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+Project Gutenberg's Lord Chatham, by Archibald Phillip Primrose Rosebery
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Lord Chatham
+ His Early Life and Connections
+
+Author: Archibald Phillip Primrose Rosebery
+
+Release Date: January 1, 2012 [EBook #38452]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LORD CHATHAM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Delphine Lettau, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CHATHAM
+
+ HIS EARLY LIFE AND CONNECTIONS
+
+
+
+
+ CHATHAM
+
+ His Early Life and Connections
+
+
+ BY
+
+ LORD ROSEBERY
+
+
+ LONDON
+ ARTHUR L. HUMPHREYS
+ 187 PICCADILLY, W
+
+ 1910
+
+
+
+
+ Second Impression.
+
+
+
+
+ _To_
+ BEVILL FORTESCUE
+ OF DROPMORE AND BOCONNOC,
+ THIS BOOK, WHICH OWES EVERYTHING TO HIM,
+ IS
+ GRATEFULLY DEDICATED.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+My first words of preface must be of excuse for some apparent lack of
+gratitude in my dedication. For besides my debt to Mr. Fortescue, I owe
+my warmest acknowledgments to Mary, Lady Ilchester, and her son, for the
+permission to examine some of the papers of Henry Fox; a character of
+great interest, whose life is yet to be written. But I hope that this
+will soon be presented by Lord Ilchester, whose capacity for such work
+is already proved. I render my sincere thanks both to him and to his
+mother; but my dedication, written long before I had access to the
+Holland House papers, must remain unchanged; for without Mr. Fortescue's
+family collection of papers at Dropmore this book could never have been
+begun.
+
+The life of Chatham is extremely difficult to write, and, strictly
+speaking, never can be written at all. It is difficult because of the
+artificial atmosphere in which he thought it well to envelop himself,
+and because the rare glimpses which are obtainable of the real man
+reveal a nature so complex, so violent, and so repressed. What is this
+strange career?
+
+Born of a turbulent stock, he is crippled by gout at Eton and Oxford,
+then launched into a cavalry regiment, and then into Parliament. For
+eight years he is groom-in-waiting to a prince. Then he holds
+subordinate office for nine years more. Then he suddenly flashes out,
+not as a royal attendant or a minor placeman, but as the people's
+darling and the champion of the country. In obscure positions he has
+become the first man in Britain, which he now rules absolutely for four
+years in a continual blaze of triumph. Then he is sacrificed to an
+intrigue, but remains the supreme statesman of his country for five
+years more. Then he becomes Prime Minister amid general acclamation; but
+in an instant he shatters his own power, and retires, distempered if not
+mad, into a cell. At last he divests himself of office, and recovers his
+reason; he lives for nine years more, a lonely, sublime figure, but
+awful to the last, an incalculable force. He dies, practically, in
+public, as he would have wished; and the nation, hoping against hope,
+pins its faith in him to the hour of death.
+
+And for most of the time his associations are ignoble, if not
+humiliating. He had to herd with political jobbers; he has to serve
+intriguing kinsfolk; he had to cringe to unworthy Kings and the
+mistresses of Kings; he is flouted and insulted by a puppet whig like
+Rockingham. Despite all this he bequeaths the most illustrious name in
+our political history; and it is the arduous task of his biographer to
+show how these circumstances led to this result.
+
+Happily this task does not fall to the present writer, who has only to
+describe the struggle and the ascent; the consummation and glory of the
+career lie beyond these limits.
+
+Further, it may be said that not merely is the complete life of Chatham
+difficult to write, but impossible. It is safe, indeed, to assert that
+it never has been written and never can be written.
+
+This seems a hard saying, for it appears to be a reflection on his
+numerous biographers from Thackeray to Von Ruville, though it is nothing
+of the sort. The fact is that the materials do not exist. For the first
+time the Dropmore papers throw some light on the earlier part of his
+life. But it is tolerably certain that nothing of this kind exists to
+illuminate his later years. Of his conversations, of his private life
+nothing, or little more than nothing, remains. Except on the one genial
+occasion on which Burke saw him tooling a jim-whiskey down to Stowe, we
+scarcely see a human touch. After his accession to office in 1756, his
+letters of pompous and sometimes abject circumlocution, intended partly
+to deceive his correspondent and partly to baffle the authorities of the
+Post Office, give no clue to his mind. He wrote an ordinary note as
+Rogers wrote an ordinary couplet. Even his love-letters are incurably
+stilted. There is no ease, no frankness, no self-revelation in anything
+that he wrote after he embarked actively in politics. From that time he
+shrouded himself carefully and successfully from his contemporaries,
+except on the occasions when he appeared in public; for, strange to say,
+it was in his speeches that his nature sometimes burst forth. And yet
+even here, there is trouble. One of the difficulties of a life of
+Chatham lies in the rough notes of his speeches preserved by Horace
+Walpole. They are often confused, often dreary, sometimes
+incomprehensible; but they must be included, for there is nothing else;
+though they weigh heavy on a book. Sometimes, however, they reveal a
+flash of the man, and Pitt permits little else. Such being his
+deliberate scheme of life, adopted partly from policy, partly from
+considerations of health, there seems little more material for a
+biography of the man, apart from his public career, than exists in the
+case of a Trappist.
+
+It is then, I think, safe to predict that the real life of Chatham can
+never be written, as the intimate facts are wanting. What survive were,
+as usual, exhausted by Macaulay in those two brilliant essays, in which
+with the sure grasp of historical imagination he depicted the glowing
+scenes of Chatham's career, and left to posterity the portrait which
+will never be superseded. For his instinct supplies the lack of
+evidence, and though there may be exaggeration of praise, that praise
+will not be seriously diminished. Lives of Chatham will always be
+written, because few subjects are more interesting or more dramatic, but
+they must always be imperfect. It is, of course, easy to record his
+course as a statesman, his speeches, his triumphs, his achievements; and
+these narratives will be called biographies. But will they ever reveal
+the real man?
+
+There seems to be a constant tendency in writers to forget that the
+provinces of history and biography, though they often overlap, are
+essentially distinct; for history records the life of nations, and
+biography the life of individuals. To set forth the annals of the time
+in which the hero has existed, and to note his contact with them, is
+only a part of his life, though it is often held to be all that is worth
+remembering. The life of any man that ever lived on earth is far more
+than his public career. The life of a man is not his public life, which
+is always alloyed with some necessary diplomacy and which is sometimes
+only a mask; it is made up of a thousand touches, a multitude of lights
+and shadows, most of which are invisible behind the austere presentment
+of statecraft. We have probably all, and perhaps more than all, that
+Shakespeare ever wrote; we have so to speak all his public life. But
+would we not gladly give one or two of his plays to obtain some true
+insight into his private life, to realise the humanity of this
+superhuman being, to know how this immortal was linked to mortality? We
+want to know how a master man talked, and, if possible, what he thought;
+what was his standpoint with regard to the grave issues of life; what he
+was in his hours of ease, what he enjoyed, how he unbent; in a word,
+what he was without his wig and bag and sword, in his dressing-gown and
+slippers, with a friend, a novel, or a pipe. This is half or three parts
+of a man, and it is certain that we shall never know this aspect of
+Chatham. He would no doubt, had it served his purpose, have appeared in
+the dressing-gown and slippers, but the array would have been as solemn
+and artificial as the robes of a cardinal. He would, had it served his
+purpose, have smoked a pipe, but it would have been the jewelled
+nargileh of the Grand Mogul. He had practically no intimates; his wife
+told nothing, his children told nothing; he revealed himself neither by
+word nor on paper, he deliberately enveloped himself in an opaque fog of
+mystery; and there seems no clue or channel by which any further detail
+of his character can reach us, unless Addington, the doctor, or Wilson,
+the tutor, have anything to tell us. But did anything of the kind
+survive, we feel confident that it would have transpired. Beckford and
+Potter, Barré and Camden, his friends or sycophants or satellites, have
+left no sign. Shelburne indeed thinks that he penetrated Chatham, and
+Shelburne no doubt saw him under circumstances of comparative intimacy.
+And yet, judging by the result, it may well be doubted whether Shelburne
+did more than watch and guess, with an inkling of spite. Occasionally
+there is a legend, a tradition, or an anecdote, but Chatham seems to
+have cut off all vestiges of his real self as completely as a
+successful fugitive from justice. And so posterity sees nothing but the
+stern effigy representing what he wished, or permitted, or authorised to
+be seen. This is not enough or nearly enough, but it must now be certain
+that there will never be much more. This makes us all the more grateful
+for the Dropmore papers and for Mr. Fortescue's liberality. He has been
+able to throw new light on Chatham's youth and on his unrestrained days.
+Light on the subsequent years of self-repression would be so guarded and
+shaded that we should scarce obtain a glimpse of the true man. Indeed,
+by his careful disguise Chatham has made himself a prehistoric or rather
+a prebiographical figure, a man of the fifteenth century or earlier. We
+know what was around him, the scene on which he played, the other actors
+in the great drama, and we recognise himself on the stage; but away from
+the footlights he remains in darkness. In a word, after 1756, when this
+book ends, his public life is conspicuous and familiar. But his inner
+life after that period will never be known; and so we must be content
+with a torso.
+
+ _October 1910._
+
+
+ It has seemed unnecessary to give references to familiar printed
+ authorities, such as Horace Walpole, Coxe, Harris's Life of
+ Hardwicke, Waldegrave, or the published Dropmore MSS. But where an
+ exception has been deemed necessary, 'Orford' refers to the
+ 'Memoirs,' and 'Walpole' denotes an allusion to the 'Letters.'
+
+ Lord Camelford's manuscript, which I have used so copiously, is an
+ intimate family document entitled 'Family Characters and Anecdotes,'
+ addressed to his son, and dated 1781.
+
+
+
+
+CHATHAM
+
+HIS EARLY LIFE AND CONNECTIONS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+There is one initial part of a biography which is skipped by every
+judicious reader; that in which the pedigree of the hero is set forth,
+often with warm fancy, and sometimes at intolerable length. It is,
+happily, not necessary to enter upon the bewildering branches of the
+innumerable Pitts, but only to keep to one conspicuous stem. We must
+however record that the Pitt family was gentle and honourable; 'it had,'
+says one of them, 'been near two centuries growing into wealth without
+producing anything illustrious.'[1] But in the eighteenth century it was
+destined to blossom into no less than four peerages, Londonderry,
+Rivers, Camelford, and Chatham, not one of which survives. William
+Pitt's great-grandfather was Vicar of Blandford in Dorsetshire; and
+there was born Thomas, his grandfather, better known as Governor Pitt,
+and associated in history with the famous Pitt diamond. The Vicar, being
+the younger son of a younger son, had no fortune but the advowson of his
+own living of St. Mary; and Thomas again being a younger son set forth
+to seek his fortunes in the Golden East, and, it may be added, found
+them there.
+
+Of this redoubtable progenitor, Governor Pitt, as he was always called,
+it would be possible to say much, as his life, measured by the length of
+current biographies, would justify a volume; in any case it is necessary
+to say something, for in his character may be traced some germs of his
+grandson's intractable qualities.
+
+We first catch sight of him as an 'interloper,' that is, an illicit
+merchant carrying on trade in violation of the East India Company's
+monopoly. In that capacity he showed himself formidable and intrepid,
+'of a haughty, huffying, daring temper,'[2] and the Company waged
+unsparing war against him. In a letter to their agents, writing with
+special reference to him, they say: 'We have a most acceptable accompt
+of the flourishing condition of all our affaires in those parts, and of
+the wreck and disappointment of all the interlopers; insomuch that if
+you have done your parts in reference to the _Crowne_, that Tho. Pitts
+went upon, there is no probability (that) of seven interloping ships
+that went to India the same year that our Agent did, any one ship will
+ever come to England again; and ... we cannot doubt that you will in due
+time render us as pleasing an accompt of those interlopers that went out
+this year, which will certainly put an end to that kind of robbery.'[3]
+And so these hostilities continued for more than a score of years, but
+without the suppression of Pitt, who appears to have greatly thriven in
+the process; for during the latter part of this period he was member of
+Parliament for his own pocket borough of Old Sarum,[4] bought out of
+these contraband gains. Victory, indeed, rested with him; for the
+Company, weary and baffled, determined, on the faith of an ancient but
+precarious principle, to set a thief to catch a thief; and in November
+1697 appointed Pitt governor of Fort St. George, though some fastidious
+stockholders protested. This 'roughling immoral man,' as one of the
+objectors called him, governed with a high and strong hand from 1698 to
+1709; when the Company, finding the burden of him intolerable, summarily
+dismissed him. He was, no doubt, like his grandson, a difficult servant;
+and in his career we see the source of that energy, haughtiness, and
+self-reliance which were so conspicuous in both. Lord Camelford, his
+great-grandson, though a relentless critic of his family, gives, in the
+grateful character of an heir, a leniently appreciative account of the
+Governor; and says that 'he amassed a fortune which was reckoned
+prodigious in those times without the smallest stain on his reputation.
+I have heard (but at what exact period of his life I know not) that,
+having accomplished such a sum as he thought would enable him to pass
+the remainder of his days in peace, he was taken prisoner, together with
+the greatest part of his effects, on his return to England, and released
+at the intercession of the Duchess of Portsmouth, who was then in
+France. He went back to India and made in a shorter time a much larger
+fortune from the credit he had established and the experience he had
+acquired.'
+
+[Sidenote: 1710]
+
+However that may be, he now returned promptly to England, by way of
+Bergen, having shipped on a Danish vessel, and having sent before him in
+the heel of his son's shoe[5] the precious chattel which made his name
+famous, until, under his descendants, it acquired a different lustre.
+This was a prodigious diamond, to which he alludes in his correspondence
+as his 'grand concern,' which he bought for 48,000_l._, and sold, after
+keeping it for some sixteen years, to the Regent of Orleans for the
+French Crown. It was rather a sonorous than a profitable bargain, for
+though he sold it for 133,000_l._, he was never paid in full. He
+received 40,000_l._ and three boxes of jewels, but the balance,
+calculated at 20,000_l._, was never discharged. He and his descendants
+reckoned, indeed, that on the whole he was the poorer by the possession
+of this gem. A tradition remains that the bargain might have fallen
+through at the last moment but for the shrewdness of the Governor's
+second son, Lord Londonderry. When Rondet, the royal jeweller, came from
+Paris to receive it, he criticised the water of the stone. 'His
+lordship, who was quick enough in business, understood him, and putting
+a bank-note into his hands, bid him go to the window to see it in a
+better light. It was then decided to be in all respects perfect.'[6]
+
+It is evident, however, that he was possessed of considerable though
+exaggerated wealth, and he was probably the first of those nabobs who
+were to bulk so largely in the drama, the society, and the politics of
+the eighteenth century. Among these his diamond gave him pre-eminence,
+and made his name both famous and proverbial. In England he remained for
+the rest of his life, some sixteen years, dying in 1726. The reformed
+filibuster had become a power in the land. He had wealth, force of
+character, political connection, and parliamentary influence. This last
+must have been an object with him, as we find him sitting for Thirsk
+instead of his own borough of Old Sarum; and his eldest grandson seems
+to have inherited a considerable but indefinable interest in the
+borough-mongering of the West, having definite powers in regard to
+Okehampton and Sarum, and vaguer connections elsewhere. So the Governor,
+a staunch Whig and furious anti-Jacobite, with an influential son-in-law
+in Stanhope, a soldier and statesman who was First Minister for a time,
+was a man to be reckoned with. He was indeed offered, and had accepted,
+the Governorship of Jamaica, a high compliment, for it was then a
+position of peculiar difficulty, but never took up the appointment;
+finding probably his hands full at home, with an insubordinate family to
+manage, capital to invest, and estates to superintend.
+
+We find him living at Twickenham, Swallowfield, Blandford, and in Pall
+Mall, but mainly at Stratford, near Old Sarum. He had indeed
+contemplated building his principal residence at Blandford, his early
+home. But the younger children, finding that this would be settled on
+the eldest son, intercepted his purpose and turned his attention to
+Swallowfield, 'where, however, he contrived to throw away as much money
+in a very ugly place with no property about it,'[7] writes his resentful
+heir.
+
+Finally, in 1726, the Governor was gathered to his fathers, and his
+spoils caused some disappointment. His wealth had been over-rated, as is
+perhaps the case with all notorious fortunes, and not well invested; at
+any rate, he had burned his fingers in the South Sea Bubble. He seems to
+have left 100,000_l._ in personal property, though some of that may have
+consisted in unsubstantial and unrealised advances to Lord Londonderry,
+or others of his children. He had bought land wherever he could find it
+(for the sake, perhaps, of influence as much as income), in London
+(Soho), Berkshire, Hampshire, Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, Devonshire, and
+Cornwall, as well as that most marketable of assets, Old Sarum, and
+apparently other borough interests. But his greatest acquisition was the
+noble estate of Boconnoc, which he purchased in 1717 from the widow of
+that wild Mohun who was slain in duel by his brother-in-law, the Duke of
+Hamilton. The Governor paid 53,000_l._ for the estate, a great price in
+those days; but was held to have got a bargain.[8]
+
+To his family he had always been formidable, but also an object of
+jealous rapacity and expectation. They wrangled and intrigued for his
+money both during his life and afterwards, and seem to have been
+universally dissatisfied by the result. 'From the various characters of
+these persons' (the Governor's children) 'it is easy to conceive,'
+writes Lord Camelford, 'in what manner the Governor must have been
+pulled to pieces by their different passions and interests when he came
+to realise his wealth in England.' The transactions with Lord
+Londonderry seem to have been particularly complicated; in fact they
+were never unravelled. We only gather, as a specimen of them, that after
+the Governor's death his executors claimed 95,000_l._ as due from Lord
+Londonderry; which Lord Londonderry denied, claiming 10,000_l._ from the
+estate. Thirty years were vainly spent in the endeavour to clear up this
+issue, a process rendered all the more arduous by Lord Londonderry's
+having peremptorily possessed himself of his father's papers after
+death. Only one case seems to have been free from complication. The
+Governor stated succinctly that his son John was good for nothing, and
+so he logically left him nothing. John, however, claimed an annuity
+which, we may be confident, he never obtained. Thus there were endless
+disputes, a civil war in the family, not uncongenial, perhaps, to those
+who waged it; which died out only with the combatants, but which
+illustrates once more the volcanic character of these truculent Pitts.
+
+It is in his family relations, in his dealings with these ungracious
+heirs and with his own wife, that the Governor is most vivid and
+interesting; at any rate, to one who has to trace the heredity of genius
+and character in his descendants. Thomas Pitt's blood came all aflame
+from the East, and flowed like burning lava to his remotest descendants,
+with the exception of Chatham's children; but even then it blazed up
+again in Hester Stanhope. There was in it, even when it throbbed in the
+veins of his eldest son and grandson, some tropical, irritant quality
+which, under happy circumstances and control, might produce genius, but
+which under ordinary circumstances could only evolve domestic skirmish
+and friction. The Governor himself, in his dealings with his wife and
+children, does not seem to have been tolerant or tolerable. He set
+himself to rule them with the notions of absolutism which are associated
+with the Oriental monarchies, but he met with no great measure of
+success. It is necessary to study his methods as exhibiting the volcanic
+source of a formidable race.
+
+His wife was of the family of Innes in Morayshire, 'of Scotch and
+Cornish extraction,' says Lord Camelford, and she was lineally descended
+from the Regent Murray. Sir John Sinclair, like a loyal Scot, attributes
+the genius and eloquence of the Pitts to their 'fortunate connection
+... with a Miss Innes of Redhall, in the Highlands of Scotland.' Of her,
+nevertheless, in unconsciousness of this obligation, but in receipt of
+private advices, the Governor writes in terms of implacable hostility.
+He had heard, he says to his son, 'that your mother has been guilty of
+some imprudence at the Bath ... let it be what it will, in my esteem she
+is noe longer my wife, nor will I see her more if I can help it.'[9]
+
+But his children were not to be released from duty to her by her
+supposed misconduct. Four years earlier he had written to Robert: 'If
+what you write of your mother be true, I think she is mad, and wish she
+was well secured in Bedlam; but I charge you let nothing she says or
+does make you undutiful in any respect whatever.' So when they
+apparently act on the Governor's view of Mrs. Pitt, he turns round and
+belabours them. 'Have all of you,' he inquires of his eldest son, 'shook
+hands with shame, that you regard not any of the tyes of Christianity,
+humanity, consanguinity, duty, good morality, or anything that makes you
+differ from beasts, but must run from one end of the kingdome to the
+other, aspersing one another, and aiming at the ruine and destruction of
+one another?' This genial picture of his offspring does not seem wholly
+imaginary, for the Governor proceeds: 'That you should dare to doe such
+an unnatural and opprobrious action as to turne your mother and sisters
+out of doors?--for which I observe your frivolous reasons, and was
+astonished to read them; and I no less resent what they did to your
+child at Stratford. But I see your hand is against every one of them,
+and every one against you, and your brother William to his last dying
+minute.' (William had died young, in 1706.) A week later he writes
+again: 'Not only your letters, but all I have from friends, are stuffed
+with an account of the hellish confusion that is in my family; and by
+what I can collect of all my letters, the vileness of your actions on
+all sides are not to be paralleled in history. Did ever mother, brother,
+and sisters study one another's ruine and destruction more than my
+unfortunate and cursed family have done?' He again reverts to the
+grievance of Robert's having turned his mother and sisters out of doors,
+though he calls them, in the same letter, 'an infamous wife and
+children,' and states that he has 'discarded and renounced your mother
+for ever;' apparently on suspicion, for he makes 'noe distinction
+between women that are reputed ill and such as are actually soe.' The
+wife of the Cćsar of Fort St. George had to be above suspicion. Nor is
+this by any means an isolated passage. From his Eastern satrapy the
+Governor pours on his hapless family, and especially on his firstborn, a
+constant flood of scorn and invective. The arrival of the Indian mail
+must have caused a periodical panic to his children, and his
+announcement in 1715 that 'writing now is not so much my talent as
+formerly' a corresponding relief.
+
+In vain does Robert, the eldest son, inspire friends to write to the
+Governor glowing accounts of his conduct; the Governor sniffs suspicion
+in every breeze. 'I wish gaming bee not rife in your family, or you
+could never have spent so considerable an estate in so short a time.' 'I
+wish gameing, drinking, and other debaucheries has not been the bane of
+you.' 'I wish these sore eyes of yours did not come by drinking, and
+that generally ushers in gaming, of either of which vices or any other
+dishonourable action, if I find you guilty, you may be assured I will
+give you no quarter.' 'I think that no son in the world deserves more to
+be discarded by a father.' But on the rare occasions when the Governor
+does not write in a passion his letters are full of sound sense. The
+cost of education is the only expense which he does not grudge. 'I would
+also have you putt your mother in mind that she gives her daughters good
+education, and not to stick at any charge for it.' But he wishes to get
+his money's worth. 'See that your brothers and sisters keep close to
+their studies, and let not my money be spent in vain on them; if it be,
+I'll pinch 'em hereafter.' Again, later, he writes: 'When this reaches
+you your brothers will be 17 years old. If their genius leads them to be
+scholars, I would have them sent to Oxford, but placed in two distinct
+colleges; and if inclined to study law you may enter them in the Temple.
+But if they are inclined to be merchants, let them learn all languages,
+and obtain perfect knowledge of the sciences bearing upon trade. I
+believe that trade will flourish rather than decay.'
+
+When he returned home things were probably not much better for his
+children, though his letters, of course, are less frequent, and also
+less violent. But we gather from timid and vigilant bulletins sent off
+by those who cautiously approached the Governor's lair that he was still
+as formidable and plain spoken as ever. He suspects Robert of
+Jacobitism, the supreme sin in the judgment of the old Governor. 'It is
+said you are taken up with factious caballs, and are contriving amongst
+you to put a French kickshaw upon the throne again.' 'I have heard since
+I came to towne,' he writes seven years afterwards, 'that you are
+strooke with your old hellish acquaintance, and in all your discourse
+are speaking in favour of that villainous traytor Ormond.' And again:
+'Since last post I have had it reiterated to me that in all company you
+are vindicating Ormonde and Bullingbrooke, the two vilest rebells that
+ever were in any nation, and that you still adhere to your cursed Tory
+principles, and keep those wretches company who hoped by this time to
+have murthered the whole Royall family: in which catastrophe your father
+was sure to fall,' &c. &c. From which it may be gathered that the moral
+temperature of Pall Mall, whence the Governor was writing, differed
+little from that of Madras.
+
+The only note of tenderness that he ever strikes is with regard to his
+grandson, William, to whom he looks with a rare prescience of attention.
+At first he conducts both boys from Eton to Swallowfield, 'with some of
+their comrogues,' on a short leave of absence. But soon it is William
+alone whom he takes as a companion. 'I set out for Swallowfield Friday
+next; your son, William, goes with me.' 'I observe you have sent for
+your son, William, from Eton. He is a hopeful lad, and doubt not but he
+will answer yours and all his friends' expectations,' 'I shall be glad
+to see Will here as he goes to Eton.' 'Monday last I left Will at Eton.'
+Sentences like these taken from the Governor's letters are, when the
+writer is considered, a sufficient testimony of exceptional regard. It
+is not too much to say that William is the only one of his descendants
+whom the Governor commends; the only one, indeed, who never falls under
+the lash of the Governor's uncontrollable tongue.
+
+The Governor left behind him three sons, Robert, Thomas, and John; and
+two daughters, Lucy and Essex. Robert, the eldest son, married, somewhat
+clandestinely, Harriot Villiers, sister of the Earl of Grandison, 'who
+seems to have brought with her,' says her grandson, 'little more than
+the insolence of a noble alliance.' A more favourable estimate declares
+that she had a fortune of 3000_l._, and that 'it is a great dispute
+among those who have the pleasure of conversing with her whether her
+beauty, understanding, or good-humour be the most captivating.' She
+makes a pale apparition in Lady Suffolk's correspondence, soliciting a
+place for her brother, Lord Grandison, with the offer of a bribe, and
+subsiding under the royal confidant's rebuke.[10]
+
+The second, Thomas, married one of the heiresses of Ridgeway, Earl of
+Londonderry. After that nobleman's death 'he _bought_ the honours which
+were extinct in the person of his wife's father.'[11] One infers from
+casual hints that Thomas may have had the most influence with his
+father, and that he was not embarrassed by scruples. He was, says Lord
+Camelford, 'a man of no character, and of parts that were calculated
+only for the knavery of business, in which he overreached others, and at
+last himself.' But Camelford may have been soured by the controversies
+which followed the Governor's death. The honours so dubiously acquired
+died out with Lord Londonderry's two sons.
+
+John, the Governor's third son, 'was in the army, an amiable vaurien, a
+personal favourite with the King, and, indeed, with all who knew him as
+a sort of Comte de Gramont, who contrived to sacrifice his health, his
+honour, his fortunes to a flow of libertinism which dashed the fairest
+prospect, and sank him for many years before his death in contempt and
+obscurity.'[12] This death took place, within Lord Camelford's memory,
+'at the thatched house by the turnpike in Hammersmith.' John seems to
+have been a sort of Will Esmond, and we have on record a horse
+transaction of his which savours strongly of Thackeray's famous
+knave.[13] He married 'a sister of Lord Fauconberg's, whose personal
+talents and accomplishments distinguished her as much at least as her
+birth, and much more than her virtues.'[14]
+
+Another of Colonel John's freaks is worth retailing, as throwing light
+on the peremptory methods of the Pitts, and of the manner in which the
+Governor was harried by his offspring. He waited outside his father's
+house in Pall Mall on a day when he knew that one of the estate agents
+was to bring up the rents of an estate. He watched the man in and out of
+the house, then went in, where he found some secretary counting the
+money over, swept it deftly with his sword into his hat, and escaped
+into the street, full of glee at having bubbled an unappreciative parent
+out of his dues, and leaving the unhappy subordinate paralysed behind
+him.[15] This anecdote enables us to understand why the Governor had so
+low an opinion of John, and why the keys were kept under the Governor's
+bed when this scapegrace was at home.[16]
+
+Of the two daughters, Lucy, who married the first Earl Stanhope, the
+minister and general, seems to have left a fragrant memory behind her;
+we are pleased to find her resenting her sister-in-law's behaviour to
+her mother, the Governor's wife. She died in February 1723-4.
+
+Essex, the second, married Charles Cholmondely, of Vale Royal,
+grandfather of the first Lord Delamere. 'Her peevishness made her the
+scourge of her family,' says her great-nephew, so we may conclude that
+she was not devoid of the Pitt characteristics. She died in 1754.
+
+Over his luckless heir the Governor had kept constantly suspended the
+terrors of his testamentary dispositions. 'My resentments,' he wrote not
+long before his death, 'against you all have been justly and honourably
+grounded, and that you will find when my head is laid.' Nevertheless,
+when he died in 1726, Robert, the belaboured eldest son, succeeded to
+the great bulk of his fortune. He, in his turn, did not lose a moment in
+visiting on his eldest son, Thomas, the sufferings that he himself had
+endured. In the very letter in which he announces his father's death to
+the lad, he speaks of his son's 'past slighting and disobedient conduct
+towards me,' and lectures him with uncompromising severity. He does,
+indeed, announce an allowance of 700_l._ a year, but soon after docks it
+of 200_l._ on the flimsiest and shabbiest pretexts. Robert, who seems to
+have been a poor creature, as his portrait at Boconnoc represents him,
+mean and cantankerous, with some of the violence but without the vigour
+and ability of the Governor, only survived his father a year, into which
+he managed to concentrate a creditable average of quarrels with his
+family. His death was something like the sinking of a fireship;
+spluttering and scolding he disappears in 1727.
+
+Robert's life and death were on the lines laid down by Pitt precedent.
+He lived and died on ill terms with his family, and his death was
+followed by the customary lawsuits. During his short possession of his
+patrimony he had laboured under some miscalculation as to its extent;
+for, after examining the rentals and estates, he had congratulated
+himself on the possession of 'full 10,000_l._ a year;' ' in which belief
+he died soon after, leaving the same delusion to his son, which was one
+of the principal causes of his misfortunes.'[17] As the estate was
+entailed, Thomas, Robert's eldest son, was not liable for the debts of
+his father, or anxious to assume that responsibility. The claims that
+gave him most trouble were those of his mother, Robert's widow, who had
+obtained additions to her jointure, and had had 10,000_l._ settled on
+her children at her marriage, a provision which was apparently never
+carried into execution. Many bills and cross bills in Chancery were the
+consequence of these claims, which ended in Mrs. Robert Pitt's
+retirement into France, where she shortly afterwards died. Her brother
+and champion, Lord Grandison, also retreated to Ireland, both thus
+renouncing administration of the effects of Robert Pitt. So, avows Lord
+Camelford, 'my father seized whatever fell into his hands without
+account, either belonging to my grandfather or grandmother, keeping at
+arm's length every demand upon him, till somehow or other these
+litigations seem to have worn themselves out and slept by the
+acquiescence of all parties.' The 'acquiescence,' we may add, seems only
+to have accrued by the death of the litigants.
+
+Robert left two sons and five daughters, and this brood was not unworthy
+of the family traditions. The eldest son was Thomas, the second
+William, the subject of this book; to the daughters we shall come
+presently.
+
+The volcanic element in the Pitt blood was fully manifest in this
+generation, and Thomas was a child of wrath. His relations with his
+younger brother William seem always to have been uneasy, and from an
+early period they seem to have been wholly uncongenial to each other.
+
+Whatever William may have been, Thomas was impracticable, and no one
+seems to have succeeded in working amicably with him. He was a man of
+extremes. 'All his passions,' writes his son, 'were violent by nature,
+particularly pride and ambition, which were painted in his figure, one
+of the most imposing I ever saw. He was not without good qualities; but,
+to speak fairly, they were greatly over-balanced by the contrary
+tendencies.' He was said not to have been naturally vicious, but early
+embarrassments, perpetual family litigations, a sense of injury, the
+flattery of dependents, and a train of mortifications and
+disappointments 'had formed in him such habits of rapacity, injustice
+and violence that he seemed at last to have lost even the sense of right
+and wrong.' He had, evidently, personal attractions, marred by an
+imperious demeanour, was strong and graceful, addicted to hunting and
+manly sports, fond of music and dancing. His overbearing manner, which
+arose from an undisguised contempt of his equals, gave him some
+ascendancy in Cornwall, where, however, though endured, he was secretly
+detested.
+
+So haughty and violent a character might, one supposes, have been
+mellowed and redeemed by a fortunate marriage, and Thomas seems to have
+secured an angel as his wife. At the opera one night he saw a daughter
+of Sir Thomas Lyttelton, was struck by her extraordinary beauty,
+proposed in his headlong manner next day, and was accepted. Her son
+laments her want of any fortune to remedy her husband's eternal
+embarrassments, but she seems to have lacked nothing else. Besides her
+loveliness, 'as a faithful wife, a tender mother, a kind friend, an
+indulgent mistress, she was a pattern to her sex.'[18] But her very
+virtues turned her husband against her. Her meek gentleness, humility,
+and charity, the extreme piety, carried almost to bigotry, in which she
+had been reared, were reproachful contrasts to his opposite qualities.
+She was the object of ridicule to the wit and malice of others,
+possibly, we should guess, of her sisters-in-law; and, finally, every
+kind sentiment, even of common humanity, towards her, was extinguished
+in the husband who had loved her so passionately.
+
+Thomas seems, from the moment of succession until death, to have been a
+prey to pecuniary embarrassment. He started with an exaggerated view of
+his resources, and launched into extravagance; arrogance and ambition
+made him more profuse; a taste for borough management, strong in him,
+was probably more expensive than any other possible form of gambling; so
+all his life was soured by the struggle between pride and debt, and by
+consequent mortification. This seems to be the secret of his wasted and
+unhappy existence.
+
+United as he was by his marriage to the Lytteltons, Grenvilles, and
+Cobham, he naturally became an adherent and favourite of the Prince of
+Wales. He probably called the Prince's attention in glowing terms to the
+possibilities of the Heir Apparent's Duchy of Cornwall, and, at any
+rate, became His Royal Highness's parliamentary manager in the West, the
+realm of rotten boroughs. There the Prince was flattered, or flattered
+himself, with influence as Duke of Cornwall, in a region where Lord
+Falmouth, the famous threatener of 'we are seven,' and Thomas himself
+exercised a more substantial sway. He enjoyed a fleeting triumph at the
+General Election of 1741, not unaccompanied with the constant quarrels
+which were the vital element of his family. As a reward he was appointed
+in 1742 Warden of the Stannaries.
+
+Then he seems to decay. The General Election of 1747, on which he had
+built high hopes, brought him nothing but debt and disaster. He writes
+in despair to the Prince, and Frederick sends kindly and reassuring
+messages in reply; but he was now ruined, and his last prospects
+vanished with the Prince of Wales, on whose death he was superseded in
+the Stannaries; this perhaps marks the date of his final catastrophe. At
+any rate, there was a financial collapse, and he had to go abroad.
+Shelburne met him at Utrecht and heard him hold forth in the true Pitt
+style, abusing his brother William as a hypocrite and scoundrel, with a
+great flow of language and a quantity of illustrative anecdotes. 'A bad
+man,' says Horace Walpole. 'Never was ill-nature so dull as his, never
+dullness so vain.'
+
+Shelburne hints that he was mad, or nearly mad, and that, though not
+actually confined, he was obliged to live a very retired life,
+complicated by straitened circumstances. 'The unhappy man,' as William
+calls him, had never been on cordial terms with his brother: they had
+had the usual family wrangles about property, and recently, in his
+distress, Thomas had solicited from William, now Secretary of State and
+supreme, the appointment of Minister to the Swiss Cantons. He might have
+foreseen refusal, for he was fit for no such employment, and William was
+sensitive as to charges of favour to his family from the Crown. But men
+are friendly judges of their own fitness for any post which they may
+happen to desire, and Thomas did not care, probably, to have his merits
+or demerits so justly appraised by his junior; so he spent his time of
+exile in denouncing to any audience that was attracted by his name, the
+ingratitude and neglect of his successful relative. He died in July
+1761, and William frigidly announces to his nephew the death of 'the
+unhappy man' from apoplexy.
+
+This nephew was created Lord Camelford under the auspices of his first
+cousin, the younger Pitt, whom, by the way, Pitt-like, he seems unable
+to forgive for this favour, as he never mentions his creator. The
+malicious bards of the Rolliad hinted that the peerage accrued from some
+borough-mongering transaction:
+
+ 'Say, what gave Camelford his wished for rank?
+ Did he devote old Sarum to the Bank?
+ Or did he not, that envied rank to gain,
+ Transfer the victim to the Treasury's fame?' (_sic_)
+
+But, though he was by no means destitute of the family characteristics,
+this Thomas was a man of high honour, character and charm. He won the
+heart of Horace Walpole, whose neighbour he was, until they quarrelled,
+as of course they were sure to do. But for a time Horace, whose
+affection was not often or easily given and whose confidence in matters
+of taste was fastidious, gave both affection and confidence unstintedly
+to this young man. He attracted, too, the still rarer tenderness of his
+uncle William. To him Chatham addressed the well-known letters on
+education which he found time to write in all the business of office;
+though Thomas on attaining manhood repaid him with the most cordial
+aversion. This sentiment, which seems at first to savour of ingratitude,
+is not in reality difficult to explain. In the first place, the uncle
+was to some extent involved in those financial questions connected with
+the paternal inheritance in which the father played, as we have seen, so
+intrepid though unscrupulous a part. Mutual aversion facilitated mutual
+disagreement in matters always fertile of friction; and the younger
+Thomas, though he had an ill opinion of his father, sided with him as
+against his uncle. We cannot, even on Thomas's own showing, blame the
+uncle in these rather petty transactions, and William's besetting sin
+was certainly not avarice; but neither can we blame the son for siding
+with the father. On an impartial survey we may conclude that disputes
+between two Pitts who were near descendants of the Governor were
+incapable of an amicable solution.
+
+But there was more than this. William, for some purpose of persuasion,
+says Lord Camelford, informed Thomas that his nephew, the younger Thomas
+(Lord Camelford himself), would be his heir. This was a considerable,
+almost a magnificent, prospect. William was then middle-aged and
+unmarried, his position and future were alike splendid, and high office
+might in those days lead to wealth. His career had, moreover, brought
+him a legacy of 10,000_l._ from Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough. But, far
+beyond that there was the reversion of the great Althorp inheritance,
+between which and William there were only the lives of the short-lived
+possessor and his sickly child. That William held out this expectation
+we think so probable that we do not even question it. He had all his
+life been half an invalid, and never seems to have contemplated marriage
+till he did marry, at the age of forty-eight. He, moreover, loved his
+nephew with sincere and proved tenderness. Why, then, should it be
+doubted that he indicated him as his heir, when, in truth, he had no
+other? But that he did this with an unworthy motive or for the purpose
+of deception there is neither proof nor probability. The episode
+probably furnished matter for his brother's maudlin ravings at Utrecht,
+but we do not think that it materially influenced the opinions of his
+nephew.
+
+The true reason for Camelford's hatred of his uncle was that he fell
+under the influence of George Grenville at a time when Grenville had
+broken for ever with Pitt. The estimable qualities of Grenville have
+been described with a colour and exuberance which could only proceed
+from the glowing imagination of Burke. But, with all allowance for what
+Burke saw in this able, narrow, and laborious person, it cannot be
+denied that the foundation of his qualities was a stubborn self-esteem
+which necessarily led to stubborn hatreds. Grenville came to hate Bute,
+to hate the King, to hate the Duke of Cumberland; but it may be doubted
+if all his other accumulated hatreds equalled that which he felt for his
+brother-in-law. Pitt, while in office, had kept Grenville in a
+subordinate position, and had apparently thought it adequate to his
+deserts. When Grenville was Minister, Pitt had negotiated with the King
+to overthrow him. In the schism produced by Pitt's resignation, Temple
+had sided with Pitt and quarrelled with his brother George. But, worst
+of all, Pitt had held Grenville up, not unsuccessfully, to public
+ridicule and contempt. Now, a Grenville to himself was not as other men
+are; he was something sacred and ineffable. Neither Temple nor George
+ever doubted that they were the equals, nay, the superiors, of their
+brother-in-law, whom in their hearts they regarded as only a brilliant
+adventurer, useful, under careful guidance, to the Grenville scheme of
+creation. When, therefore, Pitt quizzed and thwarted George, he raised
+an implacable enemy. Later on, they might affect reconciliation, and
+Temple might pompously announce to the world that the Brethren were
+reunited. But George's undying resentment against Pitt never flagged to
+the hour of his death.
+
+Thomas Pitt came under Grenville's influence at the fiercest moment of
+this rancour, and seems to have been the only person on record who was
+fascinated by him. Thomas writes of him with affectionate enthusiasm
+long after his death, and in his life waged his wars with zeal. One of
+these led to a quarrel with Horace Walpole, arising out of the dismissal
+of Conway, which produced a lengthy correspondence, still extant. But to
+become the disciple of George Grenville it was necessary to abhor
+William Pitt. Thomas took the test without difficulty, and adhered to it
+conscientiously. His father's influence, such as it was, tended in the
+same direction. So, though Thomas specifically places his uncle at the
+head of all British statesmen, and although he besought Chatham to sit
+to Reynolds for the gallery at Boconnoc, and though he displayed grief,
+real or ostentatious, at Chatham's death, going the quaint length of
+asking every one to dinner who spoke sympathetically in either House on
+the occasion; in spite of all this, he retails aversion in every
+sentence that he writes; aversion of which the obvious source is
+devotion to Grenville. It is necessary to explain this because
+Camelford's manuscript notes would otherwise be inexplicable. Putting
+this violent prejudice on one side, this memorial drawn up by Camelford
+for his son, though too intimate for complete publication, is a
+priceless document. Let all be forgiven him for the sake of this
+manuscript. It may be inaccurate, and biassed and acrid, but it presents
+the family circle from within by one of themselves, and no more vivid
+picture can exist of that strange cockatrice brood of Pitts.
+
+The son for whom it was written grew up a spitfire, not less eccentric
+than his sires, and became notorious as the second Lord Camelford. His
+was a turbulent, rakehelly, demented existence, the theme of many
+newspaper paragraphs. He revived in his person all the pranks and
+outrage of the Mohawks. Bull-terriers, bludgeons, fighting of all kinds
+were associated with him; riots of all kinds were as the breath of his
+nostrils, more especially theatrical tumults. One of these latter
+contests brought him into contact with the pacific authors of the
+'Rejected Addresses,' who were admitted, not without trepidation, to his
+apartment, which was almost an arsenal. It can scarcely be doubted that
+the lurking madness of the Pitts found a full expression in him. As an
+officer in the Navy, commanding a sloop in the West Indies, his conduct
+fell little if at all short of insanity. It is not easy to understand
+how even in those more facile times he escaped disgrace.
+
+Eventually, at the age of twenty-nine he was killed in a wanton duel
+with a Mr. Best. The circumstances of this mortal combat show that he
+was a true Pitt of the Governor's headstrong breed. Both before the duel
+and afterwards, on his death-bed, he acknowledged that he was the sole
+wanton aggressor, and that his antagonist was blameless. But as Mr. Best
+was reported the best pistol-shot in England, his pride would not allow
+him to lend himself, however indirectly, to any sort of accommodation.
+So he died, and with him died the eldest line of the Governor's branch
+of Pitts. Boconnoc passed to his sister, Lady Grenville, wife of the
+minister who was Chatham's nephew. The relations of the brothers-in-law
+seem to have been on the Pitt model. 'Pique against Lord Grenville
+explains his (Lord Camelford's) conduct,' writes Lady Holland.[19]
+Despite all their idiosyncrasies it seemed impossible to keep the Pitts
+and Grenvilles from quarrelling and blending.
+
+All this may seem trivial enough, but it has an important, indeed
+necessary, bearing on the story of William's life, as showing the stock
+from which he sprang.
+
+The harsh passions of the Governor and the petulant violence of his
+heirs seem so outrageous and uncontrolled as to verge on actual
+insanity. Shelburne explicitly states that 'there was a great deal of
+madness in the family.' Every indication confirms this statement. What
+seemed in the Governor brutality and excess, frequently developed in
+his descendants into something little if at all short of mental
+disorder. We thus trace to their source the germs of that haughty,
+impossible, anomalous character, distempered at times beyond the
+confines of reason, which made William so difficult to calculate or
+comprehend.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+And now we come by a process of exhaustion to the subject of this book.
+
+William Pitt, the elder statesman of that name, was born in London, in
+the parish of St. James's, November 15, 1708. It does not now seem
+possible to trace the house of his nativity, but it was probably in Pall
+Mall, where his father then or afterwards resided. We are limited to the
+information that his godfathers were 'Cousin Pitt' (probably George Pitt
+of Strathfieldsaye) and General Stewart, after the latter of whom he was
+named. General Stewart was the second husband of William's grandmother,
+Lady Grandison.[20]
+
+It may be well to recall here that William was the second son of Robert
+Pitt, the Governor's eldest son, and his wife, Harriot Villiers, fourth
+daughter of Catherine, Viscountess Grandison, and her husband the Hon.
+Edward Villiers Fitzgerald, who was descended from a brother of the
+first Villiers, Duke of Buckingham.
+
+Of his childhood we catch but occasional and remote glimpses.
+
+His grandfather, as we have seen, had early marked him. The shrewd old
+nabob had discerned the boy's possibilities, but seems also to have
+determined that his energies should not be relaxed by wealth. At any
+rate, the Governor refrained from any special sign of favour, and
+bequeathed the lad only an annuity of 100_l._ a year. This was
+William's sole patrimony, for he seems to have received nothing from his
+father.
+
+He was sent to Eton, or, as William always spells it, 'Eaton,' at an
+early age; the exact period does not seem to be ascertainable. Here he
+had notable contemporaries: Henry Fox, George Lyttelton, Charles Pratt,
+Hanbury Williams, and Fielding.
+
+'Thee,' said this last, addressing Learning, 'in the favourite fields,
+where the limpid gently rolling Thames washes thy Etonian banks, in
+early youth I have worshipped. To thee, at thy birchen altar, with true
+Spartan devotion I have sacrificed my blood.'[21] Pitt could have echoed
+his schoolfellow's apostrophe if the not improbable legend be true that
+he underwent an unusually severe flogging for having been caught out of
+bounds. But even without this, his experiences were no doubt poignant
+enough; for, though the son of a wealthy father, he was placed on the
+foundation, and the Eton of those days afforded to its King's Scholars
+no lap of luxury. The horrors and hardships of Long Chamber, the immense
+dormitory of these lads, have come down to us in a whisper of awful
+tradition, and it is therefore no matter for surprise, though it is for
+regret, that William did not share the passionate devotion of most
+Etonians for their illustrious college. He is credited indeed with
+saying that he had scarcely ever observed a boy who was not cowed for
+life at Eton[22]: a sweeping condemnation which sounds strange in these
+days, but which is easily explained by the misery that he, as a sickly
+boy, may well have undergone in that petty Lacedćmon. For his health
+deprived him of all the pleasures of his age, as he was already a martyr
+to gout. That hereditary malady which cut him off from the sports of the
+school impelled him to study, and so served his career. Mr. Thackeray,
+who wrote his biography in quarto and who may be discriminated without
+difficulty from the genius of that name, deposes vaguely that 'Dr.
+Bland, at that time the headmaster of Eton, is said to have highly
+valued the attainments of his pupil.' We rest more securely on a letter
+of his Eton tutor, Mr. Burchett, of which the last sentence need only be
+quoted here, as it is all that relates to William.
+
+
+ MR. BURCHETT TO MR. PITT.
+
+ Yr younger Son has made a great Progress since his coming hither,
+ indeed I never was concern'd with a young Gentleman of so good
+ Abilities, & at the same time of so good a disposition, and there is
+ no question to be made but he will answer all yr Hopes.
+
+ I am, Sr,
+ Yr most Obedient & most Humble Servant,
+ WILL. BURCHETT.[23]
+
+
+This reference under the hand of an Eton tutor is exuberant enough. But
+no doubt rests on Pitt's school reputation. It survived even to the time
+of Shelburne, who speaks of him as distinguished at Eton. Lyttelton
+wrote of him while still there: 'This (good-humour) to Pitt's genius
+adds a brighter grace;'[24] a remarkable tribute from one Eton boy to
+another. More striking still is the tradition preserved by an unfriendly
+witness, William's nephew, Camelford. 'The surprising Genius of Lord
+Chatham,' he writes, 'distinguished him as early as at Eaton School,
+where he and his friend Lord Lyttelton in different ways were looked up
+to as prodigies.' School prodigies rarely mellow into remarkable men;
+though remarkable men are often credited, when their reputation is
+secure, with having been school prodigies. But the contemporary letter
+of Burchett and the reluctant testimony of Camelford admit of no doubts.
+Most significant, perhaps, of all is the preservation of the flotsam of
+school life, a couple of school bills, the tutor's letter, another from
+the boy himself. This last, which took eleven days in transmission, is
+here given. The bills have been already published by Sir Henry Lyte in
+his History of Eton.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS FATHER.
+
+ _Eaton, Septembr ye 29th._
+
+ Hon'ed Sr,--I write this to pay my duty to you, and to lett you
+ know that I am well, I hope you and my mama have found a great
+ benefit from the Bath, and it would be a very great satisfaction to
+ me, to hear how you do, I was in hopes of an answer to my last
+ letter, to have heard how you both did, and I should direct my
+ letters, to you; for not knowing how to direct my letters, has
+ hindered me writing to you. my time has been pretty much taken up
+ for this three weeks, in my trying for to gett into the fiveth form,
+ And I am now removed into it; pray my duty to my mama and service to
+ my uncle and aunt Stuart if now att the Bath. I am with great
+ respect,
+
+ Hon'ed Sr, Your most dutiful Son,
+ W. PITT.[25]
+
+
+This is the whole record extant of William's Eton life; to so many lads
+the happiest period of their existence, but not to him. An invalid, and
+so disabled for games, a recluse, perhaps a victim, he had no pleasant
+memories of Eton. But there, in all probability, he laid the foundations
+of character and intellect on which his fame was to be reared. It is not
+usually profitable to imagine pictures of the past, but it may not be
+amiss to evoke, in passing, the shadow of the lean, saturnine boy as he
+limped by the Thames, shaping a career, or pondering on life and
+destiny, dreaming of greatness where so many have dreamed, while he
+watched, half enviously, half scornfully, the sports in which he might
+not join. He is not the first, and will not be the last, to find his
+school a salutary school of adversity. He looked back to it with no
+gratitude. But Eton claims him for her own; and long generations of
+reluctant students have whiled away the reputed hours of learning or
+examination by gazing at his bust in Upper School, and dreamily
+conjecturing why so great a glamour still hangs about his name.
+
+With these few remnants and this vague surmise ends all that is, or will
+probably ever be, known of William's childhood. Little enough if we
+compare it to the copious details furnished by modern autobiographers.
+But self-revelation was not the fashion of the eighteenth century, and
+childhood then furnished less to record. Boys were in the background,
+repressing their emotions, and inured to a rugged discipline which,
+though odious to the sympathetic delicacy of modern civilisation,
+produced the men who made the Empire.
+
+From Eton, Pitt proceeded to Oxford, where he was admitted a Gentleman
+Commoner at Trinity College on January 10th, 1726 (o.s.), guided
+thither, probably, by the fact that his uncle, Lord Stanhope, had been a
+member of that society. There are indications that at this time he was
+destined, like a great minister of a recent day, for the Church, but the
+gout attacked him with such violence as to compel him to leave the
+University without taking his degree. We have, however, an indirect
+proof of the reputation which he brought to Oxford in a letter from a
+Mr. Stockwell, who, although he had determined to give up tuition,
+consents to take William as his pupil, partly as a 'Salsbury man,' and
+so owing respect to the Pitt family; partly because of 'the character I
+hear of Mr. Pitt on all hands.'
+
+William's only public achievement at Oxford was a copy of Latin verses
+which he published on the death of George I. They are artificial and
+uncandid, as is the nature of such compositions, and have been justly
+ridiculed by Lord Macaulay. But the performance is at least an early
+mark of ambition. If this be all, and it is all, that we know of this
+period of William's life, it seems worth while to print the two letters
+written by Mr. Stockwell to Robert Pitt, the more as they throw some
+light on bygone Oxford, a topic of evergreen interest.
+
+
+ MR. I. STOCKWELL TO ROBERT PITT.
+
+ Hon'ed Sr,--I had long since determin'd, not to engage any more
+ in a Trust of so much consequence, as the Care of a young Gentleman
+ of Fortune is, & have in fact refus'd many offers of that sort: but
+ the great Regard, that every Salsbury-Man must have for your Family,
+ and the Character I hear of Mr Pitt from All Hands, put it out of
+ my Power to decline a Proposal of so much Credit & Advantage to
+ Myself & the College. I heartily wish your Business and Health
+ would have allow'd you to have seen him settled here, because I
+ flatter Myself, that you would have left Him in Our Society with
+ some Degree of Satisfaction; as That can't be hop'd for, You will
+ assure Yourself that everything shall be done with the exactest Care
+ and Fidelity.
+
+ I have secur'd a very good Room for Mr Pitt, which is just now left
+ by a Gentleman of Great Fortune, who is gone to the Temple. Tis
+ thoroughly furnish't & with All necessarys, but perhaps may require
+ some little Additional Expence for Ornament or Change of Furniture.
+ The method of paying for the Goods of any Room in the University is,
+ that Every Person leaving the College receives of his Successor Two
+ Thirds of what He has expended. On this foot the Mony to be paid by
+ Mr Pitt to the Gentleman who possess't the Room last, is 43l, Two
+ thirds of which, as likewise of whatever Addition He shall please to
+ make to the Furniture, He is to receive again of the Person, who
+ succeeds Him.
+
+ Tis usual for Young Gentlemen of Figure to have a small quantity of
+ Table-Linnen, & sometimes some particular peices of plate, for the
+ reception of Any Friend in their Rooms, but everything of that sort
+ for Common & Publick Uses is provided by the College.
+
+ If you please to send me the Servitor's Name, I will immediately
+ procure His admission into the College, & show Him all the Kindness
+ in my Power, but as to His attendance on Mr Pitt it is not now
+ usual in the University, nor, as I apprehend, can be of any Service.
+ Tis much more Customary & Creditable to a Gentleman of Family to be
+ attended by a Footman--But this I barely mention.
+
+ The other Expences of Mr Pitt's Admission will be in the following
+ Articles:
+
+ Caution Mony (to be return'd again) 10 0 0
+ Benefaction to the College 10 0 0
+ For Admission to the Fellow's Common Room 2 0 0
+ Fee for the Use of the College Plate, &c. 2 0 0
+ College Serv'ts Fees 1 15 0
+ University Fees 0 16 0
+
+ I have stated Mr Pitt's Benefaction at Ten Pounds, because that is
+ what we require & receive of every Gentleman-Commoner, & of very
+ many Commoners; but I know Sr that you will excuse me for
+ mentioning, that several Young Gentlemen of Mr Pitt's Gown have
+ besides made the College a Present of a Peice of Plate of 10, or
+ 12l. I am thus particular only in Obedience to Your Orders. I
+ believe Sr if You please to remit a Bill of An Hundred Pounds, it
+ will answer the whole expence of Mr. Pitt's settlement here and I
+ shall have the Honour to send you a particular Account of the
+ disposal of it. As I am debarr'd the Pleasure of waiting on You by a
+ little Office, that Confines me to the College in Termtime, I shall
+ take it a very great Favour, if you please to let me know at what
+ time I may hope to see Mr Pitt here.
+
+ I beg my Humble Duty to Your Good Lady, & my Humble Service &
+ Respects to Mr Pitt, and am with the highest Respect
+
+ Sr Yr most Oblig'd & Obedient Servt
+
+ IOS. STOCKWELL.[26]
+
+
+ MR. STOCKWELL TO ROBERT PITT, 'AT SWALLOWFIELD
+ NEAR READING, BERKS.'
+
+ _Trin: Coll: Oxon: Decr 22. 1726._
+
+ Hon'rd Sr,--Upon receiving the favour of Yours & finding that it
+ was your Intention that Mr Pitt should keep a Servant, I have made
+ choice of Another Room much more Convenient for that Purpose, as it
+ supply's a Lodging for His Footman. I have employ'd some Workmen in
+ it to make some necessary alterations; but the whole expence will
+ not amount to the Charge of the Chamber, I had mention'd to you
+ before. As I am not willing, Mr Pitt should be put to the distress
+ of lying One Night in an Inn, I will take Care, it shall be fit for
+ his Reception by New Years Day, & I am sure He will like it very
+ well.
+
+ I proposed so large a Sum, because I had not mention'd the Articles
+ of Gown, Cap Bands, Tea-Furniture, & some other little Ornaments &
+ Conveniences that young Gentlemen don't care to be without. You will
+ be pleas'd to mention, in what degree of mourning[27] His Gown must
+ be made; & I will send you an exact Account of the whole expence.
+ There is no need of remitting any Mony, till He comes.
+
+ If You are willing to recommend the Servitor You spoke of, who may
+ live here at a very easy rate (I believe very well for 15l p. Ann)
+ I have bespoke a place for him, & He may be admitted when you
+ please. I beg My Humble Duty to Your Good Lady, & my Humble Service
+ & Respects to Your Good Family, & am
+
+ Sr Yr most Obliged & Obedient Servt
+ IOS. STOCKWELL.[28]
+
+
+Fortunately, too, a few of William's Oxford letters have also been
+preserved. The first apologetically continues Stockwell's tale of
+preliminary expenses, and endeavours to deprecate Robert Pitt's
+economical wrath.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS FATHER, IN PALL MALL.
+
+ _Trin: Coll: Janry Ye 20th 1726/7._
+
+ Hon'ed Sr--After such delay, though not owing to any negligence
+ on my Part, I am ashamed to send you ye following accompt, without
+ first making great apologies for not executing ye Commands sooner.
+
+ Matriculation Fees 0 16 6
+ Caution money 10 0 0
+ Benefaction 10 0 0
+ Utensils of ye Coll 2 0 0
+ Common Room 2 0 0
+ Coll: Serv'ts Fees 1 15 0
+ Paddesway[29] Gown 8 5 0
+ Cap 0 7 0
+ Tea Table, China ware, bands &c. 6 5 0
+ Glasses 0 11 0
+ Thirds of Chamber & Furniture 41 7 8
+ Teaspoons 1 7 6
+ --------
+ Summe total 84 14 8
+ --------
+ Balance pd me by Mr Stockwell 15 05 4
+
+ I have too much reason to fear you may think some of these articles
+ too extravagant, as they really are, but all I have to say for it is
+ humbly to beg you would not attribute it to my extravagance, but to
+ ye custom of this Place; where we pay for most things too at a high
+ rate.
+
+ I must again repeat my wishes for yr health, hoping you have not
+ been prevented by so painfull a delay as ye gout from pursuing yr
+ intended journey to Town I must beg leave to subjoin my Duty to my
+ Mother & love to my Sistrs and am with all Possible respect
+
+ Sr Yr most dutyfull Son
+ WM. PITT.[30]
+
+
+The next is written after an evident explosion of that wrath. In the
+Pitt family, even more than in others, father and son viewed filial
+expenditure from opposite points of view. It is painful, then, but not
+surprising to find that Robert should have regarded William's washing
+bill as beyond the dreams of luxury.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS FATHER, 'IN PALL MALL.'
+
+ _Trin: Coll: April ye 29th._
+
+ Hon'ed Sr,--I recd yrs of ye 25th in which I find with
+ ye utmost concern ye dissatisfaction you express at my expences.
+ To pretend to justify, or defend myself in this case would be, I
+ fear, with reason thought impertinent; tis sufficient to convince me
+ of the extravagance of my expences, that they have met with yr
+ disapprobation, but might I have leave to instance an Article or
+ two, perhaps you may not think 'em so wild and boundless, as with
+ all imaginable uneasiness, I see you do at present. Washing 2_l._
+ 1_s._ 0_d._, about 3_s._ 6_d._ per wk, of which money half a dozen
+ shirts at 4_d._ each comes to 2_s._ per wk, shoes and stockings
+ 19_s._ 0_d._ Three pairs of Shoes at 5_s._ each, two pair of
+ Stockings, one silk, one worcestead, are all that make up this
+ Article, but be it as it will, since, Sr, you judge my expence too
+ great, I must endeavour for ye future to lessen it, & shall be
+ contented with whatever you please to allow me. one considerable
+ article is a servant, an expence which many are not at, and which I
+ shall be glad to spare, if you think it fitt, in hopes to convince
+ you I desire nothing superfluous; as I have reason to think you will
+ not deny me what is necessary. As you have been pleased to give me
+ leave I shall draw upon you for 25li as soon as I have occasion.
+ I beg my duty to my Mother & am with all possible respect
+
+ Hon'ed Sr, yr most Dutifull Son
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+The third is mysterious enough to us, but it expresses gratitude for
+some marks of kindness, whether to the writer or not, cannot now be
+known. It is difficult to imagine that Robert should have extended his
+beneficence to any one at Trinity but William, and yet it is not easy to
+depict the gratitude of a College for a favour done to one of their
+undergraduates by his father. In any case there remains no longer any
+trace of such benefaction at Trinity. The inevitable financial statement
+in which the bookseller's bill figures handsomely, not far behind the
+tailor's, is tactfully kept separate in a postscript. It is, however,
+well to know that this letter, the last in all probability that William
+wrote to his father, who died six weeks afterwards, is one of as much
+affection as the fashion of that day permitted.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS FATHER.
+
+ _Trin: Coll: April ye 10th 1727._
+
+ Hon'ed Sr,--I hope you gott well to London yesterday as I did
+ to this place, though too late to trouble you with a letter that
+ Evening. I can not say how full of acknowledgements every one
+ amongst us is for ye favr you confer'd upon one of their society.
+ One could almost imagine by ye good wishes I hear express't toward
+ you from all hands, you were rather a publick benefactor to ye
+ College, than a Patron to any one member of it. I mention this
+ because I believe it will not be unacceptable to you to hear yr
+ favrs are gratefully recd. I hope my Mother is well, to whom I
+ beg my Duty: & am with all possible respect, Sr,
+
+ Yr most dutifull son,
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ Sr,--Finding ye quarter just up I send you ye following accompt
+ commencing Janry ye 9th to ye 9th of this month.
+
+ Battels 15 0 0
+ Paid Lambert bd Wages 4 4 0
+ Three months learning french & entrance 2 2 0
+ For a course of experimental Philosophy 2 2 0
+ For coat & breeches & making 5 18 0
+ Booksellers bill 5 0 0
+ Cambrick for ruffles 1 4 0
+ Shoes, stockings 1 19 0
+ Candles, coal, fagots 3 10 0
+ Pockett money, Gloves, Powder, Tea, &c. 4 4 0
+ For washing 2 2 0
+ ----------
+ 47 5 0
+ Remains 9 15 0[31]
+
+
+Robert Pitt died in Paris, May 20, 1727, and the next letter is
+addressed to his widow at Bath. The eldest son, Thomas, already, it
+would appear, had played William false, and caused a coolness with the
+mother by not delivering a letter.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER.
+ _Oxford July ye 10th 1727._
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--Tis with no small impatience I have waited for ye
+ pleasure of hearing from you, but as that is denied me, I take this
+ opportunity of repeating my Duty and enquiries after yr health. I
+ wrote to you by return of ye coach, enclos'd to my Brother, to be
+ forwarded by him, from whom I have also received no answer, which
+ makes me imagine you may not have less reason to be angry with me
+ for not paying my Duty to you, than I have to be sorry at not having
+ ye pleasure to hear from you, I mean my letter has not come into
+ yr hands. I send this by ye Post from hence, which I hope will
+ find better luck, it will be a sensible pleasure to me to hear ye
+ waters agree with you: for wch reason out of kindness to me, as
+ also in regard to yr own quiet (lest I should trouble you every
+ other post with an importuning epistle) be so good as to give ye
+ satisfaction of hearing you are well; I am with all respect,
+
+ Yr most Dutifull Son,
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+The following letter would seem to indicate that William was spending
+the Long Vacation at Oxford, while his mother as usual was spending hers
+at Bath. He appears to hint disapproval of an acquaintance she wished
+him to make, reversing the usual position of parent and son on such
+matters. There is again reproachful allusion to his brother; there are
+few indeed in any other tone throughout William's correspondence.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'AT BATH.'
+
+ _Oxon Septr ye 17th 1727._
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--I rec'd ye favour of yrs by Mr Mayo and have
+ waited on Mr Vesey as you order'd, with whom, had you not
+ recommended him to me upon ye knowledge you have of his family, I
+ should not have sought an acquaintance. I hope you will lett me hear
+ soon yr intentions. If I am not to be happy in seeing you hear, ye
+ certainty of it can not be more uneasy than the apprehension; if I
+ am, I shall gain so much happiness, by ye foreknowledge of it. What
+ part of ye world my Brother is in or when he will be in Town, I
+ know not. I hope to hear from him between this and ye Coronation.
+ The only consideration yt can make me give up quietly ye pleasure
+ I promis'd myself in seeing you here, is yt you are employ'd in a
+ more important care to yrself and Family, ye preservation of yr
+ health. I have only to add my Love to my Sister and am with all
+ respect,
+
+ Yr most dutifull son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+The gout, we have seen, drove William prematurely from Oxford, after a
+little more than a year of residence. Thence he proceeded to Utrecht,
+where it was then not unusual for young Englishmen and Scotsmen to
+complete their education. Here we find him in 1728 with his cousin Lord
+Villiers and Lord Buchan, father of the grotesque egotist of that name
+and of Henry and Thomas Erskine. Pitt writes in 1766 that Buchan was his
+intimate friend from the period that they were students together at
+Utrecht, and, when in office, he showed kindness on that ground to Lord
+Cardross, Buchan's eldest son, the egotist himself. Of this period some
+few letters to his mother survive, dutiful yet playful.
+
+The first letter is of the formal kind then general between sons and
+parents, mentioning his cousin Lord Villiers, for whom he puts in a good
+word, not unnecessarily, as we shall see presently.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER.
+
+ _Utrecht, Febry ye 6th N.S. 1728._
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--I have ye pleasure to repeat my assurances of
+ affection & duty to you, together with my wishes for yr health: I
+ shall take all opportunities for paying my respects to you, I hope
+ you will now and then favr me wth a line or two, especially
+ since you have so good a Scribe as Miss Ann to ease you of ye
+ trouble of writing yrself. My Ld Villiers begs his Compliments
+ may be acceptable to you, at ye same time I should not do my Ld
+ justice if I omitted saying something in his just praise, but as I
+ can not say enough, I forbear to say more. My Love to my Sistrs &
+ Compliments where due. I am with all respt
+
+ Your dutiful Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+The next seems to denote a reluctant intention of returning to England
+to pay his family a visit.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER.
+
+ _Utrecht Febry ye 13th 1728._
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--I hope I need not assure you yr letter gave me a
+ very sensible pleasure in informing me of yr better health; I wish
+ I may any way be able to contribute toward farther establishment of
+ it by obeying a Command which tallies so well with my own
+ Inclinations though at ye same time be assured, nothing less than
+ ye pleasure of seeing you should prevail upon me to repeat so much
+ sickness & difficulty as I met with Coming over to Holland. I
+ believe I shall not fail in my respects to you, as often as occasion
+ permits, though I fear my letters are hardly worth postage: unless
+ to one who I flatter myself believes me to be
+
+ hr most Dutifull Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ P.S. my Love to all ye Family.
+
+
+The next letter again pleads on behalf of my Lord Villiers, for whose
+excess of vivacity William feels obvious sympathy. He mentions, too, and
+characterises with a sure touch, his old Eton friend Lyttelton, who has
+fallen in love with Harriot Pitt, as he was afterwards to fall in love
+with Ann. Lyttelton was apparently determined that the Lytteltons and
+Pitts should be matrimonially connected as closely as possible, for two
+months afterwards we find him exclaiming in a letter to his father:
+'Would to God Mr. (William) Pitt had a fortune equal to his brother's,
+that he might make a present of it to my pretty little Molly! But
+unhappily they have neither of them any portion but an uncommon share of
+merit, which the world will not think them much the richer for.'[32] As
+Thomas had just married Christian Lyttelton, it is clear that the writer
+meditated a triple alliance as the end to be aimed at. The peerage books
+tell us that this pretty little Molly died unmarried.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'IN PALLMALL, LONDON.'
+
+ _Utrecht Feb: ye 29th_
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--The return of my Ld Villiers into England gives me
+ an opportunity of assuring you of my respect & wishes for yr
+ health; I can not omitt any occasion of shewing how sensible I am of
+ yr affection, but must own I could have wish'd any other than this
+ by which I am depriv'd of my Ld Villier's Company, he is recall'd
+ perhaps deservedly: if a little Indiscretion arising from too much
+ vivacity be a fault, my Ld is undeniably blameable; but I doubt not
+ but my Ld Grandison himself will find more to be pleas'd with in
+ ye one than to correct in ye other respect. I have received so
+ many Civilities from Mr Waddel, who does me ye honr to be ye
+ bearer of this, yt I should not do him justice to omitt letting you
+ know how much I am obliged to him. I hope ye Family is well:
+ Lyttelton prevented you in ye account of his own Madness. Sure
+ there never was so much fine sense & Extravagance of Passion jumbled
+ together in any one Man. Send him over to Holland: perhaps living in
+ a republick may inspire him with a love of liberty & make him scorn
+ his Chains. My love to all, who (a second time) I hope are well: &
+ believe me with all respect & affection
+
+ Yr most Dutiful Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+The third contains, perhaps, the only token of kindness between the two
+brothers which survives. It also alludes to Lyttelton's passion for
+Harriot.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'IN PALL MALL, LONDON.'
+
+ _Utrecht April ye 8th N.S. 1728._
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--Yr letters must always give me so much pleasure,
+ yt I beg no consideration may induce you to deprive me of it. they
+ can never fail being an entertainment to me when they give me an
+ opportunity of hearing you are well. I can not omitt thanking you
+ for ye enquiry you make about my supplies from my Brother: neither
+ should I do him justice, if I did not assure you I receiv'd ye
+ kindest letter in ye world from him: wherein he gives me ye offer
+ of going where I think most for my improvement, and assures me
+ nothing yt ye estate can afford shall be denied me for my
+ advantage & education. I hope all ye family is well. Miss Anne's
+ time is so taken up with dansing & Italien yt I despair of hearing
+ from her. I should be glad to hear what conquests miss Harriot made
+ at ye birthday. if I had not a letter from one of ye Three, I must
+ think they have forgott me. I am in pain for poor Lyttelton: I wish
+ there was leagues of sea between him & ye Charms of Miss Harriot.
+ If he dies I shall sue her for ye murder of my Friend. This Place
+ affords so little matter of entertainment, yt I shall only beg you
+ to believe me with all respect,
+
+ Hon'ed Madm, Yr most Dutifull Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ My love & service to my Brother & Compliments to all ye Family.
+
+
+His stay at Utrecht was probably not protracted, as we find no more
+letters from thence. The next glimpse we have of him is in January 1730,
+at Boconnoc. He is now established at home, rather, perhaps, from
+economy than of his own free will, for he disrespectfully calls Boconnoc
+'this cursed hiding-place;' living in Cornwall or at Swallowfield, near
+Reading, another of the family residences; or on military duty at
+'North'ton,' evidently Northampton, which William, however, abbreviates
+differently in later letters. When we consider the elaborate style and
+formulas of the letters of this period there seems nothing so strange as
+the passion for abbreviation by apostrophe, such as 'do's' for 'does,'
+which seems to save neither time, trouble, nor space.
+
+In February 1731 he received a commission in the 1st Dragoon Guards,
+then under the command of Lord Pembroke, and we find him in country
+quarters at Northampton and elsewhere. In the autumn we find him once
+more at Boconnoc, whence he writes this more genial note to his mother.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, AT BATH.
+
+ _Bocconnock Octbr ye 17 1731._
+
+ Dear Madam,--I am, after a long Confinement at Quarters, at present
+ confined here, by disagreeable, dirty weather, which makes us all
+ prisoners in this little house. I knew nothing of your journey to
+ Bath, when I came to Town, and was therefore disappointed of the
+ pleasure of seeing you there. I see you have put a bill upon your
+ door. Pray what do you intend to do with yourself this winter? I
+ shou'd be mighty glad to know whether your affairs are near an
+ Issue. I hope they will very soon leave you at Leisure to consult
+ nothing but your health and Quiet. Be pleas'd to favour me with a
+ Letter here, where I shall stay about a month longer; and give me
+ the satisfaction of knowing how much you profit by the Waters.
+ Believe me,
+
+ Dear Madam, Your dutifull affect son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ My service to the Col: and Mrs. Bouchier: I shall Be glad to hear he
+ makes one at the Balls.
+
+
+In 1733 he set out on a foreign tour, of which we shall see more
+presently, and before leaving writes this note, which gives some ground
+for thinking that his brother helped him at least to meet the expenses
+of this voyage, as Lord Camelford thinks was actually the case.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'IN BATEMAN STREET, NEAR PICCADILLY,
+ LONDON.'
+
+ _Boconnock jan: 19: 1732/3._
+
+ Dear Madam,--I hope Miss Kitty who is now upon ye Road will get
+ safe to You: I cant omit doing Justice To your goodness in making
+ room for her, she no doubt wanting your care very much in the ill
+ state she is in. I continue still here and shall not set out yet
+ this month, haveing a design to go abroad then. It is however
+ uncertain till I hear from my Brother after he gets to Town. Miss
+ Harriot, by her letters, Is much recovered and I flatter myself your
+ house will prove as lucky to Poor Kitty. I need not assure you of my
+ wishes for your health and speedy deliverance from the Misery of
+ Late: my Love to my Sisters and believe me
+
+ Dear Madam Your most Dutifull Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ Miss Nanny gives her Duty to you.
+
+
+He visited Paris, and Geneva, Besançon (where he lost his heart for a
+time), Marseilles, and Montpelier, passing the winter at Luneville.
+
+From Paris he again writes to his mother this letter, of no significance
+except dutiful affection; and another from Geneva which gives a strong
+proof of filial obedience in giving his consent, though with strong and
+obvious reluctance, to one of the bills filed by his mother and Lord
+Grandison in reference to his father's succession.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'IN BATEMAN STREET NEAR PICCADILLY Ŕ
+ LONDRES.'
+
+ _Paris May ye 1 1733._
+
+ Dear Madam,--Though I have nothing to say to you yet of the Place I
+ am arrived at, I cant help giving you a bare account of my being got
+ safe to Paris: You are pleased to give me so much reason to Think
+ you interest yourself in my welfare That I cou'd not acquit myself
+ of my Duty In not giving you this mark of my respect and the sense I
+ have of your goodness. I shall make my stay as short here as
+ possible. let me have the pleasure of hearing some account of your
+ health and situation: be pleased to direct to me Chez Monsieur
+ Alexandre Banquier, dans la Rue St. Appoline pres de la Porte St.
+ Denis, ŕ Paris. I am
+
+ Madam Yr most Dutifull Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'IN BATEMAN STREET PICCADILLY LONDON.
+ ANGLETERRE.'
+
+ _Geneva Sepr ye 17: N.S. 1733._
+
+ Dear Madam--I have just recd ye favour of your letter of ye
+ 7th august, with the answer to a bill of complaint of my Ld
+ Grandison and your self: I cou'd wish you had pleased to have let me
+ know in general that that bill is, for at present I have no Idea of
+ it. You assure me, Madam the answer you wou'd have me make is a
+ form, and can lead me into no farther consequences, by engageing me
+ In Law, or disobligeing My Brother; neither of which I am persuaded
+ you wou'd upon any consideration involve me in: upon these grounds I
+ readily send you my consent to the answer proposed By Mr Martyn in
+ your letter. I am sorry it did not come to my hands sooner, least my
+ answer shou'd not be time enough; and that I shou'd, by that means,
+ be any involuntary obstacle to your affairs which wou'd be a
+ sensible concern to
+
+ Dear Madam Yr most Dutyfull affece Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ I leave this Place shortly not knowing yet where I shall pass ye
+ winter.
+
+
+In 1734 he was back in England, doing duty with his regiment at Newbury.
+
+It is unnecessary to speculate on the measure of success that William
+would have achieved in the army had he remained a soldier. That he had
+an early disposition to the career of arms seems probable, as his uncle,
+Lord Stanhope, a soldier himself, who died when William was twelve, used
+to call him 'the young Marshal.' It is useless to surmise; but had he
+not been so great an orator, one would be apt to imagine that his bent
+and talent lay in the direction of a military career. This at least is
+certain, that he sedulously employed his time, preserved from mess
+debauches and idle activity by his guardian demon the gout. He told
+Shelburne that during the time he was a cornet of horse, there was not a
+military book that he had not read through. This is a large statement,
+but denotes at least unstinted application. So his career as a
+subaltern, though abruptly cut short, was probably fruitful, and these
+studies must have been useful to the future war minister. To paraphrase
+Gibbon's pompous and comical phrase, the cornet of dragoons may not have
+been useless to the history-maker of the British Empire. For his destiny
+was to plan and not to conduct campaigns, and he was now to be caught in
+the jealous embrace of parliamentary politics.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+But before he launches on that troubled career, it is well to catch what
+glimpses we can obtain of Pitt in private life. It is the more necessary
+as this aspect soon disappears from sight, and his letters begin to
+assume that pompous and obsequious tone which we have come to believe
+was his natural style, but which it is obvious was assumed and affected
+for purposes of his own. Until he passes on to the stage, he is as
+bright, as livery, and as affectionate as any lad of his generation. It
+is beyond measure refreshing to see him at this period bantering,
+falling in love, the participator of revels if not a reveller himself.
+For afterwards no one saw him behind the scenes, no one was admitted to
+his presence until every feature had been composed and his wig and his
+vesture dramatically arranged. To catch a glimpse of him before he
+played a part has been hitherto an unknown luxury. But to do this we
+must now for a moment consider his sisters.
+
+There were five of these, and among them was to be found in abundance
+the strain of violence and eccentricity that distinguished the Pitts.
+
+'The eldest, Harriot,' writes Lord Camelford, 'was one of the most
+beautiful women of her time, but little produced in the great world, and
+died very young from anxiety of mind in consequence of a foolish
+engagement she entered into with Mr. Corbett, son of Sir William
+Corbett, to whom she was privately married.' She secured for a while, as
+we have seen, Lyttelton's transient affections. 'The second daughter,
+Catherine, had much goodness, but neither beauty nor wit to boast of.
+She married Robert Nedham,[33] a man of uncommon endowments, but of good
+Irish family and property, by whom she had several children.' The third
+was Ann, of whom more presently; and the fifth Mary.
+
+The fourth was Betty, of whom, unlike three of her sisters, we seem to
+know too much. The curse of the Pitt blood was strong in her. Lord
+Camelford, her nephew, speaks of her 'diabolical disposition,' and says
+concisely that 'she had the face of an angel and the heart of all the
+furies,' and that she 'formed the most complicated character of vice
+that I have ever met with.' Family testimony is not always the most
+charitable, but outside witnesses in no way mitigate these expressions.
+Lord Shelburne says that she was received nowhere, owing to her
+profligate life. Horace Walpole brings an infamous charge against her,
+which we may well hope is a distortion of the natural fact that for some
+time she took up her abode with her eldest brother Thomas; though Thomas
+on parting with her said that her staying with him was extremely
+distasteful to him. She, in any case, openly lived as his mistress with
+Lord Talbot, a peer as eccentric as herself, and who promised her
+marriage, she said, whenever he should be free from the incumbrance of
+Lady Talbot.[34] Afterwards she went to Italy, became a Roman Catholic,
+started from Florence with the declared intention of marrying Mr.
+Preston, a Leghorn merchant, who seems however to have been unequal to
+the occasion.[35] Then she returned to England, virulent against her
+brother William, 'whose kindness to her,' says Horace Walpole, no
+biassed witness, 'has been excessive. She applies to all his enemies,
+and, as Mr. Fox told me, has even gone so far as to send a bundle of his
+letters to the author of _The Test_[36] to prove that Mr. Pitt has
+cheated her, as she calls it, out of a hundred a year, and which only
+prove that he once allowed her two, and, after all her wickedness, still
+allows her one.'[37] And yet on occasion she could call William the best
+of brothers and of men.[38] This, too, was characteristic of the breed.
+
+At this period of her life she called herself, heaven knows why, Clara
+Villiers Pitt, or Villiers Clara Pitt (there is an engraving of her with
+the latter designation), and published a pamphlet recommending magazines
+of corn. Of her perhaps too much has been said; but it is necessary to
+demonstrate that William's family relations were not always easy: Thomas
+reviled him, Elizabeth reviled him, Ann, whoever was in fault, caused
+him much trouble, while Thomas's son, whom he peculiarly cherished,
+regarded him with peculiar animosity.
+
+It should be mentioned, however, that Dutens met her in France some time
+during Pitt's paymastership, and gives us a picture of her, which also
+throws light on William's strong family affection. She was then
+handsome, with a fine figure, her face aflame with pride and intellect,
+her age apparently under thirty; she was abroad for her health. With
+her, as a companion, chosen by her brother, was a Miss Taylor, a much
+prettier girl, of whom Elizabeth was vigilantly jealous and with whom
+Dutens fell haplessly in love. Miss Pitt was then apparently on
+excellent terms with her illustrious brother, and gave Dutens a letter
+to him. She had indeed become enamoured of the young Frenchman, a
+passion which, we are not surprised to hear, she carried to indecorous
+lengths. He, however, escaped to England and presented his letter. Pitt
+called on him the same afternoon and thanked him for his attentions to a
+beloved sister. Dutens became intimate, showed the minister his
+compositions, and was favoured with an inspection of Pitt's. Then all
+suddenly changed, and he was denied access.[39] Betty had quarrelled
+with the family of Dutens, and had written to beg her brother to quarrel
+with Dutens.[40] Dutens, she said, had boasted in company that he was
+well with her, and that if her fortune and family answered expectation
+he might marry her. Consequently she desired her brother to order his
+footman to kick Dutens down stairs; in any case she implored him to
+quarrel with the young man. With this request Pitt unhesitatingly and
+unreasonably complied. We see here in one incident how warm were Pitt's
+family affections, and the difficulties under which they were cherished.
+
+In 1761 she married John Hannan of the Middle Temple, 'of Sir William
+Hannan's family in Dorsetshire, a lawyer by profession, remarkable for
+his abilities, some years younger than myself, and possessed of a
+fortune superior to my own,' as Betty describes him in a hostile
+announcement of the engagement addressed to William. Nine years
+afterwards she died. Of Hannan, her husband, nothing further seems to be
+known; but it may be surmised that his lot was not enviable.
+
+Mary, the youngest, seems to have been a spinster of no striking
+qualities. We know little of her, except that she was born in 1725 and
+died in 1782.[41] There exists one letter from William to her of the
+year 1753, and he mentions her in a letter, dated April 9, 1755, as
+living with him. And indeed he was always kind to her, as she seems to
+have habitually resided with him. Mrs. Montagu writes in July 1754:
+'Miss Mary Pitt, youngest sister of Mr. Pitt, is come to stay a few days
+with me. She is a very sensible, modest, pretty sort of young woman, and
+as Mr. Pitt seem'd to take every civility shown to her as a favour, I
+thought this mark of respect to her one manner of returning my
+obligations to him.'[42] But even she, though colourless, seems not to
+have been wholly devoid of the Pitt temperament, though she seems to
+have always been on intimate terms with her family. 'She had,' says Lord
+Camelford, 'neither the beauty of two of her sisters, nor the wit and
+talents of her sister Ann, nor the diabolical dispositions of her sister
+Betty. She meant always, I believe, to do right to the best of her
+judgement, but that judgement was liable to be warped by prejudice, and
+by a peculiar twist in her understanding which made it very dangerous to
+have transactions with her.' The 'peculiar twist,' which even Mary could
+not escape, was innate in most Pitts.
+
+We have kept Ann to the last, though she was third of the sisterhood in
+point of age, being born in 1712, and so four years younger than
+William, whose peculiar pet and crony she was for the earlier part of
+their lives. She was in her way almost as notable as he, and she
+resembled him in genius and temper, as Horace Walpole wittily observed,
+'_comme deux gouttes de feu_.' But drops of fire, did they exist, would
+probably not amalgamate for long, and one would guess that Ann and
+William were too much alike to remain in permanent harmony. Perhaps,
+too, their extreme intimacy made them too well acquainted with each
+other's tender points, a dangerous knowledge when coupled with great
+powers of sarcasm. One might surmise, too, that Pitt's wife, always
+apparently cold to Ann, might be disinclined to encourage the renewal of
+an intimacy which might once more attract William's closest confidence,
+though we have a letter[43] from Ann, dated 1757, in which she speaks
+with nothing less than rapture of Lady Hester's kindness to her. Lady
+Hester's immaculate caligraphy and frigid style give in our easier days
+an impression of distance and austerity.
+
+Ann, when she was little more than twenty, may be said to have entered
+public life by becoming a maid of honour to Queen Caroline, the wife of
+George II. From this moment she became one of that group of
+distinguished women, not blue but brilliant, who adorned England in the
+eighteenth century by their idiosyncrasies as much as by their
+abilities. She was courted and beloved by characters so famous as Gay's
+Duchess of Queensberry and George the Second's Lady Suffolk, and by Mrs.
+Montagu, who was much more blue than brilliant; for her essay on
+Shakespeare, so much lauded by her contemporaries, has long been dead
+and buried. In her dear Mrs. Pitt's conversation, declared this paragon
+of pedants, she saw Minerva without the formal owl on her helmet.
+
+Among men she corresponded with her neighbour, Horace Walpole (who felt
+for her an affection tempered with alarm), Lord Chesterfield, and Lord
+Mansfield. 'She had charms enough to kindle a passion in the celebrated
+Lord Lyttelton,' says Camelford; Dr. Ayscough, a coarse and crafty
+ecclesiastic, whose acquaintance Pitt and Lyttelton had made at Oxford,
+and who was a trusted adviser of Frederick, Prince of Wales, sought her
+in marriage;[44] but there seem no other traces of the tender passion in
+her life. For the whim, if it indeed were not a joke, which made her ask
+Lady Suffolk to assist her to secure the hand of Lord Bath (then about
+seventy, when she herself was forty-six), hardly comes under that
+description. Ann was, indeed, made rather for admiration than for love.
+Bolingbroke, who called William 'Sublimity Pitt,' called Ann 'Divinity
+Pitt.'[45] But she was, one may gather, destitute of beauty,[46] and
+her vigorous originality of character and conversation inspired, we
+suspect, more awe than affection. The delightful sprightliness of youth
+is apt with age or encouragement to sour into a blistering insolence,
+and Ann had all the sarcastic powers of her brother. For example,
+Chesterfield calling on her in his later life complained of decay. 'I
+fear,' he said, 'that I am growing an old woman.' 'I am glad of it,'
+briskly replied Ann, 'I was afraid you were growing an old man, which
+you know is a much worse thing.'[47] An attractive, even fascinating,
+member of society, she was something too formidable for the ordinary man
+to take to his bosom and his hearth. Reviewing her life, we think that
+the real and sole object of her love was her brother William, even when
+her love for the moment vented itself, as love sometimes does, in
+quarrel. Strife was necessary to the Pitts, and when they waged war with
+each other it was no battle of roses. The disputes of lovers and
+relatives, like amicable lawsuits, are apt to become serious affairs,
+and with this race they were conflicts of the tomahawk. Be that as it
+may, and whatever the cause, William and Ann adored each other, kept
+house together, and then quarrelled with prodigious violence and effect.
+At present we are not near that point. Ann is her brother's 'little
+Nan,' 'little Jug,' and he is writing her the delightful letters
+contained in this chapter, written, says Camelford, who preserved them,
+with the passion of a lover rather than that of a brother. To us they
+represent rather the special relation of a brother and sister, when
+affection and intimacy have grown with their growth, from the nursery
+and the schoolroom to riper years, not unfrequently the sweetest and
+tenderest of human connections. Our only regret must be that William did
+not cherish Ann's letters as she did his, for they may well have
+possessed her peculiar charm. 'She equalled her brother, Lord Chatham,'
+writes her nephew, who knew them both well, 'in quickness of parts, and
+exceeded him in wit and in all those nameless graces and attentions by
+which conversation is enlivened and endeared.' At the same time, one may
+reluctantly admit that such letters of hers as survive, give one little
+desire for more. The same, however, may be said of her great brother's
+habitual epistles (for they can be called nothing less); and their
+correspondence together was something apart, the gay and engaging
+eclogue of two young hearts; so that Ann, like William, must have been
+at her best in her early letters to him.
+
+And so we set forth these delightful letters of a lad of twenty-two to
+his favourite sister. They need no comment; of the allusions no
+explanation can now be given or would be worth giving; but the letters
+speak for themselves.[48]
+
+
+ _Boconnock, Jany 3, 1730._
+
+ Dear Nanny,--As you have degraded my sheets From ye rank and
+ Quality of a Letter, merely for Containing a few Innocent Questions,
+ I am determin'd to avoid such rigour for the future by Confining
+ myself to bare narration: first, Then we are to have a ball this
+ week at Mr. Hawky's Child-feast, (a Heathenish Name for the
+ Christian Institution of Baptism), where the Ladies intend to shine
+ most irresistably, and like enfants perdus, thrust themselves in the
+ very front of ye Battle, break some stubborn Tramontanne Hearts, or
+ Die of the spleen upon the spot. The next thing I have to say,
+ (Don't be afraid of a Question) Is, that we set out ye end of the
+ same week, and propose seeing you about a week after our departure.
+ I'l say no more, least I should forget ye restrictions I have Laid
+ myself under and launch out into some Impious enquiries that don't
+ suit my sex. Adieu, Dearest Nanny, till I have the pleasure of
+ seeing you at Bath.[49]
+
+
+The next letter is from Swallowfield, one of the Pitt houses. Ayscough
+has proposed to Ann. He is a favourite butt of William's, who seems to
+rejoice in his discomfiture.
+
+
+ _Swallowfeild, Sep. ye 29th, 1730._
+
+ I am quite tired of waiting for a letter from my Dear Nanny, and am
+ determin'd by way of revenge to fatigue you as much by obliging you
+ to read a very long letter from myself, as you have me with the
+ eager expectation of receiving one from you. The excuse you assign'd
+ for not doing it sooner fills me with apprehensions for your health;
+ Is it that you still converse only with Doctor Bave,[50] or that you
+ have already changed the old Physician for the young Galant? Is it
+ the want of conversation That denies you matter, or the entire
+ engagement to it that won't allow you time for a letter? Be it as it
+ will, I flatter myself into a beleif of the Latter, chusing rather
+ to be very angry with you for your neglect of me, than sincerely
+ afflicted for your want of health. I desire I may know from yourself
+ what advances you make towards your recovery; you never can want a
+ subject to write to me upon, while you have it in your power to
+ entertain me with a prospect of seeing you perfectly restored to
+ health, and in consequence of that to the sprightly exertion of your
+ understanding and full display (as my Lady Lynn elegantly has it) of
+ your Primitive Beauties. Why shou'd I mention Ayscough's overthrow!
+ That is a conquest perhaps of a nature not so brilliant as to touch
+ your heart with much exultation; But lett me tell you, a man of his
+ wit in one's suite has no Ill air; You may hear enough of eyes and
+ flames and such gentle flows of tender nonsense from every Fop that
+ can remember, but I can assure you Child, a man can think that
+ declares his Passion by saying Tis not a sett of Features I admire,
+ &c. Such a Lover is the Ridiculous Skew,[51] who Instead of
+ whispering his soft Tale to the woods and lonely Rocks, proclaims to
+ all the world he loves Miss Nanny--Fâth (_sic_)--with the same
+ confidence He wou'd pronounce an Heretical Sermon at St. Mary's. I
+ must quit your admirer to enquire after the condition of the Colonel
+ and his Lady,[52] and to assure' em of my most hearty wishes for
+ Their health and happiness. I beg leave to repeat the same to Miss
+ Lenard, who I hope will recruit her spirits after so much affliction
+ with ye holsome Application of a Fiddle. I shall communicate to you
+ next Post a Translation of an Elegy of Tibullus By Lyttelton, who
+ orders me to say it was done for you:[53] I shall then be able to
+ say whether I go to Cornwall or no, so that you may know how to
+ direct to me.
+
+ I need not say what you are to do with the hair enclosed to you from
+ Mrs. Pitt. Adieu dear Nanny.
+
+
+The next letter is from Blandford, where the writer is stopping on his
+way to Boconnoc, which he gives as his address at the end of the letter.
+He is still occupied with his sister's career as a flirt.
+
+
+ _Blanford: Oct. ye 13th. 1730._
+
+ As we mutually complain'd of the silence of Each other, so I
+ conclude we mutually have Forgiven it: But had I continued it, my
+ Dear, Till I had something more entertaining to talk of Than an
+ execrable journey to Cornwall, perhaps You might not have had much
+ reason to complain of me. I have not had a minute's pleasure from
+ my own thoughts since I left Swallowfeild, till now I give them up
+ entirely to you, and Paint you to myself in the hands of some
+ agreeable Partner, as happy as the new way of wooing can make you. I
+ can not help suggesting To you here a little grave advice, which is,
+ not to lett your glorious Thirst of Conquest transport You so far,
+ as to lose your health in acquiring Hearts: I know I am a bold man
+ to dissuade One from dansing a great deal that danses very
+ gracefully; but once more I repeat, beware of shining too much;
+ content yourself to be healthy first, even tho you suspend your
+ triumphs a week or ten days. I beg I may not be misconstrued To
+ insinuate anything here in favour of my own sex, or to serve the
+ sinister ends of an envious Sister or two; no; I scorn such mean
+ artifices. In God's Name, when the waters have had their Effect,
+ give no Quarter, faites main basse upon all you meet, ŕ coup
+ d'eventelle, ŕ coup d'Oeil: spare neither age nor condition: but
+ like an Unskilfull Generall don't begin to take the Feild till your
+ military stores are provided and your magazines well furnish'd. Thus
+ Have I acquitted myself not only as an able but honest Counsellour,
+ and ventured to represent to you your true Interest, tho' never so
+ distastefull. Adieu, my Dear Nanny, till you renew our Conversation
+ by a speedy letter. My sincere respects to the Col. and family.
+
+ _Boconnock Near Bodmin._
+
+
+Next comes the letter in which he curses Boconnoc, but only because of
+its remoteness. He lives, it may be presumed, at the family house from
+economy. But he is not at ease about Ann's health, and longs to be at
+Bath to be with her.
+
+
+ _Boconnock. Novr ye 15th 1730._
+
+ I read all my Dear Nanny's letters with so much pleasure, that I
+ grow more and more out of temper with ye remoteness of this cursed
+ hiding place, where The distance of some hundred Miles denies me the
+ Repetition of it so often as I eagerly desire. But as much as I am
+ pleas'd with the prettiness of your style and manner of writing, I
+ cant help feeling a sensible uneasiness to hear no news of your
+ amendment; cou'd my Dear Girl add that to them, they wou'd give me a
+ satisfaction that wou'd bear some proportion to The degree of your
+ Esteem, you convince me I possess. We are all sollicitous to hear
+ Doctor Baves opinion of your case, which I beg you will not fail to
+ send me in your next letter, You will before this reaches you, have
+ recd a letter from my Brother, which I hope will give you perfect
+ satisfaction with regard to your further demands. As I shall not go
+ to London Before my Brother, it will not be absolutely in my Power
+ to see you in my way: I am not however without hopes of prevailing
+ upon him to go from Blanford to Bath, which is not above thirty
+ Miles. Beleive me I shall have it at heart to make you this visit,
+ having two such powerful motives to it, as my Own Pleasure and
+ yours. All proofs of your affection To me are highly agreeable, and
+ I am willing to measure the value you may set upon mine to you, By
+ the same favourable standard. Be assured therefore I shall lett slip
+ no occasion of giving what I shall in my turn receive with infinite
+ pleasure: Pray assure Colonel Lanoe and his family of my good
+ wishes; and let us know what benefit they receive from the waters. I
+ have time for no more. Adieu My Dear Girl.[54]
+
+
+He was now apparently with his regiment at Northampton, though he was
+not gazetted till February.
+
+
+ _Northton. Jan. 7, 1731._
+
+ I am just in my Dear Nanny's Condition, when she tells me she sat
+ down determin'd to write tho' she had Nothing to say: but I know not
+ how it comes to pass, One has a pleasure in saying and hearing very
+ nothings, where one loves: while I have my paper before me I Fancy
+ myself in company with you, and while you read my letters, you hear
+ me chattering to you, tis at least an interruption to working or
+ reading, that serves to diversify Things a little, to be forced to
+ run your eyes over a side or Two of paper; tho' it says nothing at
+ all. I remember, when I saw you last, you had a thought of reading
+ and Translating Voiture's letters: I beg you will take him up as
+ soon as you have got through this of mine, To recompense you for the
+ dullest of Letters, what will you Have me do? I come from two hours
+ muzzy conversation To a house full of swearing Butchers and Drunken
+ Butter women, and in short all the blessings of a market day: In
+ such a situation what can the wit of man suggest to him? Oh for the
+ restless Tongue of Dear little Jug! She never knows the painful
+ state of Silence In the midst of uproar: for my Part I think I cou'd
+ write a better letter in a storm at sea, or in my own way, at a
+ Bombardment, than in my present situation. I won't have this called
+ a Conversation: it shall pass for a mute interview, adieu my Dearest
+ Nanny: preserve your health is ye only word of consequence I can
+ say to-night.
+
+ Compliments to my Sis. Pitt, and all my Friends that come in your
+ way.[55]
+
+
+Now, for the only time in his life perhaps, we find him engaged
+reluctantly in drinking bouts, the necessary discipline of a military
+mess in those days. He refers to the amiability of Charles Feilding in a
+later letter.
+
+
+ _Northton. Febry ye 9. 1731._
+
+ I have been a monstrous time out of my Dearest Nanny's Company; the
+ date of your Letter before me, Me fait de sanglantes reproches: I
+ say nothing in my own behalf, but Frankly confess, in aggravation of
+ my silence, that I have neglected you for a course of drunken
+ conversation, which I have some days been in. The service wou'd be
+ the most inactive life in ye world if Charles Feilding was out of
+ it; As long as he is with us, we seldom remain long without pretty
+ smart Action: I am just releiv'd by one night's rest, from an
+ attaque that lasted sixteen hours, but as a Heroe should never
+ boast, I have done ye state some service and they know't--no more
+ of that.
+
+ What shall I talk of to my dear Girl? I have told her I love Her, in
+ every shape I cou'd think of: we'l converse in French and tell one
+ another ye same things under the Dress of Novelty. Mon aimable
+ Fille, rien ne m'est si doux que de recevoir de votre part les
+ marques d'une ardente amitié, si ce n'est de vous en donner
+ moi-meme. I did not think I cou'd have wrote a sentence so easily,
+ mais les paroles obeissent toujours aux sentiments du coeur. Let me
+ tell you once more, in plain English, your letter was infinitely
+ pretty; you may leave off Voiture whenever you please. I hope little
+ Jug is still talking at Boconnock; how Fares it with my Statira, my
+ angry Dear? I can think of nothing so likely to bring her into
+ Temper, as telling Her, her Skew will soon revisit ye groves of
+ Boconnock, where they may pass ye Long Day, and tend a few sheep
+ together. I beg she'l accept of ye following stanza I met with by
+ chance in some french poesy, and put a Tune to it, which She may
+ warble in honour of her gentle loveing shepherd:
+
+ Dans ces Lieux solitaires
+ Daphnis est de retour:
+ Deesse de Cythere
+ Celebre ce grand jour:
+ Rapellez sur ces rives
+ Les amours envolés,
+ Les graces fugitives
+ et les Ris exilés.
+
+ my Love and services to all Freinds: My Brother gives me ye
+ pleasure of hearing my Sistr Pitt is very well: pray make my
+ apologies for not writing to her.
+
+ Adio Anima mia bella,
+ Dolce speranza mia.
+
+ WM PITT.
+
+
+He has now come to London apparently to kiss hands for his commission.
+How little George II. can have realised what his relations were to be
+with the raw young cornet.
+
+
+ _London: March ye 5: 1731._
+
+ I thank my Dearest Nanny for her Letter Though it abused me, I think
+ without Reasonable Grounds: tis true I dont write so often as I wish
+ to see you, yet I won't allow I have let our conversation suffer any
+ considerable Interruption. I Have had no opportunity yet of
+ cultivating any farther acquaintance with Mr Molinox than by
+ receiving his name and leaving Mine: I shall need no other
+ inducement to his Freindship than the presumption of his civility to
+ you, which your letter gives me reason to think: I shall ever esteem
+ Any Man deserving of my regard who loves In any degree what so
+ thoroughly merits and possesses my Heart as my Dear Girl. I have the
+ pleasure of telling you my Commission is sign'd and I have Kiss'd
+ hands for it, so that my Country Quarters won't be Cornwall this
+ Summer. You are like to have Company soon with you, Hollins having
+ ordered my Sister Pitt the Bath immediately: what becomes of the two
+ poor vestals I dont yet know. the Town produces nothing new, as the
+ Place you are in I suppose, produces absolutely nothing at all: kill
+ some of your time by writing often to one who will always contribute
+ to make you pass it more pleasurably, when in his Power. Adieu,
+ recover yr health, and preserve Chearfulness enough to give your
+ Understanding a fair light.[56]
+
+ Yrs most sensibly
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+The next letter was written in the midst of what would now be called a
+bear-fight, carried on apparently in the room of the demure Lyttelton.
+
+
+ _London. March ye 13: 1731._
+
+ I am now lock'd into George's room; the girls Thundering at the door
+ as if Heaven and Earth would come together: I am certainly the
+ warmest Brother, or the coldest Gallant In the Universe, to suffer
+ the gentle Impertinencies the sportly Sollicitations of two girls
+ not quite despicable without emotion, and bestow my Time and spirits
+ upon a Sister: But in effect the thing is not so strange or
+ unreasonable, for every Man may have Girls worthy his attention, but
+ few, sisters so conversible as my Dear Nanny. Tis impossible to say
+ much, amidst this rocking of the doors Chairs and tables: I fancy
+ myself in a storm Of the utmost danger and horror; and were I really
+ in one, I would not cease to think of my Dear Girl, till I lost my
+ fears and Trepidations in the object of my tenderest care and
+ sincerest zeal. let the winds roar, and the big Torrent burst! I
+ won't leave my Nanny for any Lady of you all, but with the warmest
+ assurance of unalterable affection, Adieu.[57]
+
+
+He is now once more in country quarters, grievously hipped. The allusion
+to the barmaid 'who young at the bar is just learning to score' reads
+like a line from some forgotten song. In his despair he threatens to get
+drunk.
+
+
+ _Northampton April ye 9th. 1731._
+
+ After neglecting my Dear Girl so many Posts In the joys of London, I
+ should be deservedly Punished by the Loss of your correspondence now
+ I very much stand in need of it: I am come from an agreeable set of
+ acquaintance in Town to a Place, where the wings of Gallantry must
+ Be terribly clip'd, and can hope to soar No higher than to Dolly,
+ who young at the Bar is just Learning to score--what must I do? my
+ head is not settled enough to study; nor my heart light enough to
+ find amusement In doing nothing. I have in short no resource But
+ flying to the conversation of my distant Freinds and supplying the
+ Loss of the jolis entretiens I have left behind by telling my greifs
+ and hearing myself pity'd. I shall every Post go near to waft a sigh
+ from Quarters to the Bath, which you shall rally me very prettyly
+ upon, suppose me in Love, laugh at my cruel fate a little, then bid
+ me hope for a Fair wind and better weather. I entreat you Be very
+ trifling and badine, send me witty letters or I must chear my heart
+ at the expense Of my head and get drunk with bad Port To kill time.
+ My sister is by this time with You and I hope the Girls: my Love to
+ her and bid her send away her husband and drink away. my spirits
+ flag, et je n'en puis plus, adieu.
+
+
+One would guess, but one can only guess, that the following letter
+referred to some project of marrying William, which Ann dreaded as
+causing a separation from her.
+
+
+ _Northampton. May ye 21: 1731._
+
+ What shall I say to my Dearest Nanny for sinking into a tenderness
+ below ye dignity of her spirit and Genius? I sat down with a
+ resolution to scold you off for a little Loving Fool, but Find
+ myself upon examination your very own Brother and as fond of
+ receiving such testimonies of the Excess of yr affection, as you
+ are of Bestowing them: t'wou'd be more becoming ye Firmness of a
+ man to reprove you a little upon this occasion, and advise you to
+ fortify your Mind against any such Separation as you so kindly
+ apprehend, but as your fears are, I believe at present Groundless, I
+ chuse rather To talk to you like an affectionate Freind, than a
+ stern Philosopher and return every Fear you Feel for me with a most
+ ardent wish for your Happiness: Beleive me t'will wound my Quiet to
+ be forced to do anything to disturb yours, But shou'd such an event
+ as you are alarm'd at, arrive, your own reason will soon convince
+ your tender Fears, there is but one Party for me to take: All the
+ Dictates of Prudence, all the Considerations of Interest must
+ determine me to it: But I am Insensibly drawn in to prove I ought to
+ do, what There is no appearance I shall have in my Power to do,
+ therefore my Dear Girl, suspend your Inquietudes, as I will my
+ Arguments, and think I Long to see you in ye full enjoyment of yr
+ Health and Spirits, which I hope to be able to do early in August.
+ Adieu my Dearest Nanny, Love me and preserve your own happiness.
+
+ I never recd a Line from my Sister Pitt.
+
+ But will write to her soon. I hope she is well.[58]
+
+
+This next letter is taken up with poking fun at Ayscough. The 'poor
+nuns' would be Pitt's sisters, whom he calls elsewhere the 'poor
+vestals.'[59]
+
+
+ _North'ton June ye 17: 1731._
+
+ My Dear Nanny's letter from Bath gave me so many Pleasures that I
+ don't know which to thank her for first: the Prettiness of it tells
+ me she has more sense than her sex, the affection of it declares she
+ is more capable of Freindship Than her sex: and to compleat my joy,
+ It assures me she no longer wants her health: which may Heaven
+ continue to my Dear Girl! If anything can make me devout, t'is my
+ Zeal for your happiness: However don't let the Parson[60] know this
+ Prayer escaped me for fear she (_sic_) shou'd be malicious enough to
+ Tell me of it in company some time or other at Quarters. I am glad
+ he is with you: he will prove as good an enlivener of the spirits
+ and invigourate the conversation amongst you, as much as Bath waters
+ do The Blood. Be sure not to suffer him to be Indolent and withdraw
+ his Wit from ye Service of ye Company: I know ye Dog sometimes
+ grows tired of being laugh't at: But no matter: insist upon his
+ being a Man of humour every Day but Sunday. I expect you will all
+ Three Lose your reputations in ye country for him: and indeed
+ there's no Intimacy with one of His Cloath without too much room for
+ Suspicion: But as you don't expect to make your fortune there, The
+ thing is not so deplorable. You will be mutually Happy in meeting
+ the Poor Nuns again: I very much fear I shall not partake of that
+ pleasure so soon as August: Beleive me I long for nothing more than
+ to see you all well and happy: I break off ye Conversation with
+ great reluctance To go to Supper: Adieu Dearest Nanny.
+
+
+Ann was now to be a maid of honour and venture on the new world of a
+court. So she asks advice of her sage young brother, and he gives his
+admonitions in French, probably from fear of the Post Office.
+
+
+ Undated.
+
+ Vous voulez que je vous dise, mon aimable, ce que je pense de la vie
+ que vous allez mener ŕ la cour; votre Interest, qui me touche de
+ prčs, m'y fait faire mille Reflexions: en voici mon Idée. Le cour me
+ paroit une mer peu aisée ŕ naviger, mais qui ne manque pas d'ouvrir
+ aux mariniers bien entendűs le commerce le plus avantageux; j'entens
+ l'art de connoitre le monde et de s'en faire connoitre agreablement:
+ Un Esprit habile sans artifice, et un coeur gai sans legereté vous
+ rendent ce voiage pleins d'agrements et de plaisirs, pendant que la
+ vertu qui ne se dement jamais, est l'Etoile fixe qui vous empeche de
+ vous y egarer.
+
+ En effet n'est-il pas ŕ souhaiter pour une Personne qu'on aime, et
+ dont on connoit bien les forces, de la voir exposée ŕ un tel point,
+ qu'elle ne puisse s'en tirer qu'avec le secours du bon sens et de la
+ Prudence? Ce sont les difficultés qui donnent au merite tout son
+ jour, et souvent elles en font naitre: Vous en avez, mon aimable, et
+ il ne s'agit que de le mettre en oeuvre: mais voici ce qui vous
+ embarasse: La Modestie, qui en est une Considerable, cache mille
+ autres vertus en se montrant toujours elle-meme; Elle ne laisse pas
+ en cela de faire un peu le Tyran: elle nous fait souvenir de ces
+ meres qui par un excez de Pruderie derobent leurs Filles aux yeux du
+ monde, toutes aimables qu'elles soient, mais que cette Modestie
+ songe ŕ prendre quelque fois le Parti de la retraite, et qu'elle
+ scache qu'on ne la regrette gueres, quand on voit quelque belle
+ vertu briller ŕ sa place.
+
+ ŕ mon avis il n'y a rien de si outrée que l'idée que de certaines
+ gens se sont fait de la cour des Princes: Ils ne s'y figurent que
+ l'Envie et ses noirceurs, la Perfidie, et les suites funestes de
+ l'amour dereglé: ils en enlaidissent tellement la ressemblance qu'on
+ ne la reconnoit plus: pour vous, ma chčre, Ie ne vous conseille ni
+ de vous troubler la cervelle d'affreuses Chimeres, ni de vous
+ endormir tout ŕ fait a l'ombre de la securité. Pour ce qui est de
+ l'amour, il seroit ridicule d'entreprendre de vous en Tracer le
+ Portrait, Il ne se fera comprendre que par Luimeme: en un mot, qu'il
+ soit un Dieu bienfaissant ou qu'il ne soit qu'un Demon malin, donnez
+ vous garde de l'offenser, car, effectivement, c'est un Personnage ŕ
+ represailles: enfin en quelque caractere que vous le voyez, Il vous
+ le faudra respecter: dans l'un vous l'aimerez comme fidele
+ chretienne; dans l'autre, reverez le afin qu'il ne vous fasse point
+ de mal. adieu ma tres chere.
+
+
+William has now set out on his foreign tour, of which we caught some
+glimpses in letters to his mother. We have already had his letter to his
+mother from Paris.
+
+
+ _Paris May ye 3rd: N.S. 1733._
+
+ I don't know whether my Dearest Nanny is not at this moment angry
+ with me for not writing sooner; But cou'd you see the hurry this
+ Place throws a man into upon his arrival, you wou'd rather wonder I
+ write at all. I have done nothing since I came to Paris, but run up
+ and down and see; so that beleive me it is a sort of Novelty to set
+ down and think: Tis with pleasure I return to you from The variety
+ of fine sights which have engaged me; my eyes have been long enough
+ entertain'd, to give my Heart leisure to indulge itself in a short
+ conversation with my Dear Girl. It may sound oddly to say I love you
+ best at a great distance, but surely absence best shows us the Value
+ of a Thing, by making us feel how much we want it: I find already I
+ shall have many vacant hours that wou'd be agreably fill'd up with
+ the company of something one esteems; but I must comfort myself ŕ la
+ francoise, le bannis la Sagesse et la Raison; c'est de notre vie le
+ Poison. I shall set out for Besancon in franche comté In three or
+ four days, where I shall stay till autumn, write often and direct to
+ me chez Monsr Alexandre Banquier dans la Rue St. Appoline Prčs de
+ la Porte St. Denis ŕ Paris who will Take care to send them to me. I
+ hope you like your way of Life better every Day; I don't know
+ whether you may not be said to be travelling too; France is hardly
+ newer to me than Court was to you; may you find the Country mend
+ upon you the farther you advance in it: bon voyage ma chere, and may
+ you find at your journey's end as good an inn as matrimony can
+ afford you. I am
+
+ Your most afft Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ My Love to Kitty and Harriot. I cou'd not write to all and you are
+ the only one I was sure to find.
+
+ I write this Post to Skew; if he is not in Town, enquire at his
+ Lodgings for ye letter and send it. I hope my Brother reced my
+ Letter.[61]
+
+
+The next letter leaves him at Besançon, the ancient capital of
+Franche-Comté, wrested from the Spaniards in 1678, and now become a
+French fortress, famous for its silver watches. Here Pitt loses his
+heart.
+
+
+ _Besancon. June the 5: 1733. N.S._
+
+ I receiv'd my Dear Nanny's letter yesterday: it has no Date, but I
+ imagine by some of the Contents it has been a tedious time upon the
+ road. The direction I left was a very proper one and particular
+ enough, Alexander being generally known at Paris, so that the street
+ of his abode is unnecessary: however To be very sure of meeting with
+ no disappointment In a pleasure I desire to indulge myself in as
+ often as you'l let me, direct to me at Alexander's dans la rue St.
+ Appoline prčs de la Porte St. Denis ŕ Paris, who will carefully
+ transmit all letters to me, wherever I am. The pleasure you give me
+ in the account of Kitty's recovery, is disagreably accompanied with
+ that of Poor Harriot's Relapse into an ill State of Health; which I
+ too much fear will never be removed till her mind is made a little
+ easy: I never think of her but with great uneasiness, my tenderness
+ for her begins to turn to sorrow and affliction; I consider her in a
+ great degree lost, and buried almost in an unsuccessfull Ingagement:
+ You have all my warmest wishes for your happiness and prosperity. I
+ persuade myself you are in the high road to them, make the best of
+ your way I beg of you; and contrive to finish your Travels by the
+ time of my return. I can say but little of Besancon yet: The Place
+ is externally pretty enough how it will prove upon a more intimate
+ knowledge of it, I can't say. My Lord Walgrave was so good as to
+ procure me letters For the Commandant and a Lady of this Place who
+ passes for the finest Woman here. I have had the honour to dine with
+ her at her campagne, where I was very handsomely regaled: what
+ ressource Her acquaintance will be, I shall be better able to judge
+ after another visit or two.
+
+ Skew hinted something to me concerning Kitty, which he said was not
+ quite chimerical. If it be any suite of my Mother's project for her
+ I doubt the Success. I have not Heard a word from my Brother, tho' I
+ have wrote to him three times. If he han't received them all let him
+ know it.
+
+ I find Sir James Gray here, who is a very pretty sort of Man and
+ once more my schoolfellow; between my letters and the acquaintance
+ he has made in the Town, we shall be of some Use to one another.
+ Adieu.
+
+ Your most afft Freind and Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I wish you joy of Lord William's Match.
+
+
+He is next found at Marseilles, where he discovers that he is still sore
+from his love affair at Besançon.
+
+
+ _Marseilles, sep: ye 1: 1733._
+
+ j'ai honte ŕ regarder la datte de votre derniere lettre, ŕ laquelle
+ je vai faire reponse: vous me dites ma Chere, que vous etes fort
+ aise que vos lettres me fassent plaisir, d'autant plus que vous
+ croiez en avoir obligation plutot ŕ ma prevention pour vous, qu'ŕ
+ votre merite. Qu'y a-til de plus obligeant Pour moi ou de plus
+ injuste pour vous meme?
+
+ Il est vrai que je vous aime ŕ un point qui passe bien souvent dans
+ le monde pour aveuglement: mais je prétens vous aimer en
+ connoisseur, je veux que le gout et la raison fassent ici ce que
+ l'entetement fait d'ordinaire ailleurs. ne guerirez vous jamais de
+ cette modestie outrée? de grace ne faites plus Tort ŕ vous meme par
+ une humilité qui n'est pas de ce bas lieu, et cessez de louer mon
+ amitié aux depens de mon gout.
+
+ Vous voiez par la datte de ceci que je suis ŕ Marseilles, j'y suis
+ depuis deux jours et conte d'en partir dans deux ou trois jours pour
+ Monpelier, oů nous ferons un sejour ŕ peu pres comme celui que nous
+ ferons ici: je crois passer l'hiver a Luneville, et de[62] a Lyon
+ par Geneve et le long du Rhin ŕ Strasbourg d'oů je me rendrai en
+ Lorraine. je viens de quitter Besancon avec infiniment de regrets:
+ voulez vous que je me confesse ŕ vous? j'y avois un plus fort
+ attachement que je ne croiois, avant que de me Trouver sur le Point
+ de partir: tant il est vrai que l'on ne sent jamais si bien le prix
+ d'une chose Que lorsque il la faut perdre. Nous y avions de fort
+ aimables connoissances, et je trouve presentement ŕ plus de soixante
+ Lieues de loin, que j'y aurois passer l'hyver volontiers, je n'en ai
+ pas tout ŕ travers du coeur, mais toutefois j'en ai. adieu ma chere,
+ faites moi d'abord reponse, et imputez mon silence passé ŕ toute
+ autre cause que ŕ un refroidissement pour vous. je suis avec tout la
+ tendresse du monde
+
+ votre affectionné Serviteur
+ W. PITT.[63]
+
+
+And now he has arrived at Luneville, the city of the moon, once
+dedicated to the worship of Diana, but at this time devoted to the
+manufacture of glass and pottery. In four years it was to be enlivened
+by the gay court of Stanislas; but it was now a provincial town,
+occupied provisionally by the French in defiance of its absentee Duke,
+Francis, afterwards Emperor of Germany. Pitt is not yet cured of his
+passion. It is painful to him to revive it by giving a description of
+the lady, and he seems to feel her want of noble birth as if he had
+contemplated marriage.
+
+
+ _Luneville ce 12: d'octob. N.S. 1733._
+
+ Votre lettre me réjouit fort en m'apprenant que votre vie est
+ heureuse: quand vous ne me manderiez que cela une fois la semaine,
+ votre commerce me donneroit toute la satisfaction du monde: mais
+ d'ailleurs il y'a, mon aimable, un tour agreable dans tout ce que
+ vous me dites, qui me rend votre conversation charmante. La
+ tendresse de ses amis, en quelque expression que ce soit, nous
+ touche; mais quand elle se presente ŕ nous d'une maniere aisée et
+ delicate, l'esprit participe ŕ la satisfaction que la coeur en
+ recoit.
+
+ Vous me demandez le Portrait de la Belle: faites vous bien attention
+ ŕ quoi vous m'allez engager? je commence ŕ respirer et vous voulez me
+ replonger dans les douleurs que m'a causées sa perte, en m'obligeant
+ de renouveller dans mon esprit les traits qui s'en etoient emparés.
+ L'absence est un grand Medecin: je me suis si bien trouvé de ses
+ remedes que je ne desespere pas d'en pouvoir revenir: laissez lui
+ faire encore un peu et je vous ferai le Portrait, que vous me
+ demandez, assez ŕ l'aise. Cependant trouvez bon que je vous en fasse
+ seulement un crayon (ŕ la hate?) en vous disant que, quoique son
+ coeur fűt certainement neuf, son esprit ne l'etoit point (j'en parle
+ comme de feu ma Flamme) que sa Taille etoit grande et des plus
+ parfaites, son air simple avec quelque chose de noble; Pour ses
+ Traits je n'y touche pas: suffit que vous sachiez que ce fut de ces
+ beautés d'un grand effet, et que sa Physionomie prononcât quelque
+ chose des qualités d'une ame admirable ne vous attendez pas pour le
+ present Que je vous en donne un detail si exact que vous en puissiez
+ la reconnoittre si elle se trouvoit sur votre chemin: je n'ose m'y
+ laisser aller davantage: nous en parlerons un jour plus amplement:
+ mais avant de quitter son chapitre il faut que je vous dise tout:
+ Elle n'a point de titre ni de grand nom qui impose; et c'est lŕ le
+ diable. C'est simplement Madamoiselle de ---- fille cadette de Monsr
+ de ---- ecuyer ŕ Besancon: Religieuse, Vous avez bien dit que j'en
+ parlerai volontiers: de quoi vous avisez vous de mettre un homme sur
+ le chapitre de ses amours? Vous saviez que quand on y est, on ne
+ scait jamais oů finir, et que vous vous exposez ŕ essuier tout ce qui
+ vient au bout de sa plume, voila trop parler de mes affaires: parlons
+ un peu des votres: faisons des demandes par rapport ŕ certain peuple
+ connu sous le titre d'amants. Parler franchement et donnez m'en des
+ nouvelles, vous ne scauriez ętre si content que vous l'ętes so vous
+ n'aviez range quelque coeur sous vos lois: adieu: aimons nous
+ toujours et songeons a nous render heureux.
+
+ W. PITT.
+
+ No one can be more sensible than I am of the esteem of Charles
+ Feilding, nor more disposed to do justice to the amiableness of his
+ character.
+
+
+Six weeks afterwards all trace of his love affair has disappeared; it is
+not the mere cessation of pain, it is oblivion.
+
+
+ _Luneville. Nov. ye 22: 1733._
+
+ Les vérités obligeantes que vous me dites, ne me sont pas seulement
+ cheres par le fond de tendresse qu'elles me font vous connoitre pour
+ moi, elles le sont au dernier point par la maniere agreable dont
+ vous les tournez: j'aime autant que votre coeur s'explique avec moi
+ en bon Anglois qu'en bon francois, d'autant plus que ce qu'on dit en
+ sa langue maternelle paroit encore plus Naturel, et c'est la ce qui
+ fait le principal merite des lettres d'amitié, je suis charmé, mon
+ aimable Bonne, de l'air content dont vous m'ecrivez, j'ai un plaisir
+ aussi sensible ŕ me figurer que vous ętes heureuse, que vous etes
+ gaie, que j'en pourrois repentir moimęme de tout ce que la joie et
+ la gaieté me pourrait offrir: je vous suis present que si l'etois
+ Dans le cabinet ŕ Cote de votre Toilette. Je n'ai plus rien ŕ vous
+ dire de Mademoiselle.
+
+ C'etoit de ces flammes passageres, un eclair qui a passé si vite
+ qu'il n'en reste pas le moindre vestige. j'ai oublié jusque au
+ portrait que je vous en ai fait: n'allez pas m'accuser de legereté,
+ voila comme il faut ętre en voiage: je me fais un fond de constance
+ pour mon retour. Souvenez vous de garder votre parole en me faisant
+ la confidence de vos premieres amours: que le terme ne vous choque
+ pas, je l'entends avec les circonstances qu'il faut. Je ne doute pas
+ que vous ne m'en fassiez bientot, au moins si vous avez autant de
+ franchise que je me l'imagine. adieu, ma chere, je vous--(torn)--de
+ terribles bagatelles: mais je ne'en scai rien--(torn)
+
+ Votre tres affectionné
+ W. PITT.
+
+ If Miss Molly Lyttelton is in Town, I wish you may see one another
+ often, and make a Friendship.[64]
+
+
+The two following letters contain obscure allusions, which, so far as we
+can now interpret them, appear to indicate that Thomas Pitt at any rate
+was at this time a ministerialist and supporter of Sir Robert Walpole.
+
+
+ _Newbury Octbr ye 24: 1734._
+
+ Dear Nanny,--You may conceive I was a good deal surprised at Mr
+ Harrison's modest proposal: I thought it indeed so monstrous, that
+ ye best way of treating it was not to vouchsafe it any answer,
+ especially as it did not come immediately from Him: I cannot
+ conceive how poor Harriot cou'd think of employing Herself in such a
+ message, or at least that she wou'd not understand my neglect in
+ answering it, to be (what it is) a thorough contempt of the Noble
+ Colonel's ridiculous offer. My first astonishment is a little abated
+ by hearing he was encouraged to it by my Brother at Paris, I mean my
+ astonishment as to him; For the latter, I have done wondering at
+ any the most Inscrutable of his proposed designs: it must be
+ confess'd, this last (if true) is not inferiour to any of the
+ brightest passages of his conduct: removeing me to bring in a Person
+ declared in Opposition, and who it is proposed shou'd pay me,
+ instead of reimbursing him his expences at Oakhampton. I can talk no
+ more of him; I'll endeavour to put him out of my mind till January.
+
+ I am extremely pleased to see the time of my deliverance from my Inn
+ approach, a month more will bring me to you, when I shall be as
+ happy as the endless disapointments and difficulties I have to
+ encounter, will allow me: all I have of happiness is confined to you
+ and my friend George; you may easily judge of my Impatience to be
+ with you; I suppose he's still at Stowe. I am pleased with ye
+ honour done me to (sic) Lady Suffolk, the more as I am sure it gave
+ you pleasure. Adieu Dear Nanny.
+
+ Most affecy yrs
+ W. PITT.[65]
+
+
+ _Newbury. Nov: ye 7. 1734._
+
+ Dear Nanny,--I have been persecuted with a succession of little
+ impertinent complaints; I have been deliver'd some time of my broken
+ tooth, by the most dextrous operator, I beleive, in the World, but
+ am at present in my Room with a sore throat, which is very
+ troublesome to me. I wou'd not have You be very uneasy at Harrison's
+ proposal; it appears to me, as it did at first, of no consequence,
+ and deserves being spoken of only for the Impertinence of it. I am
+ persuaded it is no more than an absurd, sudden thought of ye
+ Coll's; 'tis hardly possible my Brother shou'd have given his
+ consent to it as a foundation for Harrison to proceed upon with me.
+ My Brother's Interest no doubt do's not persuade him to such a
+ bargain between Harrison and me: if he intends to consult that, in
+ the disposition of this seat in Parliament, he must certainly rather
+ oblige me to accept of satisfaction for the loss of it by something
+ he may obtain for me, and chuse a man more agreeable to Sir Robt.
+ than Harrison, who will put him two thousand pounds in Pocket: I am
+ very much deceived if I hear any thing more of it. You misunderstood
+ me in thinking I had given no sort of answer to the proposal. I was,
+ I confess, little sollicitous about giving a speedy one or a very
+ particular one: I said to Harriot in general that I was extremely
+ surprised at the offer: that an answer was almost needless for the
+ Coll., if he had thought of it since, must be able to guess what
+ answer it deserved. that I was sorry she had employ'd herself at all
+ in so strange a Proposal, in short something to that effect. I
+ apprehend no difficulties from this affair; if I have any to
+ encounter they'l come from another Quarter. I wrote to a certain
+ Gentleman[66] above a month ago, without answer, so judge of his
+ kind disposition towards me. my Lord Pembroke is very good in
+ leaving it in my Power to come to Town, if I found it necessary. I
+ have at present no thoughts of making use of his Indulgence. I want
+ to see you more than you can imagine. Adieu:
+
+ Yrs most affecly
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+Lady Suffolk, Ann's principal friend at Court, has now retired from an
+ungrateful servitude. The loss must have been great to Ann, who required
+more than most an experienced and sagacious friend at her elbow.
+
+
+ _Newbury Nov: ye 17: 1734._
+
+ Dear Nanny,--I was persuaded my Lady Suffolk's removal from court
+ wou'd affect you in the Manner you tell me it dos: Your Friend
+ Mrs Herbert, where I dined the day before yesterday, was speaking
+ of the thing with concern and was sure it wou'd touch you, as much
+ as any Body: your Greifs are so much mine that it wou'd be needless
+ to tell you I am sorry for your Loss; I foresee a very disagreeable
+ consequence to you from this change, which is, that your Friendship
+ with Her may be charg'd upon you as a crime, and what was before a
+ support may now be a prejudice to you. Harriot's complaint is far
+ from giving me any uneasiness, I think nothing but such a necessity
+ wou'd have made Them do what they indisputably ought to do. my
+ concern for Her is, that her situation is so bad as to render this
+ circumstance, (distresfull as it is) necessary to put her into a
+ better. Poor Girl, what unnatural cruelty and Insolence she has to
+ suffer from A Person[67] that shou'd be her support and comfort in
+ this distress: I have heard him say so many hard Things upon this
+ affair, that I think I do him no injustice to say he will be more
+ inexorable than the Knight.[68] I suppose Lyttelton is return'd from
+ Stowe and has found a letter from me Laying for him at the
+ Admiralty. If he's not come back I am afraid he's ill this Pinching
+ weather. I continue well, as I was when I wrote to you last. Adieu
+ Dear Nanny,
+
+ Yrs most affecly
+ WM. PITT.[69]
+
+
+The letter that follows is important, as it marks an epoch in Pitt's
+life: for he was now at Stowe, where he was to make a long stay, and
+enrol himself in Cobham's band of connections. He had just entered
+Parliament[70] and now commences a politician. But, happily for us, he
+has not yet assumed his political dialect.
+
+
+ _Stowe. July ye 2: 1735:_
+
+ Dear Nanny,--I am mighty glad to hear you escaped the headach after
+ so fatiguing a journey, but I desire that may not prevent your
+ applying to a Physician: I am extremely pleas'd with the account you
+ give me of the Person[71] you saw, it is a great step to be able to
+ seem easy: I wish his mind may ever be as easy, as I have the
+ pleasure of hearing his affairs are at present, the other Part of
+ your letter astonishes me: I think he'l not succeed, tho' I assure
+ you he has my good wishes, for I am persuaded nothing less will ever
+ extricate him. The turn indeed is very sudden, but since he has
+ taken it, he'l disgrace himself less by obtaining, than losing. My
+ Ld Cobham wou'd have been very glad to see you and wish'd I had
+ brought you, I am sorry you lost so good an opportunity of seeing
+ Stowe. Adieu
+
+ most affly yrs
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ I have had other business to write to my Brother upon, which has
+ hinder'd my speaking of the Orange trees. I'l make Ayscough do it.
+
+ I hope you found Lady Suffolk well.
+
+
+The next letter is burthened with mysterious and anonymous allusions, as
+to which conjecture is futile.
+
+
+ _Stowe July ye 20: 1735._
+
+ Dear Nanny,--I am mighty glad you are so well satisfy'd with the
+ match you give me an account of: I was not surpris'd to hear it, for
+ I fancy'd I saw it long ago. I have all sort of reasons to wish Her
+ happy, but to mention no other, She loves you in the manner I am apt
+ to think one shou'd love you. the Person[72] you think pretty easy,
+ is far from it: he endeavours to acquiesce under Pain, to bring his
+ mind, if possible, to such a state of composure as to go through the
+ duties of Life like an honest and Reasonable Man. our Friends[73]
+ Repulse is the most scandalous and ignominious of all things. I want
+ to hear a little of his noble designs for next year: Despair must
+ produce something Extraordinary in so great a mind. I am seriously
+ ashamed of him, and if he was to ask my advice what he should do, I
+ think I cou'd only beg him to do nothing: that Man's whole life is a
+ sort of consolation to me in my poor little circumstances. He gives
+ me occasion to reflect too often, that I wou'd not act his Part one
+ month for twice his estate, but I leave him to talk to you of
+ yourself: I don't hear what Broxom says of your headach's: if you
+ have not consulted him you have used me very ill: Pray send for him
+ and let me know if you are better. Adieu.
+
+ most affectionately Yrs
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+Pope and Martha Blount were now at Stowe, so was Lady Suffolk; and
+William was polishing himself in the best company.
+
+
+ _Stow Sept. ye 2: 1735._
+
+ Don't say a word more of my never writing, but confess immediately
+ that you admire my way of writing more than any Body's, that is my
+ way of sending you Postcripts Every Day: I have nothing to say of
+ Letters, but Mr Pope[74] says somewhere, 'Heaven first taught
+ Postscripts for the wretches aid,' etc: you must know I han't a word
+ to say to you; for I write only to introduce the Postscript, as Mr
+ Bays wou'd make a Poem to bring in a fine thought, that was none of
+ his own; I therefore finish to leave more room for my Lady Suffolk.
+ adieu.
+
+ [In another hand, evidently Lady Suffolk's] how often my Dear Child
+ have I wish'd you here? I know you wou'd like it, and I know two who
+ thinks (_sic_) even Stowe wou'd be still more agreeable they talk of
+ you I believe both Love you; but one can pun, and talk nonsense
+ wth Mrs Blount most Elegantly remember Saturday and never
+ forget me, that is, do not be ungratefull.
+
+
+We see in the next letter that Pitt was not merely supping with the
+wits, but playing at cricket, with Pope perhaps as umpire.
+
+
+ _Stow Septr ye 14: 1735._
+
+ I am very well pleas'd with the conversation you Had lately, and
+ that you met with nothing in it that at all corresponds with the
+ Subject of my former letter: I shall now be at ease, and give myself
+ no more trouble in thinking and conjecturing about it. I am glad my
+ Lady Suffolk got so well to Town; if she's not the worse for her
+ journey, I fancy you are not much so for her return. if she did not
+ happen to be the most amiable Estimable Person one has seen, I
+ shou'd still love her For the admirable Talent she has of
+ Distinguishing and Describing merit, in which she do's not yeild to
+ the Noble Ld of our acquaintance. if she has done me justice, She
+ has Told you I was very stupid and play'd very well at Cricket. I
+ obey'd her orders to my Ld and Lady Cobham; my Lds reflection
+ was, He wish'd he cou'd take such a journey and do after it just
+ what she did. when you see Lyttelton, tell him Mr Pope has been
+ writing a letter to him ever since he has been here, but head-ach
+ and Laziness has delay'd it, so that I believe He may be time enough
+ at London to bring the letter to him himself, as he talks of setting
+ out in a few days. Ayscough has been here, and desires Lyttelton
+ will mention him to the Speaker for preaching before the House the
+ next 30th of January sermon. I'l leave off for fear I shou'd think
+ of half a dozen messages more.
+
+ I am most affecly Yrs
+ W. PITT.
+
+ direct to me at Stow I am more here than at Touster [?Towcester].
+ You must say 'member of Parlt' They make me pay always else.
+
+
+The next two letters deal with some dark transaction relating to wine,
+probably smuggled, from Guernsey.
+
+
+ _Stow Sept. ye 16: 1735._
+
+ I am very sorry I can't answer all your Questions this Post, but to
+ begin with that I can answer the Frame Maker's Name is Bellamy, he
+ lives in Rupert Street: as to the Guernsey wine, it is a commission
+ of so secret a Nature, and must be treated with such art and
+ circumspection, (according to the instructions I am honour'd with)
+ That I must desire further time to get the lights necessary to the
+ full discovery of so dark an affair. I have been able to penetrate
+ no farther than that my Ld Cobham and his Butler are the only
+ Persons at the bottom of the secret, The one I can't ask he being
+ abroad; the other I must not, being ty'd up by my orders: there
+ remains therefore nothing To be done, but to wait the return of the
+ Butler, or larger Power to treat with my Ld in Person. but to talk
+ no longer like a Minister, but an humble Servant of my lady
+ Suffolk's, I desire my compliments to Her, and I'l be sure to send
+ an answer about the wine next Post. I please myself with thinking
+ you are free from Head-ach, both as they are very bad things; and
+ because they are ye effect with you of other uneasiness: be well
+ and happy, is the only advice you want; and the only means by which
+ I can be so:
+
+ I am most affecly yrs
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+ _Stowe. Sept. ye 19: 1735._
+
+ If you happen to write to me once in a week or fortnight I am never
+ to hear the last of it; but pray admire the exact diligence of my
+ correspondence: I don't only answer your letter the first Post, but
+ I continue answering It two or three Posts successively: I am now
+ only at the second, and you shall see you are not above half
+ answer'd yet: but to tell you all I can, the Man Mr Hardy, who
+ sells my Ld Cobham the Wine in Question, is now in Guernsey; the
+ Buttler will write to his correspondent to know when he is like to
+ return, which he supposes must be soon--all which my Lady Suffolk
+ shall be informed of: I expect a clear distinct answer from you to
+ each letter of the volumes I have lately writ to you.
+
+ Adieu.
+
+
+The following letter alludes in all probability to his brother, and also
+to that Richard Grenville who was afterwards so notorious as Lord
+Temple. It seems strange when one recalls Temple in maturity to read of
+him as Dick, with a careless countenance and jolly laugh. But everybody
+has been young.
+
+
+ _Stowe. Sept. ye 28: 1735._
+
+ I don't understand this way of answering two letters in form, avec
+ un Trait de Plume; I expected you shou'd have told me you had
+ nothing to tell me in more words, or at least at two different
+ times: this sort of Correspondence, where one must not talk, seems
+ rather a sort of visit to shew yourself: I hope you won't be in such
+ a hurry next time; that I shall see you a little longer, or I shall
+ call it only leaving your name, after all this, I am not really
+ angry at the shortness of your last letter; you gave a reason that
+ satisfied me entirely. I hope our friend is well; I had the Pleasure
+ of hearing he seem'd in very good Spirits, when Dick Greenville
+ (sic) saw him; I hope really was so. I suppose You have seen Dick's
+ careless countenance at Kensington, and that you begin to be
+ acquainted with his Laugh. I am called to breakfast, so goodby
+
+ Yrs most affectionately
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+October finds William still at Stowe, and not likely to leave, but he
+sends this anxious and tender note to Ann.
+
+
+ _Stowe. October ye 5: 1735._
+
+ My Dear,--I long to be with you to know what the particular
+ circumstance is that gives you uneasiness: or is it only the Thing
+ in general? whatever it be, take all the comfort you can in knowing
+ you act humanely and honourably. it won't be in my Power to see you
+ till December, and the latter End of it. I am very much at Stowe,
+ and pass my time as agreeably as I can do at a distance from you at
+ a time you say you want to talk to me: I hope by your next letter to
+ hear you have talk'd to yourself upon the Subject of your uneasiness
+ and don't want my advice: Adieu,
+
+ I am with all affection yrs
+ W. PITT.[75]
+
+
+The next note deals again with the affair which is causing Ann
+uneasiness, but without giving us any clue to it. One cannot however
+refrain from the surmise that Ann's temper and tongue had now begun to
+get her into trouble.
+
+
+ _Stowe. Octobr ye 12: 1735._
+
+ My dear Child,--I can't by letter enter into particulars relating to
+ The affair you mention, nor were I with you, cou'd I give you any
+ other than a general advice, which is, as well as you can to make
+ yourself and others easy: I know this is saying almost nothing, and
+ that is the very thing I think you have only to do: I beg you will
+ be at Quiet as to what you have hitherto done, believe me it is not
+ only irreproachable, but must do you great honour with whoever know
+ your conduct. I will say one word more, which is this, that you
+ shou'd take care not to be misunderstood, at least in any great
+ degree. This is all I can say to you, who have the warmest concern
+ for your happiness and am with more affection than I can tell you,
+
+ Yrs W. PITT.
+
+
+There is now an unexplained interval of two years. Some letters have
+perhaps been lost or destroyed, one has apparently miscarried; or, still
+more probably, the brother and sister have been together. But the next
+letter is still dated from Stowe, where William was evidently
+established on the most familiar footing.
+
+
+ _Stow. Novr ye 6: 1737._
+
+ You are even with me for all the want of readiness in writing, ever
+ since I began to correspond: I wou'd tell you how many weeks it is,
+ since I wrote to you my last unanswer'd letter, if my memory was
+ strong enough to carry so remote a period of Chronology in my head:
+ I have sometimes told you I have been ashamed of not writing: I take
+ this occasion to retract all Declarations of that sort, and tell
+ you I never was, nor ever will be ashamed of want of regularity in
+ corresponding, after this last silence of yours: I am aware that you
+ must throw the blame upon ye Post, and say you never received the
+ letter in question, and indeed the Doctor has given me an
+ intimation, yt the thing was to take yt turn, without which you
+ wou'd not have been troubled even with these reproaches. the Letter
+ had nothing in it, and yet I had rather you had receiv'd it, if you
+ are in earnest that you did not. I intend to be in Town the
+ beginning of December: I shall see Mrs. Nedham at Bampton before I
+ come:
+
+ Yrs W. PITT.
+
+ I desire you will write immediately to let me know you have no
+ return of ye disorder you had just before you left Hampton court.
+
+
+In the next he refers to Lord Cornbury, a friend, a Tory, and something
+of a Jacobite. He was a great admirer of Pitt, and had indeed written an
+ode to him.
+
+
+ _Stow. Novr ye 12: 1737._
+
+ I do not think myself obliged to thank you for your letter, it was a
+ defence to an accusation, you was under a necessity of pleading and
+ you did it with the confidence of an old offender, and even went so
+ far as to recriminate upon yr accuser: but let the act of oblivion
+ cover all. however that I may thank you for something, I thank you
+ for haveing hardly any remains of yr cold. Pray keep keeping
+ yourself well till December, in one week of which month I hope to
+ see you. Adieu.
+
+ Yrs Most affecly
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I wish you the Dutchess of Queensbury and Lady Cardigan with all my
+ heart. How do's Ld Cornbury?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+More than sixteen years elapse between this letter and the next, which
+takes us far beyond our present limit, but it is best to finish the
+story of Ann. Part of this long interval can be explained by extreme
+harmony, and the remainder by the reverse. The mutual devotion of
+William and Ann lasted, says Lord Camelford, till he became Paymaster in
+May 1746: then they quarrelled. Why, no one knows, or, it is to be
+presumed, will ever know. Horace Walpole only says that Pitt shook his
+sister off in an unbecoming manner. Camelford thinks that Pitt disliked
+Ann's friendship for Lady Bolingbroke, and thought that she was under
+the influence of Bolingbroke himself, 'that tawdry fellow, as Lord
+Cobham called him.'[76] Pitt, like most other people, except the rare
+spirits who loved the brilliant being, profoundly distrusted
+Bolingbroke, and may not have wished to see Bolingbroke influence assume
+a footing in his house. Perhaps then he remonstrated, perhaps Ann
+vindicated her friendship with heat. Between these two fiery natures
+words might be exchanged in a moment which years would not obliterate.
+Grattan told Rogers that 'Mrs. Ann Pitt, Lord Chatham's sister, was a
+very superior woman. She hated him, and they lived like cat and dog. He
+could only get rid of her by leaving his house and setting a bill on
+it, "This house to let."'[77] If these two Pitts quarrelled in the
+fierce Pitt fashion, it is not unlikely that some such expedient would
+be adopted. But it must be doubted whether they lived like cat and dog,
+else they would have parted long before. Grattan's statement was made in
+conversation with all the large outline and picturesque latitude that
+conversation allows, and he probably knew nothing about the matter. We
+can only surmise. Lord Camelford tells us that up to the time of the
+Paymastership (1746) William and Ann had lived together in one of the
+small houses in Pall Mall which look into St. James's Square, and that
+when he moved to his official residence at the Pay Office he moved
+alone. But, as a matter of fact, she had left him some time before, and
+gone to live with Lady Bolingbroke at Argeville. We have a letter from
+William to Lady Suffolk, dated July 6, 1742, in which he favours the
+plan of Ann's living with Lady Bolingbroke, so long as is convenient to
+her hostess, and then returning home. Moreover, Pitt himself in October
+of this year 1742 was not living in Pall Mall, but had moved to York
+Street, Burlington Buildings.[78] Ann had formed a mad project of living
+in Paris as a single woman, which William justly discountenanced.
+However, she proceeded to Argeville, where George Grenville found her in
+September. She may have returned to her brother, but she probably
+remained abroad, and her having been with the Bolingbrokes so long, even
+with William's sanction, may have made her less welcome to her brother
+on her return.
+
+In June 1751 she was appointed Keeper of the Privy Purse to the
+Princess of Wales, and superintendent of the education of the Princess
+Augusta, afterwards Duchess of Brunswick. She obtained this appointment,
+we are told, through the interest of Mr. Cresset, the confidential
+servant and Treasurer of the Princess of Wales, whose authority in the
+Court soon afterwards gave way to the ascendancy of Lord Bute; though
+Pitt imagined that here again he could trace the hand of Bolingbroke.
+'However,' says Lord Camelford, 'thinking she could be useful to him in
+so important a post, he sought a reconciliation--he flattered, he
+menaced, he insulted, but was rejected.'
+
+Of these proceedings two records remain in letters which have already
+been published, but cannot be omitted here, as they are instinct with
+passion and light. Whether they answer to Lord Camelford's description
+must be left to the judgment of those who read them. That they are
+powerful, tender, and unaffected all must allow. They also contain
+quotations from the quarrels which are not devoid of interest. Ann had
+declared that William expected absolute deference and a blind submission
+to his will; and that he had in several conversations directly explained
+to her that, to satisfy him, she must live with him as his slave. On
+this point William admits that he did expect some measure of deference
+to his views, and that, living together, he thought she might shape her
+life in some degree to his. This seems to have been the real ground of
+separation. William wished to be master in his own house. Ann could
+brook no control. Perhaps the brother may have asked the sister to
+discontinue or relax her intimacy with the Bolingbrokes, as injurious
+and inconvenient to him, and Ann, we may guess, would curtly bid him
+mind his own business. But these are only probabilities.
+
+In the course of these proceedings we learn that William lost his
+temper, declaring that she had a bad head and a worse heart; for this he
+humbly begs her pardon.
+
+Another complaint of Ann's is easily explained. She says that William
+had been talking of the 200_l._ a year that he allowed her. William's
+answer makes it perfectly clear that he had been reproached with the
+fact of his sister's destitute condition, and that he had had to
+explain, in his own defence, that he gave her this income.
+
+Whether Pitt wished for a reconciliation because his sister had become
+Privy Purse to the Princess of Wales must be judged by the light of his
+character. It seems more probable that it was because she had returned
+from abroad, and that he would now meet her constantly in society. In
+any case, here are the letters. Whatever Pitt's motives may have been,
+it is clear that Ann, had she not been a vixen, would have gladly
+accepted the olive-branch offered by her brother, who, still unmarried,
+wished to be restored to the companionship which had been the joy of his
+life, 'that friendship which was my very existence for so many years,'
+'a harmony between brother and sister unexampled almost all that time.'
+
+
+ (A)
+
+ _June 19, 1751. Wednesday morning._
+
+ Dear Sister!--As you had been so good to tell me in your note of
+ Monday that you would write to me again soon _in a manner capable,
+ you hoped, of effacing every impression of any thing painfull that
+ may have passed from me to you_, I did not expect such a letter as
+ I found late last night, and which I have now before me to answer:
+ without any compliment to you, I find myself in point of writing
+ unequal enough to the task; nor have I the slightest desire to
+ sharpen my pen. I have well weighed your letter, and deeply examined
+ your picture of me, for some years past; and indeed, Sister, I still
+ find something within, that firmly assures me I am not that thing
+ which your interpretations of my life (if I can ever be brought to
+ think them all your own) would represent me to be. I have
+ infirmities of temper, blemishes, and faults, if you please, of
+ nature, without end; but the Eye that can't be deceived must judge
+ between us, whether that friendship, which was my very existence for
+ so many years, could ever have received the least flaw, but from
+ umbrages and causes which the quickest sensibility and tenderest
+ jealousy of friendship alone, at first, suggested. It is needless to
+ mark the unhappy epoque, so fatal to a harmony between sister and
+ brother unexampled almost all that time, the loss of which has
+ embitter'd much of my life and will always be an affliction to me.
+ But I will avoid running into vain retrospects and unseasonable
+ effusions of heart, in order to hasten to some particular points of
+ your letter, upon which it is necessary for me to trouble you with a
+ few words. _Absolute_ deference and _blind submission to my will_,
+ you tell me I have often declared to you in the strongest and most
+ mortifying terms cou'd alone satisfy me. I must here beseech you
+ cooly to reconsider these precise terms, with their epithets; and I
+ will venture to make the appeal to the sacred testimony of your
+ breast, whether there be not exaggeration in them. I have often, too
+ often reproached you, and from warmth of temper, in strong and plain
+ terms, that I found no longer the same consent of minds and
+ agreement of sentiments: and I have certainly declared to you that I
+ cou'd not be satisfy'd with you, and I could no longer find in you
+ _any degree of deference towards me_. I was never so drunk with
+ presumption as to expect _absolute_ deference and _blind submission
+ to my will_. A degree of deference to me and to my situation, I
+ frankly own, I did not think too much for me to expect from you,
+ with all the high opinion I really have of your parts. What I
+ expected was too much (as perhaps might be). In our former days
+ friendship had led me into the error. That error is at an end, and
+ you may rest assured, that I can never be so unreasonable as to
+ expect from you, now, anything like deference to me or my opinions.
+ I come next to the small pecuniary assistance which you accepted
+ from me, and which was exactly as you state it, two hundred pounds a
+ year. I declare, upon my honour, I never gave the least foundation
+ for those exaggerations which you say have been spread concerning
+ it. I also declare as solemnly, before God and man, that no
+ consideration cou'd ever have extorted from my lips the least
+ mention of the trifling assistance you accepted from me, but the
+ cruel reports, industriously propagated, and circulating from
+ various quarters round to me, of the state you was left to live in.
+ As to the repayment of this wretched money, allow me, dear Sister,
+ to entreat you to think no more of it. The bare thought of it may
+ surely suffice for your own dignity and for my humiliation, without
+ taxing your present income, merely to mortify me: the demonstration
+ of a blow is, in honour, a blow, and let me conjure you to rest it
+ here. When I want and you abound, I promise you to afford you a
+ better and abler triumph over me, by asking the assistance of your
+ purse. I will now trouble you no farther than to repeat my sincere
+ wishes for your welfare and to rejoice that you have so ample matter
+ for the best of happiness, _springing from a heart and mind_ (to use
+ your own words) entirely devoted to gratitude and duty.
+
+
+ (B)
+
+ _June 20, 1751. Pay Office._
+
+ 'Dear Sister!--I am this moment returned out of the Country and find
+ another letter from you. I am extremely sorry that any expressions
+ in mine to you should make you think it necessary for you to trouble
+ yourself to write again, that you might convey upon paper to me,
+ what you would avoid saying in conversation, as disagreeable and
+ painfull. I believe I may venture to refer you to the whole tenor
+ of my letter to convince yourself that I had no desire to irritate;
+ and I assure you very sincerely that the expression, which seems to
+ have had some of that effect, did not in the least flow from a
+ thought that you was capable of intending to represent falsely. I
+ only took the liberty to put it to your candid recollection, whether
+ the very cause you mention, _strong feelings_ and emotions of mind
+ attending them, with regard to conversations of a disagreeable kind,
+ might not have led to some exaggerations of them to your own self. I
+ verily believe this cause, and this alone may have had some of this
+ effect: for sure I am, that I never could wish, much less exact that
+ the object of my whole heart and of my highest opinion and
+ confidence, thro the best part of my days, could be capable of such
+ vileness as _absolute_ deference and _blind submission to my will_.
+ All I wished and what I but late quite despaired of, I took the
+ liberty to recall to you in my last letter. As to the late
+ conversation you have thought necessary (since your letter of
+ yesterday) to recollect, I am ready to take shame before you, and
+ all mankind, if you please, for having lost my temper, upon any
+ provocation, so far as to use expressions, as foolish as they are
+ angry: that you _had a bad head_ will easily pass for the first: and
+ a worse heart for the last. This you made me angry enough to say:
+ but this I never was, nor I hope shall be, angry enough to think:
+ and this, Sister, I am sure you know. As to the other word, which I
+ am sorry I used because it offended you, I will again beg to appeal
+ to your recollection, whether it was not apply'd to your forbidding
+ _me ever to talk to you of every thing that interested you_: and as
+ _to shaping your life in some degree to mine_, which I believe were
+ my very words, let me ask you, if you don't know that they were said
+ in an answer to your telling me _that I had in several conversations
+ directly explained to you that to satisfy me you must live with me
+ as my slave_? So much, dear Sister, for the several points of your
+ letter; which I am sorry to find it necessary to say so many words
+ upon. I will be with you by nine to-morrow, as that hour seems most
+ convenient to you: is it impossible I may still find you so
+ obliging as not to think any more of repaying what I certainly never
+ lent you, in any other sense than that of giving me a right to your
+ purse, whenever I should want it, and which you must forego some
+ convenience to repay?[79]
+
+
+Whether a reconciliation took place on this occasion or not we have no
+evidence apart from Camelford's. But if he is to be believed as to
+William's motives, there was little to be gained by one, for Ann was
+soon to leave the Court. Her new office 'very soon grew uneasy to her,'
+says her nephew, 'through the artifices of her royal pupil.' Horace
+Walpole gives a different account. 'Being of an intriguing and most
+ambitious nature, she soon destroyed her own prospect by an impetuosity
+to govern her mistress and by embarking in other cabals at that Court.
+Her disgrace followed, but without dismissal, on which she had retired
+to France.'[80]
+
+'It was then,' says Camelford, 'that her brother, then Secretary of
+State, made a new overture of reconciliation by a letter that you will
+read, which had too much the appearance of sincerity and
+disinterestedness not to be gladly accepted.'
+
+Camelford is not particularly careful of his own accuracy or
+consistency. He had just told us that William sought for a renewal of
+friendship because Ann would be useful to him at Court: he now has to
+acknowledge that when Ann was banished from Court he instantly sought
+reconciliation with more ardour than ever. As regards his accuracy, it
+need only be noted that the letter to which he alludes is dated from the
+Pay Office, and despatched more than three years before Pitt became
+Secretary; a flaw, but not a grave flaw, in a father writing from memory
+to his son.
+
+Here is the letter, which seems to be in answer to one from Ann, and
+which is surely as tender and affectionate as the sorest heart of sister
+could desire:
+
+
+ _Pay Office. Feb. 8. 1753._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I shou'd have receiv'd the most sensible satisfaction,
+ if you had been able to tell me, that the more declared, or new
+ symptoms of your disorder had been such, as gave you a near prospect
+ of being quite relieved. believe me Dear Sister, my heart is fill'd
+ with the most affectionate wishes for your health, and impatient
+ desire to see you return home well and happy. I never can reflect on
+ things passed, (wherein I must have been infinitely in the wrong, if
+ I ever gave you a pain) without the tenderest sorrow: and the
+ highest aggravation of this concern wou'd be to think, that,
+ perhaps, you may not understand the true state of my heart towards
+ you. Heaven preserve my Dear Sister, and may I ever be able to
+ convince her how sincerely I am her most affectionate Brother:
+
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I continue an Invalid, and wait for better weather with as much
+ patience as I can.
+
+
+This is followed by another letter so humble and so self-reproachful
+that one can scarcely believe it to be penned by one whose pride was a
+byeword, and one can certainly not believe it to be the production of
+crafty and servile selfishness, as Lord Camelford would have us imagine.
+No brother could approach a sister with more delicacy or warmth of
+feeling.
+
+
+ _Pay Office. Feb. 27. 1753._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I am unable to express the load you have taken off my
+ heart by your affectionate and generous answer to my last letter: I
+ will recur no more to a subject, which your goodness and
+ forgiveness forbid me to mention. the concern I feel for your state
+ of health is most sensible; wou'd to God, you may be shortly in a
+ situation to give me the infinite comfort of hearing of an amendment
+ in it! I hope Spring is forwarder, where you reside, than with us,
+ and that the difference of climate begins to be felt. I will not
+ give you the trouble to read any more: but must repeat, in the
+ fulness of my heart, the warmest and tenderest acknowledgements of
+ your goodness to,
+
+ My Dear Sister, Your most affec Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I continue still a good deal out of Order, but begin to get ground.
+
+
+The next letter marks a complete removal of tension and the restoration
+of close and friendly relations. It cannot, alas! restore the easy flow
+of youth. A score of years have passed, William has been buffeted and
+tossed and has had to fight hard for his hand; he is besides so much the
+older. So we find ourselves involved in the fulsome extravagance of his
+maturer epistles; so much the worse!
+
+
+ _London. April ye 5. 1753._
+
+ My Dear Sister,--Nothing can be felt more sensibly than I do the
+ goodness of your letter, in which you talk to me circumstantially of
+ your own health, and desire to hear circumstantially of mine. it is
+ a great deal of Comfort to me to know that you have great hopes of
+ being better by Mr Vernage's advice; but it wou'd have been an
+ infinite satisfaction to have heard that you had already found
+ amendment. May every Day of Spring contribute to the thing in the
+ world I wish the most ardently! I am infinitely glad that the
+ concurrent opinions of Physicians of both Countries are the
+ foundation of expecting the Spa will relieve you: I shall dwell all
+ I can on this comfortable hope, and beg to hear of any amendment you
+ may find by better weather and whatever course you now use. I will
+ now talk of that health you so kindly desire to hear of. I have
+ been ill all the winter with disorders in my bowels, which have left
+ me very low, and reduced me to a weak state of health. I am now, in
+ many respects, better, and seem getting ground, by riding and taking
+ better nourishment. Warmer weather, I am to hope, will be of much
+ service to me. I propose using some mineral waters: Tunbridge or
+ Sunning Hill or Bath, at their proper seasons, as the main of my
+ complaint is much abated and almost removed, I hope my Horse, warm
+ weather and proper nourishment will give me health again. the kind
+ concern you take in it is infinitely felt by, Dear Sister,
+
+ Your most affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+The next letter shows that Ann was residing at Blois.
+
+
+ Dear Sister,--I have just receiv'd the pleasure of your letter of 30
+ April. the Comfort it has given me is infinitely great, and your
+ goodness in sending me the earliest account in your power of such an
+ amendment as you now describe is the kindest thing imaginable, May
+ the fine season, where you are, continue without interruption, and
+ every Day of it add to the beneficial effects you have begun to
+ feel! our season here does not keep pace with that at Blois: I am
+ however much mended in several respects, and have the greatest hopes
+ given me of removing my remaining disorder by the help of warmer
+ weather and Tunbridge waters. I have just time to write this line
+ before dinner, and had I more, I think it best not to trouble you
+ with long letters. I shall dine upon your letter I am dear Sister
+
+ Your most affectionate Brother
+ _London. May 7th 1753._
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+Here intervenes a letter to Mary, in which there is cordial mention of
+Ann, and an obvious allusion to the escapades of Elizabeth; surely a
+tender letter from a brother of forty-five to a younger sister.
+
+
+ _Bath. Octr the 20th. 1753._
+
+ I am very glad to hear in the Conclusion of my Dear Mary's letter
+ that she will be under no difficulty in getting to London: my
+ Brother is very obliging, as I dare say he intends to be in all
+ things towards you, to make your journey easy and agreeable to you.
+ I propose being in Town by the meeting of the Parliament; if I am
+ able: when I shall have infinite Joy in meeting my Dear Sister after
+ so very long an Absence and seeing Her in a Place where she seems to
+ think herself not unhappy. if I shou'd be prevented being in Town so
+ soon, the House will always be ready to receive you. I think you
+ judge very right not to produce yourself much till we have met:
+ Mrs Stuart, and my Sister Nedham, if in Town, will be the
+ properest, as well as the most agreeable Places for you to frequent.
+ My Dear Child, I need not intimate to your good understanding and
+ right Intentions, what a high degree of Prudence and exact attention
+ to your Conduct and whole behaviour is render'd necessary by the sad
+ errors of others. It is an infinite misfortune to you that my Sister
+ Ann is not in England: her Countenance and her Advice and
+ Instructions, superior to any you can otherwise receive, wou'd be
+ the highest advantage to you. Supply it as well as you can, by
+ thinking of Her, imitating her worth, and thereby endeavouring to
+ deserve her esteem, as you wish to obtain that of the best Part of
+ the World. I can not express how anxious I am for your right
+ behaviour in all respects, upon which alone your happiness must
+ depend. whatever assistance my advice can be to You, you will ever
+ have with the truest affection of a Brother.
+
+ Yrs
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+The next letter is pregnant enough, written to Ann at Nevers. Their aunt
+Essex is dead, but her death only lurks in a postscript. For Pelham is
+dead and Pitt is a cripple at Bath, disabled from proceeding to the
+capital, where his fate and that of the future administration are being
+settled. His restless anguish seems to pierce through these few lines.
+And yet this bedridden invalid was to be a joyful and alert bridegroom
+before the year was out.
+
+
+ _Bath. March 9th: 1754._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I write to you under the greatest affliction, on all
+ Considerations Private and Publick. Mr Pelham Died Wednesday
+ morning, of a Feaver and St. Anthony's fire. This Loss is, in my
+ notion of things, irreparable to the Publick. I am still suffering
+ much Pain with Gout in both feet, and utterly unable To be carry'd
+ to London. I may hope to be the better for it hereafter, but I am at
+ present rather worn down than releiv'd by it: I am extremely
+ concern'd at the last accounts of your health. I hope you have
+ Spring begun at Nevers, which I pray God may relieve you.
+
+ I am Dear Sister, Your most affectionate Brother,
+ W. PITT.
+
+ My Sister Nedham has been ill of a Feaver here, but is well again.
+
+ I have just received an account of Mrs Cholmondeley's[81] Death.
+
+
+The next letter, a month later, leaves Pitt still at Bath; the gout had
+almost the lion's share of his life, and we wonder that he accomplished
+so much under its constant pangs. On this occasion he strains our
+credulity by the complimentary assertion that he thinks a thousand times
+more of Ann than of the struggle over Pelham's succession, and his own
+involved ambition. On all that sordid scramble he kept the fierce,
+unflinching eye of a hawk, and of a hawk fastened by the talon. Ten days
+before he wrote this note he had despatched a letter to Newcastle,
+Pelham's brother and successor, burning with a passion which Ann's
+ailments could never have inspired. Ann indeed, knowing her William,
+would smile as she read, and value the extravagance at its worth.
+
+
+ _Bath. April 4th. 1754._
+
+ Dear Sister,--The Account you give me of your own health, and the
+ kind concern you feel for mine, touches me more than I will attempt
+ to express, tho' I am still at Bath, don't think the worse of my
+ health, but be assured that I am in a fairer way of recovering a
+ tolerable degree of it, than I have been in for a long time pass't.
+ My Gout has been most regular and severe, as well as of a proper
+ Continuance to relieve, and perhaps quite remove, the general
+ disorder which had brought me so low. I am recovering my feet and
+ drinking the waters with more apparent good effects than I ever
+ experienced from them. I have been out of all the bustle of the
+ present Conjuncture; and believe me, my thoughts go a thousand times
+ to Nevers, for once that they go towards London. Nothing in this
+ world can, in the smallest degree, interest my mind like the
+ recovery of your health. I wait with very painfull Impatience for
+ better weather for you, and to hear, that the waters you propose to
+ take, afford you relief.
+
+ I am My Dear Sister's ever most affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ My sister Nedham is well, and went yesterday to Marybone to see her
+ Sons.
+
+ Poor George Stanhope died of a feaver a few days since.[82]
+
+
+The next, after an interval of six months, is again from Bath, but in a
+different strain. He is now the happiest of men, about to be united to
+the most meritorious and amiable of women, whose brothers are already
+his own in harmony and affection; a happy marriage, but a disastrous,
+storm-tossed brotherhood, as it was destined to be in the years to come,
+when rival ambitions would strain the bond to breaking.
+
+There is also an icicle from Lady Hester herself, which embodies the
+decorous expression of what a young lady of the middle eighteenth
+century allowed herself to feel when she was going to be married. Even
+this act of politeness was inspired by William. 'I have writ this night
+to my poor sister Ann. She is not well enough to return to England this
+winter. Whenever your excessive goodness will honour her with a letter
+it will be a comfort to her. If you please to commit it to me I will
+forward it to her, and bless you a million of times.'[83]
+
+
+ _Bath. Oct. 21st. 1754._
+
+ Dear Sister,--The favour of your letter from Chaillot has by no
+ means answered my eager wishes for your health, and a kind of
+ distant hope I had formed of your return to England this winter. My
+ desires to see you are greatly and very painfully disappointed: I
+ have only to hope that your Stay in France will give you a much
+ better winter than the last, and may finally restore your health to
+ you and you to your Friends. I am now, Dear Sister, to impart to you
+ what I have no longer a prospect of doing, with infinitely more
+ pleasure, by word of mouth: it is to say, that, your health
+ excepted, I have nothing to wish for my happiness, Lady Hester
+ Grenville has consented to give herself to me, and by giving me
+ every thing my Heart can wish, she gives you a Sister, I am sure you
+ will find so, not less every other way than in name. the act I now
+ communicate, will best speak her character, she has generosity and
+ goodness enough to join part of her best days to a very shattered
+ part of mine; neither has my fortune any thing more tempting. I know
+ no Motif she can have but wishing to replace to me many things that
+ I have not. I can only add, that I have the honour and satisfaction
+ of receiving the most meritorious and amiable of Women from the
+ hands of a Family already my Brothers in harmony and affection, and
+ who have been kindly Contending which of them shou'd most promote my
+ happiness by throwing away the Establishment of a Sister they
+ esteem and love so much. When I left Lady Hester ten days ago, She
+ wish'd to know when I notify'd this approaching event to you, that
+ She might do herself the pleasure to write to you. when she knows I
+ have writ, she will introduce herself to you. I propose staying here
+ about ten days, if my patience can hold out so long. You will wonder
+ to see a letter on such a subject dated from Bath; but to a goodness
+ like Lady Hester Grenville's, perhaps, my infirmities and my Poverty
+ are my best titles.
+
+ Your ever affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+ LADY HESTER GRENVILLE TO MISS ANN PITT.
+
+ May I not hope, Dr Madam, that the situation I am in with your
+ Brother will dispose you to receive favourably an Instance of the
+ extreme desire I have to recommend myself to your friendship; and
+ that You will give me Leave to employ the only means in my Power
+ from the distance that is between us, of expressing how much I wish
+ to enjoy that Honour. Every Thing makes me Ambitious of Obtaining so
+ great an Advantage, and so flattering a distinction. Your Own
+ peculiar Merit, and the Large share which you possess of Mr Pitt's
+ Esteem and Affection makes me feel it as an Article important to my
+ Happiness, and I indulge myself in the pleasure of thinking that you
+ will not refuse to extend your goodness to a Person whom your
+ Brother has thought worthy of so convincing a proof of his regard
+ and Love, and whose sentiments for Him are full of all that the
+ highest sense of his superior Merit and most amiable qualities can
+ Inspire. I feel a vanity and a pleasure in being the Object of his
+ Choice which can be added to by nothing but the happiness of knowing
+ that you give your Approbation and that you will allow me to flatter
+ myself You will not be sorry for an Event which will give me the
+ valued privilege of addressing you the next time, I have the honour
+ to be thus employ'd, by the endearing name of Sister. Give me leave
+ to say that I have heard with the greatest regret that your state of
+ health does not permit you to return to England this winter, and
+ that I hope as a compensation for the Disappointment your stay will
+ ensure yr perfect recovery. I commit this Letter to Yr Brs
+ Care, and trust to Him for conveying it to you, sure that the best
+ recommendation it can have will be its coming under his protection;
+ accompanied with Marks of His Partiality; and I hope that you will
+ believe Dr Madam, that I am with all the esteem possible, and the
+ highest regard,
+
+ Your most faithful and Obed. Humble Servant,
+ HER: GRENVILLE.
+
+
+In the next letters Pitt and Lady Hester acknowledge Ann's
+congratulations. He had, however, moved to London, and amid all these
+orange-blossoms was forging terrible vengeance on his perfidious chief.
+Within ten days of his marriage he was making Newcastle and Newcastle's
+henchmen cower in their offices, though for the present they did not
+dare oust him from his.
+
+
+ _Pay Office. Nov. 8th. 1754._
+
+ Dear Sister,--Your letter of the 1st Novr has given me all that
+ remain'd to Compleat my happiness, by the affectionate Share you
+ take in it; and without which, great as it truly is, and shar'd in
+ the kindest manner by every Thing else I value and love in the
+ World, it still wou'd have wanted something ever essential to my
+ Satisfaction. Your Goodness and Friendship has nothing left to give
+ me: Cou'd the re-establishment of your health but add that most
+ sensible Pleasure to all I feel, I may call myself happy, as it is
+ given but to a few to be. Lady Hester Grenville speaks for herself
+ this Post. my Health is not good, but, as yet, it is not quite bad.
+ I have gone on with the World (as I cou'd) with much worse.
+
+ I am Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I hope in about a week to say more of my happiness.
+
+
+Lady Hester's letter is not worth giving; it is prim, decorous, and
+void.
+
+Pitt and Lady Hester are married on November 16. Lady Hester writes to
+Ann nine days afterwards a letter full of good feeling stiffened and
+starched by decorum. Some letters are too improper to print, this is too
+proper.
+
+Ann was now returning home, and Mary goes to meet her with a note of
+welcome from William. Lord Camelford says that her health and spirits
+declined grievously in France, and so her brother, 'though not till
+after repeated notifications of her distress, sent over a clergyman to
+bring her back to her family and assist in her journey.' This gives us a
+test of Camelford's bias in dealing with his uncle. For hear Ann
+herself, in a letter to Lady Suffolk announcing that she was on her way
+to England, and had arrived as far as Sens, whence she writes. Speaking
+of William, she says, 'he continued as he began, as soon as the King had
+put him in the place he is in, by giving me the strongest and tenderest
+proof of his affection.... I was so sunk and my mind so overcome with
+all I have suffered, and I was so mortified and distressed, that I do
+not believe anything in the world could have made it possible for me to
+get out of this country, but my brother's sending a friend to my
+assistance, and choosing so proper a person as Mr de la Porte is in all
+respects. He has known me and my family for about thirty years, from
+having been my Lord Stanhope's Governor.' She goes on to refer to 'the
+virtue and goodness of my friends, particularly of my brother, who has
+always seemed to guess and understand all I felt of every kind, and has
+carried his delicacy so far as never once to put me in mind of what I
+felt more strongly than any other part of my misfortune, which was, how
+very disagreeable and embarrassing it must be to him to have me in
+France, You may believe that I will be out of it the first minute that
+is possible.'
+
+So the fact is that the man, whom Camelford endeavours to depict as
+having acted with hardness and insensibility on this occasion, displayed
+in reality incessant and delicate tenderness, according to the grateful
+acknowledgment of Ann herself. Pitt had just attained his supremacy;
+this was the most critical epoch of his life; all the year he had been
+fighting the King and the Court, and this was the moment of victory.
+Eleven days before Ann wrote this letter he had become for the second
+time Secretary of State and had begun his great ministry. During this
+time of strain and anxiety he heard of Ann's illness; he must have felt
+strongly, though he refrained from mentioning it to her, the irksomeness
+of her being in France when he was waging war against that kingdom, and
+so he sent an old family friend to conduct her home. Could brother have
+done more? Is there not here an anxious and thoughtful affection,
+distorted grievously by the implacable animosity of the nephew?
+Camelford is, however, obliged to record that on her arrival she went
+straight to Pitt's villa at Hayes, 'where, tho' her spirits were still
+weak, she was surprisingly recovered.'
+
+There is no date to the following note which Mary was to hand to Ann.
+But as Ann's letter to Lady Suffolk cited above is of July 10, 1757, we
+cannot be far wrong in placing it somewhat later in the same month. It
+is indeed perplexing to find another letter to Lady Suffolk dated 'Spa,
+September 5, 1757.' But the year 1757 is a surmise, and in all
+probability an incorrect surmise, of the editor. Ann was hastening to
+England in July 1757, stayed some time at Hayes on her arrival, and is
+not likely to have been on the Continent again in September.
+
+
+ _Friday Morning._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I Can not let my Sister Mary go away without a line to
+ express my infinite satisfaction to hear you are arrived and that
+ you find your strength and Spirits in so good a condition. at the
+ same time let a Veteran Invalide recommend to you, above all things,
+ to use this returning Strength and Spirits very sparingly at first.
+ I shou'd be happy to accompany Miss Mary to Rochester, but the
+ overwhelming business of this Momentous Conjuncture hardly allow
+ (_sic_) me time to tell you how impatiently and tenderly I wish to
+ embrace my Dear Sister.[84]
+
+
+Ann had gone from Hayes to Clifton, as we know from a letter to Lady
+Suffolk dated June 22, 1758, and thence proceeded to Bath, as we know
+from another letter dated August 19, 1758. She was restless, as on
+August 26 she was at Bristol. In all these letters there is not a word
+that betokens other than kindness and gratitude to her brother; as, for
+example, on August 19 she writes to Lady Suffolk: 'God grant that the
+public news may continue to be good, especially from Prince Ferdinand,
+for the sake of a person whose health and prosperity I wish more than I
+shall ever tell him.' A week afterwards she takes public occasion to
+rejoice at his triumphs by furnishing a bonfire and ten hogsheads of
+strong beer and all the music she could procure. On the other side, we
+read the letters which the busy statesman found time to write to her,
+breathing affection and solicitude.
+
+
+ _St. James's Square. Aug. 10th. 1758._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I wait with much impatience to hear you are arrived
+ well at Bath, and that you are lodged to your mind. I will not
+ entertain any doubts, after having had the satisfaction of seeing
+ you, that your progression to a perfect recovery will be sensible
+ every Day, and as soon as you can bear a stronger nourishment, that
+ Spirits, the concomitants of Strength, will return. as a part of the
+ necessary regimen, solid nourishment for that busy craving Thing
+ call'd Mind must have its place, and I know of no mental
+ Alteratives(?) of power to renovate and brace up a sickly
+ Constitution of Thought, but that mild and generous Philosophy which
+ teaches us the true value of the World, and a rational firm
+ religion, that anchors us safe in the confidence of another. but I
+ will end my sermon and come to the affairs of the world I am so
+ deeply immersed in. this day had brought us an account that our
+ Troops effected their landing, with little Loss, ye 7th and 8th two
+ Leagues from Cherbourgh, in the face of a pretty considerable
+ Number, who gave some loose fires and run. I am infinitely anxious
+ till we hear again, as I expect something serious will ensue. I must
+ not close my letter without telling you that the most particular
+ enquiries after your health have been made by the Lady you sent a
+ Card to, and I, very obligingly reprimanded for keeping your arrival
+ a secret from Them. Lady Hester shares my Impatience to hear news of
+ you, and all my sentiments for your health and happiness. our Love
+ follows dear Mary, whose merits you must, to your great
+ satisfaction, more and more feel every day.
+
+ I am ever my Sister's most affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+ _St. James's Square. Sept. ye 12th. 1758._
+
+ Dear Sister,--You have now try'd the Bristol waters long enough to
+ make some judgement of their effects, and I have kept silence long
+ enough for you to make perhaps a strange judgement of my manner of
+ feeling for my friends. but feel I certainly do, my Dear Sister, for
+ all that concerns your health and happiness, how much soever I have
+ kept it for some weeks past a matter between me and my own
+ conscience, without giving you the least hint of my truly
+ affectionate sollicitude on your account. I am extremely inclin'd to
+ believe Doctor Oliver judges rightly of the first principle of your
+ disorders; that it is Gout, which aided by the waters of Bath and
+ proper nourishment may ripen into a salutary tho' painfull crisis.
+ as I think myself that Languor or perturbation of Spirits are well
+ exchanged for a degree of pain, I shall heartily wish you joy of
+ such a revolution in the system of your Constitution. how can I have
+ got so far in my paper, and not a word of the King of Kings whose
+ last Glories transcend all the parts? the Modesty of H:P: Majtys
+ relation, his Silence of Himself, and entire attribution of the
+ victory to Genl Seidlitz, are of a mind as truely heroick as H.
+ Majesty's taking a Colours in his own hand, when exhortations
+ failed, and forcing a disordered Infantery to follow Him or see Him
+ perish. more Glory can not be won; but more decisive final
+ consequence we still hope to hear, and languish for further letters
+ from the Prussian army. My Love to Dear Mrs Mary.
+
+ I am ever most affecly Yrs
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+Then comes a letter referring apparently to the Battle of Hochkirch:
+
+
+ Dear Sister,--I can not omit writing, tho' but a line, to give you
+ the satisfaction of knowing that Mr d'Escart will return to France
+ in a very few days. I am very glad that it has been practicable to
+ accomplish so soon a thing that will give pleasure to so many of
+ your Friends. the news from Dresden to day is not very agreable, the
+ King of Prussia's right wing attack'd sudenly at 4 in the morning
+ ye 14th, put into disorder, Marshal Keith and Prince Francis of
+ Brunswick kill'd but the King coming to the Right, the action was
+ restored and the Austrians repulsed. His Prussian Majesty's Person
+ so exposed that one trembles: his Horse shot, and a Page and Ecuyer
+ wounded by his side. a second action seems inevitable: I hope every
+ thing from it, as this Heroick Monarch's happy Genius never fails
+ him when he wants it most. I have not a moment more. be assured of
+ my constant wishes for your health and happiness.
+
+ I am Dear Sister Your affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ Loves to Mary.
+ _Oct. ye 24th._
+
+
+Ann was now in London on a short visit, for the purpose of attending the
+Court; but she had designs of her own which appear to be serious, but
+which give some evidence of the insanity which was always hovering over
+her.
+
+'I hear my Lord Bath,' she writes, November 10, 1758, 'is here very
+lively, but I have not seen him, which I am very sorry for, because I
+want to offer myself to him. I am quite in earnest, and have set my
+heart upon it; so I beg seriously you will carry it in your mind and
+think if you could find any way to help me. Do not you think Lady Betty
+(Germaine) and Lord and Lady Vere would be ready to help me, if they
+knew how willing I am? But I leave this to your discretion, and repeat
+seriously that I am quite in earnest. He can want nothing but a
+companion that would like his company, and in my situation, I should not
+desire to make the bargain without that circumstance. And though all I
+have been saying puts me in mind of some advertisements I have seen in
+the newspaper from gentlewomen in distress, I will not take that method;
+but I want to recollect whether you did not once tell me, as I think you
+did many years ago, that he spoke so well of me that he got anger for it
+at home, where I never was a favourite.'[85]
+
+Never, surely, did a spinster of forty-eight breathe so frankly her
+aspirations towards a wealthy and avaricious septuagenarian. We may be
+sure that this freak of fancy was not confided to her brother. But he on
+his side had a favour to ask of her, on behalf of a puissant personage.
+Statesmen in those days had to pay their homage to the Court wherever
+they could find it, and Pitt, who was never loved by George II., could
+not afford to neglect the influence of Lady Yarmouth. At any rate, he
+did not, though apparently without success in his ultimate object; and
+so we find him attempting to neutralise, through Ann, the mischief which
+might ensue from Lady Betty Waldegrave's letters being attributed by the
+Court of France to the King's favourite. Lady Yarmouth was in danger of
+being compromised!
+
+Ann thus describes the negotiation: 'If I had not happened to be sick, I
+should have been very much pleased with an express that was sent me to
+give me a commission that I liked to execute, because it relates to a
+person I am obliged to and have a regard for; it is my Lady Yarmouth who
+desires me, by my brother, to explain a very disagreeable mistake which
+has been made in France about a very fond letter, and mighty improper as
+to politics, which Lady Betty Waldegrave wrote to her husband, unsigned,
+and having desired the answer might be directed to Lady Y's lodging,
+they concluded, very absurdly, the letter came from her; and as it was
+intercepted, it was translated, shown, and commented very
+impertinently.'
+
+
+ _St. James's Square. Nov. 7th. 1758._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I write to you at the desire of Lady Yarmouth, on an
+ Incident of a particular nature, and which has given her Ladyship
+ so much uneasiness that it will be a very agreeable office, if you
+ can contribute, by a letter to some Lady of the Court at Versailles,
+ to the clearing up of a very odd Qui pro Quo. The matter in question
+ is as follows. Letters to England from our Army having been taken,
+ there is amongst them _one_ from Lady Betty Waldgrave to General
+ Waldgrave _unsign'd_. the writer desires the General will _direct
+ his letters to Lady Yarmouth at Kensington_. on this ground the
+ letter in question being attributed, in France, to Lady Yarmouth has
+ drawn attention, been translated, and handed about, as she is
+ inform'd, with some mirth at Versailles and Paris. this letter is
+ return'd, by the channel of Selwyn's House, and Lady Yarmouth finds
+ it to contain, not only the expressions of a loving wife to a
+ Husband, but a strain of political reflections, together with
+ observations on very high Personages in Europe, commanding Armies in
+ Germany; all which Language cou'd not but bear a very prejudicial
+ Comment, if really attributed to the Lady, by whose desire I now
+ write to you. You are the best judge how to acquit yourself of the
+ Commission you are desired to charge yourself with; whether by
+ writing to the Dutchess of Mirepoix or any other of your friends. I
+ can only say, that I perceive Lady Yarmouth will think Herself
+ obliged to you for such an intervention, in a matter of some
+ Delicacy, and which might have many possible ill Consequences. if
+ you shall write in the manner desir'd, and will send your letter
+ directed to your Correspondent, under Cover to me, I will take care
+ it shall go in Count Very's packet to Paris.
+
+ I rejoice extremely my Dear Sister, at the account of your amendment
+ in Spirits, since your late attack. keep the ground so hardly won,
+ and ascend, by courage and perseverance that arduous steep, on the
+ Summit of which, Health and Happiness, I trust, still wait you. I am
+ lame in one foot, and much threatened with Gout for some days past;
+ but I flatter myself that it may blow over, like an Autumnal ruffle.
+ our Expeditions are, I fear, lame in both Feet. My Messenger is
+ order'd to wait your full leisure.
+
+ I am Dear Sister, Your most affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+Ann appears to have been successful, and receives thanks both from
+William and the formal Lady Hester.
+
+
+ Dear Sister,--I am desired by Lady Yarmouth to assure you of the
+ sense she has of your good offices, which she was so good to
+ accompany with the most obliging expression of regard for you, and
+ with many wishes for your health. I shall be happy to receive a
+ favourable account of your situation, and which I flatter myself is
+ every day mending, and that by a Progression which will soon enable
+ you to take air and exercise. I am just going to Hayes, for some
+ hours recess, that I want much.
+
+ I am ever Dear Sister Most affly Yrs
+ W. PITT.
+ _Saturday morning._
+
+
+ _St. James's Square Tuesday Nov. 14._
+
+ Dear Madam,--If I had not for some time past found great
+ inconvenience from writing I shou'd not have continued so long
+ Silent where I always find so much pleasure in expressing my
+ sentiments, but however great my indisposition is from _my
+ Situation_ to my present employment, I cou'd not refuse a commission
+ which I had the honour to be charged with today from my Lady
+ Yarmouth, as I am sure the Subject of it will be a great pleasure
+ and Satisfaction to you. It was to desire I wou'd return you a
+ thousand Thanks for your letters, and to assure you that she felt
+ herself most extremely obliged to you for them, and for the trouble
+ you had given yourself, with many other expressions of the manner in
+ which she was sensible of your goodness in what you had done, and
+ how very agreable it was to Her. I was very sorry to find by your
+ account of yourself to Mr Pitt that you had had another return of
+ your bilious Complaint, but we Comfort our selves with the hope of
+ its having produced the same salutary effects the Last did. We shall
+ be impatient to have a confirmation of its having had so desirable a
+ consequence. By Miss Mary's Last Letters both to her Brother and Me
+ we have flattered ourselves with the pleasure of seeing Her for some
+ days past, but as yet she has not appeared, which wou'd make us
+ uneasy but that we conclude if her purpose of Leaving Bath the time
+ she mention'd had been alter'd from any disagreable Circumstance she
+ wou'd have apprised us of it. Our Nephew, Mr. Thos. Pitt, desires to
+ have the permission and pleasure of conveying this to you, as he
+ intends setting out for the Bath tomorrow in order to wait upon Sir
+ Richard Lyttelton, whom I wish he may find better than by the
+ reports which prevail, I fear he has any Chance of Doing. Your
+ Brother continues as usual overwhelm'd with business, and not
+ entirely free from some Notices of the Gout, but which yet I flatter
+ myself will not increase to a fit. He begs his affectionate
+ Compliments to you, and I that you wou'd forgive both the shortness
+ and the faults of this Letter, and believe me equally however
+ exprest
+
+ Your very affectionate Sister and Obedient Servant
+ HES: PITT.
+
+ Mr Pitt desires to assure you the Letters were the properest that
+ cou'd be writ upon the occasion.
+
+
+Ann, as we learn from the preceding letter, returned to Bath at once.
+'Mr Thomas Pitt' (Lord Camelford) brings it to her, and here makes her
+acquaintance: 'It was there' (at Bath) 'in the year 1759 that I first
+connected that friendship with her which still leaves so many mixed
+sensations on my mind.' Ann, it may confidently be said, left mixed
+sensations on all minds. The next note announces the birth of the young
+William Pitt.
+
+
+ _Hayes. May ye 28th. 1759._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I have the satisfaction to acquaint you, of what you
+ was so good to wish to hear; Lady Hester was safely delivered of a
+ Boy this morning, after a labour rather severe, but she and the
+ Child are, thank God, as well as can be. You will give us a very
+ real pleasure by good accounts of your own health which we hope is
+ much better for the journey alone, and that waters will not fail to
+ be of great assistance towards a perfect recovery. I am
+
+ Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother,
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I can't help mentioning to you the waters and Bath of Buxton: which
+ for a languid perspiration and obstructions in the smaller vessels,
+ have done wonders.
+
+
+Next comes a short letter from William, only notable from his anxiety
+about Squire Allworthy.
+
+
+ _St. James's Square. July 24th, 1759._
+
+ Dear Sister,--Your letter on the subject of Mr. Allen's Health gave
+ me, with the Pain of learning he had been ill, the Satisfaction of
+ understanding that the attack was, in some degree over; that to Lady
+ Hester giving an account of the terrible nature of his complaint,
+ having follow'd Her to Wotton, where she now is.
+
+ I trust that the next accounts from Prior Park will be favourable
+ and that the best of men, who feels and relieves the most the
+ sufferings of others, may not Himself suffer the severest of Pains.
+ I learn with great satisfaction the considerable amendment you
+ mention in your own Health, and the promising prospects of deriving
+ much benefit from Tunbridge. I hope You will not let too much of
+ this fine season for mineral waters pass, before you repair to Them,
+ and that their effects, when you try them, will fully answer your
+ own and your Friends expectation.
+
+ I am Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother,
+ W. PITT.
+
+ if Lord Paulett be still at Bath, I beg my compliments to his
+ Lordship.
+
+
+It is perhaps well, for the preservation of continuity, to print the
+following letter from Lady Hester to her sister-in-law:
+
+
+ _Tuesday. St. James's Square. Aug. 29th._
+
+ I am so much in Arrear to You, my Dear Madam, and upon so many
+ accounts, that I don't know where to begin first to acquit my Self
+ to You. I feel I want now most to justifie my self to you for not
+ having before exprest how sensible I am to the various Marks I have
+ received of your very obliging Attention upon all the Subjects that
+ you knew wou'd give me the greatest pleasure. The Fact is that an
+ unexpected Journey to Wotton, from which place I return'd but Last
+ night, interfered with my intention of writing to You, and of
+ returning you my sincerest thanks for the great Satisfaction your
+ Letter gave me. It included everything that cou'd make it pleasing
+ to Me, and renew'd all my own Joy for our Successes with Yours added
+ to it, which was a great improvement of all I felt before, and
+ particularly for Louisbourg, _Dear_, as you know so many ways. I am
+ charmed with my rings, which are after an English Taste that I hope
+ will be followed, and grow fashionable enough to encourage a Variety
+ of Patterns. Last night brought a Large Package from Bath directed
+ to Your Brother, and intended we guess for the Young Militia Man at
+ Hayes. It contained besides a present for Miss Hetty, both which
+ will be faithfully deliver'd this evening, and the sentiments they
+ inspire shall be in due time communicated. In the Interval I believe
+ I must apply to you my Dear Madam to assure the kind sender of my
+ share of pleasure in the present. Miss Mary's Letter received Last
+ night, gave a great deal of Satisfaction to both your Brother and Me
+ by the account of Your Health, and the Progress You have made in a
+ returning to a Diet of Solid Food, a sort of Sustenance so much more
+ likely to restore and confirm your Strength and Spirits than any
+ other. We are glad to find that Doctor Oliver has your approbation,
+ and that he seems to reason with great sense and probability upon
+ your case, and what it is likely to end in. the Gout is not a very
+ desirable Thing, but only comparatively, where the constitution is
+ not strong, for then there ar many Disorders to which people are
+ Liable that are much worse. I am vastly pleased that Our House has
+ the honour of being approved by you, and should be delighted if I
+ cou'd be so happy as to receive You in it, and wish extremely that
+ it was furnish'd and fit for Your reception, but I find Mr. Pitt
+ thinks that it is not proper to have hired furniture put into it, as
+ well as that you cou'd not be so conveniently accommodated in a
+ House so circumstanced, as you will be in the very commodious
+ Lodgings which Bath affords. We are meditating a journey to Hayes
+ the moment Mr. Pitt returns from Kensington, which makes it
+ impossible for me to say as much as I wish to You upon the different
+ Subjects in this Letter, being obliged to give an account of my
+ journey to the Friends I met at Wotton who are now disperst. May I
+ beg you to give my Love to Miss Mary, and to say I hope she will
+ admit what I have been saying as an excuse for my not acknowledging
+ by this Post in a letter to Her what I have in my sentiments
+ acknowledged ever since I heard from her, that I was indebted to her
+ for the Prettiest, as well as the most Obliging, Letter in the
+ World, besides her Bath Fairing which I value properly. I shall only
+ now repeat my request that You will believe me Always my Dear Madam
+
+ Your affectionate Sister and most Obedient Servant,
+ H. PITT.
+
+ Mr. Pitt will endeavour to serve the Chevalier de Chaila as you
+ desire.
+
+
+All so far had been harmonious enough. Unfortunately, there now occurred
+a second misunderstanding, to which the ensuing letters relate. It is
+best to give Lord Camelford's account, which, though mysterious enough,
+is all we have. 'Her Physicians advising her to discontinue the Waters
+for a short time to give trial to a course of med'cines, she determin'd
+to accompany me to London, to see some old friends after a long absence,
+and to transact certain business, and then to return to Bath. Fearing,
+however, that her unexpected arrival at her Lodgings in Leicester House
+might have objections, or that there might be difficulties in her
+lodging any where in London, she stop'd short at Sion at Ly.
+Holdernesse's, her particular friend, from whence she removed to
+Kensington to a house Mr. Cresset lent her. This Journey gave offence to
+her Brother, and occasion'd their second quarrel. Instead of managing a
+temper too like his own, instead of yielding to her repeated request of
+seeing him, when with gentleness he might have explained his wishes to
+her and have persuaded to whatever he thought best for her or for
+himself, he satisfied himself with dark hints, imperious messages, and
+ambiguous menaces convey'd thro' Ly. Hester and his Sister Mary, neither
+of whom were very happy in the arts of conciliation. Frightened,
+confounded, and at the same time exasperated by so strange a conduct,
+she tried to return to Bath, but her strength would not admit of her
+getting half way thro' the Journey. She return'd to Kensington--she got
+medical advice--she saw a few of her old friends, who soon disproved the
+falsities that were every day propagated of her State of Health--by
+degrees she saw all her fears vanish--the World return to her and nobody
+flie from her but the Person from whom she expected her chief
+countenance and support. She sounded the Princess, and found she was at
+full liberty to live where she pleased, except that the former intimacy
+was at an end. She met her Brother accidentally at Ly. Yarmouth's, he
+kiss'd her on both sides with the affectation of the warmest affection;
+whilst he refused to visit her and his whole family were hostile to her
+in the cruelest manner.'
+
+The whole affair is obscure, and is not elucidated by the letters of
+Pitt and his wife which follow. Lady Hester is civil and kind enough,
+though evidently forbidden to visit or receive her sister-in-law. But
+what Pitt means by his allusion to 'desultory jaunts,' and 'hovering
+about London,' and conduct 'too imprudent and restless or as too
+mysterious' for him to be connected with it, we cannot now conjecture.
+What harm a spinster of forty-eight could do by staying with Lady
+Holdernesse at Sion, and thence moving to Kensington, and being
+undecided as to her plans, it is not easy to determine. It is possible,
+on considering the whole affair, Ann's own temperate reply, and all that
+followed, that Pitt knew that his sister was seeking a pension, for
+which purpose she had gone to Sion and to Kensington (for Lady
+Holdernesse was the wife of a Secretary of State, and Cresset was a man
+of influence), and desirous that his name should not be connected with
+the pension list at this moment of unrivalled popularity and power, he
+was anxious to have no communication with her. There is a still more
+probable explanation of Pitt's annoyance with his sister's behaviour. We
+have seen that Lord Camelford speaks of the 'falsities that were every
+day propagated about her state of health.' In a letter soon to follow
+she herself speaks of her stay in France 'before my spirits were so much
+disordered as they have been since.' Some years afterwards, Horace
+Walpole wrote of her that she had at times been out of her senses. It
+seems possible, then, that one of these attacks had taken place at Bath,
+and that she had broken loose from constraint and come up to London,
+which would revive the gossip about her condition, and so cause
+annoyance to her brother, who thought that peremptoriness was the only
+method of getting her back again to Bath. If this were so, he acted
+wisely, as she appears to have returned to Bath at once. This last
+conjecture seems the more probable explanation. In any case the
+circumstances of the people and the times were full of electricity. Pitt
+was busy, gouty and irritable; Bute was much above the horizon. Ann was
+eccentric, wilful, and wayward. Soon afterwards, she had a pension,
+which annoyed her brother. This is all that we can be said to know. We
+do not even know the date of this episode.
+
+
+ FROM LADY HESTER PITT.
+
+ It is my Dear Madam extremely unfortunate that from different
+ circumstances which have interpos'd themselves, I have not had it in
+ my power to have the pleasure of seeing you since your arrival in
+ the neighbourhood of London, and I am quite concern'd that by Your
+ Brother's business I am so circumstanced today, as to make it
+ impossible for me to receive that Satisfaction. There is to be a
+ meeting of the Cabinet here this Evening, which Always engrosses my
+ Apartment and banishes me to other quarters. We are but just arrived
+ from the Country, which I think has done your Brother good. He
+ desires I wou'd assure you of his affectionate Compliments, and Let
+ you know that his present Pressure of business is so great that it
+ does not leave him the Command of a quarter of an hour of his time,
+ so as to be able to assure himself beforehand of the pleasure of
+ seeing any friend. therefore under that uncertainty, and fearing he
+ may miss of the Satisfaction of meeting You, he desires thro' me to
+ wish you a safe return to Bath, so much the best place, He is
+ perfectly convinced, for Your Health. We are both very glad to hear
+ you have had a confirmation from Doctor Pitt of the efficacy you may
+ expect to find in those waters for your Complaints. I must not end
+ my Note without expressing how much I was flattered by your
+ remembrance of Little Hetty, tho' I trust Miss Mary did not forget
+ me upon that subject, no more than on that of my real Concern for
+ its being impossible for me to wait upon You, and say for myself
+ how much I feel obliged to You for your kind Letter and message. The
+ Compliments of the season attend You my Dear Madam with many good
+ wishes.
+
+ _St. James's Square. Tuesday._
+
+
+ _St. James's Square. Monday. Jan. 15th._
+
+ Dear Madam,--Mr. Pitt is this moment come to Town, and so
+ overwhelm'd with business, that it is quite impossible for Him to
+ write a word to You Himself, in answer to your Note which he has
+ just received. He is very sorry to find you are ill, and wishes me
+ to tell you that you have mistaken Him in thinking he meant to
+ express any desire of His as to your Going, or Staying, which he
+ always meant to Leave to your own Decision, but only to offer you
+ his opinion, and never proposes to take upon Him to give you any
+ further Advice with regard to the place of Your residence, which you
+ have all right independent of any thing with respect to Him to
+ determine as You please for Yourself. I am extremely concern'd to
+ hear your disorder is increased so much as to have made your return
+ to Kensington necessary, as I fear your Situation There must be very
+ uncomfortable and Disagreeable, without Servants, or any of those
+ Conveniences, which are so particularly of Consequence when any body
+ is ill. I hope most sincerely to have the pleasure of hearing you
+ are better, and Able to prosecute what ever May be thought best for
+ Your Health, being very truly Dear Madam
+
+ Your Most Affectionate and Most Obedt
+ H. PITT.
+
+
+ _Friday Morning._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I desire to assure you that all Idea of _Quarrel_ or
+ _unkindness_, (words I am griev'd to find you cou'd employ) was
+ never farther from my mind than during your stay in this
+ neighbourhood. on the Contrary, my Dear Sister, nothing but kindness
+ and regard to your Good, on the whole, has made me judge it
+ necessary that we should not meet during the Continuance you think
+ fit to give to an excursion so unexpected, and so hurtfull to you. I
+ beg my Dear Sister not to mistake my wishes to see Her set down,
+ for a time, quiet and collected within her own Resources of Patience
+ and fortitude, (merely as being best and the only fit thing for
+ Herself) so very widely as to suppose, that my Situation as a
+ Publick Person, is any way concern'd in her residing in one Place or
+ another. all I mean is, that, _for your own sake_, you shou'd
+ abstain from all desultory jaunts, such as the present. the hearing
+ of you all at once, at Sion; next at Kensington, then every day
+ going, and now not yet gone, certainly carries an appearance
+ disadvantageous to you in this view; I have refused myself the
+ pleasure of seeing You; as considering your journey and hovering
+ about London, as too imprudent and restless, or as too mysterious,
+ for me not to discourage such a conduct, by remaining unmixt with
+ it. this is the only cause of my not seeing you, nor can I give you
+ a more real proof of my affectionate regard for your welfare than by
+ thus refusing myself a great pleasure, and, I fear, giving you a
+ Pain. I offer you no Advice, as to the choice of your residence. I
+ am persuaded you want none; you have a right and are well able to
+ judge for yourself on this point. but if you will not fix somewhere
+ You are undone. I am sorry to be forc'd to say this much; but saying
+ less I should cease to be with truest affection Dear Sister
+
+ Ever Yrs
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+ ANN PITT TO HER BROTHER.
+
+ Dear Brother,--I am going to set out to return to Bath, but as the
+ letter I received from you yesterday leaves me in great anxiety and
+ perplexity of mind, I can not set out without assuring you, as I do
+ with the most exact truth, that there was no mistery in my journey
+ here, nor no purpose but the relief I proposed to my mind. If I had
+ known before I left the Bath that you disapproved of my leaving that
+ place at this time, or of my coming to Town, I wou'd not have done
+ as I have done, and wou'd not even have come near it, tho' the
+ advice given me at Oxford with regard to my health, made me desire
+ to make use of the interval in which I was order'd not to try the
+ waters again, to have the pleasure and satisfaction of seeing You
+ and some of my friends and as I hoped that satisfaction from You in
+ the first place, I will not dissemble that I am very much
+ disappointed and mortified in not having seen you, but as the hurry
+ of important business you are in, and the relief necessary to make
+ you go through it, made it possible for me not to interpret your not
+ seeing me as a mark of unkindness, I never used the word (the word)
+ but to guard against other people using it, upon a circumstance
+ which I thought they had nothing to do with.
+
+ When I writ you word from the Bath that I had thoughts of coming to
+ Town for Christmas, I desir'd nothing so much as to do what was most
+ proper according to my situation, and consequently to have your
+ advice, which I told you, very sincerely I wished to be guided by
+ preferably to every other consideration, You best know how I am to
+ attain the end I have steadily desired for Years, as you know I writ
+ you word from France (before my spirits were so much disorder'd as
+ they have been since) that I desired nothing as much as a safe and
+ honourable retreat, that wou'd leave me the enjoyment of my Friends,
+ without which help and suport I find by a painfull experience that
+ it is impossible for me to suport myself. I beg leave to trouble you
+ with my compliments to Lady Hester, and my wishes for the happiness
+ of you both, and of all the little family that belong to you.
+
+ I am D Br &c.
+
+
+This undated note appears to belong to the same time as the preceding
+ones, and tends to confirm the hypothesis that it was Ann's mental
+condition that gave rise to anxiety.
+
+
+ FROM LADY HESTER PITT.
+
+ Dear Madam,--Having informed Mr. Pitt, who is this moment come home,
+ that you intend going to the Lodgings in Lisle Street, He wou'd not
+ set down to dinner without desiring me to let you know from Him that
+ this intention of Yours gives him the greatest surprise and not Less
+ concern for _Your sake_, being unalterably persuaded that Retreat is
+ the only right Thing for your Health, Welfare, and Happiness, and
+ that Bath in Your present state seems to be the fittest Place.
+
+ _St. James's Square   Wednesday   past four o'clock._
+
+
+We now come to the famous affair of the pension. Ann has evidently
+written to ask her brother's interest for a pension. He replies that on
+such a subject he would rather not speak, much less write to her, and
+gives her plainly to understand that he washes his hands of the whole
+business. She now turned to Bute. 'Having lost, therefore,' writes
+Camelford, 'all the hopes she had founded on her brother's friendship,
+which now turned to open enmity, she tried the generosity of Ld Bute
+upon the King's succession, who, not unwilling to give Mr Pitt a
+sensible mortification in the shape of a civility, procured for her a
+pension that was no small comfort in addition to her slender income,
+which was afterwards again augmented to Ł1000 p.a., at the instance of
+her friend M. de Nivernois, upon the peace.'
+
+
+ Dear Sister,--I hoped long before now to have been able to call on
+ you, and in that hope have delayed answering a letter on a subject
+ so very nice and particular, that I cou'd, with difficulty and but
+ imperfectly, enter into it even in conversation. I am sure I need
+ not say to one of your knowledge of the world, that explaining of
+ Situations is not a small Affair, at any time, and in the present
+ moment I dare say You are too reasonable to wish me to do it. In
+ this state I have only to assure you of my sincerest wishes for your
+ advantage and happiness, and that I shall consider any good that
+ arrives to you as done to myself, which I shall be ready to
+ acknowledge as such: but having never been a Sollicitor of favours,
+ upon any occasion, how can I become so now without contradicting the
+ whole tenour of my Life? I think there is no foundation for your
+ apprehensions of anything distressfull being intended, and I hope
+ you will not attribute, what I have said to any motive that may give
+ you uneasiness, being very truely
+
+ Dear Sister Your affectionate Brother
+ _Nov. 24: 1760._ W. PITT.
+
+
+After the letter in which Pitt sheers off from the pension, there was
+evidently an announcement from Ann that it had been granted to her on
+the recommendation of Lord Bute. This is lost. But we have Pitt's
+unpleasing congratulation. This was the note which Ann was with
+difficulty restrained from returning to Pitt, having altered it to suit
+the circumstances of the case, when Pitt's wife was granted a much
+larger pension.
+
+
+ Dear Sister,--Accept sincere felicitations from Lady Hester and me
+ on the Event you have just communicated. on your account, I rejoice
+ at an addition of income so agreeable to your turn of life, whatever
+ repugnancy I find, at the same time, to see my Name placed on the
+ Pensions of Ireland. unmixt as I am in this whole transaction, I
+ will not doubt that you will take care to have it thoroughly
+ understood. long may you live in health to enjoy the comforts and
+ happiness which you tell me you owe to the King, singly through the
+ intercession of Lord Bute, and to feel the pleasing sentiments of
+ such an obligation.
+
+ I am Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother
+ _Tuesday Dec. 30th 1760._ W. PITT.
+
+
+Then follows Ann's reply, which may be judged not unconciliatory when
+her fierce temperament is taken into consideration. She elaborately and
+almost humbly vindicates her pension against her brother's sarcastic
+strictures.
+
+
+ Dear Brother,--I must trouble you again, not only to return my
+ thanks to Lady Hester and yourself, for your obliging
+ felicitations, But as I have the mortification of finding, that for
+ some reasons which I can not judge of, You feel a repugnancy to the
+ mark of favour I have had the honour to receive, and desire--it may
+ be throughly understood that you had no share in the transaction--I
+ ought to make you easy, by assuring you, as I do, that so far as I
+ think proper to communicate an event, which will not naturally be
+ very publick, I will take care to explain the truth, by which it
+ will appear that you are no way concern'd in it, and that it has no
+ sort of relation to your Situation as Minister, since my request was
+ first made to the Princess many years ago, as Her Royal Highnesess
+ Servant, as I am pretty sure I explained to you in a letter from
+ France, and repeated to you at my return, as the foundation of my
+ hopes of obtaining the Princesses approbation for any establishment
+ you might have procured for me. And tho' the Provision I have been
+ so happy to obtain from His Majesty's Bounty is of the utmost
+ importance to me and answers every wish I cou'd form with regard to
+ my income, yet when I was allow'd to say how much wou'd make me
+ easy, I fix'd it at a sum, which I flatter myself will not be
+ thought exorbitant, or appear as if I had wanted to avail myself of
+ the weight of your credit, or the merit of your services to obtain
+ it.
+
+ As to your objection to your Names (_sic_) being upon the Irish
+ Pensions, I do not believe that any mistake can be made, from mine
+ being there. And as to myself, I very sincerely think it an honour
+ that is very flattering to me, to have received so precious a mark
+ of the Royal favour, and to have my Name upon the same List not only
+ with some of the highest and the most deserving persons in England,
+ but even with some of the greatest and most glorious names in
+ Europe. If I have tired you with a longer letter than I intended, I
+ have been lead (_sic_) into it, by the sincere desire I have, that
+ an advantage so very essential to the ease and comfort of the
+ remainder of a Life, which has not hitherto been very happy, shou'd
+ not be a cause of uneasiness to You. I am
+
+
+Alas for the freakful fate which plays with poor humanity and its
+concerns! The next letter announces another pension, not to Ann, but to
+Pitt's wife. So soon after the other correspondence, not ten months! No
+wonder that Ann was tempted to the vengeance that has been described.
+Even though she refrained we may imagine her unrestrained scoffs and her
+bitter laughter.
+
+
+ Dear Madam,--I was out of Town Yesterday, or otherwise I shou'd have
+ had the pleasure of informing You that His Majesty has been
+ Graciously pleas'd to confer the Dignity of Peerage on Your
+ Brother's Family, by creating Me Baroness of Chatham with Limitation
+ to our Sons. The King has been farther pleas'd to make a Grant of
+ Three Thousand Pounds a Year to Mr. Pitt for his own Life, Mine, and
+ our Eldest Son's in consideration of Mr. Pitt's Services, We do not
+ doubt of the Share You will take in these Gracious Marks of his
+ Majesties Royal Approbation and Goodness.
+
+ I am Dear Madam Your most Obedient Servant
+ HES: PITT.
+ _Sunday Morning_
+
+
+Some four years afterwards Ann received this short note, which shows
+that there was no rupture of relations; and the tone indeed is cordial
+for the period, when the expression of the warmest affection was far
+from gushing.
+
+
+ _Burton-Pynsent Aug. ye 1st 1765._
+
+ I am extremely obliged to you, Dear Sister, for the trouble you are
+ so good to take of writing to enquire after my health, which I found
+ mend on the journey and by change of air. I still continue lame, but
+ have left off one Crutch, which is no small advance; tho' with only
+ one Wing my flights, you will imagine, are as yet very short: the
+ Country of Somersetshire is beautifull and tempts much to extend
+ them. I hope your health is much better and that you have found the
+ way to subdue all your complaints, or at least to reduce them
+ within such bounds, as leave your life comfortable and agreeable.
+ Lady Chatham desires to present her compliments to you.
+
+ I am Dear Sister Your affectionate Brother
+ WILLIAM PITT.
+
+
+And now there come the last sad words, the last sign of life that
+William gives to Ann. It is not without significance that even at this
+period of prostration he bids his wife tell Ann that his official life
+is ended. It does not appear that there had ever been or was ever to be
+any formal reconciliation between them. But through all the gusts and
+squalls and storms that had troubled their intercourse an underlying
+tenderness had survived.
+
+
+ _Hayes. Oct. 21st. 1768._
+
+ Madam,--The very weak and broken state of my Lord's health having
+ reduced him to the necessity of supplicating the King to grant him
+ the permission to resign the Privy Seal, he has desir'd I wou'd
+ communicate this Step to You.
+
+ I am Madam, Your most Obedient Humble Servant
+ H. CHATHAM.
+
+
+About this time (1768) she took up her abode at Kensington Gravel Pits,
+in the region of Notting Hill, 'where out of a very ugly odd house and a
+flat piece of ground with a little dirty pond in the middle of it, she
+has made a very pretty place; she says she has "hurt her understanding"
+in trying to make it so.'[86] Before that time she seems to have lived
+for a while at Twickenham; at least Horace Walpole speaks of her as a
+close neighbour. Being fairly launched as a pensioner, she throve on the
+system, and eventually accumulated a treble allowance; this Bute
+pension, another procured by M. de Nivernois, and another, mentioned by
+Horace Walpole in a letter of Nov. 25, 1764, which must have raised her
+whole income from this source to some 1500_l._ a year. On this she
+entertained, and frolicked, and danced. We hear of her choice but
+miniature balls, and her band of French horns, which Horace Walpole
+enjoyed and described. But her intercourse with William, once so bright
+and genial, was ended, and that is all with which we are here concerned.
+A frigid letter or two counted as nothing in a connection which had once
+been as intimate as it was delightful.
+
+Ann went on living at Kensington a somewhat frivolous life so far as we
+know anything about it, in intimate relations with Horace Walpole and
+his society. But in 1774 she went abroad, under the auspices of the
+Butes, to Italy, to Pisa and elsewhere. Then came her brother's sudden
+death. Though she had been so long aloof from him, the shock finally
+shattered her reason, which, it would appear, had already given cause
+for apprehension. Chatham died May 11, 1778. She soon returned to
+England, and in the October of that year Horace Walpole writes that she
+is 'in a very wild way, and they think must be confined.'[87] In the
+following May he announces that she is actually under restraint.[88]
+There is a letter at Chevening from her to her niece, Lady Mahon, dated
+'Burnham, May 9, 1779,' which betrays her distraught condition. Burnham
+was probably that 'one of Dr. Duffell's houses' to which she had been
+removed. On Feb. 9, 1781, she dies, still in confinement. Lady Bute, it
+should be noted, was kind and attentive to the end.[89]
+
+'She was in Italy at the time of his (Chatham's) death,' writes Lord
+Camelford, who was probably there too. 'I can bear witness that the
+grief she felt at the reflection of his having died without a
+reconciliation with her made such an impression of tenderness on her
+mind that not only obliterated all remembrance of his unkindness, but
+recoiled upon herself, as if she had been the offending party, and
+doubtless contributed greatly to the melancholy state in which she
+died.'
+
+Horace Walpole, who had come to hate all Pitts, confirms this in his
+sardonic way. 'Did I tell you that Mrs Ann Pitt is returned and acts
+great grief for her brother?' and he goes on to say that Camelford
+himself 'gave a little into that mummery, even to me; forgetting how
+much I must remember of his aversion to his uncle.'
+
+There were perhaps few genuine tears save those of wife and children
+shed over the grave of the grim, disconcerting old statesman, for men of
+his type are beyond friendship: they inspire awe, not affection; they
+deal with masses, not with individuals; they have followers, admirers,
+and an envious host of enemies, rarely a friend. But Ann had no reason
+to feign grief or self-reproach. She had lost her first love, her only
+love, the love of her life. It is probable that the brother and sister
+had understood each other throughout in their quick-kindling, petulant
+way. 'My brother, who has always seemed to guess and understand all I
+felt of every kind,' she wrote in 1757;[90] a sentence which is a clue
+to all. The memory of childhood, the glad sympathies of youth, the
+impressions received when their characters were plastic and fresh, the
+habit of close intimacy for the score of years during which intimacy
+was possible for him, all these contributed to form a bond which
+survived the skirmishes and collisions of their later lives. Two persons
+of highly charged temperament, and of natures too much akin, who
+understood each other, respected each other, and perhaps secretly
+enjoyed each other's ebullitions, such were Ann and William after they
+separated in 1746. Their long affection is interesting if only that it
+seemed impossible that two such characters should agree even for a time.
+And therefore, though the narrative of this episode has swollen beyond
+all limit and proportion, the space is not lost, for it is invaluable to
+the student of Pitt's career. It lights up the only expressed tenderness
+in his life, it is the one relief to his sombre nature, it is the sole
+record that we have of the unbending of that grim and stately figure.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+In 1734 there had been a fiercely contested General Election, and Thomas
+Pitt had been returned for both Okehampton and Old Sarum. He elected to
+sit for Okehampton, and nominated his brother, William, together with
+his brother-in-law, Nedham, for the other borough. So, on February 18,
+1735, William was returned Member for the notorious borough of Old
+Sarum; an area of about sixty acres of ploughed land, on which had once
+stood the old city of Salisbury, but which no longer contained a single
+house or a single resident. The electorate consisted of seven votes.
+When an election took place the returning officer brought with him a
+tent, under which the necessary business was transacted.[91]
+
+To such a constituency it was superfluous, and indeed impossible, to
+offer an election address, or an exposition of policy. But William's
+politics could not be other than those of his brother and nominator,
+though it would seem that Thomas conformed to William rather than
+William to Thomas. We have seen some indications in his letters to Ann
+that Thomas had been favourable to Sir Robert Walpole, and that so late
+as November 1734. But it seems probable that William, who was united in
+private friendship with Lyttelton and the Grenvilles, was drawn to them
+by political sympathy as well, and was thus in agreement with the
+fiercest section of the Opposition. By the time that William was
+elected, Thomas, who was connected with the same group by marriage, must
+also have thrown in his political lot with it, or he would not have
+nominated his brother. For William, though only a cornet of horse, was
+known to be an enemy, and a redoubtable enemy, to the Minister. On this
+point we have clear evidence in a remarkable statement by Lord
+Camelford, which will be quoted later.
+
+William's political opinions were then, we may safely suppose, the
+result of family connection, for through his brother and his own
+friendships he was closely united with that band of politicians who met
+and caballed at Stowe, the stately residence of Lord Cobham. There he
+was a visitor for the first time this year (1735). His stay lasted not
+less than four months, from the beginning of July to the end of October.
+He could scarcely have remained so long without being enrolled in this
+small but important group, even had he not been enlisted already. But he
+was probably a recruit before his visit began. His brother, as we have
+seen, had married Christian Lyttelton, Cobham's niece; George,
+afterwards Lord Lyttelton, was her brother, and Cobham's nephew, as well
+as William's intimate friend; Richard and George Grenville, the first of
+whom is better known as Lord Temple, and the second as a laborious but
+intolerable prime minister, were Cobham's nephews; Richard, indeed, was
+his heir. A family connection was thus formed, which, at first held up
+to ridicule under the nickname of 'Cobham's cubs,' or 'The Cousins,' or
+'The Boy Patriots,' was to be for the next thirty years a notable factor
+in political history, and a sinister element in Pitt's career.
+
+So it may be well here to turn aside for a moment to consider these
+Grenvilles, who exercised so singular and baleful an influence on Pitt,
+and indeed on public affairs in general. For from the moment that Pitt
+became their brother-in-law, he was adopted as one of the brotherhood
+and choked in their embraces. From this mortal entanglement he
+emancipated himself too late. It was then patent how different his
+career would have been had he had a man of common-sense at his elbow, or
+at least an unselfish adviser. George Grenville, however, complained on
+his side that the connection had been fatal to the peace and happiness
+of the Grenvilles.[92]
+
+Who was the chief of this combination? Richard Temple, Viscount Cobham,
+best remembered as the 'brave Cobham' to whom Pope addressed his first
+Epistle and as the founder of the dynasty and palace of Stowe, was not
+merely a soldier who had served with distinction under Marlborough, but
+a fortunate courtier on whom the House of Hanover had heaped constant
+and signal honours. He was created first a Baron, then a Viscount,
+Constable of Windsor Castle, Governor of Jersey, a Privy Councillor,
+Colonel of the First Dragoons, and was afterwards to become a Field
+Marshal and Colonel of the Horse Guards. He had, hints Shelburne, some
+of the Shandean humour of Marlborough's veterans, but his portrait shows
+a keen, refined, perhaps sensitive countenance; he was also something
+of a bashaw.[93] Sated with military honours, and always a staunch Whig,
+he had now taken to conspicuous politics and splendour; politics
+exacerbated by a personal slight, and splendour displayed in sumptuous
+hospitality, princely buildings, and lavish magnificence of gardens.
+These, laid out under the supervision of Lancelot Brown, extended at
+last to not less than four hundred acres. Here he erected pavilions and
+shrines in the fashion of those times; the most daring of which was one
+to commemorate his friendships, with which politics had made sad havoc
+before the temple was completed. Here he kept open house in the spacious
+and genial fashion of that time, and entertained Pope, Congreve,
+Bolingbroke, Pulteney, the wits as well as the princes of the day. From
+these pleasing cares he had recently been diverted by one of those
+needless affronts which seem so inconsistent with the robust and genial
+character of Walpole, but to the infliction of which Walpole was
+singularly prone. On account of his opposition to the Excise Bill,
+Cobham had been deprived of his regiment, the same, by-the-bye, in which
+Pitt was a subaltern. Stung to political ardour by this insult, he had
+begun to form a faction of violent opposition, of which his nephews and
+their friends were the nucleus. Thus began that formidable influence
+which had its home and source at Stowe for near a century afterwards,
+and which for three generations patiently and persistently pursued the
+ducal coronet which was the darling object of its successive chiefs.
+
+Cobham, then, founded the family, and, so long as he lived, directed
+their operations, with too much perhaps of the spirit of a martinet.
+When he died his fortune and title passed to his sister, afterwards, as
+we shall see, Countess Temple in her own right, the mother of the
+Grenvilles with whom we are concerned.
+
+There were originally five Grenville brothers: Richard, George, James,
+Henry, and Thomas. Three of these, however, are outside our limits.
+Thomas, a naval officer of signal promise, was killed in action off Cape
+Finisterre in May 1747. James and Henry were cyphers, not ill provided
+for at the public charge. Both seem to have broken loose at one time
+from the tyranny of the brotherhood: James at first siding with Richard
+against George in 1761; and Henry, whom we find Richard anxious, on
+opposite grounds it is to be presumed, to oust from the representation
+of Buckingham in 1774. James, who, says Horace Walpole, 'had all the
+defects of his brothers and had turned them to the best account,' was
+Deputy Paymaster to Pitt; and Henry was a popular Governor of Barbadoes,
+as well as Ambassador at Constantinople for four years, after which both
+subsided into the blameless occupation of various sinecures.
+
+Never, indeed, was family so well provided for during an entire century
+as the Temple-Grenvilles. Although the system by which the aristocracy
+lived on the country was not carried nearly as far in Great Britain as
+in the France of the fourteenth Louis and his successor, yet it had no
+inconsiderable hold. Even the austere George, though averse in Burke's
+expressive language to 'the low, pimping politics of a Court,' did not
+disdain, when Prime Minister, to hurry to the King to announce the
+death of Lord Macclesfield and secure for his son, afterwards Marquis of
+Buckingham, the reversion of the Irish Tellership of the Exchequer thus
+vacated;[94] nor, a few months later, to obtain the grant of a
+lighthouse as a provision for his younger children.[95] The Tellership,
+held as it was under the unreformed conditions, was a place of vast
+emolument; it is not now easy to compute the amount.[96] Nor is it
+necessary for the purpose of this book to follow up these details.
+Cobbett reckoned from returns furnished to the House of Commons that
+this Lord Buckingham and his brother Thomas, the sons of George
+Grenville, had in half a century drawn 700,000_l._ of public money, and
+William, another brother, something like 200,000_l._ more. These
+figures, of course, are open to dispute, but they indicate at least that
+the revenues from public money of this family of sinecurists must have
+been enormous. Of English families the Grenvilles were in this
+particular line easily the first. Had all sinecurists, it may be said in
+passing, spent their money like the younger Thomas, who returned far
+more than he received by bequeathing his matchless library to the
+nation, the public conscience would have been much more tender towards
+them.
+
+Nor was it need that drove them thus to live upon the public, for the
+private wealth of the family was commanding; it was the basis of their
+power. Richard by the death of his mother was said to have become the
+richest subject in England.[97] And, as time went on, his possessions
+swelled and swelled. The estates of Bubb[98] devolved upon him.
+Heiresses brought their fortunes. There seemed no end to this
+prosperity, and it was all utilised steadily and ceaselessly to extend
+the political influence of the family.
+
+So all the brothers, even the sailor Thomas, were brought into the House
+of Commons; and, with their connections and their discipline, so long as
+this was preserved, formed a redoubtable political force. They were not
+only a brotherhood but a confraternity. What is really admirable indeed
+is the pertinacity and concentration of this strange, dogged race, and
+their devotion, indeed subjection, to their chief; they were a political
+Company of Jesus. Their objects were not exalted, but from generation to
+generation, with a patience little less than Chinese, they pursued and
+ultimately attained what they desired. They were of course unpopular,
+because their scheme was too obvious; but they knew the value of
+popularity, and attempted it with pompous and crowded entertainments.
+They were not brilliant; but in every generation they had a man of
+sufficient ability, two prime ministers among them, to further their
+cause. They built, no doubt, on inadequate foundations, but these lasted
+just long enough to enable the structure to be crowned. It is a singular
+story; there is nothing like it in the history of England; it resembles
+rather the persistent annals of the hive.
+
+The career of Pitt is concerned with only two of these Grenvilles,
+Richard and George. These two men had this at least in common, an
+amazing opinion of themselves. They were in their own estimation as good
+as or better than any one else. They resented the slightest idea of any
+disparity between themselves and Pitt. On what this prodigious estimate
+was founded we shall never know; we can only conjecture that it was the
+combination of fortune and family with some ability that made them deem
+their position at least equal to his. When Pitt had raised Britain from
+abasement to the first position in the world, when he was indisputably
+the greatest orator and the greatest power in the country, the
+Grenvilles considered themselves at the least as Pitt's equals, and him
+as only one and not the first of a triumvirate. In 1769, when Pitt was
+reconciled to them, Temple trumpeted the 'union of the three brothers'
+as the greatest fact in contemporary history. As the alliance of a man
+of genius with great parliamentary influence and powers of intrigue it
+was undoubtedly a political fact of note. But any disparity between the
+three personalities never occurs to Temple. In 1766, he writes: 'If a
+lead of superiority was claimed (on the part of Pitt) it was rejected on
+my part with an assertion of my pretensions to an equality.' And again:
+'I claimed an equality, and have no idea of yielding to him ... a
+superiority which I think it would be unbecoming in me to give.' Poor
+forgotten Temple! With such superb scorn did he reject the offer of the
+First Lordship of the Treasury, with the nomination of the
+Chancellorship of the Exchequer and the whole Board of Treasury, when
+offered by the first man in Europe. An hallucination of the same kind
+was observed in the brothers of Napoleon. But in that case it was only
+noted by cynical contemporaries, in this it was proclaimed on the
+housetops.
+
+Of Richard, the eldest, who became, as will be seen, Earl Temple, a
+competent and laborious critic has said that he was one of the 'most
+straightforward, honest, and honourable men of his age.' The age, no
+doubt, was not famous for public men of this type; but it was not so
+barren as this judgment would imply. And indeed it is difficult to
+discern the grounds on which it is based. To the ordinary student
+Temple, we imagine, will always appear a selfish and tortuous intriguer,
+who hoped to utilise his brother-in-law's genius and popularity for
+practical objects of his own. But he had other resources of a more
+questionable kind. He delighted in the subterranean and the obscure.
+'This malignant man,' says Horace Walpole with truth and point, 'worked
+in the mines of successive factions for over thirty years together.' He
+was in constant communication with Wilkes, whom he supplied with funds.
+He was an active pamphleteer. So well were his methods understood that
+he acquired the dubious honour of a candidature for the authorship of
+Junius. It is almost certain at any rate that he was one of the few
+confidants of that remarkable secret. But his wealth and strategy and
+borough power were all concentrated on selfish and personal objects. As
+head of the Grenvilles, his design was that the Grenvilles and their
+connections and all other influences that he could bring to bear should
+co-operate for the elevation of the family in the person of its chief.
+For this purpose his brother-in-law, Pitt, was a priceless asset. But
+all the family had to serve. All of them were put into the House of
+Commons; and, it may be added, into the Privy Council, except Thomas,
+the sailor, who was prematurely removed by death. George, who under Pitt
+and Temple only enjoyed subordinate office, was for a time lured from
+the family allegiance by Bute with the offer of a Secretaryship of State
+and the reversion of the headship. But George himself was eventually
+brought into line.
+
+Temple's aims were simple and material; from the first moment that we
+discern him he is pursuing them with persistent but intemperate ardour.
+Hardly was Cobham's body cold, Cobham, his uncle and benefactor, to whom
+he owed everything, when we find Temple urging that his mother, Cobham's
+sister and heiress, should be made a Countess in her own right, with
+descent, of course, to himself. Cobham died on September 13; on
+September 28 Temple applied for this title. Even Newcastle, the most
+hardened of political jobbers, was shocked at his precipitation, and
+suggested a postponement, on the ground of common decency. Temple
+brushed this objection aside with contempt. He wished the thing done at
+once, and done it was.
+
+Hardly had he thus been ennobled when we find him signalising his new
+rank by a filthy trick more suited to a barge than a court. At a
+reception in his own house, presided over by his charming and
+accomplished wife, Lord Cobham, as he was now styled, spat into the hat
+which Lord Hervey held in his hand. This feat Cobham had betted a guinea
+that he would accomplish. Hervey behaved with temper and coolness.
+Cobham took the hat and wiped it with profuse excuses, trying to pass
+the matter off as a joke; but after some days of humiliation he had to
+write an explicit apology with a recital of all his previous efforts to
+appease Hervey's resentment.[99] Such diversions, Lady Hester Stanhope
+declares, were common at Stowe. She narrates one scarcely less
+nauseous.[100]
+
+Having obtained the earldom, his next object was the Garter. George II.
+detested him, and refused the request with asperity. So Pitt had to be
+brought in. Pitt was then all-powerful, for this was the autumn of 1759.
+He wrote a note full of sombre menace to Newcastle, and demanded the
+Garter for Temple as a reward for his own services; but still the King
+refused. Then the last reserves were brought into play. Temple resigned
+the Privy Seal on the ground that the Garter was denied. Pitt had at the
+same time a peremptory interview with Newcastle. The King had to yield,
+but could not repress his anger. He threw the ribbon to Temple as a bone
+is thrown to a dog. But delicacy, as we have seen, did not trouble
+Temple in matters of substance, and he was satisfied.
+
+Having obtained these two objects of ambition, he now played for a
+dukedom. This ambition, suspected presumably in Cobham, had been the
+subject of epigram so early as 1742.[101] It was avowed, according to
+Walpole, in 1767, and, indeed, no other explanation seems adapted to his
+various proceedings at critical junctures. Thus, when in June 1765,
+George III. and his uncle Cumberland tried to form a Pitt ministry, but
+found that an absolute condition of such a ministry was that Temple
+should be First Lord of the Treasury, Temple refused on various flimsy
+pretexts. When these were surmounted, he declared that 'he had tender
+and delicate reasons' which he did not explain to the King, or,
+apparently, to Pitt.[102] That this unwonted delicacy and tenderness
+were concentrated on the superior coronet appears from the negotiation
+carried on by Horace Walpole in 1767, when Lord Hertford assured him of
+the fact that Lord Temple's ambition was now a dukedom.[103] It is not
+doubtful that this had now become the central preoccupation of his life,
+and the hereditary object of the family combination. At first sight it
+would seem improbable that Pitt was aware of it, for the simple reason
+that he would probably have made efforts to obtain it from the King. On
+the other hand, it is unlikely that Temple, in the affair of the Garter,
+having found the inestimable value of Pitt's pressure on George II.,
+could have foregone the effort to exercise it on George III. On the
+whole, the most plausible conjecture appears to be that Pitt was
+unsuccessfully sounded by his brother-in-law. All that we know is, that
+when Pitt finally determined to undertake the ministry without Temple,
+they had a heated interview, which seems to have left deep marks on
+Pitt's nerves and health, but whether it turned on Temple's particular
+ambition or not can now only be matter for surmise.
+
+The death of Temple made no difference to the family ambition. His
+nephew made violent, even frantic, but ineffectual efforts to obtain the
+title through Chatham's son. Nor were other means of aggrandisement
+neglected. By marriage there accrued the fortunes of Chambers, Nugent,
+Chandos, and, by some other way, that of Dodington. Acre was added to
+acre and estate to estate, often by the dangerous expedient of borrowed
+money, until Buckinghamshire seemed likely to become the appanage of the
+family. Borough influence was laboriously accumulated and maintained.
+Nor were nobler possessions disdained. Rare books and manuscripts,
+choice pictures, and sumptuous furniture were added by successive
+generations to the splendid collections of Stowe. Finally, in the reign
+of George IV., and in the time of Temple's great-nephew, the object was
+attained. Lord Liverpool acquired the support of the Grenville
+parliamentary influence by an almost commercial compact, Louis XVIII.
+added his instances, and Buckingham became a duke. From that moment the
+star of the family visibly paled. Eight years afterwards the duke had to
+shut up Stowe, and go abroad. Less than twenty years from then the
+palace was dismantled, its treasures were dispersed, the vast estates
+sold, and the glories of the House, built up with so much care and
+persistence, vanished like a snow-wreath.
+
+But all this is beyond our narrative. At this time all these ambitions
+are concealed, there is nothing visible but cordiality, the genial flow
+of soul, and brotherly love. Pitt's early letters to George Grenville
+are among the easiest and most human that he ever wrote: he wrote
+nothing more unaffectedly tender than two letters he sent in September
+and October 1742, to George, then abroad for his health. Richard and
+George Grenville, Lyttelton and William Pitt, with their set, form one
+of those engaging companionships of youth, when high spirits, warm
+affections, and the dayspring of life combine to animate a friendship
+without guile or suspicion.
+
+Then come separation, marriage, new interests, new ambitions, and the
+paths diverge, perhaps till sunset. So it was with these young men. They
+all at times quarrelled, even the kindly Lyttelton was driven to
+separation. Later, again, they all came together again in some fashion
+or another, with the exception, perhaps, of George, whose obstinate
+self-love when wounded could never be healed.
+
+But now all was dawn and blossom and smiles. The friends are full of
+banter. Their politics are half a frolic. Life is all before them. Its
+conditions will harden them presently, and they will wrangle and snarl,
+and have their quarrels and huffs. But that is not yet; not even a
+coming shadow is visible. Still, even now, it is necessary to indicate
+the nature and consequences of Pitt's absorption into the cousinhood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+It is here that his public career begins. His lot was cast in stirring
+times. For the year of his entry into Parliament was the fourteenth of
+Walpole's long administration, and it was not difficult to see menacing
+cracks in the structure. The Minister himself seems to have been aware
+that his position was critical; and at the general election in the
+previous year he had spared no exertions to secure a majority. In his
+own county of Norfolk, 10,000_l._ had been spent in support of his
+candidates without averting their defeat: from his own private means he
+is said, no doubt with gross exaggeration, to have expended no less than
+60,000_l._ Figures like these, however swollen by rumour, denote the
+intensity of the struggle. But in spite of all, his losses were
+considerable. Even Scotland, in those days the hungry dependant of all
+Governments, was shaken in her allegiance. And, though he gained the
+victory, the toughness of the contest betokened clearly that his
+stability was seriously impaired, and that the country was weary of his
+domination.
+
+For this there were many obvious causes. One, of course, was the
+universal unpopularity of the Excise scheme. It was also one of the
+moments in our history when the country is uneasily conscious of
+weakness and possible humiliation abroad, and when the silent and
+passive interests of peace weigh lightly in the balance against the
+smarting burden of wounded self-respect. But the most operative cause
+lay in Walpole himself.
+
+There is no enigma about Walpole. He sprang from near a score of
+generations of Norfolk squires who had spent six hundred years in
+healthy obscurity and the simple pleasures of the country. None of them
+apparently had brains, or the need of them. From these he inherited a
+frame hardy and robust, and that taste for the sports of the field that
+never left him. He had also the advantage of being brought up as a
+younger son to work, and thus he gained that self-reliant and
+pertinacious industry which served him so well through long years of
+high office. From the beginning to the end he was primarily a man of
+business. Had he not been a politician it cannot be doubted that he
+would have been a great merchant or a great financier. And, though his
+lot was cast in politics, a man of business he essentially remained.
+This is not to say that he was not a consummate parliamentary debater,
+for that he must have been. But it is to suggest that the key to
+Walpole's character as Prime Minister lies in his instincts and
+qualifications as a man of business. His main tendency was not, as with
+Chesterfield and Carteret and Bolingbroke, towards high statesmanship.
+His first object was to carry on the business of the country in a
+business spirit, as economically and as peacefully as possible. His
+chief preoccupation apart from this was the keeping out of the rival
+house of Stuart, which would not have employed the firm of Walpole and
+the Whigs to keep their accounts. It is quite possible that as a patriot
+he may have also dreaded the probable evils of the Stuart dynasty. But
+the first reason is amply sufficient. The corruption of which he was
+undoubtedly guilty, but of which he was by no means the inventor, he
+perhaps considered as the commission due to customers; or else he may
+have argued, 'these men have to be bought by somebody, let us do it in a
+business-like way.' His merciless crushing of any rivals was simply the
+big firm crushing competition, a familiar feature of commerce. His
+carrying on a war against Spain in spite of his own conscientious
+disapproval can only be satisfactorily explained on the same hypothesis.
+The nation would have war: well, if it must, he could carry it on more
+cheaply, and limit its mischief more effectually than any other
+contractor. Moreover, Walpole had all along been the merchants' man. He
+had given them peace and wealth. Now for commercial purposes they wanted
+war and he had to gratify them. They had been the main backers of his
+administration, the deprivation of their support would have left him
+bare; so when they turned round he had to follow, with scarcely the
+appearance of leadership.
+
+In these days we should undoubtedly condemn any statesman who declared a
+war of which he disapproved. Lord Aberdeen morbidly and unjustly accused
+himself of this offence, and refused to be comforted. That is the other
+extreme to Walpole's position. But we must remember the political
+morality of those times. Was there then living a statesman who would
+have acted differently? From this sweeping question we cannot except
+Pitt, who was bitterly denouncing Walpole for his pacific attitude, and
+had afterwards to confess that Walpole had been right.
+
+We regard Walpole, then, first and foremost as a man of business, led
+into the great error with which history reproaches him by his brother
+men of business. Still, his qualities in that capacity would not have
+maintained him for years as Prime Minister. They proved him to be a
+hard-working man with practical knowledge of affairs and strong common
+sense; a sagacious man who hated extremes. He had besides the highest
+qualities of a parliamentary leader. Of imagination, unless it may be
+inferred from his palace and picture gallery, he seems to have been
+totally destitute. But he had dauntless courage and imperturbable
+temper.
+
+To his courage George II., who was not profuse of praise, gave ardent
+testimony. 'He is a brave fellow,' he would cry out vehemently, with a
+flush and an oath, 'he has more spirit than any man I ever knew;' a
+compliment ill-requited by Sir Robert, who declared that his master, if
+he knew anything of him, was, 'with all his personal bravery, as great a
+political coward as ever wore a crown.' Early in his career as Prime
+Minister Sir Robert, who had the art, rare among eighteenth century
+politicians, of inditing pointed and pregnant letters, had written to an
+Irish Viceroy: 'I have weathered great storms before now, and shall not
+be lost in an Irish hurricane.'[104] This was no vain boast; it was the
+spirit in which he habitually conducted affairs. In truth Walpole's
+courage stands in no need of witness, it speaks for itself; his very
+defects arose from it or prove it. His jealousy of ability which
+deprived him of precious allies and compelled him to fight
+single-handed, his intolerance of independence in his party which had
+the same effect, all show the dauntless self-confidence of the man. He
+wanted no competitors, no dubious allies, no assistance but that of
+unflagging votes or diligent service; for all else he relied on himself
+alone.
+
+This great Minister had all the defects of his qualities as well as one
+which seemed curiously alien to them. Part of his strength lay in a
+coarse and burly, if cynical, geniality. His temper, as we have said,
+was imperturbable; we shall see this even in the closing scene of his
+ministry; it was even cordial, and sometimes boisterous. He loved to
+seem rather a country gentleman than a statesman. He seemed most natural
+when shooting and carousing at Houghton, or carousing and hunting at
+Richmond. But his appearance was deceptive; he was what the French would
+call 'un faux bonhomme,' a spurious good fellow. Good nature perhaps
+could hardly have survived the desperate battles and intrigues in which
+this hard-bitten old statesman had been engaged all his life. And so
+under this bluff and debonair exterior there was concealed a jealousy of
+power, passing the jealousy of woman, and the ruthless vindictiveness of
+a Red Indian. To the opposition of his political foes he opposed a stout
+and unflinching front which shielded a gang of mediocrities; with these
+enemies he fought a battle in which quarter was neither granted nor
+expected. But his own forces were kept under martial law; anything like
+opposition or rivalry within his ranks he crushed in the relentless
+spirit of Peter the Great. By these methods he had not merely maintained
+an iron discipline among his own supporters, but had himself constructed
+by alienation and proscription the opposition to his administration, an
+opposition which comprised consummate abilities and undying
+resentments. For he had driven from him and united in a league of
+implacable revenge almost all the men of power and leading in
+Parliament. Politics to them were embodied in one controlling idea; how
+to compass the fall, the ruin, the impeachment of Walpole. The undaunted
+Minister faced them with confident serenity, though they were not
+enemies to be disdained. Pulteney, Wyndham, Chesterfield, and Carteret
+were men of the highest ability and distinction. Barnard and Polwarth,
+Shippen and Sandys, were from character or intellect scarcely less
+redoubtable. Behind them lurked Bolingbroke, excluded, indeed, from
+Parliament by the vigilant detestation of Walpole, but guiding and
+inspiring from his enforced retirement, the seer and oracle of all the
+Minister's enemies, for--
+
+ 'Princely counsel in his face yet shone,
+ Majestic, though in ruin.'
+
+Prominent among these stately combatants was an anomalous figure with a
+brain as shallow and futile as St. John's was active and brilliant, but
+by the nature of things as formidable as Bolingbroke was impotent,
+Frederick Prince of Wales. For Frederick was soon to add to the second
+position in the country the leadership of the Opposition. The King's
+health was supposed to be precarious, though he lived cheerfully and not
+ingloriously for another quarter of a century. And the Heir Apparent,
+feeling conscious of his advantages, and determined to assert himself,
+became the complacent puppet of all the factions opposed to his father's
+Government. His Court, indeed, resembled that famous cave to which were
+gathered every one that was discontented and every one that was in
+distress. All who had been spurned or ousted by Walpole, all who were
+under the displeasure of the King, all who saw little prospect of
+advancement under the present reign, hastened to rally round the Heir
+Apparent. He was soon to employ Pitt about his person. It is well, then,
+to pause a moment and consider this prominent and formidable figure.
+
+Frederick, Prince of Wales, is one of the idle mysteries of English
+history. The problem does not lie in his being a political leader, in
+spite of the general contempt in which he was held by his contemporaries
+and associates; for an heir-apparent to the Crown can always, if he
+chooses, be a factor in party politics, though it is scarcely possible
+that his intervention can be beneficial. But no circumstance known to us
+can explain the virulence of aversion with which the King and Queen
+regarded him, which was so intense as to be almost incredible. They were
+both good haters, and yet they hated no one half so much as their eldest
+son. His father called him the greatest beast and liar and scoundrel in
+existence. His mother and his sister wished hourly to hear of his death.
+This violence of unnatural loathing is not to be accounted for by any
+known facts. Frederick was a poor creature, no doubt, a vain and fatuous
+coxcomb. But human beings are constantly the parents of coxcombs without
+regarding them as vermin. The only conjecture in regard to the matter
+which seems to furnish adequate ground for these feelings is that the
+King was bred in the narrow school of a little German State, where,
+though nothing less than affection was expected between a prince and his
+heir, discipline was rigidly observed; so that the conduct of Frederick,
+in assuming a position independent and defiant of his father, and in
+openly heading an opposition to his Government, was an offence the more
+unspeakable and unpardonable as it had been absolutely beyond the limits
+of Hanoverian contemplation. There was, it must be confessed, an
+hereditary predisposition to this parental relation. The King himself,
+when Prince of Wales, had been placed under arrest by his father for the
+somewhat venial offence of insulting the Duke of Newcastle. He had
+submitted himself to his disgrace, and his opposition had only been
+passive and inarticulate; he had never dreamed of forming a faction
+hostile to the Crown. His only real crimes had been his right of
+succession and a fictitious popularity founded on dislike of his
+father's mistresses. And yet his father hated him almost as much as
+father ever hated son. It was reserved for George II. to discover a
+deeper abhorrence for his own heir. With his views of absolute
+authority, a peculiar degree of detestation had to be discovered for a
+Prince of Wales who had not merely the inherent vice of heirship
+apparent but the gratuitous offence of an active opposition which his
+father deemed flagrant rebellion. Given violent temper, ill manners, and
+a sort of family tradition, the cause of wrath can best be thus
+explained.
+
+Beyond this we know nothing for certain, and presumably shall never know
+more. There are some facts, but they are insufficient.
+
+It is said that as a mere boy he gamed and drank and kept a mistress. By
+this last scandal the royal family was enabled to present to the world
+the unedifying spectacle of grandfather, father, and son simultaneously
+living under these immoral conditions; and all three, it is said,
+successively with the same woman. But these facts alone would certainly
+not have accounted for his father's displeasure. Again, it is narrated
+that when his tutor complained of him his mother said that these were
+page's tricks. 'Would to God they were, madam,' replied the tutor, 'but
+they are rather the tricks of lackeys and knaves.' And tricky Frederick
+undoubtedly was from the beginning to the end. But trickiness, though it
+was not among the King's faults, and though it would excite his just
+contempt, cannot alone have caused the intensity of his hatred.
+
+One if not two of Frederick's escapades were concerned with designs of
+marriage. He was discovered on the point of concluding a secret alliance
+with Princess Wilhelmine of Prussia, with whom he professed himself in
+love, and who afterwards became known to us as Margravine of Bareith; on
+another occasion it is said that he was lured by a dowry of 100,000_l._
+into a betrothal with Lady Diana Spencer, grand-daughter of Sarah,
+Duchess of Marlborough. Both these affairs were interrupted at the last
+moment. In both cases the King was irritated by the underhand
+proceedings of his son, and by the total lack of a confidence which, as
+he probably omitted to remember, he had done nothing to gain. But his
+crowning outrage was a monkey-trick, both wanton and barbarous. When he
+had at last married a princess of his father's choice, and his wife was
+seized with the first pangs of maternity in the King's palace of Hampton
+Court, he hurried her off, in her agony and in spite of her entreaties,
+to St. James's. At any moment of the journey a catastrophe might have
+occurred. What the motive was for this cruel and unmeaning escapade
+cannot be guessed, for his own explanations were futile. It was said
+that his father suspected him of an intention to foist a spurious child
+on his family and that he resented the suspicion. If that were so his
+action was exactly suited to confirm it. Whatever his purpose may have
+been, the King and Queen, from whom the imminence of the Princess's
+situation had been carefully concealed, were naturally and grossly
+insulted. The King banished him from his palace and presence, and
+forbade the Court to all who should visit him. Nor was there ever an
+approach to reconciliation or forgiveness in the fourteen years that the
+Prince had yet to live. The King would receive him at Court and would
+express the hope that his wife was in good health; that was the extent
+of their relations. But though this was the culminating point of his
+known misconduct, it would almost seem that there was some more occult
+reason which we do not know. We only guess at its existence from the
+record of Lord Hardwicke. At the time of this last scandal 'Sir Robert
+Walpole,' says the Chancellor, 'informed me of certain passages between
+the King and himself, and between the King and the Prince, of too high
+and secret a nature even to be trusted to this narrative; but from
+thence I found great reason to think that this unhappy difference
+between the King and Queen and His Royal Highness turned upon some
+points of a more interesting and important nature than have hitherto
+appeared.'[105] There, then, is the mystery, without a key, with no room
+even for conjecture. But the cause must have been dire that evoked so
+deadly a passion of hatred between parents and son.
+
+Those who care to read in detail the coarse and violent expressions of
+this unnatural repulsion may glut their appetite in Lord Hervey's
+memoirs. One or two such passages will serve as specimens of the rest.
+The Queen and Princess Caroline, Frederick's sister, made no ceremony of
+wishing a hundred times a day that the Prince might drop down dead of an
+apoplexy. Princess Caroline, who, Hervey tells us, 'had affability
+without meanness, dignity without pride, cheerfulness without levity,
+and prudence without falsehood,' who was in a word an exemplary and
+charming person, declared that she grudged him every hour he had to
+breathe, and reproached Hervey with being 'so great a dupe as to believe
+the nauseous beast' (those were her words) 'cared for anything but his
+own nauseous self, that he loved anything but money, that he was not the
+greatest liar that ever spoke.' The Queen, not to be outdone, declared
+that she would give it under her hand 'that my dear firstborn is the
+greatest ass, and the greatest liar, and the greatest canaille, and the
+greatest beast in the whole world, and that I most heartily wish he was
+out of it.'[106] Even on her deathbed she could not be brought to
+receive or forgive him. If Lord Hervey, his bitter enemy, can be
+credited, this obduracy was not at the last without justification. Lord
+Hervey declares that the Prince crowded the Queen's anteroom with his
+emissaries to convey to him the earliest information of her condition.
+As the bulletins of the Queen's decline reached him, he would say,
+'Well, now we shall have some good news; she cannot hold out much
+longer.' All this need not be literally believed, but it affords a
+picture of family rancour which can scarcely have been equalled in the
+history of mankind.
+
+From the time of the public quarrel with his parents the Prince of Wales
+gave himself up to political opposition. He wielded, indeed, formidable
+weapons of offence. His father was avaricious, secluded, and disliked;
+Frederick laid himself out to be thought generous, accessible, and
+popular. He knew well that every symptom of national affection for
+himself was a stab to the King. He and his family, at a time when French
+fashions were all the rage, ostentatiously wore none but English goods.
+He trained his children to act Addison's Cato. Nor did he disdain more
+social arts. He would go to fairs, bull-baitings, races, and rowing
+matches; he would visit gipsy encampments; he became familiar to the
+people. He would assist at a fire in London, amid shouts from the mob,
+as he and his court alleged, of 'Crown him! crown him!' At Epsom there
+is a tradition that when living there he fought a chimney-sweep with his
+fists, and erected a monument in generous acknowledgment of his own
+defeat.
+
+In private life he was essentially frivolous. When his father's troops
+were besieging Carlisle, the Prince had a model of the citadel made in
+confectionery, while he and the ladies of the court bombarded it with
+sugar-plums. This seems emblematic of his whole career.
+
+But his main and favourite diversion had a graver aspect: it lay in
+political cabals of which he was the puppet and the figurehead, and in
+forming futile ministries and policies for his own reign. Of these last
+a curious example is preserved among the Bedford Papers.[107]
+
+All political malcontents of the slightest importance were sure of a
+cordial reception at Leicester House or Kew. There all could warm their
+wants and disappointments with the sunshine of royal patronage and the
+cheering prospect of a new reign. 'Remember that the King is sixty-one,
+and I am thirty-seven,'[108] said Frederick, and this calculation
+coloured his whole life. The future was freely discounted and
+anticipated in the Prince's circle, so that there, as in the Court of
+the Pretender, the faithful adherent might receive some high office to
+be enjoyed after the death of the King, but with this substantial
+difference: that whereas what James distributed were shadows, the awards
+of Frederick required only common good faith and the death of an old man
+to make them realities. Bubb for example, the most avid and unabashed of
+political harlots, gravely kissed his patron's hand for a Secretaryship
+of State, and, according to Walpole, a dukedom, immediately afterwards
+nominating his under-secretary, to show the solidity of the arrangement.
+Henley, who was afterwards under different circumstances to be
+Chancellor, was grievously disappointed to find that Dr. Lee was to have
+the seals. And so they snapped and snarled over the spoils, while the
+Prince complacently made his appointments, and apportioned the functions
+of the future. So far as he was concerned it was all barren enough. His
+little projects, his little ambitions, his little ministries, his
+political post-obits, were all cut short by the sudden shears of Death.
+His councillors and followers were scattered to the winds, and Bubb had
+to hasten to make his peace with the powers that be, and to exchange his
+contingent Secretaryship of State for an actual Treasurership of the
+Navy. The Prince's other post-obits, his debts, were, it would seem,
+never paid.[109]
+
+To sum up, with regard to Frederick we have a few certain facts: the
+hatred of his parents and sisters, and a singular unanimity of scorn
+from his contemporaries. There is not perhaps in existence a single
+favourable testimony. We have many portraits, one at Windsor of an
+innocent lad in a red coat playing the violoncello with his sisters,
+which is pleasant enough; the later ones all stamped with a pretentious
+silliness which affirms the verdict of his own day. Then we have the
+mysterious intimation of Lord Hardwicke of some deep and sinister cause
+for the alienation of his parents. This, however, unsupported and
+unexplained, carries us no further, and is merely an excuse for the
+unnatural aversion of his family. Beyond that mystery, the word
+'fatuous' seems exactly to embody all that we know of this prince; his
+appearance, morals, manners, and intellect are all summed up in that
+single expression.
+
+On the other hand, there are traits of generosity which are recorded,
+there is his apparent popularity, there is the general grief for his
+death; but it may well be surmised that it was not difficult for the son
+of George II. and the grandson of George I. to be popular and regretted.
+On the whole, may we not conclude that the arbitrary discipline of
+Hanover in early life made him incurably tricky and untruthful, that he
+was an empty and frivolous coxcomb, but not without kindly instincts;
+and that his weaknesses and frailties, whatever they may have been, laid
+a grave responsibility on the parents who reared and cursed him?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+During his first session of Parliament, Pitt never opened his mouth:
+indeed, his only public performance was to tell in a division. In 1736
+he became better known. He supported an address of congratulation to the
+Crown on the marriage of the Prince of Wales. This formal and
+complimentary speech has been absurdly scrutinised because of the
+speaker's subsequent fame, and much has been read into it which no
+impartial reader can now discern. A notorious eulogy describes it as
+superior even to the models of ancient eloquence. Others read into it
+piercing innuendoes and vitriolic sarcasm. All this was discovered, long
+after its delivery, by the light of Pitt's later achievements. It is
+said that George II. never forgave it. But George II.'s hatred of Pitt
+is more easily accounted for by other offences. It is rumoured that
+Walpole shuddered when he heard it, and said, 'We must muzzle that
+terrible cornet of horse.' The ordinary reader sees in the reported
+speech nothing which would provoke admiration or alarm in anybody were
+it attributed to any one who had remained obscure. But the report,
+though elaborate, was probably inaccurate; the speech may have been more
+vicious than appears; it must, at any rate, have been something very
+different from smooth platitudes on a royal marriage that would have
+made Walpole tremble, if indeed Walpole was liable to any such emotion.
+The truth, no doubt, is that the graces of voice, person, and delivery
+marvellously embellished this maiden effort, and produced a striking
+effect on the audience.
+
+But, whatever its intrinsic merits, the success of this speech was
+immeasurably enhanced, if not altogether secured, by Walpole's action.
+It may indeed be said to have been made famous by the penalty which
+followed it rather than by its own merits. He deprived the young orator
+and cornet of his commission.
+
+ 'The servile standard from the freeborn hand
+ He took, and bade thee lead the patriot band,'
+
+sang Lyttelton to Pitt.
+
+It was a vindictive act which seems alien to Walpole's boisterous good
+humour, but of a kind to which Walpole's arbitrary notions of political
+discipline made him singularly prone. So petty an act of vengeance
+wreaked on so young and subordinate an officer by a powerful Prime
+Minister seems incredible in our larger or laxer days. But it was
+perhaps the very slightness of Pitt's position which was an inducement
+to Walpole. He was determined, it may be, that the whole army, from the
+highest to the lowest, should feel the weight of his hand. The disgrace
+of political generals seemed just and proper, it was cutting off the
+heads of the tallest poppies, a proceeding recognised and respectable
+since the days of Tarquin. These penalties had left the mass of the army
+unmoved, not impossibly because the removal of chiefs means the
+promotion of subordinates. So Walpole may have resolved that all in the
+service of the Crown should feel that revolt against the minister of the
+Crown was a flagrant crime. Generals had been punished, and so all
+officers from the highest, to the lowest should be liable to the same
+pains and penalties; nay private soldiers, were their lot enviable,
+might suffer the same deprivation. 'The King,' wrote Lady Irwin, a lady
+of the Prince of Wales' household, to her brother, Lord Carlisle, 'two
+days ago turned out Mr. Pitt from a cornetcy for having voted and spoke
+in Parliament contrary to his approbation. He is a young man of no
+fortune, a very pretty speaker, one the Prince is particular to, and
+under the tuition of my Lord Cobham. The Army is all alarmed at this,
+and 'tis said it will hurt the King more than his removing my Lord
+Stairs and Lord Cobham, since it is making the whole army dependent, by
+descending to resent a vote from the lowest commission, which may
+occasion a representation in parliament to prevent all officers of the
+army from sitting there.'[110]
+
+It may, however, have been that Pitt's dismissal was due not to his
+obscurity but to an exactly opposite consideration.
+
+Pitt's nephew, Lord Camelford, asserts as an undoubted fact that the
+reputation both of Pitt and of Lyttelton was so considerable before they
+entered Parliament, and their political tendencies so notorious, that
+Walpole made considerable offers to Thomas Pitt on condition that he did
+not brings them in for any of his boroughs. 'William's early abilities,'
+writes Lord Camelford, 'induc'd Sir Robert Walpole to offer my father
+(Thomas Pitt) any terms not to bring him or his brother-in-law Mr.
+Lyttelton into Parliament,' but 'my father preferred their interests to
+his own, and laid the foundations, at his own expense, for all his
+brother's future fame and greatness.' It is a tradition that Canning,
+when in office, kept his eye on promising lads at Eton who might make
+eligible followers. One would not, however, have imagined that Walpole
+was so much in touch with the rising youth of the country. But if
+Camelford may be credited, and there seems no reason to doubt him,
+Walpole was prejudiced and on his guard against Pitt before Pitt opened
+his mouth; and he may have been hurried into a petulant act by previous
+friction unconnected with the speech, which may, moreover, have
+contained irritating innuendoes directed against Walpole, which Walpole
+alone understood.
+
+The Minister had not been so foolish as to alienate without trying to
+secure, and his failure may have exasperated him the more. In later
+years Pitt told Shelburne that Sir Robert had offered him the troop
+which was afterwards given to Conway, so that had he remained in the
+army he would have stood high by seniority alone. This offer, we may
+conjecture, was just previous to the overtures to Thomas Pitt. Walpole,
+hearing reports of the young officer's conspicuous abilities and of his
+hostility to the Government, would try and fix his ambitions in the
+army. Failing that, he would try and exclude him from Parliament. And
+failing all pacific overtures, he would try different methods. It is
+possible, and even probable, that expressions passed during the
+negotiations which left a sting. But it now seems clear that no young
+private member, without means or influence, ever caused such active
+disquietude.
+
+There is yet another, and, perhaps, a simpler reason. Pitt, as we have
+seen, had become identified with the fortunes and party of Cobham, who
+was Walpole's bitter enemy. Conciliation having been found futile, the
+Minister determined that the young soldier should suffer the same
+penalty as the old general. The old gamecock had lost his spurs, so
+should the young cockerel. If Pitt were so devoted to Cobham, he should
+have the gratification of sharing Cobham's martyrdom. Cobham had lost
+his regiment; Pitt should lose his commission. In striking Pitt he would
+also wound Cobham. So the removal was carried out in a spirit of
+pettiness which was criticised at the time, and seems incredible to
+posterity. 'At the end of the session,' says Hervey, 'Cornet Pitt was
+broke for this, which was a measure at least ill-timed if not
+ill-taken;' which he explained by saying that if done at all it should
+have been done immediately on his speech. Hervey, though an ardent
+Walpolian, evidently thought the whole proceeding was disproportionate
+to the offender and the offence. But the result of the intended disgrace
+was, we are told, immediate popularity. Pitt after his dismissal drove
+about the country in a one-horse chaise without a servant, and
+everywhere the people gathered round him with enthusiasm.[111]
+
+Pitt took the matter philosophically. 'I should not be a little vain,'
+he writes, 'to be the object of the hatred of a minister, hated even by
+those who call themselves his friends.'[112] But to his slender means
+the loss of his pay was not unimportant, and this fact perhaps explains
+his accepting an office ill-suited to his temperament. In September
+1737, the Prince of Wales, in consequence of his crazy and insolent
+conduct at the time of his wife's confinement, was ordered to leave St.
+James' Palace. He retired first to Kew, and then to Norfolk House in
+St. James' Square, which thus became the birthplace of George III. The
+King's displeasure also caused some resignations in the Prince's
+household; and, smarting under this disgrace, Frederick found it no
+doubt agreeable to take advantage of these vacancies to attach to his
+household two active young members of the Opposition, whose appointment
+would be profoundly distasteful to his father. Few could be more
+repugnant to the King than Pitt, the ex-cornet, and Lyttelton his
+seconder. Moreover, Pitt was already intimate and influential with the
+Prince.[113] So Lyttelton became private secretary to Frederick, and
+Pitt a groom of his bedchamber. These appointments would, in the
+ordinary course, be submitted for the sanction of the King, but the
+alienation between father and son was so acute that it is probable that
+no communication was made. Pitt held this post for seven years,
+resigning it in 1744; and the salary was no doubt of sensible assistance
+to his meagre income during this period.
+
+Pitt's second speech (in 1737) was also on the Prince of Wales's
+affairs. George II., who lost no opportunity of displaying publicly his
+hatred to his son, and who as Prince of Wales had received a fixed
+income of 100,000_l._ a year, gave the Prince on his marriage an
+allowance at pleasure of 50,000_l._ The Prince, who owed his father but
+scant duty and affection, was persuaded by his advisers to apply to
+Parliament for the same annuity that his father, when in his situation,
+had received. This proceeding violently incensed the King; but he was
+induced to send an official message to his son, promising to convert
+the present voluntary allowance into a fixed income, and to settle some
+provision on the Princess. The Prince replied that the matter was now
+out of his hands. The offer, in effect, was not particularly alluring,
+as the allowance could never have been withdrawn, and a settlement on
+the Princess ought to have been made at the time of her marriage. It is
+indeed difficult, given the circumstances, to blame Frederick's unfilial
+conduct in this matter. He had a colourable claim to an income double
+that which was given him by the King; the King had ampler means of
+paying it than had been possessed by George I.; and the Prince had
+nothing to hope from the unconstrained bounty of his father; he was
+indeed under his father's ban. So the motion was brought before the
+House, and Pitt made a speech, which Thackeray, his insipid biographer,
+declares to have been most masterly, but which is nowhere preserved. We
+know nothing of it, but it is safe to presume that it was a good speech.
+These efforts and his household appointment made him a prominent figure
+in the Prince's party. He was beginning to be talked about. He had been
+sneered at by the Government paper, the 'Gazetteer,' and defended by
+Bolingbroke's organ, the 'Craftsman.' This seems the first glimmering of
+his note, and is therefore worthy of remark. Nothing is so difficult as
+to trace in a biography the several degrees by which eminence has been
+reached; seldom are the slow degrees of the ladder recorded. Here it is
+at least possible to mark the first and second steps. The first event,
+that brought Pitt into notice was the deprivation of his commission: the
+second indication of his growing power is apparent in the laboured
+sneers of the 'Gazetteer' at the young man's long neck and slender body,
+for it would not have been worth while to direct these gibes against
+one who was not formidable.
+
+Pitt's next speech was less successful. It was in support of a reduction
+of the standing army from 17,400 to 12,000. The contention seems almost
+incredible when it is considered that Pitt and his party were calling on
+the ministry to avenge the ill-treatment of British subjects by Spain.
+But, however inconsistent, it was probably deemed a popular move.
+Jealousy and dislike of standing armies was still strong among the
+people. Lord Hervey had told the Queen in 1735, 'that there was
+certainly nothing so odious to men of all ranks and classes in this
+country as troops,' and that 'as a standing army was the thing in the
+world that was most disliked in this country, so the reduction of any
+part of it was a measure that always made any prince more popular than
+any other he could take.'[114] Walpole had then maintained that the army
+should never be reduced below 18,000 men in view of the constant menace
+of the disputed succession, the turbulent character of the nation, and
+the necessity of a strong position in foreign affairs.[115] In this
+debate of 1738 he took much the same line. This sane view, as it was the
+policy of the Minister, was furiously combated by the young bloods of
+the Opposition. Lyttelton did not shrink from using the childish
+argument that a standing army weakened us abroad, as it made foreign
+governments believe that there must be violent dissensions in the
+country which it was kept to control. A taunt had in the course of
+debate been levelled at placemen; and Pitt, as a member of the Prince's
+household, vindicated the independence of officials, directing as he
+passed a shaft at the three hundred thick or thin supporters of the
+Government who were always so singularly unanimous on all political
+questions. The army, he said, was the chief cause of the national
+discontents, and yet these discontents were alleged as the chief cause
+for maintaining the army. Then he made the criticism so familiar to
+English public men even now, that the army cost three times as much
+proportionally to its size as the armies of France and Germany. On the
+question of disbanding troops, he took a strangely unsympathetic line.
+The officers would be put on half-pay, which was as high as full-pay
+elsewhere. And as for the private soldiers, 'I must think,' he said,
+'they have no claim for any greater reward than the pay they have
+already received, nor should I think we were guilty of the least
+ingratitude if they were all turned adrift to-morrow morning.'[116]
+Pitt, it was obvious, had some distance to compass before he should
+become a popular leader. That he should have pressed at all for the
+reduction of the small standing army in the midst of an irresistible
+clamour for war is another proof of the heedless rhetoric of ambitious
+youth.
+
+While the young patriots were thus endeavouring to reduce the army, war
+was brewing with Spain. Our traders were constantly encroaching on her
+rights and monopolies in the New World. There was a perpetual smuggling
+invasion of the Spanish settlements in America on the part of the
+British, and a rigorous defence by right of search on the part of the
+Spaniards. There can be little doubt that the British merchants were in
+the wrong. But trade has neither conscience nor bowels, and monopolies
+of commerce are the fair quarry of the freebooting merchant. The
+Spaniards, on their side, were not delicate or merciful in exercising
+their undoubted right of search; so our countrymen, to conceal their own
+infractions of treaty and to stir up hostility to Spain, spared no
+methods or exertions to rouse popular indignation against their enemies.
+Little less than the tortures of the Inquisition were alleged. 'Seventy
+of our brave sailors are now in chains in Spain! our countrymen in
+chains and slaves to the Spaniards!' exclaimed an enthusiastic alderman:
+'is not this enough to fire the coldest?'[117] The notorious Jenkins now
+appeared on the scene with an ear in cotton-wool, which he alleged to
+have been torn from his head by a Spaniard, with an intimation that the
+mutilator would gladly serve our King in the same way. Alderman
+Beckford, who brought Jenkins forward, afterwards declared that if any
+member had lifted up Jenkins's wig, he would have found both ears whole
+and complete.[118] Others averred that though he had lost his ear, he
+had lost it in the pillory.
+
+The Spaniards, not to be outdone, recorded the sufferings of two of
+their nobles, who, captured by our British filibusters, had been
+compelled to devour their own noses.[119] It was alleged, too, that
+English pirates swarmed, and that Spaniards were publicly sold as slaves
+in British colonies.[120] But these allegations, though probably neither
+more nor less veracious than the others, had no currency in England,
+while the story of the suffering Jenkins ran through England like
+wildfire. A bombastic utterance was coined for him by some political
+Tadpole, and rang through the land. None cared to inquire into the right
+or the wrong of the imprisonments, or to investigate the other side of
+the question, and there were none to present it if they did. 'Britons in
+Spanish prisons' was a sufficient cry, and swept the nation off its
+feet. Walpole, always too contemptuous of popular passion, had presented
+to Parliament a convention with Spain, which regulated most of the
+points at issue between them, except that which lay nearest the heart of
+his people, the right of search; and his brother Horace moved, in a long
+and laudatory speech, an address of thanks to the Crown for this
+agreement. This roused the Prince's young men. Lyttelton, indeed, spoke
+ostentatiously as the Prince's mouthpiece. 'I know who hears me,' he
+said, alluding to his master's presence in the gallery, 'and for that
+reason I speak,'[121] Pitt and Grenville also spoke, and they are
+described in a contemporary account as 'three or four young gentlemen
+who took great personal liberties.' Another letter says that Pitt 'spoke
+very well, but very abusively.' However imperfectly his speech may be
+reported, it has much of that energy of declamatory invective which is
+part of the tradition connected with his name. Of this the peroration is
+a sufficient example. 'This convention, Sir, I think from my heart is
+nothing but a stipulation for national ignominy; an illusory expedient
+to baffle the resentment of the nation; a truce without a suspension of
+hostilities on the part of Spain; on the part of England, a suspension,
+as to Georgia, of the first law of nature, self-preservation and
+self-defence; a surrender of the right of England to the mercy of
+plenipotentiaries; and in this infinitely highest and sacred point,
+future security, not only inadequate, but directly repugnant to the
+resolutions of Parliament, and the gracious promise from the throne. The
+complaints of your despairing merchants, the voice of England have
+condemned it. Be the guilt of it on the adviser. God forbid that the
+Committee should share the guilt by approving it.'[122] This was
+undoubtedly the first speech in which Pitt made a real mark as an
+orator, and of this a proof remains in the fact that it is recorded that
+Sir R. Walpole took notes of it as it proceeded.[123]
+
+The debate and its unsuccessful division were followed by that abortive
+and disastrous form of protest known as a secession. Wyndham announced
+it in a speech of solemn acrimony. It failed, as all such secessions do.
+It has been said by a veteran politician that 'a secession of a party
+from parliament is so obvious a failure in both duty and prudence that a
+benevolent looker-on will always recommend to the seceder to get to his
+place as well and as fast as he can.'[124] A secession does not appeal
+to the country, which regards it as an exhibition of baffled ill-temper,
+while it leaves the House at the mercy of the Ministry. This retirement
+of his enemies was therefore hailed by Walpole as an unexpected stroke
+of good fortune. Prompt repentance, as usual, overtook the seceders, and
+the usual difficulty as to returning with dignity and consistency. In
+November they had to slink back without much of either.
+
+It is not easy to discover whether Pitt was among the seceders, though
+it seems improbable, as Lyttelton, one of his closest allies, remained
+to repeat the strange parallel contention of the Opposition that the
+army should be reduced and war declared against Spain.
+
+The national wish for war was at any rate soon gratified. Though Walpole
+had carried resolutions approving of his convention, the growing fury of
+the nation could not be dammed by his meagre majority of twenty-eight.
+When the negotiations between Spain and Great Britain were resumed,
+Spain absolutely refused to abandon the right of search. To the English
+this was the main point, and Walpole knew that war was now inevitable.
+Whether he as minister could or should, in spite of his convictions,
+carry it out was another matter. He decided that he could, and war was
+declared on October 29, 1739.
+
+The enthusiasm of the nation was frantic. The heralds, on proceeding to
+the city to read the formal declaration, were attended by a great
+procession. The Prince of Wales did not disdain to take part in it, or
+to pause at Temple Bar to drink a public toast to the war. All the
+church bells of the capital were set ringing. The Minister, as he heard
+the clang, bitterly remarked that they might ring the bells now, but
+that they would soon wring their hands. This is a truth that may be
+uttered with justice at the beginning of all hostilities, and in this
+case there were many opportunities for wringing hands; for, with the
+exception of the truce of Aix-la-Chapelle, Britain was not at peace from
+now (1739) till 1763. But Walpole's cynical pun did not embody the
+spirit which gives confidence to a nation, or in which a great Minister
+would begin a just or necessary war. Walpole was, no doubt, convinced
+that this one was neither just nor necessary. Moreover, he hated all
+war as a needless complication which deranged finance and held out
+prospects and opportunities for a Pretender. He knew, too, that he was a
+Minister of peace, and that he was not likely to shine in war. He had
+indeed been Secretary at War, but then he had the guarantee of a
+Marlborough in the field; his function had been to serve and supply a
+supreme captain. But there was nothing now to give him the same
+confidence. He felt, he knew that he was out of place as a director of
+wars. Close to him, unsuspected as yet, was the most successful War
+Minister that this country has ever seen. For on the benches over
+against him sate Pitt, who was to revel in warfare and find his true
+vocation in directing it; but his time was not come. Afterwards, when it
+had arrived, he was to repent and recant his opposition on this
+occasion, and pay homage to Walpole. None, indeed, of the leaders in
+opposition to Walpole attempted afterwards to justify their conduct in
+this business.
+
+That Minister meanwhile moodily prepared to carry out the wishes of the
+country, and no doubt excused himself for his humiliating compliance by
+the thought that if he did not some one else would, with less economy
+and more danger to the State. He is said to have tendered his
+resignation, but even were this true it could only be, in view of the
+King's relations to himself and the Opposition, a matter of form. He
+uttered his own self-condemnation: 'I dare not do what is right.'
+
+But his submission, whether accompanied or not by a feigned resignation,
+availed him nothing; his unpopularity seemed rather to increase than
+diminish. The nation suspected his good faith. The legion of able and
+brilliant men whom he had alienated were in no ways appeased, but more
+ruthless in their determination to hunt him to the death; the multitude
+effervesced in mobs. Soon they were all in full cry. There was another
+general election in 1741, when the Prince of Wales with lavish subsidies
+entered actively into the strife. Parliament, dissolved in April, met in
+December, thirsty for Walpole's political blood.
+
+The inglorious course of the war in the meantime, its delays and
+disasters, forms no part of Pitt's life. One may wonder in passing at
+the callous wickedness that sent out raw boys and decrepit pensioners to
+die of fever and exhaustion, or at the strange fortune by which those
+who prepare such expeditions, ministers, commissaries, contractors, and
+the like, escape the gallows. Walpole at any rate did not escape the
+particular fate that he deserved. A year of glowing and successful war
+might yet have saved him; a year of failure and calamity fixed his doom.
+
+He had held on to the last possible moment, and so fell with little of
+grace or dignity. An inevitable political catastrophe only becomes more
+overwhelming by delay; each day that a minister remains in power against
+the will of the nation adds force to the torrent against him. Moreover,
+he affronted public opinion by receiving unusual favours from the King
+when he had become the object of popular execration. Here the coarse
+fibre which had stood him in such good stead during a hundred fights did
+him disservice, for it hindered his perception of the fact that it is
+unwise to be conspicuously decorated at a moment when the nation is
+calling for your head. He held on, with failing health but unfailing
+courage, though the war had furnished him with a reasonable door of
+departure at the critical moment when honour permitted and indeed
+required him to go, and though his friends had implored him to resign.
+The motives for his obstinacy were obvious enough. His was a doughty
+soul, and did not yield without agony. But there was a more practical
+reason. He believed that, as had long been threatened, his fall would be
+followed by his impeachment. As soon as he resigned, his brother Horace
+hurried off to burn his papers. Walpole himself took a similar
+precaution. This shows their sense of the imminence of the danger which
+had always impended over him, and which was first in their thoughts when
+the protection of office was about to be withdrawn.
+
+The final scene in the House of Commons was dramatic enough, and must
+have been in the mind of Disraeli when he penned his description of the
+fall of Peel. As the fatal division on the Chippenham election was
+proceeding, the Minister sate and watched the hostile procession with
+unfailing and imperturbable humour. He beckoned to his side Bayntun
+Rolt, the Chippenham candidate supported by the Opposition, and so their
+nominal champion, and gave him a reasoned catalogue of many of the
+members voting against him, detailing their ingratitude and treachery,
+as well as the exact favours that he had heaped on them. 'Young man, I
+will tell you the history of all your friends as they come in; that
+fellow I saved from the gallows, and that from starvation; this other
+one's sons I promoted,' and so forth;[125] then passing on through this
+bitter recital to his scornful conclusion, he declared that never again
+would he set foot in that House.[126]
+
+He fell with the skill and presence of mind which never deserted him,
+for in everything except office he remained victorious. All parties had
+combined to destroy Walpole, and in their triumph all not unnaturally
+expected to see every vestige of the detested administration swept away
+in his defeat. Vast was their disappointment. Newcastle, the oldest of
+the old gang, to use the vivid expression of modern politics, had long
+scented the approaching catastrophe of his chief, and had been preparing
+to lessen the shock to himself and his friends, so far as was possible,
+by judicious conference with the Opposition.
+
+Newcastle has long been a byeword; he was so all through his protracted
+public life; and he has remained in history a synonym for a certain
+jobbing and fussing incapacity. Justice has, perhaps, been scarcely done
+to his laborious life; his disinterestedness about money, rare in any
+age, especially in that; above all to his unequalled capacity for
+remaining in office, a virtue not unappreciated by the great mass of
+politicians. Nor was he a fool, though he was something of a coward. A
+man who could hold the seals of Secretary of State for thirty continuous
+years of stress and intrigue, who filled high office for forty-five
+years in succession, could not be without invaluable qualities for
+steering with persistence and astuteness through intricacies of
+parliamentary navigation. His ambition, such as it was, had indeed an
+elastic but stubborn tenacity; the ties of blood, friendship, or
+principle availed nothing against it. His industry, such as it was, is
+attested by his long tenure of office and the vast mass of his
+correspondence. His disinterestedness, such as it was, is proved by his
+leaving public life 300,000_l._ poorer than he entered it, and by his
+nevertheless refusing a pension offered him by George III. on his
+retirement, a circumstance almost unique in the annals of the century.
+In nothing else was he disinterested. His only taste in private life
+seems to have been for the pleasures of the table and the consequent art
+of the physician. On his resignation in 1756 he attempted indeed to
+assume the air of a retired country squire. Guns and gaiters were
+procured, but getting his feet wet he hurriedly abandoned the sports of
+the field and with them the appearance of rural absorption. This
+illustrates his crowning defect. In all that he did he was supremely
+ridiculous.
+
+ 'Behind him close behold Newcastle's Grace,
+ Haste in his step and absence in his face;
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Tho' void of honesty, of sense, of art,
+ A foolish head and a perfidious heart,
+ Yet riches, honours, power he shall enjoy.'[127]
+
+Foote and Smollett have left vivid caricatures of his ludicrous
+personality. The story of his conference with Pitt when Pitt was in bed
+with the gout, and of his getting into a vacant bed and discoursing from
+thence to his colleague, is one of the choicest pictures of his
+absurdity that survive. The two leading Ministers were found storming at
+each other from adjacent couches, disputing as to whether Hawke's fleet
+should put to sea or not.[128] Pitt fortunately prevailed. Newcastle's
+grotesqueness was part of his temperament, for all through his life his
+jealousy and suspicion kept him in a perpetual froth of nervous
+excitement. His jealousy was of power, his suspicion of those who aimed
+at it. And by power he meant patronage. Throughout his long life his god
+or goddess was patronage. Indeed his voluminous correspondence rather
+resembles the letter-bag of an agency for necessitous persons of social
+position than the papers of a Prime Minister or Secretary of State. To
+hold a crowded levee of placehunters, ecclesiastical and temporal, to
+thread his way about it coaxing, fawning, and slobbering, embracing and
+even kissing, promising and paying all with the base coin of cozenage,
+this was Newcastle's paradise. But it answered. It made him necessary to
+his party, and therefore necessary to those who would govern the
+country; for government was restricted to his party. So all statesmen in
+turn scorned and employed him. 'His name,' said Walpole, 'is perfidy.'
+But perfidy paid, and Walpole kept him to the end, fully aware that he
+was always ready for betrayal if expediency dictated it, and that in the
+closing months he was in fact busy at the work. At last, indeed, Walpole
+himself, under the name of the King, commissioned him to intrigue
+officially. Hardwicke, perhaps the greatest of our Chancellors, who
+furnished the brains for Newcastle, and condescended to act as his
+mentor and instrument, was joined with him to make terms with the enemy,
+and offer the reversion of the Treasury on condition of immunity for
+Walpole.
+
+Pulteney was the enemy, or its chief; for he led the Opposition, and
+guided the Court of the Heir Apparent, as he had that of the father when
+Prince of Wales, though then without fruit and result. He was also the
+idol of the nation. For long years he had made the people believe that
+Walpole was a Goliath of corruption, and that he was the incorruptible
+David. Moreover, his vast wealth, his ability, his eloquence, and his
+social qualities gave him a personal ascendancy apart from his political
+position. 'He was, by all accounts,' writes Shelburne, 'the greatest
+House of Commons orator that had ever appeared,'[129] surpassing even
+the legendary reputation of Bolingbroke; he was also a scholar, a wit,
+and a potent pamphleteer. In conversation he excelled; when the wits
+were gathered at Stowe, the pre-eminence of Pulteney was
+acknowledged.[130] At this moment he was supreme, 'in the greatest point
+of view,' writes Chesterfield, 'that I ever saw any subject in ... the
+arbiter between the Crown and the people; the former imploring his
+protection, the latter his support;' 'possessing,' says Glover, 'a
+degree of popularity and power which no subject before him was ever
+possessed of.' All eyes were raised to him with expectant adoration as
+he stood on this pinnacle, and as they gazed they saw him slowly totter,
+and then fall headlong. For the two Ministers had succeeded in
+compromising him. He refused, indeed, amnesty for Walpole or office for
+himself; but adulterated these refusals by watering his expressions of
+hostility to the Minister, and by asking on his own behalf for an
+earldom and a seat in the Cabinet. When his followers found that he and
+Carteret were engaged in secret negotiation with Ministers, their
+indignation was unbounded. They held a public meeting to disown him. His
+popularity disappeared in an instant and for ever. He afterwards averred
+that he had lost his head, that there was no comprehending or describing
+the confusion that prevailed, and that he was obliged to go out of town
+for three or four days to keep his senses. This is not impossible or
+even improbable. A political crisis bursts like a tornado, and
+bewilders the strongest characters. Both rare and happy are the men who
+can on such occasions take counsel with themselves, and meet the storm
+with presence of mind. Pulteney had, perhaps, become enervated with a
+long period of merely negative opposition. Glover also asserts that his
+hand was forced by Lyttelton who was secretly offering terms to Walpole,
+and that these, though tendered by the Prince of Wales's Secretary,
+Walpole treated with disdain. Glover was an ill-conditioned wasp, and
+his story refutes itself. For the one person whom Walpole was anxious to
+gain was Frederick, even offering to add 50,000_l._ to his income. That
+he should then have spurned an overture from the Prince's right-hand man
+is out of the question; he would have met it more than half-way.
+Whatever the cause, Pulteney, having committed himself, could not
+retrace his steps; an iron grip constrained him. In vain did he seek to
+recall his patent and escape his peerage. Walpole held him fast.
+Pulteney had finally conquered in the long struggle of twenty years, and
+overthrown Sir Robert; but the prostrate Minister had from the dust
+worked Pulteney like a marionette.
+
+For behind all these strange scenes Walpole pulled the strings. His main
+object was to avoid his own impeachment, and this, in spite of the
+determination of the hostile majority which called for his head, he
+achieved; a feat little less than miraculous. The Tory candidates for
+office were rejected by the King, and as for the not less bitter Whigs,
+as
+
+ '... bees, on flowers alighting, cease to hum,
+ So, settling upon places, Whigs grow dumb.'
+
+They were dumb in spite of themselves. The nation, which had been
+excited by the hope of seeing corruption extinguished, and the advent of
+a new era of virtue and public spirit, was again disappointed. People
+saw this sublime struggle result in a jobbing distribution of such
+places as were vacated to the same sort of people as had vacated them,
+with precisely the same system. It was much the same ministry without
+the one great minister. Fooled once more, as so often before and since,
+people shrugged their shoulders, and turned their attention to other
+things, more honest and more practical than party politics.
+
+With the fall of Walpole this narrative is not otherwise concerned, for
+his successors found no post for Pitt. Two members of the Prince of
+Wales's household, Lords Baltimore and Archibald Hamilton, had found
+acceptance as members of the new administration; the King probably could
+not stomach more, certainly not Pitt. For long years afterwards he could
+not endure contact with the orator who sneered at him and at Hanover,
+and who even insinuated with factious injustice doubts of his personal
+courage. It must also be remembered that Pitt was not merely attached to
+the party of the Prince but to the group of Cobham. That veteran
+accepted for a short time a seat in the Cabinet and the command of a
+regiment. But his animosity against Carteret was second only to his
+animosity against Walpole. Carteret was a powerful, and aimed at being
+the controlling member of the new Government. He therefore succeeded to
+the position of target for the barbed arrows of Pitt and his friends
+which had been vacated by Walpole's retirement. Carteret, the new object
+of philippic, had striven hard for the succession to Walpole when
+Pulteney stood aside, but had been foiled by Walpole acting through the
+King. Lord Wilmington, whom Horace Walpole describes as a solemn
+debauchee and Hervey as fond only of money and eating, but who was the
+favourite nonentity of George II., had been fobbed off upon the party as
+First Minister; and the choice had its advantages. For, always
+incapable, he was now moribund; and so as a feeble and transient barrier
+to ambition was the least unacceptable to Walpole's expectant heirs. A
+figurehead, moreover, was the favourite expedient of the century for
+skirting the fierce conflict of personalities.
+
+So Wilmington reigned, and Carteret governed for a while in Walpole's
+stead. The shadowy form of the First Minister could not veil for a
+moment the bold outline of the Secretary of State, for Carteret, though
+scarcely attaining real greatness, remains one of the most brilliant and
+striking figures in the eighteenth century. It is almost enough to say
+that in all but disregard of money he was the exact antipodes of
+Newcastle. No man of his time was so splendidly equipped for the highest
+public service as Carteret. He was sprung from an ancient Norman family
+settled in Jersey, eight of whom, the father and seven sons, were
+knighted in one day by Edward III.[131] To a person of commanding beauty
+and an open and engaging demeanour, he united superb qualities of
+intellect developed by ardent study. He was a scholar of signal
+excellence at a time when scholarship was in the atmosphere of English
+statesmanship, the best Grecian of his day, with the great classics
+always in his mind and at command. Did any one of the like taste come to
+him on business, Carteret would at once turn from business to some
+Homeric discussion. Moreover he knew the whole Greek Testament by heart;
+an unusual and unsuspected accomplishment.[132] But he was also versed
+in modern languages, then a rare and never a common faculty in this
+island, and alone among his compeers spoke German fluently, a priceless
+advantage under a sovereign whose heart and mind were in Hanover. He was
+the only person who was in favour both with the King and with the Prince
+of Wales.[133] He abounded in a wit at once genial and penetrating. He
+was a puissant orator. His comprehensive grasp of European statecraft,
+his capacity for taking broad and high views, his soaring politics, his
+intrepid spirit and his high ambition, marked him out among the meaner
+men by whom he was surrounded. His contempt of money amounted to
+recklessness. His scorn of all pettiness made him disdain jobbery, and
+even the subtler arts of parliamentary manipulation. There was much that
+was sublime in him, and more that was impracticable. In a greater degree
+than any other minister of his time, if we except Chatham, with whom he
+had many qualities in common, does he seem to partake of the mystery of
+genius. Unfortunately, his energy came in gusts, he could scarcely bring
+himself to bend, and he was incapable of that self-contained patience,
+amounting to long-suffering, which is a necessary condition of the
+highest success in official life. All, indeed, was marred by an
+extravagance of conduct which was in reality the result of his nature
+running riot and of his good qualities carried to excess. He played his
+political chess with the big pieces alone, and neglected the pawns. He
+disregarded not merely the soldiers and most of the officers, but all
+the arts and equipment of the parliamentary army, heedless of the fact
+that parliamentary support is the vital necessity of a British minister.
+Disdainful of public opinion or party connections, he attempted to play
+the great game in Europe with no resource but his own abilities and the
+confidence of his sovereign, whose antipathy to France he shared, and
+whose policy and prejudices he could discuss in the King's native
+language. And yet over the bottle, which he loved at least as much as
+literature or politics, he would laugh at the whole business and the men
+with whom he was engaged. 'What is it to me,' he would say, 'who is a
+judge or who is a bishop? It is my business to make Kings and Emperors';
+and he would have to be reminded that those who wanted offices or
+honours would follow and support those who did deal in those
+commodities. One can hear his jolly laugh. His policy he embodied in one
+striking sentence: 'I want to instil a nobler ambition into you, to make
+you knock the heads of the Kings of Europe together, and jumble
+something out of it which may be of service to this country.' As a
+matter of fact though he did undoubtedly knock together the heads of
+some kings, no material advantage resulted to the country. He was,
+however, a patriot, a single-minded, able, jovial, reckless patriot, but
+out of touch with the politicians, unsuited to parliamentary government,
+and so almost ineffectual. And thus we see him at his best on his
+deathbed, where he quotes to the under-secretary who brought him the
+Treaty of Paris for approval the speech of Sarpedon with melancholy
+emphasis. 'Friend of my soul, were we to escape from this war, and then
+live for ever without old age or death, I should not fight myself among
+the foremost, nor would I send thee into the glorifying battle; but a
+thousand fates of death stand over us, which mortal man may not flee
+from and avoid; then let us on.' These last words he repeated with calm
+and determined resignation, and after a pause of some minutes desired
+the preliminary articles of the Peace of Paris to be read to him. After
+hearing these at length he desired that, to use own words, the
+approbation of a dying statesman might be declared to the most glorious
+war and the most honourable peace that this nation ever saw.[134] The
+news of his extremity had reached Chesterfield. 'When he dies,' wrote
+this shrewdest judge and observer of mankind in England, who had in his
+factious days called Carteret 'a wild and drunken minister,'[135] 'the
+ablest head in England dies too, take it for all in all.'[136]
+
+Pitt soon had an opportunity of showing that the selection of ministers
+from the Prince's household had left out the one priceless force. For
+now there came raining into Parliament imperative demands for the
+impeachment of the fallen Minister. These representations from the
+various constituencies to their several members are well worth
+consideration, for they emphasise identical demands with a unanimity
+suggestive of much later forms of political organization. They denounce
+Standing Armies, and Septennial Parliaments, asking that Triennial
+Parliaments, 'at least,' may be restored; they require that placemen
+largely, and pensioners entirely, shall be excluded from the House of
+Commons; and that laws shall be passed for the security and
+encouragement of the linen trade. In an even more sanguine spirit they
+stipulate for the extirpation of those party distractions 'which, though
+their foundations have long ceased to exist, were yet so industriously
+fomented among us, in order to serve the mischievous purposes of a
+ministerial tyranny.' But first and last, and above all, they insist on
+the punishment of Walpole, bringing him and his colleagues, which of
+course meant him, to 'condign punishment.' 'Nothing but the most
+rigorous justice ought to avenge an injured people ... justice is a duty
+we owe to posterity.' 'We have a right to speak plainly to you, and we
+must tell you, Sir, that if the man that ruined our trade, disgraced our
+arms, plundered our treasure, negotiated away our interests,
+impoverished the land--in a word, the author of all the disgraces and
+calamities of twenty years should (while the whole nation is calling out
+for justice against him) triumph in impunity, we shall be apt to think
+our constitution is lost.' 'Lenity to him would be cruelty to the
+nation.'[137] Our ancestors, it will be seen, did not wage their
+political warfare with the sweetmeats or roses of a carnival contest.
+
+It seems unnecessary to remark that of these various injunctions the
+only one to which the members of Parliament paid any heed was that for
+the prosecution or persecution of Walpole. Even here there was no
+result. The new officials were sated and at ease, the hungry remnant was
+insufficient or inept. But the constituencies were in deadly earnest, if
+their members were not. They had been goaded by their leaders to a state
+bordering on frenzy, and their demands, vindictive as they may appear
+to us, only embodied the declamation of the Opposition throughout half
+at least of Walpole's ministry. More than ten years before, Pulteney had
+publicly declared that 'the Opposition had come to a determined
+resolution not to listen to any treaty whatsoever, or from whomsoever it
+may come, in which the first and principal condition should not be to
+deliver him (Walpole) up to the justice of the country.' But now the
+Opposition was in power, and Pulteney was in a chastened and moderate
+mood. His star, indeed, was already on the wane; he was on the high road
+to the earldom of Bath and extinction. At the first meeting indeed with
+the King's envoys he had declared in a famous phrase that he could not
+screen Walpole if he would, for 'the heads of parties are like the heads
+of snakes, which are carried on by their tails.' But at a later
+conference he said, with reference to the same topic, that he was not a
+man of blood, and that in all his expressions importing a resolution to
+pursue the Minister to destruction he meant only the destruction of his
+power, not his person. He would consult with his friends, yet must
+confess that so many years of maladministration deserved some
+parliamentary censure.
+
+Accordingly Lord Limerick moved on March 9 (1742) for a select committee
+of inquiry into the administration of the late Sir Robert Walpole during
+the last twenty years; but Pulteney did not at first countenance this
+moderate measure. He was absent, on a reasonable excuse no doubt, and in
+his absence his friends intimated that it would not be disagreeable to
+him were the motion rejected.
+
+This was, it seems, untrue, but it gave Pitt the first great opportunity
+of his life. When others were silenced by office or honours, he stood
+forth as the mouthpiece of the people and as the consistent,
+incorruptible maintainer of the policy and declarations of his party. It
+was an opportunity of which he availed himself with terrible effect. It
+is now, we think, that he first appealed to the imagination and
+confidence of the nation, as distinguished from the appreciation of
+Parliament, though that also was sufficiently marked. 'Pitt grows the
+most popular speaker in the House of Commons, and is at the head of his
+party,' writes Philip to Joseph Yorke.[138]
+
+Owing to the absence, and so the presumed indifference or disapproval of
+Pulteney, Lord Limerick's motion was rejected by two votes. At the
+request of Pulteney, however, who, whether lukewarm or not, was nettled
+at the natural criticisms provoked by his attitude, Lord Limerick
+brought forward another motion of the same kind limited to the last ten
+years of Walpole's administration. Pulteney who, discredited outside,
+retained within the House 'a miraculous influence,' exerted himself to
+the utmost, we may be sure, but it can scarcely be doubted that the
+honours of the double debate rested with the vehement and untainted
+Pitt. It is not perhaps of much use to quote from the vague and
+imperfect reports of his speeches, but we can gather, at least, their
+general trend. One passage, at any rate, in his speech on the second
+motion, has been authentically preserved by Horace Walpole, for it was a
+compliment to himself. Horace had defended his father with a grace and
+filial duty that commended him to the House. Pitt, in reply, said that
+it was becoming in the young man to remember that he was the child of
+the accused, the House should remember that they were the children of
+their country, a flight which seems to outstep the perilous limits of
+the sublime.
+
+From the summary of Pitt's two speeches we may at least gather that he
+had much the best of the argument on this issue, so long dead and
+buried. One noteworthy point, however, in his declamation against the
+Minister, is that he paid vindictive attention to Walpole's practice of
+dismissing and cashiering his opponents, by which he had himself
+suffered. He argued that the King might as well dispose of all the
+property of his subjects as of that particular form of property
+represented by commissions in the army; which, whether obtained by
+service or by purchase, were as freehold as an estate, and should be as
+amply secured.[139]
+
+But, in truth, his denunciation of Walpole is much less remarkable than
+the poisoned shafts which, as is manifest even in the faulty report, he
+aimed at the King, or at Hanover, which was much the same thing. He
+declared that the changes were unreal, that Walpole remained Minister
+behind the scenes. 'Though he be removed from the Treasury,' said Pitt,
+'he is not from the King's closet, nor probably will be, unless by our
+advice or by our sending him to a lodging at the other end of the town,
+where he cannot do so much harm to his country.'[140] This pointed hint
+at the Tower must have been greatly to the taste of his audience.
+Allusions to the debts of the Civil List, caused certainly not by
+hospitality or by expenditure on any public object, but inferentially by
+corruption, were artfully framed so as to cause the King the greatest
+possible annoyance;[141] so, too, were the innuendoes as to our foreign
+policy having been framed in the sole interests of Hanover. Lord
+Limerick's second motion was carried by seven votes, and Pitt was named
+on the secret committee, which, however, owing to the loyal silence of
+Walpole's associates, to the placing one of them in the privileged
+security of the House of Lords, and to the refusal of the King to allow
+disclosures as to the manner in which secret service money had been
+employed, came to a futile and inglorious end. We catch one glimpse of
+Pitt in its proceedings. Scrope, the doughty old Secretary of the
+Treasury, who had fought under Monmouth at Sedgemoor, refused to reply
+to the questions of the inquisitors. Pitt seems to have pushed him hard,
+and he was so stung that he wished to call his tormentor out. From this
+we may at least infer that Pitt took a leading part in the deliberations
+of the Committee. On the other hand, it may be noticed that he only
+received 259, or one more than the lowest number of votes, while the
+member who headed the poll scored 518, a circumstance which would seem
+to indicate that he had as yet no strong position in the House.
+
+He soon had the opportunity of further exasperating the King, an
+opportunity of which he availed himself rather with the intemperance of
+resentment than with the astuteness of ambition; for he was now in
+declared opposition to the new Government, and as bitter against
+Carteret as he had been against Walpole. When Parliament met (November
+16, 1742) after the recess, Pitt 'spoke like ten thousand angels,' but
+no trace of his speech remains. Of its spirit, however, we can judge
+from that which he delivered on December 10, on the vote for continuing
+the British troops in Flanders. Here the onslaught was against the King,
+and it is scarcely possible to conceive sarcasms more calculated to
+afflict the sovereign in his tenderest susceptibilities than those which
+Pitt now launched, even as we read them in an imperfect report; they
+are, indeed, so masterly in this way as almost to prove their
+authenticity. This is the first speech of real point and power delivered
+by Pitt of which we have any record. It may be noted in passing, that in
+the 'London Magazine' (one of the two newspapers that reported debates)
+Pitt's speech was unnoticed, while it did not appear in the 'Gentleman's
+Magazine' till fourteen months after it was delivered.[142]
+
+A few specimens may give a fair idea of the power which made Pitt so
+dreaded.
+
+'The troops of Hanover, whom we are now expected to pay, marched into
+the Low Countries, where they still remain. They marched to the place
+most distant from the enemy, least in danger of an attack, and most
+strongly fortified had an attack been designed. They have, therefore, no
+other claim to be paid than that they left their own country for a place
+of greater security. I shall not, therefore, be surprised, after such
+another glorious campaign ... to be told that the money of this nation
+cannot be more properly employed than in hiring Hanoverians to eat and
+sleep.'[143]
+
+'As to Hanover,' he continues, 'we know by experience that none of the
+merits of that Electorate are passed over in silence.' 'It is not to be
+imagined that His Majesty would not have sent his proportion of troops
+to the Austrian army had not the temptation of greater profit been laid
+industriously before him.' 'It is now too apparent that this powerful,
+this great, this mighty nation is considered only as a province to a
+despicable electorate, and that, in consequence of a plan formed long
+ago and invariably pursued, these [Hanoverian] troops are hired only to
+drain us of our money.... How much reason the transactions of almost
+every year have given for suspecting this absurd, ungrateful, and
+perfidious partiality it is not necessary to declare.... To dwell upon
+all the instances of partiality which have been shown, and the yearly
+visits which have been paid to that delightful country [Hanover], to
+reckon up all the sums that have been spent to aggrandise and enrich it,
+would be an irksome and invidious task, invidious to those who are
+afraid to be told the truth, and irksome to those who are unwilling to
+hear of the dishonour and injuries of their country. I shall, however,
+dwell no longer on this unpleasing subject than to express my hope that
+we shall no longer suffer ourselves to be deceived and oppressed.'
+
+Conceive the position. On the one side a King, born and bred in Hanover,
+to whom the honour and welfare of Hanover and the Hanoverians were
+everything, whose paradise was Hanover, who counted the days to his
+annual visit to Hanover as a schoolboy counts the days to his holidays,
+who held Hanover as his own absolute monarchy and property as compared
+with the limited interest and power of the British throne; a King,
+moreover, courted by all, whose favour was necessary for the obtaining
+of office; accustomed to unstinted adulation and homage. On the other,
+this young jackanapes, an official in the court of his detested son,
+declaiming against him with every art of the actor and the rhetorician,
+with every power of voice and eye, holding him and his Hanover up to
+every kind of ridicule and contempt, before an audience mainly of
+place-hunters and place-holders, half trembling, half chuckling, as the
+philippic proceeded.
+
+Why did Pitt take this line? If he wished for office (as he undoubtedly
+did), it seemed madness: he was committing something like suicide. But
+pique, as Sir George Savile well said, 'is the spur the devil rides the
+noblest tempers with.' He was unquestionably angry at his exclusion from
+office, which he had, no doubt, been told was due to the King. He was
+justly indignant that the long-continued efforts which had resulted in
+the overthrow of Walpole's overweening power had simply resulted in the
+shuffle of a few offices, and that to the victors the spoil had been
+denied; the sole and execrable minister Walpole had been replaced by a
+much less sole but not less execrable minister in Carteret. All this was
+gall to a man who had been among the most formidable in the heat of
+battle. That heat was now over, and the vanquished were picnicking with
+a few selected victors, while Pitt and his friends were left to cool
+themselves on the deserted battlefield. 'They tell me,' said Lord George
+Bentinck, in 1846, 'that I shall save fifteen hundred a year by Free
+Trade. I don't care for that. What I cannot bear is being sold.' Pitt,
+too, could not bear being sold.
+
+That pique and a not ignoble rage had much to do with this philippic we
+may well assume. But we may also surmise that his attitude was not
+devoid of calculation. The veto of George II. was not to be removed by
+deference, so he would, like another Hannibal, destroy the obstacle
+with vinegar. The King had been exasperated by the lambent play of
+Pitt's earlier insinuations; he should be made to know how Pitt had then
+held his hand, what thunderbolts he had kept in reserve, what
+unspeakable things awaited the Prince who should frown on him. 'All the
+things I have told you,' said Sancho Panza, 'are tarts and cheese-cakes
+to what remains behind.' George II. should learn that the innuendoes
+that Pitt had levelled at him before were tarts and cheesecakes compared
+to what he had the power of producing. Pitt, in a word, had made up his
+mind that his only means of achieving his objects was by terror. He had
+thrown away the scabbard. Moreover, he was appealing from the Court to
+the people. The Court was foreign, immoral, and unpopular: the very name
+of Hanover was detested. And although Pitt's actual words reached the
+people late or not at all, there was an echo which was audible, and made
+known all through the three kingdoms that there was within the walls of
+Parliament an intrepid, unbribed, perhaps incorruptible orator who
+feared the face of no man, and who was embodying in fiery words the
+antipathies and distrusts of the nation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+Let us consider for a moment the character of the Sovereign whom Pitt
+had set himself to bait.
+
+George II. was first and fundamentally a German prince of his epoch.
+What other could he be? And these magnates all aped Louis XIV. as their
+model. They built huge palaces, as like Versailles as their means would
+permit, and generally beyond those limits, with fountains and avenues
+and dismally wide paths. Even in our own day a German monarch has left,
+fortunately unfinished, an accurate Versailles on a damp island in a
+Bavarian lake. In these grandiose structures they cherished a blighting
+etiquette, and led lives as dull as those of the aged and torpid carp in
+their own stew-ponds. Then at the proper season, they would break away
+into the forest and kill game. Moreover, still in imitation of their
+model, they held, as a necessary feature in the dreary drama of their
+existence, ponderous dalliance with unattractive mistresses, in whom
+they fondly tried to discern the charms of a Montespan or a La Valličre.
+This monotonous programme, sometimes varied by a violent contest whether
+they should occupy a seat with or without a back, or with or without
+arms, represented the even tenor of their lives.
+
+George II. was better than this training would suggest. His first
+ambition indeed was to be a Lovelace, but his second was to be a
+soldier. As a soldier he had the unaffected courage of the princes of
+his race. George, red and angry, fighting on foot at the battle of
+Dettingen, is a figure that is memorable and congenial to his British
+subjects.
+
+As a Lovelace he lives to this day, for his portraits are generally in
+the posture of a coxcomb, with his face in outline wearing an
+irresistible smile, only comical to the beholder now, but with which he
+goes smirking into the eternities. It is not necessary to dwell on this
+part of his character; after all, a shallow part, for the one woman whom
+he loved was his wife. It was, however, a necessary part, vital to his
+conception of an ideal monarch. His confidences to his wife on this
+delicate point, though gross to us, seemed natural to him and to her,
+and were probably not alien to the atmosphere in which he was reared.
+Withal he bored his mistresses to death, and not impossibly they bored
+him. But that did not matter; the thing had to be done; he saw himself
+as in a mirror the fourteenth or fifteenth Louis; and when on the
+Saturdays in summer he drove down with Lady Yarmouth and his court to
+Richmond, escorted by Lifeguards kicking up the dust, to walk an hour in
+the garden, dine, and return to London, he imagined himself, as Horace
+Walpole tells us, the most gallant and lively prince in Europe![144]
+
+We must admit then that he was born and bred a coxcomb, like his son.
+That he was a fond father no one will allege. His pleasures were coarse
+and dull. Even here one strange exception must be made. His letters to
+women, in the opinion of hostile critics, were tender and even
+exquisite.[145] How he came to write them we cannot know, for his
+character could not make one expect a grace of this kind.
+
+In other respects we think him underrated. Sir Robert Walpole said that
+politically he was a coward. To what does this charge really amount?
+That a prince who had never left Germany till he was thirty-one, who
+succeeded to the throne when he was forty-four, after a life of such
+severe repression that his father even entertained the idea of
+transporting him to the plantations, should display that familiarity
+with his position, his political relations, and a strange nation, which
+alone could justify the independent action which is implied by the
+phrase 'political courage,' would have been astonishing; it would indeed
+have savoured of political recklessness. Walpole may have uttered the
+charge in resentment for some refusal of the King's. He was, we know,
+irritated at the moment by finding that the King had promised to go to
+Hanover without informing him. The King no doubt blustered in private
+when he yielded in public. But domestic effervescence was the only
+method of relief for a Sovereign who knew his own limitations, and who
+also knew that, constitutionally, he would have at last to yield to his
+Minister. What is 'political courage' in a constitutional Sovereign?
+What would Walpole have said had the monarch shown 'political courage'
+and insisted on having his own stubborn way? 'Had he,' wrote Waldegrave,
+with his usual good sense, 'always been as firm and undaunted in the
+Closet as he showed himself at Oudenarde and Dettingen, he might not
+have proved quite as good a king in this limited monarchy.'
+
+His foible, we are told, was avarice. We do not know that he was mean in
+his personal expenditure. Waldegrave, again, who was fair, and knew him
+better than most men, declared that 'he was always just, and sometimes
+charitable, though rarely generous.' He amused himself, we are told,
+with counting his guineas in private. That perhaps was not a very royal
+occupation, though a nursery rhyme indicates that it is; it may have
+been a trick learned when he was poor, or it may have been his
+substitute for those games of anxious futility now known as 'patience.'
+But the real ground for the charge of avarice in the eyes of his British
+subjects was that he accumulated a great treasure in Hanover. If that be
+avarice, it was the avarice of the kings who made Prussia, the famous
+Frederick and his father. Parsimony in such cases may well be a virtue;
+and subjects may even prefer to be ruled by those who possess it rather
+than by princes who rear vast and idle palaces like the Bourbons of
+Spain and Naples, or live with unbridled extravagance like George IV.
+But kings rarely hit the right mean; if they are generous they are
+called profuse, if they are careful they are called mean. George's
+avarice, if such it was, was a public-spirited avarice. He hoarded for
+his own beloved country, he got as much out of his Kingdom as he could
+for his Electorate; for he was a Hanoverian first and a Briton a long
+way afterwards. But when Hanover needed it, he spent all his hoards on
+her behalf ungrudgingly, and died poor.
+
+We do not claim him as a great King, far from it. But we think him
+unjustly and hastily condemned. It is easy in a slapdash manner to
+lavish sarcasms on a King who presented many tempting opportunities for
+satire. The genius of Thackeray could not resist them, small blame to
+it. But the King's absurdities should not blind one to his merits. The
+just critic must recognise in George II. a constant substantial
+shrewdness, seasoned with humour. His sagacity made him realise his
+constitutional limitations; his penetration appraised with great justice
+the men by whom he was surrounded; he had to do much that he disliked
+and resented, but he did it when he saw that it was necessary, not
+gracefully, for he was never graceful, but without scandal. His rough
+common sense constantly vented itself in the ejaculation of 'Stuff and
+nonsense,'[146] which proved his command of at least one British idiom,
+and not unfrequently a just appreciation of affairs. His judgment of men
+was sure. He had only three ministers who were men of commanding
+ability; Walpole, Carteret, and Pitt. Two of these were his especial
+favourites; to the third, who had mortally offended him, he submitted.
+For Newcastle he had a supreme contempt; but wisely accommodated himself
+to one who was useful, who 'did his business,' to whom he was
+accustomed, and whom he knew through and through. He infinitely
+preferred Carteret to Pelham, but at the supreme moment he chose Pelham
+in spite of Carteret. No doubt this was due largely to the influence of
+Walpole, but many kings would not have followed an advice so contrary to
+their own bias. He piqued himself on his knowledge of mankind, not
+without reason, and Hervey depicts a scene where he reels off a
+catalogue of names, and the King, tersely and unhesitatingly, gives the
+character of each.
+
+The fact is that George II. had the misfortune to keep in his inmost
+circle a vigilant and deadly enemy. John Lord Hervey, the Sporus of
+Pope's blighting satire, akin in mind and probably in blood to Horace
+Walpole, was always with him; noting down, with spruce rancour, a
+venomous pen, and some dramatic power, the random outbreaks of his
+master. It is not wise to attribute literal exactitude or even general
+veracity to such chronicles; the man who can commit so gross a breach of
+confidence is little worthy of trust. That Hervey in the very heart of
+the King's family should have sate down with a pen dipped in vitriol to
+portray its most intimate aspects is perhaps our gain but his disgrace.
+He was a viper warmed in the bosom of the Court, and stung it to the
+full extent of his opportunity and powers. A court is considered fair
+game by such reptiles. But it is hard to see why princes, who after all
+are human beings, should not be allowed to some extent the same sanctity
+of family life which humbler human beings claim and maintain. Hervey was
+the intimate associate of the King, the confidential friend of the
+Queen, the lover of one of their daughters, he was the tame cat of the
+family circle. He thought it seemly to narrate their secrets in so
+brutal a fashion that some more decent member of his family tore out and
+destroyed the coarsest and bitterest passages. What remains is coarse
+and bitter enough. It shows the King and Queen in a most unfavourable
+light. But that aspect is fascinating compared to that in which he
+presents himself. The story of royalty should not be a Court Circular;
+but neither should it be a lampoon, written by a trusted friend. The
+only excuse for him is that being devoted to the Queen, who in her way
+merited his devotion, he detested the King whom he deemed unworthy of
+her. But that does not help the reader who looks to him for facts. The
+George II. we know is the George II. of Hervey, and Hervey's Journal
+proves the writer to be unworthy of implicit credence.
+
+Chesterfield also drew a character of the King. But when we discount
+Chesterfield's studied epigrams, poised with the malignant nicety of one
+who hated his subject, there is not much left for discredit.
+
+The real crime of George II. in the eyes of his British subjects was
+almost in the category of virtues, for it was his devotion to Hanover.
+Innocent and natural as it was in him, it seems wonderful to us that our
+fathers should have endured it. How they must have hated Popery! But
+Hanover was the King's home and fatherland; all his pleasant
+associations were with Hanover; there he was absolute Sovereign, and
+could lead without criticism the life that he enjoyed. He could not help
+being a Hanoverian any more than William III. could help being a
+Hollander. The English chose their Dutch and Hanoverian Sovereigns with
+their eyes open, and had no right to complain if what they desired and
+obtained was somewhat bitter in digestion. Neither William nor the two
+first Georges ever professed to be other than what they were; they never
+for a moment simulated that they were English, they never pretended to
+like England. 'He hated the English,' says Lord Hervey of George II. And
+when at the first available instant they fled from Kensington and
+Hampton Court to Loo or Herrenhausen, their English subjects ignored
+the mortifying preference, from devotion no doubt to the Protestant
+Succession; but partly also because these monarchs were profoundly
+indifferent to them. With George II., it is true, these excursions were
+accompanied, as in Shakespeare, by alarms; alarms only too well founded
+that he would return with a pocket full of treaties for subsidies which
+the British taxpayer would have to pay. But all these three kings
+accurately understood their position. They knew that they were not
+chosen from affection, or for their qualities, certainly not for their
+attractions. They were taken as necessities, almost odious necessities,
+to keep out a Romanist dynasty which represented something to the people
+that was more odious still.
+
+They entertained, then, no illusions; a bargain had been driven with
+them and they would keep it; they gave their pound, or more, of flesh.
+They would occupy palaces, receive civil lists, interview ministers, and
+keep out the Pretender. But that did not imply a perpetual exile from
+home; they intended to get as many holidays as possible; and they did.
+They might be a hateful necessity for England, but England as a
+necessity was almost as hateful to them. Their life in this island was
+servitude, more or less penal; they only breathed by the dykes of
+Holland or the waters of the Leine. If this be clearly understood, much
+confusion and vituperation may be avoided. But the wonder is that the
+English (for the Scots and Irish had little to do with it) should have
+had the civic courage in the cause of religion and liberty to endure the
+compact.
+
+George II. then, we contend, putting his private life apart, which we
+must judge by the German standard of those days, was not a bad King
+under the conditions of his time and of his throne. He was perhaps the
+best of the Georges; better than George I. or George IV., better as a
+King than George III., though inferior no doubt in the domestic virtues.
+All things considered, it is wonderful that he was as good as he was,
+and he scarcely deserves the thoughtless opprobrium which he has
+incurred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+And now it is necessary to say a word of Continental affairs.
+
+A life of Pitt should concern itself with Pitt alone, or with the
+persons and events immediately relating to him. But as during this
+period of his life foreign policy was all in all, and Britain seemed a
+mere anxious appendage to the Continent, it is necessary to give a
+succinct sketch of the familiar but complicated sequence of events in
+Europe which occurred at this time, and which inspired almost all the
+debates in which Pitt took part.
+
+Walpole, as we have seen, had declared war against Spain in 1739, and
+the not very glorious course of those operations does not call for
+record. But the year 1740 marked a new and critical epoch. Death in
+those few months was busy lopping off the crowned heads of Europe, as if
+to clear the scene for two great figures. On February 6 died Pope
+Clement XII. On March 31 died the shrewd but brutal boor Frederick
+William I., and at the age of twenty-eight his son Frederick II. reigned
+in his stead. His accession was to unveil a mystery; and where mankind
+had hitherto seen a fiddling dilettante, contemptuous of his countrymen
+and craving for all that was French, to reveal the direct ancestor of
+German unity, the most practical and tenacious of conquerors. On
+October 20 the Emperor Charles VI., the figure-head for which we had
+fought in the War of the Succession, and, a week afterwards, Anne the
+Empress of Russia passed away. Rarely has the sickle of Eternity
+gathered so pompous a harvest. Between February and November it had
+garnered the Holy Roman Emperor, the Holy Roman Pontiff, the sovereign
+of Russia, and the sovereign of Prussia. Of these the death at Vienna
+was by far the most momentous. For Charles left behind him no son, but a
+young daughter of twenty-three, about to be a mother, whose succession
+he had attempted to secure by the Pragmatic Sanction of 1718, ratified
+and recognised by solemn international instruments. On the morning of
+his death she was promptly proclaimed sovereign of her father's
+dominions; but her treasury was empty and her ministers paralysed.
+Bavaria at once protested. Behind Bavaria stood Frederick armed to the
+teeth, eager to let slip the dogs of war. Every one saw his
+preparations; no one could tell at whom they were aimed.
+
+'No fair judge,' Mr. Carlyle[147] tells us, can blame the 'young
+magnanimous King' for seizing this 'flaming opportunity.' The point is
+fortunately not one which a biographer of Pitt is called upon to
+discuss, except to note that hero-worship makes bad history. For our
+purpose it is sufficient to say that Frederick did avail himself of the
+new juncture of affairs. Charles had died on October 20; on December 6
+the announcement was officially made in Berlin that the King had
+resolved to march a body of troops into Silesia; on December 13 these
+had passed the frontier, not as enemies of the Queen of Hungary or
+Silesia, it was declared, but as protective friends of Silesia and her
+Majesty's rights there. All this was preceded and accompanied by the
+strangest diplomacy that the world had seen, but which does not concern
+this abstract. Thus begins the first period of the Continental war.
+
+Britain, like Prussia, was bound by treaty to maintain the Pragmatic
+Sanction which assured the Austrian dominions to Maria Theresa. Our
+statesmen at this moment were engaged in a pastime of more immediate
+interest and excitement, for they were hunting Walpole to death; the
+exhaustion of the quarry was evident; the end could not be far off. But
+even then the nature of the aggression and the appeal of a young and
+beautiful Queen exercised the usual influence on the chivalrous
+sympathies of the nation. Maria Theresa could, moreover, appeal to
+treaty rights. So that Walpole found himself reluctantly forced into a
+new war while the former was still undecided and incomplete. He agreed
+to renew the pledges of England to maintain that Pragmatic Sanction
+which secured the succession to the daughter of Charles VI.; he agreed,
+moreover, to an immediate subsidy of 300,000_l._, and to sending a force
+of 12,000 men. Meanwhile Marshal Schwerin had defeated the Austrians at
+Molwitz at the very moment that the House of Commons was debating these
+proposals.
+
+This victory brought into the arena new and eager claimants for some
+part of the Austrian spoils, now apparently so available. The eminent
+guarantors of the integrity of Austria were suddenly transformed into
+hungry schemers for her immediate partition. Spain, Sardinia, and
+Poland-Saxony all advanced pretensions. But a mightier enemy was
+preparing to join hands with Frederick and take the field; for it was
+scarcely to be supposed that the secular enemy of the House of Hapsburg
+could remain quiescent at such a moment. France saw a unique opportunity
+for breaking up the Austrian dominions, and reducing the portion
+reserved to the young Queen to comparative insignificance. In France, as
+in England, the Minister was peaceful, but the party of war carried the
+day. Two French armies of 40,000 men each crossed the Rhine in August
+1741. One under Marshal Maillebois marched on Hanover. The ruler of that
+State, who, as sovereign of Great Britain, was the active ally of Maria
+Theresa, hastily concluded a treaty of neutrality for one year,
+promising to give no assistance to the young Queen in his Hanoverian
+capacity, and to refrain from voting for her husband as Emperor. For
+this treaty George II. was violently attacked by his British subjects,
+who believed themselves to be fighting for Hanoverian interests, while
+Hanover itself was thus snugly removed into a haven of peace. The
+censure was, we think, excessive, if not undeserved. The treaty did
+indeed accentuate the duality which somewhat unequally divided the
+person of George. But if that be once conceded, it must be admitted that
+he was right as Elector to do his very best for Hanover, just as King he
+was bound to do his very best for England. As Elector, then, he was
+fully justified in keeping his defenceless State out of the devastation
+of war, from which it was destined to suffer so terribly sixteen years
+later from another French army under the Duke of Richelieu, when
+neutrality was no longer possible.
+
+While Maillebois marched towards Hanover, the other army, under Marshals
+Belleisle and Broglie, marched through Bavaria and menaced Vienna.
+Maria Theresa had to fly to Hungary, and appeal in a manner made
+familiar by description to the chivalry of the Magyars. The Elector of
+Bavaria, who was the figure-head chosen by the confederates for the
+imperial throne, and who had his fill of titles in the lack of more
+substantial fare, was proclaimed Archduke of Austria at Linz, King of
+Bohemia in Prague, and soon afterwards Emperor in Frankfort. It seemed
+as if a vast partition was about to take place, and the House of Austria
+destined to disappear.
+
+But this was the turning-point; in the general blackness there appeared
+rays of hope for Maria Theresa. Walpole, the peace minister,
+disappeared, and the control of Foreign Affairs in Great Britain passed
+to Carteret, who was warm for Austria, and eager to play an active part
+on the Continent. Moreover, the misfortunes of the Queen roused the
+enthusiasm of Great Britain. Five millions were voted for the war, half
+a million as a subsidy to the Queen of Hungary. Sixteen thousand men
+were sent into Flanders to assist the exertions of the Dutch.
+Unfortunately there were no exertions to assist, and our troops remained
+useless. Our fleets were more active. They harried the Spaniards and
+controlled the Mediterranean. A squadron entered the Bay of Naples and
+gave the King, afterwards Charles III. of Spain, an hour in which to
+decide whether he would abandon the confederacy against Austria or see
+his beautiful city bombarded. The King of Naples yielded, but as King of
+Spain never forgave the English for this humiliation.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 12, 1742.]
+
+The Austrians, too, found a bold and skilful general in Khevenhüller,
+who seized Bavaria and occupied Munich on the very day on which its
+ruler was crowned Emperor. In the succeeding June a peace, which proved
+afterwards to be but a truce, was concluded at Breslau between Austria
+and Prussia, through the mediation of Great Britain, and followed by the
+Treaty of Berlin, to which George II. both as King and Elector, the
+Empress of Russia, the States General, and the King of Poland as Elector
+of Saxony were parties. There had been a secret armistice between the
+two states in the winter of 1741, by which Lower Silesia and Niesse had
+been ceded to Frederick, but this had soon proved inoperative. A new
+situation was however produced by the severe battle of Chotusitz, in
+which the Austrians suffered defeat at the hands of Frederick. Maria
+Theresa now yielded to the pressure of the English ministry and ceded
+all Lower and part of Upper Silesia with the county of Glatz to
+Frederick, who in return abandoned his allies and left the French to
+themselves, on the plea that they were in secret communication with
+Vienna. Saxony, under his influence, also withdrew from the war, and the
+King of Prussia and the Elector of Hanover concluded a defensive
+alliance, the Elector guaranteeing Silesia and Glatz to the King.
+Frederick saw that he had been too successful. He was determined to
+retain Silesia, but he saw with apprehension great French armies
+overrunning the German Empire. That France should be aggrandised at the
+expense of Germany was no part of his policy. For Germany as Germany he
+had no natural affection; but the waters of Germany, however troubled
+they might be, he proposed to keep for his own fishing.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 1741.]
+
+With the Peace of Breslau, then, the first period of the war ends, and
+the second begins, in which it assumes a new character. It is not
+Frederick and France fighting against Austria; it is Austria supported
+by Britain, and to some extent Holland, fighting, with the secret
+sympathy of Germany, against France and Spain. Elizabeth, too, the
+daughter of Peter the Great, had mounted the throne of Russia, and
+assisted her sister sovereign with sympathy and with money. The whole
+aspect of the war was suddenly changed. Austria was now free to turn her
+whole forces on France, and she did so with terrible effect. The French
+had to evacuate Bohemia in a retreat so heroic and so appalling that it
+anticipated the horrors of 1812. Of the 40,000 men with whom he had
+crossed the Rhine, Belleisle brought back but 8000 into France. The
+share of Great Britain in the war became substantial and direct. The
+Elector of Hanover, relieved from apprehension by his treaty with
+Prussia and the success of Austria, reduced his army by 16,000 men, but
+the King of England took them into his pay. This measure exasperated his
+British subjects, whose attention was thus once more called to the
+jarring interests of the Kingdom and the Electorate combined in George's
+person. But Ministers carried the day, and in June 1743 the King himself
+took the field with an Anglo-German army of some 40,000 men under the
+command of Lord Stair. At Dettingen, not far from Frankfort, in escaping
+from a position of extreme jeopardy, they encountered and defeated the
+French. The strangest part of this engagement was that there was then
+nominally no war between France and Great Britain, and that these
+operations were only accidental auxiliary conflicts. It was not for nine
+months afterwards that war between the two countries was formally
+declared.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept. 1743.]
+
+Later on in this year George II. took an even more active measure, and
+through Carteret, as Secretary of State, though behind the back of his
+other ministers, signed the Treaty of Worms. For many years past it had
+been the policy of the House of Savoy to put itself up to auction, and
+by the Treaty of Worms George II. became the successful bidder. The King
+of Sardinia was to receive some territory from Austria, and 200,000_l._
+a year from Great Britain, while he was to assist the Austrian cause
+with 45,000 men. Carteret at the same time covenanted to pay Maria
+Theresa a subsidy of 300,000_l._ a year 'so long as the war should
+continue, or the necessity of her affairs should require.' But this the
+British Ministry refused to recognise, and it became the subject of
+fierce debate in Parliament.
+
+To meet this combination, Louis XV., on the advice of his Minister but
+against his own better judgment, signed one of those one-sided and
+altruistic treaties which characterised French policy at this time, and
+renewed the family compact of 1733 by a treaty signed at Fontainebleau
+in October 1743. In this new edition the Bourbons of France and Spain
+pledged themselves to an indissoluble union. France was to declare war
+against Great Britain and Sardinia, to help Spain to reconquer Parma and
+the Milanese for Don Philip, and to compel Great Britain to give up her
+colony of Georgia. Finally, the two Powers were not to make peace until
+Gibraltar and, if possible, Minorca were restored to Spain.[148]
+
+[Sidenote: May 1744.]
+
+But the Austrian successes once more brought Frederick into the field
+to redress the balance, which now inclined too much to Austria, as it
+had inclined too much to France. Austria had acquired Bavaria for the
+moment, and perhaps would never evacuate it; she might be encouraged to
+attempt the reconquest of Silesia. Her armies were now in Alsace; where
+would they stop? The Queen, he knew, was only a degree less tenacious
+than himself. So he signed a new convention at Frankfort with the
+Emperor, the King of France, the King of Sweden as Landgrave of Hesse,
+and the Elector Palatine, and again took up arms against Austria, which
+was almost drained of troops. France about the same time formally
+declared war against Great Britain and Austria, whom she had been
+fighting, so to speak, incognito, for three years past. On the other
+hand a quadruple alliance was concluded between Great Britain, Austria,
+Holland, and Saxony; based as usual on British subsidies, which
+Parliament ungrudgingly voted, with the eloquent but surprising support
+of Pitt.
+
+Here begins the third period of the war. Louis XV. and Marshal Saxe at
+the head of 80,000 men entered the Austrian Netherlands almost without
+resistance. Frederick soon made himself master of Bohemia and Bavaria,
+and returned the Electorate to its sovereign, the Emperor Charles VII.
+In January 1745, worn out with misfortunes and anxieties and dignities,
+but once more in his capital, that hapless monarch died. Within three
+months his successor had concluded peace with Austria through the
+earnest pressure of the British Cabinet on the haughty Queen; the
+Elector abandoning his claims on the Austrian dominions, and promising
+his vote for the Empire to Maria Theresa's husband. Peace between
+Austria and the King of Poland, Elector of Saxony, followed in May,
+when the contracting parties entered into a premature concert for the
+partition of the Prussian dominions.
+
+Otherwise 1745 was a disastrous year for Austria. The Allies, Austrians,
+British, and Dutch, under the Duke of Cumberland, sustained a bloody
+defeat at Fontenoy in May; and Great Britain, occupied with the domestic
+disturbance caused by the landing of Charles Edward, had to withdraw
+from active participation in the war. In August a secret convention was
+concluded at Hanover between the Kings of Prussia and Great Britain, by
+which the latter Power guaranteed Silesia to the former. This was the
+beginning of the end. The British Ministry now notified to the
+unyielding Queen that she must come to terms with her enemy, or expect
+no more assistance from England or Holland. The Austrian arms met
+everywhere with reverses. While the young Queen was planning with Saxony
+a triumphant march on Berlin, Frederick broke into Saxony and occupied
+Dresden. On this final blow Maria Theresa accepted the mediation of
+Great Britain and signed, on Christmas Day, 1745, the peace of Dresden
+which gave Silesia and Glatz to Frederick. So ends the third period of
+this strange and erratic war; a labyrinth of fugitive conventions and
+transient alliances, with two strong purposes in the centre.
+
+But the auxiliary combatants remained at strife, just as the seconds in
+a duel have sometimes fought after their principals had settled their
+own differences. And so we now enter on its fourth period, that in which
+the British, Austrians, and Dutch (with the assistance of the
+Piedmontese in Italy) contended against France and Spain. The part of
+this war which chiefly concerns Great Britain was fought in Flanders.
+And in all these transactions it must be noted that a main difficulty of
+the British Ministry, both from the practical and from the parliamentary
+point of view, lay in the problem of moving the Dutch. The Hollanders
+had everything to apprehend from the triumph of the French arms, but
+their phlegmatic temper, and still more the impracticable nature of
+their constitution, offered great obstacles to their co-operation.
+Anglers may see an analogy between these British negotiations with the
+Dutch and the tardy and tantalising sport of sniggling for eels. At the
+beginning of 1746, matters seemed to have come to a climax. The French
+were harrying Flanders, and were threatening to invade Holland. The
+Dutch Government were now stirred into proposing active measures, and
+the raising of a large army, to be under the command of the Prince of
+Waldeck; but they declined to declare war against France. The British
+agreed to a joint force of 100,000 men, comprising 40,000 to be
+furnished by the States-General, 30,000 by Austria, some Hanoverians and
+Saxons to be paid by England and Holland, and 6000 Hessians to be
+provided by England after Charles Edward had been finally defeated. The
+Dutch regarded the British offers as inadequate; for it is a cardinal
+principle of all Continental wars in which Great Britain is concerned
+that her purse is to be open to her allies, and that she is to find the
+funds.
+
+ 'The Dutch we know are good allies,
+ So are they all with subsidies.'[149]
+
+They were, moreover, not indisposed to negotiate with the French.
+These, meanwhile, under the leadership of Marshal Saxe, were occupying
+the Low Countries almost without interruption or resistance. In February
+they entered Brussels; in May, Antwerp. Mons, Charleroi, and Namur
+successively fell into their hands, and they ended the campaign by
+defeating the allies at Roucoux, and remaining practically in possession
+of the Austrian Netherlands. But there was a glimpse of peace, in that
+some negotiations, abortive though they were destined to be, were opened
+at Breda.
+
+In 1747 the Duke of Cumberland again assumed the command with the usual
+disastrous result. The Dutch contingent, also as usual, was very
+inadequate: commercial nations are perhaps apt to treat international
+engagements in too commercial a spirit. But the irruption into Dutch
+Flanders of twenty thousand Frenchmen roused a spirit of a different
+kind. The Dutch rose like one man, overturned their rulers, and once
+more entrusted the Stadtholderate to the House of Orange. This was a
+national gain. But the luckless Cumberland again sustained a bloody
+defeat at Lauffeld. The battle, however, had one indirect but happy
+consequence. Our best General, Ligonier, was captured, and, being of
+French birth, was favourably received by Louis XV., who threw out hints
+of peace and placed him in communication with Marshal Saxe. The Marshal
+admitted that the war, and he himself as concerned in it, were
+profoundly unpopular in France, that peace might be obtained on easy
+terms, and suggested that Cumberland and he should be the negotiators.
+
+Pelham was naturally eager for a pacification, George II. less so, and
+what the King wished Newcastle was anxious to wish. But a congress to
+adjust a treaty met at Aix-la-Chapelle in March 1748, and in April the
+preliminaries of a treaty were signed by the British and French and
+Dutch plenipotentiaries.
+
+[Sidenote: 1748.]
+
+Maria Theresa held aloof. To her it seemed that the first and only duty
+of the British, and, indeed, of all other nations, was to fight and work
+and pay that she might regain Silesia, just as her father had held that
+the first, last, and only duty of Europe was to establish him in Spain.
+This peace would ratify the acquisition of Silesia by Frederick, and
+though she herself had ceded it, she could not bring herself to declare
+the cession definite. England, however, could no longer agree to the
+general interest being overridden by the obstinacy of the Empress-Queen;
+there had been bloodshed and suffering enough on her account. However
+just a cause may be, there are limits to human endurance, more
+especially when the cause to be upheld has no substantial importance for
+the defending nation. The definitive treaty was signed on October 18.
+Two days later, Spain, the original belligerent, acceded to it. There
+were, a philosopher may note, no stipulations regarding the commercial
+regulations which had been the original cause of our war with Spain. On
+the 23rd it was accepted by the Austrian Government.
+
+This is a narrative, as condensed as possible, of the foreign affairs
+which entered into our parliamentary debates. That part of the war which
+took place in Italy has been excluded. It was a mere contest of petty
+rapine in which strange princes parcelled out Italy; which can scarcely
+be said to have concerned Great Britain, and Pitt not at all. Nor has it
+left the least visible trace in history.
+
+The greater war which we have summarised is a sufficient tangle. Leslie
+Stephen calls it 'that complicated series of wars which lasted some ten
+years, and passes all power of the ordinary human intellect to
+understand or remember. For what particular reason Englishmen were
+fighting at Dettingen, or Fontenoy, or Lauffeld is a question which a
+man can only answer when he has been specially crammed for examination,
+and his knowledge has not begun to ooze out.'[150] This is the exact
+truth, as the ill-fated chronicler who gropes about among the treaties
+and conventions is fain to confess. But apart from its complications
+this war is not in itself very memorable or exalted, though it has left
+an indelible result in the great Prussian monarchy. It was not beautiful
+or glorious. The guarantors of Austria at the first sign of her weakness
+had hurried, most of them, to divide her spoils, at the same time
+betraying each other from time to time without scruple, as their
+immediate interests required. Frederick had a business-like candour
+which almost disarms criticism. Macaulay in a famous passage has pointed
+out that innocent peasants perished in thousands all over the world that
+he might obtain and retain an Austrian province. And Maria Theresa, with
+all her maternal charm, is not wholly admirable. It was natural that she
+should fight for her rights, and induce all she could to fight for her;
+natural, perhaps, that she should be content that all Europe should
+bleed so that she might retain her territory. But we cannot forget that
+she who was ready that myriads should perish, not of Austrians or
+Magyars alone, but of all the nations that she could enlist in her
+cause, to maintain the sanctity of her rights to Silesia, was later on
+an accomplice in the partition of Poland; a reluctant accomplice, it is
+fair to add, as she herself was awake to the inconsistency of her
+position.
+
+Among all these stately figures and famous slaughters we see the central
+fact of the period, the shameless and naked cynicism of the eighteenth
+century, which, turning its back for ever on the wars of faith and
+conviction, looked only to contests of prey. And so it continued till
+the great Revolution cleared the air, and, followed up by the poignant
+discipline of Napoleon, made way for the wars of nationality.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+No more of Pitt's speeches are recorded during the session, which, with
+the enviable ease of those days, having opened on November 16, 1742,
+closed on April 21, 1743. In the interval before the ensuing session an
+event occurred, not in itself memorable, but notable for the contest
+that followed. In July 1743 occurred the long-expected death of
+Wilmington, the nominal head of the Government. In itself this departure
+would not have caused a ripple on the surface of politics, but it opened
+a critical succession. Pulteney, now Earl of Bath, at once laid claim to
+it; and his pretensions were warmly supported by Carteret, who was the
+minister in attendance on the King in Germany. Henry Pelham, supported
+by his brother Newcastle, also applied for the vacant post. As between
+these two groups it seemed certain that Bath, through Carteret, who was
+on the ground, would have the preference. Pelham, indeed, at the
+instance of Walpole, had, before the King left England, applied to his
+Majesty for the reversion of the moribund Minister's place, and had, if
+Coxe may be trusted, received a definite promise. It seems difficult to
+credit this, for George was a man of his word, yet the Pelham brothers
+were unfeignedly astonished when the reversion was given them; so that
+had Pelham indeed received such a pledge, he must have expected that
+the King would break it. Six weeks of dire suspense followed the death
+of Wilmington; an interval which was probably caused by the anxiety of
+the Sovereign to consult Walpole, while he intimated to Pelham that his
+decision would be conveyed to the Ministry by Carteret. This seemed a
+deathblow to the chances of Pelham, though the King's aversion to Bath
+was notorious. But a letter at length arrived from Carteret, in which he
+announced, with unaffected regret but with a generous promise of
+support, that the prize had fallen to Pelham. The brothers were elated,
+if such an expression can ever be applied to the timid and cautious
+Pelham. Newcastle was transported by the 'agreeable but most surprising
+news;' so much so, as to acknowledge that Carteret's letter was 'manly.'
+
+Walpole, in writing his congratulations, looked warily to the future.
+'Recruits,' he advised, should now be sought 'from the Cobham
+squadron.... Pitt is thought able and formidable, try him or show
+him.... Whig it with all opponents that will parley, but 'ware Tory.'
+Newcastle, on reading this letter to his brother, wrote back: 'I am
+afraid, one part of it, viz. the taking in of the Cobham party and the
+Whigs in opposition, without a mixture of Tories, is absolutely
+impracticable; and, therefore, the only question is whether, in order to
+get the Cobham party, etc., you will bring in three or four Tories, at
+least, with them, for, without that, they will not come, and this is
+what I have the greatest difficulty to bring myself to.' Orford's advice
+was not followed, and Pelham's appointments were few and narrow. Two of
+Lord Bath's followers, a friend of the Prince of Wales, and a friend of
+his own, the only surviving name of the four, Henry Fox, were
+gratified, and that was all. And even this limited arrangement was not
+completed before Parliament met.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 1, 1743.]
+
+The opening of the new session was anticipated with keen interest, as
+the Ministry was known to be rent with divisions, and hatred of the
+Hanoverians had immeasurably swollen in consequence of rumours of the
+favour that the King had shown to his electoral subjects. He had been
+surrounded by Hanoverian Guards to the exclusion of the English Guards;
+he had worn at Dettingen a yellow sash, which it appears was a
+Hanoverian symbol of authority; the Hanoverians had refused to obey the
+orders of Lord Stair, and so forth. We can easily imagine the buzz of
+angry legend and comment; for national antipathies have no difficulty in
+obtaining substantial affidavits in their support. Of this wild but not
+unreasonable intemperance Pitt, it is scarcely necessary to say, was the
+mouthpiece. In the debate on the Address he spoke with his accustomed
+violence. He called Carteret 'an execrable or sole minister, who had
+renounced the British nation, and seemed to have drunk of the potion
+described in poetic fictions which made men forget their country.'[151]
+So far as this tirade concerned Carteret's authority, nothing could be
+more absurd or wide of the truth. He could indeed scarcely have chosen a
+more unfortunate epithet than 'sole.' So far from being a sole minister,
+Carteret, as we have seen, had just received a crushing defeat in the
+elevation of Henry Pelham to the first place in the Ministry, and the
+rejection of his own candidate; though he had strained all his influence
+in the cause.
+
+Nor had this 'sole minister' any parliamentary following; his only
+strength lay with the King, where it had just been found signally
+inadequate. The supreme minister in the last resort, and behind the
+scenes, was, in truth, Walpole. It was his decision and his alone that
+had turned the scale against Carteret and Pulteney. Carteret was
+congenial to the King, for he worked with his Sovereign in matters of
+foreign policy; and, as we have seen, he could talk politics to the
+Sovereign in the King's own language. But, while the King tried to carry
+out his own views in Continental affairs, in domestic politics he looked
+to Walpole alone. Still, invective must necessarily have an object, and,
+by aiming at the King's confidential Foreign Minister, Pitt was able to
+wound the King as well. It is hinted by Yorke, the parliamentary
+chronicler, that Pitt's acrimony was dictated by jealousy of Carteret's
+influence with the Prince of Wales.[152] As to this there is no proof,
+and conjecture is idle. Carteret and Frederick had indeed been long
+connected, but this would scarcely impel one of the Prince's court to
+attack one of the Prince's friends. Moreover, were this the motive,
+Pitt's attacks would have been of a different and milder character,
+enough to damage Carteret, but not enough to embroil Pitt with the
+Prince, who was not merely his master, but the head of his political
+connection. It is clear that Pitt's sole object was to destroy Carteret
+as minister, not for the ignominious purpose of subverting him in a
+court camarilla, but to show his own power by demolishing the
+conspicuous man, the vizier of the King who proscribed himself. The mere
+fact that Carteret represented the King's Continental policy, and that
+Pitt had apparently determined, in the jargon of that day, to storm the
+Closet, seems sufficient reason for Pitt's bitterness. He denounced
+Carteret as he denounced Hanover, as darling accessories of a monarch
+whom he was determined to harass in every way until his attacks should
+produce compliance or surrender. But it was the fate of Pitt to have to
+recant his abuse of Carteret, as solemnly and as publicly as he recanted
+his abuse of Walpole. 'His abilities,' said Pitt in 1770 of Carteret,
+'did honour to this House and to this nation. In the upper departments
+of Government he had not his equal. And I feel a pride in declaring that
+to his patronage, to his friendship, and instruction, I owe whatever I
+am.'[153] It was a generous, almost an extravagant statement. But it
+shows how little importance should be attached to the early philippics
+of Pitt, as of other aspiring and brilliant young men. Invectives are
+one of the least subtle and most piquant forms of advertisement, but
+they do not facilitate the task of biographers.
+
+The Sovereign he attacked openly and unsparingly. It was proposed, in
+the Address to the Throne, to congratulate the King on his escape from
+the dangers of the battle of Dettingen. This Pitt deprecated. 'Suppose,
+Sir,' he asked, 'it should appear that His Majesty was exposed to few or
+no dangers abroad, but those to which he is daily liable at home, such
+as the overturning of his coach or the stumbling of his horse, would not
+the address proposed, instead of being a compliment, be an affront and
+insult to the Sovereign?' No affront or insult could at any rate be more
+stinging or more unfounded than his wanton insinuation. George II. had
+the courage of his race, and had displayed it at Dettingen. At first his
+runaway horse had almost carried him into the French lines, so he
+dismounted and fought on foot for the rest of the day; not leaving the
+field until he had created a number of knights banneret; the last
+British king to take the field, and the last bannerets to be so
+created.[154]
+
+It was vile then to disparage the King's courage, but political life in
+those days had no scruple and little shame. The sneers at Hanover with
+which this speech was sprinkled were better founded and deserved. But a
+serious and reasonable argument, not yet obsolete, pervaded Pitt's
+violent rhetoric on this occasion. It was that though the balance of
+power concerned all states, it concerned our island state least and last
+of all. Moreover, he attacked our recent policy on other grounds. On our
+attitude to Austria, then fighting for its integrity under Maria
+Theresa, he heaped scorn from another point of view. We had promised her
+abundant assistance when she was fighting Prussia alone; when France
+intervened we shrank back and left her in the lurch. That, he declared,
+was not our only discredit. When Prussia attacked the Queen of Hungary,
+and Spain, Poland, and Bavaria laid claim to her father's succession, we
+should have known that the preservation of the whole was impossible, and
+advised her to yield the part claimed by Frederick. But the words from
+the Throne and the speeches of the courtiers had persuaded the Austrian
+Government that Great Britain was determined to support her. So great
+was the determination, that even Hanover added near one-third to her
+army at her own cost, the first extraordinary expense, it was believed,
+that Hanover had borne for her purposes since her fortunate conjunction
+with England! But then the French intervened. Hanover was in danger, and
+so we promptly retired. We gave some money, indeed, but that was because
+our ministers contrived to make a job of every parliamentary grant. The
+Queen, seeing that she was deserted, came to terms with Frederick, but
+much worse terms than he had originally offered. Then was the time for
+us to have insisted on her making peace with France and the phantom
+Emperor. But we had advised her against this, for no conceivable reason
+except apparently that we wished to go on paying the 16,000 Hanoverians
+whom we were employing. As regards the battle of Dettingen, he declared
+that we had no idea of fighting, but that the French had caught us in a
+trap. The ardour of our troops was restrained by the cowardice of the
+Hanoverians; we ran away in the night, leaving our dead and wounded
+behind us. Never would he consent to call the battle a victory, it was
+only a fortunate escape.
+
+Were we to continue fighting? he asked. We ourselves had nothing to gain
+by it, though Hanover, no doubt, would continue to receive four or five
+hundred thousand pounds a year from us if we did. But we should
+consider, even the Hanoverians should consider, that we could not carry
+on a long war as in the reign of Queen Anne. We were not far from a
+national bankruptcy, and should soon have to disband our army. What,
+then, if the Pretender should land at the head of a French force?
+
+This outline is given to show the singular but forcible mixture of
+shrewd argument, wayward extravagance, and bitter scoffs, which at this
+time constituted Pitt's parliamentary armament.
+
+He followed this speech up by another on December 6, of which little
+remains; but his vehemence brought him into collision with the Speaker.
+He urged contemptuously that if we must have German troops we should
+rather hire those of Cologne and Saxony than those of Hanover. The King
+was surrounded by German officers, and by one English Minister without
+an English heart. The little finger of one man, he declared, had lain
+heavier upon the nation than an administration which had continued
+twenty years. Murray, however, the Solicitor-General, afterwards Lord
+Mansfield, delivered a consummate speech against the motion, which
+carried so much conviction that Pitt with some of the other Cobhamites
+struck out the words relating to the exhausted and impoverished state of
+the kingdom. But the amended motion was rejected by a majority of
+seventy-seven.
+
+And now there occurred a significant fissure in the Opposition. Pitt and
+Lyttelton were inclined to support the maintenance of the British force
+in Flanders. But Cobham, the chief of the little party, was
+uncompromising: he resigned his commission 'as captain of the troop of
+horse grenadiers' and his seat in the Cabinet. A formula had to be
+framed to unite the two sections, and so George Grenville brought
+forward a motion praying his Majesty 'in consideration of the exhausted
+and impoverished state of the Kingdom not to proceed in this war without
+the concurrence of the Dutch.' Pitt concurred in this motion, and
+promised that if it were rejected he would join in opposing the
+continued employment of the British as well as the Hanoverian troops in
+Flanders.
+
+This revision by a little group is not without significance; as the
+Opposition, we are told, at the beginning of the session, entrusted the
+direction of the party to a committee of six, consisting of Dodington,
+Pitt, Sir John Cotton, Sir Watkin Wynn, Waller, and Lyttelton. The
+putting of political leadership into commission has never been
+successful in Parliament, and the device seems finally to have broken
+down when it was last attempted, by the Protectionist party, after the
+fall of Peel. Nor does it appear to have been more happy on this
+occasion. Pitt and Lyttelton, who, in spite of their engagement, still
+desired to support the continued employment of the British troops in the
+Low Countries, at a general meeting of the Opposition found themselves
+alone, and so agreed to give a silent vote with their associates.
+
+It is probable that this incident produced alienation as it certainly
+wrought friction between Pitt and Cobham. In the ensuing year we find
+Cobham describing Pitt as a young man of fine parts, but narrow,
+ignorant of the world, and dogmatical.[155] Two years afterwards Cobham
+went further, and described him as a wrong-headed fellow, whom he had
+had no regard for.[156] So we may well conjecture that from this time
+there was but little confidence between Pitt and the patron of the
+cousinhood; a great emancipation, though not wholly a gain for Pitt.
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 19, 1744.]
+
+On the vote of 393,773_l._ to maintain the 16,000 Hanoverians during the
+coming year, there was no need for the restraint of silence, so Pitt
+railed with his customary bitterness against Carteret, who was the
+Hanover-troop minister, a flagitious taskmaster, with a party only
+composed of the 16,000 Hanoverians; and he ended his denunciation by
+wishing that Carteret were in the House, for then he would say ten times
+more. His speech was passionate and rhetorical, incomparably good of its
+kind. But the Government prevailed in the division by 271 to 226. This
+majority of forty-five was larger than had been anticipated, and was due
+to the incessant exertions of Walpole. He sustained the flagging spirits
+of the Ministry, who were on the point of abandoning the proposal.
+Newcastle, indeed, had blenched before the storm, and openly took part
+against the Hanoverians. But Walpole restored the fortune of the field.
+He stemmed the gathering retreat, put heart into the waverers, and used
+his personal credit with his old friends. Never in his own
+administration had he laboured any point with more zeal. 'The whole
+world,' writes his son Horace, 'nay, the Prince himself, allows that if
+Lord Orford had not come to town, the Hanover troops had been lost. They
+were, in effect, given up by all but Carteret.'[157]
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 1744.]
+
+So far as the House of Commons was concerned, this ended the hostilities
+against the Hanoverian troops, though the House of Lords continued the
+controversy with a debate in which Chesterfield, who outdid Pitt in
+violence, delivered a speech which was greatly admired. But a subsidy of
+200,000_l._ had to be voted to the King of Sardinia under the treaty of
+Worms. This treaty, negotiated by the King and Carteret in Germany
+independently of the Home Government, was little relished by that
+Government, and offered a tempting target to the warriors of the
+Opposition. On a first motion for papers, Pitt was again prominent,
+though little of his speech survives. Alluding, however, to a secret
+convention attached to the treaty, which Carteret had signed but which
+Ministers had refused to ratify, he declared, 'I only wanted the sight
+of a convention, tacked to the treaty which that audacious hand had
+signed, to furnish matter for immediate impeachment.' On the actual vote
+the Government had only a majority of 62. Subsequent unreported debates
+furnished Pitt with opportunities of denouncing the Pelham brethren as
+subservient tools of Carteret. But the Government waxed stronger in
+proportion to the heat of opposition. On a vote of censure they had a
+majority of 114. Through these discussions Pitt passes like a phantom,
+foremost by all consent in debate, but without leaving any footprint of
+speech behind.
+
+From these broils Parliament was now distracted by startling
+intelligence. By message to the House on February 15 (1744) the King
+apprised his faithful lieges that a French fleet was prowling in the
+Channel, and that the young Stuart Prince, Charles Edward, had arrived
+in France to join it. One of our vessels had met this squadron of
+seventeen men-of-war and four frigates so long ago as January 27, 'half
+seas over' between Brest and the Land's End, prowling apparently
+northwards. There was something of a panic: men remembered how the Dutch
+in 1667 had sailed up the Thames, and apprehended a repetition of that
+disgrace. The Jacobites began to raise their head, but stocks did not
+fall. The King's message announced that the 'eldest son of the Pretender
+to his Crown is arrived in France; and that preparations are making
+there to invade this kingdom in concert with disaffected persons here.'
+A loyal address was at once prepared, to which the Opposition moved an
+addition, promising an inquiry into the state of the Navy. The
+amendment was, of course, supported by Pitt, and, of course, defeated.
+But Pitt, as stout an anti-Jacobite as his grandfather, promised his
+adhesion to the address whether the amendment voted or not; and a few
+days later, on the presentation of papers, he supported the Government
+so warmly as to receive the public thanks of Pelham. But for once the
+interest was not in the Commons but the Lords. Newcastle had laid the
+papers before the House, and with his usual blundering ineptitude had
+allowed the House to pass to private business. Then Orford rose, and
+broke his long silence. With dignity and emotion he confessed that he
+had vowed to refrain from speech in that House, but that abstinence now
+would be a crime. He had heard the King's message, and had observed with
+amazement that that House was to be so wanting in respect as to leave it
+unanswered. Was our language so barren as to be unable to find words to
+the King at such a crisis; 'a time of distraction and confusion, a time
+when the greatest power in Europe is setting up a Pretender to his
+throne?'
+
+'I have indeed particular reason to express my astonishment and my
+uneasiness on this occasion; I feel my breast fired with the warmest
+gratitude to a gracious and royal master whom I have so long served; my
+heart overflows with zeal for his honour, and ardour for the lasting
+security of his illustrious house. But, my lords, the danger is common,
+and an invasion equally involves all our happiness, all our hopes, and
+all our fortunes.'
+
+In these passionate words the wary and unemotional Orford allowed his
+apprehension to overflow. He saw the work of his life, the keeping out
+of the Stuarts, compromised and endangered by the unpopularity of the
+throne, and the blunders of jobbing mediocrity. He perceived the danger
+which he had so long warded off now instant and imminent. The House was
+deeply moved. Newcastle with obvious mortification acknowledged his
+lapse, and the Chancellor hurriedly drafted an address. Even the Prince
+of Wales, whose hatred of Walpole was perhaps the deepest feeling of
+which his shallow nature was capable, was so stirred, that he rose and
+shook hands with the veteran Minister. Nay, as we are told by a
+chronicler blissfully unconscious of bathos, 'he revoked the prohibition
+which prevented the family of Lord Orford from attending his levee.' It
+was a dramatic occasion, worthy of being the last public appearance of
+Orford. The hard-bitten old statesman who had been baited for near a
+quarter of a century, and had always given his opponents as good as he
+had got, disappeared from the stage with a burst of passionate
+patriotism.
+
+[Sidenote: 1744.]
+
+The end is so near that we may follow him thither. This speech was on
+the last day of February, and he was soon afterwards seized with a
+painful and mortal complaint; but in July he could not resist returning
+to Houghton for a final visit. There he remained till November, beset by
+anxious solicitations both from the King and from the Ministry, for he
+was the guide and stay of both. At last, though tortured with the stone,
+he consented to return to London at the urgent solicitation of his
+sovereign, then engaged in a desperate struggle to retain Carteret as
+Secretary of State. Even Carteret, his old enemy, in the stress of
+self-preservation sought his aid. Orford set out on November 19, and in
+four slow days of an agony which wrung even the practised nerves of
+Ranby, the surgeon (and it is difficult even now to read Ranby's
+narrative without emotion), he reached London. The crisis then was over,
+for he had put an end to it on his journey. A message despatched by the
+Pelhams had met him on the road and placed him in possession of the
+facts of the situation. He had at once written to advise the King to
+part with Carteret, and the King had instantly submitted.
+
+This was Walpole's last act of power, but he remained in London to die.
+For four months he lingered under the hands of the surgeons, sometimes
+under opium, sometimes suffering tortures with equanimity and good
+humour. But even so his shrewd and cynical common sense did not desert
+him. Consulted by the Duke of Cumberland as to a marriage projected for
+him by the King, but repugnant to the Duke, the dying statesman advised
+him to consent to the marriage on condition of an ample and immediate
+establishment. 'Believe me,' he added, 'the marriage will not be
+pressed.' Walpole's knowledge of mankind left him only with his death.
+
+His constancy, his courage, his temper, his unfailing resource, his love
+of peace, his gifts of management and debate, his long reign of
+prosperity will always maintain Walpole in the highest rank of English
+statesmen. Distinguished even in death, he rests under the bare and
+rustic pavement of Houghton Church, in face of the palace that he had
+reared and cherished, without so much as an initial to mark his grave.
+This is the blank end of so much honour, adulation, power, and renown.
+For a century and a half unconscious hobnails and pattens have ground
+the nameless stones above him, while mediocrities in marble have
+thronged our public haunts. His monument, unvoted, unsubscribed, but
+supreme, was the void left by his death, the helpless bewilderment of
+King and Government, the unwilling homage and retractation offered by
+his foes, the twenty years of peace and plenty represented by his name.
+
+And here another illustrious name cannot but suggest itself, though it
+may seem difficult to bring into anything like a parallel the two great
+Sir Roberts, Walpole and Peel. Both were distinguished by the same
+cautious and pacific sagacity. But they differed by the whole width of
+human nature in temperament. Walpole belonged to the school of the cold
+blood, and Peel to that of the warm. This, perhaps, constitutes the most
+important touchstone in the characters of statesmen, and success usually
+lies with the colder temperament. Of this principle, Fox, who was warm
+blooded, presents the most remarkable illustration, and Gladstone, who
+was not less so, the most signal exception. Peel's conscience, moreover,
+was as notably sensitive as Walpole's was notoriously the reverse. But
+though thus essentially apart, there is one capital point which the
+careers of Walpole and Pitt bear an almost exact resemblance to each
+other. Neither of them, strangely enough, reached his full height until
+his fall; neither acquired the full confidence of the country until he
+had lost that of Parliament; after having exercised almost paramount
+power as Ministers, neither ever reached his truest supremacy until he
+had left office for ever. Then, after a great catastrophe which had
+seemed to demolish them, it was perceived that they had soared above the
+mist into a higher air, clear of passion and interest; whence, though
+with scarce a following and without the remotest idea of a return to
+office, they spoke with an authority which they had never possessed when
+their word was law to an obedient majority in the Commons; an authority
+derived from experience and wisdom, without any lingering suspicion of
+self-interest. They lived in reserve, and only broke their self-imposed
+silence when the highest interests of the country seemed to forbid them
+to maintain it. Walpole, it is true, had to do his work mainly behind
+the scenes, while Peel did it conspicuously in Parliament; but the
+position was the same. If their eulogist had to choose the supreme
+period in the lives of both Walpole and Peel, he would select, not the
+epoch of their party triumphs, but the few exalted judicial years which
+elapsed between their final resignation and their death. It may seem a
+strain of language to use the word 'judicial,' for Walpole remained the
+oracle and stay of Whiggery, while Peel extended his consistent
+protection to the weak ministry of Lord John Russell. But Peel's
+protection of Russell was given in defiance of party to secure the Free
+Trade which he deemed vital, and Walpole's guidance of Whiggery was in
+disinterested support of men he disliked and despised because he deemed
+Whiggery, or at least opposition to Jacobitism, not less vital. Free
+Trade and Whiggery were, in the opinion of the two statesmen, essential
+to avert the revolutions which the opposite systems would have involved.
+
+This seems a digression, but at this time Pitt and Walpole were not far
+apart; they secretly acknowledged each other's power and merit. Pitt had
+already begun to appreciate the solid sagacity of Walpole, and to repent
+of some random invective. Walpole saw the rhetorical boy developing
+into the man of the future, and was more and more anxious to enlist him.
+'Sir Robert Walpole,' said Pitt in Parliament at a later period,
+'thought well of me, and died at peace with me. He was a truly English
+minister.'[158]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+[Sidenote: March 1744.]
+
+Soon after this memorable debate France formally declared war against
+Great Britain in a document reciting the injuries sustained by France at
+the hands of the 'King of England, Elector of Hanover,' and faction was
+for the moment laid on one side, though Pitt, while supporting the
+Government, managed to declare that perdition would attend Carteret as
+the 'rash author of those measures which have produced this disastrous,
+impracticable war.' Still Parliament adjourned with comparative harmony
+in May. Before it met again two events occurred of the greatest
+importance to Pitt.
+
+The first was the death of that vigorous old termagant Sarah, Duchess of
+Marlborough. All through life she had been more bellicose, though with
+less success, than her illustrious husband, and of late years had
+devoted her peculiar powers of hatred to Walpole. This bitterness
+extended even beyond the grave, for by a codicil dated two months before
+her death she bequeathed legacies to the two men who had most
+distinguished themselves by their attacks on that Minister. One was
+Chesterfield, to whom she left 20,000_l._; the other was Pitt, to whom
+she left 10,000_l._, 'for the noble defence he made for the support of
+the laws of England, and to prevent the ruin of his country.' Moreover,
+she seems to have bequeathed to him her 'manor in the County of
+Buckingham, late the estate of Richard Hampden Esq: and leasehold in
+Suffolk; and lands etc. in Northampton.'[159] Pitt, in acknowledging the
+bequest to Marchmont, her executor, demurely and ambiguously replies:
+'Give me leave to return your Lordship my thanks for the obliging manner
+in which you do me the honour to inform me of the Duchess of
+Marlborough's great goodness to me. The sort of regard I feel for her
+memory I leave to your Lordship's heart to suggest to you.'[160] Nor was
+this legacy all, for she settled her Wimbledon estate on her favourite
+grandson John Spencer, and after him on his only son; should that only
+son die without issue, it was to be divided between Chesterfield and
+Pitt. She, moreover, induced John Spencer to make a will bequeathing his
+own Sunderland estates to Pitt after his own sickly son.[161] Two years
+afterwards Spencer himself died at the age of thirty-seven 'because he
+would not be abridged of those invaluable blessings of an English
+subject, brandy, small beer and tobacco,'[162] so that only a child
+stood between Pitt and this great inheritance. Fortunately the splendid
+contingency did not take effect. For Chesterfield died without
+legitimate issue, and the Pitts have long been extinct; but the
+descendants of John Spencer's only son have been men of a purity of
+character and honour which have sweetened and exalted the traditions of
+English public life.
+
+The legacy was opportune in more respects than one. It came as a solace
+to Pitt, who was desperately ill at Bath with gout in his stomach,
+which the waters were unavailing to remove; his friends indeed feared
+that he would be disabled for life. It also made him independent.
+Bolingbroke indeed thought it made him too independent.[163] Cynics soon
+declared it to be timely from another point of view, for immediately
+after the Duchess's death there was a crisis which was to put an end to
+Pitt's opposition and so to his claims on her sympathies. Carteret fell,
+and with his fall disappeared the object of Cobham's hatred and Pitt's
+philippics. The tempting contrast between Pitt receiving a legacy as the
+leading member of the Opposition, and Pitt immediately reconciled to the
+Ministry, and so ceasing to be a 'Patriot,' could not escape satire. Sir
+Charles Hanbury Williams lost no time in penning the coarse but vigorous
+lampoon which depicts the ghost of the old Duchess appearing to Pitt.
+'Return, base villain, my retaining fee,' says the spectre, reminds the
+legatee that even Judas returned the wage of betrayal, and leaves him to
+the 'lash of lost integrity.'[164] But these taunts were wide of the
+mark. It was not Pitt's integrity that had disappeared, but the object
+of his opposition, now that Carteret had fallen.
+
+The story of that fall is material to the life of Pitt; it is that
+second event of importance to him at this time to which we have alluded.
+We have seen that Walpole's last journey to London was caused by the
+King's struggle to retain Carteret whom the Pelhams insisted on
+removing. This indeed was a matter of necessity for them, as they could
+never enjoy real power while Carteret engrossed the King's confidence.
+Moreover, owing to the ill success of the Austro-British alliance during
+1744 in operations with which he was identified he had become extremely
+unpopular. He himself was dissatisfied with his position, for though he
+had the ear of the King he was constantly outvoted in the Cabinet.
+'Things cannot go on as they are,' he said to the ruling brother. 'I
+will not submit to be overruled and outvoted on every point by four to
+one. If you will undertake the Government, do so. If you cannot or will
+not I will.' This rash declaration of war sealed his fate. As a matter
+of fact the main division in the Cabinet of which we have record at this
+time was nine to four; but the majority was no doubt steady and
+inflexible against Carteret. The brothers now concentrated their
+energies on his overthrow. But before making any open attack on so
+strong a position, they wisely endeavoured to secure new sources of
+strength by negotiation with the Opposition.
+
+During the year 1744 the leaders of the Opposition had reunited, 'upon
+one principle,' says the malignant Glover, 'which was to get into
+place.' This may fairly be said, without disparagement, to be the
+legitimate object of all Oppositions. In any case these politicians may
+well have realised that divided and scattered they were impotent, and
+they may have desired to make themselves felt in Parliament with or
+without office. So they appointed a committee of nine to treat with the
+Government. The junto, as it was termed in the jargon of that day,
+consisted of Bedford, Chesterfield, Gower, Cobham, Pitt, Lyttelton,
+Waller, Bubb, and Sir John Hinde Cotton.[165] This powerful body was
+approached by Carteret, always tardy and unskilful in such
+negotiations; but he had been anticipated by the brethren in power, who,
+in such intrigues, displayed all the skill that he lacked. He obtained,
+however, the powerful mediation of the Prince of Wales, who had a regard
+for him. Carteret's offers were liberal enough. He offered that the
+administration should be transformed, and places found for all of them;
+but they replied that they could make no terms with him. He turned, as
+we have seen, to Walpole in his despair, but in vain. Every hole was
+stopped. The Pelhams had secured both Walpole and the Committee.
+
+Five of the junto, including Pitt and Lyttelton, were, it is said, in
+favour of joining the Pelhams without any stipulation. The minority,
+including Cobham, who considered that the pass had been sold, and who
+cursed the less scrupulous tactics of the majority, were for making
+conditions as regards future policy. However, all, both of the majority
+and the minority, were brought into the scheme; Cobham, who received a
+regiment, having, it is said, also obtained an assurance from Newcastle
+that the interests of Hanover should be subordinated to the interests of
+Great Britain. Bedford became First Lord of the Admiralty; Gower, Privy
+Seal; Waller, Cofferer; Lyttelton, a Lord of the Treasury; Bubb,
+Treasurer of the Navy; and Cotton, a notorious Jacobite, Treasurer of
+the Chambers. It should be added, however, that the narrative of this
+negotiation, however probable it may appear, rests on the doubtful
+authority of Glover, who is too venomous to be trustworthy. But in any
+case it is not necessary to condemn the Committee, even if Glover's
+statement be accepted as fact. Should so powerful a body of men enter
+the feeble Government of the Pelhams, they might well feel confident of
+controlling its policy with or without previous stipulation. A severer
+judgment may be passed when it is seen that the policy remained
+substantially unaltered, and that Pitt found himself able to
+discriminate between Carteret's policy with Carteret in office, and the
+same policy with Carteret out of office.
+
+Fortified by this treaty, which included, of course, places for Pitt and
+Chesterfield, to be given when the King could be induced to give them,
+the Pelhams executed their stroke of state; and having, as we have seen,
+made sure of the oracle at Houghton to which the King was sure to have
+recourse, they sent the Chancellor to the King to inform him of the
+determination of the entire Cabinet to resign unless he would remove
+Carteret. Still the King could not be brought to abandon his favourite
+Foreign Minister and his favourite foreign policy. It was not until
+Orford gave the decision against Carteret that the Sovereign succumbed,
+three weeks after the delivery by the Pelhams of their ultimatum.
+
+The fall of Carteret left the brothers, Newcastle and Pelham, absolute
+masters of the situation. The King had been completely defeated, and had
+sullenly to submit. He would scarcely speak to his Ministers. When he
+broke silence it would be to say, 'I have done all you asked me, I have
+put all the power into your hands, and I suppose you will make the most
+of it.' To that Hardwicke, the Lord Chancellor, with more than legal
+subtlety replied, 'The disposition of places is not enough if your
+Majesty takes pains to show the world that you disapprove of your own
+work.' This was more than the King could endure. 'My work!' he broke
+out; 'I was forced, I was threatened.' The Chancellor was shocked at
+these expressions. He knew of nothing of the kind. Such harshness was
+utterly alien to the ministerial mind. The mere idea of compulsion was
+shocking to it. 'No means were employed but what have been used in all
+times, the humble advice of your servants supported by such reasons as
+convinced them that the measure was necessary for your service.' This
+was the legal and fastidious method of describing the threatened strike
+of the Ministry in the previous November.
+
+Carteret resigned in the last week of November (1744), and the Pelhams
+used their victory wisely and well by building up during the following
+month a strong administration on a large basis. It comprised men of all
+parties, Whigs, Tories, even Jacobites, forgotten Whigs, forgotten
+Tories, forgotten Jacobites, and was called in the canting phrase of
+that day the Broad Bottom Administration, as being a coalition of all
+parties. The only flaw in it was that it omitted the only men worth
+having. Among the new officials were George Grenville and George
+Lyttelton, who became subordinate Lords of the Treasury and Admiralty.
+'Do what you will,' Cobham had said, 'provided you take care of my
+boys,' from whom Pitt now seemed to be excluded; for Cobham found him
+positive and unbending, differing, sometimes, it may be presumed, from
+Cobham. When complete, this Ministry was so comprehensive as to
+annihilate opposition, and render the next few years unprecedentedly
+placid and dull from the parliamentary point of view.
+
+Outside the forgotten worthies who were provided with places, there
+towered the two memorable men, Pitt and Chesterfield, the one great and
+the other considerable. Against them the King remained implacable. But
+he had at last to yield to the admission of Chesterfield. At first 'he
+shall have nothing,' had said the King, 'trouble me no more with such
+nonsense.' But now Chesterfield was to combine the Lord Lieutenancy of
+Ireland with a special embassy to the Hague. On Pitt alone was the veto
+still absolute. And yet he was the only man whom the Ministers really
+dreaded.[166]
+
+The Pelhams, through Cobham, had promised him the Secretaryship at War,
+on which his heart was set; but they were unable to fulfil their pledge,
+and soothed him for the time with promises that they would persevere in
+pressing him upon the Sovereign. With these fine words Pitt professed
+himself satisfied, and promised support, all the more readily as he knew
+himself to be inevitable. In the meantime, however, he gave up the only
+post he held, a course to which he was impelled both by the Marlborough
+legacy and the fall of Carteret; for while the first made him
+independent of salary, the second had alienated the Prince of Wales. So
+in April (1745) he resigned his groomship of the bedchamber, and met
+Parliament in the unadorned character of the most powerful private
+individual in the country.
+
+On the army estimates he spoke for the first time, and with vehemence,
+as a supporter of the Government. On this occasion, too, he first
+utilised the apparatus of gout with the demeanour of a graceful invalid,
+whose end was approaching. Were it to be the last day of his life, he
+exclaimed, he would spend it in the House of Commons, since he judged
+the condition of his country to be worse than that of his own health.
+Formerly these expressions would have meant that the Government was
+ruining the nation. But now, he explained, that though Carteret had
+nearly wrecked the kingdom, the present object was, by connecting
+Hanover with Holland, to arrive at a prompt and fair pacification. He
+paid warm compliments to Pelham on his patriotism and capacity for
+business, and commended his Government with oblique and friendly
+expressions directed towards the King. A dawn of salvation to this
+country had broken forth (which, apparently, had hitherto been obscured
+by the form of Carteret), and he would follow it as far as it would lead
+him. His 'fulminating eloquence,' we are told, 'silenced all
+opposition.'[167]
+
+In February 1745 a question arose of peculiar delicacy for Pitt. Through
+one of the compromises sometimes required by political emergency the
+question of the employment of the Hanoverians, against which Pitt was so
+strongly pledged, was arranged by transferring them to Maria Theresa,
+with an extra subsidy to enable her to pay them. This somewhat
+transparent artifice was boldly and dexterously defended by Pitt
+himself. On such occasions it is well not to hesitate or refine, and
+Pitt spoke without visible qualms. 'It was,' he said, 'a meritorious and
+popular measure, which did honour to the minister who advised it, and
+the Prince, who so graciously vouchsafed to follow it, and must give
+pleasure to every honest heart. As to what had been thrown out that the
+Queen of Hungary might take them into her pay, when they were dismissed
+from ours, what of that? She was at liberty to take them or not. They
+would not be forced on her, but God forbid that these unfortunate troops
+should by our votes be proscribed at every court in Europe.' It was
+enough that, 'by his Majesty's wisdom and goodness,' they were no longer
+voted annually as a part of our army, and so forth.[168]
+
+It is obvious from the meagre report that Pitt was now as copious in his
+praise of the King as he had formerly been niggard. His Sovereign had
+become wise and good and gracious; the Hanoverian troops, which had been
+so short a time ago cowardly and contemptible troops, were now
+unfortunate and meritorious, well worthy the attention and employment of
+Maria Theresa. One or two members could not help smiling; they called
+the measure collusive, and declared that if we were to pay the
+Hanoverians at all it were better to pay them directly, when they would
+at least be under our direction and control, than through the Queen of
+Hungary, when they would not. It is not on record that any one asked
+what advantage would be reaped by the taxpayer under the method
+proposed, when he would pay at least as much as before, but without the
+least check as to the way in which the money was spent. Nevertheless,
+there were complaints enough. Pitt must have hinted that it was better
+that they should fight under the Hungarian flag than the British, as
+they did not fight in harmony by the side of British troops; for this
+called up a Northumbrian baronet to explain that this was contrary to
+the fact, and that he should raise the point in a motion. Pitt at once
+rose again, not in his high line, but 'with all the art and temper
+imaginable,' soothed and complimented the honest member, hinted that his
+motion would only serve the purposes of Carteret, whom they both
+rejoiced to see removed, and generally allayed the debate with complete
+success.[169]
+
+This is again a notable mark in his career. For the first time he
+appears, not as the fierce hero of declamation and invective, but as the
+dexterous official diplomatist, coaxing and reassuring. He was fast
+moving onwards.
+
+The official character of Pitt's speeches is all the more marked because
+there was little to commend and much to attack in the conduct of the
+Ministry, which had, to say the least, been singularly unfortunate. The
+disastrous battle of Fontenoy was not redeemed by the capture of
+Louisbourg, a gallant affair for which local volunteers and local
+enterprise, rather than the Government, deserve the credit. And now
+during the Parliamentary recess from May to October there suddenly
+appeared a fresh danger, the one against which Walpole's policy had been
+mainly directed for a generation. On August 19, Charles Edward, eldest
+son of the exiled Prince of Wales, and grandson of King James II.,
+raised the standard of civil war at Glenfinnan; on September 17 he was
+living in the palace of his ancestors at Holyrood; four days afterwards
+he completely defeated the forces sent against him. Had he at once
+marched South he might well have reached London, and had he reached
+London the face of history in this island might have been changed. The
+Cabinet was panic-stricken, not merely at the advance of Charles, but at
+the anger of their legal Sovereign, who seemed likely to recall
+Carteret to his side. Dutch troops were hastily fetched over and sent to
+the North, and English troops from Flanders followed. Had these
+reinforcements been detained by contrary winds but a few weeks Pelham
+declared that London could not have been defended against the Jacobites.
+Two days before the victory of Charles Edward, Henry Fox wrote that 'had
+five thousand (French) troops landed in any part of this island a week
+ago, I verily believe the entire conquest would not have cost them a
+battle.'
+
+But Charles contented himself with a reign at Holyrood of six weeks, and
+this delay lost him his chances of success. When Parliament met on
+October 17 he was still in Edinburgh, but adequate measures had been
+taken to render his enterprise abortive. All this does not concern Pitt,
+except as giving him an opportunity of expressing his devoted loyalty to
+George II.; but while Charles Edward was marching on Derby a desperate
+struggle was going on which related entirely to him. In the new session
+he had begun to show signs of irritation and of impatience with the
+Government; the emollients of the Pelhams began to lose their virtue,
+and he was determined not to be fooled any longer. His amiability had
+disappeared, and though his speeches are unreported, it is evident that
+the Ministers were now made to feel the terrors of his tongue.
+'Yesterday,' writes Horace Walpole, 'they had another baiting from Pitt,
+who is ravenous for the place of Secretary at War: they would give it
+him: but as preliminary, he insists on a declaration of our having
+nothing to do with the Continent,' a stipulation which reads strangely
+enough by the light of the years to come. The Pelhams saw that they
+could no longer defer the fulfilment of their promises, and that it was
+necessary to approach the King. The moment was singularly unfavourable.
+The King had never forgiven the compulsion put on him to dismiss
+Carteret, nor the fact of his separation from Carteret. He had
+shrewdness enough to see that in ability and grasp of affairs Carteret
+towered above the other ministers except the Chancellor; and he despised
+Newcastle, who was principally thrown into contact with him. It was a
+shame, he declared, that a man who was not fit to be a chamberlain at
+the pettiest of German courts should be forced on the nation and on the
+Crown as a principal minister. All through 1745 the royal resentment
+smouldered, though it was kept in suspense by the rebellion. But when
+that movement lost in importance and became clearly doomed, the King
+felt more free to display his feelings. Foreign policy, with which we
+are not here concerned, was part of his grievance; but the main cause of
+irritation was the threatened intrusion of Pitt on his councils. And yet
+this was obviously impending and even inevitable. Pitt, at first so
+patient, had begun to show his teeth in public, and probably in private
+as well. The crisis could not be any longer avoided.
+
+In the preceding autumn there had been conferences between the Pelhams
+on the one side and Pitt and Cobham on the other. On November 20, 1745,
+Newcastle records a meeting at which Pitt put forward his demands, and
+'apprehended great difficulties in bringing about what we so much
+desired,' his accession to office. His conditions were finally melted
+down to an extension of the Place Bill so as to exclude from Parliament
+all officers in the Army under the rank of lieutenant-colonel, and in
+the Navy below the rank of captain; the removal of all the remaining
+adherents of Carteret, notably the two Finches, from Court; and a 'total
+alteration of the foreign system, by feeding only the war on the
+Continent, acting there as auxiliaries, and particularly by confining
+all the assistance we should give to the Dutch to the bare contingent of
+10,000 men; but to increase our navy, and to act as principals at sea in
+the war against France and Spain. For a peace with France, at present,
+was not to be thought of.'
+
+The first condition presented no complications. The second seemed
+inexpedient on grounds of prudence and decency. The third presented more
+difficulty. Newcastle had two long conferences upon it, first with Pitt
+and then with Cobham. Finally a meeting was held between the Chancellor,
+Hardwicke, Harrington, Pelham, and Newcastle on one side, and Gower,
+Bedford, Cobham, and Pitt on the other.[170]
+
+The situation of affairs at this moment was this: Charles Edward was
+marching from Holyrood towards London. The French had won Fontenoy and
+were overrunning the Austrian Netherlands, without difficulty and almost
+without resistance. Maria Theresa was about to conclude peace at Dresden
+(December 25, 1745) by a renewed cession of Silesia. This was the
+juncture at which the Pelhams resolved to force on a Cabinet crisis in
+order to obtain the services of Pitt. The fact at least displays the
+value and importance of the personage who was the subject of contest.
+
+The real point at issue between the Government and Pitt was this: The
+Government wished to give general and unlimited assurances of
+assistance, amounting almost to a guarantee, to the Dutch. Pitt wished
+the assistance definitely limited to a force of 10,000 men; and that we
+should then, free of all other continental complications (for both
+parties agreed that Austria must come to terms with Prussia), carry on a
+purely naval war against France and Spain.
+
+At this conference between the Ministers and the Cobham
+plenipotentiaries, Newcastle was the spokesman of the Government. He
+declared that the Queen of Hungary had forfeited her rights to any
+further assistance, and that we were about to tell her that she could
+have no more from us. On this point all were apparently agreed, so that
+Austria was eliminated from the discussion. The case of Holland was,
+however, in the opinion of Ministers, different; her existence was
+necessary to us, and we must proffer help to her, if only to prevent her
+concluding a separate peace with France. But an offer limited to 10,000
+men would not prevent such a peace; we must show a general disposition
+to assist. Lord Cobham answered that this sort of defensive war could
+never bring about a peace, that the Dutch would evade their engagements,
+and we should find ourselves with as formidable a continental war on our
+hands as if we were again actively supporting Maria Theresa. Pitt warmly
+supported Cobham; spoke strongly against the Dutch; 'insisted that
+10,000 men in our present circumstances was a generous and noble
+succour.... He insisted on the necessity of coming to some precision as
+to the contingent in order to satisfy the people; and talk'd much of the
+great impression we could make upon France, when our efforts were singly
+at sea.'
+
+At this point Bedford and Gower separated themselves from Cobham and
+Pitt. It was not possible, they said, to increase our navy. In fine, the
+plenipotentiaries of the Government pointed out that if France and
+Holland came to terms, we might have France and Spain free to devote
+their whole energies against us, and, as the others chimed in, 'they
+might easily keep the rebellion on foot for years, if not destroy us
+quite.'
+
+Cobham and Pitt, however, departed unshaken, though with great civility
+and good-humour. Newcastle glumly sums up the position. The King may say
+that he was ready to take these gentlemen into the Government, but, as
+they will not come in, ask if the Ministry will thereupon desert him?
+'To which, to be sure, no other answer can be given but that we are not
+in a condition to carry it on. To depend upon my Lord Granville's
+friends to support this administration against Lord Granville is a
+contradiction in itself. To bring in Mr. Pitt against his own will is
+impossible. And, therefore, at present there seems to be nothing to be
+done, if Mr. Pitt is determined (which, I should still hope, he would
+not finally be), but with your lordship (Chesterfield), the Duke of
+Bedford, my Lord Gower, to get as many individuals as we can to carry us
+through till the rebellion is over: and then we shall be at liberty to
+take such part as we shall think most consistent with our own honour and
+the public service.'[171]
+
+Observe: without Pitt we are not in a condition to carry on. That is
+what this letter amounts to, for of Bedford and Gower the Ministry felt
+sure, and Cobham was an auxiliary who was on and off like a freebooter.
+The adhesion of Pitt, a private member, poor and almost unconnected,
+was vital to a Government which in the public opinion had already
+collected every possible element of strength. So matters continued till
+the meeting of Parliament after the Christmas recess in January 1746.
+Pitt held aloof, and had no further commerce with the Government.
+
+A few days before Parliament met, however, he went to the Duke of
+Bedford, inquired as to the foreign policy of the Government, showed a
+disposition to come into it, and expressed a wish that some minister
+would talk it over with Lord Cobham, 'into whose hands they had now
+finally committed themselves.'[172] On this hint Newcastle hurried to
+Cobham, who was reasonable, and 'seemed very desirous to come into us
+and bring his Boys, as he called them.... The terms were, Mr. Pitt to be
+Secretary at War; Lord Barrington in the Admiralty; and Mr. James
+Grenville to have an employment of Ł1000 a year. He flung out Lord
+Denbigh, the Duke of Queensbury, and some Scotch politicians, but not as
+points absolutely to be insisted on.'
+
+It is useful and edifying to be allowed behind the scenes in this way;
+for such negotiations are now, one would imagine, obsolete, or as nearly
+obsolete as the corruption of our fallen nature will allow. Still, one
+may drop a tear in passing over the 'Scotch politicians,' so lightly
+proffered, so lightly dismissed. But let Newcastle continue his
+narrative. 'Upon this I opened the Budget to the King, which was better
+received than I expected, and the only objection was to the giving Mr.
+Pitt the particular office of Secretary at War.' Still the Pelhams
+pressed the appointment. Then the goaded and distressed monarch
+determined to make a desperate effort to break from the dominion of the
+Whig hierarchy, so as to carry out his own foreign policy, and avoid the
+admission of Pitt to his counsels. At this juncture Bath gained
+admittance to the Closet, and fortified the King's repugnance. He
+'represented against the behaviour of his ministers in forcing him in
+such a manner to take a disagreeable man into a particular office, and
+thereby dishonouring his Majesty both at home and abroad; and
+encouraging the King to resist it by offering him the support of his
+friends in so doing.'[173] The King caught at this forlorn hope, and
+gave Bath full power to form a new Government. Bath released himself
+from his vow against holding office, accepted the charge with alacrity,
+instantly summoned Carteret, and obtained from the City a promise of
+supplies on terms more favourable than those to which Pelham had agreed.
+Carteret, it need scarcely be said, joyfully acceded. The misfortune was
+that there was no one else who did. The Pelham ministry resigned in a
+body. Bath kissed hands as First Minister, and received the seals of the
+Secretaries of State to transmit to Carteret, who was ill. The new
+Secretary at once announced by circular his appointment to the foreign
+ministers. But there all ended. When old Horace Walpole was told that
+this ministry was settled he shrewdly remarked: 'I presume in the same
+manner as what we call a settlement in Norfolk; when a house is cracked
+from top to bottom and ready to fall, we say it is settled.'[174]
+Winnington was to have been the new Chancellor of the Exchequer. Thrice
+did the King press the seal into his hand, and thrice did Winnington
+return it. 'Your new ministers, sir, can neither support Your Majesty
+nor themselves,' said he.[175] He insisted, moreover, that they could
+not depend on more than 31 peers and 80 commoners. History does not
+confirm even so moderate a computation, but it may be presumed that this
+was the Court contingent on which any minister could count.
+
+Harrington, one of the actual Secretaries of State, on whom the King
+confidently reckoned for assistance in the new arrangement, resigned,
+after a stormy scene with his master, who never forgave him. Every one
+resigned or tried to resign, and there was no one to fill their places.
+To Pelham himself Carteret had made overtures; but Pelham told the King
+that the Whig junto would have nothing to do with Bath or Carteret. At
+last, the only measure left to the hapless monarch was to shut himself
+up and forbid his door to the crowd that sought admittance in order to
+give up their keys and staves and official insignia. He was soon
+compelled to send for Bath and to tell him that it would not do. Bath
+exhorted him to be firm, and offered by means of the Prince of Wales to
+secure Tory support. But with Charles Edward still in arms in the
+Highlands, the King could not bring himself to approach the foes of his
+house, and under no circumstances would he owe salvation to his son.
+Both Princes of Wales, the real and the titular, were almost equally
+repugnant to him. Another version of the story states that it was Bath
+who told the King that the project would not work. It matters little
+which is correct, for the position was self-evident, but George was
+probably stouter than Bath.
+
+Bath kissed hands on February 10 (1746). Two days afterwards his
+ministry had come to an end, and the King had sent for Pelham to return.
+Carteret saw the humour of the situation and laughed it away; he owned
+it a mad escapade, but was all the more ready to repeat it. It was all
+over, the King had to surrender to the Whigs, who condescended to resume
+the seals on easy terms, which were the proscription of Bath's following
+and the admission of Pitt. The first condition was simple enough, it was
+the natural result of Bath's defeat. _Vae victis._ 'We immediately
+desired,' writes Newcastle, 'that the Court might be purged of all their
+friends and dependents, that Lord Bath might be out of the Cabinet
+Council, the Duke of Bolton, Lord Berkeley of Stratton, Mr. William
+Finch, the Vice-Chamberlain, Mr. Edward Finch, the Groom of the
+Bedchamber, Mr. Boone, and the Lord Advocate of Scotland (which were all
+that were left of that sort), should be removed.' We have an impression
+that, in spite of all, 'the black, funereal Finches' were preserved to
+the Bedchamber and to the card table, but that does not concern this
+narrative.
+
+As to the second condition, it was inevitable sooner or later, and took
+place in the form least offensive to the Sovereign. But the ministerial
+crisis and the desperate venture with Bath and Carteret testify to the
+formidable position of Pitt and to the equal aversion of the Sovereign.
+In no less an instance than Pitt's could this repulsion have been
+overcome.
+
+Pitt himself had begged that his pretensions to the Secretaryship at War
+should not act as an obstacle to an accommodation with the King, for
+there was evidently nothing so repugnant to the Sovereign. The King had
+said first that he would not have him in that office at any price, then
+that he would use him ill if he had it, then that he would not admit him
+to his presence to do the business of the office if he had it.[176]
+
+There is, if the matter be candidly considered, no just cause of
+reproach in this obstinacy. George II. was a gentleman, and a brave
+gentleman. The Hanoverians were his own people, of his own blood and
+language. Hanover was the home in which he had been brought up, the
+paradise to which he always looked longingly from his splendid exile in
+England. The King's personal courage Pitt had publicly and wantonly
+aspersed; Hanover and the Hanoverians he had held up to every form of
+public hatred and contempt. One cannot be surprised that George II.
+would have nothing to say to him except under compulsion, and refused,
+as between one gentleman and another, to have personal relations with
+him. As a constitutional ruler his duty was another matter, but he would
+not perform a duty so odious except in the last resort. He ignored Pitt
+even after Pitt had entered office. It was four years after Pitt became
+Paymaster that Newcastle, as the result of long pressure or intrigue,
+induced the King even to speak to him. This was considered a triumph for
+the ministry.[177]
+
+[Sidenote: Mar. 6, 1746.]
+
+Perhaps the Pelhams understood the King's feelings. Pitt did without
+doubt. The King was not now pressed beyond endurance, and Pitt was
+content for the moment with the joint Vice Treasurership of Ireland, in
+which his partner was Walpole's son-in-law, Cholmondeley. The office was
+understood to be lucrative, but he was not destined to hold this
+sinecure for more than a few weeks. He had scarce time to ask for
+exemption from the land tax of four shillings in the pound which was
+charged on his salary for not residing in Ireland, or for admission to
+the Irish Privy Council, both customary requests.[178] Two months after
+he was gazetted Winnington died, and Pitt succeeded him in the rich
+office of Paymaster-General. This is a Privy Councillor's place, so Pitt
+had to be admitted to the King's presence to take the oath. The King
+shed tears as Pitt knelt before him. A constitutional Sovereign has
+these bitter moments.
+
+During the interval between the two appointments Pitt had to pay a heavy
+fee for the first. A vote was demanded for 18,000 Hanoverians to be
+taken into British pay. Cobham's young men, one of whom, afterwards Lord
+Temple, 'had declared in the House that he would seal it with his blood
+that he never would give his vote for a Hanoverian,' voted the money in
+silence. Pitt however was not content to play so abject a part. He stood
+boldly forth, speaking, said Pelham, his new chief, with the dignity of
+Wyndham, the wit of Pulteney, and the knowledge blended with judgment of
+Walpole. Walpole's son thought differently: Pitt, he declared, added
+'impudence to profligacy; but no criminal at the Place de Grčve was ever
+so racked as he was by Dr. Lee, a friend of Lord Granville, who gave him
+the question both ordinary and extraordinary.' Probably both accounts
+are true. Lee was one of the Prince of Wales's men, and Pitt's relations
+with his late master were strained to the point of rupture by his
+acceptance of office.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+Pitt was now to inhabit the Pay Office, and he gave notice to Ann,
+without any previous quarrel so far as we know, that they would
+henceforth live apart. In any case, Pitt's accession to office thus
+enabled him to put a convenient period to what had probably become a
+fretting and irksome arrangement; but Walpole notes at this time that
+there is gossip about 'the new Paymaster's ménage,' possibly Grattan's
+tradition of 'This House to Let.' This sort of chit-chat is, however,
+the inevitable accompaniment of a man in Pitt's position and need not
+again be dwelt upon. Two of his early patrons also quarrelled with him:
+the Prince of Wales and Cobham. But Pitt, for the moment at any rate,
+could afford to do without either. A more delicate question required his
+attention. There were habitual practices in the Pay Office which brought
+in immense profits to the Paymaster. It was the custom of that official
+to take poundage on all subsidies paid to foreign princes, and to use
+the great balances at his credit for his own purposes of speculation. As
+to this second method Pitt had no doubts, and rejected the idea. As to
+the first he seems, on entering upon office, to have consulted
+Pelham.[179] Pelham replied that Winnington had taken these perquisites,
+but that he himself when Paymaster had not; Pitt could do as he chose.
+'Such a manner of stating it left scarce an option in any but the basest
+of mankind,' remarks Camelford with characteristic bitterness. Pitt at
+any rate did not hesitate, and refused to take a farthing beyond his
+salary, which, in truth, was splendid enough. But the indirect profits
+of the Paymastership, which earlier in the century had founded the
+dukedom of Chandos and the palace of Canons, and which later endowed the
+peerage of Henry Fox and the glories of his exquisite residence at
+Kensington, besides furnishing great fortunes for his graceless sons to
+squander at the gaming-table, were, as Dr. Johnson would have said,
+beyond the dreams of avarice. It was held in that day of loose political
+morality to be noble, if not unique, for a man with a patrimony of a
+hundred a year and a legacy of ten thousand pounds to refuse to receive
+such profits.[180]
+
+Lord Camelford's statement may be taken in the main to be correct
+without adopting the sour inference which he draws. Pitt may well have
+asked Pelham as to the practice of the office and Pelham have replied in
+the sense indicated. If so, it was nearly as creditable to Pelham as to
+Pitt, for one was scarcely less needy than the other. Pelham was a
+gambler, and so wanted all the money he could get. He was a politician,
+and politicians in those days required money for their purposes almost
+as much as gamblers. Lord Camelford implies that had Pelham not answered
+as he did, Pitt would have taken the percentages and the balances. This
+is mere surmise. But, had he done so, he could not have been blamed.
+These perquisites were regarded as legitimate by the practice and
+opinion of the day; the balances were matters of public account. They
+made the Paymaster's office a great prize, a recognised source of
+immense profits. The fact remains that Pitt, or Pitt and Pelham, thought
+them improper, and refused to take them.
+
+One signal difference must however be observed. Pelham abstained
+silently, the abstinence of Pitt was widely known. This notoriety may
+have been partly due to the fact that the King of Sardinia, having heard
+of Pitt's refusal to deduct the percentage on the Sardinian subsidy,
+sent to offer him a large present, which Pitt unhesitatingly declined.
+But there was another reason, which colours Pitt's whole life, and which
+may therefore well be noted here. His light was never hid under any sort
+of bushel, and he did not intend that it should be. He already saw that
+his power lay with the people, and that it was based not merely on his
+genius and eloquence, but on a faith in his public spirit and scrupulous
+integrity. His virtues were his credentials, and it was necessary that
+they should be conspicuous. Pulteney and St. John had wielded greater
+Parliamentary power, yet Pulteney and St. John had perished from want of
+character. Character he saw was the one necessary thing, but character
+must be known to be appreciated. Pitt was perhaps the first of those
+statesmen who sedulously imbue the public with a knowledge of their
+merit. He can scarcely be called an advertiser, but he was the ancestor
+of advertisers. Other statesmen no doubt had paid their pamphleteers.
+Pitt paid nobody, but he inspired; he had hangers-on who clung to the
+skirts of his growing fortune. This is not to imply that he had not a
+genuine scorn of meanness and corruption and the baser arts of
+politics. He had to use them through others; he had to ally himself with
+Newcastle and his gang; he could not govern otherwise. But he was
+anxious that the public should know that he was something apart from and
+above these politicians. His was a real but not a retiring purity; a
+white column rather than a snowdrop. This was all part of his
+essentially theatrical character, which he had found successful in
+Parliament, and which gradually absorbed him, with unhappy results.
+
+But there was another reason why it was necessary that Pitt should
+advertise his virtue on this occasion. He was a patriot joining the
+Court party, a member of the Opposition accepting a place, which, with
+all deductions, had a fixed and ample salary. It was not possible for
+him, though his friends were already established in office, to join them
+without some loss of popularity. It was difficult for him to keep his
+shield untarnished in the royal armoury. The morose Glover states that
+he brought himself to the level of Lord Bath in public disfavour by his
+acceptance of office. Pitt himself, at the time of his bitter
+mortification in 1754, writes to Lord Hardwicke of his 'bearing long a
+load of obloquy for supporting the King's measures,' without the
+smallest abatement of the King's hostility, and about the same time
+describes himself as having parted with that weight in the country which
+arose from his independent opposition to the measures of the Government.
+He must indeed have counted the cost. It seemed obvious and in the
+nature of things that Lytteltons, Grenvilles, and Cobhams should follow
+the other patriots into office when opportunity offered; they had no
+doubt barked loudly at ministers, but they belonged to the families
+which always governed the country, and it was proper, indeed inevitable,
+that they should take up their predestined positions on the Treasury
+Bench. But Pitt had stood on a different pedestal. He had been marked
+out by Walpole for punishment and by the King for exclusion. He had
+thundered against the King and the King's trusted Ministers, the
+Walpoles and the Carterets, with a voice that overbore all others, and
+which apparently could not be silenced. The people seemed at last to
+have found an incorruptible champion. Then suddenly he was muzzled with
+a sinecure. Had he insisted on the Secretaryship of War and wrenched it
+from the reluctant sovereign, the position would have been totally
+different. But to pass into the sleek silence of the Vice Treasurership,
+and almost to disappear from sight or hearing for eight years, seemed a
+moral collapse. It is not one of the least remarkable features of Pitt's
+career that he should have survived this lucrative obscurity.
+
+It is indeed difficult to understand how so fierce and restless a spirit
+could have endured the passive existence to which he had restrained
+himself by the acceptance of office. We seem to hear a growl but a few
+months after he had become Paymaster. 'In the gloomy scene which, I
+fear, is opening in public affairs for this disgraced country,' he
+writes to George Grenville in October 1746; not a cheerful tone for a
+young minister, but one not unfamiliar among those in subordinate
+positions. Still he could afford to wait. He probably contented himself
+with the reflection that King George could not last for ever, and
+flattered himself with an easy entrance to the councils of King
+Frederick. He could watch, too, with silent scorn, the miscarriages of
+his official superiors, confident that high office must come to him, as
+it were, of its own accord. Still, he had to wait long, and the death of
+Frederick as well as the longevity of the monarch were little less than
+disastrous to his calculations. It would have been better, of course,
+for his historical position had he refrained from taking a subordinate
+office, which restrained his independence, and deprived him of the
+peculiar lustre of his lonely power. In these days we ask ourselves what
+temptation could induce him to accept a post which seemed to offer
+nothing but salary in exchange for the exceptional splendour of his
+independent position? How was it worth his while to become
+Vice-Treasurer of Ireland? It cannot have been for money. He was
+notoriously indifferent to money (though his nephew casts doubts even on
+this), and he was better off as to money than he had ever been before,
+owing to the Marlborough legacy. It may have been that as his political
+associates had all joined the administration, he thought that his
+loneliness impaired his power, and he must certainly have felt that it
+was impossible for him to continue in active and effective opposition to
+a Government which included his closest friends. That would seem to be
+the chief and conspicuous reason. But there was another, as one may well
+suppose, which was not less potent. Office is the natural, legitimate
+and honourable object of all politicians who feel capable of doing good
+work as ministers, and even of some who do not. The instances to the
+contrary are so few as to prove the rule. Wilberforce and Burdett,
+Ashley (for Ashley, though not literally outside the category of
+officials, cannot be considered as one), and Cobden are the names that
+obviously present themselves. But Ashley and Wilberforce had
+consecrated themselves to a high career of philanthropy which was
+incompatible with the bond of ministry. Burdett, long a popular idol and
+an orator of great power, a country gentleman of the best type, and
+personally agreeable even to those who differed from him, was probably
+held to be too advanced a demagogue to be even considered for an
+appointment. Cobden refused office at least twice; yet had he lived he
+could not have kept out of it. Bright, his illustrious political twin,
+the Castor to his Pollux, took it and liked it. In the eighteenth
+century we can think of no one but Pulteney. He, indeed, strictly
+speaking, is no exception, for as a youth he held a subordinate post.
+And though in the maturity of his powers he refused the first place when
+apparently he might have had it, he also solicited it when it was out of
+his reach.
+
+Althorp too, in the last century, is a singular example. He led the
+House of Commons for four years as Chancellor of the Exchequer, when his
+popularity and ascendancy made him the real pivot of the Government. But
+he hated office with so deadly a hatred that he had the pistols removed
+from his room lest he should end his official career with them. He
+really comes in the list of exceptions to the rule that office is the
+goal of all capable politicians.
+
+But Pitt had nothing in common with these men. He wished to be in
+office, and he knew that he would be a better minister than any there,
+even though he may not have felt already the confidence which he
+afterwards expressed that he alone could save England. How then was he
+to obtain a foothold in the ministry? The just repugance of the King
+was, he knew, insurmountable, so long as he remained outside. But if
+admitted to office he might well hope much from his power of
+fascination, which was almost famous. The King was not an easy person
+for any man to charm; but Pitt no doubt felt that if he could once be
+placed in contact with His Majesty, he might be able to remove the royal
+prejudice; though in that he seems to have been wrong. He tried his hand
+on Lady Yarmouth, with whom at a later period he seems to have been on a
+familiar footing; but it is doubtful if she ever dispelled, though she
+may have mitigated, the King's hatred of Pitt.
+
+Even failing the mollification of the King, he felt that by taking
+office he would have entered the official caste, and he would have
+placed his foot on one rung of the ladder of greatness. In accepting the
+Vice-Treasurership he had doubtless been promised the next post that was
+vacant, and was, as has been seen, given the Paymastership. He was thus
+reunited to all his political friends, and would form with them a solid
+proportion of the garrison of Downing Street, a proportion to be
+reckoned with. It would be strange indeed if in such a position and with
+such feeble superiors he did not make his way to some position of real
+business and power.
+
+It must be remembered, too, that the state of affairs as regards office
+in the eighteenth century was very different from the present. Now, if a
+man be a bold and popular speaker, both in Parliament and on the
+platform, but more especially on the platform, he leaps into the Cabinet
+at once; he disdains anything else; a Vice-Treasurership such as Pitt
+accepted he would regard as an insult. But in the middle of the
+eighteenth century there was nothing of this. There was no such thing as
+platform speaking outside the religious movement. A man made himself
+prominent and formidable in Parliament, but that was a small part of the
+necessary qualifications for office. The Sovereign then exercised a
+control, not indeed absolute, but efficacious and material, on the
+selection of ministers. The great posts were mainly given to peers;
+while a peerage is now as regards office in the nature of an impediment,
+if not a disqualification. In those days an industrious duke, or even
+one like Grafton who was not industrious, could have almost what he
+chose. But most of the great potentates preferred to brood over affairs
+in company with hangers-on who brought them the news, or with their
+feudal members of parliament. Still they formed a vital element in the
+governments of that time. Pelham's administration at this very time
+contained five dukes: he himself was the only commoner in it, and he was
+a duke's brother. It was necessary to have a Chancellor of the Exchequer
+in the House of Commons, but all the other high offices could be held
+preferably by peers. The two Secretaries of State were both dukes. A
+brilliant commoner without family connection or great fortune was an
+efficient gladiator to be employed in the service of these princes, but
+he was not allowed to rise beyond a fixed line. The peers lived, as it
+were, in the steward's room, and the commoners in the servants' hall; in
+some parlour, high above all, sate the King.
+
+Pitt, according to the practice of the twentieth century, would have
+received at least the highest office outside or, more probably, office
+within the Cabinet on the fall of Walpole, and he certainly would have
+been a Secretary of State or the equivalent before 1746. As it was, in
+that year he had to climb on hands and knees into a subordinate
+position. It had been difficult for him to get even that far at the cost
+of a ministerial crisis of capital importance. The veto of the King had
+certainly been the principal obstacle. But the iron rules of caste
+forbade any idea of office for Pitt at all commensurate with his
+importance. He had under the system in force to get in as he could, and
+into much the same sort of office as his inferior but more influentially
+connected colleagues, the Grenvilles, the Lytteltons, and the like.
+
+There was another weighty consideration which pointed to prompt
+acceptance. Pitt had no time to spare. He was no longer in his first
+youth, he was approaching middle age. When he accepted this subordinate
+post he was thirty-eight; and thirty-eight, it may be said, when the
+lives of statesmen were comparatively short, was a more mature period in
+a career than it would be considered now. At the age when Pitt became
+Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, North was already Prime Minister. Pitt was
+now seven years older than Grafton when he became Prime Minister, and
+fifteen years older than his own son when he first led the House of
+Commons as Chancellor of the Exchequer; both, of course, under
+circumstances abnormally propitious. These figures show sufficiently not
+merely that Pitt's career was, so to speak, in arrear, but that the
+youthfulness of ministers in those days, under the favouring breezes of
+birth and connection, affords no standard of comparison for the
+possibilities of a poor country gentleman with no such advantages. Pitt
+was, indeed, rather old than young of his age. His sickly youth and his
+habitual infirmities had aged him beyond his years. But it must be
+noted in passing that, in spite of the dire impetuosity of his
+character, all his steps in life, except his entry into Parliament, were
+tardy and delayed. He was forty-six when he married, and forty-eight
+when he first entered the Cabinet; he was thirty-eight when he first
+obtained office. He moved slowly, but not patiently. His glowing nature,
+thrown back on itself, exacerbated by rebuffs and neglect, all fused
+into a fierce scorn, the _sćva indignatio_ of Swift, gathered strength
+and intensity in its restrained progress, until it developed into a
+spirit not indeed amiable or attractive, but of indomitable and
+superhuman force. That was the process which was at work in the shade of
+subordinate office.
+
+This consideration leads us to what is the best, and probably the true,
+explanation of this voluntary eclipse: that in taking office he was
+taking leave of his youth and of his past, and embarking on a new phase
+of his career. Up to this time he had, like a predatory animal, lived
+wholly on attack, and had given no thought to consistency, and little to
+his future. He had only been a rattling politician, determined to make
+his way, thinking only of the game, and of how to develop and display
+his powers of oratory. He had been content to adopt Cobham's enemies as
+his own, and had tried on them the temper of his virgin sword, without
+much caring who they were or why he attacked them, so long as they were
+sufficiently prominent to give notoriety to their assailant. His course
+had been one of brilliant recklessness and of striking eloquence; but at
+bottom it had been nothing but faction. There have been many such
+swashbucklers in our history, and there will be many more. But it is
+rare that, as in Pitt's case, they develop into something supreme. With
+Pitt these extravagancies had only been the frolics of genius. By
+burying himself in the sedateness and reticence of office, Pitt sought
+to break with his dazzling indiscretions, and mature himself for
+statesmanship. He retired behind a screen in order to change his dress.
+That, one may infer, was his design; that, certainly, was the effect.
+
+To make an end of this topic, one may ask why Pitt, so fertile of
+invective himself, was not the subject of execration when he joined the
+Court. Great men no doubt may commit faults, even crimes, with impunity,
+for the lustre of their achievements throws a shadow over their errors.
+In such men it is recognised that all is usually on a colossal scale,
+deeds and misdeeds alike. As they are capable of gigantic successes,
+they are also capable of stupendous blunders. This is true of Pitt's
+whole career, but it does not explain the facility with which he was now
+able, before he had his famous administration to his credit, to subside
+into an easy placeman and vindicate the measures which he had previously
+denounced. A few lampoons were of course launched at so tempting an
+object, but he was not made a conspicuous butt. Nor does he seem to have
+lost, or if he did he soon regained, the ear and confidence of the
+people. He had at all periods rare powers of recovery. But in this case
+the fact is not difficult to explain. In the first place it must be
+borne in mind that what he did was the ordinary thing to do. Again, his
+personal friends, and even those who had intercourse with him, were
+impressed by his character and believed in his integrity. Then the
+refusal of the indirect profits counted for much, it gave an air of
+austere virtue to a proceeding otherwise questionable. Again, there was
+no particular object to be gained by attacking him. Who indeed was there
+to attack him? No one thought it worth their while to subsidise Grub
+Street for the purpose of throwing dirt on a silent Paymaster, and few
+dared attack him to his face. He had already inspired the House of
+Commons with that awe of him which subsisted and increased so long as he
+remained there. To deliver a philippic against Pitt was no joking
+matter; it required a man with iron nerves who was reckless of
+retribution. Lee, as we have seen, had attempted one, but, in spite of
+Horace Walpole's eulogy, he does not seem to have repeated the
+experiment. Hampden also attacked him, as we shall see, in terms which
+would have led to a duel had not the Speaker interposed his authority.
+Fox and Grenville withstood him doggedly in after years. Barré, when an
+obscure Irish adventurer, tried an attack not altogether without
+success, but did not care to renew the attempt, and became, in fact,
+Pitt's devoted follower. But these instances must be considered as
+singularly rare when it is remembered how tempting a mark was presented
+by Pitt's career, how frank and direct was the language of Parliament,
+and how generous the potations which flushed its debates. Murray, Pitt's
+contemporary and his equal in sheer ability, cowered before him; cowered
+with loathing, but cowered.[181] Pitt was already surrounded, and as
+years went on completely encompassed, with an armour and atmosphere of
+terror which rendered him almost impregnable to personal collisions
+throughout his career in the House of Commons. Some who had nothing to
+lose and everything to gain baited him from time to time, but they were
+always tossed back with damage. Such persistent assailants as he had,
+and they only appeared in force long afterwards, were mainly anonymous.
+
+Whatever the cause may have been, Pitt, from his accession to office in
+1746, remains in obscurity and almost in silence (so far as the records
+testify, though it is evident that these are extremely imperfect) for
+eight long years, at the potent period of life which ranges from
+thirty-eight to forty-six, the age at which Napoleon closed his career,
+but which was yet two years earlier than the commencement of Pitt's.
+During this long eclipse of ambition and stormy vigour he gives but few
+signs of life for the most diligent chronicler to note. But he had no
+sooner been appointed Paymaster than an incident took place which seemed
+to point to a sudden dawn of royal favour. The Duke of Cumberland's
+achievements in Scotland were to be rewarded by a pension of 40,000_l._
+a year, and the King expressed a wish that the motion to this effect
+should be made by Pitt. It is, however, evident that this was not a mark
+of royal affection, but rather of a royal desire to utilise the new
+acquisition to the Government, and in a way so little congenial as to
+make Pitt feel the collar on his neck. The King may have wished to
+display his captive in chains. But Cumberland, who did not love Pitt,
+declined this mark of regard, and Pelham fulfilled the honorary duty.
+
+Cumberland had earned this grant, as well as his name of 'the Butcher,'
+by his victory at Culloden, and the barbarity with which he had followed
+up his success. Fortunately for him, it never occurred to a grateful
+country to draw up a debtor and creditor account as between the nation
+and the Duke. Had it done so, there would have been no grant; for his
+defeats, both in number and in importance, represented something much
+more considerable than this easy and solitary triumph, which would have
+been amply compensated by Swift's 'frankincense and earthern pots to
+burn it in' at 4_l._ 10_s._, with 'a bull for sacrifice' at 8_l._
+However, mingling vengeance with gratitude, Parliament now plunged
+itself with zest into the horrors of the trials of some adventurous or
+bankrupt gentlemen who had followed Charles Edward, so that Pitt, even
+had he so desired, had no opportunity of breaking silence. No speech of
+his is recorded, indeed, till 1748.
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 20, 1747.]
+
+In the meantime he had been compelled to exchange Old Sarum for the
+ministerial borough of Seaford, one of the Cinque Ports; for Old Sarum
+was no longer tenable. The lord of Old Sarum, his brother Thomas, was a
+liege servant of the Prince of Wales, who was now once more in violent
+opposition, and who indeed ran two candidates, Lord Middlesex, a member
+of his household, and Mr. Gage, the sitting member, at Seaford in
+opposition to the ministerial men, William Pitt and William Hay. This
+proceeding sufficiently indicates the violence and completeness of the
+rupture between Pitt and his former master, brought about by acceptance
+of office. So tense indeed was the contest that Newcastle posted down to
+Seaford in person, held a levee of the voters whom he wooed with copious
+solicitation and refreshment, and during the poll sat by the returning
+officer to overawe the corrupt and limited constituency. He was
+victorious; Lord Middlesex exchanging seats with Pitt, for after this
+his defeat he was brought in by Thomas Pitt for Old Sarum. Newcastle's
+proceedings furnished matter for a petition to the House of Commons.
+This Pitt treated with contempt and 'turned into a mere jest,'[182] but
+Potter, son of the Primate, a clever scapegrace, of whom we shall hear
+again, spoke vigorously in support of the petition. This, however, had
+little chance against the argument of a compact parliamentary majority,
+which rejected it by 247 to 96. But it is strange to find Pitt treating
+purity of election with ridicule: all the more strange when we remember
+that seven years afterwards he delivered one of his most famous speeches
+in awful rebuke of the same levity on the same subject. 'Was the dignity
+of the House of Commons on so sure foundations that they might venture
+themselves to shake it by jokes on electoral bribery?' It was thus that
+the House might dwindle into a little assembly serving only 'to register
+the arbitrary edicts of one too powerful a subject.' It was the
+arbitrary interference of the same too powerful subject in a
+parliamentary election that Pitt was now screening with jesting scorn.
+But Pitt thought little of consistency, and he might well have forgotten
+for the moment his earlier performance, when seeing and seizing the
+opportunity for a speech which placed him on a moral elevation above the
+House of Commons.
+
+In 1748 we find him intervening comically enough in an affair,
+suspiciously like a local job, which affected his friends, the
+Grenvilles, and which proved the bitter and jealous animosity with which
+they were regarded.
+
+Hitherto the summer assizes for Buckinghamshire had been held at
+Buckingham, and the winter at Aylesbury; but suddenly the summer assizes
+had also been transferred to Aylesbury. The reason seems to have been
+simple enough; for the gaol being at Aylesbury, prisoners had to be
+transferred thence and back again when the assizes were at Buckingham.
+Richard Grenville (afterwards Lord Temple), however, for obvious
+reasons, took up the cudgels for Buckingham, which was the close
+neighbour and borough of Stowe, and brought in a Bill to enact that the
+summer assizes should be held at that town. All Bucks rushed into the
+conflict, and as is generally the case in a local affair, the debate was
+extraordinarily diverting. Richard Grenville, Sir William Stanhope of
+Eythrope, the brother of Chesterfield, and afterwards a brother of the
+famous or infamous Medmenham fraternity, Potter again, who had now
+become secretary to the Prince of Wales, who was soon to be member for
+Aylesbury, probably for his services on this occasion, and also a future
+monk of Medmenham, George Grenville, the solemn figure of Pitt, Robert
+Nugent (whose daughter married George Grenville's son), Lee of Hartwell,
+were all visible and ardent in the thick of the battle. Henry Fox, then
+a friend of Pitt, was the only outside member who intervened, and then
+with a sort of puzzled surprise at the fury of the combatants. Sir
+William Stanhope, who led the attack on Buckingham, made a speech which
+was specially piquant. He began: 'Sir, if I did not think I could prove
+that this Bill is the arrantest job that ever was brought to Parliament,
+I should not give the House the trouble of hearing me.' He attributed
+the Bill to the fact that the County of Bucks had not elected two
+Grenvilles as their members. 'Here let me condole with that unhappy,
+rather that blinded, county who neglected to choose two gentlemen of
+such power and interest that I am persuaded they will have more votes
+in this House to-day than they would have had at the General Election in
+the whole county in question if they had done it the honour to offer
+themselves for representatives.' After this bitter exordium he
+proceeded: 'It is the power and interest of these gentlemen that I am
+afraid of, not of their arguments;' with good reason, for though to
+posterity the claim of Aylesbury with its gaol will seem conclusive, the
+Bill was triumphantly carried. But Stanhope proceeded with an invective
+against Cobham's young patriots, so violent as to be checked by the
+Speaker. It is noteworthy as showing the jealousy and hostility with
+which their rise and power were regarded in the House, and so merits
+quotation:--
+
+
+ And to shew you, Sir, how sensible they are of the frivolousness of
+ the latter, I could recapitulate such instances of intriguing for
+ votes, as no man would believe who does not know those gentlemen.
+ Conscious of the badness of their cause, they have employed every
+ bad art to support it, and have retained so much of their former
+ patriotism, as consisted in blackening their adversaries and
+ acquiring auxiliaries. They have propagated such tales, that men
+ have overlooked the improbabilities, while they wondered at the
+ foolishness of them; and they have solicited the attendance of their
+ friends, and of their friends' friends, with as much importunity as
+ if their power itself was tottering, not the wanton exercise of it
+ opposed: the only aid they have failed to call in was reason, the
+ natural but baffled enemy of their family: a family, Sir, possessed
+ of every honour they formerly decried, fallen from every honour they
+ formerly acquired: a family, Sir, who coloured over ambition with
+ patriotism, disguised emptiness by noise, and disgraced every virtue
+ by wearing them only for mercenary purposes: a family, Sir, who from
+ being the most clamorous incendiaries against power and places, are
+ possessed of more employments than the most comprehensive
+ place-bill that ever was brought into parliament would include; and
+ who, to every indignity offered to their royal master, have added
+ that greatest of all, intrusion of themselves into his presence and
+ councils; and who shew him what he has still farther to expect, by
+ their scandalous ingratitude to his son; a family, Sir, raised from
+ obscurity by the petulance of the times, drawn up higher by the
+ insolence of their bribing kinsman, and supported by the timidity of
+ two ministers, who, to secure their own persons from abuse have
+ sacrificed their own party to this all-grasping family, the elder
+ ones of which riot in the spoils of their treachery and places, and
+ the younger....
+
+
+At this point he was, not prematurely, called to order. Stanhope brought
+up Pitt, portentous but unconvincing, with perhaps a unique expression,
+for he addressed the Speaker as 'dear Sir.' 'They (the Grenvilles)
+desire the assizes may be sometimes held at Buckingham; the point he
+(Stanhope) espouses is that they should be always held at Aylesbury.
+Which, dear Sir, looks most like a monopoly?' Then he proceeds to defend
+the Grenvilles.
+
+
+ After so happy a beginning, he falls into a torrent of violent abuse
+ on a whole family, founded on no reason in the world, but because
+ that family is distinguished by the just rewards of their services
+ to their king and country; and, in the heat of his resentment, he
+ throws out things that are as unpardonably seditious as they are
+ palpably absurd. He takes it for granted that men force themselves
+ into a presence and into councils to which they have the honour to
+ be called, and into which our Constitution renders it impossible for
+ any to intrude. In the same breath he makes entering into a father's
+ service an act of ingratitude to a son; and, without so much as
+ pretending to assign either facts or reasons, he bestows the most
+ low and infamous epithets upon characters that all other men mention
+ with esteem. In a word, he forgot himself to such a degree that he
+ pointed out men of birth and fortune, and in high stations, as if
+ they were the most abandoned and profligate creatures in the
+ universe, without parts, without morals, without shame, and who, if
+ his description had in it the least tittle of truth, instead of
+ being Members of Parliament, or admitted to the Privy Council, were
+ fit only to be members of a society once famous by the name of the
+ Hell-fire Club.[183]
+
+
+It is not worth while to follow this local squabble further, except to
+notice the singular atmosphere of jobbery with which it was surrounded.
+By a job, it was alleged, Lord Chief Justice Baldwin, having purchased
+the manor of Aylesbury in the reign of Henry VIII., had transferred the
+assizes from Buckingham to Aylesbury. By another job a judge who was a
+native of Buckingham had managed that the summer assizes should be
+always held at Buckingham while he lived. 'The arrantest job,' cried
+Stanhope. 'One of the worst sort of jobs,' echoed Potter, who divided
+jobs into two species, one laudable and the other infamous, declaring
+this to be one of the latter kind. Lee also called it a private job of
+the most infamous kind. Articulate Buckinghamshire was indeed unanimous
+against the Bill. But the Grenvilles were now powerful with all the
+insolence of power, and the Government smiled silently on their
+enterprise; though Nugent said they could only have done so from
+weariness of political serenity, and the wish to invite catastrophe. So
+the Bill was carried, and the job, whatever its exact denomination may
+have been, lasted for nearly a century.[184] But the debate, as will be
+seen, is significant because it shows the resentment which had long
+been growing, but which was now openly displayed against Cobham's
+aggressive and ambitious group.
+
+We do not again hear Pitt's voice till 1749, when he vindicated the
+proposal of the Government to pay to Glasgow ten thousand pounds to
+reimburse the city in some degree for what the occupation of the
+Jacobites had cost it. This of course was an official speech and of no
+permanent interest.[185] He had to prove that the case of Glasgow stood
+by itself, and that there was no analogy between this and those of other
+towns which made the same claim. Two of his points are incidentally
+worthy of remark. The first is that it was the whole tenor of Glasgow's
+conduct since the Reformation which had drawn upon it the resentment of
+the Jacobites; the second, that if this payment were not made, and made
+promptly, Glasgow must be ruined. He told, too, a story which merits
+preservation. When there were rumours in 1688 of the coming of William
+III. with 30,000 men, an adherent of James II. made light of the matter;
+when it was said that the prince was coming with 20,000 he began to be
+alarmed; but when he heard that the expeditionary force numbered only
+14,000 he cried, 'We are undone: an army of 30,000 men could not conquer
+England. But no man would come here with only 14,000 unless he were sure
+of finding a great many traitors among ourselves.'[186]
+
+In 1750 there is a faint echo of Pitt's voice in a discussion on the
+annual Mutiny Bill, at least the only echo in the recorded debates, for
+we learn from two letters of Pitt's to George Grenville that there had
+been other long and troublesome discussions in which he had had
+officially to bear much of the burden.[187] Colonel Townshend brought
+forward the case of non-commissioned officers who had been broke or
+reduced to the ranks without any cause assigned. Some of these, he said,
+were waiting at the bar as he spoke. He proposed a clause for preventing
+this abuse, and forbidding these punishments except under sentence of a
+court-martial. Pitt took the line, truly enough, that if soldiers were
+on every occasion to bring their complaints against their officers to
+the House for redress there would be an end to all discipline; and
+proceeded in the tone of a Paymaster-General to declare that the
+business of the House was to consider the requisite number of the forces
+and to grant money for their payment, but that the conduct of the army
+or complaints against one another were solely within the province of the
+King or those commissioned by His Majesty.[188] This need not detain us.
+About the same time, Lord Egmont, who now represented the Prince of
+Wales in the House of Commons, an able man not without incredible
+absurdities, brought forward a mischievous motion with regard to
+Dunkirk. The question which he raised was whether the French had
+demolished the fortifications erected during the late war, as by the
+Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle they were bound to do; but he diverged into a
+general attack upon the provisions of that Treaty. Pelham answered him
+in a speech of remarkable candour. Lord Strange followed and brought up
+Pitt. He defended the peace, which indeed was not difficult, in a
+speech eminently discreet, ministerial, and conciliatory. No one could
+discover in it any germ of the policy he was destined afterwards to
+pursue with such triumphant success. But he cast an interesting light on
+the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle. 'If there be any secret in the late
+affairs of Europe,' he said, 'it is in the question how it was possible
+for our ministers to obtain so good a peace as they did. For I must
+confess that when the French laid siege to Maestricht in the beginning
+of 1748, I had such a gloomy prospect of affairs that I thought it next
+to impossible to preserve our friends the Dutch from the imminent ruin
+they were then threatened with, or to maintain the present Emperor upon
+the imperial throne.'[189] Though he had thus already spoken, he wound
+up the debate for the Ministry, and did so with equal discretion.
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 3-14, 1750.]
+
+This was in February 1750. He seems to have spoken no more that session,
+but in August Pelham wrote to his brother: 'I think him the most able
+and useful man we have among us, truly honourable and strictly honest.
+He is as firm a friend to us as we can wish for, and a more useful one
+does not exist.'[190] Such an eulogy, offered in confidence by a Prime
+Minister, a reticent, unemotional man, seems to us a great mark and
+epoch in Pitt's career. Not 'the most brilliant,' not 'the most
+eloquent,' not 'the most intrepid,' as we should have expected, but 'the
+most useful, able, and strictly honest.'
+
+Pitt had earned this praise by exertions which were not visible to the
+outer world. It often happens that there is a member of Government whose
+merits do not appeal to the public, who is no orator, who passes no
+measures, whose conversation does not attract, and whose position in an
+administration is a puzzle to the outer world. And yet perhaps his
+colleagues regard him as invaluable. He is probably the peacemaker, the
+man who walks about dropping oil into the machinery, and preventing
+injurious friction. This had recently been Pitt's position. He had been
+diligently and unobtrusively trying to keep the Government together.
+This was not so easy as it would seem; for though the brothers Pelham
+had arranged it to their will when they ejected Carteret, the morbid and
+intolerable jealousies of Newcastle prevented any ease. Did other
+subjects of intrigue and irritation fail he would quarrel with his
+brother, for when all else was serene it would secretly chafe him that
+his junior should be in the first place and he only in the second. Henry
+himself, it may be noted, seems to have been both blameless and placable
+on these occasions, but naturally bored. The elder brother would begin
+whimpering and whining to Hardwicke, his prop and confidant. Hardwicke
+would soothe him as a sick baby is soothed, eventually his tears would
+be dried, and he would begin burrowing and intriguing in some other
+direction.
+
+On this occasion the trouble arose over Bedford. Bedford had become
+Joint Secretary of State with Newcastle on the resignation of
+Chesterfield. Sandwich, a clever scapegrace, and Bedford's henchman, had
+been Newcastle's candidate for the office, while Henry Fox had been
+strongly supported by Pitt and others. Before offering it to Sandwich,
+it was thought well to make an honorary tender of the post to Bedford,
+in the belief that he would refuse it. Bedford, as sometimes happens on
+such occasions, had promptly accepted it; for six months as he said,
+but, as also happens, for as long as he could keep it, which was more
+than three years. The appointment was thus distasteful in its origin to
+Newcastle and became more irksome with experience. Bedford as a minister
+was indolent, and as a man was obstinate and unamiable to a singular
+degree. But it was not these drawbacks which attracted the malevolent
+attention of Newcastle. Bedford, no doubt, was difficult to work with,
+and Newcastle soon wished to be rid of him. But it was when Bedford
+became well with the Court, with the King and with Princess Amelia, for
+whom Newcastle had once affected to feel something more tender than
+friendship, with the Duke of Cumberland and Lady Yarmouth, that
+Newcastle's hatred passed the bounds of moderation and almost of sanity.
+Pelham, who knew the parliamentary power of Bedford and who was anxious
+not to alienate it, was reluctant to take up his brother's dispute; so
+Newcastle promptly quarrelled with him. Pitt intervened. Had he been
+blindly ambitious, he would have welcomed a schism which might have
+produced a much greater position for himself. But he saw that a quarrel
+between the brethren would break up the Ministry; and that such a
+destruction would involve grave consequences, difficult to calculate,
+and possibly the resuscitation of Carteret in the first place. Moreover,
+though on the whole he sided with Newcastle, as Fox sided with Pelham,
+he could not but be aware of the priceless merits of Pelham as a party
+manager, as one who allayed animosities, and as one who kept the peace.
+Pelham, in writing to Newcastle, affects to diminish the value of Pitt's
+intervention, as he wishes to attribute the renewal of harmony to
+'natural affection.' But an impartial judgment comes to a different
+conclusion. Natural affection had not prevented discord, and was
+insufficient to produce reconciliation. It is at all times an
+indifferent political cement. But the exertions of an independent
+colleague such as Pitt could not be overestimated. There exists a long
+and earnest letter of July 13, 1750, from Pitt to Newcastle, too long
+and too tedious to quote, but which is both tactful and energetic,
+though in his worst style of winding verbosity. 'I don't hazard much,'
+he wrote, 'in venturing to prophesy that two brothers who love one
+another, and two ministers essentially necessary to each other, will
+never suffer themselves to be divided further than the nearest friends
+by difference of opinion or even little ruffles of temper may
+occasionally be. Give me leave,' he continues, 'to suggest a doubt. May
+not frequent reproaches upon one subject gall and irritate a mind not
+conscious, intentionally at least, of giving cause?' and so forth.[191]
+He concludes all this with warm eulogies on Newcastle's conduct of
+foreign affairs, and soothes and flatters the fretful duke with
+something like sympathetic regard. He or 'natural affection' is
+successful, for, a week afterwards, he writes a brief note on
+another subject, which ends thus: 'I am glad to note that the
+understanding between you and Mr. Pelham, for which I had fears, is
+re-established.'[192] It is pleasant thus to catch a glimpse of Pitt as
+a loyal colleague, strenuously patching up differences; not less
+pleasant to see him pushing the claims of his rival, Fox, to be
+Secretary of State. This is a new human, and attractive aspect.
+
+The termination of the Bedford transaction is worth noticing for more
+reasons than one. The King, though he was at least indifferent to
+Bedford, declined to remove him at the instance of Newcastle, and was
+probably pleased to have the opportunity of thwarting the tiresome
+minister who had been the inseparable bane and necessity of his life.
+Pelham would not intervene directly for other reasons. A characteristic
+and tortuous method was therefore adopted. The King cared nothing for
+Sandwich, who was necessary to Bedford. So the brothers suggested the
+removal of Sandwich, to which the King promptly acceded, and Bedford, as
+they had foreseen, instantly resigned.
+
+Two points are notable with regard to the vacancy thus caused. The Prime
+Minister announced that the nomination of Bedford's successor must be
+left to the sole nomination of the King, with which he would not
+interfere in any way, but insisted that he must be a peer.[193] The main
+reason for this strange limitation seems to have been that there were
+fierce but dormant rivalries in the House of Commons, and that an
+appointment of one of the aspirants would call uncontrollable passions
+into activity. Both Secretaries of State must therefore be peers, a
+principle which seems strange to a later generation. The King,
+therefore, nominated Lord Holdernesse, of whom the Prime Minister merely
+observes, 'I cannot possibly see him in the light of Secretary of
+State.'[194] Holdernesse however is appointed, and reappears more than
+once in this accidental character.
+
+But Pelham, though he tried to take this affair easily, was near the
+end of his patience. He was worn out by the perpetual exigencies and
+caprice of his brother and colleague, for Newcastle was in truth his
+partner in the Premiership, as well as by the explosive rivalries of
+Pitt and Fox, which any spark might ignite. Chained to an intolerable
+nincompoop, with two such subordinates ready to fly at each other's
+throats or his, and conscious of failing health, he began to long for
+liberty and repose. At the end of March 1751 died the second Earl of
+Orford, and thus vacated the rich sinecure office of Auditor of the
+Exchequer, worth at least eight thousand a year. Pelham, it is said,
+intimated his wish to retire from active business with this noble
+provision, but the King would not let him go.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+On the meeting of Parliament in January 1751, Lord Egmont raised on the
+Address the question of the peace with Spain. Pitt in reply delivered a
+speech of singular interest, for he disarms criticism by frankly avowing
+the errors of his 'young and sanguine' days, to employ his own epithets.
+After pointing out that the Spaniards could not be expected to give up
+the assertion of their right of search any more than we would renounce
+our claim to the right of free navigation in the American seas, he
+proceeded: 'I must therefore conclude, Sir, that "no search" is a
+stipulation which it is ridiculous to insist on, because it is
+impossible to be obtained. And after having said this I expect to be
+told that upon a former occasion I concurred heartily in a motion for an
+address not to admit of any treaty of peace with Spain unless such a
+stipulation as this should be first obtained as a preliminary thereto. I
+confess I did, Sir, because I then thought it right, but I was then very
+young and sanguine. I am now ten years older, and have had time to
+consider things more coolly. From that consideration I am convinced that
+we may as well ask for a free and open trade with all the Spanish
+settlements in America, as ask that none of our ships shall be visited
+or stopt, though sailing within a bowshot of their shore; and within
+that distance our ships must often sail in order to have the benefit of
+what they call the land breeze.' 'I am also convinced that all
+addresses from this House during the course of a war, for prescribing
+terms of peace, are in themselves ridiculous; because the turns or
+chances of war are generally so sudden and often so little expected that
+it is impossible to foresee or foretell what terms of peace it may be
+proper to insist on. And as the Crown has the sole power of making peace
+or war, every such address must certainly be an encroachment upon the
+King's prerogative, which has always hitherto proved to be unlucky. For
+these reasons I believe I should never hereafter concur in any such
+address, unless made so conditional as to leave the Crown at full
+liberty to agree to such terms of peace as may at the time be thought
+most proper, which this of "no search" can never be, unless Spain should
+be brought so low as to give us a _carte blanche_; and such a low ebb it
+is not our interest to bring that nation to, nor would the other Powers
+of Europe suffer it, should we attempt it.'[195]
+
+This is a new milestone. 'Those who endeavour to quote from my former
+speeches, the outpourings of my hot and fractious youth, are hereby
+warned off. I have sown my wild oats; henceforward I am to be regarded
+as a prudent and sagacious statesman.' This was the real purport of this
+speech, divested of the necessary circumlocutions. A statesman who has
+been an active politician in his youth usually has to utter some such
+warning and repentant note in his maturity.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 22, 1751.]
+
+In 1751 we find Pitt delivering another speech which marks a further
+distance from his unregenerate days. At this time, for reasons which we
+can now scarcely discern, but which originated with George II., who
+considered that the peace and safety of his electorate depended on a
+secure succession to the Empire being vested in the House of Austria,
+our foreign policy was concentrated on securing the election of Maria
+Theresa's son, a boy of ten years old, as King of the Romans, and so
+heir to the Empire. This strange line of action was absurd enough to be
+congenial to Newcastle, who soon adopted it, called it his darling
+child, and grudged its paternity to the King.[196] Pelham had
+reluctantly to follow, only deprecating expenditure as far as possible.
+For this we slaved and negotiated and subsidised, in the faith that
+should the Emperor die without a King of the Romans being ready to
+succeed him, a war must infallibly ensue. This hypothesis was at least
+doubtful; but, in any case, we expended our energies in vain. Prussia,
+and France as guarantor of the Treaty of Westphalia, declared the
+election of a minor to be contrary to the fundamental laws of the
+Empire, and prevailed. There is the less reason to deplore our failure,
+as it is not known what we should have gained by success. Austria, which
+was alone to profit, threw the coldest water on the project. The obvious
+flaw of the policy appears to have been that the receipt of subsidies so
+entirely conflicted with the electoral oath as to form an insuperable
+bar of honour preventing any elector who received them from voting for
+our candidate. We were in fact to bribe those who could not vote if they
+accepted our bribe, for an object flagrantly illegal, on behalf of a
+Power which scouted our assistance. We offered to bribe the Electors of
+Mainz, Cologne, and Saxony. To the Elector of Bavaria we agreed by
+treaty to pay 40,000_l._ a year, the sum to be made up by Holland and
+ourselves. It was this last treaty which Pitt found himself called upon
+to defend, and his speech was a broad defence of the whole system and
+principle of subsidies. 'Surely,' he cried, 'it is more prudent in us to
+grant subsidies to foreign princes for keeping up a number of troops for
+the service of the common cause of Europe, than by keeping up such
+numerous armies of our own here at home, as might be of the most
+dangerous consequence to our constitution.'[197] This must have seemed
+strange doctrine to those who remembered his former harangues. But in
+this speech he was to exceed himself in superfluous candour. He had said
+that there was a good prospect of a firm and lasting peace, and then
+strangely wandered off to the consequent prospect of economy at home,
+'perhaps by a different method of collecting the revenue. I am not
+afraid to mention the word Excise.[198] I was not in the House when the
+famous Excise scheme was brought upon the carpet. If I had I should
+probably have been induced by the general but groundless clamour to have
+joined with those who opposed it. But I have seen so much of the deceit
+of popular clamours, and the artful surmises upon which they are
+founded, and I am so fully convinced of the benefits we should reap by
+preventing all sorts of unfair trade, that if ever any such scheme be
+again offered whilst I have a seat in this assembly, I believe I shall
+be as heartily for it as I am for the motion now under our
+consideration.'[199]
+
+It is scarcely possible to conceive a more deliberate and scornful
+repudiation of responsibility for any previous opinions that he may have
+maintained than is expressed in this passage. He goes out of his way to
+tender an unnecessary support to the detested Excise scheme, which at
+the same time he declares that he should certainly have opposed had he
+been in the House when it was introduced. The middle-aged Pitt seemed
+never to tire of trampling savagely on the young Pitt, even wantonly, as
+on this occasion. There is, indeed, more justice than is usual in Horace
+Walpole's taunts when he says of Pitt, 'Where he chiefly shone was in
+exposing his own conduct; having waded through the most notorious
+apostasy in politics, he treated it with an impudent confidence that
+made all reflections upon him poor and spiritless when worded by any
+other men.' This is one way of putting it. A preferable and, in our
+judgment, a truer way is that Pitt deliberately chose this method of
+public atonement for past recklessness, and as an avowal that he had
+learned and ripened by experience. He recanted at large, so as to
+obliterate every vestige of his heedless and censorious youth. It is
+better for the country and for themselves that statesmen should thus do
+penance than that they should continue to offer sacrifices of what they
+see to be right to the somewhat egotistical pagod of their personal
+consistency. Honourable consistency is necessary to retain the
+confidence of the country; but there is also a dishonourable consistency
+in concealing and suppressing conscientious changes of judgment.
+
+Though, as we have seen, his defence of the principle of subsidies
+seemed unbounded, it was more limited in practice, and Pitt fixed his
+limit at the Bavarian contribution. In 1752 Pelham had to move a subsidy
+to the Elector of Saxony, King of Poland. This had been negotiated by
+Newcastle, but was so strongly disapproved by Pelham that he even
+threatened to second the opposition to it. However, he was persuaded by
+the argument most urgent and sometimes most fatal to prime ministers,
+that the apparent unity of the Government must at any cost be
+maintained, to withdraw his opposition and move the vote. Old Horatio
+Walpole, though he voted with Pelham, spoke warmly against him, and Pitt
+supported Walpole's argument, though privately and not in speech. He
+felt, it may be presumed, that it was not for him to be more of a
+Pelhamite than Pelham himself.
+
+With Pelham, however, he had felt constrained to be at open variance in
+the previous year, about the time of the Bavarian subsidy. The Minister
+had moved a reduction of our seamen from 10,000 to 8000. Pitt declared a
+preference for 10,000; and Potter, whom we have seen in the Buckingham
+and Aylesbury affair, a clever, worthless fellow, who had now become an
+ally of Pitt, opposed the reduction. Pelham seemed to acquiesce, but
+Lord Hartington, an enthusiastic Pelhamite, who was hereafter to be for
+a while Prime Minister under Pitt, forced a division, in order to show
+Pitt that the Whigs would not support him against Pelham. Pitt's
+immediate following on this occasion seems to have consisted only of
+Lyttelton, the three Grenvilles, Conway, and eight others. There was, it
+is to be observed, nothing factious in this; the opinion of Pitt was
+natural, and not distasteful to Pelham. Moreover, on the report Pitt
+made a conciliatory speech, marking in the strongest manner his regret
+at differing with Pelham, declaring that it was his fear of Jacobitism
+alone which made him prefer the larger number, and expressing his
+concern at seeing our body of trained seamen, whom he called our
+standing army, reduced. He and his little following, or rather
+cousinhood, vied with each other in loyal eulogies of the Prime
+Minister.
+
+This called up Hampden, an intrepid buffoon, but the great-grandson of
+the patriot, and 'twenty-fourth hereditary lord of Great Hampden,' who
+attacked Pitt and his group with rancour. Here, again, we seem to
+discern traces of Buckinghamshire politics and jealousies. Temple and
+his belongings had, as we have seen, many enemies in their own county,
+and Hampden was one of them. Perhaps the Aylesbury affair still rankled.
+Pitt was visibly angered. Though Pelham warmly defended him, he was not
+appeased, and the affair would have ended in a duel had not the
+Speaker's authority intervened. In the succeeding year, it may be noted,
+the number of 10,000 was restored.
+
+Though these hostilities were averted, the debate produced further
+friction between the brethren who controlled the Ministry. Newcastle was
+profusely grateful to Pitt for the line he had taken. He wrote to one of
+his vassals (January 30, 1750-1): 'As you can be no stranger (if you
+have attended the late debate) to the able and affectionate manner in
+which Mr. Pitt has taken upon himself to defend me, and the measures
+which have been solely carried on by me, when both have been openly
+attacked with violence, and when no other person opened his lips, in
+defence of either, but Mr. Pitt, I think myself bound in honour and
+gratitude to show my sense of it in the best way I am able. I must
+therefore desire that neither you nor any of my friends would give into
+any clamour or row that may be made against him from any of the party on
+account of his differing as to the number of seamen. For after the kind
+part he has acted to me, and (as far as I am allowed to be part of it)
+the meritorious one to the administration, I cannot think any man my
+friend who shall join in any such clamour, and who does not do all in
+his power to discourage it. I desire you would read this letter to'
+(here follow the names of seven forgotten men whom we may presume to
+have been his closest followers).[200] Pitt's attitude had alarmed
+Pelham, and this letter from the Duke, so formidable from parliamentary
+influence, made him sensible of imminent danger. He saw that he must
+either be reconciled to his brother or face that alarming coalition of
+Pitt and Newcastle which was afterwards effected with so much success.
+Once more there was a crisis, and Pelham's son-in-law Lincoln was called
+in as mediator. A treaty of peace of three articles was solemnly drawn
+up between the brothers, and apparent harmony restored. The King,
+however, broke out anew with emphatic anger against Pitt and the
+Grenvilles.
+
+This was probably due to the rumour that Pitt and his connections were
+negotiating with the Prince of Wales. This is not improbable. We know
+indeed that Lyttelton was arranging through his brother-in-law Dr.
+Ayscough for a coalition between the forces of Stowe and those of
+Leicester House. The King was old, and ambitious politicians would not
+wish to be ill with his heir, if that could be avoided. But all such
+foresight was wasted, for Frederick was never to reign, and within two
+months of the vote on the seamen he was dead. Up to the last he was
+intriguing and securing adherents. On February 28 he was engaging
+Oswald, an able debater in the House of Commons, to his cause; on March
+20 he died. Next morning his party was convoked by Egmont to consider
+the future. Many came, probably from curiosity, but dispersed without
+any conclusion. 'My Lord Drax,' writes Henry Fox in pleasant allusion to
+the promises of the Prince, 'my Lord Colebrook, Earl Dodington, and
+prime minister Egmont are distracted; but nobody more so than Lord
+Cobham, who _cum suis_ has been making great court and with some effect
+all this winter. Do not name this from me. I fear they will not be dealt
+with as I would deal with them.'[201] In truth the purpose and bond of
+the party, the sole reason for its existence, had disappeared.
+Henceforth the courtiers who found no favour with the King kept their
+eyes on the Princess of Wales and her eldest son, a shy, sensitive boy,
+who was afterwards to be George III. Soon they began to perceive in this
+obscure court a handsome, supercilious Scotsman, who enjoyed the favour
+of the Princess and the veneration of her son, who was now a lord of the
+Prince's bedchamber, but was hereafter to head one ministry and become
+the bugbear of many others, John Earl of Bute.
+
+The Heir Apparent was only thirteen, and a Regency Bill was required.
+This is only pertinent to our narrative in that it produced a fierce
+parliamentary duel between Pitt and Fox, the point at issue between them
+being the Duke of Cumberland, whom the King wished, but the Ministry
+did not dare, to nominate Regent. Indeed, one of the principal
+expressions of popular grief for the loss of the Prince of Wales had
+taken the form of regret that the death had not been that of the Duke.
+'Oh! that it was but his brother! Oh! that it was but the Butcher!'
+Unfortunately, the speeches of neither Pitt nor Fox in this session have
+come down to us. All that we know is that Pelham declared that Pitt's
+was the finest speech that ever he heard. Pitt had strongly maintained
+that the Regency must be closely restricted, the vital contention of his
+son thirty-seven years later, and hinted that Cumberland, if
+unrestrained in his capacity as head of the Council of Regency, might be
+tempted to usurp the Crown. Hence the wrath of Fox, the close friend of
+the royal Duke; hence, too, the antipathy of Cumberland to Pitt, which
+was to cause complications thereafter.
+
+Pitt and his family connections, whose allegiance to the Ministry had
+been under suspicion, and who had been in negotiation with the Prince's
+party, were rallied into apparent fidelity to the Ministry by the
+Prince's death, without, however, severing their renewed connection with
+Leicester House. But it was acquiescence rather than loyalty. Between
+the two ministerial orators in the House of Commons, Fox and Pitt, there
+had been cordial friendship. But it is evident that this had ceased.
+Fox, as we have seen, would have dealt with Pitt and the Grenvilles as
+traitors, and one would infer that it was the negotiation with the
+Prince of Wales which had angered him. The fact that Fox had sided with
+Pelham, and Pitt with Newcastle, had probably tended to division. Pitt,
+indeed, afterwards accused Pelham, poor soul, with having fostered their
+variance. Then there had been the affair of the Regency. There had,
+too, just previously to the Prince's death, been a sharp altercation
+between them in a small debate raised by the petition for compensation
+of an ill-used gentleman in Minorca. This Pelham had refused; while Pitt
+upheld the claim with his wonted energy, but with unusual absurdity. He
+would support the petition of a man so oppressed and of so ancient a
+family to the last drop of his blood. Fox ridiculed this extravagance,
+and Pitt was nettled. This is only notable as a symptom of prevailing
+temper.
+
+But the facts of their personalities speak for themselves. They were
+rivals in Parliament, neither of them very scrupulous, both fierce in
+debate. What need of further explanation? Fox, moreover, viewed Pitt's
+overtures to Leicester House with distrust, not merely from the point of
+view of a minister, but from that of the Duke of Cumberland, to whom he
+was devoted, and who detested the Prince of Wales and his crew. So that
+on the Regency Bill it was the wrath between the two factions which
+broke into open war. It was in the main the devotion of Fox to
+Cumberland which originally divided and then estranged him from Pitt.
+They were afterwards to reunite for a time by the mutual attraction of
+brains opposed to imbecility.
+
+This is perhaps the best opportunity to consider the character of this
+Henry Fox, who was now Pitt's rival. Strangely enough there is no real
+biography of this remarkable man, a vigorous and interesting figure, who
+has been to some extent obscured by his more popular and famous son.
+
+It would almost be enough to say that Fox was everything that Pitt was
+not. He had not that wayward but divine fire which we call genius, and
+which inspired Pitt; but he had the saving quality of common sense which
+was wanting to his rival. He laid no claim to the oratory of Pitt; he
+was, we are told hesitating and inelegant, not indeed a good speaker;
+but he was plain and forcible, with a good business-like wear and tear
+style, which is in Parliament not less valuable than oratory; on
+occasions indeed he spoke with a vehemence and closeness of reasoning
+which almost anticipated the supreme faculty of his son. More than all,
+he thoroughly understood the House of Commons. He had the cordial
+manner, the veneer at least of good fellowship, the frankness savouring
+of cynicism, which make for an eminently serviceable sort of
+parliamentary popularity. In one respect, as a letter writer, he was
+greatly Pitt's superior. While Pitt was prancing fantastic minuets
+before his correspondents, Fox, without wasting a word, went straight to
+the point; and his letters are pregnant, graphic, and forcible. There
+are perhaps none better in the English language than those in which he
+describes the debates of December 1755. He was, what Pitt was not, a
+genial companion, fond of the bottle and the chase; he had, indeed, been
+a gambler and a debauchee. He was, what Pitt was not, a man of the
+world, and was closely allied with the choicest blood of the aristocracy
+by a marriage with a daughter of the Duke of Richmond. Pitt was a county
+gentleman, who had indeed married Temple's sister, but had thus entered
+a more limited and less exalted connection. They both had courage, but
+Fox minded the rebuffs of debate much less than Pitt. He was
+passionate, but with a passion less sublime than Pitt's. Pitt could
+sometimes feign passion; Fox could sometimes repress it. In later life,
+when it had been long smouldering, it was ungovernable. But at this time
+it only displayed itself in a not ungenerous resentment. In the race for
+success it would perhaps have been safer to back Fox than Pitt.
+
+But Fox had one incurable flaw which was wholly wanting in Pitt: his
+aims were base and material. He was content for long years to be
+Paymaster, amassing a huge fortune from all the emoluments, legitimate
+and semi-legitimate, of that lucrative office, when a noble ambition
+would not have stooped to so gross an obscurity. And besides money he
+had another weakness. He longed to be a lord. In the moment of his
+rival's triumph and his own fall we find him writing to Lady Yarmouth
+soliciting a peerage in almost abject terms.[202] That was refused, and
+it was only after long years of unabashed solicitation that he obtained
+his object. At last a peerage was accorded to his wife, as if to mark
+the reluctance felt to giving it to himself. Then his chance came. Bute
+had to find a bold and unscrupulous agent to carry the Peace through the
+House, and Fox was his man. Not merely had Fox to earn his peerage but
+to wreak some vengeances.[203] He accepted the task readily, and had as
+his first reward the joy of removing Newcastle from the lieutenancy of
+three counties. And then, as if animated by a hatred of the whole human
+race, he expelled from their posts all, from the highest to the
+humblest, whom he suspected of opposition. It was a reign of terror, and
+by terror he accomplished the work he had been hired to do. Then he
+claimed his reward. He had earned and he received his peerage. But he
+had also earned and received a detestation, rarely accorded in England
+to a statesman, which lasted for the rest of his life, and which finds
+vent in the bitter lampoon which Gray, the gentlest of scholars, was
+moved to write.
+
+Later again, in his opulent seclusion, Fox was fired with a new ambition
+to become an earl.[204] He feared no extremity, no humiliation, to
+obtain his cherished object. But he failed. He was no longer worth
+buying; he could not, indeed, be employed. So in bitterness of spirit he
+passed away, cheered only by his delightful devotion to his wife and
+children, and by the goodwill of a few staunch friends.
+
+There is something profoundly melancholy in Fox's degeneracy. Its
+commencement is clearly marked. In 1756 he was an easy companion, a good
+friend, kindly and beloved; he was honoured and admired; he was the
+second man in the House of Commons, willing and able to dare all. But
+when he was discarded, and had subsided into the Paymastership, he seems
+to have suffered a gradual deterioration. His objects became sordid; he
+lost the finer elements of his character; his ambition sank into
+something composed of vindictiveness and greed; his generous wine became
+corked and bitter. But at the time we are writing of, he was still
+amiable, still courageous, still warm with some instinct of honour,
+patriotism, and high emulation, still an able and masculine figure. It
+is perhaps unfair to anticipate a decline which is outside our limits.
+But the change is so remarkable, throwing, as it were, a back light on
+some of the puzzling aspects of Fox's earlier career, that it cannot
+well be unnoticed.
+
+More ominous of Pitt's attitude to the Ministry than any small incidents
+of debate was Pitt's silence. For three successive sessions of
+Parliament, in 1752, 1753, and in that which closed in April 1754, he
+practically held his peace. Nothing could be more sinister, nothing
+could mark more emphatically his discontent. Sickness, it appears,
+accounted in part for this abstinence from the arena. 'After a year of
+sullen illness,' as Horace Walpole describes it, he intervened in 1753;
+and this was followed by another twelve months of silence and of illness
+not less sullen. The intervention of 1753 was not very happy. By an Act
+passed in June 1753, foreign Jews had been rendered capable of
+naturalisation. The Bill had passed into law without serious opposition,
+but soon aroused great popular clamour. Grub Street, as usual, was
+called into requisition.
+
+ 'But Lord! how surprised when they heard of the news
+ That we were to be servants to circumcised Jews,
+ To be negroes and slaves instead of True Blues,
+ Which nobody can deny.'
+
+Newcastle was charged with having been bribed.
+
+ 'That money you know is a principal thing,
+ It will pay a Duke's mortgage or interest bring.'[205]
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 27, 1753.]
+
+On the meeting of Parliament in November of the same year Newcastle at
+once moved to repeal it. It had only been, he said in his silly jargon,
+a 'point of political policy,' and as it had aroused agitation in the
+public it had better be repealed. Foote recalled this slipshod phrase in
+his comical portrait of the Duke. 'The honour,' says Matthew Mug, 'I
+this day solicit will be to me the most honourable honour that can be
+conferred.' Pitt supported the repeal in a speech on which his admirers
+would not desire to dwell. He was still in favour of the Act, but should
+vote for its repeal, because the people wished it, having been misled by
+the 'old High Church persecuting spirit' into believing that religion
+was concerned in the matter, which was not the fact, therefore an
+explanatory preamble was necessary. 'In the present case we ought to
+treat the people as a prudent father would treat his child; if a
+peevish, perverse boy should insist on something that was not quite
+right but of such a nature as, when granted, could not be attended with
+any very bad consequence, an indulgent father would comply with the
+humour of his child, but at the same time he would let him know that he
+did so merely out of complaisance, and not because he approved of what
+the child insisted on.'[206] Whether this would or would not be the
+wisest course of parental discipline it is not necessary to discuss, but
+it was in the spirit of the practice that prevailed in the Fox family
+rather than in that of the Pitts. The repeal was passed with the
+preamble of admonition.
+
+This reluctant, ironical support was all that Pitt gave his colleagues.
+It cannot indeed be doubted that throughout these three lean years of
+silence he was hostile to the Ministry. Promises had probably been made
+on his first accession to office which he thought had been ill-kept. He
+had been told, no doubt, that every effort would be made to make him
+more acceptable to the King, and he might well doubt if there had been
+much strenuous effort in that direction. And indeed a topic so sure to
+excite the royal spleen was not likely to be raised except under the
+pressure of absolute necessity. At any rate there had been no result.
+'The Pitts and Lytteltons are grown very mutinous on the Newcastle's not
+choosing Pitt for his colleague,' writes Horace Walpole six weeks after
+the Prince's death. For Bedford was known to be doomed by Newcastle, and
+his Secretaryship of State would soon be vacant. There were many
+aspirants for the succession, but no whisper of Pitt. Cobham, who had
+been his main supporter, was dead;[207] no one could speak with so much
+authority on his behalf; and even had Cobham survived he would probably
+have been silent.
+
+Soon after the letter from Walpole which we have quoted (June 1751)
+Bedford had resigned. He had been succeeded by Holdernesse. At the same
+time Granville, the object of Pitt's inveterate philippics, was admitted
+to the Cabinet as President of the Council. These events may well have
+inflamed Pitt's resentment, which had, we cannot doubt, been long
+smouldering. The great obstacle to his advancement was the King, who, as
+he knew, had always detested him. It was with the greatest difficulty
+that the Pelhams could persuade the Sovereign not altogether to ignore
+him at the Levees. Could he indeed trust the brothers? He appreciated no
+doubt Pelham's qualities at the Treasury, in council, and in the House
+of Commons. It seems impossible to believe that Pitt ever can have
+trusted Newcastle; though he addresses the Duke in his letters with an
+affected flummery of devotion. Almon, who is not a trustworthy
+authority, but who is supported in this instance by a probability which
+we may well deem irresistible, says that in at least one interview in
+the year 1752 he treated Newcastle with such scorn that Newcastle had he
+dared would have dismissed him from office.[208] Pitt had openly scoffed
+at the King of the Romans policy, Newcastle's cherished plan, and told
+the Duke that he was engaging in subsidies without knowing the amount,
+and in alliances without knowing the terms. Why, indeed, should Pitt
+trust Newcastle, whom no one had ever trusted, and whom Pitt must have
+measured and known to the very marrow of his bones?
+
+We may take it as certain then that Pitt viewed the Duke with
+contemptuous penetration, and tolerated his grimaces and professions
+only till such time as he could put them to the test. Meanwhile there
+was a free trade in blandishments between them. Newcastle would send
+venison from Holland, and carp and fruit, and Pitt would abound in
+gratitude.[209] He still thought well to profess friendship, but, we may
+be sure, a wary friendship, for the veteran in the florid and artificial
+style of the day; on the very day of Pelham's death he wrote from Bath
+to assure him of 'unalterable attachment;'[210] and he condescended to
+solicit a parliamentary seat from him.
+
+But words cost little, and Pitt did not disdain profusion in them any
+more than in what cost more. In a letter to Lyttelton written
+immediately after Pelham's death, when he recommended an attitude of
+armed and hostile vigilance towards the new powers, he says:
+'Professions of personal regard cannot be made too strongly,' and this
+line of conduct explains his professions to Newcastle. For how could he
+fail under existing circumstances to be suspicious? Had Newcastle lifted
+a finger to procure him the succession to Bedford? Yet no one could
+compete in Parliamentary authority with Pitt; and, though Murray's
+claims to oratorical pre-eminence might vie with his, Murray's
+aspirations were confined to the law. At this time, Chesterfield, the
+best living judge of such matters, was writing to his son, and
+expressing therefore his real convictions: 'Mr. Pitt and Mr. Murray are
+beyond comparison ... the best orators. They alone can inflame or quiet
+the House; they alone are so attended to, in that numerous and noisy
+assembly, that you might hear a pin fall while either was
+speaking.'[211] It is true that Chesterfield depreciates Pitt's matter.
+But the fact remains that he mentions Pitt as one of the two supreme
+masters of the House of Commons, the other, indeed, not having much
+heart in politics. The ignoring, the slighting of this great power,
+could not be forgiven by so aspiring a nature as Pitt's. He brooded and
+watched.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+How did he pass these three years? It is not easy to say, for we have so
+little light on his private life. No prescient Boswell marked his words
+and habits, or indeed had much opportunity of doing so. Few men of the
+same eminence have lived in such retirement as he did; we only catch
+glimpses. In the first place, it may be said without extravagance that
+his principal occupation was the gout. His gout became part of the
+history of England. To him it was a cruel fact. It kept him constantly
+disabled, and constantly away from London, ever trying new waters,
+principally the historical springs of Bath. Bath, indeed, was his second
+home. He seems to be almost always there till his marriage, and very
+frequently afterwards. Half his letters seem to be dated thence. At last
+he definitely recognised it as a home by building a house there in the
+Circus, which cost him 1200_l._[212] This was in 1753. But in 1763 he
+disposed of this particular house, probably under some financial
+stress.[213] Whether he thus established himself from love of the place
+or from love of his friend Ralph Allen, who was Fielding's Squire
+Allworthy and Bath's Man of Ross, or whether he had already an ambition
+to represent the City in Parliament, we cannot tell. His cousin, Lord
+Stanhope soon joined him and bought the houses next to his.[214] As time
+went on, and Pitt's fame and seclusion increased, it became more and
+more a political centre. There men collected who were anxious to get a
+word with the statesman, or at least obtain news of his health, which at
+times became the problem and mystery of a crisis.
+
+But his own uneasy quest of health made him seek a variety of other
+resorts, Astrop Wells, at the spring of St. Rumbald, Tunbridge Wells,
+Sunninghill, and what not. He thus became a constant participator in the
+tepid diversions of these sickly haunts. Gilbert West, a minor poet,
+whose mother was Cobham's sister, and who was one of Pitt's dearest and
+most intimate friends, accompanied him to Tunbridge Wells in May 1753,
+and writes accounts thence of his life and condition.[215] They lived
+together at the Stone House, which perhaps may still be identified, and
+which was chosen as their residence for its absolute quiet. Actual gout
+he seems to have welcomed as a relief from other disorders. He was at
+one time unable to sleep without opiates. Insomnia produced its usual
+effects, deep dejection, nay, complete prostration. Like all sufferers
+under that supreme disability, he was ready to try any remedies; musk
+was one of these. When the open appearance of gout relieved the sufferer
+of its more insidious effects, he began a course of mild dissipation. We
+find him giving a dinner at the New Vauxhall, enriched perhaps by the
+bounty of Newcastle, who was sending him choice dainties at this time;
+then a rural entertainment of tea in a tent, where he bade 'his French
+horn breathe music like the unseen genius of the wood;'[216] a diversion
+which seems all the more pastoral, when we remember that at the same
+moment Fox and Hardwicke, the Chancellor, were at each other's throats
+in St. Stephen's over the Marriage Act. He made excursions to view the
+fine parks and seats of the neighbourhood, to Penshurst, Buckhurst, and,
+we may presume, Eridge; we are told that he considered these expeditions
+as good for the mind as well as the body. Then when he got stronger he
+went further afield. 'I have made a tour,' he writes, 'of four or five
+days in Sussex, as far as Hastings; Battel Abbey is very fine, as to
+situation and lying of ground, together with a great command of water on
+one side, within an airing; Ashburnham Park most beautiful; Hurtmonceux
+(_sic_) very fine, curiously and dismally ugly. On the other side of
+Battel: Crowhurst, Colonel Pelham's, the sweetest thing in the world;
+more taste than anywhere, land and sea views exquisite. Beach of four or
+five miles to Hastings, enchanting Hastings, unique; Fairly Farm, Sir
+Whistler Webster's, just above it; perfect in its kind, _cum multis
+aliis_, &c. I long to be with you' (he is writing to John Pitt, his
+Dorsetshire kinsman), 'kicking my heels upon your cliffs and looking
+like a shepherd in Theocritus.'[217] For the sake of his mind, too, he
+attended 'Mr. King's lectures on philosophy, &c.,' when 'Mr. Pitt, who
+is desirous of attaining some knowledge in this way, makes him explain
+things very precisely.' In August, we must note in passing, he begged
+Newcastle to give him an opportunity of an interview as the duke passed
+near Tunbridge on the way to Sussex. Even in this amiable note he allows
+his pique to be visible for a moment. He entirely agrees with the policy
+of the brothers, but 'What I think concerning publick affairs can import
+nothing to any one but myself.'[218] On his recovery he went off on a
+round of country visits to Stowe, Hagley and Hayes; Hayes, then occupied
+by Mrs. Montagu, which was destined to be the shrine of his passionate
+affection. Stowe was a second home to him; there we have seen him play
+cricket, there he entered with zest into the sumptuous plans of
+landscape gardening, and even advised on architecture. His delight in
+Hagley, the seat of his friend Lyttelton, was scarcely less keen. 'My
+dear Billy,' he writes to William Lyttelton, then travelling in Germany,
+'I am going in a few days to follow your brother to Hagley, and with all
+the respect due to the oaks of Germany, I would not quit the Dryads of
+your father's woods for all the charms of Westphalia. Io giŕ coi campi
+Elisi fortunato giardin dei Semidei, la vostra ombra gentil non
+cangerei. You see, the idea of the Germanick body and the heroes and
+demigods who compose it have made me very poetical.'[219] He had, we may
+note, when this letter was written (August 1748), just returned from
+Tunbridge, and had greatly benefited by his stay there. What, we may ask
+in passing, has become of the efficacious nymphs of all these wells?
+Have they lost their virtue, or is it only the necessary faith which has
+disappeared?
+
+From Hagley, Pitt would visit Shenstone at his petty paradise of the
+Leasowes, and the grateful poet would apostrophise him:
+
+ 'Ev'n Pitt, whose fervent periods roll
+ Resistless o'er the kindling soul
+ Of Senates, Councils, Kings;
+ Tho' formed for Courts, vouchsafed to move
+ Inglorious thro' the shepherd's grove,
+ And ope his bashful springs.'
+
+But Pitt, debarred from the sports of the field, had always taken a
+lively interest in the laying out of land, in planting, in landscape
+gardening. He had, to use his own felicitous expression, 'the prophetic
+eye of taste.' At the Leasowes, at Hagley, at Radway, the Warwickshire
+seat of Mr. Saunderson Miller,[220] at Wickham, the home of Gilbert
+West, and at Chevening, the delightful residence of his friend and
+cousin Lord Stanhope, he freely exercised his gift. He utilised it still
+more freely and indeed extravagantly at his own homes, for in the
+pursuit of this hobby he disdained all limitations. Once, when Secretary
+of State, he was staying with a friend near London whose grounds he had
+undertaken to adorn and in the evening was summoned suddenly to London.
+He at once collected all the servants with lanterns, and sallied forth
+to plant stakes in the different places that he wished to mark for
+plantations. In later life he ran to still greater extremes. At Burton
+Pynsent a bleak hill bounded his views and offended his eye. He ordered
+it to be instantly planted with cedars and cypresses. 'Bless me, my
+Lord,' said the gardener, 'all the nurseries in the county would not
+furnish the hundredth part required.' 'No matter; send for them from
+London. And from London they were sent down by land carriage, at a vast
+expense. These two familiar anecdotes cannot well be omitted.
+
+In the more moderate time with which we are dealing he was the chosen
+adviser of his friends, who may well have been guilty of the innocent
+flattery of seeking his advice with regard to his favourite hobby. His
+own home at this time was South Lodge in Enfield Chace, which is said to
+have been bequeathed to him together with 10,000_l._, 'on this bequest
+that he should spend the money on improvements, and then grow tired of
+the place in three or four years.'[221] This seems dubious. But we are
+on safe ground in inferring from a letter of Legge's that he established
+himself there in 1748. Legge writes to him from Berlin (July 10, 1748):
+'I congratulate myself and the rest of my unsound brethren upon the
+acquisition we have made by your admission into the respectable corps of
+woodmen and sawyers. I consider your Lodge as an accession to the common
+Stock and Republick of Sportsmen, which from its situation will bring
+peculiar advantages along with it, and that the woodcocks and snipes of
+Enfield may be visited at seasons of the year when those of Hampshire
+will not be so accessible.... As to the joiners and bricklayers,
+possibly too the planters of trees and levellers of walks by whom you
+are surrounded, don't give yourself any concern about them. They are a
+sort of _satellites_ which I beg leave to assure you attend a man
+_gratis_. Nay, I have been told by one whose opinion I rate highly, that
+these men's works all execute themselves with a certain overplus of
+profit to the person who is so happy as to employ them,'[222] and he
+adds in a postscript a list of shrubs or trees which he recommends.
+Legge's playful sarcasms as to expense did not deter his friend.
+
+By 1752 Pitt had converted South Lodge, in the opinion of his friends or
+flatterers, into a delightful pleasance. He had, in the fashion of those
+days, constructed a Temple of Pan with appropriate surroundings, which
+excited the admiration of critics, and is mentioned with special
+admiration, we are told, 'by Mr. Whately, a forgotten expert, in his
+"Observations on Modern Gardening," as one of the happiest efforts of
+well-directed and appropriate decoration.' The famous blue-stocking,
+Mrs. Montagu, writes of the 'shady oaks and beautiful verdure of South
+Lodge.' 'There can,' she says in another letter, 'hardly be a finer
+entertainment not only to the eyes, but to the mind, than so sweet and
+peaceful a scene.' Yet Pitt assured her that he had never spent an
+entire week there. Gilbert West paid a visit there, when suffering
+presumably under an attack of the gout. 'He had provided for me a
+wheeling-chair, by the help of which I was enabled to visit every
+sequestered nook, dingle, and bosky bower from side to side in that
+little paradise opened in the wild.'[223] So that the garden would seem
+to have really been a success.
+
+But Pitt was to prove fickle to all these charms. On leaving Tunbridge
+Wells after the completion of his course of waters, he intended, besides
+long visits to Stowe and Hagley, to pay a passing visit to Hayes, a
+place near Bromley, of which his friend, Mrs. Montagu, had a lease.
+Whether it was a case of love at first sight or not, we do not know, but
+Hayes was destined to be the home of his affections and the place most
+closely identified with himself. At the termination of Mrs. Montagu's
+lease in 1756, he bought it of the Harrison family, who owned it, and a
+letter from him is dated thence in May 1756. But in January 1765 he
+inherited the Burton Pynsent estate, and so, in the following October,
+he offered the Hayes property to his friend, the Hon. Thomas Walpole, at
+a fair valuation, indeed at cost price. He had wasted on it, we are
+told, prodigious sums, with little to show for it, for he had spent much
+in purchasing contiguous houses to free himself from neighbours. 'Much
+had gone in doing and undoing, and not a little portion in planting by
+torchlight, as his peremptory and imperious temper could brook no
+delay.' He had, moreover, Wallenstein's morbid horror of the slightest
+sound. Though he doted on his children, he could not bear them under the
+same roof; they were placed in a separate building communicating with
+the main structure by a winding passage. Vast sums were thus expended
+without adding to the value of the property. But now he was eager to
+leave the cherished home which had swallowed so much of his fortune, and
+to hurry to the new scene. His intention of retiring into Somersetshire
+seems to have caused some alarm among his friends, who feared that it
+betokened retirement from public life; but with little reason, for it
+was in June 1766 that the sale of Hayes to Mr. Walpole was completed,
+and in the succeeding month Pitt was First Minister. His accession to
+power was, however, accompanied by a combined attack of all his
+maladies, nervous and physical; and his morbid, violent cravings had, if
+possible, to be indulged. The most imperious of these was for Hayes, and
+he persuaded himself that its air was necessary to his recovery. He
+negotiated through Camden with Walpole, who unfortunately, in his year
+of residence, had become passionately attached to the place. But Pitt
+had become frantic. Hayes could not be mentioned before him for fear of
+causing immoderate excitement. 'Did he' (Pitt) 'mention Hayes?' Camden
+asked James Grenville, who had just visited his illustrious
+brother-in-law. 'Yes; and then his discourse grew very ferocious.' Lady
+Chatham wrote imploring and pathetic letters to Walpole, who was ready
+to lend indefinitely, but not to sell. It would save her husband and her
+children; her children's children would pray for him. Meanwhile, even if
+Walpole consented, they had no money to buy with. They determined to
+sell part of the Pynsent inheritance. But that would only suffice to pay
+other debts, and Hayes would have to be mortgaged as well. Nothing could
+better prove the insane violence of Pitt's desire. At last, in October
+1767, Walpole yielded to Pitt's importunity, and in December the great
+man found himself once more at home. Camden declared of Walpole that
+'the applause of the world and his own conscience will be his reward,'
+but it is not altogether pleasant to find that he did not disdain much
+more material compensations. Pitt had sold the house and grounds in June
+1766 for 11,780_l._, and had to buy them back in November 1767 for
+17,400_l._, a difference of 5628_l._; so that he had to pay a smart fine
+for his caprices. The whole purchase came to 24,532_l._, but this
+includes other items, and lands which had been added by Walpole.[224] In
+1772 he appears again to have contemplated selling Hayes,[225] but he
+was destined to die there. All this is anticipation, but follows
+naturally on the topic of Pitt's country life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+We have seen that Pitt was to proceed to Hagley after leaving Tunbridge
+Wells in September 1753. From Hagley he sent a letter to Newcastle,
+which it must have cost him something to write. 'Some circumstances of
+my brother's transactions at Old Sarum render me uneasy at depending for
+my seat in next Parliament on that place. So I take the liberty to recur
+once more for your Grace's protection and friendship to provide for my
+election elsewhere.'[226] Newcastle seems at once to have offered his
+borough of Aldborough, and Pitt 'can never express himself sufficiently
+grateful for all your favours.'[227] From Hagley (October 1753) he
+proceeded to Bath for a fresh course, and seems to have remained there a
+helpless cripple for no less than seven months, though he was in London
+for a debate in November. Never was illness so untimely, as events of
+vital importance to him were about to take place. For on March 6, 1754,
+Pelham died, and all was confusion. 'Now I shall have no more peace,'
+said the shrewd old King. 'I never saw the King under such deep concern
+since the Queen's death,' wrote Hardwicke. And indeed the situation was
+full of alarming possibilities. For Pelham had become the unobtrusive
+but indispensable man, like the mediocre and forgotten Liverpool, who
+kept the balance between fierce rivalries and discordant opinions for
+fifteen years.
+
+There seems no great complication in Pelham's character. He was a Whig
+politician, trained under Walpole, but also under an intolerable brother
+who exercised the utmost prerogative of his birthright. His portrait, by
+Hoare, indicates something catlike, and he had much of feline caution
+and timidity. But among the politicians of that day he seems to have
+been comparatively simple and direct; and no man of his day was so fit
+for the position of Prime Minister in view of his own qualifications,
+and the conditions of the office at that time. He was indeed an inferior
+Walpole. He seems moreover to have been almost devoid of personal
+ambition; the highest places were thrust on him without his seeking
+them. At the fall of Walpole, in spite of Walpole's urgent instances
+that he should accept the Chancellorship of the Exchequer, which besides
+the eminence of the office would have given him the succession to Lord
+Wilmington, he insisted on remaining Paymaster, a post which, as we have
+seen, even without the recognised perquisites, had great material
+attractions, and which with them was capable of enchaining so powerful a
+parliamentarian as Fox. On the death of Wilmington, by Walpole's
+influence, he obtained the highest place; though Walpole had not merely
+to inspire the King, but to overcome Pelham's reluctance. We may imagine
+that Walpole would urge on his Sovereign that Pelham was the only House
+of Commons man available, that he was eminently safe, that he
+represented Newcastle's parliamentary influence, and that Newcastle
+represented Hardwicke, who embodied the brains of the Cabinet; for
+those of Carteret were too dangerous to trust.
+
+As First Minister Pelham had many difficulties to contend with, but not
+greater than those which always must encompass that position. There was
+the King, with violent prejudices and a Hanoverian policy, neither of
+which he shared. Then there was his brother, who regarded himself as at
+least his junior's equal, and whose petulance, jealousy, and suspicion
+had to be kept in a constant state of arduous appeasement. Thirdly,
+there was Pitt, whom the King could not do with and Pelham could not do
+without; an element of incalculable explosion which anything might
+ignite.
+
+He seems to have steered his course somewhat passively through these
+complications; content so long as he could ward off domestic
+catastrophe, and prevent war with its consequent expenditure; though the
+fates in neither case were propitious. His only real conviction indeed
+was for peace and economy; for the heritage of Walpole's policy had
+devolved upon him, without Walpole's character and ability. Three years
+before the end, as we have seen, he had sickened of his task and of his
+helplessness amid the jarring elements of discord, but he had not been
+permitted to retire. He was indeed the necessary man; a good debater, a
+good administrator, a minister with a conscience for the public, a
+leader or a figurehead with Newcastle's parliamentary power behind him,
+a tactician who managed to keep Pitt at bay, dangerous but muzzled. Men
+of this stamp are kept in harness to the end.
+
+He died on March 6, and the news found Pitt, on March 7, crippled and
+immovable at Bath. His feet were impotent with gout, but his brain and
+hands were evidently unaffected. He at once despatched a brief note of
+condolence to Newcastle, 'whose grief must be inconsolable as its cause
+is irreparable. You have a great occasion for all your strength of mind
+to exert itself. Exercise it for the sake of your master and your
+country, and may all good men support you. I have the gout in both feet
+and am totally unable to travel.'[228] To Lyttelton and the Grenvilles
+he wrote on the same day at length 'the breaking of first thoughts to be
+confined to you four,'[229] enclosed in a covering letter to Temple,
+saying that he was worn down with pain, and incapable of motion. But he
+was none the less vigilant with regard to the least ripple on the
+surface of politics, 'I heard some time since that the Princess of Wales
+inquired after my health: an honour which I received with much pleasure,
+as not void, perhaps of some meaning.'[230] Newcastle at once answered
+Pitt's note of condolence, for we find Pitt acknowledging the reply on
+March 11, and mentioning a letter written to him by Hardwicke, under
+Newcastle's authority, 'with regard to some things in deliberation for
+the settling the Government in the House of Commons and the direction of
+the affairs of the Treasury. My answer is in a letter to Sir George
+Lyttelton.'[231] This was practically giving powers to Lyttelton to
+negotiate with Newcastle as Pitt's representative; a strange choice,
+when we read in the covering letter to Temple: 'let me recommend to my
+dear Lord to preach prudence and reserve to our friend Sir George, and,
+if he can, inspire him with his own.' Lyttelton indeed was not destined
+ever to earn fame as a negotiator.
+
+And now it is necessary to give the principal passages of this letter to
+Lyttelton and the Cousinhood, which would have been a fuller and clearer
+manifesto had not all politicians at that time felt a well-grounded
+apprehension that their letters would be opened and read before they
+were delivered. Fulness and clearness were therefore the last qualities
+aimed at in their epistolary style, and inquiring posterity rues the
+result.
+
+
+ MR. PITT TO SIR GEORGE LYTTELTON AND THE GRENVILLE BROTHERS.
+
+ _March 7, 1754._
+
+ My dearest Friends,--[Then follows pompous regrets for Pelham's
+ 'utterly irreparable' loss.] I will offer to the consideration of my
+ friends but two things: the object to be wished for, the public; and
+ the means; which the object itself seems to suggest; for the pursuit
+ of it, my own object for the public, is, to support the King in
+ quiet as long as he may have to live; and to strengthen the hands of
+ the Princess of Wales, as much as may be, in order to maintain her
+ power in the Government, in case of the misfortune of the King's
+ demise. The means, as I said, suggest themselves: an union of all
+ those in action who are really already united in their wishes as to
+ the object: this might easily be effected, but it is my opinion, it
+ will certainly not be done.
+
+ As to the nomination of a Chancellor of the Exchequer, Mr. Fox in
+ point of party, seniority in the Corps, and I think ability for
+ Treasury and House of Commons business stands, upon the whole, first
+ of any.
+
+ Doctor Lee if his health permits is Papabilis, and in some views
+ very desirable. Te Quinte Catule, my dear George Grenville, would be
+ my nomination.
+
+ A fourth idea I will mention, which if practicable, and worth the
+ person's while, might have great strength and efficiency for
+ Government in it, and be perfectly adapted to the main future
+ contingent object, could it be tempered so as to reconcile the Whigs
+ to it: I mean to secularise, if I may use the expression, the
+ Solicitor-General,[232] and make him Chancellor of the Exchequer. I
+ call this an idea only; but I think it not visionary, were it
+ accompanied by proper temperaments. I write these thoughts for Lord
+ Temple, his brothers' and Sir George Lyttelton's consideration only,
+ or rather as a communication of my first thoughts, upon an emergency
+ that has too much importance and delicacy, as well as danger in it,
+ to whoever delivers their opinion freely, to be imparted any
+ farther.
+
+ I am utterly unable to travel, nor can guess when I shall be able:
+ this situation is most unfortunate. I am overpowered with gout,
+ rather than relieved, but expect to be better for it. My dear
+ friends over-rate infinitely the importance of my health, were it
+ established: something I might weigh in such a scale as the present,
+ but you, who have health to act, cannot fail to weigh much, if
+ united in views.
+
+ I will join you the first moment I am able, for letters cannot
+ exchange one's thoughts upon matters so complicated, extensive and
+ delicate.
+
+ I don't a little wonder I have had no express from another
+ quarter.[233]
+
+ I repeat again, that what I have said are the breakings of first
+ thoughts, to be confined to you four; and the looseness, and want of
+ form in them, to be, I trust, excused in consideration of the state
+ of mind and body of
+
+ Your ever most affectionate,
+ W. PITT.
+
+ As nothing is so delicate and dangerous, as every word uttered upon
+ the present _unexplained_ state of things, I mean _unexplained_, as
+ to the King's inclinations towards Mr. Fox, and his real desire to
+ have his own act of Regency, as it is called, maintained in the
+ hands of the Princess; too much caution, reserve, and silence
+ cannot be observed towards any who come to fish or sound your
+ dispositions, without authority to make direct propositions. If eyes
+ are really turned towards any connection of men, as a resource
+ against dangers apprehended, that set of men cannot, though willing,
+ answer the expectation without countenance, and additional
+ consideration and weight added to them, by marks of Royal favour,
+ one of the connection put into the Cabinet, and called to a real
+ participation of councils and business. How our little connection
+ has stood at all, under all depression and discountenance, or has an
+ existence in the eyes of the public, I don't understand: that it
+ should continue to do so, without an attribution of some new
+ strength and consideration, arising from a real share in Government,
+ I have difficulty to believe.
+
+ I am, however, resolved to listen to no suggestions of certain
+ feelings, however founded, but to go as straight as my poor judgment
+ will direct me, to the sole object of public good.
+
+ I don't think quitting of offices at all advisable, for public or
+ private accounts: but as to answering any further purposes in the
+ House of Commons, that must depend on the King's will and pleasure
+ to enable us so to do.[234]
+
+
+It will be observed that Pitt does not mention the Treasury; and he
+probably, though in his letter to Temple of the same date he speaks of
+the Duke's 'ability as Secretary of State,' took it for granted that
+Newcastle would succeed his brother; a proof of his perception. Yet
+Walpole tells us that it was to the astonishment of all men that
+Newcastle took the Treasury five days later.
+
+Next we may notice that he does not mention the Secretaryship of State
+to be vacated by Newcastle, which would seem to show that that office
+had long been destined by the cousinhood for himself.
+
+The postscript is extremely obscure, as it was probably intended to be.
+It seems to enjoin the greatest caution in dealing with any vague
+overtures which may be made, until it is known whether the King means to
+give his confidence to Fox, and whether he means to maintain the Regency
+as then established. But this phrase about the Regency is almost
+unintelligible.
+
+The last sentence in the postscript is the clearest of the letter. Let
+us remain in office, but whether we exert ourselves there or remain in
+sullen silence must depend on the attitude of the King.
+
+All this is enclosed in a covering letter to Temple--
+
+
+ MR. PITT TO EARL TEMPLE.
+
+ _March 7, 1754._
+
+ My dear Lord,--I return my answer to Jemmy's and Sir George's
+ dispatch directed to you, and accompany it with this line to give
+ you my apprehensions of Sir George's want of discretion and address,
+ in such soundings as will be, and have been, made upon him, with
+ regard to the disposition of his friends.
+
+ I beg your Lordship will be so good to convene your brothers and Sir
+ George, and communicate my letter to them which is addressed to you
+ jointly. It is a most untoward circumstance that I cannot set out
+ immediately to join you. I am extremely crippled and worn down with
+ pain, which still continues. I make what efforts I can, and am
+ carried out to breathe a little air. I write this hardly legible
+ scrawl in my chaise.
+
+ Let me recommend to my dear Lord to preach prudence and reserve to
+ our friend Sir George, and if he can, to inspire him with his own.
+
+ I heard some time since that the Princess inquired after my health;
+ an honour which I received with much pleasure, as not void, perhaps,
+ of some meaning.
+
+ I have writ more to-day than my weak state, under such a shock as
+ the news of to-day, will well permit.
+
+ Believe me, my dearest Lord,
+ Ever most affectionately yours,
+ W. PITT.
+
+ Fox will be Chancellor of the Exchequer, notwithstanding any
+ reluctancy to yield to it in the Ministers; George Grenville may be
+ offered Secretary at War; I am sure he ought to be so. I advise his
+ acceptance. The Chancellor is the only resource; his wisdom, temper,
+ and authority, joined to the Duke of Newcastle's ability as
+ Secretary of State, are the dependance for Government. The Duke of
+ Newcastle alone is feeble, this not to Sir George.[235]
+
+
+Pitt's next step was to send two letters, in the same cover, to
+Lyttelton; one a confidential letter, the other, an ostensible one, to
+be sent to Hardwicke. The confidential letter, which follows, is
+striking, and contains as much of Pitt's plan of operations at this
+crisis as any that we possess.
+
+
+ _Bath, March 10th, 1754._
+
+ Dear Lyttelton,--I am much obliged to you for your dispatch, and am
+ highly satisfied with the necessary reserve you have kept with
+ respect to the dispositions of yourself and friends. Indeed, the
+ conjuncture itself, and more especially our peculiar situation,
+ require much caution and measure in all our answers, in order to act
+ like honest men, who determine to adhere to the public great object;
+ as well as men who would not be treated like children. I am far from
+ meaning to recommend a sullen, dark, much less a double conduct. All
+ I mean is to lay down a plan to ourselves; which is, to support the
+ King's Government in present, and maintain the Princess's authority
+ and power in a future, contingency. As a necessary consequence of
+ this system, I wish to see as little power in Fox's hands as
+ possible, because he is incompatible with the main part, and indeed
+ of the whole, of this plan; but I mean not to open myself to whoever
+ pleases to sound my dispositions, with regard to persons especially,
+ and by premature declarations deprive ourselves of the only chance
+ we have of deriving any consideration to ourselves from the mutual
+ fears and animosities of different factions in court: and expose
+ ourselves to the resentment and malice in the closet of the one
+ without stipulations or security for the good offices and weight of
+ the other there in our favour.
+
+ But do I mean, then, an absolute reserve, which has little less than
+ the air of hostility towards our friends (such as they are) at
+ Court, or at least, bear too plainly the indications of intending a
+ third party or flying squadron? By no means. Nothing would, in my
+ poor judgment, be so unfit and dangerous for us. I would be open and
+ explicit (but only on proper occasions) that, I was most willing to
+ support his Majesty's Government upon such a proper plan as I
+ doubted not his Majesty, by the advice of his Ministers, would
+ frame; in order to supply, the best that may be, the irreparable
+ loss the King has sustained in Mr. Pelham's death: in order to
+ secure the King ease for his life and future security to his family
+ and to the kingdom: that my regards to the ministers in being were
+ too well known to need any declarations;' this and the like, which
+ may be vary'd for ever, is answer enough to any _sounder_. As to any
+ things said by Principals in personal conference, as that of the
+ Chancellor with you, another manner of talking will be proper,
+ though still conformable to the same private plan which you shall
+ resolve to pursue. Professions of personal regard cannot be made too
+ strongly; but as to matter, generals are to be answered with
+ generals; particulars, if you are led into them, need not at all be
+ shunn'd; and if treated with common prudence and presence of mind,
+ can not be greatly used to a man's prejudice; if he says nothing
+ that implies specific engagements, without knowing specifically what
+ he is to trust to reciprocally. Within these limitations, it seems
+ to me, that a man whose intentions are clear and right, may talk
+ without putting himself at another's mercy or offending him by a
+ dark and mysterious reserve.
+
+ I think it best to throw my answer to the Chancellor into a separate
+ piece of paper, that you may send it to his lordship. I am sorry to
+ be forced to answer in writing, because, not seeing the party, it is
+ not possible to throw in necessary qualifications and additions or
+ retractions, according to the impression things make.
+
+ As far as, my dear Lyttelton, you are so good to relate your several
+ conversations upon the present situation, I highly applaud your
+ prudence. I hope you neither have nor will drop a word of menace,
+ and that you will always bear in mind that my personal connection
+ with the Duke of Newcastle, has a peculiar circumstance,[236] which
+ yours and that of your friends has not. One cannot be too explicit
+ in conversing at this unhappy distance on matters of this delicate
+ and critical nature. I will, therefore, commit tautology, and repeat
+ what I said in my former dispatch, viz., that it enters not the
+ least into my plans to intimate quitting the King's service; giving
+ trouble, if not satisfied, to Government. The essence of it exists
+ in this: attachment to the King's service, and zeal for the ease and
+ quiet of his life, and stability and strength to future government
+ under the Princess; this declared openly and explicitly _to the
+ ministers_. The reserve I would use should be with regard to listing
+ in particular subdivisions, and thereby not freeing persons from
+ those fears which will alone quicken them to give us some
+ consideration for their own sakes: but this is to be done
+ _negatively_ only, by eluding explicit declarations with regard to
+ persons especially; but by _intimations of a possibility of our
+ following our resentments_; for, indeed, dear Sir George, I am
+ determined not to go into faction. Upon the whole, the mutual fears
+ in Court open to our connexion some room for importance and weight,
+ in the course of affairs: in order to profit by this situation, we
+ must not be out of office: and the strongest argument of all to
+ enforce that, is, that Fox is too odious to last for ever, and G.
+ Grenville must be next nominated under any Government.
+
+ I am too lame to move.
+
+ Your ever affectionate,
+ W. PITT.[237]
+
+
+Then follows the apparent and ostensible letter to be shown to the
+Chancellor. It is from the nature of it artificial and need not be
+quoted in full. But it contains one remarkable passage in which Pitt
+claims credit for having renounced opposition and the accompanying
+popularity when he was convinced that there might be danger to the
+reigning family from his carrying it further. The assertion is striking
+and daring, and no doubt Pitt did join the Government while Charles
+Edward was still in arms.
+
+
+ _Bath, March 11th, 1754._
+
+ My dear Sir George.--I beg you will be so good to assure my Lord
+ Chancellor, in my name, of my most humble services and many very
+ grateful acknowledgments for his Lordship's obliging wishes for my
+ health.... I can never sufficiently express the high sense I have of
+ the great honours of my Lord Chancellor's much too favourable
+ opinion of his humble servant; but I am so truly and deeply
+ conscious of so many of my wants in Parliament and out of it, to
+ supply in the smallest degree this irreparable loss, that I can say
+ with much truth were my health restored and his Majesty brought from
+ the dearth of subjects to hear of my name for so great a charge, I
+ should wish to decline the honour, even though accompany'd with the
+ attribution of all the weight and strength which the good opinion
+ and confidence of the master cannot fail to add to a servant; but
+ under impressions in the Royal mind towards me, the reverse of
+ these, what must be the vanity which would attempt it? These
+ prejudices, however so successfully suggested and hitherto so
+ unsuccessfully attempted to be removed, shall not abate my zeal for
+ his Majesty's service, though they have so effectually disarmed me
+ of all means of being useful to it. I need not suggest to his
+ Lordship that consideration and weight in the House of Commons
+ arises generally but from one of two causes--the protection and
+ countenance of the Crown, visibly manifested by marks of Royal
+ favour at Court, or from weight in the country, sometimes arising
+ from opposition to the public measures. This latter sort of
+ consideration it is a great satisfaction to me to reflect I parted
+ with, as soon as I became convinced there might be danger to the
+ family from pursuing opposition any further; and I need not say I
+ have not had the honour to receive any of the former since I became
+ the King's servant.... Perhaps some of my friends may not labour
+ under all the prejudices that I do. I have reason to believe they do
+ not: in that case should Mr. Fox be Chancellor of the Exchequer, the
+ Secretary at War is to be filled up....[238]
+
+
+He does not follow up this innuendo, nor was it necessary. The next day
+he writes frankly to Temple, who seems to have been much in Pitt's
+confidence at this time. Taken in conjunction with the secret letter to
+Lyttelton of March 10, the plan of operations is easily understood. We
+will leave ministers 'under the impression of their own fears and
+resentments, the only friends we shall ever have at Court, but to say
+not a syllable which can scatter terrors or imply menaces.' Pitt's plan,
+in a sentence, was to hang over the Government like a thundercloud,
+dark, silent, menacing, possibly to be dispelled, but ready and in an
+instant to pour destruction down.
+
+
+ MR. PITT TO EARL TEMPLE.
+
+ _Bath, March 11, 1754._
+
+ My dearest Lord,--I hope you will not disapprove my answer to Lord
+ Chancellor. I include in you your brothers, for your Lordship's name
+ is Legion. You will see the answer contains my whole poor plan; the
+ essence of which is to talk modestly, to declare attachment to the
+ _King's_ government, and the future plan _under the Princess_,
+ neither to intend nor intimate the quitting the service, to give no
+ terrors by talking big, to make no declarations of thinking
+ ourselves free by Mr. Pelham's death, to look out and fish in
+ troubled waters, and perhaps help trouble them in order to fish the
+ better: but to profess and to resolve _bona fide_ to act like public
+ men in a dangerous conjuncture for our country, and support
+ Government when they will please to settle it; to let them see we
+ shall do this from _principles of public good_, not as the _bubbles_
+ of a few fair words, without effects (all this civilly), and to be
+ collected by them, not expressed by us; to leave them under the
+ impressions of their own fears and resentments, the only friends we
+ shall ever have at Court, but to say not a syllable which can
+ scatter terrors or imply menaces. Their fears will increase by what
+ we _avoid saying concerning persons_ (though what I think of Fox,
+ etc., is much fixed), and by _saying very explicitly_, as I have
+ (but civilly), that we have our eyes open to our situation at Court,
+ and the foul play we have had offered us in the Closet: to wait the
+ working of all these things in offices, the best we can have, but in
+ offices.
+
+ My judgment tells me, my dear Lord, that this simple plan steadily
+ pursued will once again, before it be long, give some weight to a
+ connection, long depressed, and yet still not annihilated. Mr. Fox's
+ having called at my door early the morning Mr. Pelham died is, I
+ suppose, no secret, and a lucky incident, in my opinion. I have a
+ post letter from the Duke of Newcastle, a very obliging one. I
+ heartily pity him, he suffers a great deal for his loss.
+
+ Give me leave to recommend to your Lordship a little gathering of
+ friends about you at dinners, without ostentation. Stanley, who will
+ be in Parliament: some attention to Sir Richard Lyttelton I should
+ think proper; a dinner to the Yorkes very seasonable; and, before
+ things are settled, any of the Princess of Wales's Court. John Pitt
+ not to be forgot: I know the Duke of B---- nibbles at him: in short
+ liez commerce with as many members of Parliament, who may be open to
+ our purposes, as your Lordship can. Pardon, my dear Lord, all this
+ freedom, but the conjuncture is made to awaken men, and there is
+ room for action. I have no doubt George Grenville's turn must come.
+ Fox is odious, and will have difficulty to stand in a future time. I
+ mend a little. I cannot express my impatience to be with you.
+
+ W. PITT.[239]
+
+
+On March 18, Lyttelton writes to Grenville to ask if he shall send an
+express down to Pitt as 'he will be impatient to hear particulars,' with
+the news that Grenville and the writer had accepted office, and 'things
+are not as much settled as they are likely to be till the dissolution of
+parliament. I have had no answer from him to my last letter; have you?'
+But this unanswered letter may not have reached its destination, or was
+destitute of certain intelligence, for we find Pitt writing to Lyttelton
+on March 20: 'I conclude that things still remain unsettled, because I
+hear nothing from you or my other friends relating to them.' So he is
+solacing himself by reading Bolingbroke's works. Their arrogance, he
+says, is so excessive, that, great as is the performance, it often
+becomes ridiculous. There was, he remembers, not many years ago, a man
+in Bedlam, a scholar of fine parts, who used to entertain all the
+spectators of that asylum with very rational discourses, and talked
+with wit and eloquence; but always concluded by assuring his hearers
+that he alone of all his hearers was in his right senses, and they and
+all mankind were mad, and had conspired to put him in that place;
+Bolingbroke reminds Pitt of this lunatic. There was indeed no love lost
+between the two men. Pitt had not treated the elder statesman with the
+deference paid to him by the adoring circle in which he lived, and
+Bolingbroke had then charged Pitt with the same fault which Pitt now
+found in Bolingbroke. On March 24, in a letter to Grenville, he pursues
+the same theme, and dubs Bolingbroke the 'intellectual Sampson of
+Battersea.' But six weeks afterwards, we find him warmly recommending
+Bolingbroke's 'Remarks on the History of England' to his nephew 'to be
+studied and almost got by heart for the inimitable beauty of the style
+as well as the matter.'
+
+And now comes a letter of which not a word must be omitted, the
+memorable letter to Newcastle of March 24, long supposed to be lost, but
+now discovered among the Newcastle Papers. It was penned under the just
+resentment caused by the knowledge of the arrangements for office from
+which he had been insultingly ignored. It is, so far as we know, the
+greatest that Pitt ever wrote, full of scornful humility, suppressed
+passion, and pointed insinuation. Unlike most of his letters it needs no
+interpretation, it speaks for itself. That bitterness of indignation,
+which is said to produce poetry, has in this instance evolved clearness
+and force. Towards the end, after speaking of resignation, and of his
+wish for retirement, he utters this prophecy, baleful to Newcastle, who
+should have remembered that the prophet had it in his power to fulfil
+his own prediction. 'Indeed, my lord, the inside of the House must be
+consider'd in other respects besides merely numbers, or the reins of
+government will soon slip or be wrested out of any minister's hands.' A
+few months were to bring home to the duke the truth of this prediction.
+
+
+ PITT TO NEWCASTLE.
+
+ _Bath, 24 March, 1754._
+
+ My Lord Duke,--I have heard with the highest satisfaction by a
+ message from Sr George Lyttelton the effectual proofs of his
+ Majesty's great kindness and firm confidence in your Grace for the
+ conduct of his Government. You have certainly taken most wisely the
+ Province of the Treasury to yourself, where the powers of Government
+ reside, and which at this particular crisis of a General Election
+ may lay the foundations of the future political system so fast as
+ not to be shaken hereafter. But this will depend upon many
+ concomitant circumstances. For the present the nation may say with
+ consolation, _uno avulso non deficit alter aureus_. The power of the
+ Purse in the hands of the same family may, I trust, be so used as to
+ fix all other power there along with it. Amidst all the real
+ satisfaction I feel on this great measure so happily taken, it is
+ with infinite reluctance that I am forced to return to the
+ mortifying situation of your Grace's humblest servant and to add
+ some few considerations to those, which, I have the satisfaction to
+ learn from Sr George Lyttelton, had the honour to be receiv'd by
+ your Grace and my Lord Chancellor without disapprobation. The
+ difficulties grow so fast upon me by the repetition and
+ multiplication of most painfull and too visible humiliations that my
+ small store of prudence suggests no longer to me any means of
+ colouring them to the world; nor of repairing them to my own mind
+ consistently with my unshaken purpose to do nothing on any
+ provocation to disturb the quiet of the King and the ease and
+ stability of present and future Government.
+
+ Permit, my Lord, a man, whose affectionate attachment to your Grace,
+ I believe, you don't doubt, to expose simply to your view his
+ situation, and then let me entreat your Grace (if you can divest
+ your mind of the great disparity between us) to transport yourself
+ for a moment into my place. From the time I had the honour to come
+ into the King's service, I have never been wanting in my most
+ zealous endeavours in Parliament on the points that laboured the
+ most, those of military discipline and foreign affairs; nor have I
+ differ'd on any whatever, but the too small number of seamen one
+ year, which was admitted to be so the next; and on a crying
+ complaint against General Anstruther: for these crimes how am I
+ punish'd? Be the want of subjects ever so great and the force of the
+ conjuncture ever so cogent, be my best friends and protectors ever
+ so much at the head of Government, an indelible negative is fixed
+ against my name. Since I had the honour to return that answer to the
+ Chancellor which Your Grace and his Lordship were pleas'd not to
+ disapprove, how have mortifications been multiply'd upon me. One
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer over me was at that time destin'd, Mr.
+ Fox: since that time a second, Mr. Legge, is fixt: a Secretary of
+ State is next to be look'd for in the House of Commons; Mr. Fox is
+ again put over me and destin'd to that office: he refuses the seals:
+ Sir Thomas Robinson is immediately put over me and is now in
+ possession of that great office. I sincerely think both these high
+ employments much better fill'd than I cou'd supply either of them in
+ many respects. Mr. Legge I truely and cordially esteem and love. Sir
+ Thos. Robinson, with whom I have not the honour to live in the same
+ intimacy, I sincerely believe to be a gentleman of much worth and
+ ability. Nevertheless I will venture to appeal to your Grace's
+ candour and justice whether upon such feeble pretensions as twenty
+ years' use of Parliament may have given me, I have not some cause to
+ feel (as I do most deeply) so many repeated and visible
+ humiliations. I have troubled your Grace so long on this painfull
+ subject that I may have nothing disagreeable to say, when I have
+ the honour to wait on you; as well as that I think it fit your
+ Grace shou'd know the whole heart of a faithfull servant, who is
+ conscious of nothing towards your Grace which he wishes to conceal
+ from you. In my degraded situation in parliament, an active part
+ there I am sure your Grace is too equitable to desire me to take;
+ for otherwise than as an associate and in equal rank with those
+ charg'd with Government there, I never can take such a part.
+
+ I will confess I had flatter'd myself that the interests of your
+ Grace's own power were so concern'd to bring forward an instrument
+ of your own raising in the House of Commons that you cou'd not let
+ pass this decisive occasion without surmounting in the royal mind
+ the unfavourable impressions I have the unhappiness to be under; and
+ that the seals (at least when refus'd by Mr. Fox) might have been
+ destin'd as soon as an opening cou'd be made in the King's mind in
+ my favour instead of being immediately put into other hands. Things
+ standing as they do, whether I can continue in office without losing
+ myself in the opinion of the world is become a matter of very
+ painfull doubt to me. If any thing can colour with any air of
+ decency such an acquiescence, it can only be the consideration given
+ to my friends and some degree of softening obtain'd in his Majesty's
+ mind towards me. Mr Pelham destin'd Sir George Lyttelton to be
+ cofferer, whenever that office shou'd open, and there can be no
+ shadow of difficulty in Mr Grenville being made Treasurer of the
+ Navy. Weighed in the fair scale of usefulness to the King's business
+ in Parliament, they can have no competitors that deserve to stand in
+ their way. I have submitted these things to your Grace with a
+ frankness you had hitherto been so good to tolerate in me, however
+ inferior. I wou'd not have done it so fully for my own regard alone,
+ were I not certain that your Grace's interests are more concern'd in
+ it than mine: because I am most sure that my mind carries me more
+ strongly towards retreat than towards courts and business. Indeed,
+ My Lord, the inside of the House must be consider'd in other
+ respects besides merely numbers, or the reins of Government will
+ soon slip or be wrested out of any minister's hands. If I have
+ spoken too freely, I humbly beg your Grace's pardon: and entreat you
+ to impute my freedom to the most sincere and unalterable attachment
+ of a man who never will conceal his heart, and who can complain
+ without alienation of mind and remonstrate without resentment.
+
+ I have the honour to be, etc. etc.
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I cannot hope to leave Bath in less than a week. My health seems
+ much mended by my gout.[240]
+
+
+This letter was enclosed to Lyttelton under flying seal to be
+communicated to the Grenvilles. Pitt, writing the same day to Temple,
+says: 'I hope my letter to the Duke of Newcastle will meet with the
+fraternal approbation. It is strong, but not hostile, and will, I
+believe, operate some effect. I am still more strongly fixed in my
+judgement that the place of importance is employment, in the present
+unsettled conjuncture. It may not to us be the place of dignity, but
+sure I am it is that of the former. I see, as your Lordship does, the
+treatment we have had: I feel it as deeply, but I believe, not so
+warmly. I don't suffer my feelings to warp the only plan I can form that
+has any tendency or meaning. For making ourselves felt, by disturbing
+Government, I think would prove hurtful to the public, not reputable to
+ourselves, and beneficial in the end, only to others. All Achilles as
+you are, Impiger, Iracundus, etc., what would avail us to sail back a
+few myrmidons to Thessaly! Go over to the Trojans, to be revenged, we
+none of us can bear the thought of. What then remains? The conduct of
+the much-enduring man, who by temper, patience, and persevering
+prudence, became _adversis rerum immersabilis undis_.'
+
+He adds another postscript of caution: 'Be so good as not to leave my
+letters in your pockets, but lock them up or burn them, and caution Sir
+George to do the same.'[241] Secrecy was of the essence of his scheme.
+Should Newcastle or the Chancellor understand the part that he designed
+to play, they would have an advantage in the game.
+
+On April 2 Pitt writes to jog Newcastle's memory in a note about the
+Aldborough election: 'I had expected to hear from you, but I know the
+multiplicity of your business.'[242] He need not have feared that his
+letter had been overlooked. So little was this the case that, no doubt
+after anxious and protracted conferences, Newcastle and Hardwicke were
+both writing to him on this very day long and elaborate apologies.
+Hardwicke's is a document, as might be expected, of great but inadequate
+skill.[243] It gives him much concern to find that Pitt is 'under
+apprehensions of _some_ neglect on this decisive occasion.' He is not
+altogether surprised. Could Pitt only have heard how warmly Hardwicke
+pressed his claims! But there are certain things which ministers cannot
+do directly. These must be left to 'time and incidents and perhaps
+ill-judging opponents.' Fox's pressing for larger powers than the King
+would give had no doubt helped the cause of Pitt, and Newcastle's being
+at the head of the Government whose devotion to Pitt was so notorious
+would further it still more. He concludes by hoping with sincerity that
+Pitt would take an active part, though no doubt had he seen the
+direction in which his wish was fulfilled, he would have withdrawn it
+with greater emphasis. This stripped of verbiage seems the bone of this
+long letter.
+
+Behind Hardwicke shuffles Newcastle. 'Feel for me,' he plaintively
+exclaims, 'for my melancholy and distressed situation: compelled to
+leave the department of which I was a master to one with which I was
+entirely ignorant, exposed to envy and reproach, and sure of nothing but
+the comfort of an honest heart.' It had first been suggested that Fox
+should be Secretary of State to make Newcastle's elevation more
+palatable to his opponents. But 'that for certain reasons did not take
+place; upon which the King himself, of his own motion declared Sir
+Thomas Robinson Secretary of State.' And this Pitt's friends thought the
+best practicable arrangement. For though an excellent man for the
+office, Robinson had not Parliamentary talents which could excite
+jealousy, and as, from circumstances deeply lamented by Newcastle, 'it
+was impossible to put one into that office who had all the necessary
+qualifications both within and out of the House,' there seemed nothing
+better to do than to appoint the inoffensive Sir Thomas. All
+interspersed with copious assurances of love and affection. 'I honour,
+esteem, and ... most sincerely love you.'[244]
+
+Pitt replies to Newcastle in a letter which it is necessary to print in
+full from the original in the Newcastle Papers, for this is very
+different from the draft printed in the Chatham Correspondence.
+
+
+ PITT TO NEWCASTLE.
+
+ _Bath, 4 Apr. 1754._
+
+ My Lord Duke,--I was honour'd with your Grace's letter of ye 2nd
+ inst. yesterday evening. How shall I find words to express my sense
+ of the great condescension and kindness of expression with which it
+ is writ? It would be making but an ill return to so much goodness,
+ were I to go back far into the disagreeable subject that has
+ occasion'd your Grace so much trouble, and wou'd be tearing and
+ wounding your good nature to little purpose. Whatever my sensations
+ are, it is sufficient that I have once freely laid them before you,
+ and that your Grace has had the indulgence to pardon that freedom,
+ which I thought I used both to your Grace and myself. As for the
+ rest, my attachment shall be ever found as unalterable to Government
+ as my inability to be of any material use to it is become manifest
+ to all the world. I will enter again, but for a word or two, into a
+ subject your Grace shall be troubled no more with. It is most
+ obliging to suggest as consolations to me that I might have been
+ much more mortify'd under another management than under the present:
+ but I will freely own I shou'd have felt myself far less personally
+ humiliated, had Mr. Fox been placed by the King's favour at the head
+ of the House of Commons, than I am at present: in that case the
+ necessity wou'd have been apparent: the ability of the subject wou'd
+ in some degree have warranted the thing. I shou'd indeed have been
+ much mortify'd for your Grace and for my Lord Chancellor: very
+ little for my own particular. Cou'd Mr. Murray's situation have
+ allow'd him to be placed at the head of the House of Commons, I
+ shou'd have served under him with the greatest pleasure: I
+ acknowledge as much as the rest of the world do his superiority in
+ every respect. My mortification arises not from silly pride, but
+ from being evidently excluded by a negative personal to me (now and
+ for ever) flowing from a displeasure utterly irremovable. As to the
+ office of Chancellor of the Exchequer, I hope your Grace cannot
+ think me fill'd with so impertinent a vanity as to imagine it a
+ disparagement to me to serve under the Duke of Newcastle at the head
+ of the Treasury: but, my Lord, had I been proposed for that honour
+ and the King been once reconciled to the thought of me, my honour
+ wou'd have been saved and I shou'd with pleasure have declin'd the
+ charge in favour of Mr. Legge from a just regard to his Majesty's
+ service. I know my health, at best, is too precarious a thing to
+ expose his Majesty's affairs in Parliament to suffer delay, perhaps
+ in the middle of a session by being in such improper hands. As to
+ the other great office, many circumstances of it render an
+ uninterrupted health not so absolutely necessary to the discharge of
+ it. Were I to fail in it from want of health, or, what is still more
+ likely, from want of ability and a sufficient knowledge of foreign
+ affairs, a fitter person might at any time be substituted without
+ material inconvenience to publick business. To conclude, my Lord,
+ and to release your Grace from a troublesome correspondent, give me
+ leave to recur to your Grace's equity and candour: when the suffrage
+ of the party in one instance, and a higher nomination, the Royal
+ designation in another, operate to the eternal precluding of a man's
+ name being so much as brought in question, what reasonable wish can
+ remain for a man so circumstanced (under a first resolution, on no
+ account to disturb Government) but that of a decent retreat, a
+ retreat of respect, not resentment: of despair of being ever
+ accepted to equal terms with others, be his poor endeavours ever so
+ zealous. Very few have been the advantages and honours of my life:
+ but among the first of them I shall ever esteem the honour of your
+ Grace's good opinion: to that good opinion and protection I
+ recommend myself: and hope from it that some retreat, neither
+ disagreeable nor dishonourable, may (when practicable) be open'd to
+ me. I see with great joy Sr George Lyttelton and Mr. Grenville in
+ this arrangement, where they ought to be. I am persuaded they will
+ be of the greatest advantage to your Grace's system. They are both
+ connected in friendship with Mr. Legge and with Mr. Murray, who in
+ effect is the greatest strength of it in parliament. May every kind
+ of satisfaction and honour attend your Grace's labours for his
+ Majesty's service. I have the honour, etc. etc.
+
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I wrote your Grace by the Post ye 2nd inst. which I hope came to
+ your hands.'[245]
+
+
+Two days afterwards he answered Hardwicke. In this letter the notable
+passage is that in which he points to retreat, having in his mind, it
+would seem, some specific office:--'The weight of irremovable royal
+displeasure is a load too great to move under; it must crush any man; it
+has sunk and broken me. I succumb, and wish for nothing but a decent and
+innocent retreat.... To speak without a figure I will presume ... to
+tell my utmost wish; it is that a retreat, not void of advantage or
+derogatory to the rank of the office I hold, might, as soon as
+practicable, be opened to me.... Out of his Grace's (Newcastle's)
+immediate province accommodations of this kind arise.'[246]
+
+By the same messenger Pitt wrote to Lyttelton one of the terse notes
+which throw a hundredfold more light on his real temper than his more
+pompous lucubrations, and which are infinitely more readable than the
+long rigmaroles which he wrote to official persons. He professes in this
+to be more than satisfied with Newcastle's answer, and also with the
+Chancellor's.
+
+
+ ... The Duke of Newcastle's letter to me is not only in a temper
+ very different from what you saw his Grace in, but is writ with a
+ condescension, and in terms so flattering, that it pains me. I am
+ almost tempted to think there is kindness at the bottom of it,
+ _which, if left to itself, would before now have shewed itself_ in
+ effects. If I have not the fruit, I have the leaves of it in
+ abundance; a beautiful foliage of fine words.... The Chancellor's
+ letter is the most condescending, friendly, obliging thing that can
+ be imagined. I have the deepest sense of his goodness for me; but I
+ am really compelled, by every reason fit for a man to listen to, to
+ resist (as to the point of activity in Parliament) farther than I
+ like to do. I have intimated retreat and pointed out such a one in
+ general as I shall really like. Resolved not to disturb Government;
+ I desire to be released from the oar of Parliamentary drudgery. I am
+ (un)willing[247] to sit there and be ready to be called out into
+ action when the Duke of Newcastle's personal interests might
+ require, or Government should deign to employ me as an instrument. I
+ am not fond of making speeches (though some may think I am). I never
+ cultivated the talent, but as an instrument of action in a country
+ like ours....[248]
+
+
+The places were now all filled: the Government was made up: Pitt was
+excluded and proscribed. Fox or Murray, he admitted, might reasonably be
+put over his head. But the promotion of Robinson was a personal outrage.
+So he would no longer sit in Parliament as a subordinate and almost a
+creature of Newcastle's, member for one of his boroughs, Paymaster in
+his administration. Pitt was now determined to be free. He would remain
+out of London, and they might see how they got on without him. When he
+did return to London they should realise what they had lost. Meanwhile
+he would occupy himself with a little architecture and a little
+gardening; all that he was fit for, as he would assure inquirers with
+obsequious sarcasm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+In the meantime all had been settled by hasty arrangements in London.
+Owing to Newcastle's 'overwhelming affliction,' Hardwicke tells us that
+he himself was compelled to step forward as a 'kind of minister _ab
+aratro_,' and make the necessary arrangements. A faint offer of the
+Treasury was made to the Duke of Devonshire, which he wisely declined,
+and, six days after the death of Pelham, Newcastle, in spite of his
+overwhelming affliction, was proclaimed his successor. We do not doubt
+Newcastle's sorrow, for in his own way he loved his brother and had
+divided his patrimony with him; but it is even more certain that the
+Chancellor acted as his watch-dog in front of the Treasury. For the
+Duke, though his timidity was a standing jest, could not bear that any
+one else should obtain the rich prize which he coveted and dreaded. And,
+in truth, if that was his view, no one could controvert it, for his
+power in the House of Commons was obvious and undeniable. The King seems
+to have made no trouble. He said that he had an open mind, and would be
+guided by the opinion of the Cabinet as to the nomination of their new
+chief. The suggestion shocked Hardwicke. 'To poll in a Cabinet Council
+for his first minister, which should only be settled in his closet, I
+could by no means digest.' So Hardwicke, with remarkable expedition,
+took care that the Closet, which was the term used to denote the King's
+personal apartment and so his personal authority, should pronounce in
+favour of Newcastle. But the Closet was guided by the Cabinet in spite
+of Hardwicke's scruples; and the Cabinet, a facile caucus, inspired by
+Hardwicke himself, represented to the King as its unanimous opinion that
+Newcastle should be their chief. Horace Walpole tells us that it was 'to
+the astonishment of all men.' To us it seems the only natural solution.
+Hardwicke had declared that a peer must be placed at the head of the
+Treasury. 'That peer must be somebody of great figure and credit in the
+nation, in whom the Whigs will have great confidence.' He was no doubt
+painting the figure to represent Newcastle. But who else could it be?
+Newcastle was the head of the Whigs, the master of Parliament, Secretary
+of State for a generation, and the brother of the late First Minister.
+The House of Commons, moreover, consisted mainly of his creatures. His
+nomination to the premiership was easy and simple enough. But a
+formidable difficulty at once presented itself. Who should lead the
+House of Commons? It was not that there was a dearth of capable men; on
+the contrary, there was a terrible embarrassment of riches; for there
+were Fox, Pitt, and Murray, all men of the first eminence in their
+lines. Murray at once let it be known that his views lay in another
+direction; in any case, he was a Scotsman, which was little
+recommendation, and suspected of being a Jacobite, which was less. But
+Fox was on the spot, and, though distracted with anxiety for his child
+Charles, who lay dangerously ill,[249] prompt, vigilant, and eager.
+Within a few hours of Pelham's death he had sent three humble messages
+of apology to Hardwicke, with whom he was on terms of bitter enmity,
+made energetic advances to Newcastle, and had called at Pitt's London
+house. Soon afterwards he was closeted with Lord Hartington. It was
+obvious that no considerations of delicacy would stand in his way. But
+there were strong prejudices against him. Hardwicke feared his success,
+for they had quarrelled mortally. He belonged, said the Chancellor, 'to
+a very narrow clique, many of them of the worst sort.' His claims rested
+on his abilities, but even more on the friendship of the Duke of
+Cumberland; perhaps, too, on a presumed pliability.
+
+Pitt was absent, and had the proverbial fate of the absent; he was not
+merely distant, but could not be moved. He had been nearly a year
+secluded in the country out of the atmosphere of London and politics.
+Horace Walpole describes him epigrammatically in a letter written on the
+stirring day after Pelham's death: 'Pitt has no health, no party, and
+has what in _this_ case is allowed to operate, the King's negative.' On
+the other hand, the King had a prepossession for Fox; and the Cabinet,
+we are told, when it recommended Newcastle, unanimously named Fox as the
+proper person to be Secretary of State and manager of the House of
+Commons. What wonder then that Newcastle's choice fell on Fox, who at
+any rate could not be fobbed off by stories of the King's insurmountable
+repugnance and who was the favourite of the King's favourite son? The
+Chancellor sent his son-in-law, Lord Anson, to Fox with an olive-branch.
+Lady Yarmouth acted as a friendly means of communication between Fox
+and the King. Lord Hartington acted as the honest broker. Fox was given
+the management of the House of Commons, with the Secretaryship of State
+vacant by Newcastle's elevation. He was at once led by Hartington, like
+a votive lamb, to the Chancellor, with whom a reconciliation was
+concluded. Thence he was conducted to Newcastle, who received him, we
+need not doubt, with his customary effusion, probably with a kiss. All
+went well till the Secret Service money was mentioned. This Newcastle
+said he should distribute as his brother had done, without telling
+anybody anything. Then came the question of patronage. That also was to
+be reserved to Newcastle alone. Lastly, there was the list of nominees
+for ministerial boroughs at the approaching General Election. This
+Newcastle also declined to divulge. In the evening Newcastle sent for
+Hartington. He did not deny that he had broken his engagements, but
+simply declared that he would not stand by them. He 'confirmed not his
+promise but his breach of promise in these words: "Who desires Mr. Fox
+to be answerable for anybody but himself in the House of Commons?" I
+then,' continues Fox, 'was to take this great office on the footing of
+being quite a cypher, and being known to have been told so.'[250]
+
+Newcastle had always intended this and nothing else. As Hardwicke
+judiciously wrote, two days before Newcastle saw Fox: 'If the power of
+the Treasury, the Secret Service and the House of Commons is once well
+settled in safe hands, the office of Secretary of State of the Southern
+province will carry very little efficient power along with it.' Fox was
+to be Secretary for the Southern province. But the Duke's plan of
+campaign had the radical defect of making the post of manager
+impossible. For the difference between the modern term of 'leadership'
+and the denomination of 'management' was no mere verbal distinction. The
+House of Commons had to be managed by acts of a kind more material than
+the eloquence of a chief, or the seductive hints of whips. The leader,
+in fact, combined the leadership with the office of Patronage Secretary.
+'The House of Commons must have,' as Fox explained on a subsequent
+occasion, 'at least one man in it who shall be the organ of His
+Majesty's parliamentary wishes, and known to be able to help or hurt
+people with His Majesty.'[251] The leader would not know how to talk to
+his followers, when some might be hirelings and some free, without his
+knowing which were which. He would not be able to promise a borough or a
+place. He would be a mere speaking automaton with a wary old chief in
+concealment working the machine. Fox saw that he was cheated. He himself
+seems to have clung for a moment even to the shadow of office which
+Newcastle had proffered. But his friends insisted on his refusal. So on
+the next day or the next day but one, he wrote a curt letter, stating
+that the assurances conveyed to him through Lord Hartington had been
+entirely contradicted by Newcastle at their interview, and that he
+preferred to remain Secretary at War. 'I remain therefore,' he wrote to
+Marlborough, 'a little little man, which I think is better than a little
+great man.'[252] But he soon repented, or his friends did for him.[253]
+
+Newcastle cared little for the charge of breach of faith. He had kept
+his patronage, and, as he thought, silenced Fox, who remained Secretary
+at War. In a hysterical condition he hurried to kiss hands for his new
+office. He flung himself at the King's feet, sobbing out 'God bless your
+Majesty! God preserve your Majesty!' embracing the royal knees with such
+howls of adoration that the lord-in-waiting had to beg the other
+courtiers to retire and not watch 'a great man in distress;' then, in
+the zeal of discretion, attempting to shut the door on the tittering
+crowd, he jammed the new Minister's foot till genuine roars of physical
+pain drowned the more artificial clamour.[254] Having recovered himself
+after this characteristic performance, Newcastle betook himself without
+delay to the choice of his heart, the man whom he had always longed for
+as a colleague, even at the time when he had been seeking a successor to
+Bedford, an obscure diplomatist, Sir Thomas Robinson. 'Had I,' he had
+written in September 1750, 'to chuse for the King, the public, and
+myself, I would prefer Sir Thomas Robinson to any man living. I know he
+knows more and would be more useful to the country and me than any other
+can be.' This opinion seems to have been confined to the Duke himself.
+Horace Walpole writing at the moment says:--'The German Sir Thomas
+Robinson was thought on for the Secretary's seals; but has just sense
+enough to be unwilling to accept them under so ridiculous an
+administration. This is the first act of the comedy.' But in the second
+act Sir Thomas's good sense was unequal even to this strain, and he
+accepted the post. Under what hallucination he laboured, or whether he
+was merely beguiled by the fawning caresses of Newcastle, it is
+difficult to say. The fact remains that he undertook to lead the House
+of Commons, seated between Pitt and Fox, whom he knew to be malcontents,
+and capable of anything. His own parliamentary powers were in the egg
+(for he had never spoken), and were never destined to be hatched. At the
+time of his appointment as Secretary of State he was Master of the Great
+Wardrobe, a congenial post which he was destined during the next year to
+resume. For in his new capacity he justified the anticipations of his
+enemies, and disturbed the equanimity of his friends. Newcastle himself
+had recommended the appointment to Pitt's benevolent consideration on
+the very ground that he could not excite the rivalry of existing
+orators. He 'had not those parliamentary talents which could give
+jealousy or in that light set him above the rest of the King's
+servants.' But the reality was far below these modest anticipations. Sir
+Thomas was not merely ineffectual and feeble, but would attempt on
+occasion agonising flights of eloquence. Posterity is spared the perusal
+of these, for Parliamentary history records no word of this unhappy
+leader. 'Sir Thomas,' says Lord Waldegrave, 'though a good Secretary of
+State, as far as the business of his office and that which related to
+foreign affairs, was ignorant even of the language of an House of
+Commons controversy; and when he played the orator, which he too
+frequently attempted, it was so exceedingly ridiculous that those who
+loved and esteemed him could not always preserve a friendly composure of
+countenance.' This partly arose from his appearance. He was a large
+unwieldy man, and would in debate put his arms straight out, which made
+George Selwyn compare him to a signpost.[255]
+
+Such was Sir Thomas; who was to allay the warring elements, to appease
+the Titans and the Giants, to hold the scales between Fox and Pitt. Let
+us, while contemplating this grievous and pathetic spectacle, at least
+take comfort that we have arrived at the priceless narrative of Lord
+Waldegrave, a man not brilliant, but shrewd and honest, who guides us
+past the waspish partiality of Horace Walpole, the bitterness of Glover,
+and the corrupt cynicism of Dodington with a light which we feel to be
+the lamp of truth. Newcastle, delighted with the consent of Sir Thomas,
+and with the apparent acquiescence of Fox, hastened to complete his
+arrangements with the squalid instinct of a jobber. Fox was, he thought,
+muzzled; the formidable task remained of silencing Pitt. He could not
+satisfy Pitt directly, for that would imply overwhelming difficulties
+with the King, and perhaps with Fox; but he might give indirect
+satisfaction, and detach some of Pitt's little section. In this last
+attempt he succeeded. Pitt's friend Legge was made Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, the King only making the same condition that he had with
+regard to Pitt himself, that he was never to receive the new minister.
+It is said, indeed, by Horace Walpole that his mean appearance and
+uncouth dialect made him unsuitable for such audiences, and that he
+would have preferred to remain Treasurer of the Navy, the lucrative post
+which had so great a fascination for Bubb. George Grenville, one of the
+Cobham Cousinhood, succeeded Legge in this attractive office; George
+Lyttelton, another, became Cofferer, with his brother as Sub-Cofferer;
+'it is a good Ł2200 per annum, all taxes deducted,'[256] writes George
+of his new post in the fulness of his heart; and, according to Horace
+Walpole, in the exuberance of his satisfaction with that office, he
+vouched for Pitt's acquiescence in the new arrangements. Newcastle
+himself presented these appointments to Pitt with a satisfaction not
+unalloyed with melancholy presentiments. 'The appointment of Mr. Legge
+was made,' he writes, 'with a view to please all our friends. We knew he
+was well with the old corps, we knew he was happy in your friendship,
+and in your good opinion and in that of your connection; _and you must
+allow me to say, that I never could have thought one moment of removing
+you, in the high light which you so justly stand, from the office you
+now possess to be Chancellor of the Exchequer with another person at the
+head of the Treasury_.'[257]
+
+It is perhaps scarcely necessary to explain that the italics are not the
+Duke's, but it seemed necessary to give emphasis to so daring a flight.
+
+'These dispositions being thus made,' he continues, 'it was my first
+view to show you that regard in the person of your friends, which it was
+impossible to do in your own, to the degree which you might reasonably
+expect. The two first vacant offices, that of Treasurer of the Navy and
+Cofferer, were by my recommendation given to your two first friends, Mr.
+Grenville and Sir George Lyttelton,' etc. etc. 'Legge at the Exchequer,
+unsuitable for you, two of your friends as Cofferer and Treasurer';
+these were the sedatives timidly launched to Pitt, gnashing his teeth
+at Bath over his own impotence and the desertion of his friends. So may
+a despairing traveller have attempted to assuage with a few casual
+comfits the hunger of a Bengal tiger crouching for a spring.
+
+Pitt controlled himself. We have seen his reply[258] to Newcastle's
+shuffling apologies. He continued to write to Lyttelton, but with less
+cordiality. To George Grenville he wrote a tepid note of congratulation.
+To Temple, who had been omitted from the arrangements, he addressed
+himself more cordially, and sent the portrait for which he had been
+sitting to Hoare. It represents no formidable orator, but a simpering
+man of the world; yet, after the fashion of mankind, who secretly
+cherish the portraits least like themselves, Pitt commended the
+resemblance. But he took occasion to add a phrase which reveals the full
+bitterness of his heart. 'In this portrait,' he writes, 'I shall have
+had the honour to present myself before you in my very person; not only
+from the great likeness of the portrait, but, moreover, that I have no
+right to pretend to any other existence than that of a man en peinture.'
+The wrath pierces through the confused sentence like a sudden sting: it
+is not often indulged, but it cannot be wholly suppressed.
+
+Soon afterwards (May 1754) Temple and his brother George paid Pitt a
+flying visit at Bath, where no doubt explanations were exchanged and
+plans concerted. For, putting Pitt on one side, the Minister knew little
+of human nature who could think that he would conciliate Temple by
+promoting his brother George.
+
+In June 1754, Pitt at length left Bath and arrived in London. He had
+now been fourteen months absent from the metropolis. In the meantime he
+had been chosen for Newcastle's borough of Aldborough at the General
+Election in the previous April, a somewhat embarrassing connection under
+existing circumstances; though embarrassments of this kind are apt to be
+less irksome in politics than they may appear. And Pitt wrote to thank
+the Duke in terms of Oriental submission. 'I thank you for writing to
+tell me of the great honour you have done me at Aldborough, for which
+seat I declined the offer of many others, being anxious to be known as
+your servant.' With whatever grimace Pitt may have written this, it
+strikes one as carrying the joke too far.[259]
+
+But when he returned to London in June, he no longer affected to conceal
+his discontent. His complaints were obvious and well founded enough. He
+had not been consulted, but had only been informed. Nor was the
+information calculated to gratify him. He had been told at first that
+Fox, whom Bubb at this time calls Pitt's 'inveterate enemy,' had been
+offered the seals; then by the next post that Fox had refused them and
+that they had been accepted by Robinson. The excuse had then been
+tendered that Pitt's health would not allow him to accept an office of
+so much business and fatigue; to which he had replied that he himself
+should be the best judge of that. He ought at least to have been offered
+the Exchequer, which had been given to the underling Legge.[260] The
+King in any case should have been reconciled to him. When he saw the new
+minister Newcastle asked him his opinion of the arrangements. This Pitt
+at first refused to give, but on being pressed declared that 'your Grace
+may be surprised, but I think Mr. Fox should have been at the head of
+the House of Commons.' He met Fox. They had mutual explanations, and no
+doubt assurances of common vengeance to exchange. For Fox was as loud in
+complaint as Pitt. 'Nothing,' he wrote, 'can be more contemptuous than
+the usage I receive.'[261]
+
+Parliament had risen, so Pitt, after settling the arrears in his office,
+went back to the country. Early in September we find him at Astrop
+Wells. On October 2 he called on Newcastle with reference to some
+business in his office. Bubb's account of this interview is well known.
+When they had settled the business which had brought Pitt, the Duke
+wished to enter on affairs in North America, where things were looking
+black, and Washington, then a major, had been compelled to surrender to
+the French at Fort Necessity. 'Your Grace,' said Pitt, 'knows I have no
+capacity for such things,' and declined to discuss them.[262] Newcastle,
+who, the same day, wrote an account of the interview to Hardwicke, makes
+no mention of this incident. And yet it is too good, too Pitt-like, not
+to be true. We can reconcile the two statements by presuming that it was
+what an opening is to a game of chess, and that Pitt, having enjoyed his
+sarcasm, could not resist the appeal of military plans. 'I then
+acquainted him with what was designed for North America, and also with
+my Lord Granville's notions, which had not been followed. He talked up
+the affair of North America very highly--that it must be supported in
+all events and at all risks--that the Duke's scheme was a very good one
+as far as it went--that it might do something: that it did not go near
+far enough--that he could not help agreeing with my Lord Granville--that
+he was for doing both, sending the regiments and raising some thousand
+men in America--that we should do it once for all--that it was not to be
+done by troops from Europe--that mere France would be too strong for
+us--that we should have soon to countenance the Americans, &c.--that the
+Duke's proposals for artillery, &c., were infinitely too short. This
+discourse, joined with Lord Anson's opinion, has made me suspend at
+least the stopping the orders for the raising two regiments, &c., and
+for providing all the artillery promised by the Duke.'[263]
+
+What a scene of confusion! Here are three stages revealed: the orders,
+the stopping the orders, the suspending the stopping the orders! Pitt,
+it is evident, though beginning with a refusal, ended by speaking with
+authority.
+
+Hardwicke, however, who had made a merit to Pitt of having sustained his
+claim to be Secretary, waxed suspicious on receiving Newcastle's letter.
+'I am glad,' he replies, 'your Grace has talked to Mr. Pitt upon these
+measures. As he expressed himself so zealously and sanguinely for them,
+I hope he will support them in Parliament, and I dare say your Grace did
+not omit the opportunity of pressing that upon him. There is something
+remarkable in that gentleman's taking a measure of the Duke's so
+strongly to heart, and arguing even to carry it further. I think that
+sett used to be against warlike measures.'[264]
+
+Suspicion tainted every political breeze. The vigilant celibates in
+Cranford did not keep a closer watch on their neighbours' proceedings
+than did the public men of those days on each other. The mere fact of
+Pitt's commending a project of Cumberland, his former enemy, at once
+implied to Hardwicke that he was in harmony and understanding with Fox,
+Cumberland's right-hand man. And indeed Bubb assures us that this was
+the case. Fox and Pitt were agreed as to the division of the spoils,
+when spoils there should be. Fox was to be head of the Treasury and Pitt
+Secretary of State; 'but neither will assist the other.'
+
+All this came to nothing, and therefore need not detain us now; for Pitt
+was occupied with something far more vital to him than Fox, or
+Newcastle, or the distant echoes of American warfare. He had come up
+from Wotton, the residence of George Grenville, where in the last days
+of September he had plighted his troth to Lady Hester Grenville, the
+sister of the Grenvilles, and he was now hurrying back to join her at
+Stowe. The engagement was in some respects remarkable. Pitt was now
+forty-six and Lady Hester was thirty-three. When Pitt first went to
+Stowe in 1735 she was fourteen, and in the nineteen years that had
+elapsed they must have seen each other constantly. How was it then that
+the cripple of forty-six suddenly flung away his crutches to throw
+himself at the feet of this mature young lady? It seems inexplicable,
+but love affairs are often inexplicable. And we know little or nothing
+of Pitt's loves. Except the childish passage at Besançon, there is only
+the statement of Horace Walpole, a spiteful gossip if ever there was
+one, that Lady Archibald Hamilton had lost the affections of Frederick
+Prince of Wales by giving him Pitt as a rival.[265] This lacks
+confirmation and even probability. Were it true, it might be a clue to
+phases of Pitt's connection with Leicester House. He seems, too, as we
+have seen in a letter of Lyttelton's, to have had a tenderness for
+Lyttelton's sister Molly. Then there was another Molly, Molly West, with
+whom, it is said, he had been in love, the sister of his friend Gilbert,
+who afterwards married Admiral Hood, Lord Bridport. Want of means, we
+are told, prevented their union. But the authority for this is unknown
+to us.[266]
+
+This much at least is certain, that no man ever had a nobler or more
+devoted wife. She survived him to witness the glories and almost the
+death of her second son, dying in April 1808. At Orwell there is a
+picture of her by Gainsborough, painted in 1747, dressed in white with
+jewels, with a pleasant rather than a beautiful face. There is another
+portrait at Chevening painted in 1750, which represents her with auburn
+hair, a long upper lip, and a nose slightly turned up; comely and
+intelligent, but no more. Mrs. Montagu rather confirms this impression:
+'I believe Lady Hester Grenville is very good-humoured, which is the
+principal article in the happiness of the Marriage State. Beauty soon
+grows familiar to the lover,'[267] and so forth; from which we may infer
+that Lady Hester was not at any rate a reigning toast. Her appearances
+are rare but full of tenderness; she watched over her husband with
+exquisite devotion; furthering and anticipating his wishes, which were
+often fanciful and extravagant; shielding his moments of nervous
+prostration with the wings of an angel. On her rested often, if not
+always, the care of his affairs, often, if not always, disordered, and
+all the burdens of household management. For many months she was his
+sole channel of communication with the outer world. The wives of
+statesmen are not invariably successful, though they are generally
+devoted; but none was ever more absorbed in her high but harassing duty.
+In all the bitterness of that bitter time, when her husband seemed
+surrounded by implacable enmities, no one found a word to say against
+her. Pitt's choice seems to have been as wise as it was deliberate.
+
+Camelford, from whom the worst interpretation can always be obtained,
+says: 'His marriage was unexpected. He was no longer young, and his
+infirmities made him older than his years, when, upon a visit to Mr.
+Grenville at Wotton, Lady Hester made an impression upon him that was
+the more extraordinary as she was by no means new to him. The first
+hints he gave of his intentions were eagerly seized by her, saying she
+should be unworthy the honour he proposed to her if she could hesitate a
+moment in accepting it. With a very common understanding and totally
+devoid of tenderness, or of any feeling but pride and ambition, she
+contrived to make herself a good wife to him by a devotion and
+attachment that knew no bounds. She lived only in his glory, and that
+vanity absorbed every other idea of her mind. She was his nurse, his
+flatterer, his housekeeper and steward, and, though her talent was by no
+means economy, yet she could submit to any privation that would gratify
+his wants or his caprices. If he loved anyone it must be her who had no
+love but for him, or rather for his reputation. Yet I saw no sacrifices
+on his part for her ease and quiet or to the essential comforts of her
+life.'
+
+As to Lady Hester's having a 'very common understanding' and being
+'totally devoid of tenderness' we need not rest on tradition, though
+that is all the other way; for the superiority of her understanding and
+her tenderness are amply proved by the admirable letters published from
+the Pretyman Papers by Lord Ashbourne; and her devotion to her husband
+is attested by Camelford himself. How he became acquainted with the
+details of courtship, usually mysterious enough, and in those days more
+veiled than in these, we need not trouble to inquire. When it took place
+Pitt was taking time which he could ill spare to write letters of
+anxious and affectionate solicitude to Camelford at Cambridge, and
+receiving in return the most unbounded assurances of grateful devotion.
+
+Pitt's love letters, alas! survive; the treasures of his wife, but the
+despair of posterity. That a great genius presumably in love should send
+such stilted, pompous, artificial documents as tokens of his passion to
+the object of his affections is one of the mysteries of brain and heart.
+They are as wretched in their way as the letters of Burns to Clarinda,
+and shall not be quoted here.
+
+Having paid his betrothed a flying visit at Stowe, the blithe bridegroom
+had as usual to proceed to Bath, where he remained a fortnight inditing
+these execrable epistles of rhetorical affection.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+[Sidenote: 1754.]
+
+On November 14, the very day of the opening of Parliament, Pitt brought
+forward a bill for the relief of the Chelsea Pensioners, who, from
+receiving their pensions a year in arrear, fell inextricably into the
+hands of usurers. He was in haste to perform this useful duty, for on
+November 16 he was married by special licence to Lady Hester at Argyll
+Buildings, Dr. Ayscough officiating; and Solomon and Esther, as Lady
+Townshend called them, thence departed for the honeymoon to West's house
+of Wickham in Kent. That interval of seclusion did not last long, but it
+would seem to have effected a striking transformation. The marriage
+marks a new ascent in Pitt's career; love seemed to have transformed
+him; always powerful and eloquent, he became sublime. Into his former
+qualities there had passed an inspiration kindred to the divine passion
+which makes the poet. The timid warblers of the grove, as he was
+afterwards to call them, the politicians who sought quiet lives and safe
+places, the arch-jobber himself who had for years deluded him, were in
+an instant to realise that a new terror was added to life. For on
+November 25 he was once more in the House of Commons. At this time, just
+before or just after the meeting of Parliament, he had come to open
+words with Newcastle. The Duke had offered the usual palliatives.
+'Fewer words, if you please, my Lord,' replied Pitt contemptuously, 'for
+your words have long lost all weight with me.' Fox had said much the
+same to Newcastle in March. The new Minister had therefore been grossly
+insulted by the two first men in the House of Commons. He must have felt
+that there were menacing symptoms in the political horizon. It is
+strange, therefore, to find Walpole writing that, as 'Newcastle had
+secured by employments almost every material speaker in Parliament,' it
+was hoped that the session might pass in settling election
+petitions.[268]
+
+It seems incredible that the Duke can have so flattered himself. But no
+doubt he relied on two main considerations. One was that, though
+official discipline was then incomparably more lax than now, it was
+scarcely possible for Pitt or Fox to mean mischief so long as they kept
+their places, and these they had not resigned. The other was this. The
+General Election had just been conducted under his auspices, and had
+returned a House of Commons devoted to himself. Indeed in all England
+there were only forty-two contests. In some Continental countries a
+general election always returns a ministerial majority; there are
+mysteries connected with the proceeding of which only ministers have the
+key. This to some extent was the case in England at this period; and no
+Secretary of the Treasury, no Martin or Robinson, understood his
+particular business better than Newcastle. But whatever his illusions,
+they were soon destined to be disturbed, for on November 25 Pitt opened
+fire on him. Of that famous scene and outburst we are fortunate enough
+to possess two brilliant descriptions: one by Horace Walpole, and one,
+even more graphic, which has the additional value of being written by
+Pitt's rival, Henry Fox. Fox, writing in a white heat of generous
+admiration, describes it summarily as 'the finest speech that ever Pitt
+spoke, and perhaps the most remarkable.' This last epithet was probably
+due to the fact that the speech was apparently made on the spur of the
+moment. The occasion was one of those election petitions on which the
+Duke had relied as a sedative and a pastime for his faithful Commons.
+Wilkes, the pleasant, worthless demagogue, who was afterwards to cause
+so much trouble, had petitioned against the return of Delaval, the
+sitting member for Berwick. Delaval had defended his seat in a speech
+full of wit and buffoonery, which kept the House in a roar of laughter;
+much the same speech, one would guess, that Pitt himself had delivered
+on the proceedings at his own election for Seaford when those were
+attacked. But to-day he was in a different mood, and, as the debate
+proceeded, came down from the gallery where he was seated, and
+intervened with a frown. He was 'astonished to hear this merriment when
+such a matter was concerned. Was the dignity of the House on so sure a
+foundation that we could afford to shake it with scoffs?' In an instant
+the House was cowed into silence, like schoolboys found in fault by
+their master. You could have heard a pin drop as he continued.
+
+'Had it not, on the contrary, been diminishing for years, till now we
+were brought to the very brink of a precipice where, if ever, a stand
+must be made? Were we ourselves within the House to try and lessen that
+dignity when such attacks were made upon it from without that it was
+almost lost? On the contrary, it wanted support, for it was scarcely
+possible to recover it.' He appealed to the Speaker (Onslow) with
+profuse compliments, for the Speaker only could restore it--yet scarcely
+even he. Then he eloquently adjured all Whigs to rally and unite in
+defence of their liberties, which were attacked, nay, dying, 'unless,'
+he passionately added, 'you will degenerate into a little assembly
+serving no other purpose than to register the arbitrary edicts of _one_
+too-powerful _subject_;' laying an emphasis on the words 'one' and
+'subject' that might well send a shudder to the soul of Newcastle, when
+the echo should reach him. He ended by a recapitulation as to 'our being
+likely to become an appendix to--I know not what: I have no name for
+it.' 'All,' adds Fox, 'whether pleased or displeased, declare this speech
+to be the finest that ever was made.'[269] The effect of this sudden
+menace in the midst of the Duke's comfortable arrangements to appease
+and silence everybody, was appalling. It came with the shattering effect
+of a shell, and a shell falling in some quiet picnic. The Ministers were
+in consternation; every member sat confounded. Murray, pale and
+miserable, shrunk his head in silence. Wilkes used to narrate his dread,
+as he heard the awful tone of Pitt's exordium, lest the thunder that he
+saw was gathering should fall on him. Never, he said, when at
+Westminster School had he felt greater terror when summoned for a
+flogging, never when let off a greater relief than on this occasion;
+terror when uncertain where the bolt would fall, relief when he found it
+was destined for another.[270] Fox himself only came in as Pitt was
+finishing, just in time to witness the devastation which had been
+caused. Legge, on the part of the Government, had to rise and humbly
+deprecate the wrath of the orator.
+
+Pitt allowed no respite. On the same evening a discussion arose as to
+the dates on which the various petitions would be taken. That relating
+to Reading was fixed for a particular day, and that for Colchester on a
+day soon afterwards. Pitt moved the postponement of the Colchester
+petition; as the Reading one would take time, and concerned a noble
+lord, Lord Fane, for whom he had a particular regard. A malignant fate
+here tempted the new Secretary of State to a needless and unhappy
+intervention. He declared that the Reading petition would be a short
+case, and, so far as concerned the sitting member, a poor case; that
+Lord Fane had only a majority of one.
+
+This gave Pitt his opportunity, and he soundly trounced the unfortunate
+Minister. What did Sir Thomas know about it? It was ignorant presumption
+to lay down the law about a case which had not been heard. If this was
+the method of the Minister, there would be short work with elections. He
+himself had little thought to see so melancholy a day as this, but he
+was not to be taught his duty by Sir Thomas or any one else. Sir Thomas
+replied, 'with pomp, confusion, and warmth,' to deprecate the misleading
+effects of mere eloquence. He hoped that words would not be allowed more
+than their due weight. For his own part, he was performing the duties of
+an office which he had never desired. Pitt in his rejoinder affected to
+believe this last statement, with the unkind commentary that if anybody
+else had wished for the post, Sir Thomas would not have had it. Then,
+artfully cooling down, he showed that he was only aiming at Newcastle,
+for he professed the highest respect for Sir Thomas with this cruel,
+backhand blow at the Duke, 'that he thought him, Sir Thomas, as able as
+any man that had of late years filled that office, or was likely to fill
+it.' Fox could no longer resist joining in the sport of baiting his
+hapless leader. He also could only explain and excuse Sir Thomas's
+pronouncing hastily and summarily on a case which he had not heard by
+his long residence abroad, and by his consequent and total inexperience
+of parliamentary matters.
+
+It was clear that neither of the formidable lieutenants was in the least
+appeased, or likely to contribute to the tranquillity of the session.
+Still it was also clear that the members of the House were loyal to
+Newcastle and his deputy, and that they were not moved from their
+allegiance by the oratory to which they had listened. But when the
+display was over, the frightened ministerialists gathered into small
+groups whispering their terrors to each other. Pitt's fury breaking out
+at this moment might be due, thought Fox, in some measure to accident.
+'But break out I knew it would. And the Duke of Newcastle may thank
+himself for the violence of it (he) having ... owned to Pitt that he had
+acquainted the King with part of their last conversation; adding, like
+an idiot, "to do you good, to do you good," and that he had not
+mentioned that part which could do him harm.'[271] We do not know what
+is the interview to which this refers; it can hardly be that which
+occurred at the beginning of October in which Pitt had said, 'Your
+Grace, I suppose, knows that I have no capacity for such things.' So we
+are at a loss to know the immediate cause of Pitt's outbreak, though no
+divination is required to know that ever since Pelham's death he had
+been explosive.
+
+Nothing can better illustrate the extraordinary power which Newcastle
+wielded in the House of Commons than the dumb terrified fidelity of the
+great majority who clung to his knees in spite of the attacks of Pitt
+and Fox. Hapless majority! They had neither voice nor faith; they
+despised almost equally their nominal chief Robinson, and their real
+chief Newcastle; so they huddled together for warmth and sympathy. And
+this was a House of Commons produced by a general election carried on
+under the auspices of a consummate manipulator and by long years of
+cozening, patronage, and corruption. The success had been complete, a
+devoted and passive majority had been returned, and this was the result.
+It was a strange and instructive spectacle. This docile flock was
+shepherdless, it was not thought to need any superintendence, it had
+only to receive its instructions from Newcastle through the channel of
+some such agent as Robinson. What Newcastle thought well to give, it was
+prepared gladly to take. Could Minister want more? Yet, before the
+session was a fortnight old, Newcastle was to learn, but not completely,
+the futility of such a scheme of government. He had promised the King
+that the new House of Commons would need no leader, that indeed the
+position of leader of the House of Commons was both dangerous in power
+and superfluous in practice. He was yet to learn that there was
+something more formidable; a ship without captain or helmsman, and two
+loose cannon banging about at large.
+
+For, two days after the annihilation of Robinson, Pitt again took the
+field, this time against Murray, the most formidable antagonist that he
+ever had to face after the resignation of Walpole. It was on the vote
+for the army. Barrington and Nugent had made fulsome speeches, dwelling
+on the popularity of the King and the Ministry, declaring, indeed, that
+there were no Jacobites in England. People, said Nugent, sometimes
+reared those whom they thought would be Jacobites, but who turned out
+very differently. So had he seen in his rural retirement a hen, which
+had hatched duck's eggs, watch with apprehension her nurslings betake
+themselves to the water. Pitt rose and declared with solemn pleasantry
+that this image had greatly struck him, 'for, sir, I know of such a
+hen.' The hen, it appeared, was the University of Oxford. This, we
+think, in its demure unexpectedness, is the best stroke of humour in all
+his speeches. But he begged the House not to be sure that all she
+hatched would ever entirely forget what she had taught them. Then
+followed an innuendo at old Horace Walpole which is immaterial and
+obscure. Sir Roger Newdigate, whose name is still cherished by budding
+poets, rose, as member for the University, to make a meek defence. Pitt
+rose again, and told 'inimitably' the story of a recent adventure at
+Oxford. He was with a party at the Angel Inn, one of whom was asked to
+sing 'God save Great George our King' (one can hardly imagine that it
+was Pitt who called for this). The chorus was re-echoed by
+undergraduates outside who had been attracted by the song, 'but with
+additions of the rankest treason.' Then walking down the High Street he
+examined a print in a shop window of a young Highlander in a blue
+ribbon, and was shocked to read the motto _Hunc saltem everso Juvenem_.
+This Latin prayer was a flagrant proof of the disloyalty of that learned
+body. 'In both speeches every word was _Murray_; yet so managed that
+neither he nor anybody else could or did take public notice of it, or in
+any degree reprehend him. I,' it is Henry Fox who speaks, 'sate next
+Murray, _who suffered for an hour_.'[272] Two episodes seem to attach
+themselves to this terrible onslaught. One is the famous and dramatic
+menace. Fixing his eyes on Murray the orator paused and proceeded: 'I
+must now address a few words to Mr. Solicitor.--They shall be few, but
+they shall be daggers.' Murray's agitation was now visible. 'Judge
+Festus trembles,' thundered Pitt; 'well, he shall hear me some other
+day,' and sat down.[273] Murray could not muster a reply. We may be sure
+that he then mentally resolved that, whether Festus or not, he would be
+a Judge as soon as possible. Yet Granville had embraced him that very
+day and bid him pluck up resolution. The other episode is this. Foote
+went with Murphy (afterwards Editor of the 'Test') to hear Pitt, who
+happened to be putting forth his full powers in an attack on Murray.
+'Shall we go home now?' asked Murphy at last. 'No,' replied Foote, 'let
+us wait till he has made the little man vanish entirely.'[274]
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 27, 1754.]
+
+The plan of ignoring the House of Commons and keeping all power in a
+junto of two or three, or even one, was already breaking down. 'It is
+the universal opinion,' writes Fox, in the same letter as that in which
+he describes Pitt's onslaught on Murray, 'that business cannot go on as
+things are now, and that offers will be made to Pitt or me. On this
+subject Pitt was with me two hours yesterday morning. A difficult
+conversation.' Difficult indeed, for both parties fenced with each
+other, and neither was sincere. Pitt had long distrusted Fox and his
+connection with Cumberland. We have seen that in March he was writing
+confidentially that he wished 'to see as little power in Fox's hand as
+possible,' and again in the same letter, 'Fox is too odious to last for
+ever.' On the other hand, Fox, who was genial but ignoble, was
+determined to take the best place that offered, with a secret leaning to
+the lucrative possibilities of Pitt's office. Fox was not in error as to
+the offers. He wrote on November 28, and on November 29 Newcastle was
+beginning to seek assistance. On that morning the King sent for Fox and
+treated him with friendly confidence. It then appeared that the royal
+leaning towards Fox was caused by the King's having found out that
+Frederick Prince of Wales had made overtures to Fox, who had rejected
+them, but had not divulged them for the purpose of paying court to the
+King.[275]
+
+The object of the Court was to separate Fox and Pitt. This last,
+doubtful and suspicious, had at first assured the Chancellor and
+Newcastle that he would not league with Fox. This was probably the
+secret of the Minister's confidence. But when Pitt realised that the
+Duke was trading on the division between his two formidable auxiliaries
+he sought, or appeared to seek, an honest and hearty co-operation with
+his rival.[276]
+
+'Could you bear to act under Fox?' Hardwicke had asked him, and 'Leave
+out _under_; it will never be a word between us: Mr. Fox and I shall
+never quarrel,' had been the reply.
+
+Alas! for the loves of statesmen, often ardent and always precarious.
+The vague bait was no sooner dangled before Fox than he began to eye it
+with avidity and to contemplate the abandonment of Pitt. He sought the
+advice of two friends, Cumberland and Marlborough. The last advised him
+to ask for admission to the Cabinet and to be satisfied with that
+advantage. Cumberland dissuaded him, as it would seem, from parting
+company with Pitt, and used these remarkable words: 'I don't know him,
+but by what you tell me, Pitt is what is scarce--he is a man.' But at
+last both dukes concurred in Marlborough's advice, with the proviso that
+Fox should make it a condition that he was not to oppose Pitt; a
+singular reservation when it is remembered that his help was only sought
+against Pitt, as he was soon made distinctly to understand. Fox
+apparently took Pitt into his confidence, and they exchanged cordial
+notes. He submitted to Pitt his letter to the King, and Pitt approved it
+with some omissions. Nothing must be said, he declared, which remotely
+implied that he would do the least thing to keep his place.[277] So Fox
+wrote to say that, understanding the King was determined to have no
+leader in the House of Commons, but wished to have him take a forward
+and spirited part on behalf of the Ministry, he desired some mark of his
+Majesty's favour to show that he enjoyed his Majesty's confidence.
+Waldegrave, who conducted the negotiation, was given to understand that
+the distinction aimed at was a seat in the Cabinet. He was further told
+that Fox would never accept Pitt's rich place, which the King had said
+was destined for him in the event of Pitt's dismissal, lest it be said
+that he was answering Pitt for money. So the stipulation about not
+opposing Pitt was already out of his contemplation. The negotiations
+extended over months. The King had first seen Fox on November 29, 1754,
+but did not signify to Fox his admission to the Cabinet till April 26,
+1755, two days before his Majesty left for Hanover. Fox was also
+admitted to the Council of Regency during the King's absence.
+
+During these months of negotiation his opposition to the Ministry
+ceased, and Pitt was left alone. But he communicated constantly and
+secretly with Pitt as to the offers made. When he had closed with them,
+without waiting for the cock to crow, he forswore Pitt.[278] He was no
+doubt made to understand distinctly, as he must always have known, that
+it was the condition of his elevation. This treachery cost him dear; for
+Pitt, who seems to have been at once apprised of the desertion, probably
+by a Minister whose interest it was to keep the two apart, never forgave
+it. Nor could a man much less irritably and jealously proud have done
+otherwise. So much for the question of honour. As to the question of
+policy it is clear that a real union between Pitt and himself would have
+been irresistible. But Fox at the first temptation forsook this
+honourable alliance, and forsook it for a feather, as the lure was
+justly described.
+
+It should be mentioned that this account of Fox's behaviour is founded
+on the narrative of Horace Walpole, and that Waldegrave, who is far
+more trustworthy, says that 'Fox during the whole negotiation behaved
+like a man of sense and a man of honour.' But this only regards his
+negotiation with Newcastle, in which Waldegrave acted as the channel.
+Walpole, on the other hand, was notoriously partial to Fox, and in his
+confidence, so that his statement may be taken as accurate. In no other
+way, indeed, can the breach between the two statesmen be adequately
+explained. On April 26 they are on the most confidential footing. On May
+9 there is a public rupture. Fox, indeed, attributes this sudden breach
+to Pitt's wish to be well at Leicester House; but then Fox had to find
+an ostensible reason, as he did not know that Pitt was aware of his
+desertion.
+
+[Sidenote: Apr. 27, 1755.]
+
+The day after the admission of Fox to the Cabinet, Newcastle despatched
+old Horace Walpole to Pitt to see if they could not come to terms. Old
+Horace, who has suffered from the constant malignity of his nephew, but
+who appears to have been a laborious and public-spirited man, with a not
+uncommon itch for a coronet, undertook the commission with alacrity; but
+found, as all did who attempted to negotiate for Newcastle, that his
+powers were far from ample, and shrunk from the moment that they were
+given. It is probable that these overtures were only made in consequence
+of some secret agreement between Fox and Pitt that Pitt's claims should
+be pushed; for it is otherwise inexplicable that they should have been
+made simultaneously with the capture of Fox, and that Newcastle on the
+slenderest grounds should at once have withdrawn the commission. The
+hypothesis of a sham negotiation, entered upon to keep to the letter of
+some understanding arrived at through Fox, is highly congenial to the
+character of Newcastle; nor is it likely that Fox can have joined the
+Government, when in the closest communication with Pitt, without some
+such stipulation.
+
+Whatever the nature of the overture may have been, Pitt received
+Walpole, with whom he was on cordial terms, not unfavourably. He
+stipulated that he should be admitted to the Cabinet, but not, it would
+appear, immediately (for the King was going abroad next day); and that
+in case of a vacancy he should be promised the seals of Secretary of
+State. No one could deem these conditions excessive, and Walpole
+approved them. But Newcastle would have none of them, and soundly rated
+his emissary. It is clear that the negotiation was illusory and unreal;
+for what less terms could Newcastle have expected Pitt to demand?[279]
+
+[Sidenote: May 9, 1755.]
+
+A fortnight afterwards Pitt went to Lord Hillsborough's, where he met
+Fox. When Fox had gone he declared that all was at an end between Fox
+and himself; that the ground was altered; Fox was a Regent and a Cabinet
+Minister, and he was left isolated. Fox returned, and Pitt, in great
+heat, repeated what he had said with even more violence. He would not
+accept the seals from Fox (this seems to confirm our hypothesis as to
+the sham negotiation through Walpole), for that would be to acknowledge
+a superiority and an obligation. 'What, then,' said Fox, 'would put us
+on an equality?' 'A winter in the Cabinet and a summer's Regency,'
+replied Pitt, in allusion to what Fox had accepted.
+
+Next day Hillsborough expostulated with Pitt, who, however, remained
+unmoved, and begged him to convey as a message to Fox that all
+connection between them was at an end. Pitt added that though he
+esteemed Fox he wished to have no further conversation on this subject.
+In spite of this, during the next few days they had a further conference
+at Holland House, but with no better result.[280]
+
+On this second occasion (May 12, 1755) Pitt formally declared their
+connection at an end. Fox asked if Pitt suspected him of ill faith in
+the recent negotiations. Pitt, on his honour, held him blameless.
+'Then,' asked Fox, 'are our lines incompatible?' 'Not incompatible, but
+convergent,' a word that Fox professed not to understand. In the future
+it was possible they might act together, not now. On this or some
+proximate occasion, Pitt blurted out what was at least one cause of
+offence. 'Here is the Duke of Cumberland King and you his minister.' The
+Duke, like Fox himself, was only an ordinary member of the Council of
+Regency, so that Pitt's taunt was absurd. But Pitt was looking to the
+young court of Leicester House which detested and distrusted Cumberland;
+hence this outburst of jealousy and wrath. Pitt indeed, the day before,
+had seen the Princess of Wales; who, it was presumed, had insisted on an
+open and immediate rupture with Fox as the price of her support. But
+beneath all there was we think, in spite of all professions, undying
+suspicion of Fox's rectitude in the recent negotiation with
+Newcastle.[281]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+It was soon clear to Newcastle that Fox after all might not suffice, and
+that Pitt must be again approached. The King, then in Hanover and beyond
+Newcastle's control, was negotiating new treaties of subsidy on behalf
+of his German dominions; one with Hesse-Cassel for a contingent of
+12,000 men to act in defence of Hanover or Great Britain, the other with
+Russia for an army of 40,000 men for the defence of Hanover. It was
+terrible for the Duke to contemplate what Pitt might say and do with
+regard to such unpopular and indefensible instruments. Moreover, Pitt
+was now supported by the court, every day more and more important, of
+Leicester House. It was probably Hardwicke, who as the moving brain of
+the Cabinet saw the vital importance of securing Pitt, and who was, we
+think, sincerely favourable to Pitt's pretensions, if only from hatred
+of Fox, who suggested these negotiations; and it was his son Charles
+Yorke who entered upon them. Yorke was to act as a skirmisher, to get in
+touch with Pitt, and to report on the temper in which he found him. They
+met on July 6 (1755), and talked over the abortive conference with
+Walpole. Pitt declared that he had then waived the immediate bestowal of
+the Secretaryship of State, but had asked not merely that Newcastle
+should speak on his behalf before the King left for Hanover, and urge
+that he was the proper person to lead the debates in the House of
+Commons; but that Lady Yarmouth should also be interested in his cause,
+so that she might use her influence with the King during their stay
+abroad.
+
+Of Newcastle himself he spoke with supreme disdain. It was a waste of
+time to bring him assurances of friendship and confidence from
+Newcastle. All that was over. He would never owe Newcastle a favour, he
+would accept nothing as an obligation to Newcastle. This is not in
+Yorke's account, because probably it would be shown to Newcastle. But it
+comes authentically enough from Pitt's brother-in-law, James Grenville,
+to Bubb. If Newcastle were really in earnest, he would say that he could
+listen to no proposition but this: 'This is our policy; and the post of
+Secretary of State, in which you shall support it, is destined for you.'
+
+Yorke reported to his father, and Hardwicke saw Pitt on August 8 (1755),
+with power to offer a seat in the Cabinet. After compliments, to use
+Eastern language, which were usually the preface of such interviews, in
+which both parties assured each other of high mutual esteem, which Pitt
+went so far on this occasion as to declare for Newcastle, in strange
+contrast with his language to Yorke, they came at once to the point.
+Before he could take what was required, 'a clear, active, and cordial
+part in support of the King's measures in the House of Commons,' Pitt
+desired to know what those measures might be. Hardwicke at once
+specified them. 'Twas all open and above board; the support of the
+maritime and American war, in which we were going to be engaged, and the
+defence of the King's German dominions, if attacked on account of the
+English cause. The maritime and American war he came roundly into, tho'
+very orderly, and allowed the principle and obligation of honour and
+justice as to the other, but argued strongly as to the practicability of
+it. That subsidiary treaties would not go down; the nation could not
+hear' (obviously 'bear') them. That they were a connection and a chain,
+and would end in a general plan for the Continent which the country
+would (obviously 'could') not possibly support.' Then he went into
+financial considerations. The maritime and American war would alone add
+two millions a year to the National Debt, which could not bear an
+addition of one million. He would treat Hanover like any other foreign
+dependency of the British Crown; the worst that could happen was that it
+should be occupied by the enemy for a time and restored at a peace, and
+that then compensation might be given to the King. As to the subsidies,
+Hessian and Russian, he asked questions but did not commit himself. But
+he inquired, with peculiar emphasis, what others, such as Fox, Legge,
+Lee, and Egmont, thought of them. At last he said he must consult his
+friends, one of whom, Legge, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, he was
+about to visit. But why, asked Hardwicke, should he not see Newcastle
+himself? 'With all my heart, if he would see me,' replied Pitt. To the
+offer of a seat in the Cabinet he said neither yea nor nay, but he was,
+thought Hardwicke, gratified by the overture.[282]
+
+One cannot but note the strange contrast between Pitt's language about
+Newcastle to Hardwicke and that which he had used to Yorke. 'He
+expressed great regard for your Grace and me.' But this was the base
+coinage in political use at that time, and Pitt had by this time become
+a master of dissimulation. Fox hated Newcastle to the full as much as
+did Pitt. In truth, every one seems to have secretly hated or despised
+him, or both; a melancholy reward for an industrious ministerial
+existence. But so great was his political influence that scarce any one
+could afford to say so.
+
+One Minister was now, however, to display a rare courage, and to oppose
+both the King and his Minister on a critical point. In the middle of
+August, after the conversation with Hardwicke, the treaty of subsidy
+with Hesse-Cassel arrived for the necessary confirmations. When it came
+before Legge as Chancellor of the Exchequer, he, no doubt with the
+connivance of Pitt, flatly refused his signature. Newcastle had always
+distrusted Legge, as, indeed, he distrusted everybody, and had given him
+the seals of the Exchequer with great reluctance. He was now aghast. War
+was imminent; the King would soon return with his pockets full of odious
+treaties of subsidy; Fox was still a malcontent; Legge was in open
+revolt; it was evident that he must face the formidable interview with
+Pitt. So he expressed the necessary wish, though one may guess his
+reluctance, and Pitt saw the Duke on September 2 (1755) for two hours
+and a half. The record of this interview is contained in a long letter
+from Newcastle to Hardwicke,[283] couched in the quavering notes of a
+distracted Minister. It begins with a wail of despair, the reluctant
+acknowledgment of the paramount importance of Pitt. 'I never sat down to
+write to your lordship with more melancholy apprehensions for the
+Publick than at present. I see nothing but confusion and it is beyond me
+to point out a remedy.'
+
+This was the result of Pitt's verbal refusal to join him, made by a
+Minister who held the great mass of the House of Commons in the hollow
+of his hand, who clung to office as to life, and yet, though he knew
+Pitt was indispensable to its retention, would not once more, as in
+1746, face his Sovereign and say so. Nothing can better illustrate the
+trembling plank on which the Duke was content to walk, wavering and
+helpless, depending only on Hardwicke's counsel and his own jobs. He did
+not dare face the King, he was bullied by the disorderly chiefs in the
+House of Commons, and he was always chaffering, but always afraid. So he
+and his like are satisfied to bear the yoke for the semblance of power.
+
+All began smoothly between Pitt and the Duke, all was apparently open,
+friendly, and civil; but when Newcastle referred to the conversation
+with Hardwicke, he was taken aback by finding that Pitt declared that
+nothing had passed that was material. He thus compelled Newcastle to
+recapitulate the points of policy, no doubt for purposes of comparison.
+
+So the Duke had to state that the eve of the King's departure had been
+too troubled to lay Pitt's claim before his Majesty; for an address
+against the journey had been threatened in the House of Commons and
+actually proposed in the House of Lords. But that when alarming events
+had happened in America, Hardwicke and he had represented to the King
+the urgent necessity of forming a system in the House of Commons, which
+means, it may be presumed, abandoning the plan of conducting the House
+without a leader, and of enlisting Pitt as an active Minister there.
+That thereupon the King had graciously expressed his readiness to admit
+Pitt to his Cabinet. Pitt received this offer coolly, and proceeded at
+once to larger issues.
+
+As to the King's voyage he spoke with unsparing candour. The King had
+nearly ruined himself by his unpardonable departure to Hanover at such a
+crisis. He should only have been allowed to go there over the dead
+bodies of his people. 'A King abroad at this time, without one man about
+him that has an English heart, and only returning to bring home a packet
+of subsidies.'
+
+Of course, he proceeded to say with scarcely disguised sarcasm, the
+King's countenance was more to him than any other consideration. But if
+it was expected that he should take an active and efficient part in
+Parliament he must observe that a mere summons to the Cabinet would not
+be sufficient. In his present office he could silently acquiesce in
+ministerial measures. But activity could only be exercised in a
+responsible situation.
+
+Then he took a line which was clear, bold, and statesmanlike. The whole
+machinery of the House of Commons was, he said, paralysed by the plan of
+leaving it without a responsible Minister. That plan must be abandoned.
+The House could not perform its proper functions without a responsible
+Minister, even though a subordinate one, who should have access to the
+Sovereign and to the royal confidence. For that purpose the leader or
+agent must have a responsible office of _advice_ as well as of
+_execution_. 'That was the distinction he made throughout his whole
+conversation. He would support the measures which he himself had
+advised, but would not like a lawyer talk from a brief. That it was
+better plainly to tell me so at first.'
+
+This surely was no inordinate claim from indisputably the first member
+of the House of Commons, whom the King had kept at bay for so many
+years, and to keep whom still in subjection every possible manoeuvre,
+childish or cunning, was being adopted. 'Why,' said he bluntly to
+Newcastle, 'cannot you bring yourself to part with some of your sole
+power?' This of course produced voluble asseverations from the Duke.
+Sole power! What an idea! He had no conception of what Pitt could mean.
+He was in his present place, not by his own choice, far from it! but by
+the King's command, and, though he was devoted to the King, he would
+retire to-morrow if he was distasteful to the House of Commons. (This
+was a safe promise, for, as we have seen, the House of Commons was with
+but few exceptions at his absolute disposal.) Pitt replied that he
+himself had no objections to a Peer as First Lord of the Treasury, but
+there must be men of ability and responsibility in the House of Commons,
+a Secretary of State and a Chancellor of the Exchequer, that they must
+be sufficiently supported, and they must have access to the Crown, not a
+nominal, but an habitual, free, familiar access. In speaking of the
+Chancellor of the Exchequer he burst out into so enthusiastic a eulogy
+of Legge, 'the child, and deservedly the favourite child of the Whigs,'
+that Newcastle suspected that all this was concerted between his
+rebellious Chancellor of the Exchequer and his insubordinate Paymaster.
+
+Pitt and the Duke next proceeded to analyse their own expressions; a
+task which the statesmen of that day seem to have avoided, to our
+detriment, as much as possible. Newcastle had spoken of the proposed
+seat in the Cabinet as a designation. 'What did this mean?' asked Pitt.
+'Did it mean the seals of Secretary of State, though not immediately?'
+The Duke was obliged to shuffle out, for in truth he had no power to
+promise any such thing. Designation only meant that the seat in the
+Cabinet would design him as the King's man of confidence. 'Then the
+Secretaryship of State is not intended,' was the fierce rejoinder. The
+Duke replied that he was not authorised to offer more than a seat in the
+Cabinet. If, rejoined Pitt, 'the Secretaryships of State are to remain
+as they are, there is an end of any question of my giving active support
+to the Government in the House of Commons.'
+
+They had arrived at an impassable barrier, Pitt would take nothing but
+the seals which the King would not give him, and Newcastle was
+determined not to force on another crisis with the King on account of
+Pitt; whom, in truth, he dreaded little less as a colleague than as a
+foe. So they turned to matters of public policy, 'and then,' writes the
+hapless Minister, 'nothing can equal my astonishment and concern.' He
+tried Pitt first with the Hessian Treaty, and then with the Russian. For
+the Hessian Treaty the Duke characteristically urged every reason but
+the true one, and for the Russian that it was the fruit of four years of
+negotiation, and that it would seem strange to drop it now. But Pitt was
+obdurate. He would be no party to a system of subsidies. If the Duke of
+Devonshire attacked the Hessian subsidy in the House of Lords, as was
+his intention, Pitt would echo the attack in the House of Commons. If
+the Russian Treaty were dropped he might acquiesce in the Hessian from
+regard for the King; as, for the same reason, he would always speak with
+the utmost respect of Hanover. But no consideration would make him
+support both, or a system of subsidies. It was his regard for the King,
+presumably, which impelled him to make a further suggestion, which
+Newcastle did not venture to transmit even to Hardwicke. Out of the
+fifteen millions sterling that the King was said to have saved why,
+asked Pitt, should he not give Hesse 100,000_l._, and Russia
+150,000_l._, to be out of these bad bargains? Newcastle was driven to
+his usual resource of the Chancellor, and suggested a conference with
+him in the ensuing week. Pitt agreed to this with, we may presume, a
+shrug of the shoulders.
+
+Neither in truth expected anything from such a meeting, for the pleas
+and the powers had both been exhausted. Newcastle realised this, and
+ends his remarkable record of the conversation with a despairing glance
+at his own prospects. What was he to do? There were as usual three
+courses to pursue. The first, which he should infinitely prefer, would
+be his own retirement. This is a common cant of ministers, and with
+Newcastle it was more than usually insincere. Fox, he said, might
+succeed him at the Treasury, and Pitt for a session at any rate would
+have to acquiesce. The second would be for Newcastle, remaining First
+Minister, to throw himself into the arms of the Pitt group, with Pitt
+as Secretary of State and Legge at the Exchequer. But the King would
+never hear of this. Newcastle puts it significantly thus: 'Whether this
+is in any shape practicable, I leave to your Lordship and all who know
+the King to determine.' The third course was the one adopted, 'to accept
+Mr. Fox's proposal, made by my Lord Granville,' the first allusion that
+we have to this particular negotiation. Fox was to be the real,
+efficient, and trusted leader of the House of Commons. But there must be
+conditions. Cumberland, the patron of Fox, must give his support, so
+must Devonshire and Hartington. There must be a new Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, and Fox must act cordially with the person whom the King
+might appoint to that office. Murray, and indeed every one, must put
+their shoulders to the wheel and exert themselves on behalf of the
+Administration. Lastly, it might be necessary to take in the venal but
+inevitable Bubb.
+
+Hardwicke answered Newcastle's report without a moment's delay, in a
+shrewd letter.[284] His first remark was that Pitt had taken much higher
+ground with the Duke than with him, perhaps because the bad news from
+the Ohio had made the Paymaster deem himself more valuable and
+necessary. He doubted whether the praises of Legge were sincere; they
+were probably intended to indicate a closer connection between them than
+really existed. But Hardwicke went straight to the two main points. The
+first was the general principle that the King must have a recognised
+Minister, what he called oddly enough 'a Minister with the King' in the
+House of Commons. The other question was whether Pitt should be
+Secretary of State.
+
+As to the first, if the Minister is to be subordinate, that is, not the
+Premier, he sees no great harm in it. 'For I have long been convinced,'
+continues the sagacious man, 'that whoever your Grace shall make use of
+as your first man and man of confidence in the House of Commons, you
+will find it necessary, if he be a man of reputation and ability
+accompanied with the ambition naturally incident to such a character, I
+say under those circumstances, your Grace will find it necessary to
+invest him with more power than, from the beginning, you thought fit to
+impart either to Mr. Legge or Sir Thomas Robinson.'
+
+From this we may gather that the Chancellor had never believed in the
+plan of a leaderless House of Commons. How indeed could he, as a man of
+sense, much more as a man of rare capacity? Such a plan could only be
+deemed possible by an alien King and a mountebank Minister. As to the
+personal point, Hardwicke is not less acute. Pitt, he declares, has
+stiffened his demand since their interview. Pitt, he is convinced,
+intended to draw from the Duke a promise that it should be made a point
+with the King that he should be made Secretary of State within a given
+time; and so, when he failed in this, he proceeded to discuss measures
+in a more peremptory tone than he would otherwise have employed.
+
+'Now,' says Hardwicke, 'this comes to a point which you and I have often
+discussed together. Whether you can think it right or bring yourself to
+declare to him that you really wish him in the Secretary's office, and
+will in earnest recommend him to the King on that foot.'
+
+This inestimable sentence throws a flood of light on Newcastle's
+professions to Pitt, and on the reality of the efforts that Newcastle
+had employed to soften the King. It is clear, we think, from this secret
+utterance that Newcastle had been sincere in neither case.
+
+Hardwicke urges that the Duke should close with Pitt. He thinks that if
+Newcastle were loyally to give this assurance Pitt 'would close and take
+his active part immediately.' Without this he is sure that Pitt believes
+'that the intention is to have the use of his talents without gratifying
+his ambition.' In writing this Hardwicke of course knew, as Newcastle
+knew, that Pitt's apprehension was well founded. 'My poor opinion,'
+continues the Chancellor, 'is that without it all further meetings and
+pourparlers with this gentleman will be vain. Your heart can only
+dictate to you whether you should do it or not.'[285] Justly distrusting
+the Duke's heart, the Chancellor proceeds to appeal to his instincts. He
+discards, of course, the idea of Newcastle's resignation. A friend,
+consulted on such a point, rarely deems it decent to do otherwise;
+certainly no confidant of Newcastle's could have done so and retained
+his intimacy.
+
+As to relying on Pitt and Legge, he agrees that nothing but the pressure
+of necessity could make the King adopt this course. Of course he does
+not say that the Duke could at any moment bring about this pressure,
+though that no doubt was the case. Newcastle, by his Parliamentary
+influence, could always produce a deadlock, as was soon to be proved.
+But Newcastle could, thinks Hardwicke, have Pitt without Legge. If Pitt
+had the seals he would not insist on Legge.
+
+The third course is that urged by Granville: to take Fox on Granville's
+conditions, which we may safely presume to have been those afterwards
+adopted. Hardwicke insinuates objections. Fox has the strong protection
+of Cumberland and the personal inclination of the King, but his election
+will be profoundly distasteful to Leicester House. Pitt, on the other
+hand, has 'no support at Court, and the personal disinclination of the
+King. He must therefore probably depend, at least for a good while, upon
+those who bring him thither.' Then comes the sentence about Fox and
+Leicester House which conveys a hint that Pitt, on the contrary, is well
+there. It is impossible to be more adroit. Hardwicke knew that Newcastle
+was fully aware that he hated Fox, and so put his objections in this
+indirect and skilful way. He failed, probably because Newcastle felt
+that to accept Fox would at any rate not necessitate a critical struggle
+with the King, and that Fox himself was more malleable.
+
+Of all strange confidants it was Bubb whom Pitt, on leaving Newcastle,
+proceeded to take into his inmost counsels. There are always parasites
+of this kind in politics, universally mistrusted, and yet constantly
+taken into confidence on grounds of convenience. Always sympathetic,
+always warm, always ready to betray at the first symptom of personal
+advantage, they are nevertheless useful parts of the political machine,
+and not so contemptible as might appear. They profess little, they
+deceive nobody except for a fleeting moment, and they are employed,
+with full knowledge of their character, to sound others and report the
+result, to suggest from their own base experience, to bring statesmen
+into relation with necessary people, and do the work with which
+statesmen will not soil their hands. But they are perilous and slippery
+agents, they attract in the warmth of the moment excessive confidence,
+and while these indiscretions are still ringing in their ears they are
+already in the tents of the enemy. Still, such as they are, they will
+always exist, and always be utilised, for they are part of the fatality
+of politics.
+
+So to Bubb Pitt betook himself on the day after that on which he had
+seen Newcastle, and gave a spirited account of the interview. He then
+spoke fully of his relations with Fox, in which really lay the key to
+the situation. He wished well to Mr. Fox, he did not complain of him,
+but he could not act with him; they could not co-operate because they
+were not on the same ground. Fox was not independent (_sui juris_), but
+he was. He had been ready during the last session to go all lengths
+against the Duke of Newcastle; but when it came to the pinch Fox always
+failed him (under the constraint, it may be presumed, of the Duke of
+Cumberland). _Fox had risen on his shoulders_;[286] he did not blame him
+for it. Fox had taken the smooth part, and left him the brunt; he did
+not complain. Fox, too, lived with his greatest enemies, Carteret,
+Stone, and Murray. And Newcastle had told him that Fox had recently
+offered himself to his Grace. Bubb declared that this was false, to his
+knowledge. Pitt replied that no one knew better than himself how great a
+liar Newcastle could be, and that if Fox denied this he should readily
+take his word against the Duke's. But all that he had recapitulated
+showed how impossible it was for two men to act together who stood on so
+different a footing as Fox and himself.
+
+Bubb now scented business of the kind to which he himself was addicted,
+and broke in with, 'As we who are to unite in this attack _are to part
+no more_,'[287] it would be proper to think what was to be held out to
+the confederates if they succeeded.
+
+Pitt declined to enter into this premature traffic, 'it would look too
+like a faction, there was no country in it'; but expressed himself, in
+the fashion of the day, with warmth and confidence as to Bubb himself.
+He thought Bubb of the greatest consequence; nothing was too good for
+such a man; no one was more listened to in the House and in the country.
+He wished to be connected with Bubb in the strictest sense politically,
+as he already was by marriage.[288]
+
+Bubb demurely records these confidences, and was left happy; glad to
+find, as he writes, that he should receive such support in an opposition
+which, on patriotic and conscientious grounds, he must have pursued even
+had he stood alone.[289]
+
+Once more we have to deplore the hapless destinies of political alliance
+and of Parliamentary twins, united in bonds of principle, who are to
+part no more. This conversation took place on September 3 (1755). On
+November 20 Pitt was dismissed, because of his adherence to the
+virtuous course which Bubb had resolved to pursue without flinching,
+even if isolated, with or without Pitt. Bubb records the removal in a
+terse entry of his diary, and the next, not less terse, records his
+acceptance of a lucrative post tendered by Newcastle. History has to
+note some such incidents, but we know of none so cynically and
+complacently narrated by the renegade himself.
+
+Hardwicke made one last desperate effort to move Pitt, but without
+success. He writes to Newcastle on September 15 (1755): 'I have had a
+long conversation with the _gentleman_ your Grace knows, but with little
+effect. I talked very fully and strongly to him upon every part of the
+case, both as to _persons_ and _measures_. He made great professions of
+his regard and firm attachment to your Grace and me, but adhered to his
+_negative_. He puts that negative upon two things: His objections to the
+two treaties of subsidy ... his other objection arose from _Mr. F._,
+with whom he declared he could not act.'[290]
+
+On this scene, coming more and more into prominence as the King became
+older, and as the Prince of Wales, or rather Bute and his clique, waxed
+bolder, appears the mysterious and elusive influence of Leicester House.
+It is difficult to trace or measure this combination, except in the
+naked fact of an old King and a young heir, nor is it easy to trace the
+connection of Pitt with this party. Every movement in Leicester House
+was jealously watched by the politicians, much as a late Sultan is said
+to have tracked the movements of the least menial of his dethroned and
+secluded predecessor. We read of the Princess being stirred to wrath by
+her father-in-law's project of marrying her son to the daughter,
+supposed to be active and ambitious, of a woman she detested. Then there
+is the suspicion that the Heir Apparent was surrounded by persons who
+were more or less Jacobite; Bute himself having, it was presumed,
+Jacobite leanings. But the King at once desisted with rare good sense
+from any idea of the projected marriage, though no doubt it would have
+given him pleasure. And the danger of an Hanoverian sovereign becoming a
+Jacobite under any influence seems too fantastic for a pantomime. The
+real apprehension was no doubt that Leicester House might shake off the
+domination and destroy the long monopoly of the Whigs, as indeed it
+eventually did. And certainly Leicester House, with the throne full in
+view, was becoming more and more inclined to assert itself. Human nature
+and family relations had, as usual in such cases, much to do with the
+matter. The Hanoverian Kings did not love their heirs apparent. George
+the First hated his, but he had no other son to love, and indeed little
+capacity for loving, except mistresses who found favour with no one
+else. George the Second hated his with a peculiar hatred, and was thus
+able to devote what fatherly affection he had to give to his second son,
+the Duke of Cumberland. These parental preferences, however justifiable,
+do not tend to affection between sons. And so there was no love lost
+between Prince Frederick and his family on the one side, and Duke
+William on the other. These feelings, as is usually the case, survived,
+when Frederick died, with increasing intensity between the widow and her
+brother-in-law. She saw him on the right hand of the King, enjoying all
+his confidence, as was natural, and herself and her bashful son of no
+account; so that a new jealousy was added to the original rancour.
+
+Understanding these facts, we are able to follow the course of Pitt. Fox
+was essentially the Duke of Cumberland's man, and so by the force of
+circumstances Pitt became allied, but not at this moment closely allied,
+to Leicester House. He had been a friend and servant of the dead Prince
+of Wales, then had quarrelled with him, but the original brand was not
+altogether effaced. Now he was the one champion whom the faction of the
+late Heir Apparent could adopt; and so the politicians began to see
+behind Pitt the influence of the coming King, his mother, and their
+favourite. Thus, when Newcastle had to make the option between Fox and
+Pitt, it was not merely the choice between two rival orators, but
+between two rival Courts, the Old and the New. We may be sure that no
+element in this business was more essentially present to the Minister's
+mind.
+
+All this seems petty but essential; but all was petty then, as is proved
+by the mere fact of Newcastle being at the head of the Ministry and
+master of the House of Commons; and it is all essential to the reader
+who would understand the history of those times, because the
+complication of these byways and intrigues is so extreme. There was the
+King with Lady Yarmouth and Cumberland; there were Newcastle and
+Hardwicke, with the House of Commons at their feet, and anxious to
+remain at their feet if that were possible; there was the influence of
+Cumberland apart from the King, and represented by Fox; there was
+Bedford, powerful from his property and connections, with a clique
+hungry for office; there was Pitt with his Grenville relations, who were
+ready to give him their support, but not less ready to withdraw it if
+something better should offer. And around and below these was the great
+shifting mass of politicians by profession and cupidity, the
+parliamentary Zoroastrians, who worshipped the rising sun, when they
+could discern it; the sun which should shed upon them office, salary,
+and titles; striving, sweating, cringing, as Bubb, the most shameless of
+them all, emphasises in capital letters, 'AND ALL FOR QUARTER-DAY.' It
+was through this scene of confusion and intrigue that Pitt had to thread
+his way, not very scrupulously; for he had always lived in this society,
+had lost whatever thin illusions he had ever possessed, and followed the
+clues which his experience had taught him to prize. He played the game.
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 13, 1755.]
+
+The meeting of Parliament took place two months afterwards and that
+period was spent by Newcastle and Hardwicke in arranging to discard Pitt
+and Legge, and to lean on Cumberland and Fox. Newcastle did not yield to
+Fox without reluctance, for it was, in Pitt's words, parting with some
+of his sole power. In his helplessness and despair he even offered to
+cede his place to Granville, who as Carteret had been his most detested
+bugbear, but who had now subsided into a quiescent President of the
+Council. Granville refused with a laugh, and preferred to conduct the
+negotiation with Fox. Fox had to him the merit of keeping out Pitt,
+whose former denunciations he had neither forgotten nor forgiven. So he
+had first endeavoured to inspire Murray to face, and now Fox to
+supplant Pitt. With a flash of his old diplomacy he was able to bring
+together the two mistrustful parties, on terms which Newcastle had
+curtly refused in the first insolence of his power, but which now, at
+the instance of Hardwicke as we have seen, he had to concede. The insane
+plan of a leaderless House of Commons, left like sheep on a barren moor,
+owned by an absentee Duke secluded in the Treasury, was to be abandoned.
+Fox was to be Secretary of State, leader of the House of Commons in name
+and in fact, and what was far more than either, he was authorised to
+announce that he represented the full influence of the King in the House
+'to help or to hurt.' When the two shepherds, the old and the new,
+burning with mutual hatred and distrust, met to ratify the conditions,
+Fox suggested sardonically that it would be best that this should be the
+last time on which they should meet to agree, that there should be a
+final settlement, or none at all, meaning that it should be honest and
+complete. Newcastle, no doubt with a wry face, agreed. 'Then,' said Fox,
+'it shall be so'; though indeed it was not. Fox stipulated for the
+admission or promotion of five persons, the only memorable ones of whom
+were George Selwyn, whose lovable and humorous personality has survived
+that of many more eminent contemporaries, and Hamilton, who is the only
+man, except the less-known Hawkins, who is remembered by a single
+speech. Chesterfield, on hearing of the reconstitution of the Ministry,
+observed with his habitual shrewdness that Newcastle had turned out
+everybody else and had now turned himself out. Fox at once repented of
+his adhesion, for Stone, Newcastle's confidant, informed him that had he
+not joined them the Ministry would have instantly resigned.[291] But
+now he had to content himself with negotiating through Rigby with the
+Bedford group, which he hoped to bring into office for the purpose of
+wrecking the administration.
+
+Robinson made less than no difficulties in accommodating himself to the
+new pretensions. He only yearned to return to the Great Wardrobe of
+which he had been Master. And so with a pension of 2000_l._ a year,
+fixed upon luckless Ireland, he vanishes into space, with the natural
+remark that he had never looked on his seven children with so much
+satisfaction as on the completion of these domestic arrangements.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+This blank though important space in the life of Pitt himself seems
+favourable for picking up a few threads which had to be dropped in the
+narrative of his negotiations with Newcastle.
+
+After the baiting to which Robinson had been subjected in the first days
+of the session he disappeared from debate; and Fox, then in close
+negotiation for a seat in the Cabinet, represented the Government in the
+Commons, and turned a deaf ear to the proposal that he should join Pitt
+in a combined attack on Newcastle. Fox's game, it will be seen, was not
+calculated to win the confidence of Pitt, to whom, however, during the
+session, he showed marked courtesy on the one hand, while negotiating
+with the Duke on the other.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 26, 1755.]
+
+The Lord Advocate had introduced a Bill continuing for a further period
+the provisions passed after the rising of 1745 which had temporarily
+placed the tenure of sheriff-deputyships at the King's pleasure instead
+of for life as before. This seems to have raised an animated debate,
+memorable to us as having produced two fine speeches from Pitt, which
+Horace Walpole alone mentions, and of which he gives a spirited sketch.
+It is only possible to give Walpole's record in his own words, as there
+is no other. Pitt spoke in answer to Murray (who, by-the-by, speaking
+in defence of the Bill, had said that there was not a single Jacobite
+left in Scotland) 'with great fire, in one of his best worded and most
+spirited declarations for liberty, but which, like others of his fine
+orations, cannot be delivered adequately without his own language; nor
+will they appear so cold to the reader, as they even do to myself, when
+I attempt to sketch them, and cannot forget with what soul and grace
+they were uttered. He did not directly oppose, but wished rather to send
+the Bill to the Committee, to see how it could be amended. He was glad
+that Murray would defend the King, only with a salve to the rights of
+the Revolution; he commended his abilities, but tortured him on his
+distinctions and refinements. He himself had more scruples; it might be
+a Whig delicacy--but even that is a solid principle. He had more dread
+of arbitrary power dressing itself in the long robe, than even of
+military power. When master principles are concerned, he dreaded
+accuracy of distinction: he feared that sort of reasoning: if you class
+everything, you will soon reduce everything into a particular; you will
+then lose great general maxims. Gentlemen may analyse a question till it
+is lost. If I can show him, says Murray, that it is not my Lord Judge,
+but Mr. Judge, I have got him into a class. For his part, could he be
+drawn to violate liberty, it should be _regnandi causâ_, for this King's
+reigning. He would not recur for precedents to the diabolic divans of
+the second Charles and James; he did not date his principles of the
+liberty of this country from the Revolution; they are eternal rights;
+and when God said, "_let justice be justice_," He made it independent.
+The Act of Parliament that you are going to repeal is a proof of the
+importance of the Sheriffs-depute: formerly they were instruments of
+tyranny. Why is this attempted? is it to make Mr. Pelham more regretted?
+He would have been tender of cramming down the throats of the people
+what they are averse to swallow. Whig and Minister were conjuncts he
+always wished to see. He deprecated (_sic_) those, who had more weight
+than himself in the Administration, to drop this; or besought that they
+would take it for any term that may comprehend the King's life; for
+seven years, for fourteen, though he was not disposed to weigh things in
+such golden scales.' The reader must make of this what he will.
+
+Fox said 'that he was undetermined, and would reserve himself for the
+Committee; that he only spoke now, to show it was not crammed down his
+throat; which was in no man's power to do. That in the Committee he
+would be free, which he feared Pitt had not left it in his own power to
+be, so well he had spoken on one side. That he reverenced liberty and
+Pitt, because nobody could speak so well on its behalf.'[292]
+
+The Bill came up again a few days afterwards, and we find Pitt again
+attacking it, and Fox apparently evading a contest with him. We are once
+more thrown back on Walpole's account. 'Pitt talked on the harmony of
+the day, and wished that Fox had omitted anything that looked like
+levity on this great principle. That the Ministry giving up the _durante
+benč placito_ was an instance of moderation. That two points of the
+Debate had affected him with sensible pleasure--the admission that
+judicature ought to be free, and the universal zeal to strengthen the
+King's hands. That liberty was the best loyalty; that giving
+extraordinary powers to the Crown was so many repeals of the Act of
+Settlement. Fox said shortly, that if he had honoured the fire of
+liberty, he now honoured the smoke.'[293]
+
+These arguments are not easy to follow, so the only faithful course
+seems to be to give the actual record.
+
+Meanwhile it is necessary for a moment to peer outside, and take note of
+the world so far, and only so far, as it affects the life of Pitt; for
+the clouds of war were gathering fast. The Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle was
+only an armed truce, the cupidities and resentments which it had checked
+for the moment were still active, though mute. With two such characters
+as Frederick and Maria Theresa matched against each other, it was
+evident that Silesia would never be surrendered or abandoned without
+another deadly struggle. Moreover, half unconsciously, the two secular
+rivals, France and Britain, were drifting into a contest for supremacy
+over half the globe, to settle the question as to which should become
+the first colonising power of the world. Hostilities in India and in
+North America were always smouldering, and the arrangements of
+Aix-la-Chapelle had not extended to either region. The treaty had in no
+way checked the desperate war carried on in India between the English
+and French Companies, between Clive and Dupleix. That was presently
+closed for the moment by a provisional treaty signed on the spot in
+January 1755. In America the scene was even more poignant. There without
+any declaration of war, in a formal and legal state of peace,
+hostilities were carried on, openly and yet treacherously, by incursions
+connived at by the French Government. And as if to add an additional
+horror to these sinister operations, they were accompanied by all the
+unspeakable barbarities of Indian warfare, the cold-blooded murder of
+men, women and children, rewards from the European governors for the
+scalps thus obtained, and by open cannibalism.[294] Christian
+missionaries were not ashamed to hound on these savages to murder,
+torture, and rapine; nay, their professed converts[295] were sometimes
+the keenest in butchery. For religious fanaticism imparted an ignorant
+zeal to the barbarous combatants, who were taught, it is said, that
+Christ was a Frenchman crucified by the English. The claim that the King
+of France was the eldest son of the Church was construed into a much
+more literal interpretation of divine origin.[296] There was in fact no
+element of atrocity wanting to this war, which was not a war; blasphemy,
+murder, outrage, arson, rape, torture were all employed under the pure
+white banner with its golden lilies. Parkman, the historian of these
+operations, does not record the like of the British. But this is not to
+affirm there were no reprisals. For war carried on in this fashion and
+by the employment of savages can scarcely be one-sided in its
+barbarities.
+
+[Sidenote: July 4, 1754.]
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 1755.]
+
+[Sidenote: July 9, 1755.]
+
+But apart from the perfidious ambitions of governments and the predatory
+lusts of savages, there could not be peace in America, nor in effect had
+there been since the settlement of Utrecht. Boundaries in that trackless
+continent were vague, and constantly overstepped. The proper limits of
+Nova Scotia, and the demarcation between Canada and New England, were
+subjects of acute controversy. Under such circumstances both parties
+plant outposts in disputed territories, and both attempt to dislodge
+each other. French officers headed exploring parties, annexing vast
+territories by the simple expedient of nailing to a tree-trunk a tin
+plate stamped with the arms of France, and burying at the root a leaden
+tablet recording that possession had thus been taken. But there were
+other operations much less bloodless and futile. One of these petty
+engagements survives in history because it marks the first appearance of
+Washington, compelled in 1754 to celebrate the Fourth of July by a
+surrender to the French, who had surrounded him in superior numbers; and
+because it was the commencement of open but not declared warfare between
+the British and the French. Both nations now determined to send out
+reinforcements. 'In a moment,' says Walpole, 'the Duke of Newcastle
+assumed the hero, and breathed nothing but military operations; he and
+the Chancellor held councils of war; none of the ministers except Lord
+Holderness were admitted inside their tent.' With some discount for
+Walpole's malicious pleasantry, the picture, humorous enough to us, must
+have filled men like Pitt with the darkest misgivings. Pitt, as we have
+seen, had once been accidentally admitted into the tent and taken into
+confidence. He must have left it with the feeling that the destinies of
+the Empire were in peril so long as Newcastle was at the helm. A giant
+conflict for the supremacy of the world was preparing, and Newcastle was
+in charge of Great Britain. It was enough to give the bravest patriot a
+qualm. Nor were the military preparations less deplorable. Braddock was
+sent out at the new year with a plan of campaign prepared by
+Cumberland. Cumberland on Braddock was a combination which might make
+the stoutest heart in England quail. Cumberland, who had lost every
+battle but the one-sided affray of Culloden, was the brain to devise.
+Braddock, a brutal soldier of parade experience, whose only warfare had
+been in Hyde Park or Hounslow, was the hand to execute. Braddock took
+his troops through the American bush as if they were marching from
+London to Windsor, and was annihilated ten miles from the French
+stronghold, Fort Duquesne, where now smokes toiling Pittsburg. British
+troops then first faced the most formidable of adversaries, an invisible
+foe. They advanced boldly, cheering and singing 'God save the King.' But
+they found that they were mere targets for a host of concealed
+sharpshooters. Behind every tree and rock there lurked a musket. At last
+they broke ranks and huddled into confusion. 'We would fight,' they
+answered their officers, 'if we could see anybody to fight with.' Some
+survivors declared that they had not seen a single Indian. Others were
+not so fortunate. Twelve unhappy persons were tortured and burned alive
+by the savage allies of the French. Braddock was mortally wounded, and
+died after a long silence, broken only by the one pathetic question,
+'Who would have thought it?'[297] His papers fell into the hands of the
+French and swelled the indictment with which they declared war.[298]
+This evil news arrived in England at the end of August, and no doubt
+precipitated Newcastle's attempt to come to terms with Pitt.
+
+Three months after the departure of Braddock, the French in alarm
+fitted out a fleet of reinforcement, which sailed at the end of April,
+just as George II. was leaving his kingdom for his electorate, amid the
+scarce veiled indignation of his British subjects. The moment was
+critical, the King was old, his heir was young, the French were making
+great warlike preparations, every circumstance pointed to the grave
+impropriety of the departure. But the King was obdurate to all
+remonstrance. Not only was Hanover his home, he was also anxious to
+negotiate treaties of subsidy for its protection; treaties which were
+more conveniently signed away from Great Britain; that country being
+only required to endorse them in order to furnish the necessary
+supplies.
+
+[Sidenote: 1755.]
+
+When it was certain that the French fleet was destined for America,
+Admiral Boscawen was despatched with a squadron to intercept it.
+Boscawen had eleven ships of the line and one frigate, the French fleet
+consisted of eighteen ships, eight of which were lightly armed as
+transports. The two armaments came into collision at the mouth of the
+St. Lawrence on June 7. Three French ships came into conflict with three
+British ships under Captain Howe. The French commander sent to ask 'Is
+it peace or war?' Lord Howe replied that he must ask his admiral, who
+replied 'War.' Thereupon Howe attacked and captured two of the enemy,
+but to the mortification of the British the bulk of the French fleet got
+safely into Louisbourg; then a Gibraltar, now a lonely pasture beaten by
+the surf.
+
+During all this year attempts had been made by negotiation in London
+between Mirepoix, the French Ambassador, and Newcastle, to delimit the
+territories in dispute, but at the news of this conflict Mirepoix left
+London at once. Nevertheless the French behaved with signal
+placability, they even released the _Blandford_ man-of-war, which they
+had captured; and there was at present no formal declaration of open
+hostility. For Louis XV. and his mistress did not desire war with Great
+Britain, nor were they ready for it. A council was held at Compičgne at
+which the opinion of Noailles prevailed. That was to suffer and endure,
+so as to attract the sympathy of all Europe against Britain; only to
+declare war when it was abundantly proved to be inevitable; then to
+limit the operations to the sea, and not to be lured into any warfare on
+the continent of Europe.[299] It was the Government of Newcastle that
+moved towards hostilities. Our Admiralty behaved with great but perhaps
+lawless vigour. It issued letters of marque, and before the end of the
+year 300 French merchant ships and 6000 French seamen had been captured.
+
+War seemed now inevitable, although at earlier stages it might, we
+think, have been avoided without difficulty; and there began a general
+hunt for alliances, which soon developed into a complete reversal of
+former arrangements. Maria Theresa, thirsting for revenge, sought under
+the inspiration of Kaunitz a strict union with France and Russia. The
+tongue of Frederick, biting, uncontrolled, and especially venomous in
+dealing with the frailty of woman, did perhaps more than Austrian
+diplomacy to facilitate these arrangements; for the Empress Elizabeth
+and Madame de Pompadour were both stung to unrelenting animosity by
+Frederick's reckless ribaldry. Frederick, however, took the first step
+himself. While France was secretly carrying on negotiations with
+England, which continued to the end of 1755, and neglecting to renew
+her previous treaty with Prussia which expired in May 1756, Frederick
+signed with Great Britain in January 1756 the Treaty of Westminster, by
+which both parties guaranteed each other's possessions and bound
+themselves to take up arms against any Power which should invade
+Germany. This instrument had the indirect but grave effect of
+neutralising the King's treaty with Russia for the defence of Hanover,
+for it precluded any foreign Power from marching troops into Germany.
+The news of this agreement was received at Versailles with consternation
+and wrath. The French Court replied to it by the Treaty of Versailles
+(May 1, 1756), hurriedly concluded with Austria and extremely one-sided.
+France agreed to respect the Austrian Netherlands, from which she might
+have hoped for some compensation in case of success. Both parties agreed
+to guarantee each other's dominions, and a secret article, aimed at
+Prussia, made the compact more stringent. In August a treaty still more
+advantageous to Austria was concluded between the two Powers; but in
+this some frontier towns in the Austrian Netherlands, though not
+specified, were to be conceded to France, when Austria was once more in
+possession of Silesia and Glatz.[300]
+
+It was believed in Europe that this counterbalancing treaty to that of
+Westminster ensured the peace of the Continent. But the world did not
+yet know Frederick. He was crouching for a spring. Two circumstances
+impelled him. He had become aware through a corrupt Saxon clerk of a
+correspondence between Austria and Saxony concerting a vast confederacy
+against him. The second was this. We have noticed the Russian and
+Hessian treaties of subsidy. That with Russia had been originally
+concluded with a view to operations against Frederick himself,[301] and
+to that purpose the Empress Elizabeth was determined that it should be
+confined. By a personal declaration[302] and by two resolutions of the
+Russian Senate[303] it was made clear that hostility to Frederick alone
+inspired the Russian share of the treaty. He saw the circle closing
+round him. Three outraged women were directing the forces of three
+Empires against him. He had nothing to rely upon but his own country,
+Britain, and himself. Cognizant of the plot against him, he determined
+to have the advantage of attack. Like a leopard he sprang upon Dresden.
+Before the Saxons had well realised that war was impending he was at the
+throat of the electorate, and had seized the capital, the army, and the
+compromising papers which justified his action. This was the beginning
+of the worldwide struggle known as the Seven Years' War, and it occurred
+in September 1756.
+
+This is all that is necessary for our story, a mere glimpse of the
+intrigues and rancours which were lashing all Europe into storm. We must
+now return to the parliamentary arena.
+
+[Sidenote: 1755.]
+
+On September 15, George II. deigned to return to his British dominions,
+and on November 13 he opened his Parliament. Two circumstances were
+considered noteworthy in connection with the formal occasion. Fox, as
+leader of the House, rehearsed the Speech from the Throne, as was then
+the custom, at the Cockpit; but the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the
+Paymaster, and the Grenvilles were conspicuous by their absence. Fox,
+too, summoned his supporters by a note of the kind then, as now,
+customary, but in terms which gave offence to the susceptible
+independence of members; intimating that the King was about to make him
+Secretary of State, though not till after the first debate, 'which may
+be a warm one,' so that his seat might not be vacated until after the
+Address had been voted. He was also to take upon him 'the conduct of the
+House of Commons.' This last expression was animadverted upon in
+Parliament, and Fox admitted that he should have said 'conduct of His
+Majesty's affairs in the House of Commons.' In these days, when 'leader
+of the House of Commons' is the recognised title of the principal
+Minister in the House, it is not without interest to notice this
+constitutional squeamishness.
+
+The King's Speech contained the following paragraph, which strikes the
+reader as something less than candid:--
+
+'With a sincere desire to preserve my people from the calamities of war,
+as well as to prevent, in the midst of these troubles, a general war
+from being lighted up in Europe, I have always been ready to accept
+reasonable and honourable terms of accommodation; but none such have
+hitherto been proposed on the part of France. I have also confined my
+views and operations to hinder France from making new encroachments, or
+supporting those already made; to exert our right to a satisfaction for
+hostilities committed in a time of profound peace: and to disappoint
+such designs as, from various appearances and preparations, there is
+reason to think, have been formed against my kingdoms and dominions.'
+
+Members met to hear the Royal Speech in the electric condition which
+bodes a crisis. There had been a long political truce; but this was
+evidently about to come to an end. Ministers had to bear the burden of
+the Russian and Hessian treaties, which the Speech from the Throne
+commended to the attention of Parliament. War with France was impending;
+indeed, a French invasion was daily expected. There was a new leader,
+and, consequently, a new opposition. Pitt was evidently prepared to
+launch thunderbolts at the Administration. Leicester House was said to
+be behind him. There was an animating sense of conflict in the air.
+
+Once more the parliamentary history fails us, and disdains to record one
+of the most memorable passages in its annals; so once more we are thrown
+on the authority and the sketches of Walpole; sometimes brilliant, but
+more often confused and defective.
+
+The debate in the Commons lasted till near five in the morning, an hour
+then almost unprecedented.
+
+It was distinguished by that famous effort which gave Single-speech
+Hamilton his nickname. Walpole, in recording and eulogising it, says:
+'You will ask, what could be beyond this? Nothing but what was beyond
+what ever was, and that was Pitt.' Pitt, indeed, after sitting through
+the eleven hours of the debate, rose and delivered, with inimitable
+spirit and all the dramatic force that the greatest actor of his age
+could impart, a speech of an hour and a half, which contains his most
+famous figure, and which perhaps he never exceeded.
+
+'His eloquence,' says Walpole, 'like a torrent long obstructed, burst
+forth with more commanding impetuosity.' For ten years he had been
+muzzled, and now he revelled in his freedom. 'He spoke at past one (in
+the morning) for an hour and thirty-five minutes. There was more humour,
+wit, vivacity, fine language, more boldness,--in short, more astonishing
+perfections, than even you who are used to him can conceive.'
+
+He 'surpassed himself, and then I need not tell you that he surpassed
+Cicero and Demosthenes. What a figure would they with their formal
+laboured cabinet orations make vis-a-vis his manly vivacity and dashing
+eloquence at one o'clock in the morning, after sitting in that heat for
+eleven hours!'
+
+This enthusiasm from the least enthusiastic of men adds to our regrets
+that so faint a memory of this dazzling speech remains. And yet perhaps
+we were wise to be grateful that we have only the description. It seems
+not impossible that the words taken down verbatim by some old
+parliamentary hand in the reporters' gallery would seem cold or tawdry
+without the soul and grace which animated them, and which haunted Horace
+Walpole for long years afterwards. Some of the allusions which have been
+noted down seem forced, some of the bursts incoherent, some of the irony
+obscure. But those who heard it palpitated with emotion, they saw the
+divine fire of the orator, while posterity can only grope among the cold
+ashes for the burning fragments poured forth in the wrath of the
+eruption.
+
+'Haughty, defiant, conscious of injury, and of supreme abilities,' he
+offered a great contrast to Legge, who fought by his side with different
+weapons; for Legge was studiously moderate, deferential, and artful;
+'gliding to revenge.' Yet Pitt himself began with expressions of
+veneration for the King, and of gratitude for 'late condescending
+goodness and gracious openings,' alluding to the offer of a seat in the
+Cabinet. It was obvious from this that he did not mean the door of the
+Closet to be closed on him, or to try again to force it by attack. But,
+he continued, the very respect he felt for that august name made him
+deprecate the unconstitutional use made of it in this debate.
+
+Egmont had argued that we were to have the Hessian and Russian
+mercenaries to fall back upon in case our fleets were defeated. Why if
+that were so, asked Pitt, did we not hire of Russia ships rather than
+men? The answer was simple: because ships could not defend Hanover. Must
+we drain, he asked, presumably in obscure allusion to Russia, our last
+vital drop and send it to the North Pole? We had been told that Carthage
+was undone in spite of her navy. But that was not until she betook
+herself to land operations. Carthage, too, he added, pointing directly
+to the enterprises of Cumberland, had a Hannibal who would pass the
+Alps. We were told, too, that we must assist Hanover out of justice and
+gratitude. As to justice, there was a charter which barred any such
+consideration. Gratitude was only in question if Hanover should be
+involved in anything which called down on her the resentment of France
+in consequence of any quarrel of ours. But, to speak plainly, these
+expressions were unparliamentary and unconstitutional. The King owed a
+duty to his people which should not be obscured by such phraseology. Our
+ancestors would never have stooped to such adulation.
+
+Then he turned with the greatest contempt to Sir George Lyttelton: 'A
+gentleman near me has talked of writers on the law of Nations. But
+Nature is the best writer; she will teach us to be men and not to
+truckle to power.' As he proceeded, he slowly swelled into his famous
+burst. 'I, who am at a distance from the _sanctum sanctorum_--I, who
+travel through a desert and am overwhelmed with mountains of
+obscurity--cannot so easily catch a gleam to direct me to the beauties
+of these negotiations. For there are parts of this Address which do not
+seem to come from the same quarter as the rest. I cannot unravel this
+mystery. But, yes!' he exclaimed with an air of sudden enlightenment,
+clapping his hand to his forehead, 'I too am now inspired. I am struck
+by a recollection. I remember at Lyons to have been taken to see the
+conflux of the Rhone and the Saône. The one is a gentle, feeble, languid
+stream, and, though languid, of no depth; the other a boisterous and
+impetuous torrent. Yet they meet at last. And long,' he added, with
+bitter sarcasm, 'may they continue united, to the comfort of each other,
+and to the glory, honour, and security of this nation.'
+
+This is all that we possess of this renowned flight and in this faint
+form it does not strike one as particularly impressive. But the actual
+words of the orator were probably very different; and nothing can
+preserve for us the voice, the eye, the darting accent and the
+concentrated fire of delivery which imparted such tremendous force to
+the apostrophe. In any case, the effect was instant and prodigious.
+After the debate Fox asked Pitt, 'Who is the Rhone?' 'Is that a fair
+question?' answered Pitt, for no orator likes to be cross-examined
+about his metaphors. 'Why,' rejoined Fox good-humouredly, 'as you have
+said so much that I did not wish to hear, you may tell me one thing that
+I want to hear. Am I the Rhone, or Lord Granville?' 'You are Granville,'
+returned Pitt. He meant, of course, what was true, that Fox and
+Granville were now practically one, and one in opposition to himself.
+
+After this climax the notes of the remainder of the speech seem
+comparatively poor. By adopting these measures, he urged, we are losing
+sight of our proper force, the Navy. It was the Navy which, by making us
+masters of Cape Breton in the last war, had secured the restoration of
+Flanders and the Barrier Fortresses. And yet even then we had had to
+conclude a bad peace. Moreover, bad as it was, our Ministers had
+suffered such constant infractions of it that they would have been
+stoned in the streets had they not at last shown signs of resentment.
+And yet, even now, they seem to have already forgotten the cause in
+which they took up arms, for at present they are not acting on behalf of
+Britain. These treaties are not English measures, but Hanoverian. Are
+they indeed measures of prevention? Are they not rather measures of
+aggression and provocation? Will they not irritate Prussia and light up
+a general war? If that be the result, I will follow to the death the
+authors of this policy, for this is the day that I hope will give a
+colour to my life. And yet I fear it is useless to try and stem the
+torrent. Ministers evidently mean a land war, and how preposterous a
+war. Hanover is their only base, for they cannot gain the alliance of
+the Dutch. I remember, everybody remembers, when you did force them to
+join you: all our misfortunes are due to those daring, wicked counsels
+(of Granville's). Out of them sprung a ministry,' he continued,
+referring to the forty-eight hours phantom of Pulteney and Carteret. 'I
+saw that ministry. In the morning it flourished. It was green at noon.
+By night it was cut down and forgotten.' What if a ministry should
+spring out of this subsidy? It is contended, moreover, that it will
+dishonour the King to reject these treaties which he has concluded. But
+was not the treaty of Hanau transmitted to us in the same way and
+rejected here? If these treaties are really a preventive measure, they
+are only preventive of Newcastle's retirement.
+
+Then he ridiculed Murray's elaborate compassion of the aged Sovereign.
+He too could appeal for commiseration of the King. He could picture him
+deprived of any honest counsel, spending his summer in his electorate,
+surrounded by affrighted Hanoverians, without any one near him to keep
+him in mind of the policy and interest of England, or of the fact that
+we cannot reverse the laws of Nature, and make Hanover other than an
+open, defenceless country. He too could foresee the day, within the next
+two years, when the King would be unable to sleep in St. James's; but
+that would be because his slumbers would be disturbed by the clamours of
+a bankrupt people.
+
+These are all the shreds that remain of this glorious rhapsody. It would
+perhaps be better that nothing had survived. Each student must try and
+reconstruct for himself, like some rhetorical Owen, out of these poor
+bones the majestic structure of Pitt's famous speech.
+
+Fox replied with obvious languor and fatigue, and the division was
+taken between four and five. On the first question, that the words
+promising assistance to Hanover should be omitted, the supporters of the
+Government were 311 to 105. On the second amendment, which obscurely
+questioned the policy of both treaties the numbers were 290 to 89. The
+faithful Commons were still able to be loyal to Newcastle. Against that
+pasteboard rock Pitt's billows broke in vain.[304]
+
+Next day (November 15, 1755) Fox received the seals. Five days
+afterwards Pitt, Legge, and George Grenville were dismissed by notes
+from Lord Holdernesse, the colleague of Fox in the Secretaryship of
+State. Fox indeed declares in a letter to Welbore Ellis, then peevish at
+not getting a better place, that he did not know till the last moment of
+the intention to remove anybody but Legge.[305] To George Grenville,
+Bute, now beginning to show himself above ground, but still with
+circumspection, sent a significant note of congratulation. 'Tis
+glorious,' he wrote, 'to suffer in such a cause and with such
+companions.' Pitt received an even more gratifying communication from
+Temple, who settled on him a thousand a year till better times. We
+cannot perhaps blame Pitt for accepting this offer, since probably there
+was no other way of maintaining Lady Hester in decent comfort; for we
+may easily surmise that he had squandered his own fortune on buildings,
+gardens, and the like; as Temple probably knew. But we could wish that
+he had done so with less effusion. 'How decline or how receive so great
+a generosity so amiably offered.' Lady Hester, who had begun the letter
+of thanks, 'was literally not in a situation to write any farther.'
+Pitt was 'little better able to hold the pen than Lady Hester. We are
+both yours more affectionately than words can express. We could have
+slept upon the Earl of Holdernesses' letter (of dismissal). But our
+hearts must now wake to gratitude and you, and wish for nothing but the
+return of day to embrace the best and noblest of brothers.' Even this is
+not sufficient. Next day he must write again to say to Lord Temple,
+'that I am more yours than my own, and that I equally love and revere
+the kindest of brothers and the noblest of men.'
+
+Language less ecstatic would better have become a great man accepting a
+serious pecuniary obligation. In truth Pitt never had any scrupulous
+idea of personal independence. He had accepted a borough from Newcastle,
+whom he then suspected and despised. Now it was an allowance from
+Temple, whom, from close intimacy and kinship, he must have known to be
+an intriguing politician, who was not likely to give without expecting
+return. A few years hence it was to be a pension from the Crown.
+
+With regard to money indeed he had no very careful or exalted standard.
+In such matters he was indifferent, reckless, and heedless of any nicety
+of scruple, except as regards the public. He never seems to have
+considered how important solvency is to character. He was always, after
+his marriage, quite unnecessarily, in desperate straits for money.
+Indifference to the fact that pecuniary independence is a main though
+not necessary base of moral independence was a flaw in his own life, and
+was the worst inheritance that he transmitted to his illustrious son.
+
+The announcement of Legge's successor at the Exchequer provoked
+universal hilarity. It was Lyttelton. We have seen that in the last
+debate Pitt had turned with fierce scorn on his former ally. No doubt he
+was aware of Lyttelton's approaching elevation. But their historic
+friendship had been dissolved for a year. In November 1754, at the
+heedless or mischievous instance of the younger Horace Walpole,
+Lyttelton, with the best intentions and the most inane execution
+possible, had hurried off, without consultation with his friend, to
+effect a reconciliation between Newcastle, Pitt's enemy, and Bedford,
+who was allied to Pitt by a common hatred of the Minister. Newcastle
+received the negotiator with his wonted effervescence, and gave or
+appeared to give full powers. Away sped Lyttelton, bursting with the
+importance of an amateur diplomatist. But at the mere mention of his
+mission the other Duke nearly kicked the messenger of peace downstairs,
+and at once communicated the secret overture to Pitt. The result to
+Lyttelton was for the moment unmixed disaster. Pitt publicly broke with
+him, Newcastle of course disowned him, he indeed disowned himself.
+Henceforth he was banned by the Cousinhood, and incurred a wrath and
+vengeance as implacable as that of the Carbonari. Now, however, he had
+his reward, for it can scarcely be doubted that his elevation to the
+Exchequer was intended partly as a plaster for his diplomatic wounds,
+partly as an annoyance to the party of Pitt. Any motive indeed but
+fitness for the office can be suggested for his promotion, to which he
+was lured by the promise of a peerage.[306] If, however, the annoyance
+it would cause to his late friends was a reason, it failed in its
+object. For Lyttelton, in his new office, gave the amplest opportunity
+for the wreaking of their revenge. He was, as we have seen, grotesque as
+a diplomatist. He was even more unfit to be Chancellor of the Exchequer.
+
+Lyttelton had been a promising young man, but promising young men
+frequently fail to mature, and he became a minor politician, a minor
+poet, a minor historian. As a politician, he was principally known for
+the delivery of pompous prepared harangues. He wrote a pathetic and not
+wholly forgotten monody on the death of his first wife, to which he
+could have added a new and poignant emphasis after his second marriage.
+He wrote a treatise on the conversion of St. Paul, which earned the
+commendation of Dr. Johnson. He wrote some 'Dialogues of the Dead,'
+which Dr. Johnson was not able to commend. He was now writing an
+elaborate History of Henry the Second, on the printer's corrections in
+which he spent a thousand pounds, and was soon to publish with a score
+of pages of errata. But his literary renown rests on the dedication of
+'Tom Jones.'
+
+He was, however, best known to the public at large by his eccentric
+appearance and demeanour. 'Extremely tall and extremely thin, he bent
+under his own weight,' says his nephew Camelford. 'His face was so
+ugly,' says Hervey, 'his person so ill-made, and his carriage so
+awkward, that every feature was a blemish, every limb an incumbrance,
+and every motion a disgrace.' Horace Walpole says of him that he had the
+figure of a spectre and the gesticulations of a puppet. Chesterfield
+portrays him as the embodiment of all in manner and deportment that was
+to be avoided. His legs and arms, said the urbane peer, seem to have
+undergone the rack, his head hanging limp on his shoulder the first
+stroke of the axe. As absent as a Laputan, he leaves his hat in one
+room, his sword in another, and would leave his shoes, if unfastened, in
+a third. 'Who's dat!' wrote the satirist,
+
+ 'Who's dat who ride astride de pony,
+ So long, so lank, so lean and bony?
+ Oh! he be de great orator Little-toney.'
+
+He was obviously something of a butt from his physical peculiarities and
+awkwardness, and a butt is ill placed in high office.
+
+Gawky, fussy, pedantic, he was what in these days we should call a prig;
+a kindly prig, with a warm heart, some literary ability, and strong
+religious feeling; but for all that an unmistakable, inveterate,
+incurable prig. The word 'prig' is untranslatable and uncommunicable. It
+denotes nothing unamiable, nothing distasteful. It marks only a strange
+flaw; partly of intellect, partly of character, partly of accent. And
+one feels that it was impossible not to like Lyttelton, for he was full
+of friendliness and virtue. With Pitt he was reconciled within a decade,
+and mourned his death with a sincere sorrow which was not then abundant.
+
+But the Exchequer is a peculiar office requiring peculiar gifts. A dull
+man may succeed in it if he possess them; without them the greatest
+talents will fail. Lyttelton possessed none of them. He was unable, it
+was alleged, to work out the simplest sum in arithmetic. He was ignorant
+of the first principles of finance. The Exchequer never had a more
+preposterous Chancellor, till Dashwood appeared. He had better have left
+it alone.
+
+Fox, whose accession to the leadership was said to have inspired Murray
+with courage, must have watched with gloomy forebodings the figure set
+up in the Exchequer to face the lightnings of Pitt. The most that he
+could hope was that it would act as an efficient conductor. Yet Fox
+needed all the strength that he could muster. For no one despised his
+chief more than he, or had a greater respect for the powers of his
+rival.
+
+It should further be noted that this ministry had a luckless connection
+which made it known as 'the Duke's ministry'; for it had been formed
+under the auspices and at the recommendation of the disastrous
+Cumberland. 'Never,' says Almon, 'was an administration more unpopular
+and odious.'
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 21, 1755.]
+
+War had now been declared between the Government and Pitt, who now
+certainly had the latent countenance of the Heir Apparent, or of the
+clique who represented the Heir Apparent; and there was no delay in
+coming to blows. The very day after Pitt's dismissal, Welbore Ellis, a
+Lord of the Admiralty, who was destined to live on as a Nestor in
+politics and be made a peer by Pitt's son, moved for 50,000 seamen,
+mentioning that the peace establishment was 40,000. It was a formal
+motion, and members were leaving the House, when they were recalled by
+the awful tones of Pitt, declaring that he shuddered at hearing that our
+naval resources were so narrowed. He recalled his former protest in 1751
+against reduction. He would hunt down the authors of these disastrous
+measures which made the King's crown totter on his head. This noble
+country of ours was being ruined by the silly pride of one man and the
+subservience of his colleagues, and some day we should have to answer
+for it; unless already overwhelmed by some catastrophe brought about by
+France, our hereditary enemy. All this trouble arose from the petty
+struggle for power. What power was it that was sought, what kind of
+power, was it only that of doing good? On an English question like this
+he would not impede unanimity but implore it; he would ask favours in
+such a cause of any minister, would have gone that morning to Fox's
+first levee to ask him to accept 50,000 men besides marines. (The vote
+asked for was for 50,000 men, including 9113 marines.) If that could be
+obtained it would be the first thing done for this country since the
+Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle. He obscurely intimated charges of treachery
+and collusion. And now, he added, shame and danger had come together. He
+himself had been alarmed by intelligence on the highest authority. These
+terrors had been communicated to the House, which was willing to grant
+the King any assistance for any English object. But there was an
+essential difference between the ministry and that House. The ministry
+thought of everything but the public interest; the House was ready to
+afford everything for it. The House, he added mysteriously, was a
+fluctuating body, but he hoped would be eternal; and he concluded with a
+prayer for the King, with his royal posterity, and for this 'poor,
+forlorn, distressed country.'
+
+It is not always easy to trace the sequence of Pitt's speeches in
+Walpole's notes, nor is it possible to tell whether the confusion is due
+to the oration or the notes. The notes were probably made during the
+debate with the intention of filling in the outlines while recollection
+was still fresh; an intention which, as is usual with such intentions,
+was, it may be safely surmised, never carried out. But we are inclined
+to attribute obscurity in the main to the abrupt rhapsodical transitions
+of Pitt's speeches. They require, as reported by Walpole, almost as much
+interpretation as Cromwell's. In this one we discern great court paid to
+the House of Commons, so hostile to himself; unrelenting scorn of the
+Government; and bitter emphasis on British as opposed to Hanoverian
+interests. The peroration as barely reported seems below the level of a
+debating society. But, then, we must remember that no fervent and
+exalted apostrophe, prolonged as this probably was, can be adequately
+transmitted in a naked sentence, or perhaps in any conceivable report.
+
+Fox replied with admirable temper, a self-control all the more laudable
+and noted because of his usual impetuousness. He took up Pitt's sneer at
+petty struggles for power. What the motives of these struggles for power
+had been let those tell who had struggled most and longest for power.
+They had been told that nobody round the King had sense or virtue, that
+sense and virtue resided somewhere else. How was the King to know where
+they are to be found? for he feared that _this_ House of Commons would
+not point in the required direction. He ended by asking why Pitt had not
+asked sooner for his augmentation of force.
+
+This called up Pitt again, who denied that he had ever asserted that
+there were no sense and virtue near the Throne. No man had ever suffered
+so much as himself from those stilettoes of a Court which assassinate
+the fair repute of a man with his Sovereign. The insinuation of his
+having struggled for power had been received by the House with so much
+approval, that he must take notice of the charge. Had he yielded to the
+poor and sordid measures which are ruining the country he might, no
+doubt, have been admitted to the confidence of the Closet. Then, carried
+by anger beyond the facts, he went further, and said that as he was not
+prepared then to enter into the details of the private transactions of a
+whole summer, he would only say that he might have had what Fox had
+accepted. Unfortunately for himself, however, the measures contemplated
+were so disastrous that his conscience and his honour had forbidden him
+to support them; though he would have strained conscience a little,
+perhaps, to be admitted to the confidence of the King. No, it was not
+failure in the struggle for power that was the cause of his exclusion
+from office. Was it not that he would not approve of the Russian and
+Hessian treaties? He challenged a denial.
+
+Fox rose in reply, and said that he was ready to forget what Pitt had
+said about the lack of sense and virtue near the Throne.
+
+Pitt, evidently beside himself with wrath, interrupted him, and said he
+rose to order, and, on that long-suffering plea, delivered another long
+speech. The phrase about sense and virtue, he declared on his honour,
+was none of his. What he said was that France would found her hopes on
+the want of sense, understanding, and virtue in those that govern here.
+Fox's modesty appeared to have taken these words to himself; but he had
+not put him right sooner, as the statement of the plain truth would
+sooner or later be sufficient. He would remind that gentleman of certain
+efforts which had been made (alluding to their brief coalition against
+Newcastle) to limit the power at which he had hinted. As to invective,
+he was not fond of employing it, but no man feared it less than himself.
+He was, however, complimentary to Fox; would, though no betting man,
+back his sense and spirit; believed that we should get some information
+from abroad now that he was in power; but could not treat him as _the_
+minister, for that he was not yet.
+
+'But[307] he asks why I did not call out sooner. _My_ calling out was
+more likely to defeat than promote. When I remonstrated for more seamen,
+I was called an enemy to Government: now I am told that I want to strew
+the King's pillow with thorns: am traduced, aspersed, calumniated from
+morning to night. _I_ would have warned the King: did _he_? If he with
+his sense and spirit had represented to the King the necessity of
+augmentation, it would have been made--but what! if there is any man so
+wicked--don't let it be reported that I say there is--as to
+procrastinate the importing troops from Ireland, in order to make
+subsidiary forces necessary.[308] This whole summer I have been looking
+for Government. I saw none. Thank God, His Majesty was not here. The
+trade of France has been spared sillily, there has been dead stagnation.
+Orders contradicting one another were the only symptoms of spirit. When
+His Majesty returned, his kingdom was delivered back to him more like a
+wreck than as a vessel able to stem the storm. Perhaps a little
+sustentation of life to the country will be obtained by a wretched
+peace. These are my sentiments, and when a man has truth on his side,
+he is not to be overborne by quick interrogatories. It may be presumed,
+and indeed confidently hoped, that this was not Pitt's actual speech,
+though Walpole gives it as the very words. They are probably only heads.
+He continued with softening expressions to Fox. Want of virtue was the
+characteristic not merely of the Government but of the age. He himself
+was glad to show a zeal not inferior to that of ministers; let them show
+him how to serve the King, and then let them, if they could, tax him
+with strewing the royal pillow with thorns. But what were their own
+services? Murray indeed had boasted that 140,000 of the best troops in
+Europe were provided for the defence of--what? of Hanover. But what of
+England? What of the Colonies? Compare the countries, compare the forces
+destined for the defence of each! Two miserable battalions of Irish, who
+scarcely ever saw one another, had been sent to America as to the
+shambles. If his comparison of forces for Hanover and for the Empire was
+exaggerated, he would be glad to be told his error.
+
+Fox kept his temper, and remained on the defensive. He not unnaturally
+commented on the disorderliness of Pitt's speech to order. He did not
+'on his honour' know what was the offer which Pitt had rejected. He
+himself had waited till everybody had refused, passing the summer at
+Holland House, as happy as any man in Parliament. He was in favour of
+the subsidies, and when that was known he was told 'Then support them';
+and so he did. When his opinion changed he should leave office. He
+wished all evil might befall him if he had injured Pitt with the King,
+for he thought nothing so dishonourable as to accuse a man where he
+could not defend himself.
+
+Murray followed with covert but bitter innuendoes; defended Pelham's
+reduction of 2000 men, and had thought that that Minister had at least
+died in friendship with Pitt. This again brought Pitt on his feet to say
+that his friendship for Pelham had been as real as Murray's. Murray
+continued coolly. The sting of his waspish speech was in its tail. He
+wanted to clear up one particular point for his own information. He
+understood Pitt to say that he had refused the Secretaryship of State:
+pray, had he?
+
+He had his enemy at the point of the sword. Pitt had certainly, as we
+have seen, with incredible rashness, at least insinuated this, if not
+declared it. He now had to rise and eat his words: 'he had only refused
+to come into measures'![309]
+
+Walpole apologises for recording this debate, tedious as it is, at such
+a length. We must do the same, and his excuse is ours. Little was said
+on the question, and indeed there was scarcely a question to discuss.
+But the points of the speeches, so far as we can discern them, throw
+light on the speakers, more especially on the reckless, impetuous
+character of Pitt, even at this time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+
+The bombardment of the new Ministry continued without intermission, for
+Pitt was determined to wreak his vengeance on Newcastle and Fox. We may,
+moreover, presume that, seeing the critical condition of affairs and the
+incompetence of the Ministry to wrestle with them, he, conscious of
+great powers, was determined to become a directing Minister. He was now
+forty-seven, in the full ripeness of character and intellect. Neither he
+nor the country could afford to wait.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 2, 1755.]
+
+Ten days after the last debate, Lord Pulteney, the sole and short-lived
+hope of his famous father, introduced a Bill to give the prizes captured
+before a declaration of war to the seamen who had captured them, should
+war be afterwards declared. Pitt and his section intervened, and the
+engagement developed from a skirmish into a battle. The debate turned
+largely on pressing; that practice having brought great complaints from
+Scotland, where 'mobs are more dangerous and more mischievous than our
+mobs in England, not contenting themselves with clubs and bludgeons, but
+possessing themselves of as many firearms and other mortal weapons as
+they can possibly come at.' This perhaps was not wonderful, when it was
+admitted that a gang had surrounded a church, and pressed part of the
+congregation as it came out. But it soon soared from that point to the
+question of our relations with France.
+
+Fox opposed the Bill, which he said would be considered as a veiled
+declaration of war. France was patient because she wished to persuade
+her allies that we were the aggressors, and so induce them to join her.
+The passing of the Bill would furnish the very proof she required. The
+whole gist of the matter lay in the word 'now,' 'the hinge,' he said
+with a painful confusion of metaphor, 'upon which the very marrow of
+this debate must turn.' Were peace hopeless such a Bill might be
+necessary; now it could only do harm. Pitt followed Fox and made play
+with the word 'now,' for as Murray said in reply: 'He has the happy
+faculty of being able to turn the most important word, the most serious
+argument, into ridicule.' He pointed out from examples in the reign of
+Elizabeth and Charles II. that we might be at war for many years without
+declaring war, and supported the Bill; as did Richard Lyttelton (though
+the House, says Rigby, can no longer be brought to hear a word from
+him), and George Grenville. The most piquant part of the speeches of
+both Pitt and Fox related to Walpole, who had now from a bugbear become
+a fetish. Fox pronounced a high eulogy upon him, but denied that his
+parliaments had been venal. Pitt said that he himself had always opposed
+Walpole when in power, but after resignation had always 'spoken well of
+him as a man.' Here there was a laugh, which Pitt angrily rebuked. Was
+it not more honourable to respect a man when his power had come to an
+end than before? Walpole had no doubt 'for many years an amazing
+influence in this House, and the enquiry, stifled as it was, made it
+pretty evident from whence that influence proceeded!' Legge swelled the
+chorus of devotion to a Minister who had scarce a friend at his fall,
+by declaring that 'he was an honour to human nature and the peculiar
+friend to Great Britain!' Death, in British politics, magnanimously
+closes most accounts with a credit balance.[310]
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 5, 1755.]
+
+Three days afterwards, Barrington, the new Secretary at War, moved the
+Army Estimates. Here we are again thrown upon Walpole, whose records,
+precious as they are, are the notes of an amateur, jotted down at the
+time with the idea of subsequent expansion, but not subsequently
+expanded. Indeed, when he came to use them, his memory, it is probable,
+no longer availed for the purpose. But from the account of the last
+debate on December 2, 1755, the Parliamentary history, incredible as it
+may seem, records no speech of Pitt's till the last month of 1761, and
+then only a formal reply.
+
+Pitt, 'in one of his finest florid declamations,' seconded the motion
+for an army of 34,263 men, which was an augmentation of 15,000 men. He
+would have moved for a larger number, had not Barrington promised to
+move for more men when he brought in a Bill for the better recruiting of
+the army, a pledge which seemed to meet the general anxiety of the
+House. Rigby, who gives us this information, says that Pitt's speech was
+most violent and abusive, but admits that it was a very fine piece of
+declamation.[311] Both Walpole and Rigby, it will be observed, use this
+vigorous substantive to characterise the speech.
+
+Pitt again used the language of tenderness and devotion to the King,
+deplored to see him in his old age, and his kingdom exposed to attack;
+and even his amiable posterity, _born among us_, sacrificed by unskilful
+Ministers.
+
+The innuendo at the King's foreign birth betrays the sarcasm underlying
+Pitt's effusive loyalty. One cannot also but suspect that his constant
+allusions to the venerable age of George II. were not intended to be
+wholly agreeable to a King who piqued himself on being gay and
+libertine. 'He then drew a striking and masterly picture of a French
+invasion reaching London, and of the horror ensuing while there was a
+formidable enemy within the capital itself, as full of weakness as full
+of multitude; a flagitious rabble, ready for every nefarious action; of
+the consternation in the City, where the noble, artificial, yet
+vulnerable fabric of public credit should crumble in their hands. How
+would Ministers be able to meet the aspect of so many citizens dismayed?
+How could men so guilty meet their countrymen?'
+
+The King's Speech of last year, he continued, had been calculated to
+lull the country into repose. Had His Majesty's Ministers not sufficient
+understanding, or foresight, or virtue, he repeated the words that they
+might not again be misquoted, to lay before him the real danger?
+Elsewhere, where the King himself had the slightest suspicion even of a
+fancied danger, we knew what vast preparations had been made. Did the
+subjects of his kingdom lack that prudent foresight which his subjects
+of the electorate possessed in so eminent a degree? Alas! that he should
+live to see a British Parliament so unequal to its duties. There were
+but ten thousand men left in England. Not half that number would be
+available to defend the royal family and the metropolis. 'Half security
+is full danger.'
+
+'Accursed be the man,' he continued, 'who will not do all he can to
+strengthen the King's hands, and he will indeed receive the malediction.
+Strengthen the Sovereign by laying bare the weakness of his Councils:
+urge him to substitute reality to incapacity, futility, and the petty
+love of power. It is the little spirit of domination, the ambition of
+being the only figure among cyphers, which has caused the decay of this
+country. The ignominious indulgence of patronage, the poor desire to
+dispose of places, should be left for times of relaxation: rough times
+such as these require wisdom. The cost of the augmentation proposed
+to-day, two hundred and eighty thousand pounds, would last year have
+given us security. Yet the danger was last year as visible as now to the
+eye of foresight. The first attribute of a wise Minister is to leave as
+little as possible exposed to contingencies. Now, for want of that
+foresight, stocks will fall, and hurry along with them the ruin of the
+City, vulnerable in proportion to its opulence. In other countries the
+treasure remains in a city which is not sacked. But paper credit like
+ours may be wounded even in Kent. It is like the sensitive plant, it
+need not be cropped; extend but your hand, it withers and dies.'
+
+Barrington, the orator continued, had cited the Romans. He need not go
+so far afield, our own days had produced as great examples. In 1746,
+thirteen regiments had been raised by noblemen who, though they had not
+like the Romans left their ploughs, had left their palaces to save their
+country. With what scorn, depression, and cruelty, so far as contempt is
+cruelty, had they been treated!
+
+He wished the country gentry encouraged to raise a militia, for he was
+anxious to call the country out of that enervated condition that the
+menace of twenty thousand men from France could shake it. It was our
+Government that was degenerate, not our people. He wished the breed
+restored that had formerly carried our glory so high. What did those
+Ministers deserve, and again he insinuated mysterious hints of
+connivance and collusion, what did those Ministers deserve, who, after
+Washington had been defeated and our forts taken, advised his Majesty to
+trust to so slender a force as had been sent. He was for no vindictive
+proceedings against them; they erred from the weakness of their heads
+rather than their hearts. But a sagacity something less than that of a
+Richelieu or a Burleigh could have foreseen what would happen.
+
+Fox replied with urbanity and compliment, for there was at this time a
+marked courtesy in the language of the two protagonists, as of men who
+did not know how soon they might be allies. Pitt denounced Newcastle,
+and Fox did not defend him. This, too, must be noticed. Why, Fox now
+asked, had Pitt not made this noble speech sooner, when we were indeed
+asleep, before the French had wakened us. 'If he had made it,' said Fox,
+'I am sure I should have remembered it: I am not apt to forget his
+speeches.' Let Pitt himself take in hand a Militia Bill. It was
+evidently Fox whom Pitt had described as treating the thirteen regiments
+with contempt, at least Fox now fitted the cap on himself. He said that
+he thought obloquy too harsh a term to apply to his language on that
+occasion; nevertheless, he should not disown anything he had said. But
+he must make a clear distinction between these noble persons. He thanked
+God there was one noble duke, able and willing to save his country, who
+went to the King, and offered to go and try if, with his lowlanders, he
+was not a match for any highlanders. This was an elaborate compliment to
+Bedford, whose political lowlanders were now at the service of the
+Government, though not the Chief himself. Fox at the same time made an
+invidious comparison to the detriment of the Duke of Montagu, and was on
+the point of saying that he must discriminate between dukes, for though
+some deserved everything from their country for the part they took, yet
+he should not be for trusting others to raise a regiment who could not
+raise half a crown. There was evidently money to be made out of these
+patriotic impulses.[312]
+
+Pitt excused himself for not having sooner raised the cry of danger on
+the ground that he had been lulled into composure by the previous Speech
+from the Throne. When he became alarmed he made representations in
+private, so long as he was allowed to do so. But now the alarm must be
+sounded in Parliament itself, for we have invited into our bowels a war
+that was the child of ignorance and connivance. If there be justice in
+Heaven, Ministers must some day answer for this.
+
+Nugent, an Irish adventurer of the type known to comedy, paid his court
+to Newcastle by a burlesque attack on Pitt. And even Robinson appeared
+once more on the scene with a panegyric on himself, which, though
+ridiculous to his audience, was by no means superfluous. The other
+notable speeches, delivered by Charles Townshend, Sackville, and
+Beckford, do not affect our subject.[313]
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 8, 1755.]
+
+Five days later, George, who was afterwards Marquis, Townshend, brought
+forward a Militia Bill. Pitt took this occasion of responding to Fox's
+challenge by unfolding a plan of his own. No scheme, he said, could be
+carried out without the co-operation of the Government, the Army, the
+Law, and the country gentry. But he unfortunately came under none of
+these descriptions. He knew no secrets of Government; he had too early
+been driven from the profession of arms; he had never studied the law;
+he was no country gentleman.
+
+His plan was made the groundwork of a Bill, which occupied much time in
+the Commons, but was lost in the Lords.
+
+It provided for an infantry militia of fifty or sixty thousand men, to
+be summoned compulsorily by the civil power: to be exercised twice a
+week, one of these days to be Sunday, if the clergy did not raise too
+much objection. It was to have the same pay as the infantry, but plain
+clothing, 'not pretending to all the lustre of the army.' The
+non-commissioned officers were to be private soldiers, not fewer than
+four to every eighty men.
+
+What millions, he said, would have been saved by such a force during the
+last thirty years! And what an inglorious picture for this country, to
+figure gentlemen driven by an invasion like a flock of sheep, and forced
+to send money abroad to buy courage and defence! If this scheme should
+prove oppressive, provincially or parochially, he was willing to give it
+up. But surely it was preferable to waiting to see if the wind would
+blow you subsidiary troops. These, always an eyesore, you would never
+want again if this Bill were passed. This speech marked another step
+forward in Pitt's career; for he opened his plan with a plain precision,
+a mastery of detail, and a business-like clearness the House had not
+expected from him. 'He had never shone in this light before.'[314]
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 10, 1755.]
+
+Two days later, again the treaties were discussed in both Houses.
+
+The debate in the Lords does not concern us. It was spirited and bitter.
+Temple raised the storm, while the future George III. sate and took
+notes. In the Commons there was a new feature. Newcastle, doubtful of
+the zeal of Fox and Murray on his behalf, had retained for his defence
+Hume Campbell, the brother of Marchmont; with the Paymastership as a
+retaining fee, had not Fox, who always had his eye on this lucrative
+place, vetoed the appointment.[315] Walpole describes the new gladiator
+as eloquent, acute, abusive, corrupt, insatiable. To this accumulation
+of epithets we need and can add nothing. He had been in opposition with
+Pitt, and had had a brush with him already, but had almost given up
+attendance in Parliament.
+
+Hume Campbell, raised to this bad eminence, seems to have acquitted
+himself ably in his opening attack, and to have delivered a masterly
+speech. He could see no reason, he said, why gentlemen were suffered to
+come every day to the House merely to threaten and arraign the conduct
+of their superiors. Such behaviour was unparliamentary and
+unprecedented. 'Let the House punish,' he said, 'these eternal
+invectives.' Pitt angrily called him to order for so describing the
+debates of that House. Horace Walpole, the elder, said, with some
+reason, that Pitt ought to be the last man in the House to complain of
+irregularity. Pitt declared that Campbell's words struck directly at the
+liberty of debate; that he had a mind to move to have the words taken
+down, but would refrain till the orator had explained himself. Campbell
+then proceeded with his discourse. He was followed by other speakers,
+Murray delivering a fine argument in defence of the treaties. Pitt,
+meanwhile, contrary to his habit, possessed himself in silence,
+collecting all his powers for his reply. When he arose he delivered one
+that was memorable and overwhelming. 'You never heard such a philippic
+as Pitt returned. Hume Campbell was annihilated. Pitt, like an angry
+wasp, seems to have left his sting in the wound, and has since assumed a
+style of delicate ridicule and repartee. But think how charming a
+ridicule must be that lasts and rises, flash after flash, for an hour
+and a half! Some day perhaps you will see some of the glittering
+splinters that I gathered up.'
+
+So wrote Horace Walpole in the first enthusiasm produced by this effort.
+But the more deliberate record in his memoirs reveals few of the
+flashing splinters that he thought to have garnered. Luckily, Sir
+William Meredith has left a very brief account[316] of the tilt between
+Campbell and Pitt, which we can collate with Walpole's.
+
+So slight had been the defence, said Pitt, that he did not know how to
+deal with it; only little shifts or evasions worthy of a pie-poudre
+court, but not of Parliament. As for Hume Campbell, he had him in his
+power, he could bring him to his knees at the bar of the House as a
+delinquent for such an assault on the privileges of Parliament. If
+members were to be threatened for speaking with freedom of Ministers,
+all liberty of debate would be at an end. As he revered the profession
+of the law, so he grieved to hear it dishonoured by language that fixed
+an indelible blot on him that spoke it. 'Superior' was a word that he
+disdained. That hon. gentleman might indeed have his superiors. But he
+knew that when sitting, speaking, and voting in his legislative capacity
+the King himself was not his superior. And he could assure the hon.
+gentleman that such freedom in speaking of ministers was neither
+unparliamentary nor unprecedented. For even in the profligate
+prerogative reign of James I., when a great duke, as now, monopolised
+power, the House of Commons possessed an honest member who dared to call
+that duke _stellionatus_, a beast of most hideous deformity, covered
+with blurs and blotches and filth, an ideal monster, fouler than exists
+in nature. Yet a grave and venerable member of parliament thought this
+no unfit comparison for that great duke, who no doubt had his slaves all
+about him who called him Superior, yet durst not bring such language
+into the House of Commons. And we had then a wretched King who would
+have been glad of the assistance of a great lawyer, could he have one to
+have threatened a member of parliament for exposing the arbitrary and
+pernicious designs that he was carrying on by his ministers against his
+people. Thank God! we had no such King. If we had, he would not want a
+slavish lawyer to abet the worst measures that can be devised to ruin
+and enslave this country.
+
+'But I will not dress up this image under a third person,' he exclaimed,
+turning full round and facing Hume Campbell, 'I apply it to him; his is
+the servile doctrine; he is the slave; and the shame of his doctrine
+will stick to him as long as his gown sticks to his back. After all, his
+trade is words; they were not provoked by me, but they have no terrors
+for me, they provoke only my ridicule and contempt.'
+
+Then turning to Murray, he denounced the treaties as a violation of the
+Act of Settlement. The article to which, it may be presumed, he referred
+was as follows:
+
+'That in case the Crown and Imperial Dignity of this realm shall
+hereafter come to any person, not being a native of this Kingdom of
+England, this nation be not obliged to engage in any war for the defence
+of any dominions or territories which do not belong to the Crown of
+England without the consent of Parliament.'
+
+It cannot be said that this enactment had been specially present to the
+mind of George II. at any period of his reign. Murray had defended the
+treaties thinly against the charge of infringement by declaring that if
+this treaty violated the Act of Settlement all our defensive treaties
+had done the same, and had ended by the quaint and almost cynical remark
+that 'we could not enjoy the blessing of the present Royal Family
+without the inconveniences.'
+
+Pitt can have had, and in fact had, but little difficulty in dealing
+with Murray. 'It is difficult to know where to pull the first thread
+from a piece so finely spun. Constructions ought never to condemn a
+great minister, but I think this crime of violating the Act of
+Settlement is within the letter. If the dangerous illegality of this is
+to be inquired into, it should be referred to a committee of the whole
+House, not to a Committee of Supply. Inquired into it must be, for I
+will not suffer an audacious minister to escape the judgment of
+Parliament. For if a Cabinet have taken upon them to conclude treaties
+of subsidy without the consent of Parliament, shall they not answer for
+their action?'
+
+He derided Murray's precedents. For in 1717 or 1718 Ministers stated
+that there was danger to be apprehended from Sweden, and then asked for
+money. Would any lawyer plead that when his Britannic Majesty speaks of
+dominions in a treaty, he can mean any but his British dominions? We
+were not to be explained out of our liberties.
+
+He then criticised the conduct of the Hessians in the last war; except
+on one occasion, when they were forced at Munich, they had not behaved
+well.
+
+There Horace Walpole's notes branch off into a tangle of headings and
+exclamations which it is difficult and unnecessary to unravel. Pitt
+emphatically denied that the Crown had a power of concluding treaties of
+subsidy that led to war. He was sorry to hear it avowed that Hanover was
+concerned in all the treaties which had been cited. It was clearly a
+time to make a stand, now that we had arrived at that pitch of adulation
+that we were ready to declare openly that Hanover was at the back of
+all. He wished that the circumstances of this country would enable us to
+extend this protecting care to Hanover, but they would not. For no
+consideration would he have set his hand to these treaties.
+
+Fox in reply defended Hume Campbell with spirit, and made ironical
+retorts to Pitt, some of them now obscure, none of them now pertinent to
+this narrative. Such speeches become trivial within forty-eight hours of
+their delivery. The bones of Pitt's preserved by Walpole scarcely claim
+any better right of survival. To tell the bare truth, what survives of
+these debates is incomparably tedious and confused. But it is evident
+that Pitt had amazed the House by disclosing a new weapon, the power of
+ridicule. 'His antagonists endeavoured to disarm him. But as fast as
+they deprive him of one weapon, he finds a better. I never suspected him
+of such an universal armoury; I knew he had a Gorgon's head, composed of
+bayonets and pistols, but little thought that he could tickle to death
+with a feather.'
+
+Whatever the relative arguments may have been, the legions were
+faithful, and voted the treaties by 318 to 126.
+
+[Sidenote: 1755.]
+
+On December 12 the general engagement on the treaties was renewed, when
+Barrington brought them forward in Committee, and Charles Townshend
+distinguished himself by a speech which, Pitt declared, displayed such
+abilities as had not appeared since that House was a House. He himself
+spoke at length, but poorly and languidly, not deigning to answer Hume
+Campbell, who once more appeared, with manner and matter both 'flat and
+mean.'
+
+Pitt said, in the few sentences into which Walpole condenses his speech,
+that he did not pretend to eloquence, but owed all his credit to the
+indulgence of the House. He looked with respect on the King's
+prejudices, he added with the finesse of a courtier or the irony of a
+foe, and with contempt on those who encouraged them. Was everything to
+be called invective that had not the smoothness of a court compliment?
+Old Horace Walpole had said that if one spoke against Hanover it might
+cause a rebellion. That was the chatter of a boarding-school miss. Lord
+Townshend and Sir Robert Walpole had withstood Hanover. 'Sir Robert
+thought well of me, died in peace with me. He was a truly English
+minister, and kept a strict hand on the Closet; when he was removed the
+door was flung open (to dangerous advisers?). His friends and followers
+had then transferred themselves to that minister, Lord Granville, who
+transplanted (_sic_) that English minister. Even Sir Robert's own
+reverend brother has gone over to the Hanoverian party!'
+
+Fox merely tried in reply to keep Pitt at bay, so he said little of the
+treaties, but seems to have attacked his rival with some acrimony. He
+recalled all the treasonable songs and pamphlets of the former
+Opposition, all directed by Pitt, no doubt for the good of the country!
+But he could never forgive any man who had the heart to conceive, the
+head to contrive, and the hand to execute so much mischief. 'The right
+honourable gentleman professes pride at acting with some here; I am
+proud of acting with so many! But because he wishes that Hanover should
+be separated from England, is it wise to act as if it were already
+separated?'
+
+The legions once more prevailed, and approved both treaties by 289 to
+121.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 15, 1755.]
+
+If Pitt was held to have been below himself in this debate, he was
+considered to have surpassed himself, when the treaties came up on
+report three days afterwards, in a speech 'of most admirable and ready
+wit that flashed from him for the space of an hour and a half,
+accompanied with action that would have added reputation to Garrick.' He
+denounced Murray for attempting to hide the points at issue in a cloud
+of words. But in fact these treaties from simple questions had become
+all things to all men, as a conjuror plays with a pack of cards,
+passing them in turn to each spectator, receiving and keeping the money
+of all. Then he turned to Russia. 'Let us consider this Northern Star,
+that will not shine with any light of its own, but requires to be rubbed
+up into lustre; for could Russia, without our assistance, support her
+own troops? She will not prove a Star of the Wise Men, yet they must
+approach her with presents. The real Wise Man "Quć desperat tractata
+nitescere posse relinquit."
+
+'By this measure you are throwing Prussia into the arms of France. What
+can Frederick answer if France proposes to march an army into Germany?
+If he refuses to join her will she not threaten to leave him at the
+mercy of Russia? This is one of the effects of our sage
+negotiations--not to mention that we have wasted ten or eleven millions
+in subsidies.
+
+'Shall we not set the impossibility of our carrying on so extensive a
+war against the contention that his Majesty's honour is engaged? Our
+Ministers foresaw our ill-success at sea, and prudently laid a nest-egg
+for a war on the Continent. We have as an inducement to engage in this
+war been referred to the examples of Greece and Carthage. These ancient
+histories, no doubt, furnish ample matter for declamation. It is long
+since I read them, but I think I recollect enough to show how
+inapplicable they are to our present circumstances. Suppose Thebes and
+Sparta and the other Greek Commonwealths fallen from their former power,
+would Athens have gone on alone and paid all the rest? No, Athens put
+herself on board her fleet to fight where she could be superior, and so
+recovered her land.'
+
+'Not giving succour to Hannibal was indeed wrong, because he was already
+on land and was successful, and might have done something of the kind
+that Prince Eugene proposed, and marched with a torch to Versailles. But
+another poet says, I recollect a good deal of poetry to-day, another
+poet says, "Expende Hannibalem," "weigh him, weigh him." I have weighed
+him. What good did his glory procure to his country? Remember what the
+same poet says: "I, demens, curre per Alpes, ut pueris placeas et
+declamatio fias."'
+
+This flight, it may be surmised, was aimed at Cumberland.
+
+He once more expressed his dutiful feelings to the King, and
+acknowledged how difficult it was for Ministers to be honest with him.
+But yet the resistance to these treaties might save us from a
+Continental war. In any case, speaking for himself, he would never again
+give his confidence in the nation's advisers or adopters of this
+measure. He could only hope that our perverted Ministers might yet yield
+to conviction and save us, and that a British spirit might influence
+British councils.
+
+In the division which followed, the Hessian treaty appeared somewhat
+less acceptable than the Russian. The former was voted by 259 to 72 and
+the latter by 263 to 69. This was the net result. Yet, as Horace Walpole
+wrote at the time, 'Pitt had ridden in the whirlwind and directed the
+storm with abilities beyond the common reach of the genii of the
+tempest.' Eloquence, reason, and argument avail little against a compact
+parliamentary majority.[317]
+
+The reader will scarcely regret that an adjournment for Christmas
+followed this debate, for nothing is so tantalising as these barren
+husks of great speeches. The Minister employed his holiday appropriately
+in distributing gifts of office to his friends, and the reconstruction
+of the Government was completed. No part of it directly touches our
+story, but some features are of interest. The Dukes of Newcastle and
+Bedford, the Chancellor and Fox were each allowed to nominate a member
+of the Board of Trade. But Newcastle would not allow Fox a single voice
+in the appointment of the Lords of the Treasury; for he guarded that
+department with the jealousy of a Turk. The other point of interest was
+the cost to the public of these manipulations. To get rid of Sir Thomas
+Robinson it had been necessary to settle a pension on him of 2000_l._ a
+year for thirty-one years. To make a place for Lord Hillsborough, Mr.
+Arundel had a pension of 2000_l._ in exchange for the sinecure office of
+Treasurer of the Chamber. Lord Lothian had 1200_l._ a year to vacate the
+Clerk Registership of Scotland for Hume Campbell. Lord Cholmondeley, who
+held the Vice-Treasurership of Ireland with one colleague, had 600_l._ a
+year to induce him to accept a third partner of the office. Sir Conyers
+Darcy had 1600_l._ a year for vacating the Comptrollership of the
+Household. In all a burden of 7400_l._ a year was settled on the public
+to patch up a feeble and odious Ministry for ten months.
+
+While the gentle showers of office and pensions were descending on
+parched politicians, Pitt wended his valetudinarian way, as usual, to
+Bath. But when Parliament met in January, he was in his place, alert and
+thirsting for combat.
+
+[Sidenote: 1756.]
+
+We first catch a glimpse of him, on January 23, paying great court to
+Beckford; with conspicuous success as it happened, for Beckford
+hereafter was to be his devoted follower, and his invaluable agent in
+the City of London. On the same day the new Chancellor of the Exchequer
+unfolded his Budget, better than was expected, but bewildered with the
+figures. 'He stumbled over millions, and dwelt pompously over
+farthings.' His Budget dealt with figures enviably small; duties on
+plate, calculated to produce 30,000_l._ a year, which produced
+18,000_l._; on bricks and tiles which were to produce 30,000_l._ a year,
+and on cards and dice which were to produce 17,000_l._ Bricks and tiles
+failed the Government; the tax was too unpopular; so, it is scarcely
+necessary to state, it was moved on to ale-houses. A generation, which
+passes tens of millions of expenditure without breaking silence, looks
+back with awe on that which deployed the full splendour of eloquence on
+taxes which altogether were not to produce 80,000_l._ a year. Pitt, who
+was almost as ignorant of finance as the Chancellor of the Exchequer,
+attacked him with vigour, but Lyttelton replied effectively. In speaking
+he mentioned Pitt as his friend, but corrected it to 'the gentleman.'
+This raised a laugh, when Lyttelton remarked, not without pathos, 'If he
+is not my friend, it is not my fault,' and the contest, after lasting
+some time, mellowed into good humour.
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 28, 1756.]
+
+A few days later Pitt broke out again and declared that the Ministry was
+disjointed, and united only in corrupt and arbitrary measures. Fox
+denied this publicly and privately; publicly sneering at Pitt's family
+connection, privately assuring Pitt that, so far from there being any
+disunion between Newcastle and himself, the two Townshends had offered
+to join the Duke if he would give up Fox, and that the Minister had
+refused them.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 9, 1756.]
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 10, 1756.]
+
+The next battle was on a proposal to raise four Swiss battalions to be
+employed in America, when Pitt, as usual, censured the dilatoriness of
+the Government and flouted their 'paper' forces. Lord Loudoun commanded
+only a scroll, he said; the suggested battalions were only adding paper
+to paper; and so forth. Next day he diverted the debate from its tedious
+course by accusing the Government of having cashiered a brave officer,
+Sir Henry Erskine, a friend of Bute's by the by, on account of his vote
+in Parliament. But this ended in nothing.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 20, 1756.]
+
+At a later stage, Pitt ironically described the plan for the Swiss
+auxiliaries as a fortuitous blessing, for had not Prevot, the adventurer
+who was to command the battalions, been taken prisoner by the French and
+found his way from Brest hither, and had he not then taken it into his
+head that he would like to command a regiment, nothing would have been
+heard of it. He hoped this Ulysses-like wanderer might be as wise as his
+prototype and so forth; one can imagine the sort of pleasantry. But it
+was Charles Townshend who, 'content with promoting confusion,' chiefly
+shone at this time. On the other hand, one of Pitt's speeches, urging
+that the Colonies should be heard on this Swiss scheme, is described as
+lasting an hour and a half without fire or force. Indeed, Walpole writes
+of this debate that 'the opposition neither increase in numbers or
+eloquence; the want of the former seems to have damped the fire of the
+latter,' and that 'the House of Commons has dwindled into a very
+dialogue between Pitt and Fox ... in which, though Pitt has attacked,
+Fox has generally had the better.' Pitt seemed to be becoming dull and
+diffuse. 'Mr. Pitt talks by Shrewsbury clock, and is grown almost as
+little heard as that is at Westminster.' Still one wishes that the
+chronicler had reported the speeches of either as faithfully as he
+reports his own.
+
+The apprehension of a French invasion, which had been present for
+months, became acute in March and April (1756). The Government asked for
+the troops which Holland was, it was held, bound to furnish, and they
+were refused. Thereupon Lord George Sackville, probably by concert with
+the Court or to gain its favour, suggested a preference for Hanoverians,
+whose soldierlike qualities he commended. The hint was acted upon with
+suspicious promptitude; and on March 29, Fox formally moved to address
+the King to send for his Electoral troops.[318]
+
+Pitt, swathed as an invalid, opposed the motion in a long speech. He
+alleged his respect for the King as the ground of his opposition. For
+this address would be advice to the King in his Electoral capacity which
+we had no claim to offer, and which, moreover, might involve his
+Electorate in a peril equal to our own. He seems to have argued against
+any fear of invasion, on the ground that in the Dutch war, with a
+suspected King, we had coped with Holland and France; that in 1690, when
+the French had beaten our fleet at Beachy Head and had an army actually
+in Ireland, we had surmounted that danger; and that de Witt, the
+greatest man since the men of Plutarch, had proposed an invasion to
+d'Estrades, who had treated it as a chimerical suggestion. In any case
+the natural force of the nation was sufficient to repel any attack of
+the enemy. That state alone is a sovereign state 'qui suis stat viribus,
+non alieno pendet arbitrio,' which subsists by its own strength, not by
+the courtesy of its neighbours:[319] words which may have inspired Lord
+Lyndhurst, a century afterwards, with his famous phrase with regard to a
+State existing on sufferance. He would vote, Pitt proceeded, for raising
+any numbers of British troops. The late war had formed many great
+officers, and he would not interpose foreigners to hinder their
+promotion; nor would he force this vote on the King when he might send
+for his troops without.[320] The motion was agreed to by 259 to 92. Bubb
+comically commented on the readiness of the King, who had then amassed,
+it was believed, an immense treasure in Hanover, to make the nation pay
+for this defence of himself, by declaring that 'His Majesty would not
+for the world lend himself a farthing.' Not less humorous is the story
+preserved by Horace Walpole that the night the Hanoverian troops were
+voted, he summoned his German cook and ordered himself an exceptionally
+good supper. 'Get me all de varieties,' said the homely monarch, 'I
+don't mind expense.' A lampoon in the form of an anecdote, it is to be
+supposed.
+
+[Sidenote: March 30, 1756.]
+
+Next day Pitt had another opportunity for attack on the charge involved
+by the employment of Hessian troops, who, he declared, would cost
+400,000_l._ more than the same number of British troops. But, a few days
+afterwards, there was a still better occasion, when Barrington brought
+forward the estimate for the Hanoverian troops, and commended it as a
+better bargain than the Hessian, which had been passed, and was
+therefore secure. Pitt at once harped on the same strain, and, lauding
+the Hanoverian estimate, fell still more vehemently on the Hessian. No
+one could find fault with the Hanoverian, that we owed to His Majesty;
+but the subsidiary juggle with Hesse was the work of his Ministers.
+'Nothing but good flows from the King; nothing but ruin from his
+servants. I choose that they shall fall by a friendly hand, and that the
+condemnation of his patrons should come from the noble lord himself
+(Barrington). But must we engage mercenaries because France does? She
+engages them,' he said, with one of his phrases of picturesque energy,
+'because she has not blood enough in her own veins for the purpose of
+universal monarchy.' He despaired of preserving Minorca, he continued
+with gloomy prescience, yet the waste on these Hessians would have saved
+that island, would have conquered America. He broke out bitterly against
+the departmental character of the Government. 'I don't call this an
+administration, it is so unsteady. One is at the head of the Treasury;
+one, Chancellor; one, head of the Navy; one great person, of the Army.
+But is that an administration? They shift and shuffle the charge from
+one to another. One says, "I am not the General;" the Treasury says, "I
+am not the Admiral;" the Admiralty says, "I am not the Minister." From
+such an unaccording assemblage of separate and distinct powers with no
+system, a nullity results. One, two, three, four, five lords meet. If
+they cannot agree, "Oh, we will meet again on Saturday!" "Oh," but says
+one of them, "I am to go out of town." Alas! when no parties survive to
+thwart them, what an aggravation it is that no good comes from such
+unanimity!'
+
+Fox, in reply, asked if Pitt wished to see a sole Minister, a question
+that suggests that there was already an impression abroad that Pitt was
+aiming at the dictatorship which he afterwards received, or else that
+Pitt, if he obtained office, would be so overbearing as to become the
+sole Minister.
+
+Pitt, at any rate, did not accept the allusion as to himself. He said
+that he did not wish to see a single Minister, but system and decision.
+Indeed, he gracefully added, were Fox sole Minister there would be
+decision enough.[321]
+
+On May 11 (1756) a royal message apprised Parliament of the treaty
+concluded with Prussia (the Convention of Westminster, signed January
+1756), and asking his faithful Commons for supplies.
+
+The House promptly voted a million on account, but Pitt as usual uttered
+eloquent lamentations on the incapacity of Ministers and the calamitous
+situation of affairs. What was this vote of credit for? Was it to raise
+more men? We had already 40,000 British and 14,000 foreign troops. Was
+it for the purpose of marine treaties? Then he would joyfully vote it.
+For a naval war we could and ought to support, but a Continental war on
+the present system we could not. Regard should no doubt be had to
+Hanover, but a secondary regard. For if Hanover was to be our first
+object it would lead us to bankruptcy. It was impossible to defend
+Hanover by subsidies. How could an open country be defended against an
+enemy who could march 150,000 men into it, and if necessary reinforce
+them by as many more? Should Hanover suffer by her connection with Great
+Britain, we ought not to make peace without exacting full and ample
+compensation for all the damage and injury she might have sustained. But
+the idea of defending Hanover by subsidies was preposterous, absurd, and
+impracticable. Then, excited by this favourite theme beyond the limits
+he had imposed on himself, he struck home at the King and his darling
+patrimony. This system, he said, would in a few years, cost us more
+money than the fee simple of the electorate was worth, a place which
+after all could not be found in the map. He ardently wished us to break
+those fetters which chained us like Prometheus to that barren rock. (The
+metaphor which made a rock of Hanover does not strike one as one of his
+happiest efforts).
+
+If Lyttelton could not state the purpose for which this credit was
+designed, perhaps he could say for what it was not designed. Still, Pitt
+added sardonically, he was of so compounding a temper that he should
+assent to it.
+
+Ministers bragged of their unanimity and spirit. But what had all this
+army of councils and talents, this universal aye, produced? Were we
+safe? Had we inflicted any damage on the enemy? If so, when and where?
+
+He had no particular pleasure in thus speaking. He did not wish to load
+the unhappy men who had undone their country, most unhappy if they did
+not realise it. And our activity! Philosophers indeed had a phrase _vis
+inertić_ by which they denoted the inactivity of action (_sic_). Was it
+by that that we were to be saved?
+
+His charge against the Government was this: that we had provoked before
+we could defend, and neglected after provocation; that we were left
+inferior to France in every quarter; that the vote of credit had been
+misapplied to secure Hanover; and that we had bought a treaty with
+Prussia by sacrificing our rights. He would not have signed such a
+treaty to have the five great places of those who had signed it. Yet if
+this treaty were restrained to the defence of the King's dominions he
+should not know how to oppose it.
+
+He had no feeling of resentment against the Government, no one had
+injured him. Yet he could not but think ill of their capacity and their
+measures. Could he, then, every day, arraign their policy and feel
+confidence in them? Pelham indeed had intended economy, but he was
+dragged into this foreign policy by his brother, now at the head of the
+Treasury. And if he, Pitt, saw Newcastle like a child driving a go-cart
+with that precious freight of an old King and his family on to a
+precipice, was he not bound to try and take the reins from his hands?
+And with a gloomy foreboding which must have chilled the anxious House,
+he solemnly prayed that the King might not have Minorca written on his
+heart, as Calais had been, in the dying declaration of Mary, engraved on
+hers.
+
+The debate ended with a bitter rally between Pitt and Lyttelton, the
+fiercer for their former friendship. Lyttelton had sneered at his
+epithets. This came well, said Pitt, from Lyttelton, whose own character
+was a composition of epithets. He himself had used no epithets that day,
+so Lyttelton had chosen ill the occasion for his taunt. But in any case
+the House was not an academy for the exchange of compliments. And when
+Lyttelton disclaimed any share in framing the motion, it was obvious
+that he was not at liberty to change it. If Lyttelton would declare that
+he had no more resources, he would only say that Lyttelton was
+incapable.
+
+The new Chancellor of the Exchequer, whose heart was still warm with his
+old affection, was hurt by this attack, but he maintained his ground.
+'He says I am but a thing made up of epithets. Is not this the language
+of Billingsgate? The world is complaining that the House was turned into
+a bear garden. I do not envy my friend the glory of being the Figg or
+Broughton of it.' Pitt retorted that Lyttelton was a very pretty poet,
+and that there was no one whom he more respected pen in hand. 'But it is
+hard that my friend, with whom I have taken sweet counsel in epithets,
+should now reproach me with using them.' Lyttelton replied once more
+that it was not his fault if he and Pitt were not still friends.[322]
+
+[Sidenote: May 14, 1756.]
+
+A day or two later Lyttelton unfolded to the House the provisions of the
+Treaty of Westminster. It had cleared up some small pecuniary claims on
+both sides, so much to Frederick for losses from British privateers, so
+much from Frederick for arrears of interest on the Silesian loan, a
+balance of 40,000_l._ due on the whole to Great Britain. On this, Pitt,
+inveterate against the Ministry, fulminated once more. He declared that
+by payment, even of a small sum, we had conceded the principle of our
+Empire over the sea, and went off into the usual rhetoric. 'For himself
+he should affect no superiority but what was common to him with the
+twelve millions of his countrymen, innocence of his country's ruin, the
+superiority of the undone over the undoers.'
+
+All that is notable in these crumbs of debate is the strategy of Pitt;
+to hammer at the enemy without ceasing, not to allow him a moment to
+breathe or recover, but to display him to the country day and night
+pummelled, bewildered and helpless, until he should succumb from
+exhaustion; when the country should insist on the removal of the
+defeated combatant, and the substitution of his conqueror. Pitt was
+openly set on the destruction of the Newcastle Government for more
+reasons than one. He was vindictive and had been slighted; he was
+profoundly anxious about the position of the country, and convinced of
+the incapacity of Newcastle to govern; he wished to try his own hand at
+the game, believing that he could do better, convinced that he could do
+no worse, than the Ministers whom he had seen at work.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+
+But national calamity was now to lend irresistible force to his attacks.
+It had been known for some time that France was meditating an attack on
+Gibraltar or Minorca, and in the beginning of March it became certain
+that Minorca was to be the object.[323] During the first week of May the
+Government received the news that the French had actually landed on the
+island. War was formally and not prematurely declared on May 18. Six
+weeks earlier the ill-fated Byng had sailed with a fleet to relieve the
+fortress. The country waited for news with bated breath. The King
+declared that he could neither eat nor sleep. Saunders, afterwards to be
+Pitt's First Lord of the Admiralty, reassured his Sovereign by saying
+that they should screw his heart out if Byng were not at that moment
+(June 7) in the harbour of Mahon.[324] Then came the news that Byng,
+after an indecisive engagement with the French fleet, had sailed back to
+Gibraltar and left Minorca to its fate. Still the nation, though raging
+against Byng, hoped against hope, till on July 14 the news came that
+Fort St. Philip, the British fort, had surrendered after a gallant
+defence on June 28, and that Minorca was in the hands of the French. The
+long-compressed anxiety exploded in a terrible outburst of wrath against
+Byng. Addresses poured in from every part of England demanding vengeance
+upon him. The unhappy Admiral was brought back to Greenwich Hospital as
+a prisoner to await a court-martial. But, the nation had already turned
+its thumb downwards. Perhaps the best idea of the popular sentiment is
+conveyed by the fact that Byng's brother, who went to meet the Admiral,
+was stricken to death by the popular fury wherever he passed; so that he
+fell ill at the first sight of the prisoner, and died next day in
+convulsions. There was no chance of a fair trial for the unhappy man. To
+the merchants of London bringing one of the addresses for his exemplary
+punishment Newcastle, not sorry to have a scapegoat, had blurted out,
+'Oh! indeed he shall be tried immediately: he shall be hanged directly.'
+And executed he was, after an agony of eight months, in spite of
+justice, in spite of Pitt, who had the fine courage to support him, in
+deference to the nation and the King who were bent on his death.
+Voltaire, who had tried with real humanity to save him, sardonically
+described the execution in Candide, 'Dans ce pays-ci il est bon de tuer
+de temps en temps un amiral pour encourager les autres,' a phrase which
+he appears to have borrowed from the Knights of Malta.[325]
+
+Something less, much less than Nelson, might have saved Minorca. The
+truth seems to be that Byng, who was personally brave, sailed from
+Gibraltar with the preconceived impression that Minorca was lost, and
+acted throughout under this conviction, without energy or resource. So
+far as his countrymen, or rather, their rulers, were concerned, they had
+long done their best to lose it. They had, in spite of constant appeals,
+starved and neglected it. But there was worse than this. On one side of
+the mouth of the harbour of Mahon is a site easily rendered impregnable,
+on the other a plain which nothing can secure. John Duke of Argyle had
+begun a fort on the first site, but Lord Cadogan out of hatred to him,
+it was said, destroyed it and built Fort St. Philip at a vast expense on
+the second. The thing is incredible to the traveller who sees the place.
+If the story be true (Horace Walpole is the authority), it is on the
+head of Cadogan and not of Byng that should be laid the loss of Minorca,
+a loss which can neither be forgotten nor forgiven.
+
+This tragic incident only touches Pitt's life in so far as it
+precipitated the disgrace of Newcastle. The Duke was indeed getting
+deeper and deeper. In May he declared that no one blamed him, for every
+one knew that the sea was not his province, and Fox had replied that as
+to public censure, his information was exactly the reverse. In September
+he could scarcely conceal from himself that he was being mobbed and
+pelted in his coach, and that his coachman was urged by the shouting
+crowd to drive his Grace straight to the Tower. Ballads swarmed of which
+the burden was, 'To the block with Newcastle and to the yard-arm with
+Byng.' Even the docile allegiance of the House of Commons can scarcely
+have allayed the veteran's rising anxiety. 'This was the year of the
+worst administration that I have seen in England,' says Walpole, though
+he was the close friend of Fox, 'for now Newcastle's incapacity was
+allowed full play.' Fox indeed found that he was not admitted to real
+confidence or to the counsels of Newcastle and Hardwicke. He was
+therefore in a state of swelling discontent, ready to break away at the
+first opportunity. He declared that he had urged that a strong squadron
+should be sent for the relief of the fortress during the first week of
+March, but was overruled. The fall of Minorca and the storm of national
+fury which followed increased his anxiety to be out of this disastrous
+Ministry. He was, we suspect, already determined not to meet Parliament
+again as Newcastle's talking puppet, possibly his scapegoat.
+
+The House had risen on May 27. Two days earlier occurred an event which
+was to remove one of the three intellects of the Government, Fox and
+Hardwicke, of course, being the other two. Ryder, the Chief Justice of
+the King's Bench, died, and Murray at once laid claim to the succession.
+This demand drove Newcastle to despair. He offered Murray exorbitant and
+increasing terms to remain, for he regarded Murray as his sole protector
+in the House of Commons against his doubtful friend, Fox, and his open
+enemy, Pitt. But offers of the Duchy of Lancaster for life with a
+pension of 2000_l._ a year, with permission to remain Attorney-General
+at a salary of 7000_l._ a year, and a reversion of one of the Golden
+Tellerships of the Exchequer for his nephew Stormont, left Murray
+unmoved. For months the game of temptation was played. At the beginning
+of October the Prime Minister had raised the proposed pension to
+6000_l._ a year. Murray remained firm. He stipulated, indeed, for more
+than the Chief Justiceship; he demanded a peerage as well; he would not
+take the one without the other; and in no case would he remain
+Attorney-General. We can imagine Newcastle's tears and caresses; they
+were in vain. Vain, too, was his attempt to fob off his rebellious
+subordinate with the reluctance of the King. Murray, indeed, hinted that
+when he became a private member of the House of Commons he might go into
+Opposition. We may be sure, at any rate, that he had no intention of
+facing an angry nation and Parliament in defence of Newcastle and the
+loss of Minorca. This hint probably clinched the matter. Newcastle
+capitulated; though, said Fox, from 'wilful trifling,' he deferred the
+performance of his promise as long as possible.[326] It was not till the
+eve of the Duke's fall that, on November 8, Murray was sworn in as Chief
+Justice and created a Peer as Lord Mansfield.
+
+[Sidenote: 1756.]
+
+What glimpses are there meanwhile of Pitt? He had just got possession of
+Hayes, and was there in May, building and improving, as usual, but
+speaking brilliantly on the Militia Bill in the House, so brilliantly as
+to earn a patronising note of approval from Bute, beginning 'My worthy
+friend'; an indication that the bond between Pitt and the young Court
+was now close. Indeed, Pitt seems now to have been the principal adviser
+of that increasingly powerful connection.
+
+Potter, whom Pitt had come to describe as 'one of the best friends I
+have in the world,' wrote to Pitt, ten days after Ryder's death,
+conveying the news from an inspired source that if Murray went on the
+bench Newcastle would invite Pitt to join the Government, for he could
+repair the loss in no other way. But he adds, shrewdly enough, that the
+Duke was evidently ignorant of his own strength, for if he had to rely
+on Lyttelton and Dupplin (then Joint Paymaster of the Forces) alone,
+though the debates would no doubt be shorter, he would not, such was the
+temper of the House, lose a single vote. He added that, in his judgment,
+the Opposition had not made themselves popular by their conduct, because
+of the fear of invasion. Hanover treaties and Hanover troops had become
+popular; opposition to them must be wrong 'when we are ready to be eat
+up by the French.'[327]
+
+But these anticipations were premature, for the struggle with Murray
+lasted, as we have seen, from May till November. So that Pitt had
+leisure to squander on his improvements and to receive his eldest son
+John on John's entrance into the world. But his eye was vigilantly fixed
+on the distresses of the country. 'Quć regio in terris nostri non plena
+laboris?' he writes to George Grenville (June 5, 1756). 'It is an
+inadequate and a selfish consolation, but it is a sensible one, to think
+that we share only in the common ruin, and not in the guilt of having
+left us exposed to the natural and necessary consequences of
+administration without ability or virtue.' Grenville, determined not to
+be undone, replies in a letter stuffed with Latin quotation. 'Distress,'
+rejoins Pitt (June 16, 1756), 'infinite distress seems to hem us in on
+all quarters. I am in most anxious impatience to have the affair in the
+Mediterranean cleared up. As yet nothing is clear but that the French
+are masters there, and that probably many an innocent and gallant man's
+honour and fortune is to be offered up as a scapegoat for the sins of
+the Administration.' In July he paid a visit at Stowe, and in August he
+was laid up at Hayes with 'a very awkward, uneasy, but not hurtful'
+malady.
+
+He must have seen with poignant interest Frederick's fierce irruption
+into Saxony, but all seems absorbed in his anxiety for his wife and his
+overflowing delight at the birth of his son. This event occurred on
+October 10, at a moment when the ministerial crisis had become acute.
+
+No one in fact was willing to face even an abject House of Commons with
+the loss of Minorca on his back. Newcastle was near the end of his
+tether. Murray had gone. Whether Chief Justice or not, he was determined
+to be out of the Ministry; and if disappointed of his just claim to the
+Bench he was not likely to face a storm on behalf of the Minister who
+had refused it. Murray had gone, Fox was going; for his chagrin was
+patent, and Newcastle 'treated him rather like an enemy whom he feared
+than as a minister whom he had chosen for his assistant.' He was no
+better used by the King. The Duke, moreover, was at war with the waxing
+power of Leicester House. With this Court indeed he managed to patch up
+a hollow peace at the expense of Fox; offending one Court and not
+appeasing the other. But that did not help him to an agent in the House
+of Commons.
+
+And worse was still to come, disaster followed on disaster. To a nation
+freshly smarting with the fall of Minorca there came tidings of
+catastrophe from the East and the West. In June Calcutta had been
+captured by Surajah Dowlah, followed by the horrors of the Black Hole,
+which still linger in the proverbial dialect of this country. Then in
+August fell Oswego, the most important British fortress in North
+America. Situated on Lake Ontario it was a permanent menace to the
+French, for British command of that lake would mean the separation of
+Canada from Louisiana. Montcalm, a general of high merit, who has had
+the singular good fortune to leave a name consecrated by the common
+veneration of friend and foe, had arrived to take the command of the
+French forces in Canada. Two months after landing he marched on Oswego,
+and, investing it with a greatly superior force, soon compelled it to
+capitulate. Its garrison of 1400 men surrendered as prisoners of
+war.[328] A hundred pieces of artillery and great stores of ammunition
+fell into the hands of the French. The forts, three in number, and the
+vessels were burned. It was a real triumph for the French, and a
+proportionate disaster for their foes. 'Such a shocking affair has never
+found a place in English annals,' wrote one American officer. 'The loss
+is beyond account; but the dishonour done his Majesty's arms is
+infinitely greater.' 'Oswego,' wrote Horace Walpole, 'is of ten times
+more importance even than Minorca.'
+
+Scarcely less consternation was caused in England, where the news
+arrived on September 30. People there were getting dazed with disaster,
+and the men who ruled became more and more abhorrent. Already, on
+September 2, Newcastle had written to the Chancellor that people were
+becoming outrageous in the North of England, and that a petition was
+being largely signed in Surrey demanding 'justice against persons
+however highly dignified or distinguished.' This, he adds drily, may
+mean you or me, or 'perhaps somebody more highly dignified and
+distinguished than either of us.'[329] Who could be found to bear such a
+burden of shame and ignominy, and affront the storm that threatened to
+burst at once in overwhelming popular fury?
+
+Not Fox, undaunted though he might be. Like the condottiere that he was,
+he did not heed hard knocks provided the pay were good. But here he was
+defrauded of his deserts, of the promised confidence of the King and his
+Minister. For Newcastle had betrayed him to the last; the magpie cunning
+of that old caitiff paralysed every arm that might have defended him.
+When it came to the point he could not bring himself to part with his
+monopoly of patronage, and of power as he understood power. He was like
+a drowning miser with his treasure on him, who will not part with his
+gold to save his life. So the Duke preferred to sink with all his
+influence rather than take the chance of floating without it. First he
+set the King against Fox. The Duke had tried to appease Leicester House
+by getting the appointment of Groom of the Stole for Bute. The King,
+suspecting Bute's intimacy with the Princess, detested that fascinating
+courtier. So Newcastle, to divert from himself the King's wrath at
+having to make this nomination, told His Majesty that Fox made Bute's
+appointment a condition of his retaining the seals; and then without
+telling Fox that his name had thus been mentioned to the Sovereign,
+informed him that the King was exasperated against him.[330]
+
+Then there arose the eternal question of patronage. Fox had been
+promised by the King himself that on becoming Secretary of State he
+should have the conduct of the House of Commons with all that that
+involved. But Newcastle could not bring himself to fulfil the royal
+pledges or his own. When the list of the Prince of Wales's household was
+published, Fox saw in it the names of eight or ten members of Parliament
+as to whom he had never been even consulted. Newcastle moreover, as Fox
+asserted, broke a solemn promise that Fox's nephew, Lord Digby, should
+be included. A still greater affront was that he told Fox that he
+destined a vacant seat at the Board of Trade for a person whom he was
+not at liberty to mention. More than this, he took occasion to remind
+Fox of a former offer to make way for Pitt if it were for the King's
+service, and Fox again readily agreed. All this took place on September
+30.[331] Such an insulting and accumulated want of confidence between
+the leaders of the two Houses was not to be tolerated, and Fox wrote at
+once to Bubb that things were going ill. The final explosion was caused
+by the exclusion of Digby, which was notified to Fox on October 5. The
+King, said the Duke, refused this nomination peremptorily and bitterly,
+but had said that, if the Duke himself pressed it, he would yield to
+oblige the Duke. On receiving this letter, Fox wrote a furious letter
+to Stone, Newcastle's secretary. The draft of a letter commonly reveals
+much more of the writer's mind than the letter itself, and the draft of
+this is fortunately preserved.[332] 'I do not know,' wrote Fox, 'whether
+I am to imagine from hence that the negotiation with Mr. Pitt is far
+advanced, but I am told it is not begun. In these circumstances, dear
+Sir, I must beg you to stop it. I retract all good-humoured dealing. I
+may be turned out, and I suppose shall. But I will not be used like a
+dog without having given the least provocation (suppose I should say
+with the utmost merit to those who use me so) and be like that dog a
+spaniel. I do not consent that Mr. Pitt should have my place, and
+promise to be in good humour or even on any terms with those who give it
+him.'[333] Fox was in a blind fury, but sensibly expunged all this from
+the letter he sent. To Welbore Ellis, his confidant, he wrote: 'The King
+has carried his displeasure to me beyond common bounds, and I vow to God
+I don't guess the reason. The Duke of Newcastle, instead of growing
+better, has outdone himself, and show'd me the Prince's establishment on
+which eight members of the House of Commons are plac'd whose names he
+never mention'd to me, and he had the assurance to make a merit of
+shewing me the List after it was _fix'd_ with the King. He has been Fool
+enough to ask my consent, and to intend to offer my place to Mr. Pitt
+without (as I believe) trying whether or no he will accept it. This
+makes it necessary for me to take a step in which my view is to get out
+of court and never come into it again.... If you think it worth while to
+get up very early to-morrow morning you may be at Holland House before
+I go to Lady Yarmouth, to desire and humbly advise H.M. to conclude the
+Treaty with Mr. Pitt, promising my assistance in a subaltern employment,
+and shewing the impossibility of my appearing and my determination not
+to appear in the H. of Commons as Secy. of State.'[334] While he was
+writing this, Newcastle was despatching a note giving way as to Digby's
+nomination,[335] with much the same effect as a cup of cold water poured
+with the best intentions on a burning city.
+
+Whether with or without the companionship of Ellis, Fox went straight to
+Lady Yarmouth. She was out. Newcastle had already sent her a note
+enclosing Fox's resignation, and assuring her that Fox was bringing it
+to her for transmission to the King.[336] When Fox found her, later in
+the day, and handed her his paper, she denied any idea of Pitt ever
+having been suggested to the King, but besought him to reconsider his
+determination. 'Monsieur Fox, vous ętes trop honnęte homme pour quitter
+ŕ présent. S'il y avait quatre ou cinq mois avant que le Parlement
+s'assemble; ŕ la fin de la session vous ferez ce que vous voudrez, mais
+ŕ présent de jeter tout en confusion! Regardez ŕ la position des
+affaires. Non, je n'excuse pas le Duc de Newcastle; c'est dur, c'est
+pénible, mais quand vous aurez pensé un peu au Roi, ŕ la patrie, vous
+continuerez cette session,' perhaps the only articulate utterance of
+Lady Yarmouth that we possess.[337] Failing in this, she begged at least
+that Granville might hand the resignation to the King instead of
+herself. Fox agreed to this.[338]
+
+Fox's note to Newcastle was terse and sombre:
+
+'My Lord, I return Your Grace many thanks for the letter which, not
+being at home, I did not receive till late last night, and I am much
+obliged to you for the contents of it.
+
+'The step I am going to take is not only necessary but innocent. It
+shall be accompany'd with no complaint. It shall be follow'd by no
+resentment. I have no resentment. But it is not the less true that my
+situation is impracticable.'
+
+To the King he sent a formal paper of grievance and resignation, which
+has already been printed and need not be repeated here. He took great
+pains over it, as the drafts testify. The substance of it was that he
+had been loyal to Newcastle, but that he had not received support in
+return, and so could not carry on the business of Government in the
+House of Commons as it should be carried on. But he would gladly serve
+the King outside the Cabinet. This meant that he would gladly exchange
+offices with Pitt. At the same time he told Cumberland and wrote to
+Devonshire that if Newcastle had been such a fool as to offer the seals
+to Pitt without knowing whether he would take them, he (Fox), to prevent
+the general confusion that would ensue, would continue for another
+session. No notice was taken of this offer.[339] It does not seem
+certain that it ever reached either Newcastle or the King.
+
+Granville found the King prepared for the resignation, and very angry
+with Fox for deserting him. 'Would you advise me to take Pitt?' he
+asked. 'Well, Sir!' replied Granville, 'you must take somebody.' 'Ah!
+but,' said the monarch, pensively, 'I am sure Pitt will not do my
+business.' The business to which the Sovereign referred was, of course,
+electoral. He considered that he had in various ways shown Fox great
+favour, and that Fox had acted ill in throwing up his office when the
+meeting of Parliament was near at hand.
+
+Newcastle received Fox's resignation at the Treasury. Though he was
+planning to discard Fox for Pitt, he was thunderstruck at finding that
+Fox had anticipated him. He hurried to Court, and found the King in good
+humour except with the resigning Secretary. His Majesty gave Newcastle
+the paper which he had received from Granville, having underlined the
+passage which had mainly offended him: 'for want of support, and think
+it impracticable for me to carry on His Majesty's affairs as they ought
+to be carried on;' and then recited, with the aid of Newcastle as
+prompter, all the favours shown to Fox. But the more urgent and
+practical question was not the ingratitude of Fox, but what was to be
+done now that he had gone. The King, with that shrewd and redeeming
+touch of humour which we constantly discern in him, said that a sensible
+courtier, Lord Hyde, had told him that there were but three things to
+do. The King recited them thus: 'to call in Pitt, to make up with my own
+family, and, my lord, I have forgot the third.' The third probably
+related to Newcastle himself, and may therefore have been difficult of
+repetition to the Duke. But without hesitation the King empowered
+Newcastle to approach Pitt, and to tell him that if he would take
+office he should have a good reception. Pitt was also to be offered the
+seals, but not at first, on the fatuous principle on which all
+Newcastle's negotiations were conducted; to hope against hope that the
+object he coveted could be got for much less than its value.
+
+But then the King asked 'the great question ... which,' says Newcastle,
+'I own I could not answer: what shall we do if Pitt will not come? Fox
+will then be worse.' Then the King, with still increasing acuteness,
+asked, 'Suppose Pitt will not serve with you?' 'Then, Sir, I must go.'
+And so it was to end. But Newcastle would not without a struggle
+renounce the deleterious habit of office. He summoned Hardwicke to town
+for the purpose of approaching Pitt. He hurried to Lady Yarmouth and
+took counsel with her. All agreed that the only resource was Pitt, and
+that Hardwicke alone could sound him. Pitt was at Hayes, but leaving
+immediately for Bath. Time was short, the crisis acute, so Newcastle
+wrote, 'don't boggle at it.'[340]
+
+There was no boggling or hesitation on the part of the Chancellor: he
+hurried to London and saw Pitt on Tuesday, October 19. The interview
+lasted three hours and a half. When it was over, Hardwicke despatched a
+despairing note to Newcastle: 'I am just come from my conference, which
+lasted full 3-1/2 hours. His answer is an absolute final negative
+without any reserve for further deliberation. In short there never was a
+more unsuccessful negotiator.'[341] In a longer letter to his son Lord
+Royston, Hardwicke added but little more. On the main point Pitt was
+inexorable; he would have nothing to do with Newcastle. Hardwicke could
+not move him an inch. He was obdurate on 'men and measures.'[342] But
+'men and measures' only meant Newcastle. Pitt had been repeatedly
+tricked by him; he had seen Fox repeatedly tricked by him when the
+meanest self-interest dictated honesty; he would not fall into the trap
+into which Fox had fallen; to join Newcastle now would be to be a
+willing dupe, and he was determined to govern if he was to govern,
+without this perpetual ambush at his side. Nor would he have any
+dealings with Fox. He thought, truly or untruly, that Fox had betrayed
+him, and he intended to try and do without treachery. He wished to enter
+on power clear of all suspicious connections, and indeed with little but
+the influence of his wife's family. So he resolved to see nothing even
+of Bute before meeting Hardwicke, and he summoned the Grenvilles to
+receive his report immediately after seeing Hardwicke.[343]
+
+Pitt, however, having no access to the King and being anxious to
+communicate with him directly, made overtures elsewhere. On October 21,
+the palace was disturbed by an unwonted agitation. Pages and lackeys
+were seen in sudden perturbation calling to each other that Mr. Pitt had
+arrived to see my Lady Yarmouth. Lady Yarmouth's position was singular
+enough. She had once been the declared mistress of George the Second;
+'My lady Yarmouth the comforter,' wrote a ribald wit.[344] She still
+lived under his roof, when it was her business to keep him amused, if
+possible, during the long dull evenings. But from being a favourite, she
+had developed into an institution. Her apartment, immediately below the
+King's, was little less than an office. There, it was said, peerages or
+bishoprics might sometimes be bought, and some patronage was perhaps
+facilitated or dispensed. On the other hand, Lord Walpole declared at an
+earlier period that she asked for nothing, and that one of her principal
+charms with the King was that she did not importune him for favours. At
+any rate, persons wanting anything did well to write to her. Thither,
+too, a circumstance of much significance, Ministers repaired before or
+after their audience with the King, to anticipate the royal disposition
+or to report the royal utterances. 'I went below stairs,' was the
+phrase. They took close counsel with the lady, she told them her
+impressions of the King's real views, and usually added some shrewd
+observations of her own. Her action seems to have been wholly
+beneficial; she appeased jealousies, conciliated animosities,
+administered common sense, spoke ill of nobody, and, so far as we can
+judge, was eminently good natured in the best sense of that tortured
+epithet. Perhaps her most useful function was that of acting as a
+conciliatory channel for those who had something to say to the King
+which they could not say themselves. Both Fox and Newcastle had at once
+hurried to her, as we have seen, when the crisis took place. And so Pitt
+now found it necessary to pay his first visit to her.
+
+He had heard perhaps that the King had said, 'I am sure Pitt will not do
+my business,' and had come to give soothing insinuations. But he also
+entertained a well-founded doubt as to whether he had fair play with
+the King, and whether he could trust Newcastle and Hardwicke to
+represent him fairly to the Sovereign.[345] So he came to Lady Yarmouth
+as his only means of direct communication with the Closet, and stated
+his real terms, handing her a written list of the men he proposed for
+office, a list which still exists.[346] He would not serve with
+Newcastle, but the King might find in getting rid of Newcastle that
+Hanover had other unsuspected friends.[347] But he also 'sent,' says
+Fox, 'the terms of a madman to the King.' They do not seem very mad to
+us: Ireland for Temple, the Exchequer for Legge, the Paymastership for
+George Grenville, the Irish Secretaryship for James Grenville, the
+Treasury for Devonshire. Townshend was to be Treasurer of the Chambers,
+Dr. Hay a Lord of the Admiralty, and places were to be found for George
+Townshend, Erskine, Lord Pomfret, and Sir Richard Lyttelton. For his
+colleague in the Secretaryship of State he proposed, most marvellous of
+all, Sir Thomas Robinson! The overture, however, irritated the King,
+partly from the demands, partly because it showed that people thought
+that he was influenced by Lady Yarmouth. 'Mr Pitt,' he said,'shall not
+go to that channel any more. She does not meddle and shall not
+meddle.'[348] Nevertheless the hint dropped by Pitt was probably useful
+and fruitful. Pitt himself said afterwards that this interview put an
+end to the indecision of the King, who had remained sullen and
+passive.[349]
+
+The next point to be noted is Pitt's second interview with Hardwicke.
+And though the minute of Hardwicke's conversation with Pitt on October
+19 appears to be lost, we have his record[350] of this second meeting
+between them on October 24, which he read to the King on October 26, and
+which contains the main points at issue.
+
+Hardwicke began by telling Pitt that he had sent for him at the King's
+command; that he had on October 20 faithfully narrated to the King all
+that had passed at the interview of October 19, and that the King had
+summoned him on October 23, the day previous to the present meeting, in
+order to send the following message--
+
+'The King is of opinion that what has been suggested is not for his and
+the public service.'
+
+Pitt thereupon bowed and said that His Majesty did him the greatest
+honour in condescending to return any answer to anything that came from
+him. He then repeated the message word for word, and desired Hardwicke
+to bear in mind that all that he _had suggested_ was by way of
+objection; that he had not suggested anything _affirmative_ as to
+measures of any kind. Hardwicke replied that he had repeated to the King
+exactly what had passed, and recapitulated the five heads under which
+Pitt had summed up the previous conversation.
+
+'1. That it was impossible for him to serve with the Duke of Newcastle.
+
+'2. That he thought enquiries into the past measures absolutely
+necessary, that he thought it his duty to take a considerable share in
+them, and could not lay himself under any obligation to depart from
+that.
+
+'To this I said that the King was not against a fair and impartial
+enquiry.
+
+'3. That he thought his duty to support a Militia Bill, and particularly
+that of the last session.
+
+'I told him that the King and his ministers were not against _a_ Militia
+Bill.
+
+'4. That the affair of the Hanoverian soldier[351] he thought of great
+importance; that what had been done ought to be examined, and, he
+thought, censured.
+
+'5. That if he came into His Majesty's service, he thought it necessary,
+in order to serve him, and to support his affairs, to have such powers
+as belonged to his station, to be in the first concert and concoction of
+measures, and to be at liberty to propose to His Majesty himself
+anything that occurred to him for his service, originally, and without
+going through any other minister.'
+
+Pitt, who was evidently disappointed, acknowledged the accuracy of
+Hardwicke's recital, and desired to know if the message from the King
+was _an answer to the whole_. Hardwicke replied that it was the King's
+answer in the King's own words,[352] and that he could not take on
+himself to explain it; but that he understood it as _an answer to
+everything that had been conveyed by Mr. Pitt to the King_.
+
+To this Pitt rejoined with thanks for the King's condescension that he
+would say to Hardwicke, '_as from one private gentleman to another_,'
+that he would not come into the service, in the present circumstances of
+affairs, upon any other terms for the whole world.
+
+'I then,' continues the Chancellor, 'said that undoubtedly He must judge
+for himself; But I would also say to Him, _as from Lord Hardwicke only
+to Mr. Pitt_--
+
+'That, as He professed great Duty to the King & Zeal for his Service, &
+I dared to say had it; That as He had expressed an Inclination to come
+into his Majesty's service, in order _really_ to assist in the support
+of his Government;
+
+'That as He was a Man of Abilities & knowledge of the World; That, as
+Men of Sense, who wish the End, must naturally wish the means; why would
+He at the same time make _the thing_ impracticable?
+
+'To This He answered that he would say to me _in the same private
+manner_ That he was surprized that it should be thought possible for Him
+to come into an Employment to serve with the D. of Newcastle, under
+whose Administration the things he had so much blamed had happened, &
+against which the Sense of the Nation so strongly appeared; & I think
+he added,--which Administration could not possibly have lasted, if he
+had accepted.
+
+'In answer to That I said some general things in the same sense with
+what I had mentioned on that head on Tuesday last.
+
+'He then rose up & we parted with great personal Civility on both
+sides.'
+
+Meanwhile Newcastle, proscribed by Pitt and spurned by Fox, knew not
+whither to turn. He broke out in a wail against them to the Chancellor,
+the keeper of his conscience even more than of the King's. 'My dearest
+Lord,' he writes (October 20, 1756), 'tho' a consciousness of my own
+innocence and an indifference as to my own situation may, and I hope in
+God will, support me against all the wickedness and ingratitude which I
+meet with, yet your Lordship cannot think that I am unmindful of or
+senseless to the great indignity put upon me by these two gentlemen.'
+Newcastle in the character of a Christian martyr, the prey of heathen
+raging furiously, has something humorous and incongruous about it, were
+the attitude less abject. But in a sentence or two he returns to a more
+familiar character. 'Allow me only to suggest to your Lordship the
+necessity of making the King see that the whole is a concert between Mr.
+Pitt and Mr. Fox. The news and principles upon which they act are the
+same, viz., to make themselves necessary, and masters of the King ...
+that the only thing Mr. Pitt alledges against me is the _conduct of the
+war_.' ... 'Quit before the Birthday I must and will.' He goes on to
+consult the Chancellor as to whether he shall ask any favours for his
+relations.[353]
+
+So the falling Minister in his straits tried to play upon the King's two
+strongest passions, fear of being dominated and fear for Hanover. How
+wise Pitt was to go straight to Lady Yarmouth! But Newcastle had tried
+other measures as well after Fox's resignation. The very day he received
+it he had hurried to his old enemy Granville, now comfortably ensconced
+in the Presidency of the Council, and offered to exchange offices with
+him, giving him his friend Fox as Chancellor of the Exchequer.[354]
+Granville, he remembered, had once been willing to face far greater
+hazards with Pulteney. But Granville was ten years older; he had, to use
+his own expression, put on his nightcap; and he laughed the suppliant
+Duke out of the room. 'I will be hanged a little before I take your
+place,' he said, not perhaps without some relish for his chief's terror
+and distress, 'rather than a little after.' But he added more gravely
+that '_we_ must determine either to give Mr. Fox what he wants, or to
+take in Mr. Pitt; who,' Newcastle adds piteously, 'will not come.'[355]
+Then Newcastle tried Egmont and Halifax. Egmont was willing to take the
+seals with a British peerage. But it was in the House of Commons that
+strength was wanted. No such strength was to be found without Pitt or
+Fox. Dupplin, one of the Paymasters, an able man of business and much in
+Newcastle's confidence, said broadly and truly, 'Fox and Pitt need only
+sit still and laugh, and we must walk out of the House!' And yet the
+House of Commons was almost unanimous in devotion to the Minister. Was
+there ever so strange a situation?
+
+In view of this last fact Hardwicke urged Newcastle to hold on; and
+Lyttelton, to inspirit him, offered to accept any office. This
+well-intentioned proposal failed to animate the Duke, though it was
+gratefully recognised. There was nothing left but the rank and file;
+ardent supporters with nothing to support. The Government was doomed.
+
+Instructions from counties and boroughs were coming up as in the days of
+the impeachment of Walpole. Addresses were presented to the Throne. The
+country was thoroughly roused. And its hopes and gaze were fixed solely
+on Pitt, a private member, untried in affairs, with scarce a follower in
+Parliament. He, at any rate, had not failed, a negative merit indeed,
+but one which he alone of the leading statesmen of the time could claim.
+
+Newcastle was left alone with Hardwicke. Around them that desert had
+begun to form which portends the fall of a Ministry; though their
+faithful Commons still awaited their bidding in silence. And at last the
+old Duke realised that he must resign, but determined that Hardwicke
+should resign too, perhaps to make his own resignation regretted,
+perhaps because he would not leave behind him an asset of such value.
+'My dearest, dearest Lord,' he wrote, 'you know how cruelly I am treated
+and indeed persecuted by all those who now surround the King.'
+Hardwicke's friendship, he said, was now his only comfort, Hardwicke's
+resignation would be his honour, glory, and security. 'But, my dearest
+Lord, it would hurt me extremely if yours should be long delayed.' And
+indeed, Hardwicke, to the regret of all, consented to leave the woolsack
+and follow his friend. Newcastle was shrewd enough to know that under
+the existing conditions in Parliament he could scarcely fail soon to
+return to office. But Hardwicke did not return.
+
+[Sidenote: Oct. 28, 1756.]
+
+When the King was sure that Newcastle was really going, he sent for Fox
+and bade him try if Pitt would join him. 'The Duke of Newcastle whom you
+hate will retire,' said the Sovereign; 'try your hand and see what you
+can do with Pitt.'[356] Next day Fox went to the Prince's levee at
+Saville House, and engaged Pitt in close and animated conversation for
+some twenty minutes. 'Mr. Pitt exceeding grave, Mr. Fox very warm. They
+did not seem to part amicably.'[357] Of this talk a famous fragment
+survives, characteristic of political language in those days. 'Are you
+going to Stowe?' asked Fox. 'I ask because I believe you will have a
+message of consequence from people of consequence.' 'You surprise me,'
+answered Pitt, 'are you to be of the number?' 'I don't know,' said Fox,
+taken aback. 'One likes to say things to a man of sense,' rejoined Pitt,
+'and to men of your great sense, rather than to others. And yet it is
+difficult even to you.' Fox caught his hint at once. 'What! You mean
+that you will not act with me as Minister.' 'I do,' replied Pitt. But a
+moment after he felt that he had been too abrupt, and expressed a
+courteous hope that Fox would take an active part, which his own health
+would not permit him to do.[358]
+
+Was Pitt right in refusing the concurrence of Fox? On that question we
+must allow him to be the best judge, as it is obvious that he did not
+act in heat or passion, and that we cannot know the situation as he
+did. To us now, viewing the poverty of his following and the useful
+abilities of Fox, it would seem that he made a palpable mistake. Fox
+would have taken the second place; as a matter of fact he was content to
+subside into the gilded subordination of the Paymastership. His talents
+as a debater were second only to Pitt's with the possible exception of
+Charles Townshend's; but Townshend was only a shooting star, and did
+not, like Fox, represent the important influence of Cumberland. Fox
+would have fought stolidly for the side he espoused; he had a leaning to
+Pitt, and shared Pitt's detestation of Newcastle, who was the common
+enemy. But Pitt evidently had determined that he must sever himself
+entirely from Newcastle and Newcastle's Minister in the House of
+Commons. On both these rested the taint of corruption and national
+disaster. He must, if he was to keep the confidence of the country, cut
+himself clear from these personalities and their traditions. He could
+estimate the weight of odium which rested upon them, which we cannot. He
+had all the facts of the case before him, which we have not. He knew,
+what we do not know for certain but cannot doubt, that Leicester House
+made the exclusion of Fox or of Cumberland in any form a condition of
+cordial support. He realised the weakness of his own parliamentary
+position, he well understood the value of Fox's co-operation, but he
+also knew the temper of the nation, and so we cannot doubt that he came
+to the right decision.
+
+In any case Fox was not to blame. He offered, and we think cordially
+offered, to co-operate with Pitt, and, indeed, serve under Pitt. Public
+spirit perhaps was not his main motive. He did not, he confessed, feel
+equal to the principal place. He had written in July: 'Though I see how
+fatally things are going, as I don't know how to mend them, I am not
+unreasonable enough to wish for what I could not conduct.'[359] And
+things were much worse now. Moreover, he saw, as others saw, that it was
+only the combination of himself with Pitt that could keep out Newcastle.
+But in public affairs the best and fairest course is not to analyse
+motives. He made the offer, he made it sincerely, and must have the
+credit of it.
+
+But Pitt was inflexible. Those who had made him feel the weight of their
+proscription should feel the weight of his. Fox would have liked to be
+Paymaster. In that subordinate but opulent post he would have been
+content to give support. But Pitt would have none of him. He refused him
+this slight favour on the mysterious ground that it 'would be too like
+Mr. Pelham in 1742.'[360] He would not touch Fox or Newcastle.
+
+The day after Fox's conversation with Pitt at the levee, the King sent
+for Devonshire, and bade him form a Ministry. This Duke was now Lord
+Lieutenant of Ireland and Fox's closest friend. The King probably hoped
+in this way to bring about the union between Pitt and Fox, which almost
+every one desired, save Pitt himself. Pitt himself had nominated
+Devonshire, but without consulting him, in the interviews with
+Hardwicke. Devonshire had written to Fox in approval of the resignation
+as soon as he had heard of it. Five days afterwards he wrote again: 'If
+my friendship or assistance can be of any use you can command me,' and
+went on to say, 'Nothing has hurt Mr. Pitt so much as his having shown
+the world that in order to gratify his resentment and satisfy his
+ambition he did not value the confusion or distress that he might throw
+this country into. This I own has in some degree altered the good
+opinion I had of him.'[361] Devonshire therefore did not seem a
+propitious Prime Minister for Pitt. But dukes counted for much in those
+days. No one can read the history of those times without seeing the vast
+importance attributed to forgotten princes like Marlborough, Bedford,
+and Devonshire.
+
+Fox soon quarrelled with Devonshire. He considered that Devonshire had
+abandoned him. The Duke had been his confidential friend, and had left
+him to help Pitt, and act as Pitt's figurehead. At first he affected to
+approve. But his wrath only smouldered. On one of the eternal questions
+of patronage it broke out. Fox wrote to him a note of real dignity and
+pathos. 'The Duke of Bedford has just now told me that Mr. John Pitt is
+to kiss hands to-morrow for Mr. Phillipson's place;' (promised,
+according to Fox, to his friend Hamilton). 'Consider, my Lord,
+everything that has pass'd, and do not drive me from you. I neither mean
+to do you harm, nor can do you harm if you think. But Your Grace's own
+reflections will not please you when you have done so.'[362] Devonshire
+was a weak man, but he was unconscious of blame and was deeply hurt.
+Political friendships, when paths diverge, are more difficult to
+maintain than men themselves realise at the moment of separation.
+
+[Sidenote: Oct. 31, 1756.]
+
+Devonshire was now sent to Pitt in the country,[363] but found that his
+terms were such as the King could not be brought to accept. He
+positively declined association with Fox in any shape, but deigned to
+apologise to the Duke for having nominated him without previous
+consultation. It was necessary, he said, to place some great lord there
+to whom the Whigs would look up, and his partiality had made him presume
+to suggest his Grace.[364]
+
+Then the King, refusing Pitt's terms, and aware that he had been
+misinformed as to Fox's language about Bute, sent for Fox and offered
+him the government. 'I was never dishonest, rash, or mad enough for half
+an hour to think of undertaking it,' says Fox.[365] And again, 'I am not
+capable of it,' and goes on to give the reason. 'Richelieu, were he
+alive, could not guide the councils of a nation, if (which would be my
+case) he could not from November to April have above two hours in the
+four-and-twenty to think of anything but the House of Commons.'[366] If
+that were Fox's need in 1756, it is difficult to imagine the kind of
+physical and intellectual combination that he would have thought
+adequate to the stress of affairs in the twentieth century. But in spite
+of Fox's private opinion thus expressed, his friend Walpole records that
+he offered at the worst to take the Treasury and go to the Tower if it
+would save his Sovereign from having 'his head shaved.' 'Ah!' replied
+the King with his usual shrewdness, 'if you go to the Tower I shall not
+be long behind you.'[367]
+
+Then the distracted monarch, at the instigation of Fox, tried the fatal
+expedient of an Assembly of Notables, and summoned all the leading
+nobles and commoners who were at hand to meet at Devonshire House.[368]
+But this meeting never took place, for Devonshire postponed or got rid
+of it. It was to have recommended that Devonshire should have the
+Treasury, Fox the Exchequer, and Legge be content with a peerage. Pitt
+himself was to have the seals, with _carte blanche_ for his other
+friends and dependents. Temple was to be First Lord of the
+Admiralty.[369]
+
+Fox declares that Devonshire put an end to this plan by positively
+refusing the Treasury.[370] Holdernesse sent word to Newcastle that _les
+Renardins_ (the followers of Fox) were less sanguine.[371] And indeed,
+on November 4, the day after that fixed for the assembly, Devonshire
+went in to the King and came out from his audience having accepted the
+Treasury. Bubb says that he stipulated for Fox as Chancellor of the
+Exchequer.[372] This is at least doubtful. 'This question,' Fox
+afterwards wrote, 'I beg may be asked: whether at the time his Grace did
+take it with Legge I was not pressing him strongly to another thing,
+viz., to offer to take it with me. I pressed this even to ill-humour at
+his own house with Grenville at night. He refused absolutely, and the
+next morning what he would not take with me he took with Legge.'[373]
+This would seem conclusive, were it not that Bubb evidently had his
+information from Fox at the time; but politicians are prone to illusions
+on the subject of office. In any case, Devonshire left the Closet First
+Lord of the Treasury with Legge as Chancellor of the Exchequer; the man
+with whom two days before he had refused under any circumstances to
+serve,[374] and whom the King had absolutely refused to take. Fox and
+Bedford were in the anteroom as he came out, and were thunderstruck.
+Bedford broke into passionate expostulation; Fox scented an intrigue.
+However, the deed was done.[375]
+
+Fox says that Devonshire offered him, and he refused, the Pay
+Office.[376] This is difficult to believe, and does not accord with his
+other statements that he had offered to serve in a subordinate capacity
+and been refused. Moreover, it was the office for which he always
+hankered, with its vast profits and safe obscurity, as compared with the
+Spartan frugality and dangerous prominence of the Secretaryship of
+State.[377]
+
+As to the intrigue, Fox's instinct did not deceive him. The fact was
+that Horace Walpole, having heard of the scheme of the Notables, saw at
+once that it must put an end to the new arrangement, as it was one that
+Pitt could not accept. Walpole feared no doubt that, in case of failure,
+Newcastle, the object of his special detestation, might return to
+office. So he sent his cousin Conway to alarm the Duke of Devonshire,
+who consequently suppressed the meeting, and who went himself, as we
+have seen, to the King to accept office.[378] Horace might well pique
+himself on his powers of intrigue or duplicity, for a week before he had
+spontaneously written to Fox to say that he heard that the King and Lady
+Yarmouth were persuaded that Fox would not take the Treasury, but he
+hoped they were wrong.[379]
+
+The new First Lord of the Treasury may have resisted having Legge as his
+Chancellor of the Exchequer, but was easily overborne. What is more
+difficult to understand is the King's nominating Legge, whom he
+detested. It was a rude shock for Fox, who had planned the meeting of
+Notables and framed the scheme it was to advise. Henceforth he
+controlled himself no more, and became the sleepless enemy of the new
+administration, which can be no matter of surprise. Pitt had made his
+total exclusion as absolute a condition as that of Newcastle, and Fox
+after his warm offers of co-operation and assistance could not but be
+bitterly mortified. He believed, perhaps justly, that the proscription
+laid on him proceeded from Leicester House.[380] Henceforth during the
+short life of the new government he plotted and planned against it,
+inspiring 'The Test,' a new paper under an old designation, with
+venomous articles, and ready to form alternative administrations at a
+moment's notice.[381]
+
+One great difficulty, the King's repugnance to Legge, had been
+surmounted one does not know how; but there were still minor obstacles.
+The whole arrangement was odious to the Sovereign: he could not bear
+even to turn the first page of Devonshire's appointments. Pitt, who was
+to succeed Newcastle in the Southern department, wished to exchange this
+for the Northern. The King objected, for the Northern department
+included Hanover, and Pitt eventually yielded. The new Secretary, as we
+have seen, wished for Sir Thomas Robinson, his old butt, as a colleague,
+on the singular ground that he knew nothing of the office he was
+undertaking, and required Sir Thomas's guidance.[382] Pitt had compared
+Robinson to a jack-boot; but personal opinions vary according to points
+of view; Sir Thomas might be contemptible as a leader, but useful as a
+dry-nurse. Holdernesse however remained. Then over every petty office,
+coffererships, masterships of the Wardrobe, keeperships of the jewels,
+treasurerships of the Household, there was snarling and struggling as of
+dogs over bones. Bedford was secured as Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland,
+mainly, it would appear, through the agency of Fox, who wished to secure
+as many ministerial posts as possible for his friends, and who was in
+hopes that the Duke would traverse Pitt. Bedford cared little for
+office; perhaps not much for Fox. His political passions were inspired
+by his personal hatreds, of Newcastle now, as later of Pitt.[383] But
+Fox, aided by the Duchess's ambition, prevailed. Amid these changes one
+provokes a smile; Bubb was as usual dismissed.
+
+But the greatest and most grotesque disability lay with Pitt himself.
+After all his struggles to be in the position of forming a Ministry, he
+had no Ministry to produce. He could not fill a fraction of the offices.
+His personal followers, all told, hardly exceeded a dozen. When he had
+provided for the Grenvilles, Potter, and Legge, he had scarcely any one
+to name. So this Ministry was doomed from the beginning. Pamphleteers
+could not fail to observe Pitt's predicament. One lampoon, in the form
+of a royal degree, 'Given at our imperial seat at Hayes,' and
+countersigned 'John Thistle,' (a premature allusion to Bute), sets
+forth: 'We will that you give lucrative employments to all Our Brethren,
+uncles, cousins, relations and namesakes.'[384] Outside this category
+Pitt's subordinates were mostly the friends of Newcastle or Fox, and so
+his secret enemies, or waiters upon Providence who were not sufficiently
+sure of his stability to call themselves his friends. Holdernesse,
+Pitt's colleague in the Secretaryship of State, and Barrington,
+Secretary for War, kept Newcastle fully informed of all that went on in
+the administration and of all that they knew. Holdernesse also sent
+abstracts of the despatches that came from abroad.[385] So that Pitt was
+betrayed from the first. Ministries formed by one man seldom last long
+under another. But Ministries which pass between two declared enemies
+have not from the beginning any chance of life. This one was stillborn.
+
+Pitt himself lay ill with the gout at Hayes; so he had to leave his
+affairs to be managed by a little clique in London, of which Temple of
+course was the chief, and which was in close communion with Leicester
+House. For every day Leicester House waxed and Kensington Palace waned
+in importance, as the King advanced in years. Nothing in the history of
+those days is more difficult to trace and yet nothing is more
+significant than this invisible Court of the Heir-Apparent, which was
+felt rather than seen, but towards which courtiers kept one anxious eye
+during their dutiful attendance on the King. All felt that the centre of
+power was shifting thither, and the uneasiness of those who wished to be
+well with both Courts was manifest and irrepressible. The constant
+anxiety of Fox to be Paymaster was largely due to his desire to be
+sheltered from the hatred of the young Court in the reign that seemed
+imminent. All this could not but increase the jealousy and irritability
+of the old Sovereign, at a time when he was undergoing a new Ministry
+most repulsive to him. Distasteful as it was in almost every respect,
+what was perhaps most abhorrent was the consciousness that it was
+imposed upon him by his daughter-in-law and her favourite, that it
+rested on their support, and was indeed the Ministry of George III.
+rather than of George II.
+
+Bute was the object of the King's chief detestation, a righteous
+aversion if his suspicions were well founded; and Bute was now
+undisguisedly prominent in the negotiations for the new Government. The
+King treated Temple and his friends so ill at the levee, that the
+injured nobleman went to Devonshire to say that he feared he could not
+proceed a step further in the negotiations. On this mission he was
+accompanied by Bute, for the purpose, apparently, of making the world
+realise that Leicester House and all its influence were behind Pitt.
+And Bute availed himself of this opportunity to make use of 'expressions
+so transcendently obliging to us,' writes Temple, 'and so decisive of
+the determined purposes of Leicester House towards us in the present or
+any future day, that your lively imagination cannot suggest to you a
+wish beyond them.' By Temple, too, he sent word to Pitt that he could
+not advise, that he left all to Pitt, determined to support and approve
+whatever Pitt decided.[386] This was the one element of strength to the
+new Government, besides Pitt himself. And yet, so elusive was this
+mysterious Court, that in September the town had been ringing with the
+coolness of Pitt's reception at Leicester House, more especially by
+Bute.[387] The fact is that there had evidently been a coldness, but
+that the fall of Newcastle had brought the two together again.[388]
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 4, 1756.]
+
+After Devonshire had kissed hands on November 4 there were however few
+difficulties. Temple's cold reception at Court, on the very day of
+Newcastle's resignation, which had made him declare with his usual
+arrogance to Devonshire that all was over, was only a passing incident,
+due to the fact that the King could not abide the very sight of Temple.
+Pitt no doubt counselled moderation from Hayes, not desiring to lose the
+fruit of so many years for a slight to his relative. And so, a week
+after Temple's fiery declaration to Devonshire, the new Board of
+Admiralty was gazetted with Temple at its head. Three days before, the
+Board of Treasury had been declared with Devonshire and Legge as its
+chiefs. One Grenville was included in this. For George Grenville and
+Potter treasurerships and paymasterships were found. There were indeed
+but few traces of Pitt's small connection in the Government. He, still
+an invalid, received his seals a little later. He had also to change his
+seat. He could not condescend to be re-elected for Newcastle's borough
+of Aldborough; indeed, he had held it too long. Nor indeed would
+Newcastle nominate him.[389] So now he accepted an olive branch from
+Lyttelton, who shared the control of Okehampton with the Duke of
+Bedford, and generously named his old friend and recent foe.[390] It may
+have been that Pitt was desirous of cutting the last link with Newcastle
+before entering upon office, and had deferred receiving the seals till
+he was independent. Be that as it may, he was only to hold them four
+months. During most of that time he was ill, during all of it he was
+surrounded by conspiracies, and he was soon intrigued out of office,
+though he never actually vacated it. But his short term had taught him
+one priceless lesson; that genius and public spirit were not enough,
+that a practical and even sordid leaven was required, and that if he
+would not do the necessary work of political adjustment himself, he must
+find somebody to do it for him, or give up all idea of being a powerful
+Minister.
+
+It has been thought well to narrate at length the circumstances of the
+final breakdown of the King's veto on Pitt's accession to office and the
+struggle which preceded it; partly because some of the documents are
+new, partly because it is a curious picture of character and intrigue,
+partly because it is the fifth and culminating act of this long drama.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+
+But with this Government we have nothing to do. We have reached our
+limits. The youth of Pitt has passed, his apprenticeship is over, he has
+now his foot in high office, he is soon to be supreme. The weary period
+of proscription and conflict has come to an end, he is henceforth to
+command where he has obeyed, and he is to raise his country to a
+singular height of glory and power. That splendid period is beyond the
+scope of this book, which only records the ascent and the toil; the
+lustre of achievement and reward require a separate chronicle. The next
+scenes require a broader canvas and brighter colours.
+
+But before we leave him let us try and realise his appearance. When we
+read about any one we naturally wish to know what manner of man he was
+in the flesh. In this case we seem but scantily provided with portraits.
+We have glanced at the one by Hoare, to the accuracy of which Pitt
+himself bears emphatic testimony. Of this one Hoare painted several
+replicas, one of the worst of which, very bilious in colouring, is in
+the National Portrait Gallery. There is another at Orwell which seems to
+have more force in it; it could not have less. The original represents a
+comely, graceful and elegant being without a symptom of anything but
+comeliness, grace and elegance, and might be the portrait of any man of
+fashion of the time. Great men have sometimes piqued themselves on being
+dandies, and it may have been this air which recommended the picture to
+its subject. This portrait, of which the large engraving, containing
+only the head, is infinitely better than the original, duly arrived at
+Stowe. Thence at the dispersal of that great collection it passed to
+Drayton, having been purchased by Sir Robert Peel, and has lately found
+a final home at Pittsburg.
+
+There is another portrait by Hoare, at full length, in the coronation
+robes which Pitt never can have worn, which was painted for the
+Corporation of Bath ten years after that for Temple. It leaves no
+special impression. There was a portrait by Reynolds at Belvoir. But
+that, alas! disappeared with so much else in the great fire which
+ravaged that noble structure. Towards the end of his life (in 1772) he
+was painted in peer's robes by Brompton. The engraving of this is at
+full length, but the picture itself is a kitcat, so that it was probably
+cut down. This picture is at Chevening, and Lord Sidmouth, if we are not
+mistaken, owns a replica or another version of this picture. Pitt's
+grand-daughter, Lady Hester Stanhope, who was brought up with it, says
+that it is the best portrait of him. As she was only two years old when
+he died, her testimony, though given with confidence, has no personal
+value; but she had relations who may have told her. She piqued herself
+on her resemblance to him. But no value is to be attached to the
+utterances of this vain and crazy woman, unless one can believe, which
+is difficult, that she repeated faithfully what more trustworthy people
+had told her. However, this portrait may well be the best, where the
+other is so poor. It is in itself impressive, representing a solemn,
+noble, melancholy figure, such as Chatham must have been in his last
+cheerless decade.
+
+There are more busts. There is one of him in youth, perhaps at
+five-and-twenty, handsome, bright, alert, with a smile that is almost
+saucy. The original of this was, it is believed, also at Stowe; also,
+perhaps, purchased by Sir Robert Peel. There is more than one by Wilton.
+One, dated 1759, grim and masterful, with a touch of scorn, the man
+himself at his time of power. There are others of him in old age, with
+less expression, ponderous and saturnine; they are posthumous, and dated
+1781. One of these is at Dropmore, another at Belvoir, another at
+Lowther.
+
+There are probably other portraits or busts, but these are all that are
+known to the present writer.
+
+His appearance at his best must have been extremely attractive. Tall and
+slender, 'his figure genteel and commanding,' he had cultivated all the
+arts of grace, gesture and dramatic action. 'Graceful in motion,' says
+his reluctant nephew, 'his eye and countenance would have conveyed his
+feelings to the deaf.'[391] All authorities dwell on the magic of his
+eye. His eyes, said his grand-daughter, presumably on family tradition,
+were grey, but by candlelight seemed black from the intensity of their
+expression. When he was angry or earnest no one could look him in the
+face. No one indeed seems to have been able to abide the terrors of his
+glance.
+
+Of his manners and conversation in private life we know singularly
+little. Chesterfield gives us perhaps the best glimpse. 'He had manners
+and address; but one might discern through them too great a
+consciousness of his own superior talents. He was a most agreeable and
+lively companion in social life, and had such a versatility of wit that
+he could adapt it to all sorts of conversation.' Of his early powers of
+fascination we have an authentic instance. He was seen walking with the
+Prince of Wales in the gardens at Stowe, and Cobham, watching them with
+anxiety, expressed some apprehension of Pitt's persuading the Prince to
+adopt some measures of which Cobham disapproved. A Mr. Belson said that
+the interview could not be long. 'You don't know Mr. Pitt's power of
+insinuation,' said Cobham. 'In a very short quarter of an hour he can
+persuade anyone of anything.'
+
+Butler, 'the Reminiscent,' who had this anecdote from Belson himself,
+goes on to say that 'as a companion in festive moments, Mr. Pitt was
+enchanting.' He also quotes Wilkes, who was a good judge of social
+qualifications. 'Mr. Pitt, by the most manly sense and the fine sallies
+of a warm and sportive imagination, can charm the whole day, and, as the
+Greek said, his entertainments please even the day after they are
+given.' But, after all, these must have been rare occasions, as Pitt
+does not seem to have seen much of society, for his health kept him a
+recluse; and as years went on he seems to have found it both irksome and
+impolitic to see much of mankind. We fancy that he was a man, like his
+son, of small and intimate companies; partly from a haughty aloofness,
+partly because he could not partake of the pleasures of the table.
+
+'As a private man,' says Lord Camelford, 'he had especially in his youth
+every talent to please when he thought it worth while to exert his
+talents, which was always for a purpose, for he was never natural. His
+good breeding never deserted him unless when his insolence intended to
+offend. He was, however, soon spoilt by flattery, which gave him the
+humours of a child. He was selfish even to trifles in his own family and
+amongst his intimates to the forgetting the preferences due to the other
+sex, of which I have heard many ridiculous instances; but this was much
+owing to a state of health which made him fretful, at the same time that
+it called his attention to his own person. When I first saw him he was
+intemperate towards his servants full as much as my own father, but it
+is to his honour that when he owed a better example to his children he
+got the better of that habit. His first and only friendships were with
+Lord Lyttelton and his sister Ann.' In a later passage he adds: 'He
+lived and died without a friend.'
+
+Camelford, it will be observed, speaks with confidence about Pitt's
+youth, of which he can have known nothing except from tradition, and
+Pitt's family traditions were not likely to err on the side of
+benignity. What he says about early friendships is obviously inaccurate;
+he is quoting Pitt's impulsive note of Oct. 24, 1734.[392] The
+Grenvilles, the other Lytteltons, and Gilbert West at once occur to one
+as friends to whom Pitt in youth was tenderly attached. We may indeed
+take it for granted that this curious piece refers to Pitt's middle
+life, which Camelford knew personally; but it is too interesting to be
+omitted here.
+
+His great and singular power lay in his eloquence, and yet even there we
+are left largely to the recollection and testimony of his
+contemporaries, for there was in those days no reporting as we
+understand it, and therefore no reports. There are, of course,
+professed reports, but to these little credence can be attached. Dr.
+Johnson and a Scottish clergyman named Gordon wrote a great number of
+them, based on very inadequate materials, if any materials at all. Men
+carried away some noble outburst or some striking metaphor tingling in
+their ears, and repeated it. Others would be able to recall the line of
+argument, if indeed there was an argument to follow. But the result is
+scarcely authentic. Pitt the younger must have known, and he declared
+that no specimens of his father's eloquence remained. Butler says that
+the person to whom he made this remark (no doubt Butler himself) begged
+him to read slowly his father's speeches on the Stamp Act, and endeavour
+as he did so to recall the figure, look and voice with which his father
+would have delivered them. Pitt did so, and admitted the probable effect
+of the speech thus delivered. But it is to be observed that he did not
+admit the accuracy. Almon, who knew something of this matter, says that
+none of the reports of Pitt's speeches before 1760 can be depended upon.
+In 1766 Almon began reporting the debates himself, and so would claim
+greater exactness, and may easily have attained it.
+
+One is in fact thrown back on the impressions and the descriptions of
+those who heard him. Horace Walpole, who at this time admired Pitt as
+much as he could admire anybody, gives us striking glimpses, some of
+which we have already quoted; one of which, that of the answer to Hume
+Campbell, is exquisite in felicity of phrase. Chesterfield says that
+Pitt's 'eloquence was of every kind, and he excelled in the
+argumentative as well as in the declamatory way. But his invectives were
+terrible, and uttered with such energy of diction, and stern dignity of
+action and countenance that he intimidated those who were the most
+willing and the best able to encounter him. Their arms fell out of their
+hands, and they sank under the ascendant which his genius gained over
+theirs.' In a note Chesterfield tells us that the last phrases allude to
+Murray and Hume Campbell. 'Mr. Pitt,' he says elsewhere, 'carried with
+him unpremeditated the strength of thunder and the splendour of
+lightning.' These extracts convey the impression made by Pitt on one of
+the acutest judges of the time, himself an orator of eminence, and no
+friend to his subject.
+
+Bishop Newton gladly avails himself of the same familiar metaphor: 'What
+was said of the famous orator Pericles, that he lightened, thundered,
+and confounded Greece, was in some measure applicable to him.' 'He had,'
+says the Bishop, 'extraordinary powers, quick conceptions, ready
+elocution, great command of language, a melodious voice, a piercing eye,
+a speaking countenance, and was as great an actor as an orator. During
+the time of his successful administration he had the most absolute and
+uncontrolled sway that perhaps any member ever had in the House of
+Commons. With all these excellences he was not without his defects. His
+language was sometimes too figurative and pompous, his speeches were
+seldom well connected, often desultory and rambling from one thing to
+another, so that though you were struck here and there with noble
+sentiments and happy expressions, yet you could not well remember nor
+give a clear account of the whole together. With affected modesty he was
+apt to be rather too confident and overbearing in debate, sometimes
+descended to personal invectives, and would first commend that he might
+afterwards more effectually abuse, would ever have the last word, and
+right or wrong still preserved (in his own phrase) an unembarrassed
+countenance. He spoke more to your passions than to your reason, more to
+those below the bar and above the throne than to the House itself; and,
+when that kind of audience was excluded, he sunk and lost much of his
+weight and authority.'[393]
+
+Grattan's testimony, as that of a famous orator, cannot here be passed,
+though it refers to a later period. 'He was a man of great genius, great
+flight of mind. His imagination was astonishing.... He was very great
+and very odd. He spoke in a style of conversation, not however what I
+expected. It was not a speech, for he never came with a prepared
+harangue. His style was not regular oratory, like Cicero or Demosthenes,
+but it was very fine and very elevated, and above the ordinary subjects
+of discourse.... His gesture was always graceful. He was an incomparable
+actor. Had it not been so he would have appeared ridiculous.... His
+tones were remarkably pleasing. I recollect his pronouncing one word
+"effete" in a soft charming accent. His son could not have pronounced it
+better.... His manner was dramatic. In this it was said that he was too
+much the mountebank; but if so it was a great mountebank. Perhaps he was
+not so good a debater as his son, but he was a much better orator, a
+better scholar, and a far greater mind. Great subjects, great empires,
+great characters, effulgent ideas and classical illustrations formed the
+material of his speeches.' Grattan gives examples, and even notes of one
+of his speeches, but they are all outside our period.[394]
+
+These notes on Pitt's oratory cannot well be omitted, though they are
+almost too familiar to quote. But there is one, never yet published,
+which is written by an intimate but merciless critic. Lord Camelford was
+only nineteen at the time when our narrative terminates, but he must
+already and for some years afterwards have been steeped in his uncle's
+eloquence, so that his description is of peculiar interest.
+
+'In Parliament he never spoke but to the instant, regardless of whatever
+contradictions he might afterwards be reduced to, which he carried off
+with an effrontery without example. His eloquence was supported by every
+advantage that could unite in a perfect actor. Graceful in motion, his
+eye and countenance would have conveyed his feelings to the deaf. His
+voice was clear and melodious, and capable of every variety of
+inflection and modulation. His wit was elegant, his imagination
+inexhaustible, his sensibility exquisite, and his diction flowed like a
+torrent, impure often, but always varied and abundant. There was a style
+of conscious superiority, a tone, a gesture of manner, which was quite
+peculiar to him--everything shrunk before it; and even facts, truth and
+argument were overawed and vanquished by it. On the other hand, his
+matter was never ranged, it had no method. He deviated into a thousand
+digressions, often reverted back to the same ground, and seemed
+sometimes like the lion to lash himself with his own tail to rouse his
+courage, which flashed in periods and surprised and astonished, rather
+than convinced by the steady light of reason. He was the very contrast
+of Lord Mansfield, his competitor in eloquence, who never appealed but
+to the conviction of the understanding, with an arrangement so precise
+that every sentence was only the preparation for the force that the next
+was to obtain, and scarce a word could be taken away without throwing
+the whole argument into disorder; the other bore his hearers away by
+rapid flights into a region that looked down upon argument, and opposed
+the transport of feeling to conviction.'
+
+This appears to be a description as accurate as it is vivid, and perhaps
+none gives the personality and manner of Pitt with more effect. The
+style of conscious superiority, peculiar to him, before which everything
+shrank; the way in which the orator worked himself into wrath, like a
+lion lashing himself with his own tail; the eye and countenance which
+would have conveyed his meaning to the deaf; these are touches which we
+feel to be accurate, and which seem to explain much of the effect of
+Pitt's oratory. Let us here note that Cradock gives a curious account of
+an oratorical failure of Pitt's in later life and of his consequent
+irritation, eminently comforting to humbler speakers.[395]
+
+We value sketches like these much more than any professed reports of
+Pitt's speeches, which cannot be accurate reproductions. But, even if
+they were, they would, we are told, be but pale shadows of the reality,
+for so much depended on the soul and grace with which they were uttered;
+for the majesty of his presence, his manly figure, his exquisite voice,
+his consummate acting, his harmonious action, and above all the
+lightning of his eyes inspired reluctant awe before he uttered a word.
+We can fancy him rising in the House, which subsides at once into
+silence and eager attention. On not a few faces there will be
+uneasiness and alarm; on the ministerial bench some agitation, for it is
+there probably that the thunderbolts may fall. His opening is solemn and
+impressive. Then he warms to his subject. He states his argument. He
+recalls matters of history and his own personal recollections. Then with
+an insinuating wave of his arm his voice changes, and he is found to be
+drowning some hapless wight with ridicule. Then he seems to ramble a
+little, he is marking time and collecting himself for what is coming.
+Suddenly the rich notes swell into the fullness of a great organ, and
+the audience find themselves borne into the heights of a sublime burst
+of eloquence. Then he sinks again into a whisper full of menace which
+carries some cruel sarcasm to some quivering heart. Then he is found
+playing about his subject, pelting snowballs as he proceeds. If the
+speech is proceeding to his satisfaction it will last an hour or perhaps
+two. Its length will perhaps not improve it, but no one can stir. There
+may be ineffective, tedious, obscure passages, but no one knows what may
+be coming, these vapours often precede a glowing sunburst. So all
+through the speech men sit as though paralysed, though many are heated
+with wine. He will not finish without some lofty declamation which may
+be the culminating splendour of the effort. If any effective replies are
+made, he will reply again and again, heedless of order, vehement,
+truculent, perhaps intemperate. And as he sits down perhaps with little
+applause, the tension of nerves, almost agonising in its duration and
+concentration, snaps like a harpstring; the buzz of animated
+conversation breaks forth with an ecstasy of relief. The audience
+disperses still under the spell. As it wears off, hostile critics begin
+to declare that it is all acting; the fellow acts better than Garrick.
+Garrick, indeed, himself declared that had Pitt originally preferred the
+stage of Drury Lane for that of St. Stephen's, he would almost have
+annihilated the stage by distancing all competition.[396] He was,
+without doubt, an incomparable actor, for no less a power would have
+enabled him to engage in some of his most famous flights with effect, or
+without reaction or ridicule. His action, his inflections, his vehemence
+are no doubt at least as good as Garrick's. But these are merely the
+accessories which to the shallow or cynical observer seem to be the
+heart or the whole of the matter. One might as well say that it is the
+varnish that makes the picture, or the goblet that makes the vintage.
+The orator is probably unconscious or at most half-conscious of what
+seems dramatic, he is moved by an irresistible blast of passion which
+carries him as well as his audience away. The passion may have been
+stirred beforehand, but at the moment of outpouring it is genuine
+enough. Pitt no doubt had trained himself to be graceful in animation,
+had studied and enhanced the beauties of his voice, so that when excited
+his tones were always musical, and his action harmonious. He may in
+earlier days have rehearsed speeches in private, though he probably
+delivered something different when the time came. But to imagine that
+when he spoke he was acting a prepared speech is to ignore the main
+features of his oratory, the force coming from an internal impulse which
+was for the moment irresistible. It should be remembered too, that in
+one sense he was always acting in the common business of life; when he
+chipped an egg, or talked to his gardener, or mounted his horse, he was
+acting. He might not, indeed, study his gesture at the moment, but that
+was because he had been studying gestures half his life. He had
+appropriated the dramatic way of doing things till it had become a
+second nature to him; thus, what would have been acting in others was
+natural to him. And indeed, he had so adjusted and prepared and schooled
+himself, that all his emotions were effectually concealed. The fierce
+character of the man would sometimes be irrepressible, but even then it
+would be vented with an awful grace. And so when he was said to be
+acting in the House he was natural, for acting had become a second
+nature to him. When this is so, acting has ceased to be acting. Mrs.
+Siddons would give her orders at dinner in the awful tones of Lady
+Macbeth. This was not acting but nature, trained but unconscious nature.
+So it was with Pitt. He would not laugh, because it was undignified to
+laugh. If he had a book or a play to read aloud and came to a comic
+part, he passed it to another to read and resumed the volume when the
+humorous part was over, lest, we may presume, he should smile or become
+incidentally ridiculous. His countenance was, so to speak, enamelled
+with such anxious care, that a heedless laugh might crack the elaborate
+demeanour. And so he lived in blank verse, and conducted himself in the
+heroic metre. We should surmise, though not with certainty, that some of
+his more famous flights, such as the comparison of the Rhone and the
+Saône, were prepared to some extent, but that there was nothing
+written. This is only guesswork, for of his method of preparation we
+know nothing. But his diction was habitually perfect. To improve it he
+had twice read through Bailey's Dictionary, and had plodded through
+masses of sermons, particularly those of Barrow, Abernethy, and 'the
+late Mr. Mudge of Plymouth.'[397] 'Every word he makes use of,' said
+Chesterfield as early as 1751, 'is the very best, and the most
+expressive that can be used in that place.' That was the result of
+constant and familiar effort. Like Bolingbroke he had trained himself to
+spare no pains in ordinary conversation to attain accuracy of
+expression, so as to be sure of himself in public. 'It would not be
+believed how much trouble he took to compose the most trifling note.' He
+told Shelburne that a phrase he had used in one of his speeches could
+not be taken exception to, as he had tried it on paper three times
+before employing it in public. Assiduous study of words, constant
+exercise in choice language, so that it was habitual to him even in
+conversation, and could not be other than elegant even in unpremeditated
+speech, this combined with poetical imagination, passion, a mordant wit
+and great dramatic skill, would probably seem to be the secrets of
+Chatham's oratorical supremacy. And yet it is safe to predict that a
+clever fellow who had mastered all this would produce but a pale
+reflection of the original. It is not merely the thing that is said, but
+the man who says it which counts, the character which breathes through
+the sentences. Mirabeau would, as we know, take a manuscript speech
+produced by a laborious friend, in itself a dull thing, and read it from
+the tribune with such energy of inspiration that it would carry the
+Assembly by storm. This is the more marvellous when we remember that a
+man who reads the best possible speech with the most effective elocution
+is heavily handicapped. And so it may safely be assumed that imitation
+of Pitt would be doomed to disastrous failure. The secret of oratory
+like this evades the most anxious student: its effect both on the
+immediate audience and on posterity seems beyond definition or adequate
+explanation.
+
+Some orators impress their audience, some their readers, a very few
+posterity as well. The orators who impress their audience rarely impress
+their readers, and those who impress their readers are usually less
+successful with their audience. Few indeed are those who reach posterity
+or indeed survive a year. Pitt, if any one indeed can be said to have
+read his speeches, combined all three forms of supremacy. More than
+this, his utterances with a sort of wireless telegraphy seemed to thrill
+the nation which neither heard nor read them. In the century which
+followed Chatham's death there was an illustrious succession of orators
+and debaters. And yet none of these eminent men with all their
+accurately reported speeches have left so deep an impress of eloquence
+as the elder Pitt, who was not reported at all. We cannot doubt that it
+is better for his fame that he was unreported. Sheridan never did
+anything wiser than when in his need he refused the most splendid offers
+to revise his Begum speech for publication. Pitt's speeches would have
+lost half their force without the splendour of delivery. His unreported
+eloquence has become matter of faith, and so it is likely to remain.
+
+Mr. Lecky, from whom it is difficult to differ, thinks that his
+speeches were deficient in pathos and wit. As to this last, the
+testimony of his contemporaries is emphatic the other way, and they are
+loud in extolling Pitt's piercing wit. We have seen how Walpole and
+Murray concur in extolling his powers of ridicule. 'He can turn anything
+into ridicule,' Murray had said. 'He can tickle to death with a
+feather,' was Walpole's description. Nor should we imagine he was
+defective in pathos; not perhaps in youth, for youth is not the season
+of pathos, but certainly in later years. The speeches, for example,
+delivered in the garb of an invalid, abounded we should surmise in
+pathos, to which the costume was preliminary and accessory. But pathos,
+which has something of humility in its tenderness, was, it must be
+admitted, alien to the haughty superiority which Pitt asserted and
+assumed.
+
+One word more of fascinating conjecture. Would he have been a great
+popular orator at mass meetings and the like? We cannot imagine Pitt a
+platform speaker, yet we can scarcely imagine a better. His graceful
+appearance, his terrible eye, the winning and majestic modulations of
+his voice, his spontaneity, his magnetic power, his wealth of ridicule,
+his poignant personalities, his dramatic force, his variety and
+unexpectedness constituted the most formidable equipment for platform
+oratory ever possessed by mortal man. And yet we cannot regret that he
+never was tried.
+
+Pitt's life marks itself out with singular distinctness into definite
+periods. From 1708 to 1734 is the period of obscure youth, on which this
+volume should throw some light. From 1734 to 1745 is the period of
+reckless and irresponsible opposition, when he is trying the temper of
+his weapons. From 1745 to 1754 he remains in the shadow of subordinate
+office. From 1754 to 1756, though still partly in office, he emerges as
+an independent figure of extraordinary and irresistible force. From 1756
+to 1761 is the period of power, four years of which are unrivalled in
+the annals of Great Britain. From 1761 to 1770 is the period of
+detachment, or attempted detachment, from party. It includes some tenure
+of office, much obscurity and illness, some actual insanity. And from
+1770 till his death in 1778 he appears sometimes to be attempting to
+make his peace with the party system, having found it impracticable to
+stand alone; sometimes he seems to be retiring once more into his cell.
+
+Few careers can be marked out so clearly; few have such a glamour. But
+the glamour and the glory are yet to come; they lie beyond this book.
+Already indeed there are confidence and hope, confidence in his vigour,
+his honesty, and his uprightness; but this is due rather to others than
+to himself. Every one else has failed, this may be the man of destiny.
+
+And yet up to this time the career of Pitt has been, eloquence apart,
+not unlike that of other ambitious and not very scrupulous politicians.
+He begins by attacking Sir Robert Walpole. Why? He has no particular
+objection to Sir Robert Walpole; in after years he acknowledges that he
+was a great statesman. It was partly a freak of youth. Who is the
+biggest man to attack, the man by combating whom one can acquire the
+most honour and reputation? Obviously Walpole. So tilt at him. He is
+asked to an important house; for the first time he finds himself in the
+great world. He is caressed, perhaps flattered; for he has a school
+renown, and is a lad to be secured. He is with his Eton friends, and
+they think all the world of Cobham, his wisdom, his courage, his
+magnificence; they all in a measure depend on him. Thus he is allured
+into the charmed circle, and they form much the same group as that which
+was in our own days called the Fourth Party.
+
+So they enter the House of Commons in high spirits, and lay about them
+with reckless intrepidity. Pitt is soon marked out for martyrdom by the
+Minister. But in a short time he is conspicuous for other reasons. He
+towers from the waist above his comrades as a bitter, incisive speaker.
+Walpole begins to take notes of his speeches; he is the coming man, and
+is at once secured for the faction of the Prince of Wales. Then Walpole
+falls. There is a great crash, and the spectators expect to see the
+world in ruins. But when the dust has cleared away it is seen that
+things are much as they were; Wilmington, scarcely visible, in Walpole's
+seat; Newcastle rooted in his own; Walpole, with Pulteney his
+protagonist, seated smug and dumb among the distant peers. There is no
+room for Pitt among our governors; the only new figure that strikes one
+is Carteret, he is evidently the moving spirit of the piece. As the
+prominent Minister, and as an object of hatred to Cobham, he is
+obviously the man for Pitt now to attack, and he trounces Carteret as
+recklessly as he had Walpole; only Walpole was able to reply, and
+Carteret cannot; for he sits where Walpole sits. Carteret, again, he
+mainly attacks for his eminence. He calls Carteret execrable now, but,
+when the battle is over, takes pride in declaring that to his patronage,
+to his friendship, to his instruction 'I owe whatever I am.' Still, the
+business of party must be done, and so Carteret must be assailed. Then
+Carteret disappears, and Pitt is without a target. But the young man
+has to realise that in his reckless onslaughts he has incidentally but
+mortally wounded the honour of the King. Walpole and Carteret are off
+the scene; and the stage is now occupied, so far as he is concerned, by
+a monarch who is an incarnate veto as regards him, and who can never
+forgive him. This produces a new situation. Pitt is as strenuous to be
+pardoned as he was to offend; he is all milk and honey in public, but
+apprises the Pelhams, who are now in sole possession of the
+administration, that he is not disposed to be long-suffering, and that
+the ordinary rewards of political warfare are overdue. They are fully
+alive to the situation, and attempt to mollify the Sovereign. But their
+labour is in vain, and so, with more subtlety than patriotism, they
+produce a ministerial crisis when civil war is alive in the island. The
+King has to yield, and, in angry submission, receive Pitt. The new
+placeman, having achieved office, subsides into a long silence. Pelham
+dies at last, and the great inheritance has to be divided. Pitt is ill
+and absent; his rival is at once preferred (though alienated); while
+Pelham's brother attempts to guide, with the help of the Master of the
+Great Wardrobe, what Pelham could not control. The result is easily
+foreseen. The rivals unite to tear the Master limb from limb, and one of
+them has to be bought off. That one is not Pitt. And now something,
+pique or patriotism or marriage, one cannot analyse it now, perhaps he
+could not have analysed it himself, lifts him into new splendours of
+eloquence. His rival seems cowed by the harness without the confidence
+of office. Pitt stands alone, no one dare face him. Meanwhile he
+receives new authority from disaster. In every region where Britain is
+interested calamity follows calamity. The country is roused to a passion
+of wrath and vengeance. It demands victims. Byng in prison remains an
+open wound to remind the nation of its miscarriages. They are resolved
+to shoot him, at any rate; they would not be unwilling to hang others
+whom they hold responsible for his miscarriage, who are perhaps corrupt,
+and who are certainly incapable and untoward Ministers; failing that,
+they will at least get rid of them. They look round and see no one but
+Pitt. He has been persecuted, he has been ignored by these Ministers,
+and yet his eloquence, commanding in itself, has the true note of energy
+and patriotism. He shall be tried; and they call for him with as much
+energy as the French once called for Necker, but with a truer instinct.
+
+Strangely enough, there is so far little vigour in Pitt except in his
+speeches. Half his life is spent in prostration and seclusion, under the
+martyrdom of gout. As we have seen, on the very brink of his Ministry,
+he assured Fox that his health would not allow him to hold office. And,
+indeed, in the whole life of this singular man there is nothing more
+remarkable than this, that in the glimpses we obtain of himself, apart
+from great speeches and the result of victorious policy, we almost
+always find him prostrate with illness. It is generally the gout or its
+allies which disable him; but later it is disorder akin to if not
+identical with insanity. Not unnaturally, even among those less prone by
+profession to suspicion than the expert politician, his ill-health is
+often supposed to be an assumption or a screen. But in this calmer
+generation we can see that it was not, that the man never enjoyed
+health, as it is ordinarily understood, for a moment. He was always
+distempered, irritable, or hysterical, when not in pain. His public life
+was scarcely more than the intervals between fits of gout or nervous
+collapse. We are reminded of the sufferings of his son, as he approached
+the end of a long ministerial career, struggling against constant
+sickness and a wrecked constitution, when we contemplate the lifelong
+contest between the elder Pitt and hereditary disease.
+
+Heredity counts for much, for more than we reckon in these matters. We
+breed horses and cattle with careful study on that principle; the prize
+bull and the Derby winner are the result. With mankind we heed it little
+or not at all. With Pitt it was everything or almost everything. From
+his ancestors, most probably the Governor, who, we infer, was a free
+liver in a tropical climate, he derived the curse of gout. From the same
+progenitor he inherited a nervous, violent temperament, and some taint
+of madness. All this told partly for him, partly against him. The gout
+drove him to study and reflection, but it constantly disabled him. His
+temperament roused him to great heights of energy and passion both in
+eloquence and politics, but it also alienated his fellow-men, and made
+him sometimes eccentric, and sometimes turbulent. We cannot in such a
+matter hold the balance. What is genius? None can tell. But may it not
+be the result in character of the conflict of violent strains of
+heredity, which clash like flint and steel, and produce the divine
+spark?
+
+This takes us beyond our limits, more especially those of time; for
+within those limits the genius of Pitt has only been displayed in the
+barren gift of eloquence. But when we consider his disabilities of
+heredity and of accident we deem him already heroic. Everything has been
+against him. He has contended against poverty and disease and contempt.
+He has been wounded in the house of his family. He has been constantly
+betrayed. He has had to suffer for long years in silence. He is
+forty-eight when he at last attains anything like power. From this point
+of view his career is pathetic. It seems such a waste of time and
+opportunity. But through these long impatient years he was being
+trained, hardened, one may almost say, baked in the furnace. In silence
+and bitterness the force was being accumulated that was to electrify the
+Empire.
+
+Still the dazzling result must not blind us to the facts as they stand
+at the moment when we are surveying and taking leave of them. Much in a
+man's life obviously depends on life: much too depends on death. 'Felix
+opportunitate mortis' is a pregnant saying. How many village Hampdens,
+how many Miltons have passed away, inglorious because mute, and mute
+from premature death. Had Cćsar or Marlborough died before middle age
+their military reputation would have been slender indeed. For how many
+men, on the other hand, has death come too late. What would have been
+the place in history of Napoleon III., had Orsini been a successful
+assassin? What that of Tiberius, had he died at sixty? The authors who
+have survived themselves are as the sands of the sea; indeed the
+exceptions are those who have not. The politicians in the same case are
+less conspicuous, for they crumble into the House of Lords. Historians
+and rhetoricians have vied with each other in setting forth the glories
+of Pitt's supreme years. What we have to consider is his position in
+1756, when we part from him in professed ignorance of what is to come.
+How would Pitt appear to us had he died when he was still forty-seven?
+He was forty-eight the day before Devonshire, in his name, assumed the
+government. That is a respectable age. The younger Pitt never reached
+it, though he had been Prime Minister for near a score of years.
+Napoleon closed his career at forty-six. It is needless to detail
+examples. But at forty-seven the elder Pitt could only claim that he had
+been Paymaster of the Forces, and had cowed but not persuaded the House
+of Commons by his oratory. He had, too, the faith of the people,
+unearned except by vague echoes of purity and eloquence. Otherwise his
+career had been much like other careers, denouncing, or coquetting and
+even pressing for office, equable in expectation, and vindictive if
+refused. Pride was his besetting sin; yet he had stooped, to conquer.
+
+All seems to depend on this point, so difficult to decide: was there
+patriotism in all this alloy? Was the anxiety for office the mere
+craving of the politician for reward, or was it the real consciousness
+of capacity, purity, and inspiration? It may well in earlier days have
+been the more vulgar ambition, vulgar but not reprehensible; for office
+is the legitimate end and object of the public man; and Pitt had earned
+it a hundred times over by ordinary standards, while compelled to stand
+aside and see his inferiors promoted. But at the period which we have
+reached we think the nobler sentiment is unmistakable. He will not hold
+out a finger, he spurns all assistance, he builds without any foundation
+but himself. Had he wished only for the snug and secure possession of
+office he would have welcomed the co-operation of Newcastle and Fox,
+invaluable allies in their different ways. But at this time he will have
+none of them, he dreams of a government which free from taint or
+suspicion shall appeal for the confidence of the country on the highest
+and purest grounds.
+
+Here we feel, and feel with relief, that we can give a clear verdict.
+The rest matters little. The path of the statesman rarely skirts the
+heights, it is rough, rugged, sometimes squalid, as are most of the
+roads of life. We are apt to make idols, to ignore shadows, and to fancy
+that we see stars; not too apt, for it is an illuminating worship. But,
+that being so, let not those who have to scrutinise therefore condemn.
+All careers have their blots. The best and happiest are those in which
+the blemishes are obscured by high achievement. That was supremely the
+case with Pitt. His upward ascent was much like other ascents, neither
+better nor worse. But when he reached the summit, and acted in full
+light and freedom, his triumph was so complete that none deem it worth
+while to scan his previous record. None should care now, were it not a
+healthy propensity to seek to know as much as possible of the lives of
+great men. It is preposterous to depict Pitt as an angel of light. But
+yet, judged by the standard of his day, the only proper standard to
+apply, and indeed by the standard of any day, he must be held even in
+his darkest hours not to have compromised his historical future.
+
+Whatever his failings may have been, his countrymen have refused, and
+rightly refused, to take heed of them. They have refused to see anything
+but the supreme orator, the triumphant Minister of 1757-1761, the
+champion of liberty in later years at home and in the West. With Pitt,
+as with Nelson, his country will not count flaws. What do they matter?
+How are they visible in the sunlight of achievement? A country must
+cherish and guard its heroes.
+
+We have climbed with him in his path to power. We have seen him
+petulant, factious, hungry, bitter. And yet all the time we have felt
+that there was always something in him different in quality from his
+fellow-politicians when they aired the same qualities, that there was an
+imprisoned spirit within him struggling for freedom and scope. At last
+it bursts its trammels, he tosses patronage and intrigue to the old
+political Shylocks, and inspires the policy of the world. Vanity of
+vanities! Twenty years after his epoch of glory, three years after his
+death, Britain has reached the lowest point in her history. But still
+she is the richer for his life. He bequeaths a tradition, he bequeaths a
+son; and when men think of duty and achievement they look to one or the
+other. It will be an ill day for their country when either is
+forgotten.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ Aberdeen, Lord, 145
+
+ Abernethy, Dr., sermons by, 501
+
+ Achilles, 332
+
+ Addison, Joseph, 'Cato' referred to, 154
+
+ 'Additional MSS.' referred to, 196, 248, 281, 287, 301, 306, 313,
+ 316, 332, 337, 349, 351, 374, 380, 458, 461, 464, 467, 468, 472,
+ 483, 485
+
+ Aix-la-Chapelle, Peace of, 169, 395;
+ Treaty of, 213;
+ debate on Treaty of, 277, 278
+
+ Aldborough Election, 313, 323, 332, 349
+
+ Allen, Ralph, 112, 303
+
+ Allworthy, Squire, see Fielding, Henry
+
+ Almon, John, 300, 301, 493
+
+ Althorp, Lord, 21, 262
+
+ Alsace, Austrian armies in, 209
+
+ 'Ambulator, The,' 308
+
+ Amelia, Princess, 280
+
+ America, smuggling invasion of, 165;
+ hostilities in, 350-1, 372, 395, &c.
+
+ Angel Inn, Oxford, Chatham at, 363
+
+ Anne, Empress of Russia, death of, 202
+
+ Anne, Queen of England, 222
+
+ Anson, Lord, 341, 351
+
+ Anstruther, General, 330
+
+ Antwerp, French enter, 212
+
+ Argyll Buildings, Chatham's marriage at, 356
+
+ Argyll, Duke of, 343, 452
+
+ 'Army, History of the British,' see Fortescue, J.W.
+
+ Arundel, Mr., 439
+
+ Ashbourne, Lord, 355
+
+ Ashburnham Park, 305
+
+ Ashley, ----, 261
+
+ 'Assembly of Notables,' 479
+
+ Astrop Wells, Chatham's visit to, 304, 350
+
+ Austria, House of, 286
+
+ Austrian Netherlands, French in possession of, 212
+
+ Austrians, War of the Succession, 202, 402;
+ defeated at Molwitz, 203;
+ defeated at Chotusitz, 206;
+ victorious in Bohemia, 207, 209;
+ in Flanders, 211
+
+ Aylesbury, dispute over the Assizes at, 271-5, 289;
+ purchase of manor of, 275
+
+ 'Aylesbury, History of,' see Gibbs
+
+ Ayscough, Dr., 54, 57, 58, 62, 66, 69, 78, 291, 356
+
+
+ Bailey's 'Dictionary,' Pitt's study of, 501
+
+ Baldwin, Lord Chief Justice, 275
+
+ Ballantyne, Archibald, 'Life of Lord Carteret,' quoted, 146, 179
+
+ Baltimore, Lord, 178
+
+ Bampton, 84
+
+ Banquier, Alexandre, 45, 69
+
+ Barnard, Sir John, 148
+
+ Barré, Isaac, 268
+
+ Barrington, Viscount, 249, 363, 424, 426, 435, 444, 483
+
+ Barrow, sermons of, 501
+
+ Bath, 8, 29, 38, 57-9, 63, 66, 97, 99, 104-6, 112-16, 234, 303, 313,
+ 348, 355
+
+ Bath, Earl of, see Pulteney, Sir William
+
+ Battle Abbey, 305
+
+ Bavaria, protests against the succession of Maria Theresa, 202;
+ seized by General Khevenhüller, 205;
+ taken by Frederick II., 209
+
+ Bavaria, Elector of, see Frederick II.
+
+ Bave, Dr. Charles, 57, 60
+
+ Bays, Mr., 79
+
+ 'Bedford Correspondence,' 154, 478, 480-2
+
+ Bedford, Duke of, 236, 237, 246, 248, 249, 279, 280, 282, 300, 388,
+ 412, 428, 439, 477, 480, 482, 486
+
+ Bedlam, 8
+
+ Beckford, Alderman William, 166, 428, 440
+
+ Bellamy, a frame maker, 80
+
+ Belleisle, Marshal, 204, 205, 207
+
+ Belson, Mr., 491
+
+ Bentinck, Lord George, 190
+
+ Bentley, Richard, Walpole's letter to, 344
+
+ Bergen, 3
+
+ Berkeley of Stratton, Lord, 252
+
+ Berkshire, land purchased in, 6
+
+ Berlin, 202, 210;
+ Treaty of, 206
+
+ Besançon, 45, 68, 69, 352
+
+ Best, Mr., 24
+
+ Bland, Dr., 28
+
+ Blandford, 5, 58
+
+ 'Blandford,' a man-of-war, 400
+
+ Blandford, Vicar of, see Pitt, John
+
+ Blount, Martha, 79
+
+ Boconnoc, 3, 6, 14, 23, 24, 43, 54, 56, 58, 61;
+ Chatham's early life at, 43;
+ his reasons for living at, 58, 59
+
+ Bohemia, Frederick II. proclaimed king in Prague, 205;
+ taken by Frederick II., 209
+
+ Bolingbroke, Lady, 85, 86
+
+ Bolingbroke, Lord, 132, 144, 148, 176, 235, 258;
+ nicknamed the Pitts, 54;
+ called the 'intellectual Samson of Battersea,' 328;
+ accuracy of expression of, 501;
+ his newspaper, 'The Craftsman,' 163;
+ 'Remarks on History of England,' 328
+
+ Bolton, Duke of, 252
+
+ Boone, Mr., 252
+
+ Boscawen, Admiral, 399
+
+ Boswell, James, 303
+
+ Bourchier, Colonel, 44
+
+ Bourbons, extravagance of the, 195;
+ union of the, 208
+
+ 'Boy Patriots, The,' 131
+
+ Braddock, General, 397, 398
+
+ Breda, peace negotiations at, 212
+
+ Breslau, Peace of, 206
+
+ Brest, 226
+
+ Bridport, Lord, 353
+
+ Bright, John, 262
+
+ Bristol, 104, 105
+
+ Broad-Bottom Administration, 239
+
+ Broglie, Marshal, 204, 205
+
+ Bromley, 310
+
+ Brompton, Richard, portrait-painter, 489
+
+ Browne, Lancelot, 132
+
+ Broxom, 79
+
+ Brussels, French enter, 212
+
+ Bubb, see Dodington, George Bubb
+
+ Buchan, Lord, 39
+
+ Buckhurst, 305
+
+ Buckingham, the representation of, 133;
+ dispute over the Assizes at, 271-5, 289
+
+ Buckingham, Duke of, see Grenville, Richard Temple, Earl Temple
+
+ Burchett, Will., 28, 29
+
+ Burdett, 261, 262
+
+ Burke, Edmund, 21, 133
+
+ Burleigh, Lord, 427
+
+ Burton-Pynsent, 124, 125, 307
+
+ Bute, Earl of, 21, 87, 116, 121, 122, 125, 126, 138, 292, 296, 386,
+ 387, 410, 441, 454, 458, 465, 483, 484
+
+ Bute, Lady, 126
+
+ Butler, 'the Reminiscent,' 359, 364, 491, 493
+
+ Byng, Admiral, 450-2, 507
+
+
+ 'Cabinets, History of,' see Torrens, W.T. McC.
+
+ Cadogan, Charles, 2nd Baron, 452
+
+ Calcraft, John, letter to Digby, 359
+
+ Camden, Earl of, see Pratt, Sir Charles
+
+ Camelford, Lord, see Pitt, Thomas, 1st Baron Camelford
+
+ 'Camelford MSS.' referred to, 85, 256, 412, 490
+
+ Campbell, Hume, 430, 432, 434, 435, 439, 493, 494
+
+ Canning, George, 160
+
+ Canons, Palace of, 257
+
+ Cardigan, Lady, 84
+
+ Cardross, Lord, 39
+
+ Carlisle, 154
+
+ Carlisle, Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of, 159;
+ 'Papers' referred to, 159
+
+ Carlyle, Thomas, 'Frederick the Great' referred to, 202, 402
+
+ Caroline, Princess, 153, 370
+
+ Caroline, Queen, 53, 197
+
+ Carteret, John, Earl Granville, 255, 408, 409, 436;
+ statesmanship of, 144;
+ ability and distinction of, 148, 178;
+ secret negotiations of, 176;
+ Pitt's animosity to, 178, 187, 190, 218, 219, 280;
+ Pitt's admiration of, in later years, 220;
+ his relations with George II., 196;
+ ability recognised by George II., 245;
+ his knowledge of the classics, 179;
+ as a linguist, 180;
+ his contempt for money, 180;
+ Chesterfield's opinion of, 182;
+ supports the Earl of Bath, 216;
+ downfall of, 229, 235-9;
+ Administration against, 248;
+ Secretary of State, 250;
+ President of the Council, 300, 472;
+ Walpole's distrust of, 315;
+ on North American affairs, 350, 351;
+ on subsidies, 380;
+ Fox's enmity against, 384;
+ Newcastle's negotiations with, 389;
+ his forty-eight hours' Ministry, 409;
+ Fox's resignation, 461-3;
+ attacks of Pitt upon, 505, 506;
+ 'Life of Carteret,' see Ballantyne, A.
+
+ Chaillot, 99
+
+ Chambers, 140
+
+ Chandos, Duke of, 140;
+ Dukedom of, 257
+
+ Charleroi, taken by the French, 212
+
+ Charles II., 393, 423
+
+ Charles III., 205
+
+ Charles VI., 202, 203, 213
+
+ Charles VII., 209
+
+ Charles Edward, 'the Young Pretender,' see Stuart
+
+ Chatham, Lady, see Grenville, Lady Hester
+
+ 'Chatham MSS.' referred to, 50, 51, 92, 99, 254, 455, 485
+
+ Chatham, William Pitt, 1st Earl of, parentage, 1, 8, 11;
+ birth, 26;
+ death, 126, 312;
+ appearance and characteristics, 421, 488-90;
+ at Eton, 27;
+ at Oxford, 31;
+ father, 8, 12, 14-16, 38, 48;
+ mother, 12, 14, 26, 38-46;
+ Governor Pitt's regard for, 11, 26;
+ sisters, 48-128;
+ quarrels with his sister Ann, 53, 83, 85-8, 115, 116, 256;
+ family quarrels, 19, 22, 50, 83, 509;
+ affected by gout, 28, 30, 39, 46, 96, 98, 117, 234, 298, 303, 304,
+ 313, 315, 316, 318, 332, 483, 486, 507;
+ military service, 43-7, 60, 63, 130, 132, 157, 158, 160, 163;
+ marries Lady Hester Grenville, 97, 98, 102, 253, 352, 356;
+ letters to Hester Grenville described, 355;
+ lives and dies at Hayes, 103, 110, 312, 454;
+ birth of children, 111, 455, 456;
+ legacy of Duchess of Marlborough to, 233, 234;
+ anecdotes of, 307, 308, 363;
+ recommends Bolingbroke's works, 328;
+ 'History of Chatham,' see Thackeray, Francis
+ Correspondence--with his father, 29, 34;
+ to his mother, 38-46;
+ sister Ann, 56-84, 88-93, 101, 104-112;
+ sister Mary, 96;
+ Duke of Newcastle, 97, 329-32, 335;
+ Sir George Lyttelton and Grenville, 316-18;
+ Chancellor Hardwicke, 324, 325, 337
+ Appointments--Groom of the Bedchamber, 162, 240;
+ Paymaster, 85, 133, 254, 475, 510;
+ Privy Seal, 125;
+ Secretary of State, 103, 480;
+ Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, 253, 261, 265
+ Parliamentary Career--Begins at Stowe, 77;
+ represents Old Sarum, 129, 270, 313;
+ elected for Seaford, 270;
+ chosen for Aldborough, 333, 349, 486;
+ represents Okehampton, 486;
+ his first session in Parliament, 143, 157;
+ George II.'s regard for, 108, 157, 196, 245, 249, 250, 252, 262,
+ 341, 349, 377, 465, 478, 486, 506;
+ his regard for the King, 242, 465;
+ Order of the Garter for Temple, 139;
+ member of the 'Junto,' 236;
+ forcing his hand, 247;
+ wields power through the people, 358, 475;
+ views and plans on political situation, 316, 321;
+ apologies from Duke of Newcastle, 335, 348;
+ exclusion from Government, 338, 415;
+ American War, 350;
+ his finest speeches, 293, 357-8;
+ strong remarks on Sir Thomas Robinson, 360;
+ distrust of, and attitude to Fox, 352, 365, 370, 474, 476, 478;
+ Parliamentary intrigue, 370;
+ as Leader of the House, 376;
+ eulogises Legge for a position, 377;
+ pecuniary awards to, 410;
+ and Newcastle Ministry, 460-5, 471;
+ negotiations with Hardwicke, 468;
+ co-operation sought with, 475;
+ fails to form a Ministry, 483-6;
+ connection with Leicester House, 353, 386-8, 404, 454, 475, 481,
+ 485;
+ his oratory, 357-8, 492-503;
+ periods of his life, 503, 504;
+ effect of his life's mission, 512
+ Speeches, extracts of--On royal marriage, 157;
+ reduction of army, 164;
+ convention with Spain, 167;
+ denounces Walpole's administration, 184, 505;
+ subsidies for foreign powers, 209, 237, 379, 380, 434;
+ transfer of Hanoverians, 241, 242, 410;
+ Bucks Assizes, 274;
+ compensation of Glasgow, 276;
+ peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, 278, 416;
+ opposes navy reduction, 289, 419;
+ opinion on Regency Bill, 292, 293;
+ Jews' Naturalisation Act, 299;
+ relief of Chelsea pensioners, 356;
+ on election petitions, 358;
+ tenure of sheriff-deputyships, 392, 394;
+ against the Newcastle Ministry, 404;
+ seamen's prize money, 422;
+ army estimates, 424;
+ Militia Bill, 428, 469;
+ reprimands Hume Campbell, 430-3;
+ foreign treaties, 433-8;
+ attacks Budget, 440, 447;
+ on Swiss auxiliaries, 441;
+ criticism on army grant, 445
+
+ Chesterfield, Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of, and Ann Pitt, 54, 65;
+ statesmanship of, 144;
+ his ability and distinction, 148;
+ his opinion of Pulteney, 176;
+ quotations from his Letters, 182;
+ character of George II., 198;
+ opposed to the Hanoverian vote, 225;
+ bequest to, by the Duchess of Marlborough, 233;
+ member of Opposition Committee, 236;
+ Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, 240;
+ letter from Newcastle, 248;
+ resignation of, as Secretary of State, 279;
+ eulogises Pitt and Murray, 302;
+ on the reconstruction of the Ministry, 390;
+ on the character of Pitt, 490, 491, 493;
+ on Pitt's study of words, 501
+
+ Chevening, residence of Stanhope, 3, 126, 307
+
+ Chippenham Election, 172
+
+ Cholmondeley, Lord, Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, 253, 439
+
+ Cholmondeley, Mrs., death of, 97
+
+ Cholmondely, Charles, 14
+
+ Chotusitz, Battle of, 206
+
+ Clement XII., Pope, death of, 201
+
+ Climenson's 'Mrs. Montague' referred to, 303, 304, 309
+
+ Clive, Lord, 395
+
+ Cobbett, William, 134;
+ 'Parliamentary History' referred to, 165, 167, 168, 183, 186, 187,
+ 188, 218, 219, 220, 225, 241, 242, 243, 271, 275-8, 285, 287, 443
+
+ Cobden, Richard, 261, 262
+
+ 'Cobham's Cubs,' 131
+
+ Cobham, Lord, see Temple, Sir Richard, afterwards Lord Cobham
+
+ Cobham Party (The), 217
+
+ Colchester, Petition for, 360
+
+ Colebrooke's 'Memoirs,' 296, 346
+
+ Cologne, Elector of, 286
+
+ Compičgne, Council at, 400
+
+ Congreve, William, 132
+
+ Conway, a cousin of Walpole's, 160, 289, 481
+
+ Corbett, Mr., marriage of, 49
+
+ Corbett, Sir William, 49
+
+ Cornbury, Lord, 84
+
+ Cornwall, 6, 16, 43, 58, 61
+
+ Cornwall, Duchy of, 17
+
+ Cornwall, Duke of, 18
+
+ Cotton, Sir John Hinde, 224, 236-7
+
+ 'Cousins, The,' 131
+
+ Coxe, William, 'Memoirs of Henry Pelham' quoted 249, 250, 278, 282,
+ 286;
+ 'Memoirs of Sir Robert Walpole' quoted, 166, 168, 172, 216, 369
+
+ Cradock, Joseph, 'Literary Memoirs' referred to, 497
+
+ 'Cranford,' see Gaskell, Mrs.
+
+ Cresset, Mr., 87, 115, 116
+
+ Cricket, played at Stowe, 80
+
+ Crowhurst, Colonel Pelham's place at, 305
+
+ Culloden, Battle of, 269, 398
+
+ Cumberland, Duke of, Grenville's hatred of, 21;
+ attempts to form a Pitt Ministry, 139;
+ George II.'s affection for, 387;
+ defeated at Fontenoy, 210;
+ and at Lauffeld, 212;
+ projected marriage of, 229;
+ awarded a pension, 269, 270;
+ objections to, as Regent, 293;
+ a member of the Regency Council, 370;
+ his devotion to Fox, 294, 352, 365, 380, 384, 388;
+ alliance of Newcastle with, 389;
+ plan of campaign, 398;
+ influence of, 475
+
+
+ Darcy, Sir Conyers, 439
+
+ Dashwood, Francis, Baron, 414
+
+ Delamere, Lord, 14
+
+ Delaval, John, speech at Berwick, 358
+
+ Delany, Mrs., 'Memoirs of,' referred to, 52, 125, 126
+
+ Denbigh, Lord, 249
+
+ Derby, Prince Charles Edward marches on, 244
+
+ Dettingen, Battle of, 214, 218;
+ George II. at, 193, 194;
+ Pitt's view of the, 222
+
+ Devonshire, land purchased in, 6
+
+ Devonshire, Duke of, 339, 379, 380, 462, 467, 476-86
+
+ Devonshire House, assembly at, 479
+
+ De Witt, Jan, 443
+
+ Diamond, transaction of the Pitt, 3, 4
+
+ Dickins and Stanton, 'An Eighteenth Century Correspondence'
+ referred to, 134
+
+ Digby, Lord, 359, 459, 461
+
+ Disraeli, Benjamin, 172
+
+ 'Divinity Pitt,' 54
+
+ Dodington, George Bubb, 135, 140, 155, 224, 236, 237, 292, 346, 349,
+ 350, 370, 373, 380, 383-6, 388, 443, 459, 479, 480, 483
+
+ Dorsetshire, lands purchased in, 6
+
+ Dover, Lord, 156
+
+ Dresden, occupied by Frederick II., 210;
+ Peace of, 246
+
+ 'Dropmore Papers' quoted and referred to, 8, 13, 26, 56
+
+ Duffell, Dr., 126
+
+ Dundonald, Lord, 'Autobiography of,' referred to, 134
+
+ Dunkirk, 277
+
+ Dupleix, 395
+
+ Dupplin, one of the Paymasters, 455, 472
+
+ Duquesne Fort, 398
+
+ Dutch Expedition up the Thames recalled, 226
+
+ Dutens, Louis, reception by the Pitts, 50, 51;
+ 'Voyage' referred to, 174
+
+
+ East India Company, 2
+
+ Education, Chatham's letters on, 20
+
+ Edward III., 179
+
+ Egmont, Earl of, 277, 284, 292, 373, 406, 472
+
+ 'Eighteenth Century Correspondence,' see Dickins and Stanton
+
+ Election expenses, 143
+
+ Elizabeth, Empress of Russia, 206, 207, 400, 402
+
+ Elizabeth, Queen of England, 423
+
+ Ellis, Welbore, 410, 415, 460, 461
+
+ Enfield Chase, 308
+
+ England, indifference of George II. and William III. to, 198, 199;
+ pledged to the Pragmatic Sanction, 203;
+ 'Remarks on the History of,' see Bolingbroke, Lord
+
+ Epsom, 154
+
+ Eridge, 305
+
+ Erskine, Sir Henry, 39, 441, 467
+
+ Erskine, Thomas, 39
+
+ Esmond, Will, 13
+
+ Essex, Lady, see Pitt, Essex
+
+ Esther, name given to Chatham's wife, 356
+
+ Eton, 11, 27-30, 160
+
+ Eugene, Prince, 438
+
+ Excise scheme, 287, 288
+
+
+ Fairly Farm, 305
+
+ Falmouth, Lord, 18
+
+ Fane, Lord, 360
+
+ Feilding, Charles, amiability of, 61, 73
+
+ Fielding, Henry, on Lord Chatham, 27;
+ 'Squire Allworthy' referred to, 112, 303;
+ 'Tom Jones' referred to, 27
+
+ Finch, Edward, 248, 252
+
+ Finch, William, 248, 252
+
+ Fitzgerald, Hon. Edward Villiers, 26
+
+ Fitzmaurice, Lord, 'Life of Shelburne' referred to, 27, 47, 49, 166,
+ 172, 176, 467, 501
+
+ Flanders, British troops in, 188, 205;
+ military operations in, 211, 223, 224
+
+ Florence, 49, 50
+
+ Fontainebleau, Treaty of, objects of the, 208
+
+ Fontenoy, Battle of, 210, 214, 243, 246
+
+ Foote, Samuel, 174, 298;
+ 'Table Talk' referred to, 499
+
+ Fort St. George, 3, 9
+
+ Fortescue Family, nickname of the, 58
+
+ Fortescue, J.W., 'History of the British Army,' quoted, 221
+
+ Fox, Charles, illness of, 340
+
+ Fox, Henry, at Eton with Chatham, 27;
+ temperament, 230, 294-7;
+ sketch of his character, 294-7;
+ regarded as odious, 327;
+ peerage endowment from Paymastership, 257, 296, 314;
+ candidate for Secretaryship of State, 279, 282;
+ the Buckingham Assize dispute, 272;
+ the Marriage Act, 305;
+ admitted to the Cabinet, 367, 368, 370;
+ member of the Council of Regency, 367, 370;
+ Newcastle's choice between Fox and Pitt, 388;
+ stipulations for promotions of friends, 390;
+ position on Provisioning Bill, 394;
+ as leader of the House, 330, 335, 402, 410, 415, 417-20;
+ opposes Bill for war prizes, 423;
+ his challenge accepted, 428;
+ vetoes an appointment, 430;
+ defends Hume Campbell, 434;
+ no voice in Treasury appointment, 439;
+ questions of dictatorship, 445;
+ parliamentary intrigues and position, 458-67;
+ mistakes concerning--résumé of parliamentary life, 474-84;
+ on Ann Pitt, 50;
+ prospects of the Young Pretender, 244;
+ George II.'s inclination to, 318, 341;
+ gratified with Chatham, 218;
+ opposed to Chatham, 268, 292, 294, 349, 350, 365, 407, 416-20,
+ 430, 436, 440, 445;
+ visits Chatham, 326;
+ placed over Chatham, 330;
+ agreement with Chatham, 352;
+ description of Chatham's outburst with Newcastle, 357;
+ meets Chatham at Holland House, 370;
+ sends apologies to Hardwicke, 341;
+ hatred of Newcastle, 374, 389;
+ and Newcastle's disgrace, 452, 453, 471, 472;
+ rivalries referred to, 283;
+ his enemies, 384;
+ metaphors used by, 407;
+ letters quoted, 343, 359, 364;
+ Walpole on, 442
+
+ 'France, Histoire de,' see Martin
+
+ France, Wars of, 204, 205, 207, 209, 212, 226, 233, 395, &c.
+
+ Franche-Comté, 69
+
+ Francis, Duke, 72
+
+ Frankfort, 207, 209
+
+ Frederick II. (the Great), accession of, 201;
+ in Silesia, 202, 203;
+ proclaimed Emperor at Frankfort, 205;
+ his claim of Silesia, 395;
+ War of Austrian Succession, 206, 209, 400-02;
+ subsidy to, 286-7, 289
+
+ 'Frederick the Great,' see Carlyle, Thomas
+
+ 'Frederick II. and his Times,' see Raumer
+
+ Frederick, Prince of Wales, heir apparent, 148-51;
+ marriage of, 151, 157;
+ his character and conduct, 149, 150;
+ banished from Court, 152;
+ expelled from St. James's, 161;
+ Dr. Ayscough adviser to, 54;
+ father of George II., 195;
+ friendship with Thomas Pitt, 17;
+ at the General Election, 171;
+ Carteret a favourite of, 180, 219, 237;
+ congratulates Walpole, 228;
+ quarrels with Pitt, 256;
+ negotiations with Pitt, 291, 293;
+ decline of affection for Lady Hamilton, 352;
+ overtures to Fox, 365;
+ death of, 261, 292
+
+ Frederick William, of Prussia, death of, 201
+
+ Free Trade, 231
+
+
+ Gage, Mr., M.P., 270
+
+ Gainsborough, Thomas, portrait by, 353
+
+ Gambier, Lord, 'Memorials,' 305
+
+ Garrick, David, 499
+
+ Gaskell, Mrs., 'Cranford' referred to, 352
+
+ Gay, John, 54
+
+ 'Gazetteer, The,' newspaper, 163
+
+ 'Gentleman's Magazine, The,' 188
+
+ George I., 156, 163, 200, 387
+
+ George II., his dual personality, 192, 204, 207, character of, 192;
+ his political character, 194;
+ Lord Hervey's unworthy portrayal of, 197;
+ his courage, 220, 221;
+ with Lady Yarmouth at Richmond, 193;
+ devotion for Hanover, 195, 198, 446;
+ as Elector of Hanover concludes a treaty with the French, 204;
+ on the security of the Electorate of Hanover, 286;
+ placed under arrest by his father, 150;
+ his hatred of his son the Prince of Wales, 162, 387;
+ the Dutch War, 212;
+ in Hanover, 53, 54, 399, 402;
+ at Dettingen, 207;
+ at Oudenarde, 194;
+ signs the Treaty of Worms, 208;
+ the Treaty of Berlin, 206;
+ speech in Parliament, 1755, 403-4;
+ gives Premiership to Pelham, 216, 217;
+ his aversion to the Earl of Bath, 217;
+ his anger with Newcastle, 458;
+ dismissal of Carteret, 229, 238;
+ Pitt's first visit to, 63;
+ his hatred of Pitt, 108, 157, 179, 190, 191, 253, 482;
+ reason for this hatred, 157;
+ Pitt's apparent loyalty to, 424, 425;
+ Pitt's desire for reconciliation with, 459, &c., 465-72;
+ testifies to Walpole's bravery, 146;
+ discourteous treatment of Temple, 484;
+ repugnance to Legge, 481-2;
+ the execution of Admiral Byng, 451
+
+ George III., as a lad, 292;
+ compared with George II., 200;
+ in the Lords, 430;
+ and Mr. Fox, 342, 365, 367, 459, 474;
+ endeavours to form a Pitt Ministry, 139, 140;
+ Newcastle refuses a pension offered by, 174;
+ on Pelham's death, 313;
+ treaties with Hesse-Cassel and Russia, 371
+
+ 'George III., Memoirs of the Reign of,' see Walpole, Horace
+
+ George IV., extravagance of, 195;
+ compared with George II., 200
+
+ Georgia, 167, 208
+
+ Germaine, Lady Betty, 107
+
+ Germany, 109, 165, 194, 206
+
+ Gibbs' 'History of Aylesbury' referred to, 275
+
+ Gibbon, Edward, 47
+
+ Gibraltar, proposed restoration to Spain, 208
+
+ Gladstone, Rt. Hon. W.E., 230
+
+ Glasgow and the Jacobite occupation, 276
+
+ Glatz, ceded to Frederick II., 206, 210
+
+ Glenfinnan, the Young Pretender at, 243
+
+ Glover, Richard, 176, 177, 236, 237, 259, 346
+
+ Gordon, Rev., 493
+
+ Gower, Granville Leveson, 237, 247, 248
+
+ Grafton, Duke of, 264
+
+ Grandison, Catherine, Viscountess of, 26
+
+ Grandison, Lord, 12, 15, 41, 46
+
+ Granville, Earl, see Carteret, John
+
+ 'Grattan, Life of,' referred to, 85, 86, 495
+
+ Gray, Sir James, 70
+
+ Gray, Thomas, lampoon on Fox, 297
+
+ Grenville, Family of, Pitt united to the, 17, 130, 131, 389
+
+ 'Grenville Papers' referred to, 86, 131, 132, 134, 234, 277, 316,
+ 319, 321, 327, 333, 465, 482
+
+ Grenville, George, opposed the war in Flanders, 223;
+ the Buckingham Assizes, 272;
+ speech on unrest with Spain, 167;
+ offices held by:--
+ Prime Minister, 130;
+ Lord of the Treasury, 239, 486;
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer, 346;
+ Paymastership, 467;
+ Secretaryship of State offered to, 138;
+ congratulated by Pitt, 348;
+ Bill _re_ vessels captured before declaration of war, 423;
+ position and reasons for his hatred of Pitt, 21, 131;
+ opposition to Pitt, 268;
+ letters from Pitt to, 141, 260, 276, 277, 455;
+ Letters from Lyttelton to, 317, 327;
+ visit to Bath, 328
+
+ Grenville, Henry, 133
+
+ Grenville, Lady, inherits Boconnoc, 24, 133
+
+ Grenville, Lady Hester, 410, 411;
+ wife of Chatham, 53, 102, 352, 353, 356;
+ letters of, and reference to, 99-102, 105, 110, 112-15, 124, 125,
+ 311, 312;
+ her character, 355;
+ pension to, 124
+
+ Grenville, James, 133, 139, 311, 372, 467
+
+ Grenville, Richard Temple, afterwards Earl Temple, 81;
+ resigned Privy Seal, 139;
+ proposed as Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, 467;
+ proposed as First Lord of the Admiralty, 479;
+ refused to be First Lord of the Treasury, 136, 139;
+ Order of the Garter, 139;
+ his ambition a Dukedom, 140;
+ application for title, 138;
+ his bet, 138;
+ apologises to Hervey, 138;
+ cold reception at Court, 484-5;
+ visits Chatham at Bath, 348;
+ voted against the Hanoverians, 254;
+ pensioned, 410;
+ the Buckingham Assizes dispute, 272, 290;
+ Letters to, 319-21, 326-7, 332;
+ 'Letters of Junius' ascribed to, 136
+
+ Grenville, Thomas, killed in action off Cape Finisterre, 133
+
+ Grenvilles, the, 130, 137, 465, 483;
+ public money drawn by, 134;
+ friends of Pitt, 492
+
+ Grub Street, 298
+
+ Guernsey, 80
+
+
+ Hagley, Lord Lyttelton's seat at, 306, 307, 313
+
+ Hague, Embassy to the, 240
+
+ Halifax, Earl of, 472
+
+ Hamilton, Duke of, 6, 390, 404, 477
+
+ Hamilton, Lady Archibald, 352
+
+ Hamilton, Lord Archibald, 178
+
+ Hampden, Lord, attack on Pitt, 268, 290
+
+ Hampden, Richard, estate of, 233, 234
+
+ Hampshire, land purchased in, 6
+
+ Hampton Court, 84, 151, 198
+
+ Hannan, John, 52
+
+ Hannan, Sir William, 52
+
+ Hannibal, 191, 438
+
+ Hanover, Pitt's contempt for, 178, 186;
+ George II.'s devotion to, 188, 189, 195, 198;
+ his visit to, 194;
+ his ideas for safeguarding, 286;
+ Convention signed at, between Britain and Prussia, 210;
+ George III.'s visit to, 371
+
+ Hanoverian Guards substituted for English Guards, 218
+
+ Hanoverians, allies of Britain, 211;
+ English hatred of the, 218;
+ vote for maintenance of the, 224, 225;
+ transferred to Maria Theresa, 241, 242
+
+ Hapsburg, House of, 204
+
+ Hardwicke, Philip Yorke, Earl of, letters to, 259, 324, 325, 333,
+ 337, 350, 351, 458;
+ letters from, 351, 380, 381;
+ on the alienation of the Prince of Wales from his parents, 156;
+ as Newcastle's mentor and counsellor, 175, 314, 315;
+ on Pitt's popularity in the Commons, 185;
+ on Pitt's acrimoniousness, 219;
+ and George II., 238, 239;
+ on the foreign military policy, 246;
+ his treatment of Newcastle, 279;
+ supports Newcastle, 340;
+ supports Pitt, 371-3;
+ antagonism over Marriage Act, 305;
+ as the brains of the Cabinet, 315-16;
+ political unrest and intrigue of 1755-6, 386-90, 453, 464-5,
+ 467-73, 476;
+ 'Life of Hardwicke,' see Harris, George
+
+ Harrington, Earl of, 240, 246, 251
+
+ Harris, George, 'Life of Hardwicke' referred to, 152, 464, 465, 471
+
+ Harrison, Mr., 74, 75
+
+ Hartington, Lord, 289, 341, 343;
+ Letters from Fox to, 359, 364
+
+ Hastings, 305
+
+ Hawke, Lord, 174
+
+ Hawkins, ----, 390
+
+ Hay, Dr., 467
+
+ Hayes, 103, 110, 111, 113, 114, 125, 306, 310, 311
+
+ Hedges, William, quotations from, 2
+
+ Hell-fire Club, 275
+
+ Henley, Robert, 155
+
+ Herrenhausen, 198
+
+ Hertford, Lord, 140
+
+ Hervey, Lord, 138, 153, 160, 164, 197, 413;
+ 'Memoirs' referred to, 153, 162, 164
+
+ Hesse, Landgrave of, 209
+
+ Hesse-Cassel, Treaty with, 371, 374, 378, 379
+
+ Hessians, allies of Britain, 211
+
+ Hillsborough, Lord, 369, 439
+
+ Hoare, William, portrait of Pelham, 314;
+ portraits of Pitt, 488, 489
+
+ Hochkirch, Battle of, 106
+
+ Holdernesse, Lady, 115, 116
+
+ Holdernesse, Lord, 282, 300, 397, 410, 411, 479, 482, 483
+
+ Holland, 40, 41, 199;
+ the Dutch as allies, 211;
+ guarantee of assistance to, 246, 247
+
+ Holland, Lady, 'Journal' quoted, 24
+
+ Holland House, meeting of Chatham and Fox at, 370
+
+ 'Holland House MSS.' referred to, 296, 340, 342, 343, 350, 410, 431,
+ 454, 459, 460, 476, 477, 479, 480-3, 486
+
+ Hollins, ----, 63
+
+ Holyrood, Prince Charles Edward at, 243, 244
+
+ 'Homer, Original Genius of,' see Wood, Robert
+
+ Hood, Admiral, 353
+
+ Houghton, Walpole at, 147, 228;
+ his burial at, 229
+
+ Howard, Frederick, see Carlisle, Earl of
+
+ Howe, Captain Lord, 399
+
+ Hungary, Queen of, 202;
+ subsidy voted to, 205
+
+ Hurstmonceux, 305
+
+ Hyde, Lord, 462
+
+
+ Impiger, 332
+
+ India, Governor Pitt's progress in, 2, 3
+
+ Innes Family, 7
+
+ Iracundus, 332
+
+ Irwin, Lady, 159
+
+ Italy, war in, 213
+
+
+ Jacobinism, Governor Pitt on, 10
+
+ Jamaica, position of the Governorship of, 5
+
+ James I., 432
+
+ James II., 243, 276, 393
+
+ Jenkins' Ear, story of, 166
+
+ Jews' Naturalisation Act, 298, 299
+
+ Johnson, Dr., 257, 413, 493
+
+
+ Kaunitz, adviser of Maria Theresa, 400
+
+ Kensington, 82, 114-16, 118, 198
+
+ Khevenhüller, General, occupies Munich, 205
+
+ Kielmansegge's 'Diary,' quoted, 303
+
+ Kildare, Lord, 459
+
+ 'Kildare, Narrative to,' quotations from, 476, 478, 479, 482
+
+ King, Mr., 305
+
+
+ Land's End, 226
+
+ Lanoe, Colonel, 58, 60
+
+ Lauffeld, Battle of, 212, 214
+
+ Leadam, quoted, 208
+
+ Leasowes, Shenstone's house at, 307
+
+ Lecky, W.E.H., 502
+
+ Lee, Dr., 155, 255, 268, 272, 275, 373
+
+ Legge, Henry Bilson, 330, 336, 380-2;
+ letter to Chatham, 308, 309;
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer, 346, 349, 405, 410, 411, 467, 480, 481;
+ a Lord of the Treasury, 486;
+ Pitt's Ministry, 483;
+ the King's repugnance to, 482;
+ proposed Peerage for, 479;
+ on Chatham's speech, 360;
+ refused to sign the Hesse-Cassel Treaty, 374;
+ distrusted by Newcastle, 374;
+ in praise of Walpole, 423
+
+ Leicester House, 115, 155, 291-4, 318, 353, 368, 370, 371, 383,
+ 386-8, 404, 456, 475, 481, 483-5
+
+ Lifeguards escort George II., 193
+
+ Ligonier, General, 212
+
+ Limerick, Lord, 184, 185, 187
+
+ Lincoln, acts as mediator between the Pelham brothers, 291
+
+ Linz, Archduke proclaimed in, 205
+
+ Liverpool, Lord, 141
+
+ 'London Magazine, The,' 188
+
+ Londonderry, Lord, 1, 5, 6
+
+ Loo, 198
+
+ Lothian, Lord, 439
+
+ Loudoun, Lord, 441
+
+ Louis XIV., 133, 192, 193
+
+ Louis XV., 193, 208, 209, 212, 400;
+ 'Louis XV. et la Renversement des Alliances,' see Waddington,
+ Richard
+
+ Louis XVIII., 141
+
+ Louisbourg, 113, 243
+
+ Low Countries, 188, 212
+
+ Luneville, 45, 71, 72
+
+ Lyndhurst, Lord, 443
+
+ Lyte, Sir Henry, 'Dunster,' quoted, 6;
+ 'History of Eton' referred to, 29
+
+ Lyttelton, Christian, marriage with Thomas Pitt, 17, 41, 130;
+ her character, 17
+
+ Lyttelton, Sir George, afterwards Baron Lyttelton, Pitt
+ correspondence referring to, 28, 41, 42, 49, 54, 58, 63, 77, 78,
+ 317, 318, 321-4, 329, 331, 348;
+ his companions in youth, 141;
+ friendship with William Pitt, 130, 492;
+ supports Pitt, 289;
+ quarrel with Pitt, 407;
+ reconciliation, 414;
+ private secretary to Prince of Wales, 162;
+ return to Parliament, 159;
+ and standing army, 164;
+ and Spanish War, 167-8;
+ influence over Pulteney, 177;
+ secret terms with Walpole, 177;
+ policy concerning war in Flanders, 223-4;
+ a Lord of the Treasury, 236, 237, 239;
+ arranged coalition between forces of Stowe and Leicester House, 291;
+ Cofferer, 346, 347;
+ attempts reconciliation between Newcastle and Bedford, 412;
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer, 412;
+ his Budget, 440;
+ War supplies, 446-8;
+ Joint-Paymaster of the Forces, 455;
+ character, 414;
+ couplet, 158;
+ works, 413;
+ 'Memoirs and Correspondence of,' see Phillimore, R.J.
+
+ Lyttelton, Molly, 74, 353
+
+ Lyttelton, Sir Richard, 111, 130, 327, 423, 467 473
+
+ Lyttelton, Sir Thomas, 16
+
+ Lyttelton, William, 306
+
+
+ Macaulay, 31, 214
+
+ Macclesfield, Lord, death of, 134
+
+ Madras, 11
+
+ Maestricht, siege of, 278
+
+ Magyars appealed to by Maria Theresa, 205
+
+ Mahon, Lady, 126
+
+ Maillebois, Marshal, 204
+
+ Mainz, Elector of, 286
+
+ 'Malta, Knights of,' see Porter
+
+ Mann, Sir Horace, 'Letters to Horace Walpole,' 50, 126, 138, 234, 253
+
+ Mansfield, Lord, see Murray, William, Earl of
+
+ Marchmont, Earl of, Duchess of Marlborough's bequest to, 234
+
+ 'Marchmont Papers' quoted, 155, 168, 180, 224, 234, 235, 240
+
+ Maria Theresa, the War of Austrian Succession, 202-5, 208, 210,
+ 213-15, 221, 222, 241, 242, 246, 247, 286, 395, 400;
+ her character, 214, 215
+
+ Marlborough, Duke of, 131, 170, 343, 366, 477
+
+ Marlborough, Sarah, Duchess of, death and bequests of, 21, 233, 234
+
+ 'Marlborough, Duchess of, Life of,' see Thomson
+
+ Marriage Act, 305
+
+ Marseilles, 45, 70
+
+ Martin's 'Histoire de France,' quoted, 208
+
+ Martin, Mr., 357
+
+ Martyn, Mr., 46
+
+ Mayo, Mr., 39
+
+ Mediterranean, English fleet in, 205
+
+ Medmenham, Brotherhood of, 272
+
+ Meehan's 'Famous Houses of Bath,' quoted, 303, 304
+
+ Meredith, Sir William, 431
+
+ Middlesex, Lord, M.P. for Old Sarum, 270
+
+ Milan, 208
+
+ Miller, Mr. Saunderson, 307
+
+ 'Ministry, The New,' a collection of songs, &c., 139
+
+ Minorca, 208, 294;
+ fall of, 450-1
+
+ Mirabeau's power of oratory, 501
+
+ Mirepoix, Duchess of, 109
+
+ Mirepoix, Duke of, 399
+
+ Mohawks, 23
+
+ Mohun, Lord, sells Boconnoc, 6
+
+ Molinox, Mr., 63
+
+ Molwitz, Austrians defeated at, 203
+
+ Monmouth, Duke of, at Sedgemoor, 187
+
+ Mons, capture of, 212
+
+ Montagu, Duke of, 428
+
+ Montagu, Mrs. Elizabeth, 52, 54;
+ 'Letters' quoted, 305, 306, 309, 353
+
+ Montcalm, General, 457;
+ 'Montcalm and Wolfe,' see Parkman
+
+ Montespan, 192
+
+ Montpelier, 45, 71
+
+ Morayshire, 7
+
+ 'Moreau, Souvenirs de,' referred to, 398, 400
+
+ Mudge, Mr., 501
+
+ Mug, Matthew, 299
+
+ Murray, William, Earl of, formerly Lord Mansfield, oratorical powers,
+ 302;
+ precision of, 496-7;
+ eminence of, 340;
+ Solicitor-General, 223, 318;
+ Attorney-General, 453-5;
+ his chance of promotion, 338;
+ _re_ new Cabinet, 380;
+ changes in the Cabinet, 389;
+ _re_ Jacobites, 392;
+ _re_ subsidy treaties, 431-4, 436;
+ attitude towards Pitt, 268, 421;
+ Pitt's attack on, 359, 360, 363-5;
+ on Pitt's powers of ridicule, 503;
+ enemy of Fox, 384;
+ coolness towards Newcastle, 430;
+ correspondence regarding, 54, 335, 336
+
+ Mutiny Bill, 276
+
+
+ Namur, capture of, 212
+
+ Naples, 195, 205
+
+ Napoleon I., 136, 215, 269
+
+ Napoleon III., 509
+
+ Navy, proposed reduction of the, 289
+
+ Necessity Fort, surrender of, 350
+
+ Nedham, Mrs. Catherine, see Pitt, Catherine
+
+ Nedham, Robert, his marriage with Catherine Pitt, 49;
+ nominated for Old Sarum, 129
+
+ Nevers, 98
+
+ Newbury, 46, 74
+
+ Newcastle, Sir Thomas Pelham, afterwards Duke of, his character, 138,
+ 173-4;
+ an incident at his uncle's death, 138;
+ refuses a pension, 174;
+ contempt of George II. for, 150, 196, 245;
+ supports Henry Pelham, 216, 217;
+ blunder in the Lords, 227;
+ supports the Dutch cause, 247;
+ the Ministerial crisis of 1746, 248, 249, 252;
+ the Seaford election, 270;
+ his jealous nature, 279;
+ his dislike for Bedford, 279, 280;
+ views on the Hanoverian question, 286;
+ Pitt's enmity with, 422, 427, 453, 471, 481, 486;
+ profession of gratitude to Pitt, 290, 291;
+ Fox's vengeance on, 296;
+ his jealousy of Fox, 439;
+ Fox's hatred of, 482;
+ the Jews' Naturalisation Act, 298, 299;
+ letters and correspondence, 97, 139, 281, 313, 316, 329-33, 347,
+ 351, 386, 461-2;
+ Secretary of State, 319, 321, 323;
+ his appointments, 340;
+ words with Chatham, 357;
+ his power in the Commons, 361, 382;
+ negotiations with Fox, 368-9;
+ Prime Minister, 388;
+ formation of Cabinet, 389;
+ councils of war, 397;
+ and Hanoverian treaties, 409;
+ attempted negotiations between Newcastle and French Ambassador, 399;
+ loyalty of Commons to, 410;
+ Pitt's suspicions of, 411;
+ attempted reconciliation between Newcastle and Bedford, 412;
+ his opinion of Lyttelton, 412;
+ political unrest, 430, 441, 453-5, 458-70;
+ _re_ execution of Byng, 451, 452;
+ deserted by his friends, 471-5;
+ resignation, 485
+
+ 'Newcastle MSS.,' 316, 328, 349, 351, 374, 474, 486
+
+ Newdigate, Sir Roger, 363
+
+ Newton, Bishop, 'Works' referred to, 176;
+ metaphor of, 494
+
+ Niesse ceded to Frederick II., 206
+
+ Nivernois, M. de, 121
+
+ Noailles, 400
+
+ Norfolk, election expenses in, 143
+
+ Norfolk House, 162
+
+ North, Lord, 265
+
+ Northampton, 43, 60, 64, 65, 234
+
+ Nugent, Robert, Earl, 140, 272, 275, 363, 428
+
+ Nuthall, Thomas, 312
+
+
+ Okehampton, 5, 75
+
+ Oliver, Dr., 106, 113
+
+ Onslow, Rt. Hon. Arthur, Chatham's appeal to, 359
+
+ Orange, House of, returned to power, 212
+
+ Orford's 'George III.,' see Walpole, Horace
+
+ Orleans, Regent of, 4
+
+ Orsini, 509
+
+ Orwell, portrait at, 353
+
+ Oswald, James, 292
+
+ Oswego, fall of, 457
+
+ Oudenarde, Battle of, George II. at, 194
+
+ Oxford, 10, 30, 31, 54, 119, 363
+
+
+ Pall Mall, 5, 26, 35
+
+ Pan, Temple of, 309
+
+ Paris, 45, 68, 109, 181, 182
+
+ Parkman's 'Montcalm and Wolfe' quoted, 396, 398, 457
+
+ Parliamentary History, see Cobbett, William
+
+ Parma, proposed reconquest of, 208
+
+ Paulett, Lord, 112
+
+ Peel, Sir Robert, 172, 224, 489, 490;
+ a comparison, 230, 231
+
+ Pelham, Colonel, 305
+
+ Pelham, Rt. Hon. Henry, effect of his death, 96, 97, 301, 313-15, 506;
+ the King's regard for, 196, 251, 313;
+ eager for peace, 212;
+ becomes Premier, 216, 217, 314;
+ Chatham's support, 227, 291, 394;
+ Carteret's support, 227, 291, 394;
+ Carteret's dismissal, 235, 245;
+ assistance to the Dutch, 246;
+ refuses office perquisites, 256-8, 269, 314;
+ on Aix-la-Chapelle Treaty, 277;
+ eulogy of Chatham, 278, 315;
+ seeks retirement, 283;
+ foreign policy, 289, 447;
+ 'Memoirs of Henry Pelham,' see Coxe, William
+
+ Pelham, Sir Thomas, see Newcastle, Duke of
+
+ Pembroke, Lord, 1st Dragoon Guards, 43, 76
+
+ Penshurst, Chatham visits, 305
+
+ Peter the Great, 147, 207
+
+ Philip, Don, designs on Milan, 208
+
+ Phillimore, R.J., 'Memoirs and Correspondence of Lyttelton' referred
+ to, 140, 306, 324, 325, 338
+
+ Phillips, Mrs., 57, 63
+
+ Phillipson, Mr., 477
+
+ Pitt, Dr., 117
+
+ Pitt, Ann (sister to Lord Chatham), friendships, 41, 49, 53, 54;
+ State appointments, 53, 87;
+ nicknames, 55;
+ correspondence with her brother, 55-84, 88-125, 492;
+ quarrels with Chatham, 83, 85-7, 115, 256;
+ retires to France, 92, 95;
+ returns to England, 102-4;
+ health and mental condition, 107, 115, 116, 120;
+ income increased to, 121;
+ resides at Kensington, 125;
+ grief at death of brother, 127;
+ under restraint, death, 126
+
+ Pitt, Betty (sister to Lord Chatham), history and description of,
+ 49-52
+
+ Pitt, Catherine (sister to Lord Chatham), afterwards Nedham, 49, 84,
+ 95, 96-8
+
+ Pitt, Clara Villiers, see Pitt, Betty
+
+ Pitt, Elizabeth, see Pitt, Betty
+
+ Pitt, Essex (daughter of Governor Pitt), marriage, death, 12, 14, 96
+
+ Pitt, George (of Strathfieldsaye), 26
+
+ Pitt, Harriot, wife of Robert Pitt, see Villiers
+
+ Pitt, Harriot (sister of Lord Chatham), matrimonial designs on, 41,
+ 42, 44;
+ her character, 48;
+ marriage of, 49;
+ illness, 60, 70, 74
+
+ Pitt, Hester, wife of Chatham, see Grenville
+
+ Pitt, John (great-grandfather of Chatham), Vicar of Blandford, 1
+
+ Pitt, John (son of Governor Pitt), disposition, 6, 12, 13
+
+ Pitt, John, a Dorsetshire kinsman, 305, 327
+
+ Pitt, John (eldest son of Lord Chatham), 455, 456, 477
+
+ Pitt, Lucy (daughter of Governor Pitt), marriage, death, 12-14
+
+ Pitt, Mary (sister of Lord Chatham), referred to, 95, 102, 103, 106,
+ 107, 110, 113, 115;
+ described, 49, 52;
+ letter to Lady Suffolk, 102
+
+ Pitt, Robert (son of Governor Pitt, father of Lord Chatham), family
+ relationships, 8, 12, 14-16, 26, 48;
+ character, 12, 14;
+ death, 5, 15, 19, 38;
+ correspondence from son's tutor, 28, 31
+
+ Pitt, Thomas ('The Governor') parentage, characteristics, 1-5, 7, 14,
+ 24, 508;
+ prescience regarding Chatham, 11, 26;
+ mourning item, 34
+
+ Pitt, Thomas (son of Robert, brother of Lord Chatham), conduct and
+ characteristics, 14-16;
+ seeks appointment, 18;
+ marriage, 41;
+ charge against, 49;
+ parliamentary career, 129, 159, 270
+
+ Pitt, Thomas (son of Thomas Pitt), 1st Baron Camelford, letters
+ quoted and referred to, 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 12, 15, 17, 44, 48, 50,
+ 52, 54, 85-7, 92, 93, 102, 103, 111, 114, 116, 121, 127, 130,
+ 159, 160, 413, 491, 496;
+ created Baron Camelford, 19;
+ on Chatham's marriage, 354, 355;
+ bias toward Chatham, 23, 50, 102, 127, 257
+
+ Pitt, Villiers Clara, see Pitt, Betty
+
+ Pitt, William, 1st Earl of Chatham, see Chatham
+
+ Pitt, William (the younger), birth, 111;
+ death, 353
+
+ Place Bill, extension of, 245
+
+ Plutarch, referred to, 443
+
+ Poetical quotations, 19, 62, 143, 148, 158, 174, 177, 211, 254, 298,
+ 307
+
+ Poland, partition of, 215
+
+ Poland, King of, Berlin Treaty and the, 206
+
+ Poland-Saxony, claims of Austria on, 203
+
+ Polwarth, against Walpole, 148
+
+ Pomfret, Lord, 467
+
+ Pompadour, Madame de, 400
+
+ Pope, Alexander, quoted, 79, 131, 132, 197
+
+ Porritt's 'Unreformed House of Commons' referred to, 129
+
+ Porte, Mr. de la, 102
+
+ Porter's 'History of the Knights of Malta' quoted, 451
+
+ Portsmouth, Duchess of, intercedes for Governor Pitt, 3
+
+ Potter, Thomas, supports petition against Seaford, 271;
+ Bucks Assize dispute, 272-5;
+ Chatham's praise of, 454;
+ position found for, 483, 486;
+ opposes navy reduction, 289
+
+ Pragmatic Sanction, maintenance of, 202, 203
+
+ Prague, King of Bohemia proclaimed in, 205
+
+ Pratt, Charles, 1st Earl Camden, 27, 311
+
+ Preston, Mr., 50
+
+ 'Pretyman Papers,' referred to, 355
+
+ Prevot, as a prototype, 441
+
+ Prior Park, 112
+
+ Protestant Succession, endurance to secure, 198
+
+ Prussia, Convention signed at Hanover, 210
+
+ Pulteney, Sir William, Earl of Bath, Ann Pitt's designs on, 54, 107;
+ entertained at Stowe, 132;
+ his wit, 254;
+ idolised by the people, 175, 262;
+ Walpole's use of, 176, 219, 505;
+ stands aside for Carteret, 178;
+ popularity declines, 184, 259;
+ nettled at criticism, 185;
+ claims head of Government, 216;
+ forms a Government--its failure, 250, 251, 409;
+ proscribed, 252;
+ lack of character, 258;
+ introduces Prize Bill, 422;
+ Newcastle's reflection on, 472
+
+
+ Queensbury, Duchess of, 54, 84
+
+ Queensbury, Duke of, 249
+
+
+ Radway, 307
+
+ Ranby, Dr., 229
+
+ Raumer's 'Frederick II. and his Times,' 402
+
+ Reading, 43, 360
+
+ Redhall, 8
+
+ 'Rejected Addresses,' see Smith, Horatio
+
+ Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 23, 489
+
+ Rhine, River, 207
+
+ Richelieu, Duke of, 204, 427
+
+ Richmond, 147, 193
+
+ Richmond, Duke of, 295
+
+ Ridgeway, Earl of Londonderry, 12
+
+ Rigby, Richard, 424
+
+ Rivers, Lord, 1
+
+ Robinson, Sir Thomas, his appointments, 345;
+ Master of the Wardrobe and Secretary of State, 330, 337, 344, 345,
+ 349, 467, 482;
+ pensioned, 391, 392, 439;
+ Chatham's remarks to, 360;
+ Newcastle's praise of, 344, 345;
+ panegyric on himself, 428
+
+ Rochester, 104
+
+ Rogers, Samuel, 'Recollections of Samuel Rogers' referred to, 85, 86;
+ 'Table Talk,' 364
+
+ Rolt, Bayntun, 172
+
+ Rolliad, quotation from, 19
+
+ Rondet, the royal jeweller, 4
+
+ Ross, Man of, 303
+
+ Roucoux, French victory at, 212
+
+ Royston, Lord, 465
+
+ Russell, Lord John, 231
+
+ Russia, George III.'s treaty with, 371, 378, 379
+
+ Ryder, Sir Dudley, 453, 455
+
+
+ Sackville, Lord George, 428, 442
+
+ St. James's Square, 105, 108, 110, 112, 113, 118, 120, 151, 162
+
+ St. Lawrence, River, naval battle at mouth of, 399
+
+ St. Rumbald, spring at, 304
+
+ Salisbury, 129
+
+ Samson of Battersea, nickname of Bolingbroke, 328
+
+ Sancho Panza, 191
+
+ Sandwich, Earl of, 279, 282
+
+ Sandys, Baron, 148
+
+ Sardinia, 203, 208;
+ King of, 225, 258
+
+ Sarpedon, 181
+
+ Sarum, Old, 2, 4-6, 129, 270
+
+ Saunders, Sir Charles, 450
+
+ Savile, Sir George, 191
+
+ Savoy, House of, 208
+
+ Saxe, Marshal, marches against Austria, 209;
+ successes in the Low Countries, 212
+
+ Saxons, as allies of Britain, 211
+
+ Saxony, entered by Frederick II., 210;
+ Elector of, 206, 286, 289
+
+ Schwerin, Marshal, defeats Austrians at Molwitz, 203
+
+ Scrope, John, 187
+
+ Seaford, election of Chatham for, 270, 358
+
+ Sedgemoor, 187
+
+ Seine, River, 199
+
+ Selwyn, George, 109, 345, 390
+
+ Seward's 'Anecdotes' referred to, 55, 161, 172, 180, 501
+
+ Shelburne, Lord, thoughts on Thomas Pitt, 18;
+ on the madness of the Pitts, 24;
+ on Pitt's use of words, 501;
+ on Richard Temple, 131;
+ troop offered to, 160;
+ on Pulteney's oratory, 176;
+ 'Life of Shelburne,' see Fitzmaurice, Lord
+
+ Shenstone, William, 306
+
+ Sheridan, R.B., 502
+
+ Shippen, William, 148
+
+ Siddons, Mrs., 500
+
+ Sidmouth, Lord, 489
+
+ Silesia, 209
+
+ Sinclair, Sir John, 7
+
+ Sion, 115, 116
+
+ 'Skew,' a nickname, 58, 69
+
+ Smith, Horatio, 'Rejected Addresses' referred to, 23
+
+ Smollett, Tobias, 174
+
+ Soho, 6
+
+ Solomon, name given to Chatham, 356
+
+ South Lodge, 308, 309
+
+ South Sea Bubble, 5
+
+ Spain, extravagance of the Bourbons, 195;
+ claim on Austria, 203;
+ cause of war with, 213;
+ Walpole's policy, 145, 165, 167;
+ war declared against, 201;
+ 'Britons in Spanish prisons' cry, 167;
+ peace question raised by Lord Egmont, 284
+
+ Spencer, Lady Diana, 151
+
+ Spencer, John, bequests to and from, 234
+
+ Sporus, 197
+
+ Stair, Lord, 207, 218
+
+ Stanhope, George, death of, 98
+
+ Stanhope, Lady Hester, 7, 139, 489;
+ 'Memoirs,' 139
+
+ Stanhope, James, 1st Earl, 31;
+ soldier and statesman, 5, 46;
+ marriage with Lucy Pitt, 14
+
+ Stanhope, Philip Dormer, see Chesterfield, Earl of
+
+ Stanhope, Sir William, speech on the Bucks Assize dispute, 272-4
+
+ Stanislas, 71
+
+ Stanley, Hans, 327
+
+ Stannaries, Thomas Pitt, Warden of, 18
+
+ States General, a party to the Treaty of Berlin, 206
+
+ Stephen, Leslie, 'English Literature and Society in the Eighteenth
+ Century,' 214, 307, 353
+
+ Stewart, General, 26
+
+ Stockwell, I., as tutor to Lord Chatham, 31
+
+ Stone, Andrew, 384, 390, 460
+
+ Stone House, 304
+
+ Stormont, 453
+
+ Stowe, 77-82, 130, 132, 272, 291, 306, 352, 355
+
+ Strange, Lord, 277
+
+ Stratford, 5, 28
+
+ Stuart, House of, 144
+
+ Stuart, Charles Edward, 'the Young Pretender,' 199, 210, 211, 222,
+ 226, 243
+
+ Stuart, Mrs., 96
+
+ 'Sublimity Pitt,' 54
+
+ Subsidies, On, 205, 209, 289, 379, 380, 430-4, 436
+
+ Suffolk, 234
+
+ Suffolk, Lady, letters referred to, 12, 53, 54, 57, 76, 78, 79, 81,
+ 86, 102, 104, 107, 127, 161
+
+ Sunninghill, 304
+
+ Surajah Dowlah, 457
+
+ Sussex, tour in, 305
+
+ Swallowfield, 5, 11, 43, 57
+
+ Sweden, King of, 209
+
+
+ Talbot, Lord, evil living of, 49
+
+ Taylor, Miss, 51
+
+ Temperley's 'Essay on the Causes of War with Spain' referred to, 166
+
+ Temple, Countess, see Grenville, Lady
+
+ Temple, Lord, see Grenville, Richard Temple, afterwards Earl Grenville
+
+ Temple, Sir Richard, Viscount Cobham, 17, 77, 81, 236, 245, 292, 304,
+ 346, 505;
+ builder of palace of Stowe, 130, 131;
+ his entertainments at, 132;
+ served under Marlborough, 131;
+ called 'the brave Cobham,' 131;
+ his great riches, 134, 141;
+ various titles and honours conferred on, 131;
+ opposed to the Excise Bill, 132;
+ sides with Pitt, 22;
+ Pitt devoted to Cobham, 160, 161, 178;
+ quarrel with Pitt, 256;
+ on the war in Flanders, 223, 224, 227;
+ growing jealousy of his 'young patriots,' 273, 276;
+ nicknames to, 131;
+ death of, 133, 138
+
+ Temple Bar, 169
+
+ Thackeray, Francis, 'Life of Chatham' referred to, 28, 54, 163, 363
+
+ Thackeray, W.M., referred to, 13;
+ satire on George II. mentioned, 196
+
+ Thames, Dutch ships in the, 226
+
+ 'The Test,' a newspaper, 50
+
+ Thessaly, 332
+
+ Thirsk, 4
+
+ Thomson's 'Life of the Duchess of Marlborough,' 234
+
+ Timbs, 'Anecdote biography,' 308
+
+ 'Tom Jones,' see Fielding, Henry
+
+ Torrens, W.T. McC., 'History of Cabinets,' 276
+
+ Towcester, 80
+
+ Townshend, Lady, 356
+
+ Townshend, Charles, 428, 435, 441, 467, 475
+
+ Townshend, Colonel, 277
+
+ Townshend, George, 428, 441, 467
+
+ Trinity College, Chatham admitted to, 30
+
+ Trojans, 332
+
+ Tunbridge, 306
+
+ Tunbridge Wells, 304, 309, 313
+
+ Twickenham, 5, 125
+
+
+ Underwood's 'Historical MSS.' quoted, 257
+
+ Utrecht, 18, 21, 39, 43
+
+
+ Vale Royal, 14
+
+ Valličre, La, 192
+
+ Vauxhall, New, 304
+
+ Vere, Lady, 107
+
+ Vere, Lord, 107
+
+ Versailles, 109;
+ Palace at, 192;
+ replica of, in a Bavarian lake, 192;
+ Treaty of, 401
+
+ Very, Count, 109
+
+ Vesey, Mr., 39
+
+ Vienna threatened by the French army, 205
+
+ Villiers, George, Duke of Buckingham, 26
+
+ Villiers, Harriot, marriage with Robert Pitt, 12, 26;
+ mother of Lord Chatham, 12;
+ her family, 15;
+ returns to France, 15;
+ correspondence with her son, 38-46;
+ death of, 48
+
+ Villiers, Lord, 39-41
+
+ Voiture, 61
+
+ Voltaire's 'Candide' referred to, 451
+
+
+ Waddington, Richard, 'Louis XV. et le Renversement des Alliances'
+ referred to, 401
+
+ Waldegrave, Lady Betty, 108, 109
+
+ Waldegrave, James, Earl, procures Pitt letters of introduction at
+ Paris, 70;
+ on the character of George II., 194, 195;
+ on Sir Thomas Robinson, 345;
+ negotiates for Fox to enter the Cabinet, 366-8;
+ 'Correspondence' referred to, 359, 364
+
+ Waldegrave, John, Earl, 109
+
+ Waller, 224, 236; appointed Cofferer, 237
+
+ Walpole, Horace, 2nd Earl of Orford (son of Sir Robert Walpole),
+ 283, 412
+
+ Walpole, Horace, 4th Earl of Orford (brother of Sir Robert Walpole),
+ his kinship with Lord Hervey, 197;
+ affection for Lord Camelford, 19;
+ as a gossip, 352;
+ on Thomas Pitt, 18;
+ charge against Betty Pitt, 49;
+ _re_ Ann Pitt, 53, 54, 92, 116, 125-7;
+ on Pitt's behaviour to his sisters, 50;
+ on the Grenvilles, 133, 137, 139, 140;
+ on George II., 193;
+ on Pitt's speeches, 392, 394, 405, 421, 424, 431, 434-5, 438, 441;
+ his admiration for Pitt, 341, 493, 503;
+ on Pitt's impatience for office, 244;
+ on Pitt's change of opinion, 288;
+ on Pitt's sudden illness, 298;
+ on Dr. Lee's attack on Pitt, 254-5, 268;
+ on Pitt's resentment against the Newcastles, 300, 357;
+ his partiality for Fox, 368;
+ on Sir Thomas Robinson's appointment, 344;
+ on Lyttelton, 413;
+ on Lord Wilmington, 179;
+ opposes Saxon subsidy, 289;
+ on the Bath Ministry, 250;
+ on the loss of Minorca, 452, 457;
+ on the American war;
+ on the scheme of the Notables, 480-1;
+ letter to Bentley, 344.
+
+ Walpole, Horace, 'Memoirs of the Reign of George III.,' quotations
+ from, 92, 140, 268, 359, 367, 370, 374, 394-5, 462, 467, 469,
+ 478-81.
+
+ Walpole, Sir Robert, 1st Earl of Orford, character of, 132, 144, 146,
+ 254;
+ his love for sport, 147;
+ his relations with George II., 196, 219;
+ on the political character of George II., 194;
+ his relations with Pitt, 74, 75, 158-60, 170, 178, 186, 187;
+ his attitude towards the Prince of Wales, 152, 157;
+ his attitude towards Newcastle, 175-7;
+ supports Pelham, 314-15;
+ his policy regarding Spain, 145, 167, 169, 201;
+ on the Army, 164;
+ on the Secessions, 168;
+ supports Maria Theresa, 203;
+ favours the Hanoverian vote, 225;
+ speech on threatened landing of the Pretender, 227;
+ temporary resignation of, 179;
+ inquiry into administration of, 184;
+ punishment of, 183;
+ succeeded by Lord Carteret, 205;
+ fall of, 148, 149, 171-3, 178, 505, 506;
+ resignation of, and papers burnt by his brother Horace, 172;
+ impeachment of, 473;
+ illness and death of, 228, 229;
+ compared with Pitt and Peel, 230-2;
+ 'Memoirs of Sir Robert Walpole,' see Coxe, William
+
+ Walpole, Thomas, purchases Hayes, 310
+
+ Washington, George, General, 350, 397
+
+ Webster, Sir Whistler, 305
+
+ West, Gilbert, 304, 307, 309, 492;
+ his house at Wickham, 356
+
+ West, Molly, 352
+
+ Westminster, Treaty of, 401
+
+ Westminster School, 359
+
+ Westphalia, 306;
+ Treaty of, 286
+
+ Whately, Mr., 'Observations on Modern Gardening,' 309
+
+ Wickham, Chatham's honeymoon spent at, 356
+
+ Wilberforce, William, 261
+
+ Wilhelmine, Princess of Prussia, afterwards Margravine of Bareith,
+ 151
+
+ Wilkes, John, 136, 358, 359, 491
+
+ Wilkins' 'Political Ballads,' 298
+
+ William III., indifference to England, 198, 199;
+ Pitt's story of his coming, 276
+
+ Williams, Sir Charles Hanbury, 174;
+ lampoon on Pitt, 235;
+ 'Works of,' quoted, 211, 235, 465
+
+ Wilmington, Lord, 179, 216, 217, 314, 505
+
+ Wilton, Joseph, 490
+
+ Wiltshire, lands purchased in, 6
+
+ Wimbledon, Duchess of Marlborough's estate at, 234
+
+ Windsor, 156
+
+ 'Wingfield MSS.' quoted, 343, 359, 474, 485
+
+ Winnington, Thomas, 250, 254
+
+ Wood, Robert, 'Essay on the Original Genius of Homer' quoted, 182
+
+ Worms, Treaty of, 208, 225
+
+ Wotton, residence of George Grenville, 113, 352, 354
+
+ Wyndham, Baron, 148, 254
+
+ Wynn, Sir Watkin, 224
+
+
+ Yarmouth, Lady, 280, 388, 481;
+ and George II., 193, 371, 464;
+ mistress of George II., 465;
+ and Pitt, 108-10, 263, 464, 472;
+ Fox solicits her influence to obtain a peerage, 296;
+ and Fox's overtures with the King, 341;
+ her utterance regarding, 461
+
+ Yonge, Lady, 240
+
+ Yorke, Charles, 371, 372;
+ interview with Chatham, 373
+
+ Yorke, Joseph, 185
+
+ Yorke, Philip, see Hardwicke, Earl of
+
+
+ Zoroastrians, politicians compared with, 389
+
+
+LONDON: STRANGEWAYS, PRINTERS.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] Camelford.
+
+[2] Diary of William Hedges, III. x.
+
+[3] Hedges, III. xii.
+
+[4] He purchased it from Lord Salisbury about 1690. Hedges, III. xxx.
+
+[5] The portrait of the Governor at Boconnoc represents him with the
+diamond in his hat. That at Chevening with the diamond in his own shoe.
+
+[6] Camelford.
+
+[7] Camelford.
+
+[8] Lyte's Dunster, 494.
+
+[9] This and the following extracts from the Governor's correspondence
+are all taken from the Dropmore Papers (Hist. MSS.).
+
+[10] Lady Suffolk's Letters, i. 101-4.
+
+[11] Camelford (italics his).
+
+[12] Camelford.
+
+[13] Dropmore Papers, i. 70.
+
+[14] Camelford.
+
+[15] Ib.
+
+[16] Dropmore Papers, i. 75.
+
+[17] Camelford.
+
+[18] Camelford.
+
+[19] Journal, ii. 45.
+
+[20] Dropmore Papers, i. 38, 41.
+
+[21] Tom Jones, Book xiii. Chapter i.
+
+[22] Life of Shelburne, i. 72.
+
+[23] Addressed: To Robert Pitt, Esqr, at Stratford, near Old Sarum,
+Wilts. Endorsed: 'Mr. Burchet's letter about my Sons att Eton. Febry
+4th, 1722.'
+
+[24] Lyttelton's Misc. Works, p. 650. 'Written at Eaton School, 1729.'
+The date is obviously wrong, for Pitt and Lyttelton both went to Oxford
+in 1726.
+
+[25] Endorsed: 'from my Son William Sept. 29th: recd Oct. 10th,
+1723.'
+
+[26] Endorsed: 'from Mr. Stockwell about ye charges of my Sons going to
+Oxon: Novr 1726 ansd Decr 1st.'
+
+[27] Mourning for the Governor.
+
+[28] Endorsed: 'from Mr Stockwell about my Son Wm from Oxon: Decr
+22d ansd 29th 1726.'
+
+[29] Paduasoy.
+
+[30] Endorsed: 'from my Son Willm Oxon Jany 20th wth ye acct
+ye 100 answd ye 24th 1726/7.'
+
+[31] Endorsed: 'from my Son Willm Aprill 10th wth an acct
+ of 3 mos expences 47 05 0
+ Rems in his hand 9 15 0
+ In all 57 0 0
+
+ Answd Aprill 25th, wth leave to draw for 25l.'
+
+[32] Lyttelton, Misc. Works, 665.
+
+[33] Always spelt Needham in the peerage books, always Nedham by the
+family and those concerned.
+
+[34] 'Villiers Pitt' to William Pitt. 'Tours, June 1, 1752.' Chatham
+MSS.
+
+[35] Mann and Manners at the Court of Florence, i. 382.
+
+[36] 'The Test' was a weekly paper published in 1756-7, written
+principally by Arthur Murphy, and inspired by Henry Fox, as may be seen
+from his letters. See too Orford, ii. 276, and Walpole to Mann, Jan. 6,
+1757. There had been a previous 'Test' in 1756, of which there was
+published only one number, written by Charles Townshend. See Orford, ii.
+218.
+
+[37] Walpole to Mann, Jan. 17, 1757.
+
+[38] To William Pitt, Oct. 10, 1751. Chatham MSS.
+
+[39] Dutens' Mémoires d'un Voyageur qui se repose, i. 31-42.
+
+[40] Tours, June 11, 1752. Villiers Pitt to W. Pitt. Chatham MSS.
+
+[41] Or 1787? as says a note in the Delany Memoirs, iv. 266. It matters
+little.
+
+[42] Climenson's 'Elizabeth Montagu,' ii. 53. See, too, Mrs. Montagu's
+Letters, vol. iii.
+
+[43] Suffolk Letters, ii. 233.
+
+[44] Camelford MS. Cf., too, William's letter of Sept. 29, 1730.
+
+[45] Thackeray, i. 158 note.
+
+[46] There is a crayon portrait of her at Boconnoc, which the writer has
+not seen. It 'represents the strong contemplative face of a woman well
+past her first prime,' and was taken, apparently, in 1765.
+
+[47] Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 355.
+
+[48] All these letters from William to Ann Pitt come from the papers at
+Dropmore, unless where noted otherwise.
+
+[49] 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt, at Mrs. Phillips's, at Bath. T. Pitt Free.'
+
+[50] Dr. Charles Bave, a physician of the highest character at Bath. See
+note on Vol. I., p. 408, of Lady Suffolk's Letters.
+
+[51] This must almost certainly be Ayscough, in spite of 'Skew's' being
+the hereditary nickname of the Fortescue family.
+
+[52] These are probably Colonel and Mrs. Lanoe, with whom Ann appears to
+be staying at Bath.
+
+[53] Lyttelton's Misc. Works, 619.
+
+[54] 'Mrs. Ann Pitt, at Col. Lanoe's at Bath.'
+
+[55] 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt jun. at Boconnock near Bodmin Cornwall.'
+
+[56] 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt at Mrs. Phillips's at Bath. T. Pitt Free.'
+
+[57] Same address.
+
+[58] 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt, at Bath.'
+
+[59] Ante, p. 56.
+
+[60] Dr. Ayscough?
+
+[61] 'To The Honble Mrs. Ann Pitt at St. James's House Londres.'
+
+[62] Illegible.
+
+[63] 'To The Honble Mrs Ann Pitt at Mrs Richard's In Pallmall,
+London. Angleterre.'
+
+[64] 'To the Honble Mrs Ann Pitt at St. James's House London.
+Angleterre.'
+
+[65] 'To the Honble Mrs Ann Pitt at St. James's London.
+Free--Will, Herbert.'
+
+[66] Doubtless his brother.
+
+[67] His brother.
+
+[68] Sir William Corbett.
+
+[69] 'To The Honble Mrs Ann Pitt at St. James's London.'
+
+[70] Elected Feb. 18, 1735.
+
+[71] Doubtless his brother.
+
+[72] Lyttelton--a mere guess.
+
+[73] Doubtless his brother.
+
+[74] N.B.--Pope was at Stowe during this month. See Lady Suffolk's
+Letters, ii. 143.
+
+[75] 'To the Honble Mrs Pitt at Kensington House Middlesex.
+Free--W. Pitt.'
+
+[76] Camelford MS.
+
+[77] Recollections of Samuel Rogers, p. 104.
+
+[78] Grenville Papers, i. 13.
+
+[79] Chatham MSS.
+
+[80] Orford, i. 85.
+
+[81] His aunt.
+
+[82] Their cousin, Colonel the Hon. George Stanhope, who distinguished
+himself at Falkirk and Culloden.
+
+[83] Letter dated Oct. 21, 1754, in the Chatham MSS.
+
+[84] 'To The Honourable Mrs. Ann Pitt, W. Pitt.'
+
+[85] Lady Suffolk's Letters, ii. 251.
+
+[86] Delany, iv. 156.
+
+[87] Walpole to Mann, Oct. 30, 1778.
+
+[88] Ib. May 9, 1779.
+
+[89] Delany, v. 403-5.
+
+[90] Lady Suffolk's Letters, ii. 234.
+
+[91] Porritt's Unreformed House of Commons, i. 35. T. Mozley when the
+nineteenth century was well advanced saw the constituency of Old Sarum
+in the person of 'a bright looking old fellow with a full rubicund face
+and a profusion of white hair.' Reminiscences, ii. 13.
+
+[92] Grenville Papers, i. 423.
+
+[93] Grenville Papers, i. 423-5.
+
+[94] Grenville Papers, ii. 496.
+
+[95] Ib. ii. 512.
+
+[96] Lord Dundonald in his 'Autobiography' says that it produced
+20,693_l._ p.a.
+
+[97] Dickins and Stanton. 'An Eighteenth Century Correspondence,' 193.
+
+[98] It seems best to call this worthy, who assumed the name of
+Dodington, by his patronymic; for it is his own name, and the most
+appropriate.
+
+[99] Walpole to Mann, Feb. 25, 1750.
+
+[100] Memoirs of Lady Hester Stanhope, iii. 179.
+
+[101] See 'The New Ministry, containing a collection of all the
+satyrical poems, songs, &c. 1742.'
+
+[102] Phillimore's Lyttelton, 681.
+
+[103] Orford's George III. iii. 137.
+
+[104] Ballantyne's Carteret, 107.
+
+[105] Harris's Hardwicke, i. 382.
+
+[106] These expressions are taken from Hervey's Memoirs.
+
+[107] Dated Feb. 8, 1748. Bedford Correspondence, i. 320.
+
+[108] Marchmont Papers, i. 84.
+
+[109] Lord Dover's note to H. Walpole's letter of March 21, 1751.
+
+[110] Carlisle Papers (Hist. MSS.), 172.
+
+[111] Seward, ii. 362.
+
+[112] Lady Suffolk's Letters, ii. 151.
+
+[113] Hervey, ii. 195.
+
+[114] Hervey, ii. 80.
+
+[115] Ib. ii. 82.
+
+[116] Parl. Hist. x. 464-7.
+
+[117] Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 575.
+
+[118] Life of Shelburne, i. 46.
+
+[119] Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 580 note.
+
+[120] See Temperley's Essay on the causes of this war in Trans. of Royal
+Hist. Soc. Series II. vol. iii. p. 207.
+
+[121] Parl. Hist. x. 1284.
+
+[122] Parl. Hist. x. 1280-3.
+
+[123] Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 594 note.
+
+[124] Marchmont Papers, ii. 180, note by Rose.
+
+[125] Life of Shelburne, i. 37. Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 309.
+
+[126] Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 695.
+
+[127] Sir C.H. Williams, ii. 140-1.
+
+[128] Dutens' Voyage, &c., i. 142.
+
+[129] Life of Shelburne, i. 45.
+
+[130] Bishop Newton's Works, i. 93.
+
+[131] Ballantyne's Carteret, 2.
+
+[132] Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 280.
+
+[133] Marchmont Papers, i. 42, 73.
+
+[134] Wood's Essay on the Original Genius of Homer, p. vii. n. (Ed.
+1775).
+
+[135] Chesterfield, v. 65.
+
+[136] Chesterfield's Letters, iv. 358.
+
+[137] Parl. Hist. xii. 416-427.
+
+[138] Harris, ii. 31.
+
+[139] Parl. Hist. xii. 561.
+
+[140] Ib. xii. 488.
+
+[141] Parl. Hist. xii. 490.
+
+[142] Parl. Hist. xii. 940 note.
+
+[143] Ib. xii. 1033.
+
+[144] Orford, Rem. 97.
+
+[145] Hervey, ii. 182, 228.
+
+[146] Holdernesse to Newcastle, Nov. 22, 1756. Add. MSS. 32869.
+
+[147] Frederick, iii. 141.
+
+[148] Martin, Hist. de France, xv. 265. Leadam, 376.
+
+[149] Sir C.H. Williams, i. 247.
+
+[150] L. Stephen, English Literature and Society in the Eighteenth
+Century, 138.
+
+[151] Parl. Hist. xiii. 136.
+
+[152] Parl. Hist. xiii. 473 (note). Cf. Phillimore, 226. But Carteret
+had taken the lead of the Prince's party in the House of Lords so far
+back as 1737.
+
+[153] Parl. Hist. xvi. 1097.
+
+[154] Fortescue, Hist. of the Army, ii. 101.
+
+[155] Marchmont Papers, i. 80.
+
+[156] Ib. i. 176.
+
+[157] To Mann, Jan. 24, 1744. Cf. Parl. Hist. xiii. 467 note.
+
+[158] Orford, ii. 132.
+
+[159] Thomson's Life of the Duchess of Marlborough, ii. 571-2.
+
+[160] Marchmont Papers, ii. 338.
+
+[161] H. Walpole to Montagu, June 24, 1746. Cf. Grenville Papers, i.
+131. Camelford MS.
+
+[162] H. Walpole to Mann, June 20, 1746.
+
+[163] Marchmont Papers, i. 70.
+
+[164] Works of Sir C.H. Williams, 1822, ii. 152.
+
+[165] Glover, 30.
+
+[166] Marchmont Papers, i. 67, 172. It was said that Harrington, from an
+interest in Lady Yonge, wife of the actual incumbent of the office, did
+his best to prevent Pitt's becoming Secretary for War. Ib. 97. But there
+was a more majestic obstacle.
+
+[167] Parl. Hist. xiii. 1054-6.
+
+[168] Parl. Hist. xiii. 1176.
+
+[169] Parl. Hist. xiii. 1177.
+
+[170] Bedford is ranked by Newcastle among the Cobham deputation, though
+he was First Lord of the Admiralty at the time. Perhaps he was the
+honest broker.
+
+[171] Newcastle to Chesterfield, Nov. 20, 1745. Add. MSS. 32705.
+
+[172] Newcastle to Chesterfield, Feb. 18, 1746, in Coxe's Pelham Adm. i.
+292.
+
+[173] Newcastle to Chesterfield, Feb. 18, 1746, in Coxe's Pelham Adm. i.
+293.
+
+[174] Coxe's Lord Walpole, ii. 142.
+
+[175] Coxe's Lord Walpole, ii. 133.
+
+[176] Newcastle to Chesterfield, Feb. 18, 1746.
+
+[177] Orford, i. 110. Walpole to Mann, April 2, 1750.
+
+[178] Cartwright to Pitt, Feb. 27, 1745 (Chatham MSS.). We obtain the
+exact salary more or less correctly from a lampoon.
+
+ 'Hibernia, smile!
+ Thrice happy isle,
+ On thy blest ground
+ Twelve thousand pound
+ For Stanhope's found,
+ Three thousand clear
+ For Pitt a year;
+ So shalt thou thrive,
+ Industrious hive,
+ While these and more
+ Increase thy store.'
+
+ Sir C.H. Williams, ii. 166.
+
+
+[179] Camelford.
+
+[180] Cf. Underwood MSS. (Hist. MSS.), p. 405.
+
+[181] He avowed this to Newcastle (Orford, George III. i. 82 note). But
+it was otherwise patent.
+
+[182] Parl. Hist. xiv. 103.
+
+[183] See the debate in Parl. Hist. xiv. 204.
+
+[184] Gibbs' History of Aylesbury, 502.
+
+[185] Torrens says (History of Cabinets, ii. 119) that this speech was
+revised by Pitt, but gives no authority. Almon (i. 172) specifically
+declares that it was written by Gordon.
+
+[186] Parl. Hist. xiv. 502.
+
+[187] Grenville Papers, i. 93-5.
+
+[188] Parl. Hist. xiv. 664.
+
+[189] Parl. Hist. xiv. 692-6.
+
+[190] Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 370.
+
+[191] Add. MSS. 32721.
+
+[192] July 20, 1750. Add. MSS. 32721.
+
+[193] Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 131, 370.
+
+[194] Ib. ii. 396.
+
+[195] Parl. Hist. xiv. 801.
+
+[196] Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 225, 359.
+
+[197] Parl. Hist. xiv. 967.
+
+[198] Stone to Newcastle, Feb. 22, 1750/1. Add. MSS. 32724.
+
+[199] Parl. Hist. xiv. 970.
+
+[200] Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 144.
+
+[201] Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 165.
+
+[202] Holland House MSS.
+
+[203] Colebrooke's Memoirs, i. 63.
+
+[204] Earl of Rochester. Ib. 73.
+
+[205] Wilkins, Political Ballads, ii. 312.
+
+[206] Parl. Hist. xv. 154.
+
+[207] September, 1749.
+
+[208] Almon, i. 195.
+
+[209] Pitt to Newcastle, July 25, 1753. Add. MSS. 32732.
+
+[210] Pitt to Newcastle, March 6, 1754. Add. MSS. 32734.
+
+[211] Feb. 11, o.s. 1751. Letters, ii. 97.
+
+[212] Climenson's Mrs. Montague, ii. 51. Kielmansegge's Diary, 131.
+
+[213] Meehan's Famous Houses of Bath, 112.
+
+[214] Meehan, 111.
+
+[215] Climenson.
+
+[216] Mrs. Montagu's Letters, iii. 235.
+
+[217] Memorials of Lord Gambier, i. 61. Cf. Mrs. Montagu's Letters, iii.
+240.
+
+[218] Pitt to Newcastle. Tunbridge, Aug. 14, 1753. Add. MSS. 32732.
+
+[219] Phillimore, 265.
+
+[220] An Eighteenth Century Correspondence, 388 n. See too Harris's
+Hardwicke, ii. 456.
+
+[221] Timbs, Anecdote Biography, 156, quoting from The Ambulator (1820).
+
+[222] Legge to Pitt. Berlin, July 10, 1748. Chatham MSS.
+
+[223] Climenson, ii. 9-10. Mrs. Montagu's Letters, iii. 181.
+
+[224] Nuthall to Lady Chatham, March 25, 1768. Chatham MSS.
+
+[225] Chatham to Nuthall, Oct. 7, 1772. Chatham MSS.
+
+[226] October 6, 1753. Add. MSS. 32733.
+
+[227] October 13, 1753. Add. MSS. 32733.
+
+[228] Pitt to Newcastle, March 7, 1754. Add. MSS. 32734.
+
+[229] Grenville Papers, i. 109.
+
+[230] Ib. i. 111.
+
+[231] Pitt to Newcastle, March 11, 1754. Add. MSS. 32734.
+
+[232] Murray.
+
+[233] This seems an allusion either to Leicester House, or, less
+probably, to Newcastle.
+
+[234] Grenville Papers, i. 106.
+
+[235] Granville Papers, i. 110.
+
+[236] Pitt was member for Aldborough, one of Newcastle's boroughs.
+
+[237] Phillimore's Lyttelton, 449.
+
+[238] Phillimore's Lyttelton, 453.
+
+[239] Grenville Papers, i. 112.
+
+[240] Add. MSS. 32734. f. 322.
+
+[241] Grenville Papers, i. 116.
+
+[242] Pitt to Newcastle, April 2, 1754. Add. MSS. 32735. The more
+elaborate draft of this letter is given with a wrong date in the Chatham
+Corr. i. 85.
+
+[243] Chatham Corr. i. 89.
+
+[244] Chatham Corr. i. 95.
+
+[245] Add. MSS. 32735. f. 21.
+
+[246] Harris's Hardwicke, iii. 8.
+
+[247] The sense shows clearly that Pitt intended to write 'unwilling'.
+
+[248] Phillimore, 466.
+
+[249] Holland House MSS.
+
+[250] Holland House MSS.
+
+[251] H. Fox to Argyll, Sept. 26, 1755 (H.H. MSS.).
+
+[252] H. Fox to the Duke of Marlborough, March 22, 1754 (H.H. MSS.).
+
+[253] Wingfield MSS. 224b in Hist. MSS.
+
+[254] Walpole to Bentley, March 17, 1754.
+
+[255] Colebrooke, i. 18.
+
+[256] An Eighteenth Century Correspondence, 230.
+
+[257] Newcastle to Pitt, April 2, 1754, Chatham Corr.
+
+[258] Supra, p. 335.
+
+[259] Add. MSS. 32733. Pitt to Newcastle, April 22, 1754.
+
+[260] Bubb, 304.
+
+[261] Aug. 29, 1754. H.H. MSS.
+
+[262] Bubb, 317.
+
+[263] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Oct. 2, 1754. Add. MSS. 32737.
+
+[264] Hardwicke to Newcastle, Oct. 3, 1754. Add. MSS. 32737.
+
+[265] Orford, i. 78.
+
+[266] An Eighteenth Century Correspondence, p. 154.
+
+[267] Mrs. Montagu's Letters, iii. 273.
+
+[268] Orford, i. 406-7.
+
+[269] Fox to Hartington, Nov. 26, 1754, in Waldegrave, p. 146. Orford,
+i. 408. Cf. Calcraft to Digby, Nov. 26, 1754, in Wingfield MSS.
+
+[270] Butler's Rem. i. 144.
+
+[271] Waldegrave, 149-50
+
+[272] Fox to Hartington, Nov. 28, 1754, in Waldegrave, p. 150. Orford,
+i. 142.
+
+[273] Butler's Reminiscences, i. 145.
+
+[274] Table Talk of S. Rogers, p. 100.
+
+[275] Orford, i. 417.
+
+[276] Ib. 418.
+
+[277] See Pitt's obscure note in Chatham Corresp. i. 130, and the
+interpretation in Orford, i. 419.
+
+[278] Orford, i. 420.
+
+[279] Coxe's Lord Walpole, ii. 406.
+
+[280] Bubb, 319-21. Orford, ii. 37.
+
+[281] The accession of Fox to the Cabinet is beset with small
+difficulties of chronology. Horace Walpole in his Memoirs (i. 147) tells
+us that the King sent for Fox on November 29, 1754, and in a letter of
+January 9, 1755, announces that Fox had been admitted to the Cabinet.
+Yet we have Fox's own letter to Pitt of April 26, 1755, announcing that
+the King that afternoon had signified to him his admission to the
+Cabinet. (Chatham Corresp. i. 132). It is evident that Horace Walpole
+believed, prematurely, that the matter was settled early in January.
+Strangely enough our surest authority in all these transactions, except
+Waldegrave, who is vague and dateless, is the corrupt and perfidious
+Bubb.
+
+[282] Thackeray gives a different account of this interview and of that
+with Charles Yorke, we know not whence derived. The account in the text
+is that of Charles Yorke and Hardwicke themselves (Harris, iii. 29-34)
+and in part Bubb, on the authority of James Grenville (p. 340).
+
+[283] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Sept. 3, 1755. Add. MSS. 32858. See too
+Orford, ii. 40.
+
+[284] Add. MSS. 32858.
+
+[285] These two sentences are transposed for the sake of clearness.
+
+[286] Italics ours.
+
+[287] Italics ours.
+
+[288] There was some family connection between Bubb and the Grenvilles,
+though it is not easy to trace. Bubb's property indeed, to his disgust,
+was entailed on Temple.
+
+[289] Bubb, 370.
+
+[290] Add. MSS. 32859, f. 86.
+
+[291] Orford, ii. 45.
+
+[292] Orford, ii. 7-9.
+
+[293] Orford, ii. 17.
+
+[294] 'Montcalm and Wolfe,' i. 483.
+
+[295] Ib. i. 510.
+
+[296] Ib. i. 54, 66.
+
+[297] 'Montcalm and Wolfe,' i. 214-26.
+
+[298] Souvenirs de Moreau, i. 62.
+
+[299] Moreau, i. 58.
+
+[300] Waddington. Louis XV. et le Renversement des Alliances, pp. 471-6.
+
+[301] Baumer, Frederick II. and his Times, 227.
+
+[302] Ibid. 233.
+
+[303] Carlyle, Frederick, iv. 509.
+
+[304] Orford, ii. 55-62.
+
+[305] Fox to Ellis. Holland House MSS.
+
+[306] Camelford.
+
+[307] Walpole here professes to give Pitt's words exactly.
+
+[308] _I.e._, suppose any man should have purposely put off bringing
+hither troops from Ireland, with the object of making this country
+appear so unprotected as to require foreign mercenaries.
+
+[309] Orford, ii. 67-76.
+
+[310] Parl. Hist. xv. 544-616.
+
+[311] Bedford Corr. ii. 179.
+
+[312] Bedford Corr. ii. 180.
+
+[313] Orford, ii. 86-97.
+
+[314] Orford, ii. 98-101.
+
+[315] Orford, ii. 107.
+
+[316] Holland House MSS.
+
+[317] Orford, ii. 135-9.
+
+[318] Orford says that Sackville moved for them on April 29. The
+Parliamentary History says that Fox moved for them on March 29 (xv.
+702).
+
+[319] Parl. Hist. xv. 702.
+
+[320] Orford, ii. 185-6.
+
+[321] Orford, ii. 188-90.
+
+[322] Orford, ii. 193-7.
+
+[323] The Consul at Genoa had warned Newcastle early in February that a
+surprise attack on Minorca was meditated. Mr. Corbett, who states this,
+(England in the Seven Years War, i. 97) excuses Newcastle for neglecting
+the information, one does not see why. More attention was paid to an
+intercepted despatch of the Swedish minister at Paris, dated February
+25, 1756.
+
+[324] Walpole to Chute, June 8, 1756.
+
+[325] 'So also we find it recorded during the siege of Malta, that some
+hesitation having displayed itself on the part of the slaves in exposing
+themselves, during their pioneering labours, to a fire more than
+ordinarily deadly, the Grand Master directed some to be hanged and
+others to have their ears cut off, "pour encourager les autres" as the
+chroniclers quaintly and simply record.' Porter's 'History of the
+Knights of Malta,' ii. 272.
+
+[326] Fox to Ellis, July 12, 1756. Holland House MSS.
+
+[327] Chatham Corr. i. 158.
+
+[328] 'Montcalm and Wolfe,' i. 413.
+
+[329] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Sept. 2, 1756. Add. MSS. 35416.
+
+[330] Fox to Kildare. This, an undated narrative among the Holland House
+MSS., seems to me the best statement from Fox's point of view. From Lord
+Kildare's reply it is evident that it was written and despatched towards
+the end of Nov. 1756.
+
+[331] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[332] Fox to Stone, October 7, 1756. Holland House MSS.
+
+[333] Ib.
+
+[334] Fox to Ellis. H.H. MSS., Oct. 12, 1756.
+
+[335] Newcastle to Fox, Oct. 12, 1756. H.H. MSS.
+
+[336] Newcastle to Lady Yarmouth, Oct. 13. Add. MSS. 32868.
+
+[337] Fox to Digby, Oct. 1756. Wingfield MSS. in Hist. MSS.
+
+[338] Orford, ii. 253.
+
+[339] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[340] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Oct. 15, 1756. Harris, iii. 73.
+
+[341] Hardwicke to Newcastle, Oct. 19, 1756. Add. MSS. 32868.
+
+[342] Harris, iii. 77.
+
+[343] Grenville Papers, i. 178.
+
+[344] Sir C.H. Williams, iii. 41.
+
+[345] Shelburne, i. 83.
+
+[346] Add. MSS. 35416; cf. Orford, ii. 257.
+
+[347] Orford, ii. 259.
+
+[348] Leadam, 445 note. Orford, ii. 259.
+
+[349] Shelburne, i. 83 note.
+
+[350] Add. MSS. 35870 'Powis Ho., October 24, 1756. Sunday night.'
+
+[351] This poor Hanoverian victim, as completely as Andersen's Tin
+Soldier, has melted into nothingness. But he once caused a mighty stir.
+He bought four handkerchiefs, and by mistake, as was universally
+conceded, took the whole piece, which contained six. Yet he was put in
+prison on a charge of theft. His commanding officer demanded his
+enlargement. Failing in this attempt, he obtained a warrant from
+Holdernesse for his release. The whole country was aflame in an instant
+with the old hostility to German mercenaries, Holdernesse was severely
+threatened, and the innocent soldier cruelly flogged. See Orford, ii.
+248-9.
+
+[352] Strangely enough there is a different answer appended to this
+report.
+
+'That H.M. had been desirous, in this time of difficulty, to have the
+assistance of Mr. Pitt in his service, and for that purpose to consider
+him and those connected with him in a proper manner. That H.M. continues
+in the same disposition, tho' what has been suggested by Mr. Pitt will
+not in the King's opinion form a system for carrying on H.M.'s service.'
+
+This may have been the first draft, and it may have been found, as
+usual, that the less said the better.
+
+[353] Partly given in Harris, iii. 80.
+
+[354] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Oct. 13, 5 o'clock, 1756. Add. MSS. 32868,
+f. 251.
+
+[355] Ib.
+
+[356] Digby to Lord Digby, Oct. 28, 1756. Wingfield MSS. in Hist. MSS.
+
+[357] West to Newcastle, Newcastle MSS.
+
+[358] Orford, ii. 262.
+
+[359] Fox to Ellis. July 15, 1755. Holland House MSS.
+
+[360] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[361] October 20, 1756. Holland House MSS.
+
+[362] Holland House MSS.
+
+[363] Bubb, 389.
+
+[364] Orford, ii. 263.
+
+[365] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[366] Bedford Corresp. ii. 210.
+
+[367] Orford, ii. 266.
+
+[368] See the summonses in the Holland House MSS. For example, that to
+the Duke of Marlborough. 'Nov. 2, 1756. My dear Lord, H.M. desires Your
+Grace would without fail be in town to-morrow evening. You shall find at
+Marlbro' House a summons to the place of meeting, and I leave to Mr.
+Hamilton to acquaint Your Grace more fully than I have time to do with
+the intention of it. Adieu. The D. of Bedford is kept in town and all
+great Lords within reach are sent to.'
+
+[369] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[370] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[371] Holdernesse to Newcastle, Nov. 2, 1756. Add. MSS. 32868.
+
+[372] Bubb, 390.
+
+[373] Fox to Marlborough, 1756. Holland House MSS.
+
+[374] Bedford Corresp. ii. 208.
+
+[375] Orford, ii. 269.
+
+[376] Bedford Corresp. ii. 210.
+
+[377] The salary and allowances of Secretary of State were 2680_l._, as
+appears from a paper of Fox's. But there was also 3000_l._ for Secret
+Service which Fox appears to reckon as salary. H.H. MSS.
+
+[378] Orford, ii. 268.
+
+[379] Holland House MSS. H. Walpole to Fox, Oct. 27, 1756.
+
+[380] Fox to Bedford, Nov. 23, 1756.
+
+[381] H.H. MSS.
+
+[382] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[383] Bedford Corr. ii. 170, 220. Bedford to Fox, Nov. 17, 1755 (H.H.
+MSS.).
+
+[384] Holland House MSS.
+
+[385] Add. MSS. 32869.
+
+[386] Chatham Corr. i. 190-4.
+
+[387] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Sept. 2, 1756. Add. MSS. 35416.
+
+[388] Fox to Digby. Wingfield MSS. in Hist. MSS.
+
+[389] 'As your Lordship is of opinion that I cannot (which is firmly my
+own) rechuse Mr. Pitt,' &c. Newcastle to Hardwicke, Nov. 3, 1756.
+
+[390] 'Do you know that Sir George now Lord Lyttelton, who had engaged
+with the Duke of Bedford for one and one at Okehampton, named Pitt to
+His Grace as the man to be chosen in his room?' Fox to ----, Dec. 14,
+1756 (H.H. MSS.).
+
+[391] Camelford.
+
+[392] Supra, p. 75.
+
+[393] Works, i. 135.
+
+[394] Life of Grattan, i. 234.
+
+[395] Cradock's Literary Memoirs, i. 100-1.
+
+[396] Foote's Table Talk, p. 103.
+
+[397] Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 357.
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes:
+ Many sentences in letters start with lower case.
+ Inconsistent and dubious spellings have been retained.
+ Many french accents missing.
+ Superscripts formatted with carets eg: Septembr ye 29th
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lord Chatham, by
+Archibald Phillip Primrose Rosebery
+
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Lord Chatham, by Archibald Phillip Primrose Rosebery
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Lord Chatham
+ His Early Life and Connections
+
+Author: Archibald Phillip Primrose Rosebery
+
+Release Date: January 1, 2012 [EBook #38452]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LORD CHATHAM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Delphine Lettau, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i"></a></span></p>
+
+<h1 class="p4">CHATHAM</h1>
+
+<p class="center">HIS EARLY LIFE AND CONNECTIONS</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii"></a></span></p>
+ <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii"></a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h1 class="p6">CHATHAM</h1>
+
+<h2>His Early Life and Connections</h2>
+
+
+<h3 class="p2"><small>BY</small><br />
+
+LORD ROSEBERY</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center p6">LONDON<br />
+ARTHUR L. HUMPHREYS<br />
+187 PICCADILLY, W<br />
+1910</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv"></a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center p6">Second Impression.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v"></a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center p6"><i>To</i><br />
+<big>BEVILL FORTESCUE</big><br />
+OF DROPMORE AND BOCONNOC,<br />
+THIS BOOK, WHICH OWES EVERYTHING TO HIM,<br />
+IS<br />
+GRATEFULLY DEDICATED.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi"></a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">vii</a></span></p>
+
+<h2 class="p6"><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">My</span> first words of preface must be of excuse for some apparent lack of
+gratitude in my dedication. For besides my debt to Mr. Fortescue, I owe
+my warmest acknowledgments to Mary, Lady Ilchester, and her son, for the
+permission to examine some of the papers of Henry Fox; a character of
+great interest, whose life is yet to be written. But I hope that this
+will soon be presented by Lord Ilchester, whose capacity for such work
+is already proved. I render my sincere thanks both to him and to his
+mother; but my dedication, written long before I had access to the
+Holland House papers, must remain unchanged; for without Mr. Fortescue's
+family collection of papers at Dropmore this book could never have been
+begun.</p>
+
+<p>The life of Chatham is extremely difficult to write, and, strictly
+speaking, never can be written at all. It is difficult because of the
+artificial atmosphere in which he thought it well to envelop himself,
+and because the rare glimpses which are obtainable of the real man
+reveal a nature so complex, so violent, and so repressed. What is this
+strange career?</p>
+
+<p>Born of a turbulent stock, he is crippled by gout at Eton and Oxford,
+then launched into a cavalry regiment, and then into Parliament. For
+eight years he is groom-in-waiting to a prince. Then he holds
+subordinate office for nine years more. Then he suddenly flashes out,
+not as a royal attendant or a minor placeman, but as the people's
+darling and the champion of the country. In obscure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">viii</a></span> positions he has
+become the first man in Britain, which he now rules absolutely for four
+years in a continual blaze of triumph. Then he is sacrificed to an
+intrigue, but remains the supreme statesman of his country for five
+years more. Then he becomes Prime Minister amid general acclamation; but
+in an instant he shatters his own power, and retires, distempered if not
+mad, into a cell. At last he divests himself of office, and recovers his
+reason; he lives for nine years more, a lonely, sublime figure, but
+awful to the last, an incalculable force. He dies, practically, in
+public, as he would have wished; and the nation, hoping against hope,
+pins its faith in him to the hour of death.</p>
+
+<p>And for most of the time his associations are ignoble, if not
+humiliating. He had to herd with political jobbers; he has to serve
+intriguing kinsfolk; he had to cringe to unworthy Kings and the
+mistresses of Kings; he is flouted and insulted by a puppet whig like
+Rockingham. Despite all this he bequeaths the most illustrious name in
+our political history; and it is the arduous task of his biographer to
+show how these circumstances led to this result.</p>
+
+<p>Happily this task does not fall to the present writer, who has only to
+describe the struggle and the ascent; the consummation and glory of the
+career lie beyond these limits.</p>
+
+<p>Further, it may be said that not merely is the complete life of Chatham
+difficult to write, but impossible. It is safe, indeed, to assert that
+it never has been written and never can be written.</p>
+
+<p>This seems a hard saying, for it appears to be a reflection on his
+numerous biographers from Thackeray to Von Ruville, though it is nothing
+of the sort. The fact is that the materials do not exist. For the first<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">ix</a></span>
+time the Dropmore papers throw some light on the earlier part of his
+life. But it is tolerably certain that nothing of this kind exists to
+illuminate his later years. Of his conversations, of his private life
+nothing, or little more than nothing, remains. Except on the one genial
+occasion on which Burke saw him tooling a jim-whiskey down to Stowe, we
+scarcely see a human touch. After his accession to office in 1756, his
+letters of pompous and sometimes abject circumlocution, intended partly
+to deceive his correspondent and partly to baffle the authorities of the
+Post Office, give no clue to his mind. He wrote an ordinary note as
+Rogers wrote an ordinary couplet. Even his love-letters are incurably
+stilted. There is no ease, no frankness, no self-revelation in anything
+that he wrote after he embarked actively in politics. From that time he
+shrouded himself carefully and successfully from his contemporaries,
+except on the occasions when he appeared in public; for, strange to say,
+it was in his speeches that his nature sometimes burst forth. And yet
+even here, there is trouble. One of the difficulties of a life of
+Chatham lies in the rough notes of his speeches preserved by Horace
+Walpole. They are often confused, often dreary, sometimes
+incomprehensible; but they must be included, for there is nothing else;
+though they weigh heavy on a book. Sometimes, however, they reveal a
+flash of the man, and Pitt permits little else. Such being his
+deliberate scheme of life, adopted partly from policy, partly from
+considerations of health, there seems little more material for a
+biography of the man, apart from his public career, than exists in the
+case of a Trappist.</p>
+
+<p>It is then, I think, safe to predict that the real life of Chatham can
+never be written, as the intimate facts are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">x</a></span> wanting. What survive were,
+as usual, exhausted by Macaulay in those two brilliant essays, in which
+with the sure grasp of historical imagination he depicted the glowing
+scenes of Chatham's career, and left to posterity the portrait which
+will never be superseded. For his instinct supplies the lack of
+evidence, and though there may be exaggeration of praise, that praise
+will not be seriously diminished. Lives of Chatham will always be
+written, because few subjects are more interesting or more dramatic, but
+they must always be imperfect. It is, of course, easy to record his
+course as a statesman, his speeches, his triumphs, his achievements; and
+these narratives will be called biographies. But will they ever reveal
+the real man?</p>
+
+<p>There seems to be a constant tendency in writers to forget that the
+provinces of history and biography, though they often overlap, are
+essentially distinct; for history records the life of nations, and
+biography the life of individuals. To set forth the annals of the time
+in which the hero has existed, and to note his contact with them, is
+only a part of his life, though it is often held to be all that is worth
+remembering. The life of any man that ever lived on earth is far more
+than his public career. The life of a man is not his public life, which
+is always alloyed with some necessary diplomacy and which is sometimes
+only a mask; it is made up of a thousand touches, a multitude of lights
+and shadows, most of which are invisible behind the austere presentment
+of statecraft. We have probably all, and perhaps more than all, that
+Shakespeare ever wrote; we have so to speak all his public life. But
+would we not gladly give one or two of his plays to obtain some true
+insight into his private life, to realise the humanity of this
+superhuman being, to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">xi</a></span> know how this immortal was linked to mortality? We
+want to know how a master man talked, and, if possible, what he thought;
+what was his standpoint with regard to the grave issues of life; what he
+was in his hours of ease, what he enjoyed, how he unbent; in a word,
+what he was without his wig and bag and sword, in his dressing-gown and
+slippers, with a friend, a novel, or a pipe. This is half or three parts
+of a man, and it is certain that we shall never know this aspect of
+Chatham. He would no doubt, had it served his purpose, have appeared in
+the dressing-gown and slippers, but the array would have been as solemn
+and artificial as the robes of a cardinal. He would, had it served his
+purpose, have smoked a pipe, but it would have been the jewelled
+nargileh of the Grand Mogul. He had practically no intimates; his wife
+told nothing, his children told nothing; he revealed himself neither by
+word nor on paper, he deliberately enveloped himself in an opaque fog of
+mystery; and there seems no clue or channel by which any further detail
+of his character can reach us, unless Addington, the doctor, or Wilson,
+the tutor, have anything to tell us. But did anything of the kind
+survive, we feel confident that it would have transpired. Beckford and
+Potter, Barré and Camden, his friends or sycophants or satellites, have
+left no sign. Shelburne indeed thinks that he penetrated Chatham, and
+Shelburne no doubt saw him under circumstances of comparative intimacy.
+And yet, judging by the result, it may well be doubted whether Shelburne
+did more than watch and guess, with an inkling of spite. Occasionally
+there is a legend, a tradition, or an anecdote, but Chatham seems to
+have cut off all vestiges of his real self as completely as a
+successful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">xii</a></span> fugitive from justice. And so posterity sees nothing but the
+stern effigy representing what he wished, or permitted, or authorised to
+be seen. This is not enough or nearly enough, but it must now be certain
+that there will never be much more. This makes us all the more grateful
+for the Dropmore papers and for Mr. Fortescue's liberality. He has been
+able to throw new light on Chatham's youth and on his unrestrained days.
+Light on the subsequent years of self-repression would be so guarded and
+shaded that we should scarce obtain a glimpse of the true man. Indeed,
+by his careful disguise Chatham has made himself a prehistoric or rather
+a prebiographical figure, a man of the fifteenth century or earlier. We
+know what was around him, the scene on which he played, the other actors
+in the great drama, and we recognise himself on the stage; but away from
+the footlights he remains in darkness. In a word, after 1756, when this
+book ends, his public life is conspicuous and familiar. But his inner
+life after that period will never be known; and so we must be content
+with a torso.</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+<i>October 1910.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>It has seemed unnecessary to give references to familiar printed
+authorities, such as Horace Walpole, Coxe, Harris's Life of
+Hardwicke, Waldegrave, or the published Dropmore MSS. But where an
+exception has been deemed necessary, 'Orford' refers to the
+'Memoirs,' and 'Walpole' denotes an allusion to the 'Letters.'</p>
+
+<p>Lord Camelford's manuscript, which I have used so copiously, is an
+intimate family document entitled 'Family Characters and Anecdotes,'
+addressed to his son, and dated 1781.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p6"><a name="CHATHAM" id="CHATHAM"></a>CHATHAM<br />
+
+<small>HIS EARLY LIFE AND CONNECTIONS</small></h2>
+
+
+
+
+<h2 class="p6"><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is one initial part of a biography which is skipped by every
+judicious reader; that in which the pedigree of the hero is set forth,
+often with warm fancy, and sometimes at intolerable length. It is,
+happily, not necessary to enter upon the bewildering branches of the
+innumerable Pitts, but only to keep to one conspicuous stem. We must
+however record that the Pitt family was gentle and honourable; 'it had,'
+says one of them, 'been near two centuries growing into wealth without
+producing anything illustrious.'<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> But in the eighteenth century it was
+destined to blossom into no less than four peerages, Londonderry,
+Rivers, Camelford, and Chatham, not one of which survives. William
+Pitt's great-grandfather was Vicar of Blandford in Dorsetshire; and
+there was born Thomas, his grandfather, better known as Governor Pitt,
+and associated in history with the famous Pitt diamond. The Vicar, being
+the younger son of a younger son, had no fortune but the advowson of his
+own living of St. Mary; and Thomas again being a younger son set forth
+to seek his fortunes in the Golden East, and, it may be added, found
+them there.</p>
+
+<p>Of this redoubtable progenitor, Governor Pitt, as he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">2</a></span> always called,
+it would be possible to say much, as his life, measured by the length of
+current biographies, would justify a volume; in any case it is necessary
+to say something, for in his character may be traced some germs of his
+grandson's intractable qualities.</p>
+
+<p>We first catch sight of him as an 'interloper,' that is, an illicit
+merchant carrying on trade in violation of the East India Company's
+monopoly. In that capacity he showed himself formidable and intrepid,
+'of a haughty, huffying, daring temper,'<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> and the Company waged
+unsparing war against him. In a letter to their agents, writing with
+special reference to him, they say: 'We have a most acceptable accompt
+of the flourishing condition of all our affaires in those parts, and of
+the wreck and disappointment of all the interlopers; insomuch that if
+you have done your parts in reference to the <i>Crowne</i>, that Tho. Pitts
+went upon, there is no probability (that) of seven interloping ships
+that went to India the same year that our Agent did, any one ship will
+ever come to England again; and ... we cannot doubt that you will in due
+time render us as pleasing an accompt of those interlopers that went out
+this year, which will certainly put an end to that kind of robbery.'<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
+And so these hostilities continued for more than a score of years, but
+without the suppression of Pitt, who appears to have greatly thriven in
+the process; for during the latter part of this period he was member of
+Parliament for his own pocket borough of Old Sarum,<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> bought out of
+these contraband gains. Victory, indeed, rested with him; for the
+Company, weary and baffled, determined, on the faith of an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">3</a></span> ancient but
+precarious principle, to set a thief to catch a thief; and in November
+1697 appointed Pitt governor of Fort St. George, though some fastidious
+stockholders protested. This 'roughling immoral man,' as one of the
+objectors called him, governed with a high and strong hand from 1698 to
+1709; when the Company, finding the burden of him intolerable, summarily
+dismissed him. He was, no doubt, like his grandson, a difficult servant;
+and in his career we see the source of that energy, haughtiness, and
+self-reliance which were so conspicuous in both. Lord Camelford, his
+great-grandson, though a relentless critic of his family, gives, in the
+grateful character of an heir, a leniently appreciative account of the
+Governor; and says that 'he amassed a fortune which was reckoned
+prodigious in those times without the smallest stain on his reputation.
+I have heard (but at what exact period of his life I know not) that,
+having accomplished such a sum as he thought would enable him to pass
+the remainder of his days in peace, he was taken prisoner, together with
+the greatest part of his effects, on his return to England, and released
+at the intercession of the Duchess of Portsmouth, who was then in
+France. He went back to India and made in a shorter time a much larger
+fortune from the credit he had established and the experience he had
+acquired.'</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">1710</div>
+
+<p>However that may be, he now returned promptly to England, by way of
+Bergen, having shipped on a Danish vessel, and having sent before him in
+the heel of his son's shoe<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> the precious chattel which made his name
+famous, until, under his descendants, it acquired a different lustre.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">4</a></span>
+This was a prodigious diamond, to which he alludes in his correspondence
+as his 'grand concern,' which he bought for 48,000<i>l.</i>, and sold, after
+keeping it for some sixteen years, to the Regent of Orleans for the
+French Crown. It was rather a sonorous than a profitable bargain, for
+though he sold it for 133,000<i>l.</i>, he was never paid in full. He
+received 40,000<i>l.</i> and three boxes of jewels, but the balance,
+calculated at 20,000<i>l.</i>, was never discharged. He and his descendants
+reckoned, indeed, that on the whole he was the poorer by the possession
+of this gem. A tradition remains that the bargain might have fallen
+through at the last moment but for the shrewdness of the Governor's
+second son, Lord Londonderry. When Rondet, the royal jeweller, came from
+Paris to receive it, he criticised the water of the stone. 'His
+lordship, who was quick enough in business, understood him, and putting
+a bank-note into his hands, bid him go to the window to see it in a
+better light. It was then decided to be in all respects perfect.'<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
+
+<p>It is evident, however, that he was possessed of considerable though
+exaggerated wealth, and he was probably the first of those nabobs who
+were to bulk so largely in the drama, the society, and the politics of
+the eighteenth century. Among these his diamond gave him pre-eminence,
+and made his name both famous and proverbial. In England he remained for
+the rest of his life, some sixteen years, dying in 1726. The reformed
+filibuster had become a power in the land. He had wealth, force of
+character, political connection, and parliamentary influence. This last
+must have been an object with him, as we find him sitting for Thirsk
+instead of his own borough of Old Sarum; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">5</a></span> his eldest grandson seems
+to have inherited a considerable but indefinable interest in the
+borough-mongering of the West, having definite powers in regard to
+Okehampton and Sarum, and vaguer connections elsewhere. So the Governor,
+a staunch Whig and furious anti-Jacobite, with an influential son-in-law
+in Stanhope, a soldier and statesman who was First Minister for a time,
+was a man to be reckoned with. He was indeed offered, and had accepted,
+the Governorship of Jamaica, a high compliment, for it was then a
+position of peculiar difficulty, but never took up the appointment;
+finding probably his hands full at home, with an insubordinate family to
+manage, capital to invest, and estates to superintend.</p>
+
+<p>We find him living at Twickenham, Swallowfield, Blandford, and in Pall
+Mall, but mainly at Stratford, near Old Sarum. He had indeed
+contemplated building his principal residence at Blandford, his early
+home. But the younger children, finding that this would be settled on
+the eldest son, intercepted his purpose and turned his attention to
+Swallowfield, 'where, however, he contrived to throw away as much money
+in a very ugly place with no property about it,'<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> writes his resentful
+heir.</p>
+
+<p>Finally, in 1726, the Governor was gathered to his fathers, and his
+spoils caused some disappointment. His wealth had been over-rated, as is
+perhaps the case with all notorious fortunes, and not well invested; at
+any rate, he had burned his fingers in the South Sea Bubble. He seems to
+have left 100,000<i>l.</i> in personal property, though some of that may have
+consisted in unsubstantial and unrealised advances to Lord Londonderry,
+or others of his children.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">6</a></span> He had bought land wherever he could find it
+(for the sake, perhaps, of influence as much as income), in London
+(Soho), Berkshire, Hampshire, Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, Devonshire, and
+Cornwall, as well as that most marketable of assets, Old Sarum, and
+apparently other borough interests. But his greatest acquisition was the
+noble estate of Boconnoc, which he purchased in 1717 from the widow of
+that wild Mohun who was slain in duel by his brother-in-law, the Duke of
+Hamilton. The Governor paid 53,000<i>l.</i> for the estate, a great price in
+those days; but was held to have got a bargain.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
+
+<p>To his family he had always been formidable, but also an object of
+jealous rapacity and expectation. They wrangled and intrigued for his
+money both during his life and afterwards, and seem to have been
+universally dissatisfied by the result. 'From the various characters of
+these persons' (the Governor's children) 'it is easy to conceive,'
+writes Lord Camelford, 'in what manner the Governor must have been
+pulled to pieces by their different passions and interests when he came
+to realise his wealth in England.' The transactions with Lord
+Londonderry seem to have been particularly complicated; in fact they
+were never unravelled. We only gather, as a specimen of them, that after
+the Governor's death his executors claimed 95,000<i>l.</i> as due from Lord
+Londonderry; which Lord Londonderry denied, claiming 10,000<i>l.</i> from the
+estate. Thirty years were vainly spent in the endeavour to clear up this
+issue, a process rendered all the more arduous by Lord Londonderry's
+having peremptorily possessed himself of his father's papers after
+death. Only one case seems to have been free from complication.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">7</a></span> The
+Governor stated succinctly that his son John was good for nothing, and
+so he logically left him nothing. John, however, claimed an annuity
+which, we may be confident, he never obtained. Thus there were endless
+disputes, a civil war in the family, not uncongenial, perhaps, to those
+who waged it; which died out only with the combatants, but which
+illustrates once more the volcanic character of these truculent Pitts.</p>
+
+<p>It is in his family relations, in his dealings with these ungracious
+heirs and with his own wife, that the Governor is most vivid and
+interesting; at any rate, to one who has to trace the heredity of genius
+and character in his descendants. Thomas Pitt's blood came all aflame
+from the East, and flowed like burning lava to his remotest descendants,
+with the exception of Chatham's children; but even then it blazed up
+again in Hester Stanhope. There was in it, even when it throbbed in the
+veins of his eldest son and grandson, some tropical, irritant quality
+which, under happy circumstances and control, might produce genius, but
+which under ordinary circumstances could only evolve domestic skirmish
+and friction. The Governor himself, in his dealings with his wife and
+children, does not seem to have been tolerant or tolerable. He set
+himself to rule them with the notions of absolutism which are associated
+with the Oriental monarchies, but he met with no great measure of
+success. It is necessary to study his methods as exhibiting the volcanic
+source of a formidable race.</p>
+
+<p>His wife was of the family of Innes in Morayshire, 'of Scotch and
+Cornish extraction,' says Lord Camelford, and she was lineally descended
+from the Regent Murray. Sir John Sinclair, like a loyal Scot, attributes
+the genius and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">8</a></span> eloquence of the Pitts to their 'fortunate connection
+... with a Miss Innes of Redhall, in the Highlands of Scotland.' Of her,
+nevertheless, in unconsciousness of this obligation, but in receipt of
+private advices, the Governor writes in terms of implacable hostility.
+He had heard, he says to his son, 'that your mother has been guilty of
+some imprudence at the Bath ... let it be what it will, in my esteem she
+is noe longer my wife, nor will I see her more if I can help it.'<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
+
+<p>But his children were not to be released from duty to her by her
+supposed misconduct. Four years earlier he had written to Robert: 'If
+what you write of your mother be true, I think she is mad, and wish she
+was well secured in Bedlam; but I charge you let nothing she says or
+does make you undutiful in any respect whatever.' So when they
+apparently act on the Governor's view of Mrs. Pitt, he turns round and
+belabours them. 'Have all of you,' he inquires of his eldest son, 'shook
+hands with shame, that you regard not any of the tyes of Christianity,
+humanity, consanguinity, duty, good morality, or anything that makes you
+differ from beasts, but must run from one end of the kingdome to the
+other, aspersing one another, and aiming at the ruine and destruction of
+one another?' This genial picture of his offspring does not seem wholly
+imaginary, for the Governor proceeds: 'That you should dare to doe such
+an unnatural and opprobrious action as to turne your mother and sisters
+out of doors?&mdash;for which I observe your frivolous reasons, and was
+astonished to read them; and I no less resent what they did to your
+child at Stratford.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">9</a></span> But I see your hand is against every one of them,
+and every one against you, and your brother William to his last dying
+minute.' (William had died young, in 1706.) A week later he writes
+again: 'Not only your letters, but all I have from friends, are stuffed
+with an account of the hellish confusion that is in my family; and by
+what I can collect of all my letters, the vileness of your actions on
+all sides are not to be paralleled in history. Did ever mother, brother,
+and sisters study one another's ruine and destruction more than my
+unfortunate and cursed family have done?' He again reverts to the
+grievance of Robert's having turned his mother and sisters out of doors,
+though he calls them, in the same letter, 'an infamous wife and
+children,' and states that he has 'discarded and renounced your mother
+for ever;' apparently on suspicion, for he makes 'noe distinction
+between women that are reputed ill and such as are actually soe.' The
+wife of the Cćsar of Fort St. George had to be above suspicion. Nor is
+this by any means an isolated passage. From his Eastern satrapy the
+Governor pours on his hapless family, and especially on his firstborn, a
+constant flood of scorn and invective. The arrival of the Indian mail
+must have caused a periodical panic to his children, and his
+announcement in 1715 that 'writing now is not so much my talent as
+formerly' a corresponding relief.</p>
+
+<p>In vain does Robert, the eldest son, inspire friends to write to the
+Governor glowing accounts of his conduct; the Governor sniffs suspicion
+in every breeze. 'I wish gaming bee not rife in your family, or you
+could never have spent so considerable an estate in so short a time.' 'I
+wish gameing, drinking, and other debaucheries has not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">10</a></span> been the bane of
+you.' 'I wish these sore eyes of yours did not come by drinking, and
+that generally ushers in gaming, of either of which vices or any other
+dishonourable action, if I find you guilty, you may be assured I will
+give you no quarter.' 'I think that no son in the world deserves more to
+be discarded by a father.' But on the rare occasions when the Governor
+does not write in a passion his letters are full of sound sense. The
+cost of education is the only expense which he does not grudge. 'I would
+also have you putt your mother in mind that she gives her daughters good
+education, and not to stick at any charge for it.' But he wishes to get
+his money's worth. 'See that your brothers and sisters keep close to
+their studies, and let not my money be spent in vain on them; if it be,
+I'll pinch 'em hereafter.' Again, later, he writes: 'When this reaches
+you your brothers will be 17 years old. If their genius leads them to be
+scholars, I would have them sent to Oxford, but placed in two distinct
+colleges; and if inclined to study law you may enter them in the Temple.
+But if they are inclined to be merchants, let them learn all languages,
+and obtain perfect knowledge of the sciences bearing upon trade. I
+believe that trade will flourish rather than decay.'</p>
+
+<p>When he returned home things were probably not much better for his
+children, though his letters, of course, are less frequent, and also
+less violent. But we gather from timid and vigilant bulletins sent off
+by those who cautiously approached the Governor's lair that he was still
+as formidable and plain spoken as ever. He suspects Robert of
+Jacobitism, the supreme sin in the judgment of the old Governor. 'It is
+said you are taken up with factious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</a></span> caballs, and are contriving amongst
+you to put a French kickshaw upon the throne again.' 'I have heard since
+I came to towne,' he writes seven years afterwards, 'that you are
+strooke with your old hellish acquaintance, and in all your discourse
+are speaking in favour of that villainous traytor Ormond.' And again:
+'Since last post I have had it reiterated to me that in all company you
+are vindicating Ormonde and Bullingbrooke, the two vilest rebells that
+ever were in any nation, and that you still adhere to your cursed Tory
+principles, and keep those wretches company who hoped by this time to
+have murthered the whole Royall family: in which catastrophe your father
+was sure to fall,' &amp;c. &amp;c. From which it may be gathered that the moral
+temperature of Pall Mall, whence the Governor was writing, differed
+little from that of Madras.</p>
+
+<p>The only note of tenderness that he ever strikes is with regard to his
+grandson, William, to whom he looks with a rare prescience of attention.
+At first he conducts both boys from Eton to Swallowfield, 'with some of
+their comrogues,' on a short leave of absence. But soon it is William
+alone whom he takes as a companion. 'I set out for Swallowfield Friday
+next; your son, William, goes with me.' 'I observe you have sent for
+your son, William, from Eton. He is a hopeful lad, and doubt not but he
+will answer yours and all his friends' expectations,' 'I shall be glad
+to see Will here as he goes to Eton.' 'Monday last I left Will at Eton.'
+Sentences like these taken from the Governor's letters are, when the
+writer is considered, a sufficient testimony of exceptional regard. It
+is not too much to say that William is the only one of his descendants
+whom the Governor commends; the only one, indeed, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</a></span> never falls under
+the lash of the Governor's uncontrollable tongue.</p>
+
+<p>The Governor left behind him three sons, Robert, Thomas, and John; and
+two daughters, Lucy and Essex. Robert, the eldest son, married, somewhat
+clandestinely, Harriot Villiers, sister of the Earl of Grandison, 'who
+seems to have brought with her,' says her grandson, 'little more than
+the insolence of a noble alliance.' A more favourable estimate declares
+that she had a fortune of 3000<i>l.</i>, and that 'it is a great dispute
+among those who have the pleasure of conversing with her whether her
+beauty, understanding, or good-humour be the most captivating.' She
+makes a pale apparition in Lady Suffolk's correspondence, soliciting a
+place for her brother, Lord Grandison, with the offer of a bribe, and
+subsiding under the royal confidant's rebuke.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
+
+<p>The second, Thomas, married one of the heiresses of Ridgeway, Earl of
+Londonderry. After that nobleman's death 'he <i>bought</i> the honours which
+were extinct in the person of his wife's father.'<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> One infers from
+casual hints that Thomas may have had the most influence with his
+father, and that he was not embarrassed by scruples. He was, says Lord
+Camelford, 'a man of no character, and of parts that were calculated
+only for the knavery of business, in which he overreached others, and at
+last himself.' But Camelford may have been soured by the controversies
+which followed the Governor's death. The honours so dubiously acquired
+died out with Lord Londonderry's two sons.</p>
+
+<p>John, the Governor's third son, 'was in the army, an amiable vaurien, a
+personal favourite with the King, and,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</a></span> indeed, with all who knew him as
+a sort of Comte de Gramont, who contrived to sacrifice his health, his
+honour, his fortunes to a flow of libertinism which dashed the fairest
+prospect, and sank him for many years before his death in contempt and
+obscurity.'<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> This death took place, within Lord Camelford's memory,
+'at the thatched house by the turnpike in Hammersmith.' John seems to
+have been a sort of Will Esmond, and we have on record a horse
+transaction of his which savours strongly of Thackeray's famous
+knave.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> He married 'a sister of Lord Fauconberg's, whose personal
+talents and accomplishments distinguished her as much at least as her
+birth, and much more than her virtues.'<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
+
+<p>Another of Colonel John's freaks is worth retailing, as throwing light
+on the peremptory methods of the Pitts, and of the manner in which the
+Governor was harried by his offspring. He waited outside his father's
+house in Pall Mall on a day when he knew that one of the estate agents
+was to bring up the rents of an estate. He watched the man in and out of
+the house, then went in, where he found some secretary counting the
+money over, swept it deftly with his sword into his hat, and escaped
+into the street, full of glee at having bubbled an unappreciative parent
+out of his dues, and leaving the unhappy subordinate paralysed behind
+him.<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> This anecdote enables us to understand why the Governor had so
+low an opinion of John, and why the keys were kept under the Governor's
+bed when this scapegrace was at home.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></p>
+
+<p>Of the two daughters, Lucy, who married the first Earl<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</a></span> Stanhope, the
+minister and general, seems to have left a fragrant memory behind her;
+we are pleased to find her resenting her sister-in-law's behaviour to
+her mother, the Governor's wife. She died in February 1723-4.</p>
+
+<p>Essex, the second, married Charles Cholmondely, of Vale Royal,
+grandfather of the first Lord Delamere. 'Her peevishness made her the
+scourge of her family,' says her great-nephew, so we may conclude that
+she was not devoid of the Pitt characteristics. She died in 1754.</p>
+
+<p>Over his luckless heir the Governor had kept constantly suspended the
+terrors of his testamentary dispositions. 'My resentments,' he wrote not
+long before his death, 'against you all have been justly and honourably
+grounded, and that you will find when my head is laid.' Nevertheless,
+when he died in 1726, Robert, the belaboured eldest son, succeeded to
+the great bulk of his fortune. He, in his turn, did not lose a moment in
+visiting on his eldest son, Thomas, the sufferings that he himself had
+endured. In the very letter in which he announces his father's death to
+the lad, he speaks of his son's 'past slighting and disobedient conduct
+towards me,' and lectures him with uncompromising severity. He does,
+indeed, announce an allowance of 700<i>l.</i> a year, but soon after docks it
+of 200<i>l.</i> on the flimsiest and shabbiest pretexts. Robert, who seems to
+have been a poor creature, as his portrait at Boconnoc represents him,
+mean and cantankerous, with some of the violence but without the vigour
+and ability of the Governor, only survived his father a year, into which
+he managed to concentrate a creditable average of quarrels with his
+family. His death was something like the sinking of a fireship;
+spluttering and scolding he disappears in 1727.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Robert's life and death were on the lines laid down by Pitt precedent.
+He lived and died on ill terms with his family, and his death was
+followed by the customary lawsuits. During his short possession of his
+patrimony he had laboured under some miscalculation as to its extent;
+for, after examining the rentals and estates, he had congratulated
+himself on the possession of 'full 10,000<i>l.</i> a year;' ' in which belief
+he died soon after, leaving the same delusion to his son, which was one
+of the principal causes of his misfortunes.'<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> As the estate was
+entailed, Thomas, Robert's eldest son, was not liable for the debts of
+his father, or anxious to assume that responsibility. The claims that
+gave him most trouble were those of his mother, Robert's widow, who had
+obtained additions to her jointure, and had had 10,000<i>l.</i> settled on
+her children at her marriage, a provision which was apparently never
+carried into execution. Many bills and cross bills in Chancery were the
+consequence of these claims, which ended in Mrs. Robert Pitt's
+retirement into France, where she shortly afterwards died. Her brother
+and champion, Lord Grandison, also retreated to Ireland, both thus
+renouncing administration of the effects of Robert Pitt. So, avows Lord
+Camelford, 'my father seized whatever fell into his hands without
+account, either belonging to my grandfather or grandmother, keeping at
+arm's length every demand upon him, till somehow or other these
+litigations seem to have worn themselves out and slept by the
+acquiescence of all parties.' The 'acquiescence,' we may add, seems only
+to have accrued by the death of the litigants.</p>
+
+<p>Robert left two sons and five daughters, and this brood was not unworthy
+of the family traditions. The eldest son<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</a></span> was Thomas, the second
+William, the subject of this book; to the daughters we shall come
+presently.</p>
+
+<p>The volcanic element in the Pitt blood was fully manifest in this
+generation, and Thomas was a child of wrath. His relations with his
+younger brother William seem always to have been uneasy, and from an
+early period they seem to have been wholly uncongenial to each other.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever William may have been, Thomas was impracticable, and no one
+seems to have succeeded in working amicably with him. He was a man of
+extremes. 'All his passions,' writes his son, 'were violent by nature,
+particularly pride and ambition, which were painted in his figure, one
+of the most imposing I ever saw. He was not without good qualities; but,
+to speak fairly, they were greatly over-balanced by the contrary
+tendencies.' He was said not to have been naturally vicious, but early
+embarrassments, perpetual family litigations, a sense of injury, the
+flattery of dependents, and a train of mortifications and
+disappointments 'had formed in him such habits of rapacity, injustice
+and violence that he seemed at last to have lost even the sense of right
+and wrong.' He had, evidently, personal attractions, marred by an
+imperious demeanour, was strong and graceful, addicted to hunting and
+manly sports, fond of music and dancing. His overbearing manner, which
+arose from an undisguised contempt of his equals, gave him some
+ascendancy in Cornwall, where, however, though endured, he was secretly
+detested.</p>
+
+<p>So haughty and violent a character might, one supposes, have been
+mellowed and redeemed by a fortunate marriage, and Thomas seems to have
+secured an angel as his wife. At the opera one night he saw a daughter
+of Sir Thomas<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</a></span> Lyttelton, was struck by her extraordinary beauty,
+proposed in his headlong manner next day, and was accepted. Her son
+laments her want of any fortune to remedy her husband's eternal
+embarrassments, but she seems to have lacked nothing else. Besides her
+loveliness, 'as a faithful wife, a tender mother, a kind friend, an
+indulgent mistress, she was a pattern to her sex.'<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> But her very
+virtues turned her husband against her. Her meek gentleness, humility,
+and charity, the extreme piety, carried almost to bigotry, in which she
+had been reared, were reproachful contrasts to his opposite qualities.
+She was the object of ridicule to the wit and malice of others,
+possibly, we should guess, of her sisters-in-law; and, finally, every
+kind sentiment, even of common humanity, towards her, was extinguished
+in the husband who had loved her so passionately.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas seems, from the moment of succession until death, to have been a
+prey to pecuniary embarrassment. He started with an exaggerated view of
+his resources, and launched into extravagance; arrogance and ambition
+made him more profuse; a taste for borough management, strong in him,
+was probably more expensive than any other possible form of gambling; so
+all his life was soured by the struggle between pride and debt, and by
+consequent mortification. This seems to be the secret of his wasted and
+unhappy existence.</p>
+
+<p>United as he was by his marriage to the Lytteltons, Grenvilles, and
+Cobham, he naturally became an adherent and favourite of the Prince of
+Wales. He probably called the Prince's attention in glowing terms to the
+possibilities of the Heir Apparent's Duchy of Cornwall, and, at any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</a></span>
+rate, became His Royal Highness's parliamentary manager in the West, the
+realm of rotten boroughs. There the Prince was flattered, or flattered
+himself, with influence as Duke of Cornwall, in a region where Lord
+Falmouth, the famous threatener of 'we are seven,' and Thomas himself
+exercised a more substantial sway. He enjoyed a fleeting triumph at the
+General Election of 1741, not unaccompanied with the constant quarrels
+which were the vital element of his family. As a reward he was appointed
+in 1742 Warden of the Stannaries.</p>
+
+<p>Then he seems to decay. The General Election of 1747, on which he had
+built high hopes, brought him nothing but debt and disaster. He writes
+in despair to the Prince, and Frederick sends kindly and reassuring
+messages in reply; but he was now ruined, and his last prospects
+vanished with the Prince of Wales, on whose death he was superseded in
+the Stannaries; this perhaps marks the date of his final catastrophe. At
+any rate, there was a financial collapse, and he had to go abroad.
+Shelburne met him at Utrecht and heard him hold forth in the true Pitt
+style, abusing his brother William as a hypocrite and scoundrel, with a
+great flow of language and a quantity of illustrative anecdotes. 'A bad
+man,' says Horace Walpole. 'Never was ill-nature so dull as his, never
+dullness so vain.'</p>
+
+<p>Shelburne hints that he was mad, or nearly mad, and that, though not
+actually confined, he was obliged to live a very retired life,
+complicated by straitened circumstances. 'The unhappy man,' as William
+calls him, had never been on cordial terms with his brother: they had
+had the usual family wrangles about property, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span> recently, in his
+distress, Thomas had solicited from William, now Secretary of State and
+supreme, the appointment of Minister to the Swiss Cantons. He might have
+foreseen refusal, for he was fit for no such employment, and William was
+sensitive as to charges of favour to his family from the Crown. But men
+are friendly judges of their own fitness for any post which they may
+happen to desire, and Thomas did not care, probably, to have his merits
+or demerits so justly appraised by his junior; so he spent his time of
+exile in denouncing to any audience that was attracted by his name, the
+ingratitude and neglect of his successful relative. He died in July
+1761, and William frigidly announces to his nephew the death of 'the
+unhappy man' from apoplexy.</p>
+
+<p>This nephew was created Lord Camelford under the auspices of his first
+cousin, the younger Pitt, whom, by the way, Pitt-like, he seems unable
+to forgive for this favour, as he never mentions his creator. The
+malicious bards of the Rolliad hinted that the peerage accrued from some
+borough-mongering transaction:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Say, what gave Camelford his wished for rank?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Did he devote old Sarum to the Bank?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or did he not, that envied rank to gain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Transfer the victim to the Treasury's fame?' (<i>sic</i>)<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But, though he was by no means destitute of the family characteristics,
+this Thomas was a man of high honour, character and charm. He won the
+heart of Horace Walpole, whose neighbour he was, until they quarrelled,
+as of course they were sure to do. But for a time Horace, whose
+affection was not often or easily<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span> given and whose confidence in matters
+of taste was fastidious, gave both affection and confidence unstintedly
+to this young man. He attracted, too, the still rarer tenderness of his
+uncle William. To him Chatham addressed the well-known letters on
+education which he found time to write in all the business of office;
+though Thomas on attaining manhood repaid him with the most cordial
+aversion. This sentiment, which seems at first to savour of ingratitude,
+is not in reality difficult to explain. In the first place, the uncle
+was to some extent involved in those financial questions connected with
+the paternal inheritance in which the father played, as we have seen, so
+intrepid though unscrupulous a part. Mutual aversion facilitated mutual
+disagreement in matters always fertile of friction; and the younger
+Thomas, though he had an ill opinion of his father, sided with him as
+against his uncle. We cannot, even on Thomas's own showing, blame the
+uncle in these rather petty transactions, and William's besetting sin
+was certainly not avarice; but neither can we blame the son for siding
+with the father. On an impartial survey we may conclude that disputes
+between two Pitts who were near descendants of the Governor were
+incapable of an amicable solution.</p>
+
+<p>But there was more than this. William, for some purpose of persuasion,
+says Lord Camelford, informed Thomas that his nephew, the younger Thomas
+(Lord Camelford himself), would be his heir. This was a considerable,
+almost a magnificent, prospect. William was then middle-aged and
+unmarried, his position and future were alike splendid, and high office
+might in those days lead to wealth. His career had, moreover, brought
+him a legacy of 10,000<i>l.</i> from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span> Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough. But, far
+beyond that there was the reversion of the great Althorp inheritance,
+between which and William there were only the lives of the short-lived
+possessor and his sickly child. That William held out this expectation
+we think so probable that we do not even question it. He had all his
+life been half an invalid, and never seems to have contemplated marriage
+till he did marry, at the age of forty-eight. He, moreover, loved his
+nephew with sincere and proved tenderness. Why, then, should it be
+doubted that he indicated him as his heir, when, in truth, he had no
+other? But that he did this with an unworthy motive or for the purpose
+of deception there is neither proof nor probability. The episode
+probably furnished matter for his brother's maudlin ravings at Utrecht,
+but we do not think that it materially influenced the opinions of his
+nephew.</p>
+
+<p>The true reason for Camelford's hatred of his uncle was that he fell
+under the influence of George Grenville at a time when Grenville had
+broken for ever with Pitt. The estimable qualities of Grenville have
+been described with a colour and exuberance which could only proceed
+from the glowing imagination of Burke. But, with all allowance for what
+Burke saw in this able, narrow, and laborious person, it cannot be
+denied that the foundation of his qualities was a stubborn self-esteem
+which necessarily led to stubborn hatreds. Grenville came to hate Bute,
+to hate the King, to hate the Duke of Cumberland; but it may be doubted
+if all his other accumulated hatreds equalled that which he felt for his
+brother-in-law. Pitt, while in office, had kept Grenville in a
+subordinate position, and had apparently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span> thought it adequate to his
+deserts. When Grenville was Minister, Pitt had negotiated with the King
+to overthrow him. In the schism produced by Pitt's resignation, Temple
+had sided with Pitt and quarrelled with his brother George. But, worst
+of all, Pitt had held Grenville up, not unsuccessfully, to public
+ridicule and contempt. Now, a Grenville to himself was not as other men
+are; he was something sacred and ineffable. Neither Temple nor George
+ever doubted that they were the equals, nay, the superiors, of their
+brother-in-law, whom in their hearts they regarded as only a brilliant
+adventurer, useful, under careful guidance, to the Grenville scheme of
+creation. When, therefore, Pitt quizzed and thwarted George, he raised
+an implacable enemy. Later on, they might affect reconciliation, and
+Temple might pompously announce to the world that the Brethren were
+reunited. But George's undying resentment against Pitt never flagged to
+the hour of his death.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Pitt came under Grenville's influence at the fiercest moment of
+this rancour, and seems to have been the only person on record who was
+fascinated by him. Thomas writes of him with affectionate enthusiasm
+long after his death, and in his life waged his wars with zeal. One of
+these led to a quarrel with Horace Walpole, arising out of the dismissal
+of Conway, which produced a lengthy correspondence, still extant. But to
+become the disciple of George Grenville it was necessary to abhor
+William Pitt. Thomas took the test without difficulty, and adhered to it
+conscientiously. His father's influence, such as it was, tended in the
+same direction. So, though Thomas specifically places his uncle at the
+head of all British statesmen,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span> and although he besought Chatham to sit
+to Reynolds for the gallery at Boconnoc, and though he displayed grief,
+real or ostentatious, at Chatham's death, going the quaint length of
+asking every one to dinner who spoke sympathetically in either House on
+the occasion; in spite of all this, he retails aversion in every
+sentence that he writes; aversion of which the obvious source is
+devotion to Grenville. It is necessary to explain this because
+Camelford's manuscript notes would otherwise be inexplicable. Putting
+this violent prejudice on one side, this memorial drawn up by Camelford
+for his son, though too intimate for complete publication, is a
+priceless document. Let all be forgiven him for the sake of this
+manuscript. It may be inaccurate, and biassed and acrid, but it presents
+the family circle from within by one of themselves, and no more vivid
+picture can exist of that strange cockatrice brood of Pitts.</p>
+
+<p>The son for whom it was written grew up a spitfire, not less eccentric
+than his sires, and became notorious as the second Lord Camelford. His
+was a turbulent, rakehelly, demented existence, the theme of many
+newspaper paragraphs. He revived in his person all the pranks and
+outrage of the Mohawks. Bull-terriers, bludgeons, fighting of all kinds
+were associated with him; riots of all kinds were as the breath of his
+nostrils, more especially theatrical tumults. One of these latter
+contests brought him into contact with the pacific authors of the
+'Rejected Addresses,' who were admitted, not without trepidation, to his
+apartment, which was almost an arsenal. It can scarcely be doubted that
+the lurking madness of the Pitts found a full expression in him. As an
+officer in the Navy, commanding a sloop in the West Indies, his conduct<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span>
+fell little if at all short of insanity. It is not easy to understand
+how even in those more facile times he escaped disgrace.</p>
+
+<p>Eventually, at the age of twenty-nine he was killed in a wanton duel
+with a Mr. Best. The circumstances of this mortal combat show that he
+was a true Pitt of the Governor's headstrong breed. Both before the duel
+and afterwards, on his death-bed, he acknowledged that he was the sole
+wanton aggressor, and that his antagonist was blameless. But as Mr. Best
+was reported the best pistol-shot in England, his pride would not allow
+him to lend himself, however indirectly, to any sort of accommodation.
+So he died, and with him died the eldest line of the Governor's branch
+of Pitts. Boconnoc passed to his sister, Lady Grenville, wife of the
+minister who was Chatham's nephew. The relations of the brothers-in-law
+seem to have been on the Pitt model. 'Pique against Lord Grenville
+explains his (Lord Camelford's) conduct,' writes Lady Holland.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>
+Despite all their idiosyncrasies it seemed impossible to keep the Pitts
+and Grenvilles from quarrelling and blending.</p>
+
+<p>All this may seem trivial enough, but it has an important, indeed
+necessary, bearing on the story of William's life, as showing the stock
+from which he sprang.</p>
+
+<p>The harsh passions of the Governor and the petulant violence of his
+heirs seem so outrageous and uncontrolled as to verge on actual
+insanity. Shelburne explicitly states that 'there was a great deal of
+madness in the family.' Every indication confirms this statement. What
+seemed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span> in the Governor brutality and excess, frequently developed in
+his descendants into something little if at all short of mental
+disorder. We thus trace to their source the germs of that haughty,
+impossible, anomalous character, distempered at times beyond the
+confines of reason, which made William so difficult to calculate or
+comprehend.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">And</span> now we come by a process of exhaustion to the subject of this book.</p>
+
+<p>William Pitt, the elder statesman of that name, was born in London, in
+the parish of St. James's, November 15, 1708. It does not now seem
+possible to trace the house of his nativity, but it was probably in Pall
+Mall, where his father then or afterwards resided. We are limited to the
+information that his godfathers were 'Cousin Pitt' (probably George Pitt
+of Strathfieldsaye) and General Stewart, after the latter of whom he was
+named. General Stewart was the second husband of William's grandmother,
+Lady Grandison.<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
+
+<p>It may be well to recall here that William was the second son of Robert
+Pitt, the Governor's eldest son, and his wife, Harriot Villiers, fourth
+daughter of Catherine, Viscountess Grandison, and her husband the Hon.
+Edward Villiers Fitzgerald, who was descended from a brother of the
+first Villiers, Duke of Buckingham.</p>
+
+<p>Of his childhood we catch but occasional and remote glimpses.</p>
+
+<p>His grandfather, as we have seen, had early marked him. The shrewd old
+nabob had discerned the boy's possibilities, but seems also to have
+determined that his energies should not be relaxed by wealth. At any
+rate, the Governor refrained from any special sign of favour, and
+bequeathed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span> the lad only an annuity of 100<i>l.</i> a year. This was
+William's sole patrimony, for he seems to have received nothing from his
+father.</p>
+
+<p>He was sent to Eton, or, as William always spells it, 'Eaton,' at an
+early age; the exact period does not seem to be ascertainable. Here he
+had notable contemporaries: Henry Fox, George Lyttelton, Charles Pratt,
+Hanbury Williams, and Fielding.</p>
+
+<p>'Thee,' said this last, addressing Learning, 'in the favourite fields,
+where the limpid gently rolling Thames washes thy Etonian banks, in
+early youth I have worshipped. To thee, at thy birchen altar, with true
+Spartan devotion I have sacrificed my blood.'<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> Pitt could have echoed
+his schoolfellow's apostrophe if the not improbable legend be true that
+he underwent an unusually severe flogging for having been caught out of
+bounds. But even without this, his experiences were no doubt poignant
+enough; for, though the son of a wealthy father, he was placed on the
+foundation, and the Eton of those days afforded to its King's Scholars
+no lap of luxury. The horrors and hardships of Long Chamber, the immense
+dormitory of these lads, have come down to us in a whisper of awful
+tradition, and it is therefore no matter for surprise, though it is for
+regret, that William did not share the passionate devotion of most
+Etonians for their illustrious college. He is credited indeed with
+saying that he had scarcely ever observed a boy who was not cowed for
+life at Eton<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>: a sweeping condemnation which sounds strange in these
+days, but which is easily explained by the misery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span> that he, as a sickly
+boy, may well have undergone in that petty Lacedćmon. For his health
+deprived him of all the pleasures of his age, as he was already a martyr
+to gout. That hereditary malady which cut him off from the sports of the
+school impelled him to study, and so served his career. Mr. Thackeray,
+who wrote his biography in quarto and who may be discriminated without
+difficulty from the genius of that name, deposes vaguely that 'Dr.
+Bland, at that time the headmaster of Eton, is said to have highly
+valued the attainments of his pupil.' We rest more securely on a letter
+of his Eton tutor, Mr. Burchett, of which the last sentence need only be
+quoted here, as it is all that relates to William.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Burchett to Mr. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Y<sup>r</sup> younger Son has made a great Progress since his coming hither,
+indeed I never was concern'd with a young Gentleman of so good
+Abilities, &amp; at the same time of so good a disposition, and there is
+no question to be made but he will answer all y<sup>r</sup> Hopes.</p>
+
+<p>
+I am, S<sup>r</sup>,</p>
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>r</sup> most Obedient &amp; most Humble Servant,</p>
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Will. Burchett</span>.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This reference under the hand of an Eton tutor is exuberant enough. But
+no doubt rests on Pitt's school reputation. It survived even to the time
+of Shelburne, who speaks of him as distinguished at Eton. Lyttelton
+wrote of him while still there: 'This (good-humour) to Pitt's genius
+adds a brighter grace;'<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> a remarkable tribute<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span> from one Eton boy to
+another. More striking still is the tradition preserved by an unfriendly
+witness, William's nephew, Camelford. 'The surprising Genius of Lord
+Chatham,' he writes, 'distinguished him as early as at Eaton School,
+where he and his friend Lord Lyttelton in different ways were looked up
+to as prodigies.' School prodigies rarely mellow into remarkable men;
+though remarkable men are often credited, when their reputation is
+secure, with having been school prodigies. But the contemporary letter
+of Burchett and the reluctant testimony of Camelford admit of no doubts.
+Most significant, perhaps, of all is the preservation of the flotsam of
+school life, a couple of school bills, the tutor's letter, another from
+the boy himself. This last, which took eleven days in transmission, is
+here given. The bills have been already published by Sir Henry Lyte in
+his History of Eton.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Father.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>Eaton, Septemb<sup>r</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 29<sup>th</sup>.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>ed</sup> S<sup>r</sup>,&mdash;I write this to pay my duty to you, and to lett you
+know that I am well, I hope you and my mama have found a great
+benefit from the Bath, and it would be a very great satisfaction to
+me, to hear how you do, I was in hopes of an answer to my last
+letter, to have heard how you both did, and I should direct my
+letters, to you; for not knowing how to direct my letters, has
+hindered me writing to you. my time has been pretty much taken up
+for this three weeks, in my trying for to gett into the fiveth form,
+And I am now removed into it; pray my duty to my mama and service to
+my uncle and aunt Stuart if now att the Bath. I am with great
+respect,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Hon<sup>ed</sup> S<sup>r</sup>, Your most dutiful Son,</p>
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span></p>
+
+<p>This is the whole record extant of William's Eton life; to so many lads
+the happiest period of their existence, but not to him. An invalid, and
+so disabled for games, a recluse, perhaps a victim, he had no pleasant
+memories of Eton. But there, in all probability, he laid the foundations
+of character and intellect on which his fame was to be reared. It is not
+usually profitable to imagine pictures of the past, but it may not be
+amiss to evoke, in passing, the shadow of the lean, saturnine boy as he
+limped by the Thames, shaping a career, or pondering on life and
+destiny, dreaming of greatness where so many have dreamed, while he
+watched, half enviously, half scornfully, the sports in which he might
+not join. He is not the first, and will not be the last, to find his
+school a salutary school of adversity. He looked back to it with no
+gratitude. But Eton claims him for her own; and long generations of
+reluctant students have whiled away the reputed hours of learning or
+examination by gazing at his bust in Upper School, and dreamily
+conjecturing why so great a glamour still hangs about his name.</p>
+
+<p>With these few remnants and this vague surmise ends all that is, or will
+probably ever be, known of William's childhood. Little enough if we
+compare it to the copious details furnished by modern autobiographers.
+But self-revelation was not the fashion of the eighteenth century, and
+childhood then furnished less to record. Boys were in the background,
+repressing their emotions, and inured to a rugged discipline which,
+though odious to the sympathetic delicacy of modern civilisation,
+produced the men who made the Empire.</p>
+
+<p>From Eton, Pitt proceeded to Oxford, where he was admitted a Gentleman
+Commoner at Trinity College on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span> January 10th, 1726 (o.s.), guided
+thither, probably, by the fact that his uncle, Lord Stanhope, had been a
+member of that society. There are indications that at this time he was
+destined, like a great minister of a recent day, for the Church, but the
+gout attacked him with such violence as to compel him to leave the
+University without taking his degree. We have, however, an indirect
+proof of the reputation which he brought to Oxford in a letter from a
+Mr. Stockwell, who, although he had determined to give up tuition,
+consents to take William as his pupil, partly as a 'Salsbury man,' and
+so owing respect to the Pitt family; partly because of 'the character I
+hear of Mr. Pitt on all hands.'</p>
+
+<p>William's only public achievement at Oxford was a copy of Latin verses
+which he published on the death of George I. They are artificial and
+uncandid, as is the nature of such compositions, and have been justly
+ridiculed by Lord Macaulay. But the performance is at least an early
+mark of ambition. If this be all, and it is all, that we know of this
+period of William's life, it seems worth while to print the two letters
+written by Mr. Stockwell to Robert Pitt, the more as they throw some
+light on bygone Oxford, a topic of evergreen interest.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">Mr. I. Stockwell to Robert Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>ed</sup> S<sup>r</sup>,&mdash;I had long since determin'd, not to engage any more
+in a Trust of so much consequence, as the Care of a young Gentleman
+of Fortune is, &amp; have in fact refus'd many offers of that sort: but
+the great Regard, that every Salsbury-Man must have for your Family,
+and the Character I hear of M<sup>r</sup> Pitt from All Hands, put it out of
+my Power to decline a Proposal of so much Credit &amp; Advantage to
+Myself &amp; the College. I heartily wish your Business and Health
+would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span> have allow'd you to have seen him settled here, because I
+flatter Myself, that you would have left Him in Our Society with
+some Degree of Satisfaction; as That can't be hop'd for, You will
+assure Yourself that everything shall be done with the exactest Care
+and Fidelity.</p>
+
+<p>I have secur'd a very good Room for M<sup>r</sup> Pitt, which is just now left
+by a Gentleman of Great Fortune, who is gone to the Temple. Tis
+thoroughly furnish't &amp; with All necessarys, but perhaps may require
+some little Additional Expence for Ornament or Change of Furniture.
+The method of paying for the Goods of any Room in the University is,
+that Every Person leaving the College receives of his Successor Two
+Thirds of what He has expended. On this foot the Mony to be paid by
+M<sup>r</sup> Pitt to the Gentleman who possess't the Room last, is 43<sup>l</sup>, Two
+thirds of which, as likewise of whatever Addition He shall please to
+make to the Furniture, He is to receive again of the Person, who
+succeeds Him.</p>
+
+<p>Tis usual for Young Gentlemen of Figure to have a small quantity of
+Table-Linnen, &amp; sometimes some particular peices of plate, for the
+reception of Any Friend in their Rooms, but everything of that sort
+for Common &amp; Publick Uses is provided by the College.</p>
+
+<p>If you please to send me the Servitor's Name, I will immediately
+procure His admission into the College, &amp; show Him all the Kindness
+in my Power, but as to His attendance on M<sup>r</sup> Pitt it is not now
+usual in the University, nor, as I apprehend, can be of any Service.
+Tis much more Customary &amp; Creditable to a Gentleman of Family to be
+attended by a Footman&mdash;But this I barely mention.</p>
+
+<p>The other Expences of M<sup>r</sup> Pitt's Admission will be in the following
+Articles:</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="bill">
+<tr><td class="tdl">aution Mony (to be return'd again)</td><td class="tdr">10</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Benefaction to the College</td><td class="tdr">10</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">For Admission to the Fellow's Common Room</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Fee for the Use of the College Plate, &amp;c.</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">College Serv<sup>ts</sup> Fees</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">15</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">University Fees</td><td align="right">0</td><td class="tdr">16</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>I have stated M<sup>r</sup> Pitt's Benefaction at Ten Pounds, because that is
+what we require &amp; receive of every Gentleman-Commoner, &amp; of very
+many Commoners; but I know S<sup>r</sup> that you will excuse me for
+mentioning, that several Young Gentlemen of M<sup>r</sup> Pitt's Gown have
+besides made the College a Present of a Peice of Plate of 10, or
+12<sup>l</sup>. I am thus particular only in Obedience to Your Orders. I
+believe S<sup>r</sup> if You please to remit a Bill of An Hundred Pounds, it
+will answer the whole expence of Mr. Pitt's settlement here and I
+shall have the Honour to send you a particular Account of the
+disposal of it. As I am debarr'd the Pleasure of waiting on You by a
+little Office, that Confines me to the College in Termtime, I shall
+take it a very great Favour, if you please to let me know at what
+time I may hope to see M<sup>r</sup> Pitt here.</p>
+
+<p>I beg my Humble Duty to Your Good Lady, &amp; my Humble Service &amp;
+Respects to M<sup>r</sup> Pitt, and am with the highest Respect</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+S<sup>r</sup> Y<sup>r</sup> most Oblig'd &amp; Obedient Serv<sup>t</sup></p>
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Ios. Stockwell</span>.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Stockwell to Robert Pitt, 'at Swallowfield<br />
+near Reading, Berks.'</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>Trin: Coll: Oxon: Dec<sup>r</sup> 22. 1726.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>rd</sup> S<sup>r</sup>,&mdash;Upon receiving the favour of Yours &amp; finding that it
+was your Intention that M<sup>r</sup> Pitt should keep a Servant, I have made
+choice of Another Room much more Convenient for that Purpose, as it
+supply's a Lodging for His Footman. I have employ'd some Workmen in
+it to make some necessary alterations; but the whole expence will
+not amount to the Charge of the Chamber, I had mention'd to you
+before. As I am not willing, M<sup>r</sup> Pitt should be put to the distress
+of lying One Night in an Inn, I will take Care, it shall be fit for
+his Reception by New Years Day, &amp; I am sure He will like it very
+well.</p>
+
+<p>I proposed so large a Sum, because I had not mention'd the Articles
+of Gown, Cap Bands, Tea-Furniture, &amp; some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span> other little Ornaments &amp;
+Conveniences that young Gentlemen don't care to be without. You will
+be pleas'd to mention, in what degree of mourning<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> His Gown must
+be made; &amp; I will send you an exact Account of the whole expence.
+There is no need of remitting any Mony, till He comes.</p>
+
+<p>If You are willing to recommend the Servitor You spoke of, who may
+live here at a very easy rate (I believe very well for 15<sup>l</sup> p. Ann)
+I have bespoke a place for him, &amp; He may be admitted when you
+please. I beg My Humble Duty to Your Good Lady, &amp; my Humble Service
+&amp; Respects to Your Good Family, &amp; am</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+S<sup>r</sup> Y<sup>r</sup> most Obliged &amp; Obedient Serv<sup>t</sup></p>
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Ios. Stockwell</span>.<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Fortunately, too, a few of William's Oxford letters have also been
+preserved. The first apologetically continues Stockwell's tale of
+preliminary expenses, and endeavours to deprecate Robert Pitt's
+economical wrath.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Father, in Pall Mall.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>Trin: Coll: Jan<sup>ry</sup> Y<sup>e</sup> 20<sup>th</sup> 1726/7.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>ed</sup> S<sup>r</sup>&mdash;After such delay, though not owing to any negligence
+on my Part, I am ashamed to send you y<sup>e</sup> following accompt, without
+first making great apologies for not executing y<sup>e</sup> Commands sooner.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="bills">
+<tr><td class="tdl">Matriculation Fees</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">16</td><td class="tdr">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Caution money</td><td class="tdr">10</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Benefaction</td><td class="tdr">10</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Utensils of y<sup>e</sup> Coll</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Common Room</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Coll: Serv<sup>ts</sup> Fees</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">15</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span>Paddesway<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> Gown</td><td class="tdr">8</td><td class="tdr">5</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Cap</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">7</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Tea Table, China ware, bands &amp;c.</td><td class="tdr">6</td><td class="tdr">5</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Glasses</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">11</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Thirds of Chamber &amp; Furniture</td><td class="tdr">41</td><td class="tdr">7</td><td class="tdr">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Teaspoons</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">7</td><td class="tdr">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl"></td><td colspan="3">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Summe total</td><td class="tdr">84</td><td class="tdr">14</td><td class="tdr">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl"></td><td colspan="3">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Balance p<sup>d</sup> me by M<sup>r</sup> Stockwell</td><td class="tdr">15</td><td class="tdr">05</td><td class="tdr">4</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>I have too much reason to fear you may think some of these articles
+too extravagant, as they really are, but all I have to say for it is
+humbly to beg you would not attribute it to my extravagance, but to
+y<sup>e</sup> custom of this Place; where we pay for most things too at a high
+rate.</p>
+
+<p>I must again repeat my wishes for y<sup>r</sup> health, hoping you have not
+been prevented by so painfull a delay as y<sup>e</sup> gout from pursuing y<sup>r</sup>
+intended journey to Town I must beg leave to subjoin my Duty to my
+Mother &amp; love to my Sist<sup>rs</sup> and am with all Possible respect</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+S<sup>r</sup> Y<sup>r</sup> most dutyfull Son</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next is written after an evident explosion of that wrath. In the
+Pitt family, even more than in others, father and son viewed filial
+expenditure from opposite points of view. It is painful, then, but not
+surprising to find that Robert should have regarded William's washing
+bill as beyond the dreams of luxury.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Father, 'in Pall Mall.'</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>Trin: Coll: April y<sup>e</sup> 29<sup>th</sup>.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>ed</sup> S<sup>r</sup>,&mdash;I rec<sup>d</sup> y<sup>rs</sup> of y<sup>e</sup> 25<sup>th</sup> in which I find with
+y<sup>e</sup> utmost concern y<sup>e</sup> dissatisfaction you express at my expences.
+To pretend to justify, or defend myself in this case would be, I
+fear, with reason thought impertinent; tis sufficient to convince me
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span>of the extravagance of my expences, that they have met with y<sup>r</sup>
+disapprobation, but might I have leave to instance an Article or
+two, perhaps you may not think 'em so wild and boundless, as with
+all imaginable uneasiness, I see you do at present. Washing 2<i>l.</i>
+1<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i>, about 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per w<sup>k</sup>, of which money half a dozen
+shirts at 4<i>d.</i> each comes to 2<i>s.</i> per w<sup>k</sup>, shoes and stockings
+19<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> Three pairs of Shoes at 5<i>s.</i> each, two pair of
+Stockings, one silk, one worcestead, are all that make up this
+Article, but be it as it will, since, S<sup>r</sup>, you judge my expence too
+great, I must endeavour for y<sup>e</sup> future to lessen it, &amp; shall be
+contented with whatever you please to allow me. one considerable
+article is a servant, an expence which many are not at, and which I
+shall be glad to spare, if you think it fitt, in hopes to convince
+you I desire nothing superfluous; as I have reason to think you will
+not deny me what is necessary. As you have been pleased to give me
+leave I shall draw upon you for 25<sup>li</sup> as soon as I have occasion.
+I beg my duty to my Mother &amp; am with all possible respect</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Hon<sup>ed</sup> S<sup>r</sup>, y<sup>r</sup> most Dutifull Son</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The third is mysterious enough to us, but it expresses gratitude for
+some marks of kindness, whether to the writer or not, cannot now be
+known. It is difficult to imagine that Robert should have extended his
+beneficence to any one at Trinity but William, and yet it is not easy to
+depict the gratitude of a College for a favour done to one of their
+undergraduates by his father. In any case there remains no longer any
+trace of such benefaction at Trinity. The inevitable financial statement
+in which the bookseller's bill figures handsomely, not far behind the
+tailor's, is tactfully kept separate in a postscript. It is, however,
+well to know that this letter, the last in all probability that William
+wrote to his father, who died six weeks afterwards, is one of as much
+affection as the fashion of that day permitted.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Father.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>Trin: Coll: April y<sup>e</sup> 10<sup>th</sup> 1727.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>ed</sup> S<sup>r</sup>,&mdash;I hope you gott well to London yesterday as I did
+to this place, though too late to trouble you with a letter that
+Evening. I can not say how full of acknowledgements every one
+amongst us is for y<sup>e</sup> fav<sup>r</sup> you confer'd upon one of their society.
+One could almost imagine by y<sup>e</sup> good wishes I hear express't toward
+you from all hands, you were rather a publick benefactor to y<sup>e</sup>
+College, than a Patron to any one member of it. I mention this
+because I believe it will not be unacceptable to you to hear y<sup>r</sup>
+fav<sup>rs</sup> are gratefully rec<sup>d</sup>. I hope my Mother is well, to whom I
+beg my Duty: &amp; am with all possible respect, S<sup>r</sup>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>r</sup> most dutifull son,</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>S<sup>r</sup>,&mdash;Finding y<sup>e</sup> quarter just up I send you y<sup>e</sup> following accompt
+commencing Jan<sup>ry</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 9<sup>th</sup> to y<sup>e</sup> 9<sup>th</sup> of this month.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="bills">
+<tr><td class="tdl">Battels</td><td class="tdr">15</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Paid Lambert b<sup>d</sup> Wages</td><td class="tdr">4</td><td class="tdr">4</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Three months learning french &amp; entrance</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">For a course of experimental Philosophy</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">For coat &amp; breeches &amp; making</td><td class="tdr">5</td><td class="tdr">18</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Booksellers bill</td><td class="tdr">5</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Cambrick for ruffles</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">4</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Shoes, stockings</td><td class="tdr">1</td><td class="tdr">19</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Candles, coal, fagots</td><td class="tdr">3</td><td class="tdr">10</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Pockett money, Gloves, Powder, Tea, &amp;c.</td><td class="tdr">4</td><td class="tdr">4</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">For washing</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">2</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl"></td><td colspan="3">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl"></td><td class="tdr">47</td><td class="tdr">5</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Remains</td><td class="tdr">9</td><td class="tdr">15</td><td class="tdr">0<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+</blockquote>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Robert Pitt died in Paris, May 20, 1727, and the next letter is
+addressed to his widow at Bath. The eldest son, Thomas, already, it
+would appear, had played William false, and caused a coolness with the
+mother by not delivering a letter.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Mother.</span></p>
+<p class="right"><i>Oxford July y<sup>e</sup> 10<sup>th</sup> 1727.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>ed</sup> Mad<sup>m</sup>,&mdash;Tis with no small impatience I have waited for y<sup>e</sup>
+pleasure of hearing from you, but as that is denied me, I take this
+opportunity of repeating my Duty and enquiries after y<sup>r</sup> health. I
+wrote to you by return of y<sup>e</sup> coach, enclos'd to my Brother, to be
+forwarded by him, from whom I have also received no answer, which
+makes me imagine you may not have less reason to be angry with me
+for not paying my Duty to you, than I have to be sorry at not having
+y<sup>e</sup> pleasure to hear from you, I mean my letter has not come into
+y<sup>r</sup> hands. I send this by y<sup>e</sup> Post from hence, which I hope will
+find better luck, it will be a sensible pleasure to me to hear y<sup>e</sup>
+waters agree with you: for w<sup>ch</sup> reason out of kindness to me, as
+also in regard to y<sup>r</sup> own quiet (lest I should trouble you every
+other post with an importuning epistle) be so good as to give y<sup>e</sup>
+satisfaction of hearing you are well; I am with all respect,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>r</sup> most Dutifull Son,</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The following letter would seem to indicate that William was spending
+the Long Vacation at Oxford, while his mother as usual was spending hers
+at Bath. He appears to hint disapproval of an acquaintance she wished
+him to make, reversing the usual position of parent and son on such
+matters. There is again reproachful allusion to his brother; there are
+few indeed in any other tone throughout William's correspondence.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Mother, 'at Bath.'</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Oxon Sept<sup>r</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 17<sup>th</sup> 1727.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>ed</sup> Mad<sup>m</sup>,&mdash;I rec'd y<sup>e</sup> favour of y<sup>rs</sup> by M<sup>r</sup> Mayo and have
+waited on M<sup>r</sup> Vesey as you order'd, with whom, had you not
+recommended him to me upon y<sup>e</sup> knowledge you have of his family, I
+should not have sought an acquaintance. I hope you will lett me hear
+soon y<sup>r</sup> intentions. If I am not to be happy in seeing you hear, y<sup>e</sup>
+certainty of it can not be more uneasy than the apprehension; if I
+am, I shall gain so much happiness, by y<sup>e</sup> foreknowledge of it. What
+part of y<sup>e</sup> world my Brother is in or when he will be in Town, I
+know not. I hope to hear from him between this and y<sup>e</sup> Coronation.
+The only consideration y<sup>t</sup> can make me give up quietly y<sup>e</sup> pleasure
+I promis'd myself in seeing you here, is y<sup>t</sup> you are employ'd in a
+more important care to y<sup>r</sup>self and Family, y<sup>e</sup> preservation of y<sup>r</sup>
+health. I have only to add my Love to my Sist<sup>er</sup> and am with all
+respect,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>r</sup> most dutifull son</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The gout, we have seen, drove William prematurely from Oxford, after a
+little more than a year of residence. Thence he proceeded to Utrecht,
+where it was then not unusual for young Englishmen and Scotsmen to
+complete their education. Here we find him in 1728 with his cousin Lord
+Villiers and Lord Buchan, father of the grotesque egotist of that name
+and of Henry and Thomas Erskine. Pitt writes in 1766 that Buchan was his
+intimate friend from the period that they were students together at
+Utrecht, and, when in office, he showed kindness on that ground to Lord
+Cardross, Buchan's eldest son, the egotist himself. Of this period some
+few letters to his mother survive, dutiful yet playful.</p>
+
+<p>The first letter is of the formal kind then general<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span> between sons and
+parents, mentioning his cousin Lord Villiers, for whom he puts in a good
+word, not unnecessarily, as we shall see presently.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Mother.</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Utrecht, Feb<sup>ry</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 6<sup>th</sup> N.S. 1728.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>ed</sup> Mad<sup>m</sup>,&mdash;I have y<sup>e</sup> pleasure to repeat my assurances of
+affection &amp; duty to you, together with my wishes for y<sup>r</sup> health: I
+shall take all opportunities for paying my respects to you, I hope
+you will now and then fav<sup>r</sup> me w<sup>th</sup> a line or two, especially
+since you have so good a Scribe as Miss Ann to ease you of y<sup>e</sup>
+trouble of writing y<sup>r</sup>self. My L<sup>d</sup> Villiers begs his Compliments
+may be acceptable to you, at y<sup>e</sup> same time I should not do my L<sup>d</sup>
+justice if I omitted saying something in his just praise, but as I
+can not say enough, I forbear to say more. My Love to my Sist<sup>rs</sup> &amp;
+Compliments where due. I am with all resp<sup>t</sup></p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Your dutiful Son</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next seems to denote a reluctant intention of returning to England
+to pay his family a visit.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Mother.</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Utrecht Feb<sup>ry</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 13<sup>th</sup> 1728.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>ed</sup> Mad<sup>m</sup>,&mdash;I hope I need not assure you y<sup>r</sup> letter gave me a
+very sensible pleasure in informing me of y<sup>r</sup> better health; I wish
+I may any way be able to contribute toward farther establishment of
+it by obeying a Command which tallies so well with my own
+Inclinations though at y<sup>e</sup> same time be assured, nothing less than
+y<sup>e</sup> pleasure of seeing you should prevail upon me to repeat so much
+sickness &amp; difficulty as I met with Coming over to Holland. I
+believe I shall not fail in my respects to you, as often as occasion
+permits,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span> though I fear my letters are hardly worth postage: unless
+to one who I flatter myself believes me to be</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+h<sup>r</sup> most Dutifull Son</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>P.S. my Love to all y<sup>e</sup> Family.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next letter again pleads on behalf of my Lord Villiers, for whose
+excess of vivacity William feels obvious sympathy. He mentions, too, and
+characterises with a sure touch, his old Eton friend Lyttelton, who has
+fallen in love with Harriot Pitt, as he was afterwards to fall in love
+with Ann. Lyttelton was apparently determined that the Lytteltons and
+Pitts should be matrimonially connected as closely as possible, for two
+months afterwards we find him exclaiming in a letter to his father:
+'Would to God Mr. (William) Pitt had a fortune equal to his brother's,
+that he might make a present of it to my pretty little Molly! But
+unhappily they have neither of them any portion but an uncommon share of
+merit, which the world will not think them much the richer for.'<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> As
+Thomas had just married Christian Lyttelton, it is clear that the writer
+meditated a triple alliance as the end to be aimed at. The peerage books
+tell us that this pretty little Molly died unmarried.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Mother, 'in Pallmall, London.'</span></p>
+<p class="right">
+<i>Utrecht Feb: y<sup>e</sup> 29<sup>th</sup></i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>ed</sup> Mad<sup>m</sup>,&mdash;The return of my L<sup>d</sup> Villiers into England gives me
+an opportunity of assuring you of my respect &amp; wishes for y<sup>r</sup>
+health; I can not omitt any occasion of shewing how sensible I am of
+y<sup>r</sup> affection, but must own I could have wish'd any other than this
+by which I am depriv'd of my L<sup>d</sup> Villier's Company, he is recall'd
+perhaps deservedly: if a little Indiscretion arising from too much
+vivacity be a fault, my L<sup>d</sup> is undeniably blameable; but I doubt not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span>but my L<sup>d</sup> Grandison himself will find more to be pleas'd with in
+y<sup>e</sup> one than to correct in y<sup>e</sup> other respect. I have received so
+many Civilities from M<sup>r</sup> Waddel, who does me y<sup>e</sup> hon<sup>r</sup> to be y<sup>e</sup>
+bearer of this, y<sup>t</sup> I should not do him justice to omitt letting you
+know how much I am obliged to him. I hope y<sup>e</sup> Family is well:
+Lyttelton prevented you in y<sup>e</sup> account of his own Madness. Sure
+there never was so much fine sense &amp; Extravagance of Passion jumbled
+together in any one Man. Send him over to Holland: perhaps living in
+a republick may inspire him with a love of liberty &amp; make him scorn
+his Chains. My love to all, who (a second time) I hope are well: &amp;
+believe me with all respect &amp; affection</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>r</sup> most Dutiful Son</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The third contains, perhaps, the only token of kindness between the two
+brothers which survives. It also alludes to Lyttelton's passion for
+Harriot.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Mother, 'in Pall Mall, London.'</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Utrecht April y<sup>e</sup> 8<sup>th</sup> N.S. 1728.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Hon<sup>ed</sup> Mad<sup>m</sup>,&mdash;Y<sup>r</sup> letters must always give me so much pleasure,
+y<sup>t</sup> I beg no consideration may induce you to deprive me of it. they
+can never fail being an entertainment to me when they give me an
+opportunity of hearing you are well. I can not omitt thanking you
+for y<sup>e</sup> enquiry you make about my supplies from my Brother: neither
+should I do him justice, if I did not assure you I receiv'd y<sup>e</sup>
+kindest letter in y<sup>e</sup> world from him: wherein he gives me y<sup>e</sup> offer
+of going where I think most for my improvement, and assures me
+nothing y<sup>t</sup> y<sup>e</sup> estate can afford shall be denied me for my
+advantage &amp; education. I hope all y<sup>e</sup> family is well. Miss Anne's
+time is so taken up with dansing &amp; Italien y<sup>t</sup> I despair of hearing
+from her. I should be glad to hear what conquests miss Harriot made
+at y<sup>e</sup> birthday. if I had not a letter from one of y<sup>e</sup> Three, I must
+think they have forgott me. I am in pain for poor Lyttelton: I wish
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span>there was leagues of sea between him &amp; y<sup>e</sup> Charms of Miss Harriot.
+If he dies I shall sue her for y<sup>e</sup> murder of my Friend. This Place
+affords so little matter of entertainment, y<sup>t</sup> I shall only beg you
+to believe me with all respect,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Hon<sup>ed</sup> Mad<sup>m</sup>, Y<sup>r</sup> most Dutifull Son</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My love &amp; service to my Brother &amp; Compliments to all y<sup>e</sup> Family.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>His stay at Utrecht was probably not protracted, as we find no more
+letters from thence. The next glimpse we have of him is in January 1730,
+at Boconnoc. He is now established at home, rather, perhaps, from
+economy than of his own free will, for he disrespectfully calls Boconnoc
+'this cursed hiding-place;' living in Cornwall or at Swallowfield, near
+Reading, another of the family residences; or on military duty at
+'North'ton,' evidently Northampton, which William, however, abbreviates
+differently in later letters. When we consider the elaborate style and
+formulas of the letters of this period there seems nothing so strange as
+the passion for abbreviation by apostrophe, such as 'do's' for 'does,'
+which seems to save neither time, trouble, nor space.</p>
+
+<p>In February 1731 he received a commission in the 1st Dragoon Guards,
+then under the command of Lord Pembroke, and we find him in country
+quarters at Northampton and elsewhere. In the autumn we find him once
+more at Boconnoc, whence he writes this more genial note to his mother.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Mother, at Bath.</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Bocconnock Oct<sup>br</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 17 1731.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Madam,&mdash;I am, after a long Confinement at Quarters, at present
+confined here, by disagreeable, dirty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span> weather, which makes us all
+prisoners in this little house. I knew nothing of your journey to
+Bath, when I came to Town, and was therefore disappointed of the
+pleasure of seeing you there. I see you have put a bill upon your
+door. Pray what do you intend to do with yourself this winter? I
+shou'd be mighty glad to know whether your affairs are near an
+Issue. I hope they will very soon leave you at Leisure to consult
+nothing but your health and Quiet. Be pleas'd to favour me with a
+Letter here, where I shall stay about a month longer; and give me
+the satisfaction of knowing how much you profit by the Waters.
+Believe me,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Dear Madam, Your dutifull affec<sup>t</sup> son
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My service to the Col: and Mrs. Bouchier: I shall Be glad to hear he
+makes one at the Balls.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>In 1733 he set out on a foreign tour, of which we shall see more
+presently, and before leaving writes this note, which gives some ground
+for thinking that his brother helped him at least to meet the expenses
+of this voyage, as Lord Camelford thinks was actually the case.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Mother, 'in Bateman Street, near Piccadilly, London.'</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Boconnock jan: 19: 1732/3.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Madam,&mdash;I hope Miss Kitty who is now upon y<sup>e</sup> Road will get
+safe to You: I cant omit doing Justice To your goodness in making
+room for her, she no doubt wanting your care very much in the ill
+state she is in. I continue still here and shall not set out yet
+this month, haveing a design to go abroad then. It is however
+uncertain till I hear from my Brother after he gets to Town. Miss
+Harriot, by her letters, Is much recovered and I flatter myself your
+house will prove as lucky to Poor Kitty. I need not assure you of my
+wishes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span> for your health and speedy deliverance from the Misery of
+Late: my Love to my Sisters and believe me</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Dear Madam Your most Dutifull Son<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Miss Nanny gives her Duty to you.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>He visited Paris, and Geneva, Besançon (where he lost his heart for a
+time), Marseilles, and Montpelier, passing the winter at Luneville.</p>
+
+<p>From Paris he again writes to his mother this letter, of no significance
+except dutiful affection; and another from Geneva which gives a strong
+proof of filial obedience in giving his consent, though with strong and
+obvious reluctance, to one of the bills filed by his mother and Lord
+Grandison in reference to his father's succession.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Mother, 'in Bateman Street Near Piccadilly ŕ
+Londres.'</span></p>
+
+<p class="right"><i>Paris May y<sup>e</sup> 1 1733.</i></p>
+
+<p>Dear Madam,&mdash;Though I have nothing to say to you yet of the Place I
+am arrived at, I cant help giving you a bare account of my being got
+safe to Paris: You are pleased to give me so much reason to Think
+you interest yourself in my welfare That I cou'd not acquit myself
+of my Duty In not giving you this mark of my respect and the sense I
+have of your goodness. I shall make my stay as short here as
+possible. let me have the pleasure of hearing some account of your
+health and situation: be pleased to direct to me Chez Monsieur
+Alexandre Banquier, dans la Rue St. Appoline pres de la Porte St.
+Denis, ŕ Paris. I am</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Madam Y<sup>r</sup> most Dutifull Son<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">William Pitt to his Mother, 'in Bateman Street Piccadilly London.
+Angleterre.'</span></p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>Geneva Sep<sup>r</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 17: N.S. 1733.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Madam&mdash;I have just rec<sup>d</sup> y<sup>e</sup> favour of your letter of y<sup>e</sup>
+7<sup>th</sup> august, with the answer to a bill of complaint of my L<sup>d</sup>
+Grandison and your self: I cou'd wish you had pleased to have let me
+know in general that that bill is, for at present I have no Idea of
+it. You assure me, Madam the answer you wou'd have me make is a
+form, and can lead me into no farther consequences, by engageing me
+In Law, or disobligeing My Brother; neither of which I am persuaded
+you wou'd upon any consideration involve me in: upon these grounds I
+readily send you my consent to the answer proposed By M<sup>r</sup> Martyn in
+your letter. I am sorry it did not come to my hands sooner, least my
+answer shou'd not be time enough; and that I shou'd, by that means,
+be any involuntary obstacle to your affairs which wou'd be a
+sensible concern to</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Dear Madam Y<sup>r</sup> most Dutyfull affec<sup>e</sup> Son</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I leave this Place shortly not knowing yet where I shall pass y<sup>e</sup>
+winter.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>In 1734 he was back in England, doing duty with his regiment at Newbury.</p>
+
+<p>It is unnecessary to speculate on the measure of success that William
+would have achieved in the army had he remained a soldier. That he had
+an early disposition to the career of arms seems probable, as his uncle,
+Lord Stanhope, a soldier himself, who died when William was twelve, used
+to call him 'the young Marshal.' It is useless to surmise; but had he
+not been so great an orator, one would be apt to imagine that his bent
+and talent lay in the direction of a military career. This at least is
+certain, that he sedulously employed his time, preserved from mess
+debauches and idle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</a></span> activity by his guardian demon the gout. He told
+Shelburne that during the time he was a cornet of horse, there was not a
+military book that he had not read through. This is a large statement,
+but denotes at least unstinted application. So his career as a
+subaltern, though abruptly cut short, was probably fruitful, and these
+studies must have been useful to the future war minister. To paraphrase
+Gibbon's pompous and comical phrase, the cornet of dragoons may not have
+been useless to the history-maker of the British Empire. For his destiny
+was to plan and not to conduct campaigns, and he was now to be caught in
+the jealous embrace of parliamentary politics.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">But</span> before he launches on that troubled career, it is well to catch what
+glimpses we can obtain of Pitt in private life. It is the more necessary
+as this aspect soon disappears from sight, and his letters begin to
+assume that pompous and obsequious tone which we have come to believe
+was his natural style, but which it is obvious was assumed and affected
+for purposes of his own. Until he passes on to the stage, he is as
+bright, as livery, and as affectionate as any lad of his generation. It
+is beyond measure refreshing to see him at this period bantering,
+falling in love, the participator of revels if not a reveller himself.
+For afterwards no one saw him behind the scenes, no one was admitted to
+his presence until every feature had been composed and his wig and his
+vesture dramatically arranged. To catch a glimpse of him before he
+played a part has been hitherto an unknown luxury. But to do this we
+must now for a moment consider his sisters.</p>
+
+<p>There were five of these, and among them was to be found in abundance
+the strain of violence and eccentricity that distinguished the Pitts.</p>
+
+<p>'The eldest, Harriot,' writes Lord Camelford, 'was one of the most
+beautiful women of her time, but little produced in the great world, and
+died very young from anxiety of mind in consequence of a foolish
+engagement she entered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</a></span> into with Mr. Corbett, son of Sir William
+Corbett, to whom she was privately married.' She secured for a while, as
+we have seen, Lyttelton's transient affections. 'The second daughter,
+Catherine, had much goodness, but neither beauty nor wit to boast of.
+She married Robert Nedham,<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> a man of uncommon endowments, but of good
+Irish family and property, by whom she had several children.' The third
+was Ann, of whom more presently; and the fifth Mary.</p>
+
+<p>The fourth was Betty, of whom, unlike three of her sisters, we seem to
+know too much. The curse of the Pitt blood was strong in her. Lord
+Camelford, her nephew, speaks of her 'diabolical disposition,' and says
+concisely that 'she had the face of an angel and the heart of all the
+furies,' and that she 'formed the most complicated character of vice
+that I have ever met with.' Family testimony is not always the most
+charitable, but outside witnesses in no way mitigate these expressions.
+Lord Shelburne says that she was received nowhere, owing to her
+profligate life. Horace Walpole brings an infamous charge against her,
+which we may well hope is a distortion of the natural fact that for some
+time she took up her abode with her eldest brother Thomas; though Thomas
+on parting with her said that her staying with him was extremely
+distasteful to him. She, in any case, openly lived as his mistress with
+Lord Talbot, a peer as eccentric as herself, and who promised her
+marriage, she said, whenever he should be free from the incumbrance of
+Lady Talbot.<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> Afterwards she went to Italy, became a Roman Catholic,
+started from Florence with the declared intention of marrying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</a></span> Mr.
+Preston, a Leghorn merchant, who seems however to have been unequal to
+the occasion.<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> Then she returned to England, virulent against her
+brother William, 'whose kindness to her,' says Horace Walpole, no
+biassed witness, 'has been excessive. She applies to all his enemies,
+and, as Mr. Fox told me, has even gone so far as to send a bundle of his
+letters to the author of <i>The Test</i><a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> to prove that Mr. Pitt has
+cheated her, as she calls it, out of a hundred a year, and which only
+prove that he once allowed her two, and, after all her wickedness, still
+allows her one.'<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> And yet on occasion she could call William the best
+of brothers and of men.<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> This, too, was characteristic of the breed.</p>
+
+<p>At this period of her life she called herself, heaven knows why, Clara
+Villiers Pitt, or Villiers Clara Pitt (there is an engraving of her with
+the latter designation), and published a pamphlet recommending magazines
+of corn. Of her perhaps too much has been said; but it is necessary to
+demonstrate that William's family relations were not always easy: Thomas
+reviled him, Elizabeth reviled him, Ann, whoever was in fault, caused
+him much trouble, while Thomas's son, whom he peculiarly cherished,
+regarded him with peculiar animosity.</p>
+
+<p>It should be mentioned, however, that Dutens met her in France some time
+during Pitt's paymastership, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</a></span> gives us a picture of her, which also
+throws light on William's strong family affection. She was then
+handsome, with a fine figure, her face aflame with pride and intellect,
+her age apparently under thirty; she was abroad for her health. With
+her, as a companion, chosen by her brother, was a Miss Taylor, a much
+prettier girl, of whom Elizabeth was vigilantly jealous and with whom
+Dutens fell haplessly in love. Miss Pitt was then apparently on
+excellent terms with her illustrious brother, and gave Dutens a letter
+to him. She had indeed become enamoured of the young Frenchman, a
+passion which, we are not surprised to hear, she carried to indecorous
+lengths. He, however, escaped to England and presented his letter. Pitt
+called on him the same afternoon and thanked him for his attentions to a
+beloved sister. Dutens became intimate, showed the minister his
+compositions, and was favoured with an inspection of Pitt's. Then all
+suddenly changed, and he was denied access.<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> Betty had quarrelled
+with the family of Dutens, and had written to beg her brother to quarrel
+with Dutens.<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> Dutens, she said, had boasted in company that he was
+well with her, and that if her fortune and family answered expectation
+he might marry her. Consequently she desired her brother to order his
+footman to kick Dutens down stairs; in any case she implored him to
+quarrel with the young man. With this request Pitt unhesitatingly and
+unreasonably complied. We see here in one incident how warm were Pitt's
+family affections, and the difficulties under which they were cherished.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</a></span></p><p>In 1761 she married John Hannan of the Middle Temple, 'of Sir William
+Hannan's family in Dorsetshire, a lawyer by profession, remarkable for
+his abilities, some years younger than myself, and possessed of a
+fortune superior to my own,' as Betty describes him in a hostile
+announcement of the engagement addressed to William. Nine years
+afterwards she died. Of Hannan, her husband, nothing further seems to be
+known; but it may be surmised that his lot was not enviable.</p>
+
+<p>Mary, the youngest, seems to have been a spinster of no striking
+qualities. We know little of her, except that she was born in 1725 and
+died in 1782.<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> There exists one letter from William to her of the
+year 1753, and he mentions her in a letter, dated April 9, 1755, as
+living with him. And indeed he was always kind to her, as she seems to
+have habitually resided with him. Mrs. Montagu writes in July 1754:
+'Miss Mary Pitt, youngest sister of Mr. Pitt, is come to stay a few days
+with me. She is a very sensible, modest, pretty sort of young woman, and
+as Mr. Pitt seem'd to take every civility shown to her as a favour, I
+thought this mark of respect to her one manner of returning my
+obligations to him.'<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> But even she, though colourless, seems not to
+have been wholly devoid of the Pitt temperament, though she seems to
+have always been on intimate terms with her family. 'She had,' says Lord
+Camelford, 'neither the beauty of two of her sisters, nor the wit and
+talents of her sister Ann, nor the diabolical dispositions of her sister
+Betty. She meant always, I believe, to do right to the best of her
+judgement, but that judgement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</a></span> was liable to be warped by prejudice, and
+by a peculiar twist in her understanding which made it very dangerous to
+have transactions with her.' The 'peculiar twist,' which even Mary could
+not escape, was innate in most Pitts.</p>
+
+<p>We have kept Ann to the last, though she was third of the sisterhood in
+point of age, being born in 1712, and so four years younger than
+William, whose peculiar pet and crony she was for the earlier part of
+their lives. She was in her way almost as notable as he, and she
+resembled him in genius and temper, as Horace Walpole wittily observed,
+'<i>comme deux gouttes de feu</i>.' But drops of fire, did they exist, would
+probably not amalgamate for long, and one would guess that Ann and
+William were too much alike to remain in permanent harmony. Perhaps,
+too, their extreme intimacy made them too well acquainted with each
+other's tender points, a dangerous knowledge when coupled with great
+powers of sarcasm. One might surmise, too, that Pitt's wife, always
+apparently cold to Ann, might be disinclined to encourage the renewal of
+an intimacy which might once more attract William's closest confidence,
+though we have a letter<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> from Ann, dated 1757, in which she speaks
+with nothing less than rapture of Lady Hester's kindness to her. Lady
+Hester's immaculate caligraphy and frigid style give in our easier days
+an impression of distance and austerity.</p>
+
+<p>Ann, when she was little more than twenty, may be said to have entered
+public life by becoming a maid of honour to Queen Caroline, the wife of
+George II. From this moment she became one of that group of
+distinguished women, not blue but brilliant, who adorned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</a></span> England in the
+eighteenth century by their idiosyncrasies as much as by their
+abilities. She was courted and beloved by characters so famous as Gay's
+Duchess of Queensberry and George the Second's Lady Suffolk, and by Mrs.
+Montagu, who was much more blue than brilliant; for her essay on
+Shakespeare, so much lauded by her contemporaries, has long been dead
+and buried. In her dear Mrs. Pitt's conversation, declared this paragon
+of pedants, she saw Minerva without the formal owl on her helmet.</p>
+
+<p>Among men she corresponded with her neighbour, Horace Walpole (who felt
+for her an affection tempered with alarm), Lord Chesterfield, and Lord
+Mansfield. 'She had charms enough to kindle a passion in the celebrated
+Lord Lyttelton,' says Camelford; Dr. Ayscough, a coarse and crafty
+ecclesiastic, whose acquaintance Pitt and Lyttelton had made at Oxford,
+and who was a trusted adviser of Frederick, Prince of Wales, sought her
+in marriage;<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> but there seem no other traces of the tender passion in
+her life. For the whim, if it indeed were not a joke, which made her ask
+Lady Suffolk to assist her to secure the hand of Lord Bath (then about
+seventy, when she herself was forty-six), hardly comes under that
+description. Ann was, indeed, made rather for admiration than for love.
+Bolingbroke, who called William 'Sublimity Pitt,' called Ann 'Divinity
+Pitt.'<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> But she was, one may gather, destitute of beauty,<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> and
+her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</a></span> vigorous originality of character and conversation inspired, we
+suspect, more awe than affection. The delightful sprightliness of youth
+is apt with age or encouragement to sour into a blistering insolence,
+and Ann had all the sarcastic powers of her brother. For example,
+Chesterfield calling on her in his later life complained of decay. 'I
+fear,' he said, 'that I am growing an old woman.' 'I am glad of it,'
+briskly replied Ann, 'I was afraid you were growing an old man, which
+you know is a much worse thing.'<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> An attractive, even fascinating,
+member of society, she was something too formidable for the ordinary man
+to take to his bosom and his hearth. Reviewing her life, we think that
+the real and sole object of her love was her brother William, even when
+her love for the moment vented itself, as love sometimes does, in
+quarrel. Strife was necessary to the Pitts, and when they waged war with
+each other it was no battle of roses. The disputes of lovers and
+relatives, like amicable lawsuits, are apt to become serious affairs,
+and with this race they were conflicts of the tomahawk. Be that as it
+may, and whatever the cause, William and Ann adored each other, kept
+house together, and then quarrelled with prodigious violence and effect.
+At present we are not near that point. Ann is her brother's 'little
+Nan,' 'little Jug,' and he is writing her the delightful letters
+contained in this chapter, written, says Camelford, who preserved them,
+with the passion of a lover rather than that of a brother. To us they
+represent rather the special relation of a brother and sister, when
+affection and intimacy have grown with their growth, from the nursery
+and the schoolroom to riper years, not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</a></span> unfrequently the sweetest and
+tenderest of human connections. Our only regret must be that William did
+not cherish Ann's letters as she did his, for they may well have
+possessed her peculiar charm. 'She equalled her brother, Lord Chatham,'
+writes her nephew, who knew them both well, 'in quickness of parts, and
+exceeded him in wit and in all those nameless graces and attentions by
+which conversation is enlivened and endeared.' At the same time, one may
+reluctantly admit that such letters of hers as survive, give one little
+desire for more. The same, however, may be said of her great brother's
+habitual epistles (for they can be called nothing less); and their
+correspondence together was something apart, the gay and engaging
+eclogue of two young hearts; so that Ann, like William, must have been
+at her best in her early letters to him.</p>
+
+<p>And so we set forth these delightful letters of a lad of twenty-two to
+his favourite sister. They need no comment; of the allusions no
+explanation can now be given or would be worth giving; but the letters
+speak for themselves.<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Boconnock, Jan<sup>y</sup> 3, 1730.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Nanny,&mdash;As you have degraded my sheets From y<sup>e</sup> rank and
+Quality of a Letter, merely for Containing a few Innocent Questions,
+I am determin'd to avoid such rigour for the future by Confining
+myself to bare narration: first, Then we are to have a ball this
+week at Mr. Hawky's Child-feast, (a Heathenish Name for the
+Christian Institution of Baptism), where the Ladies intend to shine
+most irresistably, and like enfants perdus, thrust themselves in the
+very front of y<sup>e</sup> Battle, break some stubborn Tramontanne Hearts, or
+Die of the spleen upon the spot. The next thing I have to say,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</a></span>
+(Don't be afraid of a Question) Is, that we set out y<sup>e</sup> end of the
+same week, and propose seeing you about a week after our departure.
+I'l say no more, least I should forget y<sup>e</sup> restrictions I have Laid
+myself under and launch out into some Impious enquiries that don't
+suit my sex. Adieu, Dearest Nanny, till I have the pleasure of
+seeing you at Bath.<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next letter is from Swallowfield, one of the Pitt houses. Ayscough
+has proposed to Ann. He is a favourite butt of William's, who seems to
+rejoice in his discomfiture.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Swallowfeild, Sep. y<sup>e</sup> 29<sup>th</sup>, 1730.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am quite tired of waiting for a letter from my Dear Nanny, and am
+determin'd by way of revenge to fatigue you as much by obliging you
+to read a very long letter from myself, as you have me with the
+eager expectation of receiving one from you. The excuse you assign'd
+for not doing it sooner fills me with apprehensions for your health;
+Is it that you still converse only with Doctor Bave,<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> or that you
+have already changed the old Physician for the young Galant? Is it
+the want of conversation That denies you matter, or the entire
+engagement to it that won't allow you time for a letter? Be it as it
+will, I flatter myself into a beleif of the Latter, chusing rather
+to be very angry with you for your neglect of me, than sincerely
+afflicted for your want of health. I desire I may know from yourself
+what advances you make towards your recovery; you never can want a
+subject to write to me upon, while you have it in your power to
+entertain me with a prospect of seeing you perfectly restored to
+health, and in consequence of that to the sprightly exertion of your
+understanding and full display (as my Lady Lynn elegantly has it) of
+your Primitive Beauties. Why shou'd I mention Ayscough's overthrow!
+That is a conquest perhaps of a nature not so brilliant as to touch
+your heart with much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</a></span> exultation; But lett me tell you, a man of his
+wit in one's suite has no Ill air; You may hear enough of eyes and
+flames and such gentle flows of tender nonsense from every Fop that
+can remember, but I can assure you Child, a man can think that
+declares his Passion by saying Tis not a sett of Features I admire,
+&amp;c. Such a Lover is the Ridiculous Skew,<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> who Instead of
+whispering his soft Tale to the woods and lonely Rocks, proclaims to
+all the world he loves Miss Nanny&mdash;Fâth (<i>sic</i>)&mdash;with the same
+confidence He wou'd pronounce an Heretical Sermon at St. Mary's. I
+must quit your admirer to enquire after the condition of the Colonel
+and his Lady,<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> and to assure' em of my most hearty wishes for
+Their health and happiness. I beg leave to repeat the same to Miss
+Lenard, who I hope will recruit her spirits after so much affliction
+with y<sup>e</sup> holsome Application of a Fiddle. I shall communicate to you
+next Post a Translation of an Elegy of Tibullus By Lyttelton, who
+orders me to say it was done for you:<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> I shall then be able to
+say whether I go to Cornwall or no, so that you may know how to
+direct to me.</p>
+
+<p>I need not say what you are to do with the hair enclosed to you from
+Mrs. Pitt. Adieu dear Nanny.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next letter is from Blandford, where the writer is stopping on his
+way to Boconnoc, which he gives as his address at the end of the letter.
+He is still occupied with his sister's career as a flirt.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Blanford: Oct. y<sup>e</sup> 13<sup>th</sup>. 1730.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>As we mutually complain'd of the silence of Each other, so I
+conclude we mutually have Forgiven it: But had I continued it, my
+Dear, Till I had something more entertaining to talk of Than an
+execrable journey to Cornwall, perhaps You might not have had much
+reason to complain of me. I have not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</a></span> had a minute's pleasure from
+my own thoughts since I left Swallowfeild, till now I give them up
+entirely to you, and Paint you to myself in the hands of some
+agreeable Partner, as happy as the new way of wooing can make you. I
+can not help suggesting To you here a little grave advice, which is,
+not to lett your glorious Thirst of Conquest transport You so far,
+as to lose your health in acquiring Hearts: I know I am a bold man
+to dissuade One from dansing a great deal that danses very
+gracefully; but once more I repeat, beware of shining too much;
+content yourself to be healthy first, even tho you suspend your
+triumphs a week or ten days. I beg I may not be misconstrued To
+insinuate anything here in favour of my own sex, or to serve the
+sinister ends of an envious Sister or two; no; I scorn such mean
+artifices. In God's Name, when the waters have had their Effect,
+give no Quarter, faites main basse upon all you meet, ŕ coup
+d'eventelle, ŕ coup d'Oeil: spare neither age nor condition: but
+like an Unskilfull Generall don't begin to take the Feild till your
+military stores are provided and your magazines well furnish'd. Thus
+Have I acquitted myself not only as an able but honest Counsellour,
+and ventured to represent to you your true Interest, tho' never so
+distastefull. Adieu, my Dear Nanny, till you renew our Conversation
+by a speedy letter. My sincere respects to the Col. and family.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>Boconnock Near Bodmin.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Next comes the letter in which he curses Boconnoc, but only because of
+its remoteness. He lives, it may be presumed, at the family house from
+economy. But he is not at ease about Ann's health, and longs to be at
+Bath to be with her.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Boconnock. Nov<sup>r</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 15<sup>th</sup> 1730.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I read all my Dear Nanny's letters with so much pleasure, that I
+grow more and more out of temper with y<sup>e</sup> remoteness of this cursed
+hiding place, where The distance of some hundred Miles denies me the
+Repetition of it so often as I eagerly desire. But as much as I am
+pleas'd with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</a></span> prettiness of your style and manner of writing, I
+cant help feeling a sensible uneasiness to hear no news of your
+amendment; cou'd my Dear Girl add that to them, they wou'd give me a
+satisfaction that wou'd bear some proportion to The degree of your
+Esteem, you convince me I possess. We are all sollicitous to hear
+Doctor Baves opinion of your case, which I beg you will not fail to
+send me in your next letter. You will before this reaches you, have
+rec<sup>d</sup> a letter from my Brother, which I hope will give you perfect
+satisfaction with regard to your further demands. As I shall not go
+to London Before my Brother, it will not be absolutely in my Power
+to see you in my way: I am not however without hopes of prevailing
+upon him to go from Blanford to Bath, which is not above thirty
+Miles. Beleive me I shall have it at heart to make you this visit,
+having two such powerful motives to it, as my Own Pleasure and
+yours. All proofs of your affection To me are highly agreeable, and
+I am willing to measure the value you may set upon mine to you, By
+the same favourable standard. Be assured therefore I shall lett slip
+no occasion of giving what I shall in my turn receive with infinite
+pleasure: Pray assure Colonel Lanoe and his family of my good
+wishes; and let us know what benefit they receive from the waters. I
+have time for no more. Adieu My Dear Girl.<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>He was now apparently with his regiment at Northampton, though he was
+not gazetted till February.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Northton. Jan. 7, 1731.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am just in my Dear Nanny's Condition, when she tells me she sat
+down determin'd to write tho' she had Nothing to say: but I know not
+how it comes to pass, One has a pleasure in saying and hearing very
+nothings, where one loves: while I have my paper before me I Fancy
+myself in company with you, and while you read my letters, you hear
+me chattering to you, tis at least an interruption to working or
+reading, that serves to diversify Things a little, to be forced to
+run<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</a></span> your eyes over a side or Two of paper; tho' it says nothing at
+all. I remember, when I saw you last, you had a thought of reading
+and Translating Voiture's letters: I beg you will take him up as
+soon as you have got through this of mine, To recompense you for the
+dullest of Letters, what will you Have me do? I come from two hours
+muzzy conversation To a house full of swearing Butchers and Drunken
+Butter women, and in short all the blessings of a market day: In
+such a situation what can the wit of man suggest to him? Oh for the
+restless Tongue of Dear little Jug! She never knows the painful
+state of Silence In the midst of uproar: for my Part I think I cou'd
+write a better letter in a storm at sea, or in my own way, at a
+Bombardment, than in my present situation. I won't have this called
+a Conversation: it shall pass for a mute interview, adieu my Dearest
+Nanny: preserve your health is y<sup>e</sup> only word of consequence I can
+say to-night.</p>
+
+<p>Compliments to my Sis. Pitt, and all my Friends that come in your
+way.<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Now, for the only time in his life perhaps, we find him engaged
+reluctantly in drinking bouts, the necessary discipline of a military
+mess in those days. He refers to the amiability of Charles Feilding in a
+later letter.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Northton. Feb<sup>ry</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 9. 1731.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I have been a monstrous time out of my Dearest Nanny's Company; the
+date of your Letter before me, Me fait de sanglantes reproches: I
+say nothing in my own behalf, but Frankly confess, in aggravation of
+my silence, that I have neglected you for a course of drunken
+conversation, which I have some days been in. The service wou'd be
+the most inactive life in y<sup>e</sup> world if Charles Feilding was out of
+it; As long as he is with us, we seldom remain long without pretty
+smart Action: I am just releiv'd by one night's rest, from an
+attaque that lasted sixteen hours, but as a Heroe should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</a></span> never
+boast, I have done y<sup>e</sup> state some service and they know't&mdash;no more
+of that.</p>
+
+<p>What shall I talk of to my dear Girl? I have told her I love Her, in
+every shape I cou'd think of: we'l converse in French and tell one
+another y<sup>e</sup> same things under the Dress of Novelty. <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mon aimable
+Fille, rien ne m'est si doux que de recevoir de votre part les
+marques d'une ardente amitié, si ce n'est de vous en donner
+moi-meme.</span> I did not think I cou'd have wrote a sentence so easily,
+<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mais les paroles obeissent toujours aux sentiments du coeur.</span> Let me
+tell you once more, in plain English, your letter was infinitely
+pretty; you may leave off Voiture whenever you please. I hope little
+Jug is still talking at Boconnock; how Fares it with my Statira, my
+angry Dear? I can think of nothing so likely to bring her into
+Temper, as telling Her, her Skew will soon revisit y<sup>e</sup> groves of
+Boconnock, where they may pass y<sup>e</sup> Long Day, and tend a few sheep
+together. I beg she'l accept of y<sup>e</sup> following stanza I met with by
+chance in some french poesy, and put a Tune to it, which She may
+warble in honour of her gentle loveing shepherd:</p>
+
+<div class="poem" lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Dans ces Lieux solitaires<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Daphnis est de retour:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Deesse de Cythere<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Celebre ce grand jour:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rapellez sur ces rives<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Les amours envolés,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Les graces fugitives<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">et les Ris exilés.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>my Love and services to all Freinds: My Brother gives me y<sup>e</sup>
+pleasure of hearing my Sist<sup>r</sup> Pitt is very well: pray make my
+apologies for not writing to her.</p>
+
+<div class="poem" lang="it" xml:lang="it"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Adio Anima mia bella,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dolce speranza mia.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W<sup>m</sup> Pitt</span>.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>He has now come to London apparently to kiss hands for his commission.
+How little George II. can have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</a></span> realised what his relations were to be
+with the raw young cornet.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>London: March y<sup>e</sup> 5: 1731.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I thank my Dearest Nanny for her Letter Though it abused me, I think
+without Reasonable Grounds: tis true I dont write so often as I wish
+to see you, yet I won't allow I have let our conversation suffer any
+considerable Interruption. I Have had no opportunity yet of
+cultivating any farther acquaintance with M<sup>r</sup> Molinox than by
+receiving his name and leaving Mine: I shall need no other
+inducement to his Freindship than the presumption of his civility to
+you, which your letter gives me reason to think: I shall ever esteem
+Any Man deserving of my regard who loves In any degree what so
+thoroughly merits and possesses my Heart as my Dear Girl. I have the
+pleasure of telling you my Commission is sign'd and I have Kiss'd
+hands for it, so that my Country Quarters won't be Cornwall this
+Summer. You are like to have Company soon with you, Hollins having
+ordered my Sister Pitt the Bath immediately: what becomes of the two
+poor vestals I dont yet know. the Town produces nothing new, as the
+Place you are in I suppose, produces absolutely nothing at all: kill
+some of your time by writing often to one who will always contribute
+to make you pass it more pleasurably, when in his Power. Adieu,
+recover y<sup>r</sup> health, and preserve Chearfulness enough to give your
+Understanding a fair light.<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a></p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>rs</sup> most sensibly</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next letter was written in the midst of what would now be called a
+bear-fight, carried on apparently in the room of the demure Lyttelton.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>London. March y<sup>e</sup> 13: 1731.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am now lock'd into George's room; the girls Thundering at the door
+as if Heaven and Earth would come together: I am certainly the
+warmest Brother, or the coldest Gallant In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</a></span> the Universe, to suffer
+the gentle Impertinencies the sportly Sollicitations of two girls
+not quite despicable without emotion, and bestow my Time and spirits
+upon a Sister: But in effect the thing is not so strange or
+unreasonable, for every Man may have Girls worthy his attention, but
+few, sisters so conversible as my Dear Nanny. Tis impossible to say
+much, amidst this rocking of the doors Chairs and tables: I fancy
+myself in a storm Of the utmost danger and horror; and were I really
+in one, I would not cease to think of my Dear Girl, till I lost my
+fears and Trepidations in the object of my tenderest care and
+sincerest zeal. let the winds roar, and the big Torrent burst! I
+won't leave my Nanny for any Lady of you all, but with the warmest
+assurance of unalterable affection, Adieu.<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>He is now once more in country quarters, grievously hipped. The allusion
+to the barmaid 'who young at the bar is just learning to score' reads
+like a line from some forgotten song. In his despair he threatens to get
+drunk.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Northampton April y<sup>e</sup> 9<sup>th.</sup> 1731.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>After neglecting my Dear Girl so many Posts In the joys of London, I
+should be deservedly Punished by the Loss of your correspondence now
+I very much stand in need of it: I am come from an agreeable set of
+acquaintance in Town to a Place, where the wings of Gallantry must
+Be terribly clip'd, and can hope to soar No higher than to Dolly,
+who young at the Bar is just Learning to score&mdash;what must I do? my
+head is not settled enough to study; nor my heart light enough to
+find amusement In doing nothing. I have in short no resource But
+flying to the conversation of my distant Freinds and supplying the
+Loss of the jolis entretiens I have left behind by telling my greifs
+and hearing myself pity'd. I shall every Post go near to waft a sigh
+from Quarters to the Bath, which you shall rally me very prettyly
+upon, suppose me in Love, laugh at my cruel fate a little, then bid
+me hope<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</a></span> for a Fair wind and better weather. I entreat you Be very
+trifling and badine, send me witty letters or I must chear my heart
+at the expense Of my head and get drunk with bad Port To kill time.
+My sister is by this time with You and I hope the Girls: my Love to
+her and bid her send away her husband and drink away. my spirits
+flag, et je n'en puis plus, adieu.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>One would guess, but one can only guess, that the following letter
+referred to some project of marrying William, which Ann dreaded as
+causing a separation from her.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Northampton. May y<sup>e</sup> 21: 1731.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>What shall I say to my Dearest Nanny for sinking into a tenderness
+below y<sup>e</sup> dignity of her spirit and Genius? I sat down with a
+resolution to scold you off for a little Loving Fool, but Find
+myself upon examination your very own Brother and as fond of
+receiving such testimonies of the Excess of y<sup>r</sup> affection, as you
+are of Bestowing them: t'wou'd be more becoming y<sup>e</sup> Firmness of a
+man to reprove you a little upon this occasion, and advise you to
+fortify your Mind against any such Separation as you so kindly
+apprehend, but as your fears are, I believe at present Groundless, I
+chuse rather To talk to you like an affectionate Freind, than a
+stern Philosopher and return every Fear you Feel for me with a most
+ardent wish for your Happiness: Beleive me t'will wound my Quiet to
+be forced to do anything to disturb yours, But shou'd such an event
+as you are alarm'd at, arrive, your own reason will soon convince
+your tender Fears, there is but one Party for me to take: All the
+Dictates of Prudence, all the Considerations of Interest must
+determine me to it: But I am Insensibly drawn in to prove I ought to
+do, what There is no appearance I shall have in my Power to do,
+therefore my Dear Girl, suspend your Inquietudes, as I will my
+Arguments, and think I Long to see you in y<sup>e</sup> full enjoyment of y<sup>r</sup>
+Health and Spirits, which I hope to be able<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</a></span> to do early in August.
+Adieu my Dearest Nanny, Love me and preserve your own happiness.</p>
+
+<p>I never rec<sup>d</sup> a Line from my Sister Pitt.</p>
+
+<p>But will write to her soon. I hope she is well.<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This next letter is taken up with poking fun at Ayscough. The 'poor
+nuns' would be Pitt's sisters, whom he calls elsewhere the 'poor
+vestals.'<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>North'ton June y<sup>e</sup> 17: 1731.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My Dear Nanny's letter from Bath gave me so many Pleasures that I
+don't know which to thank her for first: the Prettiness of it tells
+me she has more sense than her sex, the affection of it declares she
+is more capable of Freindship Than her sex: and to compleat my joy,
+It assures me she no longer wants her health: which may Heaven
+continue to my Dear Girl! If anything can make me devout, t'is my
+Zeal for your happiness: However don't let the Parson<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> know this
+Prayer escaped me for fear she (<i>sic</i>) shou'd be malicious enough to
+Tell me of it in company some time or other at Quarters. I am glad
+he is with you: he will prove as good an enlivener of the spirits
+and invigourate the conversation amongst you, as much as Bath waters
+do The Blood. Be sure not to suffer him to be Indolent and withdraw
+his Wit from y<sup>e</sup> Service of y<sup>e</sup> Company: I know y<sup>e</sup> Dog sometimes
+grows tired of being laugh't at: But no matter: insist upon his
+being a Man of humour every Day but Sunday. I expect you will all
+Three Lose your reputations in y<sup>e</sup> country for him: and indeed
+there's no Intimacy with one of His Cloath without too much room for
+Suspicion: But as you don't expect to make your fortune there, The
+thing is not so deplorable. You will be mutually Happy in meeting
+the Poor Nuns again: I very much fear I shall not partake of that
+pleasure so soon as August:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</a></span> Beleive me I long for nothing more than
+to see you all well and happy: I break off y<sup>e</sup> Conversation with
+great reluctance To go to Supper: Adieu Dearest Nanny.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Ann was now to be a maid of honour and venture on the new world of a
+court. So she asks advice of her sage young brother, and he gives his
+admonitions in French, probably from fear of the Post Office.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+
+Undated.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vous voulez que je vous dise, mon aimable, ce que je pense de la vie
+que vous allez mener ŕ la cour; votre Interest, qui me touche de
+prčs, m'y fait faire mille Reflexions: en voici mon Idée. Le cour me
+paroit une mer peu aisée ŕ naviger, mais qui ne manque pas d'ouvrir
+aux mariniers bien entendűs le commerce le plus avantageux; j'entens
+l'art de connoitre le monde et de s'en faire connoitre agreablement:
+Un Esprit habile sans artifice, et un coeur gai sans legereté vous
+rendent ce voiage pleins d'agrements et de plaisirs, pendant que la
+vertu qui ne se dement jamais, est l'Etoile fixe qui vous empeche de
+vous y egarer.</p>
+
+<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">En effet n'est-il pas ŕ souhaiter pour une Personne qu'on aime, et
+dont on connoit bien les forces, de la voir exposée ŕ un tel point,
+qu'elle ne puisse s'en tirer qu'avec le secours du bon sens et de la
+Prudence? Ce sont les difficultés qui donnent au merite tout son
+jour, et souvent elles en font naitre: Vous en avez, mon aimable, et
+il ne s'agit que de le mettre en oeuvre: mais voici ce qui vous
+embarasse: La Modestie, qui en est une Considerable, cache mille
+autres vertus en se montrant toujours elle-meme; Elle ne laisse pas
+en cela de faire un peu le Tyran: elle nous fait souvenir de ces
+meres qui par un excez de Pruderie derobent leurs Filles aux yeux du
+monde, toutes aimables qu'elles soient, mais que cette Modestie
+songe ŕ prendre quelque fois le Parti de la retraite, et qu'elle
+scache qu'on ne la regrette gueres, quand on voit quelque belle
+vertu briller ŕ sa place.</p>
+
+<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ŕ mon avis il n'y a rien de si outrée que l'idée que de<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</a></span> certaines
+gens se sont fait de la cour des Princes: Ils ne s'y figurent que
+l'Envie et ses noirceurs, la Perfidie, et les suites funestes de
+l'amour dereglé: ils en enlaidissent tellement la ressemblance qu'on
+ne la reconnoit plus: pour vous, ma chčre, Ie ne vous conseille ni
+de vous troubler la cervelle d'affreuses Chimeres, ni de vous
+endormir tout ŕ fait a l'ombre de la securité. Pour ce qui est de
+l'amour, il seroit ridicule d'entreprendre de vous en Tracer le
+Portrait, Il ne se fera comprendre que par Luimeme: en un mot, qu'il
+soit un Dieu bienfaissant ou qu'il ne soit qu'un Demon malin, donnez
+vous garde de l'offenser, car, effectivement, c'est un Personnage ŕ
+represailles: enfin en quelque caractere que vous le voyez, Il vous
+le faudra respecter: dans l'un vous l'aimerez comme fidele
+chretienne; dans l'autre, reverez le afin qu'il ne vous fasse point
+de mal. adieu ma tres chere.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>William has now set out on his foreign tour, of which we caught some
+glimpses in letters to his mother. We have already had his letter to his
+mother from Paris.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Paris May y<sup>e</sup> 3<sup>rd:</sup> N.S. 1733.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I don't know whether my Dearest Nanny is not at this moment angry
+with me for not writing sooner; But cou'd you see the hurry this
+Place throws a man into upon his arrival, you wou'd rather wonder I
+write at all. I have done nothing since I came to Paris, but run up
+and down and see; so that beleive me it is a sort of Novelty to set
+down and think: Tis with pleasure I return to you from The variety
+of fine sights which have engaged me; my eyes have been long enough
+entertain'd, to give my Heart leisure to indulge itself in a short
+conversation with my Dear Girl. It may sound oddly to say I love you
+best at a great distance, but surely absence best shows us the Value
+of a Thing, by making us feel how much we want it: I find already I
+shall have many vacant hours that wou'd be agreably fill'd up with
+the company of something one esteems; but I must comfort myself ŕ la
+francoise, le bannis la Sagesse et la Raison; c'est de notre vie le
+Poison. I shall set out for Besancon in franche comté In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</a></span> three or
+four days, where I shall stay till autumn, write often and direct to
+me chez Mons<sup>r</sup> Alexandre Banquier dans la Rue St. Appoline Prčs de
+la Porte St. Denis ŕ Paris who will Take care to send them to me. I
+hope you like your way of Life better every Day; I don't know
+whether you may not be said to be travelling too; France is hardly
+newer to me than Court was to you; may you find the Country mend
+upon you the farther you advance in it: bon voyage ma chere, and may
+you find at your journey's end as good an inn as matrimony can
+afford you. I am</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Your most aff<sup>t</sup> Brother</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My Love to Kitty and Harriot. I cou'd not write to all and you are
+the only one I was sure to find.</p>
+
+<p>I write this Post to Skew; if he is not in Town, enquire at his
+Lodgings for y<sup>e</sup> letter and send it. I hope my Brother rece<sup>d</sup> my
+Letter.<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next letter leaves him at Besançon, the ancient capital of
+Franche-Comté, wrested from the Spaniards in 1678, and now become a
+French fortress, famous for its silver watches. Here Pitt loses his
+heart.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Besancon. June the 5: 1733. N.S.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I receiv'd my Dear Nanny's letter yesterday: it has no Date, but I
+imagine by some of the Contents it has been a tedious time upon the
+road. The direction I left was a very proper one and particular
+enough, Alexander being generally known at Paris, so that the street
+of his abode is unnecessary: however To be very sure of meeting with
+no disappointment In a pleasure I desire to indulge myself in as
+often as you'l let me, direct to me at Alexander's dans la rue St.
+Appoline prčs de la Porte St. Denis ŕ Paris, who will carefully
+transmit all letters to me, wherever I am. The pleasure you give me
+in the account of Kitty's recovery, is disagreably accompanied with
+that of Poor Harriot's Relapse into an ill State of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</a></span> Health; which I
+too much fear will never be removed till her mind is made a little
+easy: I never think of her but with great uneasiness, my tenderness
+for her begins to turn to sorrow and affliction; I consider her in a
+great degree lost, and buried almost in an unsuccessfull Ingagement:
+You have all my warmest wishes for your happiness and prosperity. I
+persuade myself you are in the high road to them, make the best of
+your way I beg of you; and contrive to finish your Travels by the
+time of my return. I can say but little of Besancon yet: The Place
+is externally pretty enough how it will prove upon a more intimate
+knowledge of it, I can't say. My Lord Walgrave was so good as to
+procure me letters For the Commandant and a Lady of this Place who
+passes for the finest Woman here. I have had the honour to dine with
+her at her campagne, where I was very handsomely regaled: what
+ressource Her acquaintance will be, I shall be better able to judge
+after another visit or two.</p>
+
+<p>Skew hinted something to me concerning Kitty, which he said was not
+quite chimerical. If it be any suite of my Mother's project for her
+I doubt the Success. I have not Heard a word from my Brother, tho' I
+have wrote to him three times. If he han't received them all let him
+know it.</p>
+
+<p>I find Sir James Gray here, who is a very pretty sort of Man and
+once more my schoolfellow; between my letters and the acquaintance
+he has made in the Town, we shall be of some Use to one another.
+Adieu.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Your most aff<sup>t</sup> Freind and Brother</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I wish you joy of Lord William's Match.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>He is next found at Marseilles, where he discovers that he is still sore
+from his love affair at Besançon.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Marseilles, sep: y<sup>e</sup> 1: 1733.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">j'ai honte ŕ regarder la datte de votre derniere lettre, ŕ laquelle
+je vai faire reponse: vous me dites ma Chere, que vous etes fort
+aise que vos lettres me fassent plaisir, d'autant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</a></span> plus que vous
+croiez en avoir obligation plutot ŕ ma prevention pour vous, qu'ŕ
+votre merite. Qu'y a-til de plus obligeant Pour moi ou de plus
+injuste pour vous meme?</p>
+
+<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Il est vrai que je vous aime ŕ un point qui passe bien souvent dans
+le monde pour aveuglement: mais je prétens vous aimer en
+connoisseur, je veux que le gout et la raison fassent ici ce que
+l'entetement fait d'ordinaire ailleurs. ne guerirez vous jamais de
+cette modestie outrée? de grace ne faites plus Tort ŕ vous meme par
+une humilité qui n'est pas de ce bas lieu, et cessez de louer mon
+amitié aux depens de mon gout.</p>
+
+<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vous voiez par la datte de ceci que je suis ŕ Marseilles, j'y suis
+depuis deux jours et conte d'en partir dans deux ou trois jours pour
+Monpelier, oů nous ferons un sejour ŕ peu pres comme celui que nous
+ferons ici: je crois passer l'hiver a Luneville, et de<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> a Lyon
+par Geneve et le long du Rhin ŕ Strasbourg d'oů je me rendrai en
+Lorraine. je viens de quitter Besancon avec infiniment de regrets:
+voulez vous que je me confesse ŕ vous? j'y avois un plus fort
+attachement que je ne croiois, avant que de me Trouver sur le Point
+de partir: tant il est vrai que l'on ne sent jamais si bien le prix
+d'une chose Que lorsque il la faut perdre. Nous y avions de fort
+aimables connoissances, et je trouve presentement ŕ plus de soixante
+Lieues de loin, que j'y aurois passer l'hyver volontiers, je n'en ai
+pas tout ŕ travers du coeur, mais toutefois j'en ai. adieu ma chere,
+faites moi d'abord reponse, et imputez mon silence passé ŕ toute
+autre cause que ŕ un refroidissement pour vous. je suis avec tout la
+tendresse du monde</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+votre affectionné Serviteur<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And now he has arrived at Luneville, the city of the moon, once
+dedicated to the worship of Diana, but at this time devoted to the
+manufacture of glass and pottery. In four years it was to be enlivened
+by the gay court of Stanislas;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</a></span> but it was now a provincial town,
+occupied provisionally by the French in defiance of its absentee Duke,
+Francis, afterwards Emperor of Germany. Pitt is not yet cured of his
+passion. It is painful to him to revive it by giving a description of
+the lady, and he seems to feel her want of noble birth as if he had
+contemplated marriage.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Luneville ce 12: d'octob. N.S. 1733.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Votre lettre me réjouit fort en m'apprenant que votre vie est
+heureuse: quand vous ne me manderiez que cela une fois la semaine,
+votre commerce me donneroit toute la satisfaction du monde: mais
+d'ailleurs il y'a, mon aimable, un tour agreable dans tout ce que
+vous me dites, qui me rend votre conversation charmante. La
+tendresse de ses amis, en quelque expression que ce soit, nous
+touche; mais quand elle se presente ŕ nous d'une maniere aisée et
+delicate, l'esprit participe ŕ la satisfaction que la coeur en
+recoit.</p>
+
+<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vous me demandez le Portrait de la Belle: faites vous bien attention
+ŕ quoi vous m'allez engager? je commence ŕ respirer et vous voulez
+me replonger dans les douleurs que m'a causées sa perte, en
+m'obligeant de renouveller dans mon esprit les traits qui s'en
+etoient emparés. L'absence est un grand Medecin: je me suis si bien
+trouvé de ses remedes que je ne desespere pas d'en pouvoir revenir:
+laissez lui faire encore un peu et je vous ferai le Portrait, que
+vous me demandez, assez ŕ l'aise. Cependant trouvez bon que je vous
+en fasse seulement un crayon (ŕ la hate?) en vous disant que,
+quoique son coeur fűt certainement neuf, son esprit ne l'etoit point
+(j'en parle comme de feu ma Flamme) que sa Taille etoit grande et
+des plus parfaites, son air simple avec quelque chose de noble; Pour
+ses Traits je n'y touche pas: suffit que vous sachiez que ce fut de
+ces beautés d'un grand effet, et que sa Physionomie prononcât
+quelque chose des qualités d'une ame admirable ne vous attendez pas
+pour le present Que je vous en donne un detail si exact que vous en
+puissiez la reconnoittre si elle se trouvoit sur votre chemin: je
+n'ose m'y laisser aller<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</a></span> davantage: nous en parlerons un jour plus
+amplement: mais avant de quitter son chapitre il faut que je vous
+dise tout: Elle n'a point de titre ni de grand nom qui impose; et
+c'est lŕ le diable. C'est simplement Madamoiselle de &mdash;&mdash; fille cadette
+de Mons<sup>r</sup> de &mdash;&mdash; ecuyer ŕ Besancon: Religieuse, Vous avez bien dit que
+j'en parlerai volontiers: de quoi vous avisez vous de mettre un
+homme sur le chapitre de ses amours? Vous saviez que quand on y est,
+on ne scait jamais oů finir, et que vous vous exposez ŕ essuier tout
+ce qui vient au bout de sa plume, voila trop parler de mes affaires:
+parlons un peu des votres: faisons des demandes par rapport ŕ
+certain peuple connu sous le titre d'amants. Parler franchement et
+donnez m'en des nouvelles, vous ne scauriez ętre si content que vous
+l'ętes so vous n'aviez range quelque coeur sous vos lois: adieu:
+aimons nous toujours et songeons a nous render heureux.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">W. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>No one can be more sensible than I am of the esteem of Charles
+Feilding, nor more disposed to do justice to the amiableness of his
+character.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Six weeks afterwards all trace of his love affair has disappeared; it is
+not the mere cessation of pain, it is oblivion.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Luneville. Nov. y<sup>e</sup> 22: 1733.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les vérités obligeantes que vous me dites, ne me sont pas seulement
+cheres par le fond de tendresse qu'elles me font vous connoitre pour
+moi, elles le sont au dernier point par la maniere agreable dont
+vous les tournez: j'aime autant que votre coeur s'explique avec moi
+en bon Anglois qu'en bon francois, d'autant plus que ce qu'on dit en
+sa langue maternelle paroit encore plus Naturel, et c'est la ce qui
+fait le principal merite des lettres d'amitié, je suis charmé, mon
+aimable Bonne, de l'air content dont vous m'ecrivez, j'ai un plaisir
+aussi sensible ŕ me figurer que vous ętes heureuse, que vous etes
+gaie, que j'en pourrois repentir moimęme de tout ce que la joie et
+la gaieté me pourrait offrir: je vous suis present que<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</a></span> si l'etois
+Dans le cabinet ŕ Cote de votre Toilette. Je n'ai plus rien ŕ vous
+dire de Mademoiselle.</p>
+
+<p lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">C'etoit de ces flammes passageres, un eclair qui a passé si vite
+qu'il n'en reste pas le moindre vestige. j'ai oublié jusque au
+portrait que je vous en ai fait: n'allez pas m'accuser de legereté,
+voila comme il faut ętre en voiage: je me fais un fond de constance
+pour mon retour. Souvenez vous de garder votre parole en me faisant
+la confidence de vos premieres amours: que le terme ne vous choque
+pas, je l'entends avec les circonstances qu'il faut. Je ne doute pas
+que vous ne m'en fassiez bientot, au moins si vous avez autant de
+franchise que je me l'imagine. adieu, ma chere, je vous&mdash;(torn)&mdash;de
+terribles bagatelles: mais je ne'en scai rien&mdash;(torn)</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Votre tres affectionné</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>If Miss Molly Lyttelton is in Town, I wish you may see one another
+often, and make a Friendship.<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The two following letters contain obscure allusions, which, so far as we
+can now interpret them, appear to indicate that Thomas Pitt at any rate
+was at this time a ministerialist and supporter of Sir Robert Walpole.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Newbury Octb<sup>r</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 24: 1734.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Nanny,&mdash;You may conceive I was a good deal surprised at M<sup>r</sup>
+Harrison's modest proposal: I thought it indeed so monstrous, that
+y<sup>e</sup> best way of treating it was not to vouchsafe it any answer,
+especially as it did not come immediately from Him: I cannot
+conceive how poor Harriot cou'd think of employing Herself in such a
+message, or at least that she wou'd not understand my neglect in
+answering it, to be (what it is) a thorough contempt of the Noble
+Colonel's ridiculous offer. My first astonishment is a little abated
+by hearing he was encouraged to it by my Brother at Paris, I mean my
+astonishment as to him; For the latter, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</a></span> have done wondering at
+any the most Inscrutable of his proposed designs: it must be
+confess'd, this last (if true) is not inferiour to any of the
+brightest passages of his conduct: removeing me to bring in a Person
+declared in Opposition, and who it is proposed shou'd pay me,
+instead of reimbursing him his expences at Oakhampton. I can talk no
+more of him; I'll endeavour to put him out of my mind till January.</p>
+
+<p>I am extremely pleased to see the time of my deliverance from my Inn
+approach, a month more will bring me to you, when I shall be as
+happy as the endless disapointments and difficulties I have to
+encounter, will allow me: all I have of happiness is confined to you
+and my friend George; you may easily judge of my Impatience to be
+with you; I suppose he's still at Stowe. I am pleased with y<sup>e</sup>
+honour done me to (sic) Lady Suffolk, the more as I am sure it gave
+you pleasure. Adieu Dear Nanny.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Most affec<sup>y</sup> y<sup>rs</sup><br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Newbury. Nov: y<sup>e</sup> 7. 1734.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Nanny,&mdash;I have been persecuted with a succession of little
+impertinent complaints; I have been deliver'd some time of my broken
+tooth, by the most dextrous operator, I beleive, in the World, but
+am at present in my Room with a sore throat, which is very
+troublesome to me. I wou'd not have You be very uneasy at Harrison's
+proposal; it appears to me, as it did at first, of no consequence,
+and deserves being spoken of only for the Impertinence of it. I am
+persuaded it is no more than an absurd, sudden thought of y<sup>e</sup>
+Coll'<sup>s</sup>; 'tis hardly possible my Brother shou'd have given his
+consent to it as a foundation for Harrison to proceed upon with me.
+My Brother's Interest no doubt do's not persuade him to such a
+bargain between Harrison and me: if he intends to consult that, in
+the disposition of this seat in Parliament, he must certainly rather
+oblige me to accept of satisfaction for the loss of it by something
+he may obtain for me, and chuse a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</a></span> man more agreeable to Sir Robt.
+than Harrison, who will put him two thousand pounds in Pocket: I am
+very much deceived if I hear any thing more of it. You misunderstood
+me in thinking I had given no sort of answer to the proposal. I was,
+I confess, little sollicitous about giving a speedy one or a very
+particular one: I said to Harriot in general that I was extremely
+surprised at the offer: that an answer was almost needless for the
+Coll., if he had thought of it since, must be able to guess what
+answer it deserved. that I was sorry she had employ'd herself at all
+in so strange a Proposal, in short something to that effect. I
+apprehend no difficulties from this affair; if I have any to
+encounter they'l come from another Quarter. I wrote to a certain
+Gentleman<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> above a month ago, without answer, so judge of his
+kind disposition towards me. my Lord Pembroke is very good in
+leaving it in my Power to come to Town, if I found it necessary. I
+have at present no thoughts of making use of his Indulgence. I want
+to see you more than you can imagine. Adieu:</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>rs</sup> most affec<sup>ly</sup><br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Lady Suffolk, Ann's principal friend at Court, has now retired from an
+ungrateful servitude. The loss must have been great to Ann, who required
+more than most an experienced and sagacious friend at her elbow.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Newbury Nov: y<sup>e</sup> 17: 1734.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Nanny,&mdash;I was persuaded my Lady Suffolk's removal from court
+wou'd affect you in the Manner you tell me it dos: Your Friend
+M<sup>rs</sup> Herbert, where I dined the day before yesterday, was speaking
+of the thing with concern and was sure it wou'd touch you, as much
+as any Body: your Greifs are so much mine that it wou'd be needless
+to tell you I am sorry for your Loss; I foresee a very disagreeable
+consequence to you from this change, which is, that your Friendship
+with Her may be charg'd upon you as a crime, and what was before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</a></span> a
+support may now be a prejudice to you. Harriot's complaint is far
+from giving me any uneasiness, I think nothing but such a necessity
+wou'd have made Them do what they indisputably ought to do. my
+concern for Her is, that her situation is so bad as to render this
+circumstance, (distresfull as it is) necessary to put her into a
+better. Poor Girl, what unnatural cruelty and Insolence she has to
+suffer from A Person<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> that shou'd be her support and comfort in
+this distress: I have heard him say so many hard Things upon this
+affair, that I think I do him no injustice to say he will be more
+inexorable than the Knight.<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> I suppose Lyttelton is return'd from
+Stowe and has found a letter from me Laying for him at the
+Admiralty. If he's not come back I am afraid he's ill this Pinching
+weather. I continue well, as I was when I wrote to you last. Adieu
+Dear Nanny,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>rs</sup> most affec<sup>ly</sup><br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The letter that follows is important, as it marks an epoch in Pitt's
+life: for he was now at Stowe, where he was to make a long stay, and
+enrol himself in Cobham's band of connections. He had just entered
+Parliament<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> and now commences a politician. But, happily for us, he
+has not yet assumed his political dialect.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Stowe. July y<sup>e</sup> 2: 1735:</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Nanny,&mdash;I am mighty glad to hear you escaped the headach after
+so fatiguing a journey, but I desire that may not prevent your
+applying to a Physician: I am extremely pleas'd with the account you
+give me of the Person<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> you saw, it is a great step to be able to
+seem easy: I wish his mind may ever be as easy, as I have the
+pleasure of hearing his affairs are at present, the other Part of
+your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</a></span> letter astonishes me: I think he'l not succeed, tho' I assure
+you he has my good wishes, for I am persuaded nothing less will ever
+extricate him. The turn indeed is very sudden, but since he has
+taken it, he'l disgrace himself less by obtaining, than losing. My
+L<sup>d</sup> Cobham wou'd have been very glad to see you and wish'd I had
+brought you, I am sorry you lost so good an opportunity of seeing
+Stowe. Adieu</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+most aff<sup>ly</sup> y<sup>rs</sup><br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I have had other business to write to my Brother upon, which has
+hinder'd my speaking of the Orange trees. I'l make Ayscough do it.</p>
+
+<p>I hope you found Lady Suffolk well.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next letter is burthened with mysterious and anonymous allusions, as
+to which conjecture is futile.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Stowe July y<sup>e</sup> 20: 1735.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Nanny,&mdash;I am mighty glad you are so well satisfy'd with the
+match you give me an account of: I was not surpris'd to hear it, for
+I fancy'd I saw it long ago. I have all sort of reasons to wish Her
+happy, but to mention no other, She loves you in the manner I am apt
+to think one shou'd love you. the Person<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> you think pretty easy,
+is far from it: he endeavours to acquiesce under Pain, to bring his
+mind, if possible, to such a state of composure as to go through the
+duties of Life like an honest and Reasonable Man. our Friends<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a>
+Repulse is the most scandalous and ignominious of all things. I want
+to hear a little of his noble designs for next year: Despair must
+produce something Extraordinary in so great a mind. I am seriously
+ashamed of him, and if he was to ask my advice what he should do, I
+think I cou'd only beg him to do nothing: that Man's whole life is a
+sort of consolation to me in my poor little circumstances. He gives
+me occasion to reflect too often, that I wou'd not act his Part<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</a></span> one
+month for twice his estate, but I leave him to talk to you of
+yourself: I don't hear what Broxom says of your headach's: if you
+have not consulted him you have used me very ill: Pray send for him
+and let me know if you are better. Adieu.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+most affectionately Y<sup>rs</sup><br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Pope and Martha Blount were now at Stowe, so was Lady Suffolk; and
+William was polishing himself in the best company.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Stow Sept. y<sup>e</sup> 2: 1735.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Don't say a word more of my never writing, but confess immediately
+that you admire my way of writing more than any Body's, that is my
+way of sending you Postcripts Every Day: I have nothing to say of
+Letters, but M<sup>r</sup> Pope<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> says somewhere, 'Heaven first taught
+Postscripts for the wretches aid,' etc: you must know I han't a word
+to say to you; for I write only to introduce the Postscript, as M<sup>r</sup>
+Bays wou'd make a Poem to bring in a fine thought, that was none of
+his own; I therefore finish to leave more room for my Lady Suffolk.
+adieu.</p>
+
+<p>[In another hand, evidently Lady Suffolk's] how often my Dear Child
+have I wish'd you here? I know you wou'd like it, and I know two who
+thinks (<i>sic</i>) even Stowe wou'd be still more agreeable they talk of
+you I believe both Love you; but one can pun, and talk nonsense
+w<sup>th</sup> M<sup>rs</sup> Blount most Elegantly remember Saturday and never
+forget me, that is, do not be ungratefull.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>We see in the next letter that Pitt was not merely supping with the
+wits, but playing at cricket, with Pope perhaps as umpire.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Stow Sept<sup>r</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 14: 1735.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am very well pleas'd with the conversation you Had lately, and
+that you met with nothing in it that at all corresponds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</a></span> with the
+Subject of my former letter: I shall now be at ease, and give myself
+no more trouble in thinking and conjecturing about it. I am glad my
+Lady Suffolk got so well to Town; if she's not the worse for her
+journey, I fancy you are not much so for her return. if she did not
+happen to be the most amiable Estimable Person one has seen, I
+shou'd still love her For the admirable Talent she has of
+Distinguishing and Describing merit, in which she do's not yeild to
+the Noble L<sup>d</sup> of our acquaintance. if she has done me justice, She
+has Told you I was very stupid and play'd very well at Cricket. I
+obey'd her orders to my L<sup>d</sup> and Lady Cobham; my L<sup>ds</sup> reflection
+was, He wish'd he cou'd take such a journey and do after it just
+what she did. when you see Lyttelton, tell him M<sup>r</sup> Pope has been
+writing a letter to him ever since he has been here, but head-ach
+and Laziness has delay'd it, so that I believe He may be time enough
+at London to bring the letter to him himself, as he talks of setting
+out in a few days. Ayscough has been here, and desires Lyttelton
+will mention him to the Speaker for preaching before the House the
+next 30th of January sermon. I'l leave off for fear I shou'd think
+of half a dozen messages more.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am most affec<sup>ly</sup> Y<sup>rs</sup><br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>direct to me at Stow I am more here than at Touster [?Towcester].
+You must say 'member of Parl<sup>t</sup>' They make me pay always else.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next two letters deal with some dark transaction relating to wine,
+probably smuggled, from Guernsey.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Stow Sept. y<sup>e</sup> 16: 1735.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am very sorry I can't answer all your Questions this Post, but to
+begin with that I can answer the Frame Maker's Name is Bellamy, he
+lives in Rupert Street: as to the Guernsey wine, it is a commission
+of so secret a Nature, and must be treated with such art and
+circumspection, (according to the instructions I am honour'd with)
+That I must desire further time to get the lights necessary to the
+full discovery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</a></span> of so dark an affair. I have been able to penetrate
+no farther than that my L<sup>d</sup> Cobham and his Butler are the only
+Persons at the bottom of the secret, The one I can't ask he being
+abroad; the other I must not, being ty'd up by my orders: there
+remains therefore nothing To be done, but to wait the return of the
+Butler, or larger Power to treat with my L<sup>d</sup> in Person. but to talk
+no longer like a Minister, but an humble Servant of my lady
+Suffolk's, I desire my compliments to Her, and I'l be sure to send
+an answer about the wine next Post. I please myself with thinking
+you are free from Head-ach, both as they are very bad things; and
+because they are y<sup>e</sup> effect with you of other uneasiness: be well
+and happy, is the only advice you want; and the only means by which
+I can be so:</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am most affec<sup>ly</sup> y<sup>rs</sup></p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Stowe. Sept. y<sup>e</sup> 19: 1735.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>If you happen to write to me once in a week or fortnight I am never
+to hear the last of it; but pray admire the exact diligence of my
+correspondence: I don't only answer your letter the first Post, but
+I continue answering It two or three Posts successively: I am now
+only at the second, and you shall see you are not above half
+answer'd yet: but to tell you all I can, the Man M<sup>r</sup> Hardy, who
+sells my L<sup>d</sup> Cobham the Wine in Question, is now in Guernsey; the
+Buttler will write to his correspondent to know when he is like to
+return, which he supposes must be soon&mdash;all which my Lady Suffolk
+shall be informed of: I expect a clear distinct answer from you to
+each letter of the volumes I have lately writ to you.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Adieu.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The following letter alludes in all probability to his brother, and also
+to that Richard Grenville who was afterwards so notorious as Lord
+Temple. It seems strange when one recalls Temple in maturity to read of
+him as Dick, with a careless countenance and jolly laugh. But everybody
+has been young.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Stowe. Sept. y<sup>e</sup> 28: 1735.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I don't understand this way of answering two letters in form, avec
+un Trait de Plume; I expected you shou'd have told me you had
+nothing to tell me in more words, or at least at two different
+times: this sort of Correspondence, where one must not talk, seems
+rather a sort of visit to shew yourself: I hope you won't be in such
+a hurry next time; that I shall see you a little longer, or I shall
+call it only leaving your name, after all this, I am not really
+angry at the shortness of your last letter; you gave a reason that
+satisfied me entirely. I hope our friend is well; I had the Pleasure
+of hearing he seem'd in very good Spirits, when Dick Greenville
+(sic) saw him; I hope really was so. I suppose You have seen Dick's
+careless countenance at Kensington, and that you begin to be
+acquainted with his Laugh. I am called to breakfast, so goodby</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>rs</sup> most affectionately</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>October finds William still at Stowe, and not likely to leave, but he
+sends this anxious and tender note to Ann.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Stowe. October y<sup>e</sup> 5: 1735.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My Dear,&mdash;I long to be with you to know what the particular
+circumstance is that gives you uneasiness: or is it only the Thing
+in general? whatever it be, take all the comfort you can in knowing
+you act humanely and honourably. it won't be in my Power to see you
+till December, and the latter End of it. I am very much at Stowe,
+and pass my time as agreeably as I can do at a distance from you at
+a time you say you want to talk to me: I hope by your next letter to
+hear you have talk'd to yourself upon the Subject of your uneasiness
+and don't want my advice: Adieu,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am with all affection y<sup>rs</sup></p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The next note deals again with the affair which is causing Ann
+uneasiness, but without giving us any clue to it. One cannot however
+refrain from the surmise that Ann's temper and tongue had now begun to
+get her into trouble.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Stowe. Octob<sup>r</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 12: 1735.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My dear Child,&mdash;I can't by letter enter into particulars relating to
+The affair you mention, nor were I with you, cou'd I give you any
+other than a general advice, which is, as well as you can to make
+yourself and others easy: I know this is saying almost nothing, and
+that is the very thing I think you have only to do: I beg you will
+be at Quiet as to what you have hitherto done, believe me it is not
+only irreproachable, but must do you great honour with whoever know
+your conduct. I will say one word more, which is this, that you
+shou'd take care not to be misunderstood, at least in any great
+degree. This is all I can say to you, who have the warmest concern
+for your happiness and am with more affection than I can tell you,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>rs</sup></p> <p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>There is now an unexplained interval of two years. Some letters have
+perhaps been lost or destroyed, one has apparently miscarried; or, still
+more probably, the brother and sister have been together. But the next
+letter is still dated from Stowe, where William was evidently
+established on the most familiar footing.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Stow. Nov<sup>r</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 6: 1737.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>You are even with me for all the want of readiness in writing, ever
+since I began to correspond: I wou'd tell you how many weeks it is,
+since I wrote to you my last unanswer'd letter, if my memory was
+strong enough to carry so remote a period of Chronology in my head:
+I have sometimes told you I have been ashamed of not writing: I take
+this occasion to retract all Declarations of that sort, and tell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</a></span>
+you I never was, nor ever will be ashamed of want of regularity in
+corresponding, after this last silence of yours: I am aware that you
+must throw the blame upon y<sup>e</sup> Post, and say you never received the
+letter in question, and indeed the Doctor has given me an
+intimation, y<sup>t</sup> the thing was to take y<sup>t</sup> turn, without which you
+wou'd not have been troubled even with these reproaches. the Letter
+had nothing in it, and yet I had rather you had receiv'd it, if you
+are in earnest that you did not. I intend to be in Town the
+beginning of December: I shall see Mrs. Nedham at Bampton before I
+come:</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>rs</sup></p> <p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I desire you will write immediately to let me know you have no
+return of y<sup>e</sup> disorder you had just before you left Hampton court.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>In the next he refers to Lord Cornbury, a friend, a Tory, and something
+of a Jacobite. He was a great admirer of Pitt, and had indeed written an
+ode to him.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Stow. Nov<sup>r</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 12: 1737.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I do not think myself obliged to thank you for your letter, it was a
+defence to an accusation, you was under a necessity of pleading and
+you did it with the confidence of an old offender, and even went so
+far as to recriminate upon y<sup>r</sup> accuser: but let the act of oblivion
+cover all. however that I may thank you for something, I thank you
+for haveing hardly any remains of y<sup>r</sup> cold. Pray keep keeping
+yourself well till December, in one week of which month I hope to
+see you. Adieu.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>rs</sup> Most affec<sup>ly</sup></p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I wish you the Dutchess of Queensbury and Lady Cardigan with all my
+heart. How do's L<sup>d</sup> Cornbury?</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">More</span> than sixteen years elapse between this letter and the next, which
+takes us far beyond our present limit, but it is best to finish the
+story of Ann. Part of this long interval can be explained by extreme
+harmony, and the remainder by the reverse. The mutual devotion of
+William and Ann lasted, says Lord Camelford, till he became Paymaster in
+May 1746: then they quarrelled. Why, no one knows, or, it is to be
+presumed, will ever know. Horace Walpole only says that Pitt shook his
+sister off in an unbecoming manner. Camelford thinks that Pitt disliked
+Ann's friendship for Lady Bolingbroke, and thought that she was under
+the influence of Bolingbroke himself, 'that tawdry fellow, as Lord
+Cobham called him.'<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> Pitt, like most other people, except the rare
+spirits who loved the brilliant being, profoundly distrusted
+Bolingbroke, and may not have wished to see Bolingbroke influence assume
+a footing in his house. Perhaps then he remonstrated, perhaps Ann
+vindicated her friendship with heat. Between these two fiery natures
+words might be exchanged in a moment which years would not obliterate.
+Grattan told Rogers that 'Mrs. Ann Pitt, Lord Chatham's sister, was a
+very superior woman. She hated him, and they lived like cat and dog. He
+could only get rid of her by leaving his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</a></span> house and setting a bill on
+it, "This house to let."'<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> If these two Pitts quarrelled in the
+fierce Pitt fashion, it is not unlikely that some such expedient would
+be adopted. But it must be doubted whether they lived like cat and dog,
+else they would have parted long before. Grattan's statement was made in
+conversation with all the large outline and picturesque latitude that
+conversation allows, and he probably knew nothing about the matter. We
+can only surmise. Lord Camelford tells us that up to the time of the
+Paymastership (1746) William and Ann had lived together in one of the
+small houses in Pall Mall which look into St. James's Square, and that
+when he moved to his official residence at the Pay Office he moved
+alone. But, as a matter of fact, she had left him some time before, and
+gone to live with Lady Bolingbroke at Argeville. We have a letter from
+William to Lady Suffolk, dated July 6, 1742, in which he favours the
+plan of Ann's living with Lady Bolingbroke, so long as is convenient to
+her hostess, and then returning home. Moreover, Pitt himself in October
+of this year 1742 was not living in Pall Mall, but had moved to York
+Street, Burlington Buildings.<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> Ann had formed a mad project of living
+in Paris as a single woman, which William justly discountenanced.
+However, she proceeded to Argeville, where George Grenville found her in
+September. She may have returned to her brother, but she probably
+remained abroad, and her having been with the Bolingbrokes so long, even
+with William's sanction, may have made her less welcome to her brother
+on her return.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span></p><p>In June 1751 she was appointed Keeper of the Privy Purse to the
+Princess of Wales, and superintendent of the education of the Princess
+Augusta, afterwards Duchess of Brunswick. She obtained this appointment,
+we are told, through the interest of Mr. Cresset, the confidential
+servant and Treasurer of the Princess of Wales, whose authority in the
+Court soon afterwards gave way to the ascendancy of Lord Bute; though
+Pitt imagined that here again he could trace the hand of Bolingbroke.
+'However,' says Lord Camelford, 'thinking she could be useful to him in
+so important a post, he sought a reconciliation&mdash;he flattered, he
+menaced, he insulted, but was rejected.'</p>
+
+<p>Of these proceedings two records remain in letters which have already
+been published, but cannot be omitted here, as they are instinct with
+passion and light. Whether they answer to Lord Camelford's description
+must be left to the judgment of those who read them. That they are
+powerful, tender, and unaffected all must allow. They also contain
+quotations from the quarrels which are not devoid of interest. Ann had
+declared that William expected absolute deference and a blind submission
+to his will; and that he had in several conversations directly explained
+to her that, to satisfy him, she must live with him as his slave. On
+this point William admits that he did expect some measure of deference
+to his views, and that, living together, he thought she might shape her
+life in some degree to his. This seems to have been the real ground of
+separation. William wished to be master in his own house. Ann could
+brook no control. Perhaps the brother may have asked the sister to
+discontinue or relax her intimacy with the Bolingbrokes, as injurious
+and inconvenient to him, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</a></span> Ann, we may guess, would curtly bid him
+mind his own business. But these are only probabilities.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of these proceedings we learn that William lost his
+temper, declaring that she had a bad head and a worse heart; for this he
+humbly begs her pardon.</p>
+
+<p>Another complaint of Ann's is easily explained. She says that William
+had been talking of the 200<i>l.</i> a year that he allowed her. William's
+answer makes it perfectly clear that he had been reproached with the
+fact of his sister's destitute condition, and that he had had to
+explain, in his own defence, that he gave her this income.</p>
+
+<p>Whether Pitt wished for a reconciliation because his sister had become
+Privy Purse to the Princess of Wales must be judged by the light of his
+character. It seems more probable that it was because she had returned
+from abroad, and that he would now meet her constantly in society. In
+any case, here are the letters. Whatever Pitt's motives may have been,
+it is clear that Ann, had she not been a vixen, would have gladly
+accepted the olive-branch offered by her brother, who, still unmarried,
+wished to be restored to the companionship which had been the joy of his
+life, 'that friendship which was my very existence for so many years,'
+'a harmony between brother and sister unexampled almost all that time.'</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+(A)</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>June 19, 1751. Wednesday morning.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister!&mdash;As you had been so good to tell me in your note of
+Monday that you would write to me again soon <i>in a manner capable,
+you hoped, of effacing every impression of any thing painfull that
+may have passed from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</a></span> me to you</i>, I did not expect such a letter as
+I found late last night, and which I have now before me to answer:
+without any compliment to you, I find myself in point of writing
+unequal enough to the task; nor have I the slightest desire to
+sharpen my pen. I have well weighed your letter, and deeply examined
+your picture of me, for some years past; and indeed, Sister, I still
+find something within, that firmly assures me I am not that thing
+which your interpretations of my life (if I can ever be brought to
+think them all your own) would represent me to be. I have
+infirmities of temper, blemishes, and faults, if you please, of
+nature, without end; but the Eye that can't be deceived must judge
+between us, whether that friendship, which was my very existence for
+so many years, could ever have received the least flaw, but from
+umbrages and causes which the quickest sensibility and tenderest
+jealousy of friendship alone, at first, suggested. It is needless to
+mark the unhappy epoque, so fatal to a harmony between sister and
+brother unexampled almost all that time, the loss of which has
+embitter'd much of my life and will always be an affliction to me.
+But I will avoid running into vain retrospects and unseasonable
+effusions of heart, in order to hasten to some particular points of
+your letter, upon which it is necessary for me to trouble you with a
+few words. <i>Absolute</i> deference and <i>blind submission to my will</i>,
+you tell me I have often declared to you in the strongest and most
+mortifying terms cou'd alone satisfy me. I must here beseech you
+cooly to reconsider these precise terms, with their epithets; and I
+will venture to make the appeal to the sacred testimony of your
+breast, whether there be not exaggeration in them. I have often, too
+often reproached you, and from warmth of temper, in strong and plain
+terms, that I found no longer the same consent of minds and
+agreement of sentiments: and I have certainly declared to you that I
+cou'd not be satisfy'd with you, and I could no longer find in you
+<i>any degree of deference towards me</i>. I was never so drunk with
+presumption as to expect <i>absolute</i> deference and <i>blind submission
+to my will</i>. A degree of deference to me and to my situation, I
+frankly own, I did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</a></span> think too much for me to expect from you,
+with all the high opinion I really have of your parts. What I
+expected was too much (as perhaps might be). In our former days
+friendship had led me into the error. That error is at an end, and
+you may rest assured, that I can never be so unreasonable as to
+expect from you, now, anything like deference to me or my opinions.
+I come next to the small pecuniary assistance which you accepted
+from me, and which was exactly as you state it, two hundred pounds a
+year. I declare, upon my honour, I never gave the least foundation
+for those exaggerations which you say have been spread concerning
+it. I also declare as solemnly, before God and man, that no
+consideration cou'd ever have extorted from my lips the least
+mention of the trifling assistance you accepted from me, but the
+cruel reports, industriously propagated, and circulating from
+various quarters round to me, of the state you was left to live in.
+As to the repayment of this wretched money, allow me, dear Sister,
+to entreat you to think no more of it. The bare thought of it may
+surely suffice for your own dignity and for my humiliation, without
+taxing your present income, merely to mortify me: the demonstration
+of a blow is, in honour, a blow, and let me conjure you to rest it
+here. When I want and you abound, I promise you to afford you a
+better and abler triumph over me, by asking the assistance of your
+purse. I will now trouble you no farther than to repeat my sincere
+wishes for your welfare and to rejoice that you have so ample matter
+for the best of happiness, <i>springing from a heart and mind</i> (to use
+your own words) entirely devoted to gratitude and duty.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+(B)</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>June 20, 1751. Pay Office.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>'Dear Sister!&mdash;I am this moment returned out of the Country and find
+another letter from you. I am extremely sorry that any expressions
+in mine to you should make you think it necessary for you to trouble
+yourself to write again, that you might convey upon paper to me,
+what you would avoid saying in conversation, as disagreeable and
+painfull. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span> believe I may venture to refer you to the whole tenor
+of my letter to convince yourself that I had no desire to irritate;
+and I assure you very sincerely that the expression, which seems to
+have had some of that effect, did not in the least flow from a
+thought that you was capable of intending to represent falsely. I
+only took the liberty to put it to your candid recollection, whether
+the very cause you mention, <i>strong feelings</i> and emotions of mind
+attending them, with regard to conversations of a disagreeable kind,
+might not have led to some exaggerations of them to your own self. I
+verily believe this cause, and this alone may have had some of this
+effect: for sure I am, that I never could wish, much less exact that
+the object of my whole heart and of my highest opinion and
+confidence, thro the best part of my days, could be capable of such
+vileness as <i>absolute</i> deference and <i>blind submission to my will</i>.
+All I wished and what I but late quite despaired of, I took the
+liberty to recall to you in my last letter. As to the late
+conversation you have thought necessary (since your letter of
+yesterday) to recollect, I am ready to take shame before you, and
+all mankind, if you please, for having lost my temper, upon any
+provocation, so far as to use expressions, as foolish as they are
+angry: that you <i>had a bad head</i> will easily pass for the first: and
+a worse heart for the last. This you made me angry enough to say:
+but this I never was, nor I hope shall be, angry enough to think:
+and this, Sister, I am sure you know. As to the other word, which I
+am sorry I used because it offended you, I will again beg to appeal
+to your recollection, whether it was not apply'd to your forbidding
+<i>me ever to talk to you of every thing that interested you</i>: and as
+<i>to shaping your life in some degree to mine</i>, which I believe were
+my very words, let me ask you, if you don't know that they were said
+in an answer to your telling me <i>that I had in several conversations
+directly explained to you that to satisfy me you must live with me
+as my slave</i>? So much, dear Sister, for the several points of your
+letter; which I am sorry to find it necessary to say so many words
+upon. I will be with you by nine to-morrow, as that hour seems most
+convenient to you: is it impossible I may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</a></span> still find you so
+obliging as not to think any more of repaying what I certainly never
+lent you, in any other sense than that of giving me a right to your
+purse, whenever I should want it, and which you must forego some
+convenience to repay?<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Whether a reconciliation took place on this occasion or not we have no
+evidence apart from Camelford's. But if he is to be believed as to
+William's motives, there was little to be gained by one, for Ann was
+soon to leave the Court. Her new office 'very soon grew uneasy to her,'
+says her nephew, 'through the artifices of her royal pupil.' Horace
+Walpole gives a different account. 'Being of an intriguing and most
+ambitious nature, she soon destroyed her own prospect by an impetuosity
+to govern her mistress and by embarking in other cabals at that Court.
+Her disgrace followed, but without dismissal, on which she had retired
+to France.'<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a></p>
+
+<p>'It was then,' says Camelford, 'that her brother, then Secretary of
+State, made a new overture of reconciliation by a letter that you will
+read, which had too much the appearance of sincerity and
+disinterestedness not to be gladly accepted.'</p>
+
+<p>Camelford is not particularly careful of his own accuracy or
+consistency. He had just told us that William sought for a renewal of
+friendship because Ann would be useful to him at Court: he now has to
+acknowledge that when Ann was banished from Court he instantly sought
+reconciliation with more ardour than ever. As regards his accuracy, it
+need only be noted that the letter to which he alludes is dated from the
+Pay Office, and despatched more than three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</a></span> years before Pitt became
+Secretary; a flaw, but not a grave flaw, in a father writing from memory
+to his son.</p>
+
+<p>Here is the letter, which seems to be in answer to one from Ann, and
+which is surely as tender and affectionate as the sorest heart of sister
+could desire:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Pay Office. Feb. 8. 1753.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I shou'd have receiv'd the most sensible satisfaction,
+if you had been able to tell me, that the more declared, or new
+symptoms of your disorder had been such, as gave you a near prospect
+of being quite relieved. believe me Dear Sister, my heart is fill'd
+with the most affectionate wishes for your health, and impatient
+desire to see you return home well and happy. I never can reflect on
+things passed, (wherein I must have been infinitely in the wrong, if
+I ever gave you a pain) without the tenderest sorrow: and the
+highest aggravation of this concern wou'd be to think, that,
+perhaps, you may not understand the true state of my heart towards
+you. Heaven preserve my Dear Sister, and may I ever be able to
+convince her how sincerely I am her most affectionate Brother:</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">W. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I continue an Invalid, and wait for better weather with as much
+patience as I can.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This is followed by another letter so humble and so self-reproachful
+that one can scarcely believe it to be penned by one whose pride was a
+byeword, and one can certainly not believe it to be the production of
+crafty and servile selfishness, as Lord Camelford would have us imagine.
+No brother could approach a sister with more delicacy or warmth of
+feeling.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Pay Office. Feb. 27. 1753.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I am unable to express the load you have taken off my
+heart by your affectionate and generous answer to my last letter: I
+will recur no more to a subject, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</a></span> your goodness and
+forgiveness forbid me to mention. the concern I feel for your state
+of health is most sensible; wou'd to God, you may be shortly in a
+situation to give me the infinite comfort of hearing of an amendment
+in it! I hope Spring is forwarder, where you reside, than with us,
+and that the difference of climate begins to be felt. I will not
+give you the trouble to read any more: but must repeat, in the
+fulness of my heart, the warmest and tenderest acknowledgements of
+your goodness to,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+My Dear Sister, Your most affec Brother</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I continue still a good deal out of Order, but begin to get ground.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next letter marks a complete removal of tension and the restoration
+of close and friendly relations. It cannot, alas! restore the easy flow
+of youth. A score of years have passed, William has been buffeted and
+tossed and has had to fight hard for his hand; he is besides so much the
+older. So we find ourselves involved in the fulsome extravagance of his
+maturer epistles; so much the worse!</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>London. April y<sup>e</sup> 5. 1753.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My Dear Sister,&mdash;Nothing can be felt more sensibly than I do the
+goodness of your letter, in which you talk to me circumstantially of
+your own health, and desire to hear circumstantially of mine. it is
+a great deal of Comfort to me to know that you have great hopes of
+being better by Mr Vernage's advice; but it wou'd have been an
+infinite satisfaction to have heard that you had already found
+amendment. May every Day of Spring contribute to the thing in the
+world I wish the most ardently! I am infinitely glad that the
+concurrent opinions of Physicians of both Countries are the
+foundation of expecting the Spa will relieve you: I shall dwell all
+I can on this comfortable hope, and beg to hear of any amendment you
+may find by better weather and whatever course you now use. I will
+now talk of that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</a></span> health you so kindly desire to hear of. I have
+been ill all the winter with disorders in my bowels, which have left
+me very low, and reduced me to a weak state of health. I am now, in
+many respects, better, and seem getting ground, by riding and taking
+better nourishment. Warmer weather, I am to hope, will be of much
+service to me. I propose using some mineral waters: Tunbridge or
+Sunning Hill or Bath, at their proper seasons, as the main of my
+complaint is much abated and almost removed, I hope my Horse, warm
+weather and proper nourishment will give me health again. the kind
+concern you take in it is infinitely felt by, Dear Sister,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Your most affectionate Brother<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next letter shows that Ann was residing at Blois.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I have just receiv'd the pleasure of your letter of 30
+April. the Comfort it has given me is infinitely great, and your
+goodness in sending me the earliest account in your power of such an
+amendment as you now describe is the kindest thing imaginable, May
+the fine season, where you are, continue without interruption, and
+every Day of it add to the beneficial effects you have begun to
+feel! our season here does not keep pace with that at Blois: I am
+however much mended in several respects, and have the greatest hopes
+given me of removing my remaining disorder by the help of warmer
+weather and Tunbridge waters. I have just time to write this line
+before dinner, and had I more, I think it best not to trouble you
+with long letters. I shall dine upon your letter I am dear Sister</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Your most affectionate Brother</p>
+<p>
+<i>London. May 7<sup>th</sup> 1753.</i>
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Here intervenes a letter to Mary, in which there is cordial mention of
+Ann, and an obvious allusion to the escapades of Elizabeth; surely a
+tender letter from a brother of forty-five to a younger sister.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Bath. Oct<sup>r</sup> the 20<sup>th</sup>. 1753.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am very glad to hear in the Conclusion of my Dear Mary's letter
+that she will be under no difficulty in getting to London: my
+Brother is very obliging, as I dare say he intends to be in all
+things towards you, to make your journey easy and agreeable to you.
+I propose being in Town by the meeting of the Parliament; if I am
+able: when I shall have infinite Joy in meeting my Dear Sister after
+so very long an Absence and seeing Her in a Place where she seems to
+think herself not unhappy. if I shou'd be prevented being in Town so
+soon, the House will always be ready to receive you. I think you
+judge very right not to produce yourself much till we have met:
+M<sup>rs</sup> Stuart, and my Sister Nedham, if in Town, will be the
+properest, as well as the most agreeable Places for you to frequent.
+My Dear Child, I need not intimate to your good understanding and
+right Intentions, what a high degree of Prudence and exact attention
+to your Conduct and whole behaviour is render'd necessary by the sad
+errors of others. It is an infinite misfortune to you that my Sister
+Ann is not in England: her Countenance and her Advice and
+Instructions, superior to any you can otherwise receive, wou'd be
+the highest advantage to you. Supply it as well as you can, by
+thinking of Her, imitating her worth, and thereby endeavouring to
+deserve her esteem, as you wish to obtain that of the best Part of
+the World. I can not express how anxious I am for your right
+behaviour in all respects, upon which alone your happiness must
+depend. whatever assistance my advice can be to You, you will ever
+have with the truest affection of a Brother.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Y<sup>rs</sup></p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next letter is pregnant enough, written to Ann at Nevers. Their aunt
+Essex is dead, but her death only lurks in a postscript. For Pelham is
+dead and Pitt is a cripple at Bath, disabled from proceeding to the
+capital, where his fate and that of the future administration are being
+settled. His restless anguish seems to pierce through these<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</a></span> few lines.
+And yet this bedridden invalid was to be a joyful and alert bridegroom
+before the year was out.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Bath. March 9<sup>th</sup>: 1754.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I write to you under the greatest affliction, on all
+Considerations Private and Publick. M<sup>r</sup> Pelham Died Wednesday
+morning, of a Feaver and St. Anthony's fire. This Loss is, in my
+notion of things, irreparable to the Publick. I am still suffering
+much Pain with Gout in both feet, and utterly unable To be carry'd
+to London. I may hope to be the better for it hereafter, but I am at
+present rather worn down than releiv'd by it: I am extremely
+concern'd at the last accounts of your health. I hope you have
+Spring begun at Nevers, which I pray God may relieve you.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am Dear Sister, Your most affectionate Brother,<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My Sister Nedham has been ill of a Feaver here, but is well again.</p>
+
+<p>I have just received an account of M<sup>rs</sup> Cholmondeley's<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> Death.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next letter, a month later, leaves Pitt still at Bath; the gout had
+almost the lion's share of his life, and we wonder that he accomplished
+so much under its constant pangs. On this occasion he strains our
+credulity by the complimentary assertion that he thinks a thousand times
+more of Ann than of the struggle over Pelham's succession, and his own
+involved ambition. On all that sordid scramble he kept the fierce,
+unflinching eye of a hawk, and of a hawk fastened by the talon. Ten days
+before he wrote this note he had despatched a letter to Newcastle,
+Pelham's brother and successor, burning with a passion which Ann's
+ailments could never have inspired. Ann indeed, knowing her William,
+would smile as she read, and value the extravagance at its worth. </p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Bath. April 4th. 1754.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;The Account you give me of your own health, and the
+kind concern you feel for mine, touches me more than I will attempt
+to express, tho' I am still at Bath, don't think the worse of my
+health, but be assured that I am in a fairer way of recovering a
+tolerable degree of it, than I have been in for a long time pass't.
+My Gout has been most regular and severe, as well as of a proper
+Continuance to relieve, and perhaps quite remove, the general
+disorder which had brought me so low. I am recovering my feet and
+drinking the waters with more apparent good effects than I ever
+experienced from them. I have been out of all the bustle of the
+present Conjuncture; and believe me, my thoughts go a thousand times
+to Nevers, for once that they go towards London. Nothing in this
+world can, in the smallest degree, interest my mind like the
+recovery of your health. I wait with very painfull Impatience for
+better weather for you, and to hear, that the waters you propose to
+take, afford you relief.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am My Dear Sister's ever most affectionate Brother<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My sister Nedham is well, and went yesterday to Marybone to see her
+Sons.</p>
+
+<p>Poor George Stanhope died of a feaver a few days since.<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The next, after an interval of six months, is again from Bath, but in a
+different strain. He is now the happiest of men, about to be united to
+the most meritorious and amiable of women, whose brothers are already
+his own in harmony and affection; a happy marriage, but a disastrous,
+storm-tossed brotherhood, as it was destined to be in the years to come,
+when rival ambitions would strain the bond to breaking.</p>
+
+<p>There is also an icicle from Lady Hester herself,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</a></span> which embodies the
+decorous expression of what a young lady of the middle eighteenth
+century allowed herself to feel when she was going to be married. Even
+this act of politeness was inspired by William. 'I have writ this night
+to my poor sister Ann. She is not well enough to return to England this
+winter. Whenever your excessive goodness will honour her with a letter
+it will be a comfort to her. If you please to commit it to me I will
+forward it to her, and bless you a million of times.'<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Bath. Oct. 21<sup>st</sup>. 1754.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;The favour of your letter from Chaillot has by no
+means answered my eager wishes for your health, and a kind of
+distant hope I had formed of your return to England this winter. My
+desires to see you are greatly and very painfully disappointed: I
+have only to hope that your Stay in France will give you a much
+better winter than the last, and may finally restore your health to
+you and you to your Friends. I am now, Dear Sister, to impart to you
+what I have no longer a prospect of doing, with infinitely more
+pleasure, by word of mouth: it is to say, that, your health
+excepted, I have nothing to wish for my happiness, Lady Hester
+Grenville has consented to give herself to me, and by giving me
+every thing my Heart can wish, she gives you a Sister, I am sure you
+will find so, not less every other way than in name. the act I now
+communicate, will best speak her character, she has generosity and
+goodness enough to join part of her best days to a very shattered
+part of mine; neither has my fortune any thing more tempting. I know
+no Motif she can have but wishing to replace to me many things that
+I have not. I can only add, that I have the honour and satisfaction
+of receiving the most meritorious and amiable of Women from the
+hands of a Family already my Brothers in harmony and affection, and
+who have been kindly Contending which of them shou'd most promote my
+happiness by throwing away the Establishment of a Sister<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</a></span> they
+esteem and love so much. When I left Lady Hester ten days ago, She
+wish'd to know when I notify'd this approaching event to you, that
+She might do herself the pleasure to write to you. when she knows I
+have writ, she will introduce herself to you. I propose staying here
+about ten days, if my patience can hold out so long. You will wonder
+to see a letter on such a subject dated from Bath; but to a goodness
+like Lady Hester Grenville's, perhaps, my infirmities and my Poverty
+are my best titles.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Your ever affectionate Brother<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Lady Hester Grenville to Miss Ann Pitt.</span></p>
+
+<p>May I not hope, D<sup>r</sup> Madam, that the situation I am in with your
+Brother will dispose you to receive favourably an Instance of the
+extreme desire I have to recommend myself to your friendship; and
+that You will give me Leave to employ the only means in my Power
+from the distance that is between us, of expressing how much I wish
+to enjoy that Honour. Every Thing makes me Ambitious of Obtaining so
+great an Advantage, and so flattering a distinction. Your Own
+peculiar Merit, and the Large share which you possess of M<sup>r</sup> Pitt's
+Esteem and Affection makes me feel it as an Article important to my
+Happiness, and I indulge myself in the pleasure of thinking that you
+will not refuse to extend your goodness to a Person whom your
+Brother has thought worthy of so convincing a proof of his regard
+and Love, and whose sentiments for Him are full of all that the
+highest sense of his superior Merit and most amiable qualities can
+Inspire. I feel a vanity and a pleasure in being the Object of his
+Choice which can be added to by nothing but the happiness of knowing
+that you give your Approbation and that you will allow me to flatter
+myself You will not be sorry for an Event which will give me the
+valued privilege of addressing you the next time, I have the honour
+to be thus employ'd, by the endearing name of Sister. Give me leave
+to say that I have heard with the greatest regret that your state of
+health does not permit you to return to England this winter, and
+that I hope<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</a></span> as a compensation for the Disappointment your stay will
+ensure y<sup>r</sup> perfect recovery. I commit this Letter to Y<sup>r</sup> B<sup>rs</sup>
+Care, and trust to Him for conveying it to you, sure that the best
+recommendation it can have will be its coming under his protection;
+accompanied with Marks of His Partiality; and I hope that you will
+believe D<sup>r</sup> Madam, that I am with all the esteem possible, and the
+highest regard,</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Your most faithful and Obed. Humble Servant,</p>
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Her: Grenville</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>In the next letters Pitt and Lady Hester acknowledge Ann's
+congratulations. He had, however, moved to London, and amid all these
+orange-blossoms was forging terrible vengeance on his perfidious chief.
+Within ten days of his marriage he was making Newcastle and Newcastle's
+henchmen cower in their offices, though for the present they did not
+dare oust him from his.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Pay Office. Nov. 8<sup>th</sup>. 1754.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;Your letter of the 1<sup>st</sup> Nov<sup>r</sup> has given me all that
+remain'd to Compleat my happiness, by the affectionate Share you
+take in it; and without which, great as it truly is, and shar'd in
+the kindest manner by every Thing else I value and love in the
+World, it still wou'd have wanted something ever essential to my
+Satisfaction. Your Goodness and Friendship has nothing left to give
+me: Cou'd the re-establishment of your health but add that most
+sensible Pleasure to all I feel, I may call myself happy, as it is
+given but to a few to be. Lady Hester Grenville speaks for herself
+this Post. my Health is not good, but, as yet, it is not quite bad.
+I have gone on with the World (as I cou'd) with much worse.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I hope in about a week to say more of my happiness.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Lady Hester's letter is not worth giving; it is prim, decorous, and
+void.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Pitt and Lady Hester are married on November 16. Lady Hester writes to
+Ann nine days afterwards a letter full of good feeling stiffened and
+starched by decorum. Some letters are too improper to print, this is too
+proper.</p>
+
+<p>Ann was now returning home, and Mary goes to meet her with a note of
+welcome from William. Lord Camelford says that her health and spirits
+declined grievously in France, and so her brother, 'though not till
+after repeated notifications of her distress, sent over a clergyman to
+bring her back to her family and assist in her journey.' This gives us a
+test of Camelford's bias in dealing with his uncle. For hear Ann
+herself, in a letter to Lady Suffolk announcing that she was on her way
+to England, and had arrived as far as Sens, whence she writes. Speaking
+of William, she says, 'he continued as he began, as soon as the King had
+put him in the place he is in, by giving me the strongest and tenderest
+proof of his affection.... I was so sunk and my mind so overcome with
+all I have suffered, and I was so mortified and distressed, that I do
+not believe anything in the world could have made it possible for me to
+get out of this country, but my brother's sending a friend to my
+assistance, and choosing so proper a person as M<sup>r</sup> de la Porte is in all
+respects. He has known me and my family for about thirty years, from
+having been my Lord Stanhope's Governor.' She goes on to refer to 'the
+virtue and goodness of my friends, particularly of my brother, who has
+always seemed to guess and understand all I felt of every kind, and has
+carried his delicacy so far as never once to put me in mind of what I
+felt more strongly than any other part of my misfortune, which was, how
+very disagreeable and embarrassing it must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</a></span> be to him to have me in
+France, You may believe that I will be out of it the first minute that
+is possible.'</p>
+
+<p>So the fact is that the man, whom Camelford endeavours to depict as
+having acted with hardness and insensibility on this occasion, displayed
+in reality incessant and delicate tenderness, according to the grateful
+acknowledgment of Ann herself. Pitt had just attained his supremacy;
+this was the most critical epoch of his life; all the year he had been
+fighting the King and the Court, and this was the moment of victory.
+Eleven days before Ann wrote this letter he had become for the second
+time Secretary of State and had begun his great ministry. During this
+time of strain and anxiety he heard of Ann's illness; he must have felt
+strongly, though he refrained from mentioning it to her, the irksomeness
+of her being in France when he was waging war against that kingdom, and
+so he sent an old family friend to conduct her home. Could brother have
+done more? Is there not here an anxious and thoughtful affection,
+distorted grievously by the implacable animosity of the nephew?
+Camelford is, however, obliged to record that on her arrival she went
+straight to Pitt's villa at Hayes, 'where, tho' her spirits were still
+weak, she was surprisingly recovered.'</p>
+
+<p>There is no date to the following note which Mary was to hand to Ann.
+But as Ann's letter to Lady Suffolk cited above is of July 10, 1757, we
+cannot be far wrong in placing it somewhat later in the same month. It
+is indeed perplexing to find another letter to Lady Suffolk dated 'Spa,
+September 5, 1757.' But the year 1757 is a surmise, and in all
+probability an incorrect surmise, of the editor. Ann was hastening to
+England in July 1757,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</a></span> stayed some time at Hayes on her arrival, and is
+not likely to have been on the Continent again in September.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Friday Morning.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I Can not let my Sister Mary go away without a line to
+express my infinite satisfaction to hear you are arrived and that
+you find your strength and Spirits in so good a condition. at the
+same time let a Veteran Invalide recommend to you, above all things,
+to use this returning Strength and Spirits very sparingly at first.
+I shou'd be happy to accompany Miss Mary to Rochester, but the
+overwhelming business of this Momentous Conjuncture hardly allow
+(<i>sic</i>) me time to tell you how impatiently and tenderly I wish to
+embrace my Dear Sister.<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Ann had gone from Hayes to Clifton, as we know from a letter to Lady
+Suffolk dated June 22, 1758, and thence proceeded to Bath, as we know
+from another letter dated August 19, 1758. She was restless, as on
+August 26 she was at Bristol. In all these letters there is not a word
+that betokens other than kindness and gratitude to her brother; as, for
+example, on August 19 she writes to Lady Suffolk: 'God grant that the
+public news may continue to be good, especially from Prince Ferdinand,
+for the sake of a person whose health and prosperity I wish more than I
+shall ever tell him.' A week afterwards she takes public occasion to
+rejoice at his triumphs by furnishing a bonfire and ten hogsheads of
+strong beer and all the music she could procure. On the other side, we
+read the letters which the busy statesman found time to write to her,
+breathing affection and solicitude. </p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>St. James's Square. Aug. 10<sup>th</sup>. 1758.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I wait with much impatience to hear you are arrived
+well at Bath, and that you are lodged to your mind. I will not
+entertain any doubts, after having had the satisfaction of seeing
+you, that your progression to a perfect recovery will be sensible
+every Day, and as soon as you can bear a stronger nourishment, that
+Spirits, the concomitants of Strength, will return. as a part of the
+necessary regimen, solid nourishment for that busy craving Thing
+call'd Mind must have its place, and I know of no mental
+Alteratives(?) of power to renovate and brace up a sickly
+Constitution of Thought, but that mild and generous Philosophy which
+teaches us the true value of the World, and a rational firm
+religion, that anchors us safe in the confidence of another. but I
+will end my sermon and come to the affairs of the world I am so
+deeply immersed in. this day had brought us an account that our
+Troops effected their landing, with little Loss, y<sup>e</sup> 7th and 8th two
+Leagues from Cherbourgh, in the face of a pretty considerable
+Number, who gave some loose fires and run. I am infinitely anxious
+till we hear again, as I expect something serious will ensue. I must
+not close my letter without telling you that the most particular
+enquiries after your health have been made by the Lady you sent a
+Card to, and I, very obligingly reprimanded for keeping your arrival
+a secret from Them. Lady Hester shares my Impatience to hear news of
+you, and all my sentiments for your health and happiness. our Love
+follows dear Mary, whose merits you must, to your great
+satisfaction, more and more feel every day.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am ever my Sister's most affectionate Brother<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>St. James's Square. Sept. y<sup>e</sup> 12<sup>th</sup>. 1758.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;You have now try'd the Bristol waters long enough to
+make some judgement of their effects, and I have kept silence long
+enough for you to make perhaps a strange judgement of my manner of
+feeling for my friends. but feel I certainly do, my Dear Sister, for
+all that concerns<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</a></span> your health and happiness, how much soever I have
+kept it for some weeks past a matter between me and my own
+conscience, without giving you the least hint of my truly
+affectionate sollicitude on your account. I am extremely inclin'd to
+believe Doctor Oliver judges rightly of the first principle of your
+disorders; that it is Gout, which aided by the waters of Bath and
+proper nourishment may ripen into a salutary tho' painfull crisis.
+as I think myself that Languor or perturbation of Spirits are well
+exchanged for a degree of pain, I shall heartily wish you joy of
+such a revolution in the system of your Constitution. how can I have
+got so far in my paper, and not a word of the King of Kings whose
+last Glories transcend all the parts? the Modesty of H:P: Maj<sup>tys</sup>
+relation, his Silence of Himself, and entire attribution of the
+victory to Gen<sup>l</sup> Seidlitz, are of a mind as truely heroick as H.
+Majesty's taking a Colours in his own hand, when exhortations
+failed, and forcing a disordered Infantery to follow Him or see Him
+perish. more Glory can not be won; but more decisive final
+consequence we still hope to hear, and languish for further letters
+from the Prussian army. My Love to Dear M<sup>rs</sup> Mary.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am ever most affec<sup>ly</sup> Y<sup>rs</sup></p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Then comes a letter referring apparently to the Battle of Hochkirch:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I can not omit writing, tho' but a line, to give you
+the satisfaction of knowing that M<sup>r</sup> d'Escart will return to France
+in a very few days. I am very glad that it has been practicable to
+accomplish so soon a thing that will give pleasure to so many of
+your Friends. the news from Dresden to day is not very agreable, the
+King of Prussia's right wing attack'd sudenly at 4 in the morning
+y<sup>e</sup> 14th, put into disorder, Marshal Keith and Prince Francis of
+Brunswick kill'd but the King coming to the Right, the action was
+restored and the Austrians repulsed. His Prussian Majesty's Person
+so exposed that one trembles: his Horse shot, and a Page and Ecuyer
+wounded by his side. a second action<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</a></span> seems inevitable: I hope every
+thing from it, as this Heroick Monarch's happy Genius never fails
+him when he wants it most. I have not a moment more. be assured of
+my constant wishes for your health and happiness.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am Dear Sister Your affectionate Brother</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Loves to Mary.</p>
+
+<p><i>Oct. y<sup>e</sup> 24<sup>t</sup>h.</i></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Ann was now in London on a short visit, for the purpose of attending the
+Court; but she had designs of her own which appear to be serious, but
+which give some evidence of the insanity which was always hovering over
+her.</p>
+
+<p>'I hear my Lord Bath,' she writes, November 10, 1758, 'is here very
+lively, but I have not seen him, which I am very sorry for, because I
+want to offer myself to him. I am quite in earnest, and have set my
+heart upon it; so I beg seriously you will carry it in your mind and
+think if you could find any way to help me. Do not you think Lady Betty
+(Germaine) and Lord and Lady Vere would be ready to help me, if they
+knew how willing I am? But I leave this to your discretion, and repeat
+seriously that I am quite in earnest. He can want nothing but a
+companion that would like his company, and in my situation, I should not
+desire to make the bargain without that circumstance. And though all I
+have been saying puts me in mind of some advertisements I have seen in
+the newspaper from gentlewomen in distress, I will not take that method;
+but I want to recollect whether you did not once tell me, as I think you
+did many years ago, that he spoke so well of me that he got anger for it
+at home, where I never was a favourite.'<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> </p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Never, surely, did a spinster of forty-eight breathe so frankly her
+aspirations towards a wealthy and avaricious septuagenarian. We may be
+sure that this freak of fancy was not confided to her brother. But he on
+his side had a favour to ask of her, on behalf of a puissant personage.
+Statesmen in those days had to pay their homage to the Court wherever
+they could find it, and Pitt, who was never loved by George II., could
+not afford to neglect the influence of Lady Yarmouth. At any rate, he
+did not, though apparently without success in his ultimate object; and
+so we find him attempting to neutralise, through Ann, the mischief which
+might ensue from Lady Betty Waldegrave's letters being attributed by the
+Court of France to the King's favourite. Lady Yarmouth was in danger of
+being compromised!</p>
+
+<p>Ann thus describes the negotiation: 'If I had not happened to be sick, I
+should have been very much pleased with an express that was sent me to
+give me a commission that I liked to execute, because it relates to a
+person I am obliged to and have a regard for; it is my Lady Yarmouth who
+desires me, by my brother, to explain a very disagreeable mistake which
+has been made in France about a very fond letter, and mighty improper as
+to politics, which Lady Betty Waldegrave wrote to her husband, unsigned,
+and having desired the answer might be directed to Lady Y's lodging,
+they concluded, very absurdly, the letter came from her; and as it was
+intercepted, it was translated, shown, and commented very
+impertinently.'</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>St. James's Square. Nov. 7<sup>t</sup>h. 1758.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I write to you at the desire of Lady Yarmouth, on an
+Incident of a particular nature, and which has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</a></span> given her Ladyship
+so much uneasiness that it will be a very agreeable office, if you
+can contribute, by a letter to some Lady of the Court at Versailles,
+to the clearing up of a very odd Qui pro Quo. The matter in question
+is as follows. Letters to England from our Army having been taken,
+there is amongst them <i>one</i> from Lady Betty Waldgrave to General
+Waldgrave <i>unsign'd</i>. the writer desires the General will <i>direct
+his letters to Lady Yarmouth at Kensington</i>. on this ground the
+letter in question being attributed, in France, to Lady Yarmouth has
+drawn attention, been translated, and handed about, as she is
+inform'd, with some mirth at Versailles and Paris. this letter is
+return'd, by the channel of Selwyn's House, and Lady Yarmouth finds
+it to contain, not only the expressions of a loving wife to a
+Husband, but a strain of political reflections, together with
+observations on very high Personages in Europe, commanding Armies in
+Germany; all which Language cou'd not but bear a very prejudicial
+Comment, if really attributed to the Lady, by whose desire I now
+write to you. You are the best judge how to acquit yourself of the
+Commission you are desired to charge yourself with; whether by
+writing to the Dutchess of Mirepoix or any other of your friends. I
+can only say, that I perceive Lady Yarmouth will think Herself
+obliged to you for such an intervention, in a matter of some
+Delicacy, and which might have many possible ill Consequences. if
+you shall write in the manner desir'd, and will send your letter
+directed to your Correspondent, under Cover to me, I will take care
+it shall go in Count Very's packet to Paris.</p>
+
+<p>I rejoice extremely my Dear Sister, at the account of your amendment
+in Spirits, since your late attack. keep the ground so hardly won,
+and ascend, by courage and perseverance that arduous steep, on the
+Summit of which, Health and Happiness, I trust, still wait you. I am
+lame in one foot, and much threatened with Gout for some days past;
+but I flatter myself that it may blow over, like an Autumnal ruffle.
+our Expeditions are, I fear, lame in both Feet. My Messenger is
+order'd to wait your full leisure.</p>
+
+<p class="center">I am Dear Sister, Your most affectionate Brother</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Ann appears to have been successful, and receives thanks both from
+William and the formal Lady Hester.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I am desired by Lady Yarmouth to assure you of the
+sense she has of your good offices, which she was so good to
+accompany with the most obliging expression of regard for you, and
+with many wishes for your health. I shall be happy to receive a
+favourable account of your situation, and which I flatter myself is
+every day mending, and that by a Progression which will soon enable
+you to take air and exercise. I am just going to Hayes, for some
+hours recess, that I want much.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am ever Dear Sister Most aff<sup>ly</sup> Y<sup>rs</sup></p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.</p>
+<p>
+<i>Saturday morning.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>St. James's Square Tuesday Nov. 14.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Madam,&mdash;If I had not for some time past found great
+inconvenience from writing I shou'd not have continued so long
+Silent where I always find so much pleasure in expressing my
+sentiments, but however great my indisposition is from <i>my
+Situation</i> to my present employment, I cou'd not refuse a commission
+which I had the honour to be charged with today from my Lady
+Yarmouth, as I am sure the Subject of it will be a great pleasure
+and Satisfaction to you. It was to desire I wou'd return you a
+thousand Thanks for your letters, and to assure you that she felt
+herself most extremely obliged to you for them, and for the trouble
+you had given yourself, with many other expressions of the manner in
+which she was sensible of your goodness in what you had done, and
+how very agreable it was to Her. I was very sorry to find by your
+account of yourself to M<sup>r</sup> Pitt that you had had another return of
+your bilious Complaint, but we Comfort our selves with the hope of
+its having produced the same salutary effects the Last did. We shall
+be impatient to have a confirmation of its having had so desirable a
+consequence. By Miss Mary's Last Letters both to her Brother and Me
+we have flattered ourselves with the pleasure of seeing Her for some
+days past,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</a></span> but as yet she has not appeared, which wou'd make us
+uneasy but that we conclude if her purpose of Leaving Bath the time
+she mention'd had been alter'd from any disagreable Circumstance she
+wou'd have apprised us of it. Our Nephew, Mr. Thos. Pitt, desires to
+have the permission and pleasure of conveying this to you, as he
+intends setting out for the Bath tomorrow in order to wait upon Sir
+Richard Lyttelton, whom I wish he may find better than by the
+reports which prevail, I fear he has any Chance of Doing. Your
+Brother continues as usual overwhelm'd with business, and not
+entirely free from some Notices of the Gout, but which yet I flatter
+myself will not increase to a fit. He begs his affectionate
+Compliments to you, and I that you wou'd forgive both the shortness
+and the faults of this Letter, and believe me equally however
+exprest</p>
+
+<p class="center">Your very affectionate Sister and Obedient Servant</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">Hes: Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>M<sup>r</sup> Pitt desires to assure you the Letters were the properest that
+cou'd be writ upon the occasion.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Ann, as we learn from the preceding letter, returned to Bath at once.
+'M<sup>r</sup> Thomas Pitt' (Lord Camelford) brings it to her, and here makes her
+acquaintance: 'It was there' (at Bath) 'in the year 1759 that I first
+connected that friendship with her which still leaves so many mixed
+sensations on my mind.' Ann, it may confidently be said, left mixed
+sensations on all minds. The next note announces the birth of the young
+William Pitt.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Hayes. May y<sup>e</sup> 28<sup>th</sup>. 1759.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I have the satisfaction to acquaint you, of what you
+was so good to wish to hear; Lady Hester was safely delivered of a
+Boy this morning, after a labour rather severe, but she and the
+Child are, thank God, as well as can be. You will give us a very
+real pleasure by good accounts of your own health which we hope is
+much better<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</a></span> for the journey alone, and that waters will not fail to
+be of great assistance towards a perfect recovery. I am</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother,</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I can't help mentioning to you the waters and Bath of Buxton: which
+for a languid perspiration and obstructions in the smaller vessels,
+have done wonders.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Next comes a short letter from William, only notable from his anxiety
+about Squire Allworthy.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>St. James's Square. July 24th, 1759.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;Your letter on the subject of Mr. Allen's Health gave
+me, with the Pain of learning he had been ill, the Satisfaction of
+understanding that the attack was, in some degree over; that to Lady
+Hester giving an account of the terrible nature of his complaint,
+having follow'd Her to Wotton, where she now is.</p>
+
+<p>I trust that the next accounts from Prior Park will be favourable
+and that the best of men, who feels and relieves the most the
+sufferings of others, may not Himself suffer the severest of Pains.
+I learn with great satisfaction the considerable amendment you
+mention in your own Health, and the promising prospects of deriving
+much benefit from Tunbridge. I hope You will not let too much of
+this fine season for mineral waters pass, before you repair to Them,
+and that their effects, when you try them, will fully answer your
+own and your Friends expectation.</p>
+
+<p class="center">I am Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother,</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>if Lord Paulett be still at Bath, I beg my compliments to his
+Lordship.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It is perhaps well, for the preservation of continuity, to print the
+following letter from Lady Hester to her sister-in-law:</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Tuesday. St. James's Square. Aug. 29<sup>th</sup>.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am so much in Arrear to You, my Dear Madam, and upon so many
+accounts, that I don't know where to begin first to acquit my Self
+to You. I feel I want now most to justifie my self to you for not
+having before exprest how sensible I am to the various Marks I have
+received of your very obliging Attention upon all the Subjects that
+you knew wou'd give me the greatest pleasure. The Fact is that an
+unexpected Journey to Wotton, from which place I return'd but Last
+night, interfered with my intention of writing to You, and of
+returning you my sincerest thanks for the great Satisfaction your
+Letter gave me. It included everything that cou'd make it pleasing
+to Me, and renew'd all my own Joy for our Successes with Yours added
+to it, which was a great improvement of all I felt before, and
+particularly for Louisbourg, <i>Dear</i>, as you know so many ways. I am
+charmed with my rings, which are after an English Taste that I hope
+will be followed, and grow fashionable enough to encourage a Variety
+of Patterns. Last night brought a Large Package from Bath directed
+to Your Brother, and intended we guess for the Young Militia Man at
+Hayes. It contained besides a present for Miss Hetty, both which
+will be faithfully deliver'd this evening, and the sentiments they
+inspire shall be in due time communicated. In the Interval I believe
+I must apply to you my Dear Madam to assure the kind sender of my
+share of pleasure in the present. Miss Mary's Letter received Last
+night, gave a great deal of Satisfaction to both your Brother and Me
+by the account of Your Health, and the Progress You have made in a
+returning to a Diet of Solid Food, a sort of Sustenance so much more
+likely to restore and confirm your Strength and Spirits than any
+other. We are glad to find that Doctor Oliver has your approbation,
+and that he seems to reason with great sense and probability upon
+your case, and what it is likely to end in. the Gout is not a very
+desirable Thing, but only comparatively, where the constitution is
+not strong, for then there ar many Disorders to which people are
+Liable that are much worse. I am vastly pleased that Our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</a></span> House has
+the honour of being approved by you, and should be delighted if I
+cou'd be so happy as to receive You in it, and wish extremely that
+it was furnish'd and fit for Your reception, but I find Mr. Pitt
+thinks that it is not proper to have hired furniture put into it, as
+well as that you cou'd not be so conveniently accommodated in a
+House so circumstanced, as you will be in the very commodious
+Lodgings which Bath affords. We are meditating a journey to Hayes
+the moment Mr. Pitt returns from Kensington, which makes it
+impossible for me to say as much as I wish to You upon the different
+Subjects in this Letter, being obliged to give an account of my
+journey to the Friends I met at Wotton who are now disperst. May I
+beg you to give my Love to Miss Mary, and to say I hope she will
+admit what I have been saying as an excuse for my not acknowledging
+by this Post in a letter to Her what I have in my sentiments
+acknowledged ever since I heard from her, that I was indebted to her
+for the Prettiest, as well as the most Obliging, Letter in the
+World, besides her Bath Fairing which I value properly. I shall only
+now repeat my request that You will believe me Always my Dear Madam</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Your affectionate Sister and most Obedient Servant,</p>
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">H. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Pitt will endeavour to serve the Chevalier de Chaila as you
+desire.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>All so far had been harmonious enough. Unfortunately, there now occurred
+a second misunderstanding, to which the ensuing letters relate. It is
+best to give Lord Camelford's account, which, though mysterious enough,
+is all we have. 'Her Physicians advising her to discontinue the Waters
+for a short time to give trial to a course of med'cines, she determin'd
+to accompany me to London, to see some old friends after a long absence,
+and to transact certain business, and then to return to Bath. Fearing,
+however, that her unexpected arrival at her Lodgings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</a></span> in Leicester House
+might have objections, or that there might be difficulties in her
+lodging any where in London, she stop'd short at Sion at Ly.
+Holdernesse's, her particular friend, from whence she removed to
+Kensington to a house Mr. Cresset lent her. This Journey gave offence to
+her Brother, and occasion'd their second quarrel. Instead of managing a
+temper too like his own, instead of yielding to her repeated request of
+seeing him, when with gentleness he might have explained his wishes to
+her and have persuaded to whatever he thought best for her or for
+himself, he satisfied himself with dark hints, imperious messages, and
+ambiguous menaces convey'd thro' Ly. Hester and his Sister Mary, neither
+of whom were very happy in the arts of conciliation. Frightened,
+confounded, and at the same time exasperated by so strange a conduct,
+she tried to return to Bath, but her strength would not admit of her
+getting half way thro' the Journey. She return'd to Kensington&mdash;she got
+medical advice&mdash;she saw a few of her old friends, who soon disproved the
+falsities that were every day propagated of her State of Health&mdash;by
+degrees she saw all her fears vanish&mdash;the World return to her and nobody
+flie from her but the Person from whom she expected her chief
+countenance and support. She sounded the Princess, and found she was at
+full liberty to live where she pleased, except that the former intimacy
+was at an end. She met her Brother accidentally at Ly. Yarmouth's, he
+kiss'd her on both sides with the affectation of the warmest affection;
+whilst he refused to visit her and his whole family were hostile to her
+in the cruelest manner.'</p>
+
+<p>The whole affair is obscure, and is not elucidated by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</a></span> letters of
+Pitt and his wife which follow. Lady Hester is civil and kind enough,
+though evidently forbidden to visit or receive her sister-in-law. But
+what Pitt means by his allusion to 'desultory jaunts,' and 'hovering
+about London,' and conduct 'too imprudent and restless or as too
+mysterious' for him to be connected with it, we cannot now conjecture.
+What harm a spinster of forty-eight could do by staying with Lady
+Holdernesse at Sion, and thence moving to Kensington, and being
+undecided as to her plans, it is not easy to determine. It is possible,
+on considering the whole affair, Ann's own temperate reply, and all that
+followed, that Pitt knew that his sister was seeking a pension, for
+which purpose she had gone to Sion and to Kensington (for Lady
+Holdernesse was the wife of a Secretary of State, and Cresset was a man
+of influence), and desirous that his name should not be connected with
+the pension list at this moment of unrivalled popularity and power, he
+was anxious to have no communication with her. There is a still more
+probable explanation of Pitt's annoyance with his sister's behaviour. We
+have seen that Lord Camelford speaks of the 'falsities that were every
+day propagated about her state of health.' In a letter soon to follow
+she herself speaks of her stay in France 'before my spirits were so much
+disordered as they have been since.' Some years afterwards, Horace
+Walpole wrote of her that she had at times been out of her senses. It
+seems possible, then, that one of these attacks had taken place at Bath,
+and that she had broken loose from constraint and come up to London,
+which would revive the gossip about her condition, and so cause
+annoyance to her brother, who thought that peremptoriness was the only
+method of getting her back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</a></span> again to Bath. If this were so, he acted
+wisely, as she appears to have returned to Bath at once. This last
+conjecture seems the more probable explanation. In any case the
+circumstances of the people and the times were full of electricity. Pitt
+was busy, gouty and irritable; Bute was much above the horizon. Ann was
+eccentric, wilful, and wayward. Soon afterwards, she had a pension,
+which annoyed her brother. This is all that we can be said to know. We
+do not even know the date of this episode.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">From Lady Hester Pitt.</span></p>
+
+<p>It is my Dear Madam extremely unfortunate that from different
+circumstances which have interpos'd themselves, I have not had it in
+my power to have the pleasure of seeing you since your arrival in
+the neighbourhood of London, and I am quite concern'd that by Your
+Brother's business I am so circumstanced today, as to make it
+impossible for me to receive that Satisfaction. There is to be a
+meeting of the Cabinet here this Evening, which Always engrosses my
+Apartment and banishes me to other quarters. We are but just arrived
+from the Country, which I think has done your Brother good. He
+desires I wou'd assure you of his affectionate Compliments, and Let
+you know that his present Pressure of business is so great that it
+does not leave him the Command of a quarter of an hour of his time,
+so as to be able to assure himself beforehand of the pleasure of
+seeing any friend. therefore under that uncertainty, and fearing he
+may miss of the Satisfaction of meeting You, he desires thro' me to
+wish you a safe return to Bath, so much the best place, He is
+perfectly convinced, for Your Health. We are both very glad to hear
+you have had a confirmation from Doctor Pitt of the efficacy you may
+expect to find in those waters for your Complaints. I must not end
+my Note without expressing how much I was flattered by your
+remembrance of Little Hetty, tho' I trust Miss Mary did not forget
+me upon that subject, no more than on that of my real Concern for
+its being impossible for me to wait upon You,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</a></span> and say for myself
+how much I feel obliged to You for your kind Letter and message. The
+Compliments of the season attend You my Dear Madam with many good
+wishes.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. James's Square. Tuesday.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>St. James's Square. Monday. Jan. 15th.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Madam,&mdash;Mr. Pitt is this moment come to Town, and so
+overwhelm'd with business, that it is quite impossible for Him to
+write a word to You Himself, in answer to your Note which he has
+just received. He is very sorry to find you are ill, and wishes me
+to tell you that you have mistaken Him in thinking he meant to
+express any desire of His as to your Going, or Staying, which he
+always meant to Leave to your own Decision, but only to offer you
+his opinion, and never proposes to take upon Him to give you any
+further Advice with regard to the place of Your residence, which you
+have all right independent of any thing with respect to Him to
+determine as You please for Yourself. I am extremely concern'd to
+hear your disorder is increased so much as to have made your return
+to Kensington necessary, as I fear your Situation There must be very
+uncomfortable and Disagreeable, without Servants, or any of those
+Conveniences, which are so particularly of Consequence when any body
+is ill. I hope most sincerely to have the pleasure of hearing you
+are better, and Able to prosecute what ever May be thought best for
+Your Health, being very truly Dear Madam</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Your Most Affectionate and Most Obed<sup>t</sup></p>
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">H. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Friday Morning.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I desire to assure you that all Idea of <i>Quarrel</i> or
+<i>unkindness</i>, (words I am griev'd to find you cou'd employ) was
+never farther from my mind than during your stay in this
+neighbourhood. on the Contrary, my Dear Sister, nothing but kindness
+and regard to your Good, on the whole, has made me judge it
+necessary that we should not meet during the Continuance you think
+fit to give to an excursion so unexpected, and so hurtfull to you. I
+beg my Dear Sister<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</a></span> not to mistake my wishes to see Her set down,
+for a time, quiet and collected within her own Resources of Patience
+and fortitude, (merely as being best and the only fit thing for
+Herself) so very widely as to suppose, that my Situation as a
+Publick Person, is any way concern'd in her residing in one Place or
+another. all I mean is, that, <i>for your own sake</i>, you shou'd
+abstain from all desultory jaunts, such as the present. the hearing
+of you all at once, at Sion; next at Kensington, then every day
+going, and now not yet gone, certainly carries an appearance
+disadvantageous to you in this view; I have refused myself the
+pleasure of seeing You; as considering your journey and hovering
+about London, as too imprudent and restless, or as too mysterious,
+for me not to discourage such a conduct, by remaining unmixt with
+it. this is the only cause of my not seeing you, nor can I give you
+a more real proof of my affectionate regard for your welfare than by
+thus refusing myself a great pleasure, and, I fear, giving you a
+Pain. I offer you no Advice, as to the choice of your residence. I
+am persuaded you want none; you have a right and are well able to
+judge for yourself on this point. but if you will not fix somewhere
+You are undone. I am sorry to be forc'd to say this much; but saying
+less I should cease to be with truest affection Dear Sister</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Ever Yrs<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Ann Pitt to her Brother.</span></p>
+
+<p>Dear Brother,&mdash;I am going to set out to return to Bath, but as the
+letter I received from you yesterday leaves me in great anxiety and
+perplexity of mind, I can not set out without assuring you, as I do
+with the most exact truth, that there was no mistery in my journey
+here, nor no purpose but the relief I proposed to my mind. If I had
+known before I left the Bath that you disapproved of my leaving that
+place at this time, or of my coming to Town, I wou'd not have done
+as I have done, and wou'd not even have come near it, tho' the
+advice given me at Oxford with regard to my health, made me desire
+to make use of the interval in which I was order'd not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</a></span> to try the
+waters again, to have the pleasure and satisfaction of seeing You
+and some of my friends and as I hoped that satisfaction from You in
+the first place, I will not dissemble that I am very much
+disappointed and mortified in not having seen you, but as the hurry
+of important business you are in, and the relief necessary to make
+you go through it, made it possible for me not to interpret your not
+seeing me as a mark of unkindness, I never used the word (the word)
+but to guard against other people using it, upon a circumstance
+which I thought they had nothing to do with.</p>
+
+<p>When I writ you word from the Bath that I had thoughts of coming to
+Town for Christmas, I desir'd nothing so much as to do what was most
+proper according to my situation, and consequently to have your
+advice, which I told you, very sincerely I wished to be guided by
+preferably to every other consideration, You best know how I am to
+attain the end I have steadily desired for Years, as you know I writ
+you word from France (before my spirits were so much disorder'd as
+they have been since) that I desired nothing as much as a safe and
+honourable retreat, that wou'd leave me the enjoyment of my Friends,
+without which help and suport I find by a painfull experience that
+it is impossible for me to suport myself. I beg leave to trouble you
+with my compliments to Lady Hester, and my wishes for the happiness
+of you both, and of all the little family that belong to you.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am D B<sup>r</sup> &amp;c.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This undated note appears to belong to the same time as the preceding
+ones, and tends to confirm the hypothesis that it was Ann's mental
+condition that gave rise to anxiety.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">From Lady Hester Pitt.</span></p>
+
+<p>Dear Madam,&mdash;Having informed Mr. Pitt, who is this moment come home,
+that you intend going to the Lodgings in Lisle Street, He wou'd not
+set down to dinner without desiring me to let you know from Him that
+this intention of Yours gives him the greatest surprise and not Less
+concern for <i>Your sake</i>, being unalterably persuaded that Retreat is
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</a></span> only right Thing for your Health, Welfare, and Happiness, and
+that Bath in Your present state seems to be the fittest Place.</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>St. James's Square &nbsp; Wednesday &nbsp; past four o'clock.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>We now come to the famous affair of the pension. Ann has evidently
+written to ask her brother's interest for a pension. He replies that on
+such a subject he would rather not speak, much less write to her, and
+gives her plainly to understand that he washes his hands of the whole
+business. She now turned to Bute. 'Having lost, therefore,' writes
+Camelford, 'all the hopes she had founded on her brother's friendship,
+which now turned to open enmity, she tried the generosity of L<sup>d</sup> Bute
+upon the King's succession, who, not unwilling to give M<sup>r</sup> Pitt a
+sensible mortification in the shape of a civility, procured for her a
+pension that was no small comfort in addition to her slender income,
+which was afterwards again augmented to Ł1000 p.a., at the instance of
+her friend M. de Nivernois, upon the peace.'</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;I hoped long before now to have been able to call on
+you, and in that hope have delayed answering a letter on a subject
+so very nice and particular, that I cou'd, with difficulty and but
+imperfectly, enter into it even in conversation. I am sure I need
+not say to one of your knowledge of the world, that explaining of
+Situations is not a small Affair, at any time, and in the present
+moment I dare say You are too reasonable to wish me to do it. In
+this state I have only to assure you of my sincerest wishes for your
+advantage and happiness, and that I shall consider any good that
+arrives to you as done to myself, which I shall be ready to
+acknowledge as such: but having never been a Sollicitor of favours,
+upon any occasion, how can I become so now without contradicting the
+whole tenour of my Life? I think there is no foundation for your
+apprehensions of anything distressfull<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</a></span> being intended, and I hope
+you will not attribute, what I have said to any motive that may give
+you uneasiness, being very truely</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Dear Sister Your affectionate Brother</p>
+<p class="right">
+ <span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.</p>
+<p><i>Nov. 24: 1760.</i></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>After the letter in which Pitt sheers off from the pension, there was
+evidently an announcement from Ann that it had been granted to her on
+the recommendation of Lord Bute. This is lost. But we have Pitt's
+unpleasing congratulation. This was the note which Ann was with
+difficulty restrained from returning to Pitt, having altered it to suit
+the circumstances of the case, when Pitt's wife was granted a much
+larger pension.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Dear Sister,&mdash;Accept sincere felicitations from Lady Hester and me
+on the Event you have just communicated. on your account, I rejoice
+at an addition of income so agreeable to your turn of life, whatever
+repugnancy I find, at the same time, to see my Name placed on the
+Pensions of Ireland. unmixt as I am in this whole transaction, I
+will not doubt that you will take care to have it thoroughly
+understood. long may you live in health to enjoy the comforts and
+happiness which you tell me you owe to the King, singly through the
+intercession of Lord Bute, and to feel the pleasing sentiments of
+such an obligation.</p>
+
+<p class="center">I am Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.</p>
+<p><i>Tuesday Dec. 30<sup>th</sup> 1760.</i></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Then follows Ann's reply, which may be judged not unconciliatory when
+her fierce temperament is taken into consideration. She elaborately and
+almost humbly vindicates her pension against her brother's sarcastic
+strictures.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Dear Brother,&mdash;I must trouble you again, not only to return my
+thanks to Lady Hester and yourself, for your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</a></span> obliging
+felicitations, But as I have the mortification of finding, that for
+some reasons which I can not judge of, You feel a repugnancy to the
+mark of favour I have had the honour to receive, and desire&mdash;it may
+be throughly understood that you had no share in the transaction&mdash;I
+ought to make you easy, by assuring you, as I do, that so far as I
+think proper to communicate an event, which will not naturally be
+very publick, I will take care to explain the truth, by which it
+will appear that you are no way concern'd in it, and that it has no
+sort of relation to your Situation as Minister, since my request was
+first made to the Princess many years ago, as Her Royal Highnesess
+Servant, as I am pretty sure I explained to you in a letter from
+France, and repeated to you at my return, as the foundation of my
+hopes of obtaining the Princesses approbation for any establishment
+you might have procured for me. And tho' the Provision I have been
+so happy to obtain from His Majesty's Bounty is of the utmost
+importance to me and answers every wish I cou'd form with regard to
+my income, yet when I was allow'd to say how much wou'd make me
+easy, I fix'd it at a sum, which I flatter myself will not be
+thought exorbitant, or appear as if I had wanted to avail myself of
+the weight of your credit, or the merit of your services to obtain
+it.</p>
+
+<p>As to your objection to your Names (<i>sic</i>) being upon the Irish
+Pensions, I do not believe that any mistake can be made, from mine
+being there. And as to myself, I very sincerely think it an honour
+that is very flattering to me, to have received so precious a mark
+of the Royal favour, and to have my Name upon the same List not only
+with some of the highest and the most deserving persons in England,
+but even with some of the greatest and most glorious names in
+Europe. If I have tired you with a longer letter than I intended, I
+have been lead (<i>sic</i>) into it, by the sincere desire I have, that
+an advantage so very essential to the ease and comfort of the
+remainder of a Life, which has not hitherto been very happy, shou'd
+not be a cause of uneasiness to You. I am</p>
+
+</blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Alas for the freakful fate which plays with poor humanity and its
+concerns! The next letter announces another pension, not to Ann, but to
+Pitt's wife. So soon after the other correspondence, not ten months! No
+wonder that Ann was tempted to the vengeance that has been described.
+Even though she refrained we may imagine her unrestrained scoffs and her
+bitter laughter.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Dear Madam,&mdash;I was out of Town Yesterday, or otherwise I shou'd have
+had the pleasure of informing You that His Majesty has been
+Graciously pleas'd to confer the Dignity of Peerage on Your
+Brother's Family, by creating Me Baroness of Chatham with Limitation
+to our Sons. The King has been farther pleas'd to make a Grant of
+Three Thousand Pounds a Year to Mr. Pitt for his own Life, Mine, and
+our Eldest Son's in consideration of Mr. Pitt's Services, We do not
+doubt of the Share You will take in these Gracious Marks of his
+Majesties Royal Approbation and Goodness.</p>
+
+<p class="center">I am Dear Madam Your most Obedient Servant</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Hes: Pitt</span>.</p>
+<p><i>Sunday Morning</i></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Some four years afterwards Ann received this short note, which shows
+that there was no rupture of relations; and the tone indeed is cordial
+for the period, when the expression of the warmest affection was far
+from gushing.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Burton-Pynsent Aug. y<sup>e</sup> 1<sup>st</sup> 1765.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I am extremely obliged to you, Dear Sister, for the trouble you are
+so good to take of writing to enquire after my health, which I found
+mend on the journey and by change of air. I still continue lame, but
+have left off one Crutch, which is no small advance; tho' with only
+one Wing my flights, you will imagine, are as yet very short: the
+Country of Somersetshire is beautifull and tempts much to extend
+them. I hope your health is much better and that you have found the
+way to subdue all your complaints, or at least to reduce them
+within<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</a></span> such bounds, as leave your life comfortable and agreeable.
+Lady Chatham desires to present her compliments to you.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I am Dear Sister Your affectionate Brother<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">William Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>And now there come the last sad words, the last sign of life that
+William gives to Ann. It is not without significance that even at this
+period of prostration he bids his wife tell Ann that his official life
+is ended. It does not appear that there had ever been or was ever to be
+any formal reconciliation between them. But through all the gusts and
+squalls and storms that had troubled their intercourse an underlying
+tenderness had survived.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Hayes. Oct. 21<sup>st</sup>. 1768.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Madam,&mdash;The very weak and broken state of my Lord's health having
+reduced him to the necessity of supplicating the King to grant him
+the permission to resign the Privy Seal, he has desir'd I wou'd
+communicate this Step to You.</p>
+
+<p class="center">I am Madam, Your most Obedient Humble Servant</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">H. Chatham</span>.</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>About this time (1768) she took up her abode at Kensington Gravel Pits,
+in the region of Notting Hill, 'where out of a very ugly odd house and a
+flat piece of ground with a little dirty pond in the middle of it, she
+has made a very pretty place; she says she has "hurt her understanding"
+in trying to make it so.'<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> Before that time she seems to have lived
+for a while at Twickenham; at least Horace Walpole speaks of her as a
+close neighbour. Being fairly launched as a pensioner, she throve on the
+system, and eventually accumulated a treble allowance; this Bute
+pension, another procured by M. de Nivernois, and another,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</a></span> mentioned by
+Horace Walpole in a letter of Nov. 25, 1764, which must have raised her
+whole income from this source to some 1500<i>l.</i> a year. On this she
+entertained, and frolicked, and danced. We hear of her choice but
+miniature balls, and her band of French horns, which Horace Walpole
+enjoyed and described. But her intercourse with William, once so bright
+and genial, was ended, and that is all with which we are here concerned.
+A frigid letter or two counted as nothing in a connection which had once
+been as intimate as it was delightful.</p>
+
+<p>Ann went on living at Kensington a somewhat frivolous life so far as we
+know anything about it, in intimate relations with Horace Walpole and
+his society. But in 1774 she went abroad, under the auspices of the
+Butes, to Italy, to Pisa and elsewhere. Then came her brother's sudden
+death. Though she had been so long aloof from him, the shock finally
+shattered her reason, which, it would appear, had already given cause
+for apprehension. Chatham died May 11, 1778. She soon returned to
+England, and in the October of that year Horace Walpole writes that she
+is 'in a very wild way, and they think must be confined.'<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> In the
+following May he announces that she is actually under restraint.<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a>
+There is a letter at Chevening from her to her niece, Lady Mahon, dated
+'Burnham, May 9, 1779,' which betrays her distraught condition. Burnham
+was probably that 'one of Dr. Duffell's houses' to which she had been
+removed. On Feb. 9, 1781, she dies, still in confinement. Lady Bute, it
+should be noted, was kind and attentive to the end.<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</a></span></p><p>'She was in Italy at the time of his (Chatham's) death,' writes Lord
+Camelford, who was probably there too. 'I can bear witness that the
+grief she felt at the reflection of his having died without a
+reconciliation with her made such an impression of tenderness on her
+mind that not only obliterated all remembrance of his unkindness, but
+recoiled upon herself, as if she had been the offending party, and
+doubtless contributed greatly to the melancholy state in which she
+died.'</p>
+
+<p>Horace Walpole, who had come to hate all Pitts, confirms this in his
+sardonic way. 'Did I tell you that M<sup>rs</sup> Ann Pitt is returned and acts
+great grief for her brother?' and he goes on to say that Camelford
+himself 'gave a little into that mummery, even to me; forgetting how
+much I must remember of his aversion to his uncle.'</p>
+
+<p>There were perhaps few genuine tears save those of wife and children
+shed over the grave of the grim, disconcerting old statesman, for men of
+his type are beyond friendship: they inspire awe, not affection; they
+deal with masses, not with individuals; they have followers, admirers,
+and an envious host of enemies, rarely a friend. But Ann had no reason
+to feign grief or self-reproach. She had lost her first love, her only
+love, the love of her life. It is probable that the brother and sister
+had understood each other throughout in their quick-kindling, petulant
+way. 'My brother, who has always seemed to guess and understand all I
+felt of every kind,' she wrote in 1757;<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> a sentence which is a clue
+to all. The memory of childhood, the glad sympathies of youth, the
+impressions received when their characters were plastic and fresh, the
+habit of close intimacy for the score of years<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</a></span> during which intimacy
+was possible for him, all these contributed to form a bond which
+survived the skirmishes and collisions of their later lives. Two persons
+of highly charged temperament, and of natures too much akin, who
+understood each other, respected each other, and perhaps secretly
+enjoyed each other's ebullitions, such were Ann and William after they
+separated in 1746. Their long affection is interesting if only that it
+seemed impossible that two such characters should agree even for a time.
+And therefore, though the narrative of this episode has swollen beyond
+all limit and proportion, the space is not lost, for it is invaluable to
+the student of Pitt's career. It lights up the only expressed tenderness
+in his life, it is the one relief to his sombre nature, it is the sole
+record that we have of the unbending of that grim and stately figure. </p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">129</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">In</span> 1734 there had been a fiercely contested General Election, and Thomas
+Pitt had been returned for both Okehampton and Old Sarum. He elected to
+sit for Okehampton, and nominated his brother, William, together with
+his brother-in-law, Nedham, for the other borough. So, on February 18,
+1735, William was returned Member for the notorious borough of Old
+Sarum; an area of about sixty acres of ploughed land, on which had once
+stood the old city of Salisbury, but which no longer contained a single
+house or a single resident. The electorate consisted of seven votes.
+When an election took place the returning officer brought with him a
+tent, under which the necessary business was transacted.<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a></p>
+
+<p>To such a constituency it was superfluous, and indeed impossible, to
+offer an election address, or an exposition of policy. But William's
+politics could not be other than those of his brother and nominator,
+though it would seem that Thomas conformed to William rather than
+William to Thomas. We have seen some indications in his letters to Ann
+that Thomas had been favourable to Sir Robert<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">130</a></span> Walpole, and that so late
+as November 1734. But it seems probable that William, who was united in
+private friendship with Lyttelton and the Grenvilles, was drawn to them
+by political sympathy as well, and was thus in agreement with the
+fiercest section of the Opposition. By the time that William was
+elected, Thomas, who was connected with the same group by marriage, must
+also have thrown in his political lot with it, or he would not have
+nominated his brother. For William, though only a cornet of horse, was
+known to be an enemy, and a redoubtable enemy, to the Minister. On this
+point we have clear evidence in a remarkable statement by Lord
+Camelford, which will be quoted later.</p>
+
+<p>William's political opinions were then, we may safely suppose, the
+result of family connection, for through his brother and his own
+friendships he was closely united with that band of politicians who met
+and caballed at Stowe, the stately residence of Lord Cobham. There he
+was a visitor for the first time this year (1735). His stay lasted not
+less than four months, from the beginning of July to the end of October.
+He could scarcely have remained so long without being enrolled in this
+small but important group, even had he not been enlisted already. But he
+was probably a recruit before his visit began. His brother, as we have
+seen, had married Christian Lyttelton, Cobham's niece; George,
+afterwards Lord Lyttelton, was her brother, and Cobham's nephew, as well
+as William's intimate friend; Richard and George Grenville, the first of
+whom is better known as Lord Temple, and the second as a laborious but
+intolerable prime minister, were Cobham's nephews; Richard, indeed, was
+his heir. A family connection was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">131</a></span> thus formed, which, at first held up
+to ridicule under the nickname of 'Cobham's cubs,' or 'The Cousins,' or
+'The Boy Patriots,' was to be for the next thirty years a notable factor
+in political history, and a sinister element in Pitt's career.</p>
+
+<p>So it may be well here to turn aside for a moment to consider these
+Grenvilles, who exercised so singular and baleful an influence on Pitt,
+and indeed on public affairs in general. For from the moment that Pitt
+became their brother-in-law, he was adopted as one of the brotherhood
+and choked in their embraces. From this mortal entanglement he
+emancipated himself too late. It was then patent how different his
+career would have been had he had a man of common-sense at his elbow, or
+at least an unselfish adviser. George Grenville, however, complained on
+his side that the connection had been fatal to the peace and happiness
+of the Grenvilles.<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a></p>
+
+<p>Who was the chief of this combination? Richard Temple, Viscount Cobham,
+best remembered as the 'brave Cobham' to whom Pope addressed his first
+Epistle and as the founder of the dynasty and palace of Stowe, was not
+merely a soldier who had served with distinction under Marlborough, but
+a fortunate courtier on whom the House of Hanover had heaped constant
+and signal honours. He was created first a Baron, then a Viscount,
+Constable of Windsor Castle, Governor of Jersey, a Privy Councillor,
+Colonel of the First Dragoons, and was afterwards to become a Field
+Marshal and Colonel of the Horse Guards. He had, hints Shelburne, some
+of the Shandean humour of Marlborough's veterans, but his portrait shows
+a keen,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">132</a></span> refined, perhaps sensitive countenance; he was also something
+of a bashaw.<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> Sated with military honours, and always a staunch Whig,
+he had now taken to conspicuous politics and splendour; politics
+exacerbated by a personal slight, and splendour displayed in sumptuous
+hospitality, princely buildings, and lavish magnificence of gardens.
+These, laid out under the supervision of Lancelot Brown, extended at
+last to not less than four hundred acres. Here he erected pavilions and
+shrines in the fashion of those times; the most daring of which was one
+to commemorate his friendships, with which politics had made sad havoc
+before the temple was completed. Here he kept open house in the spacious
+and genial fashion of that time, and entertained Pope, Congreve,
+Bolingbroke, Pulteney, the wits as well as the princes of the day. From
+these pleasing cares he had recently been diverted by one of those
+needless affronts which seem so inconsistent with the robust and genial
+character of Walpole, but to the infliction of which Walpole was
+singularly prone. On account of his opposition to the Excise Bill,
+Cobham had been deprived of his regiment, the same, by-the-bye, in which
+Pitt was a subaltern. Stung to political ardour by this insult, he had
+begun to form a faction of violent opposition, of which his nephews and
+their friends were the nucleus. Thus began that formidable influence
+which had its home and source at Stowe for near a century afterwards,
+and which for three generations patiently and persistently pursued the
+ducal coronet which was the darling object of its successive chiefs.</p>
+
+<p>Cobham, then, founded the family, and, so long as he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">133</a></span> lived, directed
+their operations, with too much perhaps of the spirit of a martinet.
+When he died his fortune and title passed to his sister, afterwards, as
+we shall see, Countess Temple in her own right, the mother of the
+Grenvilles with whom we are concerned.</p>
+
+<p>There were originally five Grenville brothers: Richard, George, James,
+Henry, and Thomas. Three of these, however, are outside our limits.
+Thomas, a naval officer of signal promise, was killed in action off Cape
+Finisterre in May 1747. James and Henry were cyphers, not ill provided
+for at the public charge. Both seem to have broken loose at one time
+from the tyranny of the brotherhood: James at first siding with Richard
+against George in 1761; and Henry, whom we find Richard anxious, on
+opposite grounds it is to be presumed, to oust from the representation
+of Buckingham in 1774. James, who, says Horace Walpole, 'had all the
+defects of his brothers and had turned them to the best account,' was
+Deputy Paymaster to Pitt; and Henry was a popular Governor of Barbadoes,
+as well as Ambassador at Constantinople for four years, after which both
+subsided into the blameless occupation of various sinecures.</p>
+
+<p>Never, indeed, was family so well provided for during an entire century
+as the Temple-Grenvilles. Although the system by which the aristocracy
+lived on the country was not carried nearly as far in Great Britain as
+in the France of the fourteenth Louis and his successor, yet it had no
+inconsiderable hold. Even the austere George, though averse in Burke's
+expressive language to 'the low, pimping politics of a Court,' did not
+disdain, when Prime Minister, to hurry to the King to announce<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">134</a></span> the
+death of Lord Macclesfield and secure for his son, afterwards Marquis of
+Buckingham, the reversion of the Irish Tellership of the Exchequer thus
+vacated;<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> nor, a few months later, to obtain the grant of a
+lighthouse as a provision for his younger children.<a name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> The Tellership,
+held as it was under the unreformed conditions, was a place of vast
+emolument; it is not now easy to compute the amount.<a name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> Nor is it
+necessary for the purpose of this book to follow up these details.
+Cobbett reckoned from returns furnished to the House of Commons that
+this Lord Buckingham and his brother Thomas, the sons of George
+Grenville, had in half a century drawn 700,000<i>l.</i> of public money, and
+William, another brother, something like 200,000<i>l.</i> more. These
+figures, of course, are open to dispute, but they indicate at least that
+the revenues from public money of this family of sinecurists must have
+been enormous. Of English families the Grenvilles were in this
+particular line easily the first. Had all sinecurists, it may be said in
+passing, spent their money like the younger Thomas, who returned far
+more than he received by bequeathing his matchless library to the
+nation, the public conscience would have been much more tender towards
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Nor was it need that drove them thus to live upon the public, for the
+private wealth of the family was commanding; it was the basis of their
+power. Richard by the death of his mother was said to have become the
+richest subject in England.<a name="FNanchor_97_97" id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> And, as time went on, his possessions
+swelled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">135</a></span> and swelled. The estates of Bubb<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> devolved upon him.
+Heiresses brought their fortunes. There seemed no end to this
+prosperity, and it was all utilised steadily and ceaselessly to extend
+the political influence of the family.</p>
+
+<p>So all the brothers, even the sailor Thomas, were brought into the House
+of Commons; and, with their connections and their discipline, so long as
+this was preserved, formed a redoubtable political force. They were not
+only a brotherhood but a confraternity. What is really admirable indeed
+is the pertinacity and concentration of this strange, dogged race, and
+their devotion, indeed subjection, to their chief; they were a political
+Company of Jesus. Their objects were not exalted, but from generation to
+generation, with a patience little less than Chinese, they pursued and
+ultimately attained what they desired. They were of course unpopular,
+because their scheme was too obvious; but they knew the value of
+popularity, and attempted it with pompous and crowded entertainments.
+They were not brilliant; but in every generation they had a man of
+sufficient ability, two prime ministers among them, to further their
+cause. They built, no doubt, on inadequate foundations, but these lasted
+just long enough to enable the structure to be crowned. It is a singular
+story; there is nothing like it in the history of England; it resembles
+rather the persistent annals of the hive.</p>
+
+<p>The career of Pitt is concerned with only two of these Grenvilles,
+Richard and George. These two men had this at least in common, an
+amazing opinion of themselves. They were in their own estimation as good
+as or better<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">136</a></span> than any one else. They resented the slightest idea of any
+disparity between themselves and Pitt. On what this prodigious estimate
+was founded we shall never know; we can only conjecture that it was the
+combination of fortune and family with some ability that made them deem
+their position at least equal to his. When Pitt had raised Britain from
+abasement to the first position in the world, when he was indisputably
+the greatest orator and the greatest power in the country, the
+Grenvilles considered themselves at the least as Pitt's equals, and him
+as only one and not the first of a triumvirate. In 1769, when Pitt was
+reconciled to them, Temple trumpeted the 'union of the three brothers'
+as the greatest fact in contemporary history. As the alliance of a man
+of genius with great parliamentary influence and powers of intrigue it
+was undoubtedly a political fact of note. But any disparity between the
+three personalities never occurs to Temple. In 1766, he writes: 'If a
+lead of superiority was claimed (on the part of Pitt) it was rejected on
+my part with an assertion of my pretensions to an equality.' And again:
+'I claimed an equality, and have no idea of yielding to him.... a
+superiority which I think it would be unbecoming in me to give.' Poor
+forgotten Temple! With such superb scorn did he reject the offer of the
+First Lordship of the Treasury, with the nomination of the
+Chancellorship of the Exchequer and the whole Board of Treasury, when
+offered by the first man in Europe. An hallucination of the same kind
+was observed in the brothers of Napoleon. But in that case it was only
+noted by cynical contemporaries, in this it was proclaimed on the
+housetops.</p>
+
+<p>Of Richard, the eldest, who became, as will be seen,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">137</a></span> Earl Temple, a
+competent and laborious critic has said that he was one of the 'most
+straightforward, honest, and honourable men of his age.' The age, no
+doubt, was not famous for public men of this type; but it was not so
+barren as this judgment would imply. And indeed it is difficult to
+discern the grounds on which it is based. To the ordinary student
+Temple, we imagine, will always appear a selfish and tortuous intriguer,
+who hoped to utilise his brother-in-law's genius and popularity for
+practical objects of his own. But he had other resources of a more
+questionable kind. He delighted in the subterranean and the obscure.
+'This malignant man,' says Horace Walpole with truth and point, 'worked
+in the mines of successive factions for over thirty years together.' He
+was in constant communication with Wilkes, whom he supplied with funds.
+He was an active pamphleteer. So well were his methods understood that
+he acquired the dubious honour of a candidature for the authorship of
+Junius. It is almost certain at any rate that he was one of the few
+confidants of that remarkable secret. But his wealth and strategy and
+borough power were all concentrated on selfish and personal objects. As
+head of the Grenvilles, his design was that the Grenvilles and their
+connections and all other influences that he could bring to bear should
+co-operate for the elevation of the family in the person of its chief.
+For this purpose his brother-in-law, Pitt, was a priceless asset. But
+all the family had to serve. All of them were put into the House of
+Commons; and, it may be added, into the Privy Council, except Thomas,
+the sailor, who was prematurely removed by death. George, who under Pitt
+and Temple only enjoyed subordinate office,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">138</a></span> was for a time lured from
+the family allegiance by Bute with the offer of a Secretaryship of State
+and the reversion of the headship. But George himself was eventually
+brought into line.</p>
+
+<p>Temple's aims were simple and material; from the first moment that we
+discern him he is pursuing them with persistent but intemperate ardour.
+Hardly was Cobham's body cold, Cobham, his uncle and benefactor, to whom
+he owed everything, when we find Temple urging that his mother, Cobham's
+sister and heiress, should be made a Countess in her own right, with
+descent, of course, to himself. Cobham died on September 13; on
+September 28 Temple applied for this title. Even Newcastle, the most
+hardened of political jobbers, was shocked at his precipitation, and
+suggested a postponement, on the ground of common decency. Temple
+brushed this objection aside with contempt. He wished the thing done at
+once, and done it was.</p>
+
+<p>Hardly had he thus been ennobled when we find him signalising his new
+rank by a filthy trick more suited to a barge than a court. At a
+reception in his own house, presided over by his charming and
+accomplished wife, Lord Cobham, as he was now styled, spat into the hat
+which Lord Hervey held in his hand. This feat Cobham had betted a guinea
+that he would accomplish. Hervey behaved with temper and coolness.
+Cobham took the hat and wiped it with profuse excuses, trying to pass
+the matter off as a joke; but after some days of humiliation he had to
+write an explicit apology with a recital of all his previous efforts to
+appease Hervey's resentment.<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> Such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">139</a></span> diversions, Lady Hester Stanhope
+declares, were common at Stowe. She narrates one scarcely less
+nauseous.<a name="FNanchor_100_100" id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a></p>
+
+<p>Having obtained the earldom, his next object was the Garter. George II.
+detested him, and refused the request with asperity. So Pitt had to be
+brought in. Pitt was then all-powerful, for this was the autumn of 1759.
+He wrote a note full of sombre menace to Newcastle, and demanded the
+Garter for Temple as a reward for his own services; but still the King
+refused. Then the last reserves were brought into play. Temple resigned
+the Privy Seal on the ground that the Garter was denied. Pitt had at the
+same time a peremptory interview with Newcastle. The King had to yield,
+but could not repress his anger. He threw the ribbon to Temple as a bone
+is thrown to a dog. But delicacy, as we have seen, did not trouble
+Temple in matters of substance, and he was satisfied.</p>
+
+<p>Having obtained these two objects of ambition, he now played for a
+dukedom. This ambition, suspected presumably in Cobham, had been the
+subject of epigram so early as 1742.<a name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> It was avowed, according to
+Walpole, in 1767, and, indeed, no other explanation seems adapted to his
+various proceedings at critical junctures. Thus, when in June 1765,
+George III. and his uncle Cumberland tried to form a Pitt ministry, but
+found that an absolute condition of such a ministry was that Temple
+should be First Lord of the Treasury, Temple refused on various flimsy
+pretexts. When these were surmounted, he declared that 'he had tender
+and delicate reasons' which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">140</a></span> he did not explain to the King, or,
+apparently, to Pitt.<a name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> That this unwonted delicacy and tenderness
+were concentrated on the superior coronet appears from the negotiation
+carried on by Horace Walpole in 1767, when Lord Hertford assured him of
+the fact that Lord Temple's ambition was now a dukedom.<a name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> It is not
+doubtful that this had now become the central preoccupation of his life,
+and the hereditary object of the family combination. At first sight it
+would seem improbable that Pitt was aware of it, for the simple reason
+that he would probably have made efforts to obtain it from the King. On
+the other hand, it is unlikely that Temple, in the affair of the Garter,
+having found the inestimable value of Pitt's pressure on George II.,
+could have foregone the effort to exercise it on George III. On the
+whole, the most plausible conjecture appears to be that Pitt was
+unsuccessfully sounded by his brother-in-law. All that we know is, that
+when Pitt finally determined to undertake the ministry without Temple,
+they had a heated interview, which seems to have left deep marks on
+Pitt's nerves and health, but whether it turned on Temple's particular
+ambition or not can now only be matter for surmise.</p>
+
+<p>The death of Temple made no difference to the family ambition. His
+nephew made violent, even frantic, but ineffectual efforts to obtain the
+title through Chatham's son. Nor were other means of aggrandisement
+neglected. By marriage there accrued the fortunes of Chambers, Nugent,
+Chandos, and, by some other way, that of Dodington. Acre was added to
+acre and estate to estate,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">141</a></span> often by the dangerous expedient of borrowed
+money, until Buckinghamshire seemed likely to become the appanage of the
+family. Borough influence was laboriously accumulated and maintained.
+Nor were nobler possessions disdained. Rare books and manuscripts,
+choice pictures, and sumptuous furniture were added by successive
+generations to the splendid collections of Stowe. Finally, in the reign
+of George IV., and in the time of Temple's great-nephew, the object was
+attained. Lord Liverpool acquired the support of the Grenville
+parliamentary influence by an almost commercial compact, Louis XVIII.
+added his instances, and Buckingham became a duke. From that moment the
+star of the family visibly paled. Eight years afterwards the duke had to
+shut up Stowe, and go abroad. Less than twenty years from then the
+palace was dismantled, its treasures were dispersed, the vast estates
+sold, and the glories of the House, built up with so much care and
+persistence, vanished like a snow-wreath.</p>
+
+<p>But all this is beyond our narrative. At this time all these ambitions
+are concealed, there is nothing visible but cordiality, the genial flow
+of soul, and brotherly love. Pitt's early letters to George Grenville
+are among the easiest and most human that he ever wrote: he wrote
+nothing more unaffectedly tender than two letters he sent in September
+and October 1742, to George, then abroad for his health. Richard and
+George Grenville, Lyttelton and William Pitt, with their set, form one
+of those engaging companionships of youth, when high spirits, warm
+affections, and the dayspring of life combine to animate a friendship
+without guile or suspicion.</p>
+
+<p>Then come separation, marriage, new interests, new<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">142</a></span> ambitions, and the
+paths diverge, perhaps till sunset. So it was with these young men. They
+all at times quarrelled, even the kindly Lyttelton was driven to
+separation. Later, again, they all came together again in some fashion
+or another, with the exception, perhaps, of George, whose obstinate
+self-love when wounded could never be healed.</p>
+
+<p>But now all was dawn and blossom and smiles. The friends are full of
+banter. Their politics are half a frolic. Life is all before them. Its
+conditions will harden them presently, and they will wrangle and snarl,
+and have their quarrels and huffs. But that is not yet; not even a
+coming shadow is visible. Still, even now, it is necessary to indicate
+the nature and consequences of Pitt's absorption into the cousinhood.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">143</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is here that his public career begins. His lot was cast in stirring
+times. For the year of his entry into Parliament was the fourteenth of
+Walpole's long administration, and it was not difficult to see menacing
+cracks in the structure. The Minister himself seems to have been aware
+that his position was critical; and at the general election in the
+previous year he had spared no exertions to secure a majority. In his
+own county of Norfolk, 10,000<i>l.</i> had been spent in support of his
+candidates without averting their defeat: from his own private means he
+is said, no doubt with gross exaggeration, to have expended no less than
+60,000<i>l.</i> Figures like these, however swollen by rumour, denote the
+intensity of the struggle. But in spite of all, his losses were
+considerable. Even Scotland, in those days the hungry dependant of all
+Governments, was shaken in her allegiance. And, though he gained the
+victory, the toughness of the contest betokened clearly that his
+stability was seriously impaired, and that the country was weary of his
+domination.</p>
+
+<p>For this there were many obvious causes. One, of course, was the
+universal unpopularity of the Excise scheme. It was also one of the
+moments in our history when the country is uneasily conscious of
+weakness and possible humiliation abroad, and when the silent and
+passive interests of peace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">144</a></span> weigh lightly in the balance against the
+smarting burden of wounded self-respect. But the most operative cause
+lay in Walpole himself.</p>
+
+<p>There is no enigma about Walpole. He sprang from near a score of
+generations of Norfolk squires who had spent six hundred years in
+healthy obscurity and the simple pleasures of the country. None of them
+apparently had brains, or the need of them. From these he inherited a
+frame hardy and robust, and that taste for the sports of the field that
+never left him. He had also the advantage of being brought up as a
+younger son to work, and thus he gained that self-reliant and
+pertinacious industry which served him so well through long years of
+high office. From the beginning to the end he was primarily a man of
+business. Had he not been a politician it cannot be doubted that he
+would have been a great merchant or a great financier. And, though his
+lot was cast in politics, a man of business he essentially remained.
+This is not to say that he was not a consummate parliamentary debater,
+for that he must have been. But it is to suggest that the key to
+Walpole's character as Prime Minister lies in his instincts and
+qualifications as a man of business. His main tendency was not, as with
+Chesterfield and Carteret and Bolingbroke, towards high statesmanship.
+His first object was to carry on the business of the country in a
+business spirit, as economically and as peacefully as possible. His
+chief preoccupation apart from this was the keeping out of the rival
+house of Stuart, which would not have employed the firm of Walpole and
+the Whigs to keep their accounts. It is quite possible that as a patriot
+he may have also dreaded the probable evils of the Stuart dynasty. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</a></span>
+the first reason is amply sufficient. The corruption of which he was
+undoubtedly guilty, but of which he was by no means the inventor, he
+perhaps considered as the commission due to customers; or else he may
+have argued, 'these men have to be bought by somebody, let us do it in a
+business-like way.' His merciless crushing of any rivals was simply the
+big firm crushing competition, a familiar feature of commerce. His
+carrying on a war against Spain in spite of his own conscientious
+disapproval can only be satisfactorily explained on the same hypothesis.
+The nation would have war: well, if it must, he could carry it on more
+cheaply, and limit its mischief more effectually than any other
+contractor. Moreover, Walpole had all along been the merchants' man. He
+had given them peace and wealth. Now for commercial purposes they wanted
+war and he had to gratify them. They had been the main backers of his
+administration, the deprivation of their support would have left him
+bare; so when they turned round he had to follow, with scarcely the
+appearance of leadership.</p>
+
+<p>In these days we should undoubtedly condemn any statesman who declared a
+war of which he disapproved. Lord Aberdeen morbidly and unjustly accused
+himself of this offence, and refused to be comforted. That is the other
+extreme to Walpole's position. But we must remember the political
+morality of those times. Was there then living a statesman who would
+have acted differently? From this sweeping question we cannot except
+Pitt, who was bitterly denouncing Walpole for his pacific attitude, and
+had afterwards to confess that Walpole had been right.</p>
+
+<p>We regard Walpole, then, first and foremost as a man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</a></span> of business, led
+into the great error with which history reproaches him by his brother
+men of business. Still, his qualities in that capacity would not have
+maintained him for years as Prime Minister. They proved him to be a
+hard-working man with practical knowledge of affairs and strong common
+sense; a sagacious man who hated extremes. He had besides the highest
+qualities of a parliamentary leader. Of imagination, unless it may be
+inferred from his palace and picture gallery, he seems to have been
+totally destitute. But he had dauntless courage and imperturbable
+temper.</p>
+
+<p>To his courage George II., who was not profuse of praise, gave ardent
+testimony. 'He is a brave fellow,' he would cry out vehemently, with a
+flush and an oath, 'he has more spirit than any man I ever knew;' a
+compliment ill-requited by Sir Robert, who declared that his master, if
+he knew anything of him, was, 'with all his personal bravery, as great a
+political coward as ever wore a crown.' Early in his career as Prime
+Minister Sir Robert, who had the art, rare among eighteenth century
+politicians, of inditing pointed and pregnant letters, had written to an
+Irish Viceroy: 'I have weathered great storms before now, and shall not
+be lost in an Irish hurricane.'<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a> This was no vain boast; it was the
+spirit in which he habitually conducted affairs. In truth Walpole's
+courage stands in no need of witness, it speaks for itself; his very
+defects arose from it or prove it. His jealousy of ability which
+deprived him of precious allies and compelled him to fight
+single-handed, his intolerance of independence in his party which had
+the same effect, all show the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</a></span> dauntless self-confidence of the man. He
+wanted no competitors, no dubious allies, no assistance but that of
+unflagging votes or diligent service; for all else he relied on himself
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>This great Minister had all the defects of his qualities as well as one
+which seemed curiously alien to them. Part of his strength lay in a
+coarse and burly, if cynical, geniality. His temper, as we have said,
+was imperturbable; we shall see this even in the closing scene of his
+ministry; it was even cordial, and sometimes boisterous. He loved to
+seem rather a country gentleman than a statesman. He seemed most natural
+when shooting and carousing at Houghton, or carousing and hunting at
+Richmond. But his appearance was deceptive; he was what the French would
+call 'un faux bonhomme,' a spurious good fellow. Good nature perhaps
+could hardly have survived the desperate battles and intrigues in which
+this hard-bitten old statesman had been engaged all his life. And so
+under this bluff and debonair exterior there was concealed a jealousy of
+power, passing the jealousy of woman, and the ruthless vindictiveness of
+a Red Indian. To the opposition of his political foes he opposed a stout
+and unflinching front which shielded a gang of mediocrities; with these
+enemies he fought a battle in which quarter was neither granted nor
+expected. But his own forces were kept under martial law; anything like
+opposition or rivalry within his ranks he crushed in the relentless
+spirit of Peter the Great. By these methods he had not merely maintained
+an iron discipline among his own supporters, but had himself constructed
+by alienation and proscription the opposition to his administration, an
+opposition which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</a></span> comprised consummate abilities and undying
+resentments. For he had driven from him and united in a league of
+implacable revenge almost all the men of power and leading in
+Parliament. Politics to them were embodied in one controlling idea; how
+to compass the fall, the ruin, the impeachment of Walpole. The undaunted
+Minister faced them with confident serenity, though they were not
+enemies to be disdained. Pulteney, Wyndham, Chesterfield, and Carteret
+were men of the highest ability and distinction. Barnard and Polwarth,
+Shippen and Sandys, were from character or intellect scarcely less
+redoubtable. Behind them lurked Bolingbroke, excluded, indeed, from
+Parliament by the vigilant detestation of Walpole, but guiding and
+inspiring from his enforced retirement, the seer and oracle of all the
+Minister's enemies, for&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Princely counsel in his face yet shone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Majestic, though in ruin.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Prominent among these stately combatants was an anomalous figure with a
+brain as shallow and futile as St. John's was active and brilliant, but
+by the nature of things as formidable as Bolingbroke was impotent,
+Frederick Prince of Wales. For Frederick was soon to add to the second
+position in the country the leadership of the Opposition. The King's
+health was supposed to be precarious, though he lived cheerfully and not
+ingloriously for another quarter of a century. And the Heir Apparent,
+feeling conscious of his advantages, and determined to assert himself,
+became the complacent puppet of all the factions opposed to his father's
+Government. His Court, indeed, resembled that famous cave to which were
+gathered every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</a></span> one that was discontented and every one that was in
+distress. All who had been spurned or ousted by Walpole, all who were
+under the displeasure of the King, all who saw little prospect of
+advancement under the present reign, hastened to rally round the Heir
+Apparent. He was soon to employ Pitt about his person. It is well, then,
+to pause a moment and consider this prominent and formidable figure.</p>
+
+<p>Frederick, Prince of Wales, is one of the idle mysteries of English
+history. The problem does not lie in his being a political leader, in
+spite of the general contempt in which he was held by his contemporaries
+and associates; for an heir-apparent to the Crown can always, if he
+chooses, be a factor in party politics, though it is scarcely possible
+that his intervention can be beneficial. But no circumstance known to us
+can explain the virulence of aversion with which the King and Queen
+regarded him, which was so intense as to be almost incredible. They were
+both good haters, and yet they hated no one half so much as their eldest
+son. His father called him the greatest beast and liar and scoundrel in
+existence. His mother and his sister wished hourly to hear of his death.
+This violence of unnatural loathing is not to be accounted for by any
+known facts. Frederick was a poor creature, no doubt, a vain and fatuous
+coxcomb. But human beings are constantly the parents of coxcombs without
+regarding them as vermin. The only conjecture in regard to the matter
+which seems to furnish adequate ground for these feelings is that the
+King was bred in the narrow school of a little German State, where,
+though nothing less than affection was expected between a prince and his
+heir, discipline was rigidly observed; so that the conduct of Frederick,
+in assuming a position independent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</a></span> and defiant of his father, and in
+openly heading an opposition to his Government, was an offence the more
+unspeakable and unpardonable as it had been absolutely beyond the limits
+of Hanoverian contemplation. There was, it must be confessed, an
+hereditary predisposition to this parental relation. The King himself,
+when Prince of Wales, had been placed under arrest by his father for the
+somewhat venial offence of insulting the Duke of Newcastle. He had
+submitted himself to his disgrace, and his opposition had only been
+passive and inarticulate; he had never dreamed of forming a faction
+hostile to the Crown. His only real crimes had been his right of
+succession and a fictitious popularity founded on dislike of his
+father's mistresses. And yet his father hated him almost as much as
+father ever hated son. It was reserved for George II. to discover a
+deeper abhorrence for his own heir. With his views of absolute
+authority, a peculiar degree of detestation had to be discovered for a
+Prince of Wales who had not merely the inherent vice of heirship
+apparent but the gratuitous offence of an active opposition which his
+father deemed flagrant rebellion. Given violent temper, ill manners, and
+a sort of family tradition, the cause of wrath can best be thus
+explained.</p>
+
+<p>Beyond this we know nothing for certain, and presumably shall never know
+more. There are some facts, but they are insufficient.</p>
+
+<p>It is said that as a mere boy he gamed and drank and kept a mistress. By
+this last scandal the royal family was enabled to present to the world
+the unedifying spectacle of grandfather, father, and son simultaneously
+living under these immoral conditions; and all three, it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</a></span> is said,
+successively with the same woman. But these facts alone would certainly
+not have accounted for his father's displeasure. Again, it is narrated
+that when his tutor complained of him his mother said that these were
+page's tricks. 'Would to God they were, madam,' replied the tutor, 'but
+they are rather the tricks of lackeys and knaves.' And tricky Frederick
+undoubtedly was from the beginning to the end. But trickiness, though it
+was not among the King's faults, and though it would excite his just
+contempt, cannot alone have caused the intensity of his hatred.</p>
+
+<p>One if not two of Frederick's escapades were concerned with designs of
+marriage. He was discovered on the point of concluding a secret alliance
+with Princess Wilhelmine of Prussia, with whom he professed himself in
+love, and who afterwards became known to us as Margravine of Bareith; on
+another occasion it is said that he was lured by a dowry of 100,000<i>l.</i>
+into a betrothal with Lady Diana Spencer, grand-daughter of Sarah,
+Duchess of Marlborough. Both these affairs were interrupted at the last
+moment. In both cases the King was irritated by the underhand
+proceedings of his son, and by the total lack of a confidence which, as
+he probably omitted to remember, he had done nothing to gain. But his
+crowning outrage was a monkey-trick, both wanton and barbarous. When he
+had at last married a princess of his father's choice, and his wife was
+seized with the first pangs of maternity in the King's palace of Hampton
+Court, he hurried her off, in her agony and in spite of her entreaties,
+to St. James's. At any moment of the journey a catastrophe might have
+occurred. What the motive was for this cruel and unmeaning escapade
+cannot be guessed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</a></span> for his own explanations were futile. It was said
+that his father suspected him of an intention to foist a spurious child
+on his family and that he resented the suspicion. If that were so his
+action was exactly suited to confirm it. Whatever his purpose may have
+been, the King and Queen, from whom the imminence of the Princess's
+situation had been carefully concealed, were naturally and grossly
+insulted. The King banished him from his palace and presence, and
+forbade the Court to all who should visit him. Nor was there ever an
+approach to reconciliation or forgiveness in the fourteen years that the
+Prince had yet to live. The King would receive him at Court and would
+express the hope that his wife was in good health; that was the extent
+of their relations. But though this was the culminating point of his
+known misconduct, it would almost seem that there was some more occult
+reason which we do not know. We only guess at its existence from the
+record of Lord Hardwicke. At the time of this last scandal 'Sir Robert
+Walpole,' says the Chancellor, 'informed me of certain passages between
+the King and himself, and between the King and the Prince, of too high
+and secret a nature even to be trusted to this narrative; but from
+thence I found great reason to think that this unhappy difference
+between the King and Queen and His Royal Highness turned upon some
+points of a more interesting and important nature than have hitherto
+appeared.'<a name="FNanchor_105_105" id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> There, then, is the mystery, without a key, with no room
+even for conjecture. But the cause must have been dire that evoked so
+deadly a passion of hatred between parents and son. </p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Those who care to read in detail the coarse and violent expressions of
+this unnatural repulsion may glut their appetite in Lord Hervey's
+memoirs. One or two such passages will serve as specimens of the rest.
+The Queen and Princess Caroline, Frederick's sister, made no ceremony of
+wishing a hundred times a day that the Prince might drop down dead of an
+apoplexy. Princess Caroline, who, Hervey tells us, 'had affability
+without meanness, dignity without pride, cheerfulness without levity,
+and prudence without falsehood,' who was in a word an exemplary and
+charming person, declared that she grudged him every hour he had to
+breathe, and reproached Hervey with being 'so great a dupe as to believe
+the nauseous beast' (those were her words) 'cared for anything but his
+own nauseous self, that he loved anything but money, that he was not the
+greatest liar that ever spoke.' The Queen, not to be outdone, declared
+that she would give it under her hand 'that my dear firstborn is the
+greatest ass, and the greatest liar, and the greatest canaille, and the
+greatest beast in the whole world, and that I most heartily wish he was
+out of it.'<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> Even on her deathbed she could not be brought to
+receive or forgive him. If Lord Hervey, his bitter enemy, can be
+credited, this obduracy was not at the last without justification. Lord
+Hervey declares that the Prince crowded the Queen's anteroom with his
+emissaries to convey to him the earliest information of her condition.
+As the bulletins of the Queen's decline reached him, he would say,
+'Well, now we shall have some good news; she cannot hold out much
+longer.' All this need not be literally believed, but it affords a
+picture of family<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</a></span> rancour which can scarcely have been equalled in the
+history of mankind.</p>
+
+<p>From the time of the public quarrel with his parents the Prince of Wales
+gave himself up to political opposition. He wielded, indeed, formidable
+weapons of offence. His father was avaricious, secluded, and disliked;
+Frederick laid himself out to be thought generous, accessible, and
+popular. He knew well that every symptom of national affection for
+himself was a stab to the King. He and his family, at a time when French
+fashions were all the rage, ostentatiously wore none but English goods.
+He trained his children to act Addison's Cato. Nor did he disdain more
+social arts. He would go to fairs, bull-baitings, races, and rowing
+matches; he would visit gipsy encampments; he became familiar to the
+people. He would assist at a fire in London, amid shouts from the mob,
+as he and his court alleged, of 'Crown him! crown him!' At Epsom there
+is a tradition that when living there he fought a chimney-sweep with his
+fists, and erected a monument in generous acknowledgment of his own
+defeat.</p>
+
+<p>In private life he was essentially frivolous. When his father's troops
+were besieging Carlisle, the Prince had a model of the citadel made in
+confectionery, while he and the ladies of the court bombarded it with
+sugar-plums. This seems emblematic of his whole career.</p>
+
+<p>But his main and favourite diversion had a graver aspect: it lay in
+political cabals of which he was the puppet and the figurehead, and in
+forming futile ministries and policies for his own reign. Of these last
+a curious example is preserved among the Bedford Papers.<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> </p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All political malcontents of the slightest importance were sure of a
+cordial reception at Leicester House or Kew. There all could warm their
+wants and disappointments with the sunshine of royal patronage and the
+cheering prospect of a new reign. 'Remember that the King is sixty-one,
+and I am thirty-seven,'<a name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a> said Frederick, and this calculation
+coloured his whole life. The future was freely discounted and
+anticipated in the Prince's circle, so that there, as in the Court of
+the Pretender, the faithful adherent might receive some high office to
+be enjoyed after the death of the King, but with this substantial
+difference: that whereas what James distributed were shadows, the awards
+of Frederick required only common good faith and the death of an old man
+to make them realities. Bubb for example, the most avid and unabashed of
+political harlots, gravely kissed his patron's hand for a Secretaryship
+of State, and, according to Walpole, a dukedom, immediately afterwards
+nominating his under-secretary, to show the solidity of the arrangement.
+Henley, who was afterwards under different circumstances to be
+Chancellor, was grievously disappointed to find that Dr. Lee was to have
+the seals. And so they snapped and snarled over the spoils, while the
+Prince complacently made his appointments, and apportioned the functions
+of the future. So far as he was concerned it was all barren enough. His
+little projects, his little ambitions, his little ministries, his
+political post-obits, were all cut short by the sudden shears of Death.
+His councillors and followers were scattered to the winds, and Bubb had
+to hasten to make his peace with the powers that be, and to exchange his
+contingent Secretaryship of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">156</a></span> State for an actual Treasurership of the
+Navy. The Prince's other post-obits, his debts, were, it would seem,
+never paid.<a name="FNanchor_109_109" id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a></p>
+
+<p>To sum up, with regard to Frederick we have a few certain facts: the
+hatred of his parents and sisters, and a singular unanimity of scorn
+from his contemporaries. There is not perhaps in existence a single
+favourable testimony. We have many portraits, one at Windsor of an
+innocent lad in a red coat playing the violoncello with his sisters,
+which is pleasant enough; the later ones all stamped with a pretentious
+silliness which affirms the verdict of his own day. Then we have the
+mysterious intimation of Lord Hardwicke of some deep and sinister cause
+for the alienation of his parents. This, however, unsupported and
+unexplained, carries us no further, and is merely an excuse for the
+unnatural aversion of his family. Beyond that mystery, the word
+'fatuous' seems exactly to embody all that we know of this prince; his
+appearance, morals, manners, and intellect are all summed up in that
+single expression.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, there are traits of generosity which are recorded,
+there is his apparent popularity, there is the general grief for his
+death; but it may well be surmised that it was not difficult for the son
+of George II. and the grandson of George I. to be popular and regretted.
+On the whole, may we not conclude that the arbitrary discipline of
+Hanover in early life made him incurably tricky and untruthful, that he
+was an empty and frivolous coxcomb, but not without kindly instincts;
+and that his weaknesses and frailties, whatever they may have been, laid
+a grave responsibility on the parents who reared and cursed him?</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">157</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">During</span> his first session of Parliament, Pitt never opened his mouth:
+indeed, his only public performance was to tell in a division. In 1736
+he became better known. He supported an address of congratulation to the
+Crown on the marriage of the Prince of Wales. This formal and
+complimentary speech has been absurdly scrutinised because of the
+speaker's subsequent fame, and much has been read into it which no
+impartial reader can now discern. A notorious eulogy describes it as
+superior even to the models of ancient eloquence. Others read into it
+piercing innuendoes and vitriolic sarcasm. All this was discovered, long
+after its delivery, by the light of Pitt's later achievements. It is
+said that George II. never forgave it. But George II.'s hatred of Pitt
+is more easily accounted for by other offences. It is rumoured that
+Walpole shuddered when he heard it, and said, 'We must muzzle that
+terrible cornet of horse.' The ordinary reader sees in the reported
+speech nothing which would provoke admiration or alarm in anybody were
+it attributed to any one who had remained obscure. But the report,
+though elaborate, was probably inaccurate; the speech may have been more
+vicious than appears; it must, at any rate, have been something very
+different from smooth platitudes on a royal marriage that would have
+made Walpole tremble, if indeed Walpole was liable to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">158</a></span> any such emotion.
+The truth, no doubt, is that the graces of voice, person, and delivery
+marvellously embellished this maiden effort, and produced a striking
+effect on the audience.</p>
+
+<p>But, whatever its intrinsic merits, the success of this speech was
+immeasurably enhanced, if not altogether secured, by Walpole's action.
+It may indeed be said to have been made famous by the penalty which
+followed it rather than by its own merits. He deprived the young orator
+and cornet of his commission.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'The servile standard from the freeborn hand<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He took, and bade thee lead the patriot band,'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>sang Lyttelton to Pitt.</p>
+
+<p>It was a vindictive act which seems alien to Walpole's boisterous good
+humour, but of a kind to which Walpole's arbitrary notions of political
+discipline made him singularly prone. So petty an act of vengeance
+wreaked on so young and subordinate an officer by a powerful Prime
+Minister seems incredible in our larger or laxer days. But it was
+perhaps the very slightness of Pitt's position which was an inducement
+to Walpole. He was determined, it may be, that the whole army, from the
+highest to the lowest, should feel the weight of his hand. The disgrace
+of political generals seemed just and proper, it was cutting off the
+heads of the tallest poppies, a proceeding recognised and respectable
+since the days of Tarquin. These penalties had left the mass of the army
+unmoved, not impossibly because the removal of chiefs means the
+promotion of subordinates. So Walpole may have resolved that all in the
+service of the Crown should feel that revolt against the minister of the
+Crown was a flagrant crime. Generals<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">159</a></span> had been punished, and so all
+officers from the highest, to the lowest should be liable to the same
+pains and penalties; nay private soldiers, were their lot enviable,
+might suffer the same deprivation. 'The King,' wrote Lady Irwin, a lady
+of the Prince of Wales' household, to her brother, Lord Carlisle, 'two
+days ago turned out Mr. Pitt from a cornetcy for having voted and spoke
+in Parliament contrary to his approbation. He is a young man of no
+fortune, a very pretty speaker, one the Prince is particular to, and
+under the tuition of my Lord Cobham. The Army is all alarmed at this,
+and 'tis said it will hurt the King more than his removing my Lord
+Stairs and Lord Cobham, since it is making the whole army dependent, by
+descending to resent a vote from the lowest commission, which may
+occasion a representation in parliament to prevent all officers of the
+army from sitting there.'<a name="FNanchor_110_110" id="FNanchor_110_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a></p>
+
+<p>It may, however, have been that Pitt's dismissal was due not to his
+obscurity but to an exactly opposite consideration.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt's nephew, Lord Camelford, asserts as an undoubted fact that the
+reputation both of Pitt and of Lyttelton was so considerable before they
+entered Parliament, and their political tendencies so notorious, that
+Walpole made considerable offers to Thomas Pitt on condition that he did
+not brings them in for any of his boroughs. 'William's early abilities,'
+writes Lord Camelford, 'induc'd Sir Robert Walpole to offer my father
+(Thomas Pitt) any terms not to bring him or his brother-in-law Mr.
+Lyttelton into Parliament,' but 'my father preferred their interests to
+his own, and laid the foundations, at his own expense, for all his
+brother's future<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">160</a></span> fame and greatness.' It is a tradition that Canning,
+when in office, kept his eye on promising lads at Eton who might make
+eligible followers. One would not, however, have imagined that Walpole
+was so much in touch with the rising youth of the country. But if
+Camelford may be credited, and there seems no reason to doubt him,
+Walpole was prejudiced and on his guard against Pitt before Pitt opened
+his mouth; and he may have been hurried into a petulant act by previous
+friction unconnected with the speech, which may, moreover, have
+contained irritating innuendoes directed against Walpole, which Walpole
+alone understood.</p>
+
+<p>The Minister had not been so foolish as to alienate without trying to
+secure, and his failure may have exasperated him the more. In later
+years Pitt told Shelburne that Sir Robert had offered him the troop
+which was afterwards given to Conway, so that had he remained in the
+army he would have stood high by seniority alone. This offer, we may
+conjecture, was just previous to the overtures to Thomas Pitt. Walpole,
+hearing reports of the young officer's conspicuous abilities and of his
+hostility to the Government, would try and fix his ambitions in the
+army. Failing that, he would try and exclude him from Parliament. And
+failing all pacific overtures, he would try different methods. It is
+possible, and even probable, that expressions passed during the
+negotiations which left a sting. But it now seems clear that no young
+private member, without means or influence, ever caused such active
+disquietude.</p>
+
+<p>There is yet another, and, perhaps, a simpler reason. Pitt, as we have
+seen, had become identified with the fortunes and party of Cobham, who
+was Walpole's bitter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">161</a></span> enemy. Conciliation having been found futile, the
+Minister determined that the young soldier should suffer the same
+penalty as the old general. The old gamecock had lost his spurs, so
+should the young cockerel. If Pitt were so devoted to Cobham, he should
+have the gratification of sharing Cobham's martyrdom. Cobham had lost
+his regiment; Pitt should lose his commission. In striking Pitt he would
+also wound Cobham. So the removal was carried out in a spirit of
+pettiness which was criticised at the time, and seems incredible to
+posterity. 'At the end of the session,' says Hervey, 'Cornet Pitt was
+broke for this, which was a measure at least ill-timed if not
+ill-taken;' which he explained by saying that if done at all it should
+have been done immediately on his speech. Hervey, though an ardent
+Walpolian, evidently thought the whole proceeding was disproportionate
+to the offender and the offence. But the result of the intended disgrace
+was, we are told, immediate popularity. Pitt after his dismissal drove
+about the country in a one-horse chaise without a servant, and
+everywhere the people gathered round him with enthusiasm.<a name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a></p>
+
+<p>Pitt took the matter philosophically. 'I should not be a little vain,'
+he writes, 'to be the object of the hatred of a minister, hated even by
+those who call themselves his friends.'<a name="FNanchor_112_112" id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a> But to his slender means
+the loss of his pay was not unimportant, and this fact perhaps explains
+his accepting an office ill-suited to his temperament. In September
+1737, the Prince of Wales, in consequence of his crazy and insolent
+conduct at the time of his wife's confinement, was ordered to leave St.
+James' Palace. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">162</a></span> retired first to Kew, and then to Norfolk House in
+St. James' Square, which thus became the birthplace of George III. The
+King's displeasure also caused some resignations in the Prince's
+household; and, smarting under this disgrace, Frederick found it no
+doubt agreeable to take advantage of these vacancies to attach to his
+household two active young members of the Opposition, whose appointment
+would be profoundly distasteful to his father. Few could be more
+repugnant to the King than Pitt, the ex-cornet, and Lyttelton his
+seconder. Moreover, Pitt was already intimate and influential with the
+Prince.<a name="FNanchor_113_113" id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a> So Lyttelton became private secretary to Frederick, and
+Pitt a groom of his bedchamber. These appointments would, in the
+ordinary course, be submitted for the sanction of the King, but the
+alienation between father and son was so acute that it is probable that
+no communication was made. Pitt held this post for seven years,
+resigning it in 1744; and the salary was no doubt of sensible assistance
+to his meagre income during this period.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt's second speech (in 1737) was also on the Prince of Wales's
+affairs. George II., who lost no opportunity of displaying publicly his
+hatred to his son, and who as Prince of Wales had received a fixed
+income of 100,000<i>l.</i> a year, gave the Prince on his marriage an
+allowance at pleasure of 50,000<i>l.</i> The Prince, who owed his father but
+scant duty and affection, was persuaded by his advisers to apply to
+Parliament for the same annuity that his father, when in his situation,
+had received. This proceeding violently incensed the King; but he was
+induced to send an official message to his son, promising to convert<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">163</a></span>
+the present voluntary allowance into a fixed income, and to settle some
+provision on the Princess. The Prince replied that the matter was now
+out of his hands. The offer, in effect, was not particularly alluring,
+as the allowance could never have been withdrawn, and a settlement on
+the Princess ought to have been made at the time of her marriage. It is
+indeed difficult, given the circumstances, to blame Frederick's unfilial
+conduct in this matter. He had a colourable claim to an income double
+that which was given him by the King; the King had ampler means of
+paying it than had been possessed by George I.; and the Prince had
+nothing to hope from the unconstrained bounty of his father; he was
+indeed under his father's ban. So the motion was brought before the
+House, and Pitt made a speech, which Thackeray, his insipid biographer,
+declares to have been most masterly, but which is nowhere preserved. We
+know nothing of it, but it is safe to presume that it was a good speech.
+These efforts and his household appointment made him a prominent figure
+in the Prince's party. He was beginning to be talked about. He had been
+sneered at by the Government paper, the 'Gazetteer,' and defended by
+Bolingbroke's organ, the 'Craftsman.' This seems the first glimmering of
+his note, and is therefore worthy of remark. Nothing is so difficult as
+to trace in a biography the several degrees by which eminence has been
+reached; seldom are the slow degrees of the ladder recorded. Here it is
+at least possible to mark the first and second steps. The first event,
+that brought Pitt into notice was the deprivation of his commission: the
+second indication of his growing power is apparent in the laboured
+sneers of the 'Gazetteer' at the young man's long neck and slender body,
+for it would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">164</a></span> not have been worth while to direct these gibes against
+one who was not formidable.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt's next speech was less successful. It was in support of a reduction
+of the standing army from 17,400 to 12,000. The contention seems almost
+incredible when it is considered that Pitt and his party were calling on
+the ministry to avenge the ill-treatment of British subjects by Spain.
+But, however inconsistent, it was probably deemed a popular move.
+Jealousy and dislike of standing armies was still strong among the
+people. Lord Hervey had told the Queen in 1735, 'that there was
+certainly nothing so odious to men of all ranks and classes in this
+country as troops,' and that 'as a standing army was the thing in the
+world that was most disliked in this country, so the reduction of any
+part of it was a measure that always made any prince more popular than
+any other he could take.'<a name="FNanchor_114_114" id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> Walpole had then maintained that the army
+should never be reduced below 18,000 men in view of the constant menace
+of the disputed succession, the turbulent character of the nation, and
+the necessity of a strong position in foreign affairs.<a name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> In this
+debate of 1738 he took much the same line. This sane view, as it was the
+policy of the Minister, was furiously combated by the young bloods of
+the Opposition. Lyttelton did not shrink from using the childish
+argument that a standing army weakened us abroad, as it made foreign
+governments believe that there must be violent dissensions in the
+country which it was kept to control. A taunt had in the course of
+debate been levelled at placemen; and Pitt, as a member of the Prince's
+household, vindicated the independence of officials, directing as he
+passed a shaft at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">165</a></span> the three hundred thick or thin supporters of the
+Government who were always so singularly unanimous on all political
+questions. The army, he said, was the chief cause of the national
+discontents, and yet these discontents were alleged as the chief cause
+for maintaining the army. Then he made the criticism so familiar to
+English public men even now, that the army cost three times as much
+proportionally to its size as the armies of France and Germany. On the
+question of disbanding troops, he took a strangely unsympathetic line.
+The officers would be put on half-pay, which was as high as full-pay
+elsewhere. And as for the private soldiers, 'I must think,' he said,
+'they have no claim for any greater reward than the pay they have
+already received, nor should I think we were guilty of the least
+ingratitude if they were all turned adrift to-morrow morning.'<a name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a>
+Pitt, it was obvious, had some distance to compass before he should
+become a popular leader. That he should have pressed at all for the
+reduction of the small standing army in the midst of an irresistible
+clamour for war is another proof of the heedless rhetoric of ambitious
+youth.</p>
+
+<p>While the young patriots were thus endeavouring to reduce the army, war
+was brewing with Spain. Our traders were constantly encroaching on her
+rights and monopolies in the New World. There was a perpetual smuggling
+invasion of the Spanish settlements in America on the part of the
+British, and a rigorous defence by right of search on the part of the
+Spaniards. There can be little doubt that the British merchants were in
+the wrong. But trade has neither conscience nor bowels, and monopolies
+of commerce are the fair quarry of the freebooting merchant.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">166</a></span> The
+Spaniards, on their side, were not delicate or merciful in exercising
+their undoubted right of search; so our countrymen, to conceal their own
+infractions of treaty and to stir up hostility to Spain, spared no
+methods or exertions to rouse popular indignation against their enemies.
+Little less than the tortures of the Inquisition were alleged. 'Seventy
+of our brave sailors are now in chains in Spain! our countrymen in
+chains and slaves to the Spaniards!' exclaimed an enthusiastic alderman:
+'is not this enough to fire the coldest?'<a name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> The notorious Jenkins now
+appeared on the scene with an ear in cotton-wool, which he alleged to
+have been torn from his head by a Spaniard, with an intimation that the
+mutilator would gladly serve our King in the same way. Alderman
+Beckford, who brought Jenkins forward, afterwards declared that if any
+member had lifted up Jenkins's wig, he would have found both ears whole
+and complete.<a name="FNanchor_118_118" id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> Others averred that though he had lost his ear, he
+had lost it in the pillory.</p>
+
+<p>The Spaniards, not to be outdone, recorded the sufferings of two of
+their nobles, who, captured by our British filibusters, had been
+compelled to devour their own noses.<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> It was alleged, too, that
+English pirates swarmed, and that Spaniards were publicly sold as slaves
+in British colonies.<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> But these allegations, though probably neither
+more nor less veracious than the others, had no currency in England,
+while the story of the suffering Jenkins ran through England like
+wildfire. A bombastic utterance was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">167</a></span> coined for him by some political
+Tadpole, and rang through the land. None cared to inquire into the right
+or the wrong of the imprisonments, or to investigate the other side of
+the question, and there were none to present it if they did. 'Britons in
+Spanish prisons' was a sufficient cry, and swept the nation off its
+feet. Walpole, always too contemptuous of popular passion, had presented
+to Parliament a convention with Spain, which regulated most of the
+points at issue between them, except that which lay nearest the heart of
+his people, the right of search; and his brother Horace moved, in a long
+and laudatory speech, an address of thanks to the Crown for this
+agreement. This roused the Prince's young men. Lyttelton, indeed, spoke
+ostentatiously as the Prince's mouthpiece. 'I know who hears me,' he
+said, alluding to his master's presence in the gallery, 'and for that
+reason I speak,'<a name="FNanchor_121_121" id="FNanchor_121_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a> Pitt and Grenville also spoke, and they are
+described in a contemporary account as 'three or four young gentlemen
+who took great personal liberties.' Another letter says that Pitt 'spoke
+very well, but very abusively.' However imperfectly his speech may be
+reported, it has much of that energy of declamatory invective which is
+part of the tradition connected with his name. Of this the peroration is
+a sufficient example. 'This convention, Sir, I think from my heart is
+nothing but a stipulation for national ignominy; an illusory expedient
+to baffle the resentment of the nation; a truce without a suspension of
+hostilities on the part of Spain; on the part of England, a suspension,
+as to Georgia, of the first law of nature, self-preservation and
+self-defence; a surrender of the right of England to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">168</a></span> mercy of
+plenipotentiaries; and in this infinitely highest and sacred point,
+future security, not only inadequate, but directly repugnant to the
+resolutions of Parliament, and the gracious promise from the throne. The
+complaints of your despairing merchants, the voice of England have
+condemned it. Be the guilt of it on the adviser. God forbid that the
+Committee should share the guilt by approving it.'<a name="FNanchor_122_122" id="FNanchor_122_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> This was
+undoubtedly the first speech in which Pitt made a real mark as an
+orator, and of this a proof remains in the fact that it is recorded that
+Sir R. Walpole took notes of it as it proceeded.<a name="FNanchor_123_123" id="FNanchor_123_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a></p>
+
+<p>The debate and its unsuccessful division were followed by that abortive
+and disastrous form of protest known as a secession. Wyndham announced
+it in a speech of solemn acrimony. It failed, as all such secessions do.
+It has been said by a veteran politician that 'a secession of a party
+from parliament is so obvious a failure in both duty and prudence that a
+benevolent looker-on will always recommend to the seceder to get to his
+place as well and as fast as he can.'<a name="FNanchor_124_124" id="FNanchor_124_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a> A secession does not appeal
+to the country, which regards it as an exhibition of baffled ill-temper,
+while it leaves the House at the mercy of the Ministry. This retirement
+of his enemies was therefore hailed by Walpole as an unexpected stroke
+of good fortune. Prompt repentance, as usual, overtook the seceders, and
+the usual difficulty as to returning with dignity and consistency. In
+November they had to slink back without much of either.</p>
+
+<p>It is not easy to discover whether Pitt was among the seceders, though
+it seems improbable, as Lyttelton, one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">169</a></span> his closest allies, remained
+to repeat the strange parallel contention of the Opposition that the
+army should be reduced and war declared against Spain.</p>
+
+<p>The national wish for war was at any rate soon gratified. Though Walpole
+had carried resolutions approving of his convention, the growing fury of
+the nation could not be dammed by his meagre majority of twenty-eight.
+When the negotiations between Spain and Great Britain were resumed,
+Spain absolutely refused to abandon the right of search. To the English
+this was the main point, and Walpole knew that war was now inevitable.
+Whether he as minister could or should, in spite of his convictions,
+carry it out was another matter. He decided that he could, and war was
+declared on October 29, 1739.</p>
+
+<p>The enthusiasm of the nation was frantic. The heralds, on proceeding to
+the city to read the formal declaration, were attended by a great
+procession. The Prince of Wales did not disdain to take part in it, or
+to pause at Temple Bar to drink a public toast to the war. All the
+church bells of the capital were set ringing. The Minister, as he heard
+the clang, bitterly remarked that they might ring the bells now, but
+that they would soon wring their hands. This is a truth that may be
+uttered with justice at the beginning of all hostilities, and in this
+case there were many opportunities for wringing hands; for, with the
+exception of the truce of Aix-la-Chapelle, Britain was not at peace from
+now (1739) till 1763. But Walpole's cynical pun did not embody the
+spirit which gives confidence to a nation, or in which a great Minister
+would begin a just or necessary war. Walpole was, no doubt, convinced
+that this one was neither just nor necessary. Moreover, he hated all
+war<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">170</a></span> as a needless complication which deranged finance and held out
+prospects and opportunities for a Pretender. He knew, too, that he was a
+Minister of peace, and that he was not likely to shine in war. He had
+indeed been Secretary at War, but then he had the guarantee of a
+Marlborough in the field; his function had been to serve and supply a
+supreme captain. But there was nothing now to give him the same
+confidence. He felt, he knew that he was out of place as a director of
+wars. Close to him, unsuspected as yet, was the most successful War
+Minister that this country has ever seen. For on the benches over
+against him sate Pitt, who was to revel in warfare and find his true
+vocation in directing it; but his time was not come. Afterwards, when it
+had arrived, he was to repent and recant his opposition on this
+occasion, and pay homage to Walpole. None, indeed, of the leaders in
+opposition to Walpole attempted afterwards to justify their conduct in
+this business.</p>
+
+<p>That Minister meanwhile moodily prepared to carry out the wishes of the
+country, and no doubt excused himself for his humiliating compliance by
+the thought that if he did not some one else would, with less economy
+and more danger to the State. He is said to have tendered his
+resignation, but even were this true it could only be, in view of the
+King's relations to himself and the Opposition, a matter of form. He
+uttered his own self-condemnation: 'I dare not do what is right.'</p>
+
+<p>But his submission, whether accompanied or not by a feigned resignation,
+availed him nothing; his unpopularity seemed rather to increase than
+diminish. The nation suspected his good faith. The legion of able and
+brilliant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">171</a></span> men whom he had alienated were in no ways appeased, but more
+ruthless in their determination to hunt him to the death; the multitude
+effervesced in mobs. Soon they were all in full cry. There was another
+general election in 1741, when the Prince of Wales with lavish subsidies
+entered actively into the strife. Parliament, dissolved in April, met in
+December, thirsty for Walpole's political blood.</p>
+
+<p>The inglorious course of the war in the meantime, its delays and
+disasters, forms no part of Pitt's life. One may wonder in passing at
+the callous wickedness that sent out raw boys and decrepit pensioners to
+die of fever and exhaustion, or at the strange fortune by which those
+who prepare such expeditions, ministers, commissaries, contractors, and
+the like, escape the gallows. Walpole at any rate did not escape the
+particular fate that he deserved. A year of glowing and successful war
+might yet have saved him; a year of failure and calamity fixed his doom.</p>
+
+<p>He had held on to the last possible moment, and so fell with little of
+grace or dignity. An inevitable political catastrophe only becomes more
+overwhelming by delay; each day that a minister remains in power against
+the will of the nation adds force to the torrent against him. Moreover,
+he affronted public opinion by receiving unusual favours from the King
+when he had become the object of popular execration. Here the coarse
+fibre which had stood him in such good stead during a hundred fights did
+him disservice, for it hindered his perception of the fact that it is
+unwise to be conspicuously decorated at a moment when the nation is
+calling for your head. He held on, with failing health but unfailing
+courage, though the war had furnished him with a reasonable door of
+departure at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">172</a></span> critical moment when honour permitted and indeed
+required him to go, and though his friends had implored him to resign.
+The motives for his obstinacy were obvious enough. His was a doughty
+soul, and did not yield without agony. But there was a more practical
+reason. He believed that, as had long been threatened, his fall would be
+followed by his impeachment. As soon as he resigned, his brother Horace
+hurried off to burn his papers. Walpole himself took a similar
+precaution. This shows their sense of the imminence of the danger which
+had always impended over him, and which was first in their thoughts when
+the protection of office was about to be withdrawn.</p>
+
+<p>The final scene in the House of Commons was dramatic enough, and must
+have been in the mind of Disraeli when he penned his description of the
+fall of Peel. As the fatal division on the Chippenham election was
+proceeding, the Minister sate and watched the hostile procession with
+unfailing and imperturbable humour. He beckoned to his side Bayntun
+Rolt, the Chippenham candidate supported by the Opposition, and so their
+nominal champion, and gave him a reasoned catalogue of many of the
+members voting against him, detailing their ingratitude and treachery,
+as well as the exact favours that he had heaped on them. 'Young man, I
+will tell you the history of all your friends as they come in; that
+fellow I saved from the gallows, and that from starvation; this other
+one's sons I promoted,' and so forth;<a name="FNanchor_125_125" id="FNanchor_125_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> then passing on through this
+bitter recital to his scornful conclusion, he declared that never again
+would he set foot in that House.<a name="FNanchor_126_126" id="FNanchor_126_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">173</a></span></p><p>He fell with the skill and presence of mind which never deserted him,
+for in everything except office he remained victorious. All parties had
+combined to destroy Walpole, and in their triumph all not unnaturally
+expected to see every vestige of the detested administration swept away
+in his defeat. Vast was their disappointment. Newcastle, the oldest of
+the old gang, to use the vivid expression of modern politics, had long
+scented the approaching catastrophe of his chief, and had been preparing
+to lessen the shock to himself and his friends, so far as was possible,
+by judicious conference with the Opposition.</p>
+
+<p>Newcastle has long been a byeword; he was so all through his protracted
+public life; and he has remained in history a synonym for a certain
+jobbing and fussing incapacity. Justice has, perhaps, been scarcely done
+to his laborious life; his disinterestedness about money, rare in any
+age, especially in that; above all to his unequalled capacity for
+remaining in office, a virtue not unappreciated by the great mass of
+politicians. Nor was he a fool, though he was something of a coward. A
+man who could hold the seals of Secretary of State for thirty continuous
+years of stress and intrigue, who filled high office for forty-five
+years in succession, could not be without invaluable qualities for
+steering with persistence and astuteness through intricacies of
+parliamentary navigation. His ambition, such as it was, had indeed an
+elastic but stubborn tenacity; the ties of blood, friendship, or
+principle availed nothing against it. His industry, such as it was, is
+attested by his long tenure of office and the vast mass of his
+correspondence. His disinterestedness, such as it was, is proved by his
+leaving public life 300,000<i>l.</i> poorer than he entered it, and by his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">174</a></span>
+nevertheless refusing a pension offered him by George III. on his
+retirement, a circumstance almost unique in the annals of the century.
+In nothing else was he disinterested. His only taste in private life
+seems to have been for the pleasures of the table and the consequent art
+of the physician. On his resignation in 1756 he attempted indeed to
+assume the air of a retired country squire. Guns and gaiters were
+procured, but getting his feet wet he hurriedly abandoned the sports of
+the field and with them the appearance of rural absorption. This
+illustrates his crowning defect. In all that he did he was supremely
+ridiculous.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Behind him close behold Newcastle's Grace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Haste in his step and absence in his face;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">&nbsp;</span>
+<span class="i0">Tho' void of honesty, of sense, of art,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A foolish head and a perfidious heart,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet riches, honours, power he shall enjoy.'<a name="FNanchor_127_127" id="FNanchor_127_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Foote and Smollett have left vivid caricatures of his ludicrous
+personality. The story of his conference with Pitt when Pitt was in bed
+with the gout, and of his getting into a vacant bed and discoursing from
+thence to his colleague, is one of the choicest pictures of his
+absurdity that survive. The two leading Ministers were found storming at
+each other from adjacent couches, disputing as to whether Hawke's fleet
+should put to sea or not.<a name="FNanchor_128_128" id="FNanchor_128_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a> Pitt fortunately prevailed. Newcastle's
+grotesqueness was part of his temperament, for all through his life his
+jealousy and suspicion kept him in a perpetual froth of nervous
+excitement. His jealousy was of power,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</a></span> his suspicion of those who aimed
+at it. And by power he meant patronage. Throughout his long life his god
+or goddess was patronage. Indeed his voluminous correspondence rather
+resembles the letter-bag of an agency for necessitous persons of social
+position than the papers of a Prime Minister or Secretary of State. To
+hold a crowded levee of placehunters, ecclesiastical and temporal, to
+thread his way about it coaxing, fawning, and slobbering, embracing and
+even kissing, promising and paying all with the base coin of cozenage,
+this was Newcastle's paradise. But it answered. It made him necessary to
+his party, and therefore necessary to those who would govern the
+country; for government was restricted to his party. So all statesmen in
+turn scorned and employed him. 'His name,' said Walpole, 'is perfidy.'
+But perfidy paid, and Walpole kept him to the end, fully aware that he
+was always ready for betrayal if expediency dictated it, and that in the
+closing months he was in fact busy at the work. At last, indeed, Walpole
+himself, under the name of the King, commissioned him to intrigue
+officially. Hardwicke, perhaps the greatest of our Chancellors, who
+furnished the brains for Newcastle, and condescended to act as his
+mentor and instrument, was joined with him to make terms with the enemy,
+and offer the reversion of the Treasury on condition of immunity for
+Walpole.</p>
+
+<p>Pulteney was the enemy, or its chief; for he led the Opposition, and
+guided the Court of the Heir Apparent, as he had that of the father when
+Prince of Wales, though then without fruit and result. He was also the
+idol of the nation. For long years he had made the people believe that
+Walpole was a Goliath of corruption, and that he was the incorruptible
+David. Moreover, his vast wealth, his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</a></span> ability, his eloquence, and his
+social qualities gave him a personal ascendancy apart from his political
+position. 'He was, by all accounts,' writes Shelburne, 'the greatest
+House of Commons orator that had ever appeared,'<a name="FNanchor_129_129" id="FNanchor_129_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a> surpassing even
+the legendary reputation of Bolingbroke; he was also a scholar, a wit,
+and a potent pamphleteer. In conversation he excelled; when the wits
+were gathered at Stowe, the pre-eminence of Pulteney was
+acknowledged.<a name="FNanchor_130_130" id="FNanchor_130_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> At this moment he was supreme, 'in the greatest point
+of view,' writes Chesterfield, 'that I ever saw any subject in.... the
+arbiter between the Crown and the people; the former imploring his
+protection, the latter his support;' 'possessing,' says Glover, 'a
+degree of popularity and power which no subject before him was ever
+possessed of.' All eyes were raised to him with expectant adoration as
+he stood on this pinnacle, and as they gazed they saw him slowly totter,
+and then fall headlong. For the two Ministers had succeeded in
+compromising him. He refused, indeed, amnesty for Walpole or office for
+himself; but adulterated these refusals by watering his expressions of
+hostility to the Minister, and by asking on his own behalf for an
+earldom and a seat in the Cabinet. When his followers found that he and
+Carteret were engaged in secret negotiation with Ministers, their
+indignation was unbounded. They held a public meeting to disown him. His
+popularity disappeared in an instant and for ever. He afterwards averred
+that he had lost his head, that there was no comprehending or describing
+the confusion that prevailed, and that he was obliged to go out of town
+for three or four days to keep his senses. This is not impossible or
+even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">177</a></span> improbable. A political crisis bursts like a tornado, and
+bewilders the strongest characters. Both rare and happy are the men who
+can on such occasions take counsel with themselves, and meet the storm
+with presence of mind. Pulteney had, perhaps, become enervated with a
+long period of merely negative opposition. Glover also asserts that his
+hand was forced by Lyttelton who was secretly offering terms to Walpole,
+and that these, though tendered by the Prince of Wales's Secretary,
+Walpole treated with disdain. Glover was an ill-conditioned wasp, and
+his story refutes itself. For the one person whom Walpole was anxious to
+gain was Frederick, even offering to add 50,000<i>l.</i> to his income. That
+he should then have spurned an overture from the Prince's right-hand man
+is out of the question; he would have met it more than half-way.
+Whatever the cause, Pulteney, having committed himself, could not
+retrace his steps; an iron grip constrained him. In vain did he seek to
+recall his patent and escape his peerage. Walpole held him fast.
+Pulteney had finally conquered in the long struggle of twenty years, and
+overthrown Sir Robert; but the prostrate Minister had from the dust
+worked Pulteney like a marionette.</p>
+
+<p>For behind all these strange scenes Walpole pulled the strings. His main
+object was to avoid his own impeachment, and this, in spite of the
+determination of the hostile majority which called for his head, he
+achieved; a feat little less than miraculous. The Tory candidates for
+office were rejected by the King, and as for the not less bitter Whigs,
+as</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'... bees, on flowers alighting, cease to hum,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So, settling upon places, Whigs grow dumb.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">178</a></span></p>
+
+<p>They were dumb in spite of themselves. The nation, which had been
+excited by the hope of seeing corruption extinguished, and the advent of
+a new era of virtue and public spirit, was again disappointed. People
+saw this sublime struggle result in a jobbing distribution of such
+places as were vacated to the same sort of people as had vacated them,
+with precisely the same system. It was much the same ministry without
+the one great minister. Fooled once more, as so often before and since,
+people shrugged their shoulders, and turned their attention to other
+things, more honest and more practical than party politics.</p>
+
+<p>With the fall of Walpole this narrative is not otherwise concerned, for
+his successors found no post for Pitt. Two members of the Prince of
+Wales's household, Lords Baltimore and Archibald Hamilton, had found
+acceptance as members of the new administration; the King probably could
+not stomach more, certainly not Pitt. For long years afterwards he could
+not endure contact with the orator who sneered at him and at Hanover,
+and who even insinuated with factious injustice doubts of his personal
+courage. It must also be remembered that Pitt was not merely attached to
+the party of the Prince but to the group of Cobham. That veteran
+accepted for a short time a seat in the Cabinet and the command of a
+regiment. But his animosity against Carteret was second only to his
+animosity against Walpole. Carteret was a powerful, and aimed at being
+the controlling member of the new Government. He therefore succeeded to
+the position of target for the barbed arrows of Pitt and his friends
+which had been vacated by Walpole's retirement. Carteret, the new object
+of philippic, had striven hard for the succession to Walpole when
+Pulteney stood aside, but had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">179</a></span> been foiled by Walpole acting through the
+King. Lord Wilmington, whom Horace Walpole describes as a solemn
+debauchee and Hervey as fond only of money and eating, but who was the
+favourite nonentity of George II., had been fobbed off upon the party as
+First Minister; and the choice had its advantages. For, always
+incapable, he was now moribund; and so as a feeble and transient barrier
+to ambition was the least unacceptable to Walpole's expectant heirs. A
+figurehead, moreover, was the favourite expedient of the century for
+skirting the fierce conflict of personalities.</p>
+
+<p>So Wilmington reigned, and Carteret governed for a while in Walpole's
+stead. The shadowy form of the First Minister could not veil for a
+moment the bold outline of the Secretary of State, for Carteret, though
+scarcely attaining real greatness, remains one of the most brilliant and
+striking figures in the eighteenth century. It is almost enough to say
+that in all but disregard of money he was the exact antipodes of
+Newcastle. No man of his time was so splendidly equipped for the highest
+public service as Carteret. He was sprung from an ancient Norman family
+settled in Jersey, eight of whom, the father and seven sons, were
+knighted in one day by Edward III.<a name="FNanchor_131_131" id="FNanchor_131_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a> To a person of commanding beauty
+and an open and engaging demeanour, he united superb qualities of
+intellect developed by ardent study. He was a scholar of signal
+excellence at a time when scholarship was in the atmosphere of English
+statesmanship, the best Grecian of his day, with the great classics
+always in his mind and at command. Did any one of the like taste come to
+him on business, Carteret would at once turn from business<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">180</a></span> to some
+Homeric discussion. Moreover he knew the whole Greek Testament by heart;
+an unusual and unsuspected accomplishment.<a name="FNanchor_132_132" id="FNanchor_132_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> But he was also versed
+in modern languages, then a rare and never a common faculty in this
+island, and alone among his compeers spoke German fluently, a priceless
+advantage under a sovereign whose heart and mind were in Hanover. He was
+the only person who was in favour both with the King and with the Prince
+of Wales.<a name="FNanchor_133_133" id="FNanchor_133_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a> He abounded in a wit at once genial and penetrating. He
+was a puissant orator. His comprehensive grasp of European statecraft,
+his capacity for taking broad and high views, his soaring politics, his
+intrepid spirit and his high ambition, marked him out among the meaner
+men by whom he was surrounded. His contempt of money amounted to
+recklessness. His scorn of all pettiness made him disdain jobbery, and
+even the subtler arts of parliamentary manipulation. There was much that
+was sublime in him, and more that was impracticable. In a greater degree
+than any other minister of his time, if we except Chatham, with whom he
+had many qualities in common, does he seem to partake of the mystery of
+genius. Unfortunately, his energy came in gusts, he could scarcely bring
+himself to bend, and he was incapable of that self-contained patience,
+amounting to long-suffering, which is a necessary condition of the
+highest success in official life. All, indeed, was marred by an
+extravagance of conduct which was in reality the result of his nature
+running riot and of his good qualities carried to excess. He played his
+political chess with the big pieces alone, and neglected the pawns. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">181</a></span>
+disregarded not merely the soldiers and most of the officers, but all
+the arts and equipment of the parliamentary army, heedless of the fact
+that parliamentary support is the vital necessity of a British minister.
+Disdainful of public opinion or party connections, he attempted to play
+the great game in Europe with no resource but his own abilities and the
+confidence of his sovereign, whose antipathy to France he shared, and
+whose policy and prejudices he could discuss in the King's native
+language. And yet over the bottle, which he loved at least as much as
+literature or politics, he would laugh at the whole business and the men
+with whom he was engaged. 'What is it to me,' he would say, 'who is a
+judge or who is a bishop? It is my business to make Kings and Emperors';
+and he would have to be reminded that those who wanted offices or
+honours would follow and support those who did deal in those
+commodities. One can hear his jolly laugh. His policy he embodied in one
+striking sentence: 'I want to instil a nobler ambition into you, to make
+you knock the heads of the Kings of Europe together, and jumble
+something out of it which may be of service to this country.' As a
+matter of fact though he did undoubtedly knock together the heads of
+some kings, no material advantage resulted to the country. He was,
+however, a patriot, a single-minded, able, jovial, reckless patriot, but
+out of touch with the politicians, unsuited to parliamentary government,
+and so almost ineffectual. And thus we see him at his best on his
+deathbed, where he quotes to the under-secretary who brought him the
+Treaty of Paris for approval the speech of Sarpedon with melancholy
+emphasis. 'Friend of my soul, were we to escape from this war, and then
+live for ever without old age or death, I should<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">182</a></span> not fight myself among
+the foremost, nor would I send thee into the glorifying battle; but a
+thousand fates of death stand over us, which mortal man may not flee
+from and avoid; then let us on.' These last words he repeated with calm
+and determined resignation, and after a pause of some minutes desired
+the preliminary articles of the Peace of Paris to be read to him. After
+hearing these at length he desired that, to use own words, the
+approbation of a dying statesman might be declared to the most glorious
+war and the most honourable peace that this nation ever saw.<a name="FNanchor_134_134" id="FNanchor_134_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> The
+news of his extremity had reached Chesterfield. 'When he dies,' wrote
+this shrewdest judge and observer of mankind in England, who had in his
+factious days called Carteret 'a wild and drunken minister,'<a name="FNanchor_135_135" id="FNanchor_135_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> 'the
+ablest head in England dies too, take it for all in all.'<a name="FNanchor_136_136" id="FNanchor_136_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a></p>
+
+<p>Pitt soon had an opportunity of showing that the selection of ministers
+from the Prince's household had left out the one priceless force. For
+now there came raining into Parliament imperative demands for the
+impeachment of the fallen Minister. These representations from the
+various constituencies to their several members are well worth
+consideration, for they emphasise identical demands with a unanimity
+suggestive of much later forms of political organization. They denounce
+Standing Armies, and Septennial Parliaments, asking that Triennial
+Parliaments, 'at least,' may be restored; they require that placemen
+largely, and pensioners entirely, shall be excluded from the House of
+Commons; and that laws shall be passed for the security<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">183</a></span> and
+encouragement of the linen trade. In an even more sanguine spirit they
+stipulate for the extirpation of those party distractions 'which, though
+their foundations have long ceased to exist, were yet so industriously
+fomented among us, in order to serve the mischievous purposes of a
+ministerial tyranny.' But first and last, and above all, they insist on
+the punishment of Walpole, bringing him and his colleagues, which of
+course meant him, to 'condign punishment.' 'Nothing but the most
+rigorous justice ought to avenge an injured people ... justice is a duty
+we owe to posterity.' 'We have a right to speak plainly to you, and we
+must tell you, Sir, that if the man that ruined our trade, disgraced our
+arms, plundered our treasure, negotiated away our interests,
+impoverished the land&mdash;in a word, the author of all the disgraces and
+calamities of twenty years should (while the whole nation is calling out
+for justice against him) triumph in impunity, we shall be apt to think
+our constitution is lost.' 'Lenity to him would be cruelty to the
+nation.'<a name="FNanchor_137_137" id="FNanchor_137_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> Our ancestors, it will be seen, did not wage their
+political warfare with the sweetmeats or roses of a carnival contest.</p>
+
+<p>It seems unnecessary to remark that of these various injunctions the
+only one to which the members of Parliament paid any heed was that for
+the prosecution or persecution of Walpole. Even here there was no
+result. The new officials were sated and at ease, the hungry remnant was
+insufficient or inept. But the constituencies were in deadly earnest, if
+their members were not. They had been goaded by their leaders to a state
+bordering on frenzy, and their demands, vindictive as they may appear
+to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">184</a></span> us, only embodied the declamation of the Opposition throughout half
+at least of Walpole's ministry. More than ten years before, Pulteney had
+publicly declared that 'the Opposition had come to a determined
+resolution not to listen to any treaty whatsoever, or from whomsoever it
+may come, in which the first and principal condition should not be to
+deliver him (Walpole) up to the justice of the country.' But now the
+Opposition was in power, and Pulteney was in a chastened and moderate
+mood. His star, indeed, was already on the wane; he was on the high road
+to the earldom of Bath and extinction. At the first meeting indeed with
+the King's envoys he had declared in a famous phrase that he could not
+screen Walpole if he would, for 'the heads of parties are like the heads
+of snakes, which are carried on by their tails.' But at a later
+conference he said, with reference to the same topic, that he was not a
+man of blood, and that in all his expressions importing a resolution to
+pursue the Minister to destruction he meant only the destruction of his
+power, not his person. He would consult with his friends, yet must
+confess that so many years of maladministration deserved some
+parliamentary censure.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly Lord Limerick moved on March 9 (1742) for a select committee
+of inquiry into the administration of the late Sir Robert Walpole during
+the last twenty years; but Pulteney did not at first countenance this
+moderate measure. He was absent, on a reasonable excuse no doubt, and in
+his absence his friends intimated that it would not be disagreeable to
+him were the motion rejected.</p>
+
+<p>This was, it seems, untrue, but it gave Pitt the first great opportunity
+of his life. When others were silenced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">185</a></span> by office or honours, he stood
+forth as the mouthpiece of the people and as the consistent,
+incorruptible maintainer of the policy and declarations of his party. It
+was an opportunity of which he availed himself with terrible effect. It
+is now, we think, that he first appealed to the imagination and
+confidence of the nation, as distinguished from the appreciation of
+Parliament, though that also was sufficiently marked. 'Pitt grows the
+most popular speaker in the House of Commons, and is at the head of his
+party,' writes Philip to Joseph Yorke.<a name="FNanchor_138_138" id="FNanchor_138_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a></p>
+
+<p>Owing to the absence, and so the presumed indifference or disapproval of
+Pulteney, Lord Limerick's motion was rejected by two votes. At the
+request of Pulteney, however, who, whether lukewarm or not, was nettled
+at the natural criticisms provoked by his attitude, Lord Limerick
+brought forward another motion of the same kind limited to the last ten
+years of Walpole's administration. Pulteney who, discredited outside,
+retained within the House 'a miraculous influence,' exerted himself to
+the utmost, we may be sure, but it can scarcely be doubted that the
+honours of the double debate rested with the vehement and untainted
+Pitt. It is not perhaps of much use to quote from the vague and
+imperfect reports of his speeches, but we can gather, at least, their
+general trend. One passage, at any rate, in his speech on the second
+motion, has been authentically preserved by Horace Walpole, for it was a
+compliment to himself. Horace had defended his father with a grace and
+filial duty that commended him to the House. Pitt, in reply, said that
+it was becoming in the young man to remember that he was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">186</a></span> child of
+the accused, the House should remember that they were the children of
+their country, a flight which seems to outstep the perilous limits of
+the sublime.</p>
+
+<p>From the summary of Pitt's two speeches we may at least gather that he
+had much the best of the argument on this issue, so long dead and
+buried. One noteworthy point, however, in his declamation against the
+Minister, is that he paid vindictive attention to Walpole's practice of
+dismissing and cashiering his opponents, by which he had himself
+suffered. He argued that the King might as well dispose of all the
+property of his subjects as of that particular form of property
+represented by commissions in the army; which, whether obtained by
+service or by purchase, were as freehold as an estate, and should be as
+amply secured.<a name="FNanchor_139_139" id="FNanchor_139_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a></p>
+
+<p>But, in truth, his denunciation of Walpole is much less remarkable than
+the poisoned shafts which, as is manifest even in the faulty report, he
+aimed at the King, or at Hanover, which was much the same thing. He
+declared that the changes were unreal, that Walpole remained Minister
+behind the scenes. 'Though he be removed from the Treasury,' said Pitt,
+'he is not from the King's closet, nor probably will be, unless by our
+advice or by our sending him to a lodging at the other end of the town,
+where he cannot do so much harm to his country.'<a name="FNanchor_140_140" id="FNanchor_140_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> This pointed hint
+at the Tower must have been greatly to the taste of his audience.
+Allusions to the debts of the Civil List, caused certainly not by
+hospitality or by expenditure on any public object, but inferentially by
+corruption, were artfully framed so as to cause the King<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">187</a></span> the greatest
+possible annoyance;<a name="FNanchor_141_141" id="FNanchor_141_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> so, too, were the innuendoes as to our foreign
+policy having been framed in the sole interests of Hanover. Lord
+Limerick's second motion was carried by seven votes, and Pitt was named
+on the secret committee, which, however, owing to the loyal silence of
+Walpole's associates, to the placing one of them in the privileged
+security of the House of Lords, and to the refusal of the King to allow
+disclosures as to the manner in which secret service money had been
+employed, came to a futile and inglorious end. We catch one glimpse of
+Pitt in its proceedings. Scrope, the doughty old Secretary of the
+Treasury, who had fought under Monmouth at Sedgemoor, refused to reply
+to the questions of the inquisitors. Pitt seems to have pushed him hard,
+and he was so stung that he wished to call his tormentor out. From this
+we may at least infer that Pitt took a leading part in the deliberations
+of the Committee. On the other hand, it may be noticed that he only
+received 259, or one more than the lowest number of votes, while the
+member who headed the poll scored 518, a circumstance which would seem
+to indicate that he had as yet no strong position in the House.</p>
+
+<p>He soon had the opportunity of further exasperating the King, an
+opportunity of which he availed himself rather with the intemperance of
+resentment than with the astuteness of ambition; for he was now in
+declared opposition to the new Government, and as bitter against
+Carteret as he had been against Walpole. When Parliament met (November
+16, 1742) after the recess, Pitt 'spoke like ten thousand angels,' but
+no trace of his speech remains. Of its spirit, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">188</a></span> we can judge
+from that which he delivered on December 10, on the vote for continuing
+the British troops in Flanders. Here the onslaught was against the King,
+and it is scarcely possible to conceive sarcasms more calculated to
+afflict the sovereign in his tenderest susceptibilities than those which
+Pitt now launched, even as we read them in an imperfect report; they
+are, indeed, so masterly in this way as almost to prove their
+authenticity. This is the first speech of real point and power delivered
+by Pitt of which we have any record. It may be noted in passing, that in
+the 'London Magazine' (one of the two newspapers that reported debates)
+Pitt's speech was unnoticed, while it did not appear in the 'Gentleman's
+Magazine' till fourteen months after it was delivered.<a name="FNanchor_142_142" id="FNanchor_142_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a></p>
+
+<p>A few specimens may give a fair idea of the power which made Pitt so
+dreaded.</p>
+
+<p>'The troops of Hanover, whom we are now expected to pay, marched into
+the Low Countries, where they still remain. They marched to the place
+most distant from the enemy, least in danger of an attack, and most
+strongly fortified had an attack been designed. They have, therefore, no
+other claim to be paid than that they left their own country for a place
+of greater security. I shall not, therefore, be surprised, after such
+another glorious campaign ... to be told that the money of this nation
+cannot be more properly employed than in hiring Hanoverians to eat and
+sleep.'<a name="FNanchor_143_143" id="FNanchor_143_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a></p>
+
+<p>'As to Hanover,' he continues, 'we know by experience that none of the
+merits of that Electorate are passed over in silence.' 'It is not to be
+imagined that His Majesty would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">189</a></span> not have sent his proportion of troops
+to the Austrian army had not the temptation of greater profit been laid
+industriously before him.' 'It is now too apparent that this powerful,
+this great, this mighty nation is considered only as a province to a
+despicable electorate, and that, in consequence of a plan formed long
+ago and invariably pursued, these [Hanoverian] troops are hired only to
+drain us of our money.... How much reason the transactions of almost
+every year have given for suspecting this absurd, ungrateful, and
+perfidious partiality it is not necessary to declare.... To dwell upon
+all the instances of partiality which have been shown, and the yearly
+visits which have been paid to that delightful country [Hanover], to
+reckon up all the sums that have been spent to aggrandise and enrich it,
+would be an irksome and invidious task, invidious to those who are
+afraid to be told the truth, and irksome to those who are unwilling to
+hear of the dishonour and injuries of their country. I shall, however,
+dwell no longer on this unpleasing subject than to express my hope that
+we shall no longer suffer ourselves to be deceived and oppressed.'</p>
+
+<p>Conceive the position. On the one side a King, born and bred in Hanover,
+to whom the honour and welfare of Hanover and the Hanoverians were
+everything, whose paradise was Hanover, who counted the days to his
+annual visit to Hanover as a schoolboy counts the days to his holidays,
+who held Hanover as his own absolute monarchy and property as compared
+with the limited interest and power of the British throne; a King,
+moreover, courted by all, whose favour was necessary for the obtaining
+of office; accustomed to unstinted adulation and homage. On the other,
+this young jackanapes, an official in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">190</a></span> court of his detested son,
+declaiming against him with every art of the actor and the rhetorician,
+with every power of voice and eye, holding him and his Hanover up to
+every kind of ridicule and contempt, before an audience mainly of
+place-hunters and place-holders, half trembling, half chuckling, as the
+philippic proceeded.</p>
+
+<p>Why did Pitt take this line? If he wished for office (as he undoubtedly
+did), it seemed madness: he was committing something like suicide. But
+pique, as Sir George Savile well said, 'is the spur the devil rides the
+noblest tempers with.' He was unquestionably angry at his exclusion from
+office, which he had, no doubt, been told was due to the King. He was
+justly indignant that the long-continued efforts which had resulted in
+the overthrow of Walpole's overweening power had simply resulted in the
+shuffle of a few offices, and that to the victors the spoil had been
+denied; the sole and execrable minister Walpole had been replaced by a
+much less sole but not less execrable minister in Carteret. All this was
+gall to a man who had been among the most formidable in the heat of
+battle. That heat was now over, and the vanquished were picnicking with
+a few selected victors, while Pitt and his friends were left to cool
+themselves on the deserted battlefield. 'They tell me,' said Lord George
+Bentinck, in 1846, 'that I shall save fifteen hundred a year by Free
+Trade. I don't care for that. What I cannot bear is being sold.' Pitt,
+too, could not bear being sold.</p>
+
+<p>That pique and a not ignoble rage had much to do with this philippic we
+may well assume. But we may also surmise that his attitude was not
+devoid of calculation. The veto of George II. was not to be removed by
+deference,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">191</a></span> so he would, like another Hannibal, destroy the obstacle
+with vinegar. The King had been exasperated by the lambent play of
+Pitt's earlier insinuations; he should be made to know how Pitt had then
+held his hand, what thunderbolts he had kept in reserve, what
+unspeakable things awaited the Prince who should frown on him. 'All the
+things I have told you,' said Sancho Panza, 'are tarts and cheese-cakes
+to what remains behind.' George II. should learn that the innuendoes
+that Pitt had levelled at him before were tarts and cheesecakes compared
+to what he had the power of producing. Pitt, in a word, had made up his
+mind that his only means of achieving his objects was by terror. He had
+thrown away the scabbard. Moreover, he was appealing from the Court to
+the people. The Court was foreign, immoral, and unpopular: the very name
+of Hanover was detested. And although Pitt's actual words reached the
+people late or not at all, there was an echo which was audible, and made
+known all through the three kingdoms that there was within the walls of
+Parliament an intrepid, unbribed, perhaps incorruptible orator who
+feared the face of no man, and who was embodying in fiery words the
+antipathies and distrusts of the nation.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">192</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Let</span> us consider for a moment the character of the Sovereign whom Pitt
+had set himself to bait.</p>
+
+<p>George II. was first and fundamentally a German prince of his epoch.
+What other could he be? And these magnates all aped Louis XIV. as their
+model. They built huge palaces, as like Versailles as their means would
+permit, and generally beyond those limits, with fountains and avenues
+and dismally wide paths. Even in our own day a German monarch has left,
+fortunately unfinished, an accurate Versailles on a damp island in a
+Bavarian lake. In these grandiose structures they cherished a blighting
+etiquette, and led lives as dull as those of the aged and torpid carp in
+their own stew-ponds. Then at the proper season, they would break away
+into the forest and kill game. Moreover, still in imitation of their
+model, they held, as a necessary feature in the dreary drama of their
+existence, ponderous dalliance with unattractive mistresses, in whom
+they fondly tried to discern the charms of a Montespan or a La Valličre.
+This monotonous programme, sometimes varied by a violent contest whether
+they should occupy a seat with or without a back, or with or without
+arms, represented the even tenor of their lives.</p>
+
+<p>George II. was better than this training would suggest.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">193</a></span> His first
+ambition indeed was to be a Lovelace, but his second was to be a
+soldier. As a soldier he had the unaffected courage of the princes of
+his race. George, red and angry, fighting on foot at the battle of
+Dettingen, is a figure that is memorable and congenial to his British
+subjects.</p>
+
+<p>As a Lovelace he lives to this day, for his portraits are generally in
+the posture of a coxcomb, with his face in outline wearing an
+irresistible smile, only comical to the beholder now, but with which he
+goes smirking into the eternities. It is not necessary to dwell on this
+part of his character; after all, a shallow part, for the one woman whom
+he loved was his wife. It was, however, a necessary part, vital to his
+conception of an ideal monarch. His confidences to his wife on this
+delicate point, though gross to us, seemed natural to him and to her,
+and were probably not alien to the atmosphere in which he was reared.
+Withal he bored his mistresses to death, and not impossibly they bored
+him. But that did not matter; the thing had to be done; he saw himself
+as in a mirror the fourteenth or fifteenth Louis; and when on the
+Saturdays in summer he drove down with Lady Yarmouth and his court to
+Richmond, escorted by Lifeguards kicking up the dust, to walk an hour in
+the garden, dine, and return to London, he imagined himself, as Horace
+Walpole tells us, the most gallant and lively prince in Europe!<a name="FNanchor_144_144" id="FNanchor_144_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a></p>
+
+<p>We must admit then that he was born and bred a coxcomb, like his son.
+That he was a fond father no one will allege. His pleasures were coarse
+and dull. Even here one strange exception must be made. His letters to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">194</a></span>
+women, in the opinion of hostile critics, were tender and even
+exquisite.<a name="FNanchor_145_145" id="FNanchor_145_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a> How he came to write them we cannot know, for his
+character could not make one expect a grace of this kind.</p>
+
+<p>In other respects we think him underrated. Sir Robert Walpole said that
+politically he was a coward. To what does this charge really amount?
+That a prince who had never left Germany till he was thirty-one, who
+succeeded to the throne when he was forty-four, after a life of such
+severe repression that his father even entertained the idea of
+transporting him to the plantations, should display that familiarity
+with his position, his political relations, and a strange nation, which
+alone could justify the independent action which is implied by the
+phrase 'political courage,' would have been astonishing; it would indeed
+have savoured of political recklessness. Walpole may have uttered the
+charge in resentment for some refusal of the King's. He was, we know,
+irritated at the moment by finding that the King had promised to go to
+Hanover without informing him. The King no doubt blustered in private
+when he yielded in public. But domestic effervescence was the only
+method of relief for a Sovereign who knew his own limitations, and who
+also knew that, constitutionally, he would have at last to yield to his
+Minister. What is 'political courage' in a constitutional Sovereign?
+What would Walpole have said had the monarch shown 'political courage'
+and insisted on having his own stubborn way? 'Had he,' wrote Waldegrave,
+with his usual good sense, 'always been as firm and undaunted in the
+Closet as he showed himself at Oudenarde and Dettingen, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">195</a></span> might not
+have proved quite as good a king in this limited monarchy.'</p>
+
+<p>His foible, we are told, was avarice. We do not know that he was mean in
+his personal expenditure. Waldegrave, again, who was fair, and knew him
+better than most men, declared that 'he was always just, and sometimes
+charitable, though rarely generous.' He amused himself, we are told,
+with counting his guineas in private. That perhaps was not a very royal
+occupation, though a nursery rhyme indicates that it is; it may have
+been a trick learned when he was poor, or it may have been his
+substitute for those games of anxious futility now known as 'patience.'
+But the real ground for the charge of avarice in the eyes of his British
+subjects was that he accumulated a great treasure in Hanover. If that be
+avarice, it was the avarice of the kings who made Prussia, the famous
+Frederick and his father. Parsimony in such cases may well be a virtue;
+and subjects may even prefer to be ruled by those who possess it rather
+than by princes who rear vast and idle palaces like the Bourbons of
+Spain and Naples, or live with unbridled extravagance like George IV.
+But kings rarely hit the right mean; if they are generous they are
+called profuse, if they are careful they are called mean. George's
+avarice, if such it was, was a public-spirited avarice. He hoarded for
+his own beloved country, he got as much out of his Kingdom as he could
+for his Electorate; for he was a Hanoverian first and a Briton a long
+way afterwards. But when Hanover needed it, he spent all his hoards on
+her behalf ungrudgingly, and died poor.</p>
+
+<p>We do not claim him as a great King, far from it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">196</a></span> But we think him
+unjustly and hastily condemned. It is easy in a slapdash manner to
+lavish sarcasms on a King who presented many tempting opportunities for
+satire. The genius of Thackeray could not resist them, small blame to
+it. But the King's absurdities should not blind one to his merits. The
+just critic must recognise in George II. a constant substantial
+shrewdness, seasoned with humour. His sagacity made him realise his
+constitutional limitations; his penetration appraised with great justice
+the men by whom he was surrounded; he had to do much that he disliked
+and resented, but he did it when he saw that it was necessary, not
+gracefully, for he was never graceful, but without scandal. His rough
+common sense constantly vented itself in the ejaculation of 'Stuff and
+nonsense,'<a name="FNanchor_146_146" id="FNanchor_146_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a> which proved his command of at least one British idiom,
+and not unfrequently a just appreciation of affairs. His judgment of men
+was sure. He had only three ministers who were men of commanding
+ability; Walpole, Carteret, and Pitt. Two of these were his especial
+favourites; to the third, who had mortally offended him, he submitted.
+For Newcastle he had a supreme contempt; but wisely accommodated himself
+to one who was useful, who 'did his business,' to whom he was
+accustomed, and whom he knew through and through. He infinitely
+preferred Carteret to Pelham, but at the supreme moment he chose Pelham
+in spite of Carteret. No doubt this was due largely to the influence of
+Walpole, but many kings would not have followed an advice so contrary to
+their own bias. He piqued himself on his knowledge of mankind, not
+without reason, and Hervey depicts a scene where he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">197</a></span> reels off a
+catalogue of names, and the King, tersely and unhesitatingly, gives the
+character of each.</p>
+
+<p>The fact is that George II. had the misfortune to keep in his inmost
+circle a vigilant and deadly enemy. John Lord Hervey, the Sporus of
+Pope's blighting satire, akin in mind and probably in blood to Horace
+Walpole, was always with him; noting down, with spruce rancour, a
+venomous pen, and some dramatic power, the random outbreaks of his
+master. It is not wise to attribute literal exactitude or even general
+veracity to such chronicles; the man who can commit so gross a breach of
+confidence is little worthy of trust. That Hervey in the very heart of
+the King's family should have sate down with a pen dipped in vitriol to
+portray its most intimate aspects is perhaps our gain but his disgrace.
+He was a viper warmed in the bosom of the Court, and stung it to the
+full extent of his opportunity and powers. A court is considered fair
+game by such reptiles. But it is hard to see why princes, who after all
+are human beings, should not be allowed to some extent the same sanctity
+of family life which humbler human beings claim and maintain. Hervey was
+the intimate associate of the King, the confidential friend of the
+Queen, the lover of one of their daughters, he was the tame cat of the
+family circle. He thought it seemly to narrate their secrets in so
+brutal a fashion that some more decent member of his family tore out and
+destroyed the coarsest and bitterest passages. What remains is coarse
+and bitter enough. It shows the King and Queen in a most unfavourable
+light. But that aspect is fascinating compared to that in which he
+presents himself. The story of royalty should not be a Court<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">198</a></span> Circular;
+but neither should it be a lampoon, written by a trusted friend. The
+only excuse for him is that being devoted to the Queen, who in her way
+merited his devotion, he detested the King whom he deemed unworthy of
+her. But that does not help the reader who looks to him for facts. The
+George II. we know is the George II. of Hervey, and Hervey's Journal
+proves the writer to be unworthy of implicit credence.</p>
+
+<p>Chesterfield also drew a character of the King. But when we discount
+Chesterfield's studied epigrams, poised with the malignant nicety of one
+who hated his subject, there is not much left for discredit.</p>
+
+<p>The real crime of George II. in the eyes of his British subjects was
+almost in the category of virtues, for it was his devotion to Hanover.
+Innocent and natural as it was in him, it seems wonderful to us that our
+fathers should have endured it. How they must have hated Popery! But
+Hanover was the King's home and fatherland; all his pleasant
+associations were with Hanover; there he was absolute Sovereign, and
+could lead without criticism the life that he enjoyed. He could not help
+being a Hanoverian any more than William III. could help being a
+Hollander. The English chose their Dutch and Hanoverian Sovereigns with
+their eyes open, and had no right to complain if what they desired and
+obtained was somewhat bitter in digestion. Neither William nor the two
+first Georges ever professed to be other than what they were; they never
+for a moment simulated that they were English, they never pretended to
+like England. 'He hated the English,' says Lord Hervey of George II. And
+when at the first available instant they fled from Kensington and
+Hampton Court to Loo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">199</a></span> or Herrenhausen, their English subjects ignored
+the mortifying preference, from devotion no doubt to the Protestant
+Succession; but partly also because these monarchs were profoundly
+indifferent to them. With George II., it is true, these excursions were
+accompanied, as in Shakespeare, by alarms; alarms only too well founded
+that he would return with a pocket full of treaties for subsidies which
+the British taxpayer would have to pay. But all these three kings
+accurately understood their position. They knew that they were not
+chosen from affection, or for their qualities, certainly not for their
+attractions. They were taken as necessities, almost odious necessities,
+to keep out a Romanist dynasty which represented something to the people
+that was more odious still.</p>
+
+<p>They entertained, then, no illusions; a bargain had been driven with
+them and they would keep it; they gave their pound, or more, of flesh.
+They would occupy palaces, receive civil lists, interview ministers, and
+keep out the Pretender. But that did not imply a perpetual exile from
+home; they intended to get as many holidays as possible; and they did.
+They might be a hateful necessity for England, but England as a
+necessity was almost as hateful to them. Their life in this island was
+servitude, more or less penal; they only breathed by the dykes of
+Holland or the waters of the Leine. If this be clearly understood, much
+confusion and vituperation may be avoided. But the wonder is that the
+English (for the Scots and Irish had little to do with it) should have
+had the civic courage in the cause of religion and liberty to endure the
+compact.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">200</a></span></p>
+
+<p>George II. then, we contend, putting his private life apart, which we
+must judge by the German standard of those days, was not a bad King
+under the conditions of his time and of his throne. He was perhaps the
+best of the Georges; better than George I. or George IV., better as a
+King than George III., though inferior no doubt in the domestic virtues.
+All things considered, it is wonderful that he was as good as he was,
+and he scarcely deserves the thoughtless opprobrium which he has
+incurred.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">201</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">And</span> now it is necessary to say a word of Continental affairs.</p>
+
+<p>A life of Pitt should concern itself with Pitt alone, or with the
+persons and events immediately relating to him. But as during this
+period of his life foreign policy was all in all, and Britain seemed a
+mere anxious appendage to the Continent, it is necessary to give a
+succinct sketch of the familiar but complicated sequence of events in
+Europe which occurred at this time, and which inspired almost all the
+debates in which Pitt took part.</p>
+
+<p>Walpole, as we have seen, had declared war against Spain in 1739, and
+the not very glorious course of those operations does not call for
+record. But the year 1740 marked a new and critical epoch. Death in
+those few months was busy lopping off the crowned heads of Europe, as if
+to clear the scene for two great figures. On February 6 died Pope
+Clement XII. On March 31 died the shrewd but brutal boor Frederick
+William I., and at the age of twenty-eight his son Frederick II. reigned
+in his stead. His accession was to unveil a mystery; and where mankind
+had hitherto seen a fiddling dilettante, contemptuous of his countrymen
+and craving for all that was French, to reveal the direct ancestor of
+German unity, the most practical and tenacious of conquerors. On<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">202</a></span>
+October 20 the Emperor Charles VI., the figure-head for which we had
+fought in the War of the Succession, and, a week afterwards, Anne the
+Empress of Russia passed away. Rarely has the sickle of Eternity
+gathered so pompous a harvest. Between February and November it had
+garnered the Holy Roman Emperor, the Holy Roman Pontiff, the sovereign
+of Russia, and the sovereign of Prussia. Of these the death at Vienna
+was by far the most momentous. For Charles left behind him no son, but a
+young daughter of twenty-three, about to be a mother, whose succession
+he had attempted to secure by the Pragmatic Sanction of 1718, ratified
+and recognised by solemn international instruments. On the morning of
+his death she was promptly proclaimed sovereign of her father's
+dominions; but her treasury was empty and her ministers paralysed.
+Bavaria at once protested. Behind Bavaria stood Frederick armed to the
+teeth, eager to let slip the dogs of war. Every one saw his
+preparations; no one could tell at whom they were aimed.</p>
+
+<p>'No fair judge,' Mr. Carlyle<a name="FNanchor_147_147" id="FNanchor_147_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a> tells us, can blame the 'young
+magnanimous King' for seizing this 'flaming opportunity.' The point is
+fortunately not one which a biographer of Pitt is called upon to
+discuss, except to note that hero-worship makes bad history. For our
+purpose it is sufficient to say that Frederick did avail himself of the
+new juncture of affairs. Charles had died on October 20; on December 6
+the announcement was officially made in Berlin that the King had
+resolved to march a body of troops into Silesia; on December 13 these
+had passed the frontier, not as enemies of the Queen of Hungary or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">203</a></span>
+Silesia, it was declared, but as protective friends of Silesia and her
+Majesty's rights there. All this was preceded and accompanied by the
+strangest diplomacy that the world had seen, but which does not concern
+this abstract. Thus begins the first period of the Continental war.</p>
+
+<p>Britain, like Prussia, was bound by treaty to maintain the Pragmatic
+Sanction which assured the Austrian dominions to Maria Theresa. Our
+statesmen at this moment were engaged in a pastime of more immediate
+interest and excitement, for they were hunting Walpole to death; the
+exhaustion of the quarry was evident; the end could not be far off. But
+even then the nature of the aggression and the appeal of a young and
+beautiful Queen exercised the usual influence on the chivalrous
+sympathies of the nation. Maria Theresa could, moreover, appeal to
+treaty rights. So that Walpole found himself reluctantly forced into a
+new war while the former was still undecided and incomplete. He agreed
+to renew the pledges of England to maintain that Pragmatic Sanction
+which secured the succession to the daughter of Charles VI.; he agreed,
+moreover, to an immediate subsidy of 300,000<i>l.</i>, and to sending a force
+of 12,000 men. Meanwhile Marshal Schwerin had defeated the Austrians at
+Molwitz at the very moment that the House of Commons was debating these
+proposals.</p>
+
+<p>This victory brought into the arena new and eager claimants for some
+part of the Austrian spoils, now apparently so available. The eminent
+guarantors of the integrity of Austria were suddenly transformed into
+hungry schemers for her immediate partition. Spain, Sardinia, and
+Poland-Saxony all advanced pretensions. But a mightier enemy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">204</a></span> was
+preparing to join hands with Frederick and take the field; for it was
+scarcely to be supposed that the secular enemy of the House of Hapsburg
+could remain quiescent at such a moment. France saw a unique opportunity
+for breaking up the Austrian dominions, and reducing the portion
+reserved to the young Queen to comparative insignificance. In France, as
+in England, the Minister was peaceful, but the party of war carried the
+day. Two French armies of 40,000 men each crossed the Rhine in August
+1741. One under Marshal Maillebois marched on Hanover. The ruler of that
+State, who, as sovereign of Great Britain, was the active ally of Maria
+Theresa, hastily concluded a treaty of neutrality for one year,
+promising to give no assistance to the young Queen in his Hanoverian
+capacity, and to refrain from voting for her husband as Emperor. For
+this treaty George II. was violently attacked by his British subjects,
+who believed themselves to be fighting for Hanoverian interests, while
+Hanover itself was thus snugly removed into a haven of peace. The
+censure was, we think, excessive, if not undeserved. The treaty did
+indeed accentuate the duality which somewhat unequally divided the
+person of George. But if that be once conceded, it must be admitted that
+he was right as Elector to do his very best for Hanover, just as King he
+was bound to do his very best for England. As Elector, then, he was
+fully justified in keeping his defenceless State out of the devastation
+of war, from which it was destined to suffer so terribly sixteen years
+later from another French army under the Duke of Richelieu, when
+neutrality was no longer possible.</p>
+
+<p>While Maillebois marched towards Hanover, the other army, under Marshals
+Belleisle and Broglie, marched through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">205</a></span> Bavaria and menaced Vienna.
+Maria Theresa had to fly to Hungary, and appeal in a manner made
+familiar by description to the chivalry of the Magyars. The Elector of
+Bavaria, who was the figure-head chosen by the confederates for the
+imperial throne, and who had his fill of titles in the lack of more
+substantial fare, was proclaimed Archduke of Austria at Linz, King of
+Bohemia in Prague, and soon afterwards Emperor in Frankfort. It seemed
+as if a vast partition was about to take place, and the House of Austria
+destined to disappear.</p>
+
+<p>But this was the turning-point; in the general blackness there appeared
+rays of hope for Maria Theresa. Walpole, the peace minister,
+disappeared, and the control of Foreign Affairs in Great Britain passed
+to Carteret, who was warm for Austria, and eager to play an active part
+on the Continent. Moreover, the misfortunes of the Queen roused the
+enthusiasm of Great Britain. Five millions were voted for the war, half
+a million as a subsidy to the Queen of Hungary. Sixteen thousand men
+were sent into Flanders to assist the exertions of the Dutch.
+Unfortunately there were no exertions to assist, and our troops remained
+useless. Our fleets were more active. They harried the Spaniards and
+controlled the Mediterranean. A squadron entered the Bay of Naples and
+gave the King, afterwards Charles III. of Spain, an hour in which to
+decide whether he would abandon the confederacy against Austria or see
+his beautiful city bombarded. The King of Naples yielded, but as King of
+Spain never forgave the English for this humiliation.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Feb. 12, 1742.</div>
+
+<p>The Austrians, too, found a bold and skilful general in Khevenhüller,
+who seized Bavaria and occupied Munich<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</a></span> on the very day on which its
+ruler was crowned Emperor. In the succeeding June a peace, which proved
+afterwards to be but a truce, was concluded at Breslau between Austria
+and Prussia, through the mediation of Great Britain, and followed by the
+Treaty of Berlin, to which George II. both as King and Elector, the
+Empress of Russia, the States General, and the King of Poland as Elector
+of Saxony were parties. There had been a secret armistice between the
+two states in the winter of 1741, by which Lower Silesia and Niesse had
+been ceded to Frederick, but this had soon proved inoperative. A new
+situation was however produced by the severe battle of Chotusitz, in
+which the Austrians suffered defeat at the hands of Frederick. Maria
+Theresa now yielded to the pressure of the English ministry and ceded
+all Lower and part of Upper Silesia with the county of Glatz to
+Frederick, who in return abandoned his allies and left the French to
+themselves, on the plea that they were in secret communication with
+Vienna. Saxony, under his influence, also withdrew from the war, and the
+King of Prussia and the Elector of Hanover concluded a defensive
+alliance, the Elector guaranteeing Silesia and Glatz to the King.
+Frederick saw that he had been too successful. He was determined to
+retain Silesia, but he saw with apprehension great French armies
+overrunning the German Empire. That France should be aggrandised at the
+expense of Germany was no part of his policy. For Germany as Germany he
+had no natural affection; but the waters of Germany, however troubled
+they might be, he proposed to keep for his own fishing.</p>
+
+<p>With the Peace of Breslau, then, the first period of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</a></span> the war ends, and
+the second begins, in which it assumes a new character. It is not
+Frederick and France fighting against Austria; it is Austria supported
+by Britain, and to some extent Holland, fighting, with the secret
+sympathy of Germany, against France and Spain. Elizabeth, too, the
+daughter of Peter the Great, had mounted the throne of Russia, and
+assisted her sister sovereign with sympathy and with money. The whole<span class="sidenote">Dec. 1741.</span>
+aspect of the war was suddenly changed. Austria was now free to turn her
+whole forces on France, and she did so with terrible effect. The French
+had to evacuate Bohemia in a retreat so heroic and so appalling that it
+anticipated the horrors of 1812. Of the 40,000 men with whom he had
+crossed the Rhine, Belleisle brought back but 8000 into France. The
+share of Great Britain in the war became substantial and direct. The
+Elector of Hanover, relieved from apprehension by his treaty with
+Prussia and the success of Austria, reduced his army by 16,000 men, but
+the King of England took them into his pay. This measure exasperated his
+British subjects, whose attention was thus once more called to the
+jarring interests of the Kingdom and the Electorate combined in George's
+person. But Ministers carried the day, and in June 1743 the King himself
+took the field with an Anglo-German army of some 40,000 men under the
+command of Lord Stair. At Dettingen, not far from Frankfort, in escaping
+from a position of extreme jeopardy, they encountered and defeated the
+French. The strangest part of this engagement was that there was then
+nominally no war between France and Great Britain, and that these
+operations were only accidental auxiliary conflicts. It was not for nine
+months<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</a></span> afterwards that war between the two countries was formally
+declared.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Sept. 1743.</div>
+
+<p>Later on in this year George II. took an even more active measure, and
+through Carteret, as Secretary of State, though behind the back of his
+other ministers, signed the Treaty of Worms. For many years past it had
+been the policy of the House of Savoy to put itself up to auction, and
+by the Treaty of Worms George II. became the successful bidder. The King
+of Sardinia was to receive some territory from Austria, and 200,000<i>l.</i>
+a year from Great Britain, while he was to assist the Austrian cause
+with 45,000 men. Carteret at the same time covenanted to pay Maria
+Theresa a subsidy of 300,000<i>l.</i> a year 'so long as the war should
+continue, or the necessity of her affairs should require.' But this the
+British Ministry refused to recognise, and it became the subject of
+fierce debate in Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>To meet this combination, Louis XV., on the advice of his Minister but
+against his own better judgment, signed one of those one-sided and
+altruistic treaties which characterised French policy at this time, and
+renewed the family compact of 1733 by a treaty signed at Fontainebleau
+in October 1743. In this new edition the Bourbons of France and Spain
+pledged themselves to an indissoluble union. France was to declare war
+against Great Britain and Sardinia, to help Spain to reconquer Parma and
+the Milanese for Don Philip, and to compel Great Britain to give up her
+colony of Georgia. Finally, the two Powers were not to make peace until
+Gibraltar and, if possible, Minorca were restored to Spain.<a name="FNanchor_148_148" id="FNanchor_148_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a></p>
+
+
+
+<p>But the Austrian successes once more brought Frederick<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">209</a></span> into the field
+to redress the balance, which now inclined too much to Austria, as it
+had inclined too much to France. Austria had acquired Bavaria for the
+moment, and perhaps would never evacuate it; she might be encouraged to
+attempt the reconquest of Silesia. Her armies were now in Alsace; where
+would they stop? The Queen, he knew, was only a degree less tenacious
+than himself. So he signed a new convention at Frankfort with the
+Emperor, the King of France, the King of Sweden as Landgrave of Hesse,
+and the Elector Palatine, and again took up arms against Austria, which<span class="sidenote">May 1744.</span>
+was almost drained of troops. France about the same time formally
+declared war against Great Britain and Austria, whom she had been
+fighting, so to speak, incognito, for three years past. On the other
+hand a quadruple alliance was concluded between Great Britain, Austria,
+Holland, and Saxony; based as usual on British subsidies, which
+Parliament ungrudgingly voted, with the eloquent but surprising support
+of Pitt.</p>
+
+<p>Here begins the third period of the war. Louis XV. and Marshal Saxe at
+the head of 80,000 men entered the Austrian Netherlands almost without
+resistance. Frederick soon made himself master of Bohemia and Bavaria,
+and returned the Electorate to its sovereign, the Emperor Charles VII.
+In January 1745, worn out with misfortunes and anxieties and dignities,
+but once more in his capital, that hapless monarch died. Within three
+months his successor had concluded peace with Austria through the
+earnest pressure of the British Cabinet on the haughty Queen; the
+Elector abandoning his claims on the Austrian dominions, and promising
+his vote for the Empire to Maria Theresa's husband. Peace between
+Austria and the King<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</a></span> of Poland, Elector of Saxony, followed in May,
+when the contracting parties entered into a premature concert for the
+partition of the Prussian dominions.</p>
+
+<p>Otherwise 1745 was a disastrous year for Austria. The Allies, Austrians,
+British, and Dutch, under the Duke of Cumberland, sustained a bloody
+defeat at Fontenoy in May; and Great Britain, occupied with the domestic
+disturbance caused by the landing of Charles Edward, had to withdraw
+from active participation in the war. In August a secret convention was
+concluded at Hanover between the Kings of Prussia and Great Britain, by
+which the latter Power guaranteed Silesia to the former. This was the
+beginning of the end. The British Ministry now notified to the
+unyielding Queen that she must come to terms with her enemy, or expect
+no more assistance from England or Holland. The Austrian arms met
+everywhere with reverses. While the young Queen was planning with Saxony
+a triumphant march on Berlin, Frederick broke into Saxony and occupied
+Dresden. On this final blow Maria Theresa accepted the mediation of
+Great Britain and signed, on Christmas Day, 1745, the peace of Dresden
+which gave Silesia and Glatz to Frederick. So ends the third period of
+this strange and erratic war; a labyrinth of fugitive conventions and
+transient alliances, with two strong purposes in the centre.</p>
+
+<p>But the auxiliary combatants remained at strife, just as the seconds in
+a duel have sometimes fought after their principals had settled their
+own differences. And so we now enter on its fourth period, that in which
+the British, Austrians, and Dutch (with the assistance of the
+Piedmontese in Italy) contended against France and Spain.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">211</a></span> The part of
+this war which chiefly concerns Great Britain was fought in Flanders.
+And in all these transactions it must be noted that a main difficulty of
+the British Ministry, both from the practical and from the parliamentary
+point of view, lay in the problem of moving the Dutch. The Hollanders
+had everything to apprehend from the triumph of the French arms, but
+their phlegmatic temper, and still more the impracticable nature of
+their constitution, offered great obstacles to their co-operation.
+Anglers may see an analogy between these British negotiations with the
+Dutch and the tardy and tantalising sport of sniggling for eels. At the
+beginning of 1746, matters seemed to have come to a climax. The French
+were harrying Flanders, and were threatening to invade Holland. The
+Dutch Government were now stirred into proposing active measures, and
+the raising of a large army, to be under the command of the Prince of
+Waldeck; but they declined to declare war against France. The British
+agreed to a joint force of 100,000 men, comprising 40,000 to be
+furnished by the States-General, 30,000 by Austria, some Hanoverians and
+Saxons to be paid by England and Holland, and 6000 Hessians to be
+provided by England after Charles Edward had been finally defeated. The
+Dutch regarded the British offers as inadequate; for it is a cardinal
+principle of all Continental wars in which Great Britain is concerned
+that her purse is to be open to her allies, and that she is to find the
+funds.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'The Dutch we know are good allies,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So are they all with subsidies.'<a name="FNanchor_149_149" id="FNanchor_149_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>They were, moreover, not indisposed to negotiate with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">212</a></span> the French.
+These, meanwhile, under the leadership of Marshal Saxe, were occupying
+the Low Countries almost without interruption or resistance. In February
+they entered Brussels; in May, Antwerp. Mons, Charleroi, and Namur
+successively fell into their hands, and they ended the campaign by
+defeating the allies at Roucoux, and remaining practically in possession
+of the Austrian Netherlands. But there was a glimpse of peace, in that
+some negotiations, abortive though they were destined to be, were opened
+at Breda.</p>
+
+<p>In 1747 the Duke of Cumberland again assumed the command with the usual
+disastrous result. The Dutch contingent, also as usual, was very
+inadequate: commercial nations are perhaps apt to treat international
+engagements in too commercial a spirit. But the irruption into Dutch
+Flanders of twenty thousand Frenchmen roused a spirit of a different
+kind. The Dutch rose like one man, overturned their rulers, and once
+more entrusted the Stadtholderate to the House of Orange. This was a
+national gain. But the luckless Cumberland again sustained a bloody
+defeat at Lauffeld. The battle, however, had one indirect but happy
+consequence. Our best General, Ligonier, was captured, and, being of
+French birth, was favourably received by Louis XV., who threw out hints
+of peace and placed him in communication with Marshal Saxe. The Marshal
+admitted that the war, and he himself as concerned in it, were
+profoundly unpopular in France, that peace might be obtained on easy
+terms, and suggested that Cumberland and he should be the negotiators.</p>
+
+<p>Pelham was naturally eager for a pacification, George II. less so, and
+what the King wished Newcastle was anxious to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">213</a></span> wish. But a congress to
+adjust a treaty met at Aix-la-Chapelle in March 1748, and in April the
+preliminaries of a treaty were signed by the British and French and
+Dutch plenipotentiaries.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>Maria Theresa held aloof. To her it seemed that the first and only duty
+of the British, and, indeed, of all other nations, was to fight and work
+and pay that she might regain Silesia, just as her father had held that
+the first, last, and only duty of Europe was to establish him in Spain.
+This peace would ratify the acquisition of Silesia by Frederick, and
+though she herself had ceded it, she could not bring herself to declare
+the cession definite. England, however, could no longer agree to the
+general interest being overridden by the obstinacy of the Empress-Queen;
+there had been bloodshed and suffering enough on her account. However
+just a cause may be, there are limits to human endurance, more
+especially when the cause to be upheld has no substantial importance for
+the defending nation. The definitive treaty was signed on October 18.<span class="sidenote">1748.</span>
+Two days later, Spain, the original belligerent, acceded to it. There
+were, a philosopher may note, no stipulations regarding the commercial
+regulations which had been the original cause of our war with Spain. On
+the 23rd it was accepted by the Austrian Government.</p>
+
+<p>This is a narrative, as condensed as possible, of the foreign affairs
+which entered into our parliamentary debates. That part of the war which
+took place in Italy has been excluded. It was a mere contest of petty
+rapine in which strange princes parcelled out Italy; which can scarcely
+be said to have concerned Great Britain, and Pitt not at all. Nor has it
+left the least visible trace in history.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">214</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The greater war which we have summarised is a sufficient tangle. Leslie
+Stephen calls it 'that complicated series of wars which lasted some ten
+years, and passes all power of the ordinary human intellect to
+understand or remember. For what particular reason Englishmen were
+fighting at Dettingen, or Fontenoy, or Lauffeld is a question which a
+man can only answer when he has been specially crammed for examination,
+and his knowledge has not begun to ooze out.'<a name="FNanchor_150_150" id="FNanchor_150_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> This is the exact
+truth, as the ill-fated chronicler who gropes about among the treaties
+and conventions is fain to confess. But apart from its complications
+this war is not in itself very memorable or exalted, though it has left
+an indelible result in the great Prussian monarchy. It was not beautiful
+or glorious. The guarantors of Austria at the first sign of her weakness
+had hurried, most of them, to divide her spoils, at the same time
+betraying each other from time to time without scruple, as their
+immediate interests required. Frederick had a business-like candour
+which almost disarms criticism. Macaulay in a famous passage has pointed
+out that innocent peasants perished in thousands all over the world that
+he might obtain and retain an Austrian province. And Maria Theresa, with
+all her maternal charm, is not wholly admirable. It was natural that she
+should fight for her rights, and induce all she could to fight for her;
+natural, perhaps, that she should be content that all Europe should
+bleed so that she might retain her territory. But we cannot forget that
+she who was ready that myriads should perish, not of Austrians or
+Magyars alone, but of all the nations that she could enlist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">215</a></span> in her
+cause, to maintain the sanctity of her rights to Silesia, was later on
+an accomplice in the partition of Poland; a reluctant accomplice, it is
+fair to add, as she herself was awake to the inconsistency of her
+position.</p>
+
+<p>Among all these stately figures and famous slaughters we see the central
+fact of the period, the shameless and naked cynicism of the eighteenth
+century, which, turning its back for ever on the wars of faith and
+conviction, looked only to contests of prey. And so it continued till
+the great Revolution cleared the air, and, followed up by the poignant
+discipline of Napoleon, made way for the wars of nationality.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">216</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">No</span> more of Pitt's speeches are recorded during the session, which, with
+the enviable ease of those days, having opened on November 16, 1742,
+closed on April 21, 1743. In the interval before the ensuing session an
+event occurred, not in itself memorable, but notable for the contest
+that followed. In July 1743 occurred the long-expected death of
+Wilmington, the nominal head of the Government. In itself this departure
+would not have caused a ripple on the surface of politics, but it opened
+a critical succession. Pulteney, now Earl of Bath, at once laid claim to
+it; and his pretensions were warmly supported by Carteret, who was the
+minister in attendance on the King in Germany. Henry Pelham, supported
+by his brother Newcastle, also applied for the vacant post. As between
+these two groups it seemed certain that Bath, through Carteret, who was
+on the ground, would have the preference. Pelham, indeed, at the
+instance of Walpole, had, before the King left England, applied to his
+Majesty for the reversion of the moribund Minister's place, and had, if
+Coxe may be trusted, received a definite promise. It seems difficult to
+credit this, for George was a man of his word, yet the Pelham brothers
+were unfeignedly astonished when the reversion was given them; so that
+had Pelham indeed received such a pledge,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">217</a></span> he must have expected that
+the King would break it. Six weeks of dire suspense followed the death
+of Wilmington; an interval which was probably caused by the anxiety of
+the Sovereign to consult Walpole, while he intimated to Pelham that his
+decision would be conveyed to the Ministry by Carteret. This seemed a
+deathblow to the chances of Pelham, though the King's aversion to Bath
+was notorious. But a letter at length arrived from Carteret, in which he
+announced, with unaffected regret but with a generous promise of
+support, that the prize had fallen to Pelham. The brothers were elated,
+if such an expression can ever be applied to the timid and cautious
+Pelham. Newcastle was transported by the 'agreeable but most surprising
+news;' so much so, as to acknowledge that Carteret's letter was 'manly.'</p>
+
+<p>Walpole, in writing his congratulations, looked warily to the future.
+'Recruits,' he advised, should now be sought 'from the Cobham
+squadron.... Pitt is thought able and formidable, try him or show
+him.... Whig it with all opponents that will parley, but 'ware Tory.'
+Newcastle, on reading this letter to his brother, wrote back: 'I am
+afraid, one part of it, viz. the taking in of the Cobham party and the
+Whigs in opposition, without a mixture of Tories, is absolutely
+impracticable; and, therefore, the only question is whether, in order to
+get the Cobham party, etc., you will bring in three or four Tories, at
+least, with them, for, without that, they will not come, and this is
+what I have the greatest difficulty to bring myself to.' Orford's advice
+was not followed, and Pelham's appointments were few and narrow. Two of
+Lord Bath's followers, a friend of the Prince of Wales, and a friend of
+his own, the only surviving name<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">218</a></span> of the four, Henry Fox, were
+gratified, and that was all. And even this limited arrangement was not
+completed before Parliament met.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Dec. 1, 1743.</div>
+
+<p>The opening of the new session was anticipated with keen interest, as
+the Ministry was known to be rent with divisions, and hatred of the
+Hanoverians had immeasurably swollen in consequence of rumours of the
+favour that the King had shown to his electoral subjects. He had been
+surrounded by Hanoverian Guards to the exclusion of the English Guards;
+he had worn at Dettingen a yellow sash, which it appears was a
+Hanoverian symbol of authority; the Hanoverians had refused to obey the
+orders of Lord Stair, and so forth. We can easily imagine the buzz of
+angry legend and comment; for national antipathies have no difficulty in
+obtaining substantial affidavits in their support. Of this wild but not
+unreasonable intemperance Pitt, it is scarcely necessary to say, was the
+mouthpiece. In the debate on the Address he spoke with his accustomed
+violence. He called Carteret 'an execrable or sole minister, who had
+renounced the British nation, and seemed to have drunk of the potion
+described in poetic fictions which made men forget their country.'<a name="FNanchor_151_151" id="FNanchor_151_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a>
+So far as this tirade concerned Carteret's authority, nothing could be
+more absurd or wide of the truth. He could indeed scarcely have chosen a
+more unfortunate epithet than 'sole.' So far from being a sole minister,
+Carteret, as we have seen, had just received a crushing defeat in the
+elevation of Henry Pelham to the first place in the Ministry, and the
+rejection of his own candidate; though he had strained all his influence
+in the cause. </p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">219</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Nor had this 'sole minister' any parliamentary following; his only
+strength lay with the King, where it had just been found signally
+inadequate. The supreme minister in the last resort, and behind the
+scenes, was, in truth, Walpole. It was his decision and his alone that
+had turned the scale against Carteret and Pulteney. Carteret was
+congenial to the King, for he worked with his Sovereign in matters of
+foreign policy; and, as we have seen, he could talk politics to the
+Sovereign in the King's own language. But, while the King tried to carry
+out his own views in Continental affairs, in domestic politics he looked
+to Walpole alone. Still, invective must necessarily have an object, and,
+by aiming at the King's confidential Foreign Minister, Pitt was able to
+wound the King as well. It is hinted by Yorke, the parliamentary
+chronicler, that Pitt's acrimony was dictated by jealousy of Carteret's
+influence with the Prince of Wales.<a name="FNanchor_152_152" id="FNanchor_152_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> As to this there is no proof,
+and conjecture is idle. Carteret and Frederick had indeed been long
+connected, but this would scarcely impel one of the Prince's court to
+attack one of the Prince's friends. Moreover, were this the motive,
+Pitt's attacks would have been of a different and milder character,
+enough to damage Carteret, but not enough to embroil Pitt with the
+Prince, who was not merely his master, but the head of his political
+connection. It is clear that Pitt's sole object was to destroy Carteret
+as minister, not for the ignominious purpose of subverting him in a
+court camarilla, but to show his own power by demolishing the
+conspicuous man, the vizier of the King who proscribed himself. The mere
+fact that Carteret<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">220</a></span> represented the King's Continental policy, and that
+Pitt had apparently determined, in the jargon of that day, to storm the
+Closet, seems sufficient reason for Pitt's bitterness. He denounced
+Carteret as he denounced Hanover, as darling accessories of a monarch
+whom he was determined to harass in every way until his attacks should
+produce compliance or surrender. But it was the fate of Pitt to have to
+recant his abuse of Carteret, as solemnly and as publicly as he recanted
+his abuse of Walpole. 'His abilities,' said Pitt in 1770 of Carteret,
+'did honour to this House and to this nation. In the upper departments
+of Government he had not his equal. And I feel a pride in declaring that
+to his patronage, to his friendship, and instruction, I owe whatever I
+am.'<a name="FNanchor_153_153" id="FNanchor_153_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a> It was a generous, almost an extravagant statement. But it
+shows how little importance should be attached to the early philippics
+of Pitt, as of other aspiring and brilliant young men. Invectives are
+one of the least subtle and most piquant forms of advertisement, but
+they do not facilitate the task of biographers.</p>
+
+<p>The Sovereign he attacked openly and unsparingly. It was proposed, in
+the Address to the Throne, to congratulate the King on his escape from
+the dangers of the battle of Dettingen. This Pitt deprecated. 'Suppose,
+Sir,' he asked, 'it should appear that His Majesty was exposed to few or
+no dangers abroad, but those to which he is daily liable at home, such
+as the overturning of his coach or the stumbling of his horse, would not
+the address proposed, instead of being a compliment, be an affront and
+insult to the Sovereign?' No affront or insult could at any rate be more
+stinging or more unfounded than his wanton insinuation. George II.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">221</a></span> had
+the courage of his race, and had displayed it at Dettingen. At first his
+runaway horse had almost carried him into the French lines, so he
+dismounted and fought on foot for the rest of the day; not leaving the
+field until he had created a number of knights banneret; the last
+British king to take the field, and the last bannerets to be so
+created.<a name="FNanchor_154_154" id="FNanchor_154_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a></p>
+
+<p>It was vile then to disparage the King's courage, but political life in
+those days had no scruple and little shame. The sneers at Hanover with
+which this speech was sprinkled were better founded and deserved. But a
+serious and reasonable argument, not yet obsolete, pervaded Pitt's
+violent rhetoric on this occasion. It was that though the balance of
+power concerned all states, it concerned our island state least and last
+of all. Moreover, he attacked our recent policy on other grounds. On our
+attitude to Austria, then fighting for its integrity under Maria
+Theresa, he heaped scorn from another point of view. We had promised her
+abundant assistance when she was fighting Prussia alone; when France
+intervened we shrank back and left her in the lurch. That, he declared,
+was not our only discredit. When Prussia attacked the Queen of Hungary,
+and Spain, Poland, and Bavaria laid claim to her father's succession, we
+should have known that the preservation of the whole was impossible, and
+advised her to yield the part claimed by Frederick. But the words from
+the Throne and the speeches of the courtiers had persuaded the Austrian
+Government that Great Britain was determined to support her. So great
+was the determination, that even Hanover added near one-third to her
+army at her own cost, the first extraordinary expense, it was believed,
+that Hanover had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">222</a></span> borne for her purposes since her fortunate conjunction
+with England! But then the French intervened. Hanover was in danger, and
+so we promptly retired. We gave some money, indeed, but that was because
+our ministers contrived to make a job of every parliamentary grant. The
+Queen, seeing that she was deserted, came to terms with Frederick, but
+much worse terms than he had originally offered. Then was the time for
+us to have insisted on her making peace with France and the phantom
+Emperor. But we had advised her against this, for no conceivable reason
+except apparently that we wished to go on paying the 16,000 Hanoverians
+whom we were employing. As regards the battle of Dettingen, he declared
+that we had no idea of fighting, but that the French had caught us in a
+trap. The ardour of our troops was restrained by the cowardice of the
+Hanoverians; we ran away in the night, leaving our dead and wounded
+behind us. Never would he consent to call the battle a victory, it was
+only a fortunate escape.</p>
+
+<p>Were we to continue fighting? he asked. We ourselves had nothing to gain
+by it, though Hanover, no doubt, would continue to receive four or five
+hundred thousand pounds a year from us if we did. But we should
+consider, even the Hanoverians should consider, that we could not carry
+on a long war as in the reign of Queen Anne. We were not far from a
+national bankruptcy, and should soon have to disband our army. What,
+then, if the Pretender should land at the head of a French force?</p>
+
+<p>This outline is given to show the singular but forcible mixture of
+shrewd argument, wayward extravagance, and bitter scoffs, which at this
+time constituted Pitt's parliamentary armament.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">223</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He followed this speech up by another on December 6, of which little
+remains; but his vehemence brought him into collision with the Speaker.
+He urged contemptuously that if we must have German troops we should
+rather hire those of Cologne and Saxony than those of Hanover. The King
+was surrounded by German officers, and by one English Minister without
+an English heart. The little finger of one man, he declared, had lain
+heavier upon the nation than an administration which had continued
+twenty years. Murray, however, the Solicitor-General, afterwards Lord
+Mansfield, delivered a consummate speech against the motion, which
+carried so much conviction that Pitt with some of the other Cobhamites
+struck out the words relating to the exhausted and impoverished state of
+the kingdom. But the amended motion was rejected by a majority of
+seventy-seven.</p>
+
+<p>And now there occurred a significant fissure in the Opposition. Pitt and
+Lyttelton were inclined to support the maintenance of the British force
+in Flanders. But Cobham, the chief of the little party, was
+uncompromising: he resigned his commission 'as captain of the troop of
+horse grenadiers' and his seat in the Cabinet. A formula had to be
+framed to unite the two sections, and so George Grenville brought
+forward a motion praying his Majesty 'in consideration of the exhausted
+and impoverished state of the Kingdom not to proceed in this war without
+the concurrence of the Dutch.' Pitt concurred in this motion, and
+promised that if it were rejected he would join in opposing the
+continued employment of the British as well as the Hanoverian troops in
+Flanders.</p>
+
+<p>This revision by a little group is not without significance;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">224</a></span> as the
+Opposition, we are told, at the beginning of the session, entrusted the
+direction of the party to a committee of six, consisting of Dodington,
+Pitt, Sir John Cotton, Sir Watkin Wynn, Waller, and Lyttelton. The
+putting of political leadership into commission has never been
+successful in Parliament, and the device seems finally to have broken
+down when it was last attempted, by the Protectionist party, after the
+fall of Peel. Nor does it appear to have been more happy on this
+occasion. Pitt and Lyttelton, who, in spite of their engagement, still
+desired to support the continued employment of the British troops in the
+Low Countries, at a general meeting of the Opposition found themselves
+alone, and so agreed to give a silent vote with their associates.</p>
+
+<p>It is probable that this incident produced alienation as it certainly
+wrought friction between Pitt and Cobham. In the ensuing year we find
+Cobham describing Pitt as a young man of fine parts, but narrow,
+ignorant of the world, and dogmatical.<a name="FNanchor_155_155" id="FNanchor_155_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a> Two years afterwards Cobham
+went further, and described him as a wrong-headed fellow, whom he had
+had no regard for.<a name="FNanchor_156_156" id="FNanchor_156_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> So we may well conjecture that from this time
+there was but little confidence between Pitt and the patron of the
+cousinhood; a great emancipation, though not wholly a gain for Pitt.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Jan. 19, 1744.</div>
+
+<p>On the vote of 393,773<i>l.</i> to maintain the 16,000 Hanoverians during the
+coming year, there was no need for the restraint of silence, so Pitt
+railed with his customary bitterness against Carteret, who was the
+Hanover-troop minister, a flagitious taskmaster, with a party only
+composed of the 16,000 Hanoverians; and he ended his denunciation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">225</a></span> by
+wishing that Carteret were in the House, for then he would say ten times
+more. His speech was passionate and rhetorical, incomparably good of its
+kind. But the Government prevailed in the division by 271 to 226. This
+majority of forty-five was larger than had been anticipated, and was due
+to the incessant exertions of Walpole. He sustained the flagging spirits
+of the Ministry, who were on the point of abandoning the proposal.
+Newcastle, indeed, had blenched before the storm, and openly took part
+against the Hanoverians. But Walpole restored the fortune of the field.
+He stemmed the gathering retreat, put heart into the waverers, and used
+his personal credit with his old friends. Never in his own
+administration had he laboured any point with more zeal. 'The whole
+world,' writes his son Horace, 'nay, the Prince himself, allows that if
+Lord Orford had not come to town, the Hanover troops had been lost. They
+were, in effect, given up by all but Carteret.'<a name="FNanchor_157_157" id="FNanchor_157_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a></p>
+
+
+
+<p>So far as the House of Commons was concerned, this ended the hostilities
+against the Hanoverian troops, though the House of Lords continued the
+controversy with a debate in which Chesterfield, who outdid Pitt in
+violence, delivered a speech which was greatly admired. But a subsidy of
+200,000<i>l.</i> had to be voted to the King of Sardinia under the treaty of
+Worms. This treaty, negotiated by the King and Carteret in Germany
+independently of the Home Government, was little relished by that
+Government, and offered a tempting target to the warriors of the<span class="sidenote">Jan. 1744.</span>
+Opposition. On a first motion for papers, Pitt was again prominent,
+though little of his speech survives. Alluding, however, to a secret<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">226</a></span>
+convention attached to the treaty, which Carteret had signed but which
+Ministers had refused to ratify, he declared, 'I only wanted the sight
+of a convention, tacked to the treaty which that audacious hand had
+signed, to furnish matter for immediate impeachment.' On the actual vote
+the Government had only a majority of 62. Subsequent unreported debates
+furnished Pitt with opportunities of denouncing the Pelham brethren as
+subservient tools of Carteret. But the Government waxed stronger in
+proportion to the heat of opposition. On a vote of censure they had a
+majority of 114. Through these discussions Pitt passes like a phantom,
+foremost by all consent in debate, but without leaving any footprint of
+speech behind.</p>
+
+<p>From these broils Parliament was now distracted by startling
+intelligence. By message to the House on February 15 (1744) the King
+apprised his faithful lieges that a French fleet was prowling in the
+Channel, and that the young Stuart Prince, Charles Edward, had arrived
+in France to join it. One of our vessels had met this squadron of
+seventeen men-of-war and four frigates so long ago as January 27, 'half
+seas over' between Brest and the Land's End, prowling apparently
+northwards. There was something of a panic: men remembered how the Dutch
+in 1667 had sailed up the Thames, and apprehended a repetition of that
+disgrace. The Jacobites began to raise their head, but stocks did not
+fall. The King's message announced that the 'eldest son of the Pretender
+to his Crown is arrived in France; and that preparations are making
+there to invade this kingdom in concert with disaffected persons here.'
+A loyal address was at once prepared, to which the Opposition moved an
+addition, promising an inquiry into the state of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">227</a></span> the Navy. The
+amendment was, of course, supported by Pitt, and, of course, defeated.
+But Pitt, as stout an anti-Jacobite as his grandfather, promised his
+adhesion to the address whether the amendment voted or not; and a few
+days later, on the presentation of papers, he supported the Government
+so warmly as to receive the public thanks of Pelham. But for once the
+interest was not in the Commons but the Lords. Newcastle had laid the
+papers before the House, and with his usual blundering ineptitude had
+allowed the House to pass to private business. Then Orford rose, and
+broke his long silence. With dignity and emotion he confessed that he
+had vowed to refrain from speech in that House, but that abstinence now
+would be a crime. He had heard the King's message, and had observed with
+amazement that that House was to be so wanting in respect as to leave it
+unanswered. Was our language so barren as to be unable to find words to
+the King at such a crisis; 'a time of distraction and confusion, a time
+when the greatest power in Europe is setting up a Pretender to his
+throne?'</p>
+
+<p>'I have indeed particular reason to express my astonishment and my
+uneasiness on this occasion; I feel my breast fired with the warmest
+gratitude to a gracious and royal master whom I have so long served; my
+heart overflows with zeal for his honour, and ardour for the lasting
+security of his illustrious house. But, my lords, the danger is common,
+and an invasion equally involves all our happiness, all our hopes, and
+all our fortunes.'</p>
+
+<p>In these passionate words the wary and unemotional Orford allowed his
+apprehension to overflow. He saw the work of his life, the keeping out
+of the Stuarts, compromised<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">228</a></span> and endangered by the unpopularity of the
+throne, and the blunders of jobbing mediocrity. He perceived the danger
+which he had so long warded off now instant and imminent. The House was
+deeply moved. Newcastle with obvious mortification acknowledged his
+lapse, and the Chancellor hurriedly drafted an address. Even the Prince
+of Wales, whose hatred of Walpole was perhaps the deepest feeling of
+which his shallow nature was capable, was so stirred, that he rose and
+shook hands with the veteran Minister. Nay, as we are told by a
+chronicler blissfully unconscious of bathos, 'he revoked the prohibition
+which prevented the family of Lord Orford from attending his levee.' It
+was a dramatic occasion, worthy of being the last public appearance of
+Orford. The hard-bitten old statesman who had been baited for near a
+quarter of a century, and had always given his opponents as good as he
+had got, disappeared from the stage with a burst of passionate
+patriotism.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">1744.</div>
+
+<p>The end is so near that we may follow him thither. This speech was on
+the last day of February, and he was soon afterwards seized with a
+painful and mortal complaint; but in July he could not resist returning
+to Houghton for a final visit. There he remained till November, beset by
+anxious solicitations both from the King and from the Ministry, for he
+was the guide and stay of both. At last, though tortured with the stone,
+he consented to return to London at the urgent solicitation of his
+sovereign, then engaged in a desperate struggle to retain Carteret as
+Secretary of State. Even Carteret, his old enemy, in the stress of
+self-preservation sought his aid. Orford set out on November 19, and in
+four slow days of an agony which wrung even the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">229</a></span> practised nerves of
+Ranby, the surgeon (and it is difficult even now to read Ranby's
+narrative without emotion), he reached London. The crisis then was over,
+for he had put an end to it on his journey. A message despatched by the
+Pelhams had met him on the road and placed him in possession of the
+facts of the situation. He had at once written to advise the King to
+part with Carteret, and the King had instantly submitted.</p>
+
+<p>This was Walpole's last act of power, but he remained in London to die.
+For four months he lingered under the hands of the surgeons, sometimes
+under opium, sometimes suffering tortures with equanimity and good
+humour. But even so his shrewd and cynical common sense did not desert
+him. Consulted by the Duke of Cumberland as to a marriage projected for
+him by the King, but repugnant to the Duke, the dying statesman advised
+him to consent to the marriage on condition of an ample and immediate
+establishment. 'Believe me,' he added, 'the marriage will not be
+pressed.' Walpole's knowledge of mankind left him only with his death.</p>
+
+<p>His constancy, his courage, his temper, his unfailing resource, his love
+of peace, his gifts of management and debate, his long reign of
+prosperity will always maintain Walpole in the highest rank of English
+statesmen. Distinguished even in death, he rests under the bare and
+rustic pavement of Houghton Church, in face of the palace that he had
+reared and cherished, without so much as an initial to mark his grave.
+This is the blank end of so much honour, adulation, power, and renown.
+For a century and a half unconscious hobnails and pattens have ground
+the nameless stones above him, while mediocrities in marble<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">230</a></span> have
+thronged our public haunts. His monument, unvoted, unsubscribed, but
+supreme, was the void left by his death, the helpless bewilderment of
+King and Government, the unwilling homage and retractation offered by
+his foes, the twenty years of peace and plenty represented by his name.</p>
+
+<p>And here another illustrious name cannot but suggest itself, though it
+may seem difficult to bring into anything like a parallel the two great
+Sir Roberts, Walpole and Peel. Both were distinguished by the same
+cautious and pacific sagacity. But they differed by the whole width of
+human nature in temperament. Walpole belonged to the school of the cold
+blood, and Peel to that of the warm. This, perhaps, constitutes the most
+important touchstone in the characters of statesmen, and success usually
+lies with the colder temperament. Of this principle, Fox, who was warm
+blooded, presents the most remarkable illustration, and Gladstone, who
+was not less so, the most signal exception. Peel's conscience, moreover,
+was as notably sensitive as Walpole's was notoriously the reverse. But
+though thus essentially apart, there is one capital point which the
+careers of Walpole and Pitt bear an almost exact resemblance to each
+other. Neither of them, strangely enough, reached his full height until
+his fall; neither acquired the full confidence of the country until he
+had lost that of Parliament; after having exercised almost paramount
+power as Ministers, neither ever reached his truest supremacy until he
+had left office for ever. Then, after a great catastrophe which had
+seemed to demolish them, it was perceived that they had soared above the
+mist into a higher air, clear of passion and interest; whence,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">231</a></span> though
+with scarce a following and without the remotest idea of a return to
+office, they spoke with an authority which they had never possessed when
+their word was law to an obedient majority in the Commons; an authority
+derived from experience and wisdom, without any lingering suspicion of
+self-interest. They lived in reserve, and only broke their self-imposed
+silence when the highest interests of the country seemed to forbid them
+to maintain it. Walpole, it is true, had to do his work mainly behind
+the scenes, while Peel did it conspicuously in Parliament; but the
+position was the same. If their eulogist had to choose the supreme
+period in the lives of both Walpole and Peel, he would select, not the
+epoch of their party triumphs, but the few exalted judicial years which
+elapsed between their final resignation and their death. It may seem a
+strain of language to use the word 'judicial,' for Walpole remained the
+oracle and stay of Whiggery, while Peel extended his consistent
+protection to the weak ministry of Lord John Russell. But Peel's
+protection of Russell was given in defiance of party to secure the Free
+Trade which he deemed vital, and Walpole's guidance of Whiggery was in
+disinterested support of men he disliked and despised because he deemed
+Whiggery, or at least opposition to Jacobitism, not less vital. Free
+Trade and Whiggery were, in the opinion of the two statesmen, essential
+to avert the revolutions which the opposite systems would have involved.</p>
+
+<p>This seems a digression, but at this time Pitt and Walpole were not far
+apart; they secretly acknowledged each other's power and merit. Pitt had
+already begun to appreciate the solid sagacity of Walpole, and to repent
+of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">232</a></span> some random invective. Walpole saw the rhetorical boy developing
+into the man of the future, and was more and more anxious to enlist him.
+'Sir Robert Walpole,' said Pitt in Parliament at a later period,
+'thought well of me, and died at peace with me. He was a truly English
+minister.'<a name="FNanchor_158_158" id="FNanchor_158_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a> </p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">233</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Soon</span> after this memorable debate France formally declared war against<span class="sidenote">March 1744.</span>
+Great Britain in a document reciting the injuries sustained by France at
+the hands of the 'King of England, Elector of Hanover,' and faction was
+for the moment laid on one side, though Pitt, while supporting the
+Government, managed to declare that perdition would attend Carteret as
+the 'rash author of those measures which have produced this disastrous,
+impracticable war.' Still Parliament adjourned with comparative harmony
+in May. Before it met again two events occurred of the greatest
+importance to Pitt.</p>
+
+<p>The first was the death of that vigorous old termagant Sarah, Duchess of
+Marlborough. All through life she had been more bellicose, though with
+less success, than her illustrious husband, and of late years had
+devoted her peculiar powers of hatred to Walpole. This bitterness
+extended even beyond the grave, for by a codicil dated two months before
+her death she bequeathed legacies to the two men who had most
+distinguished themselves by their attacks on that Minister. One was
+Chesterfield, to whom she left 20,000<i>l.</i>; the other was Pitt, to whom
+she left 10,000<i>l.</i>, 'for the noble defence he made for the support of
+the laws of England, and to prevent the ruin of his country.' Moreover,
+she seems to have bequeathed to him her 'manor in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">234</a></span> County of
+Buckingham, late the estate of Richard Hampden Esq: and leasehold in
+Suffolk; and lands etc. in Northampton.'<a name="FNanchor_159_159" id="FNanchor_159_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> Pitt, in acknowledging the
+bequest to Marchmont, her executor, demurely and ambiguously replies:
+'Give me leave to return your Lordship my thanks for the obliging manner
+in which you do me the honour to inform me of the Duchess of
+Marlborough's great goodness to me. The sort of regard I feel for her
+memory I leave to your Lordship's heart to suggest to you.'<a name="FNanchor_160_160" id="FNanchor_160_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> Nor was
+this legacy all, for she settled her Wimbledon estate on her favourite
+grandson John Spencer, and after him on his only son; should that only
+son die without issue, it was to be divided between Chesterfield and
+Pitt. She, moreover, induced John Spencer to make a will bequeathing his
+own Sunderland estates to Pitt after his own sickly son.<a name="FNanchor_161_161" id="FNanchor_161_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> Two years
+afterwards Spencer himself died at the age of thirty-seven 'because he
+would not be abridged of those invaluable blessings of an English
+subject, brandy, small beer and tobacco,'<a name="FNanchor_162_162" id="FNanchor_162_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a> so that only a child
+stood between Pitt and this great inheritance. Fortunately the splendid
+contingency did not take effect. For Chesterfield died without
+legitimate issue, and the Pitts have long been extinct; but the
+descendants of John Spencer's only son have been men of a purity of
+character and honour which have sweetened and exalted the traditions of
+English public life.</p>
+
+<p>The legacy was opportune in more respects than one. It came as a solace
+to Pitt, who was desperately ill at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">235</a></span> Bath with gout in his stomach,
+which the waters were unavailing to remove; his friends indeed feared
+that he would be disabled for life. It also made him independent.
+Bolingbroke indeed thought it made him too independent.<a name="FNanchor_163_163" id="FNanchor_163_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a> Cynics soon
+declared it to be timely from another point of view, for immediately
+after the Duchess's death there was a crisis which was to put an end to
+Pitt's opposition and so to his claims on her sympathies. Carteret fell,
+and with his fall disappeared the object of Cobham's hatred and Pitt's
+philippics. The tempting contrast between Pitt receiving a legacy as the
+leading member of the Opposition, and Pitt immediately reconciled to the
+Ministry, and so ceasing to be a 'Patriot,' could not escape satire. Sir
+Charles Hanbury Williams lost no time in penning the coarse but vigorous
+lampoon which depicts the ghost of the old Duchess appearing to Pitt.
+'Return, base villain, my retaining fee,' says the spectre, reminds the
+legatee that even Judas returned the wage of betrayal, and leaves him to
+the 'lash of lost integrity.'<a name="FNanchor_164_164" id="FNanchor_164_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a> But these taunts were wide of the
+mark. It was not Pitt's integrity that had disappeared, but the object
+of his opposition, now that Carteret had fallen.</p>
+
+<p>The story of that fall is material to the life of Pitt; it is that
+second event of importance to him at this time to which we have alluded.
+We have seen that Walpole's last journey to London was caused by the
+King's struggle to retain Carteret whom the Pelhams insisted on
+removing. This indeed was a matter of necessity for them, as they could
+never enjoy real power while Carteret engrossed the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">236</a></span> King's confidence.
+Moreover, owing to the ill success of the Austro-British alliance during
+1744 in operations with which he was identified he had become extremely
+unpopular. He himself was dissatisfied with his position, for though he
+had the ear of the King he was constantly outvoted in the Cabinet.
+'Things cannot go on as they are,' he said to the ruling brother. 'I
+will not submit to be overruled and outvoted on every point by four to
+one. If you will undertake the Government, do so. If you cannot or will
+not I will.' This rash declaration of war sealed his fate. As a matter
+of fact the main division in the Cabinet of which we have record at this
+time was nine to four; but the majority was no doubt steady and
+inflexible against Carteret. The brothers now concentrated their
+energies on his overthrow. But before making any open attack on so
+strong a position, they wisely endeavoured to secure new sources of
+strength by negotiation with the Opposition.</p>
+
+<p>During the year 1744 the leaders of the Opposition had reunited, 'upon
+one principle,' says the malignant Glover, 'which was to get into
+place.' This may fairly be said, without disparagement, to be the
+legitimate object of all Oppositions. In any case these politicians may
+well have realised that divided and scattered they were impotent, and
+they may have desired to make themselves felt in Parliament with or
+without office. So they appointed a committee of nine to treat with the
+Government. The junto, as it was termed in the jargon of that day,
+consisted of Bedford, Chesterfield, Gower, Cobham, Pitt, Lyttelton,
+Waller, Bubb, and Sir John Hinde Cotton.<a name="FNanchor_165_165" id="FNanchor_165_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a> This powerful body was
+approached by Carteret, always tardy and unskilful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">237</a></span> in such
+negotiations; but he had been anticipated by the brethren in power, who,
+in such intrigues, displayed all the skill that he lacked. He obtained,
+however, the powerful mediation of the Prince of Wales, who had a regard
+for him. Carteret's offers were liberal enough. He offered that the
+administration should be transformed, and places found for all of them;
+but they replied that they could make no terms with him. He turned, as
+we have seen, to Walpole in his despair, but in vain. Every hole was
+stopped. The Pelhams had secured both Walpole and the Committee.</p>
+
+<p>Five of the junto, including Pitt and Lyttelton, were, it is said, in
+favour of joining the Pelhams without any stipulation. The minority,
+including Cobham, who considered that the pass had been sold, and who
+cursed the less scrupulous tactics of the majority, were for making
+conditions as regards future policy. However, all, both of the majority
+and the minority, were brought into the scheme; Cobham, who received a
+regiment, having, it is said, also obtained an assurance from Newcastle
+that the interests of Hanover should be subordinated to the interests of
+Great Britain. Bedford became First Lord of the Admiralty; Gower, Privy
+Seal; Waller, Cofferer; Lyttelton, a Lord of the Treasury; Bubb,
+Treasurer of the Navy; and Cotton, a notorious Jacobite, Treasurer of
+the Chambers. It should be added, however, that the narrative of this
+negotiation, however probable it may appear, rests on the doubtful
+authority of Glover, who is too venomous to be trustworthy. But in any
+case it is not necessary to condemn the Committee, even if Glover's
+statement be accepted as fact. Should so powerful a body<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">238</a></span> of men enter
+the feeble Government of the Pelhams, they might well feel confident of
+controlling its policy with or without previous stipulation. A severer
+judgment may be passed when it is seen that the policy remained
+substantially unaltered, and that Pitt found himself able to
+discriminate between Carteret's policy with Carteret in office, and the
+same policy with Carteret out of office.</p>
+
+<p>Fortified by this treaty, which included, of course, places for Pitt and
+Chesterfield, to be given when the King could be induced to give them,
+the Pelhams executed their stroke of state; and having, as we have seen,
+made sure of the oracle at Houghton to which the King was sure to have
+recourse, they sent the Chancellor to the King to inform him of the
+determination of the entire Cabinet to resign unless he would remove
+Carteret. Still the King could not be brought to abandon his favourite
+Foreign Minister and his favourite foreign policy. It was not until
+Orford gave the decision against Carteret that the Sovereign succumbed,
+three weeks after the delivery by the Pelhams of their ultimatum.</p>
+
+<p>The fall of Carteret left the brothers, Newcastle and Pelham, absolute
+masters of the situation. The King had been completely defeated, and had
+sullenly to submit. He would scarcely speak to his Ministers. When he
+broke silence it would be to say, 'I have done all you asked me, I have
+put all the power into your hands, and I suppose you will make the most
+of it.' To that Hardwicke, the Lord Chancellor, with more than legal
+subtlety replied, 'The disposition of places is not enough if your
+Majesty takes pains to show the world that you disapprove of your own
+work.' This was more than the King could endure.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">239</a></span> 'My work!' he broke
+out; 'I was forced, I was threatened.' The Chancellor was shocked at
+these expressions. He knew of nothing of the kind. Such harshness was
+utterly alien to the ministerial mind. The mere idea of compulsion was
+shocking to it. 'No means were employed but what have been used in all
+times, the humble advice of your servants supported by such reasons as
+convinced them that the measure was necessary for your service.' This
+was the legal and fastidious method of describing the threatened strike
+of the Ministry in the previous November.</p>
+
+<p>Carteret resigned in the last week of November (1744), and the Pelhams
+used their victory wisely and well by building up during the following
+month a strong administration on a large basis. It comprised men of all
+parties, Whigs, Tories, even Jacobites, forgotten Whigs, forgotten
+Tories, forgotten Jacobites, and was called in the canting phrase of
+that day the Broad Bottom Administration, as being a coalition of all
+parties. The only flaw in it was that it omitted the only men worth
+having. Among the new officials were George Grenville and George
+Lyttelton, who became subordinate Lords of the Treasury and Admiralty.
+'Do what you will,' Cobham had said, 'provided you take care of my
+boys,' from whom Pitt now seemed to be excluded; for Cobham found him
+positive and unbending, differing, sometimes, it may be presumed, from
+Cobham. When complete, this Ministry was so comprehensive as to
+annihilate opposition, and render the next few years unprecedentedly
+placid and dull from the parliamentary point of view.</p>
+
+<p>Outside the forgotten worthies who were provided with places, there
+towered the two memorable men,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">240</a></span> Pitt and Chesterfield, the one great and
+the other considerable. Against them the King remained implacable. But
+he had at last to yield to the admission of Chesterfield. At first 'he
+shall have nothing,' had said the King, 'trouble me no more with such
+nonsense.' But now Chesterfield was to combine the Lord Lieutenancy of
+Ireland with a special embassy to the Hague. On Pitt alone was the veto
+still absolute. And yet he was the only man whom the Ministers really
+dreaded.<a name="FNanchor_166_166" id="FNanchor_166_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Pelhams, through Cobham, had promised him the Secretaryship at War,
+on which his heart was set; but they were unable to fulfil their pledge,
+and soothed him for the time with promises that they would persevere in
+pressing him upon the Sovereign. With these fine words Pitt professed
+himself satisfied, and promised support, all the more readily as he knew
+himself to be inevitable. In the meantime, however, he gave up the only
+post he held, a course to which he was impelled both by the Marlborough
+legacy and the fall of Carteret; for while the first made him
+independent of salary, the second had alienated the Prince of Wales. So
+in April (1745) he resigned his groomship of the bedchamber, and met
+Parliament in the unadorned character of the most powerful private
+individual in the country.</p>
+
+<p>On the army estimates he spoke for the first time, and with vehemence,
+as a supporter of the Government. On this occasion, too, he first
+utilised the apparatus of gout with the demeanour of a graceful invalid,
+whose end<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">241</a></span> was approaching. Were it to be the last day of his life, he
+exclaimed, he would spend it in the House of Commons, since he judged
+the condition of his country to be worse than that of his own health.
+Formerly these expressions would have meant that the Government was
+ruining the nation. But now, he explained, that though Carteret had
+nearly wrecked the kingdom, the present object was, by connecting
+Hanover with Holland, to arrive at a prompt and fair pacification. He
+paid warm compliments to Pelham on his patriotism and capacity for
+business, and commended his Government with oblique and friendly
+expressions directed towards the King. A dawn of salvation to this
+country had broken forth (which, apparently, had hitherto been obscured
+by the form of Carteret), and he would follow it as far as it would lead
+him. His 'fulminating eloquence,' we are told, 'silenced all
+opposition.'<a name="FNanchor_167_167" id="FNanchor_167_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a></p>
+
+<p>In February 1745 a question arose of peculiar delicacy for Pitt. Through
+one of the compromises sometimes required by political emergency the
+question of the employment of the Hanoverians, against which Pitt was so
+strongly pledged, was arranged by transferring them to Maria Theresa,
+with an extra subsidy to enable her to pay them. This somewhat
+transparent artifice was boldly and dexterously defended by Pitt
+himself. On such occasions it is well not to hesitate or refine, and
+Pitt spoke without visible qualms. 'It was,' he said, 'a meritorious and
+popular measure, which did honour to the minister who advised it, and
+the Prince, who so graciously vouchsafed to follow it, and must give
+pleasure to every honest heart. As to what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">242</a></span> had been thrown out that the
+Queen of Hungary might take them into her pay, when they were dismissed
+from ours, what of that? She was at liberty to take them or not. They
+would not be forced on her, but God forbid that these unfortunate troops
+should by our votes be proscribed at every court in Europe.' It was
+enough that, 'by his Majesty's wisdom and goodness,' they were no longer
+voted annually as a part of our army, and so forth.<a name="FNanchor_168_168" id="FNanchor_168_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a></p>
+
+<p>It is obvious from the meagre report that Pitt was now as copious in his
+praise of the King as he had formerly been niggard. His Sovereign had
+become wise and good and gracious; the Hanoverian troops, which had been
+so short a time ago cowardly and contemptible troops, were now
+unfortunate and meritorious, well worthy the attention and employment of
+Maria Theresa. One or two members could not help smiling; they called
+the measure collusive, and declared that if we were to pay the
+Hanoverians at all it were better to pay them directly, when they would
+at least be under our direction and control, than through the Queen of
+Hungary, when they would not. It is not on record that any one asked
+what advantage would be reaped by the taxpayer under the method
+proposed, when he would pay at least as much as before, but without the
+least check as to the way in which the money was spent. Nevertheless,
+there were complaints enough. Pitt must have hinted that it was better
+that they should fight under the Hungarian flag than the British, as
+they did not fight in harmony by the side of British troops; for this
+called up a Northumbrian baronet to explain that this was contrary to
+the fact, and that he should raise the point in a motion. Pitt at once
+rose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">243</a></span> again, not in his high line, but 'with all the art and temper
+imaginable,' soothed and complimented the honest member, hinted that his
+motion would only serve the purposes of Carteret, whom they both
+rejoiced to see removed, and generally allayed the debate with complete
+success.<a name="FNanchor_169_169" id="FNanchor_169_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a></p>
+
+<p>This is again a notable mark in his career. For the first time he
+appears, not as the fierce hero of declamation and invective, but as the
+dexterous official diplomatist, coaxing and reassuring. He was fast
+moving onwards.</p>
+
+<p>The official character of Pitt's speeches is all the more marked because
+there was little to commend and much to attack in the conduct of the
+Ministry, which had, to say the least, been singularly unfortunate. The
+disastrous battle of Fontenoy was not redeemed by the capture of
+Louisbourg, a gallant affair for which local volunteers and local
+enterprise, rather than the Government, deserve the credit. And now
+during the Parliamentary recess from May to October there suddenly
+appeared a fresh danger, the one against which Walpole's policy had been
+mainly directed for a generation. On August 19, Charles Edward, eldest
+son of the exiled Prince of Wales, and grandson of King James II.,
+raised the standard of civil war at Glenfinnan; on September 17 he was
+living in the palace of his ancestors at Holyrood; four days afterwards
+he completely defeated the forces sent against him. Had he at once
+marched South he might well have reached London, and had he reached
+London the face of history in this island might have been changed. The
+Cabinet was panic-stricken, not merely at the advance of Charles, but at
+the anger of their legal Sovereign, who seemed likely to recall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">244</a></span>
+Carteret to his side. Dutch troops were hastily fetched over and sent to
+the North, and English troops from Flanders followed. Had these
+reinforcements been detained by contrary winds but a few weeks Pelham
+declared that London could not have been defended against the Jacobites.
+Two days before the victory of Charles Edward, Henry Fox wrote that 'had
+five thousand (French) troops landed in any part of this island a week
+ago, I verily believe the entire conquest would not have cost them a
+battle.'</p>
+
+<p>But Charles contented himself with a reign at Holyrood of six weeks, and
+this delay lost him his chances of success. When Parliament met on
+October 17 he was still in Edinburgh, but adequate measures had been
+taken to render his enterprise abortive. All this does not concern Pitt,
+except as giving him an opportunity of expressing his devoted loyalty to
+George II.; but while Charles Edward was marching on Derby a desperate
+struggle was going on which related entirely to him. In the new session
+he had begun to show signs of irritation and of impatience with the
+Government; the emollients of the Pelhams began to lose their virtue,
+and he was determined not to be fooled any longer. His amiability had
+disappeared, and though his speeches are unreported, it is evident that
+the Ministers were now made to feel the terrors of his tongue.
+'Yesterday,' writes Horace Walpole, 'they had another baiting from Pitt,
+who is ravenous for the place of Secretary at War: they would give it
+him: but as preliminary, he insists on a declaration of our having
+nothing to do with the Continent,' a stipulation which reads strangely
+enough by the light of the years to come. The Pelhams saw that they
+could no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">245</a></span> longer defer the fulfilment of their promises, and that it was
+necessary to approach the King. The moment was singularly unfavourable.
+The King had never forgiven the compulsion put on him to dismiss
+Carteret, nor the fact of his separation from Carteret. He had
+shrewdness enough to see that in ability and grasp of affairs Carteret
+towered above the other ministers except the Chancellor; and he despised
+Newcastle, who was principally thrown into contact with him. It was a
+shame, he declared, that a man who was not fit to be a chamberlain at
+the pettiest of German courts should be forced on the nation and on the
+Crown as a principal minister. All through 1745 the royal resentment
+smouldered, though it was kept in suspense by the rebellion. But when
+that movement lost in importance and became clearly doomed, the King
+felt more free to display his feelings. Foreign policy, with which we
+are not here concerned, was part of his grievance; but the main cause of
+irritation was the threatened intrusion of Pitt on his councils. And yet
+this was obviously impending and even inevitable. Pitt, at first so
+patient, had begun to show his teeth in public, and probably in private
+as well. The crisis could not be any longer avoided.</p>
+
+<p>In the preceding autumn there had been conferences between the Pelhams
+on the one side and Pitt and Cobham on the other. On November 20, 1745,
+Newcastle records a meeting at which Pitt put forward his demands, and
+'apprehended great difficulties in bringing about what we so much
+desired,' his accession to office. His conditions were finally melted
+down to an extension of the Place Bill so as to exclude from Parliament
+all officers in the Army under the rank of lieutenant-colonel, and in
+the Navy below<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">246</a></span> the rank of captain; the removal of all the remaining
+adherents of Carteret, notably the two Finches, from Court; and a 'total
+alteration of the foreign system, by feeding only the war on the
+Continent, acting there as auxiliaries, and particularly by confining
+all the assistance we should give to the Dutch to the bare contingent of
+10,000 men; but to increase our navy, and to act as principals at sea in
+the war against France and Spain. For a peace with France, at present,
+was not to be thought of.'</p>
+
+<p>The first condition presented no complications. The second seemed
+inexpedient on grounds of prudence and decency. The third presented more
+difficulty. Newcastle had two long conferences upon it, first with Pitt
+and then with Cobham. Finally a meeting was held between the Chancellor,
+Hardwicke, Harrington, Pelham, and Newcastle on one side, and Gower,
+Bedford, Cobham, and Pitt on the other.<a name="FNanchor_170_170" id="FNanchor_170_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a></p>
+
+<p>The situation of affairs at this moment was this: Charles Edward was
+marching from Holyrood towards London. The French had won Fontenoy and
+were overrunning the Austrian Netherlands, without difficulty and almost
+without resistance. Maria Theresa was about to conclude peace at Dresden
+(December 25, 1745) by a renewed cession of Silesia. This was the
+juncture at which the Pelhams resolved to force on a Cabinet crisis in
+order to obtain the services of Pitt. The fact at least displays the
+value and importance of the personage who was the subject of contest.</p>
+
+<p>The real point at issue between the Government and Pitt was this: The
+Government wished to give general and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">247</a></span> unlimited assurances of
+assistance, amounting almost to a guarantee, to the Dutch. Pitt wished
+the assistance definitely limited to a force of 10,000 men; and that we
+should then, free of all other continental complications (for both
+parties agreed that Austria must come to terms with Prussia), carry on a
+purely naval war against France and Spain.</p>
+
+<p>At this conference between the Ministers and the Cobham
+plenipotentiaries, Newcastle was the spokesman of the Government. He
+declared that the Queen of Hungary had forfeited her rights to any
+further assistance, and that we were about to tell her that she could
+have no more from us. On this point all were apparently agreed, so that
+Austria was eliminated from the discussion. The case of Holland was,
+however, in the opinion of Ministers, different; her existence was
+necessary to us, and we must proffer help to her, if only to prevent her
+concluding a separate peace with France. But an offer limited to 10,000
+men would not prevent such a peace; we must show a general disposition
+to assist. Lord Cobham answered that this sort of defensive war could
+never bring about a peace, that the Dutch would evade their engagements,
+and we should find ourselves with as formidable a continental war on our
+hands as if we were again actively supporting Maria Theresa. Pitt warmly
+supported Cobham; spoke strongly against the Dutch; 'insisted that
+10,000 men in our present circumstances was a generous and noble
+succour.... He insisted on the necessity of coming to some precision as
+to the contingent in order to satisfy the people; and talk'd much of the
+great impression we could make upon France, when our efforts were singly
+at sea.'</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">248</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At this point Bedford and Gower separated themselves from Cobham and
+Pitt. It was not possible, they said, to increase our navy. In fine, the
+plenipotentiaries of the Government pointed out that if France and
+Holland came to terms, we might have France and Spain free to devote
+their whole energies against us, and, as the others chimed in, 'they
+might easily keep the rebellion on foot for years, if not destroy us
+quite.'</p>
+
+<p>Cobham and Pitt, however, departed unshaken, though with great civility
+and good-humour. Newcastle glumly sums up the position. The King may say
+that he was ready to take these gentlemen into the Government, but, as
+they will not come in, ask if the Ministry will thereupon desert him?
+'To which, to be sure, no other answer can be given but that we are not
+in a condition to carry it on. To depend upon my Lord Granville's
+friends to support this administration against Lord Granville is a
+contradiction in itself. To bring in Mr. Pitt against his own will is
+impossible. And, therefore, at present there seems to be nothing to be
+done, if Mr. Pitt is determined (which, I should still hope, he would
+not finally be), but with your lordship (Chesterfield), the Duke of
+Bedford, my Lord Gower, to get as many individuals as we can to carry us
+through till the rebellion is over: and then we shall be at liberty to
+take such part as we shall think most consistent with our own honour and
+the public service.'<a name="FNanchor_171_171" id="FNanchor_171_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a></p>
+
+<p>Observe: without Pitt we are not in a condition to carry on. That is
+what this letter amounts to, for of Bedford and Gower the Ministry felt
+sure, and Cobham was an auxiliary who was on and off like a freebooter.
+The adhesion of Pitt,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">249</a></span> a private member, poor and almost unconnected,
+was vital to a Government which in the public opinion had already
+collected every possible element of strength. So matters continued till
+the meeting of Parliament after the Christmas recess in January 1746.
+Pitt held aloof, and had no further commerce with the Government.</p>
+
+<p>A few days before Parliament met, however, he went to the Duke of
+Bedford, inquired as to the foreign policy of the Government, showed a
+disposition to come into it, and expressed a wish that some minister
+would talk it over with Lord Cobham, 'into whose hands they had now
+finally committed themselves.'<a name="FNanchor_172_172" id="FNanchor_172_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a> On this hint Newcastle hurried to
+Cobham, who was reasonable, and 'seemed very desirous to come into us
+and bring his Boys, as he called them.... The terms were, Mr. Pitt to be
+Secretary at War; Lord Barrington in the Admiralty; and Mr. James
+Grenville to have an employment of Ł1000 a year. He flung out Lord
+Denbigh, the Duke of Queensbury, and some Scotch politicians, but not as
+points absolutely to be insisted on.'</p>
+
+<p>It is useful and edifying to be allowed behind the scenes in this way;
+for such negotiations are now, one would imagine, obsolete, or as nearly
+obsolete as the corruption of our fallen nature will allow. Still, one
+may drop a tear in passing over the 'Scotch politicians,' so lightly
+proffered, so lightly dismissed. But let Newcastle continue his
+narrative. 'Upon this I opened the Budget to the King, which was better
+received than I expected, and the only objection was to the giving Mr.
+Pitt the particular office of Secretary at War.' Still the Pelhams
+pressed the appointment. Then the goaded and distressed monarch
+determined<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">250</a></span> to make a desperate effort to break from the dominion of the
+Whig hierarchy, so as to carry out his own foreign policy, and avoid the
+admission of Pitt to his counsels. At this juncture Bath gained
+admittance to the Closet, and fortified the King's repugnance. He
+'represented against the behaviour of his ministers in forcing him in
+such a manner to take a disagreeable man into a particular office, and
+thereby dishonouring his Majesty both at home and abroad; and
+encouraging the King to resist it by offering him the support of his
+friends in so doing.'<a name="FNanchor_173_173" id="FNanchor_173_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a> The King caught at this forlorn hope, and
+gave Bath full power to form a new Government. Bath released himself
+from his vow against holding office, accepted the charge with alacrity,
+instantly summoned Carteret, and obtained from the City a promise of
+supplies on terms more favourable than those to which Pelham had agreed.
+Carteret, it need scarcely be said, joyfully acceded. The misfortune was
+that there was no one else who did. The Pelham ministry resigned in a
+body. Bath kissed hands as First Minister, and received the seals of the
+Secretaries of State to transmit to Carteret, who was ill. The new
+Secretary at once announced by circular his appointment to the foreign
+ministers. But there all ended. When old Horace Walpole was told that
+this ministry was settled he shrewdly remarked: 'I presume in the same
+manner as what we call a settlement in Norfolk; when a house is cracked
+from top to bottom and ready to fall, we say it is settled.'<a name="FNanchor_174_174" id="FNanchor_174_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a>
+Winnington was to have been the new Chancellor of the Exchequer. Thrice
+did the King press the seal into his hand, and thrice did Winnington
+return<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">251</a></span> it. 'Your new ministers, sir, can neither support Your Majesty
+nor themselves,' said he.<a name="FNanchor_175_175" id="FNanchor_175_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> He insisted, moreover, that they could
+not depend on more than 31 peers and 80 commoners. History does not
+confirm even so moderate a computation, but it may be presumed that this
+was the Court contingent on which any minister could count.</p>
+
+<p>Harrington, one of the actual Secretaries of State, on whom the King
+confidently reckoned for assistance in the new arrangement, resigned,
+after a stormy scene with his master, who never forgave him. Every one
+resigned or tried to resign, and there was no one to fill their places.
+To Pelham himself Carteret had made overtures; but Pelham told the King
+that the Whig junto would have nothing to do with Bath or Carteret. At
+last, the only measure left to the hapless monarch was to shut himself
+up and forbid his door to the crowd that sought admittance in order to
+give up their keys and staves and official insignia. He was soon
+compelled to send for Bath and to tell him that it would not do. Bath
+exhorted him to be firm, and offered by means of the Prince of Wales to
+secure Tory support. But with Charles Edward still in arms in the
+Highlands, the King could not bring himself to approach the foes of his
+house, and under no circumstances would he owe salvation to his son.
+Both Princes of Wales, the real and the titular, were almost equally
+repugnant to him. Another version of the story states that it was Bath
+who told the King that the project would not work. It matters little
+which is correct, for the position was self-evident, but George was
+probably stouter than Bath.</p>
+
+<p>Bath kissed hands on February 10 (1746). Two days<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">252</a></span> afterwards his
+ministry had come to an end, and the King had sent for Pelham to return.
+Carteret saw the humour of the situation and laughed it away; he owned
+it a mad escapade, but was all the more ready to repeat it. It was all
+over, the King had to surrender to the Whigs, who condescended to resume
+the seals on easy terms, which were the proscription of Bath's following
+and the admission of Pitt. The first condition was simple enough, it was
+the natural result of Bath's defeat. <i>Vae victis.</i> 'We immediately
+desired,' writes Newcastle, 'that the Court might be purged of all their
+friends and dependents, that Lord Bath might be out of the Cabinet
+Council, the Duke of Bolton, Lord Berkeley of Stratton, Mr. William
+Finch, the Vice-Chamberlain, Mr. Edward Finch, the Groom of the
+Bedchamber, Mr. Boone, and the Lord Advocate of Scotland (which were all
+that were left of that sort), should be removed.' We have an impression
+that, in spite of all, 'the black, funereal Finches' were preserved to
+the Bedchamber and to the card table, but that does not concern this
+narrative.</p>
+
+<p>As to the second condition, it was inevitable sooner or later, and took
+place in the form least offensive to the Sovereign. But the ministerial
+crisis and the desperate venture with Bath and Carteret testify to the
+formidable position of Pitt and to the equal aversion of the Sovereign.
+In no less an instance than Pitt's could this repulsion have been
+overcome.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt himself had begged that his pretensions to the Secretaryship at War
+should not act as an obstacle to an accommodation with the King, for
+there was evidently nothing so repugnant to the Sovereign. The King had
+said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">253</a></span> first that he would not have him in that office at any price, then
+that he would use him ill if he had it, then that he would not admit him
+to his presence to do the business of the office if he had it.<a name="FNanchor_176_176" id="FNanchor_176_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a></p>
+
+<p>There is, if the matter be candidly considered, no just cause of
+reproach in this obstinacy. George II. was a gentleman, and a brave
+gentleman. The Hanoverians were his own people, of his own blood and
+language. Hanover was the home in which he had been brought up, the
+paradise to which he always looked longingly from his splendid exile in
+England. The King's personal courage Pitt had publicly and wantonly
+aspersed; Hanover and the Hanoverians he had held up to every form of
+public hatred and contempt. One cannot be surprised that George II.
+would have nothing to say to him except under compulsion, and refused,
+as between one gentleman and another, to have personal relations with
+him. As a constitutional ruler his duty was another matter, but he would
+not perform a duty so odious except in the last resort. He ignored Pitt
+even after Pitt had entered office. It was four years after Pitt became
+Paymaster that Newcastle, as the result of long pressure or intrigue,
+induced the King even to speak to him. This was considered a triumph for
+the ministry.<a name="FNanchor_177_177" id="FNanchor_177_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Mar. 6, 1746.</div>
+
+<p>Perhaps the Pelhams understood the King's feelings. Pitt did without
+doubt. The King was not now pressed beyond endurance, and Pitt was
+content for the moment with the joint Vice Treasurership of Ireland, in
+which his partner was Walpole's son-in-law, Cholmondeley. The office was
+understood to be lucrative, but he was not destined to hold this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">254</a></span>
+sinecure for more than a few weeks. He had scarce time to ask for
+exemption from the land tax of four shillings in the pound which was
+charged on his salary for not residing in Ireland, or for admission to
+the Irish Privy Council, both customary requests.<a name="FNanchor_178_178" id="FNanchor_178_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> Two months after
+he was gazetted Winnington died, and Pitt succeeded him in the rich
+office of Paymaster-General. This is a Privy Councillor's place, so Pitt
+had to be admitted to the King's presence to take the oath. The King
+shed tears as Pitt knelt before him. A constitutional Sovereign has
+these bitter moments.</p>
+
+<p>During the interval between the two appointments Pitt had to pay a heavy
+fee for the first. A vote was demanded for 18,000 Hanoverians to be
+taken into British pay. Cobham's young men, one of whom, afterwards Lord
+Temple, 'had declared in the House that he would seal it with his blood
+that he never would give his vote for a Hanoverian,' voted the money in
+silence. Pitt however was not content to play so abject a part. He stood
+boldly forth, speaking, said Pelham, his new chief, with the dignity of
+Wyndham, the wit of Pulteney, and the knowledge blended with judgment of
+Walpole. Walpole's son thought differently:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">255</a></span> Pitt, he declared, added
+'impudence to profligacy; but no criminal at the Place de Grčve was ever
+so racked as he was by Dr. Lee, a friend of Lord Granville, who gave him
+the question both ordinary and extraordinary.' Probably both accounts
+are true. Lee was one of the Prince of Wales's men, and Pitt's relations
+with his late master were strained to the point of rupture by his
+acceptance of office.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">256</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Pitt</span> was now to inhabit the Pay Office, and he gave notice to Ann,
+without any previous quarrel so far as we know, that they would
+henceforth live apart. In any case, Pitt's accession to office thus
+enabled him to put a convenient period to what had probably become a
+fretting and irksome arrangement; but Walpole notes at this time that
+there is gossip about 'the new Paymaster's ménage,' possibly Grattan's
+tradition of 'This House to Let.' This sort of chit-chat is, however,
+the inevitable accompaniment of a man in Pitt's position and need not
+again be dwelt upon. Two of his early patrons also quarrelled with him:
+the Prince of Wales and Cobham. But Pitt, for the moment at any rate,
+could afford to do without either. A more delicate question required his
+attention. There were habitual practices in the Pay Office which brought
+in immense profits to the Paymaster. It was the custom of that official
+to take poundage on all subsidies paid to foreign princes, and to use
+the great balances at his credit for his own purposes of speculation. As
+to this second method Pitt had no doubts, and rejected the idea. As to
+the first he seems, on entering upon office, to have consulted
+Pelham.<a name="FNanchor_179_179" id="FNanchor_179_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> Pelham replied that Winnington had taken these perquisites,
+but that he himself when Paymaster<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">257</a></span> had not; Pitt could do as he chose.
+'Such a manner of stating it left scarce an option in any but the basest
+of mankind,' remarks Camelford with characteristic bitterness. Pitt at
+any rate did not hesitate, and refused to take a farthing beyond his
+salary, which, in truth, was splendid enough. But the indirect profits
+of the Paymastership, which earlier in the century had founded the
+dukedom of Chandos and the palace of Canons, and which later endowed the
+peerage of Henry Fox and the glories of his exquisite residence at
+Kensington, besides furnishing great fortunes for his graceless sons to
+squander at the gaming-table, were, as Dr. Johnson would have said,
+beyond the dreams of avarice. It was held in that day of loose political
+morality to be noble, if not unique, for a man with a patrimony of a
+hundred a year and a legacy of ten thousand pounds to refuse to receive
+such profits.<a name="FNanchor_180_180" id="FNanchor_180_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a></p>
+
+<p>Lord Camelford's statement may be taken in the main to be correct
+without adopting the sour inference which he draws. Pitt may well have
+asked Pelham as to the practice of the office and Pelham have replied in
+the sense indicated. If so, it was nearly as creditable to Pelham as to
+Pitt, for one was scarcely less needy than the other. Pelham was a
+gambler, and so wanted all the money he could get. He was a politician,
+and politicians in those days required money for their purposes almost
+as much as gamblers. Lord Camelford implies that had Pelham not answered
+as he did, Pitt would have taken the percentages and the balances. This
+is mere surmise. But, had he done so, he could not have been blamed.
+These perquisites were regarded as legitimate by the practice and
+opinion of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">258</a></span> day; the balances were matters of public account. They
+made the Paymaster's office a great prize, a recognised source of
+immense profits. The fact remains that Pitt, or Pitt and Pelham, thought
+them improper, and refused to take them.</p>
+
+<p>One signal difference must however be observed. Pelham abstained
+silently, the abstinence of Pitt was widely known. This notoriety may
+have been partly due to the fact that the King of Sardinia, having heard
+of Pitt's refusal to deduct the percentage on the Sardinian subsidy,
+sent to offer him a large present, which Pitt unhesitatingly declined.
+But there was another reason, which colours Pitt's whole life, and which
+may therefore well be noted here. His light was never hid under any sort
+of bushel, and he did not intend that it should be. He already saw that
+his power lay with the people, and that it was based not merely on his
+genius and eloquence, but on a faith in his public spirit and scrupulous
+integrity. His virtues were his credentials, and it was necessary that
+they should be conspicuous. Pulteney and St. John had wielded greater
+Parliamentary power, yet Pulteney and St. John had perished from want of
+character. Character he saw was the one necessary thing, but character
+must be known to be appreciated. Pitt was perhaps the first of those
+statesmen who sedulously imbue the public with a knowledge of their
+merit. He can scarcely be called an advertiser, but he was the ancestor
+of advertisers. Other statesmen no doubt had paid their pamphleteers.
+Pitt paid nobody, but he inspired; he had hangers-on who clung to the
+skirts of his growing fortune. This is not to imply that he had not a
+genuine scorn of meanness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">259</a></span> and corruption and the baser arts of
+politics. He had to use them through others; he had to ally himself with
+Newcastle and his gang; he could not govern otherwise. But he was
+anxious that the public should know that he was something apart from and
+above these politicians. His was a real but not a retiring purity; a
+white column rather than a snowdrop. This was all part of his
+essentially theatrical character, which he had found successful in
+Parliament, and which gradually absorbed him, with unhappy results.</p>
+
+<p>But there was another reason why it was necessary that Pitt should
+advertise his virtue on this occasion. He was a patriot joining the
+Court party, a member of the Opposition accepting a place, which, with
+all deductions, had a fixed and ample salary. It was not possible for
+him, though his friends were already established in office, to join them
+without some loss of popularity. It was difficult for him to keep his
+shield untarnished in the royal armoury. The morose Glover states that
+he brought himself to the level of Lord Bath in public disfavour by his
+acceptance of office. Pitt himself, at the time of his bitter
+mortification in 1754, writes to Lord Hardwicke of his 'bearing long a
+load of obloquy for supporting the King's measures,' without the
+smallest abatement of the King's hostility, and about the same time
+describes himself as having parted with that weight in the country which
+arose from his independent opposition to the measures of the Government.
+He must indeed have counted the cost. It seemed obvious and in the
+nature of things that Lytteltons, Grenvilles, and Cobhams should follow
+the other patriots into office when opportunity offered; they had no
+doubt barked loudly at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">260</a></span> ministers, but they belonged to the families
+which always governed the country, and it was proper, indeed inevitable,
+that they should take up their predestined positions on the Treasury
+Bench. But Pitt had stood on a different pedestal. He had been marked
+out by Walpole for punishment and by the King for exclusion. He had
+thundered against the King and the King's trusted Ministers, the
+Walpoles and the Carterets, with a voice that overbore all others, and
+which apparently could not be silenced. The people seemed at last to
+have found an incorruptible champion. Then suddenly he was muzzled with
+a sinecure. Had he insisted on the Secretaryship of War and wrenched it
+from the reluctant sovereign, the position would have been totally
+different. But to pass into the sleek silence of the Vice Treasurership,
+and almost to disappear from sight or hearing for eight years, seemed a
+moral collapse. It is not one of the least remarkable features of Pitt's
+career that he should have survived this lucrative obscurity.</p>
+
+<p>It is indeed difficult to understand how so fierce and restless a spirit
+could have endured the passive existence to which he had restrained
+himself by the acceptance of office. We seem to hear a growl but a few
+months after he had become Paymaster. 'In the gloomy scene which, I
+fear, is opening in public affairs for this disgraced country,' he
+writes to George Grenville in October 1746; not a cheerful tone for a
+young minister, but one not unfamiliar among those in subordinate
+positions. Still he could afford to wait. He probably contented himself
+with the reflection that King George could not last for ever, and
+flattered himself with an easy entrance to the councils of King
+Frederick. He could watch, too, with silent scorn, the miscarriages of
+his official<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">261</a></span> superiors, confident that high office must come to him, as
+it were, of its own accord. Still, he had to wait long, and the death of
+Frederick as well as the longevity of the monarch were little less than
+disastrous to his calculations. It would have been better, of course,
+for his historical position had he refrained from taking a subordinate
+office, which restrained his independence, and deprived him of the
+peculiar lustre of his lonely power. In these days we ask ourselves what
+temptation could induce him to accept a post which seemed to offer
+nothing but salary in exchange for the exceptional splendour of his
+independent position? How was it worth his while to become
+Vice-Treasurer of Ireland? It cannot have been for money. He was
+notoriously indifferent to money (though his nephew casts doubts even on
+this), and he was better off as to money than he had ever been before,
+owing to the Marlborough legacy. It may have been that as his political
+associates had all joined the administration, he thought that his
+loneliness impaired his power, and he must certainly have felt that it
+was impossible for him to continue in active and effective opposition to
+a Government which included his closest friends. That would seem to be
+the chief and conspicuous reason. But there was another, as one may well
+suppose, which was not less potent. Office is the natural, legitimate
+and honourable object of all politicians who feel capable of doing good
+work as ministers, and even of some who do not. The instances to the
+contrary are so few as to prove the rule. Wilberforce and Burdett,
+Ashley (for Ashley, though not literally outside the category of
+officials, cannot be considered as one), and Cobden are the names that
+obviously present themselves. But Ashley and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">262</a></span> Wilberforce had
+consecrated themselves to a high career of philanthropy which was
+incompatible with the bond of ministry. Burdett, long a popular idol and
+an orator of great power, a country gentleman of the best type, and
+personally agreeable even to those who differed from him, was probably
+held to be too advanced a demagogue to be even considered for an
+appointment. Cobden refused office at least twice; yet had he lived he
+could not have kept out of it. Bright, his illustrious political twin,
+the Castor to his Pollux, took it and liked it. In the eighteenth
+century we can think of no one but Pulteney. He, indeed, strictly
+speaking, is no exception, for as a youth he held a subordinate post.
+And though in the maturity of his powers he refused the first place when
+apparently he might have had it, he also solicited it when it was out of
+his reach.</p>
+
+<p>Althorp too, in the last century, is a singular example. He led the
+House of Commons for four years as Chancellor of the Exchequer, when his
+popularity and ascendancy made him the real pivot of the Government. But
+he hated office with so deadly a hatred that he had the pistols removed
+from his room lest he should end his official career with them. He
+really comes in the list of exceptions to the rule that office is the
+goal of all capable politicians.</p>
+
+<p>But Pitt had nothing in common with these men. He wished to be in
+office, and he knew that he would be a better minister than any there,
+even though he may not have felt already the confidence which he
+afterwards expressed that he alone could save England. How then was he
+to obtain a foothold in the ministry? The just repugance of the King
+was, he knew, insurmountable, so long as he remained outside. But if
+admitted to office he might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">263</a></span> well hope much from his power of
+fascination, which was almost famous. The King was not an easy person
+for any man to charm; but Pitt no doubt felt that if he could once be
+placed in contact with His Majesty, he might be able to remove the royal
+prejudice; though in that he seems to have been wrong. He tried his hand
+on Lady Yarmouth, with whom at a later period he seems to have been on a
+familiar footing; but it is doubtful if she ever dispelled, though she
+may have mitigated, the King's hatred of Pitt.</p>
+
+<p>Even failing the mollification of the King, he felt that by taking
+office he would have entered the official caste, and he would have
+placed his foot on one rung of the ladder of greatness. In accepting the
+Vice-Treasurership he had doubtless been promised the next post that was
+vacant, and was, as has been seen, given the Paymastership. He was thus
+reunited to all his political friends, and would form with them a solid
+proportion of the garrison of Downing Street, a proportion to be
+reckoned with. It would be strange indeed if in such a position and with
+such feeble superiors he did not make his way to some position of real
+business and power.</p>
+
+<p>It must be remembered, too, that the state of affairs as regards office
+in the eighteenth century was very different from the present. Now, if a
+man be a bold and popular speaker, both in Parliament and on the
+platform, but more especially on the platform, he leaps into the Cabinet
+at once; he disdains anything else; a Vice-Treasurership such as Pitt
+accepted he would regard as an insult. But in the middle of the
+eighteenth century there was nothing of this. There was no such thing as
+platform speaking outside the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">264</a></span> religious movement. A man made himself
+prominent and formidable in Parliament, but that was a small part of the
+necessary qualifications for office. The Sovereign then exercised a
+control, not indeed absolute, but efficacious and material, on the
+selection of ministers. The great posts were mainly given to peers;
+while a peerage is now as regards office in the nature of an impediment,
+if not a disqualification. In those days an industrious duke, or even
+one like Grafton who was not industrious, could have almost what he
+chose. But most of the great potentates preferred to brood over affairs
+in company with hangers-on who brought them the news, or with their
+feudal members of parliament. Still they formed a vital element in the
+governments of that time. Pelham's administration at this very time
+contained five dukes: he himself was the only commoner in it, and he was
+a duke's brother. It was necessary to have a Chancellor of the Exchequer
+in the House of Commons, but all the other high offices could be held
+preferably by peers. The two Secretaries of State were both dukes. A
+brilliant commoner without family connection or great fortune was an
+efficient gladiator to be employed in the service of these princes, but
+he was not allowed to rise beyond a fixed line. The peers lived, as it
+were, in the steward's room, and the commoners in the servants' hall; in
+some parlour, high above all, sate the King.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt, according to the practice of the twentieth century, would have
+received at least the highest office outside or, more probably, office
+within the Cabinet on the fall of Walpole, and he certainly would have
+been a Secretary of State or the equivalent before 1746. As it was, in
+that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">265</a></span> year he had to climb on hands and knees into a subordinate
+position. It had been difficult for him to get even that far at the cost
+of a ministerial crisis of capital importance. The veto of the King had
+certainly been the principal obstacle. But the iron rules of caste
+forbade any idea of office for Pitt at all commensurate with his
+importance. He had under the system in force to get in as he could, and
+into much the same sort of office as his inferior but more influentially
+connected colleagues, the Grenvilles, the Lytteltons, and the like.</p>
+
+<p>There was another weighty consideration which pointed to prompt
+acceptance. Pitt had no time to spare. He was no longer in his first
+youth, he was approaching middle age. When he accepted this subordinate
+post he was thirty-eight; and thirty-eight, it may be said, when the
+lives of statesmen were comparatively short, was a more mature period in
+a career than it would be considered now. At the age when Pitt became
+Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, North was already Prime Minister. Pitt was
+now seven years older than Grafton when he became Prime Minister, and
+fifteen years older than his own son when he first led the House of
+Commons as Chancellor of the Exchequer; both, of course, under
+circumstances abnormally propitious. These figures show sufficiently not
+merely that Pitt's career was, so to speak, in arrear, but that the
+youthfulness of ministers in those days, under the favouring breezes of
+birth and connection, affords no standard of comparison for the
+possibilities of a poor country gentleman with no such advantages. Pitt
+was, indeed, rather old than young of his age. His sickly youth and his
+habitual infirmities had aged him beyond his years. But it must be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">266</a></span>
+noted in passing that, in spite of the dire impetuosity of his
+character, all his steps in life, except his entry into Parliament, were
+tardy and delayed. He was forty-six when he married, and forty-eight
+when he first entered the Cabinet; he was thirty-eight when he first
+obtained office. He moved slowly, but not patiently. His glowing nature,
+thrown back on itself, exacerbated by rebuffs and neglect, all fused
+into a fierce scorn, the <i>sćva indignatio</i> of Swift, gathered strength
+and intensity in its restrained progress, until it developed into a
+spirit not indeed amiable or attractive, but of indomitable and
+superhuman force. That was the process which was at work in the shade of
+subordinate office.</p>
+
+<p>This consideration leads us to what is the best, and probably the true,
+explanation of this voluntary eclipse: that in taking office he was
+taking leave of his youth and of his past, and embarking on a new phase
+of his career. Up to this time he had, like a predatory animal, lived
+wholly on attack, and had given no thought to consistency, and little to
+his future. He had only been a rattling politician, determined to make
+his way, thinking only of the game, and of how to develop and display
+his powers of oratory. He had been content to adopt Cobham's enemies as
+his own, and had tried on them the temper of his virgin sword, without
+much caring who they were or why he attacked them, so long as they were
+sufficiently prominent to give notoriety to their assailant. His course
+had been one of brilliant recklessness and of striking eloquence; but at
+bottom it had been nothing but faction. There have been many such
+swashbucklers in our history, and there will be many more. But it is
+rare that, as in Pitt's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">267</a></span> case, they develop into something supreme. With
+Pitt these extravagancies had only been the frolics of genius. By
+burying himself in the sedateness and reticence of office, Pitt sought
+to break with his dazzling indiscretions, and mature himself for
+statesmanship. He retired behind a screen in order to change his dress.
+That, one may infer, was his design; that, certainly, was the effect.</p>
+
+<p>To make an end of this topic, one may ask why Pitt, so fertile of
+invective himself, was not the subject of execration when he joined the
+Court. Great men no doubt may commit faults, even crimes, with impunity,
+for the lustre of their achievements throws a shadow over their errors.
+In such men it is recognised that all is usually on a colossal scale,
+deeds and misdeeds alike. As they are capable of gigantic successes,
+they are also capable of stupendous blunders. This is true of Pitt's
+whole career, but it does not explain the facility with which he was now
+able, before he had his famous administration to his credit, to subside
+into an easy placeman and vindicate the measures which he had previously
+denounced. A few lampoons were of course launched at so tempting an
+object, but he was not made a conspicuous butt. Nor does he seem to have
+lost, or if he did he soon regained, the ear and confidence of the
+people. He had at all periods rare powers of recovery. But in this case
+the fact is not difficult to explain. In the first place it must be
+borne in mind that what he did was the ordinary thing to do. Again, his
+personal friends, and even those who had intercourse with him, were
+impressed by his character and believed in his integrity. Then the
+refusal of the indirect profits counted for much, it gave an air of
+austere virtue to a proceeding otherwise questionable. Again, there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">268</a></span> was
+no particular object to be gained by attacking him. Who indeed was there
+to attack him? No one thought it worth their while to subsidise Grub
+Street for the purpose of throwing dirt on a silent Paymaster, and few
+dared attack him to his face. He had already inspired the House of
+Commons with that awe of him which subsisted and increased so long as he
+remained there. To deliver a philippic against Pitt was no joking
+matter; it required a man with iron nerves who was reckless of
+retribution. Lee, as we have seen, had attempted one, but, in spite of
+Horace Walpole's eulogy, he does not seem to have repeated the
+experiment. Hampden also attacked him, as we shall see, in terms which
+would have led to a duel had not the Speaker interposed his authority.
+Fox and Grenville withstood him doggedly in after years. Barré, when an
+obscure Irish adventurer, tried an attack not altogether without
+success, but did not care to renew the attempt, and became, in fact,
+Pitt's devoted follower. But these instances must be considered as
+singularly rare when it is remembered how tempting a mark was presented
+by Pitt's career, how frank and direct was the language of Parliament,
+and how generous the potations which flushed its debates. Murray, Pitt's
+contemporary and his equal in sheer ability, cowered before him; cowered
+with loathing, but cowered.<a name="FNanchor_181_181" id="FNanchor_181_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> Pitt was already surrounded, and as
+years went on completely encompassed, with an armour and atmosphere of
+terror which rendered him almost impregnable to personal collisions
+throughout his career in the House of Commons. Some who had nothing to
+lose and everything to gain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">269</a></span> baited him from time to time, but they were
+always tossed back with damage. Such persistent assailants as he had,
+and they only appeared in force long afterwards, were mainly anonymous.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever the cause may have been, Pitt, from his accession to office in
+1746, remains in obscurity and almost in silence (so far as the records
+testify, though it is evident that these are extremely imperfect) for
+eight long years, at the potent period of life which ranges from
+thirty-eight to forty-six, the age at which Napoleon closed his career,
+but which was yet two years earlier than the commencement of Pitt's.
+During this long eclipse of ambition and stormy vigour he gives but few
+signs of life for the most diligent chronicler to note. But he had no
+sooner been appointed Paymaster than an incident took place which seemed
+to point to a sudden dawn of royal favour. The Duke of Cumberland's
+achievements in Scotland were to be rewarded by a pension of 40,000<i>l.</i>
+a year, and the King expressed a wish that the motion to this effect
+should be made by Pitt. It is, however, evident that this was not a mark
+of royal affection, but rather of a royal desire to utilise the new
+acquisition to the Government, and in a way so little congenial as to
+make Pitt feel the collar on his neck. The King may have wished to
+display his captive in chains. But Cumberland, who did not love Pitt,
+declined this mark of regard, and Pelham fulfilled the honorary duty.</p>
+
+<p>Cumberland had earned this grant, as well as his name of 'the Butcher,'
+by his victory at Culloden, and the barbarity with which he had followed
+up his success. Fortunately for him, it never occurred to a grateful
+country to draw up a debtor and creditor account as between the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">270</a></span> nation
+and the Duke. Had it done so, there would have been no grant; for his
+defeats, both in number and in importance, represented something much
+more considerable than this easy and solitary triumph, which would have
+been amply compensated by Swift's 'frankincense and earthern pots to
+burn it in' at 4<i>l.</i> 10<i>s.</i>, with 'a bull for sacrifice' at 8<i>l.</i>
+However, mingling vengeance with gratitude, Parliament now plunged
+itself with zest into the horrors of the trials of some adventurous or
+bankrupt gentlemen who had followed Charles Edward, so that Pitt, even
+had he so desired, had no opportunity of breaking silence. No speech of
+his is recorded, indeed, till 1748.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>In the meantime he had been compelled to exchange Old Sarum for the
+ministerial borough of Seaford, one of the Cinque Ports; for Old Sarum
+was no longer tenable. The lord of Old Sarum, his brother Thomas, was a
+liege servant of the Prince of Wales, who was now once more in violent
+opposition, and who indeed ran two candidates, Lord Middlesex, a member
+of his household, and Mr. Gage, the sitting member, at Seaford in
+opposition to the ministerial men, William Pitt and William Hay. This
+proceeding sufficiently indicates the violence and completeness of the
+rupture between Pitt and his former master, brought about by acceptance
+of office. So tense indeed was the contest that Newcastle posted down to
+Seaford in person, held a levee of the voters whom he wooed with copious
+solicitation and refreshment, and during the poll sat by the returning
+officer to overawe the corrupt and limited constituency. He was
+victorious; Lord Middlesex exchanging seats with Pitt, for after this
+his defeat he was brought in by Thomas Pitt for Old Sarum. Newcastle's
+proceedings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">271</a></span> furnished matter for a petition to the House of Commons.
+This Pitt treated with contempt and 'turned into a mere jest,'<a name="FNanchor_182_182" id="FNanchor_182_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a> but
+Potter, son of the Primate, a clever scapegrace, of whom we shall hear<span class="sidenote">Nov. 20, 1747.</span>
+again, spoke vigorously in support of the petition. This, however, had
+little chance against the argument of a compact parliamentary majority,
+which rejected it by 247 to 96. But it is strange to find Pitt treating
+purity of election with ridicule: all the more strange when we remember
+that seven years afterwards he delivered one of his most famous speeches
+in awful rebuke of the same levity on the same subject. 'Was the dignity
+of the House of Commons on so sure foundations that they might venture
+themselves to shake it by jokes on electoral bribery?' It was thus that
+the House might dwindle into a little assembly serving only 'to register
+the arbitrary edicts of one too powerful a subject.' It was the
+arbitrary interference of the same too powerful subject in a
+parliamentary election that Pitt was now screening with jesting scorn.
+But Pitt thought little of consistency, and he might well have forgotten
+for the moment his earlier performance, when seeing and seizing the
+opportunity for a speech which placed him on a moral elevation above the
+House of Commons.</p>
+
+<p>In 1748 we find him intervening comically enough in an affair,
+suspiciously like a local job, which affected his friends, the
+Grenvilles, and which proved the bitter and jealous animosity with which
+they were regarded.</p>
+
+<p>Hitherto the summer assizes for Buckinghamshire had been held at
+Buckingham, and the winter at Aylesbury; but suddenly the summer assizes
+had also been transferred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">272</a></span> to Aylesbury. The reason seems to have been
+simple enough; for the gaol being at Aylesbury, prisoners had to be
+transferred thence and back again when the assizes were at Buckingham.
+Richard Grenville (afterwards Lord Temple), however, for obvious
+reasons, took up the cudgels for Buckingham, which was the close
+neighbour and borough of Stowe, and brought in a Bill to enact that the
+summer assizes should be held at that town. All Bucks rushed into the
+conflict, and as is generally the case in a local affair, the debate was
+extraordinarily diverting. Richard Grenville, Sir William Stanhope of
+Eythrope, the brother of Chesterfield, and afterwards a brother of the
+famous or infamous Medmenham fraternity, Potter again, who had now
+become secretary to the Prince of Wales, who was soon to be member for
+Aylesbury, probably for his services on this occasion, and also a future
+monk of Medmenham, George Grenville, the solemn figure of Pitt, Robert
+Nugent (whose daughter married George Grenville's son), Lee of Hartwell,
+were all visible and ardent in the thick of the battle. Henry Fox, then
+a friend of Pitt, was the only outside member who intervened, and then
+with a sort of puzzled surprise at the fury of the combatants. Sir
+William Stanhope, who led the attack on Buckingham, made a speech which
+was specially piquant. He began: 'Sir, if I did not think I could prove
+that this Bill is the arrantest job that ever was brought to Parliament,
+I should not give the House the trouble of hearing me.' He attributed
+the Bill to the fact that the County of Bucks had not elected two
+Grenvilles as their members. 'Here let me condole with that unhappy,
+rather that blinded, county who neglected to choose two gentlemen of
+such power and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">273</a></span> interest that I am persuaded they will have more votes
+in this House to-day than they would have had at the General Election in
+the whole county in question if they had done it the honour to offer
+themselves for representatives.' After this bitter exordium he
+proceeded: 'It is the power and interest of these gentlemen that I am
+afraid of, not of their arguments;' with good reason, for though to
+posterity the claim of Aylesbury with its gaol will seem conclusive, the
+Bill was triumphantly carried. But Stanhope proceeded with an invective
+against Cobham's young patriots, so violent as to be checked by the
+Speaker. It is noteworthy as showing the jealousy and hostility with
+which their rise and power were regarded in the House, and so merits
+quotation:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>And to shew you, Sir, how sensible they are of the frivolousness of
+the latter, I could recapitulate such instances of intriguing for
+votes, as no man would believe who does not know those gentlemen.
+Conscious of the badness of their cause, they have employed every
+bad art to support it, and have retained so much of their former
+patriotism, as consisted in blackening their adversaries and
+acquiring auxiliaries. They have propagated such tales, that men
+have overlooked the improbabilities, while they wondered at the
+foolishness of them; and they have solicited the attendance of their
+friends, and of their friends' friends, with as much importunity as
+if their power itself was tottering, not the wanton exercise of it
+opposed: the only aid they have failed to call in was reason, the
+natural but baffled enemy of their family: a family, Sir, possessed
+of every honour they formerly decried, fallen from every honour they
+formerly acquired: a family, Sir, who coloured over ambition with
+patriotism, disguised emptiness by noise, and disgraced every virtue
+by wearing them only for mercenary purposes: a family, Sir, who from
+being the most clamorous incendiaries against power and places, are
+possessed of more employments than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">274</a></span> the most comprehensive
+place-bill that ever was brought into parliament would include; and
+who, to every indignity offered to their royal master, have added
+that greatest of all, intrusion of themselves into his presence and
+councils; and who shew him what he has still farther to expect, by
+their scandalous ingratitude to his son; a family, Sir, raised from
+obscurity by the petulance of the times, drawn up higher by the
+insolence of their bribing kinsman, and supported by the timidity of
+two ministers, who, to secure their own persons from abuse have
+sacrificed their own party to this all-grasping family, the elder
+ones of which riot in the spoils of their treachery and places, and
+the younger....</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>At this point he was, not prematurely, called to order. Stanhope brought
+up Pitt, portentous but unconvincing, with perhaps a unique expression,
+for he addressed the Speaker as 'dear Sir.' 'They (the Grenvilles)
+desire the assizes may be sometimes held at Buckingham; the point he
+(Stanhope) espouses is that they should be always held at Aylesbury.
+Which, dear Sir, looks most like a monopoly?' Then he proceeds to defend
+the Grenvilles.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>After so happy a beginning, he falls into a torrent of violent abuse
+on a whole family, founded on no reason in the world, but because
+that family is distinguished by the just rewards of their services
+to their king and country; and, in the heat of his resentment, he
+throws out things that are as unpardonably seditious as they are
+palpably absurd. He takes it for granted that men force themselves
+into a presence and into councils to which they have the honour to
+be called, and into which our Constitution renders it impossible for
+any to intrude. In the same breath he makes entering into a father's
+service an act of ingratitude to a son; and, without so much as
+pretending to assign either facts or reasons, he bestows the most
+low and infamous epithets upon characters that all other men mention
+with esteem. In a word, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">275</a></span> forgot himself to such a degree that he
+pointed out men of birth and fortune, and in high stations, as if
+they were the most abandoned and profligate creatures in the
+universe, without parts, without morals, without shame, and who, if
+his description had in it the least tittle of truth, instead of
+being Members of Parliament, or admitted to the Privy Council, were
+fit only to be members of a society once famous by the name of the
+Hell-fire Club.<a name="FNanchor_183_183" id="FNanchor_183_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It is not worth while to follow this local squabble further, except to
+notice the singular atmosphere of jobbery with which it was surrounded.
+By a job, it was alleged, Lord Chief Justice Baldwin, having purchased
+the manor of Aylesbury in the reign of Henry VIII., had transferred the
+assizes from Buckingham to Aylesbury. By another job a judge who was a
+native of Buckingham had managed that the summer assizes should be
+always held at Buckingham while he lived. 'The arrantest job,' cried
+Stanhope. 'One of the worst sort of jobs,' echoed Potter, who divided
+jobs into two species, one laudable and the other infamous, declaring
+this to be one of the latter kind. Lee also called it a private job of
+the most infamous kind. Articulate Buckinghamshire was indeed unanimous
+against the Bill. But the Grenvilles were now powerful with all the
+insolence of power, and the Government smiled silently on their
+enterprise; though Nugent said they could only have done so from
+weariness of political serenity, and the wish to invite catastrophe. So
+the Bill was carried, and the job, whatever its exact denomination may
+have been, lasted for nearly a century.<a name="FNanchor_184_184" id="FNanchor_184_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> But the debate, as will be
+seen, is significant because it shows the resentment which had long
+been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">276</a></span> growing, but which was now openly displayed against Cobham's
+aggressive and ambitious group.</p>
+
+<p>We do not again hear Pitt's voice till 1749, when he vindicated the
+proposal of the Government to pay to Glasgow ten thousand pounds to
+reimburse the city in some degree for what the occupation of the
+Jacobites had cost it. This of course was an official speech and of no
+permanent interest.<a name="FNanchor_185_185" id="FNanchor_185_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a> He had to prove that the case of Glasgow stood
+by itself, and that there was no analogy between this and those of other
+towns which made the same claim. Two of his points are incidentally
+worthy of remark. The first is that it was the whole tenor of Glasgow's
+conduct since the Reformation which had drawn upon it the resentment of
+the Jacobites; the second, that if this payment were not made, and made
+promptly, Glasgow must be ruined. He told, too, a story which merits
+preservation. When there were rumours in 1688 of the coming of William
+III. with 30,000 men, an adherent of James II. made light of the matter;
+when it was said that the prince was coming with 20,000 he began to be
+alarmed; but when he heard that the expeditionary force numbered only
+14,000 he cried, 'We are undone: an army of 30,000 men could not conquer
+England. But no man would come here with only 14,000 unless he were sure
+of finding a great many traitors among ourselves.'<a name="FNanchor_186_186" id="FNanchor_186_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a></p>
+
+<p>In 1750 there is a faint echo of Pitt's voice in a discussion on the
+annual Mutiny Bill, at least the only echo in the recorded debates, for
+we learn from two letters of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">277</a></span> Pitt's to George Grenville that there had
+been other long and troublesome discussions in which he had had
+officially to bear much of the burden.<a name="FNanchor_187_187" id="FNanchor_187_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a> Colonel Townshend brought
+forward the case of non-commissioned officers who had been broke or
+reduced to the ranks without any cause assigned. Some of these, he said,
+were waiting at the bar as he spoke. He proposed a clause for preventing
+this abuse, and forbidding these punishments except under sentence of a
+court-martial. Pitt took the line, truly enough, that if soldiers were
+on every occasion to bring their complaints against their officers to
+the House for redress there would be an end to all discipline; and
+proceeded in the tone of a Paymaster-General to declare that the
+business of the House was to consider the requisite number of the forces
+and to grant money for their payment, but that the conduct of the army
+or complaints against one another were solely within the province of the
+King or those commissioned by His Majesty.<a name="FNanchor_188_188" id="FNanchor_188_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> This need not detain us.
+About the same time, Lord Egmont, who now represented the Prince of
+Wales in the House of Commons, an able man not without incredible
+absurdities, brought forward a mischievous motion with regard to
+Dunkirk. The question which he raised was whether the French had
+demolished the fortifications erected during the late war, as by the
+Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle they were bound to do; but he diverged into a
+general attack upon the provisions of that Treaty. Pelham answered him
+in a speech of remarkable candour. Lord Strange followed and brought up
+Pitt. He defended the peace, which indeed was not difficult, in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">278</a></span>
+speech eminently discreet, ministerial, and conciliatory. No one could
+discover in it any germ of the policy he was destined afterwards to
+pursue with such triumphant success. But he cast an interesting light on
+the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle. 'If there be any secret in the late
+affairs of Europe,' he said, 'it is in the question how it was possible
+for our ministers to obtain so good a peace as they did. For I must
+confess that when the French laid siege to Maestricht in the beginning
+of 1748, I had such a gloomy prospect of affairs that I thought it next
+to impossible to preserve our friends the Dutch from the imminent ruin
+they were then threatened with, or to maintain the present Emperor upon
+the imperial throne.'<a name="FNanchor_189_189" id="FNanchor_189_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> Though he had thus already spoken, he wound
+up the debate for the Ministry, and did so with equal discretion.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>This was in February 1750. He seems to have spoken no more that session,
+but in August Pelham wrote to his brother: 'I think him the most able
+and useful man we have among us, truly honourable and strictly honest.
+He is as firm a friend to us as we can wish for, and a more useful one<span class="sidenote">Aug. 3-14, 1750.</span>
+does not exist.'<a name="FNanchor_190_190" id="FNanchor_190_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a> Such an eulogy, offered in confidence by a Prime
+Minister, a reticent, unemotional man, seems to us a great mark and
+epoch in Pitt's career. Not 'the most brilliant,' not 'the most
+eloquent,' not 'the most intrepid,' as we should have expected, but 'the
+most useful, able, and strictly honest.'</p>
+
+<p>Pitt had earned this praise by exertions which were not visible to the
+outer world. It often happens that there is a member of Government whose
+merits do not appeal to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">279</a></span> the public, who is no orator, who passes no
+measures, whose conversation does not attract, and whose position in an
+administration is a puzzle to the outer world. And yet perhaps his
+colleagues regard him as invaluable. He is probably the peacemaker, the
+man who walks about dropping oil into the machinery, and preventing
+injurious friction. This had recently been Pitt's position. He had been
+diligently and unobtrusively trying to keep the Government together.
+This was not so easy as it would seem; for though the brothers Pelham
+had arranged it to their will when they ejected Carteret, the morbid and
+intolerable jealousies of Newcastle prevented any ease. Did other
+subjects of intrigue and irritation fail he would quarrel with his
+brother, for when all else was serene it would secretly chafe him that
+his junior should be in the first place and he only in the second. Henry
+himself, it may be noted, seems to have been both blameless and placable
+on these occasions, but naturally bored. The elder brother would begin
+whimpering and whining to Hardwicke, his prop and confidant. Hardwicke
+would soothe him as a sick baby is soothed, eventually his tears would
+be dried, and he would begin burrowing and intriguing in some other
+direction.</p>
+
+<p>On this occasion the trouble arose over Bedford. Bedford had become
+Joint Secretary of State with Newcastle on the resignation of
+Chesterfield. Sandwich, a clever scapegrace, and Bedford's henchman, had
+been Newcastle's candidate for the office, while Henry Fox had been
+strongly supported by Pitt and others. Before offering it to Sandwich,
+it was thought well to make an honorary tender of the post to Bedford,
+in the belief that he would refuse it. Bedford, as sometimes happens on
+such occasions, had promptly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">280</a></span> accepted it; for six months as he said,
+but, as also happens, for as long as he could keep it, which was more
+than three years. The appointment was thus distasteful in its origin to
+Newcastle and became more irksome with experience. Bedford as a minister
+was indolent, and as a man was obstinate and unamiable to a singular
+degree. But it was not these drawbacks which attracted the malevolent
+attention of Newcastle. Bedford, no doubt, was difficult to work with,
+and Newcastle soon wished to be rid of him. But it was when Bedford
+became well with the Court, with the King and with Princess Amelia, for
+whom Newcastle had once affected to feel something more tender than
+friendship, with the Duke of Cumberland and Lady Yarmouth, that
+Newcastle's hatred passed the bounds of moderation and almost of sanity.
+Pelham, who knew the parliamentary power of Bedford and who was anxious
+not to alienate it, was reluctant to take up his brother's dispute; so
+Newcastle promptly quarrelled with him. Pitt intervened. Had he been
+blindly ambitious, he would have welcomed a schism which might have
+produced a much greater position for himself. But he saw that a quarrel
+between the brethren would break up the Ministry; and that such a
+destruction would involve grave consequences, difficult to calculate,
+and possibly the resuscitation of Carteret in the first place. Moreover,
+though on the whole he sided with Newcastle, as Fox sided with Pelham,
+he could not but be aware of the priceless merits of Pelham as a party
+manager, as one who allayed animosities, and as one who kept the peace.
+Pelham, in writing to Newcastle, affects to diminish the value of Pitt's
+intervention, as he wishes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">281</a></span> to attribute the renewal of harmony to
+'natural affection.' But an impartial judgment comes to a different
+conclusion. Natural affection had not prevented discord, and was
+insufficient to produce reconciliation. It is at all times an
+indifferent political cement. But the exertions of an independent
+colleague such as Pitt could not be overestimated. There exists a long
+and earnest letter of July 13, 1750, from Pitt to Newcastle, too long
+and too tedious to quote, but which is both tactful and energetic,
+though in his worst style of winding verbosity. 'I don't hazard much,'
+he wrote, 'in venturing to prophesy that two brothers who love one
+another, and two ministers essentially necessary to each other, will
+never suffer themselves to be divided further than the nearest friends
+by difference of opinion or even little ruffles of temper may
+occasionally be. Give me leave,' he continues, 'to suggest a doubt. May
+not frequent reproaches upon one subject gall and irritate a mind not
+conscious, intentionally at least, of giving cause?' and so forth.<a name="FNanchor_191_191" id="FNanchor_191_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a>
+He concludes all this with warm eulogies on Newcastle's conduct of
+foreign affairs, and soothes and flatters the fretful duke with
+something like sympathetic regard. He or 'natural affection' is
+successful, for, a week afterwards, he writes a brief note on another
+subject, which ends thus: 'I am glad to note that the understanding
+between you and Mr. Pelham, for which I had fears, is
+re-established.'<a name="FNanchor_192_192" id="FNanchor_192_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a> It is pleasant thus to catch a glimpse of Pitt as
+a loyal colleague, strenuously patching up differences; not less
+pleasant to see him pushing the claims of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">282</a></span> his rival, Fox, to be
+Secretary of State. This is a new human, and attractive aspect.</p>
+
+<p>The termination of the Bedford transaction is worth noticing for more
+reasons than one. The King, though he was at least indifferent to
+Bedford, declined to remove him at the instance of Newcastle, and was
+probably pleased to have the opportunity of thwarting the tiresome
+minister who had been the inseparable bane and necessity of his life.
+Pelham would not intervene directly for other reasons. A characteristic
+and tortuous method was therefore adopted. The King cared nothing for
+Sandwich, who was necessary to Bedford. So the brothers suggested the
+removal of Sandwich, to which the King promptly acceded, and Bedford, as
+they had foreseen, instantly resigned.</p>
+
+<p>Two points are notable with regard to the vacancy thus caused. The Prime
+Minister announced that the nomination of Bedford's successor must be
+left to the sole nomination of the King, with which he would not
+interfere in any way, but insisted that he must be a peer.<a name="FNanchor_193_193" id="FNanchor_193_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a> The main
+reason for this strange limitation seems to have been that there were
+fierce but dormant rivalries in the House of Commons, and that an
+appointment of one of the aspirants would call uncontrollable passions
+into activity. Both Secretaries of State must therefore be peers, a
+principle which seems strange to a later generation. The King,
+therefore, nominated Lord Holdernesse, of whom the Prime Minister merely
+observes, 'I cannot possibly see him in the light of Secretary of
+State.'<a name="FNanchor_194_194" id="FNanchor_194_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a> Holdernesse however is appointed, and reappears more than
+once in this accidental character.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">283</a></span></p><p>But Pelham, though he tried to take this affair easily, was near the
+end of his patience. He was worn out by the perpetual exigencies and
+caprice of his brother and colleague, for Newcastle was in truth his
+partner in the Premiership, as well as by the explosive rivalries of
+Pitt and Fox, which any spark might ignite. Chained to an intolerable
+nincompoop, with two such subordinates ready to fly at each other's
+throats or his, and conscious of failing health, he began to long for
+liberty and repose. At the end of March 1751 died the second Earl of
+Orford, and thus vacated the rich sinecure office of Auditor of the
+Exchequer, worth at least eight thousand a year. Pelham, it is said,
+intimated his wish to retire from active business with this noble
+provision, but the King would not let him go.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">284</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">On</span> the meeting of Parliament in January 1751, Lord Egmont raised on the
+Address the question of the peace with Spain. Pitt in reply delivered a
+speech of singular interest, for he disarms criticism by frankly avowing
+the errors of his 'young and sanguine' days, to employ his own epithets.
+After pointing out that the Spaniards could not be expected to give up
+the assertion of their right of search any more than we would renounce
+our claim to the right of free navigation in the American seas, he
+proceeded: 'I must therefore conclude, Sir, that "no search" is a
+stipulation which it is ridiculous to insist on, because it is
+impossible to be obtained. And after having said this I expect to be
+told that upon a former occasion I concurred heartily in a motion for an
+address not to admit of any treaty of peace with Spain unless such a
+stipulation as this should be first obtained as a preliminary thereto. I
+confess I did, Sir, because I then thought it right, but I was then very
+young and sanguine. I am now ten years older, and have had time to
+consider things more coolly. From that consideration I am convinced that
+we may as well ask for a free and open trade with all the Spanish
+settlements in America, as ask that none of our ships shall be visited
+or stopt, though sailing within a bowshot of their shore; and within
+that distance our ships must often sail in order to have the benefit of
+what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">285</a></span> they call the land breeze.' 'I am also convinced that all
+addresses from this House during the course of a war, for prescribing
+terms of peace, are in themselves ridiculous; because the turns or
+chances of war are generally so sudden and often so little expected that
+it is impossible to foresee or foretell what terms of peace it may be
+proper to insist on. And as the Crown has the sole power of making peace
+or war, every such address must certainly be an encroachment upon the
+King's prerogative, which has always hitherto proved to be unlucky. For
+these reasons I believe I should never hereafter concur in any such
+address, unless made so conditional as to leave the Crown at full
+liberty to agree to such terms of peace as may at the time be thought
+most proper, which this of "no search" can never be, unless Spain should
+be brought so low as to give us a <i>carte blanche</i>; and such a low ebb it
+is not our interest to bring that nation to, nor would the other Powers
+of Europe suffer it, should we attempt it.'<a name="FNanchor_195_195" id="FNanchor_195_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a></p>
+
+<p>This is a new milestone. 'Those who endeavour to quote from my former
+speeches, the outpourings of my hot and fractious youth, are hereby
+warned off. I have sown my wild oats; henceforward I am to be regarded
+as a prudent and sagacious statesman.' This was the real purport of this
+speech, divested of the necessary circumlocutions. A statesman who has
+been an active politician in his youth usually has to utter some such
+warning and repentant note in his maturity.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>In 1751 we find Pitt delivering another speech which marks a further
+distance from his unregenerate days. At this time, for reasons which we
+can now scarcely discern, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">286</a></span> which originated with George II., who
+considered that the peace and safety of his electorate depended on a
+secure succession to the Empire being vested in the House of Austria,
+our foreign policy was concentrated on securing the election of Maria
+Theresa's son, a boy of ten years old, as King of the Romans, and so
+heir to the Empire. This strange line of action was absurd enough to be
+congenial to Newcastle, who soon adopted it, called it his darling
+child, and grudged its paternity to the King.<a name="FNanchor_196_196" id="FNanchor_196_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a> Pelham had
+reluctantly to follow, only deprecating expenditure as far as possible.
+For this we slaved and negotiated and subsidised, in the faith that
+should the Emperor die without a King of the Romans being ready to
+succeed him, a war must infallibly ensue. This hypothesis was at least
+doubtful; but, in any case, we expended our energies in vain. Prussia,
+and France as guarantor of the Treaty of Westphalia, declared the
+election of a minor to be contrary to the fundamental laws of the
+Empire, and prevailed. There is the less reason to deplore our failure,
+as it is not known what we should have gained by success. Austria, which
+was alone to profit, threw the coldest water on the project. The obvious
+flaw of the policy appears to have been that the receipt of subsidies so
+entirely conflicted with the electoral oath as to form an insuperable
+bar of honour preventing any elector who received them from voting for
+our candidate. We were in fact to bribe those who could not vote if they
+accepted our bribe, for an object flagrantly illegal, on behalf of a
+Power which scouted our assistance. We offered to bribe the Electors of
+Mainz, Cologne, and Saxony. To the Elector of Bavaria<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">287</a></span> we agreed by
+treaty to pay 40,000<i>l.</i> a year, the sum to be made up by Holland and
+ourselves. It was this last treaty which Pitt found himself called upon
+to defend, and his speech was a broad defence of the whole system and<span class="sidenote">Feb. 22, 1751.</span>
+principle of subsidies. 'Surely,' he cried, 'it is more prudent in us to
+grant subsidies to foreign princes for keeping up a number of troops for
+the service of the common cause of Europe, than by keeping up such
+numerous armies of our own here at home, as might be of the most
+dangerous consequence to our constitution.'<a name="FNanchor_197_197" id="FNanchor_197_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> This must have seemed
+strange doctrine to those who remembered his former harangues. But in
+this speech he was to exceed himself in superfluous candour. He had said
+that there was a good prospect of a firm and lasting peace, and then
+strangely wandered off to the consequent prospect of economy at home,
+'perhaps by a different method of collecting the revenue. I am not
+afraid to mention the word Excise.<a name="FNanchor_198_198" id="FNanchor_198_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> I was not in the House when the
+famous Excise scheme was brought upon the carpet. If I had I should
+probably have been induced by the general but groundless clamour to have
+joined with those who opposed it. But I have seen so much of the deceit
+of popular clamours, and the artful surmises upon which they are
+founded, and I am so fully convinced of the benefits we should reap by
+preventing all sorts of unfair trade, that if ever any such scheme be
+again offered whilst I have a seat in this assembly, I believe I shall
+be as heartily for it as I am for the motion now under our
+consideration.'<a name="FNanchor_199_199" id="FNanchor_199_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">288</a></span></p><p>It is scarcely possible to conceive a more deliberate and scornful
+repudiation of responsibility for any previous opinions that he may have
+maintained than is expressed in this passage. He goes out of his way to
+tender an unnecessary support to the detested Excise scheme, which at
+the same time he declares that he should certainly have opposed had he
+been in the House when it was introduced. The middle-aged Pitt seemed
+never to tire of trampling savagely on the young Pitt, even wantonly, as
+on this occasion. There is, indeed, more justice than is usual in Horace
+Walpole's taunts when he says of Pitt, 'Where he chiefly shone was in
+exposing his own conduct; having waded through the most notorious
+apostasy in politics, he treated it with an impudent confidence that
+made all reflections upon him poor and spiritless when worded by any
+other men.' This is one way of putting it. A preferable and, in our
+judgment, a truer way is that Pitt deliberately chose this method of
+public atonement for past recklessness, and as an avowal that he had
+learned and ripened by experience. He recanted at large, so as to
+obliterate every vestige of his heedless and censorious youth. It is
+better for the country and for themselves that statesmen should thus do
+penance than that they should continue to offer sacrifices of what they
+see to be right to the somewhat egotistical pagod of their personal
+consistency. Honourable consistency is necessary to retain the
+confidence of the country; but there is also a dishonourable consistency
+in concealing and suppressing conscientious changes of judgment.</p>
+
+<p>Though, as we have seen, his defence of the principle of subsidies
+seemed unbounded, it was more limited in practice,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">289</a></span> and Pitt fixed his
+limit at the Bavarian contribution. In 1752 Pelham had to move a subsidy
+to the Elector of Saxony, King of Poland. This had been negotiated by
+Newcastle, but was so strongly disapproved by Pelham that he even
+threatened to second the opposition to it. However, he was persuaded by
+the argument most urgent and sometimes most fatal to prime ministers,
+that the apparent unity of the Government must at any cost be
+maintained, to withdraw his opposition and move the vote. Old Horatio
+Walpole, though he voted with Pelham, spoke warmly against him, and Pitt
+supported Walpole's argument, though privately and not in speech. He
+felt, it may be presumed, that it was not for him to be more of a
+Pelhamite than Pelham himself.</p>
+
+<p>With Pelham, however, he had felt constrained to be at open variance in
+the previous year, about the time of the Bavarian subsidy. The Minister
+had moved a reduction of our seamen from 10,000 to 8000. Pitt declared a
+preference for 10,000; and Potter, whom we have seen in the Buckingham
+and Aylesbury affair, a clever, worthless fellow, who had now become an
+ally of Pitt, opposed the reduction. Pelham seemed to acquiesce, but
+Lord Hartington, an enthusiastic Pelhamite, who was hereafter to be for
+a while Prime Minister under Pitt, forced a division, in order to show
+Pitt that the Whigs would not support him against Pelham. Pitt's
+immediate following on this occasion seems to have consisted only of
+Lyttelton, the three Grenvilles, Conway, and eight others. There was, it
+is to be observed, nothing factious in this; the opinion of Pitt was
+natural, and not distasteful to Pelham. Moreover, on the report Pitt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">290</a></span>
+made a conciliatory speech, marking in the strongest manner his regret
+at differing with Pelham, declaring that it was his fear of Jacobitism
+alone which made him prefer the larger number, and expressing his
+concern at seeing our body of trained seamen, whom he called our
+standing army, reduced. He and his little following, or rather
+cousinhood, vied with each other in loyal eulogies of the Prime
+Minister.</p>
+
+<p>This called up Hampden, an intrepid buffoon, but the great-grandson of
+the patriot, and 'twenty-fourth hereditary lord of Great Hampden,' who
+attacked Pitt and his group with rancour. Here, again, we seem to
+discern traces of Buckinghamshire politics and jealousies. Temple and
+his belongings had, as we have seen, many enemies in their own county,
+and Hampden was one of them. Perhaps the Aylesbury affair still rankled.
+Pitt was visibly angered. Though Pelham warmly defended him, he was not
+appeased, and the affair would have ended in a duel had not the
+Speaker's authority intervened. In the succeeding year, it may be noted,
+the number of 10,000 was restored.</p>
+
+<p>Though these hostilities were averted, the debate produced further
+friction between the brethren who controlled the Ministry. Newcastle was
+profusely grateful to Pitt for the line he had taken. He wrote to one of
+his vassals (January 30, 1750-1): 'As you can be no stranger (if you
+have attended the late debate) to the able and affectionate manner in
+which Mr. Pitt has taken upon himself to defend me, and the measures
+which have been solely carried on by me, when both have been openly
+attacked with violence, and when no other person opened his lips, in
+defence of either,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">291</a></span> but Mr. Pitt, I think myself bound in honour and
+gratitude to show my sense of it in the best way I am able. I must
+therefore desire that neither you nor any of my friends would give into
+any clamour or row that may be made against him from any of the party on
+account of his differing as to the number of seamen. For after the kind
+part he has acted to me, and (as far as I am allowed to be part of it)
+the meritorious one to the administration, I cannot think any man my
+friend who shall join in any such clamour, and who does not do all in
+his power to discourage it. I desire you would read this letter to'
+(here follow the names of seven forgotten men whom we may presume to
+have been his closest followers).<a name="FNanchor_200_200" id="FNanchor_200_200"></a><a href="#Footnote_200_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> Pitt's attitude had alarmed
+Pelham, and this letter from the Duke, so formidable from parliamentary
+influence, made him sensible of imminent danger. He saw that he must
+either be reconciled to his brother or face that alarming coalition of
+Pitt and Newcastle which was afterwards effected with so much success.
+Once more there was a crisis, and Pelham's son-in-law Lincoln was called
+in as mediator. A treaty of peace of three articles was solemnly drawn
+up between the brothers, and apparent harmony restored. The King,
+however, broke out anew with emphatic anger against Pitt and the
+Grenvilles.</p>
+
+<p>This was probably due to the rumour that Pitt and his connections were
+negotiating with the Prince of Wales. This is not improbable. We know
+indeed that Lyttelton was arranging through his brother-in-law Dr.
+Ayscough for a coalition between the forces of Stowe and those of
+Leicester House. The King was old, and ambitious politicians would not
+wish to be ill with his heir, if that could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">292</a></span> be avoided. But all such
+foresight was wasted, for Frederick was never to reign, and within two
+months of the vote on the seamen he was dead. Up to the last he was
+intriguing and securing adherents. On February 28 he was engaging
+Oswald, an able debater in the House of Commons, to his cause; on March
+20 he died. Next morning his party was convoked by Egmont to consider
+the future. Many came, probably from curiosity, but dispersed without
+any conclusion. 'My Lord Drax,' writes Henry Fox in pleasant allusion to
+the promises of the Prince, 'my Lord Colebrook, Earl Dodington, and
+prime minister Egmont are distracted; but nobody more so than Lord
+Cobham, who <i>cum suis</i> has been making great court and with some effect
+all this winter. Do not name this from me. I fear they will not be dealt
+with as I would deal with them.'<a name="FNanchor_201_201" id="FNanchor_201_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a> In truth the purpose and bond of
+the party, the sole reason for its existence, had disappeared.
+Henceforth the courtiers who found no favour with the King kept their
+eyes on the Princess of Wales and her eldest son, a shy, sensitive boy,
+who was afterwards to be George III. Soon they began to perceive in this
+obscure court a handsome, supercilious Scotsman, who enjoyed the favour
+of the Princess and the veneration of her son, who was now a lord of the
+Prince's bedchamber, but was hereafter to head one ministry and become
+the bugbear of many others, John Earl of Bute.</p>
+
+<p>The Heir Apparent was only thirteen, and a Regency Bill was required.
+This is only pertinent to our narrative in that it produced a fierce
+parliamentary duel between Pitt and Fox, the point at issue between them
+being the Duke of Cumberland, whom the King wished, but the Ministry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">293</a></span>
+did not dare, to nominate Regent. Indeed, one of the principal
+expressions of popular grief for the loss of the Prince of Wales had
+taken the form of regret that the death had not been that of the Duke.
+'Oh! that it was but his brother! Oh! that it was but the Butcher!'
+Unfortunately, the speeches of neither Pitt nor Fox in this session have
+come down to us. All that we know is that Pelham declared that Pitt's
+was the finest speech that ever he heard. Pitt had strongly maintained
+that the Regency must be closely restricted, the vital contention of his
+son thirty-seven years later, and hinted that Cumberland, if
+unrestrained in his capacity as head of the Council of Regency, might be
+tempted to usurp the Crown. Hence the wrath of Fox, the close friend of
+the royal Duke; hence, too, the antipathy of Cumberland to Pitt, which
+was to cause complications thereafter.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt and his family connections, whose allegiance to the Ministry had
+been under suspicion, and who had been in negotiation with the Prince's
+party, were rallied into apparent fidelity to the Ministry by the
+Prince's death, without, however, severing their renewed connection with
+Leicester House. But it was acquiescence rather than loyalty. Between
+the two ministerial orators in the House of Commons, Fox and Pitt, there
+had been cordial friendship. But it is evident that this had ceased.
+Fox, as we have seen, would have dealt with Pitt and the Grenvilles as
+traitors, and one would infer that it was the negotiation with the
+Prince of Wales which had angered him. The fact that Fox had sided with
+Pelham, and Pitt with Newcastle, had probably tended to division. Pitt,
+indeed, afterwards accused Pelham, poor soul, with having fostered their
+variance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">294</a></span> Then there had been the affair of the Regency. There had,
+too, just previously to the Prince's death, been a sharp altercation
+between them in a small debate raised by the petition for compensation
+of an ill-used gentleman in Minorca. This Pelham had refused; while Pitt
+upheld the claim with his wonted energy, but with unusual absurdity. He
+would support the petition of a man so oppressed and of so ancient a
+family to the last drop of his blood. Fox ridiculed this extravagance,
+and Pitt was nettled. This is only notable as a symptom of prevailing
+temper.</p>
+
+<p>But the facts of their personalities speak for themselves. They were
+rivals in Parliament, neither of them very scrupulous, both fierce in
+debate. What need of further explanation? Fox, moreover, viewed Pitt's
+overtures to Leicester House with distrust, not merely from the point of
+view of a minister, but from that of the Duke of Cumberland, to whom he
+was devoted, and who detested the Prince of Wales and his crew. So that
+on the Regency Bill it was the wrath between the two factions which
+broke into open war. It was in the main the devotion of Fox to
+Cumberland which originally divided and then estranged him from Pitt.
+They were afterwards to reunite for a time by the mutual attraction of
+brains opposed to imbecility.</p>
+
+<p>This is perhaps the best opportunity to consider the character of this
+Henry Fox, who was now Pitt's rival. Strangely enough there is no real
+biography of this remarkable man, a vigorous and interesting figure, who
+has been to some extent obscured by his more popular and famous son.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">295</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It would almost be enough to say that Fox was everything that Pitt was
+not. He had not that wayward but divine fire which we call genius, and
+which inspired Pitt; but he had the saving quality of common sense which
+was wanting to his rival. He laid no claim to the oratory of Pitt; he
+was, we are told hesitating and inelegant, not indeed a good speaker;
+but he was plain and forcible, with a good business-like wear and tear
+style, which is in Parliament not less valuable than oratory; on
+occasions indeed he spoke with a vehemence and closeness of reasoning
+which almost anticipated the supreme faculty of his son. More than all,
+he thoroughly understood the House of Commons. He had the cordial
+manner, the veneer at least of good fellowship, the frankness savouring
+of cynicism, which make for an eminently serviceable sort of
+parliamentary popularity. In one respect, as a letter writer, he was
+greatly Pitt's superior. While Pitt was prancing fantastic minuets
+before his correspondents, Fox, without wasting a word, went straight to
+the point; and his letters are pregnant, graphic, and forcible. There
+are perhaps none better in the English language than those in which he
+describes the debates of December 1755. He was, what Pitt was not, a
+genial companion, fond of the bottle and the chase; he had, indeed, been
+a gambler and a debauchee. He was, what Pitt was not, a man of the
+world, and was closely allied with the choicest blood of the aristocracy
+by a marriage with a daughter of the Duke of Richmond. Pitt was a county
+gentleman, who had indeed married Temple's sister, but had thus entered
+a more limited and less exalted connection. They both had courage, but
+Fox minded the rebuffs of debate much less than Pitt. He was
+passionate,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">296</a></span> but with a passion less sublime than Pitt's. Pitt could
+sometimes feign passion; Fox could sometimes repress it. In later life,
+when it had been long smouldering, it was ungovernable. But at this time
+it only displayed itself in a not ungenerous resentment. In the race for
+success it would perhaps have been safer to back Fox than Pitt.</p>
+
+<p>But Fox had one incurable flaw which was wholly wanting in Pitt: his
+aims were base and material. He was content for long years to be
+Paymaster, amassing a huge fortune from all the emoluments, legitimate
+and semi-legitimate, of that lucrative office, when a noble ambition
+would not have stooped to so gross an obscurity. And besides money he
+had another weakness. He longed to be a lord. In the moment of his
+rival's triumph and his own fall we find him writing to Lady Yarmouth
+soliciting a peerage in almost abject terms.<a name="FNanchor_202_202" id="FNanchor_202_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> That was refused, and
+it was only after long years of unabashed solicitation that he obtained
+his object. At last a peerage was accorded to his wife, as if to mark
+the reluctance felt to giving it to himself. Then his chance came. Bute
+had to find a bold and unscrupulous agent to carry the Peace through the
+House, and Fox was his man. Not merely had Fox to earn his peerage but
+to wreak some vengeances.<a name="FNanchor_203_203" id="FNanchor_203_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a> He accepted the task readily, and had as
+his first reward the joy of removing Newcastle from the lieutenancy of
+three counties. And then, as if animated by a hatred of the whole human
+race, he expelled from their posts all, from the highest to the
+humblest, whom he suspected of opposition. It was a reign of terror, and
+by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">297</a></span> terror he accomplished the work he had been hired to do. Then he
+claimed his reward. He had earned and he received his peerage. But he
+had also earned and received a detestation, rarely accorded in England
+to a statesman, which lasted for the rest of his life, and which finds
+vent in the bitter lampoon which Gray, the gentlest of scholars, was
+moved to write.</p>
+
+<p>Later again, in his opulent seclusion, Fox was fired with a new ambition
+to become an earl.<a name="FNanchor_204_204" id="FNanchor_204_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> He feared no extremity, no humiliation, to
+obtain his cherished object. But he failed. He was no longer worth
+buying; he could not, indeed, be employed. So in bitterness of spirit he
+passed away, cheered only by his delightful devotion to his wife and
+children, and by the goodwill of a few staunch friends.</p>
+
+<p>There is something profoundly melancholy in Fox's degeneracy. Its
+commencement is clearly marked. In 1756 he was an easy companion, a good
+friend, kindly and beloved; he was honoured and admired; he was the
+second man in the House of Commons, willing and able to dare all. But
+when he was discarded, and had subsided into the Paymastership, he seems
+to have suffered a gradual deterioration. His objects became sordid; he
+lost the finer elements of his character; his ambition sank into
+something composed of vindictiveness and greed; his generous wine became
+corked and bitter. But at the time we are writing of, he was still
+amiable, still courageous, still warm with some instinct of honour,
+patriotism, and high emulation, still an able and masculine figure. It
+is perhaps unfair to anticipate a decline which is outside our limits.
+But the change is so remarkable, throwing, as it were, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">298</a></span> back light on
+some of the puzzling aspects of Fox's earlier career, that it cannot
+well be unnoticed.</p>
+
+<p>More ominous of Pitt's attitude to the Ministry than any small incidents
+of debate was Pitt's silence. For three successive sessions of
+Parliament, in 1752, 1753, and in that which closed in April 1754, he
+practically held his peace. Nothing could be more sinister, nothing
+could mark more emphatically his discontent. Sickness, it appears,
+accounted in part for this abstinence from the arena. 'After a year of
+sullen illness,' as Horace Walpole describes it, he intervened in 1753;
+and this was followed by another twelve months of silence and of illness
+not less sullen. The intervention of 1753 was not very happy. By an Act
+passed in June 1753, foreign Jews had been rendered capable of
+naturalisation. The Bill had passed into law without serious opposition,
+but soon aroused great popular clamour. Grub Street, as usual, was
+called into requisition.</p>
+
+<p>
+'But Lord! how surprised when they heard of the news<br />
+That we were to be servants to circumcised Jews,<br />
+To be negroes and slaves instead of True Blues,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 14em;">Which nobody can deny.'</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Newcastle was charged with having been bribed.</p>
+
+<p>
+'That money you know is a principal thing,<br />
+It will pay a Duke's mortgage or interest bring.'<a name="FNanchor_205_205" id="FNanchor_205_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<p>On the meeting of Parliament in November of the same year Newcastle at
+once moved to repeal it. It had only been, he said in his silly jargon,
+a 'point of political<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">299</a></span> policy,' and as it had aroused agitation in the
+public it had better be repealed. Foote recalled this slipshod phrase in
+his comical portrait of the Duke. 'The honour,' says Matthew Mug, 'I
+this day solicit will be to me the most honourable honour that can be
+conferred.' Pitt supported the repeal in a speech on which his admirers<span class="sidenote">Nov. 27, 1753.</span>
+would not desire to dwell. He was still in favour of the Act, but should
+vote for its repeal, because the people wished it, having been misled by
+the 'old High Church persecuting spirit' into believing that religion
+was concerned in the matter, which was not the fact, therefore an
+explanatory preamble was necessary. 'In the present case we ought to
+treat the people as a prudent father would treat his child; if a
+peevish, perverse boy should insist on something that was not quite
+right but of such a nature as, when granted, could not be attended with
+any very bad consequence, an indulgent father would comply with the
+humour of his child, but at the same time he would let him know that he
+did so merely out of complaisance, and not because he approved of what
+the child insisted on.'<a name="FNanchor_206_206" id="FNanchor_206_206"></a><a href="#Footnote_206_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> Whether this would or would not be the
+wisest course of parental discipline it is not necessary to discuss, but
+it was in the spirit of the practice that prevailed in the Fox family
+rather than in that of the Pitts. The repeal was passed with the
+preamble of admonition.</p>
+
+<p>This reluctant, ironical support was all that Pitt gave his colleagues.
+It cannot indeed be doubted that throughout these three lean years of
+silence he was hostile to the Ministry. Promises had probably been made
+on his first accession to office which he thought had been ill-kept. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">300</a></span>
+had been told, no doubt, that every effort would be made to make him
+more acceptable to the King, and he might well doubt if there had been
+much strenuous effort in that direction. And indeed a topic so sure to
+excite the royal spleen was not likely to be raised except under the
+pressure of absolute necessity. At any rate there had been no result.
+'The Pitts and Lytteltons are grown very mutinous on the Newcastle's not
+choosing Pitt for his colleague,' writes Horace Walpole six weeks after
+the Prince's death. For Bedford was known to be doomed by Newcastle, and
+his Secretaryship of State would soon be vacant. There were many
+aspirants for the succession, but no whisper of Pitt. Cobham, who had
+been his main supporter, was dead;<a name="FNanchor_207_207" id="FNanchor_207_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a> no one could speak with so much
+authority on his behalf; and even had Cobham survived he would probably
+have been silent.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after the letter from Walpole which we have quoted (June 1751)
+Bedford had resigned. He had been succeeded by Holdernesse. At the same
+time Granville, the object of Pitt's inveterate philippics, was admitted
+to the Cabinet as President of the Council. These events may well have
+inflamed Pitt's resentment, which had, we cannot doubt, been long
+smouldering. The great obstacle to his advancement was the King, who, as
+he knew, had always detested him. It was with the greatest difficulty
+that the Pelhams could persuade the Sovereign not altogether to ignore
+him at the Levees. Could he indeed trust the brothers? He appreciated no
+doubt Pelham's qualities at the Treasury, in council, and in the House
+of Commons. It seems impossible to believe that Pitt ever can have
+trusted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">301</a></span> Newcastle; though he addresses the Duke in his letters with an
+affected flummery of devotion. Almon, who is not a trustworthy
+authority, but who is supported in this instance by a probability which
+we may well deem irresistible, says that in at least one interview in
+the year 1752 he treated Newcastle with such scorn that Newcastle had he
+dared would have dismissed him from office.<a name="FNanchor_208_208" id="FNanchor_208_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a> Pitt had openly scoffed
+at the King of the Romans policy, Newcastle's cherished plan, and told
+the Duke that he was engaging in subsidies without knowing the amount,
+and in alliances without knowing the terms. Why, indeed, should Pitt
+trust Newcastle, whom no one had ever trusted, and whom Pitt must have
+measured and known to the very marrow of his bones?</p>
+
+<p>We may take it as certain then that Pitt viewed the Duke with
+contemptuous penetration, and tolerated his grimaces and professions
+only till such time as he could put them to the test. Meanwhile there
+was a free trade in blandishments between them. Newcastle would send
+venison from Holland, and carp and fruit, and Pitt would abound in
+gratitude.<a name="FNanchor_209_209" id="FNanchor_209_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> He still thought well to profess friendship, but, we may
+be sure, a wary friendship, for the veteran in the florid and artificial
+style of the day; on the very day of Pelham's death he wrote from Bath
+to assure him of 'unalterable attachment;'<a name="FNanchor_210_210" id="FNanchor_210_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a> and he condescended to
+solicit a parliamentary seat from him.</p>
+
+<p>But words cost little, and Pitt did not disdain profusion in them any
+more than in what cost more. In a letter to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">302</a></span> Lyttelton written
+immediately after Pelham's death, when he recommended an attitude of
+armed and hostile vigilance towards the new powers, he says:
+'Professions of personal regard cannot be made too strongly,' and this
+line of conduct explains his professions to Newcastle. For how could he
+fail under existing circumstances to be suspicious? Had Newcastle lifted
+a finger to procure him the succession to Bedford? Yet no one could
+compete in Parliamentary authority with Pitt; and, though Murray's
+claims to oratorical pre-eminence might vie with his, Murray's
+aspirations were confined to the law. At this time, Chesterfield, the
+best living judge of such matters, was writing to his son, and
+expressing therefore his real convictions: 'Mr. Pitt and Mr. Murray are
+beyond comparison ... the best orators. They alone can inflame or quiet
+the House; they alone are so attended to, in that numerous and noisy
+assembly, that you might hear a pin fall while either was
+speaking.'<a name="FNanchor_211_211" id="FNanchor_211_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a> It is true that Chesterfield depreciates Pitt's matter.
+But the fact remains that he mentions Pitt as one of the two supreme
+masters of the House of Commons, the other, indeed, not having much
+heart in politics. The ignoring, the slighting of this great power,
+could not be forgiven by so aspiring a nature as Pitt's. He brooded and
+watched. </p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">303</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">How</span> did he pass these three years? It is not easy to say, for we have so
+little light on his private life. No prescient Boswell marked his words
+and habits, or indeed had much opportunity of doing so. Few men of the
+same eminence have lived in such retirement as he did; we only catch
+glimpses. In the first place, it may be said without extravagance that
+his principal occupation was the gout. His gout became part of the
+history of England. To him it was a cruel fact. It kept him constantly
+disabled, and constantly away from London, ever trying new waters,
+principally the historical springs of Bath. Bath, indeed, was his second
+home. He seems to be almost always there till his marriage, and very
+frequently afterwards. Half his letters seem to be dated thence. At last
+he definitely recognised it as a home by building a house there in the
+Circus, which cost him 1200<i>l.</i><a name="FNanchor_212_212" id="FNanchor_212_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a> This was in 1753. But in 1763 he
+disposed of this particular house, probably under some financial
+stress.<a name="FNanchor_213_213" id="FNanchor_213_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> Whether he thus established himself from love of the place
+or from love of his friend Ralph Allen, who was Fielding's Squire
+Allworthy and Bath's Man of Ross, or whether he had already an ambition
+to represent the City in Parliament,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">304</a></span> we cannot tell. His cousin, Lord
+Stanhope soon joined him and bought the houses next to his.<a name="FNanchor_214_214" id="FNanchor_214_214"></a><a href="#Footnote_214_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a> As time
+went on, and Pitt's fame and seclusion increased, it became more and
+more a political centre. There men collected who were anxious to get a
+word with the statesman, or at least obtain news of his health, which at
+times became the problem and mystery of a crisis.</p>
+
+<p>But his own uneasy quest of health made him seek a variety of other
+resorts, Astrop Wells, at the spring of St. Rumbald, Tunbridge Wells,
+Sunninghill, and what not. He thus became a constant participator in the
+tepid diversions of these sickly haunts. Gilbert West, a minor poet,
+whose mother was Cobham's sister, and who was one of Pitt's dearest and
+most intimate friends, accompanied him to Tunbridge Wells in May 1753,
+and writes accounts thence of his life and condition.<a name="FNanchor_215_215" id="FNanchor_215_215"></a><a href="#Footnote_215_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a> They lived
+together at the Stone House, which perhaps may still be identified, and
+which was chosen as their residence for its absolute quiet. Actual gout
+he seems to have welcomed as a relief from other disorders. He was at
+one time unable to sleep without opiates. Insomnia produced its usual
+effects, deep dejection, nay, complete prostration. Like all sufferers
+under that supreme disability, he was ready to try any remedies; musk
+was one of these. When the open appearance of gout relieved the sufferer
+of its more insidious effects, he began a course of mild dissipation. We
+find him giving a dinner at the New Vauxhall, enriched perhaps by the
+bounty of Newcastle, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">305</a></span> was sending him choice dainties at this time;
+then a rural entertainment of tea in a tent, where he bade 'his French
+horn breathe music like the unseen genius of the wood;'<a name="FNanchor_216_216" id="FNanchor_216_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a> a diversion
+which seems all the more pastoral, when we remember that at the same
+moment Fox and Hardwicke, the Chancellor, were at each other's throats
+in St. Stephen's over the Marriage Act. He made excursions to view the
+fine parks and seats of the neighbourhood, to Penshurst, Buckhurst, and,
+we may presume, Eridge; we are told that he considered these expeditions
+as good for the mind as well as the body. Then when he got stronger he
+went further afield. 'I have made a tour,' he writes, 'of four or five
+days in Sussex, as far as Hastings; Battel Abbey is very fine, as to
+situation and lying of ground, together with a great command of water on
+one side, within an airing; Ashburnham Park most beautiful; Hurtmonceux
+(<i>sic</i>) very fine, curiously and dismally ugly. On the other side of
+Battel: Crowhurst, Colonel Pelham's, the sweetest thing in the world;
+more taste than anywhere, land and sea views exquisite. Beach of four or
+five miles to Hastings, enchanting Hastings, unique; Fairly Farm, Sir
+Whistler Webster's, just above it; perfect in its kind, <i>cum multis
+aliis</i>, &amp;c. I long to be with you' (he is writing to John Pitt, his
+Dorsetshire kinsman), 'kicking my heels upon your cliffs and looking
+like a shepherd in Theocritus.'<a name="FNanchor_217_217" id="FNanchor_217_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a> For the sake of his mind, too, he
+attended 'Mr. King's lectures on philosophy, &amp;c.,' when 'Mr. Pitt, who
+is desirous of attaining some knowledge in this way, makes him explain
+things very precisely.' In August, we must note in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">306</a></span> passing, he begged
+Newcastle to give him an opportunity of an interview as the duke passed
+near Tunbridge on the way to Sussex. Even in this amiable note he allows
+his pique to be visible for a moment. He entirely agrees with the policy
+of the brothers, but 'What I think concerning publick affairs can import
+nothing to any one but myself.'<a name="FNanchor_218_218" id="FNanchor_218_218"></a><a href="#Footnote_218_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a> On his recovery he went off on a
+round of country visits to Stowe, Hagley and Hayes; Hayes, then occupied
+by Mrs. Montagu, which was destined to be the shrine of his passionate
+affection. Stowe was a second home to him; there we have seen him play
+cricket, there he entered with zest into the sumptuous plans of
+landscape gardening, and even advised on architecture. His delight in
+Hagley, the seat of his friend Lyttelton, was scarcely less keen. 'My
+dear Billy,' he writes to William Lyttelton, then travelling in Germany,
+'I am going in a few days to follow your brother to Hagley, and with all
+the respect due to the oaks of Germany, I would not quit the Dryads of
+your father's woods for all the charms of Westphalia. Io giŕ coi campi
+Elisi fortunato giardin dei Semidei, la vostra ombra gentil non
+cangerei. You see, the idea of the Germanick body and the heroes and
+demigods who compose it have made me very poetical.'<a name="FNanchor_219_219" id="FNanchor_219_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a> He had, we may
+note, when this letter was written (August 1748), just returned from
+Tunbridge, and had greatly benefited by his stay there. What, we may ask
+in passing, has become of the efficacious nymphs of all these wells?
+Have they lost their virtue, or is it only the necessary faith which has
+disappeared?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">307</a></span></p><p>From Hagley, Pitt would visit Shenstone at his petty paradise of the
+Leasowes, and the grateful poet would apostrophise him:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Ev'n Pitt, whose fervent periods roll<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Resistless o'er the kindling soul<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of Senates, Councils, Kings;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Tho' formed for Courts, vouchsafed to move<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Inglorious thro' the shepherd's grove,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And ope his bashful springs.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But Pitt, debarred from the sports of the field, had always taken a
+lively interest in the laying out of land, in planting, in landscape
+gardening. He had, to use his own felicitous expression, 'the prophetic
+eye of taste.' At the Leasowes, at Hagley, at Radway, the Warwickshire
+seat of Mr. Saunderson Miller,<a name="FNanchor_220_220" id="FNanchor_220_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a> at Wickham, the home of Gilbert
+West, and at Chevening, the delightful residence of his friend and
+cousin Lord Stanhope, he freely exercised his gift. He utilised it still
+more freely and indeed extravagantly at his own homes, for in the
+pursuit of this hobby he disdained all limitations. Once, when Secretary
+of State, he was staying with a friend near London whose grounds he had
+undertaken to adorn and in the evening was summoned suddenly to London.
+He at once collected all the servants with lanterns, and sallied forth
+to plant stakes in the different places that he wished to mark for
+plantations. In later life he ran to still greater extremes. At Burton
+Pynsent a bleak hill bounded his views and offended his eye. He ordered
+it to be instantly planted with cedars and cypresses. 'Bless me, my
+Lord,' said the gardener, 'all the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">308</a></span> nurseries in the county would not
+furnish the hundredth part required.' 'No matter; send for them from
+London. And from London they were sent down by land carriage, at a vast
+expense. These two familiar anecdotes cannot well be omitted.</p>
+
+<p>In the more moderate time with which we are dealing he was the chosen
+adviser of his friends, who may well have been guilty of the innocent
+flattery of seeking his advice with regard to his favourite hobby. His
+own home at this time was South Lodge in Enfield Chace, which is said to
+have been bequeathed to him together with 10,000<i>l.</i>, 'on this bequest
+that he should spend the money on improvements, and then grow tired of
+the place in three or four years.'<a name="FNanchor_221_221" id="FNanchor_221_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a> This seems dubious. But we are
+on safe ground in inferring from a letter of Legge's that he established
+himself there in 1748. Legge writes to him from Berlin (July 10, 1748):
+'I congratulate myself and the rest of my unsound brethren upon the
+acquisition we have made by your admission into the respectable corps of
+woodmen and sawyers. I consider your Lodge as an accession to the common
+Stock and Republick of Sportsmen, which from its situation will bring
+peculiar advantages along with it, and that the woodcocks and snipes of
+Enfield may be visited at seasons of the year when those of Hampshire
+will not be so accessible.... As to the joiners and bricklayers,
+possibly too the planters of trees and levellers of walks by whom you
+are surrounded, don't give yourself any concern about them. They are a
+sort of <i>satellites</i> which I beg leave to assure you attend a man
+<i>gratis</i>. Nay, I have been told by one whose opinion I rate highly, that
+these men's works all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">309</a></span> execute themselves with a certain overplus of
+profit to the person who is so happy as to employ them,'<a name="FNanchor_222_222" id="FNanchor_222_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a> and he
+adds in a postscript a list of shrubs or trees which he recommends.
+Legge's playful sarcasms as to expense did not deter his friend.</p>
+
+<p>By 1752 Pitt had converted South Lodge, in the opinion of his friends or
+flatterers, into a delightful pleasance. He had, in the fashion of those
+days, constructed a Temple of Pan with appropriate surroundings, which
+excited the admiration of critics, and is mentioned with special
+admiration, we are told, 'by Mr. Whately, a forgotten expert, in his
+"Observations on Modern Gardening," as one of the happiest efforts of
+well-directed and appropriate decoration.' The famous blue-stocking,
+Mrs. Montagu, writes of the 'shady oaks and beautiful verdure of South
+Lodge.' 'There can,' she says in another letter, 'hardly be a finer
+entertainment not only to the eyes, but to the mind, than so sweet and
+peaceful a scene.' Yet Pitt assured her that he had never spent an
+entire week there. Gilbert West paid a visit there, when suffering
+presumably under an attack of the gout. 'He had provided for me a
+wheeling-chair, by the help of which I was enabled to visit every
+sequestered nook, dingle, and bosky bower from side to side in that
+little paradise opened in the wild.'<a name="FNanchor_223_223" id="FNanchor_223_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a> So that the garden would seem
+to have really been a success.</p>
+
+<p>But Pitt was to prove fickle to all these charms. On leaving Tunbridge
+Wells after the completion of his course of waters, he intended, besides
+long visits to Stowe and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">310</a></span> Hagley, to pay a passing visit to Hayes, a
+place near Bromley, of which his friend, Mrs. Montagu, had a lease.
+Whether it was a case of love at first sight or not, we do not know, but
+Hayes was destined to be the home of his affections and the place most
+closely identified with himself. At the termination of Mrs. Montagu's
+lease in 1756, he bought it of the Harrison family, who owned it, and a
+letter from him is dated thence in May 1756. But in January 1765 he
+inherited the Burton Pynsent estate, and so, in the following October,
+he offered the Hayes property to his friend, the Hon. Thomas Walpole, at
+a fair valuation, indeed at cost price. He had wasted on it, we are
+told, prodigious sums, with little to show for it, for he had spent much
+in purchasing contiguous houses to free himself from neighbours. 'Much
+had gone in doing and undoing, and not a little portion in planting by
+torchlight, as his peremptory and imperious temper could brook no
+delay.' He had, moreover, Wallenstein's morbid horror of the slightest
+sound. Though he doted on his children, he could not bear them under the
+same roof; they were placed in a separate building communicating with
+the main structure by a winding passage. Vast sums were thus expended
+without adding to the value of the property. But now he was eager to
+leave the cherished home which had swallowed so much of his fortune, and
+to hurry to the new scene. His intention of retiring into Somersetshire
+seems to have caused some alarm among his friends, who feared that it
+betokened retirement from public life; but with little reason, for it
+was in June 1766 that the sale of Hayes to Mr. Walpole was completed,
+and in the succeeding month Pitt was First Minister. His accession to
+power was, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">311</a></span> accompanied by a combined attack of all his
+maladies, nervous and physical; and his morbid, violent cravings had, if
+possible, to be indulged. The most imperious of these was for Hayes, and
+he persuaded himself that its air was necessary to his recovery. He
+negotiated through Camden with Walpole, who unfortunately, in his year
+of residence, had become passionately attached to the place. But Pitt
+had become frantic. Hayes could not be mentioned before him for fear of
+causing immoderate excitement. 'Did he' (Pitt) 'mention Hayes?' Camden
+asked James Grenville, who had just visited his illustrious
+brother-in-law. 'Yes; and then his discourse grew very ferocious.' Lady
+Chatham wrote imploring and pathetic letters to Walpole, who was ready
+to lend indefinitely, but not to sell. It would save her husband and her
+children; her children's children would pray for him. Meanwhile, even if
+Walpole consented, they had no money to buy with. They determined to
+sell part of the Pynsent inheritance. But that would only suffice to pay
+other debts, and Hayes would have to be mortgaged as well. Nothing could
+better prove the insane violence of Pitt's desire. At last, in October
+1767, Walpole yielded to Pitt's importunity, and in December the great
+man found himself once more at home. Camden declared of Walpole that
+'the applause of the world and his own conscience will be his reward,'
+but it is not altogether pleasant to find that he did not disdain much
+more material compensations. Pitt had sold the house and grounds in June
+1766 for 11,780<i>l.</i>, and had to buy them back in November 1767 for
+17,400<i>l.</i>, a difference of 5628<i>l.</i>; so that he had to pay a smart fine
+for his caprices. The whole purchase came to 24,532<i>l.</i>, but this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">312</a></span>
+includes other items, and lands which had been added by Walpole.<a name="FNanchor_224_224" id="FNanchor_224_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a> In
+1772 he appears again to have contemplated selling Hayes,<a name="FNanchor_225_225" id="FNanchor_225_225"></a><a href="#Footnote_225_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a> but he
+was destined to die there. All this is anticipation, but follows
+naturally on the topic of Pitt's country life.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">313</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">We</span> have seen that Pitt was to proceed to Hagley after leaving Tunbridge
+Wells in September 1753. From Hagley he sent a letter to Newcastle,
+which it must have cost him something to write. 'Some circumstances of
+my brother's transactions at Old Sarum render me uneasy at depending for
+my seat in next Parliament on that place. So I take the liberty to recur
+once more for your Grace's protection and friendship to provide for my
+election elsewhere.'<a name="FNanchor_226_226" id="FNanchor_226_226"></a><a href="#Footnote_226_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> Newcastle seems at once to have offered his
+borough of Aldborough, and Pitt 'can never express himself sufficiently
+grateful for all your favours.'<a name="FNanchor_227_227" id="FNanchor_227_227"></a><a href="#Footnote_227_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a> From Hagley (October 1753) he
+proceeded to Bath for a fresh course, and seems to have remained there a
+helpless cripple for no less than seven months, though he was in London
+for a debate in November. Never was illness so untimely, as events of
+vital importance to him were about to take place. For on March 6, 1754,
+Pelham died, and all was confusion. 'Now I shall have no more peace,'
+said the shrewd old King. 'I never saw the King under such deep concern
+since the Queen's death,' wrote Hardwicke. And indeed the situation was
+full of alarming possibilities. For Pelham had become the unobtrusive
+but indispensable man,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">314</a></span> like the mediocre and forgotten Liverpool, who
+kept the balance between fierce rivalries and discordant opinions for
+fifteen years.</p>
+
+<p>There seems no great complication in Pelham's character. He was a Whig
+politician, trained under Walpole, but also under an intolerable brother
+who exercised the utmost prerogative of his birthright. His portrait, by
+Hoare, indicates something catlike, and he had much of feline caution
+and timidity. But among the politicians of that day he seems to have
+been comparatively simple and direct; and no man of his day was so fit
+for the position of Prime Minister in view of his own qualifications,
+and the conditions of the office at that time. He was indeed an inferior
+Walpole. He seems moreover to have been almost devoid of personal
+ambition; the highest places were thrust on him without his seeking
+them. At the fall of Walpole, in spite of Walpole's urgent instances
+that he should accept the Chancellorship of the Exchequer, which besides
+the eminence of the office would have given him the succession to Lord
+Wilmington, he insisted on remaining Paymaster, a post which, as we have
+seen, even without the recognised perquisites, had great material
+attractions, and which with them was capable of enchaining so powerful a
+parliamentarian as Fox. On the death of Wilmington, by Walpole's
+influence, he obtained the highest place; though Walpole had not merely
+to inspire the King, but to overcome Pelham's reluctance. We may imagine
+that Walpole would urge on his Sovereign that Pelham was the only House
+of Commons man available, that he was eminently safe, that he
+represented Newcastle's parliamentary influence, and that Newcastle
+represented Hardwicke, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">315</a></span> embodied the brains of the Cabinet; for
+those of Carteret were too dangerous to trust.</p>
+
+<p>As First Minister Pelham had many difficulties to contend with, but not
+greater than those which always must encompass that position. There was
+the King, with violent prejudices and a Hanoverian policy, neither of
+which he shared. Then there was his brother, who regarded himself as at
+least his junior's equal, and whose petulance, jealousy, and suspicion
+had to be kept in a constant state of arduous appeasement. Thirdly,
+there was Pitt, whom the King could not do with and Pelham could not do
+without; an element of incalculable explosion which anything might
+ignite.</p>
+
+<p>He seems to have steered his course somewhat passively through these
+complications; content so long as he could ward off domestic
+catastrophe, and prevent war with its consequent expenditure; though the
+fates in neither case were propitious. His only real conviction indeed
+was for peace and economy; for the heritage of Walpole's policy had
+devolved upon him, without Walpole's character and ability. Three years
+before the end, as we have seen, he had sickened of his task and of his
+helplessness amid the jarring elements of discord, but he had not been
+permitted to retire. He was indeed the necessary man; a good debater, a
+good administrator, a minister with a conscience for the public, a
+leader or a figurehead with Newcastle's parliamentary power behind him,
+a tactician who managed to keep Pitt at bay, dangerous but muzzled. Men
+of this stamp are kept in harness to the end.</p>
+
+<p>He died on March 6, and the news found Pitt, on March 7, crippled and
+immovable at Bath. His feet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">316</a></span> were impotent with gout, but his brain and
+hands were evidently unaffected. He at once despatched a brief note of
+condolence to Newcastle, 'whose grief must be inconsolable as its cause
+is irreparable. You have a great occasion for all your strength of mind
+to exert itself. Exercise it for the sake of your master and your
+country, and may all good men support you. I have the gout in both feet
+and am totally unable to travel.'<a name="FNanchor_228_228" id="FNanchor_228_228"></a><a href="#Footnote_228_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a> To Lyttelton and the Grenvilles
+he wrote on the same day at length 'the breaking of first thoughts to be
+confined to you four,'<a name="FNanchor_229_229" id="FNanchor_229_229"></a><a href="#Footnote_229_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a> enclosed in a covering letter to Temple,
+saying that he was worn down with pain, and incapable of motion. But he
+was none the less vigilant with regard to the least ripple on the
+surface of politics, 'I heard some time since that the Princess of Wales
+inquired after my health: an honour which I received with much pleasure,
+as not void, perhaps of some meaning.'<a name="FNanchor_230_230" id="FNanchor_230_230"></a><a href="#Footnote_230_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a> Newcastle at once answered
+Pitt's note of condolence, for we find Pitt acknowledging the reply on
+March 11, and mentioning a letter written to him by Hardwicke, under
+Newcastle's authority, 'with regard to some things in deliberation for
+the settling the Government in the House of Commons and the direction of
+the affairs of the Treasury. My answer is in a letter to Sir George
+Lyttelton.'<a name="FNanchor_231_231" id="FNanchor_231_231"></a><a href="#Footnote_231_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a> This was practically giving powers to Lyttelton to
+negotiate with Newcastle as Pitt's representative; a strange choice,
+when we read in the covering letter to Temple: 'let me recommend to my
+dear Lord to preach prudence and reserve to our friend Sir George, and,
+if he can, inspire him with his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">317</a></span> own.' Lyttelton indeed was not destined
+ever to earn fame as a negotiator.</p>
+
+<p>And now it is necessary to give the principal passages of this letter to
+Lyttelton and the Cousinhood, which would have been a fuller and clearer
+manifesto had not all politicians at that time felt a well-grounded
+apprehension that their letters would be opened and read before they
+were delivered. Fulness and clearness were therefore the last qualities
+aimed at in their epistolary style, and inquiring posterity rues the
+result.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Pitt to Sir George Lyttelton and the Grenville brothers.</span></p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>March 7, 1754.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My dearest Friends,&mdash;[Then follows pompous regrets for Pelham's
+'utterly irreparable' loss.] I will offer to the consideration of my
+friends but two things: the object to be wished for, the public; and
+the means; which the object itself seems to suggest; for the pursuit
+of it, my own object for the public, is, to support the King in
+quiet as long as he may have to live; and to strengthen the hands of
+the Princess of Wales, as much as may be, in order to maintain her
+power in the Government, in case of the misfortune of the King's
+demise. The means, as I said, suggest themselves: an union of all
+those in action who are really already united in their wishes as to
+the object: this might easily be effected, but it is my opinion, it
+will certainly not be done.</p>
+
+<p>As to the nomination of a Chancellor of the Exchequer, Mr. Fox in
+point of party, seniority in the Corps, and I think ability for
+Treasury and House of Commons business stands, upon the whole, first
+of any.</p>
+
+<p>Doctor Lee if his health permits is Papabilis, and in some views
+very desirable. Te Quinte Catule, my dear George Grenville, would be
+my nomination.</p>
+
+<p>A fourth idea I will mention, which if practicable, and worth the
+person's while, might have great strength and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">318</a></span> efficiency for
+Government in it, and be perfectly adapted to the main future
+contingent object, could it be tempered so as to reconcile the Whigs
+to it: I mean to secularise, if I may use the expression, the
+Solicitor-General,<a name="FNanchor_232_232" id="FNanchor_232_232"></a><a href="#Footnote_232_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a> and make him Chancellor of the Exchequer. I
+call this an idea only; but I think it not visionary, were it
+accompanied by proper temperaments. I write these thoughts for Lord
+Temple, his brothers' and Sir George Lyttelton's consideration only,
+or rather as a communication of my first thoughts, upon an emergency
+that has too much importance and delicacy, as well as danger in it,
+to whoever delivers their opinion freely, to be imparted any
+farther.</p>
+
+<p>I am utterly unable to travel, nor can guess when I shall be able:
+this situation is most unfortunate. I am overpowered with gout,
+rather than relieved, but expect to be better for it. My dear
+friends over-rate infinitely the importance of my health, were it
+established: something I might weigh in such a scale as the present,
+but you, who have health to act, cannot fail to weigh much, if
+united in views.</p>
+
+<p>I will join you the first moment I am able, for letters cannot
+exchange one's thoughts upon matters so complicated, extensive and
+delicate.</p>
+
+<p>I don't a little wonder I have had no express from another
+quarter.<a name="FNanchor_233_233" id="FNanchor_233_233"></a><a href="#Footnote_233_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a></p>
+
+<p>I repeat again, that what I have said are the breakings of first
+thoughts, to be confined to you four; and the looseness, and want of
+form in them, to be, I trust, excused in consideration of the state
+of mind and body of</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Your ever most affectionate,</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>As nothing is so delicate and dangerous, as every word uttered upon
+the present <i>unexplained</i> state of things, I mean <i>unexplained</i>, as
+to the King's inclinations towards Mr. Fox, and his real desire to
+have his own act of Regency, as it is called, maintained in the
+hands of the Princess; too much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">319</a></span> caution, reserve, and silence
+cannot be observed towards any who come to fish or sound your
+dispositions, without authority to make direct propositions. If eyes
+are really turned towards any connection of men, as a resource
+against dangers apprehended, that set of men cannot, though willing,
+answer the expectation without countenance, and additional
+consideration and weight added to them, by marks of Royal favour,
+one of the connection put into the Cabinet, and called to a real
+participation of councils and business. How our little connection
+has stood at all, under all depression and discountenance, or has an
+existence in the eyes of the public, I don't understand: that it
+should continue to do so, without an attribution of some new
+strength and consideration, arising from a real share in Government,
+I have difficulty to believe.</p>
+
+<p>I am, however, resolved to listen to no suggestions of certain
+feelings, however founded, but to go as straight as my poor judgment
+will direct me, to the sole object of public good.</p>
+
+<p>I don't think quitting of offices at all advisable, for public or
+private accounts: but as to answering any further purposes in the
+House of Commons, that must depend on the King's will and pleasure
+to enable us so to do.<a name="FNanchor_234_234" id="FNanchor_234_234"></a><a href="#Footnote_234_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>It will be observed that Pitt does not mention the Treasury; and he
+probably, though in his letter to Temple of the same date he speaks of
+the Duke's 'ability as Secretary of State,' took it for granted that
+Newcastle would succeed his brother; a proof of his perception. Yet
+Walpole tells us that it was to the astonishment of all men that
+Newcastle took the Treasury five days later.</p>
+
+<p>Next we may notice that he does not mention the Secretaryship of State
+to be vacated by Newcastle, which would seem to show that that office
+had long been destined by the cousinhood for himself.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">320</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The postscript is extremely obscure, as it was probably intended to be.
+It seems to enjoin the greatest caution in dealing with any vague
+overtures which may be made, until it is known whether the King means to
+give his confidence to Fox, and whether he means to maintain the Regency
+as then established. But this phrase about the Regency is almost
+unintelligible.</p>
+
+<p>The last sentence in the postscript is the clearest of the letter. Let
+us remain in office, but whether we exert ourselves there or remain in
+sullen silence must depend on the attitude of the King.</p>
+
+<p>All this is enclosed in a covering letter to Temple&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Pitt to Earl Temple.</span></p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>March 7, 1754.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My dear Lord,&mdash;I return my answer to Jemmy's and Sir George's
+dispatch directed to you, and accompany it with this line to give
+you my apprehensions of Sir George's want of discretion and address,
+in such soundings as will be, and have been, made upon him, with
+regard to the disposition of his friends.</p>
+
+<p>I beg your Lordship will be so good to convene your brothers and Sir
+George, and communicate my letter to them which is addressed to you
+jointly. It is a most untoward circumstance that I cannot set out
+immediately to join you. I am extremely crippled and worn down with
+pain, which still continues. I make what efforts I can, and am
+carried out to breathe a little air. I write this hardly legible
+scrawl in my chaise.</p>
+
+<p>Let me recommend to my dear Lord to preach prudence and reserve to
+our friend Sir George, and if he can, to inspire him with his own.</p>
+
+<p>I heard some time since that the Princess inquired after my health;
+an honour which I received with much pleasure, as not void, perhaps,
+of some meaning.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">321</a></span></p>
+
+<p>I have writ more to-day than my weak state, under such a shock as
+the news of to-day, will well permit.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Believe me, my dearest Lord,<br />
+Ever most affectionately yours,</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Fox will be Chancellor of the Exchequer, notwithstanding any
+reluctancy to yield to it in the Ministers; George Grenville may be
+offered Secretary at War; I am sure he ought to be so. I advise his
+acceptance. The Chancellor is the only resource; his wisdom, temper,
+and authority, joined to the Duke of Newcastle's ability as
+Secretary of State, are the dependance for Government. The Duke of
+Newcastle alone is feeble, this not to Sir George.<a name="FNanchor_235_235" id="FNanchor_235_235"></a><a href="#Footnote_235_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Pitt's next step was to send two letters, in the same cover, to
+Lyttelton; one a confidential letter, the other, an ostensible one, to
+be sent to Hardwicke. The confidential letter, which follows, is
+striking, and contains as much of Pitt's plan of operations at this
+crisis as any that we possess.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Bath, March 10th, 1754.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>Dear Lyttelton,&mdash;I am much obliged to you for your dispatch, and am
+highly satisfied with the necessary reserve you have kept with
+respect to the dispositions of yourself and friends. Indeed, the
+conjuncture itself, and more especially our peculiar situation,
+require much caution and measure in all our answers, in order to act
+like honest men, who determine to adhere to the public great object;
+as well as men who would not be treated like children. I am far from
+meaning to recommend a sullen, dark, much less a double conduct. All
+I mean is to lay down a plan to ourselves; which is, to support the
+King's Government in present, and maintain the Princess's authority
+and power in a future, contingency. As a necessary consequence of
+this system, I wish to see as little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">322</a></span> power in Fox's hands as
+possible, because he is incompatible with the main part, and indeed
+of the whole, of this plan; but I mean not to open myself to whoever
+pleases to sound my dispositions, with regard to persons especially,
+and by premature declarations deprive ourselves of the only chance
+we have of deriving any consideration to ourselves from the mutual
+fears and animosities of different factions in court: and expose
+ourselves to the resentment and malice in the closet of the one
+without stipulations or security for the good offices and weight of
+the other there in our favour.</p>
+
+<p>But do I mean, then, an absolute reserve, which has little less than
+the air of hostility towards our friends (such as they are) at
+Court, or at least, bear too plainly the indications of intending a
+third party or flying squadron? By no means. Nothing would, in my
+poor judgment, be so unfit and dangerous for us. I would be open and
+explicit (but only on proper occasions) that, I was most willing to
+support his Majesty's Government upon such a proper plan as I
+doubted not his Majesty, by the advice of his Ministers, would
+frame; in order to supply, the best that may be, the irreparable
+loss the King has sustained in Mr. Pelham's death: in order to
+secure the King ease for his life and future security to his family
+and to the kingdom: that my regards to the ministers in being were
+too well known to need any declarations;' this and the like, which
+may be vary'd for ever, is answer enough to any <i>sounder</i>. As to any
+things said by Principals in personal conference, as that of the
+Chancellor with you, another manner of talking will be proper,
+though still conformable to the same private plan which you shall
+resolve to pursue. Professions of personal regard cannot be made too
+strongly; but as to matter, generals are to be answered with
+generals; particulars, if you are led into them, need not at all be
+shunn'd; and if treated with common prudence and presence of mind,
+can not be greatly used to a man's prejudice; if he says nothing
+that implies specific engagements, without knowing specifically what
+he is to trust to reciprocally. Within these limitations, it seems
+to me, that a man whose intentions are clear and right, may talk
+without putting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">323</a></span> himself at another's mercy or offending him by a
+dark and mysterious reserve.</p>
+
+<p>I think it best to throw my answer to the Chancellor into a separate
+piece of paper, that you may send it to his lordship. I am sorry to
+be forced to answer in writing, because, not seeing the party, it is
+not possible to throw in necessary qualifications and additions or
+retractions, according to the impression things make.</p>
+
+<p>As far as, my dear Lyttelton, you are so good to relate your several
+conversations upon the present situation, I highly applaud your
+prudence. I hope you neither have nor will drop a word of menace,
+and that you will always bear in mind that my personal connection
+with the Duke of Newcastle, has a peculiar circumstance,<a name="FNanchor_236_236" id="FNanchor_236_236"></a><a href="#Footnote_236_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> which
+yours and that of your friends has not. One cannot be too explicit
+in conversing at this unhappy distance on matters of this delicate
+and critical nature. I will, therefore, commit tautology, and repeat
+what I said in my former dispatch, viz., that it enters not the
+least into my plans to intimate quitting the King's service; giving
+trouble, if not satisfied, to Government. The essence of it exists
+in this: attachment to the King's service, and zeal for the ease and
+quiet of his life, and stability and strength to future government
+under the Princess; this declared openly and explicitly <i>to the
+ministers</i>. The reserve I would use should be with regard to listing
+in particular subdivisions, and thereby not freeing persons from
+those fears which will alone quicken them to give us some
+consideration for their own sakes: but this is to be done
+<i>negatively</i> only, by eluding explicit declarations with regard to
+persons especially; but by <i>intimations of a possibility of our
+following our resentments</i>; for, indeed, dear Sir George, I am
+determined not to go into faction. Upon the whole, the mutual fears
+in Court open to our connexion some room for importance and weight,
+in the course of affairs: in order to profit by this situation, we
+must not be out of office: and the strongest argument<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">324</a></span> of all to
+enforce that, is, that Fox is too odious to last for ever, and G.
+Grenville must be next nominated under any Government.</p>
+
+<p>I am too lame to move.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+Your ever affectionate,</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt</span>.<a name="FNanchor_237_237" id="FNanchor_237_237"></a><a href="#Footnote_237_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Then follows the apparent and ostensible letter to be shown to the
+Chancellor. It is from the nature of it artificial and need not be
+quoted in full. But it contains one remarkable passage in which Pitt
+claims credit for having renounced opposition and the accompanying
+popularity when he was convinced that there might be danger to the
+reigning family from his carrying it further. The assertion is striking
+and daring, and no doubt Pitt did join the Government while Charles
+Edward was still in arms.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="right">
+
+<i>Bath, March 11th, 1754.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My dear Sir George.&mdash;I beg you will be so good to assure my Lord
+Chancellor, in my name, of my most humble services and many very
+grateful acknowledgments for his Lordship's obliging wishes for my
+health.... I can never sufficiently express the high sense I have of
+the great honours of my Lord Chancellor's much too favourable
+opinion of his humble servant; but I am so truly and deeply
+conscious of so many of my wants in Parliament and out of it, to
+supply in the smallest degree this irreparable loss, that I can say
+with much truth were my health restored and his Majesty brought from
+the dearth of subjects to hear of my name for so great a charge, I
+should wish to decline the honour, even though accompany'd with the
+attribution of all the weight and strength which the good opinion
+and confidence of the master cannot fail to add to a servant; but
+under impressions in the Royal mind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">325</a></span> towards me, the reverse of
+these, what must be the vanity which would attempt it? These
+prejudices, however so successfully suggested and hitherto so
+unsuccessfully attempted to be removed, shall not abate my zeal for
+his Majesty's service, though they have so effectually disarmed me
+of all means of being useful to it. I need not suggest to his
+Lordship that consideration and weight in the House of Commons
+arises generally but from one of two causes&mdash;the protection and
+countenance of the Crown, visibly manifested by marks of Royal
+favour at Court, or from weight in the country, sometimes arising
+from opposition to the public measures. This latter sort of
+consideration it is a great satisfaction to me to reflect I parted
+with, as soon as I became convinced there might be danger to the
+family from pursuing opposition any further; and I need not say I
+have not had the honour to receive any of the former since I became
+the King's servant.... Perhaps some of my friends may not labour
+under all the prejudices that I do. I have reason to believe they do
+not: in that case should Mr. Fox be Chancellor of the Exchequer, the
+Secretary at War is to be filled up....<a name="FNanchor_238_238" id="FNanchor_238_238"></a><a href="#Footnote_238_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>He does not follow up this innuendo, nor was it necessary. The next day
+he writes frankly to Temple, who seems to have been much in Pitt's
+confidence at this time. Taken in conjunction with the secret letter to
+Lyttelton of March 10, the plan of operations is easily understood. We
+will leave ministers 'under the impression of their own fears and
+resentments, the only friends we shall ever have at Court, but to say
+not a syllable which can scatter terrors or imply menaces.' Pitt's plan,
+in a sentence, was to hang over the Government like a thundercloud,
+dark, silent, menacing, possibly to be dispelled, but ready and in an
+instant to pour destruction down.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">326</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Mr. Pitt to Earl Temple.</span></p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>Bath, March 11, 1754.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My dearest Lord,&mdash;I hope you will not disapprove my answer to Lord
+Chancellor. I include in you your brothers, for your Lordship's name
+is Legion. You will see the answer contains my whole poor plan; the
+essence of which is to talk modestly, to declare attachment to the
+<i>King's</i> government, and the future plan <i>under the Princess</i>,
+neither to intend nor intimate the quitting the service, to give no
+terrors by talking big, to make no declarations of thinking
+ourselves free by Mr. Pelham's death, to look out and fish in
+troubled waters, and perhaps help trouble them in order to fish the
+better: but to profess and to resolve <i>bona fide</i> to act like public
+men in a dangerous conjuncture for our country, and support
+Government when they will please to settle it; to let them see we
+shall do this from <i>principles of public good</i>, not as the <i>bubbles</i>
+of a few fair words, without effects (all this civilly), and to be
+collected by them, not expressed by us; to leave them under the
+impressions of their own fears and resentments, the only friends we
+shall ever have at Court, but to say not a syllable which can
+scatter terrors or imply menaces. Their fears will increase by what
+we <i>avoid saying concerning persons</i> (though what I think of Fox,
+etc., is much fixed), and by <i>saying very explicitly</i>, as I have
+(but civilly), that we have our eyes open to our situation at Court,
+and the foul play we have had offered us in the Closet: to wait the
+working of all these things in offices, the best we can have, but in
+offices.</p>
+
+<p>My judgment tells me, my dear Lord, that this simple plan steadily
+pursued will once again, before it be long, give some weight to a
+connection, long depressed, and yet still not annihilated. Mr. Fox's
+having called at my door early the morning Mr. Pelham died is, I
+suppose, no secret, and a lucky incident, in my opinion. I have a
+post letter from the Duke of Newcastle, a very obliging one. I
+heartily pity him, he suffers a great deal for his loss.</p>
+
+<p>Give me leave to recommend to your Lordship a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">327</a></span> gathering of
+friends about you at dinners, without ostentation. Stanley, who will
+be in Parliament: some attention to Sir Richard Lyttelton I should
+think proper; a dinner to the Yorkes very seasonable; and, before
+things are settled, any of the Princess of Wales's Court. John Pitt
+not to be forgot: I know the Duke of B&mdash;&mdash; nibbles at him: in short
+liez commerce with as many members of Parliament, who may be open to
+our purposes, as your Lordship can. Pardon, my dear Lord, all this
+freedom, but the conjuncture is made to awaken men, and there is
+room for action. I have no doubt George Grenville's turn must come.
+Fox is odious, and will have difficulty to stand in a future time. I
+mend a little. I cannot express my impatience to be with you.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">W. Pitt.</span><a name="FNanchor_239_239" id="FNanchor_239_239"></a><a href="#Footnote_239_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>On March 18, Lyttelton writes to Grenville to ask if he shall send an
+express down to Pitt as 'he will be impatient to hear particulars,' with
+the news that Grenville and the writer had accepted office, and 'things
+are not as much settled as they are likely to be till the dissolution of
+parliament. I have had no answer from him to my last letter; have you?'
+But this unanswered letter may not have reached its destination, or was
+destitute of certain intelligence, for we find Pitt writing to Lyttelton
+on March 20: 'I conclude that things still remain unsettled, because I
+hear nothing from you or my other friends relating to them.' So he is
+solacing himself by reading Bolingbroke's works. Their arrogance, he
+says, is so excessive, that, great as is the performance, it often
+becomes ridiculous. There was, he remembers, not many years ago, a man
+in Bedlam, a scholar of fine parts, who used to entertain all the
+spectators of that asylum with very rational discourses,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">328</a></span> and talked
+with wit and eloquence; but always concluded by assuring his hearers
+that he alone of all his hearers was in his right senses, and they and
+all mankind were mad, and had conspired to put him in that place;
+Bolingbroke reminds Pitt of this lunatic. There was indeed no love lost
+between the two men. Pitt had not treated the elder statesman with the
+deference paid to him by the adoring circle in which he lived, and
+Bolingbroke had then charged Pitt with the same fault which Pitt now
+found in Bolingbroke. On March 24, in a letter to Grenville, he pursues
+the same theme, and dubs Bolingbroke the 'intellectual Sampson of
+Battersea.' But six weeks afterwards, we find him warmly recommending
+Bolingbroke's 'Remarks on the History of England' to his nephew 'to be
+studied and almost got by heart for the inimitable beauty of the style
+as well as the matter.'</p>
+
+<p>And now comes a letter of which not a word must be omitted, the
+memorable letter to Newcastle of March 24, long supposed to be lost, but
+now discovered among the Newcastle Papers. It was penned under the just
+resentment caused by the knowledge of the arrangements for office from
+which he had been insultingly ignored. It is, so far as we know, the
+greatest that Pitt ever wrote, full of scornful humility, suppressed
+passion, and pointed insinuation. Unlike most of his letters it needs no
+interpretation, it speaks for itself. That bitterness of indignation,
+which is said to produce poetry, has in this instance evolved clearness
+and force. Towards the end, after speaking of resignation, and of his
+wish for retirement, he utters this prophecy, baleful to Newcastle, who
+should have remembered that the prophet had it in his power to fulfil
+his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">329</a></span> own prediction. 'Indeed, my lord, the inside of the House must be
+consider'd in other respects besides merely numbers, or the reins of
+government will soon slip or be wrested out of any minister's hands.' A
+few months were to bring home to the duke the truth of this prediction.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Pitt to Newcastle.</span></p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>Bath, 24 March, 1754.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My Lord Duke,&mdash;I have heard with the highest satisfaction by a
+message from S<sup>r</sup> George Lyttelton the effectual proofs of his
+Majesty's great kindness and firm confidence in your Grace for the
+conduct of his Government. You have certainly taken most wisely the
+Province of the Treasury to yourself, where the powers of Government
+reside, and which at this particular crisis of a General Election
+may lay the foundations of the future political system so fast as
+not to be shaken hereafter. But this will depend upon many
+concomitant circumstances. For the present the nation may say with
+consolation, <i>uno avulso non deficit alter aureus</i>. The power of the
+Purse in the hands of the same family may, I trust, be so used as to
+fix all other power there along with it. Amidst all the real
+satisfaction I feel on this great measure so happily taken, it is
+with infinite reluctance that I am forced to return to the
+mortifying situation of your Grace's humblest servant and to add
+some few considerations to those, which, I have the satisfaction to
+learn from S<sup>r</sup> George Lyttelton, had the honour to be receiv'd by
+your Grace and my Lord Chancellor without disapprobation. The
+difficulties grow so fast upon me by the repetition and
+multiplication of most painfull and too visible humiliations that my
+small store of prudence suggests no longer to me any means of
+colouring them to the world; nor of repairing them to my own mind
+consistently with my unshaken purpose to do nothing on any
+provocation to disturb the quiet of the King and the ease and
+stability of present and future Government.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">330</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Permit, my Lord, a man, whose affectionate attachment to your Grace,
+I believe, you don't doubt, to expose simply to your view his
+situation, and then let me entreat your Grace (if you can divest
+your mind of the great disparity between us) to transport yourself
+for a moment into my place. From the time I had the honour to come
+into the King's service, I have never been wanting in my most
+zealous endeavours in Parliament on the points that laboured the
+most, those of military discipline and foreign affairs; nor have I
+differ'd on any whatever, but the too small number of seamen one
+year, which was admitted to be so the next; and on a crying
+complaint against General Anstruther: for these crimes how am I
+punish'd? Be the want of subjects ever so great and the force of the
+conjuncture ever so cogent, be my best friends and protectors ever
+so much at the head of Government, an indelible negative is fixed
+against my name. Since I had the honour to return that answer to the
+Chancellor which Your Grace and his Lordship were pleas'd not to
+disapprove, how have mortifications been multiply'd upon me. One
+Chancellor of the Exchequer over me was at that time destin'd, Mr.
+Fox: since that time a second, Mr. Legge, is fixt: a Secretary of
+State is next to be look'd for in the House of Commons; Mr. Fox is
+again put over me and destin'd to that office: he refuses the seals:
+Sir Thomas Robinson is immediately put over me and is now in
+possession of that great office. I sincerely think both these high
+employments much better fill'd than I cou'd supply either of them in
+many respects. Mr. Legge I truely and cordially esteem and love. Sir
+Thos. Robinson, with whom I have not the honour to live in the same
+intimacy, I sincerely believe to be a gentleman of much worth and
+ability. Nevertheless I will venture to appeal to your Grace's
+candour and justice whether upon such feeble pretensions as twenty
+years' use of Parliament may have given me, I have not some cause to
+feel (as I do most deeply) so many repeated and visible
+humiliations. I have troubled your Grace so long on this painfull
+subject that I may have nothing disagreeable to say, when I have
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">331</a></span> honour to wait on you; as well as that I think it fit your
+Grace shou'd know the whole heart of a faithfull servant, who is
+conscious of nothing towards your Grace which he wishes to conceal
+from you. In my degraded situation in parliament, an active part
+there I am sure your Grace is too equitable to desire me to take;
+for otherwise than as an associate and in equal rank with those
+charg'd with Government there, I never can take such a part.</p>
+
+<p>I will confess I had flatter'd myself that the interests of your
+Grace's own power were so concern'd to bring forward an instrument
+of your own raising in the House of Commons that you cou'd not let
+pass this decisive occasion without surmounting in the royal mind
+the unfavourable impressions I have the unhappiness to be under; and
+that the seals (at least when refus'd by Mr. Fox) might have been
+destin'd as soon as an opening cou'd be made in the King's mind in
+my favour instead of being immediately put into other hands. Things
+standing as they do, whether I can continue in office without losing
+myself in the opinion of the world is become a matter of very
+painfull doubt to me. If any thing can colour with any air of
+decency such an acquiescence, it can only be the consideration given
+to my friends and some degree of softening obtain'd in his Majesty's
+mind towards me. Mr Pelham destin'd Sir George Lyttelton to be
+cofferer, whenever that office shou'd open, and there can be no
+shadow of difficulty in Mr Grenville being made Treasurer of the
+Navy. Weighed in the fair scale of usefulness to the King's business
+in Parliament, they can have no competitors that deserve to stand in
+their way. I have submitted these things to your Grace with a
+frankness you had hitherto been so good to tolerate in me, however
+inferior. I wou'd not have done it so fully for my own regard alone,
+were I not certain that your Grace's interests are more concern'd in
+it than mine: because I am most sure that my mind carries me more
+strongly towards retreat than towards courts and business. Indeed,
+My Lord, the inside of the House must be consider'd in other
+respects besides merely numbers, or the reins of Government will
+soon slip or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">332</a></span> be wrested out of any minister's hands. If I have
+spoken too freely, I humbly beg your Grace's pardon: and entreat you
+to impute my freedom to the most sincere and unalterable attachment
+of a man who never will conceal his heart, and who can complain
+without alienation of mind and remonstrate without resentment.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+I have the honour to be, etc. etc.<br />
+</p>
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">W. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I cannot hope to leave Bath in less than a week. My health seems
+much mended by my gout.<a name="FNanchor_240_240" id="FNanchor_240_240"></a><a href="#Footnote_240_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This letter was enclosed to Lyttelton under flying seal to be
+communicated to the Grenvilles. Pitt, writing the same day to Temple,
+says: 'I hope my letter to the Duke of Newcastle will meet with the
+fraternal approbation. It is strong, but not hostile, and will, I
+believe, operate some effect. I am still more strongly fixed in my
+judgement that the place of importance is employment, in the present
+unsettled conjuncture. It may not to us be the place of dignity, but
+sure I am it is that of the former. I see, as your Lordship does, the
+treatment we have had: I feel it as deeply, but I believe, not so
+warmly. I don't suffer my feelings to warp the only plan I can form that
+has any tendency or meaning. For making ourselves felt, by disturbing
+Government, I think would prove hurtful to the public, not reputable to
+ourselves, and beneficial in the end, only to others. All Achilles as
+you are, Impiger, Iracundus, etc., what would avail us to sail back a
+few myrmidons to Thessaly! Go over to the Trojans, to be revenged, we
+none of us can bear the thought of. What then remains? The conduct of
+the much-enduring man, who by temper,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">333</a></span> patience, and persevering
+prudence, became <i>adversis rerum immersabilis undis</i>.'</p>
+
+<p>He adds another postscript of caution: 'Be so good as not to leave my
+letters in your pockets, but lock them up or burn them, and caution Sir
+George to do the same.'<a name="FNanchor_241_241" id="FNanchor_241_241"></a><a href="#Footnote_241_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a> Secrecy was of the essence of his scheme.
+Should Newcastle or the Chancellor understand the part that he designed
+to play, they would have an advantage in the game.</p>
+
+<p>On April 2 Pitt writes to jog Newcastle's memory in a note about the
+Aldborough election: 'I had expected to hear from you, but I know the
+multiplicity of your business.'<a name="FNanchor_242_242" id="FNanchor_242_242"></a><a href="#Footnote_242_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a> He need not have feared that his
+letter had been overlooked. So little was this the case that, no doubt
+after anxious and protracted conferences, Newcastle and Hardwicke were
+both writing to him on this very day long and elaborate apologies.
+Hardwicke's is a document, as might be expected, of great but inadequate
+skill.<a name="FNanchor_243_243" id="FNanchor_243_243"></a><a href="#Footnote_243_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> It gives him much concern to find that Pitt is 'under
+apprehensions of <i>some</i> neglect on this decisive occasion.' He is not
+altogether surprised. Could Pitt only have heard how warmly Hardwicke
+pressed his claims! But there are certain things which ministers cannot
+do directly. These must be left to 'time and incidents and perhaps
+ill-judging opponents.' Fox's pressing for larger powers than the King
+would give had no doubt helped the cause of Pitt, and Newcastle's being
+at the head of the Government whose devotion to Pitt was so notorious
+would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">334</a></span> further it still more. He concludes by hoping with sincerity that
+Pitt would take an active part, though no doubt had he seen the
+direction in which his wish was fulfilled, he would have withdrawn it
+with greater emphasis. This stripped of verbiage seems the bone of this
+long letter.</p>
+
+<p>Behind Hardwicke shuffles Newcastle. 'Feel for me,' he plaintively
+exclaims, 'for my melancholy and distressed situation: compelled to
+leave the department of which I was a master to one with which I was
+entirely ignorant, exposed to envy and reproach, and sure of nothing but
+the comfort of an honest heart.' It had first been suggested that Fox
+should be Secretary of State to make Newcastle's elevation more
+palatable to his opponents. But 'that for certain reasons did not take
+place; upon which the King himself, of his own motion declared Sir
+Thomas Robinson Secretary of State.' And this Pitt's friends thought the
+best practicable arrangement. For though an excellent man for the
+office, Robinson had not Parliamentary talents which could excite
+jealousy, and as, from circumstances deeply lamented by Newcastle, 'it
+was impossible to put one into that office who had all the necessary
+qualifications both within and out of the House,' there seemed nothing
+better to do than to appoint the inoffensive Sir Thomas. All
+interspersed with copious assurances of love and affection. 'I honour,
+esteem, and ... most sincerely love you.'<a name="FNanchor_244_244" id="FNanchor_244_244"></a><a href="#Footnote_244_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a></p>
+
+<p>Pitt replies to Newcastle in a letter which it is necessary to print in
+full from the original in the Newcastle Papers, for this is very
+different from the draft printed in the Chatham Correspondence. </p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">335</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Pitt to Newcastle.</span></p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<i>Bath, 4 Apr. 1754.</i><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>My Lord Duke,&mdash;I was honour'd with your Grace's letter of ye 2nd
+inst. yesterday evening. How shall I find words to express my sense
+of the great condescension and kindness of expression with which it
+is writ? It would be making but an ill return to so much goodness,
+were I to go back far into the disagreeable subject that has
+occasion'd your Grace so much trouble, and wou'd be tearing and
+wounding your good nature to little purpose. Whatever my sensations
+are, it is sufficient that I have once freely laid them before you,
+and that your Grace has had the indulgence to pardon that freedom,
+which I thought I used both to your Grace and myself. As for the
+rest, my attachment shall be ever found as unalterable to Government
+as my inability to be of any material use to it is become manifest
+to all the world. I will enter again, but for a word or two, into a
+subject your Grace shall be troubled no more with. It is most
+obliging to suggest as consolations to me that I might have been
+much more mortify'd under another management than under the present:
+but I will freely own I shou'd have felt myself far less personally
+humiliated, had Mr. Fox been placed by the King's favour at the head
+of the House of Commons, than I am at present: in that case the
+necessity wou'd have been apparent: the ability of the subject wou'd
+in some degree have warranted the thing. I shou'd indeed have been
+much mortify'd for your Grace and for my Lord Chancellor: very
+little for my own particular. Cou'd Mr. Murray's situation have
+allow'd him to be placed at the head of the House of Commons, I
+shou'd have served under him with the greatest pleasure: I
+acknowledge as much as the rest of the world do his superiority in
+every respect. My mortification arises not from silly pride, but
+from being evidently excluded by a negative personal to me (now and
+for ever) flowing from a displeasure utterly irremovable. As to the
+office of Chancellor of the Exchequer, I hope your Grace cannot
+think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">336</a></span> me fill'd with so impertinent a vanity as to imagine it a
+disparagement to me to serve under the Duke of Newcastle at the head
+of the Treasury: but, my Lord, had I been proposed for that honour
+and the King been once reconciled to the thought of me, my honour
+wou'd have been saved and I shou'd with pleasure have declin'd the
+charge in favour of Mr. Legge from a just regard to his Majesty's
+service. I know my health, at best, is too precarious a thing to
+expose his Majesty's affairs in Parliament to suffer delay, perhaps
+in the middle of a session by being in such improper hands. As to
+the other great office, many circumstances of it render an
+uninterrupted health not so absolutely necessary to the discharge of
+it. Were I to fail in it from want of health, or, what is still more
+likely, from want of ability and a sufficient knowledge of foreign
+affairs, a fitter person might at any time be substituted without
+material inconvenience to publick business. To conclude, my Lord,
+and to release your Grace from a troublesome correspondent, give me
+leave to recur to your Grace's equity and candour: when the suffrage
+of the party in one instance, and a higher nomination, the Royal
+designation in another, operate to the eternal precluding of a man's
+name being so much as brought in question, what reasonable wish can
+remain for a man so circumstanced (under a first resolution, on no
+account to disturb Government) but that of a decent retreat, a
+retreat of respect, not resentment: of despair of being ever
+accepted to equal terms with others, be his poor endeavours ever so
+zealous. Very few have been the advantages and honours of my life:
+but among the first of them I shall ever esteem the honour of your
+Grace's good opinion: to that good opinion and protection I
+recommend myself: and hope from it that some retreat, neither
+disagreeable nor dishonourable, may (when practicable) be open'd to
+me. I see with great joy S<sup>r</sup> George Lyttelton and Mr. Grenville in
+this arrangement, where they ought to be. I am persuaded they will
+be of the greatest advantage to your Grace's system. They are both
+connected in friendship with Mr. Legge and with Mr. Murray, who in
+effect is the greatest strength of it in parliament. May every kind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">337</a></span>
+of satisfaction and honour attend your Grace's labours for his
+Majesty's service. I have the honour, etc. etc.</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+<span class="smcap">W. Pitt.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>I wrote your Grace by the Post ye 2nd inst. which I hope came to
+your hands.'<a name="FNanchor_245_245" id="FNanchor_245_245"></a><a href="#Footnote_245_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>Two days afterwards he answered Hardwicke. In this letter the notable
+passage is that in which he points to retreat, having in his mind, it
+would seem, some specific office:&mdash;'The weight of irremovable royal
+displeasure is a load too great to move under; it must crush any man; it
+has sunk and broken me. I succumb, and wish for nothing but a decent and
+innocent retreat.... To speak without a figure I will presume ... to
+tell my utmost wish; it is that a retreat, not void of advantage or
+derogatory to the rank of the office I hold, might, as soon as
+practicable, be opened to me.... Out of his Grace's (Newcastle's)
+immediate province accommodations of this kind arise.'<a name="FNanchor_246_246" id="FNanchor_246_246"></a><a href="#Footnote_246_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a></p>
+
+<p>By the same messenger Pitt wrote to Lyttelton one of the terse notes
+which throw a hundredfold more light on his real temper than his more
+pompous lucubrations, and which are infinitely more readable than the
+long rigmaroles which he wrote to official persons. He professes in this
+to be more than satisfied with Newcastle's answer, and also with the
+Chancellor's.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>... The Duke of Newcastle's letter to me is not only in a temper
+very different from what you saw his Grace in, but is writ with a
+condescension, and in terms so flattering, that it pains me. I am
+almost tempted to think there is kindness at the bottom of it,
+<i>which, if left to itself, would before now have shewed itself</i> in
+effects. If I have not the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">338</a></span> fruit, I have the leaves of it in
+abundance; a beautiful foliage of fine words.... The Chancellor's
+letter is the most condescending, friendly, obliging thing that can
+be imagined. I have the deepest sense of his goodness for me; but I
+am really compelled, by every reason fit for a man to listen to, to
+resist (as to the point of activity in Parliament) farther than I
+like to do. I have intimated retreat and pointed out such a one in
+general as I shall really like. Resolved not to disturb Government;
+I desire to be released from the oar of Parliamentary drudgery. I am
+(un)willing<a name="FNanchor_247_247" id="FNanchor_247_247"></a><a href="#Footnote_247_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a> to sit there and be ready to be called out into
+action when the Duke of Newcastle's personal interests might
+require, or Government should deign to employ me as an instrument. I
+am not fond of making speeches (though some may think I am). I never
+cultivated the talent, but as an instrument of action in a country
+like ours....<a name="FNanchor_248_248" id="FNanchor_248_248"></a><a href="#Footnote_248_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a></p>
+
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The places were now all filled: the Government was made up: Pitt was
+excluded and proscribed. Fox or Murray, he admitted, might reasonably be
+put over his head. But the promotion of Robinson was a personal outrage.
+So he would no longer sit in Parliament as a subordinate and almost a
+creature of Newcastle's, member for one of his boroughs, Paymaster in
+his administration. Pitt was now determined to be free. He would remain
+out of London, and they might see how they got on without him. When he
+did return to London they should realise what they had lost. Meanwhile
+he would occupy himself with a little architecture and a little
+gardening; all that he was fit for, as he would assure inquirers with
+obsequious sarcasm.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">339</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the meantime all had been settled by hasty arrangements in London.
+Owing to Newcastle's overwhelming 'affliction,' Hardwicke tells us that
+he himself was compelled to step forward as a 'kind of minister <i>ab
+aratro</i>,' and make the necessary arrangements. A faint offer of the
+Treasury was made to the Duke of Devonshire, which he wisely declined,
+and, six days after the death of Pelham, Newcastle, in spite of his
+overwhelming affliction, was proclaimed his successor. We do not doubt
+Newcastle's sorrow, for in his own way he loved his brother and had
+divided his patrimony with him; but it is even more certain that the
+Chancellor acted as his watch-dog in front of the Treasury. For the
+Duke, though his timidity was a standing jest, could not bear that any
+one else should obtain the rich prize which he coveted and dreaded. And,
+in truth, if that was his view, no one could controvert it, for his
+power in the House of Commons was obvious and undeniable. The King seems
+to have made no trouble. He said that he had an open mind, and would be
+guided by the opinion of the Cabinet as to the nomination of their new
+chief. The suggestion shocked Hardwicke. 'To poll in a Cabinet Council
+for his first minister, which should only be settled in his closet, I
+could by no means digest.' So Hardwicke,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">340</a></span> with remarkable expedition,
+took care that the Closet, which was the term used to denote the King's
+personal apartment and so his personal authority, should pronounce in
+favour of Newcastle. But the Closet was guided by the Cabinet in spite
+of Hardwicke's scruples; and the Cabinet, a facile caucus, inspired by
+Hardwicke himself, represented to the King as its unanimous opinion that
+Newcastle should be their chief. Horace Walpole tells us that it was 'to
+the astonishment of all men.' To us it seems the only natural solution.
+Hardwicke had declared that a peer must be placed at the head of the
+Treasury. 'That peer must be somebody of great figure and credit in the
+nation, in whom the Whigs will have great confidence.' He was no doubt
+painting the figure to represent Newcastle. But who else could it be?
+Newcastle was the head of the Whigs, the master of Parliament, Secretary
+of State for a generation, and the brother of the late First Minister.
+The House of Commons, moreover, consisted mainly of his creatures. His
+nomination to the premiership was easy and simple enough. But a
+formidable difficulty at once presented itself. Who should lead the
+House of Commons? It was not that there was a dearth of capable men; on
+the contrary, there was a terrible embarrassment of riches; for there
+were Fox, Pitt, and Murray, all men of the first eminence in their
+lines. Murray at once let it be known that his views lay in another
+direction; in any case, he was a Scotsman, which was little
+recommendation, and suspected of being a Jacobite, which was less. But
+Fox was on the spot, and, though distracted with anxiety for his child
+Charles, who lay dangerously ill,<a name="FNanchor_249_249" id="FNanchor_249_249"></a><a href="#Footnote_249_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a> prompt, vigilant,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">341</a></span> and eager.
+Within a few hours of Pelham's death he had sent three humble messages
+of apology to Hardwicke, with whom he was on terms of bitter enmity,
+made energetic advances to Newcastle, and had called at Pitt's London
+house. Soon afterwards he was closeted with Lord Hartington. It was
+obvious that no considerations of delicacy would stand in his way. But
+there were strong prejudices against him. Hardwicke feared his success,
+for they had quarrelled mortally. He belonged, said the Chancellor, 'to
+a very narrow clique, many of them of the worst sort.' His claims rested
+on his abilities, but even more on the friendship of the Duke of
+Cumberland; perhaps, too, on a presumed pliability.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt was absent, and had the proverbial fate of the absent; he was not
+merely distant, but could not be moved. He had been nearly a year
+secluded in the country out of the atmosphere of London and politics.
+Horace Walpole describes him epigrammatically in a letter written on the
+stirring day after Pelham's death: 'Pitt has no health, no party, and
+has what in <i>this</i> case is allowed to operate, the King's negative.' On
+the other hand, the King had a prepossession for Fox; and the Cabinet,
+we are told, when it recommended Newcastle, unanimously named Fox as the
+proper person to be Secretary of State and manager of the House of
+Commons. What wonder then that Newcastle's choice fell on Fox, who at
+any rate could not be fobbed off by stories of the King's insurmountable
+repugnance and who was the favourite of the King's favourite son? The
+Chancellor sent his son-in-law, Lord Anson, to Fox with an olive-branch.
+Lady Yarmouth acted as a friendly means of communication between Fox<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">342</a></span>
+and the King. Lord Hartington acted as the honest broker. Fox was given
+the management of the House of Commons, with the Secretaryship of State
+vacant by Newcastle's elevation. He was at once led by Hartington, like
+a votive lamb, to the Chancellor, with whom a reconciliation was
+concluded. Thence he was conducted to Newcastle, who received him, we
+need not doubt, with his customary effusion, probably with a kiss. All
+went well till the Secret Service money was mentioned. This Newcastle
+said he should distribute as his brother had done, without telling
+anybody anything. Then came the question of patronage. That also was to
+be reserved to Newcastle alone. Lastly, there was the list of nominees
+for ministerial boroughs at the approaching General Election. This
+Newcastle also declined to divulge. In the evening Newcastle sent for
+Hartington. He did not deny that he had broken his engagements, but
+simply declared that he would not stand by them. He 'confirmed not his
+promise but his breach of promise in these words: "Who desires Mr. Fox
+to be answerable for anybody but himself in the House of Commons?" I
+then,' continues Fox, 'was to take this great office on the footing of
+being quite a cypher, and being known to have been told so.'<a name="FNanchor_250_250" id="FNanchor_250_250"></a><a href="#Footnote_250_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a></p>
+
+<p>Newcastle had always intended this and nothing else. As Hardwicke
+judiciously wrote, two days before Newcastle saw Fox: 'If the power of
+the Treasury, the Secret Service and the House of Commons is once well
+settled in safe hands, the office of Secretary of State of the Southern
+province will carry very little efficient power along with it.' Fox was
+to be Secretary for the Southern province. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">343</a></span> the Duke's plan of
+campaign had the radical defect of making the post of manager
+impossible. For the difference between the modern term of 'leadership'
+and the denomination of 'management' was no mere verbal distinction. The
+House of Commons had to be managed by acts of a kind more material than
+the eloquence of a chief, or the seductive hints of whips. The leader,
+in fact, combined the leadership with the office of Patronage Secretary.
+'The House of Commons must have,' as Fox explained on a subsequent
+occasion, 'at least one man in it who shall be the organ of His
+Majesty's parliamentary wishes, and known to be able to help or hurt
+people with His Majesty.'<a name="FNanchor_251_251" id="FNanchor_251_251"></a><a href="#Footnote_251_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a> The leader would not know how to talk to
+his followers, when some might be hirelings and some free, without his
+knowing which were which. He would not be able to promise a borough or a
+place. He would be a mere speaking automaton with a wary old chief in
+concealment working the machine. Fox saw that he was cheated. He himself
+seems to have clung for a moment even to the shadow of office which
+Newcastle had proffered. But his friends insisted on his refusal. So on
+the next day or the next day but one, he wrote a curt letter, stating
+that the assurances conveyed to him through Lord Hartington had been
+entirely contradicted by Newcastle at their interview, and that he
+preferred to remain Secretary at War. 'I remain therefore,' he wrote to
+Marlborough, 'a little little man, which I think is better than a little
+great man.'<a name="FNanchor_252_252" id="FNanchor_252_252"></a><a href="#Footnote_252_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a> But he soon repented, or his friends did for him.<a name="FNanchor_253_253" id="FNanchor_253_253"></a><a href="#Footnote_253_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">344</a></span></p><p>Newcastle cared little for the charge of breach of faith. He had kept
+his patronage, and, as he thought, silenced Fox, who remained Secretary
+at War. In a hysterical condition he hurried to kiss hands for his new
+office. He flung himself at the King's feet, sobbing out 'God bless your
+Majesty! God preserve your Majesty!' embracing the royal knees with such
+howls of adoration that the lord-in-waiting had to beg the other
+courtiers to retire and not watch 'a great man in distress;' then, in
+the zeal of discretion, attempting to shut the door on the tittering
+crowd, he jammed the new Minister's foot till genuine roars of physical
+pain drowned the more artificial clamour.<a name="FNanchor_254_254" id="FNanchor_254_254"></a><a href="#Footnote_254_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a> Having recovered himself
+after this characteristic performance, Newcastle betook himself without
+delay to the choice of his heart, the man whom he had always longed for
+as a colleague, even at the time when he had been seeking a successor to
+Bedford, an obscure diplomatist, Sir Thomas Robinson. 'Had I,' he had
+written in September 1750, 'to chuse for the King, the public, and
+myself, I would prefer Sir Thomas Robinson to any man living. I know he
+knows more and would be more useful to the country and me than any other
+can be.' This opinion seems to have been confined to the Duke himself.
+Horace Walpole writing at the moment says:&mdash;'The German Sir Thomas
+Robinson was thought on for the Secretary's seals; but has just sense
+enough to be unwilling to accept them under so ridiculous an
+administration. This is the first act of the comedy.' But in the second
+act Sir Thomas's good sense was unequal even to this strain,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">345</a></span> and he
+accepted the post. Under what hallucination he laboured, or whether he
+was merely beguiled by the fawning caresses of Newcastle, it is
+difficult to say. The fact remains that he undertook to lead the House
+of Commons, seated between Pitt and Fox, whom he knew to be malcontents,
+and capable of anything. His own parliamentary powers were in the egg
+(for he had never spoken), and were never destined to be hatched. At the
+time of his appointment as Secretary of State he was Master of the Great
+Wardrobe, a congenial post which he was destined during the next year to
+resume. For in his new capacity he justified the anticipations of his
+enemies, and disturbed the equanimity of his friends. Newcastle himself
+had recommended the appointment to Pitt's benevolent consideration on
+the very ground that he could not excite the rivalry of existing
+orators. He 'had not those parliamentary talents which could give
+jealousy or in that light set him above the rest of the King's
+servants.' But the reality was far below these modest anticipations. Sir
+Thomas was not merely ineffectual and feeble, but would attempt on
+occasion agonising flights of eloquence. Posterity is spared the perusal
+of these, for Parliamentary history records no word of this unhappy
+leader. 'Sir Thomas,' says Lord Waldegrave, 'though a good Secretary of
+State, as far as the business of his office and that which related to
+foreign affairs, was ignorant even of the language of an House of
+Commons controversy; and when he played the orator, which he too
+frequently attempted, it was so exceedingly ridiculous that those who
+loved and esteemed him could not always preserve a friendly composure of
+countenance.' This partly arose from his appearance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">346</a></span> He was a large
+unwieldy man, and would in debate put his arms straight out, which made
+George Selwyn compare him to a signpost.<a name="FNanchor_255_255" id="FNanchor_255_255"></a><a href="#Footnote_255_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a></p>
+
+<p>Such was Sir Thomas; who was to allay the warring elements, to appease
+the Titans and the Giants, to hold the scales between Fox and Pitt. Let
+us, while contemplating this grievous and pathetic spectacle, at least
+take comfort that we have arrived at the priceless narrative of Lord
+Waldegrave, a man not brilliant, but shrewd and honest, who guides us
+past the waspish partiality of Horace Walpole, the bitterness of Glover,
+and the corrupt cynicism of Dodington with a light which we feel to be
+the lamp of truth. Newcastle, delighted with the consent of Sir Thomas,
+and with the apparent acquiescence of Fox, hastened to complete his
+arrangements with the squalid instinct of a jobber. Fox was, he thought,
+muzzled; the formidable task remained of silencing Pitt. He could not
+satisfy Pitt directly, for that would imply overwhelming difficulties
+with the King, and perhaps with Fox; but he might give indirect
+satisfaction, and detach some of Pitt's little section. In this last
+attempt he succeeded. Pitt's friend Legge was made Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, the King only making the same condition that he had with
+regard to Pitt himself, that he was never to receive the new minister.
+It is said, indeed, by Horace Walpole that his mean appearance and
+uncouth dialect made him unsuitable for such audiences, and that he
+would have preferred to remain Treasurer of the Navy, the lucrative post
+which had so great a fascination for Bubb. George Grenville, one of the
+Cobham Cousinhood, succeeded Legge in this attractive office; George
+Lyttelton,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">347</a></span> another, became Cofferer, with his brother as Sub-Cofferer;
+'it is a good Ł2200 per annum, all taxes deducted,'<a name="FNanchor_256_256" id="FNanchor_256_256"></a><a href="#Footnote_256_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a> writes George
+of his new post in the fulness of his heart; and, according to Horace
+Walpole, in the exuberance of his satisfaction with that office, he
+vouched for Pitt's acquiescence in the new arrangements. Newcastle
+himself presented these appointments to Pitt with a satisfaction not
+unalloyed with melancholy presentiments. 'The appointment of Mr. Legge
+was made,' he writes, 'with a view to please all our friends. We knew he
+was well with the old corps, we knew he was happy in your friendship,
+and in your good opinion and in that of your connection; <i>and you must
+allow me to say, that I never could have thought one moment of removing
+you, in the high light which you so justly stand, from the office you
+now possess to be Chancellor of the Exchequer with another person at the
+head of the Treasury</i>.'<a name="FNanchor_257_257" id="FNanchor_257_257"></a><a href="#Footnote_257_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a></p>
+
+<p>It is perhaps scarcely necessary to explain that the italics are not the
+Duke's, but it seemed necessary to give emphasis to so daring a flight.</p>
+
+<p>'These dispositions being thus made,' he continues, 'it was my first
+view to show you that regard in the person of your friends, which it was
+impossible to do in your own, to the degree which you might reasonably
+expect. The two first vacant offices, that of Treasurer of the Navy and
+Cofferer, were by my recommendation given to your two first friends, Mr.
+Grenville and Sir George Lyttelton,' etc. etc. 'Legge at the Exchequer,
+unsuitable for you, two of your friends as Cofferer and Treasurer';
+these were the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">348</a></span> sedatives timidly launched to Pitt, gnashing his teeth
+at Bath over his own impotence and the desertion of his friends. So may
+a despairing traveller have attempted to assuage with a few casual
+comfits the hunger of a Bengal tiger crouching for a spring.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt controlled himself. We have seen his reply<a name="FNanchor_258_258" id="FNanchor_258_258"></a><a href="#Footnote_258_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a> to Newcastle's
+shuffling apologies. He continued to write to Lyttelton, but with less
+cordiality. To George Grenville he wrote a tepid note of congratulation.
+To Temple, who had been omitted from the arrangements, he addressed
+himself more cordially, and sent the portrait for which he had been
+sitting to Hoare. It represents no formidable orator, but a simpering
+man of the world; yet, after the fashion of mankind, who secretly
+cherish the portraits least like themselves, Pitt commended the
+resemblance. But he took occasion to add a phrase which reveals the full
+bitterness of his heart. 'In this portrait,' he writes, 'I shall have
+had the honour to present myself before you in my very person; not only
+from the great likeness of the portrait, but, moreover, that I have no
+right to pretend to any other existence than that of a man en peinture.'
+The wrath pierces through the confused sentence like a sudden sting: it
+is not often indulged, but it cannot be wholly suppressed.</p>
+
+<p>Soon afterwards (May 1754) Temple and his brother George paid Pitt a
+flying visit at Bath, where no doubt explanations were exchanged and
+plans concerted. For, putting Pitt on one side, the Minister knew little
+of human nature who could think that he would conciliate Temple by
+promoting his brother George.</p>
+
+<p>In June 1754, Pitt at length left Bath and arrived in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">349</a></span> London. He had
+now been fourteen months absent from the metropolis. In the meantime he
+had been chosen for Newcastle's borough of Aldborough at the General
+Election in the previous April, a somewhat embarrassing connection under
+existing circumstances; though embarrassments of this kind are apt to be
+less irksome in politics than they may appear. And Pitt wrote to thank
+the Duke in terms of Oriental submission. 'I thank you for writing to
+tell me of the great honour you have done me at Aldborough, for which
+seat I declined the offer of many others, being anxious to be known as
+your servant.' With whatever grimace Pitt may have written this, it
+strikes one as carrying the joke too far.<a name="FNanchor_259_259" id="FNanchor_259_259"></a><a href="#Footnote_259_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a></p>
+
+<p>But when he returned to London in June, he no longer affected to conceal
+his discontent. His complaints were obvious and well founded enough. He
+had not been consulted, but had only been informed. Nor was the
+information calculated to gratify him. He had been told at first that
+Fox, whom Bubb at this time calls Pitt's 'inveterate enemy,' had been
+offered the seals; then by the next post that Fox had refused them and
+that they had been accepted by Robinson. The excuse had then been
+tendered that Pitt's health would not allow him to accept an office of
+so much business and fatigue; to which he had replied that he himself
+should be the best judge of that. He ought at least to have been offered
+the Exchequer, which had been given to the underling Legge.<a name="FNanchor_260_260" id="FNanchor_260_260"></a><a href="#Footnote_260_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a> The
+King in any case should have been reconciled to him. When he saw the new
+minister Newcastle asked him his opinion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">350</a></span> of the arrangements. This Pitt
+at first refused to give, but on being pressed declared that 'your Grace
+may be surprised, but I think Mr. Fox should have been at the head of
+the House of Commons.' He met Fox. They had mutual explanations, and no
+doubt assurances of common vengeance to exchange. For Fox was as loud in
+complaint as Pitt. 'Nothing,' he wrote, 'can be more contemptuous than
+the usage I receive.'<a name="FNanchor_261_261" id="FNanchor_261_261"></a><a href="#Footnote_261_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a></p>
+
+<p>Parliament had risen, so Pitt, after settling the arrears in his office,
+went back to the country. Early in September we find him at Astrop
+Wells. On October 2 he called on Newcastle with reference to some
+business in his office. Bubb's account of this interview is well known.
+When they had settled the business which had brought Pitt, the Duke
+wished to enter on affairs in North America, where things were looking
+black, and Washington, then a major, had been compelled to surrender to
+the French at Fort Necessity. 'Your Grace,' said Pitt, 'knows I have no
+capacity for such things,' and declined to discuss them.<a name="FNanchor_262_262" id="FNanchor_262_262"></a><a href="#Footnote_262_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a> Newcastle,
+who, the same day, wrote an account of the interview to Hardwicke, makes
+no mention of this incident. And yet it is too good, too Pitt-like, not
+to be true. We can reconcile the two statements by presuming that it was
+what an opening is to a game of chess, and that Pitt, having enjoyed his
+sarcasm, could not resist the appeal of military plans. 'I then
+acquainted him with what was designed for North America, and also with
+my Lord Granville's notions, which had not been followed. He talked up
+the affair of North America very highly&mdash;that it must be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">351</a></span> supported in
+all events and at all risks&mdash;that the Duke's scheme was a very good one
+as far as it went&mdash;that it might do something: that it did not go near
+far enough&mdash;that he could not help agreeing with my Lord Granville&mdash;that
+he was for doing both, sending the regiments and raising some thousand
+men in America&mdash;that we should do it once for all&mdash;that it was not to be
+done by troops from Europe&mdash;that mere France would be too strong for
+us&mdash;that we should have soon to countenance the Americans, &amp;c.&mdash;that the
+Duke's proposals for artillery, &amp;c., were infinitely too short. This
+discourse, joined with Lord Anson's opinion, has made me suspend at
+least the stopping the orders for the raising two regiments, &amp;c., and
+for providing all the artillery promised by the Duke.'<a name="FNanchor_263_263" id="FNanchor_263_263"></a><a href="#Footnote_263_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a></p>
+
+<p>What a scene of confusion! Here are three stages revealed: the orders,
+the stopping the orders, the suspending the stopping the orders! Pitt,
+it is evident, though beginning with a refusal, ended by speaking with
+authority.</p>
+
+<p>Hardwicke, however, who had made a merit to Pitt of having sustained his
+claim to be Secretary, waxed suspicious on receiving Newcastle's letter.
+'I am glad,' he replies, 'your Grace has talked to Mr. Pitt upon these
+measures. As he expressed himself so zealously and sanguinely for them,
+I hope he will support them in Parliament, and I dare say your Grace did
+not omit the opportunity of pressing that upon him. There is something
+remarkable in that gentleman's taking a measure of the Duke's so
+strongly to heart, and arguing even to carry it further. I think that
+sett used to be against warlike measures.'<a name="FNanchor_264_264" id="FNanchor_264_264"></a><a href="#Footnote_264_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">352</a></span></p><p>Suspicion tainted every political breeze. The vigilant celibates in
+Cranford did not keep a closer watch on their neighbours' proceedings
+than did the public men of those days on each other. The mere fact of
+Pitt's commending a project of Cumberland, his former enemy, at once
+implied to Hardwicke that he was in harmony and understanding with Fox,
+Cumberland's right-hand man. And indeed Bubb assures us that this was
+the case. Fox and Pitt were agreed as to the division of the spoils,
+when spoils there should be. Fox was to be head of the Treasury and Pitt
+Secretary of State; 'but neither will assist the other.'</p>
+
+<p>All this came to nothing, and therefore need not detain us now; for Pitt
+was occupied with something far more vital to him than Fox, or
+Newcastle, or the distant echoes of American warfare. He had come up
+from Wotton, the residence of George Grenville, where in the last days
+of September he had plighted his troth to Lady Hester Grenville, the
+sister of the Grenvilles, and he was now hurrying back to join her at
+Stowe. The engagement was in some respects remarkable. Pitt was now
+forty-six and Lady Hester was thirty-three. When Pitt first went to
+Stowe in 1735 she was fourteen, and in the nineteen years that had
+elapsed they must have seen each other constantly. How was it then that
+the cripple of forty-six suddenly flung away his crutches to throw
+himself at the feet of this mature young lady? It seems inexplicable,
+but love affairs are often inexplicable. And we know little or nothing
+of Pitt's loves. Except the childish passage at Besançon, there is only
+the statement of Horace Walpole, a spiteful gossip if ever there was
+one, that Lady Archibald Hamilton had lost the affections of Frederick
+Prince of Wales by giving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">353</a></span> him Pitt as a rival.<a name="FNanchor_265_265" id="FNanchor_265_265"></a><a href="#Footnote_265_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a> This lacks
+confirmation and even probability. Were it true, it might be a clue to
+phases of Pitt's connection with Leicester House. He seems, too, as we
+have seen in a letter of Lyttelton's, to have had a tenderness for
+Lyttelton's sister Molly. Then there was another Molly, Molly West, with
+whom, it is said, he had been in love, the sister of his friend Gilbert,
+who afterwards married Admiral Hood, Lord Bridport. Want of means, we
+are told, prevented their union. But the authority for this is unknown
+to us.<a name="FNanchor_266_266" id="FNanchor_266_266"></a><a href="#Footnote_266_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a></p>
+
+<p>This much at least is certain, that no man ever had a nobler or more
+devoted wife. She survived him to witness the glories and almost the
+death of her second son, dying in April 1808. At Orwell there is a
+picture of her by Gainsborough, painted in 1747, dressed in white with
+jewels, with a pleasant rather than a beautiful face. There is another
+portrait at Chevening painted in 1750, which represents her with auburn
+hair, a long upper lip, and a nose slightly turned up; comely and
+intelligent, but no more. Mrs. Montagu rather confirms this impression:
+'I believe Lady Hester Grenville is very good-humoured, which is the
+principal article in the happiness of the Marriage State. Beauty soon
+grows familiar to the lover,'<a name="FNanchor_267_267" id="FNanchor_267_267"></a><a href="#Footnote_267_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a> and so forth; from which we may infer
+that Lady Hester was not at any rate a reigning toast. Her appearances
+are rare but full of tenderness; she watched over her husband with
+exquisite devotion; furthering and anticipating his wishes, which were
+often fanciful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">354</a></span> and extravagant; shielding his moments of nervous
+prostration with the wings of an angel. On her rested often, if not
+always, the care of his affairs, often, if not always, disordered, and
+all the burdens of household management. For many months she was his
+sole channel of communication with the outer world. The wives of
+statesmen are not invariably successful, though they are generally
+devoted; but none was ever more absorbed in her high but harassing duty.
+In all the bitterness of that bitter time, when her husband seemed
+surrounded by implacable enmities, no one found a word to say against
+her. Pitt's choice seems to have been as wise as it was deliberate.</p>
+
+<p>Camelford, from whom the worst interpretation can always be obtained,
+says: 'His marriage was unexpected. He was no longer young, and his
+infirmities made him older than his years, when, upon a visit to Mr.
+Grenville at Wotton, Lady Hester made an impression upon him that was
+the more extraordinary as she was by no means new to him. The first
+hints he gave of his intentions were eagerly seized by her, saying she
+should be unworthy the honour he proposed to her if she could hesitate a
+moment in accepting it. With a very common understanding and totally
+devoid of tenderness, or of any feeling but pride and ambition, she
+contrived to make herself a good wife to him by a devotion and
+attachment that knew no bounds. She lived only in his glory, and that
+vanity absorbed every other idea of her mind. She was his nurse, his
+flatterer, his housekeeper and steward, and, though her talent was by no
+means economy, yet she could submit to any privation that would gratify
+his wants or his caprices.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">355</a></span> If he loved anyone it must be her who had no
+love but for him, or rather for his reputation. Yet I saw no sacrifices
+on his part for her ease and quiet or to the essential comforts of her
+life.'</p>
+
+<p>As to Lady Hester's having a 'very common understanding' and being
+'totally devoid of tenderness' we need not rest on tradition, though
+that is all the other way; for the superiority of her understanding and
+her tenderness are amply proved by the admirable letters published from
+the Pretyman Papers by Lord Ashbourne; and her devotion to her husband
+is attested by Camelford himself. How he became acquainted with the
+details of courtship, usually mysterious enough, and in those days more
+veiled than in these, we need not trouble to inquire. When it took place
+Pitt was taking time which he could ill spare to write letters of
+anxious and affectionate solicitude to Camelford at Cambridge, and
+receiving in return the most unbounded assurances of grateful devotion.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt's love letters, alas! survive; the treasures of his wife, but the
+despair of posterity. That a great genius presumably in love should send
+such stilted, pompous, artificial documents as tokens of his passion to
+the object of his affections is one of the mysteries of brain and heart.
+They are as wretched in their way as the letters of Burns to Clarinda,
+and shall not be quoted here.</p>
+
+<p>Having paid his betrothed a flying visit at Stowe, the blithe bridegroom
+had as usual to proceed to Bath, where he remained a fortnight inditing
+these execrable epistles of rhetorical affection.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">356</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">On</span> November 14, the very day of the opening of<span class="sidenote">1754.</span> Parliament, Pitt brought
+forward a bill for the relief of the Chelsea Pensioners, who, from
+receiving their pensions a year in arrear, fell inextricably into the
+hands of usurers. He was in haste to perform this useful duty, for on
+November 16 he was married by special licence to Lady Hester at Argyll
+Buildings, Dr. Ayscough officiating; and Solomon and Esther, as Lady
+Townshend called them, thence departed for the honeymoon to West's house
+of Wickham in Kent. That interval of seclusion did not last long, but it
+would seem to have effected a striking transformation. The marriage
+marks a new ascent in Pitt's career; love seemed to have transformed
+him; always powerful and eloquent, he became sublime. Into his former
+qualities there had passed an inspiration kindred to the divine passion
+which makes the poet. The timid warblers of the grove, as he was
+afterwards to call them, the politicians who sought quiet lives and safe
+places, the arch-jobber himself who had for years deluded him, were in
+an instant to realise that a new terror was added to life. For on
+November 25 he was once more in the House of Commons. At this time, just
+before or just after the meeting of Parliament, he had come to open
+words with Newcastle. The Duke had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">357</a></span> offered the usual palliatives.
+'Fewer words, if you please, my Lord,' replied Pitt contemptuously, 'for
+your words have long lost all weight with me.' Fox had said much the
+same to Newcastle in March. The new Minister had therefore been grossly
+insulted by the two first men in the House of Commons. He must have felt
+that there were menacing symptoms in the political horizon. It is
+strange, therefore, to find Walpole writing that, as 'Newcastle had
+secured by employments almost every material speaker in Parliament,' it
+was hoped that the session might pass in settling election
+petitions.<a name="FNanchor_268_268" id="FNanchor_268_268"></a><a href="#Footnote_268_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a></p>
+
+<p>It seems incredible that the Duke can have so flattered himself. But no
+doubt he relied on two main considerations. One was that, though
+official discipline was then incomparably more lax than now, it was
+scarcely possible for Pitt or Fox to mean mischief so long as they kept
+their places, and these they had not resigned. The other was this. The
+General Election had just been conducted under his auspices, and had
+returned a House of Commons devoted to himself. Indeed in all England
+there were only forty-two contests. In some Continental countries a
+general election always returns a ministerial majority; there are
+mysteries connected with the proceeding of which only ministers have the
+key. This to some extent was the case in England at this period; and no
+Secretary of the Treasury, no Martin or Robinson, understood his
+particular business better than Newcastle. But whatever his illusions,
+they were soon destined to be disturbed, for on November 25 Pitt opened
+fire on him. Of that famous scene and outburst we are fortunate enough
+to possess two brilliant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">358</a></span> descriptions: one by Horace Walpole, and one,
+even more graphic, which has the additional value of being written by
+Pitt's rival, Henry Fox. Fox, writing in a white heat of generous
+admiration, describes it summarily as 'the finest speech that ever Pitt
+spoke, and perhaps the most remarkable.' This last epithet was probably
+due to the fact that the speech was apparently made on the spur of the
+moment. The occasion was one of those election petitions on which the
+Duke had relied as a sedative and a pastime for his faithful Commons.
+Wilkes, the pleasant, worthless demagogue, who was afterwards to cause
+so much trouble, had petitioned against the return of Delaval, the
+sitting member for Berwick. Delaval had defended his seat in a speech
+full of wit and buffoonery, which kept the House in a roar of laughter;
+much the same speech, one would guess, that Pitt himself had delivered
+on the proceedings at his own election for Seaford when those were
+attacked. But to-day he was in a different mood, and, as the debate
+proceeded, came down from the gallery where he was seated, and
+intervened with a frown. He was 'astonished to hear this merriment when
+such a matter was concerned. Was the dignity of the House on so sure a
+foundation that we could afford to shake it with scoffs?' In an instant
+the House was cowed into silence, like schoolboys found in fault by
+their master. You could have heard a pin drop as he continued.</p>
+
+<p>'Had it not, on the contrary, been diminishing for years, till now we
+were brought to the very brink of a precipice where, if ever, a stand
+must be made? Were we ourselves within the House to try and lessen that
+dignity when such attacks were made upon it from without that it was
+almost lost? On the contrary, it wanted support, for it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">359</a></span> scarcely
+possible to recover it.' He appealed to the Speaker (Onslow) with
+profuse compliments, for the Speaker only could restore it&mdash;yet scarcely
+even he. Then he eloquently adjured all Whigs to rally and unite in
+defence of their liberties, which were attacked, nay, dying, 'unless,'
+he passionately added, 'you will degenerate into a little assembly
+serving no other purpose than to register the arbitrary edicts of <i>one</i>
+too-powerful <i>subject</i>;' laying an emphasis on the words 'one' and
+'subject' that might well send a shudder to the soul of Newcastle, when
+the echo should reach him. He ended by a recapitulation as to 'our being
+likely to become an appendix to&mdash;I know not what: I have no name for
+it.' 'All,' adds Fox, 'whether pleased or displeased, declare this speech
+to be the finest that ever was made.'<a name="FNanchor_269_269" id="FNanchor_269_269"></a><a href="#Footnote_269_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a> The effect of this sudden
+menace in the midst of the Duke's comfortable arrangements to appease
+and silence everybody, was appalling. It came with the shattering effect
+of a shell, and a shell falling in some quiet picnic. The Ministers were
+in consternation; every member sat confounded. Murray, pale and
+miserable, shrunk his head in silence. Wilkes used to narrate his dread,
+as he heard the awful tone of Pitt's exordium, lest the thunder that he
+saw was gathering should fall on him. Never, he said, when at
+Westminster School had he felt greater terror when summoned for a
+flogging, never when let off a greater relief than on this occasion;
+terror when uncertain where the bolt would fall, relief when he found it
+was destined for another.<a name="FNanchor_270_270" id="FNanchor_270_270"></a><a href="#Footnote_270_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a> Fox himself only came in as Pitt was
+finishing,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">360</a></span> just in time to witness the devastation which had been
+caused. Legge, on the part of the Government, had to rise and humbly
+deprecate the wrath of the orator.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt allowed no respite. On the same evening a discussion arose as to
+the dates on which the various petitions would be taken. That relating
+to Reading was fixed for a particular day, and that for Colchester on a
+day soon afterwards. Pitt moved the postponement of the Colchester
+petition; as the Reading one would take time, and concerned a noble
+lord, Lord Fane, for whom he had a particular regard. A malignant fate
+here tempted the new Secretary of State to a needless and unhappy
+intervention. He declared that the Reading petition would be a short
+case, and, so far as concerned the sitting member, a poor case; that
+Lord Fane had only a majority of one.</p>
+
+<p>This gave Pitt his opportunity, and he soundly trounced the unfortunate
+Minister. What did Sir Thomas know about it? It was ignorant presumption
+to lay down the law about a case which had not been heard. If this was
+the method of the Minister, there would be short work with elections. He
+himself had little thought to see so melancholy a day as this, but he
+was not to be taught his duty by Sir Thomas or any one else. Sir Thomas
+replied, 'with pomp, confusion, and warmth,' to deprecate the misleading
+effects of mere eloquence. He hoped that words would not be allowed more
+than their due weight. For his own part, he was performing the duties of
+an office which he had never desired. Pitt in his rejoinder affected to
+believe this last statement, with the unkind commentary that if anybody
+else had wished for the post, Sir Thomas would not have had it. Then,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">361</a></span>
+artfully cooling down, he showed that he was only aiming at Newcastle,
+for he professed the highest respect for Sir Thomas with this cruel,
+backhand blow at the Duke, 'that he thought him, Sir Thomas, as able as
+any man that had of late years filled that office, or was likely to fill
+it.' Fox could no longer resist joining in the sport of baiting his
+hapless leader. He also could only explain and excuse Sir Thomas's
+pronouncing hastily and summarily on a case which he had not heard by
+his long residence abroad, and by his consequent and total inexperience
+of parliamentary matters.</p>
+
+<p>It was clear that neither of the formidable lieutenants was in the least
+appeased, or likely to contribute to the tranquillity of the session.
+Still it was also clear that the members of the House were loyal to
+Newcastle and his deputy, and that they were not moved from their
+allegiance by the oratory to which they had listened. But when the
+display was over, the frightened ministerialists gathered into small
+groups whispering their terrors to each other. Pitt's fury breaking out
+at this moment might be due, thought Fox, in some measure to accident.
+'But break out I knew it would. And the Duke of Newcastle may thank
+himself for the violence of it (he) having ... owned to Pitt that he had
+acquainted the King with part of their last conversation; adding, like
+an idiot, "to do you good, to do you good," and that he had not
+mentioned that part which could do him harm.'<a name="FNanchor_271_271" id="FNanchor_271_271"></a><a href="#Footnote_271_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a> We do not know what
+is the interview to which this refers; it can hardly be that which
+occurred at the beginning of October in which Pitt had said, 'Your
+Grace, I suppose, knows that I have no capacity for such things.' So we
+are at a loss to know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">362</a></span> the immediate cause of Pitt's outbreak, though no
+divination is required to know that ever since Pelham's death he had
+been explosive.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing can better illustrate the extraordinary power which Newcastle
+wielded in the House of Commons than the dumb terrified fidelity of the
+great majority who clung to his knees in spite of the attacks of Pitt
+and Fox. Hapless majority! They had neither voice nor faith; they
+despised almost equally their nominal chief Robinson, and their real
+chief Newcastle; so they huddled together for warmth and sympathy. And
+this was a House of Commons produced by a general election carried on
+under the auspices of a consummate manipulator and by long years of
+cozening, patronage, and corruption. The success had been complete, a
+devoted and passive majority had been returned, and this was the result.
+It was a strange and instructive spectacle. This docile flock was
+shepherdless, it was not thought to need any superintendence, it had
+only to receive its instructions from Newcastle through the channel of
+some such agent as Robinson. What Newcastle thought well to give, it was
+prepared gladly to take. Could Minister want more? Yet, before the
+session was a fortnight old, Newcastle was to learn, but not completely,
+the futility of such a scheme of government. He had promised the King
+that the new House of Commons would need no leader, that indeed the
+position of leader of the House of Commons was both dangerous in power
+and superfluous in practice. He was yet to learn that there was
+something more formidable; a ship without captain or helmsman, and two
+loose cannon banging about at large.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">363</a></span></p>
+
+<p>For, two days after the annihilation of Robinson, Pitt again took the
+field, this time against Murray, the most formidable antagonist that he
+ever had to face after the resignation of Walpole. It was on the vote
+for the army. Barrington and Nugent had made fulsome speeches, dwelling
+on the popularity of the King and the Ministry, declaring, indeed, that
+there were no Jacobites in England. People, said Nugent, sometimes
+reared those whom they thought would be Jacobites, but who turned out
+very differently. So had he seen in his rural retirement a hen, which
+had hatched duck's eggs, watch with apprehension her nurslings betake
+themselves to the water. Pitt rose and declared with solemn pleasantry
+that this image had greatly struck him, 'for, sir, I know of such a
+hen.' The hen, it appeared, was the University of Oxford. This, we
+think, in its demure unexpectedness, is the best stroke of humour in all
+his speeches. But he begged the House not to be sure that all she
+hatched would ever entirely forget what she had taught them. Then
+followed an innuendo at old Horace Walpole which is immaterial and
+obscure. Sir Roger Newdigate, whose name is still cherished by budding
+poets, rose, as member for the University, to make a meek defence. Pitt
+rose again, and told 'inimitably' the story of a recent adventure at
+Oxford. He was with a party at the Angel Inn, one of whom was asked to
+sing 'God save Great George our King' (one can hardly imagine that it
+was Pitt who called for this). The chorus was re-echoed by
+undergraduates outside who had been attracted by the song, 'but with
+additions of the rankest treason.' Then walking down the High Street he
+examined a print in a shop<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">364</a></span> window of a young Highlander in a blue
+ribbon, and was shocked to read the motto <i>Hunc saltem everso Juvenem</i>.
+This Latin prayer was a flagrant proof of the disloyalty of that learned
+body. 'In both speeches every word was <i>Murray</i>; yet so managed that
+neither he nor anybody else could or did take public notice of it, or in
+any degree reprehend him. I,' it is Henry Fox who speaks, 'sate next
+Murray, <i>who suffered for an hour</i>.'<a name="FNanchor_272_272" id="FNanchor_272_272"></a><a href="#Footnote_272_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a> Two episodes seem to attach
+themselves to this terrible onslaught. One is the famous and dramatic
+menace. Fixing his eyes on Murray the orator paused and proceeded: 'I
+must now address a few words to Mr. Solicitor.&mdash;They shall be few, but
+they shall be daggers.' Murray's agitation was now visible. 'Judge
+Festus trembles,' thundered Pitt; 'well, he shall hear me some other
+day,' and sat down.<a name="FNanchor_273_273" id="FNanchor_273_273"></a><a href="#Footnote_273_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a> Murray could not muster a reply. We may be sure
+that he then mentally resolved that, whether Festus or not, he would be
+a Judge as soon as possible. Yet Granville had embraced him that very
+day and bid him pluck up resolution. The other episode is this. Foote
+went with Murphy (afterwards Editor of the 'Test') to hear Pitt, who
+happened to be putting forth his full powers in an attack on Murray.
+'Shall we go home now?' asked Murphy at last. 'No,' replied Foote, 'let
+us wait till he has made the little man vanish entirely.'<a name="FNanchor_274_274" id="FNanchor_274_274"></a><a href="#Footnote_274_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a></p>
+
+
+
+<p>The plan of ignoring the House of Commons and keeping all power in a
+junto of two or three, or even one, was already breaking down. 'It is
+the universal opinion,' writes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">365</a></span> Fox, in the same letter as that in which
+he describes Pitt's onslaught on Murray, 'that business cannot go on as
+things are now, and that offers will be made to Pitt or me. On this
+subject Pitt was with me two hours yesterday morning. A difficult<span class="sidenote">Nov. 27, 1754.</span>
+conversation.' Difficult indeed, for both parties fenced with each
+other, and neither was sincere. Pitt had long distrusted Fox and his
+connection with Cumberland. We have seen that in March he was writing
+confidentially that he wished 'to see as little power in Fox's hand as
+possible,' and again in the same letter, 'Fox is too odious to last for
+ever.' On the other hand, Fox, who was genial but ignoble, was
+determined to take the best place that offered, with a secret leaning to
+the lucrative possibilities of Pitt's office. Fox was not in error as to
+the offers. He wrote on November 28, and on November 29 Newcastle was
+beginning to seek assistance. On that morning the King sent for Fox and
+treated him with friendly confidence. It then appeared that the royal
+leaning towards Fox was caused by the King's having found out that
+Frederick Prince of Wales had made overtures to Fox, who had rejected
+them, but had not divulged them for the purpose of paying court to the
+King.<a name="FNanchor_275_275" id="FNanchor_275_275"></a><a href="#Footnote_275_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a></p>
+
+<p>The object of the Court was to separate Fox and Pitt. This last,
+doubtful and suspicious, had at first assured the Chancellor and
+Newcastle that he would not league with Fox. This was probably the
+secret of the Minister's confidence. But when Pitt realised that the
+Duke was trading on the division between his two formidable auxiliaries
+he sought, or appeared to seek, an honest and hearty co-operation with
+his rival.<a name="FNanchor_276_276" id="FNanchor_276_276"></a><a href="#Footnote_276_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">366</a></span></p><p>'Could you bear to act under Fox?' Hardwicke had asked him, and 'Leave
+out <i>under</i>; it will never be a word between us: Mr. Fox and I shall
+never quarrel,' had been the reply.</p>
+
+<p>Alas! for the loves of statesmen, often ardent and always precarious.
+The vague bait was no sooner dangled before Fox than he began to eye it
+with avidity and to contemplate the abandonment of Pitt. He sought the
+advice of two friends, Cumberland and Marlborough. The last advised him
+to ask for admission to the Cabinet and to be satisfied with that
+advantage. Cumberland dissuaded him, as it would seem, from parting
+company with Pitt, and used these remarkable words: 'I don't know him,
+but by what you tell me, Pitt is what is scarce&mdash;he is a man.' But at
+last both dukes concurred in Marlborough's advice, with the proviso that
+Fox should make it a condition that he was not to oppose Pitt; a
+singular reservation when it is remembered that his help was only sought
+against Pitt, as he was soon made distinctly to understand. Fox
+apparently took Pitt into his confidence, and they exchanged cordial
+notes. He submitted to Pitt his letter to the King, and Pitt approved it
+with some omissions. Nothing must be said, he declared, which remotely
+implied that he would do the least thing to keep his place.<a name="FNanchor_277_277" id="FNanchor_277_277"></a><a href="#Footnote_277_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a> So Fox
+wrote to say that, understanding the King was determined to have no
+leader in the House of Commons, but wished to have him take a forward
+and spirited part on behalf of the Ministry, he desired some mark of his
+Majesty's favour to show that he enjoyed his Majesty's confidence.
+Waldegrave,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">367</a></span> who conducted the negotiation, was given to understand that
+the distinction aimed at was a seat in the Cabinet. He was further told
+that Fox would never accept Pitt's rich place, which the King had said
+was destined for him in the event of Pitt's dismissal, lest it be said
+that he was answering Pitt for money. So the stipulation about not
+opposing Pitt was already out of his contemplation. The negotiations
+extended over months. The King had first seen Fox on November 29, 1754,
+but did not signify to Fox his admission to the Cabinet till April 26,
+1755, two days before his Majesty left for Hanover. Fox was also
+admitted to the Council of Regency during the King's absence.</p>
+
+<p>During these months of negotiation his opposition to the Ministry
+ceased, and Pitt was left alone. But he communicated constantly and
+secretly with Pitt as to the offers made. When he had closed with them,
+without waiting for the cock to crow, he forswore Pitt.<a name="FNanchor_278_278" id="FNanchor_278_278"></a><a href="#Footnote_278_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a> He was no
+doubt made to understand distinctly, as he must always have known, that
+it was the condition of his elevation. This treachery cost him dear; for
+Pitt, who seems to have been at once apprised of the desertion, probably
+by a Minister whose interest it was to keep the two apart, never forgave
+it. Nor could a man much less irritably and jealously proud have done
+otherwise. So much for the question of honour. As to the question of
+policy it is clear that a real union between Pitt and himself would have
+been irresistible. But Fox at the first temptation forsook this
+honourable alliance, and forsook it for a feather, as the lure was
+justly described.</p>
+
+<p>It should be mentioned that this account of Fox's behaviour is founded
+on the narrative of Horace Walpole,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">368</a></span> and that Waldegrave, who is far
+more trustworthy, says that 'Fox during the whole negotiation behaved
+like a man of sense and a man of honour.' But this only regards his
+negotiation with Newcastle, in which Waldegrave acted as the channel.
+Walpole, on the other hand, was notoriously partial to Fox, and in his
+confidence, so that his statement may be taken as accurate. In no other
+way, indeed, can the breach between the two statesmen be adequately
+explained. On April 26 they are on the most confidential footing. On May
+9 there is a public rupture. Fox, indeed, attributes this sudden breach
+to Pitt's wish to be well at Leicester House; but then Fox had to find
+an ostensible reason, as he did not know that Pitt was aware of his
+desertion.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Apr. 27, 1755.</div>
+
+<p>The day after the admission of Fox to the Cabinet, Newcastle despatched
+old Horace Walpole to Pitt to see if they could not come to terms. Old
+Horace, who has suffered from the constant malignity of his nephew, but
+who appears to have been a laborious and public-spirited man, with a not
+uncommon itch for a coronet, undertook the commission with alacrity; but
+found, as all did who attempted to negotiate for Newcastle, that his
+powers were far from ample, and shrunk from the moment that they were
+given. It is probable that these overtures were only made in consequence
+of some secret agreement between Fox and Pitt that Pitt's claims should
+be pushed; for it is otherwise inexplicable that they should have been
+made simultaneously with the capture of Fox, and that Newcastle on the
+slenderest grounds should at once have withdrawn the commission. The
+hypothesis of a sham negotiation, entered upon to keep to the letter of
+some understanding arrived at through Fox, is highly congenial to the
+character<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">369</a></span> of Newcastle; nor is it likely that Fox can have joined the
+Government, when in the closest communication with Pitt, without some
+such stipulation.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever the nature of the overture may have been, Pitt received
+Walpole, with whom he was on cordial terms, not unfavourably. He
+stipulated that he should be admitted to the Cabinet, but not, it would
+appear, immediately (for the King was going abroad next day); and that
+in case of a vacancy he should be promised the seals of Secretary of
+State. No one could deem these conditions excessive, and Walpole
+approved them. But Newcastle would have none of them, and soundly rated
+his emissary. It is clear that the negotiation was illusory and unreal;
+for what less terms could Newcastle have expected Pitt to demand?<a name="FNanchor_279_279" id="FNanchor_279_279"></a><a href="#Footnote_279_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">May 9, 1755.</div>
+
+<p>A fortnight afterwards Pitt went to Lord Hillsborough's, where he met
+Fox. When Fox had gone he declared that all was at an end between Fox
+and himself; that the ground was altered; Fox was a Regent and a Cabinet
+Minister, and he was left isolated. Fox returned, and Pitt, in great
+heat, repeated what he had said with even more violence. He would not
+accept the seals from Fox (this seems to confirm our hypothesis as to
+the sham negotiation through Walpole), for that would be to acknowledge
+a superiority and an obligation. 'What, then,' said Fox, 'would put us
+on an equality?' 'A winter in the Cabinet and a summer's Regency,'
+replied Pitt, in allusion to what Fox had accepted.</p>
+
+<p>Next day Hillsborough expostulated with Pitt, who, however, remained
+unmoved, and begged him to convey as a message to Fox that all
+connection between them was at an end. Pitt added that though he
+esteemed Fox he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">370</a></span> wished to have no further conversation on this subject.
+In spite of this, during the next few days they had a further conference
+at Holland House, but with no better result.<a name="FNanchor_280_280" id="FNanchor_280_280"></a><a href="#Footnote_280_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a></p>
+
+<p>On this second occasion (May 12, 1755) Pitt formally declared their
+connection at an end. Fox asked if Pitt suspected him of ill faith in
+the recent negotiations. Pitt, on his honour, held him blameless.
+'Then,' asked Fox, 'are our lines incompatible?' 'Not incompatible, but
+convergent,' a word that Fox professed not to understand. In the future
+it was possible they might act together, not now. On this or some
+proximate occasion, Pitt blurted out what was at least one cause of
+offence. 'Here is the Duke of Cumberland King and you his minister.' The
+Duke, like Fox himself, was only an ordinary member of the Council of
+Regency, so that Pitt's taunt was absurd. But Pitt was looking to the
+young court of Leicester House which detested and distrusted Cumberland;
+hence this outburst of jealousy and wrath. Pitt indeed, the day before,
+had seen the Princess of Wales; who, it was presumed, had insisted on an
+open and immediate rupture with Fox as the price of her support. But
+beneath all there was we think, in spite of all professions, undying
+suspicion of Fox's rectitude in the recent negotiation with
+Newcastle.<a name="FNanchor_281_281" id="FNanchor_281_281"></a><a href="#Footnote_281_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a> </p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">371</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was soon clear to Newcastle that Fox after all might not suffice, and
+that Pitt must be again approached. The King, then in Hanover and beyond
+Newcastle's control, was negotiating new treaties of subsidy on behalf
+of his German dominions; one with Hesse-Cassel for a contingent of
+12,000 men to act in defence of Hanover or Great Britain, the other with
+Russia for an army of 40,000 men for the defence of Hanover. It was
+terrible for the Duke to contemplate what Pitt might say and do with
+regard to such unpopular and indefensible instruments. Moreover, Pitt
+was now supported by the court, every day more and more important, of
+Leicester House. It was probably Hardwicke, who as the moving brain of
+the Cabinet saw the vital importance of securing Pitt, and who was, we
+think, sincerely favourable to Pitt's pretensions, if only from hatred
+of Fox, who suggested these negotiations; and it was his son Charles
+Yorke who entered upon them. Yorke was to act as a skirmisher, to get in
+touch with Pitt, and to report on the temper in which he found him. They
+met on July 6 (1755), and talked over the abortive conference with
+Walpole. Pitt declared that he had then waived the immediate bestowal of
+the Secretaryship of State, but had asked not merely that Newcastle
+should speak on his behalf before the King left for Hanover,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">372</a></span> and urge
+that he was the proper person to lead the debates in the House of
+Commons; but that Lady Yarmouth should also be interested in his cause,
+so that she might use her influence with the King during their stay
+abroad.</p>
+
+<p>Of Newcastle himself he spoke with supreme disdain. It was a waste of
+time to bring him assurances of friendship and confidence from
+Newcastle. All that was over. He would never owe Newcastle a favour, he
+would accept nothing as an obligation to Newcastle. This is not in
+Yorke's account, because probably it would be shown to Newcastle. But it
+comes authentically enough from Pitt's brother-in-law, James Grenville,
+to Bubb. If Newcastle were really in earnest, he would say that he could
+listen to no proposition but this: 'This is our policy; and the post of
+Secretary of State, in which you shall support it, is destined for you.'</p>
+
+<p>Yorke reported to his father, and Hardwicke saw Pitt on August 8 (1755),
+with power to offer a seat in the Cabinet. After compliments, to use
+Eastern language, which were usually the preface of such interviews, in
+which both parties assured each other of high mutual esteem, which Pitt
+went so far on this occasion as to declare for Newcastle, in strange
+contrast with his language to Yorke, they came at once to the point.
+Before he could take what was required, 'a clear, active, and cordial
+part in support of the King's measures in the House of Commons,' Pitt
+desired to know what those measures might be. Hardwicke at once
+specified them. 'Twas all open and above board; the support of the
+maritime and American war, in which we were going to be engaged, and the
+defence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">373</a></span> of the King's German dominions, if attacked on account of the
+English cause. The maritime and American war he came roundly into, tho'
+very orderly, and allowed the principle and obligation of honour and
+justice as to the other, but argued strongly as to the practicability of
+it. That subsidiary treaties would not go down; the nation could not
+hear' (obviously 'bear') them. That they were a connection and a chain,
+and would end in a general plan for the Continent which the country
+would (obviously 'could') not possibly support.' Then he went into
+financial considerations. The maritime and American war would alone add
+two millions a year to the National Debt, which could not bear an
+addition of one million. He would treat Hanover like any other foreign
+dependency of the British Crown; the worst that could happen was that it
+should be occupied by the enemy for a time and restored at a peace, and
+that then compensation might be given to the King. As to the subsidies,
+Hessian and Russian, he asked questions but did not commit himself. But
+he inquired, with peculiar emphasis, what others, such as Fox, Legge,
+Lee, and Egmont, thought of them. At last he said he must consult his
+friends, one of whom, Legge, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, he was
+about to visit. But why, asked Hardwicke, should he not see Newcastle
+himself? 'With all my heart, if he would see me,' replied Pitt. To the
+offer of a seat in the Cabinet he said neither yea nor nay, but he was,
+thought Hardwicke, gratified by the overture.<a name="FNanchor_282_282" id="FNanchor_282_282"></a><a href="#Footnote_282_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a></p>
+
+<p>One cannot but note the strange contrast between Pitt's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">374</a></span> language about
+Newcastle to Hardwicke and that which he had used to Yorke. 'He
+expressed great regard for your Grace and me.' But this was the base
+coinage in political use at that time, and Pitt had by this time become
+a master of dissimulation. Fox hated Newcastle to the full as much as
+did Pitt. In truth, every one seems to have secretly hated or despised
+him, or both; a melancholy reward for an industrious ministerial
+existence. But so great was his political influence that scarce any one
+could afford to say so.</p>
+
+<p>One Minister was now, however, to display a rare courage, and to oppose
+both the King and his Minister on a critical point. In the middle of
+August, after the conversation with Hardwicke, the treaty of subsidy
+with Hesse-Cassel arrived for the necessary confirmations. When it came
+before Legge as Chancellor of the Exchequer, he, no doubt with the
+connivance of Pitt, flatly refused his signature. Newcastle had always
+distrusted Legge, as, indeed, he distrusted everybody, and had given him
+the seals of the Exchequer with great reluctance. He was now aghast. War
+was imminent; the King would soon return with his pockets full of odious
+treaties of subsidy; Fox was still a malcontent; Legge was in open
+revolt; it was evident that he must face the formidable interview with
+Pitt. So he expressed the necessary wish, though one may guess his
+reluctance, and Pitt saw the Duke on September 2 (1755) for two hours
+and a half. The record of this interview is contained in a long letter
+from Newcastle to Hardwicke,<a name="FNanchor_283_283" id="FNanchor_283_283"></a><a href="#Footnote_283_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a> couched in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">375</a></span> quavering notes of a
+distracted Minister. It begins with a wail of despair, the reluctant
+acknowledgment of the paramount importance of Pitt. 'I never sat down to
+write to your lordship with more melancholy apprehensions for the
+Publick than at present. I see nothing but confusion and it is beyond me
+to point out a remedy.'</p>
+
+<p>This was the result of Pitt's verbal refusal to join him, made by a
+Minister who held the great mass of the House of Commons in the hollow
+of his hand, who clung to office as to life, and yet, though he knew
+Pitt was indispensable to its retention, would not once more, as in
+1746, face his Sovereign and say so. Nothing can better illustrate the
+trembling plank on which the Duke was content to walk, wavering and
+helpless, depending only on Hardwicke's counsel and his own jobs. He did
+not dare face the King, he was bullied by the disorderly chiefs in the
+House of Commons, and he was always chaffering, but always afraid. So he
+and his like are satisfied to bear the yoke for the semblance of power.</p>
+
+<p>All began smoothly between Pitt and the Duke, all was apparently open,
+friendly, and civil; but when Newcastle referred to the conversation
+with Hardwicke, he was taken aback by finding that Pitt declared that
+nothing had passed that was material. He thus compelled Newcastle to
+recapitulate the points of policy, no doubt for purposes of comparison.</p>
+
+<p>So the Duke had to state that the eve of the King's departure had been
+too troubled to lay Pitt's claim before his Majesty; for an address
+against the journey had been threatened in the House of Commons and
+actually proposed in the House of Lords. But that when alarming<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">376</a></span> events
+had happened in America, Hardwicke and he had represented to the King
+the urgent necessity of forming a system in the House of Commons, which
+means, it may be presumed, abandoning the plan of conducting the House
+without a leader, and of enlisting Pitt as an active Minister there.
+That thereupon the King had graciously expressed his readiness to admit
+Pitt to his Cabinet. Pitt received this offer coolly, and proceeded at
+once to larger issues.</p>
+
+<p>As to the King's voyage he spoke with unsparing candour. The King had
+nearly ruined himself by his unpardonable departure to Hanover at such a
+crisis. He should only have been allowed to go there over the dead
+bodies of his people. 'A King abroad at this time, without one man about
+him that has an English heart, and only returning to bring home a packet
+of subsidies.'</p>
+
+<p>Of course, he proceeded to say with scarcely disguised sarcasm, the
+King's countenance was more to him than any other consideration. But if
+it was expected that he should take an active and efficient part in
+Parliament he must observe that a mere summons to the Cabinet would not
+be sufficient. In his present office he could silently acquiesce in
+ministerial measures. But activity could only be exercised in a
+responsible situation.</p>
+
+<p>Then he took a line which was clear, bold, and statesmanlike. The whole
+machinery of the House of Commons was, he said, paralysed by the plan of
+leaving it without a responsible Minister. That plan must be abandoned.
+The House could not perform its proper functions without a responsible
+Minister, even though a subordinate one, who should have access to the
+Sovereign and to the royal confidence. For that purpose the leader or
+agent must have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">377</a></span> a responsible office of <i>advice</i> as well as of
+<i>execution</i>. 'That was the distinction he made throughout his whole
+conversation. He would support the measures which he himself had
+advised, but would not like a lawyer talk from a brief. That it was
+better plainly to tell me so at first.'</p>
+
+<p>This surely was no inordinate claim from indisputably the first member
+of the House of Commons, whom the King had kept at bay for so many
+years, and to keep whom still in subjection every possible man&#339;uvre,
+childish or cunning, was being adopted. 'Why,' said he bluntly to
+Newcastle, 'cannot you bring yourself to part with some of your sole
+power?' This of course produced voluble asseverations from the Duke.
+Sole power! What an idea! He had no conception of what Pitt could mean.
+He was in his present place, not by his own choice, far from it! but by
+the King's command, and, though he was devoted to the King, he would
+retire to-morrow if he was distasteful to the House of Commons. (This
+was a safe promise, for, as we have seen, the House of Commons was with
+but few exceptions at his absolute disposal.) Pitt replied that he
+himself had no objections to a Peer as First Lord of the Treasury, but
+there must be men of ability and responsibility in the House of Commons,
+a Secretary of State and a Chancellor of the Exchequer, that they must
+be sufficiently supported, and they must have access to the Crown, not a
+nominal, but an habitual, free, familiar access. In speaking of the
+Chancellor of the Exchequer he burst out into so enthusiastic a eulogy
+of Legge, 'the child, and deservedly the favourite child of the Whigs,'
+that Newcastle suspected that all this was concerted between his
+rebellious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">378</a></span> Chancellor of the Exchequer and his insubordinate Paymaster.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt and the Duke next proceeded to analyse their own expressions; a
+task which the statesmen of that day seem to have avoided, to our
+detriment, as much as possible. Newcastle had spoken of the proposed
+seat in the Cabinet as a designation. 'What did this mean?' asked Pitt.
+'Did it mean the seals of Secretary of State, though not immediately?'
+The Duke was obliged to shuffle out, for in truth he had no power to
+promise any such thing. Designation only meant that the seat in the
+Cabinet would design him as the King's man of confidence. 'Then the
+Secretaryship of State is not intended,' was the fierce rejoinder. The
+Duke replied that he was not authorised to offer more than a seat in the
+Cabinet. If, rejoined Pitt, 'the Secretaryships of State are to remain
+as they are, there is an end of any question of my giving active support
+to the Government in the House of Commons.'</p>
+
+<p>They had arrived at an impassable barrier, Pitt would take nothing but
+the seals which the King would not give him, and Newcastle was
+determined not to force on another crisis with the King on account of
+Pitt; whom, in truth, he dreaded little less as a colleague than as a
+foe. So they turned to matters of public policy, 'and then,' writes the
+hapless Minister, 'nothing can equal my astonishment and concern.' He
+tried Pitt first with the Hessian Treaty, and then with the Russian. For
+the Hessian Treaty the Duke characteristically urged every reason but
+the true one, and for the Russian that it was the fruit of four years of
+negotiation, and that it would seem strange to drop it now. But Pitt was
+obdurate.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">379</a></span> He would be no party to a system of subsidies. If the Duke of
+Devonshire attacked the Hessian subsidy in the House of Lords, as was
+his intention, Pitt would echo the attack in the House of Commons. If
+the Russian Treaty were dropped he might acquiesce in the Hessian from
+regard for the King; as, for the same reason, he would always speak with
+the utmost respect of Hanover. But no consideration would make him
+support both, or a system of subsidies. It was his regard for the King,
+presumably, which impelled him to make a further suggestion, which
+Newcastle did not venture to transmit even to Hardwicke. Out of the
+fifteen millions sterling that the King was said to have saved why,
+asked Pitt, should he not give Hesse 100,000<i>l.</i>, and Russia
+150,000<i>l.</i>, to be out of these bad bargains? Newcastle was driven to
+his usual resource of the Chancellor, and suggested a conference with
+him in the ensuing week. Pitt agreed to this with, we may presume, a
+shrug of the shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>Neither in truth expected anything from such a meeting, for the pleas
+and the powers had both been exhausted. Newcastle realised this, and
+ends his remarkable record of the conversation with a despairing glance
+at his own prospects. What was he to do? There were as usual three
+courses to pursue. The first, which he should infinitely prefer, would
+be his own retirement. This is a common cant of ministers, and with
+Newcastle it was more than usually insincere. Fox, he said, might
+succeed him at the Treasury, and Pitt for a session at any rate would
+have to acquiesce. The second would be for Newcastle, remaining First
+Minister, to throw himself into the arms of the Pitt group, with Pitt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">380</a></span>
+as Secretary of State and Legge at the Exchequer. But the King would
+never hear of this. Newcastle puts it significantly thus: 'Whether this
+is in any shape practicable, I leave to your Lordship and all who know
+the King to determine.' The third course was the one adopted, 'to accept
+Mr. Fox's proposal, made by my Lord Granville,' the first allusion that
+we have to this particular negotiation. Fox was to be the real,
+efficient, and trusted leader of the House of Commons. But there must be
+conditions. Cumberland, the patron of Fox, must give his support, so
+must Devonshire and Hartington. There must be a new Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, and Fox must act cordially with the person whom the King
+might appoint to that office. Murray, and indeed every one, must put
+their shoulders to the wheel and exert themselves on behalf of the
+Administration. Lastly, it might be necessary to take in the venal but
+inevitable Bubb.</p>
+
+<p>Hardwicke answered Newcastle's report without a moment's delay, in a
+shrewd letter.<a name="FNanchor_284_284" id="FNanchor_284_284"></a><a href="#Footnote_284_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a> His first remark was that Pitt had taken much higher
+ground with the Duke than with him, perhaps because the bad news from
+the Ohio had made the Paymaster deem himself more valuable and
+necessary. He doubted whether the praises of Legge were sincere; they
+were probably intended to indicate a closer connection between them than
+really existed. But Hardwicke went straight to the two main points. The
+first was the general principle that the King must have a recognised
+Minister, what he called oddly enough 'a Minister with the King' in the
+House of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">381</a></span> Commons. The other question was whether Pitt should be
+Secretary of State.</p>
+
+<p>As to the first, if the Minister is to be subordinate, that is, not the
+Premier, he sees no great harm in it. 'For I have long been convinced,'
+continues the sagacious man, 'that whoever your Grace shall make use of
+as your first man and man of confidence in the House of Commons, you
+will find it necessary, if he be a man of reputation and ability
+accompanied with the ambition naturally incident to such a character, I
+say under those circumstances, your Grace will find it necessary to
+invest him with more power than, from the beginning, you thought fit to
+impart either to Mr. Legge or Sir Thomas Robinson.'</p>
+
+<p>From this we may gather that the Chancellor had never believed in the
+plan of a leaderless House of Commons. How indeed could he, as a man of
+sense, much more as a man of rare capacity? Such a plan could only be
+deemed possible by an alien King and a mountebank Minister. As to the
+personal point, Hardwicke is not less acute. Pitt, he declares, has
+stiffened his demand since their interview. Pitt, he is convinced,
+intended to draw from the Duke a promise that it should be made a point
+with the King that he should be made Secretary of State within a given
+time; and so, when he failed in this, he proceeded to discuss measures
+in a more peremptory tone than he would otherwise have employed.</p>
+
+<p>'Now,' says Hardwicke, 'this comes to a point which you and I have often
+discussed together. Whether you can think it right or bring yourself to
+declare to him that you really wish him in the Secretary's office,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">382</a></span> and
+will in earnest recommend him to the King on that foot.'</p>
+
+<p>This inestimable sentence throws a flood of light on Newcastle's
+professions to Pitt, and on the reality of the efforts that Newcastle
+had employed to soften the King. It is clear, we think, from this secret
+utterance that Newcastle had been sincere in neither case.</p>
+
+<p>Hardwicke urges that the Duke should close with Pitt. He thinks that if
+Newcastle were loyally to give this assurance Pitt 'would close and take
+his active part immediately.' Without this he is sure that Pitt believes
+'that the intention is to have the use of his talents without gratifying
+his ambition.' In writing this Hardwicke of course knew, as Newcastle
+knew, that Pitt's apprehension was well founded. 'My poor opinion,'
+continues the Chancellor, 'is that without it all further meetings and
+pourparlers with this gentleman will be vain. Your heart can only
+dictate to you whether you should do it or not.'<a name="FNanchor_285_285" id="FNanchor_285_285"></a><a href="#Footnote_285_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a> Justly distrusting
+the Duke's heart, the Chancellor proceeds to appeal to his instincts. He
+discards, of course, the idea of Newcastle's resignation. A friend,
+consulted on such a point, rarely deems it decent to do otherwise;
+certainly no confidant of Newcastle's could have done so and retained
+his intimacy.</p>
+
+<p>As to relying on Pitt and Legge, he agrees that nothing but the pressure
+of necessity could make the King adopt this course. Of course he does
+not say that the Duke could at any moment bring about this pressure,
+though that no doubt was the case. Newcastle, by his Parliamentary
+influence, could always produce a deadlock,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">383</a></span> as was soon to be proved.
+But Newcastle could, thinks Hardwicke, have Pitt without Legge. If Pitt
+had the seals he would not insist on Legge.</p>
+
+<p>The third course is that urged by Granville: to take Fox on Granville's
+conditions, which we may safely presume to have been those afterwards
+adopted. Hardwicke insinuates objections. Fox has the strong protection
+of Cumberland and the personal inclination of the King, but his election
+will be profoundly distasteful to Leicester House. Pitt, on the other
+hand, has 'no support at Court, and the personal disinclination of the
+King. He must therefore probably depend, at least for a good while, upon
+those who bring him thither.' Then comes the sentence about Fox and
+Leicester House which conveys a hint that Pitt, on the contrary, is well
+there. It is impossible to be more adroit. Hardwicke knew that Newcastle
+was fully aware that he hated Fox, and so put his objections in this
+indirect and skilful way. He failed, probably because Newcastle felt
+that to accept Fox would at any rate not necessitate a critical struggle
+with the King, and that Fox himself was more malleable.</p>
+
+<p>Of all strange confidants it was Bubb whom Pitt, on leaving Newcastle,
+proceeded to take into his inmost counsels. There are always parasites
+of this kind in politics, universally mistrusted, and yet constantly
+taken into confidence on grounds of convenience. Always sympathetic,
+always warm, always ready to betray at the first symptom of personal
+advantage, they are nevertheless useful parts of the political machine,
+and not so contemptible as might appear. They profess little, they
+deceive nobody except for a fleeting moment, and they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">384</a></span> are employed,
+with full knowledge of their character, to sound others and report the
+result, to suggest from their own base experience, to bring statesmen
+into relation with necessary people, and do the work with which
+statesmen will not soil their hands. But they are perilous and slippery
+agents, they attract in the warmth of the moment excessive confidence,
+and while these indiscretions are still ringing in their ears they are
+already in the tents of the enemy. Still, such as they are, they will
+always exist, and always be utilised, for they are part of the fatality
+of politics.</p>
+
+<p>So to Bubb Pitt betook himself on the day after that on which he had
+seen Newcastle, and gave a spirited account of the interview. He then
+spoke fully of his relations with Fox, in which really lay the key to
+the situation. He wished well to Mr. Fox, he did not complain of him,
+but he could not act with him; they could not co-operate because they
+were not on the same ground. Fox was not independent (<i>sui juris</i>), but
+he was. He had been ready during the last session to go all lengths
+against the Duke of Newcastle; but when it came to the pinch Fox always
+failed him (under the constraint, it may be presumed, of the Duke of
+Cumberland). <i>Fox had risen on his shoulders</i>;<a name="FNanchor_286_286" id="FNanchor_286_286"></a><a href="#Footnote_286_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a> he did not blame him
+for it. Fox had taken the smooth part, and left him the brunt; he did
+not complain. Fox, too, lived with his greatest enemies, Carteret,
+Stone, and Murray. And Newcastle had told him that Fox had recently
+offered himself to his Grace. Bubb declared that this was false, to his
+knowledge. Pitt replied that no one knew better than himself how great a
+liar Newcastle could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">385</a></span> be, and that if Fox denied this he should readily
+take his word against the Duke's. But all that he had recapitulated
+showed how impossible it was for two men to act together who stood on so
+different a footing as Fox and himself.</p>
+
+<p>Bubb now scented business of the kind to which he himself was addicted,
+and broke in with, 'As we who are to unite in this attack <i>are to part
+no more</i>,'<a name="FNanchor_287_287" id="FNanchor_287_287"></a><a href="#Footnote_287_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a> it would be proper to think what was to be held out to
+the confederates if they succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt declined to enter into this premature traffic, 'it would look too
+like a faction, there was no country in it'; but expressed himself, in
+the fashion of the day, with warmth and confidence as to Bubb himself.
+He thought Bubb of the greatest consequence; nothing was too good for
+such a man; no one was more listened to in the House and in the country.
+He wished to be connected with Bubb in the strictest sense politically,
+as he already was by marriage.<a name="FNanchor_288_288" id="FNanchor_288_288"></a><a href="#Footnote_288_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a></p>
+
+<p>Bubb demurely records these confidences, and was left happy; glad to
+find, as he writes, that he should receive such support in an opposition
+which, on patriotic and conscientious grounds, he must have pursued even
+had he stood alone.<a name="FNanchor_289_289" id="FNanchor_289_289"></a><a href="#Footnote_289_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a></p>
+
+<p>Once more we have to deplore the hapless destinies of political alliance
+and of Parliamentary twins, united in bonds of principle, who are to
+part no more. This conversation took place on September 3 (1755). On
+November 20<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">386</a></span> Pitt was dismissed, because of his adherence to the
+virtuous course which Bubb had resolved to pursue without flinching,
+even if isolated, with or without Pitt. Bubb records the removal in a
+terse entry of his diary, and the next, not less terse, records his
+acceptance of a lucrative post tendered by Newcastle. History has to
+note some such incidents, but we know of none so cynically and
+complacently narrated by the renegade himself.</p>
+
+<p>Hardwicke made one last desperate effort to move Pitt, but without
+success. He writes to Newcastle on September 15 (1755): 'I have had a
+long conversation with the <i>gentleman</i> your Grace knows, but with little
+effect. I talked very fully and strongly to him upon every part of the
+case, both as to <i>persons</i> and <i>measures</i>. He made great professions of
+his regard and firm attachment to your Grace and me, but adhered to his
+<i>negative</i>. He puts that negative upon two things: His objections to the
+two treaties of subsidy ... his other objection arose from <i>Mr. F.</i>,
+with whom he declared he could not act.'<a name="FNanchor_290_290" id="FNanchor_290_290"></a><a href="#Footnote_290_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a></p>
+
+<p>On this scene, coming more and more into prominence as the King became
+older, and as the Prince of Wales, or rather Bute and his clique, waxed
+bolder, appears the mysterious and elusive influence of Leicester House.
+It is difficult to trace or measure this combination, except in the
+naked fact of an old King and a young heir, nor is it easy to trace the
+connection of Pitt with this party. Every movement in Leicester House
+was jealously watched by the politicians, much as a late Sultan is said
+to have tracked the movements of the least menial of his dethroned and
+secluded predecessor. We read of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">387</a></span> Princess being stirred to wrath by
+her father-in-law's project of marrying her son to the daughter,
+supposed to be active and ambitious, of a woman she detested. Then there
+is the suspicion that the Heir Apparent was surrounded by persons who
+were more or less Jacobite; Bute himself having, it was presumed,
+Jacobite leanings. But the King at once desisted with rare good sense
+from any idea of the projected marriage, though no doubt it would have
+given him pleasure. And the danger of an Hanoverian sovereign becoming a
+Jacobite under any influence seems too fantastic for a pantomime. The
+real apprehension was no doubt that Leicester House might shake off the
+domination and destroy the long monopoly of the Whigs, as indeed it
+eventually did. And certainly Leicester House, with the throne full in
+view, was becoming more and more inclined to assert itself. Human nature
+and family relations had, as usual in such cases, much to do with the
+matter. The Hanoverian Kings did not love their heirs apparent. George
+the First hated his, but he had no other son to love, and indeed little
+capacity for loving, except mistresses who found favour with no one
+else. George the Second hated his with a peculiar hatred, and was thus
+able to devote what fatherly affection he had to give to his second son,
+the Duke of Cumberland. These parental preferences, however justifiable,
+do not tend to affection between sons. And so there was no love lost
+between Prince Frederick and his family on the one side, and Duke
+William on the other. These feelings, as is usually the case, survived,
+when Frederick died, with increasing intensity between the widow and her
+brother-in-law. She saw him on the right hand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">388</a></span> of the King, enjoying all
+his confidence, as was natural, and herself and her bashful son of no
+account; so that a new jealousy was added to the original rancour.</p>
+
+<p>Understanding these facts, we are able to follow the course of Pitt. Fox
+was essentially the Duke of Cumberland's man, and so by the force of
+circumstances Pitt became allied, but not at this moment closely allied,
+to Leicester House. He had been a friend and servant of the dead Prince
+of Wales, then had quarrelled with him, but the original brand was not
+altogether effaced. Now he was the one champion whom the faction of the
+late Heir Apparent could adopt; and so the politicians began to see
+behind Pitt the influence of the coming King, his mother, and their
+favourite. Thus, when Newcastle had to make the option between Fox and
+Pitt, it was not merely the choice between two rival orators, but
+between two rival Courts, the Old and the New. We may be sure that no
+element in this business was more essentially present to the Minister's
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>All this seems petty but essential; but all was petty then, as is proved
+by the mere fact of Newcastle being at the head of the Ministry and
+master of the House of Commons; and it is all essential to the reader
+who would understand the history of those times, because the
+complication of these byways and intrigues is so extreme. There was the
+King with Lady Yarmouth and Cumberland; there were Newcastle and
+Hardwicke, with the House of Commons at their feet, and anxious to
+remain at their feet if that were possible; there was the influence of
+Cumberland apart from the King, and represented by Fox; there was
+Bedford, powerful from his property<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">389</a></span> and connections, with a clique
+hungry for office; there was Pitt with his Grenville relations, who were
+ready to give him their support, but not less ready to withdraw it if
+something better should offer. And around and below these was the great
+shifting mass of politicians by profession and cupidity, the
+parliamentary Zoroastrians, who worshipped the rising sun, when they
+could discern it; the sun which should shed upon them office, salary,
+and titles; striving, sweating, cringing, as Bubb, the most shameless of
+them all, emphasises in capital letters, '<span class="smcap">and all for quarter-day</span>.' It
+was through this scene of confusion and intrigue that Pitt had to thread
+his way, not very scrupulously; for he had always lived in this society,
+had lost whatever thin illusions he had ever possessed, and followed the
+clues which his experience had taught him to prize. He played the game.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Nov. 13, 1755.</div>
+
+<p>The meeting of Parliament took place two months afterwards and that
+period was spent by Newcastle and Hardwicke in arranging to discard Pitt
+and Legge, and to lean on Cumberland and Fox. Newcastle did not yield to
+Fox without reluctance, for it was, in Pitt's words, parting with some
+of his sole power. In his helplessness and despair he even offered to
+cede his place to Granville, who as Carteret had been his most detested
+bugbear, but who had now subsided into a quiescent President of the
+Council. Granville refused with a laugh, and preferred to conduct the
+negotiation with Fox. Fox had to him the merit of keeping out Pitt,
+whose former denunciations he had neither forgotten nor forgiven. So he
+had first endeavoured to inspire Murray to face, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">390</a></span> now Fox to
+supplant Pitt. With a flash of his old diplomacy he was able to bring
+together the two mistrustful parties, on terms which Newcastle had
+curtly refused in the first insolence of his power, but which now, at
+the instance of Hardwicke as we have seen, he had to concede. The insane
+plan of a leaderless House of Commons, left like sheep on a barren moor,
+owned by an absentee Duke secluded in the Treasury, was to be abandoned.
+Fox was to be Secretary of State, leader of the House of Commons in name
+and in fact, and what was far more than either, he was authorised to
+announce that he represented the full influence of the King in the House
+'to help or to hurt.' When the two shepherds, the old and the new,
+burning with mutual hatred and distrust, met to ratify the conditions,
+Fox suggested sardonically that it would be best that this should be the
+last time on which they should meet to agree, that there should be a
+final settlement, or none at all, meaning that it should be honest and
+complete. Newcastle, no doubt with a wry face, agreed. 'Then,' said Fox,
+'it shall be so'; though indeed it was not. Fox stipulated for the
+admission or promotion of five persons, the only memorable ones of whom
+were George Selwyn, whose lovable and humorous personality has survived
+that of many more eminent contemporaries, and Hamilton, who is the only
+man, except the less-known Hawkins, who is remembered by a single
+speech. Chesterfield, on hearing of the reconstitution of the Ministry,
+observed with his habitual shrewdness that Newcastle had turned out
+everybody else and had now turned himself out. Fox at once repented of
+his adhesion, for Stone, Newcastle's confidant, informed him that had he
+not joined them the Ministry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">391</a></span> would have instantly resigned.<a name="FNanchor_291_291" id="FNanchor_291_291"></a><a href="#Footnote_291_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a> But
+now he had to content himself with negotiating through Rigby with the
+Bedford group, which he hoped to bring into office for the purpose of
+wrecking the administration.</p>
+
+<p>Robinson made less than no difficulties in accommodating himself to the
+new pretensions. He only yearned to return to the Great Wardrobe of
+which he had been Master. And so with a pension of 2000<i>l.</i> a year,
+fixed upon luckless Ireland, he vanishes into space, with the natural
+remark that he had never looked on his seven children with so much
+satisfaction as on the completion of these domestic arrangements. </p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">392</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">This</span> blank though important space in the life of Pitt himself seems
+favourable for picking up a few threads which had to be dropped in the
+narrative of his negotiations with Newcastle.</p>
+
+<p>After the baiting to which Robinson had been subjected in the first days
+of the session he disappeared from debate; and Fox, then in close
+negotiation for a seat in the Cabinet, represented the Government in the
+Commons, and turned a deaf ear to the proposal that he should join Pitt
+in a combined attack on Newcastle. Fox's game, it will be seen, was not
+calculated to win the confidence of Pitt, to whom, however, during the
+session, he showed marked courtesy on the one hand, while negotiating
+with the Duke on the other.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Feb. 26, 1755.</div>
+
+<p>The Lord Advocate had introduced a Bill continuing for a further period
+the provisions passed after the rising of 1745 which had temporarily
+placed the tenure of sheriff-deputyships at the King's pleasure instead
+of for life as before. This seems to have raised an animated debate,
+memorable to us as having produced two fine speeches from Pitt, which
+Horace Walpole alone mentions, and of which he gives a spirited sketch.
+It is only possible to give Walpole's record in his own words, as there
+is no other. Pitt spoke in answer to Murray (who, by-the-by,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">393</a></span> speaking
+in defence of the Bill, had said that there was not a single Jacobite
+left in Scotland) 'with great fire, in one of his best worded and most
+spirited declarations for liberty, but which, like others of his fine
+orations, cannot be delivered adequately without his own language; nor
+will they appear so cold to the reader, as they even do to myself, when
+I attempt to sketch them, and cannot forget with what soul and grace
+they were uttered. He did not directly oppose, but wished rather to send
+the Bill to the Committee, to see how it could be amended. He was glad
+that Murray would defend the King, only with a salve to the rights of
+the Revolution; he commended his abilities, but tortured him on his
+distinctions and refinements. He himself had more scruples; it might be
+a Whig delicacy&mdash;but even that is a solid principle. He had more dread
+of arbitrary power dressing itself in the long robe, than even of
+military power. When master principles are concerned, he dreaded
+accuracy of distinction: he feared that sort of reasoning: if you class
+everything, you will soon reduce everything into a particular; you will
+then lose great general maxims. Gentlemen may analyse a question till it
+is lost. If I can show him, says Murray, that it is not my Lord Judge,
+but Mr. Judge, I have got him into a class. For his part, could he be
+drawn to violate liberty, it should be <i>regnandi causâ</i>, for this King's
+reigning. He would not recur for precedents to the diabolic divans of
+the second Charles and James; he did not date his principles of the
+liberty of this country from the Revolution; they are eternal rights;
+and when God said, "<i>let justice be justice</i>," He made it independent.
+The Act of Parliament that you are going to repeal is a proof of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">394</a></span> the
+importance of the Sheriffs-depute: formerly they were instruments of
+tyranny. Why is this attempted? is it to make Mr. Pelham more regretted?
+He would have been tender of cramming down the throats of the people
+what they are averse to swallow. Whig and Minister were conjuncts he
+always wished to see. He deprecated (<i>sic</i>) those, who had more weight
+than himself in the Administration, to drop this; or besought that they
+would take it for any term that may comprehend the King's life; for
+seven years, for fourteen, though he was not disposed to weigh things in
+such golden scales.' The reader must make of this what he will.</p>
+
+<p>Fox said 'that he was undetermined, and would reserve himself for the
+Committee; that he only spoke now, to show it was not crammed down his
+throat; which was in no man's power to do. That in the Committee he
+would be free, which he feared Pitt had not left it in his own power to
+be, so well he had spoken on one side. That he reverenced liberty and
+Pitt, because nobody could speak so well on its behalf.'<a name="FNanchor_292_292" id="FNanchor_292_292"></a><a href="#Footnote_292_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a></p>
+
+<p>The Bill came up again a few days afterwards, and we find Pitt again
+attacking it, and Fox apparently evading a contest with him. We are once
+more thrown back on Walpole's account. 'Pitt talked on the harmony of
+the day, and wished that Fox had omitted anything that looked like
+levity on this great principle. That the Ministry giving up the <i>durante
+benč placito</i> was an instance of moderation. That two points of the
+Debate had affected him with sensible pleasure&mdash;the admission that
+judicature ought to be free, and the universal zeal to strengthen the
+King's hands.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">395</a></span> That liberty was the best loyalty; that giving
+extraordinary powers to the Crown was so many repeals of the Act of
+Settlement. Fox said shortly, that if he had honoured the fire of
+liberty, he now honoured the smoke.'<a name="FNanchor_293_293" id="FNanchor_293_293"></a><a href="#Footnote_293_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a></p>
+
+<p>These arguments are not easy to follow, so the only faithful course
+seems to be to give the actual record.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile it is necessary for a moment to peer outside, and take note of
+the world so far, and only so far, as it affects the life of Pitt; for
+the clouds of war were gathering fast. The Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle was
+only an armed truce, the cupidities and resentments which it had checked
+for the moment were still active, though mute. With two such characters
+as Frederick and Maria Theresa matched against each other, it was
+evident that Silesia would never be surrendered or abandoned without
+another deadly struggle. Moreover, half unconsciously, the two secular
+rivals, France and Britain, were drifting into a contest for supremacy
+over half the globe, to settle the question as to which should become
+the first colonising power of the world. Hostilities in India and in
+North America were always smouldering, and the arrangements of
+Aix-la-Chapelle had not extended to either region. The treaty had in no
+way checked the desperate war carried on in India between the English
+and French Companies, between Clive and Dupleix. That was presently
+closed for the moment by a provisional treaty signed on the spot in
+January 1755. In America the scene was even more poignant. There without
+any declaration of war, in a formal and legal state of peace,
+hostilities were carried on, openly and yet treacherously, by incursions
+connived at by the French Government. And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">396</a></span> as if to add an additional
+horror to these sinister operations, they were accompanied by all the
+unspeakable barbarities of Indian warfare, the cold-blooded murder of
+men, women and children, rewards from the European governors for the
+scalps thus obtained, and by open cannibalism.<a name="FNanchor_294_294" id="FNanchor_294_294"></a><a href="#Footnote_294_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a> Christian
+missionaries were not ashamed to hound on these savages to murder,
+torture, and rapine; nay, their professed converts<a name="FNanchor_295_295" id="FNanchor_295_295"></a><a href="#Footnote_295_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a> were sometimes
+the keenest in butchery. For religious fanaticism imparted an ignorant
+zeal to the barbarous combatants, who were taught, it is said, that
+Christ was a Frenchman crucified by the English. The claim that the King
+of France was the eldest son of the Church was construed into a much
+more literal interpretation of divine origin.<a name="FNanchor_296_296" id="FNanchor_296_296"></a><a href="#Footnote_296_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a> There was in fact no
+element of atrocity wanting to this war, which was not a war; blasphemy,
+murder, outrage, arson, rape, torture were all employed under the pure
+white banner with its golden lilies. Parkman, the historian of these
+operations, does not record the like of the British. But this is not to
+affirm there were no reprisals. For war carried on in this fashion and
+by the employment of savages can scarcely be one-sided in its
+barbarities.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<p>But apart from the perfidious ambitions of governments and the predatory
+lusts of savages, there could not be peace in America, nor in effect had
+there been since the settlement of Utrecht. Boundaries in that trackless
+continent were vague, and constantly overstepped. The proper limits of
+Nova Scotia, and the demarcation between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">397</a></span> Canada and New England, were
+subjects of acute controversy. Under such circumstances both parties
+plant outposts in disputed territories, and both attempt to dislodge
+each other. French officers headed exploring parties, annexing vast
+territories by the simple expedient of nailing to a tree-trunk a tin
+plate stamped with the arms of France, and burying at the root a leaden
+tablet recording that possession had thus been taken. But there were
+other operations much less bloodless and futile. One of these petty
+engagements survives in history because it marks the first appearance of
+Washington, compelled in 1754 to celebrate the Fourth of July by a<span class="sidenote">July 4, 1754.</span>
+surrender to the French, who had surrounded him in superior numbers; and
+because it was the commencement of open but not declared warfare between
+the British and the French. Both nations now determined to send out
+reinforcements. 'In a moment,' says Walpole, 'the Duke of Newcastle
+assumed the hero, and breathed nothing but military operations; he and
+the Chancellor held councils of war; none of the ministers except Lord
+Holderness were admitted inside their tent.' With some discount for
+Walpole's malicious pleasantry, the picture, humorous enough to us, must
+have filled men like Pitt with the darkest misgivings. Pitt, as we have
+seen, had once been accidentally admitted into the tent and taken into
+confidence. He must have left it with the feeling that the destinies of
+the Empire were in peril so long as Newcastle was at the helm. A giant
+conflict for the supremacy of the world was preparing, and Newcastle was
+in charge of Great Britain. It was enough to give the bravest patriot a<span class="sidenote">Jan. 1755.</span>
+qualm. Nor were the military preparations less deplorable. Braddock was
+sent out at the new year with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">398</a></span> plan of campaign prepared by
+Cumberland. Cumberland on Braddock was a combination which might make
+the stoutest heart in England quail. Cumberland, who had lost every
+battle but the one-sided affray of Culloden, was the brain to devise.
+Braddock, a brutal soldier of parade experience, whose only warfare had
+been in Hyde Park or Hounslow, was the hand to execute. Braddock took
+his troops through the American bush as if they were marching from<span class="sidenote">July 9, 1755.</span>
+London to Windsor, and was annihilated ten miles from the French
+stronghold, Fort Duquesne, where now smokes toiling Pittsburg. British
+troops then first faced the most formidable of adversaries, an invisible
+foe. They advanced boldly, cheering and singing 'God save the King.' But
+they found that they were mere targets for a host of concealed
+sharpshooters. Behind every tree and rock there lurked a musket. At last
+they broke ranks and huddled into confusion. 'We would fight,' they
+answered their officers, 'if we could see anybody to fight with.' Some
+survivors declared that they had not seen a single Indian. Others were
+not so fortunate. Twelve unhappy persons were tortured and burned alive
+by the savage allies of the French. Braddock was mortally wounded, and
+died after a long silence, broken only by the one pathetic question,
+'Who would have thought it?'<a name="FNanchor_297_297" id="FNanchor_297_297"></a><a href="#Footnote_297_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a> His papers fell into the hands of the
+French and swelled the indictment with which they declared war.<a name="FNanchor_298_298" id="FNanchor_298_298"></a><a href="#Footnote_298_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a>
+This evil news arrived in England at the end of August, and no doubt
+precipitated Newcastle's attempt to come to terms with Pitt.</p>
+
+<p>Three months after the departure of Braddock, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">399</a></span> French in alarm
+fitted out a fleet of reinforcement, which sailed at the end of April,
+just as George II. was leaving his kingdom for his electorate, amid the
+scarce veiled indignation of his British subjects. The moment was
+critical, the King was old, his heir was young, the French were making
+great warlike preparations, every circumstance pointed to the grave
+impropriety of the departure. But the King was obdurate to all
+remonstrance. Not only was Hanover his home, he was also anxious to
+negotiate treaties of subsidy for its protection; treaties which were
+more conveniently signed away from Great Britain; that country being
+only required to endorse them in order to furnish the necessary
+supplies.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>When it was certain that the French fleet was destined for America,
+Admiral Boscawen was despatched with a squadron to intercept it.
+Boscawen had eleven ships of the line and one frigate, the French fleet
+consisted of eighteen ships, eight of which were lightly armed as
+transports. The two armaments came into collision at the mouth of the
+St. Lawrence on June 7. Three French ships came into conflict with three<span class="sidenote">1755.</span>
+British ships under Captain Howe. The French commander sent to ask 'Is
+it peace or war?' Lord Howe replied that he must ask his admiral, who
+replied 'War.' Thereupon Howe attacked and captured two of the enemy,
+but to the mortification of the British the bulk of the French fleet got
+safely into Louisbourg; then a Gibraltar, now a lonely pasture beaten by
+the surf.</p>
+
+<p>During all this year attempts had been made by negotiation in London
+between Mirepoix, the French Ambassador, and Newcastle, to delimit the
+territories in dispute, but at the news of this conflict Mirepoix left
+London at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">400</a></span> once. Nevertheless the French behaved with signal
+placability, they even released the <i>Blandford</i> man-of-war, which they
+had captured; and there was at present no formal declaration of open
+hostility. For Louis XV. and his mistress did not desire war with Great
+Britain, nor were they ready for it. A council was held at Compičgne at
+which the opinion of Noailles prevailed. That was to suffer and endure,
+so as to attract the sympathy of all Europe against Britain; only to
+declare war when it was abundantly proved to be inevitable; then to
+limit the operations to the sea, and not to be lured into any warfare on
+the continent of Europe.<a name="FNanchor_299_299" id="FNanchor_299_299"></a><a href="#Footnote_299_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a> It was the Government of Newcastle that
+moved towards hostilities. Our Admiralty behaved with great but perhaps
+lawless vigour. It issued letters of marque, and before the end of the
+year 300 French merchant ships and 6000 French seamen had been captured.</p>
+
+<p>War seemed now inevitable, although at earlier stages it might, we
+think, have been avoided without difficulty; and there began a general
+hunt for alliances, which soon developed into a complete reversal of
+former arrangements. Maria Theresa, thirsting for revenge, sought under
+the inspiration of Kaunitz a strict union with France and Russia. The
+tongue of Frederick, biting, uncontrolled, and especially venomous in
+dealing with the frailty of woman, did perhaps more than Austrian
+diplomacy to facilitate these arrangements; for the Empress Elizabeth
+and Madame de Pompadour were both stung to unrelenting animosity by
+Frederick's reckless ribaldry. Frederick, however, took the first step
+himself. While France was secretly carrying on negotiations with
+England, which continued to the end<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">401</a></span> of 1755, and neglecting to renew
+her previous treaty with Prussia which expired in May 1756, Frederick
+signed with Great Britain in January 1756 the Treaty of Westminster, by
+which both parties guaranteed each other's possessions and bound
+themselves to take up arms against any Power which should invade
+Germany. This instrument had the indirect but grave effect of
+neutralising the King's treaty with Russia for the defence of Hanover,
+for it precluded any foreign Power from marching troops into Germany.
+The news of this agreement was received at Versailles with consternation
+and wrath. The French Court replied to it by the Treaty of Versailles
+(May 1, 1756), hurriedly concluded with Austria and extremely one-sided.
+France agreed to respect the Austrian Netherlands, from which she might
+have hoped for some compensation in case of success. Both parties agreed
+to guarantee each other's dominions, and a secret article, aimed at
+Prussia, made the compact more stringent. In August a treaty still more
+advantageous to Austria was concluded between the two Powers; but in
+this some frontier towns in the Austrian Netherlands, though not
+specified, were to be conceded to France, when Austria was once more in
+possession of Silesia and Glatz.<a name="FNanchor_300_300" id="FNanchor_300_300"></a><a href="#Footnote_300_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a></p>
+
+<p>It was believed in Europe that this counterbalancing treaty to that of
+Westminster ensured the peace of the Continent. But the world did not
+yet know Frederick. He was crouching for a spring. Two circumstances
+impelled him. He had become aware through a corrupt Saxon clerk of a
+correspondence between Austria and Saxony concerting a vast confederacy
+against him. The second was this.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">402</a></span> We have noticed the Russian and
+Hessian treaties of subsidy. That with Russia had been originally
+concluded with a view to operations against Frederick himself,<a name="FNanchor_301_301" id="FNanchor_301_301"></a><a href="#Footnote_301_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a> and
+to that purpose the Empress Elizabeth was determined that it should be
+confined. By a personal declaration<a name="FNanchor_302_302" id="FNanchor_302_302"></a><a href="#Footnote_302_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a> and by two resolutions of the
+Russian Senate<a name="FNanchor_303_303" id="FNanchor_303_303"></a><a href="#Footnote_303_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a> it was made clear that hostility to Frederick alone
+inspired the Russian share of the treaty. He saw the circle closing
+round him. Three outraged women were directing the forces of three
+Empires against him. He had nothing to rely upon but his own country,
+Britain, and himself. Cognizant of the plot against him, he determined
+to have the advantage of attack. Like a leopard he sprang upon Dresden.
+Before the Saxons had well realised that war was impending he was at the
+throat of the electorate, and had seized the capital, the army, and the
+compromising papers which justified his action. This was the beginning
+of the worldwide struggle known as the Seven Years' War, and it occurred
+in September 1756.</p>
+
+<p>This is all that is necessary for our story, a mere glimpse of the
+intrigues and rancours which were lashing all Europe into storm. We must
+now return to the parliamentary arena.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">1755.</div>
+
+<p>On September 15, George II. deigned to return to his British dominions,
+and on November 13 he opened his Parliament. Two circumstances were
+considered noteworthy in connection with the formal occasion. Fox, as
+leader of the House, rehearsed the Speech from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">403</a></span> Throne, as was then
+the custom, at the Cockpit; but the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the
+Paymaster, and the Grenvilles were conspicuous by their absence. Fox,
+too, summoned his supporters by a note of the kind then, as now,
+customary, but in terms which gave offence to the susceptible
+independence of members; intimating that the King was about to make him
+Secretary of State, though not till after the first debate, 'which may
+be a warm one,' so that his seat might not be vacated until after the
+Address had been voted. He was also to take upon him 'the conduct of the
+House of Commons.' This last expression was animadverted upon in
+Parliament, and Fox admitted that he should have said 'conduct of His
+Majesty's affairs in the House of Commons.' In these days, when 'leader
+of the House of Commons' is the recognised title of the principal
+Minister in the House, it is not without interest to notice this
+constitutional squeamishness.</p>
+
+<p>The King's Speech contained the following paragraph, which strikes the
+reader as something less than candid:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>'With a sincere desire to preserve my people from the calamities of war,
+as well as to prevent, in the midst of these troubles, a general war
+from being lighted up in Europe, I have always been ready to accept
+reasonable and honourable terms of accommodation; but none such have
+hitherto been proposed on the part of France. I have also confined my
+views and operations to hinder France from making new encroachments, or
+supporting those already made; to exert our right to a satisfaction for
+hostilities committed in a time of profound peace: and to disappoint
+such designs as, from various appearances and preparations,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">404</a></span> there is
+reason to think, have been formed against my kingdoms and dominions.'</p>
+
+<p>Members met to hear the Royal Speech in the electric condition which
+bodes a crisis. There had been a long political truce; but this was
+evidently about to come to an end. Ministers had to bear the burden of
+the Russian and Hessian treaties, which the Speech from the Throne
+commended to the attention of Parliament. War with France was impending;
+indeed, a French invasion was daily expected. There was a new leader,
+and, consequently, a new opposition. Pitt was evidently prepared to
+launch thunderbolts at the Administration. Leicester House was said to
+be behind him. There was an animating sense of conflict in the air.</p>
+
+<p>Once more the parliamentary history fails us, and disdains to record one
+of the most memorable passages in its annals; so once more we are thrown
+on the authority and the sketches of Walpole; sometimes brilliant, but
+more often confused and defective.</p>
+
+<p>The debate in the Commons lasted till near five in the morning, an hour
+then almost unprecedented.</p>
+
+<p>It was distinguished by that famous effort which gave Single-speech
+Hamilton his nickname. Walpole, in recording and eulogising it, says:
+'You will ask, what could be beyond this? Nothing but what was beyond
+what ever was, and that was Pitt.' Pitt, indeed, after sitting through
+the eleven hours of the debate, rose and delivered, with inimitable
+spirit and all the dramatic force that the greatest actor of his age
+could impart, a speech of an hour and a half, which contains his most
+famous figure, and which perhaps he never exceeded.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">405</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'His eloquence,' says Walpole, 'like a torrent long obstructed, burst
+forth with more commanding impetuosity.' For ten years he had been
+muzzled, and now he revelled in his freedom. 'He spoke at past one (in
+the morning) for an hour and thirty-five minutes. There was more humour,
+wit, vivacity, fine language, more boldness,&mdash;in short, more astonishing
+perfections, than even you who are used to him can conceive.'</p>
+
+<p>He 'surpassed himself, and then I need not tell you that he surpassed
+Cicero and Demosthenes. What a figure would they with their formal
+laboured cabinet orations make vis-a-vis his manly vivacity and dashing
+eloquence at one o'clock in the morning, after sitting in that heat for
+eleven hours!'</p>
+
+<p>This enthusiasm from the least enthusiastic of men adds to our regrets
+that so faint a memory of this dazzling speech remains. And yet perhaps
+we were wise to be grateful that we have only the description. It seems
+not impossible that the words taken down verbatim by some old
+parliamentary hand in the reporters' gallery would seem cold or tawdry
+without the soul and grace which animated them, and which haunted Horace
+Walpole for long years afterwards. Some of the allusions which have been
+noted down seem forced, some of the bursts incoherent, some of the irony
+obscure. But those who heard it palpitated with emotion, they saw the
+divine fire of the orator, while posterity can only grope among the cold
+ashes for the burning fragments poured forth in the wrath of the
+eruption.</p>
+
+<p>'Haughty, defiant, conscious of injury, and of supreme abilities,' he
+offered a great contrast to Legge, who fought by his side with different
+weapons; for Legge was studiously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">406</a></span> moderate, deferential, and artful;
+'gliding to revenge.' Yet Pitt himself began with expressions of
+veneration for the King, and of gratitude for 'late condescending
+goodness and gracious openings,' alluding to the offer of a seat in the
+Cabinet. It was obvious from this that he did not mean the door of the
+Closet to be closed on him, or to try again to force it by attack. But,
+he continued, the very respect he felt for that august name made him
+deprecate the unconstitutional use made of it in this debate.</p>
+
+<p>Egmont had argued that we were to have the Hessian and Russian
+mercenaries to fall back upon in case our fleets were defeated. Why if
+that were so, asked Pitt, did we not hire of Russia ships rather than
+men? The answer was simple: because ships could not defend Hanover. Must
+we drain, he asked, presumably in obscure allusion to Russia, our last
+vital drop and send it to the North Pole? We had been told that Carthage
+was undone in spite of her navy. But that was not until she betook
+herself to land operations. Carthage, too, he added, pointing directly
+to the enterprises of Cumberland, had a Hannibal who would pass the
+Alps. We were told, too, that we must assist Hanover out of justice and
+gratitude. As to justice, there was a charter which barred any such
+consideration. Gratitude was only in question if Hanover should be
+involved in anything which called down on her the resentment of France
+in consequence of any quarrel of ours. But, to speak plainly, these
+expressions were unparliamentary and unconstitutional. The King owed a
+duty to his people which should not be obscured by such phraseology. Our
+ancestors would never have stooped to such adulation.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">407</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Then he turned with the greatest contempt to Sir George Lyttelton: 'A
+gentleman near me has talked of writers on the law of Nations. But
+Nature is the best writer; she will teach us to be men and not to
+truckle to power.' As he proceeded, he slowly swelled into his famous
+burst. 'I, who am at a distance from the <i>sanctum sanctorum</i>&mdash;I, who
+travel through a desert and am overwhelmed with mountains of
+obscurity&mdash;cannot so easily catch a gleam to direct me to the beauties
+of these negotiations. For there are parts of this Address which do not
+seem to come from the same quarter as the rest. I cannot unravel this
+mystery. But, yes!' he exclaimed with an air of sudden enlightenment,
+clapping his hand to his forehead, 'I too am now inspired. I am struck
+by a recollection. I remember at Lyons to have been taken to see the
+conflux of the Rhone and the Saône. The one is a gentle, feeble, languid
+stream, and, though languid, of no depth; the other a boisterous and
+impetuous torrent. Yet they meet at last. And long,' he added, with
+bitter sarcasm, 'may they continue united, to the comfort of each other,
+and to the glory, honour, and security of this nation.'</p>
+
+<p>This is all that we possess of this renowned flight and in this faint
+form it does not strike one as particularly impressive. But the actual
+words of the orator were probably very different; and nothing can
+preserve for us the voice, the eye, the darting accent and the
+concentrated fire of delivery which imparted such tremendous force to
+the apostrophe. In any case, the effect was instant and prodigious.
+After the debate Fox asked Pitt, 'Who is the Rhone?' 'Is that a fair
+question?' answered Pitt, for no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">408</a></span> orator likes to be cross-examined
+about his metaphors. 'Why,' rejoined Fox good-humouredly, 'as you have
+said so much that I did not wish to hear, you may tell me one thing that
+I want to hear. Am I the Rhone, or Lord Granville?' 'You are Granville,'
+returned Pitt. He meant, of course, what was true, that Fox and
+Granville were now practically one, and one in opposition to himself.</p>
+
+<p>After this climax the notes of the remainder of the speech seem
+comparatively poor. By adopting these measures, he urged, we are losing
+sight of our proper force, the Navy. It was the Navy which, by making us
+masters of Cape Breton in the last war, had secured the restoration of
+Flanders and the Barrier Fortresses. And yet even then we had had to
+conclude a bad peace. Moreover, bad as it was, our Ministers had
+suffered such constant infractions of it that they would have been
+stoned in the streets had they not at last shown signs of resentment.
+And yet, even now, they seem to have already forgotten the cause in
+which they took up arms, for at present they are not acting on behalf of
+Britain. These treaties are not English measures, but Hanoverian. Are
+they indeed measures of prevention? Are they not rather measures of
+aggression and provocation? Will they not irritate Prussia and light up
+a general war? If that be the result, I will follow to the death the
+authors of this policy, for this is the day that I hope will give a
+colour to my life. And yet I fear it is useless to try and stem the
+torrent. Ministers evidently mean a land war, and how preposterous a
+war. Hanover is their only base, for they cannot gain the alliance of
+the Dutch. I remember, everybody<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">409</a></span> remembers, when you did force them to
+join you: all our misfortunes are due to those daring, wicked counsels
+(of Granville's). Out of them sprung a ministry,' he continued,
+referring to the forty-eight hours phantom of Pulteney and Carteret. 'I
+saw that ministry. In the morning it flourished. It was green at noon.
+By night it was cut down and forgotten.' What if a ministry should
+spring out of this subsidy? It is contended, moreover, that it will
+dishonour the King to reject these treaties which he has concluded. But
+was not the treaty of Hanau transmitted to us in the same way and
+rejected here? If these treaties are really a preventive measure, they
+are only preventive of Newcastle's retirement.</p>
+
+<p>Then he ridiculed Murray's elaborate compassion of the aged Sovereign.
+He too could appeal for commiseration of the King. He could picture him
+deprived of any honest counsel, spending his summer in his electorate,
+surrounded by affrighted Hanoverians, without any one near him to keep
+him in mind of the policy and interest of England, or of the fact that
+we cannot reverse the laws of Nature, and make Hanover other than an
+open, defenceless country. He too could foresee the day, within the next
+two years, when the King would be unable to sleep in St. James's; but
+that would be because his slumbers would be disturbed by the clamours of
+a bankrupt people.</p>
+
+<p>These are all the shreds that remain of this glorious rhapsody. It would
+perhaps be better that nothing had survived. Each student must try and
+reconstruct for himself, like some rhetorical Owen, out of these poor
+bones the majestic structure of Pitt's famous speech.</p>
+
+<p>Fox replied with obvious languor and fatigue, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">410</a></span> division was
+taken between four and five. On the first question, that the words
+promising assistance to Hanover should be omitted, the supporters of the
+Government were 311 to 105. On the second amendment, which obscurely
+questioned the policy of both treaties the numbers were 290 to 89. The
+faithful Commons were still able to be loyal to Newcastle. Against that
+pasteboard rock Pitt's billows broke in vain.<a name="FNanchor_304_304" id="FNanchor_304_304"></a><a href="#Footnote_304_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a></p>
+
+<p>Next day (November 15, 1755) Fox received the seals. Five days
+afterwards Pitt, Legge, and George Grenville were dismissed by notes
+from Lord Holdernesse, the colleague of Fox in the Secretaryship of
+State. Fox indeed declares in a letter to Welbore Ellis, then peevish at
+not getting a better place, that he did not know till the last moment of
+the intention to remove anybody but Legge.<a name="FNanchor_305_305" id="FNanchor_305_305"></a><a href="#Footnote_305_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a> To George Grenville,
+Bute, now beginning to show himself above ground, but still with
+circumspection, sent a significant note of congratulation. 'Tis
+glorious,' he wrote, 'to suffer in such a cause and with such
+companions.' Pitt received an even more gratifying communication from
+Temple, who settled on him a thousand a year till better times. We
+cannot perhaps blame Pitt for accepting this offer, since probably there
+was no other way of maintaining Lady Hester in decent comfort; for we
+may easily surmise that he had squandered his own fortune on buildings,
+gardens, and the like; as Temple probably knew. But we could wish that
+he had done so with less effusion. 'How decline or how receive so great
+a generosity so amiably offered.' Lady Hester, who had begun the letter
+of thanks, 'was literally not in a situation to write any farther.'
+Pitt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">411</a></span> was 'little better able to hold the pen than Lady Hester. We are
+both yours more affectionately than words can express. We could have
+slept upon the Earl of Holdernesses' letter (of dismissal). But our
+hearts must now wake to gratitude and you, and wish for nothing but the
+return of day to embrace the best and noblest of brothers.' Even this is
+not sufficient. Next day he must write again to say to Lord Temple,
+'that I am more yours than my own, and that I equally love and revere
+the kindest of brothers and the noblest of men.'</p>
+
+<p>Language less ecstatic would better have become a great man accepting a
+serious pecuniary obligation. In truth Pitt never had any scrupulous
+idea of personal independence. He had accepted a borough from Newcastle,
+whom he then suspected and despised. Now it was an allowance from
+Temple, whom, from close intimacy and kinship, he must have known to be
+an intriguing politician, who was not likely to give without expecting
+return. A few years hence it was to be a pension from the Crown.</p>
+
+<p>With regard to money indeed he had no very careful or exalted standard.
+In such matters he was indifferent, reckless, and heedless of any nicety
+of scruple, except as regards the public. He never seems to have
+considered how important solvency is to character. He was always, after
+his marriage, quite unnecessarily, in desperate straits for money.
+Indifference to the fact that pecuniary independence is a main though
+not necessary base of moral independence was a flaw in his own life, and
+was the worst inheritance that he transmitted to his illustrious son.</p>
+
+<p>The announcement of Legge's successor at the Exchequer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">412</a></span> provoked
+universal hilarity. It was Lyttelton. We have seen that in the last
+debate Pitt had turned with fierce scorn on his former ally. No doubt he
+was aware of Lyttelton's approaching elevation. But their historic
+friendship had been dissolved for a year. In November 1754, at the
+heedless or mischievous instance of the younger Horace Walpole,
+Lyttelton, with the best intentions and the most inane execution
+possible, had hurried off, without consultation with his friend, to
+effect a reconciliation between Newcastle, Pitt's enemy, and Bedford,
+who was allied to Pitt by a common hatred of the Minister. Newcastle
+received the negotiator with his wonted effervescence, and gave or
+appeared to give full powers. Away sped Lyttelton, bursting with the
+importance of an amateur diplomatist. But at the mere mention of his
+mission the other Duke nearly kicked the messenger of peace downstairs,
+and at once communicated the secret overture to Pitt. The result to
+Lyttelton was for the moment unmixed disaster. Pitt publicly broke with
+him, Newcastle of course disowned him, he indeed disowned himself.
+Henceforth he was banned by the Cousinhood, and incurred a wrath and
+vengeance as implacable as that of the Carbonari. Now, however, he had
+his reward, for it can scarcely be doubted that his elevation to the
+Exchequer was intended partly as a plaster for his diplomatic wounds,
+partly as an annoyance to the party of Pitt. Any motive indeed but
+fitness for the office can be suggested for his promotion, to which he
+was lured by the promise of a peerage.<a name="FNanchor_306_306" id="FNanchor_306_306"></a><a href="#Footnote_306_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a> If, however, the annoyance
+it would cause to his late friends was a reason, it failed in its
+object. For Lyttelton, in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">413</a></span> new office, gave the amplest opportunity
+for the wreaking of their revenge. He was, as we have seen, grotesque as
+a diplomatist. He was even more unfit to be Chancellor of the Exchequer.</p>
+
+<p>Lyttelton had been a promising young man, but promising young men
+frequently fail to mature, and he became a minor politician, a minor
+poet, a minor historian. As a politician, he was principally known for
+the delivery of pompous prepared harangues. He wrote a pathetic and not
+wholly forgotten monody on the death of his first wife, to which he
+could have added a new and poignant emphasis after his second marriage.
+He wrote a treatise on the conversion of St. Paul, which earned the
+commendation of Dr. Johnson. He wrote some 'Dialogues of the Dead,'
+which Dr. Johnson was not able to commend. He was now writing an
+elaborate History of Henry the Second, on the printer's corrections in
+which he spent a thousand pounds, and was soon to publish with a score
+of pages of errata. But his literary renown rests on the dedication of
+'Tom Jones.'</p>
+
+<p>He was, however, best known to the public at large by his eccentric
+appearance and demeanour. 'Extremely tall and extremely thin, he bent
+under his own weight,' says his nephew Camelford. 'His face was so
+ugly,' says Hervey, 'his person so ill-made, and his carriage so
+awkward, that every feature was a blemish, every limb an incumbrance,
+and every motion a disgrace.' Horace Walpole says of him that he had the
+figure of a spectre and the gesticulations of a puppet. Chesterfield
+portrays him as the embodiment of all in manner and deportment that was
+to be avoided. His legs and arms, said the urbane peer,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">414</a></span> seem to have
+undergone the rack, his head hanging limp on his shoulder the first
+stroke of the axe. As absent as a Laputan, he leaves his hat in one
+room, his sword in another, and would leave his shoes, if unfastened, in
+a third. 'Who's dat!' wrote the satirist,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Who's dat who ride astride de pony,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So long, so lank, so lean and bony?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Oh! he be de great orator Little-toney.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He was obviously something of a butt from his physical peculiarities and
+awkwardness, and a butt is ill placed in high office.</p>
+
+<p>Gawky, fussy, pedantic, he was what in these days we should call a prig;
+a kindly prig, with a warm heart, some literary ability, and strong
+religious feeling; but for all that an unmistakable, inveterate,
+incurable prig. The word 'prig' is untranslatable and uncommunicable. It
+denotes nothing unamiable, nothing distasteful. It marks only a strange
+flaw; partly of intellect, partly of character, partly of accent. And
+one feels that it was impossible not to like Lyttelton, for he was full
+of friendliness and virtue. With Pitt he was reconciled within a decade,
+and mourned his death with a sincere sorrow which was not then abundant.</p>
+
+<p>But the Exchequer is a peculiar office requiring peculiar gifts. A dull
+man may succeed in it if he possess them; without them the greatest
+talents will fail. Lyttelton possessed none of them. He was unable, it
+was alleged, to work out the simplest sum in arithmetic. He was ignorant
+of the first principles of finance. The Exchequer never had a more
+preposterous Chancellor, till Dashwood appeared. He had better have left
+it alone.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">415</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Fox, whose accession to the leadership was said to have inspired Murray
+with courage, must have watched with gloomy forebodings the figure set
+up in the Exchequer to face the lightnings of Pitt. The most that he
+could hope was that it would act as an efficient conductor. Yet Fox
+needed all the strength that he could muster. For no one despised his
+chief more than he, or had a greater respect for the powers of his
+rival.</p>
+
+<p>It should further be noted that this ministry had a luckless connection
+which made it known as 'the Duke's ministry'; for it had been formed
+under the auspices and at the recommendation of the disastrous
+Cumberland. 'Never,' says Almon, 'was an administration more unpopular
+and odious.'</p>
+
+
+
+<p>War had now been declared between the Government and Pitt, who now
+certainly had the latent countenance of the Heir Apparent, or of the
+clique who represented the Heir Apparent; and there was no delay in
+coming to blows. The very day after Pitt's dismissal, Welbore Ellis, a
+Lord of the Admiralty, who was destined to live on as a Nestor in<span class="sidenote">Nov. 21, 1755.</span>
+politics and be made a peer by Pitt's son, moved for 50,000 seamen,
+mentioning that the peace establishment was 40,000. It was a formal
+motion, and members were leaving the House, when they were recalled by
+the awful tones of Pitt, declaring that he shuddered at hearing that our
+naval resources were so narrowed. He recalled his former protest in 1751
+against reduction. He would hunt down the authors of these disastrous
+measures which made the King's crown totter on his head. This noble
+country of ours was being ruined by the silly pride of one man and the
+subservience of his colleagues, and some day we should have to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">416</a></span> answer
+for it; unless already overwhelmed by some catastrophe brought about by
+France, our hereditary enemy. All this trouble arose from the petty
+struggle for power. What power was it that was sought, what kind of
+power, was it only that of doing good? On an English question like this
+he would not impede unanimity but implore it; he would ask favours in
+such a cause of any minister, would have gone that morning to Fox's
+first levee to ask him to accept 50,000 men besides marines. (The vote
+asked for was for 50,000 men, including 9113 marines.) If that could be
+obtained it would be the first thing done for this country since the
+Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle. He obscurely intimated charges of treachery
+and collusion. And now, he added, shame and danger had come together. He
+himself had been alarmed by intelligence on the highest authority. These
+terrors had been communicated to the House, which was willing to grant
+the King any assistance for any English object. But there was an
+essential difference between the ministry and that House. The ministry
+thought of everything but the public interest; the House was ready to
+afford everything for it. The House, he added mysteriously, was a
+fluctuating body, but he hoped would be eternal; and he concluded with a
+prayer for the King, with his royal posterity, and for this 'poor,
+forlorn, distressed country.'</p>
+
+<p>It is not always easy to trace the sequence of Pitt's speeches in
+Walpole's notes, nor is it possible to tell whether the confusion is due
+to the oration or the notes. The notes were probably made during the
+debate with the intention of filling in the outlines while recollection
+was still fresh; an intention which, as is usual with such intentions,
+was, it may be safely surmised, never carried<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">417</a></span> out. But we are inclined
+to attribute obscurity in the main to the abrupt rhapsodical transitions
+of Pitt's speeches. They require, as reported by Walpole, almost as much
+interpretation as Cromwell's. In this one we discern great court paid to
+the House of Commons, so hostile to himself; unrelenting scorn of the
+Government; and bitter emphasis on British as opposed to Hanoverian
+interests. The peroration as barely reported seems below the level of a
+debating society. But, then, we must remember that no fervent and
+exalted apostrophe, prolonged as this probably was, can be adequately
+transmitted in a naked sentence, or perhaps in any conceivable report.</p>
+
+<p>Fox replied with admirable temper, a self-control all the more laudable
+and noted because of his usual impetuousness. He took up Pitt's sneer at
+petty struggles for power. What the motives of these struggles for power
+had been let those tell who had struggled most and longest for power.
+They had been told that nobody round the King had sense or virtue, that
+sense and virtue resided somewhere else. How was the King to know where
+they are to be found? for he feared that <i>this</i> House of Commons would
+not point in the required direction. He ended by asking why Pitt had not
+asked sooner for his augmentation of force.</p>
+
+<p>This called up Pitt again, who denied that he had ever asserted that
+there were no sense and virtue near the Throne. No man had ever suffered
+so much as himself from those stilettoes of a Court which assassinate
+the fair repute of a man with his Sovereign. The insinuation of his
+having struggled for power had been received by the House with so much
+approval, that he must take notice of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">418</a></span> charge. Had he yielded to the
+poor and sordid measures which are ruining the country he might, no
+doubt, have been admitted to the confidence of the Closet. Then, carried
+by anger beyond the facts, he went further, and said that as he was not
+prepared then to enter into the details of the private transactions of a
+whole summer, he would only say that he might have had what Fox had
+accepted. Unfortunately for himself, however, the measures contemplated
+were so disastrous that his conscience and his honour had forbidden him
+to support them; though he would have strained conscience a little,
+perhaps, to be admitted to the confidence of the King. No, it was not
+failure in the struggle for power that was the cause of his exclusion
+from office. Was it not that he would not approve of the Russian and
+Hessian treaties? He challenged a denial.</p>
+
+<p>Fox rose in reply, and said that he was ready to forget what Pitt had
+said about the lack of sense and virtue near the Throne.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt, evidently beside himself with wrath, interrupted him, and said he
+rose to order, and, on that long-suffering plea, delivered another long
+speech. The phrase about sense and virtue, he declared on his honour,
+was none of his. What he said was that France would found her hopes on
+the want of sense, understanding, and virtue in those that govern here.
+Fox's modesty appeared to have taken these words to himself; but he had
+not put him right sooner, as the statement of the plain truth would
+sooner or later be sufficient. He would remind that gentleman of certain
+efforts which had been made (alluding to their brief coalition against
+Newcastle) to limit the power at which he had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">419</a></span> hinted. As to invective,
+he was not fond of employing it, but no man feared it less than himself.
+He was, however, complimentary to Fox; would, though no betting man,
+back his sense and spirit; believed that we should get some information
+from abroad now that he was in power; but could not treat him as <i>the</i>
+minister, for that he was not yet.</p>
+
+<p>'But<a name="FNanchor_307_307" id="FNanchor_307_307"></a><a href="#Footnote_307_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a> he asks why I did not call out sooner. <i>My</i> calling out was
+more likely to defeat than promote. When I remonstrated for more seamen,
+I was called an enemy to Government: now I am told that I want to strew
+the King's pillow with thorns: am traduced, aspersed, calumniated from
+morning to night. <i>I</i> would have warned the King: did <i>he</i>? If he with
+his sense and spirit had represented to the King the necessity of
+augmentation, it would have been made&mdash;but what! if there is any man so
+wicked&mdash;don't let it be reported that I say there is&mdash;as to
+procrastinate the importing troops from Ireland, in order to make
+subsidiary forces necessary.<a name="FNanchor_308_308" id="FNanchor_308_308"></a><a href="#Footnote_308_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a> This whole summer I have been looking
+for Government. I saw none. Thank God, His Majesty was not here. The
+trade of France has been spared sillily, there has been dead stagnation.
+Orders contradicting one another were the only symptoms of spirit. When
+His Majesty returned, his kingdom was delivered back to him more like a
+wreck than as a vessel able to stem the storm. Perhaps a little
+sustentation of life to the country will be obtained by a wretched
+peace. These are my sentiments, and when a man has truth on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">420</a></span> his side,
+he is not to be overborne by quick interrogatories. It may be presumed,
+and indeed confidently hoped, that this was not Pitt's actual speech,
+though Walpole gives it as the very words. They are probably only heads.
+He continued with softening expressions to Fox. Want of virtue was the
+characteristic not merely of the Government but of the age. He himself
+was glad to show a zeal not inferior to that of ministers; let them show
+him how to serve the King, and then let them, if they could, tax him
+with strewing the royal pillow with thorns. But what were their own
+services? Murray indeed had boasted that 140,000 of the best troops in
+Europe were provided for the defence of&mdash;what? of Hanover. But what of
+England? What of the Colonies? Compare the countries, compare the forces
+destined for the defence of each! Two miserable battalions of Irish, who
+scarcely ever saw one another, had been sent to America as to the
+shambles. If his comparison of forces for Hanover and for the Empire was
+exaggerated, he would be glad to be told his error.</p>
+
+<p>Fox kept his temper, and remained on the defensive. He not unnaturally
+commented on the disorderliness of Pitt's speech to order. He did not
+'on his honour' know what was the offer which Pitt had rejected. He
+himself had waited till everybody had refused, passing the summer at
+Holland House, as happy as any man in Parliament. He was in favour of
+the subsidies, and when that was known he was told 'Then support them';
+and so he did. When his opinion changed he should leave office. He
+wished all evil might befall him if he had injured Pitt with the King,
+for he thought nothing so dishonourable as to accuse a man where he
+could not defend himself.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">421</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Murray followed with covert but bitter innuendoes; defended Pelham's
+reduction of 2000 men, and had thought that that Minister had at least
+died in friendship with Pitt. This again brought Pitt on his feet to say
+that his friendship for Pelham had been as real as Murray's. Murray
+continued coolly. The sting of his waspish speech was in its tail. He
+wanted to clear up one particular point for his own information. He
+understood Pitt to say that he had refused the Secretaryship of State:
+pray, had he?</p>
+
+<p>He had his enemy at the point of the sword. Pitt had certainly, as we
+have seen, with incredible rashness, at least insinuated this, if not
+declared it. He now had to rise and eat his words: 'he had only refused
+to come into measures'!<a name="FNanchor_309_309" id="FNanchor_309_309"></a><a href="#Footnote_309_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a></p>
+
+<p>Walpole apologises for recording this debate, tedious as it is, at such
+a length. We must do the same, and his excuse is ours. Little was said
+on the question, and indeed there was scarcely a question to discuss.
+But the points of the speeches, so far as we can discern them, throw
+light on the speakers, more especially on the reckless, impetuous
+character of Pitt, even at this time. </p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">422</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">The</span> bombardment of the new Ministry continued without intermission, for
+Pitt was determined to wreak his vengeance on Newcastle and Fox. We may,
+moreover, presume that, seeing the critical condition of affairs and the
+incompetence of the Ministry to wrestle with them, he, conscious of
+great powers, was determined to become a directing Minister. He was now
+forty-seven, in the full ripeness of character and intellect. Neither he
+nor the country could afford to wait.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Dec. 2, 1755.</div>
+
+<p>Ten days after the last debate, Lord Pulteney, the sole and short-lived
+hope of his famous father, introduced a Bill to give the prizes captured
+before a declaration of war to the seamen who had captured them, should
+war be afterwards declared. Pitt and his section intervened, and the
+engagement developed from a skirmish into a battle. The debate turned
+largely on pressing; that practice having brought great complaints from
+Scotland, where 'mobs are more dangerous and more mischievous than our
+mobs in England, not contenting themselves with clubs and bludgeons, but
+possessing themselves of as many firearms and other mortal weapons as
+they can possibly come at.' This perhaps was not wonderful, when it was
+admitted that a gang had surrounded a church, and pressed part of the
+congregation as it came out. But it soon soared from that point to the
+question of our relations with France.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">423</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Fox opposed the Bill, which he said would be considered as a veiled
+declaration of war. France was patient because she wished to persuade
+her allies that we were the aggressors, and so induce them to join her.
+The passing of the Bill would furnish the very proof she required. The
+whole gist of the matter lay in the word 'now,' 'the hinge,' he said
+with a painful confusion of metaphor, 'upon which the very marrow of
+this debate must turn.' Were peace hopeless such a Bill might be
+necessary; now it could only do harm. Pitt followed Fox and made play
+with the word 'now,' for as Murray said in reply: 'He has the happy
+faculty of being able to turn the most important word, the most serious
+argument, into ridicule.' He pointed out from examples in the reign of
+Elizabeth and Charles II. that we might be at war for many years without
+declaring war, and supported the Bill; as did Richard Lyttelton (though
+the House, says Rigby, can no longer be brought to hear a word from
+him), and George Grenville. The most piquant part of the speeches of
+both Pitt and Fox related to Walpole, who had now from a bugbear become
+a fetish. Fox pronounced a high eulogy upon him, but denied that his
+parliaments had been venal. Pitt said that he himself had always opposed
+Walpole when in power, but after resignation had always 'spoken well of
+him as a man.' Here there was a laugh, which Pitt angrily rebuked. Was
+it not more honourable to respect a man when his power had come to an
+end than before? Walpole had no doubt 'for many years an amazing
+influence in this House, and the enquiry, stifled as it was, made it
+pretty evident from whence that influence proceeded!' Legge swelled the
+chorus of devotion to a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">424</a></span> Minister who had scarce a friend at his fall,
+by declaring that 'he was an honour to human nature and the peculiar
+friend to Great Britain!' Death, in British politics, magnanimously
+closes most accounts with a credit balance.<a name="FNanchor_310_310" id="FNanchor_310_310"></a><a href="#Footnote_310_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Dec. 5, 1755.</div>
+
+<p>Three days afterwards, Barrington, the new Secretary at War, moved the
+Army Estimates. Here we are again thrown upon Walpole, whose records,
+precious as they are, are the notes of an amateur, jotted down at the
+time with the idea of subsequent expansion, but not subsequently
+expanded. Indeed, when he came to use them, his memory, it is probable,
+no longer availed for the purpose. But from the account of the last
+debate on December 2, 1755, the Parliamentary history, incredible as it
+may seem, records no speech of Pitt's till the last month of 1761, and
+then only a formal reply.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt, 'in one of his finest florid declamations,' seconded the motion
+for an army of 34,263 men, which was an augmentation of 15,000 men. He
+would have moved for a larger number, had not Barrington promised to
+move for more men when he brought in a Bill for the better recruiting of
+the army, a pledge which seemed to meet the general anxiety of the
+House. Rigby, who gives us this information, says that Pitt's speech was
+most violent and abusive, but admits that it was a very fine piece of
+declamation.<a name="FNanchor_311_311" id="FNanchor_311_311"></a><a href="#Footnote_311_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a> Both Walpole and Rigby, it will be observed, use this
+vigorous substantive to characterise the speech.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt again used the language of tenderness and devotion to the King,
+deplored to see him in his old age, and his kingdom exposed to attack;
+and even his amiable posterity, <i>born among us</i>, sacrificed by unskilful
+Ministers.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">425</a></span></p><p>The innuendo at the King's foreign birth betrays the sarcasm underlying
+Pitt's effusive loyalty. One cannot also but suspect that his constant
+allusions to the venerable age of George II. were not intended to be
+wholly agreeable to a King who piqued himself on being gay and
+libertine. 'He then drew a striking and masterly picture of a French
+invasion reaching London, and of the horror ensuing while there was a
+formidable enemy within the capital itself, as full of weakness as full
+of multitude; a flagitious rabble, ready for every nefarious action; of
+the consternation in the City, where the noble, artificial, yet
+vulnerable fabric of public credit should crumble in their hands. How
+would Ministers be able to meet the aspect of so many citizens dismayed?
+How could men so guilty meet their countrymen?'</p>
+
+<p>The King's Speech of last year, he continued, had been calculated to
+lull the country into repose. Had His Majesty's Ministers not sufficient
+understanding, or foresight, or virtue, he repeated the words that they
+might not again be misquoted, to lay before him the real danger?
+Elsewhere, where the King himself had the slightest suspicion even of a
+fancied danger, we knew what vast preparations had been made. Did the
+subjects of his kingdom lack that prudent foresight which his subjects
+of the electorate possessed in so eminent a degree? Alas! that he should
+live to see a British Parliament so unequal to its duties. There were
+but ten thousand men left in England. Not half that number would be
+available to defend the royal family and the metropolis. 'Half security
+is full danger.'</p>
+
+<p>'Accursed be the man,' he continued, 'who will not do all he can to
+strengthen the King's hands, and he will indeed receive the malediction.
+Strengthen the Sovereign<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">426</a></span> by laying bare the weakness of his Councils:
+urge him to substitute reality to incapacity, futility, and the petty
+love of power. It is the little spirit of domination, the ambition of
+being the only figure among cyphers, which has caused the decay of this
+country. The ignominious indulgence of patronage, the poor desire to
+dispose of places, should be left for times of relaxation: rough times
+such as these require wisdom. The cost of the augmentation proposed
+to-day, two hundred and eighty thousand pounds, would last year have
+given us security. Yet the danger was last year as visible as now to the
+eye of foresight. The first attribute of a wise Minister is to leave as
+little as possible exposed to contingencies. Now, for want of that
+foresight, stocks will fall, and hurry along with them the ruin of the
+City, vulnerable in proportion to its opulence. In other countries the
+treasure remains in a city which is not sacked. But paper credit like
+ours may be wounded even in Kent. It is like the sensitive plant, it
+need not be cropped; extend but your hand, it withers and dies.'</p>
+
+<p>Barrington, the orator continued, had cited the Romans. He need not go
+so far afield, our own days had produced as great examples. In 1746,
+thirteen regiments had been raised by noblemen who, though they had not
+like the Romans left their ploughs, had left their palaces to save their
+country. With what scorn, depression, and cruelty, so far as contempt is
+cruelty, had they been treated!</p>
+
+<p>He wished the country gentry encouraged to raise a militia, for he was
+anxious to call the country out of that enervated condition that the
+menace of twenty thousand men from France could shake it. It was our
+Government that was degenerate, not our people. He wished the breed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">427</a></span>
+restored that had formerly carried our glory so high. What did those
+Ministers deserve, and again he insinuated mysterious hints of
+connivance and collusion, what did those Ministers deserve, who, after
+Washington had been defeated and our forts taken, advised his Majesty to
+trust to so slender a force as had been sent. He was for no vindictive
+proceedings against them; they erred from the weakness of their heads
+rather than their hearts. But a sagacity something less than that of a
+Richelieu or a Burleigh could have foreseen what would happen.</p>
+
+<p>Fox replied with urbanity and compliment, for there was at this time a
+marked courtesy in the language of the two protagonists, as of men who
+did not know how soon they might be allies. Pitt denounced Newcastle,
+and Fox did not defend him. This, too, must be noticed. Why, Fox now
+asked, had Pitt not made this noble speech sooner, when we were indeed
+asleep, before the French had wakened us. 'If he had made it,' said Fox,
+'I am sure I should have remembered it: I am not apt to forget his
+speeches.' Let Pitt himself take in hand a Militia Bill. It was
+evidently Fox whom Pitt had described as treating the thirteen regiments
+with contempt, at least Fox now fitted the cap on himself. He said that
+he thought obloquy too harsh a term to apply to his language on that
+occasion; nevertheless, he should not disown anything he had said. But
+he must make a clear distinction between these noble persons. He thanked
+God there was one noble duke, able and willing to save his country, who
+went to the King, and offered to go and try if, with his lowlanders, he
+was not a match for any highlanders. This was an elaborate compliment to
+Bedford, whose political lowlanders were now at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">428</a></span> the service of the
+Government, though not the Chief himself. Fox at the same time made an
+invidious comparison to the detriment of the Duke of Montagu, and was on
+the point of saying that he must discriminate between dukes, for though
+some deserved everything from their country for the part they took, yet
+he should not be for trusting others to raise a regiment who could not
+raise half a crown. There was evidently money to be made out of these
+patriotic impulses.<a name="FNanchor_312_312" id="FNanchor_312_312"></a><a href="#Footnote_312_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a></p>
+
+<p>Pitt excused himself for not having sooner raised the cry of danger on
+the ground that he had been lulled into composure by the previous Speech
+from the Throne. When he became alarmed he made representations in
+private, so long as he was allowed to do so. But now the alarm must be
+sounded in Parliament itself, for we have invited into our bowels a war
+that was the child of ignorance and connivance. If there be justice in
+Heaven, Ministers must some day answer for this.</p>
+
+<p>Nugent, an Irish adventurer of the type known to comedy, paid his court
+to Newcastle by a burlesque attack on Pitt. And even Robinson appeared
+once more on the scene with a panegyric on himself, which, though
+ridiculous to his audience, was by no means superfluous. The other
+notable speeches, delivered by Charles Townshend, Sackville, and
+Beckford, do not affect our subject.<a name="FNanchor_313_313" id="FNanchor_313_313"></a><a href="#Footnote_313_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Dec. 8, 1755.</div>
+
+<p>Five days later, George, who was afterwards Marquis, Townshend, brought
+forward a Militia Bill. Pitt took this occasion of responding to Fox's
+challenge by unfolding a plan of his own. No scheme, he said, could be
+carried out without the co-operation of the Government, the Army,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">429</a></span> the
+Law, and the country gentry. But he unfortunately came under none of
+these descriptions. He knew no secrets of Government; he had too early
+been driven from the profession of arms; he had never studied the law;
+he was no country gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>His plan was made the groundwork of a Bill, which occupied much time in
+the Commons, but was lost in the Lords.</p>
+
+<p>It provided for an infantry militia of fifty or sixty thousand men, to
+be summoned compulsorily by the civil power: to be exercised twice a
+week, one of these days to be Sunday, if the clergy did not raise too
+much objection. It was to have the same pay as the infantry, but plain
+clothing, 'not pretending to all the lustre of the army.' The
+non-commissioned officers were to be private soldiers, not fewer than
+four to every eighty men.</p>
+
+<p>What millions, he said, would have been saved by such a force during the
+last thirty years! And what an inglorious picture for this country, to
+figure gentlemen driven by an invasion like a flock of sheep, and forced
+to send money abroad to buy courage and defence! If this scheme should
+prove oppressive, provincially or parochially, he was willing to give it
+up. But surely it was preferable to waiting to see if the wind would
+blow you subsidiary troops. These, always an eyesore, you would never
+want again if this Bill were passed. This speech marked another step
+forward in Pitt's career; for he opened his plan with a plain precision,
+a mastery of detail, and a business-like clearness the House had not
+expected from him. 'He had never shone in this light before.'<a name="FNanchor_314_314" id="FNanchor_314_314"></a><a href="#Footnote_314_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a> </p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">430</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Dec. 10, 1755.</div>
+
+<p>Two days later, again the treaties were discussed in both Houses.</p>
+
+<p>The debate in the Lords does not concern us. It was spirited and bitter.
+Temple raised the storm, while the future George III. sate and took
+notes. In the Commons there was a new feature. Newcastle, doubtful of
+the zeal of Fox and Murray on his behalf, had retained for his defence
+Hume Campbell, the brother of Marchmont; with the Paymastership as a
+retaining fee, had not Fox, who always had his eye on this lucrative
+place, vetoed the appointment.<a name="FNanchor_315_315" id="FNanchor_315_315"></a><a href="#Footnote_315_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a> Walpole describes the new gladiator
+as eloquent, acute, abusive, corrupt, insatiable. To this accumulation
+of epithets we need and can add nothing. He had been in opposition with
+Pitt, and had had a brush with him already, but had almost given up
+attendance in Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>Hume Campbell, raised to this bad eminence, seems to have acquitted
+himself ably in his opening attack, and to have delivered a masterly
+speech. He could see no reason, he said, why gentlemen were suffered to
+come every day to the House merely to threaten and arraign the conduct
+of their superiors. Such behaviour was unparliamentary and
+unprecedented. 'Let the House punish,' he said, 'these eternal
+invectives.' Pitt angrily called him to order for so describing the
+debates of that House. Horace Walpole, the elder, said, with some
+reason, that Pitt ought to be the last man in the House to complain of
+irregularity. Pitt declared that Campbell's words struck directly at the
+liberty of debate; that he had a mind to move to have the words taken
+down, but would refrain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">431</a></span> till the orator had explained himself. Campbell
+then proceeded with his discourse. He was followed by other speakers,
+Murray delivering a fine argument in defence of the treaties. Pitt,
+meanwhile, contrary to his habit, possessed himself in silence,
+collecting all his powers for his reply. When he arose he delivered one
+that was memorable and overwhelming. 'You never heard such a philippic
+as Pitt returned. Hume Campbell was annihilated. Pitt, like an angry
+wasp, seems to have left his sting in the wound, and has since assumed a
+style of delicate ridicule and repartee. But think how charming a
+ridicule must be that lasts and rises, flash after flash, for an hour
+and a half! Some day perhaps you will see some of the glittering
+splinters that I gathered up.'</p>
+
+<p>So wrote Horace Walpole in the first enthusiasm produced by this effort.
+But the more deliberate record in his memoirs reveals few of the
+flashing splinters that he thought to have garnered. Luckily, Sir
+William Meredith has left a very brief account<a name="FNanchor_316_316" id="FNanchor_316_316"></a><a href="#Footnote_316_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a> of the tilt between
+Campbell and Pitt, which we can collate with Walpole's.</p>
+
+<p>So slight had been the defence, said Pitt, that he did not know how to
+deal with it; only little shifts or evasions worthy of a pie-poudre
+court, but not of Parliament. As for Hume Campbell, he had him in his
+power, he could bring him to his knees at the bar of the House as a
+delinquent for such an assault on the privileges of Parliament. If
+members were to be threatened for speaking with freedom of Ministers,
+all liberty of debate would be at an end. As he revered the profession
+of the law, so he grieved to hear it dishonoured by language that fixed
+an indelible<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">432</a></span> blot on him that spoke it. 'Superior' was a word that he
+disdained. That hon. gentleman might indeed have his superiors. But he
+knew that when sitting, speaking, and voting in his legislative capacity
+the King himself was not his superior. And he could assure the hon.
+gentleman that such freedom in speaking of ministers was neither
+unparliamentary nor unprecedented. For even in the profligate
+prerogative reign of James I., when a great duke, as now, monopolised
+power, the House of Commons possessed an honest member who dared to call
+that duke <i>stellionatus</i>, a beast of most hideous deformity, covered
+with blurs and blotches and filth, an ideal monster, fouler than exists
+in nature. Yet a grave and venerable member of parliament thought this
+no unfit comparison for that great duke, who no doubt had his slaves all
+about him who called him Superior, yet durst not bring such language
+into the House of Commons. And we had then a wretched King who would
+have been glad of the assistance of a great lawyer, could he have one to
+have threatened a member of parliament for exposing the arbitrary and
+pernicious designs that he was carrying on by his ministers against his
+people. Thank God! we had no such King. If we had, he would not want a
+slavish lawyer to abet the worst measures that can be devised to ruin
+and enslave this country.</p>
+
+<p>'But I will not dress up this image under a third person,' he exclaimed,
+turning full round and facing Hume Campbell, 'I apply it to him; his is
+the servile doctrine; he is the slave; and the shame of his doctrine
+will stick to him as long as his gown sticks to his back. After all, his
+trade is words; they were not provoked by me,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">433</a></span> but they have no terrors
+for me, they provoke only my ridicule and contempt.'</p>
+
+<p>Then turning to Murray, he denounced the treaties as a violation of the
+Act of Settlement. The article to which, it may be presumed, he referred
+was as follows:</p>
+
+<p>'That in case the Crown and Imperial Dignity of this realm shall
+hereafter come to any person, not being a native of this Kingdom of
+England, this nation be not obliged to engage in any war for the defence
+of any dominions or territories which do not belong to the Crown of
+England without the consent of Parliament.'</p>
+
+<p>It cannot be said that this enactment had been specially present to the
+mind of George II. at any period of his reign. Murray had defended the
+treaties thinly against the charge of infringement by declaring that if
+this treaty violated the Act of Settlement all our defensive treaties
+had done the same, and had ended by the quaint and almost cynical remark
+that 'we could not enjoy the blessing of the present Royal Family
+without the inconveniences.'</p>
+
+<p>Pitt can have had, and in fact had, but little difficulty in dealing
+with Murray. 'It is difficult to know where to pull the first thread
+from a piece so finely spun. Constructions ought never to condemn a
+great minister, but I think this crime of violating the Act of
+Settlement is within the letter. If the dangerous illegality of this is
+to be inquired into, it should be referred to a committee of the whole
+House, not to a Committee of Supply. Inquired into it must be, for I
+will not suffer an audacious minister to escape the judgment of
+Parliament. For if a Cabinet have taken upon them to conclude<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">434</a></span> treaties
+of subsidy without the consent of Parliament, shall they not answer for
+their action?'</p>
+
+<p>He derided Murray's precedents. For in 1717 or 1718 Ministers stated
+that there was danger to be apprehended from Sweden, and then asked for
+money. Would any lawyer plead that when his Britannic Majesty speaks of
+dominions in a treaty, he can mean any but his British dominions? We
+were not to be explained out of our liberties.</p>
+
+<p>He then criticised the conduct of the Hessians in the last war; except
+on one occasion, when they were forced at Munich, they had not behaved
+well.</p>
+
+<p>There Horace Walpole's notes branch off into a tangle of headings and
+exclamations which it is difficult and unnecessary to unravel. Pitt
+emphatically denied that the Crown had a power of concluding treaties of
+subsidy that led to war. He was sorry to hear it avowed that Hanover was
+concerned in all the treaties which had been cited. It was clearly a
+time to make a stand, now that we had arrived at that pitch of adulation
+that we were ready to declare openly that Hanover was at the back of
+all. He wished that the circumstances of this country would enable us to
+extend this protecting care to Hanover, but they would not. For no
+consideration would he have set his hand to these treaties.</p>
+
+<p>Fox in reply defended Hume Campbell with spirit, and made ironical
+retorts to Pitt, some of them now obscure, none of them now pertinent to
+this narrative. Such speeches become trivial within forty-eight hours of
+their delivery. The bones of Pitt's preserved by Walpole scarcely claim
+any better right of survival. To tell the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">435</a></span> bare truth, what survives of
+these debates is incomparably tedious and confused. But it is evident
+that Pitt had amazed the House by disclosing a new weapon, the power of
+ridicule. 'His antagonists endeavoured to disarm him. But as fast as
+they deprive him of one weapon, he finds a better. I never suspected him
+of such an universal armoury; I knew he had a Gorgon's head, composed of
+bayonets and pistols, but little thought that he could tickle to death
+with a feather.'</p>
+
+<p>Whatever the relative arguments may have been, the legions were
+faithful, and voted the treaties by 318 to 126.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">1755.</div>
+
+<p>On December 12 the general engagement on the treaties was renewed, when
+Barrington brought them forward in Committee, and Charles Townshend
+distinguished himself by a speech which, Pitt declared, displayed such
+abilities as had not appeared since that House was a House. He himself
+spoke at length, but poorly and languidly, not deigning to answer Hume
+Campbell, who once more appeared, with manner and matter both 'flat and
+mean.'</p>
+
+<p>Pitt said, in the few sentences into which Walpole condenses his speech,
+that he did not pretend to eloquence, but owed all his credit to the
+indulgence of the House. He looked with respect on the King's
+prejudices, he added with the finesse of a courtier or the irony of a
+foe, and with contempt on those who encouraged them. Was everything to
+be called invective that had not the smoothness of a court compliment?
+Old Horace Walpole had said that if one spoke against Hanover it might
+cause a rebellion. That was the chatter of a boarding-school miss. Lord
+Townshend and Sir Robert Walpole had withstood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">436</a></span> Hanover. 'Sir Robert
+thought well of me, died in peace with me. He was a truly English
+minister, and kept a strict hand on the Closet; when he was removed the
+door was flung open (to dangerous advisers?). His friends and followers
+had then transferred themselves to that minister, Lord Granville, who
+transplanted (<i>sic</i>) that English minister. Even Sir Robert's own
+reverend brother has gone over to the Hanoverian party!'</p>
+
+<p>Fox merely tried in reply to keep Pitt at bay, so he said little of the
+treaties, but seems to have attacked his rival with some acrimony. He
+recalled all the treasonable songs and pamphlets of the former
+Opposition, all directed by Pitt, no doubt for the good of the country!
+But he could never forgive any man who had the heart to conceive, the
+head to contrive, and the hand to execute so much mischief. 'The right
+honourable gentleman professes pride at acting with some here; I am
+proud of acting with so many! But because he wishes that Hanover should
+be separated from England, is it wise to act as if it were already
+separated?'</p>
+
+<p>The legions once more prevailed, and approved both treaties by 289 to
+121.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Dec. 15, 1755.</div>
+
+<p>If Pitt was held to have been below himself in this debate, he was
+considered to have surpassed himself, when the treaties came up on
+report three days afterwards, in a speech 'of most admirable and ready
+wit that flashed from him for the space of an hour and a half,
+accompanied with action that would have added reputation to Garrick.' He
+denounced Murray for attempting to hide the points at issue in a cloud
+of words. But in fact these treaties from simple questions had become
+all things to all men, as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">437</a></span> conjuror plays with a pack of cards,
+passing them in turn to each spectator, receiving and keeping the money
+of all. Then he turned to Russia. 'Let us consider this Northern Star,
+that will not shine with any light of its own, but requires to be rubbed
+up into lustre; for could Russia, without our assistance, support her
+own troops? She will not prove a Star of the Wise Men, yet they must
+approach her with presents. The real Wise Man "Quć desperat tractata
+nitescere posse relinquit."</p>
+
+<p>'By this measure you are throwing Prussia into the arms of France. What
+can Frederick answer if France proposes to march an army into Germany?
+If he refuses to join her will she not threaten to leave him at the
+mercy of Russia? This is one of the effects of our sage
+negotiations&mdash;not to mention that we have wasted ten or eleven millions
+in subsidies.</p>
+
+<p>'Shall we not set the impossibility of our carrying on so extensive a
+war against the contention that his Majesty's honour is engaged? Our
+Ministers foresaw our ill-success at sea, and prudently laid a nest-egg
+for a war on the Continent. We have as an inducement to engage in this
+war been referred to the examples of Greece and Carthage. These ancient
+histories, no doubt, furnish ample matter for declamation. It is long
+since I read them, but I think I recollect enough to show how
+inapplicable they are to our present circumstances. Suppose Thebes and
+Sparta and the other Greek Commonwealths fallen from their former power,
+would Athens have gone on alone and paid all the rest? No, Athens put
+herself on board her fleet to fight where she could be superior, and so
+recovered her land.'</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">438</a></span></p>
+
+<p>'Not giving succour to Hannibal was indeed wrong, because he was already
+on land and was successful, and might have done something of the kind
+that Prince Eugene proposed, and marched with a torch to Versailles. But
+another poet says, I recollect a good deal of poetry to-day, another
+poet says, "Expende Hannibalem," "weigh him, weigh him." I have weighed
+him. What good did his glory procure to his country? Remember what the
+same poet says: "I, demens, curre per Alpes, ut pueris placeas et
+declamatio fias."'</p>
+
+<p>This flight, it may be surmised, was aimed at Cumberland.</p>
+
+<p>He once more expressed his dutiful feelings to the King, and
+acknowledged how difficult it was for Ministers to be honest with him.
+But yet the resistance to these treaties might save us from a
+Continental war. In any case, speaking for himself, he would never again
+give his confidence in the nation's advisers or adopters of this
+measure. He could only hope that our perverted Ministers might yet yield
+to conviction and save us, and that a British spirit might influence
+British councils.</p>
+
+<p>In the division which followed, the Hessian treaty appeared somewhat
+less acceptable than the Russian. The former was voted by 259 to 72 and
+the latter by 263 to 69. This was the net result. Yet, as Horace Walpole
+wrote at the time, 'Pitt had ridden in the whirlwind and directed the
+storm with abilities beyond the common reach of the genii of the
+tempest.' Eloquence, reason, and argument avail little against a compact
+parliamentary majority.<a name="FNanchor_317_317" id="FNanchor_317_317"></a><a href="#Footnote_317_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a></p>
+
+<p>The reader will scarcely regret that an adjournment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">439</a></span> for Christmas
+followed this debate, for nothing is so tantalising as these barren
+husks of great speeches. The Minister employed his holiday appropriately
+in distributing gifts of office to his friends, and the reconstruction
+of the Government was completed. No part of it directly touches our
+story, but some features are of interest. The Dukes of Newcastle and
+Bedford, the Chancellor and Fox were each allowed to nominate a member
+of the Board of Trade. But Newcastle would not allow Fox a single voice
+in the appointment of the Lords of the Treasury; for he guarded that
+department with the jealousy of a Turk. The other point of interest was
+the cost to the public of these manipulations. To get rid of Sir Thomas
+Robinson it had been necessary to settle a pension on him of 2000<i>l.</i> a
+year for thirty-one years. To make a place for Lord Hillsborough, Mr.
+Arundel had a pension of 2000<i>l.</i> in exchange for the sinecure office of
+Treasurer of the Chamber. Lord Lothian had 1200<i>l.</i> a year to vacate the
+Clerk Registership of Scotland for Hume Campbell. Lord Cholmondeley, who
+held the Vice-Treasurership of Ireland with one colleague, had 600<i>l.</i> a
+year to induce him to accept a third partner of the office. Sir Conyers
+Darcy had 1600<i>l.</i> a year for vacating the Comptrollership of the
+Household. In all a burden of 7400<i>l.</i> a year was settled on the public
+to patch up a feeble and odious Ministry for ten months.</p>
+
+<p>While the gentle showers of office and pensions were descending on
+parched politicians, Pitt wended his valetudinarian way, as usual, to
+Bath. But when Parliament met in January, he was in his place, alert and
+thirsting for combat.</p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">440</a></span></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">1756.</div>
+
+<p>We first catch a glimpse of him, on January 23, paying great court to
+Beckford; with conspicuous success as it happened, for Beckford
+hereafter was to be his devoted follower, and his invaluable agent in
+the City of London. On the same day the new Chancellor of the Exchequer
+unfolded his Budget, better than was expected, but bewildered with the
+figures. 'He stumbled over millions, and dwelt pompously over
+farthings.' His Budget dealt with figures enviably small; duties on
+plate, calculated to produce 30,000<i>l.</i> a year, which produced
+18,000<i>l.</i>; on bricks and tiles which were to produce 30,000<i>l.</i> a year,
+and on cards and dice which were to produce 17,000<i>l.</i> Bricks and tiles
+failed the Government; the tax was too unpopular; so, it is scarcely
+necessary to state, it was moved on to ale-houses. A generation, which
+passes tens of millions of expenditure without breaking silence, looks
+back with awe on that which deployed the full splendour of eloquence on
+taxes which altogether were not to produce 80,000<i>l.</i> a year. Pitt, who
+was almost as ignorant of finance as the Chancellor of the Exchequer,
+attacked him with vigour, but Lyttelton replied effectively. In speaking
+he mentioned Pitt as his friend, but corrected it to 'the gentleman.'
+This raised a laugh, when Lyttelton remarked, not without pathos, 'If he
+is not my friend, it is not my fault,' and the contest, after lasting
+some time, mellowed into good humour.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Jan. 28, 1756.</div>
+
+<p>A few days later Pitt broke out again and declared that the Ministry was
+disjointed, and united only in corrupt and arbitrary measures. Fox
+denied this publicly and privately; publicly sneering at Pitt's family
+connection, privately assuring Pitt that, so far from there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">441</a></span> being any
+disunion between Newcastle and himself, the two Townshends had offered
+to join the Duke if he would give up Fox, and that the Minister had
+refused them.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Feb. 9, 1756.</div>
+
+
+
+<p>The next battle was on a proposal to raise four Swiss battalions to be
+employed in America, when Pitt, as usual, censured the dilatoriness of
+the Government and flouted their 'paper' forces. Lord Loudoun commanded
+only a scroll, he said; the suggested battalions were only adding paper
+to paper; and so forth. Next day he diverted the debate from its tedious<span class="sidenote">Feb. 10, 1756.</span>
+course by accusing the Government of having cashiered a brave officer,
+Sir Henry Erskine, a friend of Bute's by the by, on account of his vote
+in Parliament. But this ended in nothing.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Feb. 20, 1756.</div>
+
+<p>At a later stage, Pitt ironically described the plan for the Swiss
+auxiliaries as a fortuitous blessing, for had not Prevot, the adventurer
+who was to command the battalions, been taken prisoner by the French and
+found his way from Brest hither, and had he not then taken it into his
+head that he would like to command a regiment, nothing would have been
+heard of it. He hoped this Ulysses-like wanderer might be as wise as his
+prototype and so forth; one can imagine the sort of pleasantry. But it
+was Charles Townshend who, 'content with promoting confusion,' chiefly
+shone at this time. On the other hand, one of Pitt's speeches, urging
+that the Colonies should be heard on this Swiss scheme, is described as
+lasting an hour and a half without fire or force. Indeed, Walpole writes
+of this debate that 'the opposition neither increase in numbers or
+eloquence; the want of the former seems to have damped the fire of the
+latter,' and that 'the House of Commons has dwindled into a very
+dialogue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">442</a></span> between Pitt and Fox ... in which, though Pitt has attacked,
+Fox has generally had the better.' Pitt seemed to be becoming dull and
+diffuse. 'Mr. Pitt talks by Shrewsbury clock, and is grown almost as
+little heard as that is at Westminster.' Still one wishes that the
+chronicler had reported the speeches of either as faithfully as he
+reports his own.</p>
+
+<p>The apprehension of a French invasion, which had been present for
+months, became acute in March and April (1756). The Government asked for
+the troops which Holland was, it was held, bound to furnish, and they
+were refused. Thereupon Lord George Sackville, probably by concert with
+the Court or to gain its favour, suggested a preference for Hanoverians,
+whose soldierlike qualities he commended. The hint was acted upon with
+suspicious promptitude; and on March 29, Fox formally moved to address
+the King to send for his Electoral troops.<a name="FNanchor_318_318" id="FNanchor_318_318"></a><a href="#Footnote_318_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a></p>
+
+<p>Pitt, swathed as an invalid, opposed the motion in a long speech. He
+alleged his respect for the King as the ground of his opposition. For
+this address would be advice to the King in his Electoral capacity which
+we had no claim to offer, and which, moreover, might involve his
+Electorate in a peril equal to our own. He seems to have argued against
+any fear of invasion, on the ground that in the Dutch war, with a
+suspected King, we had coped with Holland and France; that in 1690, when
+the French had beaten our fleet at Beachy Head and had an army actually
+in Ireland, we had surmounted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">443</a></span> that danger; and that de Witt, the
+greatest man since the men of Plutarch, had proposed an invasion to
+d'Estrades, who had treated it as a chimerical suggestion. In any case
+the natural force of the nation was sufficient to repel any attack of
+the enemy. That state alone is a sovereign state 'qui suis stat viribus,
+non alieno pendet arbitrio,' which subsists by its own strength, not by
+the courtesy of its neighbours:<a name="FNanchor_319_319" id="FNanchor_319_319"></a><a href="#Footnote_319_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a> words which may have inspired Lord
+Lyndhurst, a century afterwards, with his famous phrase with regard to a
+State existing on sufferance. He would vote, Pitt proceeded, for raising
+any numbers of British troops. The late war had formed many great
+officers, and he would not interpose foreigners to hinder their
+promotion; nor would he force this vote on the King when he might send
+for his troops without.<a name="FNanchor_320_320" id="FNanchor_320_320"></a><a href="#Footnote_320_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a> The motion was agreed to by 259 to 92. Bubb
+comically commented on the readiness of the King, who had then amassed,
+it was believed, an immense treasure in Hanover, to make the nation pay
+for this defence of himself, by declaring that 'His Majesty would not
+for the world lend himself a farthing.' Not less humorous is the story
+preserved by Horace Walpole that the night the Hanoverian troops were
+voted, he summoned his German cook and ordered himself an exceptionally
+good supper. 'Get me all de varieties,' said the homely monarch, 'I
+don't mind expense.' A lampoon in the form of an anecdote, it is to be
+supposed.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">March 30, 1756.</div>
+
+<p>Next day Pitt had another opportunity for attack on the charge involved
+by the employment of Hessian troops, who, he declared, would cost
+400,000<i>l.</i> more than the same number of British troops. But, a few days
+afterwards,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">444</a></span> there was a still better occasion, when Barrington brought
+forward the estimate for the Hanoverian troops, and commended it as a
+better bargain than the Hessian, which had been passed, and was
+therefore secure. Pitt at once harped on the same strain, and, lauding
+the Hanoverian estimate, fell still more vehemently on the Hessian. No
+one could find fault with the Hanoverian, that we owed to His Majesty;
+but the subsidiary juggle with Hesse was the work of his Ministers.
+'Nothing but good flows from the King; nothing but ruin from his
+servants. I choose that they shall fall by a friendly hand, and that the
+condemnation of his patrons should come from the noble lord himself
+(Barrington). But must we engage mercenaries because France does? She
+engages them,' he said, with one of his phrases of picturesque energy,
+'because she has not blood enough in her own veins for the purpose of
+universal monarchy.' He despaired of preserving Minorca, he continued
+with gloomy prescience, yet the waste on these Hessians would have saved
+that island, would have conquered America. He broke out bitterly against
+the departmental character of the Government. 'I don't call this an
+administration, it is so unsteady. One is at the head of the Treasury;
+one, Chancellor; one, head of the Navy; one great person, of the Army.
+But is that an administration? They shift and shuffle the charge from
+one to another. One says, "I am not the General;" the Treasury says, "I
+am not the Admiral;" the Admiralty says, "I am not the Minister." From
+such an unaccording assemblage of separate and distinct powers with no
+system, a nullity results. One, two, three, four, five lords meet. If
+they cannot agree, "Oh, we will meet again on Saturday!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">445</a></span> "Oh," but says
+one of them, "I am to go out of town." Alas! when no parties survive to
+thwart them, what an aggravation it is that no good comes from such
+unanimity!'</p>
+
+<p>Fox, in reply, asked if Pitt wished to see a sole Minister, a question
+that suggests that there was already an impression abroad that Pitt was
+aiming at the dictatorship which he afterwards received, or else that
+Pitt, if he obtained office, would be so overbearing as to become the
+sole Minister.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt, at any rate, did not accept the allusion as to himself. He said
+that he did not wish to see a single Minister, but system and decision.
+Indeed, he gracefully added, were Fox sole Minister there would be
+decision enough.<a name="FNanchor_321_321" id="FNanchor_321_321"></a><a href="#Footnote_321_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a></p>
+
+<p>On May 11 (1756) a royal message apprised Parliament of the treaty
+concluded with Prussia (the Convention of Westminster, signed January
+1756), and asking his faithful Commons for supplies.</p>
+
+<p>The House promptly voted a million on account, but Pitt as usual uttered
+eloquent lamentations on the incapacity of Ministers and the calamitous
+situation of affairs. What was this vote of credit for? Was it to raise
+more men? We had already 40,000 British and 14,000 foreign troops. Was
+it for the purpose of marine treaties? Then he would joyfully vote it.
+For a naval war we could and ought to support, but a Continental war on
+the present system we could not. Regard should no doubt be had to
+Hanover, but a secondary regard. For if Hanover was to be our first
+object it would lead us to bankruptcy. It was impossible to defend
+Hanover by subsidies. How could an open country be defended against an
+enemy who could march 150,000 men into it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">446</a></span> and if necessary reinforce
+them by as many more? Should Hanover suffer by her connection with Great
+Britain, we ought not to make peace without exacting full and ample
+compensation for all the damage and injury she might have sustained. But
+the idea of defending Hanover by subsidies was preposterous, absurd, and
+impracticable. Then, excited by this favourite theme beyond the limits
+he had imposed on himself, he struck home at the King and his darling
+patrimony. This system, he said, would in a few years, cost us more
+money than the fee simple of the electorate was worth, a place which
+after all could not be found in the map. He ardently wished us to break
+those fetters which chained us like Prometheus to that barren rock. (The
+metaphor which made a rock of Hanover does not strike one as one of his
+happiest efforts).</p>
+
+<p>If Lyttelton could not state the purpose for which this credit was
+designed, perhaps he could say for what it was not designed. Still, Pitt
+added sardonically, he was of so compounding a temper that he should
+assent to it.</p>
+
+<p>Ministers bragged of their unanimity and spirit. But what had all this
+army of councils and talents, this universal aye, produced? Were we
+safe? Had we inflicted any damage on the enemy? If so, when and where?</p>
+
+<p>He had no particular pleasure in thus speaking. He did not wish to load
+the unhappy men who had undone their country, most unhappy if they did
+not realise it. And our activity! Philosophers indeed had a phrase <i>vis
+inertić</i> by which they denoted the inactivity of action (<i>sic</i>). Was it
+by that that we were to be saved?</p>
+
+<p>His charge against the Government was this: that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">447</a></span> we had provoked before
+we could defend, and neglected after provocation; that we were left
+inferior to France in every quarter; that the vote of credit had been
+misapplied to secure Hanover; and that we had bought a treaty with
+Prussia by sacrificing our rights. He would not have signed such a
+treaty to have the five great places of those who had signed it. Yet if
+this treaty were restrained to the defence of the King's dominions he
+should not know how to oppose it.</p>
+
+<p>He had no feeling of resentment against the Government, no one had
+injured him. Yet he could not but think ill of their capacity and their
+measures. Could he, then, every day, arraign their policy and feel
+confidence in them? Pelham indeed had intended economy, but he was
+dragged into this foreign policy by his brother, now at the head of the
+Treasury. And if he, Pitt, saw Newcastle like a child driving a go-cart
+with that precious freight of an old King and his family on to a
+precipice, was he not bound to try and take the reins from his hands?
+And with a gloomy foreboding which must have chilled the anxious House,
+he solemnly prayed that the King might not have Minorca written on his
+heart, as Calais had been, in the dying declaration of Mary, engraved on
+hers.</p>
+
+<p>The debate ended with a bitter rally between Pitt and Lyttelton, the
+fiercer for their former friendship. Lyttelton had sneered at his
+epithets. This came well, said Pitt, from Lyttelton, whose own character
+was a composition of epithets. He himself had used no epithets that day,
+so Lyttelton had chosen ill the occasion for his taunt. But in any case
+the House was not an academy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">448</a></span> for the exchange of compliments. And when
+Lyttelton disclaimed any share in framing the motion, it was obvious
+that he was not at liberty to change it. If Lyttelton would declare that
+he had no more resources, he would only say that Lyttelton was
+incapable.</p>
+
+<p>The new Chancellor of the Exchequer, whose heart was still warm with his
+old affection, was hurt by this attack, but he maintained his ground.
+'He says I am but a thing made up of epithets. Is not this the language
+of Billingsgate? The world is complaining that the House was turned into
+a bear garden. I do not envy my friend the glory of being the Figg or
+Broughton of it.' Pitt retorted that Lyttelton was a very pretty poet,
+and that there was no one whom he more respected pen in hand. 'But it is
+hard that my friend, with whom I have taken sweet counsel in epithets,
+should now reproach me with using them.' Lyttelton replied once more
+that it was not his fault if he and Pitt were not still friends.<a name="FNanchor_322_322" id="FNanchor_322_322"></a><a href="#Footnote_322_322" class="fnanchor">[322]</a></p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">May 14, 1756.</div>
+
+<p>A day or two later Lyttelton unfolded to the House the provisions of the
+Treaty of Westminster. It had cleared up some small pecuniary claims on
+both sides, so much to Frederick for losses from British privateers, so
+much from Frederick for arrears of interest on the Silesian loan, a
+balance of 40,000<i>l.</i> due on the whole to Great Britain. On this, Pitt,
+inveterate against the Ministry, fulminated once more. He declared that
+by payment, even of a small sum, we had conceded the principle of our
+Empire over the sea, and went off into the usual rhetoric. 'For himself
+he should affect no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">449</a></span> superiority but what was common to him with the
+twelve millions of his countrymen, innocence of his country's ruin, the
+superiority of the undone over the undoers.'</p>
+
+<p>All that is notable in these crumbs of debate is the strategy of Pitt;
+to hammer at the enemy without ceasing, not to allow him a moment to
+breathe or recover, but to display him to the country day and night
+pummelled, bewildered and helpless, until he should succumb from
+exhaustion; when the country should insist on the removal of the
+defeated combatant, and the substitution of his conqueror. Pitt was
+openly set on the destruction of the Newcastle Government for more
+reasons than one. He was vindictive and had been slighted; he was
+profoundly anxious about the position of the country, and convinced of
+the incapacity of Newcastle to govern; he wished to try his own hand at
+the game, believing that he could do better, convinced that he could do
+no worse, than the Ministers whom he had seen at work.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">450</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">But</span> national calamity was now to lend irresistible force to his attacks.
+It had been known for some time that France was meditating an attack on
+Gibraltar or Minorca, and in the beginning of March it became certain
+that Minorca was to be the object.<a name="FNanchor_323_323" id="FNanchor_323_323"></a><a href="#Footnote_323_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a> During the first week of May the
+Government received the news that the French had actually landed on the
+island. War was formally and not prematurely declared on May 18. Six
+weeks earlier the ill-fated Byng had sailed with a fleet to relieve the
+fortress. The country waited for news with bated breath. The King
+declared that he could neither eat nor sleep. Saunders, afterwards to be
+Pitt's First Lord of the Admiralty, reassured his Sovereign by saying
+that they should screw his heart out if Byng were not at that moment
+(June 7) in the harbour of Mahon.<a name="FNanchor_324_324" id="FNanchor_324_324"></a><a href="#Footnote_324_324" class="fnanchor">[324]</a> Then came the news that Byng,
+after an indecisive engagement with the French fleet, had sailed back to
+Gibraltar and left Minorca to its fate. Still the nation, though raging
+against Byng, hoped against hope, till on July 14 the news came that
+Fort St. Philip, the British fort, had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">451</a></span> surrendered after a gallant
+defence on June 28, and that Minorca was in the hands of the French. The
+long-compressed anxiety exploded in a terrible outburst of wrath against
+Byng. Addresses poured in from every part of England demanding vengeance
+upon him. The unhappy Admiral was brought back to Greenwich Hospital as
+a prisoner to await a court-martial. But, the nation had already turned
+its thumb downwards. Perhaps the best idea of the popular sentiment is
+conveyed by the fact that Byng's brother, who went to meet the Admiral,
+was stricken to death by the popular fury wherever he passed; so that he
+fell ill at the first sight of the prisoner, and died next day in
+convulsions. There was no chance of a fair trial for the unhappy man. To
+the merchants of London bringing one of the addresses for his exemplary
+punishment Newcastle, not sorry to have a scapegoat, had blurted out,
+'Oh! indeed he shall be tried immediately: he shall be hanged directly.'
+And executed he was, after an agony of eight months, in spite of
+justice, in spite of Pitt, who had the fine courage to support him, in
+deference to the nation and the King who were bent on his death.
+Voltaire, who had tried with real humanity to save him, sardonically
+described the execution in Candide, 'Dans ce pays-ci il est bon de tuer
+de temps en temps un amiral pour encourager les autres,' a phrase which
+he appears to have borrowed from the Knights of Malta.<a name="FNanchor_325_325" id="FNanchor_325_325"></a><a href="#Footnote_325_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">452</a></span></p><p>Something less, much less than Nelson, might have saved Minorca. The
+truth seems to be that Byng, who was personally brave, sailed from
+Gibraltar with the preconceived impression that Minorca was lost, and
+acted throughout under this conviction, without energy or resource. So
+far as his countrymen, or rather, their rulers, were concerned, they had
+long done their best to lose it. They had, in spite of constant appeals,
+starved and neglected it. But there was worse than this. On one side of
+the mouth of the harbour of Mahon is a site easily rendered impregnable,
+on the other a plain which nothing can secure. John Duke of Argyle had
+begun a fort on the first site, but Lord Cadogan out of hatred to him,
+it was said, destroyed it and built Fort St. Philip at a vast expense on
+the second. The thing is incredible to the traveller who sees the place.
+If the story be true (Horace Walpole is the authority), it is on the
+head of Cadogan and not of Byng that should be laid the loss of Minorca,
+a loss which can neither be forgotten nor forgiven.</p>
+
+<p>This tragic incident only touches Pitt's life in so far as it
+precipitated the disgrace of Newcastle. The Duke was indeed getting
+deeper and deeper. In May he declared that no one blamed him, for every
+one knew that the sea was not his province, and Fox had replied that as
+to public censure, his information was exactly the reverse. In September
+he could scarcely conceal from himself that he was being mobbed and
+pelted in his coach, and that his coachman was urged by the shouting
+crowd to drive his Grace straight to the Tower. Ballads swarmed of which
+the burden was, 'To the block with Newcastle and to the yard-arm with
+Byng.' Even the docile allegiance of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">453</a></span> House of Commons can scarcely
+have allayed the veteran's rising anxiety. 'This was the year of the
+worst administration that I have seen in England,' says Walpole, though
+he was the close friend of Fox, 'for now Newcastle's incapacity was
+allowed full play.' Fox indeed found that he was not admitted to real
+confidence or to the counsels of Newcastle and Hardwicke. He was
+therefore in a state of swelling discontent, ready to break away at the
+first opportunity. He declared that he had urged that a strong squadron
+should be sent for the relief of the fortress during the first week of
+March, but was overruled. The fall of Minorca and the storm of national
+fury which followed increased his anxiety to be out of this disastrous
+Ministry. He was, we suspect, already determined not to meet Parliament
+again as Newcastle's talking puppet, possibly his scapegoat.</p>
+
+<p>The House had risen on May 27. Two days earlier occurred an event which
+was to remove one of the three intellects of the Government, Fox and
+Hardwicke, of course, being the other two. Ryder, the Chief Justice of
+the King's Bench, died, and Murray at once laid claim to the succession.
+This demand drove Newcastle to despair. He offered Murray exorbitant and
+increasing terms to remain, for he regarded Murray as his sole protector
+in the House of Commons against his doubtful friend, Fox, and his open
+enemy, Pitt. But offers of the Duchy of Lancaster for life with a
+pension of 2000<i>l.</i> a year, with permission to remain Attorney-General
+at a salary of 7000<i>l.</i> a year, and a reversion of one of the Golden
+Tellerships of the Exchequer for his nephew Stormont, left Murray
+unmoved. For months the game of temptation was played. At the beginning
+of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">454</a></span> October the Prime Minister had raised the proposed pension to
+6000<i>l.</i> a year. Murray remained firm. He stipulated, indeed, for more
+than the Chief Justiceship; he demanded a peerage as well; he would not
+take the one without the other; and in no case would he remain
+Attorney-General. We can imagine Newcastle's tears and caresses; they
+were in vain. Vain, too, was his attempt to fob off his rebellious
+subordinate with the reluctance of the King. Murray, indeed, hinted that
+when he became a private member of the House of Commons he might go into
+Opposition. We may be sure, at any rate, that he had no intention of
+facing an angry nation and Parliament in defence of Newcastle and the
+loss of Minorca. This hint probably clinched the matter. Newcastle
+capitulated; though, said Fox, from 'wilful trifling,' he deferred the
+performance of his promise as long as possible.<a name="FNanchor_326_326" id="FNanchor_326_326"></a><a href="#Footnote_326_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a> It was not till the
+eve of the Duke's fall that, on November 8, Murray was sworn in as Chief
+Justice and created a Peer as Lord Mansfield.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">1756.</div>
+
+<p>What glimpses are there meanwhile of Pitt? He had just got possession of
+Hayes, and was there in May, building and improving, as usual, but
+speaking brilliantly on the Militia Bill in the House, so brilliantly as
+to earn a patronising note of approval from Bute, beginning 'My worthy
+friend'; an indication that the bond between Pitt and the young Court
+was now close. Indeed, Pitt seems now to have been the principal adviser
+of that increasingly powerful connection.</p>
+
+<p>Potter, whom Pitt had come to describe as 'one of the best friends I
+have in the world,' wrote to Pitt, ten days after Ryder's death,
+conveying the news from an inspired<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">455</a></span> source that if Murray went on the
+bench Newcastle would invite Pitt to join the Government, for he could
+repair the loss in no other way. But he adds, shrewdly enough, that the
+Duke was evidently ignorant of his own strength, for if he had to rely
+on Lyttelton and Dupplin (then Joint Paymaster of the Forces) alone,
+though the debates would no doubt be shorter, he would not, such was the
+temper of the House, lose a single vote. He added that, in his judgment,
+the Opposition had not made themselves popular by their conduct, because
+of the fear of invasion. Hanover treaties and Hanover troops had become
+popular; opposition to them must be wrong 'when we are ready to be eat
+up by the French.'<a name="FNanchor_327_327" id="FNanchor_327_327"></a><a href="#Footnote_327_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a></p>
+
+<p>But these anticipations were premature, for the struggle with Murray
+lasted, as we have seen, from May till November. So that Pitt had
+leisure to squander on his improvements and to receive his eldest son
+John on John's entrance into the world. But his eye was vigilantly fixed
+on the distresses of the country. 'Quć regio in terris nostri non plena
+laboris?' he writes to George Grenville (June 5, 1756). 'It is an
+inadequate and a selfish consolation, but it is a sensible one, to think
+that we share only in the common ruin, and not in the guilt of having
+left us exposed to the natural and necessary consequences of
+administration without ability or virtue.' Grenville, determined not to
+be undone, replies in a letter stuffed with Latin quotation. 'Distress,'
+rejoins Pitt (June 16, 1756), 'infinite distress seems to hem us in on
+all quarters. I am in most anxious impatience to have the affair in the
+Mediterranean cleared up. As yet nothing is clear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">456</a></span> but that the French
+are masters there, and that probably many an innocent and gallant man's
+honour and fortune is to be offered up as a scapegoat for the sins of
+the Administration.' In July he paid a visit at Stowe, and in August he
+was laid up at Hayes with 'a very awkward, uneasy, but not hurtful'
+malady.</p>
+
+<p>He must have seen with poignant interest Frederick's fierce irruption
+into Saxony, but all seems absorbed in his anxiety for his wife and his
+overflowing delight at the birth of his son. This event occurred on
+October 10, at a moment when the ministerial crisis had become acute.</p>
+
+<p>No one in fact was willing to face even an abject House of Commons with
+the loss of Minorca on his back. Newcastle was near the end of his
+tether. Murray had gone. Whether Chief Justice or not, he was determined
+to be out of the Ministry; and if disappointed of his just claim to the
+Bench he was not likely to face a storm on behalf of the Minister who
+had refused it. Murray had gone, Fox was going; for his chagrin was
+patent, and Newcastle 'treated him rather like an enemy whom he feared
+than as a minister whom he had chosen for his assistant.' He was no
+better used by the King. The Duke, moreover, was at war with the waxing
+power of Leicester House. With this Court indeed he managed to patch up
+a hollow peace at the expense of Fox; offending one Court and not
+appeasing the other. But that did not help him to an agent in the House
+of Commons.</p>
+
+<p>And worse was still to come, disaster followed on disaster. To a nation
+freshly smarting with the fall of Minorca there came tidings of
+catastrophe from the East<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">457</a></span> and the West. In June Calcutta had been
+captured by Surajah Dowlah, followed by the horrors of the Black Hole,
+which still linger in the proverbial dialect of this country. Then in
+August fell Oswego, the most important British fortress in North
+America. Situated on Lake Ontario it was a permanent menace to the
+French, for British command of that lake would mean the separation of
+Canada from Louisiana. Montcalm, a general of high merit, who has had
+the singular good fortune to leave a name consecrated by the common
+veneration of friend and foe, had arrived to take the command of the
+French forces in Canada. Two months after landing he marched on Oswego,
+and, investing it with a greatly superior force, soon compelled it to
+capitulate. Its garrison of 1400 men surrendered as prisoners of
+war.<a name="FNanchor_328_328" id="FNanchor_328_328"></a><a href="#Footnote_328_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a> A hundred pieces of artillery and great stores of ammunition
+fell into the hands of the French. The forts, three in number, and the
+vessels were burned. It was a real triumph for the French, and a
+proportionate disaster for their foes. 'Such a shocking affair has never
+found a place in English annals,' wrote one American officer. 'The loss
+is beyond account; but the dishonour done his Majesty's arms is
+infinitely greater.' 'Oswego,' wrote Horace Walpole, 'is of ten times
+more importance even than Minorca.'</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely less consternation was caused in England, where the news
+arrived on September 30. People there were getting dazed with disaster,
+and the men who ruled became more and more abhorrent. Already, on
+September 2, Newcastle had written to the Chancellor that people were
+becoming outrageous in the North of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">458</a></span> England, and that a petition was
+being largely signed in Surrey demanding 'justice against persons
+however highly dignified or distinguished.' This, he adds drily, may
+mean you or me, or 'perhaps somebody more highly dignified and
+distinguished than either of us.'<a name="FNanchor_329_329" id="FNanchor_329_329"></a><a href="#Footnote_329_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a> Who could be found to bear such a
+burden of shame and ignominy, and affront the storm that threatened to
+burst at once in overwhelming popular fury?</p>
+
+<p>Not Fox, undaunted though he might be. Like the condottiere that he was,
+he did not heed hard knocks provided the pay were good. But here he was
+defrauded of his deserts, of the promised confidence of the King and his
+Minister. For Newcastle had betrayed him to the last; the magpie cunning
+of that old caitiff paralysed every arm that might have defended him.
+When it came to the point he could not bring himself to part with his
+monopoly of patronage, and of power as he understood power. He was like
+a drowning miser with his treasure on him, who will not part with his
+gold to save his life. So the Duke preferred to sink with all his
+influence rather than take the chance of floating without it. First he
+set the King against Fox. The Duke had tried to appease Leicester House
+by getting the appointment of Groom of the Stole for Bute. The King,
+suspecting Bute's intimacy with the Princess, detested that fascinating
+courtier. So Newcastle, to divert from himself the King's wrath at
+having to make this nomination, told His Majesty that Fox made Bute's
+appointment a condition of his retaining the seals; and then without
+telling Fox that his name had thus been mentioned to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">459</a></span> Sovereign,
+informed him that the King was exasperated against him.<a name="FNanchor_330_330" id="FNanchor_330_330"></a><a href="#Footnote_330_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a></p>
+
+<p>Then there arose the eternal question of patronage. Fox had been
+promised by the King himself that on becoming Secretary of State he
+should have the conduct of the House of Commons with all that that
+involved. But Newcastle could not bring himself to fulfil the royal
+pledges or his own. When the list of the Prince of Wales's household was
+published, Fox saw in it the names of eight or ten members of Parliament
+as to whom he had never been even consulted. Newcastle moreover, as Fox
+asserted, broke a solemn promise that Fox's nephew, Lord Digby, should
+be included. A still greater affront was that he told Fox that he
+destined a vacant seat at the Board of Trade for a person whom he was
+not at liberty to mention. More than this, he took occasion to remind
+Fox of a former offer to make way for Pitt if it were for the King's
+service, and Fox again readily agreed. All this took place on September
+30.<a name="FNanchor_331_331" id="FNanchor_331_331"></a><a href="#Footnote_331_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a> Such an insulting and accumulated want of confidence between
+the leaders of the two Houses was not to be tolerated, and Fox wrote at
+once to Bubb that things were going ill. The final explosion was caused
+by the exclusion of Digby, which was notified to Fox on October 5. The
+King, said the Duke, refused this nomination peremptorily and bitterly,
+but had said that, if the Duke himself pressed it, he would yield to
+oblige the Duke. On receiving this letter,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">460</a></span> Fox wrote a furious letter
+to Stone, Newcastle's secretary. The draft of a letter commonly reveals
+much more of the writer's mind than the letter itself, and the draft of
+this is fortunately preserved.<a name="FNanchor_332_332" id="FNanchor_332_332"></a><a href="#Footnote_332_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a> 'I do not know,' wrote Fox, 'whether
+I am to imagine from hence that the negotiation with Mr. Pitt is far
+advanced, but I am told it is not begun. In these circumstances, dear
+Sir, I must beg you to stop it. I retract all good-humoured dealing. I
+may be turned out, and I suppose shall. But I will not be used like a
+dog without having given the least provocation (suppose I should say
+with the utmost merit to those who use me so) and be like that dog a
+spaniel. I do not consent that Mr. Pitt should have my place, and
+promise to be in good humour or even on any terms with those who give it
+him.'<a name="FNanchor_333_333" id="FNanchor_333_333"></a><a href="#Footnote_333_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a> Fox was in a blind fury, but sensibly expunged all this from
+the letter he sent. To Welbore Ellis, his confidant, he wrote: 'The King
+has carried his displeasure to me beyond common bounds, and I vow to God
+I don't guess the reason. The Duke of Newcastle, instead of growing
+better, has outdone himself, and show'd me the Prince's establishment on
+which eight members of the House of Commons are plac'd whose names he
+never mention'd to me, and he had the assurance to make a merit of
+shewing me the List after it was <i>fix'd</i> with the King. He has been Fool
+enough to ask my consent, and to intend to offer my place to Mr. Pitt
+without (as I believe) trying whether or no he will accept it. This
+makes it necessary for me to take a step in which my view is to get out
+of court and never come into it again.... If you think it worth while to
+get up very early<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">461</a></span> to-morrow morning you may be at Holland House before
+I go to Lady Yarmouth, to desire and humbly advise H.M. to conclude the
+Treaty with Mr. Pitt, promising my assistance in a subaltern employment,
+and shewing the impossibility of my appearing and my determination not
+to appear in the H. of Commons as Secy. of State.'<a name="FNanchor_334_334" id="FNanchor_334_334"></a><a href="#Footnote_334_334" class="fnanchor">[334]</a> While he was
+writing this, Newcastle was despatching a note giving way as to Digby's
+nomination,<a name="FNanchor_335_335" id="FNanchor_335_335"></a><a href="#Footnote_335_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a> with much the same effect as a cup of cold water poured
+with the best intentions on a burning city.</p>
+
+<p>Whether with or without the companionship of Ellis, Fox went straight to
+Lady Yarmouth. She was out. Newcastle had already sent her a note
+enclosing Fox's resignation, and assuring her that Fox was bringing it
+to her for transmission to the King.<a name="FNanchor_336_336" id="FNanchor_336_336"></a><a href="#Footnote_336_336" class="fnanchor">[336]</a> When Fox found her, later in
+the day, and handed her his paper, she denied any idea of Pitt ever
+having been suggested to the King, but besought him to reconsider his
+determination. 'Monsieur Fox, vous ętes trop honnęte homme pour quitter
+ŕ présent. S'il y avait quatre ou cinq mois avant que le Parlement
+s'assemble; ŕ la fin de la session vous ferez ce que vous voudrez, mais
+ŕ présent de jeter tout en confusion! Regardez ŕ la position des
+affaires. Non, je n'excuse pas le Duc de Newcastle; c'est dur, c'est
+pénible, mais quand vous aurez pensé un peu au Roi, ŕ la patrie, vous
+continuerez cette session,' perhaps the only articulate utterance of
+Lady Yarmouth that we possess.<a name="FNanchor_337_337" id="FNanchor_337_337"></a><a href="#Footnote_337_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a> Failing in this, she begged at least
+that Granville might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">462</a></span> hand the resignation to the King instead of
+herself. Fox agreed to this.<a name="FNanchor_338_338" id="FNanchor_338_338"></a><a href="#Footnote_338_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a></p>
+
+<p>Fox's note to Newcastle was terse and sombre:</p>
+
+<p>'My Lord, I return Your Grace many thanks for the letter which, not
+being at home, I did not receive till late last night, and I am much
+obliged to you for the contents of it.</p>
+
+<p>'The step I am going to take is not only necessary but innocent. It
+shall be accompany'd with no complaint. It shall be follow'd by no
+resentment. I have no resentment. But it is not the less true that my
+situation is impracticable.'</p>
+
+<p>To the King he sent a formal paper of grievance and resignation, which
+has already been printed and need not be repeated here. He took great
+pains over it, as the drafts testify. The substance of it was that he
+had been loyal to Newcastle, but that he had not received support in
+return, and so could not carry on the business of Government in the
+House of Commons as it should be carried on. But he would gladly serve
+the King outside the Cabinet. This meant that he would gladly exchange
+offices with Pitt. At the same time he told Cumberland and wrote to
+Devonshire that if Newcastle had been such a fool as to offer the seals
+to Pitt without knowing whether he would take them, he (Fox), to prevent
+the general confusion that would ensue, would continue for another
+session. No notice was taken of this offer.<a name="FNanchor_339_339" id="FNanchor_339_339"></a><a href="#Footnote_339_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a> It does not seem
+certain that it ever reached either Newcastle or the King.</p>
+
+<p>Granville found the King prepared for the resignation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">463</a></span> and very angry
+with Fox for deserting him. 'Would you advise me to take Pitt?' he
+asked. 'Well, Sir!' replied Granville, 'you must take somebody.' 'Ah!
+but,' said the monarch, pensively, 'I am sure Pitt will not do my
+business.' The business to which the Sovereign referred was, of course,
+electoral. He considered that he had in various ways shown Fox great
+favour, and that Fox had acted ill in throwing up his office when the
+meeting of Parliament was near at hand.</p>
+
+<p>Newcastle received Fox's resignation at the Treasury. Though he was
+planning to discard Fox for Pitt, he was thunderstruck at finding that
+Fox had anticipated him. He hurried to Court, and found the King in good
+humour except with the resigning Secretary. His Majesty gave Newcastle
+the paper which he had received from Granville, having underlined the
+passage which had mainly offended him: 'for want of support, and think
+it impracticable for me to carry on His Majesty's affairs as they ought
+to be carried on;' and then recited, with the aid of Newcastle as
+prompter, all the favours shown to Fox. But the more urgent and
+practical question was not the ingratitude of Fox, but what was to be
+done now that he had gone. The King, with that shrewd and redeeming
+touch of humour which we constantly discern in him, said that a sensible
+courtier, Lord Hyde, had told him that there were but three things to
+do. The King recited them thus: 'to call in Pitt, to make up with my own
+family, and, my lord, I have forgot the third.' The third probably
+related to Newcastle himself, and may therefore have been difficult of
+repetition to the Duke. But without hesitation the King empowered
+Newcastle to approach<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">464</a></span> Pitt, and to tell him that if he would take
+office he should have a good reception. Pitt was also to be offered the
+seals, but not at first, on the fatuous principle on which all
+Newcastle's negotiations were conducted; to hope against hope that the
+object he coveted could be got for much less than its value.</p>
+
+<p>But then the King asked 'the great question ... which,' says Newcastle,
+'I own I could not answer: what shall we do if Pitt will not come? Fox
+will then be worse.' Then the King, with still increasing acuteness,
+asked, 'Suppose Pitt will not serve with you?' 'Then, Sir, I must go.'
+And so it was to end. But Newcastle would not without a struggle
+renounce the deleterious habit of office. He summoned Hardwicke to town
+for the purpose of approaching Pitt. He hurried to Lady Yarmouth and
+took counsel with her. All agreed that the only resource was Pitt, and
+that Hardwicke alone could sound him. Pitt was at Hayes, but leaving
+immediately for Bath. Time was short, the crisis acute, so Newcastle
+wrote, 'don't boggle at it.'<a name="FNanchor_340_340" id="FNanchor_340_340"></a><a href="#Footnote_340_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a></p>
+
+<p>There was no boggling or hesitation on the part of the Chancellor: he
+hurried to London and saw Pitt on Tuesday, October 19. The interview
+lasted three hours and a half. When it was over, Hardwicke despatched a
+despairing note to Newcastle: 'I am just come from my conference, which
+lasted full 3&frac12; hours. His answer is an absolute final negative
+without any reserve for further deliberation. In short there never was a
+more unsuccessful negotiator.'<a name="FNanchor_341_341" id="FNanchor_341_341"></a><a href="#Footnote_341_341" class="fnanchor">[341]</a> In a longer letter to his son Lord<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">465</a></span>
+Royston, Hardwicke added but little more. On the main point Pitt was
+inexorable; he would have nothing to do with Newcastle. Hardwicke could
+not move him an inch. He was obdurate on 'men and measures.'<a name="FNanchor_342_342" id="FNanchor_342_342"></a><a href="#Footnote_342_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a> But
+'men and measures' only meant Newcastle. Pitt had been repeatedly
+tricked by him; he had seen Fox repeatedly tricked by him when the
+meanest self-interest dictated honesty; he would not fall into the trap
+into which Fox had fallen; to join Newcastle now would be to be a
+willing dupe, and he was determined to govern if he was to govern,
+without this perpetual ambush at his side. Nor would he have any
+dealings with Fox. He thought, truly or untruly, that Fox had betrayed
+him, and he intended to try and do without treachery. He wished to enter
+on power clear of all suspicious connections, and indeed with little but
+the influence of his wife's family. So he resolved to see nothing even
+of Bute before meeting Hardwicke, and he summoned the Grenvilles to
+receive his report immediately after seeing Hardwicke.<a name="FNanchor_343_343" id="FNanchor_343_343"></a><a href="#Footnote_343_343" class="fnanchor">[343]</a></p>
+
+<p>Pitt, however, having no access to the King and being anxious to
+communicate with him directly, made overtures elsewhere. On October 21,
+the palace was disturbed by an unwonted agitation. Pages and lackeys
+were seen in sudden perturbation calling to each other that Mr. Pitt had
+arrived to see my Lady Yarmouth. Lady Yarmouth's position was singular
+enough. She had once been the declared mistress of George the Second;
+'My lady Yarmouth the comforter,' wrote a ribald wit.<a name="FNanchor_344_344" id="FNanchor_344_344"></a><a href="#Footnote_344_344" class="fnanchor">[344]</a> She still
+lived under his roof, when it was her business to keep him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">466</a></span> amused, if
+possible, during the long dull evenings. But from being a favourite, she
+had developed into an institution. Her apartment, immediately below the
+King's, was little less than an office. There, it was said, peerages or
+bishoprics might sometimes be bought, and some patronage was perhaps
+facilitated or dispensed. On the other hand, Lord Walpole declared at an
+earlier period that she asked for nothing, and that one of her principal
+charms with the King was that she did not importune him for favours. At
+any rate, persons wanting anything did well to write to her. Thither,
+too, a circumstance of much significance, Ministers repaired before or
+after their audience with the King, to anticipate the royal disposition
+or to report the royal utterances. 'I went below stairs,' was the
+phrase. They took close counsel with the lady, she told them her
+impressions of the King's real views, and usually added some shrewd
+observations of her own. Her action seems to have been wholly
+beneficial; she appeased jealousies, conciliated animosities,
+administered common sense, spoke ill of nobody, and, so far as we can
+judge, was eminently good natured in the best sense of that tortured
+epithet. Perhaps her most useful function was that of acting as a
+conciliatory channel for those who had something to say to the King
+which they could not say themselves. Both Fox and Newcastle had at once
+hurried to her, as we have seen, when the crisis took place. And so Pitt
+now found it necessary to pay his first visit to her.</p>
+
+<p>He had heard perhaps that the King had said, 'I am sure Pitt will not do
+my business,' and had come to give soothing insinuations. But he also
+entertained a well-founded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">467</a></span> doubt as to whether he had fair play with
+the King, and whether he could trust Newcastle and Hardwicke to
+represent him fairly to the Sovereign.<a name="FNanchor_345_345" id="FNanchor_345_345"></a><a href="#Footnote_345_345" class="fnanchor">[345]</a> So he came to Lady Yarmouth
+as his only means of direct communication with the Closet, and stated
+his real terms, handing her a written list of the men he proposed for
+office, a list which still exists.<a name="FNanchor_346_346" id="FNanchor_346_346"></a><a href="#Footnote_346_346" class="fnanchor">[346]</a> He would not serve with
+Newcastle, but the King might find in getting rid of Newcastle that
+Hanover had other unsuspected friends.<a name="FNanchor_347_347" id="FNanchor_347_347"></a><a href="#Footnote_347_347" class="fnanchor">[347]</a> But he also 'sent,' says
+Fox, 'the terms of a madman to the King.' They do not seem very mad to
+us: Ireland for Temple, the Exchequer for Legge, the Paymastership for
+George Grenville, the Irish Secretaryship for James Grenville, the
+Treasury for Devonshire. Townshend was to be Treasurer of the Chambers,
+Dr. Hay a Lord of the Admiralty, and places were to be found for George
+Townshend, Erskine, Lord Pomfret, and Sir Richard Lyttelton. For his
+colleague in the Secretaryship of State he proposed, most marvellous of
+all, Sir Thomas Robinson! The overture, however, irritated the King,
+partly from the demands, partly because it showed that people thought
+that he was influenced by Lady Yarmouth. 'Mr Pitt,' he said,'shall not
+go to that channel any more. She does not meddle and shall not
+meddle.'<a name="FNanchor_348_348" id="FNanchor_348_348"></a><a href="#Footnote_348_348" class="fnanchor">[348]</a> Nevertheless the hint dropped by Pitt was probably useful
+and fruitful. Pitt himself said afterwards that this interview put an
+end to the indecision of the King, who had remained sullen and
+passive.<a name="FNanchor_349_349" id="FNanchor_349_349"></a><a href="#Footnote_349_349" class="fnanchor">[349]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">468</a></span></p><p>The next point to be noted is Pitt's second interview with Hardwicke.
+And though the minute of Hardwicke's conversation with Pitt on October
+19 appears to be lost, we have his record<a name="FNanchor_350_350" id="FNanchor_350_350"></a><a href="#Footnote_350_350" class="fnanchor">[350]</a> of this second meeting
+between them on October 24, which he read to the King on October 26, and
+which contains the main points at issue.</p>
+
+<p>Hardwicke began by telling Pitt that he had sent for him at the King's
+command; that he had on October 20 faithfully narrated to the King all
+that had passed at the interview of October 19, and that the King had
+summoned him on October 23, the day previous to the present meeting, in
+order to send the following message&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>'The King is of opinion that what has been suggested is not for his and
+the public service.'</p>
+
+<p>Pitt thereupon bowed and said that His Majesty did him the greatest
+honour in condescending to return any answer to anything that came from
+him. He then repeated the message word for word, and desired Hardwicke
+to bear in mind that all that he <i>had suggested</i> was by way of
+objection; that he had not suggested anything <i>affirmative</i> as to
+measures of any kind. Hardwicke replied that he had repeated to the King
+exactly what had passed, and recapitulated the five heads under which
+Pitt had summed up the previous conversation.</p>
+
+<p>'1. That it was impossible for him to serve with the Duke of Newcastle.</p>
+
+<p>'2. That he thought enquiries into the past measures<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">469</a></span> absolutely
+necessary, that he thought it his duty to take a considerable share in
+them, and could not lay himself under any obligation to depart from
+that.</p>
+
+<p>'To this I said that the King was not against a fair and impartial
+enquiry.</p>
+
+<p>'3. That he thought his duty to support a Militia Bill, and particularly
+that of the last session.</p>
+
+<p>'I told him that the King and his ministers were not against <i>a</i> Militia
+Bill.</p>
+
+<p>'4. That the affair of the Hanoverian soldier<a name="FNanchor_351_351" id="FNanchor_351_351"></a><a href="#Footnote_351_351" class="fnanchor">[351]</a> he thought of great
+importance; that what had been done ought to be examined, and, he
+thought, censured.</p>
+
+<p>'5. That if he came into His Majesty's service, he thought it necessary,
+in order to serve him, and to support his affairs, to have such powers
+as belonged to his station, to be in the first concert and concoction of
+measures, and to be at liberty to propose to His Majesty himself
+anything that occurred to him for his service, originally, and without
+going through any other minister.'</p>
+
+<p>Pitt, who was evidently disappointed, acknowledged the accuracy of
+Hardwicke's recital, and desired to know if the message from the King
+was <i>an answer to the whole</i>. Hardwicke replied that it was the King's
+answer in the King's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">470</a></span> own words,<a name="FNanchor_352_352" id="FNanchor_352_352"></a><a href="#Footnote_352_352" class="fnanchor">[352]</a> and that he could not take on
+himself to explain it; but that he understood it as <i>an answer to
+everything that had been conveyed by Mr. Pitt to the King</i>.</p>
+
+<p>To this Pitt rejoined with thanks for the King's condescension that he
+would say to Hardwicke, '<i>as from one private gentleman to another</i>,'
+that he would not come into the service, in the present circumstances of
+affairs, upon any other terms for the whole world.</p>
+
+<p>'I then,' continues the Chancellor, 'said that undoubtedly He must judge
+for himself; But I would also say to Him, <i>as from Lord Hardwicke only
+to Mr. Pitt</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>'That, as He professed great Duty to the King &amp; Zeal for his Service, &amp;
+I dared to say had it; That as He had expressed an Inclination to come
+into his Majesty's service, in order <i>really</i> to assist in the support
+of his Government;</p>
+
+<p>'That as He was a Man of Abilities &amp; knowledge of the World; That, as
+Men of Sense, who wish the End, must naturally wish the means; why would
+He at the same time make <i>the thing</i> impracticable?</p>
+
+<p>'To This He answered that he would say to me <i>in the same private
+manner</i> That he was surprized that it should be thought possible for Him
+to come into an Employment to serve with the D. of Newcastle, under
+whose Administration the things he had so much blamed had happened, &amp;
+against which the Sense of the Nation so strongly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">471</a></span> appeared; &amp; I think
+he added,&mdash;which Administration could not possibly have lasted, if he
+had accepted.</p>
+
+<p>'In answer to That I said some general things in the same sense with
+what I had mentioned on that head on Tuesday last.</p>
+
+<p>'He then rose up &amp; we parted with great personal Civility on both
+sides.'</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Newcastle, proscribed by Pitt and spurned by Fox, knew not
+whither to turn. He broke out in a wail against them to the Chancellor,
+the keeper of his conscience even more than of the King's. 'My dearest
+Lord,' he writes (October 20, 1756), 'tho' a consciousness of my own
+innocence and an indifference as to my own situation may, and I hope in
+God will, support me against all the wickedness and ingratitude which I
+meet with, yet your Lordship cannot think that I am unmindful of or
+senseless to the great indignity put upon me by these two gentlemen.'
+Newcastle in the character of a Christian martyr, the prey of heathen
+raging furiously, has something humorous and incongruous about it, were
+the attitude less abject. But in a sentence or two he returns to a more
+familiar character. 'Allow me only to suggest to your Lordship the
+necessity of making the King see that the whole is a concert between Mr.
+Pitt and Mr. Fox. The news and principles upon which they act are the
+same, viz., to make themselves necessary, and masters of the King ...
+that the only thing Mr. Pitt alledges against me is the <i>conduct of the
+war</i>.' ... 'Quit before the Birthday I must and will.' He goes on to
+consult the Chancellor as to whether he shall ask any favours for his
+relations.<a name="FNanchor_353_353" id="FNanchor_353_353"></a><a href="#Footnote_353_353" class="fnanchor">[353]</a> </p><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">472</a></span></p>
+
+<p>So the falling Minister in his straits tried to play upon the King's two
+strongest passions, fear of being dominated and fear for Hanover. How
+wise Pitt was to go straight to Lady Yarmouth! But Newcastle had tried
+other measures as well after Fox's resignation. The very day he received
+it he had hurried to his old enemy Granville, now comfortably ensconced
+in the Presidency of the Council, and offered to exchange offices with
+him, giving him his friend Fox as Chancellor of the Exchequer.<a name="FNanchor_354_354" id="FNanchor_354_354"></a><a href="#Footnote_354_354" class="fnanchor">[354]</a>
+Granville, he remembered, had once been willing to face far greater
+hazards with Pulteney. But Granville was ten years older; he had, to use
+his own expression, put on his nightcap; and he laughed the suppliant
+Duke out of the room. 'I will be hanged a little before I take your
+place,' he said, not perhaps without some relish for his chief's terror
+and distress, 'rather than a little after.' But he added more gravely
+that '<i>we</i> must determine either to give Mr. Fox what he wants, or to
+take in Mr. Pitt; who,' Newcastle adds piteously, 'will not come.'<a name="FNanchor_355_355" id="FNanchor_355_355"></a><a href="#Footnote_355_355" class="fnanchor">[355]</a>
+Then Newcastle tried Egmont and Halifax. Egmont was willing to take the
+seals with a British peerage. But it was in the House of Commons that
+strength was wanted. No such strength was to be found without Pitt or
+Fox. Dupplin, one of the Paymasters, an able man of business and much in
+Newcastle's confidence, said broadly and truly, 'Fox and Pitt need only
+sit still and laugh, and we must walk out of the House!' And yet the
+House of Commons was almost unanimous in devotion to the Minister. Was
+there ever so strange a situation?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">473</a></span></p><p>In view of this last fact Hardwicke urged Newcastle to hold on; and
+Lyttelton, to inspirit him, offered to accept any office. This
+well-intentioned proposal failed to animate the Duke, though it was
+gratefully recognised. There was nothing left but the rank and file;
+ardent supporters with nothing to support. The Government was doomed.</p>
+
+<p>Instructions from counties and boroughs were coming up as in the days of
+the impeachment of Walpole. Addresses were presented to the Throne. The
+country was thoroughly roused. And its hopes and gaze were fixed solely
+on Pitt, a private member, untried in affairs, with scarce a follower in
+Parliament. He, at any rate, had not failed, a negative merit indeed,
+but one which he alone of the leading statesmen of the time could claim.</p>
+
+<p>Newcastle was left alone with Hardwicke. Around them that desert had
+begun to form which portends the fall of a Ministry; though their
+faithful Commons still awaited their bidding in silence. And at last the
+old Duke realised that he must resign, but determined that Hardwicke
+should resign too, perhaps to make his own resignation regretted,
+perhaps because he would not leave behind him an asset of such value.
+'My dearest, dearest Lord,' he wrote, 'you know how cruelly I am treated
+and indeed persecuted by all those who now surround the King.'
+Hardwicke's friendship, he said, was now his only comfort, Hardwicke's
+resignation would be his honour, glory, and security. 'But, my dearest
+Lord, it would hurt me extremely if yours should be long delayed.' And
+indeed, Hardwicke, to the regret of all, consented to leave the woolsack
+and follow his friend. Newcastle was shrewd enough to know that under
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">474</a></span> existing conditions in Parliament he could scarcely fail soon to
+return to office. But Hardwicke did not return.</p>
+
+
+
+<p>When the King was sure that Newcastle was really going, he sent for Fox
+and bade him try if Pitt would join him. 'The Duke of Newcastle whom you
+hate will retire,' said the Sovereign; 'try your hand and see what you<span class="sidenote">Oct. 28, 1756.</span>
+can do with Pitt.'<a name="FNanchor_356_356" id="FNanchor_356_356"></a><a href="#Footnote_356_356" class="fnanchor">[356]</a> Next day Fox went to the Prince's levee at
+Saville House, and engaged Pitt in close and animated conversation for
+some twenty minutes. 'Mr. Pitt exceeding grave, Mr. Fox very warm. They
+did not seem to part amicably.'<a name="FNanchor_357_357" id="FNanchor_357_357"></a><a href="#Footnote_357_357" class="fnanchor">[357]</a> Of this talk a famous fragment
+survives, characteristic of political language in those days. 'Are you
+going to Stowe?' asked Fox. 'I ask because I believe you will have a
+message of consequence from people of consequence.' 'You surprise me,'
+answered Pitt, 'are you to be of the number?' 'I don't know,' said Fox,
+taken aback. 'One likes to say things to a man of sense,' rejoined Pitt,
+'and to men of your great sense, rather than to others. And yet it is
+difficult even to you.' Fox caught his hint at once. 'What! You mean
+that you will not act with me as Minister.' 'I do,' replied Pitt. But a
+moment after he felt that he had been too abrupt, and expressed a
+courteous hope that Fox would take an active part, which his own health
+would not permit him to do.<a name="FNanchor_358_358" id="FNanchor_358_358"></a><a href="#Footnote_358_358" class="fnanchor">[358]</a></p>
+
+<p>Was Pitt right in refusing the concurrence of Fox? On that question we
+must allow him to be the best judge, as it is obvious that he did not
+act in heat or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">475</a></span> passion, and that we cannot know the situation as he
+did. To us now, viewing the poverty of his following and the useful
+abilities of Fox, it would seem that he made a palpable mistake. Fox
+would have taken the second place; as a matter of fact he was content to
+subside into the gilded subordination of the Paymastership. His talents
+as a debater were second only to Pitt's with the possible exception of
+Charles Townshend's; but Townshend was only a shooting star, and did
+not, like Fox, represent the important influence of Cumberland. Fox
+would have fought stolidly for the side he espoused; he had a leaning to
+Pitt, and shared Pitt's detestation of Newcastle, who was the common
+enemy. But Pitt evidently had determined that he must sever himself
+entirely from Newcastle and Newcastle's Minister in the House of
+Commons. On both these rested the taint of corruption and national
+disaster. He must, if he was to keep the confidence of the country, cut
+himself clear from these personalities and their traditions. He could
+estimate the weight of odium which rested upon them, which we cannot. He
+had all the facts of the case before him, which we have not. He knew,
+what we do not know for certain but cannot doubt, that Leicester House
+made the exclusion of Fox or of Cumberland in any form a condition of
+cordial support. He realised the weakness of his own parliamentary
+position, he well understood the value of Fox's co-operation, but he
+also knew the temper of the nation, and so we cannot doubt that he came
+to the right decision.</p>
+
+<p>In any case Fox was not to blame. He offered, and we think cordially
+offered, to co-operate with Pitt, and,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">476</a></span> indeed, serve under Pitt. Public
+spirit perhaps was not his main motive. He did not, he confessed, feel
+equal to the principal place. He had written in July: 'Though I see how
+fatally things are going, as I don't know how to mend them, I am not
+unreasonable enough to wish for what I could not conduct.'<a name="FNanchor_359_359" id="FNanchor_359_359"></a><a href="#Footnote_359_359" class="fnanchor">[359]</a> And
+things were much worse now. Moreover, he saw, as others saw, that it was
+only the combination of himself with Pitt that could keep out Newcastle.
+But in public affairs the best and fairest course is not to analyse
+motives. He made the offer, he made it sincerely, and must have the
+credit of it.</p>
+
+<p>But Pitt was inflexible. Those who had made him feel the weight of their
+proscription should feel the weight of his. Fox would have liked to be
+Paymaster. In that subordinate but opulent post he would have been
+content to give support. But Pitt would have none of him. He refused him
+this slight favour on the mysterious ground that it 'would be too like
+Mr. Pelham in 1742.'<a name="FNanchor_360_360" id="FNanchor_360_360"></a><a href="#Footnote_360_360" class="fnanchor">[360]</a> He would not touch Fox or Newcastle.</p>
+
+<p>The day after Fox's conversation with Pitt at the levee, the King sent
+for Devonshire, and bade him form a Ministry. This Duke was now Lord
+Lieutenant of Ireland and Fox's closest friend. The King probably hoped
+in this way to bring about the union between Pitt and Fox, which almost
+every one desired, save Pitt himself. Pitt himself had nominated
+Devonshire, but without consulting him, in the interviews with
+Hardwicke. Devonshire had written to Fox in approval of the resignation
+as soon as he had heard of it. Five<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">477</a></span> days afterwards he wrote again: 'If
+my friendship or assistance can be of any use you can command me,' and
+went on to say, 'Nothing has hurt Mr. Pitt so much as his having shown
+the world that in order to gratify his resentment and satisfy his
+ambition he did not value the confusion or distress that he might throw
+this country into. This I own has in some degree altered the good
+opinion I had of him.'<a name="FNanchor_361_361" id="FNanchor_361_361"></a><a href="#Footnote_361_361" class="fnanchor">[361]</a> Devonshire therefore did not seem a
+propitious Prime Minister for Pitt. But dukes counted for much in those
+days. No one can read the history of those times without seeing the vast
+importance attributed to forgotten princes like Marlborough, Bedford,
+and Devonshire.</p>
+
+<p>Fox soon quarrelled with Devonshire. He considered that Devonshire had
+abandoned him. The Duke had been his confidential friend, and had left
+him to help Pitt, and act as Pitt's figurehead. At first he affected to
+approve. But his wrath only smouldered. On one of the eternal questions
+of patronage it broke out. Fox wrote to him a note of real dignity and
+pathos. 'The Duke of Bedford has just now told me that Mr. John Pitt is
+to kiss hands to-morrow for Mr. Phillipson's place;' (promised,
+according to Fox, to his friend Hamilton). 'Consider, my Lord,
+everything that has pass'd, and do not drive me from you. I neither mean
+to do you harm, nor can do you harm if you think. But Your Grace's own
+reflections will not please you when you have done so.'<a name="FNanchor_362_362" id="FNanchor_362_362"></a><a href="#Footnote_362_362" class="fnanchor">[362]</a> Devonshire
+was a weak man, but he was unconscious of blame and was deeply hurt.
+Political friendships, when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">478</a></span> paths diverge, are more difficult to
+maintain than men themselves realise at the moment of separation.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Oct. 31, 1756.</div>
+
+<p>Devonshire was now sent to Pitt in the country,<a name="FNanchor_363_363" id="FNanchor_363_363"></a><a href="#Footnote_363_363" class="fnanchor">[363]</a> but found that his
+terms were such as the King could not be brought to accept. He
+positively declined association with Fox in any shape, but deigned to
+apologise to the Duke for having nominated him without previous
+consultation. It was necessary, he said, to place some great lord there
+to whom the Whigs would look up, and his partiality had made him presume
+to suggest his Grace.<a name="FNanchor_364_364" id="FNanchor_364_364"></a><a href="#Footnote_364_364" class="fnanchor">[364]</a></p>
+
+<p>Then the King, refusing Pitt's terms, and aware that he had been
+misinformed as to Fox's language about Bute, sent for Fox and offered
+him the government. 'I was never dishonest, rash, or mad enough for half
+an hour to think of undertaking it,' says Fox.<a name="FNanchor_365_365" id="FNanchor_365_365"></a><a href="#Footnote_365_365" class="fnanchor">[365]</a> And again, 'I am not
+capable of it,' and goes on to give the reason. 'Richelieu, were he
+alive, could not guide the councils of a nation, if (which would be my
+case) he could not from November to April have above two hours in the
+four-and-twenty to think of anything but the House of Commons.'<a name="FNanchor_366_366" id="FNanchor_366_366"></a><a href="#Footnote_366_366" class="fnanchor">[366]</a> If
+that were Fox's need in 1756, it is difficult to imagine the kind of
+physical and intellectual combination that he would have thought
+adequate to the stress of affairs in the twentieth century. But in spite
+of Fox's private opinion thus expressed, his friend Walpole records that
+he offered at the worst to take the Treasury and go to the Tower if it
+would save his Sovereign from having 'his head shaved.' 'Ah!' replied
+the King with his usual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">479</a></span> shrewdness, 'if you go to the Tower I shall not
+be long behind you.'<a name="FNanchor_367_367" id="FNanchor_367_367"></a><a href="#Footnote_367_367" class="fnanchor">[367]</a></p>
+
+<p>Then the distracted monarch, at the instigation of Fox, tried the fatal
+expedient of an Assembly of Notables, and summoned all the leading
+nobles and commoners who were at hand to meet at Devonshire House.<a name="FNanchor_368_368" id="FNanchor_368_368"></a><a href="#Footnote_368_368" class="fnanchor">[368]</a>
+But this meeting never took place, for Devonshire postponed or got rid
+of it. It was to have recommended that Devonshire should have the
+Treasury, Fox the Exchequer, and Legge be content with a peerage. Pitt
+himself was to have the seals, with <i>carte blanche</i> for his other
+friends and dependents. Temple was to be First Lord of the
+Admiralty.<a name="FNanchor_369_369" id="FNanchor_369_369"></a><a href="#Footnote_369_369" class="fnanchor">[369]</a></p>
+
+<p>Fox declares that Devonshire put an end to this plan by positively
+refusing the Treasury.<a name="FNanchor_370_370" id="FNanchor_370_370"></a><a href="#Footnote_370_370" class="fnanchor">[370]</a> Holdernesse sent word to Newcastle that <i>les
+Renardins</i> (the followers of Fox) were less sanguine.<a name="FNanchor_371_371" id="FNanchor_371_371"></a><a href="#Footnote_371_371" class="fnanchor">[371]</a> And indeed,
+on November 4, the day after that fixed for the assembly, Devonshire
+went in to the King and came out from his audience having accepted the
+Treasury. Bubb says that he stipulated for Fox as Chancellor of the
+Exchequer.<a name="FNanchor_372_372" id="FNanchor_372_372"></a><a href="#Footnote_372_372" class="fnanchor">[372]</a> This is at least doubtful. 'This question,' Fox
+afterwards wrote, 'I beg may be asked: whether at the time his Grace did
+take it with Legge I was not pressing him strongly to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">480</a></span> another thing,
+viz., to offer to take it with me. I pressed this even to ill-humour at
+his own house with Grenville at night. He refused absolutely, and the
+next morning what he would not take with me he took with Legge.'<a name="FNanchor_373_373" id="FNanchor_373_373"></a><a href="#Footnote_373_373" class="fnanchor">[373]</a>
+This would seem conclusive, were it not that Bubb evidently had his
+information from Fox at the time; but politicians are prone to illusions
+on the subject of office. In any case, Devonshire left the Closet First
+Lord of the Treasury with Legge as Chancellor of the Exchequer; the man
+with whom two days before he had refused under any circumstances to
+serve,<a name="FNanchor_374_374" id="FNanchor_374_374"></a><a href="#Footnote_374_374" class="fnanchor">[374]</a> and whom the King had absolutely refused to take. Fox and
+Bedford were in the anteroom as he came out, and were thunderstruck.
+Bedford broke into passionate expostulation; Fox scented an intrigue.
+However, the deed was done.<a name="FNanchor_375_375" id="FNanchor_375_375"></a><a href="#Footnote_375_375" class="fnanchor">[375]</a></p>
+
+<p>Fox says that Devonshire offered him, and he refused, the Pay
+Office.<a name="FNanchor_376_376" id="FNanchor_376_376"></a><a href="#Footnote_376_376" class="fnanchor">[376]</a> This is difficult to believe, and does not accord with his
+other statements that he had offered to serve in a subordinate capacity
+and been refused. Moreover, it was the office for which he always
+hankered, with its vast profits and safe obscurity, as compared with the
+Spartan frugality and dangerous prominence of the Secretaryship of
+State.<a name="FNanchor_377_377" id="FNanchor_377_377"></a><a href="#Footnote_377_377" class="fnanchor">[377]</a></p>
+
+<p>As to the intrigue, Fox's instinct did not deceive him. The fact was
+that Horace Walpole, having heard of the scheme of the Notables, saw at
+once that it must put an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">481</a></span> end to the new arrangement, as it was one that
+Pitt could not accept. Walpole feared no doubt that, in case of failure,
+Newcastle, the object of his special detestation, might return to
+office. So he sent his cousin Conway to alarm the Duke of Devonshire,
+who consequently suppressed the meeting, and who went himself, as we
+have seen, to the King to accept office.<a name="FNanchor_378_378" id="FNanchor_378_378"></a><a href="#Footnote_378_378" class="fnanchor">[378]</a> Horace might well pique
+himself on his powers of intrigue or duplicity, for a week before he had
+spontaneously written to Fox to say that he heard that the King and Lady
+Yarmouth were persuaded that Fox would not take the Treasury, but he
+hoped they were wrong.<a name="FNanchor_379_379" id="FNanchor_379_379"></a><a href="#Footnote_379_379" class="fnanchor">[379]</a></p>
+
+<p>The new First Lord of the Treasury may have resisted having Legge as his
+Chancellor of the Exchequer, but was easily overborne. What is more
+difficult to understand is the King's nominating Legge, whom he
+detested. It was a rude shock for Fox, who had planned the meeting of
+Notables and framed the scheme it was to advise. Henceforth he
+controlled himself no more, and became the sleepless enemy of the new
+administration, which can be no matter of surprise. Pitt had made his
+total exclusion as absolute a condition as that of Newcastle, and Fox
+after his warm offers of co-operation and assistance could not but be
+bitterly mortified. He believed, perhaps justly, that the proscription
+laid on him proceeded from Leicester House.<a name="FNanchor_380_380" id="FNanchor_380_380"></a><a href="#Footnote_380_380" class="fnanchor">[380]</a> Henceforth during the
+short life of the new government he plotted and planned against it,
+inspiring 'The Test,' a new paper under an old designation, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">482</a></span>
+venomous articles, and ready to form alternative administrations at a
+moment's notice.<a name="FNanchor_381_381" id="FNanchor_381_381"></a><a href="#Footnote_381_381" class="fnanchor">[381]</a></p>
+
+<p>One great difficulty, the King's repugnance to Legge, had been
+surmounted one does not know how; but there were still minor obstacles.
+The whole arrangement was odious to the Sovereign: he could not bear
+even to turn the first page of Devonshire's appointments. Pitt, who was
+to succeed Newcastle in the Southern department, wished to exchange this
+for the Northern. The King objected, for the Northern department
+included Hanover, and Pitt eventually yielded. The new Secretary, as we
+have seen, wished for Sir Thomas Robinson, his old butt, as a colleague,
+on the singular ground that he knew nothing of the office he was
+undertaking, and required Sir Thomas's guidance.<a name="FNanchor_382_382" id="FNanchor_382_382"></a><a href="#Footnote_382_382" class="fnanchor">[382]</a> Pitt had compared
+Robinson to a jack-boot; but personal opinions vary according to points
+of view; Sir Thomas might be contemptible as a leader, but useful as a
+dry-nurse. Holdernesse however remained. Then over every petty office,
+coffererships, masterships of the Wardrobe, keeperships of the jewels,
+treasurerships of the Household, there was snarling and struggling as of
+dogs over bones. Bedford was secured as Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland,
+mainly, it would appear, through the agency of Fox, who wished to secure
+as many ministerial posts as possible for his friends, and who was in
+hopes that the Duke would traverse Pitt. Bedford cared little for
+office; perhaps not much for Fox. His political passions were inspired
+by his personal hatreds, of Newcastle now, as later of Pitt.<a name="FNanchor_383_383" id="FNanchor_383_383"></a><a href="#Footnote_383_383" class="fnanchor">[383]</a> But
+Fox, aided by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">483</a></span> Duchess's ambition, prevailed. Amid these changes one
+provokes a smile; Bubb was as usual dismissed.</p>
+
+<p>But the greatest and most grotesque disability lay with Pitt himself.
+After all his struggles to be in the position of forming a Ministry, he
+had no Ministry to produce. He could not fill a fraction of the offices.
+His personal followers, all told, hardly exceeded a dozen. When he had
+provided for the Grenvilles, Potter, and Legge, he had scarcely any one
+to name. So this Ministry was doomed from the beginning. Pamphleteers
+could not fail to observe Pitt's predicament. One lampoon, in the form
+of a royal degree, 'Given at our imperial seat at Hayes,' and
+countersigned 'John Thistle,' (a premature allusion to Bute), sets
+forth: 'We will that you give lucrative employments to all Our Brethren,
+uncles, cousins, relations and namesakes.'<a name="FNanchor_384_384" id="FNanchor_384_384"></a><a href="#Footnote_384_384" class="fnanchor">[384]</a> Outside this category
+Pitt's subordinates were mostly the friends of Newcastle or Fox, and so
+his secret enemies, or waiters upon Providence who were not sufficiently
+sure of his stability to call themselves his friends. Holdernesse,
+Pitt's colleague in the Secretaryship of State, and Barrington,
+Secretary for War, kept Newcastle fully informed of all that went on in
+the administration and of all that they knew. Holdernesse also sent
+abstracts of the despatches that came from abroad.<a name="FNanchor_385_385" id="FNanchor_385_385"></a><a href="#Footnote_385_385" class="fnanchor">[385]</a> So that Pitt was
+betrayed from the first. Ministries formed by one man seldom last long
+under another. But Ministries which pass between two declared enemies
+have not from the beginning any chance of life. This one was stillborn.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt himself lay ill with the gout at Hayes; so he had to leave his
+affairs to be managed by a little clique in London,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">484</a></span> of which Temple of
+course was the chief, and which was in close communion with Leicester
+House. For every day Leicester House waxed and Kensington Palace waned
+in importance, as the King advanced in years. Nothing in the history of
+those days is more difficult to trace and yet nothing is more
+significant than this invisible Court of the Heir-Apparent, which was
+felt rather than seen, but towards which courtiers kept one anxious eye
+during their dutiful attendance on the King. All felt that the centre of
+power was shifting thither, and the uneasiness of those who wished to be
+well with both Courts was manifest and irrepressible. The constant
+anxiety of Fox to be Paymaster was largely due to his desire to be
+sheltered from the hatred of the young Court in the reign that seemed
+imminent. All this could not but increase the jealousy and irritability
+of the old Sovereign, at a time when he was undergoing a new Ministry
+most repulsive to him. Distasteful as it was in almost every respect,
+what was perhaps most abhorrent was the consciousness that it was
+imposed upon him by his daughter-in-law and her favourite, that it
+rested on their support, and was indeed the Ministry of George III.
+rather than of George II.</p>
+
+<p>Bute was the object of the King's chief detestation, a righteous
+aversion if his suspicions were well founded; and Bute was now
+undisguisedly prominent in the negotiations for the new Government. The
+King treated Temple and his friends so ill at the levee, that the
+injured nobleman went to Devonshire to say that he feared he could not
+proceed a step further in the negotiations. On this mission he was
+accompanied by Bute, for the purpose, apparently, of making the world
+realise that Leicester<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">485</a></span> House and all its influence were behind Pitt.
+And Bute availed himself of this opportunity to make use of 'expressions
+so transcendently obliging to us,' writes Temple, 'and so decisive of
+the determined purposes of Leicester House towards us in the present or
+any future day, that your lively imagination cannot suggest to you a
+wish beyond them.' By Temple, too, he sent word to Pitt that he could
+not advise, that he left all to Pitt, determined to support and approve
+whatever Pitt decided.<a name="FNanchor_386_386" id="FNanchor_386_386"></a><a href="#Footnote_386_386" class="fnanchor">[386]</a> This was the one element of strength to the
+new Government, besides Pitt himself. And yet, so elusive was this
+mysterious Court, that in September the town had been ringing with the
+coolness of Pitt's reception at Leicester House, more especially by
+Bute.<a name="FNanchor_387_387" id="FNanchor_387_387"></a><a href="#Footnote_387_387" class="fnanchor">[387]</a> The fact is that there had evidently been a coldness, but
+that the fall of Newcastle had brought the two together again.<a name="FNanchor_388_388" id="FNanchor_388_388"></a><a href="#Footnote_388_388" class="fnanchor">[388]</a></p>
+
+
+
+<p>After Devonshire had kissed hands on November 4 there were however few
+difficulties. Temple's cold reception at Court, on the very day of
+Newcastle's resignation, which had made him declare with his usual
+arrogance to Devonshire that all was over, was only a passing incident,
+due to the fact that the King could not abide the very sight of Temple.
+Pitt no doubt counselled moderation from Hayes, not desiring to lose the
+fruit of so many years for a slight to his relative. And so, a week
+after Temple's fiery declaration to Devonshire, the new Board of
+Admiralty was gazetted with Temple at its head. Three days before, the
+Board of Treasury had been declared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">486</a></span> with Devonshire and Legge as its
+chiefs. One Grenville was included in this. For George Grenville and
+Potter treasurerships and paymasterships were found. There were indeed
+but few traces of Pitt's small connection in the Government. He, still
+an invalid, received his seals a little later. He had also to change his<span class="sidenote">Dec. 4, 1756.</span>
+seat. He could not condescend to be re-elected for Newcastle's borough
+of Aldborough; indeed, he had held it too long. Nor indeed would
+Newcastle nominate him.<a name="FNanchor_389_389" id="FNanchor_389_389"></a><a href="#Footnote_389_389" class="fnanchor">[389]</a> So now he accepted an olive branch from
+Lyttelton, who shared the control of Okehampton with the Duke of
+Bedford, and generously named his old friend and recent foe.<a name="FNanchor_390_390" id="FNanchor_390_390"></a><a href="#Footnote_390_390" class="fnanchor">[390]</a> It may
+have been that Pitt was desirous of cutting the last link with Newcastle
+before entering upon office, and had deferred receiving the seals till
+he was independent. Be that as it may, he was only to hold them four
+months. During most of that time he was ill, during all of it he was
+surrounded by conspiracies, and he was soon intrigued out of office,
+though he never actually vacated it. But his short term had taught him
+one priceless lesson; that genius and public spirit were not enough,
+that a practical and even sordid leaven was required, and that if he
+would not do the necessary work of political adjustment himself, he must
+find somebody to do it for him, or give up all idea of being a powerful
+Minister.</p>
+
+<p>It has been thought well to narrate at length the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_487" id="Page_487">487</a></span> circumstances of the
+final breakdown of the King's veto on Pitt's accession to office and the
+struggle which preceded it; partly because some of the documents are
+new, partly because it is a curious picture of character and intrigue,
+partly because it is the fifth and culminating act of this long drama.</p><hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_488" id="Page_488">488</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
+
+
+<p><span class="smcap">But</span> with this Government we have nothing to do. We have reached our
+limits. The youth of Pitt has passed, his apprenticeship is over, he has
+now his foot in high office, he is soon to be supreme. The weary period
+of proscription and conflict has come to an end, he is henceforth to
+command where he has obeyed, and he is to raise his country to a
+singular height of glory and power. That splendid period is beyond the
+scope of this book, which only records the ascent and the toil; the
+lustre of achievement and reward require a separate chronicle. The next
+scenes require a broader canvas and brighter colours.</p>
+
+<p>But before we leave him let us try and realise his appearance. When we
+read about any one we naturally wish to know what manner of man he was
+in the flesh. In this case we seem but scantily provided with portraits.
+We have glanced at the one by Hoare, to the accuracy of which Pitt
+himself bears emphatic testimony. Of this one Hoare painted several
+replicas, one of the worst of which, very bilious in colouring, is in
+the National Portrait Gallery. There is another at Orwell which seems to
+have more force in it; it could not have less. The original represents a
+comely, graceful and elegant being without a symptom of anything but
+comeliness, grace and elegance,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_489" id="Page_489">489</a></span> and might be the portrait of any man of
+fashion of the time. Great men have sometimes piqued themselves on being
+dandies, and it may have been this air which recommended the picture to
+its subject. This portrait, of which the large engraving, containing
+only the head, is infinitely better than the original, duly arrived at
+Stowe. Thence at the dispersal of that great collection it passed to
+Drayton, having been purchased by Sir Robert Peel, and has lately found
+a final home at Pittsburg.</p>
+
+<p>There is another portrait by Hoare, at full length, in the coronation
+robes which Pitt never can have worn, which was painted for the
+Corporation of Bath ten years after that for Temple. It leaves no
+special impression. There was a portrait by Reynolds at Belvoir. But
+that, alas! disappeared with so much else in the great fire which
+ravaged that noble structure. Towards the end of his life (in 1772) he
+was painted in peer's robes by Brompton. The engraving of this is at
+full length, but the picture itself is a kitcat, so that it was probably
+cut down. This picture is at Chevening, and Lord Sidmouth, if we are not
+mistaken, owns a replica or another version of this picture. Pitt's
+grand-daughter, Lady Hester Stanhope, who was brought up with it, says
+that it is the best portrait of him. As she was only two years old when
+he died, her testimony, though given with confidence, has no personal
+value; but she had relations who may have told her. She piqued herself
+on her resemblance to him. But no value is to be attached to the
+utterances of this vain and crazy woman, unless one can believe, which
+is difficult, that she repeated faithfully what more trustworthy people
+had told her. However, this portrait may well be the best, where the
+other is so poor.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_490" id="Page_490">490</a></span> It is in itself impressive, representing a solemn,
+noble, melancholy figure, such as Chatham must have been in his last
+cheerless decade.</p>
+
+<p>There are more busts. There is one of him in youth, perhaps at
+five-and-twenty, handsome, bright, alert, with a smile that is almost
+saucy. The original of this was, it is believed, also at Stowe; also,
+perhaps, purchased by Sir Robert Peel. There is more than one by Wilton.
+One, dated 1759, grim and masterful, with a touch of scorn, the man
+himself at his time of power. There are others of him in old age, with
+less expression, ponderous and saturnine; they are posthumous, and dated
+1781. One of these is at Dropmore, another at Belvoir, another at
+Lowther.</p>
+
+<p>There are probably other portraits or busts, but these are all that are
+known to the present writer.</p>
+
+<p>His appearance at his best must have been extremely attractive. Tall and
+slender, 'his figure genteel and commanding,' he had cultivated all the
+arts of grace, gesture and dramatic action. 'Graceful in motion,' says
+his reluctant nephew, 'his eye and countenance would have conveyed his
+feelings to the deaf.'<a name="FNanchor_391_391" id="FNanchor_391_391"></a><a href="#Footnote_391_391" class="fnanchor">[391]</a> All authorities dwell on the magic of his
+eye. His eyes, said his grand-daughter, presumably on family tradition,
+were grey, but by candlelight seemed black from the intensity of their
+expression. When he was angry or earnest no one could look him in the
+face. No one indeed seems to have been able to abide the terrors of his
+glance.</p>
+
+<p>Of his manners and conversation in private life we know singularly
+little. Chesterfield gives us perhaps the best glimpse. 'He had manners
+and address; but one might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_491" id="Page_491">491</a></span> discern through them too great a
+consciousness of his own superior talents. He was a most agreeable and
+lively companion in social life, and had such a versatility of wit that
+he could adapt it to all sorts of conversation.' Of his early powers of
+fascination we have an authentic instance. He was seen walking with the
+Prince of Wales in the gardens at Stowe, and Cobham, watching them with
+anxiety, expressed some apprehension of Pitt's persuading the Prince to
+adopt some measures of which Cobham disapproved. A Mr. Belson said that
+the interview could not be long. 'You don't know Mr. Pitt's power of
+insinuation,' said Cobham. 'In a very short quarter of an hour he can
+persuade anyone of anything.'</p>
+
+<p>Butler, 'the Reminiscent,' who had this anecdote from Belson himself,
+goes on to say that 'as a companion in festive moments, Mr. Pitt was
+enchanting.' He also quotes Wilkes, who was a good judge of social
+qualifications. 'Mr. Pitt, by the most manly sense and the fine sallies
+of a warm and sportive imagination, can charm the whole day, and, as the
+Greek said, his entertainments please even the day after they are
+given.' But, after all, these must have been rare occasions, as Pitt
+does not seem to have seen much of society, for his health kept him a
+recluse; and as years went on he seems to have found it both irksome and
+impolitic to see much of mankind. We fancy that he was a man, like his
+son, of small and intimate companies; partly from a haughty aloofness,
+partly because he could not partake of the pleasures of the table.</p>
+
+<p>'As a private man,' says Lord Camelford, 'he had especially in his youth
+every talent to please when he thought it worth while to exert his
+talents, which was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_492" id="Page_492">492</a></span> always for a purpose, for he was never natural. His
+good breeding never deserted him unless when his insolence intended to
+offend. He was, however, soon spoilt by flattery, which gave him the
+humours of a child. He was selfish even to trifles in his own family and
+amongst his intimates to the forgetting the preferences due to the other
+sex, of which I have heard many ridiculous instances; but this was much
+owing to a state of health which made him fretful, at the same time that
+it called his attention to his own person. When I first saw him he was
+intemperate towards his servants full as much as my own father, but it
+is to his honour that when he owed a better example to his children he
+got the better of that habit. His first and only friendships were with
+Lord Lyttelton and his sister Ann.' In a later passage he adds: 'He
+lived and died without a friend.'</p>
+
+<p>Camelford, it will be observed, speaks with confidence about Pitt's
+youth, of which he can have known nothing except from tradition, and
+Pitt's family traditions were not likely to err on the side of
+benignity. What he says about early friendships is obviously inaccurate;
+he is quoting Pitt's impulsive note of Oct. 24, 1734.<a name="FNanchor_392_392" id="FNanchor_392_392"></a><a href="#Footnote_392_392" class="fnanchor">[392]</a> The
+Grenvilles, the other Lytteltons, and Gilbert West at once occur to one
+as friends to whom Pitt in youth was tenderly attached. We may indeed
+take it for granted that this curious piece refers to Pitt's middle
+life, which Camelford knew personally; but it is too interesting to be
+omitted here.</p>
+
+<p>His great and singular power lay in his eloquence, and yet even there we
+are left largely to the recollection and testimony of his
+contemporaries, for there was in those days no reporting as we
+understand it, and therefore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_493" id="Page_493">493</a></span> no reports. There are, of course,
+professed reports, but to these little credence can be attached. Dr.
+Johnson and a Scottish clergyman named Gordon wrote a great number of
+them, based on very inadequate materials, if any materials at all. Men
+carried away some noble outburst or some striking metaphor tingling in
+their ears, and repeated it. Others would be able to recall the line of
+argument, if indeed there was an argument to follow. But the result is
+scarcely authentic. Pitt the younger must have known, and he declared
+that no specimens of his father's eloquence remained. Butler says that
+the person to whom he made this remark (no doubt Butler himself) begged
+him to read slowly his father's speeches on the Stamp Act, and endeavour
+as he did so to recall the figure, look and voice with which his father
+would have delivered them. Pitt did so, and admitted the probable effect
+of the speech thus delivered. But it is to be observed that he did not
+admit the accuracy. Almon, who knew something of this matter, says that
+none of the reports of Pitt's speeches before 1760 can be depended upon.
+In 1766 Almon began reporting the debates himself, and so would claim
+greater exactness, and may easily have attained it.</p>
+
+<p>One is in fact thrown back on the impressions and the descriptions of
+those who heard him. Horace Walpole, who at this time admired Pitt as
+much as he could admire anybody, gives us striking glimpses, some of
+which we have already quoted; one of which, that of the answer to Hume
+Campbell, is exquisite in felicity of phrase. Chesterfield says that
+Pitt's 'eloquence was of every kind, and he excelled in the
+argumentative as well as in the declamatory way. But his invectives were
+terrible, and uttered with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_494" id="Page_494">494</a></span> such energy of diction, and stern dignity of
+action and countenance that he intimidated those who were the most
+willing and the best able to encounter him. Their arms fell out of their
+hands, and they sank under the ascendant which his genius gained over
+theirs.' In a note Chesterfield tells us that the last phrases allude to
+Murray and Hume Campbell. 'Mr. Pitt,' he says elsewhere, 'carried with
+him unpremeditated the strength of thunder and the splendour of
+lightning.' These extracts convey the impression made by Pitt on one of
+the acutest judges of the time, himself an orator of eminence, and no
+friend to his subject.</p>
+
+<p>Bishop Newton gladly avails himself of the same familiar metaphor: 'What
+was said of the famous orator Pericles, that he lightened, thundered,
+and confounded Greece, was in some measure applicable to him.' 'He had,'
+says the Bishop, 'extraordinary powers, quick conceptions, ready
+elocution, great command of language, a melodious voice, a piercing eye,
+a speaking countenance, and was as great an actor as an orator. During
+the time of his successful administration he had the most absolute and
+uncontrolled sway that perhaps any member ever had in the House of
+Commons. With all these excellences he was not without his defects. His
+language was sometimes too figurative and pompous, his speeches were
+seldom well connected, often desultory and rambling from one thing to
+another, so that though you were struck here and there with noble
+sentiments and happy expressions, yet you could not well remember nor
+give a clear account of the whole together. With affected modesty he was
+apt to be rather too confident and overbearing in debate, sometimes
+descended to personal invectives, and would first commend that he might
+afterwards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_495" id="Page_495">495</a></span> more effectually abuse, would ever have the last word, and
+right or wrong still preserved (in his own phrase) an unembarrassed
+countenance. He spoke more to your passions than to your reason, more to
+those below the bar and above the throne than to the House itself; and,
+when that kind of audience was excluded, he sunk and lost much of his
+weight and authority.'<a name="FNanchor_393_393" id="FNanchor_393_393"></a><a href="#Footnote_393_393" class="fnanchor">[393]</a></p>
+
+<p>Grattan's testimony, as that of a famous orator, cannot here be passed,
+though it refers to a later period. 'He was a man of great genius, great
+flight of mind. His imagination was astonishing.... He was very great
+and very odd. He spoke in a style of conversation, not however what I
+expected. It was not a speech, for he never came with a prepared
+harangue. His style was not regular oratory, like Cicero or Demosthenes,
+but it was very fine and very elevated, and above the ordinary subjects
+of discourse.... His gesture was always graceful. He was an incomparable
+actor. Had it not been so he would have appeared ridiculous.... His
+tones were remarkably pleasing. I recollect his pronouncing one word
+"effete" in a soft charming accent. His son could not have pronounced it
+better.... His manner was dramatic. In this it was said that he was too
+much the mountebank; but if so it was a great mountebank. Perhaps he was
+not so good a debater as his son, but he was a much better orator, a
+better scholar, and a far greater mind. Great subjects, great empires,
+great characters, effulgent ideas and classical illustrations formed the
+material of his speeches.' Grattan gives examples, and even notes of one
+of his speeches, but they are all outside our period.<a name="FNanchor_394_394" id="FNanchor_394_394"></a><a href="#Footnote_394_394" class="fnanchor">[394]</a></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_496" id="Page_496">496</a></span></p><p>These notes on Pitt's oratory cannot well be omitted, though they are
+almost too familiar to quote. But there is one, never yet published,
+which is written by an intimate but merciless critic. Lord Camelford was
+only nineteen at the time when our narrative terminates, but he must
+already and for some years afterwards have been steeped in his uncle's
+eloquence, so that his description is of peculiar interest.</p>
+
+<p>'In Parliament he never spoke but to the instant, regardless of whatever
+contradictions he might afterwards be reduced to, which he carried off
+with an effrontery without example. His eloquence was supported by every
+advantage that could unite in a perfect actor. Graceful in motion, his
+eye and countenance would have conveyed his feelings to the deaf. His
+voice was clear and melodious, and capable of every variety of
+inflection and modulation. His wit was elegant, his imagination
+inexhaustible, his sensibility exquisite, and his diction flowed like a
+torrent, impure often, but always varied and abundant. There was a style
+of conscious superiority, a tone, a gesture of manner, which was quite
+peculiar to him&mdash;everything shrunk before it; and even facts, truth and
+argument were overawed and vanquished by it. On the other hand, his
+matter was never ranged, it had no method. He deviated into a thousand
+digressions, often reverted back to the same ground, and seemed
+sometimes like the lion to lash himself with his own tail to rouse his
+courage, which flashed in periods and surprised and astonished, rather
+than convinced by the steady light of reason. He was the very contrast
+of Lord Mansfield, his competitor in eloquence, who never appealed but
+to the conviction of the understanding, with an arrangement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_497" id="Page_497">497</a></span> so precise
+that every sentence was only the preparation for the force that the next
+was to obtain, and scarce a word could be taken away without throwing
+the whole argument into disorder; the other bore his hearers away by
+rapid flights into a region that looked down upon argument, and opposed
+the transport of feeling to conviction.'</p>
+
+<p>This appears to be a description as accurate as it is vivid, and perhaps
+none gives the personality and manner of Pitt with more effect. The
+style of conscious superiority, peculiar to him, before which everything
+shrank; the way in which the orator worked himself into wrath, like a
+lion lashing himself with his own tail; the eye and countenance which
+would have conveyed his meaning to the deaf; these are touches which we
+feel to be accurate, and which seem to explain much of the effect of
+Pitt's oratory. Let us here note that Cradock gives a curious account of
+an oratorical failure of Pitt's in later life and of his consequent
+irritation, eminently comforting to humbler speakers.<a name="FNanchor_395_395" id="FNanchor_395_395"></a><a href="#Footnote_395_395" class="fnanchor">[395]</a></p>
+
+<p>We value sketches like these much more than any professed reports of
+Pitt's speeches, which cannot be accurate reproductions. But, even if
+they were, they would, we are told, be but pale shadows of the reality,
+for so much depended on the soul and grace with which they were uttered;
+for the majesty of his presence, his manly figure, his exquisite voice,
+his consummate acting, his harmonious action, and above all the
+lightning of his eyes inspired reluctant awe before he uttered a word.
+We can fancy him rising in the House, which subsides at once into
+silence and eager attention. On not a few faces there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_498" id="Page_498">498</a></span> will be
+uneasiness and alarm; on the ministerial bench some agitation, for it is
+there probably that the thunderbolts may fall. His opening is solemn and
+impressive. Then he warms to his subject. He states his argument. He
+recalls matters of history and his own personal recollections. Then with
+an insinuating wave of his arm his voice changes, and he is found to be
+drowning some hapless wight with ridicule. Then he seems to ramble a
+little, he is marking time and collecting himself for what is coming.
+Suddenly the rich notes swell into the fullness of a great organ, and
+the audience find themselves borne into the heights of a sublime burst
+of eloquence. Then he sinks again into a whisper full of menace which
+carries some cruel sarcasm to some quivering heart. Then he is found
+playing about his subject, pelting snowballs as he proceeds. If the
+speech is proceeding to his satisfaction it will last an hour or perhaps
+two. Its length will perhaps not improve it, but no one can stir. There
+may be ineffective, tedious, obscure passages, but no one knows what may
+be coming, these vapours often precede a glowing sunburst. So all
+through the speech men sit as though paralysed, though many are heated
+with wine. He will not finish without some lofty declamation which may
+be the culminating splendour of the effort. If any effective replies are
+made, he will reply again and again, heedless of order, vehement,
+truculent, perhaps intemperate. And as he sits down perhaps with little
+applause, the tension of nerves, almost agonising in its duration and
+concentration, snaps like a harpstring; the buzz of animated
+conversation breaks forth with an ecstasy of relief. The audience
+disperses<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_499" id="Page_499">499</a></span> still under the spell. As it wears off, hostile critics begin
+to declare that it is all acting; the fellow acts better than Garrick.
+Garrick, indeed, himself declared that had Pitt originally preferred the
+stage of Drury Lane for that of St. Stephen's, he would almost have
+annihilated the stage by distancing all competition.<a name="FNanchor_396_396" id="FNanchor_396_396"></a><a href="#Footnote_396_396" class="fnanchor">[396]</a> He was,
+without doubt, an incomparable actor, for no less a power would have
+enabled him to engage in some of his most famous flights with effect, or
+without reaction or ridicule. His action, his inflections, his vehemence
+are no doubt at least as good as Garrick's. But these are merely the
+accessories which to the shallow or cynical observer seem to be the
+heart or the whole of the matter. One might as well say that it is the
+varnish that makes the picture, or the goblet that makes the vintage.
+The orator is probably unconscious or at most half-conscious of what
+seems dramatic, he is moved by an irresistible blast of passion which
+carries him as well as his audience away. The passion may have been
+stirred beforehand, but at the moment of outpouring it is genuine
+enough. Pitt no doubt had trained himself to be graceful in animation,
+had studied and enhanced the beauties of his voice, so that when excited
+his tones were always musical, and his action harmonious. He may in
+earlier days have rehearsed speeches in private, though he probably
+delivered something different when the time came. But to imagine that
+when he spoke he was acting a prepared speech is to ignore the main
+features of his oratory, the force coming from an internal impulse which
+was for the moment irresistible. It should be remembered too, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_500" id="Page_500">500</a></span> in
+one sense he was always acting in the common business of life; when he
+chipped an egg, or talked to his gardener, or mounted his horse, he was
+acting. He might not, indeed, study his gesture at the moment, but that
+was because he had been studying gestures half his life. He had
+appropriated the dramatic way of doing things till it had become a
+second nature to him; thus, what would have been acting in others was
+natural to him. And indeed, he had so adjusted and prepared and schooled
+himself, that all his emotions were effectually concealed. The fierce
+character of the man would sometimes be irrepressible, but even then it
+would be vented with an awful grace. And so when he was said to be
+acting in the House he was natural, for acting had become a second
+nature to him. When this is so, acting has ceased to be acting. Mrs.
+Siddons would give her orders at dinner in the awful tones of Lady
+Macbeth. This was not acting but nature, trained but unconscious nature.
+So it was with Pitt. He would not laugh, because it was undignified to
+laugh. If he had a book or a play to read aloud and came to a comic
+part, he passed it to another to read and resumed the volume when the
+humorous part was over, lest, we may presume, he should smile or become
+incidentally ridiculous. His countenance was, so to speak, enamelled
+with such anxious care, that a heedless laugh might crack the elaborate
+demeanour. And so he lived in blank verse, and conducted himself in the
+heroic metre. We should surmise, though not with certainty, that some of
+his more famous flights, such as the comparison of the Rhone and the
+Saône, were prepared to some extent, but that there was nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_501" id="Page_501">501</a></span>
+written. This is only guesswork, for of his method of preparation we
+know nothing. But his diction was habitually perfect. To improve it he
+had twice read through Bailey's Dictionary, and had plodded through
+masses of sermons, particularly those of Barrow, Abernethy, and 'the
+late Mr. Mudge of Plymouth.'<a name="FNanchor_397_397" id="FNanchor_397_397"></a><a href="#Footnote_397_397" class="fnanchor">[397]</a> 'Every word he makes use of,' said
+Chesterfield as early as 1751, 'is the very best, and the most
+expressive that can be used in that place.' That was the result of
+constant and familiar effort. Like Bolingbroke he had trained himself to
+spare no pains in ordinary conversation to attain accuracy of
+expression, so as to be sure of himself in public. 'It would not be
+believed how much trouble he took to compose the most trifling note.' He
+told Shelburne that a phrase he had used in one of his speeches could
+not be taken exception to, as he had tried it on paper three times
+before employing it in public. Assiduous study of words, constant
+exercise in choice language, so that it was habitual to him even in
+conversation, and could not be other than elegant even in unpremeditated
+speech, this combined with poetical imagination, passion, a mordant wit
+and great dramatic skill, would probably seem to be the secrets of
+Chatham's oratorical supremacy. And yet it is safe to predict that a
+clever fellow who had mastered all this would produce but a pale
+reflection of the original. It is not merely the thing that is said, but
+the man who says it which counts, the character which breathes through
+the sentences. Mirabeau would, as we know, take a manuscript speech
+produced by a laborious friend, in itself a dull thing, and read it from
+the tribune with such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_502" id="Page_502">502</a></span> energy of inspiration that it would carry the
+Assembly by storm. This is the more marvellous when we remember that a
+man who reads the best possible speech with the most effective elocution
+is heavily handicapped. And so it may safely be assumed that imitation
+of Pitt would be doomed to disastrous failure. The secret of oratory
+like this evades the most anxious student: its effect both on the
+immediate audience and on posterity seems beyond definition or adequate
+explanation.</p>
+
+<p>Some orators impress their audience, some their readers, a very few
+posterity as well. The orators who impress their audience rarely impress
+their readers, and those who impress their readers are usually less
+successful with their audience. Few indeed are those who reach posterity
+or indeed survive a year. Pitt, if any one indeed can be said to have
+read his speeches, combined all three forms of supremacy. More than
+this, his utterances with a sort of wireless telegraphy seemed to thrill
+the nation which neither heard nor read them. In the century which
+followed Chatham's death there was an illustrious succession of orators
+and debaters. And yet none of these eminent men with all their
+accurately reported speeches have left so deep an impress of eloquence
+as the elder Pitt, who was not reported at all. We cannot doubt that it
+is better for his fame that he was unreported. Sheridan never did
+anything wiser than when in his need he refused the most splendid offers
+to revise his Begum speech for publication. Pitt's speeches would have
+lost half their force without the splendour of delivery. His unreported
+eloquence has become matter of faith, and so it is likely to remain.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lecky, from whom it is difficult to differ, thinks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_503" id="Page_503">503</a></span> that his
+speeches were deficient in pathos and wit. As to this last, the
+testimony of his contemporaries is emphatic the other way, and they are
+loud in extolling Pitt's piercing wit. We have seen how Walpole and
+Murray concur in extolling his powers of ridicule. 'He can turn anything
+into ridicule,' Murray had said. 'He can tickle to death with a
+feather,' was Walpole's description. Nor should we imagine he was
+defective in pathos; not perhaps in youth, for youth is not the season
+of pathos, but certainly in later years. The speeches, for example,
+delivered in the garb of an invalid, abounded we should surmise in
+pathos, to which the costume was preliminary and accessory. But pathos,
+which has something of humility in its tenderness, was, it must be
+admitted, alien to the haughty superiority which Pitt asserted and
+assumed.</p>
+
+<p>One word more of fascinating conjecture. Would he have been a great
+popular orator at mass meetings and the like? We cannot imagine Pitt a
+platform speaker, yet we can scarcely imagine a better. His graceful
+appearance, his terrible eye, the winning and majestic modulations of
+his voice, his spontaneity, his magnetic power, his wealth of ridicule,
+his poignant personalities, his dramatic force, his variety and
+unexpectedness constituted the most formidable equipment for platform
+oratory ever possessed by mortal man. And yet we cannot regret that he
+never was tried.</p>
+
+<p>Pitt's life marks itself out with singular distinctness into definite
+periods. From 1708 to 1734 is the period of obscure youth, on which this
+volume should throw some light. From 1734 to 1745 is the period of
+reckless and irresponsible opposition, when he is trying the temper of
+his weapons. From 1745 to 1754 he remains in the shadow of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_504" id="Page_504">504</a></span> subordinate
+office. From 1754 to 1756, though still partly in office, he emerges as
+an independent figure of extraordinary and irresistible force. From 1756
+to 1761 is the period of power, four years of which are unrivalled in
+the annals of Great Britain. From 1761 to 1770 is the period of
+detachment, or attempted detachment, from party. It includes some tenure
+of office, much obscurity and illness, some actual insanity. And from
+1770 till his death in 1778 he appears sometimes to be attempting to
+make his peace with the party system, having found it impracticable to
+stand alone; sometimes he seems to be retiring once more into his cell.</p>
+
+<p>Few careers can be marked out so clearly; few have such a glamour. But
+the glamour and the glory are yet to come; they lie beyond this book.
+Already indeed there are confidence and hope, confidence in his vigour,
+his honesty, and his uprightness; but this is due rather to others than
+to himself. Every one else has failed, this may be the man of destiny.</p>
+
+<p>And yet up to this time the career of Pitt has been, eloquence apart,
+not unlike that of other ambitious and not very scrupulous politicians.
+He begins by attacking Sir Robert Walpole. Why? He has no particular
+objection to Sir Robert Walpole; in after years he acknowledges that he
+was a great statesman. It was partly a freak of youth. Who is the
+biggest man to attack, the man by combating whom one can acquire the
+most honour and reputation? Obviously Walpole. So tilt at him. He is
+asked to an important house; for the first time he finds himself in the
+great world. He is caressed, perhaps flattered; for he has a school
+renown, and is a lad to be secured. He is with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_505" id="Page_505">505</a></span> his Eton friends, and
+they think all the world of Cobham, his wisdom, his courage, his
+magnificence; they all in a measure depend on him. Thus he is allured
+into the charmed circle, and they form much the same group as that which
+was in our own days called the Fourth Party.</p>
+
+<p>So they enter the House of Commons in high spirits, and lay about them
+with reckless intrepidity. Pitt is soon marked out for martyrdom by the
+Minister. But in a short time he is conspicuous for other reasons. He
+towers from the waist above his comrades as a bitter, incisive speaker.
+Walpole begins to take notes of his speeches; he is the coming man, and
+is at once secured for the faction of the Prince of Wales. Then Walpole
+falls. There is a great crash, and the spectators expect to see the
+world in ruins. But when the dust has cleared away it is seen that
+things are much as they were; Wilmington, scarcely visible, in Walpole's
+seat; Newcastle rooted in his own; Walpole, with Pulteney his
+protagonist, seated smug and dumb among the distant peers. There is no
+room for Pitt among our governors; the only new figure that strikes one
+is Carteret, he is evidently the moving spirit of the piece. As the
+prominent Minister, and as an object of hatred to Cobham, he is
+obviously the man for Pitt now to attack, and he trounces Carteret as
+recklessly as he had Walpole; only Walpole was able to reply, and
+Carteret cannot; for he sits where Walpole sits. Carteret, again, he
+mainly attacks for his eminence. He calls Carteret execrable now, but,
+when the battle is over, takes pride in declaring that to his patronage,
+to his friendship, to his instruction 'I owe whatever I am.' Still, the
+business of party must be done, and so Carteret must be assailed. Then
+Carteret disappears,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_506" id="Page_506">506</a></span> and Pitt is without a target. But the young man
+has to realise that in his reckless onslaughts he has incidentally but
+mortally wounded the honour of the King. Walpole and Carteret are off
+the scene; and the stage is now occupied, so far as he is concerned, by
+a monarch who is an incarnate veto as regards him, and who can never
+forgive him. This produces a new situation. Pitt is as strenuous to be
+pardoned as he was to offend; he is all milk and honey in public, but
+apprises the Pelhams, who are now in sole possession of the
+administration, that he is not disposed to be long-suffering, and that
+the ordinary rewards of political warfare are overdue. They are fully
+alive to the situation, and attempt to mollify the Sovereign. But their
+labour is in vain, and so, with more subtlety than patriotism, they
+produce a ministerial crisis when civil war is alive in the island. The
+King has to yield, and, in angry submission, receive Pitt. The new
+placeman, having achieved office, subsides into a long silence. Pelham
+dies at last, and the great inheritance has to be divided. Pitt is ill
+and absent; his rival is at once preferred (though alienated); while
+Pelham's brother attempts to guide, with the help of the Master of the
+Great Wardrobe, what Pelham could not control. The result is easily
+foreseen. The rivals unite to tear the Master limb from limb, and one of
+them has to be bought off. That one is not Pitt. And now something,
+pique or patriotism or marriage, one cannot analyse it now, perhaps he
+could not have analysed it himself, lifts him into new splendours of
+eloquence. His rival seems cowed by the harness without the confidence
+of office. Pitt stands alone, no one dare face him. Meanwhile he
+receives new authority from disaster. In<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_507" id="Page_507">507</a></span> every region where Britain is
+interested calamity follows calamity. The country is roused to a passion
+of wrath and vengeance. It demands victims. Byng in prison remains an
+open wound to remind the nation of its miscarriages. They are resolved
+to shoot him, at any rate; they would not be unwilling to hang others
+whom they hold responsible for his miscarriage, who are perhaps corrupt,
+and who are certainly incapable and untoward Ministers; failing that,
+they will at least get rid of them. They look round and see no one but
+Pitt. He has been persecuted, he has been ignored by these Ministers,
+and yet his eloquence, commanding in itself, has the true note of energy
+and patriotism. He shall be tried; and they call for him with as much
+energy as the French once called for Necker, but with a truer instinct.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, there is so far little vigour in Pitt except in his
+speeches. Half his life is spent in prostration and seclusion, under the
+martyrdom of gout. As we have seen, on the very brink of his Ministry,
+he assured Fox that his health would not allow him to hold office. And,
+indeed, in the whole life of this singular man there is nothing more
+remarkable than this, that in the glimpses we obtain of himself, apart
+from great speeches and the result of victorious policy, we almost
+always find him prostrate with illness. It is generally the gout or its
+allies which disable him; but later it is disorder akin to if not
+identical with insanity. Not unnaturally, even among those less prone by
+profession to suspicion than the expert politician, his ill-health is
+often supposed to be an assumption or a screen. But in this calmer
+generation we can see that it was not, that the man never enjoyed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_508" id="Page_508">508</a></span>
+health, as it is ordinarily understood, for a moment. He was always
+distempered, irritable, or hysterical, when not in pain. His public life
+was scarcely more than the intervals between fits of gout or nervous
+collapse. We are reminded of the sufferings of his son, as he approached
+the end of a long ministerial career, struggling against constant
+sickness and a wrecked constitution, when we contemplate the lifelong
+contest between the elder Pitt and hereditary disease.</p>
+
+<p>Heredity counts for much, for more than we reckon in these matters. We
+breed horses and cattle with careful study on that principle; the prize
+bull and the Derby winner are the result. With mankind we heed it little
+or not at all. With Pitt it was everything or almost everything. From
+his ancestors, most probably the Governor, who, we infer, was a free
+liver in a tropical climate, he derived the curse of gout. From the same
+progenitor he inherited a nervous, violent temperament, and some taint
+of madness. All this told partly for him, partly against him. The gout
+drove him to study and reflection, but it constantly disabled him. His
+temperament roused him to great heights of energy and passion both in
+eloquence and politics, but it also alienated his fellow-men, and made
+him sometimes eccentric, and sometimes turbulent. We cannot in such a
+matter hold the balance. What is genius? None can tell. But may it not
+be the result in character of the conflict of violent strains of
+heredity, which clash like flint and steel, and produce the divine
+spark?</p>
+
+<p>This takes us beyond our limits, more especially those of time; for
+within those limits the genius of Pitt has only been displayed in the
+barren gift of eloquence. But when we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_509" id="Page_509">509</a></span> consider his disabilities of
+heredity and of accident we deem him already heroic. Everything has been
+against him. He has contended against poverty and disease and contempt.
+He has been wounded in the house of his family. He has been constantly
+betrayed. He has had to suffer for long years in silence. He is
+forty-eight when he at last attains anything like power. From this point
+of view his career is pathetic. It seems such a waste of time and
+opportunity. But through these long impatient years he was being
+trained, hardened, one may almost say, baked in the furnace. In silence
+and bitterness the force was being accumulated that was to electrify the
+Empire.</p>
+
+<p>Still the dazzling result must not blind us to the facts as they stand
+at the moment when we are surveying and taking leave of them. Much in a
+man's life obviously depends on life: much too depends on death. 'Felix
+opportunitate mortis' is a pregnant saying. How many village Hampdens,
+how many Miltons have passed away, inglorious because mute, and mute
+from premature death. Had Cćsar or Marlborough died before middle age
+their military reputation would have been slender indeed. For how many
+men, on the other hand, has death come too late. What would have been
+the place in history of Napoleon III., had Orsini been a successful
+assassin? What that of Tiberius, had he died at sixty? The authors who
+have survived themselves are as the sands of the sea; indeed the
+exceptions are those who have not. The politicians in the same case are
+less conspicuous, for they crumble into the House of Lords. Historians
+and rhetoricians have vied with each other in setting forth the glories
+of Pitt's supreme years. What we have to consider is his position in
+1756, when we part from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_510" id="Page_510">510</a></span> him in professed ignorance of what is to come.
+How would Pitt appear to us had he died when he was still forty-seven?
+He was forty-eight the day before Devonshire, in his name, assumed the
+government. That is a respectable age. The younger Pitt never reached
+it, though he had been Prime Minister for near a score of years.
+Napoleon closed his career at forty-six. It is needless to detail
+examples. But at forty-seven the elder Pitt could only claim that he had
+been Paymaster of the Forces, and had cowed but not persuaded the House
+of Commons by his oratory. He had, too, the faith of the people,
+unearned except by vague echoes of purity and eloquence. Otherwise his
+career had been much like other careers, denouncing, or coquetting and
+even pressing for office, equable in expectation, and vindictive if
+refused. Pride was his besetting sin; yet he had stooped, to conquer.</p>
+
+<p>All seems to depend on this point, so difficult to decide: was there
+patriotism in all this alloy? Was the anxiety for office the mere
+craving of the politician for reward, or was it the real consciousness
+of capacity, purity, and inspiration? It may well in earlier days have
+been the more vulgar ambition, vulgar but not reprehensible; for office
+is the legitimate end and object of the public man; and Pitt had earned
+it a hundred times over by ordinary standards, while compelled to stand
+aside and see his inferiors promoted. But at the period which we have
+reached we think the nobler sentiment is unmistakable. He will not hold
+out a finger, he spurns all assistance, he builds without any foundation
+but himself. Had he wished only for the snug and secure possession of
+office he would have welcomed the co-operation of Newcastle and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_511" id="Page_511">511</a></span> Fox,
+invaluable allies in their different ways. But at this time he will have
+none of them, he dreams of a government which free from taint or
+suspicion shall appeal for the confidence of the country on the highest
+and purest grounds.</p>
+
+<p>Here we feel, and feel with relief, that we can give a clear verdict.
+The rest matters little. The path of the statesman rarely skirts the
+heights, it is rough, rugged, sometimes squalid, as are most of the
+roads of life. We are apt to make idols, to ignore shadows, and to fancy
+that we see stars; not too apt, for it is an illuminating worship. But,
+that being so, let not those who have to scrutinise therefore condemn.
+All careers have their blots. The best and happiest are those in which
+the blemishes are obscured by high achievement. That was supremely the
+case with Pitt. His upward ascent was much like other ascents, neither
+better nor worse. But when he reached the summit, and acted in full
+light and freedom, his triumph was so complete that none deem it worth
+while to scan his previous record. None should care now, were it not a
+healthy propensity to seek to know as much as possible of the lives of
+great men. It is preposterous to depict Pitt as an angel of light. But
+yet, judged by the standard of his day, the only proper standard to
+apply, and indeed by the standard of any day, he must be held even in
+his darkest hours not to have compromised his historical future.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever his failings may have been, his countrymen have refused, and
+rightly refused, to take heed of them. They have refused to see anything
+but the supreme orator, the triumphant Minister of 1757-1761, the
+champion of liberty in later years at home and in the West.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_512" id="Page_512">512</a></span> With Pitt,
+as with Nelson, his country will not count flaws. What do they matter?
+How are they visible in the sunlight of achievement? A country must
+cherish and guard its heroes.</p>
+
+<p>We have climbed with him in his path to power. We have seen him
+petulant, factious, hungry, bitter. And yet all the time we have felt
+that there was always something in him different in quality from his
+fellow-politicians when they aired the same qualities, that there was an
+imprisoned spirit within him struggling for freedom and scope. At last
+it bursts its trammels, he tosses patronage and intrigue to the old
+political Shylocks, and inspires the policy of the world. Vanity of
+vanities! Twenty years after his epoch of glory, three years after his
+death, Britain has reached the lowest point in her history. But still
+she is the richer for his life. He bequeaths a tradition, he bequeaths a
+son; and when men think of duty and achievement they look to one or the
+other. It will be an ill day for their country when either is
+forgotten.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_513" id="Page_513">513</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX</h2>
+
+
+
+<ul class="index">
+
+<li class="ifrst">Aberdeen, Lord, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Abernethy, Dr., sermons by, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Achilles, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Addison, Joseph, 'Cato' referred to, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Additional MSS.' referred to, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aix-la-Chapelle, Peace of, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Treaty of, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">debate on Treaty of, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aldborough Election, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Allen, Ralph, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Allworthy, Squire, see <a href="#Fielding_Henry">Fielding, Henry</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Almon, John, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Althorp, Lord, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Alsace, Austrian armies in, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Ambulator, The,' <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Amelia, Princess, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">America, smuggling invasion of, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">hostilities in, <a href="#Page_350">350-1</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, &amp;c.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Angel Inn, Oxford, Chatham at, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Anne, Empress of Russia, death of, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Anne, Queen of England, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Anson, Lord, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Anstruther, General, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Antwerp, French enter, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Argyll Buildings, Chatham's marriage at, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Argyll, Duke of, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_452">452</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Army, History of the British,' see <a href="#Fortescue_JW">Fortescue, J.W.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Arundel, Mr., <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ashbourne, Lord, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ashburnham Park, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ashley, &mdash;&mdash;, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Assembly of Notables,' <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Astrop Wells, Chatham's visit to, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Austria, House of, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Austrian Netherlands, French in possession of, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Austrians, War of the Succession, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">defeated at Molwitz, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">defeated at Chotusitz, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">victorious in Bohemia, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">in Flanders, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Aylesbury, dispute over the Assizes at, <a href="#Page_271">271-5</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">purchase of manor of, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Aylesbury, History of,' see <a href="#Gibbs">Gibbs</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ayscough, Dr., <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Bailey's 'Dictionary,' Pitt's study of, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Baldwin, Lord Chief Justice, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Ballantyne_Archibald" id="Ballantyne_Archibald"></a>Ballantyne, Archibald, 'Life of Lord Carteret,' quoted, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Baltimore, Lord, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bampton, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Banquier, Alexandre, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Barnard, Sir John, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Barré, Isaac, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Barrington, Viscount, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>, <a href="#Page_444">444</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Barrow, sermons of, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bath, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57-9</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104-6</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112-16</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bath, Earl of, see <a href="#Pulteney_Sir_William">Pulteney, Sir William</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Battle Abbey, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bavaria, protests against the succession of Maria Theresa, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">seized by General Khevenhüller, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">taken by Frederick II., <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bavaria, Elector of, see <a href="#Frederick_II">Frederick II.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bave, Dr. Charles, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bays, Mr., <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Bedford Correspondence,' <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480-2</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bedford, Duke of, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bedlam, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Beckford, Alderman William, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bellamy, a frame maker, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Belleisle, Marshal, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Belson, Mr., <a href="#Page_491">491</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bentinck, Lord George, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bentley, Richard, Walpole's letter to, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bergen, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Berkeley of Stratton, Lord, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Berkshire, land purchased in, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Berlin, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Treaty of, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Besançon, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Best, Mr., <a href="#Page_24">24</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_514" id="Page_514"></a></span>
+</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bland, Dr., <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Blandford, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Blandford,' a man-of-war, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Blandford, Vicar of, see <a href="#Pitt_John">Pitt, John</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Blount, Martha, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Boconnoc, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Chatham's early life at, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his reasons for living at, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bohemia, Frederick II. proclaimed king in Prague, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">taken by Frederick II., <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bolingbroke, Lady, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Bolingbroke_Lord" id="Bolingbroke_Lord"></a>Bolingbroke, Lord, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">nicknamed the Pitts, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">called the 'intellectual Samson of Battersea,' <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">accuracy of expression of, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his newspaper, 'The Craftsman,' <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Remarks on History of England,' <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bolton, Duke of, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Boone, Mr., <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Boscawen, Admiral, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Boswell, James, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bourchier, Colonel, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bourbons, extravagance of the, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">union of the, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Boy Patriots, The,' <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Braddock, General, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Breda, peace negotiations at, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Breslau, Peace of, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Brest, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bridport, Lord, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bright, John, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bristol, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Broad-Bottom Administration, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Broglie, Marshal, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bromley, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Brompton, Richard, portrait-painter, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Browne, Lancelot, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Broxom, <a href="#Page_79">79</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Brussels, French enter, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bubb, see <a href="#Dodington_George_Bubb">Dodington, George Bubb</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Buchan, Lord, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Buckhurst, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Buckingham, the representation of, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">dispute over the Assizes at, <a href="#Page_271">271-5</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Buckingham, Duke of, see <a href="#Grenville_Richard_Temple">Grenville, Richard Temple</a>, Earl Temple</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Burchett, Will., <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Burdett, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Burke, Edmund, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Burleigh, Lord, <a href="#Page_427">427</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Burton-Pynsent, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bute, Earl of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_484">484</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Bute, Lady, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Butler, 'the Reminiscent,' <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Byng, Admiral, <a href="#Page_450">450-2</a>, <a href="#Page_507">507</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">'Cabinets, History of,' see <a href="#Torrens_WT_McC">Torrens, W.T. McC</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cadogan, Charles, 2nd Baron, <a href="#Page_452">452</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Calcraft, John, letter to Digby, <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Camden, Earl of, see <a href="#Pratt_Charles">Pratt, Sir Charles</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Camelford, Lord, see <a href="#Pitt_Thomas">Pitt, Thomas</a>, 1st Baron Camelford</li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Camelford MSS.' referred to, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>, <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Campbell, Hume, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Canning, George, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Canons, Palace of, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cardigan, Lady, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cardross, Lord, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Carlisle, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Carlisle_Frederick_Howard" id="Carlisle_Frederick_Howard"></a>Carlisle, Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Papers' referred to, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Carlyle_Thomas" id="Carlyle_Thomas"></a>Carlyle, Thomas, 'Frederick the Great' referred to, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Caroline, Princess, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Caroline, Queen, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Carteret_John" id="Carteret_John"></a>Carteret, John, Earl Granville, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">statesmanship of, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">ability and distinction of, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">secret negotiations of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt's animosity to, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt's admiration of, in later years, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his relations with George II., <a href="#Page_196">196</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">ability recognised by George II., <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his knowledge of the classics, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">as a linguist, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his contempt for money, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Chesterfield's opinion of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">supports the Earl of Bath, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">downfall of, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235-9</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Administration against, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Secretary of State, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">President of the Council, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Walpole's distrust of, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on North American affairs, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on subsidies, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Fox's enmity against, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Newcastle's negotiations with, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his forty-eight hours' Ministry, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Fox's resignation, <a href="#Page_461">461-3</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">attacks of Pitt upon, <a href="#Page_505">505</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Life of Carteret,' see <a href="#Ballantyne_Archibald">Ballantyne, A.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chaillot, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chambers, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chandos, Duke of, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Dukedom of, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Charleroi, taken by the French, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Charles II., <a href="#Page_393">393</a>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Charles III., <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Charles VI., <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Charles VII., <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Charles Edward, 'the Young Pretender,' see <a href="#Stuart_Charles_Edward">Stuart</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chatham, Lady, see <a href="#Grenville_Lady_Hester">Grenville, Lady Hester</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_515" id="Page_515"></a></span>
+</li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Chatham MSS.' referred to, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Chatham_William_Pitt" id="Chatham_William_Pitt"></a>Chatham, William Pitt, 1st Earl of, parentage, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">birth, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">death, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">appearance and characteristics, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_488">488-90</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at Eton, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at Oxford, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">father, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14-16</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">mother, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38-46</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Governor Pitt's regard for, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">sisters, <a href="#Page_48">48-128</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">quarrels with his sister Ann, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85-8</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">family quarrels, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">affected by gout, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>, <a href="#Page_507">507</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">military service, <a href="#Page_43">43-7</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">marries Lady Hester Grenville, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">letters to Hester Grenville described, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">lives and dies at Hayes, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">birth of children, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">legacy of Duchess of Marlborough to, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">anecdotes of, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">recommends Bolingbroke's works, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'History of Chatham,' see <a href="#Thackeray_Francis">Thackeray, Francis</a></li>
+
+<li class="isub2">Correspondence&mdash;with his father, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">to his mother, <a href="#Page_38">38-46</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">sister Ann, <a href="#Page_56">56-84</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88-93</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104-112</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">sister Mary, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Duke of Newcastle, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329-32</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Sir George Lyttelton and Grenville, <a href="#Page_316">316-18</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Chancellor Hardwicke, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
+
+<li class="isub2">Appointments&mdash;Groom of the Bedchamber, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Paymaster, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>, <a href="#Page_510">510</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Privy Seal, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Secretary of State, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
+
+<li class="isub2">Parliamentary Career&mdash;Begins at Stowe, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">represents Old Sarum, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">elected for Seaford, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">chosen for Aldborough, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">represents Okehampton, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his first session in Parliament, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">George II.'s regard for, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his regard for the King, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Order of the Garter for Temple, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">member of the 'Junto,' <a href="#Page_236">236</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">forcing his hand, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">wields power through the people, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">views and plans on political situation, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">apologies from Duke of Newcastle, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">exclusion from Government, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">American War, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his finest speeches, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357-8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">strong remarks on Sir Thomas Robinson, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">distrust of, and attitude to Fox, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Parliamentary intrigue, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">as Leader of the House, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">eulogises Legge for a position, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">pecuniary awards to, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">and Newcastle Ministry, <a href="#Page_460">460-5</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">negotiations with Hardwicke, <a href="#Page_468">468</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">co-operation sought with, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">fails to form a Ministry, <a href="#Page_483">483-6</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">connection with Leicester House, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386-8</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his oratory, <a href="#Page_357">357-8</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492-503</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">periods of his life, <a href="#Page_503">503</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">effect of his life's mission, <a href="#Page_512">512</a></li>
+
+<li class="isub2">Speeches, extracts of&mdash;On royal marriage, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">reduction of army, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">convention with Spain, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">denounces Walpole's administration, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_505">505</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">subsidies for foreign powers, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">transfer of Hanoverians, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Bucks Assizes, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">compensation of Glasgow, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">opposes navy reduction, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">opinion on Regency Bill, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Jews' Naturalisation Act, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">relief of Chelsea pensioners, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on election petitions, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">tenure of sheriff-deputyships, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">against the Newcastle Ministry, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">seamen's prize money, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">army estimates, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Militia Bill, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">reprimands Hume Campbell, <a href="#Page_430">430-3</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">foreign treaties, <a href="#Page_433">433-8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">attacks Budget, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Swiss auxiliaries, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">criticism on army grant, <a href="#Page_445">445</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Chesterfield_Philip_Dormer_Stanhope" id="Chesterfield_Philip_Dormer_Stanhope"></a>Chesterfield, Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of, and Ann Pitt, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">statesmanship of, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his ability and distinction, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his opinion of Pulteney, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">quotations from his Letters, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">character of George II., <a href="#Page_198">198</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">opposed to the Hanoverian vote, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">bequest to, by the Duchess of Marlborough, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">member of Opposition Committee, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">letter from Newcastle, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">resignation of, as Secretary of State, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">eulogises Pitt and Murray, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the reconstruction of the Ministry, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the character of Pitt, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pitt's study of words, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chevening, residence of Stanhope, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chippenham Election, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cholmondeley, Lord, Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cholmondeley, Mrs., death of, <a href="#Page_97">97</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cholmondely, Charles, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Chotusitz, Battle of, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Clement XII., Pope, death of, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_516" id="Page_516"></a></span>
+</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Climenson's 'Mrs. Montague' referred to, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Clive, Lord, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Cobbett_William" id="Cobbett_William"></a>Cobbett, William, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Parliamentary History' referred to, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275-8</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_443">443</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cobden, Richard, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Cobham's Cubs,' <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cobham, Lord, see <a href="#Temple_Sir_Richard">Temple, Sir Richard</a>, afterwards Lord Cobham</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cobham Party (The), <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Colchester, Petition for, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Colebrooke's 'Memoirs,' <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cologne, Elector of, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Compičgne, Council at, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Congreve, William, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Conway, a cousin of Walpole's, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Corbett, Mr., marriage of, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Corbett, Sir William, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cornbury, Lord, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cornwall, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cornwall, Duchy of, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cornwall, Duke of, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cotton, Sir John Hinde, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236-7</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Cousins, The,' <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Coxe_William" id="Coxe_William"></a>Coxe, William, 'Memoirs of Henry Pelham' quoted <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Memoirs of Sir Robert Walpole' quoted, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cradock, Joseph, 'Literary Memoirs' referred to, <a href="#Page_497">497</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Cranford,' see <a href="#Gaskell_Mrs">Gaskell, Mrs.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cresset, Mr., <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cricket, played at Stowe, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Crowhurst, Colonel Pelham's place at, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Culloden, Battle of, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Cumberland, Duke of, Grenville's hatred of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">attempts to form a Pitt Ministry, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">George II.'s affection for, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">defeated at Fontenoy, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">and at Lauffeld, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">projected marriage of, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">awarded a pension, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">objections to, as Regent, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">a member of the Regency Council, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his devotion to Fox, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">alliance of Newcastle with, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">plan of campaign, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">influence of, <a href="#Page_475">475</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Darcy, Sir Conyers, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dashwood, Francis, Baron, <a href="#Page_414">414</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Delamere, Lord, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Delaval, John, speech at Berwick, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Delany, Mrs., 'Memoirs of,' referred to, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Denbigh, Lord, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Derby, Prince Charles Edward marches on, <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dettingen, Battle of, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">George II. at, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt's view of the, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Devonshire, land purchased in, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Devonshire, Duke of, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476-86</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Devonshire House, assembly at, <a href="#Page_479">479</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">De Witt, Jan, <a href="#Page_443">443</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Diamond, transaction of the Pitt, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Dickins_and_Stanton" id="Dickins_and_Stanton"></a>Dickins and Stanton, 'An Eighteenth Century Correspondence' referred to, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Digby, Lord, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Disraeli, Benjamin, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Divinity Pitt,' <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Dodington_George_Bubb" id="Dodington_George_Bubb"></a>Dodington, George Bubb, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383-6</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dorsetshire, lands purchased in, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dover, Lord, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dresden, occupied by Frederick II., <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Peace of, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Dropmore Papers' quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Duffell, Dr., <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dundonald, Lord, 'Autobiography of,' referred to, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dunkirk, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dupleix, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dupplin, one of the Paymasters, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Duquesne Fort, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dutch Expedition up the Thames recalled, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Dutens, Louis, reception by the Pitts, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Voyage' referred to, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">East India Company, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Education, Chatham's letters on, <a href="#Page_20">20</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Edward III., <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Egmont, Earl of, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Eighteenth Century Correspondence,' see <a href="#Dickins_and_Stanton">Dickins and Stanton</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Election expenses, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Elizabeth, Empress of Russia, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Elizabeth, Queen of England, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ellis, Welbore, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Enfield Chase, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">England, indifference of George II. and William III. to, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">pledged to the Pragmatic Sanction, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Remarks on the History of,' see <a href="#Bolingbroke_Lord">Bolingbroke, Lord</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Epsom, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Eridge, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Erskine, Sir Henry, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_517" id="Page_517"></a></span>
+</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Erskine, Thomas, <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Esmond, Will, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Essex, Lady, see <a href="#Pitt_Essex">Pitt, Essex</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Esther, name given to Chatham's wife, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Eton, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27-30</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Eugene, Prince, <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Excise scheme, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Fairly Farm, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Falmouth, Lord, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fane, Lord, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Feilding, Charles, amiability of, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Fielding_Henry" id="Fielding_Henry"></a>Fielding, Henry, on Lord Chatham, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Squire Allworthy' referred to, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Tom Jones' referred to, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Finch, Edward, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Finch, William, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fitzgerald, Hon. Edward Villiers, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Fitzmaurice_Lord" id="Fitzmaurice_Lord"></a>Fitzmaurice, Lord, 'Life of Shelburne' referred to, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Flanders, British troops in, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">military operations in, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Florence, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fontainebleau, Treaty of, objects of the, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fontenoy, Battle of, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Foote, Samuel, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Table Talk' referred to, <a href="#Page_499">499</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fort St. George, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fortescue Family, nickname of the, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Fortescue_JW" id="Fortescue_JW"></a>Fortescue, J.W., 'History of the British Army,' quoted, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fox, Charles, illness of, <a href="#Page_340">340</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Fox, Henry, at Eton with Chatham, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">temperament, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294-7</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">sketch of his character, <a href="#Page_294">294-7</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">regarded as odious, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">peerage endowment from Paymastership, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">candidate for Secretaryship of State, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the Buckingham Assize dispute, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the Marriage Act, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">admitted to the Cabinet, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">member of the Council of Regency, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Newcastle's choice between Fox and Pitt, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">stipulations for promotions of friends, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">position on Provisioning Bill, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">as leader of the House, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417-20</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">opposes Bill for war prizes, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his challenge accepted, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">vetoes an appointment, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">defends Hume Campbell, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">no voice in Treasury appointment, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">questions of dictatorship, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">parliamentary intrigues and position, <a href="#Page_458">458-67</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">mistakes concerning&mdash;résumé of parliamentary life, <a href="#Page_474">474-84</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Ann Pitt, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">prospects of the Young Pretender, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">George II.'s inclination to, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">gratified with Chatham, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">opposed to Chatham, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416-20</a>, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>, <a href="#Page_445">445</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">visits Chatham, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">placed over Chatham, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">agreement with Chatham, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">description of Chatham's outburst with Newcastle, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">meets Chatham at Holland House, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">sends apologies to Hardwicke, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">hatred of Newcastle, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">and Newcastle's disgrace, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">rivalries referred to, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his enemies, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">metaphors used by, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">letters quoted, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Walpole on, <a href="#Page_442">442</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'France, Histoire de,' see <a href="#Martins_Histoire_de_France">Martin</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">France, Wars of, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, &amp;c.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Franche-Comté, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Francis, Duke, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Frankfort, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Frederick_II" id="Frederick_II"></a>Frederick II. (the Great), accession of, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">in Silesia, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">proclaimed Emperor at Frankfort, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his claim of Silesia, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">War of Austrian Succession, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400-02</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">subsidy to, <a href="#Page_286">286-7</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Frederick the Great,' see <a href="#Carlyle_Thomas">Carlyle, Thomas</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Frederick II. and his Times,' see <a href="#Raumers_Frederick_II">Raumer</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Frederick, Prince of Wales, heir apparent, <a href="#Page_148">148-51</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">marriage of, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his character and conduct, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">banished from Court, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">expelled from St. James's, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Dr. Ayscough adviser to, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">father of George II., <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">friendship with Thomas Pitt, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at the General Election, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Carteret a favourite of, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">congratulates Walpole, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">quarrels with Pitt, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">negotiations with Pitt, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">decline of affection for Lady Hamilton, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">overtures to Fox, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">death of, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Frederick William, of Prussia, death of, <a href="#Page_201">201</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Free Trade, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Gage, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gainsborough, Thomas, portrait by, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gambier, Lord, 'Memorials,' <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Garrick, David, <a href="#Page_499">499</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Gaskell_Mrs" id="Gaskell_Mrs"></a>Gaskell, Mrs., 'Cranford' referred to, <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gay, John, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Gazetteer, The,' newspaper, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Gentleman's Magazine, The,' <a href="#Page_188">188</a>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_518" id="Page_518"></a></span>
+</li>
+<li class="indx">George I., <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">George II., his dual personality, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, character of, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his political character, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Lord Hervey's unworthy portrayal of, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his courage, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">with Lady Yarmouth at Richmond, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">devotion for Hanover, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">as Elector of Hanover concludes a treaty with the French, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the security of the Electorate of Hanover, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">placed under arrest by his father, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his hatred of his son the Prince of Wales, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the Dutch War, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">in Hanover, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>, <a href="#Page_402">402</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at Dettingen, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">at Oudenarde, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">signs the Treaty of Worms, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the Treaty of Berlin, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">speech in Parliament, 1755, <a href="#Page_403">403-4</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">gives Premiership to Pelham, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his aversion to the Earl of Bath, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his anger with Newcastle, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">dismissal of Carteret, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt's first visit to, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his hatred of Pitt, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">reason for this hatred, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt's apparent loyalty to, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>, <a href="#Page_425">425</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt's desire for reconciliation with, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>, &amp;c., <a href="#Page_465">465-72</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">testifies to Walpole's bravery, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">discourteous treatment of Temple, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">repugnance to Legge, <a href="#Page_481">481-2</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the execution of Admiral Byng, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">George III., as a lad, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">compared with George II., <a href="#Page_200">200</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">in the Lords, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">and Mr. Fox, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">endeavours to form a Pitt Ministry, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Newcastle refuses a pension offered by, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pelham's death, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">treaties with Hesse-Cassel and Russia, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'George III., Memoirs of the Reign of,' see <a href="#Walpole_Horace">Walpole, Horace</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">George IV., extravagance of, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">compared with George II., <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Georgia, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Germaine, Lady Betty, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Germany, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Gibbs" id="Gibbs"></a>Gibbs' 'History of Aylesbury' referred to, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gibbon, Edward, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gibraltar, proposed restoration to Spain, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gladstone, Rt. Hon. W.E., <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Glasgow and the Jacobite occupation, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Glatz, ceded to Frederick II., <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Glenfinnan, the Young Pretender at, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Glover, Richard, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gordon, Rev., <a href="#Page_493">493</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gower, Granville Leveson, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grafton, Duke of, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grandison, Catherine, Viscountess of, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grandison, Lord, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Granville, Earl, see <a href="#Carteret_John">Carteret, John</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Grattan, Life of,' referred to, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_495">495</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gray, Sir James, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Gray, Thomas, lampoon on Fox, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grenville, Family of, Pitt united to the, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_389">389</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Grenville Papers' referred to, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grenville, George, opposed the war in Flanders, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the Buckingham Assizes, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">speech on unrest with Spain, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">offices held by:&mdash;</li>
+<li class="isub2">Prime Minister, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub2">Lord of the Treasury, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub2">Chancellor of the Exchequer, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub2">Paymastership, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub2">Secretaryship of State offered to, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">congratulated by Pitt, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Bill <i>re</i> vessels captured before declaration of war, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">position and reasons for his hatred of Pitt, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">opposition to Pitt, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">letters from Pitt to, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Letters from Lyttelton to, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">visit to Bath, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grenville, Henry, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grenville, Lady, inherits Boconnoc, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Grenville_Lady_Hester" id="Grenville_Lady_Hester"></a>Grenville, Lady Hester, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">wife of Chatham, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">letters of, and reference to, <a href="#Page_99">99-102</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112-15</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">her character, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">pension to, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grenville, James, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Grenville_Richard_Temple" id="Grenville_Richard_Temple"></a>Grenville, Richard Temple, afterwards Earl Temple, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">resigned Privy Seal, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">proposed as Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">proposed as First Lord of the Admiralty, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">refused to be First Lord of the Treasury, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Order of the Garter, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his ambition a Dukedom, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">application for title, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his bet, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">apologises to Hervey, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">cold reception at Court, <a href="#Page_484">484-5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">visits Chatham at Bath, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">voted against the Hanoverians, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">pensioned, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the Buckingham Assizes dispute, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Letters to, <a href="#Page_319">319-21</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326-7</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Letters of Junius' ascribed to, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grenville, Thomas, killed in action off Cape Finisterre, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grenvilles, the, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">public money drawn by, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">friends of Pitt, <a href="#Page_492">492</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Grub Street, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_519" id="Page_519"></a></span>
+</li>
+<li class="indx">Guernsey, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Hagley, Lord Lyttelton's seat at, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hague, Embassy to the, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Halifax, Earl of, <a href="#Page_472">472</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hamilton, Duke of, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hamilton, Lady Archibald, <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hamilton, Lord Archibald, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hampden, Lord, attack on Pitt, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hampden, Richard, estate of, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hampshire, land purchased in, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hampton Court, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hannan, John, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hannan, Sir William, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hannibal, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hanover, Pitt's contempt for, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">George II.'s devotion to, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his visit to, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his ideas for safeguarding, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Convention signed at, between Britain and Prussia, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">George III.'s visit to, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hanoverian Guards substituted for English Guards, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hanoverians, allies of Britain, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">English hatred of the, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">vote for maintenance of the, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">transferred to Maria Theresa, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hapsburg, House of, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Hardwicke_Philip_Yorke" id="Hardwicke_Philip_Yorke"></a>Hardwicke, Philip Yorke, Earl of, letters to, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_458">458</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">letters from, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the alienation of the Prince of Wales from his parents, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">as Newcastle's mentor and counsellor, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pitt's popularity in the Commons, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pitt's acrimoniousness, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">and George II., <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the foreign military policy, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his treatment of Newcastle, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">supports Newcastle, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">supports Pitt, <a href="#Page_371">371-3</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">antagonism over Marriage Act, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">as the brains of the Cabinet, <a href="#Page_315">315-16</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">political unrest and intrigue of 1755-6, <a href="#Page_386">386-90</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464-5</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467-73</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Life of Hardwicke,' see <a href="#Harris_George">Harris, George</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Harrington, Earl of, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Harris_George" id="Harris_George"></a>Harris, George, 'Life of Hardwicke' referred to, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Harrison, Mr., <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hartington, Lord, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Letters from Fox to, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hastings, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hawke, Lord, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hawkins, &mdash;&mdash;, <a href="#Page_390">390</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hay, Dr., <a href="#Page_467">467</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hayes, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hedges, William, quotations from, <a href="#Page_2">2</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hell-fire Club, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Henley, Robert, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Herrenhausen, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hertford, Lord, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hervey, Lord, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Memoirs' referred to, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hesse, Landgrave of, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hesse-Cassel, Treaty with, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hessians, allies of Britain, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hillsborough, Lord, <a href="#Page_369">369</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hoare, William, portrait of Pelham, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">portraits of Pitt, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hochkirch, Battle of, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Holdernesse, Lady, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Holdernesse, Lord, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Holland, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the Dutch as allies, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">guarantee of assistance to, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Holland, Lady, 'Journal' quoted, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Holland House, meeting of Chatham and Fox at, <a href="#Page_370">370</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Holland House MSS.' referred to, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>, <a href="#Page_460">460</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480-3</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hollins, &mdash;&mdash;, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Holyrood, Prince Charles Edward at, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Homer, Original Genius of,' see <a href="#Wood_Robert">Wood, Robert</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hood, Admiral, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Houghton, Walpole at, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his burial at, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Howard, Frederick, see <a href="#Carlisle_Frederick_Howard">Carlisle, Earl of</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Howe, Captain Lord, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hungary, Queen of, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">subsidy voted to, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hurstmonceux, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Hyde, Lord, <a href="#Page_462">462</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Impiger, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">India, Governor Pitt's progress in, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Innes Family, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Iracundus, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Irwin, Lady, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Italy, war in, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Jacobinism, Governor Pitt on, <a href="#Page_10">10</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jamaica, position of the Governorship of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">James I., <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">James II., <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jenkins' Ear, story of, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Jews' Naturalisation Act, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Johnson, Dr., <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Kaunitz, adviser of Maria Theresa, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kensington, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114-16</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_520" id="Page_520"></a></span>
+</li>
+<li class="indx">Khevenhüller, General, occupies Munich, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kielmansegge's 'Diary,' quoted, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Kildare, Lord, <a href="#Page_459">459</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Kildare, Narrative to,' quotations from, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478</a>, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">King, Mr., <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Land's End, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lanoe, Colonel, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lauffeld, Battle of, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Leadam, quoted, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Leasowes, Shenstone's house at, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lecky, W.E.H., <a href="#Page_502">502</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lee, Dr., <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Legge, Henry Bilson, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380-2</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">letter to Chatham, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Chancellor of the Exchequer, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_480">480</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">a Lord of the Treasury, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt's Ministry, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the King's repugnance to, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">proposed Peerage for, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Chatham's speech, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">refused to sign the Hesse-Cassel Treaty, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">distrusted by Newcastle, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">in praise of Walpole, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Leicester House, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291-4</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386-8</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a>, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_483">483-5</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lifeguards escort George II., <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ligonier, General, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Limerick, Lord, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lincoln, acts as mediator between the Pelham brothers, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Linz, Archduke proclaimed in, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Liverpool, Lord, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'London Magazine, The,' <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Londonderry, Lord, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Loo, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lothian, Lord, <a href="#Page_439">439</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Loudoun, Lord, <a href="#Page_441">441</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Louis XIV., <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Louis XV., <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Louis XV. et la Renversement des Alliances,' see <a href="#Waddington_Richard">Waddington, Richard</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Louis XVIII., <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Louisbourg, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Low Countries, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Luneville, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyndhurst, Lord, <a href="#Page_443">443</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyte, Sir Henry, 'Dunster,' quoted, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'History of Eton' referred to, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyttelton, Christian, marriage with Thomas Pitt, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">her character, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyttelton, Sir George, afterwards Baron Lyttelton, Pitt correspondence referring to, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321-4</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his companions in youth, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">friendship with William Pitt, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">supports Pitt, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">quarrel with Pitt, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">reconciliation, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">private secretary to Prince of Wales, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">return to Parliament, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">and standing army, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">and Spanish War, <a href="#Page_167">167-8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">influence over Pulteney, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">secret terms with Walpole, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">policy concerning war in Flanders, <a href="#Page_223">223-4</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">a Lord of the Treasury, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">arranged coalition between forces of Stowe and Leicester House, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Cofferer, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">attempts reconciliation between Newcastle and Bedford, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Chancellor of the Exchequer, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his Budget, <a href="#Page_440">440</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">War supplies, <a href="#Page_446">446-8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Joint-Paymaster of the Forces, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">character, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">couplet, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">works, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Memoirs and Correspondence of,' see <a href="#Phillimore_RJ">Phillimore, R.J.</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyttelton, Molly, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyttelton, Sir Richard, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a> <a href="#Page_473">473</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyttelton, Sir Thomas, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Lyttelton, William, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Macaulay, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Macclesfield, Lord, death of, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Madras, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Maestricht, siege of, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Magyars appealed to by Maria Theresa, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mahon, Lady, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Maillebois, Marshal, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mainz, Elector of, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Malta, Knights of,' see <a href="#Porters_History_of_the_Knights_of_Malta">Porter</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mann, Sir Horace, 'Letters to Horace Walpole,' <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mansfield, Lord, see <a href="#Murray_William_Earl_of">Murray, William, Earl of</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marchmont, Earl of, Duchess of Marlborough's bequest to, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Marchmont Papers' quoted, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Maria Theresa, the War of Austrian Succession, <a href="#Page_202">202-5</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213-15</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">her character, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marlborough, Duke of, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marlborough, Sarah, Duchess of, death and bequests of, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Marlborough, Duchess of, Life of,' see <a href="#Thomsons_Life_of_the_Duchess_of_Marlborough">Thomson</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marriage Act, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Marseilles, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Martins_Histoire_de_France" id="Martins_Histoire_de_France"></a>Martin's 'Histoire de France,' quoted, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Martin, Mr., <a href="#Page_357">357</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Martyn, Mr., <a href="#Page_46">46</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_521" id="Page_521"></a></span>
+</li>
+<li class="indx">Mayo, Mr., <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mediterranean, English fleet in, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Medmenham, Brotherhood of, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Meehan's 'Famous Houses of Bath,' quoted, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Meredith, Sir William, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Middlesex, Lord, M.P. for Old Sarum, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Milan, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Miller, Mr. Saunderson, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Ministry, The New,' a collection of songs, &amp;c., <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Minorca, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">fall of, <a href="#Page_450">450-1</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mirabeau's power of oratory, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mirepoix, Duchess of, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mirepoix, Duke of, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mohawks, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mohun, Lord, sells Boconnoc, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Molinox, Mr., <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Molwitz, Austrians defeated at, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Monmouth, Duke of, at Sedgemoor, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mons, capture of, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Montagu, Duke of, <a href="#Page_428">428</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Montagu, Mrs. Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Letters' quoted, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Montcalm, General, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Montcalm and Wolfe,' see <a href="#Parkmans_Montcalm_and_Wolfe">Parkman</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Montespan, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Montpelier, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Morayshire, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Moreau, Souvenirs de,' referred to, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mudge, Mr., <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mug, Matthew, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Murray_William_Earl_of" id="Murray_William_Earl_of"></a>Murray, William, Earl of, formerly Lord Mansfield, oratorical powers, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">precision of, <a href="#Page_496">496-7</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">eminence of, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Solicitor-General, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Attorney-General, <a href="#Page_453">453-5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his chance of promotion, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1"><i>re</i> new Cabinet, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">changes in the Cabinet, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1"><i>re</i> Jacobites, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1"><i>re</i> subsidy treaties, <a href="#Page_431">431-4</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">attitude towards Pitt, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt's attack on, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363-5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pitt's powers of ridicule, <a href="#Page_503">503</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">enemy of Fox, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">coolness towards Newcastle, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">correspondence regarding, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Mutiny Bill, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Namur, capture of, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Naples, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Napoleon I., <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Napoleon III., <a href="#Page_509">509</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Navy, proposed reduction of the, <a href="#Page_289">289</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Necessity Fort, surrender of, <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nedham, Mrs. Catherine, see <a href="#Pitt_Catherine">Pitt, Catherine</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nedham, Robert, his marriage with Catherine Pitt, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">nominated for Old Sarum, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nevers, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Newbury, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Newcastle_Sir_Thomas_Pelham" id="Newcastle_Sir_Thomas_Pelham"></a>Newcastle, Sir Thomas Pelham, afterwards Duke of, his character, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173-4</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">an incident at his uncle's death, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">refuses a pension, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">contempt of George II. for, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">supports Henry Pelham, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">blunder in the Lords, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">supports the Dutch cause, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the Ministerial crisis of 1746, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the Seaford election, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his jealous nature, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his dislike for Bedford, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">views on the Hanoverian question, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt's enmity with, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">profession of gratitude to Pitt, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Fox's vengeance on, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his jealousy of Fox, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Fox's hatred of, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the Jews' Naturalisation Act, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">letters and correspondence, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329-33</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_386">386</a>, <a href="#Page_461">461-2</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Secretary of State, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his appointments, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">words with Chatham, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his power in the Commons, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">negotiations with Fox, <a href="#Page_368">368-9</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Prime Minister, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">formation of Cabinet, <a href="#Page_389">389</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">councils of war, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">and Hanoverian treaties, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">attempted negotiations between Newcastle and French Ambassador, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">loyalty of Commons to, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt's suspicions of, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">attempted reconciliation between Newcastle and Bedford, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his opinion of Lyttelton, <a href="#Page_412">412</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">political unrest, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>, <a href="#Page_453">453-5</a>, <a href="#Page_458">458-70</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1"><i>re</i> execution of Byng, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">deserted by his friends, <a href="#Page_471">471-5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">resignation, <a href="#Page_485">485</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Newcastle MSS.,' <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Newdigate, Sir Roger, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Newton, Bishop, 'Works' referred to, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">metaphor of, <a href="#Page_494">494</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Niesse ceded to Frederick II., <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nivernois, M. de, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Noailles, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Norfolk, election expenses in, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Norfolk House, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">North, Lord, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Northampton, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nugent, Robert, Earl, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Nuthall, Thomas, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Okehampton, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Oliver, Dr., <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_522" id="Page_522"></a></span>
+</li>
+<li class="indx">Onslow, Rt. Hon. Arthur, Chatham's appeal to, <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Orange, House of, returned to power, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Orford's 'George III.,' see <a href="#Walpole_Horace">Walpole, Horace</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Orleans, Regent of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Orsini, <a href="#Page_509">509</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Orwell, portrait at, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Oswald, James, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Oswego, fall of, <a href="#Page_457">457</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Oudenarde, Battle of, George II. at, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Oxford, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Pall Mall, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pan, Temple of, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Paris, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Parkmans_Montcalm_and_Wolfe" id="Parkmans_Montcalm_and_Wolfe"></a>Parkman's 'Montcalm and Wolfe' quoted, <a href="#Page_396">396</a>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Parliamentary History, see <a href="#Cobbett_William">Cobbett, William</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Parma, proposed reconquest of, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Paulett, Lord, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Peel, Sir Robert, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>, <a href="#Page_490">490</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">a comparison, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pelham, Colonel, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pelham, Rt. Hon. Henry, effect of his death, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313-15</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">the King's regard for, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">eager for peace, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">becomes Premier, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Chatham's support, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Carteret's support, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Carteret's dismissal, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">assistance to the Dutch, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">refuses office perquisites, <a href="#Page_256">256-8</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Aix-la-Chapelle Treaty, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">eulogy of Chatham, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">seeks retirement, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">foreign policy, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Memoirs of Henry Pelham,' see <a href="#Coxe_William">Coxe, William</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pelham, Sir Thomas, see <a href="#Newcastle_Sir_Thomas_Pelham">Newcastle, Duke of</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pembroke, Lord, 1st Dragoon Guards, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Penshurst, Chatham visits, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Peter the Great, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Philip, Don, designs on Milan, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Phillimore_RJ" id="Phillimore_RJ"></a>Phillimore, R.J., 'Memoirs and Correspondence of Lyttelton' referred to, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Phillips, Mrs., <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Phillipson, Mr., <a href="#Page_477">477</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Dr., <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Ann (sister to Lord Chatham), friendships, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">State appointments, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">nicknames, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">correspondence with her brother, <a href="#Page_55">55-84</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88-125</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">quarrels with Chatham, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85-7</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">retires to France, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">returns to England, <a href="#Page_102">102-4</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">health and mental condition, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">income increased to, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">resides at Kensington, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">grief at death of brother, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">under restraint, death, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Pitt_Betty" id="Pitt_Betty"></a>Pitt, Betty (sister to Lord Chatham), history and description of, <a href="#Page_49">49-52</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Pitt_Catherine" id="Pitt_Catherine"></a>Pitt, Catherine (sister to Lord Chatham), afterwards Nedham, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96-8</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Clara Villiers, see <a href="#Pitt_Betty">Pitt, Betty</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Elizabeth, see <a href="#Pitt_Betty">Pitt, Betty</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Pitt_Essex" id="Pitt_Essex"></a>Pitt, Essex (daughter of Governor Pitt), marriage, death, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, George (of Strathfieldsaye), <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Harriot, wife of Robert Pitt, see <a href="#Villiers_Harriot">Villiers</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Harriot (sister of Lord Chatham), matrimonial designs on, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">her character, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">marriage of, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">illness, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Hester, wife of Chatham, see <a href="#Grenville_Lady_Hester">Grenville</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Pitt_John" id="Pitt_John"></a>Pitt, John (great-grandfather of Chatham), Vicar of Blandford, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, John (son of Governor Pitt), disposition, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, John, a Dorsetshire kinsman, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, John (eldest son of Lord Chatham), <a href="#Page_455">455</a>, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>, <a href="#Page_477">477</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Lucy (daughter of Governor Pitt), marriage, death, <a href="#Page_12">12-14</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Mary (sister of Lord Chatham), referred to, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">described, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">letter to Lady Suffolk, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Robert (son of Governor Pitt, father of Lord Chatham), family relationships, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14-16</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">character, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">death, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">correspondence from son's tutor, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Thomas ('The Governor') parentage, characteristics, <a href="#Page_1">1-5</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">prescience regarding Chatham, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">mourning item, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Thomas (son of Robert, brother of Lord Chatham), conduct and characteristics, <a href="#Page_14">14-16</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">seeks appointment, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">marriage, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">charge against, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">parliamentary career, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Pitt_Thomas" id="Pitt_Thomas"></a>Pitt, Thomas (son of Thomas Pitt), 1st Baron Camelford, letters quoted and referred to, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85-7</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_496">496</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">created Baron Camelford, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Chatham's marriage, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">bias toward Chatham, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, Villiers Clara, see <a href="#Pitt_Betty">Pitt, Betty</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_523" id="Page_523"></a></span>
+</li>
+<li class="indx">Pitt, William, 1st Earl of Chatham, see <a href="#Chatham_William_Pitt">Chatham</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pitt, William (the younger), birth, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">death, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Place Bill, extension of, <a href="#Page_245">245</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Plutarch, referred to, <a href="#Page_443">443</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Poetical quotations, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Poland, partition of, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Poland, King of, Berlin Treaty and the, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Poland-Saxony, claims of Austria on, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Polwarth, against Walpole, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pomfret, Lord, <a href="#Page_467">467</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pompadour, Madame de, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pope, Alexander, quoted, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Porritt's 'Unreformed House of Commons' referred to, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Porte, Mr. de la, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Porters_History_of_the_Knights_of_Malta" id="Porters_History_of_the_Knights_of_Malta"></a>Porter's 'History of the Knights of Malta' quoted, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Portsmouth, Duchess of, intercedes for Governor Pitt, <a href="#Page_3">3</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Potter, Thomas, supports petition against Seaford, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Bucks Assize dispute, <a href="#Page_272">272-5</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Chatham's praise of, <a href="#Page_454">454</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">position found for, <a href="#Page_483">483</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">opposes navy reduction, <a href="#Page_289">289</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Pragmatic Sanction, maintenance of, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prague, King of Bohemia proclaimed in, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Pratt_Charles" id="Pratt_Charles"></a>Pratt, Charles, 1st Earl Camden, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Preston, Mr., <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Pretyman Papers,' referred to, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prevot, as a prototype, <a href="#Page_441">441</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prior Park, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Protestant Succession, endurance to secure, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Prussia, Convention signed at Hanover, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Pulteney_Sir_William" id="Pulteney_Sir_William"></a>Pulteney, Sir William, Earl of Bath, Ann Pitt's designs on, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">entertained at Stowe, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his wit, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">idolised by the people, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Walpole's use of, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_505">505</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">stands aside for Carteret, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">popularity declines, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">nettled at criticism, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">claims head of Government, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">forms a Government&mdash;its failure, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">proscribed, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">lack of character, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">introduces Prize Bill, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Newcastle's reflection on, <a href="#Page_472">472</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Queensbury, Duchess of, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Queensbury, Duke of, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Radway, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ranby, Dr., <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Raumers_Frederick_II" id="Raumers_Frederick_II"></a>Raumer's 'Frederick II. and his Times,' <a href="#Page_402">402</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Reading, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Redhall, <a href="#Page_8">8</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Rejected Addresses,' see <a href="#Smith_Horatio">Smith, Horatio</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Reynolds, Sir Joshua, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rhine, River, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Richelieu, Duke of, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_427">427</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Richmond, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Richmond, Duke of, <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ridgeway, Earl of Londonderry, <a href="#Page_12">12</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rigby, Richard, <a href="#Page_424">424</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rivers, Lord, <a href="#Page_1">1</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Robinson, Sir Thomas, his appointments, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Master of the Wardrobe and Secretary of State, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_482">482</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">pensioned, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Chatham's remarks to, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Newcastle's praise of, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">panegyric on himself, <a href="#Page_428">428</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rochester, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rogers, Samuel, 'Recollections of Samuel Rogers' referred to, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Table Talk,' <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rolt, Bayntun, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rolliad, quotation from, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Rondet, the royal jeweller, <a href="#Page_4">4</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ross, Man of, <a href="#Page_303">303</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Roucoux, French victory at, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Royston, Lord, <a href="#Page_465">465</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russell, Lord John, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Russia, George III.'s treaty with, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Ryder, Sir Dudley, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>, <a href="#Page_455">455</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Sackville, Lord George, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>, <a href="#Page_442">442</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. James's Square, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Lawrence, River, naval battle at mouth of, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">St. Rumbald, spring at, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Salisbury, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Samson of Battersea, nickname of Bolingbroke, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sancho Panza, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sandwich, Earl of, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sandys, Baron, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sardinia, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">King of, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sarpedon, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sarum, Old, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4-6</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Saunders, Sir Charles, <a href="#Page_450">450</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Savile, Sir George, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Savoy, House of, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Saxe, Marshal, marches against Austria, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">successes in the Low Countries, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Saxons, as allies of Britain, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Saxony, entered by Frederick II., <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Elector of, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_524" id="Page_524"></a></span>
+</li>
+<li class="indx">Schwerin, Marshal, defeats Austrians at Molwitz, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Scrope, John, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Seaford, election of Chatham for, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sedgemoor, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Seine, River, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Selwyn, George, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Seward's 'Anecdotes' referred to, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_501">501</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shelburne, Lord, thoughts on Thomas Pitt, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the madness of the Pitts, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pitt's use of words, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Richard Temple, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">troop offered to, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pulteney's oratory, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Life of Shelburne,' see <a href="#Fitzmaurice_Lord">Fitzmaurice, Lord</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shenstone, William, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sheridan, R.B., <a href="#Page_502">502</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Shippen, William, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Siddons, Mrs., <a href="#Page_500">500</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sidmouth, Lord, <a href="#Page_489">489</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Silesia, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sinclair, Sir John, <a href="#Page_7">7</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sion, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Skew,' a nickname, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Smith_Horatio" id="Smith_Horatio"></a>Smith, Horatio, 'Rejected Addresses' referred to, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Smollett, Tobias, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Soho, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Solomon, name given to Chatham, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">South Lodge, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">South Sea Bubble, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Spain, extravagance of the Bourbons, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">claim on Austria, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">cause of war with, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Walpole's policy, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">war declared against, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Britons in Spanish prisons' cry, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">peace question raised by Lord Egmont, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Spencer, Lady Diana, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Spencer, John, bequests to and from, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sporus, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stair, Lord, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stanhope, George, death of, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stanhope, Lady Hester, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_489">489</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Memoirs,' <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stanhope, James, 1st Earl, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">soldier and statesman, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">marriage with Lucy Pitt, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stanhope, Philip Dormer, see <a href="#Chesterfield_Philip_Dormer_Stanhope">Chesterfield, Earl of</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stanhope, Sir William, speech on the Bucks Assize dispute, <a href="#Page_272">272-4</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stanislas, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stanley, Hans, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stannaries, Thomas Pitt, Warden of, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">States General, a party to the Treaty of Berlin, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stephen, Leslie, 'English Literature and Society in the Eighteenth Century,' <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stewart, General, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stockwell, I., as tutor to Lord Chatham, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stone, Andrew, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_460">460</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stone House, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stormont, <a href="#Page_453">453</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stowe, <a href="#Page_77">77-82</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Strange, Lord, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stratford, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stuart, House of, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Stuart_Charles_Edward" id="Stuart_Charles_Edward"></a>Stuart, Charles Edward, 'the Young Pretender,' <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Stuart, Mrs., <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Sublimity Pitt,' <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Subsidies, On, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>, <a href="#Page_380">380</a>, <a href="#Page_430">430-4</a>, <a href="#Page_436">436</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Suffolk, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Suffolk, Lady, letters referred to, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sunninghill, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Surajah Dowlah, <a href="#Page_457">457</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sussex, tour in, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Swallowfield, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Sweden, King of, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Talbot, Lord, evil living of, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Taylor, Miss, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Temperley's 'Essay on the Causes of War with Spain' referred to, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Temple, Countess, see <a href="#Grenville_Lady_Hester">Grenville, Lady</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Temple, Lord, see <a href="#Grenville_Richard_Temple">Grenville, Richard Temple</a>, afterwards Earl Grenville</li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Temple_Sir_Richard" id="Temple_Sir_Richard"></a>Temple, Sir Richard, Viscount Cobham, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_505">505</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">builder of palace of Stowe, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his entertainments at, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">served under Marlborough, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">called 'the brave Cobham,' <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his great riches, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">various titles and honours conferred on, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">opposed to the Excise Bill, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">sides with Pitt, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt devoted to Cobham, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">quarrel with Pitt, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the war in Flanders, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">growing jealousy of his 'young patriots,' <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">nicknames to, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">death of, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Temple Bar, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Thackeray_Francis" id="Thackeray_Francis"></a>Thackeray, Francis, 'Life of Chatham' referred to, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Thackeray, W.M., referred to, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">satire on George II. mentioned, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Thames, Dutch ships in the, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'The Test,' a newspaper, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Thessaly, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Thirsk, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_525" id="Page_525"></a></span>
+</li>
+<li class="indx"><a name="Thomsons_Life_of_the_Duchess_of_Marlborough" id="Thomsons_Life_of_the_Duchess_of_Marlborough"></a>Thomson's 'Life of the Duchess of Marlborough,' <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Timbs, 'Anecdote biography,' <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Tom Jones,' see <a href="#Fielding_Henry">Fielding, Henry</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Torrens_WT_McC" id="Torrens_WT_McC"></a>Torrens, W.T. McC., 'History of Cabinets,' <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Towcester, <a href="#Page_80">80</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Townshend, Lady, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Townshend, Charles, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_475">475</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Townshend, Colonel, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Townshend, George, <a href="#Page_428">428</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Trinity College, Chatham admitted to, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Trojans, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tunbridge, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Tunbridge Wells, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Twickenham, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Underwood's 'Historical MSS.' quoted, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Utrecht, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Vale Royal, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Valličre, La, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vauxhall, New, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vere, Lady, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vere, Lord, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Versailles, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Palace at, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">replica of, in a Bavarian lake, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Treaty of, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Very, Count, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vesey, Mr., <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Vienna threatened by the French army, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Villiers, George, Duke of Buckingham, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Villiers_Harriot" id="Villiers_Harriot"></a>Villiers, Harriot, marriage with Robert Pitt, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">mother of Lord Chatham, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">her family, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">returns to France, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">correspondence with her son, <a href="#Page_38">38-46</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">death of, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Villiers, Lord, <a href="#Page_39">39-41</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Voiture, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Voltaire's 'Candide' referred to, <a href="#Page_451">451</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst"><a name="Waddington_Richard" id="Waddington_Richard"></a>Waddington, Richard, 'Louis XV. et le Renversement des Alliances' referred to, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Waldegrave, Lady Betty, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Waldegrave, James, Earl, procures Pitt letters of introduction at Paris, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the character of George II., <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Sir Thomas Robinson, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">negotiates for Fox to enter the Cabinet, <a href="#Page_366">366-8</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Correspondence' referred to, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Waldegrave, John, Earl, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Waller, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>; appointed Cofferer, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Walpole, Horace, 2nd Earl of Orford (son of Sir Robert Walpole), <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Walpole_Horace" id="Walpole_Horace"></a>Walpole, Horace, 4th Earl of Orford (brother of Sir Robert Walpole), his kinship with Lord Hervey, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">affection for Lord Camelford, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">as a gossip, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Thomas Pitt, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">charge against Betty Pitt, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1"><i>re</i> Ann Pitt, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125-7</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pitt's behaviour to his sisters, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the Grenvilles, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on George II., <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pitt's speeches, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434-5</a>, <a href="#Page_438">438</a>, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his admiration for Pitt, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>, <a href="#Page_503">503</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pitt's impatience for office, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pitt's change of opinion, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pitt's sudden illness, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Dr. Lee's attack on Pitt, <a href="#Page_254">254-5</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Pitt's resentment against the Newcastles, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his partiality for Fox, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Sir Thomas Robinson's appointment, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Lyttelton, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on Lord Wilmington, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">opposes Saxon subsidy, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the Bath Ministry, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the loss of Minorca, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>, <a href="#Page_457">457</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the American war;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the scheme of the Notables, <a href="#Page_480">480-1</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">letter to Bentley, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Walpole, Horace, 'Memoirs of the Reign of George III.,' quotations from, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>, <a href="#Page_394">394-5</a>, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>, <a href="#Page_467">467</a>, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>, <a href="#Page_478">478-81</a>.</li>
+
+<li class="indx">Walpole, Sir Robert, 1st Earl of Orford, character of, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his love for sport, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his relations with George II., <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the political character of George II., <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his relations with Pitt, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158-60</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his attitude towards the Prince of Wales, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his attitude towards Newcastle, <a href="#Page_175">175-7</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">supports Pelham, <a href="#Page_314">314-15</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">his policy regarding Spain, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the Army, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">on the Secessions, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">supports Maria Theresa, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">favours the Hanoverian vote, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">speech on threatened landing of the Pretender, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">temporary resignation of, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">inquiry into administration of, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">punishment of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">succeeded by Lord Carteret, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">fall of, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171-3</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_505">505</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">resignation of, and papers burnt by his brother Horace, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">impeachment of, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">illness and death of, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">compared with Pitt and Peel, <a href="#Page_230">230-2</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Memoirs of Sir Robert Walpole,' see <a href="#Coxe_William">Coxe, William</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Walpole, Thomas, purchases Hayes, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Washington, George, General, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_397">397</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Webster, Sir Whistler, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">West, Gilbert, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_492">492</a>;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_526" id="Page_526"></a></span>
+</li>
+<li class="isub1">his house at Wickham, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">West, Molly, <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Westminster, Treaty of, <a href="#Page_401">401</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Westminster School, <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Westphalia, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Treaty of, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Whately, Mr., 'Observations on Modern Gardening,' <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wickham, Chatham's honeymoon spent at, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wilberforce, William, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wilhelmine, Princess of Prussia, afterwards Margravine of Bareith, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wilkes, John, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wilkins' 'Political Ballads,' <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">William III., indifference to England, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Pitt's story of his coming, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Williams, Sir Charles Hanbury, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">lampoon on Pitt, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">'Works of,' quoted, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_465">465</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wilmington, Lord, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_505">505</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wilton, Joseph, <a href="#Page_490">490</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wiltshire, lands purchased in, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wimbledon, Duchess of Marlborough's estate at, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Windsor, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">'Wingfield MSS.' quoted, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Winnington, Thomas, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx"><a name="Wood_Robert" id="Wood_Robert"></a>Wood, Robert, 'Essay on the Original Genius of Homer' quoted, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Worms, Treaty of, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wotton, residence of George Grenville, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wyndham, Baron, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Wynn, Sir Watkin, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Yarmouth, Lady, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">and George II., <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">mistress of George II., <a href="#Page_465">465</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">and Pitt, <a href="#Page_108">108-10</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_464">464</a>, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">Fox solicits her influence to obtain a peerage, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">and Fox's overtures with the King, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">her utterance regarding, <a href="#Page_461">461</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yonge, Lady, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yorke, Charles, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>;</li>
+<li class="isub1">interview with Chatham, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yorke, Joseph, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
+
+<li class="indx">Yorke, Philip, see <a href="#Hardwicke_Philip_Yorke">Hardwicke, Earl of</a></li>
+
+
+<li class="ifrst">Zoroastrians, politicians compared with, <a href="#Page_389">389</a></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+<p class="p6 center">LONDON: STRANGEWAYS, PRINTERS.</p>
+<p class="p6">&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h2><a name="FOOTNOTES" id="FOOTNOTES"></a>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Camelford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Diary of William Hedges, III. x.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Hedges, III. xii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> He purchased it from Lord Salisbury about 1690. Hedges,
+III. xxx.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The portrait of the Governor at Boconnoc represents him
+with the diamond in his hat. That at Chevening with the diamond in his
+own shoe.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Camelford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Camelford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> Lyte's Dunster, 494.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> This and the following extracts from the Governor's
+correspondence are all taken from the Dropmore Papers (Hist. MSS.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Lady Suffolk's Letters, i. 101-4.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Camelford (italics his).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Camelford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Dropmore Papers, i. 70.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Camelford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Ib.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Dropmore Papers, i. 75.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Camelford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Camelford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Journal, ii. 45.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Dropmore Papers, i. 38, 41.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Tom Jones, Book xiii. Chapter i.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Life of Shelburne, i. 72.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Addressed: To Robert Pitt, Esq<sup>r</sup>, at Stratford, near Old
+Sarum, Wilts. Endorsed: 'Mr. Burchet's letter about my Sons att Eton.
+Feb<sup>ry</sup> 4th, 1722.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Lyttelton's Misc. Works, p. 650. 'Written at Eaton School,
+1729.' The date is obviously wrong, for Pitt and Lyttelton both went to
+Oxford in 1726.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Endorsed: 'from my Son William Sept. 29<sup>th</sup>: rec<sup>d</sup> Oct.
+10<sup>th</sup>, 1723.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Endorsed: 'from Mr. Stockwell about y<sup>e</sup> charges of my Sons
+going to Oxon: Nov<sup>r</sup> 1726 ans<sup>d</sup> Dec<sup>r</sup> 1st.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> Mourning for the Governor.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Endorsed: 'from M<sup>r</sup> Stockwell about my Son W<sup>m</sup> from Oxon:
+Dec<sup>r</sup> 22<sup>d</sup> ans<sup>d</sup> 29<sup>th</sup> 1726.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Paduasoy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Endorsed: 'from my Son Will<sup>m</sup> Oxon Jan<sup>y</sup> 20<sup>th</sup> w<sup>th</sup>
+y<sup>e</sup> acc<sup>t</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 100 answ<sup>d</sup> y<sup>e</sup> 24<sup>th</sup> 1726/7.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a>
+</p><p>
+<br />
+Endorsed: 'from my Son Will<sup>m</sup> Aprill 10<sup>th</sup> w<sup>th</sup> an acc<sup>t</sup></p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="bill">
+<tr><td class="tdl">of 3 mo<sup>s</sup> expences</td><td class="tdr">47</td><td class="tdr">05</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Rem<sup>s</sup> in his hand</td><td class="tdr">9</td><td class="tdr">15</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">In all</td><td class="tdr">57</td><td class="tdr">0</td><td class="tdr">0</td></tr>
+</table></div><p><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Answ<sup>d</sup> Aprill 25<sup>th</sup>, w<sup>th</sup> leave to draw for 25<sup>l</sup>.'</span><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Lyttelton, Misc. Works, 665.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> Always spelt Needham in the peerage books, always Nedham
+by the family and those concerned.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> 'Villiers Pitt' to William Pitt. 'Tours, June 1, 1752.'
+Chatham MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> Mann and Manners at the Court of Florence, i. 382.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> 'The Test' was a weekly paper published in 1756-7, written
+principally by Arthur Murphy, and inspired by Henry Fox, as may be seen
+from his letters. See too Orford, ii. 276, and Walpole to Mann, Jan. 6,
+1757. There had been a previous 'Test' in 1756, of which there was
+published only one number, written by Charles Townshend. See Orford, ii.
+218.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> Walpole to Mann, Jan. 17, 1757.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> To William Pitt, Oct. 10, 1751. Chatham MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> Dutens' Mémoires d'un Voyageur qui se repose, i. 31-42.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> Tours, June 11, 1752. Villiers Pitt to W. Pitt. Chatham
+MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> Or 1787? as says a note in the Delany Memoirs, iv. 266. It
+matters little.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Climenson's 'Elizabeth Montagu,' ii. 53. See, too, Mrs.
+Montagu's Letters, vol. iii.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Suffolk Letters, ii. 233.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> Camelford MS. Cf., too, William's letter of Sept. 29,
+1730.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Thackeray, i. 158 note.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> There is a crayon portrait of her at Boconnoc, which the
+writer has not seen. It 'represents the strong contemplative face of a
+woman well past her first prime,' and was taken, apparently, in 1765.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 355.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> All these letters from William to Ann Pitt come from the
+papers at Dropmore, unless where noted otherwise.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt, at Mrs. Phillips's, at Bath. T. Pitt
+Free.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> Dr. Charles Bave, a physician of the highest character at
+Bath. See note on Vol. I., p. 408, of Lady Suffolk's Letters.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> This must almost certainly be Ayscough, in spite of
+'Skew's' being the hereditary nickname of the Fortescue family.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> These are probably Colonel and Mrs. Lanoe, with whom Ann
+appears to be staying at Bath.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> Lyttelton's Misc. Works, 619.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> 'Mrs. Ann Pitt, at Col. Lanoe's at Bath.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt jun. at Boconnock near Bodmin
+Cornwall.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt at Mrs. Phillips's at Bath. T. Pitt
+Free.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> Same address.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt, at Bath.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> Ante, p. 56.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> Dr. Ayscough?</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> 'To The Hon<sup>ble</sup> Mrs. Ann Pitt at St. James's House
+Londres.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> Illegible.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> 'To The Hon<sup>ble</sup> M<sup>rs</sup> Ann Pitt at M<sup>rs</sup> Richard's In
+Pallmall, London. Angleterre.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> 'To the Hon<sup>ble</sup> Mrs Ann Pitt at St. James's House
+London. Angleterre.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> 'To the Hon<sup>ble</sup> M<sup>rs</sup> Ann Pitt at St. James's London.
+Free&mdash;Will, Herbert.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> Doubtless his brother.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> His brother.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> Sir William Corbett.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> 'To The Hon<sup>ble</sup> M<sup>rs</sup> Ann Pitt at St. James's London.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> Elected Feb. 18, 1735.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> Doubtless his brother.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> Lyttelton&mdash;a mere guess.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> Doubtless his brother.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> N.B.&mdash;Pope was at Stowe during this month. See Lady
+Suffolk's Letters, ii. 143.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> 'To the Hon<sup>ble</sup> M<sup>rs</sup> Pitt at Kensington House
+Middlesex. Free&mdash;W. Pitt.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> Camelford MS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> Recollections of Samuel Rogers, p. 104.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> Grenville Papers, i. 13.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> Chatham MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> Orford, i. 85.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> His aunt.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> Their cousin, Colonel the Hon. George Stanhope, who
+distinguished himself at Falkirk and Culloden.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> Letter dated Oct. 21, 1754, in the Chatham MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> 'To The Honourable Mrs. Ann Pitt, W. Pitt.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> Lady Suffolk's Letters, ii. 251.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> Delany, iv. 156.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> Walpole to Mann, Oct. 30, 1778.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> Ib. May 9, 1779.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> Delany, v. 403-5.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> Lady Suffolk's Letters, ii. 234.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> Porritt's Unreformed House of Commons, i. 35. T. Mozley
+when the nineteenth century was well advanced saw the constituency of
+Old Sarum in the person of 'a bright looking old fellow with a full
+rubicund face and a profusion of white hair.' Reminiscences, ii. 13.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> Grenville Papers, i. 423.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> Grenville Papers, i. 423-5.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> Grenville Papers, ii. 496.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> Ib. ii. 512.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> Lord Dundonald in his 'Autobiography' says that it
+produced 20,693<i>l.</i> p.a.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> Dickins and Stanton. 'An Eighteenth Century
+Correspondence,' 193.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> It seems best to call this worthy, who assumed the name of
+Dodington, by his patronymic; for it is his own name, and the most
+appropriate.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> Walpole to Mann, Feb. 25, 1750.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> Memoirs of Lady Hester Stanhope, iii. 179.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> See 'The New Ministry, containing a collection of all the
+satyrical poems, songs, &amp;c. 1742.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> Phillimore's Lyttelton, 681.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> Orford's George III. iii. 137.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> Ballantyne's Carteret, 107.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> Harris's Hardwicke, i. 382.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> These expressions are taken from Hervey's Memoirs.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> Dated Feb. 8, 1748. Bedford Correspondence, i. 320.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> Marchmont Papers, i. 84.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> Lord Dover's note to H. Walpole's letter of March 21,
+1751.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> Carlisle Papers (Hist. MSS.), 172.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> Seward, ii. 362.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> Lady Suffolk's Letters, ii. 151.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> Hervey, ii. 195.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> Hervey, ii. 80.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> Ib. ii. 82.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> Parl. Hist. x. 464-7.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 575.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> Life of Shelburne, i. 46.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 580 note.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> See Temperley's Essay on the causes of this war in Trans.
+of Royal Hist. Soc. Series II. vol. iii. p. 207.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_121_121" id="Footnote_121_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> Parl. Hist. x. 1284.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_122_122" id="Footnote_122_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> Parl. Hist. x. 1280-3.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_123_123" id="Footnote_123_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 594 note.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_124_124" id="Footnote_124_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> Marchmont Papers, ii. 180, note by Rose.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_125_125" id="Footnote_125_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> Life of Shelburne, i. 37. Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 309.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_126_126" id="Footnote_126_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 695.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_127_127" id="Footnote_127_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> Sir C.H. Williams, ii. 140-1.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_128_128" id="Footnote_128_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> Dutens' Voyage, &amp;c., i. 142.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_129_129" id="Footnote_129_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> Life of Shelburne, i. 45.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_130_130" id="Footnote_130_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> Bishop Newton's Works, i. 93.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_131_131" id="Footnote_131_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> Ballantyne's Carteret, 2.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_132_132" id="Footnote_132_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 280.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_133_133" id="Footnote_133_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> Marchmont Papers, i. 42, 73.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_134_134" id="Footnote_134_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> Wood's Essay on the Original Genius of Homer, p. vii. n.
+(Ed. 1775).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_135_135" id="Footnote_135_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> Chesterfield, v. 65.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_136_136" id="Footnote_136_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> Chesterfield's Letters, iv. 358.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_137_137" id="Footnote_137_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xii. 416-427.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_138_138" id="Footnote_138_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> Harris, ii. 31.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_139_139" id="Footnote_139_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xii. 561.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_140_140" id="Footnote_140_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> Ib. xii. 488.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_141_141" id="Footnote_141_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xii. 490.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_142_142" id="Footnote_142_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xii. 940 note.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_143_143" id="Footnote_143_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> Ib. xii. 1033.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_144_144" id="Footnote_144_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> Orford, Rem. 97.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_145_145" id="Footnote_145_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> Hervey, ii. 182, 228.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_146_146" id="Footnote_146_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> Holdernesse to Newcastle, Nov. 22, 1756. Add. MSS.
+32869.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_147_147" id="Footnote_147_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> Frederick, iii. 141.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_148_148" id="Footnote_148_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> Martin, Hist. de France, xv. 265. Leadam, 376.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_149_149" id="Footnote_149_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> Sir C.H. Williams, i. 247.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_150_150" id="Footnote_150_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> L. Stephen, English Literature and Society in the
+Eighteenth Century, 138.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_151_151" id="Footnote_151_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiii. 136.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_152_152" id="Footnote_152_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiii. 473 (note). Cf. Phillimore, 226. But
+Carteret had taken the lead of the Prince's party in the House of Lords
+so far back as 1737.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_153_153" id="Footnote_153_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xvi. 1097.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_154_154" id="Footnote_154_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> Fortescue, Hist. of the Army, ii. 101.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_155_155" id="Footnote_155_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> Marchmont Papers, i. 80.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_156_156" id="Footnote_156_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> Ib. i. 176.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_157_157" id="Footnote_157_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> To Mann, Jan. 24, 1744. Cf. Parl. Hist. xiii. 467 note.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_158_158" id="Footnote_158_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> Orford, ii. 132.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_159_159" id="Footnote_159_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> Thomson's Life of the Duchess of Marlborough, ii. 571-2.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_160_160" id="Footnote_160_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a> Marchmont Papers, ii. 338.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_161_161" id="Footnote_161_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> H. Walpole to Montagu, June 24, 1746. Cf. Grenville
+Papers, i. 131. Camelford MS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_162_162" id="Footnote_162_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a> H. Walpole to Mann, June 20, 1746.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_163_163" id="Footnote_163_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> Marchmont Papers, i. 70.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_164_164" id="Footnote_164_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> Works of Sir C.H. Williams, 1822, ii. 152.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_165_165" id="Footnote_165_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> Glover, 30.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_166_166" id="Footnote_166_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> Marchmont Papers, i. 67, 172. It was said that
+Harrington, from an interest in Lady Yonge, wife of the actual incumbent
+of the office, did his best to prevent Pitt's becoming Secretary for
+War. Ib. 97. But there was a more majestic obstacle.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_167_167" id="Footnote_167_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiii. 1054-6.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_168_168" id="Footnote_168_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiii. 1176.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_169_169" id="Footnote_169_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiii. 1177.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_170_170" id="Footnote_170_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> Bedford is ranked by Newcastle among the Cobham
+deputation, though he was First Lord of the Admiralty at the time.
+Perhaps he was the honest broker.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_171_171" id="Footnote_171_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> Newcastle to Chesterfield, Nov. 20, 1745. Add. MSS.
+32705.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_172_172" id="Footnote_172_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> Newcastle to Chesterfield, Feb. 18, 1746, in Coxe's
+Pelham Adm. i. 292.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_173_173" id="Footnote_173_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> Newcastle to Chesterfield, Feb. 18, 1746, in Coxe's
+Pelham Adm. i. 293.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_174_174" id="Footnote_174_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> Coxe's Lord Walpole, ii. 142.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_175_175" id="Footnote_175_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> Coxe's Lord Walpole, ii. 133.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_176_176" id="Footnote_176_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> Newcastle to Chesterfield, Feb. 18, 1746.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_177_177" id="Footnote_177_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> Orford, i. 110. Walpole to Mann, April 2, 1750.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_178_178" id="Footnote_178_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> Cartwright to Pitt, Feb. 27, 1745 (Chatham MSS.). We
+obtain the exact salary more or less correctly from a lampoon.
+</p>
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Hibernia, smile!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thrice happy isle,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On thy blest ground<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Twelve thousand pound<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For Stanhope's found,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Three thousand clear<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For Pitt a year;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So shalt thou thrive,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Industrious hive,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While these and more<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Increase thy store.'<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">&nbsp;</span>
+<span class="i0">Sir C.H. Williams, ii. 166.<br /></span>
+</div></div></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_179_179" id="Footnote_179_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> Camelford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_180_180" id="Footnote_180_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> Cf. Underwood MSS. (Hist. MSS.), p. 405.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_181_181" id="Footnote_181_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a> He avowed this to Newcastle (Orford, George III. i. 82
+note). But it was otherwise patent.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_182_182" id="Footnote_182_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiv. 103.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_183_183" id="Footnote_183_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> See the debate in Parl. Hist. xiv. 204.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_184_184" id="Footnote_184_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> Gibbs' History of Aylesbury, 502.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_185_185" id="Footnote_185_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> Torrens says (History of Cabinets, ii. 119) that this
+speech was revised by Pitt, but gives no authority. Almon (i. 172)
+specifically declares that it was written by Gordon.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_186_186" id="Footnote_186_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiv. 502.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_187_187" id="Footnote_187_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> Grenville Papers, i. 93-5.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_188_188" id="Footnote_188_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiv. 664.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_189_189" id="Footnote_189_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiv. 692-6.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_190_190" id="Footnote_190_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a> Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 370.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_191_191" id="Footnote_191_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a> Add. MSS. 32721.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_192_192" id="Footnote_192_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a> July 20, 1750. Add. MSS. 32721.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_193_193" id="Footnote_193_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a> Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 131, 370.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_194_194" id="Footnote_194_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a> Ib. ii. 396.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_195_195" id="Footnote_195_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiv. 801.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_196_196" id="Footnote_196_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a> Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 225, 359.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_197_197" id="Footnote_197_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiv. 967.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_198_198" id="Footnote_198_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a> Stone to Newcastle, Feb. 22, 1750/1. Add. MSS. 32724.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_199_199" id="Footnote_199_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xiv. 970.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_200_200" id="Footnote_200_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a> Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 144.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_201_201" id="Footnote_201_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a> Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 165.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_202_202" id="Footnote_202_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a> Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_203_203" id="Footnote_203_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a> Colebrooke's Memoirs, i. 63.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_204_204" id="Footnote_204_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a> Earl of Rochester. Ib. 73.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_205_205" id="Footnote_205_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a> Wilkins, Political Ballads, ii. 312.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_206_206" id="Footnote_206_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xv. 154.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_207_207" id="Footnote_207_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a> September, 1749.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_208_208" id="Footnote_208_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a> Almon, i. 195.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_209_209" id="Footnote_209_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a> Pitt to Newcastle, July 25, 1753. Add. MSS. 32732.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_210_210" id="Footnote_210_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a> Pitt to Newcastle, March 6, 1754. Add. MSS. 32734.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_211_211" id="Footnote_211_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a> Feb. 11, o.s. 1751. Letters, ii. 97.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_212_212" id="Footnote_212_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a> Climenson's Mrs. Montague, ii. 51. Kielmansegge's Diary,
+131.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_213_213" id="Footnote_213_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a> Meehan's Famous Houses of Bath, 112.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_214_214" id="Footnote_214_214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_214_214"><span class="label">[214]</span></a> Meehan, 111.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_215_215" id="Footnote_215_215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_215_215"><span class="label">[215]</span></a> Climenson.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_216_216" id="Footnote_216_216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_216_216"><span class="label">[216]</span></a> Mrs. Montagu's Letters, iii. 235.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_217_217" id="Footnote_217_217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_217_217"><span class="label">[217]</span></a> Memorials of Lord Gambier, i. 61. Cf. Mrs. Montagu's
+Letters, iii. 240.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_218_218" id="Footnote_218_218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_218_218"><span class="label">[218]</span></a> Pitt to Newcastle. Tunbridge, Aug. 14, 1753. Add. MSS.
+32732.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_219_219" id="Footnote_219_219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_219_219"><span class="label">[219]</span></a> Phillimore, 265.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_220_220" id="Footnote_220_220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_220_220"><span class="label">[220]</span></a> An Eighteenth Century Correspondence, 388 n. See too
+Harris's Hardwicke, ii. 456.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_221_221" id="Footnote_221_221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_221_221"><span class="label">[221]</span></a> Timbs, Anecdote Biography, 156, quoting from The
+Ambulator (1820).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_222_222" id="Footnote_222_222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_222_222"><span class="label">[222]</span></a> Legge to Pitt. Berlin, July 10, 1748. Chatham MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_223_223" id="Footnote_223_223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_223_223"><span class="label">[223]</span></a> Climenson, ii. 9-10. Mrs. Montagu's Letters, iii. 181.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_224_224" id="Footnote_224_224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_224_224"><span class="label">[224]</span></a> Nuthall to Lady Chatham, March 25, 1768. Chatham MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_225_225" id="Footnote_225_225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_225_225"><span class="label">[225]</span></a> Chatham to Nuthall, Oct. 7, 1772. Chatham MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_226_226" id="Footnote_226_226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_226_226"><span class="label">[226]</span></a> October 6, 1753. Add. MSS. 32733.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_227_227" id="Footnote_227_227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_227_227"><span class="label">[227]</span></a> October 13, 1753. Add. MSS. 32733.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_228_228" id="Footnote_228_228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_228_228"><span class="label">[228]</span></a> Pitt to Newcastle, March 7, 1754. Add. MSS. 32734.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_229_229" id="Footnote_229_229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_229_229"><span class="label">[229]</span></a> Grenville Papers, i. 109.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_230_230" id="Footnote_230_230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_230_230"><span class="label">[230]</span></a> Ib. i. 111.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_231_231" id="Footnote_231_231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_231_231"><span class="label">[231]</span></a> Pitt to Newcastle, March 11, 1754. Add. MSS. 32734.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_232_232" id="Footnote_232_232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_232_232"><span class="label">[232]</span></a> Murray.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_233_233" id="Footnote_233_233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_233_233"><span class="label">[233]</span></a> This seems an allusion either to Leicester House, or,
+less probably, to Newcastle.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_234_234" id="Footnote_234_234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_234_234"><span class="label">[234]</span></a> Grenville Papers, i. 106.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_235_235" id="Footnote_235_235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_235_235"><span class="label">[235]</span></a> Granville Papers, i. 110.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_236_236" id="Footnote_236_236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_236_236"><span class="label">[236]</span></a> Pitt was member for Aldborough, one of Newcastle's
+boroughs.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_237_237" id="Footnote_237_237"></a><a href="#FNanchor_237_237"><span class="label">[237]</span></a> Phillimore's Lyttelton, 449.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_238_238" id="Footnote_238_238"></a><a href="#FNanchor_238_238"><span class="label">[238]</span></a> Phillimore's Lyttelton, 453.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_239_239" id="Footnote_239_239"></a><a href="#FNanchor_239_239"><span class="label">[239]</span></a> Grenville Papers, i. 112.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_240_240" id="Footnote_240_240"></a><a href="#FNanchor_240_240"><span class="label">[240]</span></a> Add. MSS. 32734. f. 322.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_241_241" id="Footnote_241_241"></a><a href="#FNanchor_241_241"><span class="label">[241]</span></a> Grenville Papers, i. 116.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_242_242" id="Footnote_242_242"></a><a href="#FNanchor_242_242"><span class="label">[242]</span></a> Pitt to Newcastle, April 2, 1754. Add. MSS. 32735. The
+more elaborate draft of this letter is given with a wrong date in the
+Chatham Corr. i. 85.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_243_243" id="Footnote_243_243"></a><a href="#FNanchor_243_243"><span class="label">[243]</span></a> Chatham Corr. i. 89.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_244_244" id="Footnote_244_244"></a><a href="#FNanchor_244_244"><span class="label">[244]</span></a> Chatham Corr. i. 95.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_245_245" id="Footnote_245_245"></a><a href="#FNanchor_245_245"><span class="label">[245]</span></a> Add. MSS. 32735. f. 21.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_246_246" id="Footnote_246_246"></a><a href="#FNanchor_246_246"><span class="label">[246]</span></a> Harris's Hardwicke, iii. 8.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_247_247" id="Footnote_247_247"></a><a href="#FNanchor_247_247"><span class="label">[247]</span></a> The sense shows clearly that Pitt intended to write
+'unwilling'.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_248_248" id="Footnote_248_248"></a><a href="#FNanchor_248_248"><span class="label">[248]</span></a> Phillimore, 466.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_249_249" id="Footnote_249_249"></a><a href="#FNanchor_249_249"><span class="label">[249]</span></a> Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_250_250" id="Footnote_250_250"></a><a href="#FNanchor_250_250"><span class="label">[250]</span></a> Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_251_251" id="Footnote_251_251"></a><a href="#FNanchor_251_251"><span class="label">[251]</span></a> H. Fox to Argyll, Sept. 26, 1755 (H.H. MSS.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_252_252" id="Footnote_252_252"></a><a href="#FNanchor_252_252"><span class="label">[252]</span></a> H. Fox to the Duke of Marlborough, March 22, 1754 (H.H.
+MSS.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_253_253" id="Footnote_253_253"></a><a href="#FNanchor_253_253"><span class="label">[253]</span></a> Wingfield MSS. 224b in Hist. MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_254_254" id="Footnote_254_254"></a><a href="#FNanchor_254_254"><span class="label">[254]</span></a> Walpole to Bentley, March 17, 1754.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_255_255" id="Footnote_255_255"></a><a href="#FNanchor_255_255"><span class="label">[255]</span></a> Colebrooke, i. 18.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_256_256" id="Footnote_256_256"></a><a href="#FNanchor_256_256"><span class="label">[256]</span></a> An Eighteenth Century Correspondence, 230.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_257_257" id="Footnote_257_257"></a><a href="#FNanchor_257_257"><span class="label">[257]</span></a> Newcastle to Pitt, April 2, 1754, Chatham Corr.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_258_258" id="Footnote_258_258"></a><a href="#FNanchor_258_258"><span class="label">[258]</span></a> Supra, p. 335.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_259_259" id="Footnote_259_259"></a><a href="#FNanchor_259_259"><span class="label">[259]</span></a> Add. MSS. 32733. Pitt to Newcastle, April 22, 1754.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_260_260" id="Footnote_260_260"></a><a href="#FNanchor_260_260"><span class="label">[260]</span></a> Bubb, 304.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_261_261" id="Footnote_261_261"></a><a href="#FNanchor_261_261"><span class="label">[261]</span></a> Aug. 29, 1754. H.H. MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_262_262" id="Footnote_262_262"></a><a href="#FNanchor_262_262"><span class="label">[262]</span></a> Bubb, 317.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_263_263" id="Footnote_263_263"></a><a href="#FNanchor_263_263"><span class="label">[263]</span></a> Newcastle to Hardwicke, Oct. 2, 1754. Add. MSS. 32737.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_264_264" id="Footnote_264_264"></a><a href="#FNanchor_264_264"><span class="label">[264]</span></a> Hardwicke to Newcastle, Oct. 3, 1754. Add. MSS. 32737.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_265_265" id="Footnote_265_265"></a><a href="#FNanchor_265_265"><span class="label">[265]</span></a> Orford, i. 78.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_266_266" id="Footnote_266_266"></a><a href="#FNanchor_266_266"><span class="label">[266]</span></a> An Eighteenth Century Correspondence, p. 154.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_267_267" id="Footnote_267_267"></a><a href="#FNanchor_267_267"><span class="label">[267]</span></a> Mrs. Montagu's Letters, iii. 273.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_268_268" id="Footnote_268_268"></a><a href="#FNanchor_268_268"><span class="label">[268]</span></a> Orford, i. 406-7.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_269_269" id="Footnote_269_269"></a><a href="#FNanchor_269_269"><span class="label">[269]</span></a> Fox to Hartington, Nov. 26, 1754, in Waldegrave, p. 146.
+Orford, i. 408. Cf. Calcraft to Digby, Nov. 26, 1754, in Wingfield MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_270_270" id="Footnote_270_270"></a><a href="#FNanchor_270_270"><span class="label">[270]</span></a> Butler's Rem. i. 144.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_271_271" id="Footnote_271_271"></a><a href="#FNanchor_271_271"><span class="label">[271]</span></a> Waldegrave, 149-50</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_272_272" id="Footnote_272_272"></a><a href="#FNanchor_272_272"><span class="label">[272]</span></a> Fox to Hartington, Nov. 28, 1754, in Waldegrave, p. 150.
+Orford, i. 142.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_273_273" id="Footnote_273_273"></a><a href="#FNanchor_273_273"><span class="label">[273]</span></a> Butler's Reminiscences, i. 145.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_274_274" id="Footnote_274_274"></a><a href="#FNanchor_274_274"><span class="label">[274]</span></a> Table Talk of S. Rogers, p. 100.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_275_275" id="Footnote_275_275"></a><a href="#FNanchor_275_275"><span class="label">[275]</span></a> Orford, i. 417.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_276_276" id="Footnote_276_276"></a><a href="#FNanchor_276_276"><span class="label">[276]</span></a> Ib. 418.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_277_277" id="Footnote_277_277"></a><a href="#FNanchor_277_277"><span class="label">[277]</span></a> See Pitt's obscure note in Chatham Corresp. i. 130, and
+the interpretation in Orford, i. 419.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_278_278" id="Footnote_278_278"></a><a href="#FNanchor_278_278"><span class="label">[278]</span></a> Orford, i. 420.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_279_279" id="Footnote_279_279"></a><a href="#FNanchor_279_279"><span class="label">[279]</span></a> Coxe's Lord Walpole, ii. 406.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_280_280" id="Footnote_280_280"></a><a href="#FNanchor_280_280"><span class="label">[280]</span></a> Bubb, 319-21. Orford, ii. 37.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_281_281" id="Footnote_281_281"></a><a href="#FNanchor_281_281"><span class="label">[281]</span></a> The accession of Fox to the Cabinet is beset with small
+difficulties of chronology. Horace Walpole in his Memoirs (i. 147) tells
+us that the King sent for Fox on November 29, 1754, and in a letter of
+January 9, 1755, announces that Fox had been admitted to the Cabinet.
+Yet we have Fox's own letter to Pitt of April 26, 1755, announcing that
+the King that afternoon had signified to him his admission to the
+Cabinet. (Chatham Corresp. i. 132). It is evident that Horace Walpole
+believed, prematurely, that the matter was settled early in January.
+Strangely enough our surest authority in all these transactions, except
+Waldegrave, who is vague and dateless, is the corrupt and perfidious
+Bubb.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_282_282" id="Footnote_282_282"></a><a href="#FNanchor_282_282"><span class="label">[282]</span></a> Thackeray gives a different account of this interview and
+of that with Charles Yorke, we know not whence derived. The account in
+the text is that of Charles Yorke and Hardwicke themselves (Harris, iii.
+29-34) and in part Bubb, on the authority of James Grenville (p. 340).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_283_283" id="Footnote_283_283"></a><a href="#FNanchor_283_283"><span class="label">[283]</span></a> Newcastle to Hardwicke, Sept. 3, 1755. Add. MSS. 32858.
+See too Orford, ii. 40.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_284_284" id="Footnote_284_284"></a><a href="#FNanchor_284_284"><span class="label">[284]</span></a> Add. MSS. 32858.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_285_285" id="Footnote_285_285"></a><a href="#FNanchor_285_285"><span class="label">[285]</span></a> These two sentences are transposed for the sake of
+clearness.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_286_286" id="Footnote_286_286"></a><a href="#FNanchor_286_286"><span class="label">[286]</span></a> Italics ours.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_287_287" id="Footnote_287_287"></a><a href="#FNanchor_287_287"><span class="label">[287]</span></a> Italics ours.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_288_288" id="Footnote_288_288"></a><a href="#FNanchor_288_288"><span class="label">[288]</span></a> There was some family connection between Bubb and the
+Grenvilles, though it is not easy to trace. Bubb's property indeed, to
+his disgust, was entailed on Temple.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_289_289" id="Footnote_289_289"></a><a href="#FNanchor_289_289"><span class="label">[289]</span></a> Bubb, 370.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_290_290" id="Footnote_290_290"></a><a href="#FNanchor_290_290"><span class="label">[290]</span></a> Add. MSS. 32859, f. 86.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_291_291" id="Footnote_291_291"></a><a href="#FNanchor_291_291"><span class="label">[291]</span></a> Orford, ii. 45.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_292_292" id="Footnote_292_292"></a><a href="#FNanchor_292_292"><span class="label">[292]</span></a> Orford, ii. 7-9.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_293_293" id="Footnote_293_293"></a><a href="#FNanchor_293_293"><span class="label">[293]</span></a> Orford, ii. 17.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_294_294" id="Footnote_294_294"></a><a href="#FNanchor_294_294"><span class="label">[294]</span></a> 'Montcalm and Wolfe,' i. 483.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_295_295" id="Footnote_295_295"></a><a href="#FNanchor_295_295"><span class="label">[295]</span></a> Ib. i. 510.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_296_296" id="Footnote_296_296"></a><a href="#FNanchor_296_296"><span class="label">[296]</span></a> Ib. i. 54, 66.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_297_297" id="Footnote_297_297"></a><a href="#FNanchor_297_297"><span class="label">[297]</span></a> 'Montcalm and Wolfe,' i. 214-26.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_298_298" id="Footnote_298_298"></a><a href="#FNanchor_298_298"><span class="label">[298]</span></a> Souvenirs de Moreau, i. 62.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_299_299" id="Footnote_299_299"></a><a href="#FNanchor_299_299"><span class="label">[299]</span></a> Moreau, i. 58.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_300_300" id="Footnote_300_300"></a><a href="#FNanchor_300_300"><span class="label">[300]</span></a> Waddington. Louis XV. et le Renversement des Alliances,
+pp. 471-6.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_301_301" id="Footnote_301_301"></a><a href="#FNanchor_301_301"><span class="label">[301]</span></a> Baumer, Frederick II. and his Times, 227.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_302_302" id="Footnote_302_302"></a><a href="#FNanchor_302_302"><span class="label">[302]</span></a> Ibid. 233.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_303_303" id="Footnote_303_303"></a><a href="#FNanchor_303_303"><span class="label">[303]</span></a> Carlyle, Frederick, iv. 509.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_304_304" id="Footnote_304_304"></a><a href="#FNanchor_304_304"><span class="label">[304]</span></a> Orford, ii. 55-62.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_305_305" id="Footnote_305_305"></a><a href="#FNanchor_305_305"><span class="label">[305]</span></a> Fox to Ellis. Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_306_306" id="Footnote_306_306"></a><a href="#FNanchor_306_306"><span class="label">[306]</span></a> Camelford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_307_307" id="Footnote_307_307"></a><a href="#FNanchor_307_307"><span class="label">[307]</span></a> Walpole here professes to give Pitt's words exactly.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_308_308" id="Footnote_308_308"></a><a href="#FNanchor_308_308"><span class="label">[308]</span></a> <i>I.e.</i>, suppose any man should have purposely put off
+bringing hither troops from Ireland, with the object of making this
+country appear so unprotected as to require foreign mercenaries.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_309_309" id="Footnote_309_309"></a><a href="#FNanchor_309_309"><span class="label">[309]</span></a> Orford, ii. 67-76.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_310_310" id="Footnote_310_310"></a><a href="#FNanchor_310_310"><span class="label">[310]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xv. 544-616.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_311_311" id="Footnote_311_311"></a><a href="#FNanchor_311_311"><span class="label">[311]</span></a> Bedford Corr. ii. 179.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_312_312" id="Footnote_312_312"></a><a href="#FNanchor_312_312"><span class="label">[312]</span></a> Bedford Corr. ii. 180.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_313_313" id="Footnote_313_313"></a><a href="#FNanchor_313_313"><span class="label">[313]</span></a> Orford, ii. 86-97.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_314_314" id="Footnote_314_314"></a><a href="#FNanchor_314_314"><span class="label">[314]</span></a> Orford, ii. 98-101.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_315_315" id="Footnote_315_315"></a><a href="#FNanchor_315_315"><span class="label">[315]</span></a> Orford, ii. 107.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_316_316" id="Footnote_316_316"></a><a href="#FNanchor_316_316"><span class="label">[316]</span></a> Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_317_317" id="Footnote_317_317"></a><a href="#FNanchor_317_317"><span class="label">[317]</span></a> Orford, ii. 135-9.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_318_318" id="Footnote_318_318"></a><a href="#FNanchor_318_318"><span class="label">[318]</span></a> Orford says that Sackville moved for them on April 29.
+The Parliamentary History says that Fox moved for them on March 29 (xv.
+702).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_319_319" id="Footnote_319_319"></a><a href="#FNanchor_319_319"><span class="label">[319]</span></a> Parl. Hist. xv. 702.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_320_320" id="Footnote_320_320"></a><a href="#FNanchor_320_320"><span class="label">[320]</span></a> Orford, ii. 185-6.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_321_321" id="Footnote_321_321"></a><a href="#FNanchor_321_321"><span class="label">[321]</span></a> Orford, ii. 188-90.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_322_322" id="Footnote_322_322"></a><a href="#FNanchor_322_322"><span class="label">[322]</span></a> Orford, ii. 193-7.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_323_323" id="Footnote_323_323"></a><a href="#FNanchor_323_323"><span class="label">[323]</span></a> The Consul at Genoa had warned Newcastle early in
+February that a surprise attack on Minorca was meditated. Mr. Corbett,
+who states this, (England in the Seven Years War, i. 97) excuses
+Newcastle for neglecting the information, one does not see why. More
+attention was paid to an intercepted despatch of the Swedish minister at
+Paris, dated February 25, 1756.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_324_324" id="Footnote_324_324"></a><a href="#FNanchor_324_324"><span class="label">[324]</span></a> Walpole to Chute, June 8, 1756.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_325_325" id="Footnote_325_325"></a><a href="#FNanchor_325_325"><span class="label">[325]</span></a> 'So also we find it recorded during the siege of Malta,
+that some hesitation having displayed itself on the part of the slaves
+in exposing themselves, during their pioneering labours, to a fire more
+than ordinarily deadly, the Grand Master directed some to be hanged and
+others to have their ears cut off, "pour encourager les autres" as the
+chroniclers quaintly and simply record.' Porter's 'History of the
+Knights of Malta,' ii. 272.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_326_326" id="Footnote_326_326"></a><a href="#FNanchor_326_326"><span class="label">[326]</span></a> Fox to Ellis, July 12, 1756. Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_327_327" id="Footnote_327_327"></a><a href="#FNanchor_327_327"><span class="label">[327]</span></a> Chatham Corr. i. 158.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_328_328" id="Footnote_328_328"></a><a href="#FNanchor_328_328"><span class="label">[328]</span></a> 'Montcalm and Wolfe,' i. 413.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_329_329" id="Footnote_329_329"></a><a href="#FNanchor_329_329"><span class="label">[329]</span></a> Newcastle to Hardwicke, Sept. 2, 1756. Add. MSS. 35416.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_330_330" id="Footnote_330_330"></a><a href="#FNanchor_330_330"><span class="label">[330]</span></a> Fox to Kildare. This, an undated narrative among the
+Holland House MSS., seems to me the best statement from Fox's point of
+view. From Lord Kildare's reply it is evident that it was written and
+despatched towards the end of Nov. 1756.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_331_331" id="Footnote_331_331"></a><a href="#FNanchor_331_331"><span class="label">[331]</span></a> Narrative to Kildare.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_332_332" id="Footnote_332_332"></a><a href="#FNanchor_332_332"><span class="label">[332]</span></a> Fox to Stone, October 7, 1756. Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_333_333" id="Footnote_333_333"></a><a href="#FNanchor_333_333"><span class="label">[333]</span></a> Ib.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_334_334" id="Footnote_334_334"></a><a href="#FNanchor_334_334"><span class="label">[334]</span></a> Fox to Ellis. H.H. MSS., Oct. 12, 1756.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_335_335" id="Footnote_335_335"></a><a href="#FNanchor_335_335"><span class="label">[335]</span></a> Newcastle to Fox, Oct. 12, 1756. H.H. MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_336_336" id="Footnote_336_336"></a><a href="#FNanchor_336_336"><span class="label">[336]</span></a> Newcastle to Lady Yarmouth, Oct. 13. Add. MSS. 32868.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_337_337" id="Footnote_337_337"></a><a href="#FNanchor_337_337"><span class="label">[337]</span></a> Fox to Digby, Oct. 1756. Wingfield MSS. in Hist. MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_338_338" id="Footnote_338_338"></a><a href="#FNanchor_338_338"><span class="label">[338]</span></a> Orford, ii. 253.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_339_339" id="Footnote_339_339"></a><a href="#FNanchor_339_339"><span class="label">[339]</span></a> Narrative to Kildare.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_340_340" id="Footnote_340_340"></a><a href="#FNanchor_340_340"><span class="label">[340]</span></a> Newcastle to Hardwicke, Oct. 15, 1756. Harris, iii. 73.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_341_341" id="Footnote_341_341"></a><a href="#FNanchor_341_341"><span class="label">[341]</span></a> Hardwicke to Newcastle, Oct. 19, 1756. Add. MSS. 32868.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_342_342" id="Footnote_342_342"></a><a href="#FNanchor_342_342"><span class="label">[342]</span></a> Harris, iii. 77.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_343_343" id="Footnote_343_343"></a><a href="#FNanchor_343_343"><span class="label">[343]</span></a> Grenville Papers, i. 178.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_344_344" id="Footnote_344_344"></a><a href="#FNanchor_344_344"><span class="label">[344]</span></a> Sir C.H. Williams, iii. 41.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_345_345" id="Footnote_345_345"></a><a href="#FNanchor_345_345"><span class="label">[345]</span></a> Shelburne, i. 83.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_346_346" id="Footnote_346_346"></a><a href="#FNanchor_346_346"><span class="label">[346]</span></a> Add. MSS. 35416; cf. Orford, ii. 257.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_347_347" id="Footnote_347_347"></a><a href="#FNanchor_347_347"><span class="label">[347]</span></a> Orford, ii. 259.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_348_348" id="Footnote_348_348"></a><a href="#FNanchor_348_348"><span class="label">[348]</span></a> Leadam, 445 note. Orford, ii. 259.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_349_349" id="Footnote_349_349"></a><a href="#FNanchor_349_349"><span class="label">[349]</span></a> Shelburne, i. 83 note.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_350_350" id="Footnote_350_350"></a><a href="#FNanchor_350_350"><span class="label">[350]</span></a> Add. MSS. 35870 'Powis Ho., October 24, 1756. Sunday
+night.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_351_351" id="Footnote_351_351"></a><a href="#FNanchor_351_351"><span class="label">[351]</span></a> This poor Hanoverian victim, as completely as Andersen's
+Tin Soldier, has melted into nothingness. But he once caused a mighty
+stir. He bought four handkerchiefs, and by mistake, as was universally
+conceded, took the whole piece, which contained six. Yet he was put in
+prison on a charge of theft. His commanding officer demanded his
+enlargement. Failing in this attempt, he obtained a warrant from
+Holdernesse for his release. The whole country was aflame in an instant
+with the old hostility to German mercenaries, Holdernesse was severely
+threatened, and the innocent soldier cruelly flogged. See Orford, ii.
+248-9.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_352_352" id="Footnote_352_352"></a><a href="#FNanchor_352_352"><span class="label">[352]</span></a> Strangely enough there is a different answer appended to
+this report.
+</p><p>
+'That H.M. had been desirous, in this time of difficulty, to have the
+assistance of Mr. Pitt in his service, and for that purpose to consider
+him and those connected with him in a proper manner. That H.M. continues
+in the same disposition, tho' what has been suggested by Mr. Pitt will
+not in the King's opinion form a system for carrying on H.M.'s service.'
+</p><p>
+This may have been the first draft, and it may have been found, as
+usual, that the less said the better.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_353_353" id="Footnote_353_353"></a><a href="#FNanchor_353_353"><span class="label">[353]</span></a> Partly given in Harris, iii. 80.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_354_354" id="Footnote_354_354"></a><a href="#FNanchor_354_354"><span class="label">[354]</span></a> Newcastle to Hardwicke, Oct. 13, 5 o'clock, 1756. Add.
+MSS. 32868, f. 251.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_355_355" id="Footnote_355_355"></a><a href="#FNanchor_355_355"><span class="label">[355]</span></a> Ib.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_356_356" id="Footnote_356_356"></a><a href="#FNanchor_356_356"><span class="label">[356]</span></a> Digby to Lord Digby, Oct. 28, 1756. Wingfield MSS. in
+Hist. MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_357_357" id="Footnote_357_357"></a><a href="#FNanchor_357_357"><span class="label">[357]</span></a> West to Newcastle, Newcastle MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_358_358" id="Footnote_358_358"></a><a href="#FNanchor_358_358"><span class="label">[358]</span></a> Orford, ii. 262.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_359_359" id="Footnote_359_359"></a><a href="#FNanchor_359_359"><span class="label">[359]</span></a> Fox to Ellis. July 15, 1755. Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_360_360" id="Footnote_360_360"></a><a href="#FNanchor_360_360"><span class="label">[360]</span></a> Narrative to Kildare.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_361_361" id="Footnote_361_361"></a><a href="#FNanchor_361_361"><span class="label">[361]</span></a> October 20, 1756. Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_362_362" id="Footnote_362_362"></a><a href="#FNanchor_362_362"><span class="label">[362]</span></a> Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_363_363" id="Footnote_363_363"></a><a href="#FNanchor_363_363"><span class="label">[363]</span></a> Bubb, 389.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_364_364" id="Footnote_364_364"></a><a href="#FNanchor_364_364"><span class="label">[364]</span></a> Orford, ii. 263.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_365_365" id="Footnote_365_365"></a><a href="#FNanchor_365_365"><span class="label">[365]</span></a> Narrative to Kildare.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_366_366" id="Footnote_366_366"></a><a href="#FNanchor_366_366"><span class="label">[366]</span></a> Bedford Corresp. ii. 210.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_367_367" id="Footnote_367_367"></a><a href="#FNanchor_367_367"><span class="label">[367]</span></a> Orford, ii. 266.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_368_368" id="Footnote_368_368"></a><a href="#FNanchor_368_368"><span class="label">[368]</span></a> See the summonses in the Holland House MSS. For example,
+that to the Duke of Marlborough. 'Nov. 2, 1756. My dear Lord, H.M.
+desires Your Grace would without fail be in town to-morrow evening. You
+shall find at Marlbro' House a summons to the place of meeting, and I
+leave to Mr. Hamilton to acquaint Your Grace more fully than I have time
+to do with the intention of it. Adieu. The D. of Bedford is kept in town
+and all great Lords within reach are sent to.'</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_369_369" id="Footnote_369_369"></a><a href="#FNanchor_369_369"><span class="label">[369]</span></a> Narrative to Kildare.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_370_370" id="Footnote_370_370"></a><a href="#FNanchor_370_370"><span class="label">[370]</span></a> Narrative to Kildare.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_371_371" id="Footnote_371_371"></a><a href="#FNanchor_371_371"><span class="label">[371]</span></a> Holdernesse to Newcastle, Nov. 2, 1756. Add. MSS. 32868.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_372_372" id="Footnote_372_372"></a><a href="#FNanchor_372_372"><span class="label">[372]</span></a> Bubb, 390.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_373_373" id="Footnote_373_373"></a><a href="#FNanchor_373_373"><span class="label">[373]</span></a> Fox to Marlborough, 1756. Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_374_374" id="Footnote_374_374"></a><a href="#FNanchor_374_374"><span class="label">[374]</span></a> Bedford Corresp. ii. 208.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_375_375" id="Footnote_375_375"></a><a href="#FNanchor_375_375"><span class="label">[375]</span></a> Orford, ii. 269.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_376_376" id="Footnote_376_376"></a><a href="#FNanchor_376_376"><span class="label">[376]</span></a> Bedford Corresp. ii. 210.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_377_377" id="Footnote_377_377"></a><a href="#FNanchor_377_377"><span class="label">[377]</span></a> The salary and allowances of Secretary of State were
+2680<i>l.</i>, as appears from a paper of Fox's. But there was also 3000<i>l.</i>
+for Secret Service which Fox appears to reckon as salary. H.H. MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_378_378" id="Footnote_378_378"></a><a href="#FNanchor_378_378"><span class="label">[378]</span></a> Orford, ii. 268.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_379_379" id="Footnote_379_379"></a><a href="#FNanchor_379_379"><span class="label">[379]</span></a> Holland House MSS. H. Walpole to Fox, Oct. 27, 1756.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_380_380" id="Footnote_380_380"></a><a href="#FNanchor_380_380"><span class="label">[380]</span></a> Fox to Bedford, Nov. 23, 1756.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_381_381" id="Footnote_381_381"></a><a href="#FNanchor_381_381"><span class="label">[381]</span></a> H.H. MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_382_382" id="Footnote_382_382"></a><a href="#FNanchor_382_382"><span class="label">[382]</span></a> Narrative to Kildare.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_383_383" id="Footnote_383_383"></a><a href="#FNanchor_383_383"><span class="label">[383]</span></a> Bedford Corr. ii. 170, 220. Bedford to Fox, Nov. 17, 1755
+(H.H. MSS.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_384_384" id="Footnote_384_384"></a><a href="#FNanchor_384_384"><span class="label">[384]</span></a> Holland House MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_385_385" id="Footnote_385_385"></a><a href="#FNanchor_385_385"><span class="label">[385]</span></a> Add. MSS. 32869.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_386_386" id="Footnote_386_386"></a><a href="#FNanchor_386_386"><span class="label">[386]</span></a> Chatham Corr. i. 190-4.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_387_387" id="Footnote_387_387"></a><a href="#FNanchor_387_387"><span class="label">[387]</span></a> Newcastle to Hardwicke, Sept. 2, 1756. Add. MSS. 35416.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_388_388" id="Footnote_388_388"></a><a href="#FNanchor_388_388"><span class="label">[388]</span></a> Fox to Digby. Wingfield MSS. in Hist. MSS.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_389_389" id="Footnote_389_389"></a><a href="#FNanchor_389_389"><span class="label">[389]</span></a> 'As your Lordship is of opinion that I cannot (which is
+firmly my own) rechuse Mr. Pitt,' &amp;c. Newcastle to Hardwicke, Nov. 3,
+1756.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_390_390" id="Footnote_390_390"></a><a href="#FNanchor_390_390"><span class="label">[390]</span></a> 'Do you know that Sir George now Lord Lyttelton, who had
+engaged with the Duke of Bedford for one and one at Okehampton, named
+Pitt to His Grace as the man to be chosen in his room?' Fox to &mdash;&mdash;, Dec.
+14, 1756 (H.H. MSS.).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_391_391" id="Footnote_391_391"></a><a href="#FNanchor_391_391"><span class="label">[391]</span></a> Camelford.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_392_392" id="Footnote_392_392"></a><a href="#FNanchor_392_392"><span class="label">[392]</span></a> Supra, p. 75.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_393_393" id="Footnote_393_393"></a><a href="#FNanchor_393_393"><span class="label">[393]</span></a> Works, i. 135.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_394_394" id="Footnote_394_394"></a><a href="#FNanchor_394_394"><span class="label">[394]</span></a> Life of Grattan, i. 234.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_395_395" id="Footnote_395_395"></a><a href="#FNanchor_395_395"><span class="label">[395]</span></a> Cradock's Literary Memoirs, i. 100-1.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_396_396" id="Footnote_396_396"></a><a href="#FNanchor_396_396"><span class="label">[396]</span></a> Foote's Table Talk, p. 103.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_397_397" id="Footnote_397_397"></a><a href="#FNanchor_397_397"><span class="label">[397]</span></a> Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 357.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="transnote"><p>
+Transcriber's Notes:<br />
+Many sentences in letters start with lower case.<br />
+Inconsistent and dubious spellings have been retained.<br />
+Many french accents missing.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Lord Chatham, by Archibald Phillip Primrose Rosebery
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Lord Chatham
+ His Early Life and Connections
+
+Author: Archibald Phillip Primrose Rosebery
+
+Release Date: January 1, 2012 [EBook #38452]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LORD CHATHAM ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Delphine Lettau, Rory OConor and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ CHATHAM
+
+ HIS EARLY LIFE AND CONNECTIONS
+
+
+
+
+ CHATHAM
+
+ His Early Life and Connections
+
+
+ BY
+
+ LORD ROSEBERY
+
+
+ LONDON
+ ARTHUR L. HUMPHREYS
+ 187 PICCADILLY, W
+
+ 1910
+
+
+
+
+ Second Impression.
+
+
+
+
+ _To_
+ BEVILL FORTESCUE
+ OF DROPMORE AND BOCONNOC,
+ THIS BOOK, WHICH OWES EVERYTHING TO HIM,
+ IS
+ GRATEFULLY DEDICATED.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+My first words of preface must be of excuse for some apparent lack of
+gratitude in my dedication. For besides my debt to Mr. Fortescue, I owe
+my warmest acknowledgments to Mary, Lady Ilchester, and her son, for the
+permission to examine some of the papers of Henry Fox; a character of
+great interest, whose life is yet to be written. But I hope that this
+will soon be presented by Lord Ilchester, whose capacity for such work
+is already proved. I render my sincere thanks both to him and to his
+mother; but my dedication, written long before I had access to the
+Holland House papers, must remain unchanged; for without Mr. Fortescue's
+family collection of papers at Dropmore this book could never have been
+begun.
+
+The life of Chatham is extremely difficult to write, and, strictly
+speaking, never can be written at all. It is difficult because of the
+artificial atmosphere in which he thought it well to envelop himself,
+and because the rare glimpses which are obtainable of the real man
+reveal a nature so complex, so violent, and so repressed. What is this
+strange career?
+
+Born of a turbulent stock, he is crippled by gout at Eton and Oxford,
+then launched into a cavalry regiment, and then into Parliament. For
+eight years he is groom-in-waiting to a prince. Then he holds
+subordinate office for nine years more. Then he suddenly flashes out,
+not as a royal attendant or a minor placeman, but as the people's
+darling and the champion of the country. In obscure positions he has
+become the first man in Britain, which he now rules absolutely for four
+years in a continual blaze of triumph. Then he is sacrificed to an
+intrigue, but remains the supreme statesman of his country for five
+years more. Then he becomes Prime Minister amid general acclamation; but
+in an instant he shatters his own power, and retires, distempered if not
+mad, into a cell. At last he divests himself of office, and recovers his
+reason; he lives for nine years more, a lonely, sublime figure, but
+awful to the last, an incalculable force. He dies, practically, in
+public, as he would have wished; and the nation, hoping against hope,
+pins its faith in him to the hour of death.
+
+And for most of the time his associations are ignoble, if not
+humiliating. He had to herd with political jobbers; he has to serve
+intriguing kinsfolk; he had to cringe to unworthy Kings and the
+mistresses of Kings; he is flouted and insulted by a puppet whig like
+Rockingham. Despite all this he bequeaths the most illustrious name in
+our political history; and it is the arduous task of his biographer to
+show how these circumstances led to this result.
+
+Happily this task does not fall to the present writer, who has only to
+describe the struggle and the ascent; the consummation and glory of the
+career lie beyond these limits.
+
+Further, it may be said that not merely is the complete life of Chatham
+difficult to write, but impossible. It is safe, indeed, to assert that
+it never has been written and never can be written.
+
+This seems a hard saying, for it appears to be a reflection on his
+numerous biographers from Thackeray to Von Ruville, though it is nothing
+of the sort. The fact is that the materials do not exist. For the first
+time the Dropmore papers throw some light on the earlier part of his
+life. But it is tolerably certain that nothing of this kind exists to
+illuminate his later years. Of his conversations, of his private life
+nothing, or little more than nothing, remains. Except on the one genial
+occasion on which Burke saw him tooling a jim-whiskey down to Stowe, we
+scarcely see a human touch. After his accession to office in 1756, his
+letters of pompous and sometimes abject circumlocution, intended partly
+to deceive his correspondent and partly to baffle the authorities of the
+Post Office, give no clue to his mind. He wrote an ordinary note as
+Rogers wrote an ordinary couplet. Even his love-letters are incurably
+stilted. There is no ease, no frankness, no self-revelation in anything
+that he wrote after he embarked actively in politics. From that time he
+shrouded himself carefully and successfully from his contemporaries,
+except on the occasions when he appeared in public; for, strange to say,
+it was in his speeches that his nature sometimes burst forth. And yet
+even here, there is trouble. One of the difficulties of a life of
+Chatham lies in the rough notes of his speeches preserved by Horace
+Walpole. They are often confused, often dreary, sometimes
+incomprehensible; but they must be included, for there is nothing else;
+though they weigh heavy on a book. Sometimes, however, they reveal a
+flash of the man, and Pitt permits little else. Such being his
+deliberate scheme of life, adopted partly from policy, partly from
+considerations of health, there seems little more material for a
+biography of the man, apart from his public career, than exists in the
+case of a Trappist.
+
+It is then, I think, safe to predict that the real life of Chatham can
+never be written, as the intimate facts are wanting. What survive were,
+as usual, exhausted by Macaulay in those two brilliant essays, in which
+with the sure grasp of historical imagination he depicted the glowing
+scenes of Chatham's career, and left to posterity the portrait which
+will never be superseded. For his instinct supplies the lack of
+evidence, and though there may be exaggeration of praise, that praise
+will not be seriously diminished. Lives of Chatham will always be
+written, because few subjects are more interesting or more dramatic, but
+they must always be imperfect. It is, of course, easy to record his
+course as a statesman, his speeches, his triumphs, his achievements; and
+these narratives will be called biographies. But will they ever reveal
+the real man?
+
+There seems to be a constant tendency in writers to forget that the
+provinces of history and biography, though they often overlap, are
+essentially distinct; for history records the life of nations, and
+biography the life of individuals. To set forth the annals of the time
+in which the hero has existed, and to note his contact with them, is
+only a part of his life, though it is often held to be all that is worth
+remembering. The life of any man that ever lived on earth is far more
+than his public career. The life of a man is not his public life, which
+is always alloyed with some necessary diplomacy and which is sometimes
+only a mask; it is made up of a thousand touches, a multitude of lights
+and shadows, most of which are invisible behind the austere presentment
+of statecraft. We have probably all, and perhaps more than all, that
+Shakespeare ever wrote; we have so to speak all his public life. But
+would we not gladly give one or two of his plays to obtain some true
+insight into his private life, to realise the humanity of this
+superhuman being, to know how this immortal was linked to mortality? We
+want to know how a master man talked, and, if possible, what he thought;
+what was his standpoint with regard to the grave issues of life; what he
+was in his hours of ease, what he enjoyed, how he unbent; in a word,
+what he was without his wig and bag and sword, in his dressing-gown and
+slippers, with a friend, a novel, or a pipe. This is half or three parts
+of a man, and it is certain that we shall never know this aspect of
+Chatham. He would no doubt, had it served his purpose, have appeared in
+the dressing-gown and slippers, but the array would have been as solemn
+and artificial as the robes of a cardinal. He would, had it served his
+purpose, have smoked a pipe, but it would have been the jewelled
+nargileh of the Grand Mogul. He had practically no intimates; his wife
+told nothing, his children told nothing; he revealed himself neither by
+word nor on paper, he deliberately enveloped himself in an opaque fog of
+mystery; and there seems no clue or channel by which any further detail
+of his character can reach us, unless Addington, the doctor, or Wilson,
+the tutor, have anything to tell us. But did anything of the kind
+survive, we feel confident that it would have transpired. Beckford and
+Potter, Barre and Camden, his friends or sycophants or satellites, have
+left no sign. Shelburne indeed thinks that he penetrated Chatham, and
+Shelburne no doubt saw him under circumstances of comparative intimacy.
+And yet, judging by the result, it may well be doubted whether Shelburne
+did more than watch and guess, with an inkling of spite. Occasionally
+there is a legend, a tradition, or an anecdote, but Chatham seems to
+have cut off all vestiges of his real self as completely as a
+successful fugitive from justice. And so posterity sees nothing but the
+stern effigy representing what he wished, or permitted, or authorised to
+be seen. This is not enough or nearly enough, but it must now be certain
+that there will never be much more. This makes us all the more grateful
+for the Dropmore papers and for Mr. Fortescue's liberality. He has been
+able to throw new light on Chatham's youth and on his unrestrained days.
+Light on the subsequent years of self-repression would be so guarded and
+shaded that we should scarce obtain a glimpse of the true man. Indeed,
+by his careful disguise Chatham has made himself a prehistoric or rather
+a prebiographical figure, a man of the fifteenth century or earlier. We
+know what was around him, the scene on which he played, the other actors
+in the great drama, and we recognise himself on the stage; but away from
+the footlights he remains in darkness. In a word, after 1756, when this
+book ends, his public life is conspicuous and familiar. But his inner
+life after that period will never be known; and so we must be content
+with a torso.
+
+ _October 1910._
+
+
+ It has seemed unnecessary to give references to familiar printed
+ authorities, such as Horace Walpole, Coxe, Harris's Life of
+ Hardwicke, Waldegrave, or the published Dropmore MSS. But where an
+ exception has been deemed necessary, 'Orford' refers to the
+ 'Memoirs,' and 'Walpole' denotes an allusion to the 'Letters.'
+
+ Lord Camelford's manuscript, which I have used so copiously, is an
+ intimate family document entitled 'Family Characters and Anecdotes,'
+ addressed to his son, and dated 1781.
+
+
+
+
+CHATHAM
+
+HIS EARLY LIFE AND CONNECTIONS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+There is one initial part of a biography which is skipped by every
+judicious reader; that in which the pedigree of the hero is set forth,
+often with warm fancy, and sometimes at intolerable length. It is,
+happily, not necessary to enter upon the bewildering branches of the
+innumerable Pitts, but only to keep to one conspicuous stem. We must
+however record that the Pitt family was gentle and honourable; 'it had,'
+says one of them, 'been near two centuries growing into wealth without
+producing anything illustrious.'[1] But in the eighteenth century it was
+destined to blossom into no less than four peerages, Londonderry,
+Rivers, Camelford, and Chatham, not one of which survives. William
+Pitt's great-grandfather was Vicar of Blandford in Dorsetshire; and
+there was born Thomas, his grandfather, better known as Governor Pitt,
+and associated in history with the famous Pitt diamond. The Vicar, being
+the younger son of a younger son, had no fortune but the advowson of his
+own living of St. Mary; and Thomas again being a younger son set forth
+to seek his fortunes in the Golden East, and, it may be added, found
+them there.
+
+Of this redoubtable progenitor, Governor Pitt, as he was always called,
+it would be possible to say much, as his life, measured by the length of
+current biographies, would justify a volume; in any case it is necessary
+to say something, for in his character may be traced some germs of his
+grandson's intractable qualities.
+
+We first catch sight of him as an 'interloper,' that is, an illicit
+merchant carrying on trade in violation of the East India Company's
+monopoly. In that capacity he showed himself formidable and intrepid,
+'of a haughty, huffying, daring temper,'[2] and the Company waged
+unsparing war against him. In a letter to their agents, writing with
+special reference to him, they say: 'We have a most acceptable accompt
+of the flourishing condition of all our affaires in those parts, and of
+the wreck and disappointment of all the interlopers; insomuch that if
+you have done your parts in reference to the _Crowne_, that Tho. Pitts
+went upon, there is no probability (that) of seven interloping ships
+that went to India the same year that our Agent did, any one ship will
+ever come to England again; and ... we cannot doubt that you will in due
+time render us as pleasing an accompt of those interlopers that went out
+this year, which will certainly put an end to that kind of robbery.'[3]
+And so these hostilities continued for more than a score of years, but
+without the suppression of Pitt, who appears to have greatly thriven in
+the process; for during the latter part of this period he was member of
+Parliament for his own pocket borough of Old Sarum,[4] bought out of
+these contraband gains. Victory, indeed, rested with him; for the
+Company, weary and baffled, determined, on the faith of an ancient but
+precarious principle, to set a thief to catch a thief; and in November
+1697 appointed Pitt governor of Fort St. George, though some fastidious
+stockholders protested. This 'roughling immoral man,' as one of the
+objectors called him, governed with a high and strong hand from 1698 to
+1709; when the Company, finding the burden of him intolerable, summarily
+dismissed him. He was, no doubt, like his grandson, a difficult servant;
+and in his career we see the source of that energy, haughtiness, and
+self-reliance which were so conspicuous in both. Lord Camelford, his
+great-grandson, though a relentless critic of his family, gives, in the
+grateful character of an heir, a leniently appreciative account of the
+Governor; and says that 'he amassed a fortune which was reckoned
+prodigious in those times without the smallest stain on his reputation.
+I have heard (but at what exact period of his life I know not) that,
+having accomplished such a sum as he thought would enable him to pass
+the remainder of his days in peace, he was taken prisoner, together with
+the greatest part of his effects, on his return to England, and released
+at the intercession of the Duchess of Portsmouth, who was then in
+France. He went back to India and made in a shorter time a much larger
+fortune from the credit he had established and the experience he had
+acquired.'
+
+[Sidenote: 1710]
+
+However that may be, he now returned promptly to England, by way of
+Bergen, having shipped on a Danish vessel, and having sent before him in
+the heel of his son's shoe[5] the precious chattel which made his name
+famous, until, under his descendants, it acquired a different lustre.
+This was a prodigious diamond, to which he alludes in his correspondence
+as his 'grand concern,' which he bought for 48,000_l._, and sold, after
+keeping it for some sixteen years, to the Regent of Orleans for the
+French Crown. It was rather a sonorous than a profitable bargain, for
+though he sold it for 133,000_l._, he was never paid in full. He
+received 40,000_l._ and three boxes of jewels, but the balance,
+calculated at 20,000_l._, was never discharged. He and his descendants
+reckoned, indeed, that on the whole he was the poorer by the possession
+of this gem. A tradition remains that the bargain might have fallen
+through at the last moment but for the shrewdness of the Governor's
+second son, Lord Londonderry. When Rondet, the royal jeweller, came from
+Paris to receive it, he criticised the water of the stone. 'His
+lordship, who was quick enough in business, understood him, and putting
+a bank-note into his hands, bid him go to the window to see it in a
+better light. It was then decided to be in all respects perfect.'[6]
+
+It is evident, however, that he was possessed of considerable though
+exaggerated wealth, and he was probably the first of those nabobs who
+were to bulk so largely in the drama, the society, and the politics of
+the eighteenth century. Among these his diamond gave him pre-eminence,
+and made his name both famous and proverbial. In England he remained for
+the rest of his life, some sixteen years, dying in 1726. The reformed
+filibuster had become a power in the land. He had wealth, force of
+character, political connection, and parliamentary influence. This last
+must have been an object with him, as we find him sitting for Thirsk
+instead of his own borough of Old Sarum; and his eldest grandson seems
+to have inherited a considerable but indefinable interest in the
+borough-mongering of the West, having definite powers in regard to
+Okehampton and Sarum, and vaguer connections elsewhere. So the Governor,
+a staunch Whig and furious anti-Jacobite, with an influential son-in-law
+in Stanhope, a soldier and statesman who was First Minister for a time,
+was a man to be reckoned with. He was indeed offered, and had accepted,
+the Governorship of Jamaica, a high compliment, for it was then a
+position of peculiar difficulty, but never took up the appointment;
+finding probably his hands full at home, with an insubordinate family to
+manage, capital to invest, and estates to superintend.
+
+We find him living at Twickenham, Swallowfield, Blandford, and in Pall
+Mall, but mainly at Stratford, near Old Sarum. He had indeed
+contemplated building his principal residence at Blandford, his early
+home. But the younger children, finding that this would be settled on
+the eldest son, intercepted his purpose and turned his attention to
+Swallowfield, 'where, however, he contrived to throw away as much money
+in a very ugly place with no property about it,'[7] writes his resentful
+heir.
+
+Finally, in 1726, the Governor was gathered to his fathers, and his
+spoils caused some disappointment. His wealth had been over-rated, as is
+perhaps the case with all notorious fortunes, and not well invested; at
+any rate, he had burned his fingers in the South Sea Bubble. He seems to
+have left 100,000_l._ in personal property, though some of that may have
+consisted in unsubstantial and unrealised advances to Lord Londonderry,
+or others of his children. He had bought land wherever he could find it
+(for the sake, perhaps, of influence as much as income), in London
+(Soho), Berkshire, Hampshire, Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, Devonshire, and
+Cornwall, as well as that most marketable of assets, Old Sarum, and
+apparently other borough interests. But his greatest acquisition was the
+noble estate of Boconnoc, which he purchased in 1717 from the widow of
+that wild Mohun who was slain in duel by his brother-in-law, the Duke of
+Hamilton. The Governor paid 53,000_l._ for the estate, a great price in
+those days; but was held to have got a bargain.[8]
+
+To his family he had always been formidable, but also an object of
+jealous rapacity and expectation. They wrangled and intrigued for his
+money both during his life and afterwards, and seem to have been
+universally dissatisfied by the result. 'From the various characters of
+these persons' (the Governor's children) 'it is easy to conceive,'
+writes Lord Camelford, 'in what manner the Governor must have been
+pulled to pieces by their different passions and interests when he came
+to realise his wealth in England.' The transactions with Lord
+Londonderry seem to have been particularly complicated; in fact they
+were never unravelled. We only gather, as a specimen of them, that after
+the Governor's death his executors claimed 95,000_l._ as due from Lord
+Londonderry; which Lord Londonderry denied, claiming 10,000_l._ from the
+estate. Thirty years were vainly spent in the endeavour to clear up this
+issue, a process rendered all the more arduous by Lord Londonderry's
+having peremptorily possessed himself of his father's papers after
+death. Only one case seems to have been free from complication. The
+Governor stated succinctly that his son John was good for nothing, and
+so he logically left him nothing. John, however, claimed an annuity
+which, we may be confident, he never obtained. Thus there were endless
+disputes, a civil war in the family, not uncongenial, perhaps, to those
+who waged it; which died out only with the combatants, but which
+illustrates once more the volcanic character of these truculent Pitts.
+
+It is in his family relations, in his dealings with these ungracious
+heirs and with his own wife, that the Governor is most vivid and
+interesting; at any rate, to one who has to trace the heredity of genius
+and character in his descendants. Thomas Pitt's blood came all aflame
+from the East, and flowed like burning lava to his remotest descendants,
+with the exception of Chatham's children; but even then it blazed up
+again in Hester Stanhope. There was in it, even when it throbbed in the
+veins of his eldest son and grandson, some tropical, irritant quality
+which, under happy circumstances and control, might produce genius, but
+which under ordinary circumstances could only evolve domestic skirmish
+and friction. The Governor himself, in his dealings with his wife and
+children, does not seem to have been tolerant or tolerable. He set
+himself to rule them with the notions of absolutism which are associated
+with the Oriental monarchies, but he met with no great measure of
+success. It is necessary to study his methods as exhibiting the volcanic
+source of a formidable race.
+
+His wife was of the family of Innes in Morayshire, 'of Scotch and
+Cornish extraction,' says Lord Camelford, and she was lineally descended
+from the Regent Murray. Sir John Sinclair, like a loyal Scot, attributes
+the genius and eloquence of the Pitts to their 'fortunate connection
+... with a Miss Innes of Redhall, in the Highlands of Scotland.' Of her,
+nevertheless, in unconsciousness of this obligation, but in receipt of
+private advices, the Governor writes in terms of implacable hostility.
+He had heard, he says to his son, 'that your mother has been guilty of
+some imprudence at the Bath ... let it be what it will, in my esteem she
+is noe longer my wife, nor will I see her more if I can help it.'[9]
+
+But his children were not to be released from duty to her by her
+supposed misconduct. Four years earlier he had written to Robert: 'If
+what you write of your mother be true, I think she is mad, and wish she
+was well secured in Bedlam; but I charge you let nothing she says or
+does make you undutiful in any respect whatever.' So when they
+apparently act on the Governor's view of Mrs. Pitt, he turns round and
+belabours them. 'Have all of you,' he inquires of his eldest son, 'shook
+hands with shame, that you regard not any of the tyes of Christianity,
+humanity, consanguinity, duty, good morality, or anything that makes you
+differ from beasts, but must run from one end of the kingdome to the
+other, aspersing one another, and aiming at the ruine and destruction of
+one another?' This genial picture of his offspring does not seem wholly
+imaginary, for the Governor proceeds: 'That you should dare to doe such
+an unnatural and opprobrious action as to turne your mother and sisters
+out of doors?--for which I observe your frivolous reasons, and was
+astonished to read them; and I no less resent what they did to your
+child at Stratford. But I see your hand is against every one of them,
+and every one against you, and your brother William to his last dying
+minute.' (William had died young, in 1706.) A week later he writes
+again: 'Not only your letters, but all I have from friends, are stuffed
+with an account of the hellish confusion that is in my family; and by
+what I can collect of all my letters, the vileness of your actions on
+all sides are not to be paralleled in history. Did ever mother, brother,
+and sisters study one another's ruine and destruction more than my
+unfortunate and cursed family have done?' He again reverts to the
+grievance of Robert's having turned his mother and sisters out of doors,
+though he calls them, in the same letter, 'an infamous wife and
+children,' and states that he has 'discarded and renounced your mother
+for ever;' apparently on suspicion, for he makes 'noe distinction
+between women that are reputed ill and such as are actually soe.' The
+wife of the Caesar of Fort St. George had to be above suspicion. Nor is
+this by any means an isolated passage. From his Eastern satrapy the
+Governor pours on his hapless family, and especially on his firstborn, a
+constant flood of scorn and invective. The arrival of the Indian mail
+must have caused a periodical panic to his children, and his
+announcement in 1715 that 'writing now is not so much my talent as
+formerly' a corresponding relief.
+
+In vain does Robert, the eldest son, inspire friends to write to the
+Governor glowing accounts of his conduct; the Governor sniffs suspicion
+in every breeze. 'I wish gaming bee not rife in your family, or you
+could never have spent so considerable an estate in so short a time.' 'I
+wish gameing, drinking, and other debaucheries has not been the bane of
+you.' 'I wish these sore eyes of yours did not come by drinking, and
+that generally ushers in gaming, of either of which vices or any other
+dishonourable action, if I find you guilty, you may be assured I will
+give you no quarter.' 'I think that no son in the world deserves more to
+be discarded by a father.' But on the rare occasions when the Governor
+does not write in a passion his letters are full of sound sense. The
+cost of education is the only expense which he does not grudge. 'I would
+also have you putt your mother in mind that she gives her daughters good
+education, and not to stick at any charge for it.' But he wishes to get
+his money's worth. 'See that your brothers and sisters keep close to
+their studies, and let not my money be spent in vain on them; if it be,
+I'll pinch 'em hereafter.' Again, later, he writes: 'When this reaches
+you your brothers will be 17 years old. If their genius leads them to be
+scholars, I would have them sent to Oxford, but placed in two distinct
+colleges; and if inclined to study law you may enter them in the Temple.
+But if they are inclined to be merchants, let them learn all languages,
+and obtain perfect knowledge of the sciences bearing upon trade. I
+believe that trade will flourish rather than decay.'
+
+When he returned home things were probably not much better for his
+children, though his letters, of course, are less frequent, and also
+less violent. But we gather from timid and vigilant bulletins sent off
+by those who cautiously approached the Governor's lair that he was still
+as formidable and plain spoken as ever. He suspects Robert of
+Jacobitism, the supreme sin in the judgment of the old Governor. 'It is
+said you are taken up with factious caballs, and are contriving amongst
+you to put a French kickshaw upon the throne again.' 'I have heard since
+I came to towne,' he writes seven years afterwards, 'that you are
+strooke with your old hellish acquaintance, and in all your discourse
+are speaking in favour of that villainous traytor Ormond.' And again:
+'Since last post I have had it reiterated to me that in all company you
+are vindicating Ormonde and Bullingbrooke, the two vilest rebells that
+ever were in any nation, and that you still adhere to your cursed Tory
+principles, and keep those wretches company who hoped by this time to
+have murthered the whole Royall family: in which catastrophe your father
+was sure to fall,' &c. &c. From which it may be gathered that the moral
+temperature of Pall Mall, whence the Governor was writing, differed
+little from that of Madras.
+
+The only note of tenderness that he ever strikes is with regard to his
+grandson, William, to whom he looks with a rare prescience of attention.
+At first he conducts both boys from Eton to Swallowfield, 'with some of
+their comrogues,' on a short leave of absence. But soon it is William
+alone whom he takes as a companion. 'I set out for Swallowfield Friday
+next; your son, William, goes with me.' 'I observe you have sent for
+your son, William, from Eton. He is a hopeful lad, and doubt not but he
+will answer yours and all his friends' expectations,' 'I shall be glad
+to see Will here as he goes to Eton.' 'Monday last I left Will at Eton.'
+Sentences like these taken from the Governor's letters are, when the
+writer is considered, a sufficient testimony of exceptional regard. It
+is not too much to say that William is the only one of his descendants
+whom the Governor commends; the only one, indeed, who never falls under
+the lash of the Governor's uncontrollable tongue.
+
+The Governor left behind him three sons, Robert, Thomas, and John; and
+two daughters, Lucy and Essex. Robert, the eldest son, married, somewhat
+clandestinely, Harriot Villiers, sister of the Earl of Grandison, 'who
+seems to have brought with her,' says her grandson, 'little more than
+the insolence of a noble alliance.' A more favourable estimate declares
+that she had a fortune of 3000_l._, and that 'it is a great dispute
+among those who have the pleasure of conversing with her whether her
+beauty, understanding, or good-humour be the most captivating.' She
+makes a pale apparition in Lady Suffolk's correspondence, soliciting a
+place for her brother, Lord Grandison, with the offer of a bribe, and
+subsiding under the royal confidant's rebuke.[10]
+
+The second, Thomas, married one of the heiresses of Ridgeway, Earl of
+Londonderry. After that nobleman's death 'he _bought_ the honours which
+were extinct in the person of his wife's father.'[11] One infers from
+casual hints that Thomas may have had the most influence with his
+father, and that he was not embarrassed by scruples. He was, says Lord
+Camelford, 'a man of no character, and of parts that were calculated
+only for the knavery of business, in which he overreached others, and at
+last himself.' But Camelford may have been soured by the controversies
+which followed the Governor's death. The honours so dubiously acquired
+died out with Lord Londonderry's two sons.
+
+John, the Governor's third son, 'was in the army, an amiable vaurien, a
+personal favourite with the King, and, indeed, with all who knew him as
+a sort of Comte de Gramont, who contrived to sacrifice his health, his
+honour, his fortunes to a flow of libertinism which dashed the fairest
+prospect, and sank him for many years before his death in contempt and
+obscurity.'[12] This death took place, within Lord Camelford's memory,
+'at the thatched house by the turnpike in Hammersmith.' John seems to
+have been a sort of Will Esmond, and we have on record a horse
+transaction of his which savours strongly of Thackeray's famous
+knave.[13] He married 'a sister of Lord Fauconberg's, whose personal
+talents and accomplishments distinguished her as much at least as her
+birth, and much more than her virtues.'[14]
+
+Another of Colonel John's freaks is worth retailing, as throwing light
+on the peremptory methods of the Pitts, and of the manner in which the
+Governor was harried by his offspring. He waited outside his father's
+house in Pall Mall on a day when he knew that one of the estate agents
+was to bring up the rents of an estate. He watched the man in and out of
+the house, then went in, where he found some secretary counting the
+money over, swept it deftly with his sword into his hat, and escaped
+into the street, full of glee at having bubbled an unappreciative parent
+out of his dues, and leaving the unhappy subordinate paralysed behind
+him.[15] This anecdote enables us to understand why the Governor had so
+low an opinion of John, and why the keys were kept under the Governor's
+bed when this scapegrace was at home.[16]
+
+Of the two daughters, Lucy, who married the first Earl Stanhope, the
+minister and general, seems to have left a fragrant memory behind her;
+we are pleased to find her resenting her sister-in-law's behaviour to
+her mother, the Governor's wife. She died in February 1723-4.
+
+Essex, the second, married Charles Cholmondely, of Vale Royal,
+grandfather of the first Lord Delamere. 'Her peevishness made her the
+scourge of her family,' says her great-nephew, so we may conclude that
+she was not devoid of the Pitt characteristics. She died in 1754.
+
+Over his luckless heir the Governor had kept constantly suspended the
+terrors of his testamentary dispositions. 'My resentments,' he wrote not
+long before his death, 'against you all have been justly and honourably
+grounded, and that you will find when my head is laid.' Nevertheless,
+when he died in 1726, Robert, the belaboured eldest son, succeeded to
+the great bulk of his fortune. He, in his turn, did not lose a moment in
+visiting on his eldest son, Thomas, the sufferings that he himself had
+endured. In the very letter in which he announces his father's death to
+the lad, he speaks of his son's 'past slighting and disobedient conduct
+towards me,' and lectures him with uncompromising severity. He does,
+indeed, announce an allowance of 700_l._ a year, but soon after docks it
+of 200_l._ on the flimsiest and shabbiest pretexts. Robert, who seems to
+have been a poor creature, as his portrait at Boconnoc represents him,
+mean and cantankerous, with some of the violence but without the vigour
+and ability of the Governor, only survived his father a year, into which
+he managed to concentrate a creditable average of quarrels with his
+family. His death was something like the sinking of a fireship;
+spluttering and scolding he disappears in 1727.
+
+Robert's life and death were on the lines laid down by Pitt precedent.
+He lived and died on ill terms with his family, and his death was
+followed by the customary lawsuits. During his short possession of his
+patrimony he had laboured under some miscalculation as to its extent;
+for, after examining the rentals and estates, he had congratulated
+himself on the possession of 'full 10,000_l._ a year;' ' in which belief
+he died soon after, leaving the same delusion to his son, which was one
+of the principal causes of his misfortunes.'[17] As the estate was
+entailed, Thomas, Robert's eldest son, was not liable for the debts of
+his father, or anxious to assume that responsibility. The claims that
+gave him most trouble were those of his mother, Robert's widow, who had
+obtained additions to her jointure, and had had 10,000_l._ settled on
+her children at her marriage, a provision which was apparently never
+carried into execution. Many bills and cross bills in Chancery were the
+consequence of these claims, which ended in Mrs. Robert Pitt's
+retirement into France, where she shortly afterwards died. Her brother
+and champion, Lord Grandison, also retreated to Ireland, both thus
+renouncing administration of the effects of Robert Pitt. So, avows Lord
+Camelford, 'my father seized whatever fell into his hands without
+account, either belonging to my grandfather or grandmother, keeping at
+arm's length every demand upon him, till somehow or other these
+litigations seem to have worn themselves out and slept by the
+acquiescence of all parties.' The 'acquiescence,' we may add, seems only
+to have accrued by the death of the litigants.
+
+Robert left two sons and five daughters, and this brood was not unworthy
+of the family traditions. The eldest son was Thomas, the second
+William, the subject of this book; to the daughters we shall come
+presently.
+
+The volcanic element in the Pitt blood was fully manifest in this
+generation, and Thomas was a child of wrath. His relations with his
+younger brother William seem always to have been uneasy, and from an
+early period they seem to have been wholly uncongenial to each other.
+
+Whatever William may have been, Thomas was impracticable, and no one
+seems to have succeeded in working amicably with him. He was a man of
+extremes. 'All his passions,' writes his son, 'were violent by nature,
+particularly pride and ambition, which were painted in his figure, one
+of the most imposing I ever saw. He was not without good qualities; but,
+to speak fairly, they were greatly over-balanced by the contrary
+tendencies.' He was said not to have been naturally vicious, but early
+embarrassments, perpetual family litigations, a sense of injury, the
+flattery of dependents, and a train of mortifications and
+disappointments 'had formed in him such habits of rapacity, injustice
+and violence that he seemed at last to have lost even the sense of right
+and wrong.' He had, evidently, personal attractions, marred by an
+imperious demeanour, was strong and graceful, addicted to hunting and
+manly sports, fond of music and dancing. His overbearing manner, which
+arose from an undisguised contempt of his equals, gave him some
+ascendancy in Cornwall, where, however, though endured, he was secretly
+detested.
+
+So haughty and violent a character might, one supposes, have been
+mellowed and redeemed by a fortunate marriage, and Thomas seems to have
+secured an angel as his wife. At the opera one night he saw a daughter
+of Sir Thomas Lyttelton, was struck by her extraordinary beauty,
+proposed in his headlong manner next day, and was accepted. Her son
+laments her want of any fortune to remedy her husband's eternal
+embarrassments, but she seems to have lacked nothing else. Besides her
+loveliness, 'as a faithful wife, a tender mother, a kind friend, an
+indulgent mistress, she was a pattern to her sex.'[18] But her very
+virtues turned her husband against her. Her meek gentleness, humility,
+and charity, the extreme piety, carried almost to bigotry, in which she
+had been reared, were reproachful contrasts to his opposite qualities.
+She was the object of ridicule to the wit and malice of others,
+possibly, we should guess, of her sisters-in-law; and, finally, every
+kind sentiment, even of common humanity, towards her, was extinguished
+in the husband who had loved her so passionately.
+
+Thomas seems, from the moment of succession until death, to have been a
+prey to pecuniary embarrassment. He started with an exaggerated view of
+his resources, and launched into extravagance; arrogance and ambition
+made him more profuse; a taste for borough management, strong in him,
+was probably more expensive than any other possible form of gambling; so
+all his life was soured by the struggle between pride and debt, and by
+consequent mortification. This seems to be the secret of his wasted and
+unhappy existence.
+
+United as he was by his marriage to the Lytteltons, Grenvilles, and
+Cobham, he naturally became an adherent and favourite of the Prince of
+Wales. He probably called the Prince's attention in glowing terms to the
+possibilities of the Heir Apparent's Duchy of Cornwall, and, at any
+rate, became His Royal Highness's parliamentary manager in the West, the
+realm of rotten boroughs. There the Prince was flattered, or flattered
+himself, with influence as Duke of Cornwall, in a region where Lord
+Falmouth, the famous threatener of 'we are seven,' and Thomas himself
+exercised a more substantial sway. He enjoyed a fleeting triumph at the
+General Election of 1741, not unaccompanied with the constant quarrels
+which were the vital element of his family. As a reward he was appointed
+in 1742 Warden of the Stannaries.
+
+Then he seems to decay. The General Election of 1747, on which he had
+built high hopes, brought him nothing but debt and disaster. He writes
+in despair to the Prince, and Frederick sends kindly and reassuring
+messages in reply; but he was now ruined, and his last prospects
+vanished with the Prince of Wales, on whose death he was superseded in
+the Stannaries; this perhaps marks the date of his final catastrophe. At
+any rate, there was a financial collapse, and he had to go abroad.
+Shelburne met him at Utrecht and heard him hold forth in the true Pitt
+style, abusing his brother William as a hypocrite and scoundrel, with a
+great flow of language and a quantity of illustrative anecdotes. 'A bad
+man,' says Horace Walpole. 'Never was ill-nature so dull as his, never
+dullness so vain.'
+
+Shelburne hints that he was mad, or nearly mad, and that, though not
+actually confined, he was obliged to live a very retired life,
+complicated by straitened circumstances. 'The unhappy man,' as William
+calls him, had never been on cordial terms with his brother: they had
+had the usual family wrangles about property, and recently, in his
+distress, Thomas had solicited from William, now Secretary of State and
+supreme, the appointment of Minister to the Swiss Cantons. He might have
+foreseen refusal, for he was fit for no such employment, and William was
+sensitive as to charges of favour to his family from the Crown. But men
+are friendly judges of their own fitness for any post which they may
+happen to desire, and Thomas did not care, probably, to have his merits
+or demerits so justly appraised by his junior; so he spent his time of
+exile in denouncing to any audience that was attracted by his name, the
+ingratitude and neglect of his successful relative. He died in July
+1761, and William frigidly announces to his nephew the death of 'the
+unhappy man' from apoplexy.
+
+This nephew was created Lord Camelford under the auspices of his first
+cousin, the younger Pitt, whom, by the way, Pitt-like, he seems unable
+to forgive for this favour, as he never mentions his creator. The
+malicious bards of the Rolliad hinted that the peerage accrued from some
+borough-mongering transaction:
+
+ 'Say, what gave Camelford his wished for rank?
+ Did he devote old Sarum to the Bank?
+ Or did he not, that envied rank to gain,
+ Transfer the victim to the Treasury's fame?' (_sic_)
+
+But, though he was by no means destitute of the family characteristics,
+this Thomas was a man of high honour, character and charm. He won the
+heart of Horace Walpole, whose neighbour he was, until they quarrelled,
+as of course they were sure to do. But for a time Horace, whose
+affection was not often or easily given and whose confidence in matters
+of taste was fastidious, gave both affection and confidence unstintedly
+to this young man. He attracted, too, the still rarer tenderness of his
+uncle William. To him Chatham addressed the well-known letters on
+education which he found time to write in all the business of office;
+though Thomas on attaining manhood repaid him with the most cordial
+aversion. This sentiment, which seems at first to savour of ingratitude,
+is not in reality difficult to explain. In the first place, the uncle
+was to some extent involved in those financial questions connected with
+the paternal inheritance in which the father played, as we have seen, so
+intrepid though unscrupulous a part. Mutual aversion facilitated mutual
+disagreement in matters always fertile of friction; and the younger
+Thomas, though he had an ill opinion of his father, sided with him as
+against his uncle. We cannot, even on Thomas's own showing, blame the
+uncle in these rather petty transactions, and William's besetting sin
+was certainly not avarice; but neither can we blame the son for siding
+with the father. On an impartial survey we may conclude that disputes
+between two Pitts who were near descendants of the Governor were
+incapable of an amicable solution.
+
+But there was more than this. William, for some purpose of persuasion,
+says Lord Camelford, informed Thomas that his nephew, the younger Thomas
+(Lord Camelford himself), would be his heir. This was a considerable,
+almost a magnificent, prospect. William was then middle-aged and
+unmarried, his position and future were alike splendid, and high office
+might in those days lead to wealth. His career had, moreover, brought
+him a legacy of 10,000_l._ from Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough. But, far
+beyond that there was the reversion of the great Althorp inheritance,
+between which and William there were only the lives of the short-lived
+possessor and his sickly child. That William held out this expectation
+we think so probable that we do not even question it. He had all his
+life been half an invalid, and never seems to have contemplated marriage
+till he did marry, at the age of forty-eight. He, moreover, loved his
+nephew with sincere and proved tenderness. Why, then, should it be
+doubted that he indicated him as his heir, when, in truth, he had no
+other? But that he did this with an unworthy motive or for the purpose
+of deception there is neither proof nor probability. The episode
+probably furnished matter for his brother's maudlin ravings at Utrecht,
+but we do not think that it materially influenced the opinions of his
+nephew.
+
+The true reason for Camelford's hatred of his uncle was that he fell
+under the influence of George Grenville at a time when Grenville had
+broken for ever with Pitt. The estimable qualities of Grenville have
+been described with a colour and exuberance which could only proceed
+from the glowing imagination of Burke. But, with all allowance for what
+Burke saw in this able, narrow, and laborious person, it cannot be
+denied that the foundation of his qualities was a stubborn self-esteem
+which necessarily led to stubborn hatreds. Grenville came to hate Bute,
+to hate the King, to hate the Duke of Cumberland; but it may be doubted
+if all his other accumulated hatreds equalled that which he felt for his
+brother-in-law. Pitt, while in office, had kept Grenville in a
+subordinate position, and had apparently thought it adequate to his
+deserts. When Grenville was Minister, Pitt had negotiated with the King
+to overthrow him. In the schism produced by Pitt's resignation, Temple
+had sided with Pitt and quarrelled with his brother George. But, worst
+of all, Pitt had held Grenville up, not unsuccessfully, to public
+ridicule and contempt. Now, a Grenville to himself was not as other men
+are; he was something sacred and ineffable. Neither Temple nor George
+ever doubted that they were the equals, nay, the superiors, of their
+brother-in-law, whom in their hearts they regarded as only a brilliant
+adventurer, useful, under careful guidance, to the Grenville scheme of
+creation. When, therefore, Pitt quizzed and thwarted George, he raised
+an implacable enemy. Later on, they might affect reconciliation, and
+Temple might pompously announce to the world that the Brethren were
+reunited. But George's undying resentment against Pitt never flagged to
+the hour of his death.
+
+Thomas Pitt came under Grenville's influence at the fiercest moment of
+this rancour, and seems to have been the only person on record who was
+fascinated by him. Thomas writes of him with affectionate enthusiasm
+long after his death, and in his life waged his wars with zeal. One of
+these led to a quarrel with Horace Walpole, arising out of the dismissal
+of Conway, which produced a lengthy correspondence, still extant. But to
+become the disciple of George Grenville it was necessary to abhor
+William Pitt. Thomas took the test without difficulty, and adhered to it
+conscientiously. His father's influence, such as it was, tended in the
+same direction. So, though Thomas specifically places his uncle at the
+head of all British statesmen, and although he besought Chatham to sit
+to Reynolds for the gallery at Boconnoc, and though he displayed grief,
+real or ostentatious, at Chatham's death, going the quaint length of
+asking every one to dinner who spoke sympathetically in either House on
+the occasion; in spite of all this, he retails aversion in every
+sentence that he writes; aversion of which the obvious source is
+devotion to Grenville. It is necessary to explain this because
+Camelford's manuscript notes would otherwise be inexplicable. Putting
+this violent prejudice on one side, this memorial drawn up by Camelford
+for his son, though too intimate for complete publication, is a
+priceless document. Let all be forgiven him for the sake of this
+manuscript. It may be inaccurate, and biassed and acrid, but it presents
+the family circle from within by one of themselves, and no more vivid
+picture can exist of that strange cockatrice brood of Pitts.
+
+The son for whom it was written grew up a spitfire, not less eccentric
+than his sires, and became notorious as the second Lord Camelford. His
+was a turbulent, rakehelly, demented existence, the theme of many
+newspaper paragraphs. He revived in his person all the pranks and
+outrage of the Mohawks. Bull-terriers, bludgeons, fighting of all kinds
+were associated with him; riots of all kinds were as the breath of his
+nostrils, more especially theatrical tumults. One of these latter
+contests brought him into contact with the pacific authors of the
+'Rejected Addresses,' who were admitted, not without trepidation, to his
+apartment, which was almost an arsenal. It can scarcely be doubted that
+the lurking madness of the Pitts found a full expression in him. As an
+officer in the Navy, commanding a sloop in the West Indies, his conduct
+fell little if at all short of insanity. It is not easy to understand
+how even in those more facile times he escaped disgrace.
+
+Eventually, at the age of twenty-nine he was killed in a wanton duel
+with a Mr. Best. The circumstances of this mortal combat show that he
+was a true Pitt of the Governor's headstrong breed. Both before the duel
+and afterwards, on his death-bed, he acknowledged that he was the sole
+wanton aggressor, and that his antagonist was blameless. But as Mr. Best
+was reported the best pistol-shot in England, his pride would not allow
+him to lend himself, however indirectly, to any sort of accommodation.
+So he died, and with him died the eldest line of the Governor's branch
+of Pitts. Boconnoc passed to his sister, Lady Grenville, wife of the
+minister who was Chatham's nephew. The relations of the brothers-in-law
+seem to have been on the Pitt model. 'Pique against Lord Grenville
+explains his (Lord Camelford's) conduct,' writes Lady Holland.[19]
+Despite all their idiosyncrasies it seemed impossible to keep the Pitts
+and Grenvilles from quarrelling and blending.
+
+All this may seem trivial enough, but it has an important, indeed
+necessary, bearing on the story of William's life, as showing the stock
+from which he sprang.
+
+The harsh passions of the Governor and the petulant violence of his
+heirs seem so outrageous and uncontrolled as to verge on actual
+insanity. Shelburne explicitly states that 'there was a great deal of
+madness in the family.' Every indication confirms this statement. What
+seemed in the Governor brutality and excess, frequently developed in
+his descendants into something little if at all short of mental
+disorder. We thus trace to their source the germs of that haughty,
+impossible, anomalous character, distempered at times beyond the
+confines of reason, which made William so difficult to calculate or
+comprehend.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+And now we come by a process of exhaustion to the subject of this book.
+
+William Pitt, the elder statesman of that name, was born in London, in
+the parish of St. James's, November 15, 1708. It does not now seem
+possible to trace the house of his nativity, but it was probably in Pall
+Mall, where his father then or afterwards resided. We are limited to the
+information that his godfathers were 'Cousin Pitt' (probably George Pitt
+of Strathfieldsaye) and General Stewart, after the latter of whom he was
+named. General Stewart was the second husband of William's grandmother,
+Lady Grandison.[20]
+
+It may be well to recall here that William was the second son of Robert
+Pitt, the Governor's eldest son, and his wife, Harriot Villiers, fourth
+daughter of Catherine, Viscountess Grandison, and her husband the Hon.
+Edward Villiers Fitzgerald, who was descended from a brother of the
+first Villiers, Duke of Buckingham.
+
+Of his childhood we catch but occasional and remote glimpses.
+
+His grandfather, as we have seen, had early marked him. The shrewd old
+nabob had discerned the boy's possibilities, but seems also to have
+determined that his energies should not be relaxed by wealth. At any
+rate, the Governor refrained from any special sign of favour, and
+bequeathed the lad only an annuity of 100_l._ a year. This was
+William's sole patrimony, for he seems to have received nothing from his
+father.
+
+He was sent to Eton, or, as William always spells it, 'Eaton,' at an
+early age; the exact period does not seem to be ascertainable. Here he
+had notable contemporaries: Henry Fox, George Lyttelton, Charles Pratt,
+Hanbury Williams, and Fielding.
+
+'Thee,' said this last, addressing Learning, 'in the favourite fields,
+where the limpid gently rolling Thames washes thy Etonian banks, in
+early youth I have worshipped. To thee, at thy birchen altar, with true
+Spartan devotion I have sacrificed my blood.'[21] Pitt could have echoed
+his schoolfellow's apostrophe if the not improbable legend be true that
+he underwent an unusually severe flogging for having been caught out of
+bounds. But even without this, his experiences were no doubt poignant
+enough; for, though the son of a wealthy father, he was placed on the
+foundation, and the Eton of those days afforded to its King's Scholars
+no lap of luxury. The horrors and hardships of Long Chamber, the immense
+dormitory of these lads, have come down to us in a whisper of awful
+tradition, and it is therefore no matter for surprise, though it is for
+regret, that William did not share the passionate devotion of most
+Etonians for their illustrious college. He is credited indeed with
+saying that he had scarcely ever observed a boy who was not cowed for
+life at Eton[22]: a sweeping condemnation which sounds strange in these
+days, but which is easily explained by the misery that he, as a sickly
+boy, may well have undergone in that petty Lacedaemon. For his health
+deprived him of all the pleasures of his age, as he was already a martyr
+to gout. That hereditary malady which cut him off from the sports of the
+school impelled him to study, and so served his career. Mr. Thackeray,
+who wrote his biography in quarto and who may be discriminated without
+difficulty from the genius of that name, deposes vaguely that 'Dr.
+Bland, at that time the headmaster of Eton, is said to have highly
+valued the attainments of his pupil.' We rest more securely on a letter
+of his Eton tutor, Mr. Burchett, of which the last sentence need only be
+quoted here, as it is all that relates to William.
+
+
+ MR. BURCHETT TO MR. PITT.
+
+ Yr younger Son has made a great Progress since his coming hither,
+ indeed I never was concern'd with a young Gentleman of so good
+ Abilities, & at the same time of so good a disposition, and there is
+ no question to be made but he will answer all yr Hopes.
+
+ I am, Sr,
+ Yr most Obedient & most Humble Servant,
+ WILL. BURCHETT.[23]
+
+
+This reference under the hand of an Eton tutor is exuberant enough. But
+no doubt rests on Pitt's school reputation. It survived even to the time
+of Shelburne, who speaks of him as distinguished at Eton. Lyttelton
+wrote of him while still there: 'This (good-humour) to Pitt's genius
+adds a brighter grace;'[24] a remarkable tribute from one Eton boy to
+another. More striking still is the tradition preserved by an unfriendly
+witness, William's nephew, Camelford. 'The surprising Genius of Lord
+Chatham,' he writes, 'distinguished him as early as at Eaton School,
+where he and his friend Lord Lyttelton in different ways were looked up
+to as prodigies.' School prodigies rarely mellow into remarkable men;
+though remarkable men are often credited, when their reputation is
+secure, with having been school prodigies. But the contemporary letter
+of Burchett and the reluctant testimony of Camelford admit of no doubts.
+Most significant, perhaps, of all is the preservation of the flotsam of
+school life, a couple of school bills, the tutor's letter, another from
+the boy himself. This last, which took eleven days in transmission, is
+here given. The bills have been already published by Sir Henry Lyte in
+his History of Eton.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS FATHER.
+
+ _Eaton, Septembr ye 29th._
+
+ Hon'ed Sr,--I write this to pay my duty to you, and to lett you
+ know that I am well, I hope you and my mama have found a great
+ benefit from the Bath, and it would be a very great satisfaction to
+ me, to hear how you do, I was in hopes of an answer to my last
+ letter, to have heard how you both did, and I should direct my
+ letters, to you; for not knowing how to direct my letters, has
+ hindered me writing to you. my time has been pretty much taken up
+ for this three weeks, in my trying for to gett into the fiveth form,
+ And I am now removed into it; pray my duty to my mama and service to
+ my uncle and aunt Stuart if now att the Bath. I am with great
+ respect,
+
+ Hon'ed Sr, Your most dutiful Son,
+ W. PITT.[25]
+
+
+This is the whole record extant of William's Eton life; to so many lads
+the happiest period of their existence, but not to him. An invalid, and
+so disabled for games, a recluse, perhaps a victim, he had no pleasant
+memories of Eton. But there, in all probability, he laid the foundations
+of character and intellect on which his fame was to be reared. It is not
+usually profitable to imagine pictures of the past, but it may not be
+amiss to evoke, in passing, the shadow of the lean, saturnine boy as he
+limped by the Thames, shaping a career, or pondering on life and
+destiny, dreaming of greatness where so many have dreamed, while he
+watched, half enviously, half scornfully, the sports in which he might
+not join. He is not the first, and will not be the last, to find his
+school a salutary school of adversity. He looked back to it with no
+gratitude. But Eton claims him for her own; and long generations of
+reluctant students have whiled away the reputed hours of learning or
+examination by gazing at his bust in Upper School, and dreamily
+conjecturing why so great a glamour still hangs about his name.
+
+With these few remnants and this vague surmise ends all that is, or will
+probably ever be, known of William's childhood. Little enough if we
+compare it to the copious details furnished by modern autobiographers.
+But self-revelation was not the fashion of the eighteenth century, and
+childhood then furnished less to record. Boys were in the background,
+repressing their emotions, and inured to a rugged discipline which,
+though odious to the sympathetic delicacy of modern civilisation,
+produced the men who made the Empire.
+
+From Eton, Pitt proceeded to Oxford, where he was admitted a Gentleman
+Commoner at Trinity College on January 10th, 1726 (o.s.), guided
+thither, probably, by the fact that his uncle, Lord Stanhope, had been a
+member of that society. There are indications that at this time he was
+destined, like a great minister of a recent day, for the Church, but the
+gout attacked him with such violence as to compel him to leave the
+University without taking his degree. We have, however, an indirect
+proof of the reputation which he brought to Oxford in a letter from a
+Mr. Stockwell, who, although he had determined to give up tuition,
+consents to take William as his pupil, partly as a 'Salsbury man,' and
+so owing respect to the Pitt family; partly because of 'the character I
+hear of Mr. Pitt on all hands.'
+
+William's only public achievement at Oxford was a copy of Latin verses
+which he published on the death of George I. They are artificial and
+uncandid, as is the nature of such compositions, and have been justly
+ridiculed by Lord Macaulay. But the performance is at least an early
+mark of ambition. If this be all, and it is all, that we know of this
+period of William's life, it seems worth while to print the two letters
+written by Mr. Stockwell to Robert Pitt, the more as they throw some
+light on bygone Oxford, a topic of evergreen interest.
+
+
+ MR. I. STOCKWELL TO ROBERT PITT.
+
+ Hon'ed Sr,--I had long since determin'd, not to engage any more
+ in a Trust of so much consequence, as the Care of a young Gentleman
+ of Fortune is, & have in fact refus'd many offers of that sort: but
+ the great Regard, that every Salsbury-Man must have for your Family,
+ and the Character I hear of Mr Pitt from All Hands, put it out of
+ my Power to decline a Proposal of so much Credit & Advantage to
+ Myself & the College. I heartily wish your Business and Health
+ would have allow'd you to have seen him settled here, because I
+ flatter Myself, that you would have left Him in Our Society with
+ some Degree of Satisfaction; as That can't be hop'd for, You will
+ assure Yourself that everything shall be done with the exactest Care
+ and Fidelity.
+
+ I have secur'd a very good Room for Mr Pitt, which is just now left
+ by a Gentleman of Great Fortune, who is gone to the Temple. Tis
+ thoroughly furnish't & with All necessarys, but perhaps may require
+ some little Additional Expence for Ornament or Change of Furniture.
+ The method of paying for the Goods of any Room in the University is,
+ that Every Person leaving the College receives of his Successor Two
+ Thirds of what He has expended. On this foot the Mony to be paid by
+ Mr Pitt to the Gentleman who possess't the Room last, is 43l, Two
+ thirds of which, as likewise of whatever Addition He shall please to
+ make to the Furniture, He is to receive again of the Person, who
+ succeeds Him.
+
+ Tis usual for Young Gentlemen of Figure to have a small quantity of
+ Table-Linnen, & sometimes some particular peices of plate, for the
+ reception of Any Friend in their Rooms, but everything of that sort
+ for Common & Publick Uses is provided by the College.
+
+ If you please to send me the Servitor's Name, I will immediately
+ procure His admission into the College, & show Him all the Kindness
+ in my Power, but as to His attendance on Mr Pitt it is not now
+ usual in the University, nor, as I apprehend, can be of any Service.
+ Tis much more Customary & Creditable to a Gentleman of Family to be
+ attended by a Footman--But this I barely mention.
+
+ The other Expences of Mr Pitt's Admission will be in the following
+ Articles:
+
+ Caution Mony (to be return'd again) 10 0 0
+ Benefaction to the College 10 0 0
+ For Admission to the Fellow's Common Room 2 0 0
+ Fee for the Use of the College Plate, &c. 2 0 0
+ College Serv'ts Fees 1 15 0
+ University Fees 0 16 0
+
+ I have stated Mr Pitt's Benefaction at Ten Pounds, because that is
+ what we require & receive of every Gentleman-Commoner, & of very
+ many Commoners; but I know Sr that you will excuse me for
+ mentioning, that several Young Gentlemen of Mr Pitt's Gown have
+ besides made the College a Present of a Peice of Plate of 10, or
+ 12l. I am thus particular only in Obedience to Your Orders. I
+ believe Sr if You please to remit a Bill of An Hundred Pounds, it
+ will answer the whole expence of Mr. Pitt's settlement here and I
+ shall have the Honour to send you a particular Account of the
+ disposal of it. As I am debarr'd the Pleasure of waiting on You by a
+ little Office, that Confines me to the College in Termtime, I shall
+ take it a very great Favour, if you please to let me know at what
+ time I may hope to see Mr Pitt here.
+
+ I beg my Humble Duty to Your Good Lady, & my Humble Service &
+ Respects to Mr Pitt, and am with the highest Respect
+
+ Sr Yr most Oblig'd & Obedient Servt
+
+ IOS. STOCKWELL.[26]
+
+
+ MR. STOCKWELL TO ROBERT PITT, 'AT SWALLOWFIELD
+ NEAR READING, BERKS.'
+
+ _Trin: Coll: Oxon: Decr 22. 1726._
+
+ Hon'rd Sr,--Upon receiving the favour of Yours & finding that it
+ was your Intention that Mr Pitt should keep a Servant, I have made
+ choice of Another Room much more Convenient for that Purpose, as it
+ supply's a Lodging for His Footman. I have employ'd some Workmen in
+ it to make some necessary alterations; but the whole expence will
+ not amount to the Charge of the Chamber, I had mention'd to you
+ before. As I am not willing, Mr Pitt should be put to the distress
+ of lying One Night in an Inn, I will take Care, it shall be fit for
+ his Reception by New Years Day, & I am sure He will like it very
+ well.
+
+ I proposed so large a Sum, because I had not mention'd the Articles
+ of Gown, Cap Bands, Tea-Furniture, & some other little Ornaments &
+ Conveniences that young Gentlemen don't care to be without. You will
+ be pleas'd to mention, in what degree of mourning[27] His Gown must
+ be made; & I will send you an exact Account of the whole expence.
+ There is no need of remitting any Mony, till He comes.
+
+ If You are willing to recommend the Servitor You spoke of, who may
+ live here at a very easy rate (I believe very well for 15l p. Ann)
+ I have bespoke a place for him, & He may be admitted when you
+ please. I beg My Humble Duty to Your Good Lady, & my Humble Service
+ & Respects to Your Good Family, & am
+
+ Sr Yr most Obliged & Obedient Servt
+ IOS. STOCKWELL.[28]
+
+
+Fortunately, too, a few of William's Oxford letters have also been
+preserved. The first apologetically continues Stockwell's tale of
+preliminary expenses, and endeavours to deprecate Robert Pitt's
+economical wrath.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS FATHER, IN PALL MALL.
+
+ _Trin: Coll: Janry Ye 20th 1726/7._
+
+ Hon'ed Sr--After such delay, though not owing to any negligence
+ on my Part, I am ashamed to send you ye following accompt, without
+ first making great apologies for not executing ye Commands sooner.
+
+ Matriculation Fees 0 16 6
+ Caution money 10 0 0
+ Benefaction 10 0 0
+ Utensils of ye Coll 2 0 0
+ Common Room 2 0 0
+ Coll: Serv'ts Fees 1 15 0
+ Paddesway[29] Gown 8 5 0
+ Cap 0 7 0
+ Tea Table, China ware, bands &c. 6 5 0
+ Glasses 0 11 0
+ Thirds of Chamber & Furniture 41 7 8
+ Teaspoons 1 7 6
+ --------
+ Summe total 84 14 8
+ --------
+ Balance pd me by Mr Stockwell 15 05 4
+
+ I have too much reason to fear you may think some of these articles
+ too extravagant, as they really are, but all I have to say for it is
+ humbly to beg you would not attribute it to my extravagance, but to
+ ye custom of this Place; where we pay for most things too at a high
+ rate.
+
+ I must again repeat my wishes for yr health, hoping you have not
+ been prevented by so painfull a delay as ye gout from pursuing yr
+ intended journey to Town I must beg leave to subjoin my Duty to my
+ Mother & love to my Sistrs and am with all Possible respect
+
+ Sr Yr most dutyfull Son
+ WM. PITT.[30]
+
+
+The next is written after an evident explosion of that wrath. In the
+Pitt family, even more than in others, father and son viewed filial
+expenditure from opposite points of view. It is painful, then, but not
+surprising to find that Robert should have regarded William's washing
+bill as beyond the dreams of luxury.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS FATHER, 'IN PALL MALL.'
+
+ _Trin: Coll: April ye 29th._
+
+ Hon'ed Sr,--I recd yrs of ye 25th in which I find with
+ ye utmost concern ye dissatisfaction you express at my expences.
+ To pretend to justify, or defend myself in this case would be, I
+ fear, with reason thought impertinent; tis sufficient to convince me
+ of the extravagance of my expences, that they have met with yr
+ disapprobation, but might I have leave to instance an Article or
+ two, perhaps you may not think 'em so wild and boundless, as with
+ all imaginable uneasiness, I see you do at present. Washing 2_l._
+ 1_s._ 0_d._, about 3_s._ 6_d._ per wk, of which money half a dozen
+ shirts at 4_d._ each comes to 2_s._ per wk, shoes and stockings
+ 19_s._ 0_d._ Three pairs of Shoes at 5_s._ each, two pair of
+ Stockings, one silk, one worcestead, are all that make up this
+ Article, but be it as it will, since, Sr, you judge my expence too
+ great, I must endeavour for ye future to lessen it, & shall be
+ contented with whatever you please to allow me. one considerable
+ article is a servant, an expence which many are not at, and which I
+ shall be glad to spare, if you think it fitt, in hopes to convince
+ you I desire nothing superfluous; as I have reason to think you will
+ not deny me what is necessary. As you have been pleased to give me
+ leave I shall draw upon you for 25li as soon as I have occasion.
+ I beg my duty to my Mother & am with all possible respect
+
+ Hon'ed Sr, yr most Dutifull Son
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+The third is mysterious enough to us, but it expresses gratitude for
+some marks of kindness, whether to the writer or not, cannot now be
+known. It is difficult to imagine that Robert should have extended his
+beneficence to any one at Trinity but William, and yet it is not easy to
+depict the gratitude of a College for a favour done to one of their
+undergraduates by his father. In any case there remains no longer any
+trace of such benefaction at Trinity. The inevitable financial statement
+in which the bookseller's bill figures handsomely, not far behind the
+tailor's, is tactfully kept separate in a postscript. It is, however,
+well to know that this letter, the last in all probability that William
+wrote to his father, who died six weeks afterwards, is one of as much
+affection as the fashion of that day permitted.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS FATHER.
+
+ _Trin: Coll: April ye 10th 1727._
+
+ Hon'ed Sr,--I hope you gott well to London yesterday as I did
+ to this place, though too late to trouble you with a letter that
+ Evening. I can not say how full of acknowledgements every one
+ amongst us is for ye favr you confer'd upon one of their society.
+ One could almost imagine by ye good wishes I hear express't toward
+ you from all hands, you were rather a publick benefactor to ye
+ College, than a Patron to any one member of it. I mention this
+ because I believe it will not be unacceptable to you to hear yr
+ favrs are gratefully recd. I hope my Mother is well, to whom I
+ beg my Duty: & am with all possible respect, Sr,
+
+ Yr most dutifull son,
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ Sr,--Finding ye quarter just up I send you ye following accompt
+ commencing Janry ye 9th to ye 9th of this month.
+
+ Battels 15 0 0
+ Paid Lambert bd Wages 4 4 0
+ Three months learning french & entrance 2 2 0
+ For a course of experimental Philosophy 2 2 0
+ For coat & breeches & making 5 18 0
+ Booksellers bill 5 0 0
+ Cambrick for ruffles 1 4 0
+ Shoes, stockings 1 19 0
+ Candles, coal, fagots 3 10 0
+ Pockett money, Gloves, Powder, Tea, &c. 4 4 0
+ For washing 2 2 0
+ ----------
+ 47 5 0
+ Remains 9 15 0[31]
+
+
+Robert Pitt died in Paris, May 20, 1727, and the next letter is
+addressed to his widow at Bath. The eldest son, Thomas, already, it
+would appear, had played William false, and caused a coolness with the
+mother by not delivering a letter.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER.
+ _Oxford July ye 10th 1727._
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--Tis with no small impatience I have waited for ye
+ pleasure of hearing from you, but as that is denied me, I take this
+ opportunity of repeating my Duty and enquiries after yr health. I
+ wrote to you by return of ye coach, enclos'd to my Brother, to be
+ forwarded by him, from whom I have also received no answer, which
+ makes me imagine you may not have less reason to be angry with me
+ for not paying my Duty to you, than I have to be sorry at not having
+ ye pleasure to hear from you, I mean my letter has not come into
+ yr hands. I send this by ye Post from hence, which I hope will
+ find better luck, it will be a sensible pleasure to me to hear ye
+ waters agree with you: for wch reason out of kindness to me, as
+ also in regard to yr own quiet (lest I should trouble you every
+ other post with an importuning epistle) be so good as to give ye
+ satisfaction of hearing you are well; I am with all respect,
+
+ Yr most Dutifull Son,
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+The following letter would seem to indicate that William was spending
+the Long Vacation at Oxford, while his mother as usual was spending hers
+at Bath. He appears to hint disapproval of an acquaintance she wished
+him to make, reversing the usual position of parent and son on such
+matters. There is again reproachful allusion to his brother; there are
+few indeed in any other tone throughout William's correspondence.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'AT BATH.'
+
+ _Oxon Septr ye 17th 1727._
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--I rec'd ye favour of yrs by Mr Mayo and have
+ waited on Mr Vesey as you order'd, with whom, had you not
+ recommended him to me upon ye knowledge you have of his family, I
+ should not have sought an acquaintance. I hope you will lett me hear
+ soon yr intentions. If I am not to be happy in seeing you hear, ye
+ certainty of it can not be more uneasy than the apprehension; if I
+ am, I shall gain so much happiness, by ye foreknowledge of it. What
+ part of ye world my Brother is in or when he will be in Town, I
+ know not. I hope to hear from him between this and ye Coronation.
+ The only consideration yt can make me give up quietly ye pleasure
+ I promis'd myself in seeing you here, is yt you are employ'd in a
+ more important care to yrself and Family, ye preservation of yr
+ health. I have only to add my Love to my Sister and am with all
+ respect,
+
+ Yr most dutifull son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+The gout, we have seen, drove William prematurely from Oxford, after a
+little more than a year of residence. Thence he proceeded to Utrecht,
+where it was then not unusual for young Englishmen and Scotsmen to
+complete their education. Here we find him in 1728 with his cousin Lord
+Villiers and Lord Buchan, father of the grotesque egotist of that name
+and of Henry and Thomas Erskine. Pitt writes in 1766 that Buchan was his
+intimate friend from the period that they were students together at
+Utrecht, and, when in office, he showed kindness on that ground to Lord
+Cardross, Buchan's eldest son, the egotist himself. Of this period some
+few letters to his mother survive, dutiful yet playful.
+
+The first letter is of the formal kind then general between sons and
+parents, mentioning his cousin Lord Villiers, for whom he puts in a good
+word, not unnecessarily, as we shall see presently.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER.
+
+ _Utrecht, Febry ye 6th N.S. 1728._
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--I have ye pleasure to repeat my assurances of
+ affection & duty to you, together with my wishes for yr health: I
+ shall take all opportunities for paying my respects to you, I hope
+ you will now and then favr me wth a line or two, especially
+ since you have so good a Scribe as Miss Ann to ease you of ye
+ trouble of writing yrself. My Ld Villiers begs his Compliments
+ may be acceptable to you, at ye same time I should not do my Ld
+ justice if I omitted saying something in his just praise, but as I
+ can not say enough, I forbear to say more. My Love to my Sistrs &
+ Compliments where due. I am with all respt
+
+ Your dutiful Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+The next seems to denote a reluctant intention of returning to England
+to pay his family a visit.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER.
+
+ _Utrecht Febry ye 13th 1728._
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--I hope I need not assure you yr letter gave me a
+ very sensible pleasure in informing me of yr better health; I wish
+ I may any way be able to contribute toward farther establishment of
+ it by obeying a Command which tallies so well with my own
+ Inclinations though at ye same time be assured, nothing less than
+ ye pleasure of seeing you should prevail upon me to repeat so much
+ sickness & difficulty as I met with Coming over to Holland. I
+ believe I shall not fail in my respects to you, as often as occasion
+ permits, though I fear my letters are hardly worth postage: unless
+ to one who I flatter myself believes me to be
+
+ hr most Dutifull Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ P.S. my Love to all ye Family.
+
+
+The next letter again pleads on behalf of my Lord Villiers, for whose
+excess of vivacity William feels obvious sympathy. He mentions, too, and
+characterises with a sure touch, his old Eton friend Lyttelton, who has
+fallen in love with Harriot Pitt, as he was afterwards to fall in love
+with Ann. Lyttelton was apparently determined that the Lytteltons and
+Pitts should be matrimonially connected as closely as possible, for two
+months afterwards we find him exclaiming in a letter to his father:
+'Would to God Mr. (William) Pitt had a fortune equal to his brother's,
+that he might make a present of it to my pretty little Molly! But
+unhappily they have neither of them any portion but an uncommon share of
+merit, which the world will not think them much the richer for.'[32] As
+Thomas had just married Christian Lyttelton, it is clear that the writer
+meditated a triple alliance as the end to be aimed at. The peerage books
+tell us that this pretty little Molly died unmarried.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'IN PALLMALL, LONDON.'
+
+ _Utrecht Feb: ye 29th_
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--The return of my Ld Villiers into England gives me
+ an opportunity of assuring you of my respect & wishes for yr
+ health; I can not omitt any occasion of shewing how sensible I am of
+ yr affection, but must own I could have wish'd any other than this
+ by which I am depriv'd of my Ld Villier's Company, he is recall'd
+ perhaps deservedly: if a little Indiscretion arising from too much
+ vivacity be a fault, my Ld is undeniably blameable; but I doubt not
+ but my Ld Grandison himself will find more to be pleas'd with in
+ ye one than to correct in ye other respect. I have received so
+ many Civilities from Mr Waddel, who does me ye honr to be ye
+ bearer of this, yt I should not do him justice to omitt letting you
+ know how much I am obliged to him. I hope ye Family is well:
+ Lyttelton prevented you in ye account of his own Madness. Sure
+ there never was so much fine sense & Extravagance of Passion jumbled
+ together in any one Man. Send him over to Holland: perhaps living in
+ a republick may inspire him with a love of liberty & make him scorn
+ his Chains. My love to all, who (a second time) I hope are well: &
+ believe me with all respect & affection
+
+ Yr most Dutiful Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+The third contains, perhaps, the only token of kindness between the two
+brothers which survives. It also alludes to Lyttelton's passion for
+Harriot.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'IN PALL MALL, LONDON.'
+
+ _Utrecht April ye 8th N.S. 1728._
+
+ Hon'ed Madm,--Yr letters must always give me so much pleasure,
+ yt I beg no consideration may induce you to deprive me of it. they
+ can never fail being an entertainment to me when they give me an
+ opportunity of hearing you are well. I can not omitt thanking you
+ for ye enquiry you make about my supplies from my Brother: neither
+ should I do him justice, if I did not assure you I receiv'd ye
+ kindest letter in ye world from him: wherein he gives me ye offer
+ of going where I think most for my improvement, and assures me
+ nothing yt ye estate can afford shall be denied me for my
+ advantage & education. I hope all ye family is well. Miss Anne's
+ time is so taken up with dansing & Italien yt I despair of hearing
+ from her. I should be glad to hear what conquests miss Harriot made
+ at ye birthday. if I had not a letter from one of ye Three, I must
+ think they have forgott me. I am in pain for poor Lyttelton: I wish
+ there was leagues of sea between him & ye Charms of Miss Harriot.
+ If he dies I shall sue her for ye murder of my Friend. This Place
+ affords so little matter of entertainment, yt I shall only beg you
+ to believe me with all respect,
+
+ Hon'ed Madm, Yr most Dutifull Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ My love & service to my Brother & Compliments to all ye Family.
+
+
+His stay at Utrecht was probably not protracted, as we find no more
+letters from thence. The next glimpse we have of him is in January 1730,
+at Boconnoc. He is now established at home, rather, perhaps, from
+economy than of his own free will, for he disrespectfully calls Boconnoc
+'this cursed hiding-place;' living in Cornwall or at Swallowfield, near
+Reading, another of the family residences; or on military duty at
+'North'ton,' evidently Northampton, which William, however, abbreviates
+differently in later letters. When we consider the elaborate style and
+formulas of the letters of this period there seems nothing so strange as
+the passion for abbreviation by apostrophe, such as 'do's' for 'does,'
+which seems to save neither time, trouble, nor space.
+
+In February 1731 he received a commission in the 1st Dragoon Guards,
+then under the command of Lord Pembroke, and we find him in country
+quarters at Northampton and elsewhere. In the autumn we find him once
+more at Boconnoc, whence he writes this more genial note to his mother.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, AT BATH.
+
+ _Bocconnock Octbr ye 17 1731._
+
+ Dear Madam,--I am, after a long Confinement at Quarters, at present
+ confined here, by disagreeable, dirty weather, which makes us all
+ prisoners in this little house. I knew nothing of your journey to
+ Bath, when I came to Town, and was therefore disappointed of the
+ pleasure of seeing you there. I see you have put a bill upon your
+ door. Pray what do you intend to do with yourself this winter? I
+ shou'd be mighty glad to know whether your affairs are near an
+ Issue. I hope they will very soon leave you at Leisure to consult
+ nothing but your health and Quiet. Be pleas'd to favour me with a
+ Letter here, where I shall stay about a month longer; and give me
+ the satisfaction of knowing how much you profit by the Waters.
+ Believe me,
+
+ Dear Madam, Your dutifull affect son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ My service to the Col: and Mrs. Bouchier: I shall Be glad to hear he
+ makes one at the Balls.
+
+
+In 1733 he set out on a foreign tour, of which we shall see more
+presently, and before leaving writes this note, which gives some ground
+for thinking that his brother helped him at least to meet the expenses
+of this voyage, as Lord Camelford thinks was actually the case.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'IN BATEMAN STREET, NEAR PICCADILLY,
+ LONDON.'
+
+ _Boconnock jan: 19: 1732/3._
+
+ Dear Madam,--I hope Miss Kitty who is now upon ye Road will get
+ safe to You: I cant omit doing Justice To your goodness in making
+ room for her, she no doubt wanting your care very much in the ill
+ state she is in. I continue still here and shall not set out yet
+ this month, haveing a design to go abroad then. It is however
+ uncertain till I hear from my Brother after he gets to Town. Miss
+ Harriot, by her letters, Is much recovered and I flatter myself your
+ house will prove as lucky to Poor Kitty. I need not assure you of my
+ wishes for your health and speedy deliverance from the Misery of
+ Late: my Love to my Sisters and believe me
+
+ Dear Madam Your most Dutifull Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ Miss Nanny gives her Duty to you.
+
+
+He visited Paris, and Geneva, Besancon (where he lost his heart for a
+time), Marseilles, and Montpelier, passing the winter at Luneville.
+
+From Paris he again writes to his mother this letter, of no significance
+except dutiful affection; and another from Geneva which gives a strong
+proof of filial obedience in giving his consent, though with strong and
+obvious reluctance, to one of the bills filed by his mother and Lord
+Grandison in reference to his father's succession.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'IN BATEMAN STREET NEAR PICCADILLY A
+ LONDRES.'
+
+ _Paris May ye 1 1733._
+
+ Dear Madam,--Though I have nothing to say to you yet of the Place I
+ am arrived at, I cant help giving you a bare account of my being got
+ safe to Paris: You are pleased to give me so much reason to Think
+ you interest yourself in my welfare That I cou'd not acquit myself
+ of my Duty In not giving you this mark of my respect and the sense I
+ have of your goodness. I shall make my stay as short here as
+ possible. let me have the pleasure of hearing some account of your
+ health and situation: be pleased to direct to me Chez Monsieur
+ Alexandre Banquier, dans la Rue St. Appoline pres de la Porte St.
+ Denis, a Paris. I am
+
+ Madam Yr most Dutifull Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+ WILLIAM PITT TO HIS MOTHER, 'IN BATEMAN STREET PICCADILLY LONDON.
+ ANGLETERRE.'
+
+ _Geneva Sepr ye 17: N.S. 1733._
+
+ Dear Madam--I have just recd ye favour of your letter of ye
+ 7th august, with the answer to a bill of complaint of my Ld
+ Grandison and your self: I cou'd wish you had pleased to have let me
+ know in general that that bill is, for at present I have no Idea of
+ it. You assure me, Madam the answer you wou'd have me make is a
+ form, and can lead me into no farther consequences, by engageing me
+ In Law, or disobligeing My Brother; neither of which I am persuaded
+ you wou'd upon any consideration involve me in: upon these grounds I
+ readily send you my consent to the answer proposed By Mr Martyn in
+ your letter. I am sorry it did not come to my hands sooner, least my
+ answer shou'd not be time enough; and that I shou'd, by that means,
+ be any involuntary obstacle to your affairs which wou'd be a
+ sensible concern to
+
+ Dear Madam Yr most Dutyfull affece Son
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ I leave this Place shortly not knowing yet where I shall pass ye
+ winter.
+
+
+In 1734 he was back in England, doing duty with his regiment at Newbury.
+
+It is unnecessary to speculate on the measure of success that William
+would have achieved in the army had he remained a soldier. That he had
+an early disposition to the career of arms seems probable, as his uncle,
+Lord Stanhope, a soldier himself, who died when William was twelve, used
+to call him 'the young Marshal.' It is useless to surmise; but had he
+not been so great an orator, one would be apt to imagine that his bent
+and talent lay in the direction of a military career. This at least is
+certain, that he sedulously employed his time, preserved from mess
+debauches and idle activity by his guardian demon the gout. He told
+Shelburne that during the time he was a cornet of horse, there was not a
+military book that he had not read through. This is a large statement,
+but denotes at least unstinted application. So his career as a
+subaltern, though abruptly cut short, was probably fruitful, and these
+studies must have been useful to the future war minister. To paraphrase
+Gibbon's pompous and comical phrase, the cornet of dragoons may not have
+been useless to the history-maker of the British Empire. For his destiny
+was to plan and not to conduct campaigns, and he was now to be caught in
+the jealous embrace of parliamentary politics.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+But before he launches on that troubled career, it is well to catch what
+glimpses we can obtain of Pitt in private life. It is the more necessary
+as this aspect soon disappears from sight, and his letters begin to
+assume that pompous and obsequious tone which we have come to believe
+was his natural style, but which it is obvious was assumed and affected
+for purposes of his own. Until he passes on to the stage, he is as
+bright, as livery, and as affectionate as any lad of his generation. It
+is beyond measure refreshing to see him at this period bantering,
+falling in love, the participator of revels if not a reveller himself.
+For afterwards no one saw him behind the scenes, no one was admitted to
+his presence until every feature had been composed and his wig and his
+vesture dramatically arranged. To catch a glimpse of him before he
+played a part has been hitherto an unknown luxury. But to do this we
+must now for a moment consider his sisters.
+
+There were five of these, and among them was to be found in abundance
+the strain of violence and eccentricity that distinguished the Pitts.
+
+'The eldest, Harriot,' writes Lord Camelford, 'was one of the most
+beautiful women of her time, but little produced in the great world, and
+died very young from anxiety of mind in consequence of a foolish
+engagement she entered into with Mr. Corbett, son of Sir William
+Corbett, to whom she was privately married.' She secured for a while, as
+we have seen, Lyttelton's transient affections. 'The second daughter,
+Catherine, had much goodness, but neither beauty nor wit to boast of.
+She married Robert Nedham,[33] a man of uncommon endowments, but of good
+Irish family and property, by whom she had several children.' The third
+was Ann, of whom more presently; and the fifth Mary.
+
+The fourth was Betty, of whom, unlike three of her sisters, we seem to
+know too much. The curse of the Pitt blood was strong in her. Lord
+Camelford, her nephew, speaks of her 'diabolical disposition,' and says
+concisely that 'she had the face of an angel and the heart of all the
+furies,' and that she 'formed the most complicated character of vice
+that I have ever met with.' Family testimony is not always the most
+charitable, but outside witnesses in no way mitigate these expressions.
+Lord Shelburne says that she was received nowhere, owing to her
+profligate life. Horace Walpole brings an infamous charge against her,
+which we may well hope is a distortion of the natural fact that for some
+time she took up her abode with her eldest brother Thomas; though Thomas
+on parting with her said that her staying with him was extremely
+distasteful to him. She, in any case, openly lived as his mistress with
+Lord Talbot, a peer as eccentric as herself, and who promised her
+marriage, she said, whenever he should be free from the incumbrance of
+Lady Talbot.[34] Afterwards she went to Italy, became a Roman Catholic,
+started from Florence with the declared intention of marrying Mr.
+Preston, a Leghorn merchant, who seems however to have been unequal to
+the occasion.[35] Then she returned to England, virulent against her
+brother William, 'whose kindness to her,' says Horace Walpole, no
+biassed witness, 'has been excessive. She applies to all his enemies,
+and, as Mr. Fox told me, has even gone so far as to send a bundle of his
+letters to the author of _The Test_[36] to prove that Mr. Pitt has
+cheated her, as she calls it, out of a hundred a year, and which only
+prove that he once allowed her two, and, after all her wickedness, still
+allows her one.'[37] And yet on occasion she could call William the best
+of brothers and of men.[38] This, too, was characteristic of the breed.
+
+At this period of her life she called herself, heaven knows why, Clara
+Villiers Pitt, or Villiers Clara Pitt (there is an engraving of her with
+the latter designation), and published a pamphlet recommending magazines
+of corn. Of her perhaps too much has been said; but it is necessary to
+demonstrate that William's family relations were not always easy: Thomas
+reviled him, Elizabeth reviled him, Ann, whoever was in fault, caused
+him much trouble, while Thomas's son, whom he peculiarly cherished,
+regarded him with peculiar animosity.
+
+It should be mentioned, however, that Dutens met her in France some time
+during Pitt's paymastership, and gives us a picture of her, which also
+throws light on William's strong family affection. She was then
+handsome, with a fine figure, her face aflame with pride and intellect,
+her age apparently under thirty; she was abroad for her health. With
+her, as a companion, chosen by her brother, was a Miss Taylor, a much
+prettier girl, of whom Elizabeth was vigilantly jealous and with whom
+Dutens fell haplessly in love. Miss Pitt was then apparently on
+excellent terms with her illustrious brother, and gave Dutens a letter
+to him. She had indeed become enamoured of the young Frenchman, a
+passion which, we are not surprised to hear, she carried to indecorous
+lengths. He, however, escaped to England and presented his letter. Pitt
+called on him the same afternoon and thanked him for his attentions to a
+beloved sister. Dutens became intimate, showed the minister his
+compositions, and was favoured with an inspection of Pitt's. Then all
+suddenly changed, and he was denied access.[39] Betty had quarrelled
+with the family of Dutens, and had written to beg her brother to quarrel
+with Dutens.[40] Dutens, she said, had boasted in company that he was
+well with her, and that if her fortune and family answered expectation
+he might marry her. Consequently she desired her brother to order his
+footman to kick Dutens down stairs; in any case she implored him to
+quarrel with the young man. With this request Pitt unhesitatingly and
+unreasonably complied. We see here in one incident how warm were Pitt's
+family affections, and the difficulties under which they were cherished.
+
+In 1761 she married John Hannan of the Middle Temple, 'of Sir William
+Hannan's family in Dorsetshire, a lawyer by profession, remarkable for
+his abilities, some years younger than myself, and possessed of a
+fortune superior to my own,' as Betty describes him in a hostile
+announcement of the engagement addressed to William. Nine years
+afterwards she died. Of Hannan, her husband, nothing further seems to be
+known; but it may be surmised that his lot was not enviable.
+
+Mary, the youngest, seems to have been a spinster of no striking
+qualities. We know little of her, except that she was born in 1725 and
+died in 1782.[41] There exists one letter from William to her of the
+year 1753, and he mentions her in a letter, dated April 9, 1755, as
+living with him. And indeed he was always kind to her, as she seems to
+have habitually resided with him. Mrs. Montagu writes in July 1754:
+'Miss Mary Pitt, youngest sister of Mr. Pitt, is come to stay a few days
+with me. She is a very sensible, modest, pretty sort of young woman, and
+as Mr. Pitt seem'd to take every civility shown to her as a favour, I
+thought this mark of respect to her one manner of returning my
+obligations to him.'[42] But even she, though colourless, seems not to
+have been wholly devoid of the Pitt temperament, though she seems to
+have always been on intimate terms with her family. 'She had,' says Lord
+Camelford, 'neither the beauty of two of her sisters, nor the wit and
+talents of her sister Ann, nor the diabolical dispositions of her sister
+Betty. She meant always, I believe, to do right to the best of her
+judgement, but that judgement was liable to be warped by prejudice, and
+by a peculiar twist in her understanding which made it very dangerous to
+have transactions with her.' The 'peculiar twist,' which even Mary could
+not escape, was innate in most Pitts.
+
+We have kept Ann to the last, though she was third of the sisterhood in
+point of age, being born in 1712, and so four years younger than
+William, whose peculiar pet and crony she was for the earlier part of
+their lives. She was in her way almost as notable as he, and she
+resembled him in genius and temper, as Horace Walpole wittily observed,
+'_comme deux gouttes de feu_.' But drops of fire, did they exist, would
+probably not amalgamate for long, and one would guess that Ann and
+William were too much alike to remain in permanent harmony. Perhaps,
+too, their extreme intimacy made them too well acquainted with each
+other's tender points, a dangerous knowledge when coupled with great
+powers of sarcasm. One might surmise, too, that Pitt's wife, always
+apparently cold to Ann, might be disinclined to encourage the renewal of
+an intimacy which might once more attract William's closest confidence,
+though we have a letter[43] from Ann, dated 1757, in which she speaks
+with nothing less than rapture of Lady Hester's kindness to her. Lady
+Hester's immaculate caligraphy and frigid style give in our easier days
+an impression of distance and austerity.
+
+Ann, when she was little more than twenty, may be said to have entered
+public life by becoming a maid of honour to Queen Caroline, the wife of
+George II. From this moment she became one of that group of
+distinguished women, not blue but brilliant, who adorned England in the
+eighteenth century by their idiosyncrasies as much as by their
+abilities. She was courted and beloved by characters so famous as Gay's
+Duchess of Queensberry and George the Second's Lady Suffolk, and by Mrs.
+Montagu, who was much more blue than brilliant; for her essay on
+Shakespeare, so much lauded by her contemporaries, has long been dead
+and buried. In her dear Mrs. Pitt's conversation, declared this paragon
+of pedants, she saw Minerva without the formal owl on her helmet.
+
+Among men she corresponded with her neighbour, Horace Walpole (who felt
+for her an affection tempered with alarm), Lord Chesterfield, and Lord
+Mansfield. 'She had charms enough to kindle a passion in the celebrated
+Lord Lyttelton,' says Camelford; Dr. Ayscough, a coarse and crafty
+ecclesiastic, whose acquaintance Pitt and Lyttelton had made at Oxford,
+and who was a trusted adviser of Frederick, Prince of Wales, sought her
+in marriage;[44] but there seem no other traces of the tender passion in
+her life. For the whim, if it indeed were not a joke, which made her ask
+Lady Suffolk to assist her to secure the hand of Lord Bath (then about
+seventy, when she herself was forty-six), hardly comes under that
+description. Ann was, indeed, made rather for admiration than for love.
+Bolingbroke, who called William 'Sublimity Pitt,' called Ann 'Divinity
+Pitt.'[45] But she was, one may gather, destitute of beauty,[46] and
+her vigorous originality of character and conversation inspired, we
+suspect, more awe than affection. The delightful sprightliness of youth
+is apt with age or encouragement to sour into a blistering insolence,
+and Ann had all the sarcastic powers of her brother. For example,
+Chesterfield calling on her in his later life complained of decay. 'I
+fear,' he said, 'that I am growing an old woman.' 'I am glad of it,'
+briskly replied Ann, 'I was afraid you were growing an old man, which
+you know is a much worse thing.'[47] An attractive, even fascinating,
+member of society, she was something too formidable for the ordinary man
+to take to his bosom and his hearth. Reviewing her life, we think that
+the real and sole object of her love was her brother William, even when
+her love for the moment vented itself, as love sometimes does, in
+quarrel. Strife was necessary to the Pitts, and when they waged war with
+each other it was no battle of roses. The disputes of lovers and
+relatives, like amicable lawsuits, are apt to become serious affairs,
+and with this race they were conflicts of the tomahawk. Be that as it
+may, and whatever the cause, William and Ann adored each other, kept
+house together, and then quarrelled with prodigious violence and effect.
+At present we are not near that point. Ann is her brother's 'little
+Nan,' 'little Jug,' and he is writing her the delightful letters
+contained in this chapter, written, says Camelford, who preserved them,
+with the passion of a lover rather than that of a brother. To us they
+represent rather the special relation of a brother and sister, when
+affection and intimacy have grown with their growth, from the nursery
+and the schoolroom to riper years, not unfrequently the sweetest and
+tenderest of human connections. Our only regret must be that William did
+not cherish Ann's letters as she did his, for they may well have
+possessed her peculiar charm. 'She equalled her brother, Lord Chatham,'
+writes her nephew, who knew them both well, 'in quickness of parts, and
+exceeded him in wit and in all those nameless graces and attentions by
+which conversation is enlivened and endeared.' At the same time, one may
+reluctantly admit that such letters of hers as survive, give one little
+desire for more. The same, however, may be said of her great brother's
+habitual epistles (for they can be called nothing less); and their
+correspondence together was something apart, the gay and engaging
+eclogue of two young hearts; so that Ann, like William, must have been
+at her best in her early letters to him.
+
+And so we set forth these delightful letters of a lad of twenty-two to
+his favourite sister. They need no comment; of the allusions no
+explanation can now be given or would be worth giving; but the letters
+speak for themselves.[48]
+
+
+ _Boconnock, Jany 3, 1730._
+
+ Dear Nanny,--As you have degraded my sheets From ye rank and
+ Quality of a Letter, merely for Containing a few Innocent Questions,
+ I am determin'd to avoid such rigour for the future by Confining
+ myself to bare narration: first, Then we are to have a ball this
+ week at Mr. Hawky's Child-feast, (a Heathenish Name for the
+ Christian Institution of Baptism), where the Ladies intend to shine
+ most irresistably, and like enfants perdus, thrust themselves in the
+ very front of ye Battle, break some stubborn Tramontanne Hearts, or
+ Die of the spleen upon the spot. The next thing I have to say,
+ (Don't be afraid of a Question) Is, that we set out ye end of the
+ same week, and propose seeing you about a week after our departure.
+ I'l say no more, least I should forget ye restrictions I have Laid
+ myself under and launch out into some Impious enquiries that don't
+ suit my sex. Adieu, Dearest Nanny, till I have the pleasure of
+ seeing you at Bath.[49]
+
+
+The next letter is from Swallowfield, one of the Pitt houses. Ayscough
+has proposed to Ann. He is a favourite butt of William's, who seems to
+rejoice in his discomfiture.
+
+
+ _Swallowfeild, Sep. ye 29th, 1730._
+
+ I am quite tired of waiting for a letter from my Dear Nanny, and am
+ determin'd by way of revenge to fatigue you as much by obliging you
+ to read a very long letter from myself, as you have me with the
+ eager expectation of receiving one from you. The excuse you assign'd
+ for not doing it sooner fills me with apprehensions for your health;
+ Is it that you still converse only with Doctor Bave,[50] or that you
+ have already changed the old Physician for the young Galant? Is it
+ the want of conversation That denies you matter, or the entire
+ engagement to it that won't allow you time for a letter? Be it as it
+ will, I flatter myself into a beleif of the Latter, chusing rather
+ to be very angry with you for your neglect of me, than sincerely
+ afflicted for your want of health. I desire I may know from yourself
+ what advances you make towards your recovery; you never can want a
+ subject to write to me upon, while you have it in your power to
+ entertain me with a prospect of seeing you perfectly restored to
+ health, and in consequence of that to the sprightly exertion of your
+ understanding and full display (as my Lady Lynn elegantly has it) of
+ your Primitive Beauties. Why shou'd I mention Ayscough's overthrow!
+ That is a conquest perhaps of a nature not so brilliant as to touch
+ your heart with much exultation; But lett me tell you, a man of his
+ wit in one's suite has no Ill air; You may hear enough of eyes and
+ flames and such gentle flows of tender nonsense from every Fop that
+ can remember, but I can assure you Child, a man can think that
+ declares his Passion by saying Tis not a sett of Features I admire,
+ &c. Such a Lover is the Ridiculous Skew,[51] who Instead of
+ whispering his soft Tale to the woods and lonely Rocks, proclaims to
+ all the world he loves Miss Nanny--Fath (_sic_)--with the same
+ confidence He wou'd pronounce an Heretical Sermon at St. Mary's. I
+ must quit your admirer to enquire after the condition of the Colonel
+ and his Lady,[52] and to assure' em of my most hearty wishes for
+ Their health and happiness. I beg leave to repeat the same to Miss
+ Lenard, who I hope will recruit her spirits after so much affliction
+ with ye holsome Application of a Fiddle. I shall communicate to you
+ next Post a Translation of an Elegy of Tibullus By Lyttelton, who
+ orders me to say it was done for you:[53] I shall then be able to
+ say whether I go to Cornwall or no, so that you may know how to
+ direct to me.
+
+ I need not say what you are to do with the hair enclosed to you from
+ Mrs. Pitt. Adieu dear Nanny.
+
+
+The next letter is from Blandford, where the writer is stopping on his
+way to Boconnoc, which he gives as his address at the end of the letter.
+He is still occupied with his sister's career as a flirt.
+
+
+ _Blanford: Oct. ye 13th. 1730._
+
+ As we mutually complain'd of the silence of Each other, so I
+ conclude we mutually have Forgiven it: But had I continued it, my
+ Dear, Till I had something more entertaining to talk of Than an
+ execrable journey to Cornwall, perhaps You might not have had much
+ reason to complain of me. I have not had a minute's pleasure from
+ my own thoughts since I left Swallowfeild, till now I give them up
+ entirely to you, and Paint you to myself in the hands of some
+ agreeable Partner, as happy as the new way of wooing can make you. I
+ can not help suggesting To you here a little grave advice, which is,
+ not to lett your glorious Thirst of Conquest transport You so far,
+ as to lose your health in acquiring Hearts: I know I am a bold man
+ to dissuade One from dansing a great deal that danses very
+ gracefully; but once more I repeat, beware of shining too much;
+ content yourself to be healthy first, even tho you suspend your
+ triumphs a week or ten days. I beg I may not be misconstrued To
+ insinuate anything here in favour of my own sex, or to serve the
+ sinister ends of an envious Sister or two; no; I scorn such mean
+ artifices. In God's Name, when the waters have had their Effect,
+ give no Quarter, faites main basse upon all you meet, a coup
+ d'eventelle, a coup d'Oeil: spare neither age nor condition: but
+ like an Unskilfull Generall don't begin to take the Feild till your
+ military stores are provided and your magazines well furnish'd. Thus
+ Have I acquitted myself not only as an able but honest Counsellour,
+ and ventured to represent to you your true Interest, tho' never so
+ distastefull. Adieu, my Dear Nanny, till you renew our Conversation
+ by a speedy letter. My sincere respects to the Col. and family.
+
+ _Boconnock Near Bodmin._
+
+
+Next comes the letter in which he curses Boconnoc, but only because of
+its remoteness. He lives, it may be presumed, at the family house from
+economy. But he is not at ease about Ann's health, and longs to be at
+Bath to be with her.
+
+
+ _Boconnock. Novr ye 15th 1730._
+
+ I read all my Dear Nanny's letters with so much pleasure, that I
+ grow more and more out of temper with ye remoteness of this cursed
+ hiding place, where The distance of some hundred Miles denies me the
+ Repetition of it so often as I eagerly desire. But as much as I am
+ pleas'd with the prettiness of your style and manner of writing, I
+ cant help feeling a sensible uneasiness to hear no news of your
+ amendment; cou'd my Dear Girl add that to them, they wou'd give me a
+ satisfaction that wou'd bear some proportion to The degree of your
+ Esteem, you convince me I possess. We are all sollicitous to hear
+ Doctor Baves opinion of your case, which I beg you will not fail to
+ send me in your next letter, You will before this reaches you, have
+ recd a letter from my Brother, which I hope will give you perfect
+ satisfaction with regard to your further demands. As I shall not go
+ to London Before my Brother, it will not be absolutely in my Power
+ to see you in my way: I am not however without hopes of prevailing
+ upon him to go from Blanford to Bath, which is not above thirty
+ Miles. Beleive me I shall have it at heart to make you this visit,
+ having two such powerful motives to it, as my Own Pleasure and
+ yours. All proofs of your affection To me are highly agreeable, and
+ I am willing to measure the value you may set upon mine to you, By
+ the same favourable standard. Be assured therefore I shall lett slip
+ no occasion of giving what I shall in my turn receive with infinite
+ pleasure: Pray assure Colonel Lanoe and his family of my good
+ wishes; and let us know what benefit they receive from the waters. I
+ have time for no more. Adieu My Dear Girl.[54]
+
+
+He was now apparently with his regiment at Northampton, though he was
+not gazetted till February.
+
+
+ _Northton. Jan. 7, 1731._
+
+ I am just in my Dear Nanny's Condition, when she tells me she sat
+ down determin'd to write tho' she had Nothing to say: but I know not
+ how it comes to pass, One has a pleasure in saying and hearing very
+ nothings, where one loves: while I have my paper before me I Fancy
+ myself in company with you, and while you read my letters, you hear
+ me chattering to you, tis at least an interruption to working or
+ reading, that serves to diversify Things a little, to be forced to
+ run your eyes over a side or Two of paper; tho' it says nothing at
+ all. I remember, when I saw you last, you had a thought of reading
+ and Translating Voiture's letters: I beg you will take him up as
+ soon as you have got through this of mine, To recompense you for the
+ dullest of Letters, what will you Have me do? I come from two hours
+ muzzy conversation To a house full of swearing Butchers and Drunken
+ Butter women, and in short all the blessings of a market day: In
+ such a situation what can the wit of man suggest to him? Oh for the
+ restless Tongue of Dear little Jug! She never knows the painful
+ state of Silence In the midst of uproar: for my Part I think I cou'd
+ write a better letter in a storm at sea, or in my own way, at a
+ Bombardment, than in my present situation. I won't have this called
+ a Conversation: it shall pass for a mute interview, adieu my Dearest
+ Nanny: preserve your health is ye only word of consequence I can
+ say to-night.
+
+ Compliments to my Sis. Pitt, and all my Friends that come in your
+ way.[55]
+
+
+Now, for the only time in his life perhaps, we find him engaged
+reluctantly in drinking bouts, the necessary discipline of a military
+mess in those days. He refers to the amiability of Charles Feilding in a
+later letter.
+
+
+ _Northton. Febry ye 9. 1731._
+
+ I have been a monstrous time out of my Dearest Nanny's Company; the
+ date of your Letter before me, Me fait de sanglantes reproches: I
+ say nothing in my own behalf, but Frankly confess, in aggravation of
+ my silence, that I have neglected you for a course of drunken
+ conversation, which I have some days been in. The service wou'd be
+ the most inactive life in ye world if Charles Feilding was out of
+ it; As long as he is with us, we seldom remain long without pretty
+ smart Action: I am just releiv'd by one night's rest, from an
+ attaque that lasted sixteen hours, but as a Heroe should never
+ boast, I have done ye state some service and they know't--no more
+ of that.
+
+ What shall I talk of to my dear Girl? I have told her I love Her, in
+ every shape I cou'd think of: we'l converse in French and tell one
+ another ye same things under the Dress of Novelty. Mon aimable
+ Fille, rien ne m'est si doux que de recevoir de votre part les
+ marques d'une ardente amitie, si ce n'est de vous en donner
+ moi-meme. I did not think I cou'd have wrote a sentence so easily,
+ mais les paroles obeissent toujours aux sentiments du coeur. Let me
+ tell you once more, in plain English, your letter was infinitely
+ pretty; you may leave off Voiture whenever you please. I hope little
+ Jug is still talking at Boconnock; how Fares it with my Statira, my
+ angry Dear? I can think of nothing so likely to bring her into
+ Temper, as telling Her, her Skew will soon revisit ye groves of
+ Boconnock, where they may pass ye Long Day, and tend a few sheep
+ together. I beg she'l accept of ye following stanza I met with by
+ chance in some french poesy, and put a Tune to it, which She may
+ warble in honour of her gentle loveing shepherd:
+
+ Dans ces Lieux solitaires
+ Daphnis est de retour:
+ Deesse de Cythere
+ Celebre ce grand jour:
+ Rapellez sur ces rives
+ Les amours envoles,
+ Les graces fugitives
+ et les Ris exiles.
+
+ my Love and services to all Freinds: My Brother gives me ye
+ pleasure of hearing my Sistr Pitt is very well: pray make my
+ apologies for not writing to her.
+
+ Adio Anima mia bella,
+ Dolce speranza mia.
+
+ WM PITT.
+
+
+He has now come to London apparently to kiss hands for his commission.
+How little George II. can have realised what his relations were to be
+with the raw young cornet.
+
+
+ _London: March ye 5: 1731._
+
+ I thank my Dearest Nanny for her Letter Though it abused me, I think
+ without Reasonable Grounds: tis true I dont write so often as I wish
+ to see you, yet I won't allow I have let our conversation suffer any
+ considerable Interruption. I Have had no opportunity yet of
+ cultivating any farther acquaintance with Mr Molinox than by
+ receiving his name and leaving Mine: I shall need no other
+ inducement to his Freindship than the presumption of his civility to
+ you, which your letter gives me reason to think: I shall ever esteem
+ Any Man deserving of my regard who loves In any degree what so
+ thoroughly merits and possesses my Heart as my Dear Girl. I have the
+ pleasure of telling you my Commission is sign'd and I have Kiss'd
+ hands for it, so that my Country Quarters won't be Cornwall this
+ Summer. You are like to have Company soon with you, Hollins having
+ ordered my Sister Pitt the Bath immediately: what becomes of the two
+ poor vestals I dont yet know. the Town produces nothing new, as the
+ Place you are in I suppose, produces absolutely nothing at all: kill
+ some of your time by writing often to one who will always contribute
+ to make you pass it more pleasurably, when in his Power. Adieu,
+ recover yr health, and preserve Chearfulness enough to give your
+ Understanding a fair light.[56]
+
+ Yrs most sensibly
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+The next letter was written in the midst of what would now be called a
+bear-fight, carried on apparently in the room of the demure Lyttelton.
+
+
+ _London. March ye 13: 1731._
+
+ I am now lock'd into George's room; the girls Thundering at the door
+ as if Heaven and Earth would come together: I am certainly the
+ warmest Brother, or the coldest Gallant In the Universe, to suffer
+ the gentle Impertinencies the sportly Sollicitations of two girls
+ not quite despicable without emotion, and bestow my Time and spirits
+ upon a Sister: But in effect the thing is not so strange or
+ unreasonable, for every Man may have Girls worthy his attention, but
+ few, sisters so conversible as my Dear Nanny. Tis impossible to say
+ much, amidst this rocking of the doors Chairs and tables: I fancy
+ myself in a storm Of the utmost danger and horror; and were I really
+ in one, I would not cease to think of my Dear Girl, till I lost my
+ fears and Trepidations in the object of my tenderest care and
+ sincerest zeal. let the winds roar, and the big Torrent burst! I
+ won't leave my Nanny for any Lady of you all, but with the warmest
+ assurance of unalterable affection, Adieu.[57]
+
+
+He is now once more in country quarters, grievously hipped. The allusion
+to the barmaid 'who young at the bar is just learning to score' reads
+like a line from some forgotten song. In his despair he threatens to get
+drunk.
+
+
+ _Northampton April ye 9th. 1731._
+
+ After neglecting my Dear Girl so many Posts In the joys of London, I
+ should be deservedly Punished by the Loss of your correspondence now
+ I very much stand in need of it: I am come from an agreeable set of
+ acquaintance in Town to a Place, where the wings of Gallantry must
+ Be terribly clip'd, and can hope to soar No higher than to Dolly,
+ who young at the Bar is just Learning to score--what must I do? my
+ head is not settled enough to study; nor my heart light enough to
+ find amusement In doing nothing. I have in short no resource But
+ flying to the conversation of my distant Freinds and supplying the
+ Loss of the jolis entretiens I have left behind by telling my greifs
+ and hearing myself pity'd. I shall every Post go near to waft a sigh
+ from Quarters to the Bath, which you shall rally me very prettyly
+ upon, suppose me in Love, laugh at my cruel fate a little, then bid
+ me hope for a Fair wind and better weather. I entreat you Be very
+ trifling and badine, send me witty letters or I must chear my heart
+ at the expense Of my head and get drunk with bad Port To kill time.
+ My sister is by this time with You and I hope the Girls: my Love to
+ her and bid her send away her husband and drink away. my spirits
+ flag, et je n'en puis plus, adieu.
+
+
+One would guess, but one can only guess, that the following letter
+referred to some project of marrying William, which Ann dreaded as
+causing a separation from her.
+
+
+ _Northampton. May ye 21: 1731._
+
+ What shall I say to my Dearest Nanny for sinking into a tenderness
+ below ye dignity of her spirit and Genius? I sat down with a
+ resolution to scold you off for a little Loving Fool, but Find
+ myself upon examination your very own Brother and as fond of
+ receiving such testimonies of the Excess of yr affection, as you
+ are of Bestowing them: t'wou'd be more becoming ye Firmness of a
+ man to reprove you a little upon this occasion, and advise you to
+ fortify your Mind against any such Separation as you so kindly
+ apprehend, but as your fears are, I believe at present Groundless, I
+ chuse rather To talk to you like an affectionate Freind, than a
+ stern Philosopher and return every Fear you Feel for me with a most
+ ardent wish for your Happiness: Beleive me t'will wound my Quiet to
+ be forced to do anything to disturb yours, But shou'd such an event
+ as you are alarm'd at, arrive, your own reason will soon convince
+ your tender Fears, there is but one Party for me to take: All the
+ Dictates of Prudence, all the Considerations of Interest must
+ determine me to it: But I am Insensibly drawn in to prove I ought to
+ do, what There is no appearance I shall have in my Power to do,
+ therefore my Dear Girl, suspend your Inquietudes, as I will my
+ Arguments, and think I Long to see you in ye full enjoyment of yr
+ Health and Spirits, which I hope to be able to do early in August.
+ Adieu my Dearest Nanny, Love me and preserve your own happiness.
+
+ I never recd a Line from my Sister Pitt.
+
+ But will write to her soon. I hope she is well.[58]
+
+
+This next letter is taken up with poking fun at Ayscough. The 'poor
+nuns' would be Pitt's sisters, whom he calls elsewhere the 'poor
+vestals.'[59]
+
+
+ _North'ton June ye 17: 1731._
+
+ My Dear Nanny's letter from Bath gave me so many Pleasures that I
+ don't know which to thank her for first: the Prettiness of it tells
+ me she has more sense than her sex, the affection of it declares she
+ is more capable of Freindship Than her sex: and to compleat my joy,
+ It assures me she no longer wants her health: which may Heaven
+ continue to my Dear Girl! If anything can make me devout, t'is my
+ Zeal for your happiness: However don't let the Parson[60] know this
+ Prayer escaped me for fear she (_sic_) shou'd be malicious enough to
+ Tell me of it in company some time or other at Quarters. I am glad
+ he is with you: he will prove as good an enlivener of the spirits
+ and invigourate the conversation amongst you, as much as Bath waters
+ do The Blood. Be sure not to suffer him to be Indolent and withdraw
+ his Wit from ye Service of ye Company: I know ye Dog sometimes
+ grows tired of being laugh't at: But no matter: insist upon his
+ being a Man of humour every Day but Sunday. I expect you will all
+ Three Lose your reputations in ye country for him: and indeed
+ there's no Intimacy with one of His Cloath without too much room for
+ Suspicion: But as you don't expect to make your fortune there, The
+ thing is not so deplorable. You will be mutually Happy in meeting
+ the Poor Nuns again: I very much fear I shall not partake of that
+ pleasure so soon as August: Beleive me I long for nothing more than
+ to see you all well and happy: I break off ye Conversation with
+ great reluctance To go to Supper: Adieu Dearest Nanny.
+
+
+Ann was now to be a maid of honour and venture on the new world of a
+court. So she asks advice of her sage young brother, and he gives his
+admonitions in French, probably from fear of the Post Office.
+
+
+ Undated.
+
+ Vous voulez que je vous dise, mon aimable, ce que je pense de la vie
+ que vous allez mener a la cour; votre Interest, qui me touche de
+ pres, m'y fait faire mille Reflexions: en voici mon Idee. Le cour me
+ paroit une mer peu aisee a naviger, mais qui ne manque pas d'ouvrir
+ aux mariniers bien entendus le commerce le plus avantageux; j'entens
+ l'art de connoitre le monde et de s'en faire connoitre agreablement:
+ Un Esprit habile sans artifice, et un coeur gai sans legerete vous
+ rendent ce voiage pleins d'agrements et de plaisirs, pendant que la
+ vertu qui ne se dement jamais, est l'Etoile fixe qui vous empeche de
+ vous y egarer.
+
+ En effet n'est-il pas a souhaiter pour une Personne qu'on aime, et
+ dont on connoit bien les forces, de la voir exposee a un tel point,
+ qu'elle ne puisse s'en tirer qu'avec le secours du bon sens et de la
+ Prudence? Ce sont les difficultes qui donnent au merite tout son
+ jour, et souvent elles en font naitre: Vous en avez, mon aimable, et
+ il ne s'agit que de le mettre en oeuvre: mais voici ce qui vous
+ embarasse: La Modestie, qui en est une Considerable, cache mille
+ autres vertus en se montrant toujours elle-meme; Elle ne laisse pas
+ en cela de faire un peu le Tyran: elle nous fait souvenir de ces
+ meres qui par un excez de Pruderie derobent leurs Filles aux yeux du
+ monde, toutes aimables qu'elles soient, mais que cette Modestie
+ songe a prendre quelque fois le Parti de la retraite, et qu'elle
+ scache qu'on ne la regrette gueres, quand on voit quelque belle
+ vertu briller a sa place.
+
+ a mon avis il n'y a rien de si outree que l'idee que de certaines
+ gens se sont fait de la cour des Princes: Ils ne s'y figurent que
+ l'Envie et ses noirceurs, la Perfidie, et les suites funestes de
+ l'amour deregle: ils en enlaidissent tellement la ressemblance qu'on
+ ne la reconnoit plus: pour vous, ma chere, Ie ne vous conseille ni
+ de vous troubler la cervelle d'affreuses Chimeres, ni de vous
+ endormir tout a fait a l'ombre de la securite. Pour ce qui est de
+ l'amour, il seroit ridicule d'entreprendre de vous en Tracer le
+ Portrait, Il ne se fera comprendre que par Luimeme: en un mot, qu'il
+ soit un Dieu bienfaissant ou qu'il ne soit qu'un Demon malin, donnez
+ vous garde de l'offenser, car, effectivement, c'est un Personnage a
+ represailles: enfin en quelque caractere que vous le voyez, Il vous
+ le faudra respecter: dans l'un vous l'aimerez comme fidele
+ chretienne; dans l'autre, reverez le afin qu'il ne vous fasse point
+ de mal. adieu ma tres chere.
+
+
+William has now set out on his foreign tour, of which we caught some
+glimpses in letters to his mother. We have already had his letter to his
+mother from Paris.
+
+
+ _Paris May ye 3rd: N.S. 1733._
+
+ I don't know whether my Dearest Nanny is not at this moment angry
+ with me for not writing sooner; But cou'd you see the hurry this
+ Place throws a man into upon his arrival, you wou'd rather wonder I
+ write at all. I have done nothing since I came to Paris, but run up
+ and down and see; so that beleive me it is a sort of Novelty to set
+ down and think: Tis with pleasure I return to you from The variety
+ of fine sights which have engaged me; my eyes have been long enough
+ entertain'd, to give my Heart leisure to indulge itself in a short
+ conversation with my Dear Girl. It may sound oddly to say I love you
+ best at a great distance, but surely absence best shows us the Value
+ of a Thing, by making us feel how much we want it: I find already I
+ shall have many vacant hours that wou'd be agreably fill'd up with
+ the company of something one esteems; but I must comfort myself a la
+ francoise, le bannis la Sagesse et la Raison; c'est de notre vie le
+ Poison. I shall set out for Besancon in franche comte In three or
+ four days, where I shall stay till autumn, write often and direct to
+ me chez Monsr Alexandre Banquier dans la Rue St. Appoline Pres de
+ la Porte St. Denis a Paris who will Take care to send them to me. I
+ hope you like your way of Life better every Day; I don't know
+ whether you may not be said to be travelling too; France is hardly
+ newer to me than Court was to you; may you find the Country mend
+ upon you the farther you advance in it: bon voyage ma chere, and may
+ you find at your journey's end as good an inn as matrimony can
+ afford you. I am
+
+ Your most afft Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ My Love to Kitty and Harriot. I cou'd not write to all and you are
+ the only one I was sure to find.
+
+ I write this Post to Skew; if he is not in Town, enquire at his
+ Lodgings for ye letter and send it. I hope my Brother reced my
+ Letter.[61]
+
+
+The next letter leaves him at Besancon, the ancient capital of
+Franche-Comte, wrested from the Spaniards in 1678, and now become a
+French fortress, famous for its silver watches. Here Pitt loses his
+heart.
+
+
+ _Besancon. June the 5: 1733. N.S._
+
+ I receiv'd my Dear Nanny's letter yesterday: it has no Date, but I
+ imagine by some of the Contents it has been a tedious time upon the
+ road. The direction I left was a very proper one and particular
+ enough, Alexander being generally known at Paris, so that the street
+ of his abode is unnecessary: however To be very sure of meeting with
+ no disappointment In a pleasure I desire to indulge myself in as
+ often as you'l let me, direct to me at Alexander's dans la rue St.
+ Appoline pres de la Porte St. Denis a Paris, who will carefully
+ transmit all letters to me, wherever I am. The pleasure you give me
+ in the account of Kitty's recovery, is disagreably accompanied with
+ that of Poor Harriot's Relapse into an ill State of Health; which I
+ too much fear will never be removed till her mind is made a little
+ easy: I never think of her but with great uneasiness, my tenderness
+ for her begins to turn to sorrow and affliction; I consider her in a
+ great degree lost, and buried almost in an unsuccessfull Ingagement:
+ You have all my warmest wishes for your happiness and prosperity. I
+ persuade myself you are in the high road to them, make the best of
+ your way I beg of you; and contrive to finish your Travels by the
+ time of my return. I can say but little of Besancon yet: The Place
+ is externally pretty enough how it will prove upon a more intimate
+ knowledge of it, I can't say. My Lord Walgrave was so good as to
+ procure me letters For the Commandant and a Lady of this Place who
+ passes for the finest Woman here. I have had the honour to dine with
+ her at her campagne, where I was very handsomely regaled: what
+ ressource Her acquaintance will be, I shall be better able to judge
+ after another visit or two.
+
+ Skew hinted something to me concerning Kitty, which he said was not
+ quite chimerical. If it be any suite of my Mother's project for her
+ I doubt the Success. I have not Heard a word from my Brother, tho' I
+ have wrote to him three times. If he han't received them all let him
+ know it.
+
+ I find Sir James Gray here, who is a very pretty sort of Man and
+ once more my schoolfellow; between my letters and the acquaintance
+ he has made in the Town, we shall be of some Use to one another.
+ Adieu.
+
+ Your most afft Freind and Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I wish you joy of Lord William's Match.
+
+
+He is next found at Marseilles, where he discovers that he is still sore
+from his love affair at Besancon.
+
+
+ _Marseilles, sep: ye 1: 1733._
+
+ j'ai honte a regarder la datte de votre derniere lettre, a laquelle
+ je vai faire reponse: vous me dites ma Chere, que vous etes fort
+ aise que vos lettres me fassent plaisir, d'autant plus que vous
+ croiez en avoir obligation plutot a ma prevention pour vous, qu'a
+ votre merite. Qu'y a-til de plus obligeant Pour moi ou de plus
+ injuste pour vous meme?
+
+ Il est vrai que je vous aime a un point qui passe bien souvent dans
+ le monde pour aveuglement: mais je pretens vous aimer en
+ connoisseur, je veux que le gout et la raison fassent ici ce que
+ l'entetement fait d'ordinaire ailleurs. ne guerirez vous jamais de
+ cette modestie outree? de grace ne faites plus Tort a vous meme par
+ une humilite qui n'est pas de ce bas lieu, et cessez de louer mon
+ amitie aux depens de mon gout.
+
+ Vous voiez par la datte de ceci que je suis a Marseilles, j'y suis
+ depuis deux jours et conte d'en partir dans deux ou trois jours pour
+ Monpelier, ou nous ferons un sejour a peu pres comme celui que nous
+ ferons ici: je crois passer l'hiver a Luneville, et de[62] a Lyon
+ par Geneve et le long du Rhin a Strasbourg d'ou je me rendrai en
+ Lorraine. je viens de quitter Besancon avec infiniment de regrets:
+ voulez vous que je me confesse a vous? j'y avois un plus fort
+ attachement que je ne croiois, avant que de me Trouver sur le Point
+ de partir: tant il est vrai que l'on ne sent jamais si bien le prix
+ d'une chose Que lorsque il la faut perdre. Nous y avions de fort
+ aimables connoissances, et je trouve presentement a plus de soixante
+ Lieues de loin, que j'y aurois passer l'hyver volontiers, je n'en ai
+ pas tout a travers du coeur, mais toutefois j'en ai. adieu ma chere,
+ faites moi d'abord reponse, et imputez mon silence passe a toute
+ autre cause que a un refroidissement pour vous. je suis avec tout la
+ tendresse du monde
+
+ votre affectionne Serviteur
+ W. PITT.[63]
+
+
+And now he has arrived at Luneville, the city of the moon, once
+dedicated to the worship of Diana, but at this time devoted to the
+manufacture of glass and pottery. In four years it was to be enlivened
+by the gay court of Stanislas; but it was now a provincial town,
+occupied provisionally by the French in defiance of its absentee Duke,
+Francis, afterwards Emperor of Germany. Pitt is not yet cured of his
+passion. It is painful to him to revive it by giving a description of
+the lady, and he seems to feel her want of noble birth as if he had
+contemplated marriage.
+
+
+ _Luneville ce 12: d'octob. N.S. 1733._
+
+ Votre lettre me rejouit fort en m'apprenant que votre vie est
+ heureuse: quand vous ne me manderiez que cela une fois la semaine,
+ votre commerce me donneroit toute la satisfaction du monde: mais
+ d'ailleurs il y'a, mon aimable, un tour agreable dans tout ce que
+ vous me dites, qui me rend votre conversation charmante. La
+ tendresse de ses amis, en quelque expression que ce soit, nous
+ touche; mais quand elle se presente a nous d'une maniere aisee et
+ delicate, l'esprit participe a la satisfaction que la coeur en
+ recoit.
+
+ Vous me demandez le Portrait de la Belle: faites vous bien attention
+ a quoi vous m'allez engager? je commence a respirer et vous voulez me
+ replonger dans les douleurs que m'a causees sa perte, en m'obligeant
+ de renouveller dans mon esprit les traits qui s'en etoient empares.
+ L'absence est un grand Medecin: je me suis si bien trouve de ses
+ remedes que je ne desespere pas d'en pouvoir revenir: laissez lui
+ faire encore un peu et je vous ferai le Portrait, que vous me
+ demandez, assez a l'aise. Cependant trouvez bon que je vous en fasse
+ seulement un crayon (a la hate?) en vous disant que, quoique son
+ coeur fut certainement neuf, son esprit ne l'etoit point (j'en parle
+ comme de feu ma Flamme) que sa Taille etoit grande et des plus
+ parfaites, son air simple avec quelque chose de noble; Pour ses
+ Traits je n'y touche pas: suffit que vous sachiez que ce fut de ces
+ beautes d'un grand effet, et que sa Physionomie prononcat quelque
+ chose des qualites d'une ame admirable ne vous attendez pas pour le
+ present Que je vous en donne un detail si exact que vous en puissiez
+ la reconnoittre si elle se trouvoit sur votre chemin: je n'ose m'y
+ laisser aller davantage: nous en parlerons un jour plus amplement:
+ mais avant de quitter son chapitre il faut que je vous dise tout:
+ Elle n'a point de titre ni de grand nom qui impose; et c'est la le
+ diable. C'est simplement Madamoiselle de ---- fille cadette de Monsr
+ de ---- ecuyer a Besancon: Religieuse, Vous avez bien dit que j'en
+ parlerai volontiers: de quoi vous avisez vous de mettre un homme sur
+ le chapitre de ses amours? Vous saviez que quand on y est, on ne
+ scait jamais ou finir, et que vous vous exposez a essuier tout ce qui
+ vient au bout de sa plume, voila trop parler de mes affaires: parlons
+ un peu des votres: faisons des demandes par rapport a certain peuple
+ connu sous le titre d'amants. Parler franchement et donnez m'en des
+ nouvelles, vous ne scauriez etre si content que vous l'etes so vous
+ n'aviez range quelque coeur sous vos lois: adieu: aimons nous
+ toujours et songeons a nous render heureux.
+
+ W. PITT.
+
+ No one can be more sensible than I am of the esteem of Charles
+ Feilding, nor more disposed to do justice to the amiableness of his
+ character.
+
+
+Six weeks afterwards all trace of his love affair has disappeared; it is
+not the mere cessation of pain, it is oblivion.
+
+
+ _Luneville. Nov. ye 22: 1733._
+
+ Les verites obligeantes que vous me dites, ne me sont pas seulement
+ cheres par le fond de tendresse qu'elles me font vous connoitre pour
+ moi, elles le sont au dernier point par la maniere agreable dont
+ vous les tournez: j'aime autant que votre coeur s'explique avec moi
+ en bon Anglois qu'en bon francois, d'autant plus que ce qu'on dit en
+ sa langue maternelle paroit encore plus Naturel, et c'est la ce qui
+ fait le principal merite des lettres d'amitie, je suis charme, mon
+ aimable Bonne, de l'air content dont vous m'ecrivez, j'ai un plaisir
+ aussi sensible a me figurer que vous etes heureuse, que vous etes
+ gaie, que j'en pourrois repentir moimeme de tout ce que la joie et
+ la gaiete me pourrait offrir: je vous suis present que si l'etois
+ Dans le cabinet a Cote de votre Toilette. Je n'ai plus rien a vous
+ dire de Mademoiselle.
+
+ C'etoit de ces flammes passageres, un eclair qui a passe si vite
+ qu'il n'en reste pas le moindre vestige. j'ai oublie jusque au
+ portrait que je vous en ai fait: n'allez pas m'accuser de legerete,
+ voila comme il faut etre en voiage: je me fais un fond de constance
+ pour mon retour. Souvenez vous de garder votre parole en me faisant
+ la confidence de vos premieres amours: que le terme ne vous choque
+ pas, je l'entends avec les circonstances qu'il faut. Je ne doute pas
+ que vous ne m'en fassiez bientot, au moins si vous avez autant de
+ franchise que je me l'imagine. adieu, ma chere, je vous--(torn)--de
+ terribles bagatelles: mais je ne'en scai rien--(torn)
+
+ Votre tres affectionne
+ W. PITT.
+
+ If Miss Molly Lyttelton is in Town, I wish you may see one another
+ often, and make a Friendship.[64]
+
+
+The two following letters contain obscure allusions, which, so far as we
+can now interpret them, appear to indicate that Thomas Pitt at any rate
+was at this time a ministerialist and supporter of Sir Robert Walpole.
+
+
+ _Newbury Octbr ye 24: 1734._
+
+ Dear Nanny,--You may conceive I was a good deal surprised at Mr
+ Harrison's modest proposal: I thought it indeed so monstrous, that
+ ye best way of treating it was not to vouchsafe it any answer,
+ especially as it did not come immediately from Him: I cannot
+ conceive how poor Harriot cou'd think of employing Herself in such a
+ message, or at least that she wou'd not understand my neglect in
+ answering it, to be (what it is) a thorough contempt of the Noble
+ Colonel's ridiculous offer. My first astonishment is a little abated
+ by hearing he was encouraged to it by my Brother at Paris, I mean my
+ astonishment as to him; For the latter, I have done wondering at
+ any the most Inscrutable of his proposed designs: it must be
+ confess'd, this last (if true) is not inferiour to any of the
+ brightest passages of his conduct: removeing me to bring in a Person
+ declared in Opposition, and who it is proposed shou'd pay me,
+ instead of reimbursing him his expences at Oakhampton. I can talk no
+ more of him; I'll endeavour to put him out of my mind till January.
+
+ I am extremely pleased to see the time of my deliverance from my Inn
+ approach, a month more will bring me to you, when I shall be as
+ happy as the endless disapointments and difficulties I have to
+ encounter, will allow me: all I have of happiness is confined to you
+ and my friend George; you may easily judge of my Impatience to be
+ with you; I suppose he's still at Stowe. I am pleased with ye
+ honour done me to (sic) Lady Suffolk, the more as I am sure it gave
+ you pleasure. Adieu Dear Nanny.
+
+ Most affecy yrs
+ W. PITT.[65]
+
+
+ _Newbury. Nov: ye 7. 1734._
+
+ Dear Nanny,--I have been persecuted with a succession of little
+ impertinent complaints; I have been deliver'd some time of my broken
+ tooth, by the most dextrous operator, I beleive, in the World, but
+ am at present in my Room with a sore throat, which is very
+ troublesome to me. I wou'd not have You be very uneasy at Harrison's
+ proposal; it appears to me, as it did at first, of no consequence,
+ and deserves being spoken of only for the Impertinence of it. I am
+ persuaded it is no more than an absurd, sudden thought of ye
+ Coll's; 'tis hardly possible my Brother shou'd have given his
+ consent to it as a foundation for Harrison to proceed upon with me.
+ My Brother's Interest no doubt do's not persuade him to such a
+ bargain between Harrison and me: if he intends to consult that, in
+ the disposition of this seat in Parliament, he must certainly rather
+ oblige me to accept of satisfaction for the loss of it by something
+ he may obtain for me, and chuse a man more agreeable to Sir Robt.
+ than Harrison, who will put him two thousand pounds in Pocket: I am
+ very much deceived if I hear any thing more of it. You misunderstood
+ me in thinking I had given no sort of answer to the proposal. I was,
+ I confess, little sollicitous about giving a speedy one or a very
+ particular one: I said to Harriot in general that I was extremely
+ surprised at the offer: that an answer was almost needless for the
+ Coll., if he had thought of it since, must be able to guess what
+ answer it deserved. that I was sorry she had employ'd herself at all
+ in so strange a Proposal, in short something to that effect. I
+ apprehend no difficulties from this affair; if I have any to
+ encounter they'l come from another Quarter. I wrote to a certain
+ Gentleman[66] above a month ago, without answer, so judge of his
+ kind disposition towards me. my Lord Pembroke is very good in
+ leaving it in my Power to come to Town, if I found it necessary. I
+ have at present no thoughts of making use of his Indulgence. I want
+ to see you more than you can imagine. Adieu:
+
+ Yrs most affecly
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+Lady Suffolk, Ann's principal friend at Court, has now retired from an
+ungrateful servitude. The loss must have been great to Ann, who required
+more than most an experienced and sagacious friend at her elbow.
+
+
+ _Newbury Nov: ye 17: 1734._
+
+ Dear Nanny,--I was persuaded my Lady Suffolk's removal from court
+ wou'd affect you in the Manner you tell me it dos: Your Friend
+ Mrs Herbert, where I dined the day before yesterday, was speaking
+ of the thing with concern and was sure it wou'd touch you, as much
+ as any Body: your Greifs are so much mine that it wou'd be needless
+ to tell you I am sorry for your Loss; I foresee a very disagreeable
+ consequence to you from this change, which is, that your Friendship
+ with Her may be charg'd upon you as a crime, and what was before a
+ support may now be a prejudice to you. Harriot's complaint is far
+ from giving me any uneasiness, I think nothing but such a necessity
+ wou'd have made Them do what they indisputably ought to do. my
+ concern for Her is, that her situation is so bad as to render this
+ circumstance, (distresfull as it is) necessary to put her into a
+ better. Poor Girl, what unnatural cruelty and Insolence she has to
+ suffer from A Person[67] that shou'd be her support and comfort in
+ this distress: I have heard him say so many hard Things upon this
+ affair, that I think I do him no injustice to say he will be more
+ inexorable than the Knight.[68] I suppose Lyttelton is return'd from
+ Stowe and has found a letter from me Laying for him at the
+ Admiralty. If he's not come back I am afraid he's ill this Pinching
+ weather. I continue well, as I was when I wrote to you last. Adieu
+ Dear Nanny,
+
+ Yrs most affecly
+ WM. PITT.[69]
+
+
+The letter that follows is important, as it marks an epoch in Pitt's
+life: for he was now at Stowe, where he was to make a long stay, and
+enrol himself in Cobham's band of connections. He had just entered
+Parliament[70] and now commences a politician. But, happily for us, he
+has not yet assumed his political dialect.
+
+
+ _Stowe. July ye 2: 1735:_
+
+ Dear Nanny,--I am mighty glad to hear you escaped the headach after
+ so fatiguing a journey, but I desire that may not prevent your
+ applying to a Physician: I am extremely pleas'd with the account you
+ give me of the Person[71] you saw, it is a great step to be able to
+ seem easy: I wish his mind may ever be as easy, as I have the
+ pleasure of hearing his affairs are at present, the other Part of
+ your letter astonishes me: I think he'l not succeed, tho' I assure
+ you he has my good wishes, for I am persuaded nothing less will ever
+ extricate him. The turn indeed is very sudden, but since he has
+ taken it, he'l disgrace himself less by obtaining, than losing. My
+ Ld Cobham wou'd have been very glad to see you and wish'd I had
+ brought you, I am sorry you lost so good an opportunity of seeing
+ Stowe. Adieu
+
+ most affly yrs
+ WM. PITT.
+
+ I have had other business to write to my Brother upon, which has
+ hinder'd my speaking of the Orange trees. I'l make Ayscough do it.
+
+ I hope you found Lady Suffolk well.
+
+
+The next letter is burthened with mysterious and anonymous allusions, as
+to which conjecture is futile.
+
+
+ _Stowe July ye 20: 1735._
+
+ Dear Nanny,--I am mighty glad you are so well satisfy'd with the
+ match you give me an account of: I was not surpris'd to hear it, for
+ I fancy'd I saw it long ago. I have all sort of reasons to wish Her
+ happy, but to mention no other, She loves you in the manner I am apt
+ to think one shou'd love you. the Person[72] you think pretty easy,
+ is far from it: he endeavours to acquiesce under Pain, to bring his
+ mind, if possible, to such a state of composure as to go through the
+ duties of Life like an honest and Reasonable Man. our Friends[73]
+ Repulse is the most scandalous and ignominious of all things. I want
+ to hear a little of his noble designs for next year: Despair must
+ produce something Extraordinary in so great a mind. I am seriously
+ ashamed of him, and if he was to ask my advice what he should do, I
+ think I cou'd only beg him to do nothing: that Man's whole life is a
+ sort of consolation to me in my poor little circumstances. He gives
+ me occasion to reflect too often, that I wou'd not act his Part one
+ month for twice his estate, but I leave him to talk to you of
+ yourself: I don't hear what Broxom says of your headach's: if you
+ have not consulted him you have used me very ill: Pray send for him
+ and let me know if you are better. Adieu.
+
+ most affectionately Yrs
+ WM. PITT.
+
+
+Pope and Martha Blount were now at Stowe, so was Lady Suffolk; and
+William was polishing himself in the best company.
+
+
+ _Stow Sept. ye 2: 1735._
+
+ Don't say a word more of my never writing, but confess immediately
+ that you admire my way of writing more than any Body's, that is my
+ way of sending you Postcripts Every Day: I have nothing to say of
+ Letters, but Mr Pope[74] says somewhere, 'Heaven first taught
+ Postscripts for the wretches aid,' etc: you must know I han't a word
+ to say to you; for I write only to introduce the Postscript, as Mr
+ Bays wou'd make a Poem to bring in a fine thought, that was none of
+ his own; I therefore finish to leave more room for my Lady Suffolk.
+ adieu.
+
+ [In another hand, evidently Lady Suffolk's] how often my Dear Child
+ have I wish'd you here? I know you wou'd like it, and I know two who
+ thinks (_sic_) even Stowe wou'd be still more agreeable they talk of
+ you I believe both Love you; but one can pun, and talk nonsense
+ wth Mrs Blount most Elegantly remember Saturday and never
+ forget me, that is, do not be ungratefull.
+
+
+We see in the next letter that Pitt was not merely supping with the
+wits, but playing at cricket, with Pope perhaps as umpire.
+
+
+ _Stow Septr ye 14: 1735._
+
+ I am very well pleas'd with the conversation you Had lately, and
+ that you met with nothing in it that at all corresponds with the
+ Subject of my former letter: I shall now be at ease, and give myself
+ no more trouble in thinking and conjecturing about it. I am glad my
+ Lady Suffolk got so well to Town; if she's not the worse for her
+ journey, I fancy you are not much so for her return. if she did not
+ happen to be the most amiable Estimable Person one has seen, I
+ shou'd still love her For the admirable Talent she has of
+ Distinguishing and Describing merit, in which she do's not yeild to
+ the Noble Ld of our acquaintance. if she has done me justice, She
+ has Told you I was very stupid and play'd very well at Cricket. I
+ obey'd her orders to my Ld and Lady Cobham; my Lds reflection
+ was, He wish'd he cou'd take such a journey and do after it just
+ what she did. when you see Lyttelton, tell him Mr Pope has been
+ writing a letter to him ever since he has been here, but head-ach
+ and Laziness has delay'd it, so that I believe He may be time enough
+ at London to bring the letter to him himself, as he talks of setting
+ out in a few days. Ayscough has been here, and desires Lyttelton
+ will mention him to the Speaker for preaching before the House the
+ next 30th of January sermon. I'l leave off for fear I shou'd think
+ of half a dozen messages more.
+
+ I am most affecly Yrs
+ W. PITT.
+
+ direct to me at Stow I am more here than at Touster [?Towcester].
+ You must say 'member of Parlt' They make me pay always else.
+
+
+The next two letters deal with some dark transaction relating to wine,
+probably smuggled, from Guernsey.
+
+
+ _Stow Sept. ye 16: 1735._
+
+ I am very sorry I can't answer all your Questions this Post, but to
+ begin with that I can answer the Frame Maker's Name is Bellamy, he
+ lives in Rupert Street: as to the Guernsey wine, it is a commission
+ of so secret a Nature, and must be treated with such art and
+ circumspection, (according to the instructions I am honour'd with)
+ That I must desire further time to get the lights necessary to the
+ full discovery of so dark an affair. I have been able to penetrate
+ no farther than that my Ld Cobham and his Butler are the only
+ Persons at the bottom of the secret, The one I can't ask he being
+ abroad; the other I must not, being ty'd up by my orders: there
+ remains therefore nothing To be done, but to wait the return of the
+ Butler, or larger Power to treat with my Ld in Person. but to talk
+ no longer like a Minister, but an humble Servant of my lady
+ Suffolk's, I desire my compliments to Her, and I'l be sure to send
+ an answer about the wine next Post. I please myself with thinking
+ you are free from Head-ach, both as they are very bad things; and
+ because they are ye effect with you of other uneasiness: be well
+ and happy, is the only advice you want; and the only means by which
+ I can be so:
+
+ I am most affecly yrs
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+ _Stowe. Sept. ye 19: 1735._
+
+ If you happen to write to me once in a week or fortnight I am never
+ to hear the last of it; but pray admire the exact diligence of my
+ correspondence: I don't only answer your letter the first Post, but
+ I continue answering It two or three Posts successively: I am now
+ only at the second, and you shall see you are not above half
+ answer'd yet: but to tell you all I can, the Man Mr Hardy, who
+ sells my Ld Cobham the Wine in Question, is now in Guernsey; the
+ Buttler will write to his correspondent to know when he is like to
+ return, which he supposes must be soon--all which my Lady Suffolk
+ shall be informed of: I expect a clear distinct answer from you to
+ each letter of the volumes I have lately writ to you.
+
+ Adieu.
+
+
+The following letter alludes in all probability to his brother, and also
+to that Richard Grenville who was afterwards so notorious as Lord
+Temple. It seems strange when one recalls Temple in maturity to read of
+him as Dick, with a careless countenance and jolly laugh. But everybody
+has been young.
+
+
+ _Stowe. Sept. ye 28: 1735._
+
+ I don't understand this way of answering two letters in form, avec
+ un Trait de Plume; I expected you shou'd have told me you had
+ nothing to tell me in more words, or at least at two different
+ times: this sort of Correspondence, where one must not talk, seems
+ rather a sort of visit to shew yourself: I hope you won't be in such
+ a hurry next time; that I shall see you a little longer, or I shall
+ call it only leaving your name, after all this, I am not really
+ angry at the shortness of your last letter; you gave a reason that
+ satisfied me entirely. I hope our friend is well; I had the Pleasure
+ of hearing he seem'd in very good Spirits, when Dick Greenville
+ (sic) saw him; I hope really was so. I suppose You have seen Dick's
+ careless countenance at Kensington, and that you begin to be
+ acquainted with his Laugh. I am called to breakfast, so goodby
+
+ Yrs most affectionately
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+October finds William still at Stowe, and not likely to leave, but he
+sends this anxious and tender note to Ann.
+
+
+ _Stowe. October ye 5: 1735._
+
+ My Dear,--I long to be with you to know what the particular
+ circumstance is that gives you uneasiness: or is it only the Thing
+ in general? whatever it be, take all the comfort you can in knowing
+ you act humanely and honourably. it won't be in my Power to see you
+ till December, and the latter End of it. I am very much at Stowe,
+ and pass my time as agreeably as I can do at a distance from you at
+ a time you say you want to talk to me: I hope by your next letter to
+ hear you have talk'd to yourself upon the Subject of your uneasiness
+ and don't want my advice: Adieu,
+
+ I am with all affection yrs
+ W. PITT.[75]
+
+
+The next note deals again with the affair which is causing Ann
+uneasiness, but without giving us any clue to it. One cannot however
+refrain from the surmise that Ann's temper and tongue had now begun to
+get her into trouble.
+
+
+ _Stowe. Octobr ye 12: 1735._
+
+ My dear Child,--I can't by letter enter into particulars relating to
+ The affair you mention, nor were I with you, cou'd I give you any
+ other than a general advice, which is, as well as you can to make
+ yourself and others easy: I know this is saying almost nothing, and
+ that is the very thing I think you have only to do: I beg you will
+ be at Quiet as to what you have hitherto done, believe me it is not
+ only irreproachable, but must do you great honour with whoever know
+ your conduct. I will say one word more, which is this, that you
+ shou'd take care not to be misunderstood, at least in any great
+ degree. This is all I can say to you, who have the warmest concern
+ for your happiness and am with more affection than I can tell you,
+
+ Yrs W. PITT.
+
+
+There is now an unexplained interval of two years. Some letters have
+perhaps been lost or destroyed, one has apparently miscarried; or, still
+more probably, the brother and sister have been together. But the next
+letter is still dated from Stowe, where William was evidently
+established on the most familiar footing.
+
+
+ _Stow. Novr ye 6: 1737._
+
+ You are even with me for all the want of readiness in writing, ever
+ since I began to correspond: I wou'd tell you how many weeks it is,
+ since I wrote to you my last unanswer'd letter, if my memory was
+ strong enough to carry so remote a period of Chronology in my head:
+ I have sometimes told you I have been ashamed of not writing: I take
+ this occasion to retract all Declarations of that sort, and tell
+ you I never was, nor ever will be ashamed of want of regularity in
+ corresponding, after this last silence of yours: I am aware that you
+ must throw the blame upon ye Post, and say you never received the
+ letter in question, and indeed the Doctor has given me an
+ intimation, yt the thing was to take yt turn, without which you
+ wou'd not have been troubled even with these reproaches. the Letter
+ had nothing in it, and yet I had rather you had receiv'd it, if you
+ are in earnest that you did not. I intend to be in Town the
+ beginning of December: I shall see Mrs. Nedham at Bampton before I
+ come:
+
+ Yrs W. PITT.
+
+ I desire you will write immediately to let me know you have no
+ return of ye disorder you had just before you left Hampton court.
+
+
+In the next he refers to Lord Cornbury, a friend, a Tory, and something
+of a Jacobite. He was a great admirer of Pitt, and had indeed written an
+ode to him.
+
+
+ _Stow. Novr ye 12: 1737._
+
+ I do not think myself obliged to thank you for your letter, it was a
+ defence to an accusation, you was under a necessity of pleading and
+ you did it with the confidence of an old offender, and even went so
+ far as to recriminate upon yr accuser: but let the act of oblivion
+ cover all. however that I may thank you for something, I thank you
+ for haveing hardly any remains of yr cold. Pray keep keeping
+ yourself well till December, in one week of which month I hope to
+ see you. Adieu.
+
+ Yrs Most affecly
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I wish you the Dutchess of Queensbury and Lady Cardigan with all my
+ heart. How do's Ld Cornbury?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+More than sixteen years elapse between this letter and the next, which
+takes us far beyond our present limit, but it is best to finish the
+story of Ann. Part of this long interval can be explained by extreme
+harmony, and the remainder by the reverse. The mutual devotion of
+William and Ann lasted, says Lord Camelford, till he became Paymaster in
+May 1746: then they quarrelled. Why, no one knows, or, it is to be
+presumed, will ever know. Horace Walpole only says that Pitt shook his
+sister off in an unbecoming manner. Camelford thinks that Pitt disliked
+Ann's friendship for Lady Bolingbroke, and thought that she was under
+the influence of Bolingbroke himself, 'that tawdry fellow, as Lord
+Cobham called him.'[76] Pitt, like most other people, except the rare
+spirits who loved the brilliant being, profoundly distrusted
+Bolingbroke, and may not have wished to see Bolingbroke influence assume
+a footing in his house. Perhaps then he remonstrated, perhaps Ann
+vindicated her friendship with heat. Between these two fiery natures
+words might be exchanged in a moment which years would not obliterate.
+Grattan told Rogers that 'Mrs. Ann Pitt, Lord Chatham's sister, was a
+very superior woman. She hated him, and they lived like cat and dog. He
+could only get rid of her by leaving his house and setting a bill on
+it, "This house to let."'[77] If these two Pitts quarrelled in the
+fierce Pitt fashion, it is not unlikely that some such expedient would
+be adopted. But it must be doubted whether they lived like cat and dog,
+else they would have parted long before. Grattan's statement was made in
+conversation with all the large outline and picturesque latitude that
+conversation allows, and he probably knew nothing about the matter. We
+can only surmise. Lord Camelford tells us that up to the time of the
+Paymastership (1746) William and Ann had lived together in one of the
+small houses in Pall Mall which look into St. James's Square, and that
+when he moved to his official residence at the Pay Office he moved
+alone. But, as a matter of fact, she had left him some time before, and
+gone to live with Lady Bolingbroke at Argeville. We have a letter from
+William to Lady Suffolk, dated July 6, 1742, in which he favours the
+plan of Ann's living with Lady Bolingbroke, so long as is convenient to
+her hostess, and then returning home. Moreover, Pitt himself in October
+of this year 1742 was not living in Pall Mall, but had moved to York
+Street, Burlington Buildings.[78] Ann had formed a mad project of living
+in Paris as a single woman, which William justly discountenanced.
+However, she proceeded to Argeville, where George Grenville found her in
+September. She may have returned to her brother, but she probably
+remained abroad, and her having been with the Bolingbrokes so long, even
+with William's sanction, may have made her less welcome to her brother
+on her return.
+
+In June 1751 she was appointed Keeper of the Privy Purse to the
+Princess of Wales, and superintendent of the education of the Princess
+Augusta, afterwards Duchess of Brunswick. She obtained this appointment,
+we are told, through the interest of Mr. Cresset, the confidential
+servant and Treasurer of the Princess of Wales, whose authority in the
+Court soon afterwards gave way to the ascendancy of Lord Bute; though
+Pitt imagined that here again he could trace the hand of Bolingbroke.
+'However,' says Lord Camelford, 'thinking she could be useful to him in
+so important a post, he sought a reconciliation--he flattered, he
+menaced, he insulted, but was rejected.'
+
+Of these proceedings two records remain in letters which have already
+been published, but cannot be omitted here, as they are instinct with
+passion and light. Whether they answer to Lord Camelford's description
+must be left to the judgment of those who read them. That they are
+powerful, tender, and unaffected all must allow. They also contain
+quotations from the quarrels which are not devoid of interest. Ann had
+declared that William expected absolute deference and a blind submission
+to his will; and that he had in several conversations directly explained
+to her that, to satisfy him, she must live with him as his slave. On
+this point William admits that he did expect some measure of deference
+to his views, and that, living together, he thought she might shape her
+life in some degree to his. This seems to have been the real ground of
+separation. William wished to be master in his own house. Ann could
+brook no control. Perhaps the brother may have asked the sister to
+discontinue or relax her intimacy with the Bolingbrokes, as injurious
+and inconvenient to him, and Ann, we may guess, would curtly bid him
+mind his own business. But these are only probabilities.
+
+In the course of these proceedings we learn that William lost his
+temper, declaring that she had a bad head and a worse heart; for this he
+humbly begs her pardon.
+
+Another complaint of Ann's is easily explained. She says that William
+had been talking of the 200_l._ a year that he allowed her. William's
+answer makes it perfectly clear that he had been reproached with the
+fact of his sister's destitute condition, and that he had had to
+explain, in his own defence, that he gave her this income.
+
+Whether Pitt wished for a reconciliation because his sister had become
+Privy Purse to the Princess of Wales must be judged by the light of his
+character. It seems more probable that it was because she had returned
+from abroad, and that he would now meet her constantly in society. In
+any case, here are the letters. Whatever Pitt's motives may have been,
+it is clear that Ann, had she not been a vixen, would have gladly
+accepted the olive-branch offered by her brother, who, still unmarried,
+wished to be restored to the companionship which had been the joy of his
+life, 'that friendship which was my very existence for so many years,'
+'a harmony between brother and sister unexampled almost all that time.'
+
+
+ (A)
+
+ _June 19, 1751. Wednesday morning._
+
+ Dear Sister!--As you had been so good to tell me in your note of
+ Monday that you would write to me again soon _in a manner capable,
+ you hoped, of effacing every impression of any thing painfull that
+ may have passed from me to you_, I did not expect such a letter as
+ I found late last night, and which I have now before me to answer:
+ without any compliment to you, I find myself in point of writing
+ unequal enough to the task; nor have I the slightest desire to
+ sharpen my pen. I have well weighed your letter, and deeply examined
+ your picture of me, for some years past; and indeed, Sister, I still
+ find something within, that firmly assures me I am not that thing
+ which your interpretations of my life (if I can ever be brought to
+ think them all your own) would represent me to be. I have
+ infirmities of temper, blemishes, and faults, if you please, of
+ nature, without end; but the Eye that can't be deceived must judge
+ between us, whether that friendship, which was my very existence for
+ so many years, could ever have received the least flaw, but from
+ umbrages and causes which the quickest sensibility and tenderest
+ jealousy of friendship alone, at first, suggested. It is needless to
+ mark the unhappy epoque, so fatal to a harmony between sister and
+ brother unexampled almost all that time, the loss of which has
+ embitter'd much of my life and will always be an affliction to me.
+ But I will avoid running into vain retrospects and unseasonable
+ effusions of heart, in order to hasten to some particular points of
+ your letter, upon which it is necessary for me to trouble you with a
+ few words. _Absolute_ deference and _blind submission to my will_,
+ you tell me I have often declared to you in the strongest and most
+ mortifying terms cou'd alone satisfy me. I must here beseech you
+ cooly to reconsider these precise terms, with their epithets; and I
+ will venture to make the appeal to the sacred testimony of your
+ breast, whether there be not exaggeration in them. I have often, too
+ often reproached you, and from warmth of temper, in strong and plain
+ terms, that I found no longer the same consent of minds and
+ agreement of sentiments: and I have certainly declared to you that I
+ cou'd not be satisfy'd with you, and I could no longer find in you
+ _any degree of deference towards me_. I was never so drunk with
+ presumption as to expect _absolute_ deference and _blind submission
+ to my will_. A degree of deference to me and to my situation, I
+ frankly own, I did not think too much for me to expect from you,
+ with all the high opinion I really have of your parts. What I
+ expected was too much (as perhaps might be). In our former days
+ friendship had led me into the error. That error is at an end, and
+ you may rest assured, that I can never be so unreasonable as to
+ expect from you, now, anything like deference to me or my opinions.
+ I come next to the small pecuniary assistance which you accepted
+ from me, and which was exactly as you state it, two hundred pounds a
+ year. I declare, upon my honour, I never gave the least foundation
+ for those exaggerations which you say have been spread concerning
+ it. I also declare as solemnly, before God and man, that no
+ consideration cou'd ever have extorted from my lips the least
+ mention of the trifling assistance you accepted from me, but the
+ cruel reports, industriously propagated, and circulating from
+ various quarters round to me, of the state you was left to live in.
+ As to the repayment of this wretched money, allow me, dear Sister,
+ to entreat you to think no more of it. The bare thought of it may
+ surely suffice for your own dignity and for my humiliation, without
+ taxing your present income, merely to mortify me: the demonstration
+ of a blow is, in honour, a blow, and let me conjure you to rest it
+ here. When I want and you abound, I promise you to afford you a
+ better and abler triumph over me, by asking the assistance of your
+ purse. I will now trouble you no farther than to repeat my sincere
+ wishes for your welfare and to rejoice that you have so ample matter
+ for the best of happiness, _springing from a heart and mind_ (to use
+ your own words) entirely devoted to gratitude and duty.
+
+
+ (B)
+
+ _June 20, 1751. Pay Office._
+
+ 'Dear Sister!--I am this moment returned out of the Country and find
+ another letter from you. I am extremely sorry that any expressions
+ in mine to you should make you think it necessary for you to trouble
+ yourself to write again, that you might convey upon paper to me,
+ what you would avoid saying in conversation, as disagreeable and
+ painfull. I believe I may venture to refer you to the whole tenor
+ of my letter to convince yourself that I had no desire to irritate;
+ and I assure you very sincerely that the expression, which seems to
+ have had some of that effect, did not in the least flow from a
+ thought that you was capable of intending to represent falsely. I
+ only took the liberty to put it to your candid recollection, whether
+ the very cause you mention, _strong feelings_ and emotions of mind
+ attending them, with regard to conversations of a disagreeable kind,
+ might not have led to some exaggerations of them to your own self. I
+ verily believe this cause, and this alone may have had some of this
+ effect: for sure I am, that I never could wish, much less exact that
+ the object of my whole heart and of my highest opinion and
+ confidence, thro the best part of my days, could be capable of such
+ vileness as _absolute_ deference and _blind submission to my will_.
+ All I wished and what I but late quite despaired of, I took the
+ liberty to recall to you in my last letter. As to the late
+ conversation you have thought necessary (since your letter of
+ yesterday) to recollect, I am ready to take shame before you, and
+ all mankind, if you please, for having lost my temper, upon any
+ provocation, so far as to use expressions, as foolish as they are
+ angry: that you _had a bad head_ will easily pass for the first: and
+ a worse heart for the last. This you made me angry enough to say:
+ but this I never was, nor I hope shall be, angry enough to think:
+ and this, Sister, I am sure you know. As to the other word, which I
+ am sorry I used because it offended you, I will again beg to appeal
+ to your recollection, whether it was not apply'd to your forbidding
+ _me ever to talk to you of every thing that interested you_: and as
+ _to shaping your life in some degree to mine_, which I believe were
+ my very words, let me ask you, if you don't know that they were said
+ in an answer to your telling me _that I had in several conversations
+ directly explained to you that to satisfy me you must live with me
+ as my slave_? So much, dear Sister, for the several points of your
+ letter; which I am sorry to find it necessary to say so many words
+ upon. I will be with you by nine to-morrow, as that hour seems most
+ convenient to you: is it impossible I may still find you so
+ obliging as not to think any more of repaying what I certainly never
+ lent you, in any other sense than that of giving me a right to your
+ purse, whenever I should want it, and which you must forego some
+ convenience to repay?[79]
+
+
+Whether a reconciliation took place on this occasion or not we have no
+evidence apart from Camelford's. But if he is to be believed as to
+William's motives, there was little to be gained by one, for Ann was
+soon to leave the Court. Her new office 'very soon grew uneasy to her,'
+says her nephew, 'through the artifices of her royal pupil.' Horace
+Walpole gives a different account. 'Being of an intriguing and most
+ambitious nature, she soon destroyed her own prospect by an impetuosity
+to govern her mistress and by embarking in other cabals at that Court.
+Her disgrace followed, but without dismissal, on which she had retired
+to France.'[80]
+
+'It was then,' says Camelford, 'that her brother, then Secretary of
+State, made a new overture of reconciliation by a letter that you will
+read, which had too much the appearance of sincerity and
+disinterestedness not to be gladly accepted.'
+
+Camelford is not particularly careful of his own accuracy or
+consistency. He had just told us that William sought for a renewal of
+friendship because Ann would be useful to him at Court: he now has to
+acknowledge that when Ann was banished from Court he instantly sought
+reconciliation with more ardour than ever. As regards his accuracy, it
+need only be noted that the letter to which he alludes is dated from the
+Pay Office, and despatched more than three years before Pitt became
+Secretary; a flaw, but not a grave flaw, in a father writing from memory
+to his son.
+
+Here is the letter, which seems to be in answer to one from Ann, and
+which is surely as tender and affectionate as the sorest heart of sister
+could desire:
+
+
+ _Pay Office. Feb. 8. 1753._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I shou'd have receiv'd the most sensible satisfaction,
+ if you had been able to tell me, that the more declared, or new
+ symptoms of your disorder had been such, as gave you a near prospect
+ of being quite relieved. believe me Dear Sister, my heart is fill'd
+ with the most affectionate wishes for your health, and impatient
+ desire to see you return home well and happy. I never can reflect on
+ things passed, (wherein I must have been infinitely in the wrong, if
+ I ever gave you a pain) without the tenderest sorrow: and the
+ highest aggravation of this concern wou'd be to think, that,
+ perhaps, you may not understand the true state of my heart towards
+ you. Heaven preserve my Dear Sister, and may I ever be able to
+ convince her how sincerely I am her most affectionate Brother:
+
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I continue an Invalid, and wait for better weather with as much
+ patience as I can.
+
+
+This is followed by another letter so humble and so self-reproachful
+that one can scarcely believe it to be penned by one whose pride was a
+byeword, and one can certainly not believe it to be the production of
+crafty and servile selfishness, as Lord Camelford would have us imagine.
+No brother could approach a sister with more delicacy or warmth of
+feeling.
+
+
+ _Pay Office. Feb. 27. 1753._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I am unable to express the load you have taken off my
+ heart by your affectionate and generous answer to my last letter: I
+ will recur no more to a subject, which your goodness and
+ forgiveness forbid me to mention. the concern I feel for your state
+ of health is most sensible; wou'd to God, you may be shortly in a
+ situation to give me the infinite comfort of hearing of an amendment
+ in it! I hope Spring is forwarder, where you reside, than with us,
+ and that the difference of climate begins to be felt. I will not
+ give you the trouble to read any more: but must repeat, in the
+ fulness of my heart, the warmest and tenderest acknowledgements of
+ your goodness to,
+
+ My Dear Sister, Your most affec Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I continue still a good deal out of Order, but begin to get ground.
+
+
+The next letter marks a complete removal of tension and the restoration
+of close and friendly relations. It cannot, alas! restore the easy flow
+of youth. A score of years have passed, William has been buffeted and
+tossed and has had to fight hard for his hand; he is besides so much the
+older. So we find ourselves involved in the fulsome extravagance of his
+maturer epistles; so much the worse!
+
+
+ _London. April ye 5. 1753._
+
+ My Dear Sister,--Nothing can be felt more sensibly than I do the
+ goodness of your letter, in which you talk to me circumstantially of
+ your own health, and desire to hear circumstantially of mine. it is
+ a great deal of Comfort to me to know that you have great hopes of
+ being better by Mr Vernage's advice; but it wou'd have been an
+ infinite satisfaction to have heard that you had already found
+ amendment. May every Day of Spring contribute to the thing in the
+ world I wish the most ardently! I am infinitely glad that the
+ concurrent opinions of Physicians of both Countries are the
+ foundation of expecting the Spa will relieve you: I shall dwell all
+ I can on this comfortable hope, and beg to hear of any amendment you
+ may find by better weather and whatever course you now use. I will
+ now talk of that health you so kindly desire to hear of. I have
+ been ill all the winter with disorders in my bowels, which have left
+ me very low, and reduced me to a weak state of health. I am now, in
+ many respects, better, and seem getting ground, by riding and taking
+ better nourishment. Warmer weather, I am to hope, will be of much
+ service to me. I propose using some mineral waters: Tunbridge or
+ Sunning Hill or Bath, at their proper seasons, as the main of my
+ complaint is much abated and almost removed, I hope my Horse, warm
+ weather and proper nourishment will give me health again. the kind
+ concern you take in it is infinitely felt by, Dear Sister,
+
+ Your most affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+The next letter shows that Ann was residing at Blois.
+
+
+ Dear Sister,--I have just receiv'd the pleasure of your letter of 30
+ April. the Comfort it has given me is infinitely great, and your
+ goodness in sending me the earliest account in your power of such an
+ amendment as you now describe is the kindest thing imaginable, May
+ the fine season, where you are, continue without interruption, and
+ every Day of it add to the beneficial effects you have begun to
+ feel! our season here does not keep pace with that at Blois: I am
+ however much mended in several respects, and have the greatest hopes
+ given me of removing my remaining disorder by the help of warmer
+ weather and Tunbridge waters. I have just time to write this line
+ before dinner, and had I more, I think it best not to trouble you
+ with long letters. I shall dine upon your letter I am dear Sister
+
+ Your most affectionate Brother
+ _London. May 7th 1753._
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+Here intervenes a letter to Mary, in which there is cordial mention of
+Ann, and an obvious allusion to the escapades of Elizabeth; surely a
+tender letter from a brother of forty-five to a younger sister.
+
+
+ _Bath. Octr the 20th. 1753._
+
+ I am very glad to hear in the Conclusion of my Dear Mary's letter
+ that she will be under no difficulty in getting to London: my
+ Brother is very obliging, as I dare say he intends to be in all
+ things towards you, to make your journey easy and agreeable to you.
+ I propose being in Town by the meeting of the Parliament; if I am
+ able: when I shall have infinite Joy in meeting my Dear Sister after
+ so very long an Absence and seeing Her in a Place where she seems to
+ think herself not unhappy. if I shou'd be prevented being in Town so
+ soon, the House will always be ready to receive you. I think you
+ judge very right not to produce yourself much till we have met:
+ Mrs Stuart, and my Sister Nedham, if in Town, will be the
+ properest, as well as the most agreeable Places for you to frequent.
+ My Dear Child, I need not intimate to your good understanding and
+ right Intentions, what a high degree of Prudence and exact attention
+ to your Conduct and whole behaviour is render'd necessary by the sad
+ errors of others. It is an infinite misfortune to you that my Sister
+ Ann is not in England: her Countenance and her Advice and
+ Instructions, superior to any you can otherwise receive, wou'd be
+ the highest advantage to you. Supply it as well as you can, by
+ thinking of Her, imitating her worth, and thereby endeavouring to
+ deserve her esteem, as you wish to obtain that of the best Part of
+ the World. I can not express how anxious I am for your right
+ behaviour in all respects, upon which alone your happiness must
+ depend. whatever assistance my advice can be to You, you will ever
+ have with the truest affection of a Brother.
+
+ Yrs
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+The next letter is pregnant enough, written to Ann at Nevers. Their aunt
+Essex is dead, but her death only lurks in a postscript. For Pelham is
+dead and Pitt is a cripple at Bath, disabled from proceeding to the
+capital, where his fate and that of the future administration are being
+settled. His restless anguish seems to pierce through these few lines.
+And yet this bedridden invalid was to be a joyful and alert bridegroom
+before the year was out.
+
+
+ _Bath. March 9th: 1754._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I write to you under the greatest affliction, on all
+ Considerations Private and Publick. Mr Pelham Died Wednesday
+ morning, of a Feaver and St. Anthony's fire. This Loss is, in my
+ notion of things, irreparable to the Publick. I am still suffering
+ much Pain with Gout in both feet, and utterly unable To be carry'd
+ to London. I may hope to be the better for it hereafter, but I am at
+ present rather worn down than releiv'd by it: I am extremely
+ concern'd at the last accounts of your health. I hope you have
+ Spring begun at Nevers, which I pray God may relieve you.
+
+ I am Dear Sister, Your most affectionate Brother,
+ W. PITT.
+
+ My Sister Nedham has been ill of a Feaver here, but is well again.
+
+ I have just received an account of Mrs Cholmondeley's[81] Death.
+
+
+The next letter, a month later, leaves Pitt still at Bath; the gout had
+almost the lion's share of his life, and we wonder that he accomplished
+so much under its constant pangs. On this occasion he strains our
+credulity by the complimentary assertion that he thinks a thousand times
+more of Ann than of the struggle over Pelham's succession, and his own
+involved ambition. On all that sordid scramble he kept the fierce,
+unflinching eye of a hawk, and of a hawk fastened by the talon. Ten days
+before he wrote this note he had despatched a letter to Newcastle,
+Pelham's brother and successor, burning with a passion which Ann's
+ailments could never have inspired. Ann indeed, knowing her William,
+would smile as she read, and value the extravagance at its worth.
+
+
+ _Bath. April 4th. 1754._
+
+ Dear Sister,--The Account you give me of your own health, and the
+ kind concern you feel for mine, touches me more than I will attempt
+ to express, tho' I am still at Bath, don't think the worse of my
+ health, but be assured that I am in a fairer way of recovering a
+ tolerable degree of it, than I have been in for a long time pass't.
+ My Gout has been most regular and severe, as well as of a proper
+ Continuance to relieve, and perhaps quite remove, the general
+ disorder which had brought me so low. I am recovering my feet and
+ drinking the waters with more apparent good effects than I ever
+ experienced from them. I have been out of all the bustle of the
+ present Conjuncture; and believe me, my thoughts go a thousand times
+ to Nevers, for once that they go towards London. Nothing in this
+ world can, in the smallest degree, interest my mind like the
+ recovery of your health. I wait with very painfull Impatience for
+ better weather for you, and to hear, that the waters you propose to
+ take, afford you relief.
+
+ I am My Dear Sister's ever most affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ My sister Nedham is well, and went yesterday to Marybone to see her
+ Sons.
+
+ Poor George Stanhope died of a feaver a few days since.[82]
+
+
+The next, after an interval of six months, is again from Bath, but in a
+different strain. He is now the happiest of men, about to be united to
+the most meritorious and amiable of women, whose brothers are already
+his own in harmony and affection; a happy marriage, but a disastrous,
+storm-tossed brotherhood, as it was destined to be in the years to come,
+when rival ambitions would strain the bond to breaking.
+
+There is also an icicle from Lady Hester herself, which embodies the
+decorous expression of what a young lady of the middle eighteenth
+century allowed herself to feel when she was going to be married. Even
+this act of politeness was inspired by William. 'I have writ this night
+to my poor sister Ann. She is not well enough to return to England this
+winter. Whenever your excessive goodness will honour her with a letter
+it will be a comfort to her. If you please to commit it to me I will
+forward it to her, and bless you a million of times.'[83]
+
+
+ _Bath. Oct. 21st. 1754._
+
+ Dear Sister,--The favour of your letter from Chaillot has by no
+ means answered my eager wishes for your health, and a kind of
+ distant hope I had formed of your return to England this winter. My
+ desires to see you are greatly and very painfully disappointed: I
+ have only to hope that your Stay in France will give you a much
+ better winter than the last, and may finally restore your health to
+ you and you to your Friends. I am now, Dear Sister, to impart to you
+ what I have no longer a prospect of doing, with infinitely more
+ pleasure, by word of mouth: it is to say, that, your health
+ excepted, I have nothing to wish for my happiness, Lady Hester
+ Grenville has consented to give herself to me, and by giving me
+ every thing my Heart can wish, she gives you a Sister, I am sure you
+ will find so, not less every other way than in name. the act I now
+ communicate, will best speak her character, she has generosity and
+ goodness enough to join part of her best days to a very shattered
+ part of mine; neither has my fortune any thing more tempting. I know
+ no Motif she can have but wishing to replace to me many things that
+ I have not. I can only add, that I have the honour and satisfaction
+ of receiving the most meritorious and amiable of Women from the
+ hands of a Family already my Brothers in harmony and affection, and
+ who have been kindly Contending which of them shou'd most promote my
+ happiness by throwing away the Establishment of a Sister they
+ esteem and love so much. When I left Lady Hester ten days ago, She
+ wish'd to know when I notify'd this approaching event to you, that
+ She might do herself the pleasure to write to you. when she knows I
+ have writ, she will introduce herself to you. I propose staying here
+ about ten days, if my patience can hold out so long. You will wonder
+ to see a letter on such a subject dated from Bath; but to a goodness
+ like Lady Hester Grenville's, perhaps, my infirmities and my Poverty
+ are my best titles.
+
+ Your ever affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+ LADY HESTER GRENVILLE TO MISS ANN PITT.
+
+ May I not hope, Dr Madam, that the situation I am in with your
+ Brother will dispose you to receive favourably an Instance of the
+ extreme desire I have to recommend myself to your friendship; and
+ that You will give me Leave to employ the only means in my Power
+ from the distance that is between us, of expressing how much I wish
+ to enjoy that Honour. Every Thing makes me Ambitious of Obtaining so
+ great an Advantage, and so flattering a distinction. Your Own
+ peculiar Merit, and the Large share which you possess of Mr Pitt's
+ Esteem and Affection makes me feel it as an Article important to my
+ Happiness, and I indulge myself in the pleasure of thinking that you
+ will not refuse to extend your goodness to a Person whom your
+ Brother has thought worthy of so convincing a proof of his regard
+ and Love, and whose sentiments for Him are full of all that the
+ highest sense of his superior Merit and most amiable qualities can
+ Inspire. I feel a vanity and a pleasure in being the Object of his
+ Choice which can be added to by nothing but the happiness of knowing
+ that you give your Approbation and that you will allow me to flatter
+ myself You will not be sorry for an Event which will give me the
+ valued privilege of addressing you the next time, I have the honour
+ to be thus employ'd, by the endearing name of Sister. Give me leave
+ to say that I have heard with the greatest regret that your state of
+ health does not permit you to return to England this winter, and
+ that I hope as a compensation for the Disappointment your stay will
+ ensure yr perfect recovery. I commit this Letter to Yr Brs
+ Care, and trust to Him for conveying it to you, sure that the best
+ recommendation it can have will be its coming under his protection;
+ accompanied with Marks of His Partiality; and I hope that you will
+ believe Dr Madam, that I am with all the esteem possible, and the
+ highest regard,
+
+ Your most faithful and Obed. Humble Servant,
+ HER: GRENVILLE.
+
+
+In the next letters Pitt and Lady Hester acknowledge Ann's
+congratulations. He had, however, moved to London, and amid all these
+orange-blossoms was forging terrible vengeance on his perfidious chief.
+Within ten days of his marriage he was making Newcastle and Newcastle's
+henchmen cower in their offices, though for the present they did not
+dare oust him from his.
+
+
+ _Pay Office. Nov. 8th. 1754._
+
+ Dear Sister,--Your letter of the 1st Novr has given me all that
+ remain'd to Compleat my happiness, by the affectionate Share you
+ take in it; and without which, great as it truly is, and shar'd in
+ the kindest manner by every Thing else I value and love in the
+ World, it still wou'd have wanted something ever essential to my
+ Satisfaction. Your Goodness and Friendship has nothing left to give
+ me: Cou'd the re-establishment of your health but add that most
+ sensible Pleasure to all I feel, I may call myself happy, as it is
+ given but to a few to be. Lady Hester Grenville speaks for herself
+ this Post. my Health is not good, but, as yet, it is not quite bad.
+ I have gone on with the World (as I cou'd) with much worse.
+
+ I am Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I hope in about a week to say more of my happiness.
+
+
+Lady Hester's letter is not worth giving; it is prim, decorous, and
+void.
+
+Pitt and Lady Hester are married on November 16. Lady Hester writes to
+Ann nine days afterwards a letter full of good feeling stiffened and
+starched by decorum. Some letters are too improper to print, this is too
+proper.
+
+Ann was now returning home, and Mary goes to meet her with a note of
+welcome from William. Lord Camelford says that her health and spirits
+declined grievously in France, and so her brother, 'though not till
+after repeated notifications of her distress, sent over a clergyman to
+bring her back to her family and assist in her journey.' This gives us a
+test of Camelford's bias in dealing with his uncle. For hear Ann
+herself, in a letter to Lady Suffolk announcing that she was on her way
+to England, and had arrived as far as Sens, whence she writes. Speaking
+of William, she says, 'he continued as he began, as soon as the King had
+put him in the place he is in, by giving me the strongest and tenderest
+proof of his affection.... I was so sunk and my mind so overcome with
+all I have suffered, and I was so mortified and distressed, that I do
+not believe anything in the world could have made it possible for me to
+get out of this country, but my brother's sending a friend to my
+assistance, and choosing so proper a person as Mr de la Porte is in all
+respects. He has known me and my family for about thirty years, from
+having been my Lord Stanhope's Governor.' She goes on to refer to 'the
+virtue and goodness of my friends, particularly of my brother, who has
+always seemed to guess and understand all I felt of every kind, and has
+carried his delicacy so far as never once to put me in mind of what I
+felt more strongly than any other part of my misfortune, which was, how
+very disagreeable and embarrassing it must be to him to have me in
+France, You may believe that I will be out of it the first minute that
+is possible.'
+
+So the fact is that the man, whom Camelford endeavours to depict as
+having acted with hardness and insensibility on this occasion, displayed
+in reality incessant and delicate tenderness, according to the grateful
+acknowledgment of Ann herself. Pitt had just attained his supremacy;
+this was the most critical epoch of his life; all the year he had been
+fighting the King and the Court, and this was the moment of victory.
+Eleven days before Ann wrote this letter he had become for the second
+time Secretary of State and had begun his great ministry. During this
+time of strain and anxiety he heard of Ann's illness; he must have felt
+strongly, though he refrained from mentioning it to her, the irksomeness
+of her being in France when he was waging war against that kingdom, and
+so he sent an old family friend to conduct her home. Could brother have
+done more? Is there not here an anxious and thoughtful affection,
+distorted grievously by the implacable animosity of the nephew?
+Camelford is, however, obliged to record that on her arrival she went
+straight to Pitt's villa at Hayes, 'where, tho' her spirits were still
+weak, she was surprisingly recovered.'
+
+There is no date to the following note which Mary was to hand to Ann.
+But as Ann's letter to Lady Suffolk cited above is of July 10, 1757, we
+cannot be far wrong in placing it somewhat later in the same month. It
+is indeed perplexing to find another letter to Lady Suffolk dated 'Spa,
+September 5, 1757.' But the year 1757 is a surmise, and in all
+probability an incorrect surmise, of the editor. Ann was hastening to
+England in July 1757, stayed some time at Hayes on her arrival, and is
+not likely to have been on the Continent again in September.
+
+
+ _Friday Morning._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I Can not let my Sister Mary go away without a line to
+ express my infinite satisfaction to hear you are arrived and that
+ you find your strength and Spirits in so good a condition. at the
+ same time let a Veteran Invalide recommend to you, above all things,
+ to use this returning Strength and Spirits very sparingly at first.
+ I shou'd be happy to accompany Miss Mary to Rochester, but the
+ overwhelming business of this Momentous Conjuncture hardly allow
+ (_sic_) me time to tell you how impatiently and tenderly I wish to
+ embrace my Dear Sister.[84]
+
+
+Ann had gone from Hayes to Clifton, as we know from a letter to Lady
+Suffolk dated June 22, 1758, and thence proceeded to Bath, as we know
+from another letter dated August 19, 1758. She was restless, as on
+August 26 she was at Bristol. In all these letters there is not a word
+that betokens other than kindness and gratitude to her brother; as, for
+example, on August 19 she writes to Lady Suffolk: 'God grant that the
+public news may continue to be good, especially from Prince Ferdinand,
+for the sake of a person whose health and prosperity I wish more than I
+shall ever tell him.' A week afterwards she takes public occasion to
+rejoice at his triumphs by furnishing a bonfire and ten hogsheads of
+strong beer and all the music she could procure. On the other side, we
+read the letters which the busy statesman found time to write to her,
+breathing affection and solicitude.
+
+
+ _St. James's Square. Aug. 10th. 1758._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I wait with much impatience to hear you are arrived
+ well at Bath, and that you are lodged to your mind. I will not
+ entertain any doubts, after having had the satisfaction of seeing
+ you, that your progression to a perfect recovery will be sensible
+ every Day, and as soon as you can bear a stronger nourishment, that
+ Spirits, the concomitants of Strength, will return. as a part of the
+ necessary regimen, solid nourishment for that busy craving Thing
+ call'd Mind must have its place, and I know of no mental
+ Alteratives(?) of power to renovate and brace up a sickly
+ Constitution of Thought, but that mild and generous Philosophy which
+ teaches us the true value of the World, and a rational firm
+ religion, that anchors us safe in the confidence of another. but I
+ will end my sermon and come to the affairs of the world I am so
+ deeply immersed in. this day had brought us an account that our
+ Troops effected their landing, with little Loss, ye 7th and 8th two
+ Leagues from Cherbourgh, in the face of a pretty considerable
+ Number, who gave some loose fires and run. I am infinitely anxious
+ till we hear again, as I expect something serious will ensue. I must
+ not close my letter without telling you that the most particular
+ enquiries after your health have been made by the Lady you sent a
+ Card to, and I, very obligingly reprimanded for keeping your arrival
+ a secret from Them. Lady Hester shares my Impatience to hear news of
+ you, and all my sentiments for your health and happiness. our Love
+ follows dear Mary, whose merits you must, to your great
+ satisfaction, more and more feel every day.
+
+ I am ever my Sister's most affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+ _St. James's Square. Sept. ye 12th. 1758._
+
+ Dear Sister,--You have now try'd the Bristol waters long enough to
+ make some judgement of their effects, and I have kept silence long
+ enough for you to make perhaps a strange judgement of my manner of
+ feeling for my friends. but feel I certainly do, my Dear Sister, for
+ all that concerns your health and happiness, how much soever I have
+ kept it for some weeks past a matter between me and my own
+ conscience, without giving you the least hint of my truly
+ affectionate sollicitude on your account. I am extremely inclin'd to
+ believe Doctor Oliver judges rightly of the first principle of your
+ disorders; that it is Gout, which aided by the waters of Bath and
+ proper nourishment may ripen into a salutary tho' painfull crisis.
+ as I think myself that Languor or perturbation of Spirits are well
+ exchanged for a degree of pain, I shall heartily wish you joy of
+ such a revolution in the system of your Constitution. how can I have
+ got so far in my paper, and not a word of the King of Kings whose
+ last Glories transcend all the parts? the Modesty of H:P: Majtys
+ relation, his Silence of Himself, and entire attribution of the
+ victory to Genl Seidlitz, are of a mind as truely heroick as H.
+ Majesty's taking a Colours in his own hand, when exhortations
+ failed, and forcing a disordered Infantery to follow Him or see Him
+ perish. more Glory can not be won; but more decisive final
+ consequence we still hope to hear, and languish for further letters
+ from the Prussian army. My Love to Dear Mrs Mary.
+
+ I am ever most affecly Yrs
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+Then comes a letter referring apparently to the Battle of Hochkirch:
+
+
+ Dear Sister,--I can not omit writing, tho' but a line, to give you
+ the satisfaction of knowing that Mr d'Escart will return to France
+ in a very few days. I am very glad that it has been practicable to
+ accomplish so soon a thing that will give pleasure to so many of
+ your Friends. the news from Dresden to day is not very agreable, the
+ King of Prussia's right wing attack'd sudenly at 4 in the morning
+ ye 14th, put into disorder, Marshal Keith and Prince Francis of
+ Brunswick kill'd but the King coming to the Right, the action was
+ restored and the Austrians repulsed. His Prussian Majesty's Person
+ so exposed that one trembles: his Horse shot, and a Page and Ecuyer
+ wounded by his side. a second action seems inevitable: I hope every
+ thing from it, as this Heroick Monarch's happy Genius never fails
+ him when he wants it most. I have not a moment more. be assured of
+ my constant wishes for your health and happiness.
+
+ I am Dear Sister Your affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+ Loves to Mary.
+ _Oct. ye 24th._
+
+
+Ann was now in London on a short visit, for the purpose of attending the
+Court; but she had designs of her own which appear to be serious, but
+which give some evidence of the insanity which was always hovering over
+her.
+
+'I hear my Lord Bath,' she writes, November 10, 1758, 'is here very
+lively, but I have not seen him, which I am very sorry for, because I
+want to offer myself to him. I am quite in earnest, and have set my
+heart upon it; so I beg seriously you will carry it in your mind and
+think if you could find any way to help me. Do not you think Lady Betty
+(Germaine) and Lord and Lady Vere would be ready to help me, if they
+knew how willing I am? But I leave this to your discretion, and repeat
+seriously that I am quite in earnest. He can want nothing but a
+companion that would like his company, and in my situation, I should not
+desire to make the bargain without that circumstance. And though all I
+have been saying puts me in mind of some advertisements I have seen in
+the newspaper from gentlewomen in distress, I will not take that method;
+but I want to recollect whether you did not once tell me, as I think you
+did many years ago, that he spoke so well of me that he got anger for it
+at home, where I never was a favourite.'[85]
+
+Never, surely, did a spinster of forty-eight breathe so frankly her
+aspirations towards a wealthy and avaricious septuagenarian. We may be
+sure that this freak of fancy was not confided to her brother. But he on
+his side had a favour to ask of her, on behalf of a puissant personage.
+Statesmen in those days had to pay their homage to the Court wherever
+they could find it, and Pitt, who was never loved by George II., could
+not afford to neglect the influence of Lady Yarmouth. At any rate, he
+did not, though apparently without success in his ultimate object; and
+so we find him attempting to neutralise, through Ann, the mischief which
+might ensue from Lady Betty Waldegrave's letters being attributed by the
+Court of France to the King's favourite. Lady Yarmouth was in danger of
+being compromised!
+
+Ann thus describes the negotiation: 'If I had not happened to be sick, I
+should have been very much pleased with an express that was sent me to
+give me a commission that I liked to execute, because it relates to a
+person I am obliged to and have a regard for; it is my Lady Yarmouth who
+desires me, by my brother, to explain a very disagreeable mistake which
+has been made in France about a very fond letter, and mighty improper as
+to politics, which Lady Betty Waldegrave wrote to her husband, unsigned,
+and having desired the answer might be directed to Lady Y's lodging,
+they concluded, very absurdly, the letter came from her; and as it was
+intercepted, it was translated, shown, and commented very
+impertinently.'
+
+
+ _St. James's Square. Nov. 7th. 1758._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I write to you at the desire of Lady Yarmouth, on an
+ Incident of a particular nature, and which has given her Ladyship
+ so much uneasiness that it will be a very agreeable office, if you
+ can contribute, by a letter to some Lady of the Court at Versailles,
+ to the clearing up of a very odd Qui pro Quo. The matter in question
+ is as follows. Letters to England from our Army having been taken,
+ there is amongst them _one_ from Lady Betty Waldgrave to General
+ Waldgrave _unsign'd_. the writer desires the General will _direct
+ his letters to Lady Yarmouth at Kensington_. on this ground the
+ letter in question being attributed, in France, to Lady Yarmouth has
+ drawn attention, been translated, and handed about, as she is
+ inform'd, with some mirth at Versailles and Paris. this letter is
+ return'd, by the channel of Selwyn's House, and Lady Yarmouth finds
+ it to contain, not only the expressions of a loving wife to a
+ Husband, but a strain of political reflections, together with
+ observations on very high Personages in Europe, commanding Armies in
+ Germany; all which Language cou'd not but bear a very prejudicial
+ Comment, if really attributed to the Lady, by whose desire I now
+ write to you. You are the best judge how to acquit yourself of the
+ Commission you are desired to charge yourself with; whether by
+ writing to the Dutchess of Mirepoix or any other of your friends. I
+ can only say, that I perceive Lady Yarmouth will think Herself
+ obliged to you for such an intervention, in a matter of some
+ Delicacy, and which might have many possible ill Consequences. if
+ you shall write in the manner desir'd, and will send your letter
+ directed to your Correspondent, under Cover to me, I will take care
+ it shall go in Count Very's packet to Paris.
+
+ I rejoice extremely my Dear Sister, at the account of your amendment
+ in Spirits, since your late attack. keep the ground so hardly won,
+ and ascend, by courage and perseverance that arduous steep, on the
+ Summit of which, Health and Happiness, I trust, still wait you. I am
+ lame in one foot, and much threatened with Gout for some days past;
+ but I flatter myself that it may blow over, like an Autumnal ruffle.
+ our Expeditions are, I fear, lame in both Feet. My Messenger is
+ order'd to wait your full leisure.
+
+ I am Dear Sister, Your most affectionate Brother
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+Ann appears to have been successful, and receives thanks both from
+William and the formal Lady Hester.
+
+
+ Dear Sister,--I am desired by Lady Yarmouth to assure you of the
+ sense she has of your good offices, which she was so good to
+ accompany with the most obliging expression of regard for you, and
+ with many wishes for your health. I shall be happy to receive a
+ favourable account of your situation, and which I flatter myself is
+ every day mending, and that by a Progression which will soon enable
+ you to take air and exercise. I am just going to Hayes, for some
+ hours recess, that I want much.
+
+ I am ever Dear Sister Most affly Yrs
+ W. PITT.
+ _Saturday morning._
+
+
+ _St. James's Square Tuesday Nov. 14._
+
+ Dear Madam,--If I had not for some time past found great
+ inconvenience from writing I shou'd not have continued so long
+ Silent where I always find so much pleasure in expressing my
+ sentiments, but however great my indisposition is from _my
+ Situation_ to my present employment, I cou'd not refuse a commission
+ which I had the honour to be charged with today from my Lady
+ Yarmouth, as I am sure the Subject of it will be a great pleasure
+ and Satisfaction to you. It was to desire I wou'd return you a
+ thousand Thanks for your letters, and to assure you that she felt
+ herself most extremely obliged to you for them, and for the trouble
+ you had given yourself, with many other expressions of the manner in
+ which she was sensible of your goodness in what you had done, and
+ how very agreable it was to Her. I was very sorry to find by your
+ account of yourself to Mr Pitt that you had had another return of
+ your bilious Complaint, but we Comfort our selves with the hope of
+ its having produced the same salutary effects the Last did. We shall
+ be impatient to have a confirmation of its having had so desirable a
+ consequence. By Miss Mary's Last Letters both to her Brother and Me
+ we have flattered ourselves with the pleasure of seeing Her for some
+ days past, but as yet she has not appeared, which wou'd make us
+ uneasy but that we conclude if her purpose of Leaving Bath the time
+ she mention'd had been alter'd from any disagreable Circumstance she
+ wou'd have apprised us of it. Our Nephew, Mr. Thos. Pitt, desires to
+ have the permission and pleasure of conveying this to you, as he
+ intends setting out for the Bath tomorrow in order to wait upon Sir
+ Richard Lyttelton, whom I wish he may find better than by the
+ reports which prevail, I fear he has any Chance of Doing. Your
+ Brother continues as usual overwhelm'd with business, and not
+ entirely free from some Notices of the Gout, but which yet I flatter
+ myself will not increase to a fit. He begs his affectionate
+ Compliments to you, and I that you wou'd forgive both the shortness
+ and the faults of this Letter, and believe me equally however
+ exprest
+
+ Your very affectionate Sister and Obedient Servant
+ HES: PITT.
+
+ Mr Pitt desires to assure you the Letters were the properest that
+ cou'd be writ upon the occasion.
+
+
+Ann, as we learn from the preceding letter, returned to Bath at once.
+'Mr Thomas Pitt' (Lord Camelford) brings it to her, and here makes her
+acquaintance: 'It was there' (at Bath) 'in the year 1759 that I first
+connected that friendship with her which still leaves so many mixed
+sensations on my mind.' Ann, it may confidently be said, left mixed
+sensations on all minds. The next note announces the birth of the young
+William Pitt.
+
+
+ _Hayes. May ye 28th. 1759._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I have the satisfaction to acquaint you, of what you
+ was so good to wish to hear; Lady Hester was safely delivered of a
+ Boy this morning, after a labour rather severe, but she and the
+ Child are, thank God, as well as can be. You will give us a very
+ real pleasure by good accounts of your own health which we hope is
+ much better for the journey alone, and that waters will not fail to
+ be of great assistance towards a perfect recovery. I am
+
+ Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother,
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I can't help mentioning to you the waters and Bath of Buxton: which
+ for a languid perspiration and obstructions in the smaller vessels,
+ have done wonders.
+
+
+Next comes a short letter from William, only notable from his anxiety
+about Squire Allworthy.
+
+
+ _St. James's Square. July 24th, 1759._
+
+ Dear Sister,--Your letter on the subject of Mr. Allen's Health gave
+ me, with the Pain of learning he had been ill, the Satisfaction of
+ understanding that the attack was, in some degree over; that to Lady
+ Hester giving an account of the terrible nature of his complaint,
+ having follow'd Her to Wotton, where she now is.
+
+ I trust that the next accounts from Prior Park will be favourable
+ and that the best of men, who feels and relieves the most the
+ sufferings of others, may not Himself suffer the severest of Pains.
+ I learn with great satisfaction the considerable amendment you
+ mention in your own Health, and the promising prospects of deriving
+ much benefit from Tunbridge. I hope You will not let too much of
+ this fine season for mineral waters pass, before you repair to Them,
+ and that their effects, when you try them, will fully answer your
+ own and your Friends expectation.
+
+ I am Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother,
+ W. PITT.
+
+ if Lord Paulett be still at Bath, I beg my compliments to his
+ Lordship.
+
+
+It is perhaps well, for the preservation of continuity, to print the
+following letter from Lady Hester to her sister-in-law:
+
+
+ _Tuesday. St. James's Square. Aug. 29th._
+
+ I am so much in Arrear to You, my Dear Madam, and upon so many
+ accounts, that I don't know where to begin first to acquit my Self
+ to You. I feel I want now most to justifie my self to you for not
+ having before exprest how sensible I am to the various Marks I have
+ received of your very obliging Attention upon all the Subjects that
+ you knew wou'd give me the greatest pleasure. The Fact is that an
+ unexpected Journey to Wotton, from which place I return'd but Last
+ night, interfered with my intention of writing to You, and of
+ returning you my sincerest thanks for the great Satisfaction your
+ Letter gave me. It included everything that cou'd make it pleasing
+ to Me, and renew'd all my own Joy for our Successes with Yours added
+ to it, which was a great improvement of all I felt before, and
+ particularly for Louisbourg, _Dear_, as you know so many ways. I am
+ charmed with my rings, which are after an English Taste that I hope
+ will be followed, and grow fashionable enough to encourage a Variety
+ of Patterns. Last night brought a Large Package from Bath directed
+ to Your Brother, and intended we guess for the Young Militia Man at
+ Hayes. It contained besides a present for Miss Hetty, both which
+ will be faithfully deliver'd this evening, and the sentiments they
+ inspire shall be in due time communicated. In the Interval I believe
+ I must apply to you my Dear Madam to assure the kind sender of my
+ share of pleasure in the present. Miss Mary's Letter received Last
+ night, gave a great deal of Satisfaction to both your Brother and Me
+ by the account of Your Health, and the Progress You have made in a
+ returning to a Diet of Solid Food, a sort of Sustenance so much more
+ likely to restore and confirm your Strength and Spirits than any
+ other. We are glad to find that Doctor Oliver has your approbation,
+ and that he seems to reason with great sense and probability upon
+ your case, and what it is likely to end in. the Gout is not a very
+ desirable Thing, but only comparatively, where the constitution is
+ not strong, for then there ar many Disorders to which people are
+ Liable that are much worse. I am vastly pleased that Our House has
+ the honour of being approved by you, and should be delighted if I
+ cou'd be so happy as to receive You in it, and wish extremely that
+ it was furnish'd and fit for Your reception, but I find Mr. Pitt
+ thinks that it is not proper to have hired furniture put into it, as
+ well as that you cou'd not be so conveniently accommodated in a
+ House so circumstanced, as you will be in the very commodious
+ Lodgings which Bath affords. We are meditating a journey to Hayes
+ the moment Mr. Pitt returns from Kensington, which makes it
+ impossible for me to say as much as I wish to You upon the different
+ Subjects in this Letter, being obliged to give an account of my
+ journey to the Friends I met at Wotton who are now disperst. May I
+ beg you to give my Love to Miss Mary, and to say I hope she will
+ admit what I have been saying as an excuse for my not acknowledging
+ by this Post in a letter to Her what I have in my sentiments
+ acknowledged ever since I heard from her, that I was indebted to her
+ for the Prettiest, as well as the most Obliging, Letter in the
+ World, besides her Bath Fairing which I value properly. I shall only
+ now repeat my request that You will believe me Always my Dear Madam
+
+ Your affectionate Sister and most Obedient Servant,
+ H. PITT.
+
+ Mr. Pitt will endeavour to serve the Chevalier de Chaila as you
+ desire.
+
+
+All so far had been harmonious enough. Unfortunately, there now occurred
+a second misunderstanding, to which the ensuing letters relate. It is
+best to give Lord Camelford's account, which, though mysterious enough,
+is all we have. 'Her Physicians advising her to discontinue the Waters
+for a short time to give trial to a course of med'cines, she determin'd
+to accompany me to London, to see some old friends after a long absence,
+and to transact certain business, and then to return to Bath. Fearing,
+however, that her unexpected arrival at her Lodgings in Leicester House
+might have objections, or that there might be difficulties in her
+lodging any where in London, she stop'd short at Sion at Ly.
+Holdernesse's, her particular friend, from whence she removed to
+Kensington to a house Mr. Cresset lent her. This Journey gave offence to
+her Brother, and occasion'd their second quarrel. Instead of managing a
+temper too like his own, instead of yielding to her repeated request of
+seeing him, when with gentleness he might have explained his wishes to
+her and have persuaded to whatever he thought best for her or for
+himself, he satisfied himself with dark hints, imperious messages, and
+ambiguous menaces convey'd thro' Ly. Hester and his Sister Mary, neither
+of whom were very happy in the arts of conciliation. Frightened,
+confounded, and at the same time exasperated by so strange a conduct,
+she tried to return to Bath, but her strength would not admit of her
+getting half way thro' the Journey. She return'd to Kensington--she got
+medical advice--she saw a few of her old friends, who soon disproved the
+falsities that were every day propagated of her State of Health--by
+degrees she saw all her fears vanish--the World return to her and nobody
+flie from her but the Person from whom she expected her chief
+countenance and support. She sounded the Princess, and found she was at
+full liberty to live where she pleased, except that the former intimacy
+was at an end. She met her Brother accidentally at Ly. Yarmouth's, he
+kiss'd her on both sides with the affectation of the warmest affection;
+whilst he refused to visit her and his whole family were hostile to her
+in the cruelest manner.'
+
+The whole affair is obscure, and is not elucidated by the letters of
+Pitt and his wife which follow. Lady Hester is civil and kind enough,
+though evidently forbidden to visit or receive her sister-in-law. But
+what Pitt means by his allusion to 'desultory jaunts,' and 'hovering
+about London,' and conduct 'too imprudent and restless or as too
+mysterious' for him to be connected with it, we cannot now conjecture.
+What harm a spinster of forty-eight could do by staying with Lady
+Holdernesse at Sion, and thence moving to Kensington, and being
+undecided as to her plans, it is not easy to determine. It is possible,
+on considering the whole affair, Ann's own temperate reply, and all that
+followed, that Pitt knew that his sister was seeking a pension, for
+which purpose she had gone to Sion and to Kensington (for Lady
+Holdernesse was the wife of a Secretary of State, and Cresset was a man
+of influence), and desirous that his name should not be connected with
+the pension list at this moment of unrivalled popularity and power, he
+was anxious to have no communication with her. There is a still more
+probable explanation of Pitt's annoyance with his sister's behaviour. We
+have seen that Lord Camelford speaks of the 'falsities that were every
+day propagated about her state of health.' In a letter soon to follow
+she herself speaks of her stay in France 'before my spirits were so much
+disordered as they have been since.' Some years afterwards, Horace
+Walpole wrote of her that she had at times been out of her senses. It
+seems possible, then, that one of these attacks had taken place at Bath,
+and that she had broken loose from constraint and come up to London,
+which would revive the gossip about her condition, and so cause
+annoyance to her brother, who thought that peremptoriness was the only
+method of getting her back again to Bath. If this were so, he acted
+wisely, as she appears to have returned to Bath at once. This last
+conjecture seems the more probable explanation. In any case the
+circumstances of the people and the times were full of electricity. Pitt
+was busy, gouty and irritable; Bute was much above the horizon. Ann was
+eccentric, wilful, and wayward. Soon afterwards, she had a pension,
+which annoyed her brother. This is all that we can be said to know. We
+do not even know the date of this episode.
+
+
+ FROM LADY HESTER PITT.
+
+ It is my Dear Madam extremely unfortunate that from different
+ circumstances which have interpos'd themselves, I have not had it in
+ my power to have the pleasure of seeing you since your arrival in
+ the neighbourhood of London, and I am quite concern'd that by Your
+ Brother's business I am so circumstanced today, as to make it
+ impossible for me to receive that Satisfaction. There is to be a
+ meeting of the Cabinet here this Evening, which Always engrosses my
+ Apartment and banishes me to other quarters. We are but just arrived
+ from the Country, which I think has done your Brother good. He
+ desires I wou'd assure you of his affectionate Compliments, and Let
+ you know that his present Pressure of business is so great that it
+ does not leave him the Command of a quarter of an hour of his time,
+ so as to be able to assure himself beforehand of the pleasure of
+ seeing any friend. therefore under that uncertainty, and fearing he
+ may miss of the Satisfaction of meeting You, he desires thro' me to
+ wish you a safe return to Bath, so much the best place, He is
+ perfectly convinced, for Your Health. We are both very glad to hear
+ you have had a confirmation from Doctor Pitt of the efficacy you may
+ expect to find in those waters for your Complaints. I must not end
+ my Note without expressing how much I was flattered by your
+ remembrance of Little Hetty, tho' I trust Miss Mary did not forget
+ me upon that subject, no more than on that of my real Concern for
+ its being impossible for me to wait upon You, and say for myself
+ how much I feel obliged to You for your kind Letter and message. The
+ Compliments of the season attend You my Dear Madam with many good
+ wishes.
+
+ _St. James's Square. Tuesday._
+
+
+ _St. James's Square. Monday. Jan. 15th._
+
+ Dear Madam,--Mr. Pitt is this moment come to Town, and so
+ overwhelm'd with business, that it is quite impossible for Him to
+ write a word to You Himself, in answer to your Note which he has
+ just received. He is very sorry to find you are ill, and wishes me
+ to tell you that you have mistaken Him in thinking he meant to
+ express any desire of His as to your Going, or Staying, which he
+ always meant to Leave to your own Decision, but only to offer you
+ his opinion, and never proposes to take upon Him to give you any
+ further Advice with regard to the place of Your residence, which you
+ have all right independent of any thing with respect to Him to
+ determine as You please for Yourself. I am extremely concern'd to
+ hear your disorder is increased so much as to have made your return
+ to Kensington necessary, as I fear your Situation There must be very
+ uncomfortable and Disagreeable, without Servants, or any of those
+ Conveniences, which are so particularly of Consequence when any body
+ is ill. I hope most sincerely to have the pleasure of hearing you
+ are better, and Able to prosecute what ever May be thought best for
+ Your Health, being very truly Dear Madam
+
+ Your Most Affectionate and Most Obedt
+ H. PITT.
+
+
+ _Friday Morning._
+
+ Dear Sister,--I desire to assure you that all Idea of _Quarrel_ or
+ _unkindness_, (words I am griev'd to find you cou'd employ) was
+ never farther from my mind than during your stay in this
+ neighbourhood. on the Contrary, my Dear Sister, nothing but kindness
+ and regard to your Good, on the whole, has made me judge it
+ necessary that we should not meet during the Continuance you think
+ fit to give to an excursion so unexpected, and so hurtfull to you. I
+ beg my Dear Sister not to mistake my wishes to see Her set down,
+ for a time, quiet and collected within her own Resources of Patience
+ and fortitude, (merely as being best and the only fit thing for
+ Herself) so very widely as to suppose, that my Situation as a
+ Publick Person, is any way concern'd in her residing in one Place or
+ another. all I mean is, that, _for your own sake_, you shou'd
+ abstain from all desultory jaunts, such as the present. the hearing
+ of you all at once, at Sion; next at Kensington, then every day
+ going, and now not yet gone, certainly carries an appearance
+ disadvantageous to you in this view; I have refused myself the
+ pleasure of seeing You; as considering your journey and hovering
+ about London, as too imprudent and restless, or as too mysterious,
+ for me not to discourage such a conduct, by remaining unmixt with
+ it. this is the only cause of my not seeing you, nor can I give you
+ a more real proof of my affectionate regard for your welfare than by
+ thus refusing myself a great pleasure, and, I fear, giving you a
+ Pain. I offer you no Advice, as to the choice of your residence. I
+ am persuaded you want none; you have a right and are well able to
+ judge for yourself on this point. but if you will not fix somewhere
+ You are undone. I am sorry to be forc'd to say this much; but saying
+ less I should cease to be with truest affection Dear Sister
+
+ Ever Yrs
+ W. PITT.
+
+
+ ANN PITT TO HER BROTHER.
+
+ Dear Brother,--I am going to set out to return to Bath, but as the
+ letter I received from you yesterday leaves me in great anxiety and
+ perplexity of mind, I can not set out without assuring you, as I do
+ with the most exact truth, that there was no mistery in my journey
+ here, nor no purpose but the relief I proposed to my mind. If I had
+ known before I left the Bath that you disapproved of my leaving that
+ place at this time, or of my coming to Town, I wou'd not have done
+ as I have done, and wou'd not even have come near it, tho' the
+ advice given me at Oxford with regard to my health, made me desire
+ to make use of the interval in which I was order'd not to try the
+ waters again, to have the pleasure and satisfaction of seeing You
+ and some of my friends and as I hoped that satisfaction from You in
+ the first place, I will not dissemble that I am very much
+ disappointed and mortified in not having seen you, but as the hurry
+ of important business you are in, and the relief necessary to make
+ you go through it, made it possible for me not to interpret your not
+ seeing me as a mark of unkindness, I never used the word (the word)
+ but to guard against other people using it, upon a circumstance
+ which I thought they had nothing to do with.
+
+ When I writ you word from the Bath that I had thoughts of coming to
+ Town for Christmas, I desir'd nothing so much as to do what was most
+ proper according to my situation, and consequently to have your
+ advice, which I told you, very sincerely I wished to be guided by
+ preferably to every other consideration, You best know how I am to
+ attain the end I have steadily desired for Years, as you know I writ
+ you word from France (before my spirits were so much disorder'd as
+ they have been since) that I desired nothing as much as a safe and
+ honourable retreat, that wou'd leave me the enjoyment of my Friends,
+ without which help and suport I find by a painfull experience that
+ it is impossible for me to suport myself. I beg leave to trouble you
+ with my compliments to Lady Hester, and my wishes for the happiness
+ of you both, and of all the little family that belong to you.
+
+ I am D Br &c.
+
+
+This undated note appears to belong to the same time as the preceding
+ones, and tends to confirm the hypothesis that it was Ann's mental
+condition that gave rise to anxiety.
+
+
+ FROM LADY HESTER PITT.
+
+ Dear Madam,--Having informed Mr. Pitt, who is this moment come home,
+ that you intend going to the Lodgings in Lisle Street, He wou'd not
+ set down to dinner without desiring me to let you know from Him that
+ this intention of Yours gives him the greatest surprise and not Less
+ concern for _Your sake_, being unalterably persuaded that Retreat is
+ the only right Thing for your Health, Welfare, and Happiness, and
+ that Bath in Your present state seems to be the fittest Place.
+
+ _St. James's Square Wednesday past four o'clock._
+
+
+We now come to the famous affair of the pension. Ann has evidently
+written to ask her brother's interest for a pension. He replies that on
+such a subject he would rather not speak, much less write to her, and
+gives her plainly to understand that he washes his hands of the whole
+business. She now turned to Bute. 'Having lost, therefore,' writes
+Camelford, 'all the hopes she had founded on her brother's friendship,
+which now turned to open enmity, she tried the generosity of Ld Bute
+upon the King's succession, who, not unwilling to give Mr Pitt a
+sensible mortification in the shape of a civility, procured for her a
+pension that was no small comfort in addition to her slender income,
+which was afterwards again augmented to L1000 p.a., at the instance of
+her friend M. de Nivernois, upon the peace.'
+
+
+ Dear Sister,--I hoped long before now to have been able to call on
+ you, and in that hope have delayed answering a letter on a subject
+ so very nice and particular, that I cou'd, with difficulty and but
+ imperfectly, enter into it even in conversation. I am sure I need
+ not say to one of your knowledge of the world, that explaining of
+ Situations is not a small Affair, at any time, and in the present
+ moment I dare say You are too reasonable to wish me to do it. In
+ this state I have only to assure you of my sincerest wishes for your
+ advantage and happiness, and that I shall consider any good that
+ arrives to you as done to myself, which I shall be ready to
+ acknowledge as such: but having never been a Sollicitor of favours,
+ upon any occasion, how can I become so now without contradicting the
+ whole tenour of my Life? I think there is no foundation for your
+ apprehensions of anything distressfull being intended, and I hope
+ you will not attribute, what I have said to any motive that may give
+ you uneasiness, being very truely
+
+ Dear Sister Your affectionate Brother
+ _Nov. 24: 1760._ W. PITT.
+
+
+After the letter in which Pitt sheers off from the pension, there was
+evidently an announcement from Ann that it had been granted to her on
+the recommendation of Lord Bute. This is lost. But we have Pitt's
+unpleasing congratulation. This was the note which Ann was with
+difficulty restrained from returning to Pitt, having altered it to suit
+the circumstances of the case, when Pitt's wife was granted a much
+larger pension.
+
+
+ Dear Sister,--Accept sincere felicitations from Lady Hester and me
+ on the Event you have just communicated. on your account, I rejoice
+ at an addition of income so agreeable to your turn of life, whatever
+ repugnancy I find, at the same time, to see my Name placed on the
+ Pensions of Ireland. unmixt as I am in this whole transaction, I
+ will not doubt that you will take care to have it thoroughly
+ understood. long may you live in health to enjoy the comforts and
+ happiness which you tell me you owe to the King, singly through the
+ intercession of Lord Bute, and to feel the pleasing sentiments of
+ such an obligation.
+
+ I am Dear Sister Your most affectionate Brother
+ _Tuesday Dec. 30th 1760._ W. PITT.
+
+
+Then follows Ann's reply, which may be judged not unconciliatory when
+her fierce temperament is taken into consideration. She elaborately and
+almost humbly vindicates her pension against her brother's sarcastic
+strictures.
+
+
+ Dear Brother,--I must trouble you again, not only to return my
+ thanks to Lady Hester and yourself, for your obliging
+ felicitations, But as I have the mortification of finding, that for
+ some reasons which I can not judge of, You feel a repugnancy to the
+ mark of favour I have had the honour to receive, and desire--it may
+ be throughly understood that you had no share in the transaction--I
+ ought to make you easy, by assuring you, as I do, that so far as I
+ think proper to communicate an event, which will not naturally be
+ very publick, I will take care to explain the truth, by which it
+ will appear that you are no way concern'd in it, and that it has no
+ sort of relation to your Situation as Minister, since my request was
+ first made to the Princess many years ago, as Her Royal Highnesess
+ Servant, as I am pretty sure I explained to you in a letter from
+ France, and repeated to you at my return, as the foundation of my
+ hopes of obtaining the Princesses approbation for any establishment
+ you might have procured for me. And tho' the Provision I have been
+ so happy to obtain from His Majesty's Bounty is of the utmost
+ importance to me and answers every wish I cou'd form with regard to
+ my income, yet when I was allow'd to say how much wou'd make me
+ easy, I fix'd it at a sum, which I flatter myself will not be
+ thought exorbitant, or appear as if I had wanted to avail myself of
+ the weight of your credit, or the merit of your services to obtain
+ it.
+
+ As to your objection to your Names (_sic_) being upon the Irish
+ Pensions, I do not believe that any mistake can be made, from mine
+ being there. And as to myself, I very sincerely think it an honour
+ that is very flattering to me, to have received so precious a mark
+ of the Royal favour, and to have my Name upon the same List not only
+ with some of the highest and the most deserving persons in England,
+ but even with some of the greatest and most glorious names in
+ Europe. If I have tired you with a longer letter than I intended, I
+ have been lead (_sic_) into it, by the sincere desire I have, that
+ an advantage so very essential to the ease and comfort of the
+ remainder of a Life, which has not hitherto been very happy, shou'd
+ not be a cause of uneasiness to You. I am
+
+
+Alas for the freakful fate which plays with poor humanity and its
+concerns! The next letter announces another pension, not to Ann, but to
+Pitt's wife. So soon after the other correspondence, not ten months! No
+wonder that Ann was tempted to the vengeance that has been described.
+Even though she refrained we may imagine her unrestrained scoffs and her
+bitter laughter.
+
+
+ Dear Madam,--I was out of Town Yesterday, or otherwise I shou'd have
+ had the pleasure of informing You that His Majesty has been
+ Graciously pleas'd to confer the Dignity of Peerage on Your
+ Brother's Family, by creating Me Baroness of Chatham with Limitation
+ to our Sons. The King has been farther pleas'd to make a Grant of
+ Three Thousand Pounds a Year to Mr. Pitt for his own Life, Mine, and
+ our Eldest Son's in consideration of Mr. Pitt's Services, We do not
+ doubt of the Share You will take in these Gracious Marks of his
+ Majesties Royal Approbation and Goodness.
+
+ I am Dear Madam Your most Obedient Servant
+ HES: PITT.
+ _Sunday Morning_
+
+
+Some four years afterwards Ann received this short note, which shows
+that there was no rupture of relations; and the tone indeed is cordial
+for the period, when the expression of the warmest affection was far
+from gushing.
+
+
+ _Burton-Pynsent Aug. ye 1st 1765._
+
+ I am extremely obliged to you, Dear Sister, for the trouble you are
+ so good to take of writing to enquire after my health, which I found
+ mend on the journey and by change of air. I still continue lame, but
+ have left off one Crutch, which is no small advance; tho' with only
+ one Wing my flights, you will imagine, are as yet very short: the
+ Country of Somersetshire is beautifull and tempts much to extend
+ them. I hope your health is much better and that you have found the
+ way to subdue all your complaints, or at least to reduce them
+ within such bounds, as leave your life comfortable and agreeable.
+ Lady Chatham desires to present her compliments to you.
+
+ I am Dear Sister Your affectionate Brother
+ WILLIAM PITT.
+
+
+And now there come the last sad words, the last sign of life that
+William gives to Ann. It is not without significance that even at this
+period of prostration he bids his wife tell Ann that his official life
+is ended. It does not appear that there had ever been or was ever to be
+any formal reconciliation between them. But through all the gusts and
+squalls and storms that had troubled their intercourse an underlying
+tenderness had survived.
+
+
+ _Hayes. Oct. 21st. 1768._
+
+ Madam,--The very weak and broken state of my Lord's health having
+ reduced him to the necessity of supplicating the King to grant him
+ the permission to resign the Privy Seal, he has desir'd I wou'd
+ communicate this Step to You.
+
+ I am Madam, Your most Obedient Humble Servant
+ H. CHATHAM.
+
+
+About this time (1768) she took up her abode at Kensington Gravel Pits,
+in the region of Notting Hill, 'where out of a very ugly odd house and a
+flat piece of ground with a little dirty pond in the middle of it, she
+has made a very pretty place; she says she has "hurt her understanding"
+in trying to make it so.'[86] Before that time she seems to have lived
+for a while at Twickenham; at least Horace Walpole speaks of her as a
+close neighbour. Being fairly launched as a pensioner, she throve on the
+system, and eventually accumulated a treble allowance; this Bute
+pension, another procured by M. de Nivernois, and another, mentioned by
+Horace Walpole in a letter of Nov. 25, 1764, which must have raised her
+whole income from this source to some 1500_l._ a year. On this she
+entertained, and frolicked, and danced. We hear of her choice but
+miniature balls, and her band of French horns, which Horace Walpole
+enjoyed and described. But her intercourse with William, once so bright
+and genial, was ended, and that is all with which we are here concerned.
+A frigid letter or two counted as nothing in a connection which had once
+been as intimate as it was delightful.
+
+Ann went on living at Kensington a somewhat frivolous life so far as we
+know anything about it, in intimate relations with Horace Walpole and
+his society. But in 1774 she went abroad, under the auspices of the
+Butes, to Italy, to Pisa and elsewhere. Then came her brother's sudden
+death. Though she had been so long aloof from him, the shock finally
+shattered her reason, which, it would appear, had already given cause
+for apprehension. Chatham died May 11, 1778. She soon returned to
+England, and in the October of that year Horace Walpole writes that she
+is 'in a very wild way, and they think must be confined.'[87] In the
+following May he announces that she is actually under restraint.[88]
+There is a letter at Chevening from her to her niece, Lady Mahon, dated
+'Burnham, May 9, 1779,' which betrays her distraught condition. Burnham
+was probably that 'one of Dr. Duffell's houses' to which she had been
+removed. On Feb. 9, 1781, she dies, still in confinement. Lady Bute, it
+should be noted, was kind and attentive to the end.[89]
+
+'She was in Italy at the time of his (Chatham's) death,' writes Lord
+Camelford, who was probably there too. 'I can bear witness that the
+grief she felt at the reflection of his having died without a
+reconciliation with her made such an impression of tenderness on her
+mind that not only obliterated all remembrance of his unkindness, but
+recoiled upon herself, as if she had been the offending party, and
+doubtless contributed greatly to the melancholy state in which she
+died.'
+
+Horace Walpole, who had come to hate all Pitts, confirms this in his
+sardonic way. 'Did I tell you that Mrs Ann Pitt is returned and acts
+great grief for her brother?' and he goes on to say that Camelford
+himself 'gave a little into that mummery, even to me; forgetting how
+much I must remember of his aversion to his uncle.'
+
+There were perhaps few genuine tears save those of wife and children
+shed over the grave of the grim, disconcerting old statesman, for men of
+his type are beyond friendship: they inspire awe, not affection; they
+deal with masses, not with individuals; they have followers, admirers,
+and an envious host of enemies, rarely a friend. But Ann had no reason
+to feign grief or self-reproach. She had lost her first love, her only
+love, the love of her life. It is probable that the brother and sister
+had understood each other throughout in their quick-kindling, petulant
+way. 'My brother, who has always seemed to guess and understand all I
+felt of every kind,' she wrote in 1757;[90] a sentence which is a clue
+to all. The memory of childhood, the glad sympathies of youth, the
+impressions received when their characters were plastic and fresh, the
+habit of close intimacy for the score of years during which intimacy
+was possible for him, all these contributed to form a bond which
+survived the skirmishes and collisions of their later lives. Two persons
+of highly charged temperament, and of natures too much akin, who
+understood each other, respected each other, and perhaps secretly
+enjoyed each other's ebullitions, such were Ann and William after they
+separated in 1746. Their long affection is interesting if only that it
+seemed impossible that two such characters should agree even for a time.
+And therefore, though the narrative of this episode has swollen beyond
+all limit and proportion, the space is not lost, for it is invaluable to
+the student of Pitt's career. It lights up the only expressed tenderness
+in his life, it is the one relief to his sombre nature, it is the sole
+record that we have of the unbending of that grim and stately figure.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+In 1734 there had been a fiercely contested General Election, and Thomas
+Pitt had been returned for both Okehampton and Old Sarum. He elected to
+sit for Okehampton, and nominated his brother, William, together with
+his brother-in-law, Nedham, for the other borough. So, on February 18,
+1735, William was returned Member for the notorious borough of Old
+Sarum; an area of about sixty acres of ploughed land, on which had once
+stood the old city of Salisbury, but which no longer contained a single
+house or a single resident. The electorate consisted of seven votes.
+When an election took place the returning officer brought with him a
+tent, under which the necessary business was transacted.[91]
+
+To such a constituency it was superfluous, and indeed impossible, to
+offer an election address, or an exposition of policy. But William's
+politics could not be other than those of his brother and nominator,
+though it would seem that Thomas conformed to William rather than
+William to Thomas. We have seen some indications in his letters to Ann
+that Thomas had been favourable to Sir Robert Walpole, and that so late
+as November 1734. But it seems probable that William, who was united in
+private friendship with Lyttelton and the Grenvilles, was drawn to them
+by political sympathy as well, and was thus in agreement with the
+fiercest section of the Opposition. By the time that William was
+elected, Thomas, who was connected with the same group by marriage, must
+also have thrown in his political lot with it, or he would not have
+nominated his brother. For William, though only a cornet of horse, was
+known to be an enemy, and a redoubtable enemy, to the Minister. On this
+point we have clear evidence in a remarkable statement by Lord
+Camelford, which will be quoted later.
+
+William's political opinions were then, we may safely suppose, the
+result of family connection, for through his brother and his own
+friendships he was closely united with that band of politicians who met
+and caballed at Stowe, the stately residence of Lord Cobham. There he
+was a visitor for the first time this year (1735). His stay lasted not
+less than four months, from the beginning of July to the end of October.
+He could scarcely have remained so long without being enrolled in this
+small but important group, even had he not been enlisted already. But he
+was probably a recruit before his visit began. His brother, as we have
+seen, had married Christian Lyttelton, Cobham's niece; George,
+afterwards Lord Lyttelton, was her brother, and Cobham's nephew, as well
+as William's intimate friend; Richard and George Grenville, the first of
+whom is better known as Lord Temple, and the second as a laborious but
+intolerable prime minister, were Cobham's nephews; Richard, indeed, was
+his heir. A family connection was thus formed, which, at first held up
+to ridicule under the nickname of 'Cobham's cubs,' or 'The Cousins,' or
+'The Boy Patriots,' was to be for the next thirty years a notable factor
+in political history, and a sinister element in Pitt's career.
+
+So it may be well here to turn aside for a moment to consider these
+Grenvilles, who exercised so singular and baleful an influence on Pitt,
+and indeed on public affairs in general. For from the moment that Pitt
+became their brother-in-law, he was adopted as one of the brotherhood
+and choked in their embraces. From this mortal entanglement he
+emancipated himself too late. It was then patent how different his
+career would have been had he had a man of common-sense at his elbow, or
+at least an unselfish adviser. George Grenville, however, complained on
+his side that the connection had been fatal to the peace and happiness
+of the Grenvilles.[92]
+
+Who was the chief of this combination? Richard Temple, Viscount Cobham,
+best remembered as the 'brave Cobham' to whom Pope addressed his first
+Epistle and as the founder of the dynasty and palace of Stowe, was not
+merely a soldier who had served with distinction under Marlborough, but
+a fortunate courtier on whom the House of Hanover had heaped constant
+and signal honours. He was created first a Baron, then a Viscount,
+Constable of Windsor Castle, Governor of Jersey, a Privy Councillor,
+Colonel of the First Dragoons, and was afterwards to become a Field
+Marshal and Colonel of the Horse Guards. He had, hints Shelburne, some
+of the Shandean humour of Marlborough's veterans, but his portrait shows
+a keen, refined, perhaps sensitive countenance; he was also something
+of a bashaw.[93] Sated with military honours, and always a staunch Whig,
+he had now taken to conspicuous politics and splendour; politics
+exacerbated by a personal slight, and splendour displayed in sumptuous
+hospitality, princely buildings, and lavish magnificence of gardens.
+These, laid out under the supervision of Lancelot Brown, extended at
+last to not less than four hundred acres. Here he erected pavilions and
+shrines in the fashion of those times; the most daring of which was one
+to commemorate his friendships, with which politics had made sad havoc
+before the temple was completed. Here he kept open house in the spacious
+and genial fashion of that time, and entertained Pope, Congreve,
+Bolingbroke, Pulteney, the wits as well as the princes of the day. From
+these pleasing cares he had recently been diverted by one of those
+needless affronts which seem so inconsistent with the robust and genial
+character of Walpole, but to the infliction of which Walpole was
+singularly prone. On account of his opposition to the Excise Bill,
+Cobham had been deprived of his regiment, the same, by-the-bye, in which
+Pitt was a subaltern. Stung to political ardour by this insult, he had
+begun to form a faction of violent opposition, of which his nephews and
+their friends were the nucleus. Thus began that formidable influence
+which had its home and source at Stowe for near a century afterwards,
+and which for three generations patiently and persistently pursued the
+ducal coronet which was the darling object of its successive chiefs.
+
+Cobham, then, founded the family, and, so long as he lived, directed
+their operations, with too much perhaps of the spirit of a martinet.
+When he died his fortune and title passed to his sister, afterwards, as
+we shall see, Countess Temple in her own right, the mother of the
+Grenvilles with whom we are concerned.
+
+There were originally five Grenville brothers: Richard, George, James,
+Henry, and Thomas. Three of these, however, are outside our limits.
+Thomas, a naval officer of signal promise, was killed in action off Cape
+Finisterre in May 1747. James and Henry were cyphers, not ill provided
+for at the public charge. Both seem to have broken loose at one time
+from the tyranny of the brotherhood: James at first siding with Richard
+against George in 1761; and Henry, whom we find Richard anxious, on
+opposite grounds it is to be presumed, to oust from the representation
+of Buckingham in 1774. James, who, says Horace Walpole, 'had all the
+defects of his brothers and had turned them to the best account,' was
+Deputy Paymaster to Pitt; and Henry was a popular Governor of Barbadoes,
+as well as Ambassador at Constantinople for four years, after which both
+subsided into the blameless occupation of various sinecures.
+
+Never, indeed, was family so well provided for during an entire century
+as the Temple-Grenvilles. Although the system by which the aristocracy
+lived on the country was not carried nearly as far in Great Britain as
+in the France of the fourteenth Louis and his successor, yet it had no
+inconsiderable hold. Even the austere George, though averse in Burke's
+expressive language to 'the low, pimping politics of a Court,' did not
+disdain, when Prime Minister, to hurry to the King to announce the
+death of Lord Macclesfield and secure for his son, afterwards Marquis of
+Buckingham, the reversion of the Irish Tellership of the Exchequer thus
+vacated;[94] nor, a few months later, to obtain the grant of a
+lighthouse as a provision for his younger children.[95] The Tellership,
+held as it was under the unreformed conditions, was a place of vast
+emolument; it is not now easy to compute the amount.[96] Nor is it
+necessary for the purpose of this book to follow up these details.
+Cobbett reckoned from returns furnished to the House of Commons that
+this Lord Buckingham and his brother Thomas, the sons of George
+Grenville, had in half a century drawn 700,000_l._ of public money, and
+William, another brother, something like 200,000_l._ more. These
+figures, of course, are open to dispute, but they indicate at least that
+the revenues from public money of this family of sinecurists must have
+been enormous. Of English families the Grenvilles were in this
+particular line easily the first. Had all sinecurists, it may be said in
+passing, spent their money like the younger Thomas, who returned far
+more than he received by bequeathing his matchless library to the
+nation, the public conscience would have been much more tender towards
+them.
+
+Nor was it need that drove them thus to live upon the public, for the
+private wealth of the family was commanding; it was the basis of their
+power. Richard by the death of his mother was said to have become the
+richest subject in England.[97] And, as time went on, his possessions
+swelled and swelled. The estates of Bubb[98] devolved upon him.
+Heiresses brought their fortunes. There seemed no end to this
+prosperity, and it was all utilised steadily and ceaselessly to extend
+the political influence of the family.
+
+So all the brothers, even the sailor Thomas, were brought into the House
+of Commons; and, with their connections and their discipline, so long as
+this was preserved, formed a redoubtable political force. They were not
+only a brotherhood but a confraternity. What is really admirable indeed
+is the pertinacity and concentration of this strange, dogged race, and
+their devotion, indeed subjection, to their chief; they were a political
+Company of Jesus. Their objects were not exalted, but from generation to
+generation, with a patience little less than Chinese, they pursued and
+ultimately attained what they desired. They were of course unpopular,
+because their scheme was too obvious; but they knew the value of
+popularity, and attempted it with pompous and crowded entertainments.
+They were not brilliant; but in every generation they had a man of
+sufficient ability, two prime ministers among them, to further their
+cause. They built, no doubt, on inadequate foundations, but these lasted
+just long enough to enable the structure to be crowned. It is a singular
+story; there is nothing like it in the history of England; it resembles
+rather the persistent annals of the hive.
+
+The career of Pitt is concerned with only two of these Grenvilles,
+Richard and George. These two men had this at least in common, an
+amazing opinion of themselves. They were in their own estimation as good
+as or better than any one else. They resented the slightest idea of any
+disparity between themselves and Pitt. On what this prodigious estimate
+was founded we shall never know; we can only conjecture that it was the
+combination of fortune and family with some ability that made them deem
+their position at least equal to his. When Pitt had raised Britain from
+abasement to the first position in the world, when he was indisputably
+the greatest orator and the greatest power in the country, the
+Grenvilles considered themselves at the least as Pitt's equals, and him
+as only one and not the first of a triumvirate. In 1769, when Pitt was
+reconciled to them, Temple trumpeted the 'union of the three brothers'
+as the greatest fact in contemporary history. As the alliance of a man
+of genius with great parliamentary influence and powers of intrigue it
+was undoubtedly a political fact of note. But any disparity between the
+three personalities never occurs to Temple. In 1766, he writes: 'If a
+lead of superiority was claimed (on the part of Pitt) it was rejected on
+my part with an assertion of my pretensions to an equality.' And again:
+'I claimed an equality, and have no idea of yielding to him ... a
+superiority which I think it would be unbecoming in me to give.' Poor
+forgotten Temple! With such superb scorn did he reject the offer of the
+First Lordship of the Treasury, with the nomination of the
+Chancellorship of the Exchequer and the whole Board of Treasury, when
+offered by the first man in Europe. An hallucination of the same kind
+was observed in the brothers of Napoleon. But in that case it was only
+noted by cynical contemporaries, in this it was proclaimed on the
+housetops.
+
+Of Richard, the eldest, who became, as will be seen, Earl Temple, a
+competent and laborious critic has said that he was one of the 'most
+straightforward, honest, and honourable men of his age.' The age, no
+doubt, was not famous for public men of this type; but it was not so
+barren as this judgment would imply. And indeed it is difficult to
+discern the grounds on which it is based. To the ordinary student
+Temple, we imagine, will always appear a selfish and tortuous intriguer,
+who hoped to utilise his brother-in-law's genius and popularity for
+practical objects of his own. But he had other resources of a more
+questionable kind. He delighted in the subterranean and the obscure.
+'This malignant man,' says Horace Walpole with truth and point, 'worked
+in the mines of successive factions for over thirty years together.' He
+was in constant communication with Wilkes, whom he supplied with funds.
+He was an active pamphleteer. So well were his methods understood that
+he acquired the dubious honour of a candidature for the authorship of
+Junius. It is almost certain at any rate that he was one of the few
+confidants of that remarkable secret. But his wealth and strategy and
+borough power were all concentrated on selfish and personal objects. As
+head of the Grenvilles, his design was that the Grenvilles and their
+connections and all other influences that he could bring to bear should
+co-operate for the elevation of the family in the person of its chief.
+For this purpose his brother-in-law, Pitt, was a priceless asset. But
+all the family had to serve. All of them were put into the House of
+Commons; and, it may be added, into the Privy Council, except Thomas,
+the sailor, who was prematurely removed by death. George, who under Pitt
+and Temple only enjoyed subordinate office, was for a time lured from
+the family allegiance by Bute with the offer of a Secretaryship of State
+and the reversion of the headship. But George himself was eventually
+brought into line.
+
+Temple's aims were simple and material; from the first moment that we
+discern him he is pursuing them with persistent but intemperate ardour.
+Hardly was Cobham's body cold, Cobham, his uncle and benefactor, to whom
+he owed everything, when we find Temple urging that his mother, Cobham's
+sister and heiress, should be made a Countess in her own right, with
+descent, of course, to himself. Cobham died on September 13; on
+September 28 Temple applied for this title. Even Newcastle, the most
+hardened of political jobbers, was shocked at his precipitation, and
+suggested a postponement, on the ground of common decency. Temple
+brushed this objection aside with contempt. He wished the thing done at
+once, and done it was.
+
+Hardly had he thus been ennobled when we find him signalising his new
+rank by a filthy trick more suited to a barge than a court. At a
+reception in his own house, presided over by his charming and
+accomplished wife, Lord Cobham, as he was now styled, spat into the hat
+which Lord Hervey held in his hand. This feat Cobham had betted a guinea
+that he would accomplish. Hervey behaved with temper and coolness.
+Cobham took the hat and wiped it with profuse excuses, trying to pass
+the matter off as a joke; but after some days of humiliation he had to
+write an explicit apology with a recital of all his previous efforts to
+appease Hervey's resentment.[99] Such diversions, Lady Hester Stanhope
+declares, were common at Stowe. She narrates one scarcely less
+nauseous.[100]
+
+Having obtained the earldom, his next object was the Garter. George II.
+detested him, and refused the request with asperity. So Pitt had to be
+brought in. Pitt was then all-powerful, for this was the autumn of 1759.
+He wrote a note full of sombre menace to Newcastle, and demanded the
+Garter for Temple as a reward for his own services; but still the King
+refused. Then the last reserves were brought into play. Temple resigned
+the Privy Seal on the ground that the Garter was denied. Pitt had at the
+same time a peremptory interview with Newcastle. The King had to yield,
+but could not repress his anger. He threw the ribbon to Temple as a bone
+is thrown to a dog. But delicacy, as we have seen, did not trouble
+Temple in matters of substance, and he was satisfied.
+
+Having obtained these two objects of ambition, he now played for a
+dukedom. This ambition, suspected presumably in Cobham, had been the
+subject of epigram so early as 1742.[101] It was avowed, according to
+Walpole, in 1767, and, indeed, no other explanation seems adapted to his
+various proceedings at critical junctures. Thus, when in June 1765,
+George III. and his uncle Cumberland tried to form a Pitt ministry, but
+found that an absolute condition of such a ministry was that Temple
+should be First Lord of the Treasury, Temple refused on various flimsy
+pretexts. When these were surmounted, he declared that 'he had tender
+and delicate reasons' which he did not explain to the King, or,
+apparently, to Pitt.[102] That this unwonted delicacy and tenderness
+were concentrated on the superior coronet appears from the negotiation
+carried on by Horace Walpole in 1767, when Lord Hertford assured him of
+the fact that Lord Temple's ambition was now a dukedom.[103] It is not
+doubtful that this had now become the central preoccupation of his life,
+and the hereditary object of the family combination. At first sight it
+would seem improbable that Pitt was aware of it, for the simple reason
+that he would probably have made efforts to obtain it from the King. On
+the other hand, it is unlikely that Temple, in the affair of the Garter,
+having found the inestimable value of Pitt's pressure on George II.,
+could have foregone the effort to exercise it on George III. On the
+whole, the most plausible conjecture appears to be that Pitt was
+unsuccessfully sounded by his brother-in-law. All that we know is, that
+when Pitt finally determined to undertake the ministry without Temple,
+they had a heated interview, which seems to have left deep marks on
+Pitt's nerves and health, but whether it turned on Temple's particular
+ambition or not can now only be matter for surmise.
+
+The death of Temple made no difference to the family ambition. His
+nephew made violent, even frantic, but ineffectual efforts to obtain the
+title through Chatham's son. Nor were other means of aggrandisement
+neglected. By marriage there accrued the fortunes of Chambers, Nugent,
+Chandos, and, by some other way, that of Dodington. Acre was added to
+acre and estate to estate, often by the dangerous expedient of borrowed
+money, until Buckinghamshire seemed likely to become the appanage of the
+family. Borough influence was laboriously accumulated and maintained.
+Nor were nobler possessions disdained. Rare books and manuscripts,
+choice pictures, and sumptuous furniture were added by successive
+generations to the splendid collections of Stowe. Finally, in the reign
+of George IV., and in the time of Temple's great-nephew, the object was
+attained. Lord Liverpool acquired the support of the Grenville
+parliamentary influence by an almost commercial compact, Louis XVIII.
+added his instances, and Buckingham became a duke. From that moment the
+star of the family visibly paled. Eight years afterwards the duke had to
+shut up Stowe, and go abroad. Less than twenty years from then the
+palace was dismantled, its treasures were dispersed, the vast estates
+sold, and the glories of the House, built up with so much care and
+persistence, vanished like a snow-wreath.
+
+But all this is beyond our narrative. At this time all these ambitions
+are concealed, there is nothing visible but cordiality, the genial flow
+of soul, and brotherly love. Pitt's early letters to George Grenville
+are among the easiest and most human that he ever wrote: he wrote
+nothing more unaffectedly tender than two letters he sent in September
+and October 1742, to George, then abroad for his health. Richard and
+George Grenville, Lyttelton and William Pitt, with their set, form one
+of those engaging companionships of youth, when high spirits, warm
+affections, and the dayspring of life combine to animate a friendship
+without guile or suspicion.
+
+Then come separation, marriage, new interests, new ambitions, and the
+paths diverge, perhaps till sunset. So it was with these young men. They
+all at times quarrelled, even the kindly Lyttelton was driven to
+separation. Later, again, they all came together again in some fashion
+or another, with the exception, perhaps, of George, whose obstinate
+self-love when wounded could never be healed.
+
+But now all was dawn and blossom and smiles. The friends are full of
+banter. Their politics are half a frolic. Life is all before them. Its
+conditions will harden them presently, and they will wrangle and snarl,
+and have their quarrels and huffs. But that is not yet; not even a
+coming shadow is visible. Still, even now, it is necessary to indicate
+the nature and consequences of Pitt's absorption into the cousinhood.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+It is here that his public career begins. His lot was cast in stirring
+times. For the year of his entry into Parliament was the fourteenth of
+Walpole's long administration, and it was not difficult to see menacing
+cracks in the structure. The Minister himself seems to have been aware
+that his position was critical; and at the general election in the
+previous year he had spared no exertions to secure a majority. In his
+own county of Norfolk, 10,000_l._ had been spent in support of his
+candidates without averting their defeat: from his own private means he
+is said, no doubt with gross exaggeration, to have expended no less than
+60,000_l._ Figures like these, however swollen by rumour, denote the
+intensity of the struggle. But in spite of all, his losses were
+considerable. Even Scotland, in those days the hungry dependant of all
+Governments, was shaken in her allegiance. And, though he gained the
+victory, the toughness of the contest betokened clearly that his
+stability was seriously impaired, and that the country was weary of his
+domination.
+
+For this there were many obvious causes. One, of course, was the
+universal unpopularity of the Excise scheme. It was also one of the
+moments in our history when the country is uneasily conscious of
+weakness and possible humiliation abroad, and when the silent and
+passive interests of peace weigh lightly in the balance against the
+smarting burden of wounded self-respect. But the most operative cause
+lay in Walpole himself.
+
+There is no enigma about Walpole. He sprang from near a score of
+generations of Norfolk squires who had spent six hundred years in
+healthy obscurity and the simple pleasures of the country. None of them
+apparently had brains, or the need of them. From these he inherited a
+frame hardy and robust, and that taste for the sports of the field that
+never left him. He had also the advantage of being brought up as a
+younger son to work, and thus he gained that self-reliant and
+pertinacious industry which served him so well through long years of
+high office. From the beginning to the end he was primarily a man of
+business. Had he not been a politician it cannot be doubted that he
+would have been a great merchant or a great financier. And, though his
+lot was cast in politics, a man of business he essentially remained.
+This is not to say that he was not a consummate parliamentary debater,
+for that he must have been. But it is to suggest that the key to
+Walpole's character as Prime Minister lies in his instincts and
+qualifications as a man of business. His main tendency was not, as with
+Chesterfield and Carteret and Bolingbroke, towards high statesmanship.
+His first object was to carry on the business of the country in a
+business spirit, as economically and as peacefully as possible. His
+chief preoccupation apart from this was the keeping out of the rival
+house of Stuart, which would not have employed the firm of Walpole and
+the Whigs to keep their accounts. It is quite possible that as a patriot
+he may have also dreaded the probable evils of the Stuart dynasty. But
+the first reason is amply sufficient. The corruption of which he was
+undoubtedly guilty, but of which he was by no means the inventor, he
+perhaps considered as the commission due to customers; or else he may
+have argued, 'these men have to be bought by somebody, let us do it in a
+business-like way.' His merciless crushing of any rivals was simply the
+big firm crushing competition, a familiar feature of commerce. His
+carrying on a war against Spain in spite of his own conscientious
+disapproval can only be satisfactorily explained on the same hypothesis.
+The nation would have war: well, if it must, he could carry it on more
+cheaply, and limit its mischief more effectually than any other
+contractor. Moreover, Walpole had all along been the merchants' man. He
+had given them peace and wealth. Now for commercial purposes they wanted
+war and he had to gratify them. They had been the main backers of his
+administration, the deprivation of their support would have left him
+bare; so when they turned round he had to follow, with scarcely the
+appearance of leadership.
+
+In these days we should undoubtedly condemn any statesman who declared a
+war of which he disapproved. Lord Aberdeen morbidly and unjustly accused
+himself of this offence, and refused to be comforted. That is the other
+extreme to Walpole's position. But we must remember the political
+morality of those times. Was there then living a statesman who would
+have acted differently? From this sweeping question we cannot except
+Pitt, who was bitterly denouncing Walpole for his pacific attitude, and
+had afterwards to confess that Walpole had been right.
+
+We regard Walpole, then, first and foremost as a man of business, led
+into the great error with which history reproaches him by his brother
+men of business. Still, his qualities in that capacity would not have
+maintained him for years as Prime Minister. They proved him to be a
+hard-working man with practical knowledge of affairs and strong common
+sense; a sagacious man who hated extremes. He had besides the highest
+qualities of a parliamentary leader. Of imagination, unless it may be
+inferred from his palace and picture gallery, he seems to have been
+totally destitute. But he had dauntless courage and imperturbable
+temper.
+
+To his courage George II., who was not profuse of praise, gave ardent
+testimony. 'He is a brave fellow,' he would cry out vehemently, with a
+flush and an oath, 'he has more spirit than any man I ever knew;' a
+compliment ill-requited by Sir Robert, who declared that his master, if
+he knew anything of him, was, 'with all his personal bravery, as great a
+political coward as ever wore a crown.' Early in his career as Prime
+Minister Sir Robert, who had the art, rare among eighteenth century
+politicians, of inditing pointed and pregnant letters, had written to an
+Irish Viceroy: 'I have weathered great storms before now, and shall not
+be lost in an Irish hurricane.'[104] This was no vain boast; it was the
+spirit in which he habitually conducted affairs. In truth Walpole's
+courage stands in no need of witness, it speaks for itself; his very
+defects arose from it or prove it. His jealousy of ability which
+deprived him of precious allies and compelled him to fight
+single-handed, his intolerance of independence in his party which had
+the same effect, all show the dauntless self-confidence of the man. He
+wanted no competitors, no dubious allies, no assistance but that of
+unflagging votes or diligent service; for all else he relied on himself
+alone.
+
+This great Minister had all the defects of his qualities as well as one
+which seemed curiously alien to them. Part of his strength lay in a
+coarse and burly, if cynical, geniality. His temper, as we have said,
+was imperturbable; we shall see this even in the closing scene of his
+ministry; it was even cordial, and sometimes boisterous. He loved to
+seem rather a country gentleman than a statesman. He seemed most natural
+when shooting and carousing at Houghton, or carousing and hunting at
+Richmond. But his appearance was deceptive; he was what the French would
+call 'un faux bonhomme,' a spurious good fellow. Good nature perhaps
+could hardly have survived the desperate battles and intrigues in which
+this hard-bitten old statesman had been engaged all his life. And so
+under this bluff and debonair exterior there was concealed a jealousy of
+power, passing the jealousy of woman, and the ruthless vindictiveness of
+a Red Indian. To the opposition of his political foes he opposed a stout
+and unflinching front which shielded a gang of mediocrities; with these
+enemies he fought a battle in which quarter was neither granted nor
+expected. But his own forces were kept under martial law; anything like
+opposition or rivalry within his ranks he crushed in the relentless
+spirit of Peter the Great. By these methods he had not merely maintained
+an iron discipline among his own supporters, but had himself constructed
+by alienation and proscription the opposition to his administration, an
+opposition which comprised consummate abilities and undying
+resentments. For he had driven from him and united in a league of
+implacable revenge almost all the men of power and leading in
+Parliament. Politics to them were embodied in one controlling idea; how
+to compass the fall, the ruin, the impeachment of Walpole. The undaunted
+Minister faced them with confident serenity, though they were not
+enemies to be disdained. Pulteney, Wyndham, Chesterfield, and Carteret
+were men of the highest ability and distinction. Barnard and Polwarth,
+Shippen and Sandys, were from character or intellect scarcely less
+redoubtable. Behind them lurked Bolingbroke, excluded, indeed, from
+Parliament by the vigilant detestation of Walpole, but guiding and
+inspiring from his enforced retirement, the seer and oracle of all the
+Minister's enemies, for--
+
+ 'Princely counsel in his face yet shone,
+ Majestic, though in ruin.'
+
+Prominent among these stately combatants was an anomalous figure with a
+brain as shallow and futile as St. John's was active and brilliant, but
+by the nature of things as formidable as Bolingbroke was impotent,
+Frederick Prince of Wales. For Frederick was soon to add to the second
+position in the country the leadership of the Opposition. The King's
+health was supposed to be precarious, though he lived cheerfully and not
+ingloriously for another quarter of a century. And the Heir Apparent,
+feeling conscious of his advantages, and determined to assert himself,
+became the complacent puppet of all the factions opposed to his father's
+Government. His Court, indeed, resembled that famous cave to which were
+gathered every one that was discontented and every one that was in
+distress. All who had been spurned or ousted by Walpole, all who were
+under the displeasure of the King, all who saw little prospect of
+advancement under the present reign, hastened to rally round the Heir
+Apparent. He was soon to employ Pitt about his person. It is well, then,
+to pause a moment and consider this prominent and formidable figure.
+
+Frederick, Prince of Wales, is one of the idle mysteries of English
+history. The problem does not lie in his being a political leader, in
+spite of the general contempt in which he was held by his contemporaries
+and associates; for an heir-apparent to the Crown can always, if he
+chooses, be a factor in party politics, though it is scarcely possible
+that his intervention can be beneficial. But no circumstance known to us
+can explain the virulence of aversion with which the King and Queen
+regarded him, which was so intense as to be almost incredible. They were
+both good haters, and yet they hated no one half so much as their eldest
+son. His father called him the greatest beast and liar and scoundrel in
+existence. His mother and his sister wished hourly to hear of his death.
+This violence of unnatural loathing is not to be accounted for by any
+known facts. Frederick was a poor creature, no doubt, a vain and fatuous
+coxcomb. But human beings are constantly the parents of coxcombs without
+regarding them as vermin. The only conjecture in regard to the matter
+which seems to furnish adequate ground for these feelings is that the
+King was bred in the narrow school of a little German State, where,
+though nothing less than affection was expected between a prince and his
+heir, discipline was rigidly observed; so that the conduct of Frederick,
+in assuming a position independent and defiant of his father, and in
+openly heading an opposition to his Government, was an offence the more
+unspeakable and unpardonable as it had been absolutely beyond the limits
+of Hanoverian contemplation. There was, it must be confessed, an
+hereditary predisposition to this parental relation. The King himself,
+when Prince of Wales, had been placed under arrest by his father for the
+somewhat venial offence of insulting the Duke of Newcastle. He had
+submitted himself to his disgrace, and his opposition had only been
+passive and inarticulate; he had never dreamed of forming a faction
+hostile to the Crown. His only real crimes had been his right of
+succession and a fictitious popularity founded on dislike of his
+father's mistresses. And yet his father hated him almost as much as
+father ever hated son. It was reserved for George II. to discover a
+deeper abhorrence for his own heir. With his views of absolute
+authority, a peculiar degree of detestation had to be discovered for a
+Prince of Wales who had not merely the inherent vice of heirship
+apparent but the gratuitous offence of an active opposition which his
+father deemed flagrant rebellion. Given violent temper, ill manners, and
+a sort of family tradition, the cause of wrath can best be thus
+explained.
+
+Beyond this we know nothing for certain, and presumably shall never know
+more. There are some facts, but they are insufficient.
+
+It is said that as a mere boy he gamed and drank and kept a mistress. By
+this last scandal the royal family was enabled to present to the world
+the unedifying spectacle of grandfather, father, and son simultaneously
+living under these immoral conditions; and all three, it is said,
+successively with the same woman. But these facts alone would certainly
+not have accounted for his father's displeasure. Again, it is narrated
+that when his tutor complained of him his mother said that these were
+page's tricks. 'Would to God they were, madam,' replied the tutor, 'but
+they are rather the tricks of lackeys and knaves.' And tricky Frederick
+undoubtedly was from the beginning to the end. But trickiness, though it
+was not among the King's faults, and though it would excite his just
+contempt, cannot alone have caused the intensity of his hatred.
+
+One if not two of Frederick's escapades were concerned with designs of
+marriage. He was discovered on the point of concluding a secret alliance
+with Princess Wilhelmine of Prussia, with whom he professed himself in
+love, and who afterwards became known to us as Margravine of Bareith; on
+another occasion it is said that he was lured by a dowry of 100,000_l._
+into a betrothal with Lady Diana Spencer, grand-daughter of Sarah,
+Duchess of Marlborough. Both these affairs were interrupted at the last
+moment. In both cases the King was irritated by the underhand
+proceedings of his son, and by the total lack of a confidence which, as
+he probably omitted to remember, he had done nothing to gain. But his
+crowning outrage was a monkey-trick, both wanton and barbarous. When he
+had at last married a princess of his father's choice, and his wife was
+seized with the first pangs of maternity in the King's palace of Hampton
+Court, he hurried her off, in her agony and in spite of her entreaties,
+to St. James's. At any moment of the journey a catastrophe might have
+occurred. What the motive was for this cruel and unmeaning escapade
+cannot be guessed, for his own explanations were futile. It was said
+that his father suspected him of an intention to foist a spurious child
+on his family and that he resented the suspicion. If that were so his
+action was exactly suited to confirm it. Whatever his purpose may have
+been, the King and Queen, from whom the imminence of the Princess's
+situation had been carefully concealed, were naturally and grossly
+insulted. The King banished him from his palace and presence, and
+forbade the Court to all who should visit him. Nor was there ever an
+approach to reconciliation or forgiveness in the fourteen years that the
+Prince had yet to live. The King would receive him at Court and would
+express the hope that his wife was in good health; that was the extent
+of their relations. But though this was the culminating point of his
+known misconduct, it would almost seem that there was some more occult
+reason which we do not know. We only guess at its existence from the
+record of Lord Hardwicke. At the time of this last scandal 'Sir Robert
+Walpole,' says the Chancellor, 'informed me of certain passages between
+the King and himself, and between the King and the Prince, of too high
+and secret a nature even to be trusted to this narrative; but from
+thence I found great reason to think that this unhappy difference
+between the King and Queen and His Royal Highness turned upon some
+points of a more interesting and important nature than have hitherto
+appeared.'[105] There, then, is the mystery, without a key, with no room
+even for conjecture. But the cause must have been dire that evoked so
+deadly a passion of hatred between parents and son.
+
+Those who care to read in detail the coarse and violent expressions of
+this unnatural repulsion may glut their appetite in Lord Hervey's
+memoirs. One or two such passages will serve as specimens of the rest.
+The Queen and Princess Caroline, Frederick's sister, made no ceremony of
+wishing a hundred times a day that the Prince might drop down dead of an
+apoplexy. Princess Caroline, who, Hervey tells us, 'had affability
+without meanness, dignity without pride, cheerfulness without levity,
+and prudence without falsehood,' who was in a word an exemplary and
+charming person, declared that she grudged him every hour he had to
+breathe, and reproached Hervey with being 'so great a dupe as to believe
+the nauseous beast' (those were her words) 'cared for anything but his
+own nauseous self, that he loved anything but money, that he was not the
+greatest liar that ever spoke.' The Queen, not to be outdone, declared
+that she would give it under her hand 'that my dear firstborn is the
+greatest ass, and the greatest liar, and the greatest canaille, and the
+greatest beast in the whole world, and that I most heartily wish he was
+out of it.'[106] Even on her deathbed she could not be brought to
+receive or forgive him. If Lord Hervey, his bitter enemy, can be
+credited, this obduracy was not at the last without justification. Lord
+Hervey declares that the Prince crowded the Queen's anteroom with his
+emissaries to convey to him the earliest information of her condition.
+As the bulletins of the Queen's decline reached him, he would say,
+'Well, now we shall have some good news; she cannot hold out much
+longer.' All this need not be literally believed, but it affords a
+picture of family rancour which can scarcely have been equalled in the
+history of mankind.
+
+From the time of the public quarrel with his parents the Prince of Wales
+gave himself up to political opposition. He wielded, indeed, formidable
+weapons of offence. His father was avaricious, secluded, and disliked;
+Frederick laid himself out to be thought generous, accessible, and
+popular. He knew well that every symptom of national affection for
+himself was a stab to the King. He and his family, at a time when French
+fashions were all the rage, ostentatiously wore none but English goods.
+He trained his children to act Addison's Cato. Nor did he disdain more
+social arts. He would go to fairs, bull-baitings, races, and rowing
+matches; he would visit gipsy encampments; he became familiar to the
+people. He would assist at a fire in London, amid shouts from the mob,
+as he and his court alleged, of 'Crown him! crown him!' At Epsom there
+is a tradition that when living there he fought a chimney-sweep with his
+fists, and erected a monument in generous acknowledgment of his own
+defeat.
+
+In private life he was essentially frivolous. When his father's troops
+were besieging Carlisle, the Prince had a model of the citadel made in
+confectionery, while he and the ladies of the court bombarded it with
+sugar-plums. This seems emblematic of his whole career.
+
+But his main and favourite diversion had a graver aspect: it lay in
+political cabals of which he was the puppet and the figurehead, and in
+forming futile ministries and policies for his own reign. Of these last
+a curious example is preserved among the Bedford Papers.[107]
+
+All political malcontents of the slightest importance were sure of a
+cordial reception at Leicester House or Kew. There all could warm their
+wants and disappointments with the sunshine of royal patronage and the
+cheering prospect of a new reign. 'Remember that the King is sixty-one,
+and I am thirty-seven,'[108] said Frederick, and this calculation
+coloured his whole life. The future was freely discounted and
+anticipated in the Prince's circle, so that there, as in the Court of
+the Pretender, the faithful adherent might receive some high office to
+be enjoyed after the death of the King, but with this substantial
+difference: that whereas what James distributed were shadows, the awards
+of Frederick required only common good faith and the death of an old man
+to make them realities. Bubb for example, the most avid and unabashed of
+political harlots, gravely kissed his patron's hand for a Secretaryship
+of State, and, according to Walpole, a dukedom, immediately afterwards
+nominating his under-secretary, to show the solidity of the arrangement.
+Henley, who was afterwards under different circumstances to be
+Chancellor, was grievously disappointed to find that Dr. Lee was to have
+the seals. And so they snapped and snarled over the spoils, while the
+Prince complacently made his appointments, and apportioned the functions
+of the future. So far as he was concerned it was all barren enough. His
+little projects, his little ambitions, his little ministries, his
+political post-obits, were all cut short by the sudden shears of Death.
+His councillors and followers were scattered to the winds, and Bubb had
+to hasten to make his peace with the powers that be, and to exchange his
+contingent Secretaryship of State for an actual Treasurership of the
+Navy. The Prince's other post-obits, his debts, were, it would seem,
+never paid.[109]
+
+To sum up, with regard to Frederick we have a few certain facts: the
+hatred of his parents and sisters, and a singular unanimity of scorn
+from his contemporaries. There is not perhaps in existence a single
+favourable testimony. We have many portraits, one at Windsor of an
+innocent lad in a red coat playing the violoncello with his sisters,
+which is pleasant enough; the later ones all stamped with a pretentious
+silliness which affirms the verdict of his own day. Then we have the
+mysterious intimation of Lord Hardwicke of some deep and sinister cause
+for the alienation of his parents. This, however, unsupported and
+unexplained, carries us no further, and is merely an excuse for the
+unnatural aversion of his family. Beyond that mystery, the word
+'fatuous' seems exactly to embody all that we know of this prince; his
+appearance, morals, manners, and intellect are all summed up in that
+single expression.
+
+On the other hand, there are traits of generosity which are recorded,
+there is his apparent popularity, there is the general grief for his
+death; but it may well be surmised that it was not difficult for the son
+of George II. and the grandson of George I. to be popular and regretted.
+On the whole, may we not conclude that the arbitrary discipline of
+Hanover in early life made him incurably tricky and untruthful, that he
+was an empty and frivolous coxcomb, but not without kindly instincts;
+and that his weaknesses and frailties, whatever they may have been, laid
+a grave responsibility on the parents who reared and cursed him?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+During his first session of Parliament, Pitt never opened his mouth:
+indeed, his only public performance was to tell in a division. In 1736
+he became better known. He supported an address of congratulation to the
+Crown on the marriage of the Prince of Wales. This formal and
+complimentary speech has been absurdly scrutinised because of the
+speaker's subsequent fame, and much has been read into it which no
+impartial reader can now discern. A notorious eulogy describes it as
+superior even to the models of ancient eloquence. Others read into it
+piercing innuendoes and vitriolic sarcasm. All this was discovered, long
+after its delivery, by the light of Pitt's later achievements. It is
+said that George II. never forgave it. But George II.'s hatred of Pitt
+is more easily accounted for by other offences. It is rumoured that
+Walpole shuddered when he heard it, and said, 'We must muzzle that
+terrible cornet of horse.' The ordinary reader sees in the reported
+speech nothing which would provoke admiration or alarm in anybody were
+it attributed to any one who had remained obscure. But the report,
+though elaborate, was probably inaccurate; the speech may have been more
+vicious than appears; it must, at any rate, have been something very
+different from smooth platitudes on a royal marriage that would have
+made Walpole tremble, if indeed Walpole was liable to any such emotion.
+The truth, no doubt, is that the graces of voice, person, and delivery
+marvellously embellished this maiden effort, and produced a striking
+effect on the audience.
+
+But, whatever its intrinsic merits, the success of this speech was
+immeasurably enhanced, if not altogether secured, by Walpole's action.
+It may indeed be said to have been made famous by the penalty which
+followed it rather than by its own merits. He deprived the young orator
+and cornet of his commission.
+
+ 'The servile standard from the freeborn hand
+ He took, and bade thee lead the patriot band,'
+
+sang Lyttelton to Pitt.
+
+It was a vindictive act which seems alien to Walpole's boisterous good
+humour, but of a kind to which Walpole's arbitrary notions of political
+discipline made him singularly prone. So petty an act of vengeance
+wreaked on so young and subordinate an officer by a powerful Prime
+Minister seems incredible in our larger or laxer days. But it was
+perhaps the very slightness of Pitt's position which was an inducement
+to Walpole. He was determined, it may be, that the whole army, from the
+highest to the lowest, should feel the weight of his hand. The disgrace
+of political generals seemed just and proper, it was cutting off the
+heads of the tallest poppies, a proceeding recognised and respectable
+since the days of Tarquin. These penalties had left the mass of the army
+unmoved, not impossibly because the removal of chiefs means the
+promotion of subordinates. So Walpole may have resolved that all in the
+service of the Crown should feel that revolt against the minister of the
+Crown was a flagrant crime. Generals had been punished, and so all
+officers from the highest, to the lowest should be liable to the same
+pains and penalties; nay private soldiers, were their lot enviable,
+might suffer the same deprivation. 'The King,' wrote Lady Irwin, a lady
+of the Prince of Wales' household, to her brother, Lord Carlisle, 'two
+days ago turned out Mr. Pitt from a cornetcy for having voted and spoke
+in Parliament contrary to his approbation. He is a young man of no
+fortune, a very pretty speaker, one the Prince is particular to, and
+under the tuition of my Lord Cobham. The Army is all alarmed at this,
+and 'tis said it will hurt the King more than his removing my Lord
+Stairs and Lord Cobham, since it is making the whole army dependent, by
+descending to resent a vote from the lowest commission, which may
+occasion a representation in parliament to prevent all officers of the
+army from sitting there.'[110]
+
+It may, however, have been that Pitt's dismissal was due not to his
+obscurity but to an exactly opposite consideration.
+
+Pitt's nephew, Lord Camelford, asserts as an undoubted fact that the
+reputation both of Pitt and of Lyttelton was so considerable before they
+entered Parliament, and their political tendencies so notorious, that
+Walpole made considerable offers to Thomas Pitt on condition that he did
+not brings them in for any of his boroughs. 'William's early abilities,'
+writes Lord Camelford, 'induc'd Sir Robert Walpole to offer my father
+(Thomas Pitt) any terms not to bring him or his brother-in-law Mr.
+Lyttelton into Parliament,' but 'my father preferred their interests to
+his own, and laid the foundations, at his own expense, for all his
+brother's future fame and greatness.' It is a tradition that Canning,
+when in office, kept his eye on promising lads at Eton who might make
+eligible followers. One would not, however, have imagined that Walpole
+was so much in touch with the rising youth of the country. But if
+Camelford may be credited, and there seems no reason to doubt him,
+Walpole was prejudiced and on his guard against Pitt before Pitt opened
+his mouth; and he may have been hurried into a petulant act by previous
+friction unconnected with the speech, which may, moreover, have
+contained irritating innuendoes directed against Walpole, which Walpole
+alone understood.
+
+The Minister had not been so foolish as to alienate without trying to
+secure, and his failure may have exasperated him the more. In later
+years Pitt told Shelburne that Sir Robert had offered him the troop
+which was afterwards given to Conway, so that had he remained in the
+army he would have stood high by seniority alone. This offer, we may
+conjecture, was just previous to the overtures to Thomas Pitt. Walpole,
+hearing reports of the young officer's conspicuous abilities and of his
+hostility to the Government, would try and fix his ambitions in the
+army. Failing that, he would try and exclude him from Parliament. And
+failing all pacific overtures, he would try different methods. It is
+possible, and even probable, that expressions passed during the
+negotiations which left a sting. But it now seems clear that no young
+private member, without means or influence, ever caused such active
+disquietude.
+
+There is yet another, and, perhaps, a simpler reason. Pitt, as we have
+seen, had become identified with the fortunes and party of Cobham, who
+was Walpole's bitter enemy. Conciliation having been found futile, the
+Minister determined that the young soldier should suffer the same
+penalty as the old general. The old gamecock had lost his spurs, so
+should the young cockerel. If Pitt were so devoted to Cobham, he should
+have the gratification of sharing Cobham's martyrdom. Cobham had lost
+his regiment; Pitt should lose his commission. In striking Pitt he would
+also wound Cobham. So the removal was carried out in a spirit of
+pettiness which was criticised at the time, and seems incredible to
+posterity. 'At the end of the session,' says Hervey, 'Cornet Pitt was
+broke for this, which was a measure at least ill-timed if not
+ill-taken;' which he explained by saying that if done at all it should
+have been done immediately on his speech. Hervey, though an ardent
+Walpolian, evidently thought the whole proceeding was disproportionate
+to the offender and the offence. But the result of the intended disgrace
+was, we are told, immediate popularity. Pitt after his dismissal drove
+about the country in a one-horse chaise without a servant, and
+everywhere the people gathered round him with enthusiasm.[111]
+
+Pitt took the matter philosophically. 'I should not be a little vain,'
+he writes, 'to be the object of the hatred of a minister, hated even by
+those who call themselves his friends.'[112] But to his slender means
+the loss of his pay was not unimportant, and this fact perhaps explains
+his accepting an office ill-suited to his temperament. In September
+1737, the Prince of Wales, in consequence of his crazy and insolent
+conduct at the time of his wife's confinement, was ordered to leave St.
+James' Palace. He retired first to Kew, and then to Norfolk House in
+St. James' Square, which thus became the birthplace of George III. The
+King's displeasure also caused some resignations in the Prince's
+household; and, smarting under this disgrace, Frederick found it no
+doubt agreeable to take advantage of these vacancies to attach to his
+household two active young members of the Opposition, whose appointment
+would be profoundly distasteful to his father. Few could be more
+repugnant to the King than Pitt, the ex-cornet, and Lyttelton his
+seconder. Moreover, Pitt was already intimate and influential with the
+Prince.[113] So Lyttelton became private secretary to Frederick, and
+Pitt a groom of his bedchamber. These appointments would, in the
+ordinary course, be submitted for the sanction of the King, but the
+alienation between father and son was so acute that it is probable that
+no communication was made. Pitt held this post for seven years,
+resigning it in 1744; and the salary was no doubt of sensible assistance
+to his meagre income during this period.
+
+Pitt's second speech (in 1737) was also on the Prince of Wales's
+affairs. George II., who lost no opportunity of displaying publicly his
+hatred to his son, and who as Prince of Wales had received a fixed
+income of 100,000_l._ a year, gave the Prince on his marriage an
+allowance at pleasure of 50,000_l._ The Prince, who owed his father but
+scant duty and affection, was persuaded by his advisers to apply to
+Parliament for the same annuity that his father, when in his situation,
+had received. This proceeding violently incensed the King; but he was
+induced to send an official message to his son, promising to convert
+the present voluntary allowance into a fixed income, and to settle some
+provision on the Princess. The Prince replied that the matter was now
+out of his hands. The offer, in effect, was not particularly alluring,
+as the allowance could never have been withdrawn, and a settlement on
+the Princess ought to have been made at the time of her marriage. It is
+indeed difficult, given the circumstances, to blame Frederick's unfilial
+conduct in this matter. He had a colourable claim to an income double
+that which was given him by the King; the King had ampler means of
+paying it than had been possessed by George I.; and the Prince had
+nothing to hope from the unconstrained bounty of his father; he was
+indeed under his father's ban. So the motion was brought before the
+House, and Pitt made a speech, which Thackeray, his insipid biographer,
+declares to have been most masterly, but which is nowhere preserved. We
+know nothing of it, but it is safe to presume that it was a good speech.
+These efforts and his household appointment made him a prominent figure
+in the Prince's party. He was beginning to be talked about. He had been
+sneered at by the Government paper, the 'Gazetteer,' and defended by
+Bolingbroke's organ, the 'Craftsman.' This seems the first glimmering of
+his note, and is therefore worthy of remark. Nothing is so difficult as
+to trace in a biography the several degrees by which eminence has been
+reached; seldom are the slow degrees of the ladder recorded. Here it is
+at least possible to mark the first and second steps. The first event,
+that brought Pitt into notice was the deprivation of his commission: the
+second indication of his growing power is apparent in the laboured
+sneers of the 'Gazetteer' at the young man's long neck and slender body,
+for it would not have been worth while to direct these gibes against
+one who was not formidable.
+
+Pitt's next speech was less successful. It was in support of a reduction
+of the standing army from 17,400 to 12,000. The contention seems almost
+incredible when it is considered that Pitt and his party were calling on
+the ministry to avenge the ill-treatment of British subjects by Spain.
+But, however inconsistent, it was probably deemed a popular move.
+Jealousy and dislike of standing armies was still strong among the
+people. Lord Hervey had told the Queen in 1735, 'that there was
+certainly nothing so odious to men of all ranks and classes in this
+country as troops,' and that 'as a standing army was the thing in the
+world that was most disliked in this country, so the reduction of any
+part of it was a measure that always made any prince more popular than
+any other he could take.'[114] Walpole had then maintained that the army
+should never be reduced below 18,000 men in view of the constant menace
+of the disputed succession, the turbulent character of the nation, and
+the necessity of a strong position in foreign affairs.[115] In this
+debate of 1738 he took much the same line. This sane view, as it was the
+policy of the Minister, was furiously combated by the young bloods of
+the Opposition. Lyttelton did not shrink from using the childish
+argument that a standing army weakened us abroad, as it made foreign
+governments believe that there must be violent dissensions in the
+country which it was kept to control. A taunt had in the course of
+debate been levelled at placemen; and Pitt, as a member of the Prince's
+household, vindicated the independence of officials, directing as he
+passed a shaft at the three hundred thick or thin supporters of the
+Government who were always so singularly unanimous on all political
+questions. The army, he said, was the chief cause of the national
+discontents, and yet these discontents were alleged as the chief cause
+for maintaining the army. Then he made the criticism so familiar to
+English public men even now, that the army cost three times as much
+proportionally to its size as the armies of France and Germany. On the
+question of disbanding troops, he took a strangely unsympathetic line.
+The officers would be put on half-pay, which was as high as full-pay
+elsewhere. And as for the private soldiers, 'I must think,' he said,
+'they have no claim for any greater reward than the pay they have
+already received, nor should I think we were guilty of the least
+ingratitude if they were all turned adrift to-morrow morning.'[116]
+Pitt, it was obvious, had some distance to compass before he should
+become a popular leader. That he should have pressed at all for the
+reduction of the small standing army in the midst of an irresistible
+clamour for war is another proof of the heedless rhetoric of ambitious
+youth.
+
+While the young patriots were thus endeavouring to reduce the army, war
+was brewing with Spain. Our traders were constantly encroaching on her
+rights and monopolies in the New World. There was a perpetual smuggling
+invasion of the Spanish settlements in America on the part of the
+British, and a rigorous defence by right of search on the part of the
+Spaniards. There can be little doubt that the British merchants were in
+the wrong. But trade has neither conscience nor bowels, and monopolies
+of commerce are the fair quarry of the freebooting merchant. The
+Spaniards, on their side, were not delicate or merciful in exercising
+their undoubted right of search; so our countrymen, to conceal their own
+infractions of treaty and to stir up hostility to Spain, spared no
+methods or exertions to rouse popular indignation against their enemies.
+Little less than the tortures of the Inquisition were alleged. 'Seventy
+of our brave sailors are now in chains in Spain! our countrymen in
+chains and slaves to the Spaniards!' exclaimed an enthusiastic alderman:
+'is not this enough to fire the coldest?'[117] The notorious Jenkins now
+appeared on the scene with an ear in cotton-wool, which he alleged to
+have been torn from his head by a Spaniard, with an intimation that the
+mutilator would gladly serve our King in the same way. Alderman
+Beckford, who brought Jenkins forward, afterwards declared that if any
+member had lifted up Jenkins's wig, he would have found both ears whole
+and complete.[118] Others averred that though he had lost his ear, he
+had lost it in the pillory.
+
+The Spaniards, not to be outdone, recorded the sufferings of two of
+their nobles, who, captured by our British filibusters, had been
+compelled to devour their own noses.[119] It was alleged, too, that
+English pirates swarmed, and that Spaniards were publicly sold as slaves
+in British colonies.[120] But these allegations, though probably neither
+more nor less veracious than the others, had no currency in England,
+while the story of the suffering Jenkins ran through England like
+wildfire. A bombastic utterance was coined for him by some political
+Tadpole, and rang through the land. None cared to inquire into the right
+or the wrong of the imprisonments, or to investigate the other side of
+the question, and there were none to present it if they did. 'Britons in
+Spanish prisons' was a sufficient cry, and swept the nation off its
+feet. Walpole, always too contemptuous of popular passion, had presented
+to Parliament a convention with Spain, which regulated most of the
+points at issue between them, except that which lay nearest the heart of
+his people, the right of search; and his brother Horace moved, in a long
+and laudatory speech, an address of thanks to the Crown for this
+agreement. This roused the Prince's young men. Lyttelton, indeed, spoke
+ostentatiously as the Prince's mouthpiece. 'I know who hears me,' he
+said, alluding to his master's presence in the gallery, 'and for that
+reason I speak,'[121] Pitt and Grenville also spoke, and they are
+described in a contemporary account as 'three or four young gentlemen
+who took great personal liberties.' Another letter says that Pitt 'spoke
+very well, but very abusively.' However imperfectly his speech may be
+reported, it has much of that energy of declamatory invective which is
+part of the tradition connected with his name. Of this the peroration is
+a sufficient example. 'This convention, Sir, I think from my heart is
+nothing but a stipulation for national ignominy; an illusory expedient
+to baffle the resentment of the nation; a truce without a suspension of
+hostilities on the part of Spain; on the part of England, a suspension,
+as to Georgia, of the first law of nature, self-preservation and
+self-defence; a surrender of the right of England to the mercy of
+plenipotentiaries; and in this infinitely highest and sacred point,
+future security, not only inadequate, but directly repugnant to the
+resolutions of Parliament, and the gracious promise from the throne. The
+complaints of your despairing merchants, the voice of England have
+condemned it. Be the guilt of it on the adviser. God forbid that the
+Committee should share the guilt by approving it.'[122] This was
+undoubtedly the first speech in which Pitt made a real mark as an
+orator, and of this a proof remains in the fact that it is recorded that
+Sir R. Walpole took notes of it as it proceeded.[123]
+
+The debate and its unsuccessful division were followed by that abortive
+and disastrous form of protest known as a secession. Wyndham announced
+it in a speech of solemn acrimony. It failed, as all such secessions do.
+It has been said by a veteran politician that 'a secession of a party
+from parliament is so obvious a failure in both duty and prudence that a
+benevolent looker-on will always recommend to the seceder to get to his
+place as well and as fast as he can.'[124] A secession does not appeal
+to the country, which regards it as an exhibition of baffled ill-temper,
+while it leaves the House at the mercy of the Ministry. This retirement
+of his enemies was therefore hailed by Walpole as an unexpected stroke
+of good fortune. Prompt repentance, as usual, overtook the seceders, and
+the usual difficulty as to returning with dignity and consistency. In
+November they had to slink back without much of either.
+
+It is not easy to discover whether Pitt was among the seceders, though
+it seems improbable, as Lyttelton, one of his closest allies, remained
+to repeat the strange parallel contention of the Opposition that the
+army should be reduced and war declared against Spain.
+
+The national wish for war was at any rate soon gratified. Though Walpole
+had carried resolutions approving of his convention, the growing fury of
+the nation could not be dammed by his meagre majority of twenty-eight.
+When the negotiations between Spain and Great Britain were resumed,
+Spain absolutely refused to abandon the right of search. To the English
+this was the main point, and Walpole knew that war was now inevitable.
+Whether he as minister could or should, in spite of his convictions,
+carry it out was another matter. He decided that he could, and war was
+declared on October 29, 1739.
+
+The enthusiasm of the nation was frantic. The heralds, on proceeding to
+the city to read the formal declaration, were attended by a great
+procession. The Prince of Wales did not disdain to take part in it, or
+to pause at Temple Bar to drink a public toast to the war. All the
+church bells of the capital were set ringing. The Minister, as he heard
+the clang, bitterly remarked that they might ring the bells now, but
+that they would soon wring their hands. This is a truth that may be
+uttered with justice at the beginning of all hostilities, and in this
+case there were many opportunities for wringing hands; for, with the
+exception of the truce of Aix-la-Chapelle, Britain was not at peace from
+now (1739) till 1763. But Walpole's cynical pun did not embody the
+spirit which gives confidence to a nation, or in which a great Minister
+would begin a just or necessary war. Walpole was, no doubt, convinced
+that this one was neither just nor necessary. Moreover, he hated all
+war as a needless complication which deranged finance and held out
+prospects and opportunities for a Pretender. He knew, too, that he was a
+Minister of peace, and that he was not likely to shine in war. He had
+indeed been Secretary at War, but then he had the guarantee of a
+Marlborough in the field; his function had been to serve and supply a
+supreme captain. But there was nothing now to give him the same
+confidence. He felt, he knew that he was out of place as a director of
+wars. Close to him, unsuspected as yet, was the most successful War
+Minister that this country has ever seen. For on the benches over
+against him sate Pitt, who was to revel in warfare and find his true
+vocation in directing it; but his time was not come. Afterwards, when it
+had arrived, he was to repent and recant his opposition on this
+occasion, and pay homage to Walpole. None, indeed, of the leaders in
+opposition to Walpole attempted afterwards to justify their conduct in
+this business.
+
+That Minister meanwhile moodily prepared to carry out the wishes of the
+country, and no doubt excused himself for his humiliating compliance by
+the thought that if he did not some one else would, with less economy
+and more danger to the State. He is said to have tendered his
+resignation, but even were this true it could only be, in view of the
+King's relations to himself and the Opposition, a matter of form. He
+uttered his own self-condemnation: 'I dare not do what is right.'
+
+But his submission, whether accompanied or not by a feigned resignation,
+availed him nothing; his unpopularity seemed rather to increase than
+diminish. The nation suspected his good faith. The legion of able and
+brilliant men whom he had alienated were in no ways appeased, but more
+ruthless in their determination to hunt him to the death; the multitude
+effervesced in mobs. Soon they were all in full cry. There was another
+general election in 1741, when the Prince of Wales with lavish subsidies
+entered actively into the strife. Parliament, dissolved in April, met in
+December, thirsty for Walpole's political blood.
+
+The inglorious course of the war in the meantime, its delays and
+disasters, forms no part of Pitt's life. One may wonder in passing at
+the callous wickedness that sent out raw boys and decrepit pensioners to
+die of fever and exhaustion, or at the strange fortune by which those
+who prepare such expeditions, ministers, commissaries, contractors, and
+the like, escape the gallows. Walpole at any rate did not escape the
+particular fate that he deserved. A year of glowing and successful war
+might yet have saved him; a year of failure and calamity fixed his doom.
+
+He had held on to the last possible moment, and so fell with little of
+grace or dignity. An inevitable political catastrophe only becomes more
+overwhelming by delay; each day that a minister remains in power against
+the will of the nation adds force to the torrent against him. Moreover,
+he affronted public opinion by receiving unusual favours from the King
+when he had become the object of popular execration. Here the coarse
+fibre which had stood him in such good stead during a hundred fights did
+him disservice, for it hindered his perception of the fact that it is
+unwise to be conspicuously decorated at a moment when the nation is
+calling for your head. He held on, with failing health but unfailing
+courage, though the war had furnished him with a reasonable door of
+departure at the critical moment when honour permitted and indeed
+required him to go, and though his friends had implored him to resign.
+The motives for his obstinacy were obvious enough. His was a doughty
+soul, and did not yield without agony. But there was a more practical
+reason. He believed that, as had long been threatened, his fall would be
+followed by his impeachment. As soon as he resigned, his brother Horace
+hurried off to burn his papers. Walpole himself took a similar
+precaution. This shows their sense of the imminence of the danger which
+had always impended over him, and which was first in their thoughts when
+the protection of office was about to be withdrawn.
+
+The final scene in the House of Commons was dramatic enough, and must
+have been in the mind of Disraeli when he penned his description of the
+fall of Peel. As the fatal division on the Chippenham election was
+proceeding, the Minister sate and watched the hostile procession with
+unfailing and imperturbable humour. He beckoned to his side Bayntun
+Rolt, the Chippenham candidate supported by the Opposition, and so their
+nominal champion, and gave him a reasoned catalogue of many of the
+members voting against him, detailing their ingratitude and treachery,
+as well as the exact favours that he had heaped on them. 'Young man, I
+will tell you the history of all your friends as they come in; that
+fellow I saved from the gallows, and that from starvation; this other
+one's sons I promoted,' and so forth;[125] then passing on through this
+bitter recital to his scornful conclusion, he declared that never again
+would he set foot in that House.[126]
+
+He fell with the skill and presence of mind which never deserted him,
+for in everything except office he remained victorious. All parties had
+combined to destroy Walpole, and in their triumph all not unnaturally
+expected to see every vestige of the detested administration swept away
+in his defeat. Vast was their disappointment. Newcastle, the oldest of
+the old gang, to use the vivid expression of modern politics, had long
+scented the approaching catastrophe of his chief, and had been preparing
+to lessen the shock to himself and his friends, so far as was possible,
+by judicious conference with the Opposition.
+
+Newcastle has long been a byeword; he was so all through his protracted
+public life; and he has remained in history a synonym for a certain
+jobbing and fussing incapacity. Justice has, perhaps, been scarcely done
+to his laborious life; his disinterestedness about money, rare in any
+age, especially in that; above all to his unequalled capacity for
+remaining in office, a virtue not unappreciated by the great mass of
+politicians. Nor was he a fool, though he was something of a coward. A
+man who could hold the seals of Secretary of State for thirty continuous
+years of stress and intrigue, who filled high office for forty-five
+years in succession, could not be without invaluable qualities for
+steering with persistence and astuteness through intricacies of
+parliamentary navigation. His ambition, such as it was, had indeed an
+elastic but stubborn tenacity; the ties of blood, friendship, or
+principle availed nothing against it. His industry, such as it was, is
+attested by his long tenure of office and the vast mass of his
+correspondence. His disinterestedness, such as it was, is proved by his
+leaving public life 300,000_l._ poorer than he entered it, and by his
+nevertheless refusing a pension offered him by George III. on his
+retirement, a circumstance almost unique in the annals of the century.
+In nothing else was he disinterested. His only taste in private life
+seems to have been for the pleasures of the table and the consequent art
+of the physician. On his resignation in 1756 he attempted indeed to
+assume the air of a retired country squire. Guns and gaiters were
+procured, but getting his feet wet he hurriedly abandoned the sports of
+the field and with them the appearance of rural absorption. This
+illustrates his crowning defect. In all that he did he was supremely
+ridiculous.
+
+ 'Behind him close behold Newcastle's Grace,
+ Haste in his step and absence in his face;
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Tho' void of honesty, of sense, of art,
+ A foolish head and a perfidious heart,
+ Yet riches, honours, power he shall enjoy.'[127]
+
+Foote and Smollett have left vivid caricatures of his ludicrous
+personality. The story of his conference with Pitt when Pitt was in bed
+with the gout, and of his getting into a vacant bed and discoursing from
+thence to his colleague, is one of the choicest pictures of his
+absurdity that survive. The two leading Ministers were found storming at
+each other from adjacent couches, disputing as to whether Hawke's fleet
+should put to sea or not.[128] Pitt fortunately prevailed. Newcastle's
+grotesqueness was part of his temperament, for all through his life his
+jealousy and suspicion kept him in a perpetual froth of nervous
+excitement. His jealousy was of power, his suspicion of those who aimed
+at it. And by power he meant patronage. Throughout his long life his god
+or goddess was patronage. Indeed his voluminous correspondence rather
+resembles the letter-bag of an agency for necessitous persons of social
+position than the papers of a Prime Minister or Secretary of State. To
+hold a crowded levee of placehunters, ecclesiastical and temporal, to
+thread his way about it coaxing, fawning, and slobbering, embracing and
+even kissing, promising and paying all with the base coin of cozenage,
+this was Newcastle's paradise. But it answered. It made him necessary to
+his party, and therefore necessary to those who would govern the
+country; for government was restricted to his party. So all statesmen in
+turn scorned and employed him. 'His name,' said Walpole, 'is perfidy.'
+But perfidy paid, and Walpole kept him to the end, fully aware that he
+was always ready for betrayal if expediency dictated it, and that in the
+closing months he was in fact busy at the work. At last, indeed, Walpole
+himself, under the name of the King, commissioned him to intrigue
+officially. Hardwicke, perhaps the greatest of our Chancellors, who
+furnished the brains for Newcastle, and condescended to act as his
+mentor and instrument, was joined with him to make terms with the enemy,
+and offer the reversion of the Treasury on condition of immunity for
+Walpole.
+
+Pulteney was the enemy, or its chief; for he led the Opposition, and
+guided the Court of the Heir Apparent, as he had that of the father when
+Prince of Wales, though then without fruit and result. He was also the
+idol of the nation. For long years he had made the people believe that
+Walpole was a Goliath of corruption, and that he was the incorruptible
+David. Moreover, his vast wealth, his ability, his eloquence, and his
+social qualities gave him a personal ascendancy apart from his political
+position. 'He was, by all accounts,' writes Shelburne, 'the greatest
+House of Commons orator that had ever appeared,'[129] surpassing even
+the legendary reputation of Bolingbroke; he was also a scholar, a wit,
+and a potent pamphleteer. In conversation he excelled; when the wits
+were gathered at Stowe, the pre-eminence of Pulteney was
+acknowledged.[130] At this moment he was supreme, 'in the greatest point
+of view,' writes Chesterfield, 'that I ever saw any subject in ... the
+arbiter between the Crown and the people; the former imploring his
+protection, the latter his support;' 'possessing,' says Glover, 'a
+degree of popularity and power which no subject before him was ever
+possessed of.' All eyes were raised to him with expectant adoration as
+he stood on this pinnacle, and as they gazed they saw him slowly totter,
+and then fall headlong. For the two Ministers had succeeded in
+compromising him. He refused, indeed, amnesty for Walpole or office for
+himself; but adulterated these refusals by watering his expressions of
+hostility to the Minister, and by asking on his own behalf for an
+earldom and a seat in the Cabinet. When his followers found that he and
+Carteret were engaged in secret negotiation with Ministers, their
+indignation was unbounded. They held a public meeting to disown him. His
+popularity disappeared in an instant and for ever. He afterwards averred
+that he had lost his head, that there was no comprehending or describing
+the confusion that prevailed, and that he was obliged to go out of town
+for three or four days to keep his senses. This is not impossible or
+even improbable. A political crisis bursts like a tornado, and
+bewilders the strongest characters. Both rare and happy are the men who
+can on such occasions take counsel with themselves, and meet the storm
+with presence of mind. Pulteney had, perhaps, become enervated with a
+long period of merely negative opposition. Glover also asserts that his
+hand was forced by Lyttelton who was secretly offering terms to Walpole,
+and that these, though tendered by the Prince of Wales's Secretary,
+Walpole treated with disdain. Glover was an ill-conditioned wasp, and
+his story refutes itself. For the one person whom Walpole was anxious to
+gain was Frederick, even offering to add 50,000_l._ to his income. That
+he should then have spurned an overture from the Prince's right-hand man
+is out of the question; he would have met it more than half-way.
+Whatever the cause, Pulteney, having committed himself, could not
+retrace his steps; an iron grip constrained him. In vain did he seek to
+recall his patent and escape his peerage. Walpole held him fast.
+Pulteney had finally conquered in the long struggle of twenty years, and
+overthrown Sir Robert; but the prostrate Minister had from the dust
+worked Pulteney like a marionette.
+
+For behind all these strange scenes Walpole pulled the strings. His main
+object was to avoid his own impeachment, and this, in spite of the
+determination of the hostile majority which called for his head, he
+achieved; a feat little less than miraculous. The Tory candidates for
+office were rejected by the King, and as for the not less bitter Whigs,
+as
+
+ '... bees, on flowers alighting, cease to hum,
+ So, settling upon places, Whigs grow dumb.'
+
+They were dumb in spite of themselves. The nation, which had been
+excited by the hope of seeing corruption extinguished, and the advent of
+a new era of virtue and public spirit, was again disappointed. People
+saw this sublime struggle result in a jobbing distribution of such
+places as were vacated to the same sort of people as had vacated them,
+with precisely the same system. It was much the same ministry without
+the one great minister. Fooled once more, as so often before and since,
+people shrugged their shoulders, and turned their attention to other
+things, more honest and more practical than party politics.
+
+With the fall of Walpole this narrative is not otherwise concerned, for
+his successors found no post for Pitt. Two members of the Prince of
+Wales's household, Lords Baltimore and Archibald Hamilton, had found
+acceptance as members of the new administration; the King probably could
+not stomach more, certainly not Pitt. For long years afterwards he could
+not endure contact with the orator who sneered at him and at Hanover,
+and who even insinuated with factious injustice doubts of his personal
+courage. It must also be remembered that Pitt was not merely attached to
+the party of the Prince but to the group of Cobham. That veteran
+accepted for a short time a seat in the Cabinet and the command of a
+regiment. But his animosity against Carteret was second only to his
+animosity against Walpole. Carteret was a powerful, and aimed at being
+the controlling member of the new Government. He therefore succeeded to
+the position of target for the barbed arrows of Pitt and his friends
+which had been vacated by Walpole's retirement. Carteret, the new object
+of philippic, had striven hard for the succession to Walpole when
+Pulteney stood aside, but had been foiled by Walpole acting through the
+King. Lord Wilmington, whom Horace Walpole describes as a solemn
+debauchee and Hervey as fond only of money and eating, but who was the
+favourite nonentity of George II., had been fobbed off upon the party as
+First Minister; and the choice had its advantages. For, always
+incapable, he was now moribund; and so as a feeble and transient barrier
+to ambition was the least unacceptable to Walpole's expectant heirs. A
+figurehead, moreover, was the favourite expedient of the century for
+skirting the fierce conflict of personalities.
+
+So Wilmington reigned, and Carteret governed for a while in Walpole's
+stead. The shadowy form of the First Minister could not veil for a
+moment the bold outline of the Secretary of State, for Carteret, though
+scarcely attaining real greatness, remains one of the most brilliant and
+striking figures in the eighteenth century. It is almost enough to say
+that in all but disregard of money he was the exact antipodes of
+Newcastle. No man of his time was so splendidly equipped for the highest
+public service as Carteret. He was sprung from an ancient Norman family
+settled in Jersey, eight of whom, the father and seven sons, were
+knighted in one day by Edward III.[131] To a person of commanding beauty
+and an open and engaging demeanour, he united superb qualities of
+intellect developed by ardent study. He was a scholar of signal
+excellence at a time when scholarship was in the atmosphere of English
+statesmanship, the best Grecian of his day, with the great classics
+always in his mind and at command. Did any one of the like taste come to
+him on business, Carteret would at once turn from business to some
+Homeric discussion. Moreover he knew the whole Greek Testament by heart;
+an unusual and unsuspected accomplishment.[132] But he was also versed
+in modern languages, then a rare and never a common faculty in this
+island, and alone among his compeers spoke German fluently, a priceless
+advantage under a sovereign whose heart and mind were in Hanover. He was
+the only person who was in favour both with the King and with the Prince
+of Wales.[133] He abounded in a wit at once genial and penetrating. He
+was a puissant orator. His comprehensive grasp of European statecraft,
+his capacity for taking broad and high views, his soaring politics, his
+intrepid spirit and his high ambition, marked him out among the meaner
+men by whom he was surrounded. His contempt of money amounted to
+recklessness. His scorn of all pettiness made him disdain jobbery, and
+even the subtler arts of parliamentary manipulation. There was much that
+was sublime in him, and more that was impracticable. In a greater degree
+than any other minister of his time, if we except Chatham, with whom he
+had many qualities in common, does he seem to partake of the mystery of
+genius. Unfortunately, his energy came in gusts, he could scarcely bring
+himself to bend, and he was incapable of that self-contained patience,
+amounting to long-suffering, which is a necessary condition of the
+highest success in official life. All, indeed, was marred by an
+extravagance of conduct which was in reality the result of his nature
+running riot and of his good qualities carried to excess. He played his
+political chess with the big pieces alone, and neglected the pawns. He
+disregarded not merely the soldiers and most of the officers, but all
+the arts and equipment of the parliamentary army, heedless of the fact
+that parliamentary support is the vital necessity of a British minister.
+Disdainful of public opinion or party connections, he attempted to play
+the great game in Europe with no resource but his own abilities and the
+confidence of his sovereign, whose antipathy to France he shared, and
+whose policy and prejudices he could discuss in the King's native
+language. And yet over the bottle, which he loved at least as much as
+literature or politics, he would laugh at the whole business and the men
+with whom he was engaged. 'What is it to me,' he would say, 'who is a
+judge or who is a bishop? It is my business to make Kings and Emperors';
+and he would have to be reminded that those who wanted offices or
+honours would follow and support those who did deal in those
+commodities. One can hear his jolly laugh. His policy he embodied in one
+striking sentence: 'I want to instil a nobler ambition into you, to make
+you knock the heads of the Kings of Europe together, and jumble
+something out of it which may be of service to this country.' As a
+matter of fact though he did undoubtedly knock together the heads of
+some kings, no material advantage resulted to the country. He was,
+however, a patriot, a single-minded, able, jovial, reckless patriot, but
+out of touch with the politicians, unsuited to parliamentary government,
+and so almost ineffectual. And thus we see him at his best on his
+deathbed, where he quotes to the under-secretary who brought him the
+Treaty of Paris for approval the speech of Sarpedon with melancholy
+emphasis. 'Friend of my soul, were we to escape from this war, and then
+live for ever without old age or death, I should not fight myself among
+the foremost, nor would I send thee into the glorifying battle; but a
+thousand fates of death stand over us, which mortal man may not flee
+from and avoid; then let us on.' These last words he repeated with calm
+and determined resignation, and after a pause of some minutes desired
+the preliminary articles of the Peace of Paris to be read to him. After
+hearing these at length he desired that, to use own words, the
+approbation of a dying statesman might be declared to the most glorious
+war and the most honourable peace that this nation ever saw.[134] The
+news of his extremity had reached Chesterfield. 'When he dies,' wrote
+this shrewdest judge and observer of mankind in England, who had in his
+factious days called Carteret 'a wild and drunken minister,'[135] 'the
+ablest head in England dies too, take it for all in all.'[136]
+
+Pitt soon had an opportunity of showing that the selection of ministers
+from the Prince's household had left out the one priceless force. For
+now there came raining into Parliament imperative demands for the
+impeachment of the fallen Minister. These representations from the
+various constituencies to their several members are well worth
+consideration, for they emphasise identical demands with a unanimity
+suggestive of much later forms of political organization. They denounce
+Standing Armies, and Septennial Parliaments, asking that Triennial
+Parliaments, 'at least,' may be restored; they require that placemen
+largely, and pensioners entirely, shall be excluded from the House of
+Commons; and that laws shall be passed for the security and
+encouragement of the linen trade. In an even more sanguine spirit they
+stipulate for the extirpation of those party distractions 'which, though
+their foundations have long ceased to exist, were yet so industriously
+fomented among us, in order to serve the mischievous purposes of a
+ministerial tyranny.' But first and last, and above all, they insist on
+the punishment of Walpole, bringing him and his colleagues, which of
+course meant him, to 'condign punishment.' 'Nothing but the most
+rigorous justice ought to avenge an injured people ... justice is a duty
+we owe to posterity.' 'We have a right to speak plainly to you, and we
+must tell you, Sir, that if the man that ruined our trade, disgraced our
+arms, plundered our treasure, negotiated away our interests,
+impoverished the land--in a word, the author of all the disgraces and
+calamities of twenty years should (while the whole nation is calling out
+for justice against him) triumph in impunity, we shall be apt to think
+our constitution is lost.' 'Lenity to him would be cruelty to the
+nation.'[137] Our ancestors, it will be seen, did not wage their
+political warfare with the sweetmeats or roses of a carnival contest.
+
+It seems unnecessary to remark that of these various injunctions the
+only one to which the members of Parliament paid any heed was that for
+the prosecution or persecution of Walpole. Even here there was no
+result. The new officials were sated and at ease, the hungry remnant was
+insufficient or inept. But the constituencies were in deadly earnest, if
+their members were not. They had been goaded by their leaders to a state
+bordering on frenzy, and their demands, vindictive as they may appear
+to us, only embodied the declamation of the Opposition throughout half
+at least of Walpole's ministry. More than ten years before, Pulteney had
+publicly declared that 'the Opposition had come to a determined
+resolution not to listen to any treaty whatsoever, or from whomsoever it
+may come, in which the first and principal condition should not be to
+deliver him (Walpole) up to the justice of the country.' But now the
+Opposition was in power, and Pulteney was in a chastened and moderate
+mood. His star, indeed, was already on the wane; he was on the high road
+to the earldom of Bath and extinction. At the first meeting indeed with
+the King's envoys he had declared in a famous phrase that he could not
+screen Walpole if he would, for 'the heads of parties are like the heads
+of snakes, which are carried on by their tails.' But at a later
+conference he said, with reference to the same topic, that he was not a
+man of blood, and that in all his expressions importing a resolution to
+pursue the Minister to destruction he meant only the destruction of his
+power, not his person. He would consult with his friends, yet must
+confess that so many years of maladministration deserved some
+parliamentary censure.
+
+Accordingly Lord Limerick moved on March 9 (1742) for a select committee
+of inquiry into the administration of the late Sir Robert Walpole during
+the last twenty years; but Pulteney did not at first countenance this
+moderate measure. He was absent, on a reasonable excuse no doubt, and in
+his absence his friends intimated that it would not be disagreeable to
+him were the motion rejected.
+
+This was, it seems, untrue, but it gave Pitt the first great opportunity
+of his life. When others were silenced by office or honours, he stood
+forth as the mouthpiece of the people and as the consistent,
+incorruptible maintainer of the policy and declarations of his party. It
+was an opportunity of which he availed himself with terrible effect. It
+is now, we think, that he first appealed to the imagination and
+confidence of the nation, as distinguished from the appreciation of
+Parliament, though that also was sufficiently marked. 'Pitt grows the
+most popular speaker in the House of Commons, and is at the head of his
+party,' writes Philip to Joseph Yorke.[138]
+
+Owing to the absence, and so the presumed indifference or disapproval of
+Pulteney, Lord Limerick's motion was rejected by two votes. At the
+request of Pulteney, however, who, whether lukewarm or not, was nettled
+at the natural criticisms provoked by his attitude, Lord Limerick
+brought forward another motion of the same kind limited to the last ten
+years of Walpole's administration. Pulteney who, discredited outside,
+retained within the House 'a miraculous influence,' exerted himself to
+the utmost, we may be sure, but it can scarcely be doubted that the
+honours of the double debate rested with the vehement and untainted
+Pitt. It is not perhaps of much use to quote from the vague and
+imperfect reports of his speeches, but we can gather, at least, their
+general trend. One passage, at any rate, in his speech on the second
+motion, has been authentically preserved by Horace Walpole, for it was a
+compliment to himself. Horace had defended his father with a grace and
+filial duty that commended him to the House. Pitt, in reply, said that
+it was becoming in the young man to remember that he was the child of
+the accused, the House should remember that they were the children of
+their country, a flight which seems to outstep the perilous limits of
+the sublime.
+
+From the summary of Pitt's two speeches we may at least gather that he
+had much the best of the argument on this issue, so long dead and
+buried. One noteworthy point, however, in his declamation against the
+Minister, is that he paid vindictive attention to Walpole's practice of
+dismissing and cashiering his opponents, by which he had himself
+suffered. He argued that the King might as well dispose of all the
+property of his subjects as of that particular form of property
+represented by commissions in the army; which, whether obtained by
+service or by purchase, were as freehold as an estate, and should be as
+amply secured.[139]
+
+But, in truth, his denunciation of Walpole is much less remarkable than
+the poisoned shafts which, as is manifest even in the faulty report, he
+aimed at the King, or at Hanover, which was much the same thing. He
+declared that the changes were unreal, that Walpole remained Minister
+behind the scenes. 'Though he be removed from the Treasury,' said Pitt,
+'he is not from the King's closet, nor probably will be, unless by our
+advice or by our sending him to a lodging at the other end of the town,
+where he cannot do so much harm to his country.'[140] This pointed hint
+at the Tower must have been greatly to the taste of his audience.
+Allusions to the debts of the Civil List, caused certainly not by
+hospitality or by expenditure on any public object, but inferentially by
+corruption, were artfully framed so as to cause the King the greatest
+possible annoyance;[141] so, too, were the innuendoes as to our foreign
+policy having been framed in the sole interests of Hanover. Lord
+Limerick's second motion was carried by seven votes, and Pitt was named
+on the secret committee, which, however, owing to the loyal silence of
+Walpole's associates, to the placing one of them in the privileged
+security of the House of Lords, and to the refusal of the King to allow
+disclosures as to the manner in which secret service money had been
+employed, came to a futile and inglorious end. We catch one glimpse of
+Pitt in its proceedings. Scrope, the doughty old Secretary of the
+Treasury, who had fought under Monmouth at Sedgemoor, refused to reply
+to the questions of the inquisitors. Pitt seems to have pushed him hard,
+and he was so stung that he wished to call his tormentor out. From this
+we may at least infer that Pitt took a leading part in the deliberations
+of the Committee. On the other hand, it may be noticed that he only
+received 259, or one more than the lowest number of votes, while the
+member who headed the poll scored 518, a circumstance which would seem
+to indicate that he had as yet no strong position in the House.
+
+He soon had the opportunity of further exasperating the King, an
+opportunity of which he availed himself rather with the intemperance of
+resentment than with the astuteness of ambition; for he was now in
+declared opposition to the new Government, and as bitter against
+Carteret as he had been against Walpole. When Parliament met (November
+16, 1742) after the recess, Pitt 'spoke like ten thousand angels,' but
+no trace of his speech remains. Of its spirit, however, we can judge
+from that which he delivered on December 10, on the vote for continuing
+the British troops in Flanders. Here the onslaught was against the King,
+and it is scarcely possible to conceive sarcasms more calculated to
+afflict the sovereign in his tenderest susceptibilities than those which
+Pitt now launched, even as we read them in an imperfect report; they
+are, indeed, so masterly in this way as almost to prove their
+authenticity. This is the first speech of real point and power delivered
+by Pitt of which we have any record. It may be noted in passing, that in
+the 'London Magazine' (one of the two newspapers that reported debates)
+Pitt's speech was unnoticed, while it did not appear in the 'Gentleman's
+Magazine' till fourteen months after it was delivered.[142]
+
+A few specimens may give a fair idea of the power which made Pitt so
+dreaded.
+
+'The troops of Hanover, whom we are now expected to pay, marched into
+the Low Countries, where they still remain. They marched to the place
+most distant from the enemy, least in danger of an attack, and most
+strongly fortified had an attack been designed. They have, therefore, no
+other claim to be paid than that they left their own country for a place
+of greater security. I shall not, therefore, be surprised, after such
+another glorious campaign ... to be told that the money of this nation
+cannot be more properly employed than in hiring Hanoverians to eat and
+sleep.'[143]
+
+'As to Hanover,' he continues, 'we know by experience that none of the
+merits of that Electorate are passed over in silence.' 'It is not to be
+imagined that His Majesty would not have sent his proportion of troops
+to the Austrian army had not the temptation of greater profit been laid
+industriously before him.' 'It is now too apparent that this powerful,
+this great, this mighty nation is considered only as a province to a
+despicable electorate, and that, in consequence of a plan formed long
+ago and invariably pursued, these [Hanoverian] troops are hired only to
+drain us of our money.... How much reason the transactions of almost
+every year have given for suspecting this absurd, ungrateful, and
+perfidious partiality it is not necessary to declare.... To dwell upon
+all the instances of partiality which have been shown, and the yearly
+visits which have been paid to that delightful country [Hanover], to
+reckon up all the sums that have been spent to aggrandise and enrich it,
+would be an irksome and invidious task, invidious to those who are
+afraid to be told the truth, and irksome to those who are unwilling to
+hear of the dishonour and injuries of their country. I shall, however,
+dwell no longer on this unpleasing subject than to express my hope that
+we shall no longer suffer ourselves to be deceived and oppressed.'
+
+Conceive the position. On the one side a King, born and bred in Hanover,
+to whom the honour and welfare of Hanover and the Hanoverians were
+everything, whose paradise was Hanover, who counted the days to his
+annual visit to Hanover as a schoolboy counts the days to his holidays,
+who held Hanover as his own absolute monarchy and property as compared
+with the limited interest and power of the British throne; a King,
+moreover, courted by all, whose favour was necessary for the obtaining
+of office; accustomed to unstinted adulation and homage. On the other,
+this young jackanapes, an official in the court of his detested son,
+declaiming against him with every art of the actor and the rhetorician,
+with every power of voice and eye, holding him and his Hanover up to
+every kind of ridicule and contempt, before an audience mainly of
+place-hunters and place-holders, half trembling, half chuckling, as the
+philippic proceeded.
+
+Why did Pitt take this line? If he wished for office (as he undoubtedly
+did), it seemed madness: he was committing something like suicide. But
+pique, as Sir George Savile well said, 'is the spur the devil rides the
+noblest tempers with.' He was unquestionably angry at his exclusion from
+office, which he had, no doubt, been told was due to the King. He was
+justly indignant that the long-continued efforts which had resulted in
+the overthrow of Walpole's overweening power had simply resulted in the
+shuffle of a few offices, and that to the victors the spoil had been
+denied; the sole and execrable minister Walpole had been replaced by a
+much less sole but not less execrable minister in Carteret. All this was
+gall to a man who had been among the most formidable in the heat of
+battle. That heat was now over, and the vanquished were picnicking with
+a few selected victors, while Pitt and his friends were left to cool
+themselves on the deserted battlefield. 'They tell me,' said Lord George
+Bentinck, in 1846, 'that I shall save fifteen hundred a year by Free
+Trade. I don't care for that. What I cannot bear is being sold.' Pitt,
+too, could not bear being sold.
+
+That pique and a not ignoble rage had much to do with this philippic we
+may well assume. But we may also surmise that his attitude was not
+devoid of calculation. The veto of George II. was not to be removed by
+deference, so he would, like another Hannibal, destroy the obstacle
+with vinegar. The King had been exasperated by the lambent play of
+Pitt's earlier insinuations; he should be made to know how Pitt had then
+held his hand, what thunderbolts he had kept in reserve, what
+unspeakable things awaited the Prince who should frown on him. 'All the
+things I have told you,' said Sancho Panza, 'are tarts and cheese-cakes
+to what remains behind.' George II. should learn that the innuendoes
+that Pitt had levelled at him before were tarts and cheesecakes compared
+to what he had the power of producing. Pitt, in a word, had made up his
+mind that his only means of achieving his objects was by terror. He had
+thrown away the scabbard. Moreover, he was appealing from the Court to
+the people. The Court was foreign, immoral, and unpopular: the very name
+of Hanover was detested. And although Pitt's actual words reached the
+people late or not at all, there was an echo which was audible, and made
+known all through the three kingdoms that there was within the walls of
+Parliament an intrepid, unbribed, perhaps incorruptible orator who
+feared the face of no man, and who was embodying in fiery words the
+antipathies and distrusts of the nation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+Let us consider for a moment the character of the Sovereign whom Pitt
+had set himself to bait.
+
+George II. was first and fundamentally a German prince of his epoch.
+What other could he be? And these magnates all aped Louis XIV. as their
+model. They built huge palaces, as like Versailles as their means would
+permit, and generally beyond those limits, with fountains and avenues
+and dismally wide paths. Even in our own day a German monarch has left,
+fortunately unfinished, an accurate Versailles on a damp island in a
+Bavarian lake. In these grandiose structures they cherished a blighting
+etiquette, and led lives as dull as those of the aged and torpid carp in
+their own stew-ponds. Then at the proper season, they would break away
+into the forest and kill game. Moreover, still in imitation of their
+model, they held, as a necessary feature in the dreary drama of their
+existence, ponderous dalliance with unattractive mistresses, in whom
+they fondly tried to discern the charms of a Montespan or a La Valliere.
+This monotonous programme, sometimes varied by a violent contest whether
+they should occupy a seat with or without a back, or with or without
+arms, represented the even tenor of their lives.
+
+George II. was better than this training would suggest. His first
+ambition indeed was to be a Lovelace, but his second was to be a
+soldier. As a soldier he had the unaffected courage of the princes of
+his race. George, red and angry, fighting on foot at the battle of
+Dettingen, is a figure that is memorable and congenial to his British
+subjects.
+
+As a Lovelace he lives to this day, for his portraits are generally in
+the posture of a coxcomb, with his face in outline wearing an
+irresistible smile, only comical to the beholder now, but with which he
+goes smirking into the eternities. It is not necessary to dwell on this
+part of his character; after all, a shallow part, for the one woman whom
+he loved was his wife. It was, however, a necessary part, vital to his
+conception of an ideal monarch. His confidences to his wife on this
+delicate point, though gross to us, seemed natural to him and to her,
+and were probably not alien to the atmosphere in which he was reared.
+Withal he bored his mistresses to death, and not impossibly they bored
+him. But that did not matter; the thing had to be done; he saw himself
+as in a mirror the fourteenth or fifteenth Louis; and when on the
+Saturdays in summer he drove down with Lady Yarmouth and his court to
+Richmond, escorted by Lifeguards kicking up the dust, to walk an hour in
+the garden, dine, and return to London, he imagined himself, as Horace
+Walpole tells us, the most gallant and lively prince in Europe![144]
+
+We must admit then that he was born and bred a coxcomb, like his son.
+That he was a fond father no one will allege. His pleasures were coarse
+and dull. Even here one strange exception must be made. His letters to
+women, in the opinion of hostile critics, were tender and even
+exquisite.[145] How he came to write them we cannot know, for his
+character could not make one expect a grace of this kind.
+
+In other respects we think him underrated. Sir Robert Walpole said that
+politically he was a coward. To what does this charge really amount?
+That a prince who had never left Germany till he was thirty-one, who
+succeeded to the throne when he was forty-four, after a life of such
+severe repression that his father even entertained the idea of
+transporting him to the plantations, should display that familiarity
+with his position, his political relations, and a strange nation, which
+alone could justify the independent action which is implied by the
+phrase 'political courage,' would have been astonishing; it would indeed
+have savoured of political recklessness. Walpole may have uttered the
+charge in resentment for some refusal of the King's. He was, we know,
+irritated at the moment by finding that the King had promised to go to
+Hanover without informing him. The King no doubt blustered in private
+when he yielded in public. But domestic effervescence was the only
+method of relief for a Sovereign who knew his own limitations, and who
+also knew that, constitutionally, he would have at last to yield to his
+Minister. What is 'political courage' in a constitutional Sovereign?
+What would Walpole have said had the monarch shown 'political courage'
+and insisted on having his own stubborn way? 'Had he,' wrote Waldegrave,
+with his usual good sense, 'always been as firm and undaunted in the
+Closet as he showed himself at Oudenarde and Dettingen, he might not
+have proved quite as good a king in this limited monarchy.'
+
+His foible, we are told, was avarice. We do not know that he was mean in
+his personal expenditure. Waldegrave, again, who was fair, and knew him
+better than most men, declared that 'he was always just, and sometimes
+charitable, though rarely generous.' He amused himself, we are told,
+with counting his guineas in private. That perhaps was not a very royal
+occupation, though a nursery rhyme indicates that it is; it may have
+been a trick learned when he was poor, or it may have been his
+substitute for those games of anxious futility now known as 'patience.'
+But the real ground for the charge of avarice in the eyes of his British
+subjects was that he accumulated a great treasure in Hanover. If that be
+avarice, it was the avarice of the kings who made Prussia, the famous
+Frederick and his father. Parsimony in such cases may well be a virtue;
+and subjects may even prefer to be ruled by those who possess it rather
+than by princes who rear vast and idle palaces like the Bourbons of
+Spain and Naples, or live with unbridled extravagance like George IV.
+But kings rarely hit the right mean; if they are generous they are
+called profuse, if they are careful they are called mean. George's
+avarice, if such it was, was a public-spirited avarice. He hoarded for
+his own beloved country, he got as much out of his Kingdom as he could
+for his Electorate; for he was a Hanoverian first and a Briton a long
+way afterwards. But when Hanover needed it, he spent all his hoards on
+her behalf ungrudgingly, and died poor.
+
+We do not claim him as a great King, far from it. But we think him
+unjustly and hastily condemned. It is easy in a slapdash manner to
+lavish sarcasms on a King who presented many tempting opportunities for
+satire. The genius of Thackeray could not resist them, small blame to
+it. But the King's absurdities should not blind one to his merits. The
+just critic must recognise in George II. a constant substantial
+shrewdness, seasoned with humour. His sagacity made him realise his
+constitutional limitations; his penetration appraised with great justice
+the men by whom he was surrounded; he had to do much that he disliked
+and resented, but he did it when he saw that it was necessary, not
+gracefully, for he was never graceful, but without scandal. His rough
+common sense constantly vented itself in the ejaculation of 'Stuff and
+nonsense,'[146] which proved his command of at least one British idiom,
+and not unfrequently a just appreciation of affairs. His judgment of men
+was sure. He had only three ministers who were men of commanding
+ability; Walpole, Carteret, and Pitt. Two of these were his especial
+favourites; to the third, who had mortally offended him, he submitted.
+For Newcastle he had a supreme contempt; but wisely accommodated himself
+to one who was useful, who 'did his business,' to whom he was
+accustomed, and whom he knew through and through. He infinitely
+preferred Carteret to Pelham, but at the supreme moment he chose Pelham
+in spite of Carteret. No doubt this was due largely to the influence of
+Walpole, but many kings would not have followed an advice so contrary to
+their own bias. He piqued himself on his knowledge of mankind, not
+without reason, and Hervey depicts a scene where he reels off a
+catalogue of names, and the King, tersely and unhesitatingly, gives the
+character of each.
+
+The fact is that George II. had the misfortune to keep in his inmost
+circle a vigilant and deadly enemy. John Lord Hervey, the Sporus of
+Pope's blighting satire, akin in mind and probably in blood to Horace
+Walpole, was always with him; noting down, with spruce rancour, a
+venomous pen, and some dramatic power, the random outbreaks of his
+master. It is not wise to attribute literal exactitude or even general
+veracity to such chronicles; the man who can commit so gross a breach of
+confidence is little worthy of trust. That Hervey in the very heart of
+the King's family should have sate down with a pen dipped in vitriol to
+portray its most intimate aspects is perhaps our gain but his disgrace.
+He was a viper warmed in the bosom of the Court, and stung it to the
+full extent of his opportunity and powers. A court is considered fair
+game by such reptiles. But it is hard to see why princes, who after all
+are human beings, should not be allowed to some extent the same sanctity
+of family life which humbler human beings claim and maintain. Hervey was
+the intimate associate of the King, the confidential friend of the
+Queen, the lover of one of their daughters, he was the tame cat of the
+family circle. He thought it seemly to narrate their secrets in so
+brutal a fashion that some more decent member of his family tore out and
+destroyed the coarsest and bitterest passages. What remains is coarse
+and bitter enough. It shows the King and Queen in a most unfavourable
+light. But that aspect is fascinating compared to that in which he
+presents himself. The story of royalty should not be a Court Circular;
+but neither should it be a lampoon, written by a trusted friend. The
+only excuse for him is that being devoted to the Queen, who in her way
+merited his devotion, he detested the King whom he deemed unworthy of
+her. But that does not help the reader who looks to him for facts. The
+George II. we know is the George II. of Hervey, and Hervey's Journal
+proves the writer to be unworthy of implicit credence.
+
+Chesterfield also drew a character of the King. But when we discount
+Chesterfield's studied epigrams, poised with the malignant nicety of one
+who hated his subject, there is not much left for discredit.
+
+The real crime of George II. in the eyes of his British subjects was
+almost in the category of virtues, for it was his devotion to Hanover.
+Innocent and natural as it was in him, it seems wonderful to us that our
+fathers should have endured it. How they must have hated Popery! But
+Hanover was the King's home and fatherland; all his pleasant
+associations were with Hanover; there he was absolute Sovereign, and
+could lead without criticism the life that he enjoyed. He could not help
+being a Hanoverian any more than William III. could help being a
+Hollander. The English chose their Dutch and Hanoverian Sovereigns with
+their eyes open, and had no right to complain if what they desired and
+obtained was somewhat bitter in digestion. Neither William nor the two
+first Georges ever professed to be other than what they were; they never
+for a moment simulated that they were English, they never pretended to
+like England. 'He hated the English,' says Lord Hervey of George II. And
+when at the first available instant they fled from Kensington and
+Hampton Court to Loo or Herrenhausen, their English subjects ignored
+the mortifying preference, from devotion no doubt to the Protestant
+Succession; but partly also because these monarchs were profoundly
+indifferent to them. With George II., it is true, these excursions were
+accompanied, as in Shakespeare, by alarms; alarms only too well founded
+that he would return with a pocket full of treaties for subsidies which
+the British taxpayer would have to pay. But all these three kings
+accurately understood their position. They knew that they were not
+chosen from affection, or for their qualities, certainly not for their
+attractions. They were taken as necessities, almost odious necessities,
+to keep out a Romanist dynasty which represented something to the people
+that was more odious still.
+
+They entertained, then, no illusions; a bargain had been driven with
+them and they would keep it; they gave their pound, or more, of flesh.
+They would occupy palaces, receive civil lists, interview ministers, and
+keep out the Pretender. But that did not imply a perpetual exile from
+home; they intended to get as many holidays as possible; and they did.
+They might be a hateful necessity for England, but England as a
+necessity was almost as hateful to them. Their life in this island was
+servitude, more or less penal; they only breathed by the dykes of
+Holland or the waters of the Leine. If this be clearly understood, much
+confusion and vituperation may be avoided. But the wonder is that the
+English (for the Scots and Irish had little to do with it) should have
+had the civic courage in the cause of religion and liberty to endure the
+compact.
+
+George II. then, we contend, putting his private life apart, which we
+must judge by the German standard of those days, was not a bad King
+under the conditions of his time and of his throne. He was perhaps the
+best of the Georges; better than George I. or George IV., better as a
+King than George III., though inferior no doubt in the domestic virtues.
+All things considered, it is wonderful that he was as good as he was,
+and he scarcely deserves the thoughtless opprobrium which he has
+incurred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+And now it is necessary to say a word of Continental affairs.
+
+A life of Pitt should concern itself with Pitt alone, or with the
+persons and events immediately relating to him. But as during this
+period of his life foreign policy was all in all, and Britain seemed a
+mere anxious appendage to the Continent, it is necessary to give a
+succinct sketch of the familiar but complicated sequence of events in
+Europe which occurred at this time, and which inspired almost all the
+debates in which Pitt took part.
+
+Walpole, as we have seen, had declared war against Spain in 1739, and
+the not very glorious course of those operations does not call for
+record. But the year 1740 marked a new and critical epoch. Death in
+those few months was busy lopping off the crowned heads of Europe, as if
+to clear the scene for two great figures. On February 6 died Pope
+Clement XII. On March 31 died the shrewd but brutal boor Frederick
+William I., and at the age of twenty-eight his son Frederick II. reigned
+in his stead. His accession was to unveil a mystery; and where mankind
+had hitherto seen a fiddling dilettante, contemptuous of his countrymen
+and craving for all that was French, to reveal the direct ancestor of
+German unity, the most practical and tenacious of conquerors. On
+October 20 the Emperor Charles VI., the figure-head for which we had
+fought in the War of the Succession, and, a week afterwards, Anne the
+Empress of Russia passed away. Rarely has the sickle of Eternity
+gathered so pompous a harvest. Between February and November it had
+garnered the Holy Roman Emperor, the Holy Roman Pontiff, the sovereign
+of Russia, and the sovereign of Prussia. Of these the death at Vienna
+was by far the most momentous. For Charles left behind him no son, but a
+young daughter of twenty-three, about to be a mother, whose succession
+he had attempted to secure by the Pragmatic Sanction of 1718, ratified
+and recognised by solemn international instruments. On the morning of
+his death she was promptly proclaimed sovereign of her father's
+dominions; but her treasury was empty and her ministers paralysed.
+Bavaria at once protested. Behind Bavaria stood Frederick armed to the
+teeth, eager to let slip the dogs of war. Every one saw his
+preparations; no one could tell at whom they were aimed.
+
+'No fair judge,' Mr. Carlyle[147] tells us, can blame the 'young
+magnanimous King' for seizing this 'flaming opportunity.' The point is
+fortunately not one which a biographer of Pitt is called upon to
+discuss, except to note that hero-worship makes bad history. For our
+purpose it is sufficient to say that Frederick did avail himself of the
+new juncture of affairs. Charles had died on October 20; on December 6
+the announcement was officially made in Berlin that the King had
+resolved to march a body of troops into Silesia; on December 13 these
+had passed the frontier, not as enemies of the Queen of Hungary or
+Silesia, it was declared, but as protective friends of Silesia and her
+Majesty's rights there. All this was preceded and accompanied by the
+strangest diplomacy that the world had seen, but which does not concern
+this abstract. Thus begins the first period of the Continental war.
+
+Britain, like Prussia, was bound by treaty to maintain the Pragmatic
+Sanction which assured the Austrian dominions to Maria Theresa. Our
+statesmen at this moment were engaged in a pastime of more immediate
+interest and excitement, for they were hunting Walpole to death; the
+exhaustion of the quarry was evident; the end could not be far off. But
+even then the nature of the aggression and the appeal of a young and
+beautiful Queen exercised the usual influence on the chivalrous
+sympathies of the nation. Maria Theresa could, moreover, appeal to
+treaty rights. So that Walpole found himself reluctantly forced into a
+new war while the former was still undecided and incomplete. He agreed
+to renew the pledges of England to maintain that Pragmatic Sanction
+which secured the succession to the daughter of Charles VI.; he agreed,
+moreover, to an immediate subsidy of 300,000_l._, and to sending a force
+of 12,000 men. Meanwhile Marshal Schwerin had defeated the Austrians at
+Molwitz at the very moment that the House of Commons was debating these
+proposals.
+
+This victory brought into the arena new and eager claimants for some
+part of the Austrian spoils, now apparently so available. The eminent
+guarantors of the integrity of Austria were suddenly transformed into
+hungry schemers for her immediate partition. Spain, Sardinia, and
+Poland-Saxony all advanced pretensions. But a mightier enemy was
+preparing to join hands with Frederick and take the field; for it was
+scarcely to be supposed that the secular enemy of the House of Hapsburg
+could remain quiescent at such a moment. France saw a unique opportunity
+for breaking up the Austrian dominions, and reducing the portion
+reserved to the young Queen to comparative insignificance. In France, as
+in England, the Minister was peaceful, but the party of war carried the
+day. Two French armies of 40,000 men each crossed the Rhine in August
+1741. One under Marshal Maillebois marched on Hanover. The ruler of that
+State, who, as sovereign of Great Britain, was the active ally of Maria
+Theresa, hastily concluded a treaty of neutrality for one year,
+promising to give no assistance to the young Queen in his Hanoverian
+capacity, and to refrain from voting for her husband as Emperor. For
+this treaty George II. was violently attacked by his British subjects,
+who believed themselves to be fighting for Hanoverian interests, while
+Hanover itself was thus snugly removed into a haven of peace. The
+censure was, we think, excessive, if not undeserved. The treaty did
+indeed accentuate the duality which somewhat unequally divided the
+person of George. But if that be once conceded, it must be admitted that
+he was right as Elector to do his very best for Hanover, just as King he
+was bound to do his very best for England. As Elector, then, he was
+fully justified in keeping his defenceless State out of the devastation
+of war, from which it was destined to suffer so terribly sixteen years
+later from another French army under the Duke of Richelieu, when
+neutrality was no longer possible.
+
+While Maillebois marched towards Hanover, the other army, under Marshals
+Belleisle and Broglie, marched through Bavaria and menaced Vienna.
+Maria Theresa had to fly to Hungary, and appeal in a manner made
+familiar by description to the chivalry of the Magyars. The Elector of
+Bavaria, who was the figure-head chosen by the confederates for the
+imperial throne, and who had his fill of titles in the lack of more
+substantial fare, was proclaimed Archduke of Austria at Linz, King of
+Bohemia in Prague, and soon afterwards Emperor in Frankfort. It seemed
+as if a vast partition was about to take place, and the House of Austria
+destined to disappear.
+
+But this was the turning-point; in the general blackness there appeared
+rays of hope for Maria Theresa. Walpole, the peace minister,
+disappeared, and the control of Foreign Affairs in Great Britain passed
+to Carteret, who was warm for Austria, and eager to play an active part
+on the Continent. Moreover, the misfortunes of the Queen roused the
+enthusiasm of Great Britain. Five millions were voted for the war, half
+a million as a subsidy to the Queen of Hungary. Sixteen thousand men
+were sent into Flanders to assist the exertions of the Dutch.
+Unfortunately there were no exertions to assist, and our troops remained
+useless. Our fleets were more active. They harried the Spaniards and
+controlled the Mediterranean. A squadron entered the Bay of Naples and
+gave the King, afterwards Charles III. of Spain, an hour in which to
+decide whether he would abandon the confederacy against Austria or see
+his beautiful city bombarded. The King of Naples yielded, but as King of
+Spain never forgave the English for this humiliation.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 12, 1742.]
+
+The Austrians, too, found a bold and skilful general in Khevenhueller,
+who seized Bavaria and occupied Munich on the very day on which its
+ruler was crowned Emperor. In the succeeding June a peace, which proved
+afterwards to be but a truce, was concluded at Breslau between Austria
+and Prussia, through the mediation of Great Britain, and followed by the
+Treaty of Berlin, to which George II. both as King and Elector, the
+Empress of Russia, the States General, and the King of Poland as Elector
+of Saxony were parties. There had been a secret armistice between the
+two states in the winter of 1741, by which Lower Silesia and Niesse had
+been ceded to Frederick, but this had soon proved inoperative. A new
+situation was however produced by the severe battle of Chotusitz, in
+which the Austrians suffered defeat at the hands of Frederick. Maria
+Theresa now yielded to the pressure of the English ministry and ceded
+all Lower and part of Upper Silesia with the county of Glatz to
+Frederick, who in return abandoned his allies and left the French to
+themselves, on the plea that they were in secret communication with
+Vienna. Saxony, under his influence, also withdrew from the war, and the
+King of Prussia and the Elector of Hanover concluded a defensive
+alliance, the Elector guaranteeing Silesia and Glatz to the King.
+Frederick saw that he had been too successful. He was determined to
+retain Silesia, but he saw with apprehension great French armies
+overrunning the German Empire. That France should be aggrandised at the
+expense of Germany was no part of his policy. For Germany as Germany he
+had no natural affection; but the waters of Germany, however troubled
+they might be, he proposed to keep for his own fishing.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 1741.]
+
+With the Peace of Breslau, then, the first period of the war ends, and
+the second begins, in which it assumes a new character. It is not
+Frederick and France fighting against Austria; it is Austria supported
+by Britain, and to some extent Holland, fighting, with the secret
+sympathy of Germany, against France and Spain. Elizabeth, too, the
+daughter of Peter the Great, had mounted the throne of Russia, and
+assisted her sister sovereign with sympathy and with money. The whole
+aspect of the war was suddenly changed. Austria was now free to turn her
+whole forces on France, and she did so with terrible effect. The French
+had to evacuate Bohemia in a retreat so heroic and so appalling that it
+anticipated the horrors of 1812. Of the 40,000 men with whom he had
+crossed the Rhine, Belleisle brought back but 8000 into France. The
+share of Great Britain in the war became substantial and direct. The
+Elector of Hanover, relieved from apprehension by his treaty with
+Prussia and the success of Austria, reduced his army by 16,000 men, but
+the King of England took them into his pay. This measure exasperated his
+British subjects, whose attention was thus once more called to the
+jarring interests of the Kingdom and the Electorate combined in George's
+person. But Ministers carried the day, and in June 1743 the King himself
+took the field with an Anglo-German army of some 40,000 men under the
+command of Lord Stair. At Dettingen, not far from Frankfort, in escaping
+from a position of extreme jeopardy, they encountered and defeated the
+French. The strangest part of this engagement was that there was then
+nominally no war between France and Great Britain, and that these
+operations were only accidental auxiliary conflicts. It was not for nine
+months afterwards that war between the two countries was formally
+declared.
+
+[Sidenote: Sept. 1743.]
+
+Later on in this year George II. took an even more active measure, and
+through Carteret, as Secretary of State, though behind the back of his
+other ministers, signed the Treaty of Worms. For many years past it had
+been the policy of the House of Savoy to put itself up to auction, and
+by the Treaty of Worms George II. became the successful bidder. The King
+of Sardinia was to receive some territory from Austria, and 200,000_l._
+a year from Great Britain, while he was to assist the Austrian cause
+with 45,000 men. Carteret at the same time covenanted to pay Maria
+Theresa a subsidy of 300,000_l._ a year 'so long as the war should
+continue, or the necessity of her affairs should require.' But this the
+British Ministry refused to recognise, and it became the subject of
+fierce debate in Parliament.
+
+To meet this combination, Louis XV., on the advice of his Minister but
+against his own better judgment, signed one of those one-sided and
+altruistic treaties which characterised French policy at this time, and
+renewed the family compact of 1733 by a treaty signed at Fontainebleau
+in October 1743. In this new edition the Bourbons of France and Spain
+pledged themselves to an indissoluble union. France was to declare war
+against Great Britain and Sardinia, to help Spain to reconquer Parma and
+the Milanese for Don Philip, and to compel Great Britain to give up her
+colony of Georgia. Finally, the two Powers were not to make peace until
+Gibraltar and, if possible, Minorca were restored to Spain.[148]
+
+[Sidenote: May 1744.]
+
+But the Austrian successes once more brought Frederick into the field
+to redress the balance, which now inclined too much to Austria, as it
+had inclined too much to France. Austria had acquired Bavaria for the
+moment, and perhaps would never evacuate it; she might be encouraged to
+attempt the reconquest of Silesia. Her armies were now in Alsace; where
+would they stop? The Queen, he knew, was only a degree less tenacious
+than himself. So he signed a new convention at Frankfort with the
+Emperor, the King of France, the King of Sweden as Landgrave of Hesse,
+and the Elector Palatine, and again took up arms against Austria, which
+was almost drained of troops. France about the same time formally
+declared war against Great Britain and Austria, whom she had been
+fighting, so to speak, incognito, for three years past. On the other
+hand a quadruple alliance was concluded between Great Britain, Austria,
+Holland, and Saxony; based as usual on British subsidies, which
+Parliament ungrudgingly voted, with the eloquent but surprising support
+of Pitt.
+
+Here begins the third period of the war. Louis XV. and Marshal Saxe at
+the head of 80,000 men entered the Austrian Netherlands almost without
+resistance. Frederick soon made himself master of Bohemia and Bavaria,
+and returned the Electorate to its sovereign, the Emperor Charles VII.
+In January 1745, worn out with misfortunes and anxieties and dignities,
+but once more in his capital, that hapless monarch died. Within three
+months his successor had concluded peace with Austria through the
+earnest pressure of the British Cabinet on the haughty Queen; the
+Elector abandoning his claims on the Austrian dominions, and promising
+his vote for the Empire to Maria Theresa's husband. Peace between
+Austria and the King of Poland, Elector of Saxony, followed in May,
+when the contracting parties entered into a premature concert for the
+partition of the Prussian dominions.
+
+Otherwise 1745 was a disastrous year for Austria. The Allies, Austrians,
+British, and Dutch, under the Duke of Cumberland, sustained a bloody
+defeat at Fontenoy in May; and Great Britain, occupied with the domestic
+disturbance caused by the landing of Charles Edward, had to withdraw
+from active participation in the war. In August a secret convention was
+concluded at Hanover between the Kings of Prussia and Great Britain, by
+which the latter Power guaranteed Silesia to the former. This was the
+beginning of the end. The British Ministry now notified to the
+unyielding Queen that she must come to terms with her enemy, or expect
+no more assistance from England or Holland. The Austrian arms met
+everywhere with reverses. While the young Queen was planning with Saxony
+a triumphant march on Berlin, Frederick broke into Saxony and occupied
+Dresden. On this final blow Maria Theresa accepted the mediation of
+Great Britain and signed, on Christmas Day, 1745, the peace of Dresden
+which gave Silesia and Glatz to Frederick. So ends the third period of
+this strange and erratic war; a labyrinth of fugitive conventions and
+transient alliances, with two strong purposes in the centre.
+
+But the auxiliary combatants remained at strife, just as the seconds in
+a duel have sometimes fought after their principals had settled their
+own differences. And so we now enter on its fourth period, that in which
+the British, Austrians, and Dutch (with the assistance of the
+Piedmontese in Italy) contended against France and Spain. The part of
+this war which chiefly concerns Great Britain was fought in Flanders.
+And in all these transactions it must be noted that a main difficulty of
+the British Ministry, both from the practical and from the parliamentary
+point of view, lay in the problem of moving the Dutch. The Hollanders
+had everything to apprehend from the triumph of the French arms, but
+their phlegmatic temper, and still more the impracticable nature of
+their constitution, offered great obstacles to their co-operation.
+Anglers may see an analogy between these British negotiations with the
+Dutch and the tardy and tantalising sport of sniggling for eels. At the
+beginning of 1746, matters seemed to have come to a climax. The French
+were harrying Flanders, and were threatening to invade Holland. The
+Dutch Government were now stirred into proposing active measures, and
+the raising of a large army, to be under the command of the Prince of
+Waldeck; but they declined to declare war against France. The British
+agreed to a joint force of 100,000 men, comprising 40,000 to be
+furnished by the States-General, 30,000 by Austria, some Hanoverians and
+Saxons to be paid by England and Holland, and 6000 Hessians to be
+provided by England after Charles Edward had been finally defeated. The
+Dutch regarded the British offers as inadequate; for it is a cardinal
+principle of all Continental wars in which Great Britain is concerned
+that her purse is to be open to her allies, and that she is to find the
+funds.
+
+ 'The Dutch we know are good allies,
+ So are they all with subsidies.'[149]
+
+They were, moreover, not indisposed to negotiate with the French.
+These, meanwhile, under the leadership of Marshal Saxe, were occupying
+the Low Countries almost without interruption or resistance. In February
+they entered Brussels; in May, Antwerp. Mons, Charleroi, and Namur
+successively fell into their hands, and they ended the campaign by
+defeating the allies at Roucoux, and remaining practically in possession
+of the Austrian Netherlands. But there was a glimpse of peace, in that
+some negotiations, abortive though they were destined to be, were opened
+at Breda.
+
+In 1747 the Duke of Cumberland again assumed the command with the usual
+disastrous result. The Dutch contingent, also as usual, was very
+inadequate: commercial nations are perhaps apt to treat international
+engagements in too commercial a spirit. But the irruption into Dutch
+Flanders of twenty thousand Frenchmen roused a spirit of a different
+kind. The Dutch rose like one man, overturned their rulers, and once
+more entrusted the Stadtholderate to the House of Orange. This was a
+national gain. But the luckless Cumberland again sustained a bloody
+defeat at Lauffeld. The battle, however, had one indirect but happy
+consequence. Our best General, Ligonier, was captured, and, being of
+French birth, was favourably received by Louis XV., who threw out hints
+of peace and placed him in communication with Marshal Saxe. The Marshal
+admitted that the war, and he himself as concerned in it, were
+profoundly unpopular in France, that peace might be obtained on easy
+terms, and suggested that Cumberland and he should be the negotiators.
+
+Pelham was naturally eager for a pacification, George II. less so, and
+what the King wished Newcastle was anxious to wish. But a congress to
+adjust a treaty met at Aix-la-Chapelle in March 1748, and in April the
+preliminaries of a treaty were signed by the British and French and
+Dutch plenipotentiaries.
+
+[Sidenote: 1748.]
+
+Maria Theresa held aloof. To her it seemed that the first and only duty
+of the British, and, indeed, of all other nations, was to fight and work
+and pay that she might regain Silesia, just as her father had held that
+the first, last, and only duty of Europe was to establish him in Spain.
+This peace would ratify the acquisition of Silesia by Frederick, and
+though she herself had ceded it, she could not bring herself to declare
+the cession definite. England, however, could no longer agree to the
+general interest being overridden by the obstinacy of the Empress-Queen;
+there had been bloodshed and suffering enough on her account. However
+just a cause may be, there are limits to human endurance, more
+especially when the cause to be upheld has no substantial importance for
+the defending nation. The definitive treaty was signed on October 18.
+Two days later, Spain, the original belligerent, acceded to it. There
+were, a philosopher may note, no stipulations regarding the commercial
+regulations which had been the original cause of our war with Spain. On
+the 23rd it was accepted by the Austrian Government.
+
+This is a narrative, as condensed as possible, of the foreign affairs
+which entered into our parliamentary debates. That part of the war which
+took place in Italy has been excluded. It was a mere contest of petty
+rapine in which strange princes parcelled out Italy; which can scarcely
+be said to have concerned Great Britain, and Pitt not at all. Nor has it
+left the least visible trace in history.
+
+The greater war which we have summarised is a sufficient tangle. Leslie
+Stephen calls it 'that complicated series of wars which lasted some ten
+years, and passes all power of the ordinary human intellect to
+understand or remember. For what particular reason Englishmen were
+fighting at Dettingen, or Fontenoy, or Lauffeld is a question which a
+man can only answer when he has been specially crammed for examination,
+and his knowledge has not begun to ooze out.'[150] This is the exact
+truth, as the ill-fated chronicler who gropes about among the treaties
+and conventions is fain to confess. But apart from its complications
+this war is not in itself very memorable or exalted, though it has left
+an indelible result in the great Prussian monarchy. It was not beautiful
+or glorious. The guarantors of Austria at the first sign of her weakness
+had hurried, most of them, to divide her spoils, at the same time
+betraying each other from time to time without scruple, as their
+immediate interests required. Frederick had a business-like candour
+which almost disarms criticism. Macaulay in a famous passage has pointed
+out that innocent peasants perished in thousands all over the world that
+he might obtain and retain an Austrian province. And Maria Theresa, with
+all her maternal charm, is not wholly admirable. It was natural that she
+should fight for her rights, and induce all she could to fight for her;
+natural, perhaps, that she should be content that all Europe should
+bleed so that she might retain her territory. But we cannot forget that
+she who was ready that myriads should perish, not of Austrians or
+Magyars alone, but of all the nations that she could enlist in her
+cause, to maintain the sanctity of her rights to Silesia, was later on
+an accomplice in the partition of Poland; a reluctant accomplice, it is
+fair to add, as she herself was awake to the inconsistency of her
+position.
+
+Among all these stately figures and famous slaughters we see the central
+fact of the period, the shameless and naked cynicism of the eighteenth
+century, which, turning its back for ever on the wars of faith and
+conviction, looked only to contests of prey. And so it continued till
+the great Revolution cleared the air, and, followed up by the poignant
+discipline of Napoleon, made way for the wars of nationality.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+No more of Pitt's speeches are recorded during the session, which, with
+the enviable ease of those days, having opened on November 16, 1742,
+closed on April 21, 1743. In the interval before the ensuing session an
+event occurred, not in itself memorable, but notable for the contest
+that followed. In July 1743 occurred the long-expected death of
+Wilmington, the nominal head of the Government. In itself this departure
+would not have caused a ripple on the surface of politics, but it opened
+a critical succession. Pulteney, now Earl of Bath, at once laid claim to
+it; and his pretensions were warmly supported by Carteret, who was the
+minister in attendance on the King in Germany. Henry Pelham, supported
+by his brother Newcastle, also applied for the vacant post. As between
+these two groups it seemed certain that Bath, through Carteret, who was
+on the ground, would have the preference. Pelham, indeed, at the
+instance of Walpole, had, before the King left England, applied to his
+Majesty for the reversion of the moribund Minister's place, and had, if
+Coxe may be trusted, received a definite promise. It seems difficult to
+credit this, for George was a man of his word, yet the Pelham brothers
+were unfeignedly astonished when the reversion was given them; so that
+had Pelham indeed received such a pledge, he must have expected that
+the King would break it. Six weeks of dire suspense followed the death
+of Wilmington; an interval which was probably caused by the anxiety of
+the Sovereign to consult Walpole, while he intimated to Pelham that his
+decision would be conveyed to the Ministry by Carteret. This seemed a
+deathblow to the chances of Pelham, though the King's aversion to Bath
+was notorious. But a letter at length arrived from Carteret, in which he
+announced, with unaffected regret but with a generous promise of
+support, that the prize had fallen to Pelham. The brothers were elated,
+if such an expression can ever be applied to the timid and cautious
+Pelham. Newcastle was transported by the 'agreeable but most surprising
+news;' so much so, as to acknowledge that Carteret's letter was 'manly.'
+
+Walpole, in writing his congratulations, looked warily to the future.
+'Recruits,' he advised, should now be sought 'from the Cobham
+squadron.... Pitt is thought able and formidable, try him or show
+him.... Whig it with all opponents that will parley, but 'ware Tory.'
+Newcastle, on reading this letter to his brother, wrote back: 'I am
+afraid, one part of it, viz. the taking in of the Cobham party and the
+Whigs in opposition, without a mixture of Tories, is absolutely
+impracticable; and, therefore, the only question is whether, in order to
+get the Cobham party, etc., you will bring in three or four Tories, at
+least, with them, for, without that, they will not come, and this is
+what I have the greatest difficulty to bring myself to.' Orford's advice
+was not followed, and Pelham's appointments were few and narrow. Two of
+Lord Bath's followers, a friend of the Prince of Wales, and a friend of
+his own, the only surviving name of the four, Henry Fox, were
+gratified, and that was all. And even this limited arrangement was not
+completed before Parliament met.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 1, 1743.]
+
+The opening of the new session was anticipated with keen interest, as
+the Ministry was known to be rent with divisions, and hatred of the
+Hanoverians had immeasurably swollen in consequence of rumours of the
+favour that the King had shown to his electoral subjects. He had been
+surrounded by Hanoverian Guards to the exclusion of the English Guards;
+he had worn at Dettingen a yellow sash, which it appears was a
+Hanoverian symbol of authority; the Hanoverians had refused to obey the
+orders of Lord Stair, and so forth. We can easily imagine the buzz of
+angry legend and comment; for national antipathies have no difficulty in
+obtaining substantial affidavits in their support. Of this wild but not
+unreasonable intemperance Pitt, it is scarcely necessary to say, was the
+mouthpiece. In the debate on the Address he spoke with his accustomed
+violence. He called Carteret 'an execrable or sole minister, who had
+renounced the British nation, and seemed to have drunk of the potion
+described in poetic fictions which made men forget their country.'[151]
+So far as this tirade concerned Carteret's authority, nothing could be
+more absurd or wide of the truth. He could indeed scarcely have chosen a
+more unfortunate epithet than 'sole.' So far from being a sole minister,
+Carteret, as we have seen, had just received a crushing defeat in the
+elevation of Henry Pelham to the first place in the Ministry, and the
+rejection of his own candidate; though he had strained all his influence
+in the cause.
+
+Nor had this 'sole minister' any parliamentary following; his only
+strength lay with the King, where it had just been found signally
+inadequate. The supreme minister in the last resort, and behind the
+scenes, was, in truth, Walpole. It was his decision and his alone that
+had turned the scale against Carteret and Pulteney. Carteret was
+congenial to the King, for he worked with his Sovereign in matters of
+foreign policy; and, as we have seen, he could talk politics to the
+Sovereign in the King's own language. But, while the King tried to carry
+out his own views in Continental affairs, in domestic politics he looked
+to Walpole alone. Still, invective must necessarily have an object, and,
+by aiming at the King's confidential Foreign Minister, Pitt was able to
+wound the King as well. It is hinted by Yorke, the parliamentary
+chronicler, that Pitt's acrimony was dictated by jealousy of Carteret's
+influence with the Prince of Wales.[152] As to this there is no proof,
+and conjecture is idle. Carteret and Frederick had indeed been long
+connected, but this would scarcely impel one of the Prince's court to
+attack one of the Prince's friends. Moreover, were this the motive,
+Pitt's attacks would have been of a different and milder character,
+enough to damage Carteret, but not enough to embroil Pitt with the
+Prince, who was not merely his master, but the head of his political
+connection. It is clear that Pitt's sole object was to destroy Carteret
+as minister, not for the ignominious purpose of subverting him in a
+court camarilla, but to show his own power by demolishing the
+conspicuous man, the vizier of the King who proscribed himself. The mere
+fact that Carteret represented the King's Continental policy, and that
+Pitt had apparently determined, in the jargon of that day, to storm the
+Closet, seems sufficient reason for Pitt's bitterness. He denounced
+Carteret as he denounced Hanover, as darling accessories of a monarch
+whom he was determined to harass in every way until his attacks should
+produce compliance or surrender. But it was the fate of Pitt to have to
+recant his abuse of Carteret, as solemnly and as publicly as he recanted
+his abuse of Walpole. 'His abilities,' said Pitt in 1770 of Carteret,
+'did honour to this House and to this nation. In the upper departments
+of Government he had not his equal. And I feel a pride in declaring that
+to his patronage, to his friendship, and instruction, I owe whatever I
+am.'[153] It was a generous, almost an extravagant statement. But it
+shows how little importance should be attached to the early philippics
+of Pitt, as of other aspiring and brilliant young men. Invectives are
+one of the least subtle and most piquant forms of advertisement, but
+they do not facilitate the task of biographers.
+
+The Sovereign he attacked openly and unsparingly. It was proposed, in
+the Address to the Throne, to congratulate the King on his escape from
+the dangers of the battle of Dettingen. This Pitt deprecated. 'Suppose,
+Sir,' he asked, 'it should appear that His Majesty was exposed to few or
+no dangers abroad, but those to which he is daily liable at home, such
+as the overturning of his coach or the stumbling of his horse, would not
+the address proposed, instead of being a compliment, be an affront and
+insult to the Sovereign?' No affront or insult could at any rate be more
+stinging or more unfounded than his wanton insinuation. George II. had
+the courage of his race, and had displayed it at Dettingen. At first his
+runaway horse had almost carried him into the French lines, so he
+dismounted and fought on foot for the rest of the day; not leaving the
+field until he had created a number of knights banneret; the last
+British king to take the field, and the last bannerets to be so
+created.[154]
+
+It was vile then to disparage the King's courage, but political life in
+those days had no scruple and little shame. The sneers at Hanover with
+which this speech was sprinkled were better founded and deserved. But a
+serious and reasonable argument, not yet obsolete, pervaded Pitt's
+violent rhetoric on this occasion. It was that though the balance of
+power concerned all states, it concerned our island state least and last
+of all. Moreover, he attacked our recent policy on other grounds. On our
+attitude to Austria, then fighting for its integrity under Maria
+Theresa, he heaped scorn from another point of view. We had promised her
+abundant assistance when she was fighting Prussia alone; when France
+intervened we shrank back and left her in the lurch. That, he declared,
+was not our only discredit. When Prussia attacked the Queen of Hungary,
+and Spain, Poland, and Bavaria laid claim to her father's succession, we
+should have known that the preservation of the whole was impossible, and
+advised her to yield the part claimed by Frederick. But the words from
+the Throne and the speeches of the courtiers had persuaded the Austrian
+Government that Great Britain was determined to support her. So great
+was the determination, that even Hanover added near one-third to her
+army at her own cost, the first extraordinary expense, it was believed,
+that Hanover had borne for her purposes since her fortunate conjunction
+with England! But then the French intervened. Hanover was in danger, and
+so we promptly retired. We gave some money, indeed, but that was because
+our ministers contrived to make a job of every parliamentary grant. The
+Queen, seeing that she was deserted, came to terms with Frederick, but
+much worse terms than he had originally offered. Then was the time for
+us to have insisted on her making peace with France and the phantom
+Emperor. But we had advised her against this, for no conceivable reason
+except apparently that we wished to go on paying the 16,000 Hanoverians
+whom we were employing. As regards the battle of Dettingen, he declared
+that we had no idea of fighting, but that the French had caught us in a
+trap. The ardour of our troops was restrained by the cowardice of the
+Hanoverians; we ran away in the night, leaving our dead and wounded
+behind us. Never would he consent to call the battle a victory, it was
+only a fortunate escape.
+
+Were we to continue fighting? he asked. We ourselves had nothing to gain
+by it, though Hanover, no doubt, would continue to receive four or five
+hundred thousand pounds a year from us if we did. But we should
+consider, even the Hanoverians should consider, that we could not carry
+on a long war as in the reign of Queen Anne. We were not far from a
+national bankruptcy, and should soon have to disband our army. What,
+then, if the Pretender should land at the head of a French force?
+
+This outline is given to show the singular but forcible mixture of
+shrewd argument, wayward extravagance, and bitter scoffs, which at this
+time constituted Pitt's parliamentary armament.
+
+He followed this speech up by another on December 6, of which little
+remains; but his vehemence brought him into collision with the Speaker.
+He urged contemptuously that if we must have German troops we should
+rather hire those of Cologne and Saxony than those of Hanover. The King
+was surrounded by German officers, and by one English Minister without
+an English heart. The little finger of one man, he declared, had lain
+heavier upon the nation than an administration which had continued
+twenty years. Murray, however, the Solicitor-General, afterwards Lord
+Mansfield, delivered a consummate speech against the motion, which
+carried so much conviction that Pitt with some of the other Cobhamites
+struck out the words relating to the exhausted and impoverished state of
+the kingdom. But the amended motion was rejected by a majority of
+seventy-seven.
+
+And now there occurred a significant fissure in the Opposition. Pitt and
+Lyttelton were inclined to support the maintenance of the British force
+in Flanders. But Cobham, the chief of the little party, was
+uncompromising: he resigned his commission 'as captain of the troop of
+horse grenadiers' and his seat in the Cabinet. A formula had to be
+framed to unite the two sections, and so George Grenville brought
+forward a motion praying his Majesty 'in consideration of the exhausted
+and impoverished state of the Kingdom not to proceed in this war without
+the concurrence of the Dutch.' Pitt concurred in this motion, and
+promised that if it were rejected he would join in opposing the
+continued employment of the British as well as the Hanoverian troops in
+Flanders.
+
+This revision by a little group is not without significance; as the
+Opposition, we are told, at the beginning of the session, entrusted the
+direction of the party to a committee of six, consisting of Dodington,
+Pitt, Sir John Cotton, Sir Watkin Wynn, Waller, and Lyttelton. The
+putting of political leadership into commission has never been
+successful in Parliament, and the device seems finally to have broken
+down when it was last attempted, by the Protectionist party, after the
+fall of Peel. Nor does it appear to have been more happy on this
+occasion. Pitt and Lyttelton, who, in spite of their engagement, still
+desired to support the continued employment of the British troops in the
+Low Countries, at a general meeting of the Opposition found themselves
+alone, and so agreed to give a silent vote with their associates.
+
+It is probable that this incident produced alienation as it certainly
+wrought friction between Pitt and Cobham. In the ensuing year we find
+Cobham describing Pitt as a young man of fine parts, but narrow,
+ignorant of the world, and dogmatical.[155] Two years afterwards Cobham
+went further, and described him as a wrong-headed fellow, whom he had
+had no regard for.[156] So we may well conjecture that from this time
+there was but little confidence between Pitt and the patron of the
+cousinhood; a great emancipation, though not wholly a gain for Pitt.
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 19, 1744.]
+
+On the vote of 393,773_l._ to maintain the 16,000 Hanoverians during the
+coming year, there was no need for the restraint of silence, so Pitt
+railed with his customary bitterness against Carteret, who was the
+Hanover-troop minister, a flagitious taskmaster, with a party only
+composed of the 16,000 Hanoverians; and he ended his denunciation by
+wishing that Carteret were in the House, for then he would say ten times
+more. His speech was passionate and rhetorical, incomparably good of its
+kind. But the Government prevailed in the division by 271 to 226. This
+majority of forty-five was larger than had been anticipated, and was due
+to the incessant exertions of Walpole. He sustained the flagging spirits
+of the Ministry, who were on the point of abandoning the proposal.
+Newcastle, indeed, had blenched before the storm, and openly took part
+against the Hanoverians. But Walpole restored the fortune of the field.
+He stemmed the gathering retreat, put heart into the waverers, and used
+his personal credit with his old friends. Never in his own
+administration had he laboured any point with more zeal. 'The whole
+world,' writes his son Horace, 'nay, the Prince himself, allows that if
+Lord Orford had not come to town, the Hanover troops had been lost. They
+were, in effect, given up by all but Carteret.'[157]
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 1744.]
+
+So far as the House of Commons was concerned, this ended the hostilities
+against the Hanoverian troops, though the House of Lords continued the
+controversy with a debate in which Chesterfield, who outdid Pitt in
+violence, delivered a speech which was greatly admired. But a subsidy of
+200,000_l._ had to be voted to the King of Sardinia under the treaty of
+Worms. This treaty, negotiated by the King and Carteret in Germany
+independently of the Home Government, was little relished by that
+Government, and offered a tempting target to the warriors of the
+Opposition. On a first motion for papers, Pitt was again prominent,
+though little of his speech survives. Alluding, however, to a secret
+convention attached to the treaty, which Carteret had signed but which
+Ministers had refused to ratify, he declared, 'I only wanted the sight
+of a convention, tacked to the treaty which that audacious hand had
+signed, to furnish matter for immediate impeachment.' On the actual vote
+the Government had only a majority of 62. Subsequent unreported debates
+furnished Pitt with opportunities of denouncing the Pelham brethren as
+subservient tools of Carteret. But the Government waxed stronger in
+proportion to the heat of opposition. On a vote of censure they had a
+majority of 114. Through these discussions Pitt passes like a phantom,
+foremost by all consent in debate, but without leaving any footprint of
+speech behind.
+
+From these broils Parliament was now distracted by startling
+intelligence. By message to the House on February 15 (1744) the King
+apprised his faithful lieges that a French fleet was prowling in the
+Channel, and that the young Stuart Prince, Charles Edward, had arrived
+in France to join it. One of our vessels had met this squadron of
+seventeen men-of-war and four frigates so long ago as January 27, 'half
+seas over' between Brest and the Land's End, prowling apparently
+northwards. There was something of a panic: men remembered how the Dutch
+in 1667 had sailed up the Thames, and apprehended a repetition of that
+disgrace. The Jacobites began to raise their head, but stocks did not
+fall. The King's message announced that the 'eldest son of the Pretender
+to his Crown is arrived in France; and that preparations are making
+there to invade this kingdom in concert with disaffected persons here.'
+A loyal address was at once prepared, to which the Opposition moved an
+addition, promising an inquiry into the state of the Navy. The
+amendment was, of course, supported by Pitt, and, of course, defeated.
+But Pitt, as stout an anti-Jacobite as his grandfather, promised his
+adhesion to the address whether the amendment voted or not; and a few
+days later, on the presentation of papers, he supported the Government
+so warmly as to receive the public thanks of Pelham. But for once the
+interest was not in the Commons but the Lords. Newcastle had laid the
+papers before the House, and with his usual blundering ineptitude had
+allowed the House to pass to private business. Then Orford rose, and
+broke his long silence. With dignity and emotion he confessed that he
+had vowed to refrain from speech in that House, but that abstinence now
+would be a crime. He had heard the King's message, and had observed with
+amazement that that House was to be so wanting in respect as to leave it
+unanswered. Was our language so barren as to be unable to find words to
+the King at such a crisis; 'a time of distraction and confusion, a time
+when the greatest power in Europe is setting up a Pretender to his
+throne?'
+
+'I have indeed particular reason to express my astonishment and my
+uneasiness on this occasion; I feel my breast fired with the warmest
+gratitude to a gracious and royal master whom I have so long served; my
+heart overflows with zeal for his honour, and ardour for the lasting
+security of his illustrious house. But, my lords, the danger is common,
+and an invasion equally involves all our happiness, all our hopes, and
+all our fortunes.'
+
+In these passionate words the wary and unemotional Orford allowed his
+apprehension to overflow. He saw the work of his life, the keeping out
+of the Stuarts, compromised and endangered by the unpopularity of the
+throne, and the blunders of jobbing mediocrity. He perceived the danger
+which he had so long warded off now instant and imminent. The House was
+deeply moved. Newcastle with obvious mortification acknowledged his
+lapse, and the Chancellor hurriedly drafted an address. Even the Prince
+of Wales, whose hatred of Walpole was perhaps the deepest feeling of
+which his shallow nature was capable, was so stirred, that he rose and
+shook hands with the veteran Minister. Nay, as we are told by a
+chronicler blissfully unconscious of bathos, 'he revoked the prohibition
+which prevented the family of Lord Orford from attending his levee.' It
+was a dramatic occasion, worthy of being the last public appearance of
+Orford. The hard-bitten old statesman who had been baited for near a
+quarter of a century, and had always given his opponents as good as he
+had got, disappeared from the stage with a burst of passionate
+patriotism.
+
+[Sidenote: 1744.]
+
+The end is so near that we may follow him thither. This speech was on
+the last day of February, and he was soon afterwards seized with a
+painful and mortal complaint; but in July he could not resist returning
+to Houghton for a final visit. There he remained till November, beset by
+anxious solicitations both from the King and from the Ministry, for he
+was the guide and stay of both. At last, though tortured with the stone,
+he consented to return to London at the urgent solicitation of his
+sovereign, then engaged in a desperate struggle to retain Carteret as
+Secretary of State. Even Carteret, his old enemy, in the stress of
+self-preservation sought his aid. Orford set out on November 19, and in
+four slow days of an agony which wrung even the practised nerves of
+Ranby, the surgeon (and it is difficult even now to read Ranby's
+narrative without emotion), he reached London. The crisis then was over,
+for he had put an end to it on his journey. A message despatched by the
+Pelhams had met him on the road and placed him in possession of the
+facts of the situation. He had at once written to advise the King to
+part with Carteret, and the King had instantly submitted.
+
+This was Walpole's last act of power, but he remained in London to die.
+For four months he lingered under the hands of the surgeons, sometimes
+under opium, sometimes suffering tortures with equanimity and good
+humour. But even so his shrewd and cynical common sense did not desert
+him. Consulted by the Duke of Cumberland as to a marriage projected for
+him by the King, but repugnant to the Duke, the dying statesman advised
+him to consent to the marriage on condition of an ample and immediate
+establishment. 'Believe me,' he added, 'the marriage will not be
+pressed.' Walpole's knowledge of mankind left him only with his death.
+
+His constancy, his courage, his temper, his unfailing resource, his love
+of peace, his gifts of management and debate, his long reign of
+prosperity will always maintain Walpole in the highest rank of English
+statesmen. Distinguished even in death, he rests under the bare and
+rustic pavement of Houghton Church, in face of the palace that he had
+reared and cherished, without so much as an initial to mark his grave.
+This is the blank end of so much honour, adulation, power, and renown.
+For a century and a half unconscious hobnails and pattens have ground
+the nameless stones above him, while mediocrities in marble have
+thronged our public haunts. His monument, unvoted, unsubscribed, but
+supreme, was the void left by his death, the helpless bewilderment of
+King and Government, the unwilling homage and retractation offered by
+his foes, the twenty years of peace and plenty represented by his name.
+
+And here another illustrious name cannot but suggest itself, though it
+may seem difficult to bring into anything like a parallel the two great
+Sir Roberts, Walpole and Peel. Both were distinguished by the same
+cautious and pacific sagacity. But they differed by the whole width of
+human nature in temperament. Walpole belonged to the school of the cold
+blood, and Peel to that of the warm. This, perhaps, constitutes the most
+important touchstone in the characters of statesmen, and success usually
+lies with the colder temperament. Of this principle, Fox, who was warm
+blooded, presents the most remarkable illustration, and Gladstone, who
+was not less so, the most signal exception. Peel's conscience, moreover,
+was as notably sensitive as Walpole's was notoriously the reverse. But
+though thus essentially apart, there is one capital point which the
+careers of Walpole and Pitt bear an almost exact resemblance to each
+other. Neither of them, strangely enough, reached his full height until
+his fall; neither acquired the full confidence of the country until he
+had lost that of Parliament; after having exercised almost paramount
+power as Ministers, neither ever reached his truest supremacy until he
+had left office for ever. Then, after a great catastrophe which had
+seemed to demolish them, it was perceived that they had soared above the
+mist into a higher air, clear of passion and interest; whence, though
+with scarce a following and without the remotest idea of a return to
+office, they spoke with an authority which they had never possessed when
+their word was law to an obedient majority in the Commons; an authority
+derived from experience and wisdom, without any lingering suspicion of
+self-interest. They lived in reserve, and only broke their self-imposed
+silence when the highest interests of the country seemed to forbid them
+to maintain it. Walpole, it is true, had to do his work mainly behind
+the scenes, while Peel did it conspicuously in Parliament; but the
+position was the same. If their eulogist had to choose the supreme
+period in the lives of both Walpole and Peel, he would select, not the
+epoch of their party triumphs, but the few exalted judicial years which
+elapsed between their final resignation and their death. It may seem a
+strain of language to use the word 'judicial,' for Walpole remained the
+oracle and stay of Whiggery, while Peel extended his consistent
+protection to the weak ministry of Lord John Russell. But Peel's
+protection of Russell was given in defiance of party to secure the Free
+Trade which he deemed vital, and Walpole's guidance of Whiggery was in
+disinterested support of men he disliked and despised because he deemed
+Whiggery, or at least opposition to Jacobitism, not less vital. Free
+Trade and Whiggery were, in the opinion of the two statesmen, essential
+to avert the revolutions which the opposite systems would have involved.
+
+This seems a digression, but at this time Pitt and Walpole were not far
+apart; they secretly acknowledged each other's power and merit. Pitt had
+already begun to appreciate the solid sagacity of Walpole, and to repent
+of some random invective. Walpole saw the rhetorical boy developing
+into the man of the future, and was more and more anxious to enlist him.
+'Sir Robert Walpole,' said Pitt in Parliament at a later period,
+'thought well of me, and died at peace with me. He was a truly English
+minister.'[158]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+[Sidenote: March 1744.]
+
+Soon after this memorable debate France formally declared war against
+Great Britain in a document reciting the injuries sustained by France at
+the hands of the 'King of England, Elector of Hanover,' and faction was
+for the moment laid on one side, though Pitt, while supporting the
+Government, managed to declare that perdition would attend Carteret as
+the 'rash author of those measures which have produced this disastrous,
+impracticable war.' Still Parliament adjourned with comparative harmony
+in May. Before it met again two events occurred of the greatest
+importance to Pitt.
+
+The first was the death of that vigorous old termagant Sarah, Duchess of
+Marlborough. All through life she had been more bellicose, though with
+less success, than her illustrious husband, and of late years had
+devoted her peculiar powers of hatred to Walpole. This bitterness
+extended even beyond the grave, for by a codicil dated two months before
+her death she bequeathed legacies to the two men who had most
+distinguished themselves by their attacks on that Minister. One was
+Chesterfield, to whom she left 20,000_l._; the other was Pitt, to whom
+she left 10,000_l._, 'for the noble defence he made for the support of
+the laws of England, and to prevent the ruin of his country.' Moreover,
+she seems to have bequeathed to him her 'manor in the County of
+Buckingham, late the estate of Richard Hampden Esq: and leasehold in
+Suffolk; and lands etc. in Northampton.'[159] Pitt, in acknowledging the
+bequest to Marchmont, her executor, demurely and ambiguously replies:
+'Give me leave to return your Lordship my thanks for the obliging manner
+in which you do me the honour to inform me of the Duchess of
+Marlborough's great goodness to me. The sort of regard I feel for her
+memory I leave to your Lordship's heart to suggest to you.'[160] Nor was
+this legacy all, for she settled her Wimbledon estate on her favourite
+grandson John Spencer, and after him on his only son; should that only
+son die without issue, it was to be divided between Chesterfield and
+Pitt. She, moreover, induced John Spencer to make a will bequeathing his
+own Sunderland estates to Pitt after his own sickly son.[161] Two years
+afterwards Spencer himself died at the age of thirty-seven 'because he
+would not be abridged of those invaluable blessings of an English
+subject, brandy, small beer and tobacco,'[162] so that only a child
+stood between Pitt and this great inheritance. Fortunately the splendid
+contingency did not take effect. For Chesterfield died without
+legitimate issue, and the Pitts have long been extinct; but the
+descendants of John Spencer's only son have been men of a purity of
+character and honour which have sweetened and exalted the traditions of
+English public life.
+
+The legacy was opportune in more respects than one. It came as a solace
+to Pitt, who was desperately ill at Bath with gout in his stomach,
+which the waters were unavailing to remove; his friends indeed feared
+that he would be disabled for life. It also made him independent.
+Bolingbroke indeed thought it made him too independent.[163] Cynics soon
+declared it to be timely from another point of view, for immediately
+after the Duchess's death there was a crisis which was to put an end to
+Pitt's opposition and so to his claims on her sympathies. Carteret fell,
+and with his fall disappeared the object of Cobham's hatred and Pitt's
+philippics. The tempting contrast between Pitt receiving a legacy as the
+leading member of the Opposition, and Pitt immediately reconciled to the
+Ministry, and so ceasing to be a 'Patriot,' could not escape satire. Sir
+Charles Hanbury Williams lost no time in penning the coarse but vigorous
+lampoon which depicts the ghost of the old Duchess appearing to Pitt.
+'Return, base villain, my retaining fee,' says the spectre, reminds the
+legatee that even Judas returned the wage of betrayal, and leaves him to
+the 'lash of lost integrity.'[164] But these taunts were wide of the
+mark. It was not Pitt's integrity that had disappeared, but the object
+of his opposition, now that Carteret had fallen.
+
+The story of that fall is material to the life of Pitt; it is that
+second event of importance to him at this time to which we have alluded.
+We have seen that Walpole's last journey to London was caused by the
+King's struggle to retain Carteret whom the Pelhams insisted on
+removing. This indeed was a matter of necessity for them, as they could
+never enjoy real power while Carteret engrossed the King's confidence.
+Moreover, owing to the ill success of the Austro-British alliance during
+1744 in operations with which he was identified he had become extremely
+unpopular. He himself was dissatisfied with his position, for though he
+had the ear of the King he was constantly outvoted in the Cabinet.
+'Things cannot go on as they are,' he said to the ruling brother. 'I
+will not submit to be overruled and outvoted on every point by four to
+one. If you will undertake the Government, do so. If you cannot or will
+not I will.' This rash declaration of war sealed his fate. As a matter
+of fact the main division in the Cabinet of which we have record at this
+time was nine to four; but the majority was no doubt steady and
+inflexible against Carteret. The brothers now concentrated their
+energies on his overthrow. But before making any open attack on so
+strong a position, they wisely endeavoured to secure new sources of
+strength by negotiation with the Opposition.
+
+During the year 1744 the leaders of the Opposition had reunited, 'upon
+one principle,' says the malignant Glover, 'which was to get into
+place.' This may fairly be said, without disparagement, to be the
+legitimate object of all Oppositions. In any case these politicians may
+well have realised that divided and scattered they were impotent, and
+they may have desired to make themselves felt in Parliament with or
+without office. So they appointed a committee of nine to treat with the
+Government. The junto, as it was termed in the jargon of that day,
+consisted of Bedford, Chesterfield, Gower, Cobham, Pitt, Lyttelton,
+Waller, Bubb, and Sir John Hinde Cotton.[165] This powerful body was
+approached by Carteret, always tardy and unskilful in such
+negotiations; but he had been anticipated by the brethren in power, who,
+in such intrigues, displayed all the skill that he lacked. He obtained,
+however, the powerful mediation of the Prince of Wales, who had a regard
+for him. Carteret's offers were liberal enough. He offered that the
+administration should be transformed, and places found for all of them;
+but they replied that they could make no terms with him. He turned, as
+we have seen, to Walpole in his despair, but in vain. Every hole was
+stopped. The Pelhams had secured both Walpole and the Committee.
+
+Five of the junto, including Pitt and Lyttelton, were, it is said, in
+favour of joining the Pelhams without any stipulation. The minority,
+including Cobham, who considered that the pass had been sold, and who
+cursed the less scrupulous tactics of the majority, were for making
+conditions as regards future policy. However, all, both of the majority
+and the minority, were brought into the scheme; Cobham, who received a
+regiment, having, it is said, also obtained an assurance from Newcastle
+that the interests of Hanover should be subordinated to the interests of
+Great Britain. Bedford became First Lord of the Admiralty; Gower, Privy
+Seal; Waller, Cofferer; Lyttelton, a Lord of the Treasury; Bubb,
+Treasurer of the Navy; and Cotton, a notorious Jacobite, Treasurer of
+the Chambers. It should be added, however, that the narrative of this
+negotiation, however probable it may appear, rests on the doubtful
+authority of Glover, who is too venomous to be trustworthy. But in any
+case it is not necessary to condemn the Committee, even if Glover's
+statement be accepted as fact. Should so powerful a body of men enter
+the feeble Government of the Pelhams, they might well feel confident of
+controlling its policy with or without previous stipulation. A severer
+judgment may be passed when it is seen that the policy remained
+substantially unaltered, and that Pitt found himself able to
+discriminate between Carteret's policy with Carteret in office, and the
+same policy with Carteret out of office.
+
+Fortified by this treaty, which included, of course, places for Pitt and
+Chesterfield, to be given when the King could be induced to give them,
+the Pelhams executed their stroke of state; and having, as we have seen,
+made sure of the oracle at Houghton to which the King was sure to have
+recourse, they sent the Chancellor to the King to inform him of the
+determination of the entire Cabinet to resign unless he would remove
+Carteret. Still the King could not be brought to abandon his favourite
+Foreign Minister and his favourite foreign policy. It was not until
+Orford gave the decision against Carteret that the Sovereign succumbed,
+three weeks after the delivery by the Pelhams of their ultimatum.
+
+The fall of Carteret left the brothers, Newcastle and Pelham, absolute
+masters of the situation. The King had been completely defeated, and had
+sullenly to submit. He would scarcely speak to his Ministers. When he
+broke silence it would be to say, 'I have done all you asked me, I have
+put all the power into your hands, and I suppose you will make the most
+of it.' To that Hardwicke, the Lord Chancellor, with more than legal
+subtlety replied, 'The disposition of places is not enough if your
+Majesty takes pains to show the world that you disapprove of your own
+work.' This was more than the King could endure. 'My work!' he broke
+out; 'I was forced, I was threatened.' The Chancellor was shocked at
+these expressions. He knew of nothing of the kind. Such harshness was
+utterly alien to the ministerial mind. The mere idea of compulsion was
+shocking to it. 'No means were employed but what have been used in all
+times, the humble advice of your servants supported by such reasons as
+convinced them that the measure was necessary for your service.' This
+was the legal and fastidious method of describing the threatened strike
+of the Ministry in the previous November.
+
+Carteret resigned in the last week of November (1744), and the Pelhams
+used their victory wisely and well by building up during the following
+month a strong administration on a large basis. It comprised men of all
+parties, Whigs, Tories, even Jacobites, forgotten Whigs, forgotten
+Tories, forgotten Jacobites, and was called in the canting phrase of
+that day the Broad Bottom Administration, as being a coalition of all
+parties. The only flaw in it was that it omitted the only men worth
+having. Among the new officials were George Grenville and George
+Lyttelton, who became subordinate Lords of the Treasury and Admiralty.
+'Do what you will,' Cobham had said, 'provided you take care of my
+boys,' from whom Pitt now seemed to be excluded; for Cobham found him
+positive and unbending, differing, sometimes, it may be presumed, from
+Cobham. When complete, this Ministry was so comprehensive as to
+annihilate opposition, and render the next few years unprecedentedly
+placid and dull from the parliamentary point of view.
+
+Outside the forgotten worthies who were provided with places, there
+towered the two memorable men, Pitt and Chesterfield, the one great and
+the other considerable. Against them the King remained implacable. But
+he had at last to yield to the admission of Chesterfield. At first 'he
+shall have nothing,' had said the King, 'trouble me no more with such
+nonsense.' But now Chesterfield was to combine the Lord Lieutenancy of
+Ireland with a special embassy to the Hague. On Pitt alone was the veto
+still absolute. And yet he was the only man whom the Ministers really
+dreaded.[166]
+
+The Pelhams, through Cobham, had promised him the Secretaryship at War,
+on which his heart was set; but they were unable to fulfil their pledge,
+and soothed him for the time with promises that they would persevere in
+pressing him upon the Sovereign. With these fine words Pitt professed
+himself satisfied, and promised support, all the more readily as he knew
+himself to be inevitable. In the meantime, however, he gave up the only
+post he held, a course to which he was impelled both by the Marlborough
+legacy and the fall of Carteret; for while the first made him
+independent of salary, the second had alienated the Prince of Wales. So
+in April (1745) he resigned his groomship of the bedchamber, and met
+Parliament in the unadorned character of the most powerful private
+individual in the country.
+
+On the army estimates he spoke for the first time, and with vehemence,
+as a supporter of the Government. On this occasion, too, he first
+utilised the apparatus of gout with the demeanour of a graceful invalid,
+whose end was approaching. Were it to be the last day of his life, he
+exclaimed, he would spend it in the House of Commons, since he judged
+the condition of his country to be worse than that of his own health.
+Formerly these expressions would have meant that the Government was
+ruining the nation. But now, he explained, that though Carteret had
+nearly wrecked the kingdom, the present object was, by connecting
+Hanover with Holland, to arrive at a prompt and fair pacification. He
+paid warm compliments to Pelham on his patriotism and capacity for
+business, and commended his Government with oblique and friendly
+expressions directed towards the King. A dawn of salvation to this
+country had broken forth (which, apparently, had hitherto been obscured
+by the form of Carteret), and he would follow it as far as it would lead
+him. His 'fulminating eloquence,' we are told, 'silenced all
+opposition.'[167]
+
+In February 1745 a question arose of peculiar delicacy for Pitt. Through
+one of the compromises sometimes required by political emergency the
+question of the employment of the Hanoverians, against which Pitt was so
+strongly pledged, was arranged by transferring them to Maria Theresa,
+with an extra subsidy to enable her to pay them. This somewhat
+transparent artifice was boldly and dexterously defended by Pitt
+himself. On such occasions it is well not to hesitate or refine, and
+Pitt spoke without visible qualms. 'It was,' he said, 'a meritorious and
+popular measure, which did honour to the minister who advised it, and
+the Prince, who so graciously vouchsafed to follow it, and must give
+pleasure to every honest heart. As to what had been thrown out that the
+Queen of Hungary might take them into her pay, when they were dismissed
+from ours, what of that? She was at liberty to take them or not. They
+would not be forced on her, but God forbid that these unfortunate troops
+should by our votes be proscribed at every court in Europe.' It was
+enough that, 'by his Majesty's wisdom and goodness,' they were no longer
+voted annually as a part of our army, and so forth.[168]
+
+It is obvious from the meagre report that Pitt was now as copious in his
+praise of the King as he had formerly been niggard. His Sovereign had
+become wise and good and gracious; the Hanoverian troops, which had been
+so short a time ago cowardly and contemptible troops, were now
+unfortunate and meritorious, well worthy the attention and employment of
+Maria Theresa. One or two members could not help smiling; they called
+the measure collusive, and declared that if we were to pay the
+Hanoverians at all it were better to pay them directly, when they would
+at least be under our direction and control, than through the Queen of
+Hungary, when they would not. It is not on record that any one asked
+what advantage would be reaped by the taxpayer under the method
+proposed, when he would pay at least as much as before, but without the
+least check as to the way in which the money was spent. Nevertheless,
+there were complaints enough. Pitt must have hinted that it was better
+that they should fight under the Hungarian flag than the British, as
+they did not fight in harmony by the side of British troops; for this
+called up a Northumbrian baronet to explain that this was contrary to
+the fact, and that he should raise the point in a motion. Pitt at once
+rose again, not in his high line, but 'with all the art and temper
+imaginable,' soothed and complimented the honest member, hinted that his
+motion would only serve the purposes of Carteret, whom they both
+rejoiced to see removed, and generally allayed the debate with complete
+success.[169]
+
+This is again a notable mark in his career. For the first time he
+appears, not as the fierce hero of declamation and invective, but as the
+dexterous official diplomatist, coaxing and reassuring. He was fast
+moving onwards.
+
+The official character of Pitt's speeches is all the more marked because
+there was little to commend and much to attack in the conduct of the
+Ministry, which had, to say the least, been singularly unfortunate. The
+disastrous battle of Fontenoy was not redeemed by the capture of
+Louisbourg, a gallant affair for which local volunteers and local
+enterprise, rather than the Government, deserve the credit. And now
+during the Parliamentary recess from May to October there suddenly
+appeared a fresh danger, the one against which Walpole's policy had been
+mainly directed for a generation. On August 19, Charles Edward, eldest
+son of the exiled Prince of Wales, and grandson of King James II.,
+raised the standard of civil war at Glenfinnan; on September 17 he was
+living in the palace of his ancestors at Holyrood; four days afterwards
+he completely defeated the forces sent against him. Had he at once
+marched South he might well have reached London, and had he reached
+London the face of history in this island might have been changed. The
+Cabinet was panic-stricken, not merely at the advance of Charles, but at
+the anger of their legal Sovereign, who seemed likely to recall
+Carteret to his side. Dutch troops were hastily fetched over and sent to
+the North, and English troops from Flanders followed. Had these
+reinforcements been detained by contrary winds but a few weeks Pelham
+declared that London could not have been defended against the Jacobites.
+Two days before the victory of Charles Edward, Henry Fox wrote that 'had
+five thousand (French) troops landed in any part of this island a week
+ago, I verily believe the entire conquest would not have cost them a
+battle.'
+
+But Charles contented himself with a reign at Holyrood of six weeks, and
+this delay lost him his chances of success. When Parliament met on
+October 17 he was still in Edinburgh, but adequate measures had been
+taken to render his enterprise abortive. All this does not concern Pitt,
+except as giving him an opportunity of expressing his devoted loyalty to
+George II.; but while Charles Edward was marching on Derby a desperate
+struggle was going on which related entirely to him. In the new session
+he had begun to show signs of irritation and of impatience with the
+Government; the emollients of the Pelhams began to lose their virtue,
+and he was determined not to be fooled any longer. His amiability had
+disappeared, and though his speeches are unreported, it is evident that
+the Ministers were now made to feel the terrors of his tongue.
+'Yesterday,' writes Horace Walpole, 'they had another baiting from Pitt,
+who is ravenous for the place of Secretary at War: they would give it
+him: but as preliminary, he insists on a declaration of our having
+nothing to do with the Continent,' a stipulation which reads strangely
+enough by the light of the years to come. The Pelhams saw that they
+could no longer defer the fulfilment of their promises, and that it was
+necessary to approach the King. The moment was singularly unfavourable.
+The King had never forgiven the compulsion put on him to dismiss
+Carteret, nor the fact of his separation from Carteret. He had
+shrewdness enough to see that in ability and grasp of affairs Carteret
+towered above the other ministers except the Chancellor; and he despised
+Newcastle, who was principally thrown into contact with him. It was a
+shame, he declared, that a man who was not fit to be a chamberlain at
+the pettiest of German courts should be forced on the nation and on the
+Crown as a principal minister. All through 1745 the royal resentment
+smouldered, though it was kept in suspense by the rebellion. But when
+that movement lost in importance and became clearly doomed, the King
+felt more free to display his feelings. Foreign policy, with which we
+are not here concerned, was part of his grievance; but the main cause of
+irritation was the threatened intrusion of Pitt on his councils. And yet
+this was obviously impending and even inevitable. Pitt, at first so
+patient, had begun to show his teeth in public, and probably in private
+as well. The crisis could not be any longer avoided.
+
+In the preceding autumn there had been conferences between the Pelhams
+on the one side and Pitt and Cobham on the other. On November 20, 1745,
+Newcastle records a meeting at which Pitt put forward his demands, and
+'apprehended great difficulties in bringing about what we so much
+desired,' his accession to office. His conditions were finally melted
+down to an extension of the Place Bill so as to exclude from Parliament
+all officers in the Army under the rank of lieutenant-colonel, and in
+the Navy below the rank of captain; the removal of all the remaining
+adherents of Carteret, notably the two Finches, from Court; and a 'total
+alteration of the foreign system, by feeding only the war on the
+Continent, acting there as auxiliaries, and particularly by confining
+all the assistance we should give to the Dutch to the bare contingent of
+10,000 men; but to increase our navy, and to act as principals at sea in
+the war against France and Spain. For a peace with France, at present,
+was not to be thought of.'
+
+The first condition presented no complications. The second seemed
+inexpedient on grounds of prudence and decency. The third presented more
+difficulty. Newcastle had two long conferences upon it, first with Pitt
+and then with Cobham. Finally a meeting was held between the Chancellor,
+Hardwicke, Harrington, Pelham, and Newcastle on one side, and Gower,
+Bedford, Cobham, and Pitt on the other.[170]
+
+The situation of affairs at this moment was this: Charles Edward was
+marching from Holyrood towards London. The French had won Fontenoy and
+were overrunning the Austrian Netherlands, without difficulty and almost
+without resistance. Maria Theresa was about to conclude peace at Dresden
+(December 25, 1745) by a renewed cession of Silesia. This was the
+juncture at which the Pelhams resolved to force on a Cabinet crisis in
+order to obtain the services of Pitt. The fact at least displays the
+value and importance of the personage who was the subject of contest.
+
+The real point at issue between the Government and Pitt was this: The
+Government wished to give general and unlimited assurances of
+assistance, amounting almost to a guarantee, to the Dutch. Pitt wished
+the assistance definitely limited to a force of 10,000 men; and that we
+should then, free of all other continental complications (for both
+parties agreed that Austria must come to terms with Prussia), carry on a
+purely naval war against France and Spain.
+
+At this conference between the Ministers and the Cobham
+plenipotentiaries, Newcastle was the spokesman of the Government. He
+declared that the Queen of Hungary had forfeited her rights to any
+further assistance, and that we were about to tell her that she could
+have no more from us. On this point all were apparently agreed, so that
+Austria was eliminated from the discussion. The case of Holland was,
+however, in the opinion of Ministers, different; her existence was
+necessary to us, and we must proffer help to her, if only to prevent her
+concluding a separate peace with France. But an offer limited to 10,000
+men would not prevent such a peace; we must show a general disposition
+to assist. Lord Cobham answered that this sort of defensive war could
+never bring about a peace, that the Dutch would evade their engagements,
+and we should find ourselves with as formidable a continental war on our
+hands as if we were again actively supporting Maria Theresa. Pitt warmly
+supported Cobham; spoke strongly against the Dutch; 'insisted that
+10,000 men in our present circumstances was a generous and noble
+succour.... He insisted on the necessity of coming to some precision as
+to the contingent in order to satisfy the people; and talk'd much of the
+great impression we could make upon France, when our efforts were singly
+at sea.'
+
+At this point Bedford and Gower separated themselves from Cobham and
+Pitt. It was not possible, they said, to increase our navy. In fine, the
+plenipotentiaries of the Government pointed out that if France and
+Holland came to terms, we might have France and Spain free to devote
+their whole energies against us, and, as the others chimed in, 'they
+might easily keep the rebellion on foot for years, if not destroy us
+quite.'
+
+Cobham and Pitt, however, departed unshaken, though with great civility
+and good-humour. Newcastle glumly sums up the position. The King may say
+that he was ready to take these gentlemen into the Government, but, as
+they will not come in, ask if the Ministry will thereupon desert him?
+'To which, to be sure, no other answer can be given but that we are not
+in a condition to carry it on. To depend upon my Lord Granville's
+friends to support this administration against Lord Granville is a
+contradiction in itself. To bring in Mr. Pitt against his own will is
+impossible. And, therefore, at present there seems to be nothing to be
+done, if Mr. Pitt is determined (which, I should still hope, he would
+not finally be), but with your lordship (Chesterfield), the Duke of
+Bedford, my Lord Gower, to get as many individuals as we can to carry us
+through till the rebellion is over: and then we shall be at liberty to
+take such part as we shall think most consistent with our own honour and
+the public service.'[171]
+
+Observe: without Pitt we are not in a condition to carry on. That is
+what this letter amounts to, for of Bedford and Gower the Ministry felt
+sure, and Cobham was an auxiliary who was on and off like a freebooter.
+The adhesion of Pitt, a private member, poor and almost unconnected,
+was vital to a Government which in the public opinion had already
+collected every possible element of strength. So matters continued till
+the meeting of Parliament after the Christmas recess in January 1746.
+Pitt held aloof, and had no further commerce with the Government.
+
+A few days before Parliament met, however, he went to the Duke of
+Bedford, inquired as to the foreign policy of the Government, showed a
+disposition to come into it, and expressed a wish that some minister
+would talk it over with Lord Cobham, 'into whose hands they had now
+finally committed themselves.'[172] On this hint Newcastle hurried to
+Cobham, who was reasonable, and 'seemed very desirous to come into us
+and bring his Boys, as he called them.... The terms were, Mr. Pitt to be
+Secretary at War; Lord Barrington in the Admiralty; and Mr. James
+Grenville to have an employment of L1000 a year. He flung out Lord
+Denbigh, the Duke of Queensbury, and some Scotch politicians, but not as
+points absolutely to be insisted on.'
+
+It is useful and edifying to be allowed behind the scenes in this way;
+for such negotiations are now, one would imagine, obsolete, or as nearly
+obsolete as the corruption of our fallen nature will allow. Still, one
+may drop a tear in passing over the 'Scotch politicians,' so lightly
+proffered, so lightly dismissed. But let Newcastle continue his
+narrative. 'Upon this I opened the Budget to the King, which was better
+received than I expected, and the only objection was to the giving Mr.
+Pitt the particular office of Secretary at War.' Still the Pelhams
+pressed the appointment. Then the goaded and distressed monarch
+determined to make a desperate effort to break from the dominion of the
+Whig hierarchy, so as to carry out his own foreign policy, and avoid the
+admission of Pitt to his counsels. At this juncture Bath gained
+admittance to the Closet, and fortified the King's repugnance. He
+'represented against the behaviour of his ministers in forcing him in
+such a manner to take a disagreeable man into a particular office, and
+thereby dishonouring his Majesty both at home and abroad; and
+encouraging the King to resist it by offering him the support of his
+friends in so doing.'[173] The King caught at this forlorn hope, and
+gave Bath full power to form a new Government. Bath released himself
+from his vow against holding office, accepted the charge with alacrity,
+instantly summoned Carteret, and obtained from the City a promise of
+supplies on terms more favourable than those to which Pelham had agreed.
+Carteret, it need scarcely be said, joyfully acceded. The misfortune was
+that there was no one else who did. The Pelham ministry resigned in a
+body. Bath kissed hands as First Minister, and received the seals of the
+Secretaries of State to transmit to Carteret, who was ill. The new
+Secretary at once announced by circular his appointment to the foreign
+ministers. But there all ended. When old Horace Walpole was told that
+this ministry was settled he shrewdly remarked: 'I presume in the same
+manner as what we call a settlement in Norfolk; when a house is cracked
+from top to bottom and ready to fall, we say it is settled.'[174]
+Winnington was to have been the new Chancellor of the Exchequer. Thrice
+did the King press the seal into his hand, and thrice did Winnington
+return it. 'Your new ministers, sir, can neither support Your Majesty
+nor themselves,' said he.[175] He insisted, moreover, that they could
+not depend on more than 31 peers and 80 commoners. History does not
+confirm even so moderate a computation, but it may be presumed that this
+was the Court contingent on which any minister could count.
+
+Harrington, one of the actual Secretaries of State, on whom the King
+confidently reckoned for assistance in the new arrangement, resigned,
+after a stormy scene with his master, who never forgave him. Every one
+resigned or tried to resign, and there was no one to fill their places.
+To Pelham himself Carteret had made overtures; but Pelham told the King
+that the Whig junto would have nothing to do with Bath or Carteret. At
+last, the only measure left to the hapless monarch was to shut himself
+up and forbid his door to the crowd that sought admittance in order to
+give up their keys and staves and official insignia. He was soon
+compelled to send for Bath and to tell him that it would not do. Bath
+exhorted him to be firm, and offered by means of the Prince of Wales to
+secure Tory support. But with Charles Edward still in arms in the
+Highlands, the King could not bring himself to approach the foes of his
+house, and under no circumstances would he owe salvation to his son.
+Both Princes of Wales, the real and the titular, were almost equally
+repugnant to him. Another version of the story states that it was Bath
+who told the King that the project would not work. It matters little
+which is correct, for the position was self-evident, but George was
+probably stouter than Bath.
+
+Bath kissed hands on February 10 (1746). Two days afterwards his
+ministry had come to an end, and the King had sent for Pelham to return.
+Carteret saw the humour of the situation and laughed it away; he owned
+it a mad escapade, but was all the more ready to repeat it. It was all
+over, the King had to surrender to the Whigs, who condescended to resume
+the seals on easy terms, which were the proscription of Bath's following
+and the admission of Pitt. The first condition was simple enough, it was
+the natural result of Bath's defeat. _Vae victis._ 'We immediately
+desired,' writes Newcastle, 'that the Court might be purged of all their
+friends and dependents, that Lord Bath might be out of the Cabinet
+Council, the Duke of Bolton, Lord Berkeley of Stratton, Mr. William
+Finch, the Vice-Chamberlain, Mr. Edward Finch, the Groom of the
+Bedchamber, Mr. Boone, and the Lord Advocate of Scotland (which were all
+that were left of that sort), should be removed.' We have an impression
+that, in spite of all, 'the black, funereal Finches' were preserved to
+the Bedchamber and to the card table, but that does not concern this
+narrative.
+
+As to the second condition, it was inevitable sooner or later, and took
+place in the form least offensive to the Sovereign. But the ministerial
+crisis and the desperate venture with Bath and Carteret testify to the
+formidable position of Pitt and to the equal aversion of the Sovereign.
+In no less an instance than Pitt's could this repulsion have been
+overcome.
+
+Pitt himself had begged that his pretensions to the Secretaryship at War
+should not act as an obstacle to an accommodation with the King, for
+there was evidently nothing so repugnant to the Sovereign. The King had
+said first that he would not have him in that office at any price, then
+that he would use him ill if he had it, then that he would not admit him
+to his presence to do the business of the office if he had it.[176]
+
+There is, if the matter be candidly considered, no just cause of
+reproach in this obstinacy. George II. was a gentleman, and a brave
+gentleman. The Hanoverians were his own people, of his own blood and
+language. Hanover was the home in which he had been brought up, the
+paradise to which he always looked longingly from his splendid exile in
+England. The King's personal courage Pitt had publicly and wantonly
+aspersed; Hanover and the Hanoverians he had held up to every form of
+public hatred and contempt. One cannot be surprised that George II.
+would have nothing to say to him except under compulsion, and refused,
+as between one gentleman and another, to have personal relations with
+him. As a constitutional ruler his duty was another matter, but he would
+not perform a duty so odious except in the last resort. He ignored Pitt
+even after Pitt had entered office. It was four years after Pitt became
+Paymaster that Newcastle, as the result of long pressure or intrigue,
+induced the King even to speak to him. This was considered a triumph for
+the ministry.[177]
+
+[Sidenote: Mar. 6, 1746.]
+
+Perhaps the Pelhams understood the King's feelings. Pitt did without
+doubt. The King was not now pressed beyond endurance, and Pitt was
+content for the moment with the joint Vice Treasurership of Ireland, in
+which his partner was Walpole's son-in-law, Cholmondeley. The office was
+understood to be lucrative, but he was not destined to hold this
+sinecure for more than a few weeks. He had scarce time to ask for
+exemption from the land tax of four shillings in the pound which was
+charged on his salary for not residing in Ireland, or for admission to
+the Irish Privy Council, both customary requests.[178] Two months after
+he was gazetted Winnington died, and Pitt succeeded him in the rich
+office of Paymaster-General. This is a Privy Councillor's place, so Pitt
+had to be admitted to the King's presence to take the oath. The King
+shed tears as Pitt knelt before him. A constitutional Sovereign has
+these bitter moments.
+
+During the interval between the two appointments Pitt had to pay a heavy
+fee for the first. A vote was demanded for 18,000 Hanoverians to be
+taken into British pay. Cobham's young men, one of whom, afterwards Lord
+Temple, 'had declared in the House that he would seal it with his blood
+that he never would give his vote for a Hanoverian,' voted the money in
+silence. Pitt however was not content to play so abject a part. He stood
+boldly forth, speaking, said Pelham, his new chief, with the dignity of
+Wyndham, the wit of Pulteney, and the knowledge blended with judgment of
+Walpole. Walpole's son thought differently: Pitt, he declared, added
+'impudence to profligacy; but no criminal at the Place de Greve was ever
+so racked as he was by Dr. Lee, a friend of Lord Granville, who gave him
+the question both ordinary and extraordinary.' Probably both accounts
+are true. Lee was one of the Prince of Wales's men, and Pitt's relations
+with his late master were strained to the point of rupture by his
+acceptance of office.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+Pitt was now to inhabit the Pay Office, and he gave notice to Ann,
+without any previous quarrel so far as we know, that they would
+henceforth live apart. In any case, Pitt's accession to office thus
+enabled him to put a convenient period to what had probably become a
+fretting and irksome arrangement; but Walpole notes at this time that
+there is gossip about 'the new Paymaster's menage,' possibly Grattan's
+tradition of 'This House to Let.' This sort of chit-chat is, however,
+the inevitable accompaniment of a man in Pitt's position and need not
+again be dwelt upon. Two of his early patrons also quarrelled with him:
+the Prince of Wales and Cobham. But Pitt, for the moment at any rate,
+could afford to do without either. A more delicate question required his
+attention. There were habitual practices in the Pay Office which brought
+in immense profits to the Paymaster. It was the custom of that official
+to take poundage on all subsidies paid to foreign princes, and to use
+the great balances at his credit for his own purposes of speculation. As
+to this second method Pitt had no doubts, and rejected the idea. As to
+the first he seems, on entering upon office, to have consulted
+Pelham.[179] Pelham replied that Winnington had taken these perquisites,
+but that he himself when Paymaster had not; Pitt could do as he chose.
+'Such a manner of stating it left scarce an option in any but the basest
+of mankind,' remarks Camelford with characteristic bitterness. Pitt at
+any rate did not hesitate, and refused to take a farthing beyond his
+salary, which, in truth, was splendid enough. But the indirect profits
+of the Paymastership, which earlier in the century had founded the
+dukedom of Chandos and the palace of Canons, and which later endowed the
+peerage of Henry Fox and the glories of his exquisite residence at
+Kensington, besides furnishing great fortunes for his graceless sons to
+squander at the gaming-table, were, as Dr. Johnson would have said,
+beyond the dreams of avarice. It was held in that day of loose political
+morality to be noble, if not unique, for a man with a patrimony of a
+hundred a year and a legacy of ten thousand pounds to refuse to receive
+such profits.[180]
+
+Lord Camelford's statement may be taken in the main to be correct
+without adopting the sour inference which he draws. Pitt may well have
+asked Pelham as to the practice of the office and Pelham have replied in
+the sense indicated. If so, it was nearly as creditable to Pelham as to
+Pitt, for one was scarcely less needy than the other. Pelham was a
+gambler, and so wanted all the money he could get. He was a politician,
+and politicians in those days required money for their purposes almost
+as much as gamblers. Lord Camelford implies that had Pelham not answered
+as he did, Pitt would have taken the percentages and the balances. This
+is mere surmise. But, had he done so, he could not have been blamed.
+These perquisites were regarded as legitimate by the practice and
+opinion of the day; the balances were matters of public account. They
+made the Paymaster's office a great prize, a recognised source of
+immense profits. The fact remains that Pitt, or Pitt and Pelham, thought
+them improper, and refused to take them.
+
+One signal difference must however be observed. Pelham abstained
+silently, the abstinence of Pitt was widely known. This notoriety may
+have been partly due to the fact that the King of Sardinia, having heard
+of Pitt's refusal to deduct the percentage on the Sardinian subsidy,
+sent to offer him a large present, which Pitt unhesitatingly declined.
+But there was another reason, which colours Pitt's whole life, and which
+may therefore well be noted here. His light was never hid under any sort
+of bushel, and he did not intend that it should be. He already saw that
+his power lay with the people, and that it was based not merely on his
+genius and eloquence, but on a faith in his public spirit and scrupulous
+integrity. His virtues were his credentials, and it was necessary that
+they should be conspicuous. Pulteney and St. John had wielded greater
+Parliamentary power, yet Pulteney and St. John had perished from want of
+character. Character he saw was the one necessary thing, but character
+must be known to be appreciated. Pitt was perhaps the first of those
+statesmen who sedulously imbue the public with a knowledge of their
+merit. He can scarcely be called an advertiser, but he was the ancestor
+of advertisers. Other statesmen no doubt had paid their pamphleteers.
+Pitt paid nobody, but he inspired; he had hangers-on who clung to the
+skirts of his growing fortune. This is not to imply that he had not a
+genuine scorn of meanness and corruption and the baser arts of
+politics. He had to use them through others; he had to ally himself with
+Newcastle and his gang; he could not govern otherwise. But he was
+anxious that the public should know that he was something apart from and
+above these politicians. His was a real but not a retiring purity; a
+white column rather than a snowdrop. This was all part of his
+essentially theatrical character, which he had found successful in
+Parliament, and which gradually absorbed him, with unhappy results.
+
+But there was another reason why it was necessary that Pitt should
+advertise his virtue on this occasion. He was a patriot joining the
+Court party, a member of the Opposition accepting a place, which, with
+all deductions, had a fixed and ample salary. It was not possible for
+him, though his friends were already established in office, to join them
+without some loss of popularity. It was difficult for him to keep his
+shield untarnished in the royal armoury. The morose Glover states that
+he brought himself to the level of Lord Bath in public disfavour by his
+acceptance of office. Pitt himself, at the time of his bitter
+mortification in 1754, writes to Lord Hardwicke of his 'bearing long a
+load of obloquy for supporting the King's measures,' without the
+smallest abatement of the King's hostility, and about the same time
+describes himself as having parted with that weight in the country which
+arose from his independent opposition to the measures of the Government.
+He must indeed have counted the cost. It seemed obvious and in the
+nature of things that Lytteltons, Grenvilles, and Cobhams should follow
+the other patriots into office when opportunity offered; they had no
+doubt barked loudly at ministers, but they belonged to the families
+which always governed the country, and it was proper, indeed inevitable,
+that they should take up their predestined positions on the Treasury
+Bench. But Pitt had stood on a different pedestal. He had been marked
+out by Walpole for punishment and by the King for exclusion. He had
+thundered against the King and the King's trusted Ministers, the
+Walpoles and the Carterets, with a voice that overbore all others, and
+which apparently could not be silenced. The people seemed at last to
+have found an incorruptible champion. Then suddenly he was muzzled with
+a sinecure. Had he insisted on the Secretaryship of War and wrenched it
+from the reluctant sovereign, the position would have been totally
+different. But to pass into the sleek silence of the Vice Treasurership,
+and almost to disappear from sight or hearing for eight years, seemed a
+moral collapse. It is not one of the least remarkable features of Pitt's
+career that he should have survived this lucrative obscurity.
+
+It is indeed difficult to understand how so fierce and restless a spirit
+could have endured the passive existence to which he had restrained
+himself by the acceptance of office. We seem to hear a growl but a few
+months after he had become Paymaster. 'In the gloomy scene which, I
+fear, is opening in public affairs for this disgraced country,' he
+writes to George Grenville in October 1746; not a cheerful tone for a
+young minister, but one not unfamiliar among those in subordinate
+positions. Still he could afford to wait. He probably contented himself
+with the reflection that King George could not last for ever, and
+flattered himself with an easy entrance to the councils of King
+Frederick. He could watch, too, with silent scorn, the miscarriages of
+his official superiors, confident that high office must come to him, as
+it were, of its own accord. Still, he had to wait long, and the death of
+Frederick as well as the longevity of the monarch were little less than
+disastrous to his calculations. It would have been better, of course,
+for his historical position had he refrained from taking a subordinate
+office, which restrained his independence, and deprived him of the
+peculiar lustre of his lonely power. In these days we ask ourselves what
+temptation could induce him to accept a post which seemed to offer
+nothing but salary in exchange for the exceptional splendour of his
+independent position? How was it worth his while to become
+Vice-Treasurer of Ireland? It cannot have been for money. He was
+notoriously indifferent to money (though his nephew casts doubts even on
+this), and he was better off as to money than he had ever been before,
+owing to the Marlborough legacy. It may have been that as his political
+associates had all joined the administration, he thought that his
+loneliness impaired his power, and he must certainly have felt that it
+was impossible for him to continue in active and effective opposition to
+a Government which included his closest friends. That would seem to be
+the chief and conspicuous reason. But there was another, as one may well
+suppose, which was not less potent. Office is the natural, legitimate
+and honourable object of all politicians who feel capable of doing good
+work as ministers, and even of some who do not. The instances to the
+contrary are so few as to prove the rule. Wilberforce and Burdett,
+Ashley (for Ashley, though not literally outside the category of
+officials, cannot be considered as one), and Cobden are the names that
+obviously present themselves. But Ashley and Wilberforce had
+consecrated themselves to a high career of philanthropy which was
+incompatible with the bond of ministry. Burdett, long a popular idol and
+an orator of great power, a country gentleman of the best type, and
+personally agreeable even to those who differed from him, was probably
+held to be too advanced a demagogue to be even considered for an
+appointment. Cobden refused office at least twice; yet had he lived he
+could not have kept out of it. Bright, his illustrious political twin,
+the Castor to his Pollux, took it and liked it. In the eighteenth
+century we can think of no one but Pulteney. He, indeed, strictly
+speaking, is no exception, for as a youth he held a subordinate post.
+And though in the maturity of his powers he refused the first place when
+apparently he might have had it, he also solicited it when it was out of
+his reach.
+
+Althorp too, in the last century, is a singular example. He led the
+House of Commons for four years as Chancellor of the Exchequer, when his
+popularity and ascendancy made him the real pivot of the Government. But
+he hated office with so deadly a hatred that he had the pistols removed
+from his room lest he should end his official career with them. He
+really comes in the list of exceptions to the rule that office is the
+goal of all capable politicians.
+
+But Pitt had nothing in common with these men. He wished to be in
+office, and he knew that he would be a better minister than any there,
+even though he may not have felt already the confidence which he
+afterwards expressed that he alone could save England. How then was he
+to obtain a foothold in the ministry? The just repugance of the King
+was, he knew, insurmountable, so long as he remained outside. But if
+admitted to office he might well hope much from his power of
+fascination, which was almost famous. The King was not an easy person
+for any man to charm; but Pitt no doubt felt that if he could once be
+placed in contact with His Majesty, he might be able to remove the royal
+prejudice; though in that he seems to have been wrong. He tried his hand
+on Lady Yarmouth, with whom at a later period he seems to have been on a
+familiar footing; but it is doubtful if she ever dispelled, though she
+may have mitigated, the King's hatred of Pitt.
+
+Even failing the mollification of the King, he felt that by taking
+office he would have entered the official caste, and he would have
+placed his foot on one rung of the ladder of greatness. In accepting the
+Vice-Treasurership he had doubtless been promised the next post that was
+vacant, and was, as has been seen, given the Paymastership. He was thus
+reunited to all his political friends, and would form with them a solid
+proportion of the garrison of Downing Street, a proportion to be
+reckoned with. It would be strange indeed if in such a position and with
+such feeble superiors he did not make his way to some position of real
+business and power.
+
+It must be remembered, too, that the state of affairs as regards office
+in the eighteenth century was very different from the present. Now, if a
+man be a bold and popular speaker, both in Parliament and on the
+platform, but more especially on the platform, he leaps into the Cabinet
+at once; he disdains anything else; a Vice-Treasurership such as Pitt
+accepted he would regard as an insult. But in the middle of the
+eighteenth century there was nothing of this. There was no such thing as
+platform speaking outside the religious movement. A man made himself
+prominent and formidable in Parliament, but that was a small part of the
+necessary qualifications for office. The Sovereign then exercised a
+control, not indeed absolute, but efficacious and material, on the
+selection of ministers. The great posts were mainly given to peers;
+while a peerage is now as regards office in the nature of an impediment,
+if not a disqualification. In those days an industrious duke, or even
+one like Grafton who was not industrious, could have almost what he
+chose. But most of the great potentates preferred to brood over affairs
+in company with hangers-on who brought them the news, or with their
+feudal members of parliament. Still they formed a vital element in the
+governments of that time. Pelham's administration at this very time
+contained five dukes: he himself was the only commoner in it, and he was
+a duke's brother. It was necessary to have a Chancellor of the Exchequer
+in the House of Commons, but all the other high offices could be held
+preferably by peers. The two Secretaries of State were both dukes. A
+brilliant commoner without family connection or great fortune was an
+efficient gladiator to be employed in the service of these princes, but
+he was not allowed to rise beyond a fixed line. The peers lived, as it
+were, in the steward's room, and the commoners in the servants' hall; in
+some parlour, high above all, sate the King.
+
+Pitt, according to the practice of the twentieth century, would have
+received at least the highest office outside or, more probably, office
+within the Cabinet on the fall of Walpole, and he certainly would have
+been a Secretary of State or the equivalent before 1746. As it was, in
+that year he had to climb on hands and knees into a subordinate
+position. It had been difficult for him to get even that far at the cost
+of a ministerial crisis of capital importance. The veto of the King had
+certainly been the principal obstacle. But the iron rules of caste
+forbade any idea of office for Pitt at all commensurate with his
+importance. He had under the system in force to get in as he could, and
+into much the same sort of office as his inferior but more influentially
+connected colleagues, the Grenvilles, the Lytteltons, and the like.
+
+There was another weighty consideration which pointed to prompt
+acceptance. Pitt had no time to spare. He was no longer in his first
+youth, he was approaching middle age. When he accepted this subordinate
+post he was thirty-eight; and thirty-eight, it may be said, when the
+lives of statesmen were comparatively short, was a more mature period in
+a career than it would be considered now. At the age when Pitt became
+Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, North was already Prime Minister. Pitt was
+now seven years older than Grafton when he became Prime Minister, and
+fifteen years older than his own son when he first led the House of
+Commons as Chancellor of the Exchequer; both, of course, under
+circumstances abnormally propitious. These figures show sufficiently not
+merely that Pitt's career was, so to speak, in arrear, but that the
+youthfulness of ministers in those days, under the favouring breezes of
+birth and connection, affords no standard of comparison for the
+possibilities of a poor country gentleman with no such advantages. Pitt
+was, indeed, rather old than young of his age. His sickly youth and his
+habitual infirmities had aged him beyond his years. But it must be
+noted in passing that, in spite of the dire impetuosity of his
+character, all his steps in life, except his entry into Parliament, were
+tardy and delayed. He was forty-six when he married, and forty-eight
+when he first entered the Cabinet; he was thirty-eight when he first
+obtained office. He moved slowly, but not patiently. His glowing nature,
+thrown back on itself, exacerbated by rebuffs and neglect, all fused
+into a fierce scorn, the _saeva indignatio_ of Swift, gathered strength
+and intensity in its restrained progress, until it developed into a
+spirit not indeed amiable or attractive, but of indomitable and
+superhuman force. That was the process which was at work in the shade of
+subordinate office.
+
+This consideration leads us to what is the best, and probably the true,
+explanation of this voluntary eclipse: that in taking office he was
+taking leave of his youth and of his past, and embarking on a new phase
+of his career. Up to this time he had, like a predatory animal, lived
+wholly on attack, and had given no thought to consistency, and little to
+his future. He had only been a rattling politician, determined to make
+his way, thinking only of the game, and of how to develop and display
+his powers of oratory. He had been content to adopt Cobham's enemies as
+his own, and had tried on them the temper of his virgin sword, without
+much caring who they were or why he attacked them, so long as they were
+sufficiently prominent to give notoriety to their assailant. His course
+had been one of brilliant recklessness and of striking eloquence; but at
+bottom it had been nothing but faction. There have been many such
+swashbucklers in our history, and there will be many more. But it is
+rare that, as in Pitt's case, they develop into something supreme. With
+Pitt these extravagancies had only been the frolics of genius. By
+burying himself in the sedateness and reticence of office, Pitt sought
+to break with his dazzling indiscretions, and mature himself for
+statesmanship. He retired behind a screen in order to change his dress.
+That, one may infer, was his design; that, certainly, was the effect.
+
+To make an end of this topic, one may ask why Pitt, so fertile of
+invective himself, was not the subject of execration when he joined the
+Court. Great men no doubt may commit faults, even crimes, with impunity,
+for the lustre of their achievements throws a shadow over their errors.
+In such men it is recognised that all is usually on a colossal scale,
+deeds and misdeeds alike. As they are capable of gigantic successes,
+they are also capable of stupendous blunders. This is true of Pitt's
+whole career, but it does not explain the facility with which he was now
+able, before he had his famous administration to his credit, to subside
+into an easy placeman and vindicate the measures which he had previously
+denounced. A few lampoons were of course launched at so tempting an
+object, but he was not made a conspicuous butt. Nor does he seem to have
+lost, or if he did he soon regained, the ear and confidence of the
+people. He had at all periods rare powers of recovery. But in this case
+the fact is not difficult to explain. In the first place it must be
+borne in mind that what he did was the ordinary thing to do. Again, his
+personal friends, and even those who had intercourse with him, were
+impressed by his character and believed in his integrity. Then the
+refusal of the indirect profits counted for much, it gave an air of
+austere virtue to a proceeding otherwise questionable. Again, there was
+no particular object to be gained by attacking him. Who indeed was there
+to attack him? No one thought it worth their while to subsidise Grub
+Street for the purpose of throwing dirt on a silent Paymaster, and few
+dared attack him to his face. He had already inspired the House of
+Commons with that awe of him which subsisted and increased so long as he
+remained there. To deliver a philippic against Pitt was no joking
+matter; it required a man with iron nerves who was reckless of
+retribution. Lee, as we have seen, had attempted one, but, in spite of
+Horace Walpole's eulogy, he does not seem to have repeated the
+experiment. Hampden also attacked him, as we shall see, in terms which
+would have led to a duel had not the Speaker interposed his authority.
+Fox and Grenville withstood him doggedly in after years. Barre, when an
+obscure Irish adventurer, tried an attack not altogether without
+success, but did not care to renew the attempt, and became, in fact,
+Pitt's devoted follower. But these instances must be considered as
+singularly rare when it is remembered how tempting a mark was presented
+by Pitt's career, how frank and direct was the language of Parliament,
+and how generous the potations which flushed its debates. Murray, Pitt's
+contemporary and his equal in sheer ability, cowered before him; cowered
+with loathing, but cowered.[181] Pitt was already surrounded, and as
+years went on completely encompassed, with an armour and atmosphere of
+terror which rendered him almost impregnable to personal collisions
+throughout his career in the House of Commons. Some who had nothing to
+lose and everything to gain baited him from time to time, but they were
+always tossed back with damage. Such persistent assailants as he had,
+and they only appeared in force long afterwards, were mainly anonymous.
+
+Whatever the cause may have been, Pitt, from his accession to office in
+1746, remains in obscurity and almost in silence (so far as the records
+testify, though it is evident that these are extremely imperfect) for
+eight long years, at the potent period of life which ranges from
+thirty-eight to forty-six, the age at which Napoleon closed his career,
+but which was yet two years earlier than the commencement of Pitt's.
+During this long eclipse of ambition and stormy vigour he gives but few
+signs of life for the most diligent chronicler to note. But he had no
+sooner been appointed Paymaster than an incident took place which seemed
+to point to a sudden dawn of royal favour. The Duke of Cumberland's
+achievements in Scotland were to be rewarded by a pension of 40,000_l._
+a year, and the King expressed a wish that the motion to this effect
+should be made by Pitt. It is, however, evident that this was not a mark
+of royal affection, but rather of a royal desire to utilise the new
+acquisition to the Government, and in a way so little congenial as to
+make Pitt feel the collar on his neck. The King may have wished to
+display his captive in chains. But Cumberland, who did not love Pitt,
+declined this mark of regard, and Pelham fulfilled the honorary duty.
+
+Cumberland had earned this grant, as well as his name of 'the Butcher,'
+by his victory at Culloden, and the barbarity with which he had followed
+up his success. Fortunately for him, it never occurred to a grateful
+country to draw up a debtor and creditor account as between the nation
+and the Duke. Had it done so, there would have been no grant; for his
+defeats, both in number and in importance, represented something much
+more considerable than this easy and solitary triumph, which would have
+been amply compensated by Swift's 'frankincense and earthern pots to
+burn it in' at 4_l._ 10_s._, with 'a bull for sacrifice' at 8_l._
+However, mingling vengeance with gratitude, Parliament now plunged
+itself with zest into the horrors of the trials of some adventurous or
+bankrupt gentlemen who had followed Charles Edward, so that Pitt, even
+had he so desired, had no opportunity of breaking silence. No speech of
+his is recorded, indeed, till 1748.
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 20, 1747.]
+
+In the meantime he had been compelled to exchange Old Sarum for the
+ministerial borough of Seaford, one of the Cinque Ports; for Old Sarum
+was no longer tenable. The lord of Old Sarum, his brother Thomas, was a
+liege servant of the Prince of Wales, who was now once more in violent
+opposition, and who indeed ran two candidates, Lord Middlesex, a member
+of his household, and Mr. Gage, the sitting member, at Seaford in
+opposition to the ministerial men, William Pitt and William Hay. This
+proceeding sufficiently indicates the violence and completeness of the
+rupture between Pitt and his former master, brought about by acceptance
+of office. So tense indeed was the contest that Newcastle posted down to
+Seaford in person, held a levee of the voters whom he wooed with copious
+solicitation and refreshment, and during the poll sat by the returning
+officer to overawe the corrupt and limited constituency. He was
+victorious; Lord Middlesex exchanging seats with Pitt, for after this
+his defeat he was brought in by Thomas Pitt for Old Sarum. Newcastle's
+proceedings furnished matter for a petition to the House of Commons.
+This Pitt treated with contempt and 'turned into a mere jest,'[182] but
+Potter, son of the Primate, a clever scapegrace, of whom we shall hear
+again, spoke vigorously in support of the petition. This, however, had
+little chance against the argument of a compact parliamentary majority,
+which rejected it by 247 to 96. But it is strange to find Pitt treating
+purity of election with ridicule: all the more strange when we remember
+that seven years afterwards he delivered one of his most famous speeches
+in awful rebuke of the same levity on the same subject. 'Was the dignity
+of the House of Commons on so sure foundations that they might venture
+themselves to shake it by jokes on electoral bribery?' It was thus that
+the House might dwindle into a little assembly serving only 'to register
+the arbitrary edicts of one too powerful a subject.' It was the
+arbitrary interference of the same too powerful subject in a
+parliamentary election that Pitt was now screening with jesting scorn.
+But Pitt thought little of consistency, and he might well have forgotten
+for the moment his earlier performance, when seeing and seizing the
+opportunity for a speech which placed him on a moral elevation above the
+House of Commons.
+
+In 1748 we find him intervening comically enough in an affair,
+suspiciously like a local job, which affected his friends, the
+Grenvilles, and which proved the bitter and jealous animosity with which
+they were regarded.
+
+Hitherto the summer assizes for Buckinghamshire had been held at
+Buckingham, and the winter at Aylesbury; but suddenly the summer assizes
+had also been transferred to Aylesbury. The reason seems to have been
+simple enough; for the gaol being at Aylesbury, prisoners had to be
+transferred thence and back again when the assizes were at Buckingham.
+Richard Grenville (afterwards Lord Temple), however, for obvious
+reasons, took up the cudgels for Buckingham, which was the close
+neighbour and borough of Stowe, and brought in a Bill to enact that the
+summer assizes should be held at that town. All Bucks rushed into the
+conflict, and as is generally the case in a local affair, the debate was
+extraordinarily diverting. Richard Grenville, Sir William Stanhope of
+Eythrope, the brother of Chesterfield, and afterwards a brother of the
+famous or infamous Medmenham fraternity, Potter again, who had now
+become secretary to the Prince of Wales, who was soon to be member for
+Aylesbury, probably for his services on this occasion, and also a future
+monk of Medmenham, George Grenville, the solemn figure of Pitt, Robert
+Nugent (whose daughter married George Grenville's son), Lee of Hartwell,
+were all visible and ardent in the thick of the battle. Henry Fox, then
+a friend of Pitt, was the only outside member who intervened, and then
+with a sort of puzzled surprise at the fury of the combatants. Sir
+William Stanhope, who led the attack on Buckingham, made a speech which
+was specially piquant. He began: 'Sir, if I did not think I could prove
+that this Bill is the arrantest job that ever was brought to Parliament,
+I should not give the House the trouble of hearing me.' He attributed
+the Bill to the fact that the County of Bucks had not elected two
+Grenvilles as their members. 'Here let me condole with that unhappy,
+rather that blinded, county who neglected to choose two gentlemen of
+such power and interest that I am persuaded they will have more votes
+in this House to-day than they would have had at the General Election in
+the whole county in question if they had done it the honour to offer
+themselves for representatives.' After this bitter exordium he
+proceeded: 'It is the power and interest of these gentlemen that I am
+afraid of, not of their arguments;' with good reason, for though to
+posterity the claim of Aylesbury with its gaol will seem conclusive, the
+Bill was triumphantly carried. But Stanhope proceeded with an invective
+against Cobham's young patriots, so violent as to be checked by the
+Speaker. It is noteworthy as showing the jealousy and hostility with
+which their rise and power were regarded in the House, and so merits
+quotation:--
+
+
+ And to shew you, Sir, how sensible they are of the frivolousness of
+ the latter, I could recapitulate such instances of intriguing for
+ votes, as no man would believe who does not know those gentlemen.
+ Conscious of the badness of their cause, they have employed every
+ bad art to support it, and have retained so much of their former
+ patriotism, as consisted in blackening their adversaries and
+ acquiring auxiliaries. They have propagated such tales, that men
+ have overlooked the improbabilities, while they wondered at the
+ foolishness of them; and they have solicited the attendance of their
+ friends, and of their friends' friends, with as much importunity as
+ if their power itself was tottering, not the wanton exercise of it
+ opposed: the only aid they have failed to call in was reason, the
+ natural but baffled enemy of their family: a family, Sir, possessed
+ of every honour they formerly decried, fallen from every honour they
+ formerly acquired: a family, Sir, who coloured over ambition with
+ patriotism, disguised emptiness by noise, and disgraced every virtue
+ by wearing them only for mercenary purposes: a family, Sir, who from
+ being the most clamorous incendiaries against power and places, are
+ possessed of more employments than the most comprehensive
+ place-bill that ever was brought into parliament would include; and
+ who, to every indignity offered to their royal master, have added
+ that greatest of all, intrusion of themselves into his presence and
+ councils; and who shew him what he has still farther to expect, by
+ their scandalous ingratitude to his son; a family, Sir, raised from
+ obscurity by the petulance of the times, drawn up higher by the
+ insolence of their bribing kinsman, and supported by the timidity of
+ two ministers, who, to secure their own persons from abuse have
+ sacrificed their own party to this all-grasping family, the elder
+ ones of which riot in the spoils of their treachery and places, and
+ the younger....
+
+
+At this point he was, not prematurely, called to order. Stanhope brought
+up Pitt, portentous but unconvincing, with perhaps a unique expression,
+for he addressed the Speaker as 'dear Sir.' 'They (the Grenvilles)
+desire the assizes may be sometimes held at Buckingham; the point he
+(Stanhope) espouses is that they should be always held at Aylesbury.
+Which, dear Sir, looks most like a monopoly?' Then he proceeds to defend
+the Grenvilles.
+
+
+ After so happy a beginning, he falls into a torrent of violent abuse
+ on a whole family, founded on no reason in the world, but because
+ that family is distinguished by the just rewards of their services
+ to their king and country; and, in the heat of his resentment, he
+ throws out things that are as unpardonably seditious as they are
+ palpably absurd. He takes it for granted that men force themselves
+ into a presence and into councils to which they have the honour to
+ be called, and into which our Constitution renders it impossible for
+ any to intrude. In the same breath he makes entering into a father's
+ service an act of ingratitude to a son; and, without so much as
+ pretending to assign either facts or reasons, he bestows the most
+ low and infamous epithets upon characters that all other men mention
+ with esteem. In a word, he forgot himself to such a degree that he
+ pointed out men of birth and fortune, and in high stations, as if
+ they were the most abandoned and profligate creatures in the
+ universe, without parts, without morals, without shame, and who, if
+ his description had in it the least tittle of truth, instead of
+ being Members of Parliament, or admitted to the Privy Council, were
+ fit only to be members of a society once famous by the name of the
+ Hell-fire Club.[183]
+
+
+It is not worth while to follow this local squabble further, except to
+notice the singular atmosphere of jobbery with which it was surrounded.
+By a job, it was alleged, Lord Chief Justice Baldwin, having purchased
+the manor of Aylesbury in the reign of Henry VIII., had transferred the
+assizes from Buckingham to Aylesbury. By another job a judge who was a
+native of Buckingham had managed that the summer assizes should be
+always held at Buckingham while he lived. 'The arrantest job,' cried
+Stanhope. 'One of the worst sort of jobs,' echoed Potter, who divided
+jobs into two species, one laudable and the other infamous, declaring
+this to be one of the latter kind. Lee also called it a private job of
+the most infamous kind. Articulate Buckinghamshire was indeed unanimous
+against the Bill. But the Grenvilles were now powerful with all the
+insolence of power, and the Government smiled silently on their
+enterprise; though Nugent said they could only have done so from
+weariness of political serenity, and the wish to invite catastrophe. So
+the Bill was carried, and the job, whatever its exact denomination may
+have been, lasted for nearly a century.[184] But the debate, as will be
+seen, is significant because it shows the resentment which had long
+been growing, but which was now openly displayed against Cobham's
+aggressive and ambitious group.
+
+We do not again hear Pitt's voice till 1749, when he vindicated the
+proposal of the Government to pay to Glasgow ten thousand pounds to
+reimburse the city in some degree for what the occupation of the
+Jacobites had cost it. This of course was an official speech and of no
+permanent interest.[185] He had to prove that the case of Glasgow stood
+by itself, and that there was no analogy between this and those of other
+towns which made the same claim. Two of his points are incidentally
+worthy of remark. The first is that it was the whole tenor of Glasgow's
+conduct since the Reformation which had drawn upon it the resentment of
+the Jacobites; the second, that if this payment were not made, and made
+promptly, Glasgow must be ruined. He told, too, a story which merits
+preservation. When there were rumours in 1688 of the coming of William
+III. with 30,000 men, an adherent of James II. made light of the matter;
+when it was said that the prince was coming with 20,000 he began to be
+alarmed; but when he heard that the expeditionary force numbered only
+14,000 he cried, 'We are undone: an army of 30,000 men could not conquer
+England. But no man would come here with only 14,000 unless he were sure
+of finding a great many traitors among ourselves.'[186]
+
+In 1750 there is a faint echo of Pitt's voice in a discussion on the
+annual Mutiny Bill, at least the only echo in the recorded debates, for
+we learn from two letters of Pitt's to George Grenville that there had
+been other long and troublesome discussions in which he had had
+officially to bear much of the burden.[187] Colonel Townshend brought
+forward the case of non-commissioned officers who had been broke or
+reduced to the ranks without any cause assigned. Some of these, he said,
+were waiting at the bar as he spoke. He proposed a clause for preventing
+this abuse, and forbidding these punishments except under sentence of a
+court-martial. Pitt took the line, truly enough, that if soldiers were
+on every occasion to bring their complaints against their officers to
+the House for redress there would be an end to all discipline; and
+proceeded in the tone of a Paymaster-General to declare that the
+business of the House was to consider the requisite number of the forces
+and to grant money for their payment, but that the conduct of the army
+or complaints against one another were solely within the province of the
+King or those commissioned by His Majesty.[188] This need not detain us.
+About the same time, Lord Egmont, who now represented the Prince of
+Wales in the House of Commons, an able man not without incredible
+absurdities, brought forward a mischievous motion with regard to
+Dunkirk. The question which he raised was whether the French had
+demolished the fortifications erected during the late war, as by the
+Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle they were bound to do; but he diverged into a
+general attack upon the provisions of that Treaty. Pelham answered him
+in a speech of remarkable candour. Lord Strange followed and brought up
+Pitt. He defended the peace, which indeed was not difficult, in a
+speech eminently discreet, ministerial, and conciliatory. No one could
+discover in it any germ of the policy he was destined afterwards to
+pursue with such triumphant success. But he cast an interesting light on
+the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle. 'If there be any secret in the late
+affairs of Europe,' he said, 'it is in the question how it was possible
+for our ministers to obtain so good a peace as they did. For I must
+confess that when the French laid siege to Maestricht in the beginning
+of 1748, I had such a gloomy prospect of affairs that I thought it next
+to impossible to preserve our friends the Dutch from the imminent ruin
+they were then threatened with, or to maintain the present Emperor upon
+the imperial throne.'[189] Though he had thus already spoken, he wound
+up the debate for the Ministry, and did so with equal discretion.
+
+[Sidenote: Aug. 3-14, 1750.]
+
+This was in February 1750. He seems to have spoken no more that session,
+but in August Pelham wrote to his brother: 'I think him the most able
+and useful man we have among us, truly honourable and strictly honest.
+He is as firm a friend to us as we can wish for, and a more useful one
+does not exist.'[190] Such an eulogy, offered in confidence by a Prime
+Minister, a reticent, unemotional man, seems to us a great mark and
+epoch in Pitt's career. Not 'the most brilliant,' not 'the most
+eloquent,' not 'the most intrepid,' as we should have expected, but 'the
+most useful, able, and strictly honest.'
+
+Pitt had earned this praise by exertions which were not visible to the
+outer world. It often happens that there is a member of Government whose
+merits do not appeal to the public, who is no orator, who passes no
+measures, whose conversation does not attract, and whose position in an
+administration is a puzzle to the outer world. And yet perhaps his
+colleagues regard him as invaluable. He is probably the peacemaker, the
+man who walks about dropping oil into the machinery, and preventing
+injurious friction. This had recently been Pitt's position. He had been
+diligently and unobtrusively trying to keep the Government together.
+This was not so easy as it would seem; for though the brothers Pelham
+had arranged it to their will when they ejected Carteret, the morbid and
+intolerable jealousies of Newcastle prevented any ease. Did other
+subjects of intrigue and irritation fail he would quarrel with his
+brother, for when all else was serene it would secretly chafe him that
+his junior should be in the first place and he only in the second. Henry
+himself, it may be noted, seems to have been both blameless and placable
+on these occasions, but naturally bored. The elder brother would begin
+whimpering and whining to Hardwicke, his prop and confidant. Hardwicke
+would soothe him as a sick baby is soothed, eventually his tears would
+be dried, and he would begin burrowing and intriguing in some other
+direction.
+
+On this occasion the trouble arose over Bedford. Bedford had become
+Joint Secretary of State with Newcastle on the resignation of
+Chesterfield. Sandwich, a clever scapegrace, and Bedford's henchman, had
+been Newcastle's candidate for the office, while Henry Fox had been
+strongly supported by Pitt and others. Before offering it to Sandwich,
+it was thought well to make an honorary tender of the post to Bedford,
+in the belief that he would refuse it. Bedford, as sometimes happens on
+such occasions, had promptly accepted it; for six months as he said,
+but, as also happens, for as long as he could keep it, which was more
+than three years. The appointment was thus distasteful in its origin to
+Newcastle and became more irksome with experience. Bedford as a minister
+was indolent, and as a man was obstinate and unamiable to a singular
+degree. But it was not these drawbacks which attracted the malevolent
+attention of Newcastle. Bedford, no doubt, was difficult to work with,
+and Newcastle soon wished to be rid of him. But it was when Bedford
+became well with the Court, with the King and with Princess Amelia, for
+whom Newcastle had once affected to feel something more tender than
+friendship, with the Duke of Cumberland and Lady Yarmouth, that
+Newcastle's hatred passed the bounds of moderation and almost of sanity.
+Pelham, who knew the parliamentary power of Bedford and who was anxious
+not to alienate it, was reluctant to take up his brother's dispute; so
+Newcastle promptly quarrelled with him. Pitt intervened. Had he been
+blindly ambitious, he would have welcomed a schism which might have
+produced a much greater position for himself. But he saw that a quarrel
+between the brethren would break up the Ministry; and that such a
+destruction would involve grave consequences, difficult to calculate,
+and possibly the resuscitation of Carteret in the first place. Moreover,
+though on the whole he sided with Newcastle, as Fox sided with Pelham,
+he could not but be aware of the priceless merits of Pelham as a party
+manager, as one who allayed animosities, and as one who kept the peace.
+Pelham, in writing to Newcastle, affects to diminish the value of Pitt's
+intervention, as he wishes to attribute the renewal of harmony to
+'natural affection.' But an impartial judgment comes to a different
+conclusion. Natural affection had not prevented discord, and was
+insufficient to produce reconciliation. It is at all times an
+indifferent political cement. But the exertions of an independent
+colleague such as Pitt could not be overestimated. There exists a long
+and earnest letter of July 13, 1750, from Pitt to Newcastle, too long
+and too tedious to quote, but which is both tactful and energetic,
+though in his worst style of winding verbosity. 'I don't hazard much,'
+he wrote, 'in venturing to prophesy that two brothers who love one
+another, and two ministers essentially necessary to each other, will
+never suffer themselves to be divided further than the nearest friends
+by difference of opinion or even little ruffles of temper may
+occasionally be. Give me leave,' he continues, 'to suggest a doubt. May
+not frequent reproaches upon one subject gall and irritate a mind not
+conscious, intentionally at least, of giving cause?' and so forth.[191]
+He concludes all this with warm eulogies on Newcastle's conduct of
+foreign affairs, and soothes and flatters the fretful duke with
+something like sympathetic regard. He or 'natural affection' is
+successful, for, a week afterwards, he writes a brief note on
+another subject, which ends thus: 'I am glad to note that the
+understanding between you and Mr. Pelham, for which I had fears, is
+re-established.'[192] It is pleasant thus to catch a glimpse of Pitt as
+a loyal colleague, strenuously patching up differences; not less
+pleasant to see him pushing the claims of his rival, Fox, to be
+Secretary of State. This is a new human, and attractive aspect.
+
+The termination of the Bedford transaction is worth noticing for more
+reasons than one. The King, though he was at least indifferent to
+Bedford, declined to remove him at the instance of Newcastle, and was
+probably pleased to have the opportunity of thwarting the tiresome
+minister who had been the inseparable bane and necessity of his life.
+Pelham would not intervene directly for other reasons. A characteristic
+and tortuous method was therefore adopted. The King cared nothing for
+Sandwich, who was necessary to Bedford. So the brothers suggested the
+removal of Sandwich, to which the King promptly acceded, and Bedford, as
+they had foreseen, instantly resigned.
+
+Two points are notable with regard to the vacancy thus caused. The Prime
+Minister announced that the nomination of Bedford's successor must be
+left to the sole nomination of the King, with which he would not
+interfere in any way, but insisted that he must be a peer.[193] The main
+reason for this strange limitation seems to have been that there were
+fierce but dormant rivalries in the House of Commons, and that an
+appointment of one of the aspirants would call uncontrollable passions
+into activity. Both Secretaries of State must therefore be peers, a
+principle which seems strange to a later generation. The King,
+therefore, nominated Lord Holdernesse, of whom the Prime Minister merely
+observes, 'I cannot possibly see him in the light of Secretary of
+State.'[194] Holdernesse however is appointed, and reappears more than
+once in this accidental character.
+
+But Pelham, though he tried to take this affair easily, was near the
+end of his patience. He was worn out by the perpetual exigencies and
+caprice of his brother and colleague, for Newcastle was in truth his
+partner in the Premiership, as well as by the explosive rivalries of
+Pitt and Fox, which any spark might ignite. Chained to an intolerable
+nincompoop, with two such subordinates ready to fly at each other's
+throats or his, and conscious of failing health, he began to long for
+liberty and repose. At the end of March 1751 died the second Earl of
+Orford, and thus vacated the rich sinecure office of Auditor of the
+Exchequer, worth at least eight thousand a year. Pelham, it is said,
+intimated his wish to retire from active business with this noble
+provision, but the King would not let him go.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+On the meeting of Parliament in January 1751, Lord Egmont raised on the
+Address the question of the peace with Spain. Pitt in reply delivered a
+speech of singular interest, for he disarms criticism by frankly avowing
+the errors of his 'young and sanguine' days, to employ his own epithets.
+After pointing out that the Spaniards could not be expected to give up
+the assertion of their right of search any more than we would renounce
+our claim to the right of free navigation in the American seas, he
+proceeded: 'I must therefore conclude, Sir, that "no search" is a
+stipulation which it is ridiculous to insist on, because it is
+impossible to be obtained. And after having said this I expect to be
+told that upon a former occasion I concurred heartily in a motion for an
+address not to admit of any treaty of peace with Spain unless such a
+stipulation as this should be first obtained as a preliminary thereto. I
+confess I did, Sir, because I then thought it right, but I was then very
+young and sanguine. I am now ten years older, and have had time to
+consider things more coolly. From that consideration I am convinced that
+we may as well ask for a free and open trade with all the Spanish
+settlements in America, as ask that none of our ships shall be visited
+or stopt, though sailing within a bowshot of their shore; and within
+that distance our ships must often sail in order to have the benefit of
+what they call the land breeze.' 'I am also convinced that all
+addresses from this House during the course of a war, for prescribing
+terms of peace, are in themselves ridiculous; because the turns or
+chances of war are generally so sudden and often so little expected that
+it is impossible to foresee or foretell what terms of peace it may be
+proper to insist on. And as the Crown has the sole power of making peace
+or war, every such address must certainly be an encroachment upon the
+King's prerogative, which has always hitherto proved to be unlucky. For
+these reasons I believe I should never hereafter concur in any such
+address, unless made so conditional as to leave the Crown at full
+liberty to agree to such terms of peace as may at the time be thought
+most proper, which this of "no search" can never be, unless Spain should
+be brought so low as to give us a _carte blanche_; and such a low ebb it
+is not our interest to bring that nation to, nor would the other Powers
+of Europe suffer it, should we attempt it.'[195]
+
+This is a new milestone. 'Those who endeavour to quote from my former
+speeches, the outpourings of my hot and fractious youth, are hereby
+warned off. I have sown my wild oats; henceforward I am to be regarded
+as a prudent and sagacious statesman.' This was the real purport of this
+speech, divested of the necessary circumlocutions. A statesman who has
+been an active politician in his youth usually has to utter some such
+warning and repentant note in his maturity.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 22, 1751.]
+
+In 1751 we find Pitt delivering another speech which marks a further
+distance from his unregenerate days. At this time, for reasons which we
+can now scarcely discern, but which originated with George II., who
+considered that the peace and safety of his electorate depended on a
+secure succession to the Empire being vested in the House of Austria,
+our foreign policy was concentrated on securing the election of Maria
+Theresa's son, a boy of ten years old, as King of the Romans, and so
+heir to the Empire. This strange line of action was absurd enough to be
+congenial to Newcastle, who soon adopted it, called it his darling
+child, and grudged its paternity to the King.[196] Pelham had
+reluctantly to follow, only deprecating expenditure as far as possible.
+For this we slaved and negotiated and subsidised, in the faith that
+should the Emperor die without a King of the Romans being ready to
+succeed him, a war must infallibly ensue. This hypothesis was at least
+doubtful; but, in any case, we expended our energies in vain. Prussia,
+and France as guarantor of the Treaty of Westphalia, declared the
+election of a minor to be contrary to the fundamental laws of the
+Empire, and prevailed. There is the less reason to deplore our failure,
+as it is not known what we should have gained by success. Austria, which
+was alone to profit, threw the coldest water on the project. The obvious
+flaw of the policy appears to have been that the receipt of subsidies so
+entirely conflicted with the electoral oath as to form an insuperable
+bar of honour preventing any elector who received them from voting for
+our candidate. We were in fact to bribe those who could not vote if they
+accepted our bribe, for an object flagrantly illegal, on behalf of a
+Power which scouted our assistance. We offered to bribe the Electors of
+Mainz, Cologne, and Saxony. To the Elector of Bavaria we agreed by
+treaty to pay 40,000_l._ a year, the sum to be made up by Holland and
+ourselves. It was this last treaty which Pitt found himself called upon
+to defend, and his speech was a broad defence of the whole system and
+principle of subsidies. 'Surely,' he cried, 'it is more prudent in us to
+grant subsidies to foreign princes for keeping up a number of troops for
+the service of the common cause of Europe, than by keeping up such
+numerous armies of our own here at home, as might be of the most
+dangerous consequence to our constitution.'[197] This must have seemed
+strange doctrine to those who remembered his former harangues. But in
+this speech he was to exceed himself in superfluous candour. He had said
+that there was a good prospect of a firm and lasting peace, and then
+strangely wandered off to the consequent prospect of economy at home,
+'perhaps by a different method of collecting the revenue. I am not
+afraid to mention the word Excise.[198] I was not in the House when the
+famous Excise scheme was brought upon the carpet. If I had I should
+probably have been induced by the general but groundless clamour to have
+joined with those who opposed it. But I have seen so much of the deceit
+of popular clamours, and the artful surmises upon which they are
+founded, and I am so fully convinced of the benefits we should reap by
+preventing all sorts of unfair trade, that if ever any such scheme be
+again offered whilst I have a seat in this assembly, I believe I shall
+be as heartily for it as I am for the motion now under our
+consideration.'[199]
+
+It is scarcely possible to conceive a more deliberate and scornful
+repudiation of responsibility for any previous opinions that he may have
+maintained than is expressed in this passage. He goes out of his way to
+tender an unnecessary support to the detested Excise scheme, which at
+the same time he declares that he should certainly have opposed had he
+been in the House when it was introduced. The middle-aged Pitt seemed
+never to tire of trampling savagely on the young Pitt, even wantonly, as
+on this occasion. There is, indeed, more justice than is usual in Horace
+Walpole's taunts when he says of Pitt, 'Where he chiefly shone was in
+exposing his own conduct; having waded through the most notorious
+apostasy in politics, he treated it with an impudent confidence that
+made all reflections upon him poor and spiritless when worded by any
+other men.' This is one way of putting it. A preferable and, in our
+judgment, a truer way is that Pitt deliberately chose this method of
+public atonement for past recklessness, and as an avowal that he had
+learned and ripened by experience. He recanted at large, so as to
+obliterate every vestige of his heedless and censorious youth. It is
+better for the country and for themselves that statesmen should thus do
+penance than that they should continue to offer sacrifices of what they
+see to be right to the somewhat egotistical pagod of their personal
+consistency. Honourable consistency is necessary to retain the
+confidence of the country; but there is also a dishonourable consistency
+in concealing and suppressing conscientious changes of judgment.
+
+Though, as we have seen, his defence of the principle of subsidies
+seemed unbounded, it was more limited in practice, and Pitt fixed his
+limit at the Bavarian contribution. In 1752 Pelham had to move a subsidy
+to the Elector of Saxony, King of Poland. This had been negotiated by
+Newcastle, but was so strongly disapproved by Pelham that he even
+threatened to second the opposition to it. However, he was persuaded by
+the argument most urgent and sometimes most fatal to prime ministers,
+that the apparent unity of the Government must at any cost be
+maintained, to withdraw his opposition and move the vote. Old Horatio
+Walpole, though he voted with Pelham, spoke warmly against him, and Pitt
+supported Walpole's argument, though privately and not in speech. He
+felt, it may be presumed, that it was not for him to be more of a
+Pelhamite than Pelham himself.
+
+With Pelham, however, he had felt constrained to be at open variance in
+the previous year, about the time of the Bavarian subsidy. The Minister
+had moved a reduction of our seamen from 10,000 to 8000. Pitt declared a
+preference for 10,000; and Potter, whom we have seen in the Buckingham
+and Aylesbury affair, a clever, worthless fellow, who had now become an
+ally of Pitt, opposed the reduction. Pelham seemed to acquiesce, but
+Lord Hartington, an enthusiastic Pelhamite, who was hereafter to be for
+a while Prime Minister under Pitt, forced a division, in order to show
+Pitt that the Whigs would not support him against Pelham. Pitt's
+immediate following on this occasion seems to have consisted only of
+Lyttelton, the three Grenvilles, Conway, and eight others. There was, it
+is to be observed, nothing factious in this; the opinion of Pitt was
+natural, and not distasteful to Pelham. Moreover, on the report Pitt
+made a conciliatory speech, marking in the strongest manner his regret
+at differing with Pelham, declaring that it was his fear of Jacobitism
+alone which made him prefer the larger number, and expressing his
+concern at seeing our body of trained seamen, whom he called our
+standing army, reduced. He and his little following, or rather
+cousinhood, vied with each other in loyal eulogies of the Prime
+Minister.
+
+This called up Hampden, an intrepid buffoon, but the great-grandson of
+the patriot, and 'twenty-fourth hereditary lord of Great Hampden,' who
+attacked Pitt and his group with rancour. Here, again, we seem to
+discern traces of Buckinghamshire politics and jealousies. Temple and
+his belongings had, as we have seen, many enemies in their own county,
+and Hampden was one of them. Perhaps the Aylesbury affair still rankled.
+Pitt was visibly angered. Though Pelham warmly defended him, he was not
+appeased, and the affair would have ended in a duel had not the
+Speaker's authority intervened. In the succeeding year, it may be noted,
+the number of 10,000 was restored.
+
+Though these hostilities were averted, the debate produced further
+friction between the brethren who controlled the Ministry. Newcastle was
+profusely grateful to Pitt for the line he had taken. He wrote to one of
+his vassals (January 30, 1750-1): 'As you can be no stranger (if you
+have attended the late debate) to the able and affectionate manner in
+which Mr. Pitt has taken upon himself to defend me, and the measures
+which have been solely carried on by me, when both have been openly
+attacked with violence, and when no other person opened his lips, in
+defence of either, but Mr. Pitt, I think myself bound in honour and
+gratitude to show my sense of it in the best way I am able. I must
+therefore desire that neither you nor any of my friends would give into
+any clamour or row that may be made against him from any of the party on
+account of his differing as to the number of seamen. For after the kind
+part he has acted to me, and (as far as I am allowed to be part of it)
+the meritorious one to the administration, I cannot think any man my
+friend who shall join in any such clamour, and who does not do all in
+his power to discourage it. I desire you would read this letter to'
+(here follow the names of seven forgotten men whom we may presume to
+have been his closest followers).[200] Pitt's attitude had alarmed
+Pelham, and this letter from the Duke, so formidable from parliamentary
+influence, made him sensible of imminent danger. He saw that he must
+either be reconciled to his brother or face that alarming coalition of
+Pitt and Newcastle which was afterwards effected with so much success.
+Once more there was a crisis, and Pelham's son-in-law Lincoln was called
+in as mediator. A treaty of peace of three articles was solemnly drawn
+up between the brothers, and apparent harmony restored. The King,
+however, broke out anew with emphatic anger against Pitt and the
+Grenvilles.
+
+This was probably due to the rumour that Pitt and his connections were
+negotiating with the Prince of Wales. This is not improbable. We know
+indeed that Lyttelton was arranging through his brother-in-law Dr.
+Ayscough for a coalition between the forces of Stowe and those of
+Leicester House. The King was old, and ambitious politicians would not
+wish to be ill with his heir, if that could be avoided. But all such
+foresight was wasted, for Frederick was never to reign, and within two
+months of the vote on the seamen he was dead. Up to the last he was
+intriguing and securing adherents. On February 28 he was engaging
+Oswald, an able debater in the House of Commons, to his cause; on March
+20 he died. Next morning his party was convoked by Egmont to consider
+the future. Many came, probably from curiosity, but dispersed without
+any conclusion. 'My Lord Drax,' writes Henry Fox in pleasant allusion to
+the promises of the Prince, 'my Lord Colebrook, Earl Dodington, and
+prime minister Egmont are distracted; but nobody more so than Lord
+Cobham, who _cum suis_ has been making great court and with some effect
+all this winter. Do not name this from me. I fear they will not be dealt
+with as I would deal with them.'[201] In truth the purpose and bond of
+the party, the sole reason for its existence, had disappeared.
+Henceforth the courtiers who found no favour with the King kept their
+eyes on the Princess of Wales and her eldest son, a shy, sensitive boy,
+who was afterwards to be George III. Soon they began to perceive in this
+obscure court a handsome, supercilious Scotsman, who enjoyed the favour
+of the Princess and the veneration of her son, who was now a lord of the
+Prince's bedchamber, but was hereafter to head one ministry and become
+the bugbear of many others, John Earl of Bute.
+
+The Heir Apparent was only thirteen, and a Regency Bill was required.
+This is only pertinent to our narrative in that it produced a fierce
+parliamentary duel between Pitt and Fox, the point at issue between them
+being the Duke of Cumberland, whom the King wished, but the Ministry
+did not dare, to nominate Regent. Indeed, one of the principal
+expressions of popular grief for the loss of the Prince of Wales had
+taken the form of regret that the death had not been that of the Duke.
+'Oh! that it was but his brother! Oh! that it was but the Butcher!'
+Unfortunately, the speeches of neither Pitt nor Fox in this session have
+come down to us. All that we know is that Pelham declared that Pitt's
+was the finest speech that ever he heard. Pitt had strongly maintained
+that the Regency must be closely restricted, the vital contention of his
+son thirty-seven years later, and hinted that Cumberland, if
+unrestrained in his capacity as head of the Council of Regency, might be
+tempted to usurp the Crown. Hence the wrath of Fox, the close friend of
+the royal Duke; hence, too, the antipathy of Cumberland to Pitt, which
+was to cause complications thereafter.
+
+Pitt and his family connections, whose allegiance to the Ministry had
+been under suspicion, and who had been in negotiation with the Prince's
+party, were rallied into apparent fidelity to the Ministry by the
+Prince's death, without, however, severing their renewed connection with
+Leicester House. But it was acquiescence rather than loyalty. Between
+the two ministerial orators in the House of Commons, Fox and Pitt, there
+had been cordial friendship. But it is evident that this had ceased.
+Fox, as we have seen, would have dealt with Pitt and the Grenvilles as
+traitors, and one would infer that it was the negotiation with the
+Prince of Wales which had angered him. The fact that Fox had sided with
+Pelham, and Pitt with Newcastle, had probably tended to division. Pitt,
+indeed, afterwards accused Pelham, poor soul, with having fostered their
+variance. Then there had been the affair of the Regency. There had,
+too, just previously to the Prince's death, been a sharp altercation
+between them in a small debate raised by the petition for compensation
+of an ill-used gentleman in Minorca. This Pelham had refused; while Pitt
+upheld the claim with his wonted energy, but with unusual absurdity. He
+would support the petition of a man so oppressed and of so ancient a
+family to the last drop of his blood. Fox ridiculed this extravagance,
+and Pitt was nettled. This is only notable as a symptom of prevailing
+temper.
+
+But the facts of their personalities speak for themselves. They were
+rivals in Parliament, neither of them very scrupulous, both fierce in
+debate. What need of further explanation? Fox, moreover, viewed Pitt's
+overtures to Leicester House with distrust, not merely from the point of
+view of a minister, but from that of the Duke of Cumberland, to whom he
+was devoted, and who detested the Prince of Wales and his crew. So that
+on the Regency Bill it was the wrath between the two factions which
+broke into open war. It was in the main the devotion of Fox to
+Cumberland which originally divided and then estranged him from Pitt.
+They were afterwards to reunite for a time by the mutual attraction of
+brains opposed to imbecility.
+
+This is perhaps the best opportunity to consider the character of this
+Henry Fox, who was now Pitt's rival. Strangely enough there is no real
+biography of this remarkable man, a vigorous and interesting figure, who
+has been to some extent obscured by his more popular and famous son.
+
+It would almost be enough to say that Fox was everything that Pitt was
+not. He had not that wayward but divine fire which we call genius, and
+which inspired Pitt; but he had the saving quality of common sense which
+was wanting to his rival. He laid no claim to the oratory of Pitt; he
+was, we are told hesitating and inelegant, not indeed a good speaker;
+but he was plain and forcible, with a good business-like wear and tear
+style, which is in Parliament not less valuable than oratory; on
+occasions indeed he spoke with a vehemence and closeness of reasoning
+which almost anticipated the supreme faculty of his son. More than all,
+he thoroughly understood the House of Commons. He had the cordial
+manner, the veneer at least of good fellowship, the frankness savouring
+of cynicism, which make for an eminently serviceable sort of
+parliamentary popularity. In one respect, as a letter writer, he was
+greatly Pitt's superior. While Pitt was prancing fantastic minuets
+before his correspondents, Fox, without wasting a word, went straight to
+the point; and his letters are pregnant, graphic, and forcible. There
+are perhaps none better in the English language than those in which he
+describes the debates of December 1755. He was, what Pitt was not, a
+genial companion, fond of the bottle and the chase; he had, indeed, been
+a gambler and a debauchee. He was, what Pitt was not, a man of the
+world, and was closely allied with the choicest blood of the aristocracy
+by a marriage with a daughter of the Duke of Richmond. Pitt was a county
+gentleman, who had indeed married Temple's sister, but had thus entered
+a more limited and less exalted connection. They both had courage, but
+Fox minded the rebuffs of debate much less than Pitt. He was
+passionate, but with a passion less sublime than Pitt's. Pitt could
+sometimes feign passion; Fox could sometimes repress it. In later life,
+when it had been long smouldering, it was ungovernable. But at this time
+it only displayed itself in a not ungenerous resentment. In the race for
+success it would perhaps have been safer to back Fox than Pitt.
+
+But Fox had one incurable flaw which was wholly wanting in Pitt: his
+aims were base and material. He was content for long years to be
+Paymaster, amassing a huge fortune from all the emoluments, legitimate
+and semi-legitimate, of that lucrative office, when a noble ambition
+would not have stooped to so gross an obscurity. And besides money he
+had another weakness. He longed to be a lord. In the moment of his
+rival's triumph and his own fall we find him writing to Lady Yarmouth
+soliciting a peerage in almost abject terms.[202] That was refused, and
+it was only after long years of unabashed solicitation that he obtained
+his object. At last a peerage was accorded to his wife, as if to mark
+the reluctance felt to giving it to himself. Then his chance came. Bute
+had to find a bold and unscrupulous agent to carry the Peace through the
+House, and Fox was his man. Not merely had Fox to earn his peerage but
+to wreak some vengeances.[203] He accepted the task readily, and had as
+his first reward the joy of removing Newcastle from the lieutenancy of
+three counties. And then, as if animated by a hatred of the whole human
+race, he expelled from their posts all, from the highest to the
+humblest, whom he suspected of opposition. It was a reign of terror, and
+by terror he accomplished the work he had been hired to do. Then he
+claimed his reward. He had earned and he received his peerage. But he
+had also earned and received a detestation, rarely accorded in England
+to a statesman, which lasted for the rest of his life, and which finds
+vent in the bitter lampoon which Gray, the gentlest of scholars, was
+moved to write.
+
+Later again, in his opulent seclusion, Fox was fired with a new ambition
+to become an earl.[204] He feared no extremity, no humiliation, to
+obtain his cherished object. But he failed. He was no longer worth
+buying; he could not, indeed, be employed. So in bitterness of spirit he
+passed away, cheered only by his delightful devotion to his wife and
+children, and by the goodwill of a few staunch friends.
+
+There is something profoundly melancholy in Fox's degeneracy. Its
+commencement is clearly marked. In 1756 he was an easy companion, a good
+friend, kindly and beloved; he was honoured and admired; he was the
+second man in the House of Commons, willing and able to dare all. But
+when he was discarded, and had subsided into the Paymastership, he seems
+to have suffered a gradual deterioration. His objects became sordid; he
+lost the finer elements of his character; his ambition sank into
+something composed of vindictiveness and greed; his generous wine became
+corked and bitter. But at the time we are writing of, he was still
+amiable, still courageous, still warm with some instinct of honour,
+patriotism, and high emulation, still an able and masculine figure. It
+is perhaps unfair to anticipate a decline which is outside our limits.
+But the change is so remarkable, throwing, as it were, a back light on
+some of the puzzling aspects of Fox's earlier career, that it cannot
+well be unnoticed.
+
+More ominous of Pitt's attitude to the Ministry than any small incidents
+of debate was Pitt's silence. For three successive sessions of
+Parliament, in 1752, 1753, and in that which closed in April 1754, he
+practically held his peace. Nothing could be more sinister, nothing
+could mark more emphatically his discontent. Sickness, it appears,
+accounted in part for this abstinence from the arena. 'After a year of
+sullen illness,' as Horace Walpole describes it, he intervened in 1753;
+and this was followed by another twelve months of silence and of illness
+not less sullen. The intervention of 1753 was not very happy. By an Act
+passed in June 1753, foreign Jews had been rendered capable of
+naturalisation. The Bill had passed into law without serious opposition,
+but soon aroused great popular clamour. Grub Street, as usual, was
+called into requisition.
+
+ 'But Lord! how surprised when they heard of the news
+ That we were to be servants to circumcised Jews,
+ To be negroes and slaves instead of True Blues,
+ Which nobody can deny.'
+
+Newcastle was charged with having been bribed.
+
+ 'That money you know is a principal thing,
+ It will pay a Duke's mortgage or interest bring.'[205]
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 27, 1753.]
+
+On the meeting of Parliament in November of the same year Newcastle at
+once moved to repeal it. It had only been, he said in his silly jargon,
+a 'point of political policy,' and as it had aroused agitation in the
+public it had better be repealed. Foote recalled this slipshod phrase in
+his comical portrait of the Duke. 'The honour,' says Matthew Mug, 'I
+this day solicit will be to me the most honourable honour that can be
+conferred.' Pitt supported the repeal in a speech on which his admirers
+would not desire to dwell. He was still in favour of the Act, but should
+vote for its repeal, because the people wished it, having been misled by
+the 'old High Church persecuting spirit' into believing that religion
+was concerned in the matter, which was not the fact, therefore an
+explanatory preamble was necessary. 'In the present case we ought to
+treat the people as a prudent father would treat his child; if a
+peevish, perverse boy should insist on something that was not quite
+right but of such a nature as, when granted, could not be attended with
+any very bad consequence, an indulgent father would comply with the
+humour of his child, but at the same time he would let him know that he
+did so merely out of complaisance, and not because he approved of what
+the child insisted on.'[206] Whether this would or would not be the
+wisest course of parental discipline it is not necessary to discuss, but
+it was in the spirit of the practice that prevailed in the Fox family
+rather than in that of the Pitts. The repeal was passed with the
+preamble of admonition.
+
+This reluctant, ironical support was all that Pitt gave his colleagues.
+It cannot indeed be doubted that throughout these three lean years of
+silence he was hostile to the Ministry. Promises had probably been made
+on his first accession to office which he thought had been ill-kept. He
+had been told, no doubt, that every effort would be made to make him
+more acceptable to the King, and he might well doubt if there had been
+much strenuous effort in that direction. And indeed a topic so sure to
+excite the royal spleen was not likely to be raised except under the
+pressure of absolute necessity. At any rate there had been no result.
+'The Pitts and Lytteltons are grown very mutinous on the Newcastle's not
+choosing Pitt for his colleague,' writes Horace Walpole six weeks after
+the Prince's death. For Bedford was known to be doomed by Newcastle, and
+his Secretaryship of State would soon be vacant. There were many
+aspirants for the succession, but no whisper of Pitt. Cobham, who had
+been his main supporter, was dead;[207] no one could speak with so much
+authority on his behalf; and even had Cobham survived he would probably
+have been silent.
+
+Soon after the letter from Walpole which we have quoted (June 1751)
+Bedford had resigned. He had been succeeded by Holdernesse. At the same
+time Granville, the object of Pitt's inveterate philippics, was admitted
+to the Cabinet as President of the Council. These events may well have
+inflamed Pitt's resentment, which had, we cannot doubt, been long
+smouldering. The great obstacle to his advancement was the King, who, as
+he knew, had always detested him. It was with the greatest difficulty
+that the Pelhams could persuade the Sovereign not altogether to ignore
+him at the Levees. Could he indeed trust the brothers? He appreciated no
+doubt Pelham's qualities at the Treasury, in council, and in the House
+of Commons. It seems impossible to believe that Pitt ever can have
+trusted Newcastle; though he addresses the Duke in his letters with an
+affected flummery of devotion. Almon, who is not a trustworthy
+authority, but who is supported in this instance by a probability which
+we may well deem irresistible, says that in at least one interview in
+the year 1752 he treated Newcastle with such scorn that Newcastle had he
+dared would have dismissed him from office.[208] Pitt had openly scoffed
+at the King of the Romans policy, Newcastle's cherished plan, and told
+the Duke that he was engaging in subsidies without knowing the amount,
+and in alliances without knowing the terms. Why, indeed, should Pitt
+trust Newcastle, whom no one had ever trusted, and whom Pitt must have
+measured and known to the very marrow of his bones?
+
+We may take it as certain then that Pitt viewed the Duke with
+contemptuous penetration, and tolerated his grimaces and professions
+only till such time as he could put them to the test. Meanwhile there
+was a free trade in blandishments between them. Newcastle would send
+venison from Holland, and carp and fruit, and Pitt would abound in
+gratitude.[209] He still thought well to profess friendship, but, we may
+be sure, a wary friendship, for the veteran in the florid and artificial
+style of the day; on the very day of Pelham's death he wrote from Bath
+to assure him of 'unalterable attachment;'[210] and he condescended to
+solicit a parliamentary seat from him.
+
+But words cost little, and Pitt did not disdain profusion in them any
+more than in what cost more. In a letter to Lyttelton written
+immediately after Pelham's death, when he recommended an attitude of
+armed and hostile vigilance towards the new powers, he says:
+'Professions of personal regard cannot be made too strongly,' and this
+line of conduct explains his professions to Newcastle. For how could he
+fail under existing circumstances to be suspicious? Had Newcastle lifted
+a finger to procure him the succession to Bedford? Yet no one could
+compete in Parliamentary authority with Pitt; and, though Murray's
+claims to oratorical pre-eminence might vie with his, Murray's
+aspirations were confined to the law. At this time, Chesterfield, the
+best living judge of such matters, was writing to his son, and
+expressing therefore his real convictions: 'Mr. Pitt and Mr. Murray are
+beyond comparison ... the best orators. They alone can inflame or quiet
+the House; they alone are so attended to, in that numerous and noisy
+assembly, that you might hear a pin fall while either was
+speaking.'[211] It is true that Chesterfield depreciates Pitt's matter.
+But the fact remains that he mentions Pitt as one of the two supreme
+masters of the House of Commons, the other, indeed, not having much
+heart in politics. The ignoring, the slighting of this great power,
+could not be forgiven by so aspiring a nature as Pitt's. He brooded and
+watched.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+How did he pass these three years? It is not easy to say, for we have so
+little light on his private life. No prescient Boswell marked his words
+and habits, or indeed had much opportunity of doing so. Few men of the
+same eminence have lived in such retirement as he did; we only catch
+glimpses. In the first place, it may be said without extravagance that
+his principal occupation was the gout. His gout became part of the
+history of England. To him it was a cruel fact. It kept him constantly
+disabled, and constantly away from London, ever trying new waters,
+principally the historical springs of Bath. Bath, indeed, was his second
+home. He seems to be almost always there till his marriage, and very
+frequently afterwards. Half his letters seem to be dated thence. At last
+he definitely recognised it as a home by building a house there in the
+Circus, which cost him 1200_l._[212] This was in 1753. But in 1763 he
+disposed of this particular house, probably under some financial
+stress.[213] Whether he thus established himself from love of the place
+or from love of his friend Ralph Allen, who was Fielding's Squire
+Allworthy and Bath's Man of Ross, or whether he had already an ambition
+to represent the City in Parliament, we cannot tell. His cousin, Lord
+Stanhope soon joined him and bought the houses next to his.[214] As time
+went on, and Pitt's fame and seclusion increased, it became more and
+more a political centre. There men collected who were anxious to get a
+word with the statesman, or at least obtain news of his health, which at
+times became the problem and mystery of a crisis.
+
+But his own uneasy quest of health made him seek a variety of other
+resorts, Astrop Wells, at the spring of St. Rumbald, Tunbridge Wells,
+Sunninghill, and what not. He thus became a constant participator in the
+tepid diversions of these sickly haunts. Gilbert West, a minor poet,
+whose mother was Cobham's sister, and who was one of Pitt's dearest and
+most intimate friends, accompanied him to Tunbridge Wells in May 1753,
+and writes accounts thence of his life and condition.[215] They lived
+together at the Stone House, which perhaps may still be identified, and
+which was chosen as their residence for its absolute quiet. Actual gout
+he seems to have welcomed as a relief from other disorders. He was at
+one time unable to sleep without opiates. Insomnia produced its usual
+effects, deep dejection, nay, complete prostration. Like all sufferers
+under that supreme disability, he was ready to try any remedies; musk
+was one of these. When the open appearance of gout relieved the sufferer
+of its more insidious effects, he began a course of mild dissipation. We
+find him giving a dinner at the New Vauxhall, enriched perhaps by the
+bounty of Newcastle, who was sending him choice dainties at this time;
+then a rural entertainment of tea in a tent, where he bade 'his French
+horn breathe music like the unseen genius of the wood;'[216] a diversion
+which seems all the more pastoral, when we remember that at the same
+moment Fox and Hardwicke, the Chancellor, were at each other's throats
+in St. Stephen's over the Marriage Act. He made excursions to view the
+fine parks and seats of the neighbourhood, to Penshurst, Buckhurst, and,
+we may presume, Eridge; we are told that he considered these expeditions
+as good for the mind as well as the body. Then when he got stronger he
+went further afield. 'I have made a tour,' he writes, 'of four or five
+days in Sussex, as far as Hastings; Battel Abbey is very fine, as to
+situation and lying of ground, together with a great command of water on
+one side, within an airing; Ashburnham Park most beautiful; Hurtmonceux
+(_sic_) very fine, curiously and dismally ugly. On the other side of
+Battel: Crowhurst, Colonel Pelham's, the sweetest thing in the world;
+more taste than anywhere, land and sea views exquisite. Beach of four or
+five miles to Hastings, enchanting Hastings, unique; Fairly Farm, Sir
+Whistler Webster's, just above it; perfect in its kind, _cum multis
+aliis_, &c. I long to be with you' (he is writing to John Pitt, his
+Dorsetshire kinsman), 'kicking my heels upon your cliffs and looking
+like a shepherd in Theocritus.'[217] For the sake of his mind, too, he
+attended 'Mr. King's lectures on philosophy, &c.,' when 'Mr. Pitt, who
+is desirous of attaining some knowledge in this way, makes him explain
+things very precisely.' In August, we must note in passing, he begged
+Newcastle to give him an opportunity of an interview as the duke passed
+near Tunbridge on the way to Sussex. Even in this amiable note he allows
+his pique to be visible for a moment. He entirely agrees with the policy
+of the brothers, but 'What I think concerning publick affairs can import
+nothing to any one but myself.'[218] On his recovery he went off on a
+round of country visits to Stowe, Hagley and Hayes; Hayes, then occupied
+by Mrs. Montagu, which was destined to be the shrine of his passionate
+affection. Stowe was a second home to him; there we have seen him play
+cricket, there he entered with zest into the sumptuous plans of
+landscape gardening, and even advised on architecture. His delight in
+Hagley, the seat of his friend Lyttelton, was scarcely less keen. 'My
+dear Billy,' he writes to William Lyttelton, then travelling in Germany,
+'I am going in a few days to follow your brother to Hagley, and with all
+the respect due to the oaks of Germany, I would not quit the Dryads of
+your father's woods for all the charms of Westphalia. Io gia coi campi
+Elisi fortunato giardin dei Semidei, la vostra ombra gentil non
+cangerei. You see, the idea of the Germanick body and the heroes and
+demigods who compose it have made me very poetical.'[219] He had, we may
+note, when this letter was written (August 1748), just returned from
+Tunbridge, and had greatly benefited by his stay there. What, we may ask
+in passing, has become of the efficacious nymphs of all these wells?
+Have they lost their virtue, or is it only the necessary faith which has
+disappeared?
+
+From Hagley, Pitt would visit Shenstone at his petty paradise of the
+Leasowes, and the grateful poet would apostrophise him:
+
+ 'Ev'n Pitt, whose fervent periods roll
+ Resistless o'er the kindling soul
+ Of Senates, Councils, Kings;
+ Tho' formed for Courts, vouchsafed to move
+ Inglorious thro' the shepherd's grove,
+ And ope his bashful springs.'
+
+But Pitt, debarred from the sports of the field, had always taken a
+lively interest in the laying out of land, in planting, in landscape
+gardening. He had, to use his own felicitous expression, 'the prophetic
+eye of taste.' At the Leasowes, at Hagley, at Radway, the Warwickshire
+seat of Mr. Saunderson Miller,[220] at Wickham, the home of Gilbert
+West, and at Chevening, the delightful residence of his friend and
+cousin Lord Stanhope, he freely exercised his gift. He utilised it still
+more freely and indeed extravagantly at his own homes, for in the
+pursuit of this hobby he disdained all limitations. Once, when Secretary
+of State, he was staying with a friend near London whose grounds he had
+undertaken to adorn and in the evening was summoned suddenly to London.
+He at once collected all the servants with lanterns, and sallied forth
+to plant stakes in the different places that he wished to mark for
+plantations. In later life he ran to still greater extremes. At Burton
+Pynsent a bleak hill bounded his views and offended his eye. He ordered
+it to be instantly planted with cedars and cypresses. 'Bless me, my
+Lord,' said the gardener, 'all the nurseries in the county would not
+furnish the hundredth part required.' 'No matter; send for them from
+London. And from London they were sent down by land carriage, at a vast
+expense. These two familiar anecdotes cannot well be omitted.
+
+In the more moderate time with which we are dealing he was the chosen
+adviser of his friends, who may well have been guilty of the innocent
+flattery of seeking his advice with regard to his favourite hobby. His
+own home at this time was South Lodge in Enfield Chace, which is said to
+have been bequeathed to him together with 10,000_l._, 'on this bequest
+that he should spend the money on improvements, and then grow tired of
+the place in three or four years.'[221] This seems dubious. But we are
+on safe ground in inferring from a letter of Legge's that he established
+himself there in 1748. Legge writes to him from Berlin (July 10, 1748):
+'I congratulate myself and the rest of my unsound brethren upon the
+acquisition we have made by your admission into the respectable corps of
+woodmen and sawyers. I consider your Lodge as an accession to the common
+Stock and Republick of Sportsmen, which from its situation will bring
+peculiar advantages along with it, and that the woodcocks and snipes of
+Enfield may be visited at seasons of the year when those of Hampshire
+will not be so accessible.... As to the joiners and bricklayers,
+possibly too the planters of trees and levellers of walks by whom you
+are surrounded, don't give yourself any concern about them. They are a
+sort of _satellites_ which I beg leave to assure you attend a man
+_gratis_. Nay, I have been told by one whose opinion I rate highly, that
+these men's works all execute themselves with a certain overplus of
+profit to the person who is so happy as to employ them,'[222] and he
+adds in a postscript a list of shrubs or trees which he recommends.
+Legge's playful sarcasms as to expense did not deter his friend.
+
+By 1752 Pitt had converted South Lodge, in the opinion of his friends or
+flatterers, into a delightful pleasance. He had, in the fashion of those
+days, constructed a Temple of Pan with appropriate surroundings, which
+excited the admiration of critics, and is mentioned with special
+admiration, we are told, 'by Mr. Whately, a forgotten expert, in his
+"Observations on Modern Gardening," as one of the happiest efforts of
+well-directed and appropriate decoration.' The famous blue-stocking,
+Mrs. Montagu, writes of the 'shady oaks and beautiful verdure of South
+Lodge.' 'There can,' she says in another letter, 'hardly be a finer
+entertainment not only to the eyes, but to the mind, than so sweet and
+peaceful a scene.' Yet Pitt assured her that he had never spent an
+entire week there. Gilbert West paid a visit there, when suffering
+presumably under an attack of the gout. 'He had provided for me a
+wheeling-chair, by the help of which I was enabled to visit every
+sequestered nook, dingle, and bosky bower from side to side in that
+little paradise opened in the wild.'[223] So that the garden would seem
+to have really been a success.
+
+But Pitt was to prove fickle to all these charms. On leaving Tunbridge
+Wells after the completion of his course of waters, he intended, besides
+long visits to Stowe and Hagley, to pay a passing visit to Hayes, a
+place near Bromley, of which his friend, Mrs. Montagu, had a lease.
+Whether it was a case of love at first sight or not, we do not know, but
+Hayes was destined to be the home of his affections and the place most
+closely identified with himself. At the termination of Mrs. Montagu's
+lease in 1756, he bought it of the Harrison family, who owned it, and a
+letter from him is dated thence in May 1756. But in January 1765 he
+inherited the Burton Pynsent estate, and so, in the following October,
+he offered the Hayes property to his friend, the Hon. Thomas Walpole, at
+a fair valuation, indeed at cost price. He had wasted on it, we are
+told, prodigious sums, with little to show for it, for he had spent much
+in purchasing contiguous houses to free himself from neighbours. 'Much
+had gone in doing and undoing, and not a little portion in planting by
+torchlight, as his peremptory and imperious temper could brook no
+delay.' He had, moreover, Wallenstein's morbid horror of the slightest
+sound. Though he doted on his children, he could not bear them under the
+same roof; they were placed in a separate building communicating with
+the main structure by a winding passage. Vast sums were thus expended
+without adding to the value of the property. But now he was eager to
+leave the cherished home which had swallowed so much of his fortune, and
+to hurry to the new scene. His intention of retiring into Somersetshire
+seems to have caused some alarm among his friends, who feared that it
+betokened retirement from public life; but with little reason, for it
+was in June 1766 that the sale of Hayes to Mr. Walpole was completed,
+and in the succeeding month Pitt was First Minister. His accession to
+power was, however, accompanied by a combined attack of all his
+maladies, nervous and physical; and his morbid, violent cravings had, if
+possible, to be indulged. The most imperious of these was for Hayes, and
+he persuaded himself that its air was necessary to his recovery. He
+negotiated through Camden with Walpole, who unfortunately, in his year
+of residence, had become passionately attached to the place. But Pitt
+had become frantic. Hayes could not be mentioned before him for fear of
+causing immoderate excitement. 'Did he' (Pitt) 'mention Hayes?' Camden
+asked James Grenville, who had just visited his illustrious
+brother-in-law. 'Yes; and then his discourse grew very ferocious.' Lady
+Chatham wrote imploring and pathetic letters to Walpole, who was ready
+to lend indefinitely, but not to sell. It would save her husband and her
+children; her children's children would pray for him. Meanwhile, even if
+Walpole consented, they had no money to buy with. They determined to
+sell part of the Pynsent inheritance. But that would only suffice to pay
+other debts, and Hayes would have to be mortgaged as well. Nothing could
+better prove the insane violence of Pitt's desire. At last, in October
+1767, Walpole yielded to Pitt's importunity, and in December the great
+man found himself once more at home. Camden declared of Walpole that
+'the applause of the world and his own conscience will be his reward,'
+but it is not altogether pleasant to find that he did not disdain much
+more material compensations. Pitt had sold the house and grounds in June
+1766 for 11,780_l._, and had to buy them back in November 1767 for
+17,400_l._, a difference of 5628_l._; so that he had to pay a smart fine
+for his caprices. The whole purchase came to 24,532_l._, but this
+includes other items, and lands which had been added by Walpole.[224] In
+1772 he appears again to have contemplated selling Hayes,[225] but he
+was destined to die there. All this is anticipation, but follows
+naturally on the topic of Pitt's country life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+We have seen that Pitt was to proceed to Hagley after leaving Tunbridge
+Wells in September 1753. From Hagley he sent a letter to Newcastle,
+which it must have cost him something to write. 'Some circumstances of
+my brother's transactions at Old Sarum render me uneasy at depending for
+my seat in next Parliament on that place. So I take the liberty to recur
+once more for your Grace's protection and friendship to provide for my
+election elsewhere.'[226] Newcastle seems at once to have offered his
+borough of Aldborough, and Pitt 'can never express himself sufficiently
+grateful for all your favours.'[227] From Hagley (October 1753) he
+proceeded to Bath for a fresh course, and seems to have remained there a
+helpless cripple for no less than seven months, though he was in London
+for a debate in November. Never was illness so untimely, as events of
+vital importance to him were about to take place. For on March 6, 1754,
+Pelham died, and all was confusion. 'Now I shall have no more peace,'
+said the shrewd old King. 'I never saw the King under such deep concern
+since the Queen's death,' wrote Hardwicke. And indeed the situation was
+full of alarming possibilities. For Pelham had become the unobtrusive
+but indispensable man, like the mediocre and forgotten Liverpool, who
+kept the balance between fierce rivalries and discordant opinions for
+fifteen years.
+
+There seems no great complication in Pelham's character. He was a Whig
+politician, trained under Walpole, but also under an intolerable brother
+who exercised the utmost prerogative of his birthright. His portrait, by
+Hoare, indicates something catlike, and he had much of feline caution
+and timidity. But among the politicians of that day he seems to have
+been comparatively simple and direct; and no man of his day was so fit
+for the position of Prime Minister in view of his own qualifications,
+and the conditions of the office at that time. He was indeed an inferior
+Walpole. He seems moreover to have been almost devoid of personal
+ambition; the highest places were thrust on him without his seeking
+them. At the fall of Walpole, in spite of Walpole's urgent instances
+that he should accept the Chancellorship of the Exchequer, which besides
+the eminence of the office would have given him the succession to Lord
+Wilmington, he insisted on remaining Paymaster, a post which, as we have
+seen, even without the recognised perquisites, had great material
+attractions, and which with them was capable of enchaining so powerful a
+parliamentarian as Fox. On the death of Wilmington, by Walpole's
+influence, he obtained the highest place; though Walpole had not merely
+to inspire the King, but to overcome Pelham's reluctance. We may imagine
+that Walpole would urge on his Sovereign that Pelham was the only House
+of Commons man available, that he was eminently safe, that he
+represented Newcastle's parliamentary influence, and that Newcastle
+represented Hardwicke, who embodied the brains of the Cabinet; for
+those of Carteret were too dangerous to trust.
+
+As First Minister Pelham had many difficulties to contend with, but not
+greater than those which always must encompass that position. There was
+the King, with violent prejudices and a Hanoverian policy, neither of
+which he shared. Then there was his brother, who regarded himself as at
+least his junior's equal, and whose petulance, jealousy, and suspicion
+had to be kept in a constant state of arduous appeasement. Thirdly,
+there was Pitt, whom the King could not do with and Pelham could not do
+without; an element of incalculable explosion which anything might
+ignite.
+
+He seems to have steered his course somewhat passively through these
+complications; content so long as he could ward off domestic
+catastrophe, and prevent war with its consequent expenditure; though the
+fates in neither case were propitious. His only real conviction indeed
+was for peace and economy; for the heritage of Walpole's policy had
+devolved upon him, without Walpole's character and ability. Three years
+before the end, as we have seen, he had sickened of his task and of his
+helplessness amid the jarring elements of discord, but he had not been
+permitted to retire. He was indeed the necessary man; a good debater, a
+good administrator, a minister with a conscience for the public, a
+leader or a figurehead with Newcastle's parliamentary power behind him,
+a tactician who managed to keep Pitt at bay, dangerous but muzzled. Men
+of this stamp are kept in harness to the end.
+
+He died on March 6, and the news found Pitt, on March 7, crippled and
+immovable at Bath. His feet were impotent with gout, but his brain and
+hands were evidently unaffected. He at once despatched a brief note of
+condolence to Newcastle, 'whose grief must be inconsolable as its cause
+is irreparable. You have a great occasion for all your strength of mind
+to exert itself. Exercise it for the sake of your master and your
+country, and may all good men support you. I have the gout in both feet
+and am totally unable to travel.'[228] To Lyttelton and the Grenvilles
+he wrote on the same day at length 'the breaking of first thoughts to be
+confined to you four,'[229] enclosed in a covering letter to Temple,
+saying that he was worn down with pain, and incapable of motion. But he
+was none the less vigilant with regard to the least ripple on the
+surface of politics, 'I heard some time since that the Princess of Wales
+inquired after my health: an honour which I received with much pleasure,
+as not void, perhaps of some meaning.'[230] Newcastle at once answered
+Pitt's note of condolence, for we find Pitt acknowledging the reply on
+March 11, and mentioning a letter written to him by Hardwicke, under
+Newcastle's authority, 'with regard to some things in deliberation for
+the settling the Government in the House of Commons and the direction of
+the affairs of the Treasury. My answer is in a letter to Sir George
+Lyttelton.'[231] This was practically giving powers to Lyttelton to
+negotiate with Newcastle as Pitt's representative; a strange choice,
+when we read in the covering letter to Temple: 'let me recommend to my
+dear Lord to preach prudence and reserve to our friend Sir George, and,
+if he can, inspire him with his own.' Lyttelton indeed was not destined
+ever to earn fame as a negotiator.
+
+And now it is necessary to give the principal passages of this letter to
+Lyttelton and the Cousinhood, which would have been a fuller and clearer
+manifesto had not all politicians at that time felt a well-grounded
+apprehension that their letters would be opened and read before they
+were delivered. Fulness and clearness were therefore the last qualities
+aimed at in their epistolary style, and inquiring posterity rues the
+result.
+
+
+ MR. PITT TO SIR GEORGE LYTTELTON AND THE GRENVILLE BROTHERS.
+
+ _March 7, 1754._
+
+ My dearest Friends,--[Then follows pompous regrets for Pelham's
+ 'utterly irreparable' loss.] I will offer to the consideration of my
+ friends but two things: the object to be wished for, the public; and
+ the means; which the object itself seems to suggest; for the pursuit
+ of it, my own object for the public, is, to support the King in
+ quiet as long as he may have to live; and to strengthen the hands of
+ the Princess of Wales, as much as may be, in order to maintain her
+ power in the Government, in case of the misfortune of the King's
+ demise. The means, as I said, suggest themselves: an union of all
+ those in action who are really already united in their wishes as to
+ the object: this might easily be effected, but it is my opinion, it
+ will certainly not be done.
+
+ As to the nomination of a Chancellor of the Exchequer, Mr. Fox in
+ point of party, seniority in the Corps, and I think ability for
+ Treasury and House of Commons business stands, upon the whole, first
+ of any.
+
+ Doctor Lee if his health permits is Papabilis, and in some views
+ very desirable. Te Quinte Catule, my dear George Grenville, would be
+ my nomination.
+
+ A fourth idea I will mention, which if practicable, and worth the
+ person's while, might have great strength and efficiency for
+ Government in it, and be perfectly adapted to the main future
+ contingent object, could it be tempered so as to reconcile the Whigs
+ to it: I mean to secularise, if I may use the expression, the
+ Solicitor-General,[232] and make him Chancellor of the Exchequer. I
+ call this an idea only; but I think it not visionary, were it
+ accompanied by proper temperaments. I write these thoughts for Lord
+ Temple, his brothers' and Sir George Lyttelton's consideration only,
+ or rather as a communication of my first thoughts, upon an emergency
+ that has too much importance and delicacy, as well as danger in it,
+ to whoever delivers their opinion freely, to be imparted any
+ farther.
+
+ I am utterly unable to travel, nor can guess when I shall be able:
+ this situation is most unfortunate. I am overpowered with gout,
+ rather than relieved, but expect to be better for it. My dear
+ friends over-rate infinitely the importance of my health, were it
+ established: something I might weigh in such a scale as the present,
+ but you, who have health to act, cannot fail to weigh much, if
+ united in views.
+
+ I will join you the first moment I am able, for letters cannot
+ exchange one's thoughts upon matters so complicated, extensive and
+ delicate.
+
+ I don't a little wonder I have had no express from another
+ quarter.[233]
+
+ I repeat again, that what I have said are the breakings of first
+ thoughts, to be confined to you four; and the looseness, and want of
+ form in them, to be, I trust, excused in consideration of the state
+ of mind and body of
+
+ Your ever most affectionate,
+ W. PITT.
+
+ As nothing is so delicate and dangerous, as every word uttered upon
+ the present _unexplained_ state of things, I mean _unexplained_, as
+ to the King's inclinations towards Mr. Fox, and his real desire to
+ have his own act of Regency, as it is called, maintained in the
+ hands of the Princess; too much caution, reserve, and silence
+ cannot be observed towards any who come to fish or sound your
+ dispositions, without authority to make direct propositions. If eyes
+ are really turned towards any connection of men, as a resource
+ against dangers apprehended, that set of men cannot, though willing,
+ answer the expectation without countenance, and additional
+ consideration and weight added to them, by marks of Royal favour,
+ one of the connection put into the Cabinet, and called to a real
+ participation of councils and business. How our little connection
+ has stood at all, under all depression and discountenance, or has an
+ existence in the eyes of the public, I don't understand: that it
+ should continue to do so, without an attribution of some new
+ strength and consideration, arising from a real share in Government,
+ I have difficulty to believe.
+
+ I am, however, resolved to listen to no suggestions of certain
+ feelings, however founded, but to go as straight as my poor judgment
+ will direct me, to the sole object of public good.
+
+ I don't think quitting of offices at all advisable, for public or
+ private accounts: but as to answering any further purposes in the
+ House of Commons, that must depend on the King's will and pleasure
+ to enable us so to do.[234]
+
+
+It will be observed that Pitt does not mention the Treasury; and he
+probably, though in his letter to Temple of the same date he speaks of
+the Duke's 'ability as Secretary of State,' took it for granted that
+Newcastle would succeed his brother; a proof of his perception. Yet
+Walpole tells us that it was to the astonishment of all men that
+Newcastle took the Treasury five days later.
+
+Next we may notice that he does not mention the Secretaryship of State
+to be vacated by Newcastle, which would seem to show that that office
+had long been destined by the cousinhood for himself.
+
+The postscript is extremely obscure, as it was probably intended to be.
+It seems to enjoin the greatest caution in dealing with any vague
+overtures which may be made, until it is known whether the King means to
+give his confidence to Fox, and whether he means to maintain the Regency
+as then established. But this phrase about the Regency is almost
+unintelligible.
+
+The last sentence in the postscript is the clearest of the letter. Let
+us remain in office, but whether we exert ourselves there or remain in
+sullen silence must depend on the attitude of the King.
+
+All this is enclosed in a covering letter to Temple--
+
+
+ MR. PITT TO EARL TEMPLE.
+
+ _March 7, 1754._
+
+ My dear Lord,--I return my answer to Jemmy's and Sir George's
+ dispatch directed to you, and accompany it with this line to give
+ you my apprehensions of Sir George's want of discretion and address,
+ in such soundings as will be, and have been, made upon him, with
+ regard to the disposition of his friends.
+
+ I beg your Lordship will be so good to convene your brothers and Sir
+ George, and communicate my letter to them which is addressed to you
+ jointly. It is a most untoward circumstance that I cannot set out
+ immediately to join you. I am extremely crippled and worn down with
+ pain, which still continues. I make what efforts I can, and am
+ carried out to breathe a little air. I write this hardly legible
+ scrawl in my chaise.
+
+ Let me recommend to my dear Lord to preach prudence and reserve to
+ our friend Sir George, and if he can, to inspire him with his own.
+
+ I heard some time since that the Princess inquired after my health;
+ an honour which I received with much pleasure, as not void, perhaps,
+ of some meaning.
+
+ I have writ more to-day than my weak state, under such a shock as
+ the news of to-day, will well permit.
+
+ Believe me, my dearest Lord,
+ Ever most affectionately yours,
+ W. PITT.
+
+ Fox will be Chancellor of the Exchequer, notwithstanding any
+ reluctancy to yield to it in the Ministers; George Grenville may be
+ offered Secretary at War; I am sure he ought to be so. I advise his
+ acceptance. The Chancellor is the only resource; his wisdom, temper,
+ and authority, joined to the Duke of Newcastle's ability as
+ Secretary of State, are the dependance for Government. The Duke of
+ Newcastle alone is feeble, this not to Sir George.[235]
+
+
+Pitt's next step was to send two letters, in the same cover, to
+Lyttelton; one a confidential letter, the other, an ostensible one, to
+be sent to Hardwicke. The confidential letter, which follows, is
+striking, and contains as much of Pitt's plan of operations at this
+crisis as any that we possess.
+
+
+ _Bath, March 10th, 1754._
+
+ Dear Lyttelton,--I am much obliged to you for your dispatch, and am
+ highly satisfied with the necessary reserve you have kept with
+ respect to the dispositions of yourself and friends. Indeed, the
+ conjuncture itself, and more especially our peculiar situation,
+ require much caution and measure in all our answers, in order to act
+ like honest men, who determine to adhere to the public great object;
+ as well as men who would not be treated like children. I am far from
+ meaning to recommend a sullen, dark, much less a double conduct. All
+ I mean is to lay down a plan to ourselves; which is, to support the
+ King's Government in present, and maintain the Princess's authority
+ and power in a future, contingency. As a necessary consequence of
+ this system, I wish to see as little power in Fox's hands as
+ possible, because he is incompatible with the main part, and indeed
+ of the whole, of this plan; but I mean not to open myself to whoever
+ pleases to sound my dispositions, with regard to persons especially,
+ and by premature declarations deprive ourselves of the only chance
+ we have of deriving any consideration to ourselves from the mutual
+ fears and animosities of different factions in court: and expose
+ ourselves to the resentment and malice in the closet of the one
+ without stipulations or security for the good offices and weight of
+ the other there in our favour.
+
+ But do I mean, then, an absolute reserve, which has little less than
+ the air of hostility towards our friends (such as they are) at
+ Court, or at least, bear too plainly the indications of intending a
+ third party or flying squadron? By no means. Nothing would, in my
+ poor judgment, be so unfit and dangerous for us. I would be open and
+ explicit (but only on proper occasions) that, I was most willing to
+ support his Majesty's Government upon such a proper plan as I
+ doubted not his Majesty, by the advice of his Ministers, would
+ frame; in order to supply, the best that may be, the irreparable
+ loss the King has sustained in Mr. Pelham's death: in order to
+ secure the King ease for his life and future security to his family
+ and to the kingdom: that my regards to the ministers in being were
+ too well known to need any declarations;' this and the like, which
+ may be vary'd for ever, is answer enough to any _sounder_. As to any
+ things said by Principals in personal conference, as that of the
+ Chancellor with you, another manner of talking will be proper,
+ though still conformable to the same private plan which you shall
+ resolve to pursue. Professions of personal regard cannot be made too
+ strongly; but as to matter, generals are to be answered with
+ generals; particulars, if you are led into them, need not at all be
+ shunn'd; and if treated with common prudence and presence of mind,
+ can not be greatly used to a man's prejudice; if he says nothing
+ that implies specific engagements, without knowing specifically what
+ he is to trust to reciprocally. Within these limitations, it seems
+ to me, that a man whose intentions are clear and right, may talk
+ without putting himself at another's mercy or offending him by a
+ dark and mysterious reserve.
+
+ I think it best to throw my answer to the Chancellor into a separate
+ piece of paper, that you may send it to his lordship. I am sorry to
+ be forced to answer in writing, because, not seeing the party, it is
+ not possible to throw in necessary qualifications and additions or
+ retractions, according to the impression things make.
+
+ As far as, my dear Lyttelton, you are so good to relate your several
+ conversations upon the present situation, I highly applaud your
+ prudence. I hope you neither have nor will drop a word of menace,
+ and that you will always bear in mind that my personal connection
+ with the Duke of Newcastle, has a peculiar circumstance,[236] which
+ yours and that of your friends has not. One cannot be too explicit
+ in conversing at this unhappy distance on matters of this delicate
+ and critical nature. I will, therefore, commit tautology, and repeat
+ what I said in my former dispatch, viz., that it enters not the
+ least into my plans to intimate quitting the King's service; giving
+ trouble, if not satisfied, to Government. The essence of it exists
+ in this: attachment to the King's service, and zeal for the ease and
+ quiet of his life, and stability and strength to future government
+ under the Princess; this declared openly and explicitly _to the
+ ministers_. The reserve I would use should be with regard to listing
+ in particular subdivisions, and thereby not freeing persons from
+ those fears which will alone quicken them to give us some
+ consideration for their own sakes: but this is to be done
+ _negatively_ only, by eluding explicit declarations with regard to
+ persons especially; but by _intimations of a possibility of our
+ following our resentments_; for, indeed, dear Sir George, I am
+ determined not to go into faction. Upon the whole, the mutual fears
+ in Court open to our connexion some room for importance and weight,
+ in the course of affairs: in order to profit by this situation, we
+ must not be out of office: and the strongest argument of all to
+ enforce that, is, that Fox is too odious to last for ever, and G.
+ Grenville must be next nominated under any Government.
+
+ I am too lame to move.
+
+ Your ever affectionate,
+ W. PITT.[237]
+
+
+Then follows the apparent and ostensible letter to be shown to the
+Chancellor. It is from the nature of it artificial and need not be
+quoted in full. But it contains one remarkable passage in which Pitt
+claims credit for having renounced opposition and the accompanying
+popularity when he was convinced that there might be danger to the
+reigning family from his carrying it further. The assertion is striking
+and daring, and no doubt Pitt did join the Government while Charles
+Edward was still in arms.
+
+
+ _Bath, March 11th, 1754._
+
+ My dear Sir George.--I beg you will be so good to assure my Lord
+ Chancellor, in my name, of my most humble services and many very
+ grateful acknowledgments for his Lordship's obliging wishes for my
+ health.... I can never sufficiently express the high sense I have of
+ the great honours of my Lord Chancellor's much too favourable
+ opinion of his humble servant; but I am so truly and deeply
+ conscious of so many of my wants in Parliament and out of it, to
+ supply in the smallest degree this irreparable loss, that I can say
+ with much truth were my health restored and his Majesty brought from
+ the dearth of subjects to hear of my name for so great a charge, I
+ should wish to decline the honour, even though accompany'd with the
+ attribution of all the weight and strength which the good opinion
+ and confidence of the master cannot fail to add to a servant; but
+ under impressions in the Royal mind towards me, the reverse of
+ these, what must be the vanity which would attempt it? These
+ prejudices, however so successfully suggested and hitherto so
+ unsuccessfully attempted to be removed, shall not abate my zeal for
+ his Majesty's service, though they have so effectually disarmed me
+ of all means of being useful to it. I need not suggest to his
+ Lordship that consideration and weight in the House of Commons
+ arises generally but from one of two causes--the protection and
+ countenance of the Crown, visibly manifested by marks of Royal
+ favour at Court, or from weight in the country, sometimes arising
+ from opposition to the public measures. This latter sort of
+ consideration it is a great satisfaction to me to reflect I parted
+ with, as soon as I became convinced there might be danger to the
+ family from pursuing opposition any further; and I need not say I
+ have not had the honour to receive any of the former since I became
+ the King's servant.... Perhaps some of my friends may not labour
+ under all the prejudices that I do. I have reason to believe they do
+ not: in that case should Mr. Fox be Chancellor of the Exchequer, the
+ Secretary at War is to be filled up....[238]
+
+
+He does not follow up this innuendo, nor was it necessary. The next day
+he writes frankly to Temple, who seems to have been much in Pitt's
+confidence at this time. Taken in conjunction with the secret letter to
+Lyttelton of March 10, the plan of operations is easily understood. We
+will leave ministers 'under the impression of their own fears and
+resentments, the only friends we shall ever have at Court, but to say
+not a syllable which can scatter terrors or imply menaces.' Pitt's plan,
+in a sentence, was to hang over the Government like a thundercloud,
+dark, silent, menacing, possibly to be dispelled, but ready and in an
+instant to pour destruction down.
+
+
+ MR. PITT TO EARL TEMPLE.
+
+ _Bath, March 11, 1754._
+
+ My dearest Lord,--I hope you will not disapprove my answer to Lord
+ Chancellor. I include in you your brothers, for your Lordship's name
+ is Legion. You will see the answer contains my whole poor plan; the
+ essence of which is to talk modestly, to declare attachment to the
+ _King's_ government, and the future plan _under the Princess_,
+ neither to intend nor intimate the quitting the service, to give no
+ terrors by talking big, to make no declarations of thinking
+ ourselves free by Mr. Pelham's death, to look out and fish in
+ troubled waters, and perhaps help trouble them in order to fish the
+ better: but to profess and to resolve _bona fide_ to act like public
+ men in a dangerous conjuncture for our country, and support
+ Government when they will please to settle it; to let them see we
+ shall do this from _principles of public good_, not as the _bubbles_
+ of a few fair words, without effects (all this civilly), and to be
+ collected by them, not expressed by us; to leave them under the
+ impressions of their own fears and resentments, the only friends we
+ shall ever have at Court, but to say not a syllable which can
+ scatter terrors or imply menaces. Their fears will increase by what
+ we _avoid saying concerning persons_ (though what I think of Fox,
+ etc., is much fixed), and by _saying very explicitly_, as I have
+ (but civilly), that we have our eyes open to our situation at Court,
+ and the foul play we have had offered us in the Closet: to wait the
+ working of all these things in offices, the best we can have, but in
+ offices.
+
+ My judgment tells me, my dear Lord, that this simple plan steadily
+ pursued will once again, before it be long, give some weight to a
+ connection, long depressed, and yet still not annihilated. Mr. Fox's
+ having called at my door early the morning Mr. Pelham died is, I
+ suppose, no secret, and a lucky incident, in my opinion. I have a
+ post letter from the Duke of Newcastle, a very obliging one. I
+ heartily pity him, he suffers a great deal for his loss.
+
+ Give me leave to recommend to your Lordship a little gathering of
+ friends about you at dinners, without ostentation. Stanley, who will
+ be in Parliament: some attention to Sir Richard Lyttelton I should
+ think proper; a dinner to the Yorkes very seasonable; and, before
+ things are settled, any of the Princess of Wales's Court. John Pitt
+ not to be forgot: I know the Duke of B---- nibbles at him: in short
+ liez commerce with as many members of Parliament, who may be open to
+ our purposes, as your Lordship can. Pardon, my dear Lord, all this
+ freedom, but the conjuncture is made to awaken men, and there is
+ room for action. I have no doubt George Grenville's turn must come.
+ Fox is odious, and will have difficulty to stand in a future time. I
+ mend a little. I cannot express my impatience to be with you.
+
+ W. PITT.[239]
+
+
+On March 18, Lyttelton writes to Grenville to ask if he shall send an
+express down to Pitt as 'he will be impatient to hear particulars,' with
+the news that Grenville and the writer had accepted office, and 'things
+are not as much settled as they are likely to be till the dissolution of
+parliament. I have had no answer from him to my last letter; have you?'
+But this unanswered letter may not have reached its destination, or was
+destitute of certain intelligence, for we find Pitt writing to Lyttelton
+on March 20: 'I conclude that things still remain unsettled, because I
+hear nothing from you or my other friends relating to them.' So he is
+solacing himself by reading Bolingbroke's works. Their arrogance, he
+says, is so excessive, that, great as is the performance, it often
+becomes ridiculous. There was, he remembers, not many years ago, a man
+in Bedlam, a scholar of fine parts, who used to entertain all the
+spectators of that asylum with very rational discourses, and talked
+with wit and eloquence; but always concluded by assuring his hearers
+that he alone of all his hearers was in his right senses, and they and
+all mankind were mad, and had conspired to put him in that place;
+Bolingbroke reminds Pitt of this lunatic. There was indeed no love lost
+between the two men. Pitt had not treated the elder statesman with the
+deference paid to him by the adoring circle in which he lived, and
+Bolingbroke had then charged Pitt with the same fault which Pitt now
+found in Bolingbroke. On March 24, in a letter to Grenville, he pursues
+the same theme, and dubs Bolingbroke the 'intellectual Sampson of
+Battersea.' But six weeks afterwards, we find him warmly recommending
+Bolingbroke's 'Remarks on the History of England' to his nephew 'to be
+studied and almost got by heart for the inimitable beauty of the style
+as well as the matter.'
+
+And now comes a letter of which not a word must be omitted, the
+memorable letter to Newcastle of March 24, long supposed to be lost, but
+now discovered among the Newcastle Papers. It was penned under the just
+resentment caused by the knowledge of the arrangements for office from
+which he had been insultingly ignored. It is, so far as we know, the
+greatest that Pitt ever wrote, full of scornful humility, suppressed
+passion, and pointed insinuation. Unlike most of his letters it needs no
+interpretation, it speaks for itself. That bitterness of indignation,
+which is said to produce poetry, has in this instance evolved clearness
+and force. Towards the end, after speaking of resignation, and of his
+wish for retirement, he utters this prophecy, baleful to Newcastle, who
+should have remembered that the prophet had it in his power to fulfil
+his own prediction. 'Indeed, my lord, the inside of the House must be
+consider'd in other respects besides merely numbers, or the reins of
+government will soon slip or be wrested out of any minister's hands.' A
+few months were to bring home to the duke the truth of this prediction.
+
+
+ PITT TO NEWCASTLE.
+
+ _Bath, 24 March, 1754._
+
+ My Lord Duke,--I have heard with the highest satisfaction by a
+ message from Sr George Lyttelton the effectual proofs of his
+ Majesty's great kindness and firm confidence in your Grace for the
+ conduct of his Government. You have certainly taken most wisely the
+ Province of the Treasury to yourself, where the powers of Government
+ reside, and which at this particular crisis of a General Election
+ may lay the foundations of the future political system so fast as
+ not to be shaken hereafter. But this will depend upon many
+ concomitant circumstances. For the present the nation may say with
+ consolation, _uno avulso non deficit alter aureus_. The power of the
+ Purse in the hands of the same family may, I trust, be so used as to
+ fix all other power there along with it. Amidst all the real
+ satisfaction I feel on this great measure so happily taken, it is
+ with infinite reluctance that I am forced to return to the
+ mortifying situation of your Grace's humblest servant and to add
+ some few considerations to those, which, I have the satisfaction to
+ learn from Sr George Lyttelton, had the honour to be receiv'd by
+ your Grace and my Lord Chancellor without disapprobation. The
+ difficulties grow so fast upon me by the repetition and
+ multiplication of most painfull and too visible humiliations that my
+ small store of prudence suggests no longer to me any means of
+ colouring them to the world; nor of repairing them to my own mind
+ consistently with my unshaken purpose to do nothing on any
+ provocation to disturb the quiet of the King and the ease and
+ stability of present and future Government.
+
+ Permit, my Lord, a man, whose affectionate attachment to your Grace,
+ I believe, you don't doubt, to expose simply to your view his
+ situation, and then let me entreat your Grace (if you can divest
+ your mind of the great disparity between us) to transport yourself
+ for a moment into my place. From the time I had the honour to come
+ into the King's service, I have never been wanting in my most
+ zealous endeavours in Parliament on the points that laboured the
+ most, those of military discipline and foreign affairs; nor have I
+ differ'd on any whatever, but the too small number of seamen one
+ year, which was admitted to be so the next; and on a crying
+ complaint against General Anstruther: for these crimes how am I
+ punish'd? Be the want of subjects ever so great and the force of the
+ conjuncture ever so cogent, be my best friends and protectors ever
+ so much at the head of Government, an indelible negative is fixed
+ against my name. Since I had the honour to return that answer to the
+ Chancellor which Your Grace and his Lordship were pleas'd not to
+ disapprove, how have mortifications been multiply'd upon me. One
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer over me was at that time destin'd, Mr.
+ Fox: since that time a second, Mr. Legge, is fixt: a Secretary of
+ State is next to be look'd for in the House of Commons; Mr. Fox is
+ again put over me and destin'd to that office: he refuses the seals:
+ Sir Thomas Robinson is immediately put over me and is now in
+ possession of that great office. I sincerely think both these high
+ employments much better fill'd than I cou'd supply either of them in
+ many respects. Mr. Legge I truely and cordially esteem and love. Sir
+ Thos. Robinson, with whom I have not the honour to live in the same
+ intimacy, I sincerely believe to be a gentleman of much worth and
+ ability. Nevertheless I will venture to appeal to your Grace's
+ candour and justice whether upon such feeble pretensions as twenty
+ years' use of Parliament may have given me, I have not some cause to
+ feel (as I do most deeply) so many repeated and visible
+ humiliations. I have troubled your Grace so long on this painfull
+ subject that I may have nothing disagreeable to say, when I have
+ the honour to wait on you; as well as that I think it fit your
+ Grace shou'd know the whole heart of a faithfull servant, who is
+ conscious of nothing towards your Grace which he wishes to conceal
+ from you. In my degraded situation in parliament, an active part
+ there I am sure your Grace is too equitable to desire me to take;
+ for otherwise than as an associate and in equal rank with those
+ charg'd with Government there, I never can take such a part.
+
+ I will confess I had flatter'd myself that the interests of your
+ Grace's own power were so concern'd to bring forward an instrument
+ of your own raising in the House of Commons that you cou'd not let
+ pass this decisive occasion without surmounting in the royal mind
+ the unfavourable impressions I have the unhappiness to be under; and
+ that the seals (at least when refus'd by Mr. Fox) might have been
+ destin'd as soon as an opening cou'd be made in the King's mind in
+ my favour instead of being immediately put into other hands. Things
+ standing as they do, whether I can continue in office without losing
+ myself in the opinion of the world is become a matter of very
+ painfull doubt to me. If any thing can colour with any air of
+ decency such an acquiescence, it can only be the consideration given
+ to my friends and some degree of softening obtain'd in his Majesty's
+ mind towards me. Mr Pelham destin'd Sir George Lyttelton to be
+ cofferer, whenever that office shou'd open, and there can be no
+ shadow of difficulty in Mr Grenville being made Treasurer of the
+ Navy. Weighed in the fair scale of usefulness to the King's business
+ in Parliament, they can have no competitors that deserve to stand in
+ their way. I have submitted these things to your Grace with a
+ frankness you had hitherto been so good to tolerate in me, however
+ inferior. I wou'd not have done it so fully for my own regard alone,
+ were I not certain that your Grace's interests are more concern'd in
+ it than mine: because I am most sure that my mind carries me more
+ strongly towards retreat than towards courts and business. Indeed,
+ My Lord, the inside of the House must be consider'd in other
+ respects besides merely numbers, or the reins of Government will
+ soon slip or be wrested out of any minister's hands. If I have
+ spoken too freely, I humbly beg your Grace's pardon: and entreat you
+ to impute my freedom to the most sincere and unalterable attachment
+ of a man who never will conceal his heart, and who can complain
+ without alienation of mind and remonstrate without resentment.
+
+ I have the honour to be, etc. etc.
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I cannot hope to leave Bath in less than a week. My health seems
+ much mended by my gout.[240]
+
+
+This letter was enclosed to Lyttelton under flying seal to be
+communicated to the Grenvilles. Pitt, writing the same day to Temple,
+says: 'I hope my letter to the Duke of Newcastle will meet with the
+fraternal approbation. It is strong, but not hostile, and will, I
+believe, operate some effect. I am still more strongly fixed in my
+judgement that the place of importance is employment, in the present
+unsettled conjuncture. It may not to us be the place of dignity, but
+sure I am it is that of the former. I see, as your Lordship does, the
+treatment we have had: I feel it as deeply, but I believe, not so
+warmly. I don't suffer my feelings to warp the only plan I can form that
+has any tendency or meaning. For making ourselves felt, by disturbing
+Government, I think would prove hurtful to the public, not reputable to
+ourselves, and beneficial in the end, only to others. All Achilles as
+you are, Impiger, Iracundus, etc., what would avail us to sail back a
+few myrmidons to Thessaly! Go over to the Trojans, to be revenged, we
+none of us can bear the thought of. What then remains? The conduct of
+the much-enduring man, who by temper, patience, and persevering
+prudence, became _adversis rerum immersabilis undis_.'
+
+He adds another postscript of caution: 'Be so good as not to leave my
+letters in your pockets, but lock them up or burn them, and caution Sir
+George to do the same.'[241] Secrecy was of the essence of his scheme.
+Should Newcastle or the Chancellor understand the part that he designed
+to play, they would have an advantage in the game.
+
+On April 2 Pitt writes to jog Newcastle's memory in a note about the
+Aldborough election: 'I had expected to hear from you, but I know the
+multiplicity of your business.'[242] He need not have feared that his
+letter had been overlooked. So little was this the case that, no doubt
+after anxious and protracted conferences, Newcastle and Hardwicke were
+both writing to him on this very day long and elaborate apologies.
+Hardwicke's is a document, as might be expected, of great but inadequate
+skill.[243] It gives him much concern to find that Pitt is 'under
+apprehensions of _some_ neglect on this decisive occasion.' He is not
+altogether surprised. Could Pitt only have heard how warmly Hardwicke
+pressed his claims! But there are certain things which ministers cannot
+do directly. These must be left to 'time and incidents and perhaps
+ill-judging opponents.' Fox's pressing for larger powers than the King
+would give had no doubt helped the cause of Pitt, and Newcastle's being
+at the head of the Government whose devotion to Pitt was so notorious
+would further it still more. He concludes by hoping with sincerity that
+Pitt would take an active part, though no doubt had he seen the
+direction in which his wish was fulfilled, he would have withdrawn it
+with greater emphasis. This stripped of verbiage seems the bone of this
+long letter.
+
+Behind Hardwicke shuffles Newcastle. 'Feel for me,' he plaintively
+exclaims, 'for my melancholy and distressed situation: compelled to
+leave the department of which I was a master to one with which I was
+entirely ignorant, exposed to envy and reproach, and sure of nothing but
+the comfort of an honest heart.' It had first been suggested that Fox
+should be Secretary of State to make Newcastle's elevation more
+palatable to his opponents. But 'that for certain reasons did not take
+place; upon which the King himself, of his own motion declared Sir
+Thomas Robinson Secretary of State.' And this Pitt's friends thought the
+best practicable arrangement. For though an excellent man for the
+office, Robinson had not Parliamentary talents which could excite
+jealousy, and as, from circumstances deeply lamented by Newcastle, 'it
+was impossible to put one into that office who had all the necessary
+qualifications both within and out of the House,' there seemed nothing
+better to do than to appoint the inoffensive Sir Thomas. All
+interspersed with copious assurances of love and affection. 'I honour,
+esteem, and ... most sincerely love you.'[244]
+
+Pitt replies to Newcastle in a letter which it is necessary to print in
+full from the original in the Newcastle Papers, for this is very
+different from the draft printed in the Chatham Correspondence.
+
+
+ PITT TO NEWCASTLE.
+
+ _Bath, 4 Apr. 1754._
+
+ My Lord Duke,--I was honour'd with your Grace's letter of ye 2nd
+ inst. yesterday evening. How shall I find words to express my sense
+ of the great condescension and kindness of expression with which it
+ is writ? It would be making but an ill return to so much goodness,
+ were I to go back far into the disagreeable subject that has
+ occasion'd your Grace so much trouble, and wou'd be tearing and
+ wounding your good nature to little purpose. Whatever my sensations
+ are, it is sufficient that I have once freely laid them before you,
+ and that your Grace has had the indulgence to pardon that freedom,
+ which I thought I used both to your Grace and myself. As for the
+ rest, my attachment shall be ever found as unalterable to Government
+ as my inability to be of any material use to it is become manifest
+ to all the world. I will enter again, but for a word or two, into a
+ subject your Grace shall be troubled no more with. It is most
+ obliging to suggest as consolations to me that I might have been
+ much more mortify'd under another management than under the present:
+ but I will freely own I shou'd have felt myself far less personally
+ humiliated, had Mr. Fox been placed by the King's favour at the head
+ of the House of Commons, than I am at present: in that case the
+ necessity wou'd have been apparent: the ability of the subject wou'd
+ in some degree have warranted the thing. I shou'd indeed have been
+ much mortify'd for your Grace and for my Lord Chancellor: very
+ little for my own particular. Cou'd Mr. Murray's situation have
+ allow'd him to be placed at the head of the House of Commons, I
+ shou'd have served under him with the greatest pleasure: I
+ acknowledge as much as the rest of the world do his superiority in
+ every respect. My mortification arises not from silly pride, but
+ from being evidently excluded by a negative personal to me (now and
+ for ever) flowing from a displeasure utterly irremovable. As to the
+ office of Chancellor of the Exchequer, I hope your Grace cannot
+ think me fill'd with so impertinent a vanity as to imagine it a
+ disparagement to me to serve under the Duke of Newcastle at the head
+ of the Treasury: but, my Lord, had I been proposed for that honour
+ and the King been once reconciled to the thought of me, my honour
+ wou'd have been saved and I shou'd with pleasure have declin'd the
+ charge in favour of Mr. Legge from a just regard to his Majesty's
+ service. I know my health, at best, is too precarious a thing to
+ expose his Majesty's affairs in Parliament to suffer delay, perhaps
+ in the middle of a session by being in such improper hands. As to
+ the other great office, many circumstances of it render an
+ uninterrupted health not so absolutely necessary to the discharge of
+ it. Were I to fail in it from want of health, or, what is still more
+ likely, from want of ability and a sufficient knowledge of foreign
+ affairs, a fitter person might at any time be substituted without
+ material inconvenience to publick business. To conclude, my Lord,
+ and to release your Grace from a troublesome correspondent, give me
+ leave to recur to your Grace's equity and candour: when the suffrage
+ of the party in one instance, and a higher nomination, the Royal
+ designation in another, operate to the eternal precluding of a man's
+ name being so much as brought in question, what reasonable wish can
+ remain for a man so circumstanced (under a first resolution, on no
+ account to disturb Government) but that of a decent retreat, a
+ retreat of respect, not resentment: of despair of being ever
+ accepted to equal terms with others, be his poor endeavours ever so
+ zealous. Very few have been the advantages and honours of my life:
+ but among the first of them I shall ever esteem the honour of your
+ Grace's good opinion: to that good opinion and protection I
+ recommend myself: and hope from it that some retreat, neither
+ disagreeable nor dishonourable, may (when practicable) be open'd to
+ me. I see with great joy Sr George Lyttelton and Mr. Grenville in
+ this arrangement, where they ought to be. I am persuaded they will
+ be of the greatest advantage to your Grace's system. They are both
+ connected in friendship with Mr. Legge and with Mr. Murray, who in
+ effect is the greatest strength of it in parliament. May every kind
+ of satisfaction and honour attend your Grace's labours for his
+ Majesty's service. I have the honour, etc. etc.
+
+ W. PITT.
+
+ I wrote your Grace by the Post ye 2nd inst. which I hope came to
+ your hands.'[245]
+
+
+Two days afterwards he answered Hardwicke. In this letter the notable
+passage is that in which he points to retreat, having in his mind, it
+would seem, some specific office:--'The weight of irremovable royal
+displeasure is a load too great to move under; it must crush any man; it
+has sunk and broken me. I succumb, and wish for nothing but a decent and
+innocent retreat.... To speak without a figure I will presume ... to
+tell my utmost wish; it is that a retreat, not void of advantage or
+derogatory to the rank of the office I hold, might, as soon as
+practicable, be opened to me.... Out of his Grace's (Newcastle's)
+immediate province accommodations of this kind arise.'[246]
+
+By the same messenger Pitt wrote to Lyttelton one of the terse notes
+which throw a hundredfold more light on his real temper than his more
+pompous lucubrations, and which are infinitely more readable than the
+long rigmaroles which he wrote to official persons. He professes in this
+to be more than satisfied with Newcastle's answer, and also with the
+Chancellor's.
+
+
+ ... The Duke of Newcastle's letter to me is not only in a temper
+ very different from what you saw his Grace in, but is writ with a
+ condescension, and in terms so flattering, that it pains me. I am
+ almost tempted to think there is kindness at the bottom of it,
+ _which, if left to itself, would before now have shewed itself_ in
+ effects. If I have not the fruit, I have the leaves of it in
+ abundance; a beautiful foliage of fine words.... The Chancellor's
+ letter is the most condescending, friendly, obliging thing that can
+ be imagined. I have the deepest sense of his goodness for me; but I
+ am really compelled, by every reason fit for a man to listen to, to
+ resist (as to the point of activity in Parliament) farther than I
+ like to do. I have intimated retreat and pointed out such a one in
+ general as I shall really like. Resolved not to disturb Government;
+ I desire to be released from the oar of Parliamentary drudgery. I am
+ (un)willing[247] to sit there and be ready to be called out into
+ action when the Duke of Newcastle's personal interests might
+ require, or Government should deign to employ me as an instrument. I
+ am not fond of making speeches (though some may think I am). I never
+ cultivated the talent, but as an instrument of action in a country
+ like ours....[248]
+
+
+The places were now all filled: the Government was made up: Pitt was
+excluded and proscribed. Fox or Murray, he admitted, might reasonably be
+put over his head. But the promotion of Robinson was a personal outrage.
+So he would no longer sit in Parliament as a subordinate and almost a
+creature of Newcastle's, member for one of his boroughs, Paymaster in
+his administration. Pitt was now determined to be free. He would remain
+out of London, and they might see how they got on without him. When he
+did return to London they should realise what they had lost. Meanwhile
+he would occupy himself with a little architecture and a little
+gardening; all that he was fit for, as he would assure inquirers with
+obsequious sarcasm.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+In the meantime all had been settled by hasty arrangements in London.
+Owing to Newcastle's 'overwhelming affliction,' Hardwicke tells us that
+he himself was compelled to step forward as a 'kind of minister _ab
+aratro_,' and make the necessary arrangements. A faint offer of the
+Treasury was made to the Duke of Devonshire, which he wisely declined,
+and, six days after the death of Pelham, Newcastle, in spite of his
+overwhelming affliction, was proclaimed his successor. We do not doubt
+Newcastle's sorrow, for in his own way he loved his brother and had
+divided his patrimony with him; but it is even more certain that the
+Chancellor acted as his watch-dog in front of the Treasury. For the
+Duke, though his timidity was a standing jest, could not bear that any
+one else should obtain the rich prize which he coveted and dreaded. And,
+in truth, if that was his view, no one could controvert it, for his
+power in the House of Commons was obvious and undeniable. The King seems
+to have made no trouble. He said that he had an open mind, and would be
+guided by the opinion of the Cabinet as to the nomination of their new
+chief. The suggestion shocked Hardwicke. 'To poll in a Cabinet Council
+for his first minister, which should only be settled in his closet, I
+could by no means digest.' So Hardwicke, with remarkable expedition,
+took care that the Closet, which was the term used to denote the King's
+personal apartment and so his personal authority, should pronounce in
+favour of Newcastle. But the Closet was guided by the Cabinet in spite
+of Hardwicke's scruples; and the Cabinet, a facile caucus, inspired by
+Hardwicke himself, represented to the King as its unanimous opinion that
+Newcastle should be their chief. Horace Walpole tells us that it was 'to
+the astonishment of all men.' To us it seems the only natural solution.
+Hardwicke had declared that a peer must be placed at the head of the
+Treasury. 'That peer must be somebody of great figure and credit in the
+nation, in whom the Whigs will have great confidence.' He was no doubt
+painting the figure to represent Newcastle. But who else could it be?
+Newcastle was the head of the Whigs, the master of Parliament, Secretary
+of State for a generation, and the brother of the late First Minister.
+The House of Commons, moreover, consisted mainly of his creatures. His
+nomination to the premiership was easy and simple enough. But a
+formidable difficulty at once presented itself. Who should lead the
+House of Commons? It was not that there was a dearth of capable men; on
+the contrary, there was a terrible embarrassment of riches; for there
+were Fox, Pitt, and Murray, all men of the first eminence in their
+lines. Murray at once let it be known that his views lay in another
+direction; in any case, he was a Scotsman, which was little
+recommendation, and suspected of being a Jacobite, which was less. But
+Fox was on the spot, and, though distracted with anxiety for his child
+Charles, who lay dangerously ill,[249] prompt, vigilant, and eager.
+Within a few hours of Pelham's death he had sent three humble messages
+of apology to Hardwicke, with whom he was on terms of bitter enmity,
+made energetic advances to Newcastle, and had called at Pitt's London
+house. Soon afterwards he was closeted with Lord Hartington. It was
+obvious that no considerations of delicacy would stand in his way. But
+there were strong prejudices against him. Hardwicke feared his success,
+for they had quarrelled mortally. He belonged, said the Chancellor, 'to
+a very narrow clique, many of them of the worst sort.' His claims rested
+on his abilities, but even more on the friendship of the Duke of
+Cumberland; perhaps, too, on a presumed pliability.
+
+Pitt was absent, and had the proverbial fate of the absent; he was not
+merely distant, but could not be moved. He had been nearly a year
+secluded in the country out of the atmosphere of London and politics.
+Horace Walpole describes him epigrammatically in a letter written on the
+stirring day after Pelham's death: 'Pitt has no health, no party, and
+has what in _this_ case is allowed to operate, the King's negative.' On
+the other hand, the King had a prepossession for Fox; and the Cabinet,
+we are told, when it recommended Newcastle, unanimously named Fox as the
+proper person to be Secretary of State and manager of the House of
+Commons. What wonder then that Newcastle's choice fell on Fox, who at
+any rate could not be fobbed off by stories of the King's insurmountable
+repugnance and who was the favourite of the King's favourite son? The
+Chancellor sent his son-in-law, Lord Anson, to Fox with an olive-branch.
+Lady Yarmouth acted as a friendly means of communication between Fox
+and the King. Lord Hartington acted as the honest broker. Fox was given
+the management of the House of Commons, with the Secretaryship of State
+vacant by Newcastle's elevation. He was at once led by Hartington, like
+a votive lamb, to the Chancellor, with whom a reconciliation was
+concluded. Thence he was conducted to Newcastle, who received him, we
+need not doubt, with his customary effusion, probably with a kiss. All
+went well till the Secret Service money was mentioned. This Newcastle
+said he should distribute as his brother had done, without telling
+anybody anything. Then came the question of patronage. That also was to
+be reserved to Newcastle alone. Lastly, there was the list of nominees
+for ministerial boroughs at the approaching General Election. This
+Newcastle also declined to divulge. In the evening Newcastle sent for
+Hartington. He did not deny that he had broken his engagements, but
+simply declared that he would not stand by them. He 'confirmed not his
+promise but his breach of promise in these words: "Who desires Mr. Fox
+to be answerable for anybody but himself in the House of Commons?" I
+then,' continues Fox, 'was to take this great office on the footing of
+being quite a cypher, and being known to have been told so.'[250]
+
+Newcastle had always intended this and nothing else. As Hardwicke
+judiciously wrote, two days before Newcastle saw Fox: 'If the power of
+the Treasury, the Secret Service and the House of Commons is once well
+settled in safe hands, the office of Secretary of State of the Southern
+province will carry very little efficient power along with it.' Fox was
+to be Secretary for the Southern province. But the Duke's plan of
+campaign had the radical defect of making the post of manager
+impossible. For the difference between the modern term of 'leadership'
+and the denomination of 'management' was no mere verbal distinction. The
+House of Commons had to be managed by acts of a kind more material than
+the eloquence of a chief, or the seductive hints of whips. The leader,
+in fact, combined the leadership with the office of Patronage Secretary.
+'The House of Commons must have,' as Fox explained on a subsequent
+occasion, 'at least one man in it who shall be the organ of His
+Majesty's parliamentary wishes, and known to be able to help or hurt
+people with His Majesty.'[251] The leader would not know how to talk to
+his followers, when some might be hirelings and some free, without his
+knowing which were which. He would not be able to promise a borough or a
+place. He would be a mere speaking automaton with a wary old chief in
+concealment working the machine. Fox saw that he was cheated. He himself
+seems to have clung for a moment even to the shadow of office which
+Newcastle had proffered. But his friends insisted on his refusal. So on
+the next day or the next day but one, he wrote a curt letter, stating
+that the assurances conveyed to him through Lord Hartington had been
+entirely contradicted by Newcastle at their interview, and that he
+preferred to remain Secretary at War. 'I remain therefore,' he wrote to
+Marlborough, 'a little little man, which I think is better than a little
+great man.'[252] But he soon repented, or his friends did for him.[253]
+
+Newcastle cared little for the charge of breach of faith. He had kept
+his patronage, and, as he thought, silenced Fox, who remained Secretary
+at War. In a hysterical condition he hurried to kiss hands for his new
+office. He flung himself at the King's feet, sobbing out 'God bless your
+Majesty! God preserve your Majesty!' embracing the royal knees with such
+howls of adoration that the lord-in-waiting had to beg the other
+courtiers to retire and not watch 'a great man in distress;' then, in
+the zeal of discretion, attempting to shut the door on the tittering
+crowd, he jammed the new Minister's foot till genuine roars of physical
+pain drowned the more artificial clamour.[254] Having recovered himself
+after this characteristic performance, Newcastle betook himself without
+delay to the choice of his heart, the man whom he had always longed for
+as a colleague, even at the time when he had been seeking a successor to
+Bedford, an obscure diplomatist, Sir Thomas Robinson. 'Had I,' he had
+written in September 1750, 'to chuse for the King, the public, and
+myself, I would prefer Sir Thomas Robinson to any man living. I know he
+knows more and would be more useful to the country and me than any other
+can be.' This opinion seems to have been confined to the Duke himself.
+Horace Walpole writing at the moment says:--'The German Sir Thomas
+Robinson was thought on for the Secretary's seals; but has just sense
+enough to be unwilling to accept them under so ridiculous an
+administration. This is the first act of the comedy.' But in the second
+act Sir Thomas's good sense was unequal even to this strain, and he
+accepted the post. Under what hallucination he laboured, or whether he
+was merely beguiled by the fawning caresses of Newcastle, it is
+difficult to say. The fact remains that he undertook to lead the House
+of Commons, seated between Pitt and Fox, whom he knew to be malcontents,
+and capable of anything. His own parliamentary powers were in the egg
+(for he had never spoken), and were never destined to be hatched. At the
+time of his appointment as Secretary of State he was Master of the Great
+Wardrobe, a congenial post which he was destined during the next year to
+resume. For in his new capacity he justified the anticipations of his
+enemies, and disturbed the equanimity of his friends. Newcastle himself
+had recommended the appointment to Pitt's benevolent consideration on
+the very ground that he could not excite the rivalry of existing
+orators. He 'had not those parliamentary talents which could give
+jealousy or in that light set him above the rest of the King's
+servants.' But the reality was far below these modest anticipations. Sir
+Thomas was not merely ineffectual and feeble, but would attempt on
+occasion agonising flights of eloquence. Posterity is spared the perusal
+of these, for Parliamentary history records no word of this unhappy
+leader. 'Sir Thomas,' says Lord Waldegrave, 'though a good Secretary of
+State, as far as the business of his office and that which related to
+foreign affairs, was ignorant even of the language of an House of
+Commons controversy; and when he played the orator, which he too
+frequently attempted, it was so exceedingly ridiculous that those who
+loved and esteemed him could not always preserve a friendly composure of
+countenance.' This partly arose from his appearance. He was a large
+unwieldy man, and would in debate put his arms straight out, which made
+George Selwyn compare him to a signpost.[255]
+
+Such was Sir Thomas; who was to allay the warring elements, to appease
+the Titans and the Giants, to hold the scales between Fox and Pitt. Let
+us, while contemplating this grievous and pathetic spectacle, at least
+take comfort that we have arrived at the priceless narrative of Lord
+Waldegrave, a man not brilliant, but shrewd and honest, who guides us
+past the waspish partiality of Horace Walpole, the bitterness of Glover,
+and the corrupt cynicism of Dodington with a light which we feel to be
+the lamp of truth. Newcastle, delighted with the consent of Sir Thomas,
+and with the apparent acquiescence of Fox, hastened to complete his
+arrangements with the squalid instinct of a jobber. Fox was, he thought,
+muzzled; the formidable task remained of silencing Pitt. He could not
+satisfy Pitt directly, for that would imply overwhelming difficulties
+with the King, and perhaps with Fox; but he might give indirect
+satisfaction, and detach some of Pitt's little section. In this last
+attempt he succeeded. Pitt's friend Legge was made Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, the King only making the same condition that he had with
+regard to Pitt himself, that he was never to receive the new minister.
+It is said, indeed, by Horace Walpole that his mean appearance and
+uncouth dialect made him unsuitable for such audiences, and that he
+would have preferred to remain Treasurer of the Navy, the lucrative post
+which had so great a fascination for Bubb. George Grenville, one of the
+Cobham Cousinhood, succeeded Legge in this attractive office; George
+Lyttelton, another, became Cofferer, with his brother as Sub-Cofferer;
+'it is a good L2200 per annum, all taxes deducted,'[256] writes George
+of his new post in the fulness of his heart; and, according to Horace
+Walpole, in the exuberance of his satisfaction with that office, he
+vouched for Pitt's acquiescence in the new arrangements. Newcastle
+himself presented these appointments to Pitt with a satisfaction not
+unalloyed with melancholy presentiments. 'The appointment of Mr. Legge
+was made,' he writes, 'with a view to please all our friends. We knew he
+was well with the old corps, we knew he was happy in your friendship,
+and in your good opinion and in that of your connection; _and you must
+allow me to say, that I never could have thought one moment of removing
+you, in the high light which you so justly stand, from the office you
+now possess to be Chancellor of the Exchequer with another person at the
+head of the Treasury_.'[257]
+
+It is perhaps scarcely necessary to explain that the italics are not the
+Duke's, but it seemed necessary to give emphasis to so daring a flight.
+
+'These dispositions being thus made,' he continues, 'it was my first
+view to show you that regard in the person of your friends, which it was
+impossible to do in your own, to the degree which you might reasonably
+expect. The two first vacant offices, that of Treasurer of the Navy and
+Cofferer, were by my recommendation given to your two first friends, Mr.
+Grenville and Sir George Lyttelton,' etc. etc. 'Legge at the Exchequer,
+unsuitable for you, two of your friends as Cofferer and Treasurer';
+these were the sedatives timidly launched to Pitt, gnashing his teeth
+at Bath over his own impotence and the desertion of his friends. So may
+a despairing traveller have attempted to assuage with a few casual
+comfits the hunger of a Bengal tiger crouching for a spring.
+
+Pitt controlled himself. We have seen his reply[258] to Newcastle's
+shuffling apologies. He continued to write to Lyttelton, but with less
+cordiality. To George Grenville he wrote a tepid note of congratulation.
+To Temple, who had been omitted from the arrangements, he addressed
+himself more cordially, and sent the portrait for which he had been
+sitting to Hoare. It represents no formidable orator, but a simpering
+man of the world; yet, after the fashion of mankind, who secretly
+cherish the portraits least like themselves, Pitt commended the
+resemblance. But he took occasion to add a phrase which reveals the full
+bitterness of his heart. 'In this portrait,' he writes, 'I shall have
+had the honour to present myself before you in my very person; not only
+from the great likeness of the portrait, but, moreover, that I have no
+right to pretend to any other existence than that of a man en peinture.'
+The wrath pierces through the confused sentence like a sudden sting: it
+is not often indulged, but it cannot be wholly suppressed.
+
+Soon afterwards (May 1754) Temple and his brother George paid Pitt a
+flying visit at Bath, where no doubt explanations were exchanged and
+plans concerted. For, putting Pitt on one side, the Minister knew little
+of human nature who could think that he would conciliate Temple by
+promoting his brother George.
+
+In June 1754, Pitt at length left Bath and arrived in London. He had
+now been fourteen months absent from the metropolis. In the meantime he
+had been chosen for Newcastle's borough of Aldborough at the General
+Election in the previous April, a somewhat embarrassing connection under
+existing circumstances; though embarrassments of this kind are apt to be
+less irksome in politics than they may appear. And Pitt wrote to thank
+the Duke in terms of Oriental submission. 'I thank you for writing to
+tell me of the great honour you have done me at Aldborough, for which
+seat I declined the offer of many others, being anxious to be known as
+your servant.' With whatever grimace Pitt may have written this, it
+strikes one as carrying the joke too far.[259]
+
+But when he returned to London in June, he no longer affected to conceal
+his discontent. His complaints were obvious and well founded enough. He
+had not been consulted, but had only been informed. Nor was the
+information calculated to gratify him. He had been told at first that
+Fox, whom Bubb at this time calls Pitt's 'inveterate enemy,' had been
+offered the seals; then by the next post that Fox had refused them and
+that they had been accepted by Robinson. The excuse had then been
+tendered that Pitt's health would not allow him to accept an office of
+so much business and fatigue; to which he had replied that he himself
+should be the best judge of that. He ought at least to have been offered
+the Exchequer, which had been given to the underling Legge.[260] The
+King in any case should have been reconciled to him. When he saw the new
+minister Newcastle asked him his opinion of the arrangements. This Pitt
+at first refused to give, but on being pressed declared that 'your Grace
+may be surprised, but I think Mr. Fox should have been at the head of
+the House of Commons.' He met Fox. They had mutual explanations, and no
+doubt assurances of common vengeance to exchange. For Fox was as loud in
+complaint as Pitt. 'Nothing,' he wrote, 'can be more contemptuous than
+the usage I receive.'[261]
+
+Parliament had risen, so Pitt, after settling the arrears in his office,
+went back to the country. Early in September we find him at Astrop
+Wells. On October 2 he called on Newcastle with reference to some
+business in his office. Bubb's account of this interview is well known.
+When they had settled the business which had brought Pitt, the Duke
+wished to enter on affairs in North America, where things were looking
+black, and Washington, then a major, had been compelled to surrender to
+the French at Fort Necessity. 'Your Grace,' said Pitt, 'knows I have no
+capacity for such things,' and declined to discuss them.[262] Newcastle,
+who, the same day, wrote an account of the interview to Hardwicke, makes
+no mention of this incident. And yet it is too good, too Pitt-like, not
+to be true. We can reconcile the two statements by presuming that it was
+what an opening is to a game of chess, and that Pitt, having enjoyed his
+sarcasm, could not resist the appeal of military plans. 'I then
+acquainted him with what was designed for North America, and also with
+my Lord Granville's notions, which had not been followed. He talked up
+the affair of North America very highly--that it must be supported in
+all events and at all risks--that the Duke's scheme was a very good one
+as far as it went--that it might do something: that it did not go near
+far enough--that he could not help agreeing with my Lord Granville--that
+he was for doing both, sending the regiments and raising some thousand
+men in America--that we should do it once for all--that it was not to be
+done by troops from Europe--that mere France would be too strong for
+us--that we should have soon to countenance the Americans, &c.--that the
+Duke's proposals for artillery, &c., were infinitely too short. This
+discourse, joined with Lord Anson's opinion, has made me suspend at
+least the stopping the orders for the raising two regiments, &c., and
+for providing all the artillery promised by the Duke.'[263]
+
+What a scene of confusion! Here are three stages revealed: the orders,
+the stopping the orders, the suspending the stopping the orders! Pitt,
+it is evident, though beginning with a refusal, ended by speaking with
+authority.
+
+Hardwicke, however, who had made a merit to Pitt of having sustained his
+claim to be Secretary, waxed suspicious on receiving Newcastle's letter.
+'I am glad,' he replies, 'your Grace has talked to Mr. Pitt upon these
+measures. As he expressed himself so zealously and sanguinely for them,
+I hope he will support them in Parliament, and I dare say your Grace did
+not omit the opportunity of pressing that upon him. There is something
+remarkable in that gentleman's taking a measure of the Duke's so
+strongly to heart, and arguing even to carry it further. I think that
+sett used to be against warlike measures.'[264]
+
+Suspicion tainted every political breeze. The vigilant celibates in
+Cranford did not keep a closer watch on their neighbours' proceedings
+than did the public men of those days on each other. The mere fact of
+Pitt's commending a project of Cumberland, his former enemy, at once
+implied to Hardwicke that he was in harmony and understanding with Fox,
+Cumberland's right-hand man. And indeed Bubb assures us that this was
+the case. Fox and Pitt were agreed as to the division of the spoils,
+when spoils there should be. Fox was to be head of the Treasury and Pitt
+Secretary of State; 'but neither will assist the other.'
+
+All this came to nothing, and therefore need not detain us now; for Pitt
+was occupied with something far more vital to him than Fox, or
+Newcastle, or the distant echoes of American warfare. He had come up
+from Wotton, the residence of George Grenville, where in the last days
+of September he had plighted his troth to Lady Hester Grenville, the
+sister of the Grenvilles, and he was now hurrying back to join her at
+Stowe. The engagement was in some respects remarkable. Pitt was now
+forty-six and Lady Hester was thirty-three. When Pitt first went to
+Stowe in 1735 she was fourteen, and in the nineteen years that had
+elapsed they must have seen each other constantly. How was it then that
+the cripple of forty-six suddenly flung away his crutches to throw
+himself at the feet of this mature young lady? It seems inexplicable,
+but love affairs are often inexplicable. And we know little or nothing
+of Pitt's loves. Except the childish passage at Besancon, there is only
+the statement of Horace Walpole, a spiteful gossip if ever there was
+one, that Lady Archibald Hamilton had lost the affections of Frederick
+Prince of Wales by giving him Pitt as a rival.[265] This lacks
+confirmation and even probability. Were it true, it might be a clue to
+phases of Pitt's connection with Leicester House. He seems, too, as we
+have seen in a letter of Lyttelton's, to have had a tenderness for
+Lyttelton's sister Molly. Then there was another Molly, Molly West, with
+whom, it is said, he had been in love, the sister of his friend Gilbert,
+who afterwards married Admiral Hood, Lord Bridport. Want of means, we
+are told, prevented their union. But the authority for this is unknown
+to us.[266]
+
+This much at least is certain, that no man ever had a nobler or more
+devoted wife. She survived him to witness the glories and almost the
+death of her second son, dying in April 1808. At Orwell there is a
+picture of her by Gainsborough, painted in 1747, dressed in white with
+jewels, with a pleasant rather than a beautiful face. There is another
+portrait at Chevening painted in 1750, which represents her with auburn
+hair, a long upper lip, and a nose slightly turned up; comely and
+intelligent, but no more. Mrs. Montagu rather confirms this impression:
+'I believe Lady Hester Grenville is very good-humoured, which is the
+principal article in the happiness of the Marriage State. Beauty soon
+grows familiar to the lover,'[267] and so forth; from which we may infer
+that Lady Hester was not at any rate a reigning toast. Her appearances
+are rare but full of tenderness; she watched over her husband with
+exquisite devotion; furthering and anticipating his wishes, which were
+often fanciful and extravagant; shielding his moments of nervous
+prostration with the wings of an angel. On her rested often, if not
+always, the care of his affairs, often, if not always, disordered, and
+all the burdens of household management. For many months she was his
+sole channel of communication with the outer world. The wives of
+statesmen are not invariably successful, though they are generally
+devoted; but none was ever more absorbed in her high but harassing duty.
+In all the bitterness of that bitter time, when her husband seemed
+surrounded by implacable enmities, no one found a word to say against
+her. Pitt's choice seems to have been as wise as it was deliberate.
+
+Camelford, from whom the worst interpretation can always be obtained,
+says: 'His marriage was unexpected. He was no longer young, and his
+infirmities made him older than his years, when, upon a visit to Mr.
+Grenville at Wotton, Lady Hester made an impression upon him that was
+the more extraordinary as she was by no means new to him. The first
+hints he gave of his intentions were eagerly seized by her, saying she
+should be unworthy the honour he proposed to her if she could hesitate a
+moment in accepting it. With a very common understanding and totally
+devoid of tenderness, or of any feeling but pride and ambition, she
+contrived to make herself a good wife to him by a devotion and
+attachment that knew no bounds. She lived only in his glory, and that
+vanity absorbed every other idea of her mind. She was his nurse, his
+flatterer, his housekeeper and steward, and, though her talent was by no
+means economy, yet she could submit to any privation that would gratify
+his wants or his caprices. If he loved anyone it must be her who had no
+love but for him, or rather for his reputation. Yet I saw no sacrifices
+on his part for her ease and quiet or to the essential comforts of her
+life.'
+
+As to Lady Hester's having a 'very common understanding' and being
+'totally devoid of tenderness' we need not rest on tradition, though
+that is all the other way; for the superiority of her understanding and
+her tenderness are amply proved by the admirable letters published from
+the Pretyman Papers by Lord Ashbourne; and her devotion to her husband
+is attested by Camelford himself. How he became acquainted with the
+details of courtship, usually mysterious enough, and in those days more
+veiled than in these, we need not trouble to inquire. When it took place
+Pitt was taking time which he could ill spare to write letters of
+anxious and affectionate solicitude to Camelford at Cambridge, and
+receiving in return the most unbounded assurances of grateful devotion.
+
+Pitt's love letters, alas! survive; the treasures of his wife, but the
+despair of posterity. That a great genius presumably in love should send
+such stilted, pompous, artificial documents as tokens of his passion to
+the object of his affections is one of the mysteries of brain and heart.
+They are as wretched in their way as the letters of Burns to Clarinda,
+and shall not be quoted here.
+
+Having paid his betrothed a flying visit at Stowe, the blithe bridegroom
+had as usual to proceed to Bath, where he remained a fortnight inditing
+these execrable epistles of rhetorical affection.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+[Sidenote: 1754.]
+
+On November 14, the very day of the opening of Parliament, Pitt brought
+forward a bill for the relief of the Chelsea Pensioners, who, from
+receiving their pensions a year in arrear, fell inextricably into the
+hands of usurers. He was in haste to perform this useful duty, for on
+November 16 he was married by special licence to Lady Hester at Argyll
+Buildings, Dr. Ayscough officiating; and Solomon and Esther, as Lady
+Townshend called them, thence departed for the honeymoon to West's house
+of Wickham in Kent. That interval of seclusion did not last long, but it
+would seem to have effected a striking transformation. The marriage
+marks a new ascent in Pitt's career; love seemed to have transformed
+him; always powerful and eloquent, he became sublime. Into his former
+qualities there had passed an inspiration kindred to the divine passion
+which makes the poet. The timid warblers of the grove, as he was
+afterwards to call them, the politicians who sought quiet lives and safe
+places, the arch-jobber himself who had for years deluded him, were in
+an instant to realise that a new terror was added to life. For on
+November 25 he was once more in the House of Commons. At this time, just
+before or just after the meeting of Parliament, he had come to open
+words with Newcastle. The Duke had offered the usual palliatives.
+'Fewer words, if you please, my Lord,' replied Pitt contemptuously, 'for
+your words have long lost all weight with me.' Fox had said much the
+same to Newcastle in March. The new Minister had therefore been grossly
+insulted by the two first men in the House of Commons. He must have felt
+that there were menacing symptoms in the political horizon. It is
+strange, therefore, to find Walpole writing that, as 'Newcastle had
+secured by employments almost every material speaker in Parliament,' it
+was hoped that the session might pass in settling election
+petitions.[268]
+
+It seems incredible that the Duke can have so flattered himself. But no
+doubt he relied on two main considerations. One was that, though
+official discipline was then incomparably more lax than now, it was
+scarcely possible for Pitt or Fox to mean mischief so long as they kept
+their places, and these they had not resigned. The other was this. The
+General Election had just been conducted under his auspices, and had
+returned a House of Commons devoted to himself. Indeed in all England
+there were only forty-two contests. In some Continental countries a
+general election always returns a ministerial majority; there are
+mysteries connected with the proceeding of which only ministers have the
+key. This to some extent was the case in England at this period; and no
+Secretary of the Treasury, no Martin or Robinson, understood his
+particular business better than Newcastle. But whatever his illusions,
+they were soon destined to be disturbed, for on November 25 Pitt opened
+fire on him. Of that famous scene and outburst we are fortunate enough
+to possess two brilliant descriptions: one by Horace Walpole, and one,
+even more graphic, which has the additional value of being written by
+Pitt's rival, Henry Fox. Fox, writing in a white heat of generous
+admiration, describes it summarily as 'the finest speech that ever Pitt
+spoke, and perhaps the most remarkable.' This last epithet was probably
+due to the fact that the speech was apparently made on the spur of the
+moment. The occasion was one of those election petitions on which the
+Duke had relied as a sedative and a pastime for his faithful Commons.
+Wilkes, the pleasant, worthless demagogue, who was afterwards to cause
+so much trouble, had petitioned against the return of Delaval, the
+sitting member for Berwick. Delaval had defended his seat in a speech
+full of wit and buffoonery, which kept the House in a roar of laughter;
+much the same speech, one would guess, that Pitt himself had delivered
+on the proceedings at his own election for Seaford when those were
+attacked. But to-day he was in a different mood, and, as the debate
+proceeded, came down from the gallery where he was seated, and
+intervened with a frown. He was 'astonished to hear this merriment when
+such a matter was concerned. Was the dignity of the House on so sure a
+foundation that we could afford to shake it with scoffs?' In an instant
+the House was cowed into silence, like schoolboys found in fault by
+their master. You could have heard a pin drop as he continued.
+
+'Had it not, on the contrary, been diminishing for years, till now we
+were brought to the very brink of a precipice where, if ever, a stand
+must be made? Were we ourselves within the House to try and lessen that
+dignity when such attacks were made upon it from without that it was
+almost lost? On the contrary, it wanted support, for it was scarcely
+possible to recover it.' He appealed to the Speaker (Onslow) with
+profuse compliments, for the Speaker only could restore it--yet scarcely
+even he. Then he eloquently adjured all Whigs to rally and unite in
+defence of their liberties, which were attacked, nay, dying, 'unless,'
+he passionately added, 'you will degenerate into a little assembly
+serving no other purpose than to register the arbitrary edicts of _one_
+too-powerful _subject_;' laying an emphasis on the words 'one' and
+'subject' that might well send a shudder to the soul of Newcastle, when
+the echo should reach him. He ended by a recapitulation as to 'our being
+likely to become an appendix to--I know not what: I have no name for
+it.' 'All,' adds Fox, 'whether pleased or displeased, declare this speech
+to be the finest that ever was made.'[269] The effect of this sudden
+menace in the midst of the Duke's comfortable arrangements to appease
+and silence everybody, was appalling. It came with the shattering effect
+of a shell, and a shell falling in some quiet picnic. The Ministers were
+in consternation; every member sat confounded. Murray, pale and
+miserable, shrunk his head in silence. Wilkes used to narrate his dread,
+as he heard the awful tone of Pitt's exordium, lest the thunder that he
+saw was gathering should fall on him. Never, he said, when at
+Westminster School had he felt greater terror when summoned for a
+flogging, never when let off a greater relief than on this occasion;
+terror when uncertain where the bolt would fall, relief when he found it
+was destined for another.[270] Fox himself only came in as Pitt was
+finishing, just in time to witness the devastation which had been
+caused. Legge, on the part of the Government, had to rise and humbly
+deprecate the wrath of the orator.
+
+Pitt allowed no respite. On the same evening a discussion arose as to
+the dates on which the various petitions would be taken. That relating
+to Reading was fixed for a particular day, and that for Colchester on a
+day soon afterwards. Pitt moved the postponement of the Colchester
+petition; as the Reading one would take time, and concerned a noble
+lord, Lord Fane, for whom he had a particular regard. A malignant fate
+here tempted the new Secretary of State to a needless and unhappy
+intervention. He declared that the Reading petition would be a short
+case, and, so far as concerned the sitting member, a poor case; that
+Lord Fane had only a majority of one.
+
+This gave Pitt his opportunity, and he soundly trounced the unfortunate
+Minister. What did Sir Thomas know about it? It was ignorant presumption
+to lay down the law about a case which had not been heard. If this was
+the method of the Minister, there would be short work with elections. He
+himself had little thought to see so melancholy a day as this, but he
+was not to be taught his duty by Sir Thomas or any one else. Sir Thomas
+replied, 'with pomp, confusion, and warmth,' to deprecate the misleading
+effects of mere eloquence. He hoped that words would not be allowed more
+than their due weight. For his own part, he was performing the duties of
+an office which he had never desired. Pitt in his rejoinder affected to
+believe this last statement, with the unkind commentary that if anybody
+else had wished for the post, Sir Thomas would not have had it. Then,
+artfully cooling down, he showed that he was only aiming at Newcastle,
+for he professed the highest respect for Sir Thomas with this cruel,
+backhand blow at the Duke, 'that he thought him, Sir Thomas, as able as
+any man that had of late years filled that office, or was likely to fill
+it.' Fox could no longer resist joining in the sport of baiting his
+hapless leader. He also could only explain and excuse Sir Thomas's
+pronouncing hastily and summarily on a case which he had not heard by
+his long residence abroad, and by his consequent and total inexperience
+of parliamentary matters.
+
+It was clear that neither of the formidable lieutenants was in the least
+appeased, or likely to contribute to the tranquillity of the session.
+Still it was also clear that the members of the House were loyal to
+Newcastle and his deputy, and that they were not moved from their
+allegiance by the oratory to which they had listened. But when the
+display was over, the frightened ministerialists gathered into small
+groups whispering their terrors to each other. Pitt's fury breaking out
+at this moment might be due, thought Fox, in some measure to accident.
+'But break out I knew it would. And the Duke of Newcastle may thank
+himself for the violence of it (he) having ... owned to Pitt that he had
+acquainted the King with part of their last conversation; adding, like
+an idiot, "to do you good, to do you good," and that he had not
+mentioned that part which could do him harm.'[271] We do not know what
+is the interview to which this refers; it can hardly be that which
+occurred at the beginning of October in which Pitt had said, 'Your
+Grace, I suppose, knows that I have no capacity for such things.' So we
+are at a loss to know the immediate cause of Pitt's outbreak, though no
+divination is required to know that ever since Pelham's death he had
+been explosive.
+
+Nothing can better illustrate the extraordinary power which Newcastle
+wielded in the House of Commons than the dumb terrified fidelity of the
+great majority who clung to his knees in spite of the attacks of Pitt
+and Fox. Hapless majority! They had neither voice nor faith; they
+despised almost equally their nominal chief Robinson, and their real
+chief Newcastle; so they huddled together for warmth and sympathy. And
+this was a House of Commons produced by a general election carried on
+under the auspices of a consummate manipulator and by long years of
+cozening, patronage, and corruption. The success had been complete, a
+devoted and passive majority had been returned, and this was the result.
+It was a strange and instructive spectacle. This docile flock was
+shepherdless, it was not thought to need any superintendence, it had
+only to receive its instructions from Newcastle through the channel of
+some such agent as Robinson. What Newcastle thought well to give, it was
+prepared gladly to take. Could Minister want more? Yet, before the
+session was a fortnight old, Newcastle was to learn, but not completely,
+the futility of such a scheme of government. He had promised the King
+that the new House of Commons would need no leader, that indeed the
+position of leader of the House of Commons was both dangerous in power
+and superfluous in practice. He was yet to learn that there was
+something more formidable; a ship without captain or helmsman, and two
+loose cannon banging about at large.
+
+For, two days after the annihilation of Robinson, Pitt again took the
+field, this time against Murray, the most formidable antagonist that he
+ever had to face after the resignation of Walpole. It was on the vote
+for the army. Barrington and Nugent had made fulsome speeches, dwelling
+on the popularity of the King and the Ministry, declaring, indeed, that
+there were no Jacobites in England. People, said Nugent, sometimes
+reared those whom they thought would be Jacobites, but who turned out
+very differently. So had he seen in his rural retirement a hen, which
+had hatched duck's eggs, watch with apprehension her nurslings betake
+themselves to the water. Pitt rose and declared with solemn pleasantry
+that this image had greatly struck him, 'for, sir, I know of such a
+hen.' The hen, it appeared, was the University of Oxford. This, we
+think, in its demure unexpectedness, is the best stroke of humour in all
+his speeches. But he begged the House not to be sure that all she
+hatched would ever entirely forget what she had taught them. Then
+followed an innuendo at old Horace Walpole which is immaterial and
+obscure. Sir Roger Newdigate, whose name is still cherished by budding
+poets, rose, as member for the University, to make a meek defence. Pitt
+rose again, and told 'inimitably' the story of a recent adventure at
+Oxford. He was with a party at the Angel Inn, one of whom was asked to
+sing 'God save Great George our King' (one can hardly imagine that it
+was Pitt who called for this). The chorus was re-echoed by
+undergraduates outside who had been attracted by the song, 'but with
+additions of the rankest treason.' Then walking down the High Street he
+examined a print in a shop window of a young Highlander in a blue
+ribbon, and was shocked to read the motto _Hunc saltem everso Juvenem_.
+This Latin prayer was a flagrant proof of the disloyalty of that learned
+body. 'In both speeches every word was _Murray_; yet so managed that
+neither he nor anybody else could or did take public notice of it, or in
+any degree reprehend him. I,' it is Henry Fox who speaks, 'sate next
+Murray, _who suffered for an hour_.'[272] Two episodes seem to attach
+themselves to this terrible onslaught. One is the famous and dramatic
+menace. Fixing his eyes on Murray the orator paused and proceeded: 'I
+must now address a few words to Mr. Solicitor.--They shall be few, but
+they shall be daggers.' Murray's agitation was now visible. 'Judge
+Festus trembles,' thundered Pitt; 'well, he shall hear me some other
+day,' and sat down.[273] Murray could not muster a reply. We may be sure
+that he then mentally resolved that, whether Festus or not, he would be
+a Judge as soon as possible. Yet Granville had embraced him that very
+day and bid him pluck up resolution. The other episode is this. Foote
+went with Murphy (afterwards Editor of the 'Test') to hear Pitt, who
+happened to be putting forth his full powers in an attack on Murray.
+'Shall we go home now?' asked Murphy at last. 'No,' replied Foote, 'let
+us wait till he has made the little man vanish entirely.'[274]
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 27, 1754.]
+
+The plan of ignoring the House of Commons and keeping all power in a
+junto of two or three, or even one, was already breaking down. 'It is
+the universal opinion,' writes Fox, in the same letter as that in which
+he describes Pitt's onslaught on Murray, 'that business cannot go on as
+things are now, and that offers will be made to Pitt or me. On this
+subject Pitt was with me two hours yesterday morning. A difficult
+conversation.' Difficult indeed, for both parties fenced with each
+other, and neither was sincere. Pitt had long distrusted Fox and his
+connection with Cumberland. We have seen that in March he was writing
+confidentially that he wished 'to see as little power in Fox's hand as
+possible,' and again in the same letter, 'Fox is too odious to last for
+ever.' On the other hand, Fox, who was genial but ignoble, was
+determined to take the best place that offered, with a secret leaning to
+the lucrative possibilities of Pitt's office. Fox was not in error as to
+the offers. He wrote on November 28, and on November 29 Newcastle was
+beginning to seek assistance. On that morning the King sent for Fox and
+treated him with friendly confidence. It then appeared that the royal
+leaning towards Fox was caused by the King's having found out that
+Frederick Prince of Wales had made overtures to Fox, who had rejected
+them, but had not divulged them for the purpose of paying court to the
+King.[275]
+
+The object of the Court was to separate Fox and Pitt. This last,
+doubtful and suspicious, had at first assured the Chancellor and
+Newcastle that he would not league with Fox. This was probably the
+secret of the Minister's confidence. But when Pitt realised that the
+Duke was trading on the division between his two formidable auxiliaries
+he sought, or appeared to seek, an honest and hearty co-operation with
+his rival.[276]
+
+'Could you bear to act under Fox?' Hardwicke had asked him, and 'Leave
+out _under_; it will never be a word between us: Mr. Fox and I shall
+never quarrel,' had been the reply.
+
+Alas! for the loves of statesmen, often ardent and always precarious.
+The vague bait was no sooner dangled before Fox than he began to eye it
+with avidity and to contemplate the abandonment of Pitt. He sought the
+advice of two friends, Cumberland and Marlborough. The last advised him
+to ask for admission to the Cabinet and to be satisfied with that
+advantage. Cumberland dissuaded him, as it would seem, from parting
+company with Pitt, and used these remarkable words: 'I don't know him,
+but by what you tell me, Pitt is what is scarce--he is a man.' But at
+last both dukes concurred in Marlborough's advice, with the proviso that
+Fox should make it a condition that he was not to oppose Pitt; a
+singular reservation when it is remembered that his help was only sought
+against Pitt, as he was soon made distinctly to understand. Fox
+apparently took Pitt into his confidence, and they exchanged cordial
+notes. He submitted to Pitt his letter to the King, and Pitt approved it
+with some omissions. Nothing must be said, he declared, which remotely
+implied that he would do the least thing to keep his place.[277] So Fox
+wrote to say that, understanding the King was determined to have no
+leader in the House of Commons, but wished to have him take a forward
+and spirited part on behalf of the Ministry, he desired some mark of his
+Majesty's favour to show that he enjoyed his Majesty's confidence.
+Waldegrave, who conducted the negotiation, was given to understand that
+the distinction aimed at was a seat in the Cabinet. He was further told
+that Fox would never accept Pitt's rich place, which the King had said
+was destined for him in the event of Pitt's dismissal, lest it be said
+that he was answering Pitt for money. So the stipulation about not
+opposing Pitt was already out of his contemplation. The negotiations
+extended over months. The King had first seen Fox on November 29, 1754,
+but did not signify to Fox his admission to the Cabinet till April 26,
+1755, two days before his Majesty left for Hanover. Fox was also
+admitted to the Council of Regency during the King's absence.
+
+During these months of negotiation his opposition to the Ministry
+ceased, and Pitt was left alone. But he communicated constantly and
+secretly with Pitt as to the offers made. When he had closed with them,
+without waiting for the cock to crow, he forswore Pitt.[278] He was no
+doubt made to understand distinctly, as he must always have known, that
+it was the condition of his elevation. This treachery cost him dear; for
+Pitt, who seems to have been at once apprised of the desertion, probably
+by a Minister whose interest it was to keep the two apart, never forgave
+it. Nor could a man much less irritably and jealously proud have done
+otherwise. So much for the question of honour. As to the question of
+policy it is clear that a real union between Pitt and himself would have
+been irresistible. But Fox at the first temptation forsook this
+honourable alliance, and forsook it for a feather, as the lure was
+justly described.
+
+It should be mentioned that this account of Fox's behaviour is founded
+on the narrative of Horace Walpole, and that Waldegrave, who is far
+more trustworthy, says that 'Fox during the whole negotiation behaved
+like a man of sense and a man of honour.' But this only regards his
+negotiation with Newcastle, in which Waldegrave acted as the channel.
+Walpole, on the other hand, was notoriously partial to Fox, and in his
+confidence, so that his statement may be taken as accurate. In no other
+way, indeed, can the breach between the two statesmen be adequately
+explained. On April 26 they are on the most confidential footing. On May
+9 there is a public rupture. Fox, indeed, attributes this sudden breach
+to Pitt's wish to be well at Leicester House; but then Fox had to find
+an ostensible reason, as he did not know that Pitt was aware of his
+desertion.
+
+[Sidenote: Apr. 27, 1755.]
+
+The day after the admission of Fox to the Cabinet, Newcastle despatched
+old Horace Walpole to Pitt to see if they could not come to terms. Old
+Horace, who has suffered from the constant malignity of his nephew, but
+who appears to have been a laborious and public-spirited man, with a not
+uncommon itch for a coronet, undertook the commission with alacrity; but
+found, as all did who attempted to negotiate for Newcastle, that his
+powers were far from ample, and shrunk from the moment that they were
+given. It is probable that these overtures were only made in consequence
+of some secret agreement between Fox and Pitt that Pitt's claims should
+be pushed; for it is otherwise inexplicable that they should have been
+made simultaneously with the capture of Fox, and that Newcastle on the
+slenderest grounds should at once have withdrawn the commission. The
+hypothesis of a sham negotiation, entered upon to keep to the letter of
+some understanding arrived at through Fox, is highly congenial to the
+character of Newcastle; nor is it likely that Fox can have joined the
+Government, when in the closest communication with Pitt, without some
+such stipulation.
+
+Whatever the nature of the overture may have been, Pitt received
+Walpole, with whom he was on cordial terms, not unfavourably. He
+stipulated that he should be admitted to the Cabinet, but not, it would
+appear, immediately (for the King was going abroad next day); and that
+in case of a vacancy he should be promised the seals of Secretary of
+State. No one could deem these conditions excessive, and Walpole
+approved them. But Newcastle would have none of them, and soundly rated
+his emissary. It is clear that the negotiation was illusory and unreal;
+for what less terms could Newcastle have expected Pitt to demand?[279]
+
+[Sidenote: May 9, 1755.]
+
+A fortnight afterwards Pitt went to Lord Hillsborough's, where he met
+Fox. When Fox had gone he declared that all was at an end between Fox
+and himself; that the ground was altered; Fox was a Regent and a Cabinet
+Minister, and he was left isolated. Fox returned, and Pitt, in great
+heat, repeated what he had said with even more violence. He would not
+accept the seals from Fox (this seems to confirm our hypothesis as to
+the sham negotiation through Walpole), for that would be to acknowledge
+a superiority and an obligation. 'What, then,' said Fox, 'would put us
+on an equality?' 'A winter in the Cabinet and a summer's Regency,'
+replied Pitt, in allusion to what Fox had accepted.
+
+Next day Hillsborough expostulated with Pitt, who, however, remained
+unmoved, and begged him to convey as a message to Fox that all
+connection between them was at an end. Pitt added that though he
+esteemed Fox he wished to have no further conversation on this subject.
+In spite of this, during the next few days they had a further conference
+at Holland House, but with no better result.[280]
+
+On this second occasion (May 12, 1755) Pitt formally declared their
+connection at an end. Fox asked if Pitt suspected him of ill faith in
+the recent negotiations. Pitt, on his honour, held him blameless.
+'Then,' asked Fox, 'are our lines incompatible?' 'Not incompatible, but
+convergent,' a word that Fox professed not to understand. In the future
+it was possible they might act together, not now. On this or some
+proximate occasion, Pitt blurted out what was at least one cause of
+offence. 'Here is the Duke of Cumberland King and you his minister.' The
+Duke, like Fox himself, was only an ordinary member of the Council of
+Regency, so that Pitt's taunt was absurd. But Pitt was looking to the
+young court of Leicester House which detested and distrusted Cumberland;
+hence this outburst of jealousy and wrath. Pitt indeed, the day before,
+had seen the Princess of Wales; who, it was presumed, had insisted on an
+open and immediate rupture with Fox as the price of her support. But
+beneath all there was we think, in spite of all professions, undying
+suspicion of Fox's rectitude in the recent negotiation with
+Newcastle.[281]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+It was soon clear to Newcastle that Fox after all might not suffice, and
+that Pitt must be again approached. The King, then in Hanover and beyond
+Newcastle's control, was negotiating new treaties of subsidy on behalf
+of his German dominions; one with Hesse-Cassel for a contingent of
+12,000 men to act in defence of Hanover or Great Britain, the other with
+Russia for an army of 40,000 men for the defence of Hanover. It was
+terrible for the Duke to contemplate what Pitt might say and do with
+regard to such unpopular and indefensible instruments. Moreover, Pitt
+was now supported by the court, every day more and more important, of
+Leicester House. It was probably Hardwicke, who as the moving brain of
+the Cabinet saw the vital importance of securing Pitt, and who was, we
+think, sincerely favourable to Pitt's pretensions, if only from hatred
+of Fox, who suggested these negotiations; and it was his son Charles
+Yorke who entered upon them. Yorke was to act as a skirmisher, to get in
+touch with Pitt, and to report on the temper in which he found him. They
+met on July 6 (1755), and talked over the abortive conference with
+Walpole. Pitt declared that he had then waived the immediate bestowal of
+the Secretaryship of State, but had asked not merely that Newcastle
+should speak on his behalf before the King left for Hanover, and urge
+that he was the proper person to lead the debates in the House of
+Commons; but that Lady Yarmouth should also be interested in his cause,
+so that she might use her influence with the King during their stay
+abroad.
+
+Of Newcastle himself he spoke with supreme disdain. It was a waste of
+time to bring him assurances of friendship and confidence from
+Newcastle. All that was over. He would never owe Newcastle a favour, he
+would accept nothing as an obligation to Newcastle. This is not in
+Yorke's account, because probably it would be shown to Newcastle. But it
+comes authentically enough from Pitt's brother-in-law, James Grenville,
+to Bubb. If Newcastle were really in earnest, he would say that he could
+listen to no proposition but this: 'This is our policy; and the post of
+Secretary of State, in which you shall support it, is destined for you.'
+
+Yorke reported to his father, and Hardwicke saw Pitt on August 8 (1755),
+with power to offer a seat in the Cabinet. After compliments, to use
+Eastern language, which were usually the preface of such interviews, in
+which both parties assured each other of high mutual esteem, which Pitt
+went so far on this occasion as to declare for Newcastle, in strange
+contrast with his language to Yorke, they came at once to the point.
+Before he could take what was required, 'a clear, active, and cordial
+part in support of the King's measures in the House of Commons,' Pitt
+desired to know what those measures might be. Hardwicke at once
+specified them. 'Twas all open and above board; the support of the
+maritime and American war, in which we were going to be engaged, and the
+defence of the King's German dominions, if attacked on account of the
+English cause. The maritime and American war he came roundly into, tho'
+very orderly, and allowed the principle and obligation of honour and
+justice as to the other, but argued strongly as to the practicability of
+it. That subsidiary treaties would not go down; the nation could not
+hear' (obviously 'bear') them. That they were a connection and a chain,
+and would end in a general plan for the Continent which the country
+would (obviously 'could') not possibly support.' Then he went into
+financial considerations. The maritime and American war would alone add
+two millions a year to the National Debt, which could not bear an
+addition of one million. He would treat Hanover like any other foreign
+dependency of the British Crown; the worst that could happen was that it
+should be occupied by the enemy for a time and restored at a peace, and
+that then compensation might be given to the King. As to the subsidies,
+Hessian and Russian, he asked questions but did not commit himself. But
+he inquired, with peculiar emphasis, what others, such as Fox, Legge,
+Lee, and Egmont, thought of them. At last he said he must consult his
+friends, one of whom, Legge, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, he was
+about to visit. But why, asked Hardwicke, should he not see Newcastle
+himself? 'With all my heart, if he would see me,' replied Pitt. To the
+offer of a seat in the Cabinet he said neither yea nor nay, but he was,
+thought Hardwicke, gratified by the overture.[282]
+
+One cannot but note the strange contrast between Pitt's language about
+Newcastle to Hardwicke and that which he had used to Yorke. 'He
+expressed great regard for your Grace and me.' But this was the base
+coinage in political use at that time, and Pitt had by this time become
+a master of dissimulation. Fox hated Newcastle to the full as much as
+did Pitt. In truth, every one seems to have secretly hated or despised
+him, or both; a melancholy reward for an industrious ministerial
+existence. But so great was his political influence that scarce any one
+could afford to say so.
+
+One Minister was now, however, to display a rare courage, and to oppose
+both the King and his Minister on a critical point. In the middle of
+August, after the conversation with Hardwicke, the treaty of subsidy
+with Hesse-Cassel arrived for the necessary confirmations. When it came
+before Legge as Chancellor of the Exchequer, he, no doubt with the
+connivance of Pitt, flatly refused his signature. Newcastle had always
+distrusted Legge, as, indeed, he distrusted everybody, and had given him
+the seals of the Exchequer with great reluctance. He was now aghast. War
+was imminent; the King would soon return with his pockets full of odious
+treaties of subsidy; Fox was still a malcontent; Legge was in open
+revolt; it was evident that he must face the formidable interview with
+Pitt. So he expressed the necessary wish, though one may guess his
+reluctance, and Pitt saw the Duke on September 2 (1755) for two hours
+and a half. The record of this interview is contained in a long letter
+from Newcastle to Hardwicke,[283] couched in the quavering notes of a
+distracted Minister. It begins with a wail of despair, the reluctant
+acknowledgment of the paramount importance of Pitt. 'I never sat down to
+write to your lordship with more melancholy apprehensions for the
+Publick than at present. I see nothing but confusion and it is beyond me
+to point out a remedy.'
+
+This was the result of Pitt's verbal refusal to join him, made by a
+Minister who held the great mass of the House of Commons in the hollow
+of his hand, who clung to office as to life, and yet, though he knew
+Pitt was indispensable to its retention, would not once more, as in
+1746, face his Sovereign and say so. Nothing can better illustrate the
+trembling plank on which the Duke was content to walk, wavering and
+helpless, depending only on Hardwicke's counsel and his own jobs. He did
+not dare face the King, he was bullied by the disorderly chiefs in the
+House of Commons, and he was always chaffering, but always afraid. So he
+and his like are satisfied to bear the yoke for the semblance of power.
+
+All began smoothly between Pitt and the Duke, all was apparently open,
+friendly, and civil; but when Newcastle referred to the conversation
+with Hardwicke, he was taken aback by finding that Pitt declared that
+nothing had passed that was material. He thus compelled Newcastle to
+recapitulate the points of policy, no doubt for purposes of comparison.
+
+So the Duke had to state that the eve of the King's departure had been
+too troubled to lay Pitt's claim before his Majesty; for an address
+against the journey had been threatened in the House of Commons and
+actually proposed in the House of Lords. But that when alarming events
+had happened in America, Hardwicke and he had represented to the King
+the urgent necessity of forming a system in the House of Commons, which
+means, it may be presumed, abandoning the plan of conducting the House
+without a leader, and of enlisting Pitt as an active Minister there.
+That thereupon the King had graciously expressed his readiness to admit
+Pitt to his Cabinet. Pitt received this offer coolly, and proceeded at
+once to larger issues.
+
+As to the King's voyage he spoke with unsparing candour. The King had
+nearly ruined himself by his unpardonable departure to Hanover at such a
+crisis. He should only have been allowed to go there over the dead
+bodies of his people. 'A King abroad at this time, without one man about
+him that has an English heart, and only returning to bring home a packet
+of subsidies.'
+
+Of course, he proceeded to say with scarcely disguised sarcasm, the
+King's countenance was more to him than any other consideration. But if
+it was expected that he should take an active and efficient part in
+Parliament he must observe that a mere summons to the Cabinet would not
+be sufficient. In his present office he could silently acquiesce in
+ministerial measures. But activity could only be exercised in a
+responsible situation.
+
+Then he took a line which was clear, bold, and statesmanlike. The whole
+machinery of the House of Commons was, he said, paralysed by the plan of
+leaving it without a responsible Minister. That plan must be abandoned.
+The House could not perform its proper functions without a responsible
+Minister, even though a subordinate one, who should have access to the
+Sovereign and to the royal confidence. For that purpose the leader or
+agent must have a responsible office of _advice_ as well as of
+_execution_. 'That was the distinction he made throughout his whole
+conversation. He would support the measures which he himself had
+advised, but would not like a lawyer talk from a brief. That it was
+better plainly to tell me so at first.'
+
+This surely was no inordinate claim from indisputably the first member
+of the House of Commons, whom the King had kept at bay for so many
+years, and to keep whom still in subjection every possible manoeuvre,
+childish or cunning, was being adopted. 'Why,' said he bluntly to
+Newcastle, 'cannot you bring yourself to part with some of your sole
+power?' This of course produced voluble asseverations from the Duke.
+Sole power! What an idea! He had no conception of what Pitt could mean.
+He was in his present place, not by his own choice, far from it! but by
+the King's command, and, though he was devoted to the King, he would
+retire to-morrow if he was distasteful to the House of Commons. (This
+was a safe promise, for, as we have seen, the House of Commons was with
+but few exceptions at his absolute disposal.) Pitt replied that he
+himself had no objections to a Peer as First Lord of the Treasury, but
+there must be men of ability and responsibility in the House of Commons,
+a Secretary of State and a Chancellor of the Exchequer, that they must
+be sufficiently supported, and they must have access to the Crown, not a
+nominal, but an habitual, free, familiar access. In speaking of the
+Chancellor of the Exchequer he burst out into so enthusiastic a eulogy
+of Legge, 'the child, and deservedly the favourite child of the Whigs,'
+that Newcastle suspected that all this was concerted between his
+rebellious Chancellor of the Exchequer and his insubordinate Paymaster.
+
+Pitt and the Duke next proceeded to analyse their own expressions; a
+task which the statesmen of that day seem to have avoided, to our
+detriment, as much as possible. Newcastle had spoken of the proposed
+seat in the Cabinet as a designation. 'What did this mean?' asked Pitt.
+'Did it mean the seals of Secretary of State, though not immediately?'
+The Duke was obliged to shuffle out, for in truth he had no power to
+promise any such thing. Designation only meant that the seat in the
+Cabinet would design him as the King's man of confidence. 'Then the
+Secretaryship of State is not intended,' was the fierce rejoinder. The
+Duke replied that he was not authorised to offer more than a seat in the
+Cabinet. If, rejoined Pitt, 'the Secretaryships of State are to remain
+as they are, there is an end of any question of my giving active support
+to the Government in the House of Commons.'
+
+They had arrived at an impassable barrier, Pitt would take nothing but
+the seals which the King would not give him, and Newcastle was
+determined not to force on another crisis with the King on account of
+Pitt; whom, in truth, he dreaded little less as a colleague than as a
+foe. So they turned to matters of public policy, 'and then,' writes the
+hapless Minister, 'nothing can equal my astonishment and concern.' He
+tried Pitt first with the Hessian Treaty, and then with the Russian. For
+the Hessian Treaty the Duke characteristically urged every reason but
+the true one, and for the Russian that it was the fruit of four years of
+negotiation, and that it would seem strange to drop it now. But Pitt was
+obdurate. He would be no party to a system of subsidies. If the Duke of
+Devonshire attacked the Hessian subsidy in the House of Lords, as was
+his intention, Pitt would echo the attack in the House of Commons. If
+the Russian Treaty were dropped he might acquiesce in the Hessian from
+regard for the King; as, for the same reason, he would always speak with
+the utmost respect of Hanover. But no consideration would make him
+support both, or a system of subsidies. It was his regard for the King,
+presumably, which impelled him to make a further suggestion, which
+Newcastle did not venture to transmit even to Hardwicke. Out of the
+fifteen millions sterling that the King was said to have saved why,
+asked Pitt, should he not give Hesse 100,000_l._, and Russia
+150,000_l._, to be out of these bad bargains? Newcastle was driven to
+his usual resource of the Chancellor, and suggested a conference with
+him in the ensuing week. Pitt agreed to this with, we may presume, a
+shrug of the shoulders.
+
+Neither in truth expected anything from such a meeting, for the pleas
+and the powers had both been exhausted. Newcastle realised this, and
+ends his remarkable record of the conversation with a despairing glance
+at his own prospects. What was he to do? There were as usual three
+courses to pursue. The first, which he should infinitely prefer, would
+be his own retirement. This is a common cant of ministers, and with
+Newcastle it was more than usually insincere. Fox, he said, might
+succeed him at the Treasury, and Pitt for a session at any rate would
+have to acquiesce. The second would be for Newcastle, remaining First
+Minister, to throw himself into the arms of the Pitt group, with Pitt
+as Secretary of State and Legge at the Exchequer. But the King would
+never hear of this. Newcastle puts it significantly thus: 'Whether this
+is in any shape practicable, I leave to your Lordship and all who know
+the King to determine.' The third course was the one adopted, 'to accept
+Mr. Fox's proposal, made by my Lord Granville,' the first allusion that
+we have to this particular negotiation. Fox was to be the real,
+efficient, and trusted leader of the House of Commons. But there must be
+conditions. Cumberland, the patron of Fox, must give his support, so
+must Devonshire and Hartington. There must be a new Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, and Fox must act cordially with the person whom the King
+might appoint to that office. Murray, and indeed every one, must put
+their shoulders to the wheel and exert themselves on behalf of the
+Administration. Lastly, it might be necessary to take in the venal but
+inevitable Bubb.
+
+Hardwicke answered Newcastle's report without a moment's delay, in a
+shrewd letter.[284] His first remark was that Pitt had taken much higher
+ground with the Duke than with him, perhaps because the bad news from
+the Ohio had made the Paymaster deem himself more valuable and
+necessary. He doubted whether the praises of Legge were sincere; they
+were probably intended to indicate a closer connection between them than
+really existed. But Hardwicke went straight to the two main points. The
+first was the general principle that the King must have a recognised
+Minister, what he called oddly enough 'a Minister with the King' in the
+House of Commons. The other question was whether Pitt should be
+Secretary of State.
+
+As to the first, if the Minister is to be subordinate, that is, not the
+Premier, he sees no great harm in it. 'For I have long been convinced,'
+continues the sagacious man, 'that whoever your Grace shall make use of
+as your first man and man of confidence in the House of Commons, you
+will find it necessary, if he be a man of reputation and ability
+accompanied with the ambition naturally incident to such a character, I
+say under those circumstances, your Grace will find it necessary to
+invest him with more power than, from the beginning, you thought fit to
+impart either to Mr. Legge or Sir Thomas Robinson.'
+
+From this we may gather that the Chancellor had never believed in the
+plan of a leaderless House of Commons. How indeed could he, as a man of
+sense, much more as a man of rare capacity? Such a plan could only be
+deemed possible by an alien King and a mountebank Minister. As to the
+personal point, Hardwicke is not less acute. Pitt, he declares, has
+stiffened his demand since their interview. Pitt, he is convinced,
+intended to draw from the Duke a promise that it should be made a point
+with the King that he should be made Secretary of State within a given
+time; and so, when he failed in this, he proceeded to discuss measures
+in a more peremptory tone than he would otherwise have employed.
+
+'Now,' says Hardwicke, 'this comes to a point which you and I have often
+discussed together. Whether you can think it right or bring yourself to
+declare to him that you really wish him in the Secretary's office, and
+will in earnest recommend him to the King on that foot.'
+
+This inestimable sentence throws a flood of light on Newcastle's
+professions to Pitt, and on the reality of the efforts that Newcastle
+had employed to soften the King. It is clear, we think, from this secret
+utterance that Newcastle had been sincere in neither case.
+
+Hardwicke urges that the Duke should close with Pitt. He thinks that if
+Newcastle were loyally to give this assurance Pitt 'would close and take
+his active part immediately.' Without this he is sure that Pitt believes
+'that the intention is to have the use of his talents without gratifying
+his ambition.' In writing this Hardwicke of course knew, as Newcastle
+knew, that Pitt's apprehension was well founded. 'My poor opinion,'
+continues the Chancellor, 'is that without it all further meetings and
+pourparlers with this gentleman will be vain. Your heart can only
+dictate to you whether you should do it or not.'[285] Justly distrusting
+the Duke's heart, the Chancellor proceeds to appeal to his instincts. He
+discards, of course, the idea of Newcastle's resignation. A friend,
+consulted on such a point, rarely deems it decent to do otherwise;
+certainly no confidant of Newcastle's could have done so and retained
+his intimacy.
+
+As to relying on Pitt and Legge, he agrees that nothing but the pressure
+of necessity could make the King adopt this course. Of course he does
+not say that the Duke could at any moment bring about this pressure,
+though that no doubt was the case. Newcastle, by his Parliamentary
+influence, could always produce a deadlock, as was soon to be proved.
+But Newcastle could, thinks Hardwicke, have Pitt without Legge. If Pitt
+had the seals he would not insist on Legge.
+
+The third course is that urged by Granville: to take Fox on Granville's
+conditions, which we may safely presume to have been those afterwards
+adopted. Hardwicke insinuates objections. Fox has the strong protection
+of Cumberland and the personal inclination of the King, but his election
+will be profoundly distasteful to Leicester House. Pitt, on the other
+hand, has 'no support at Court, and the personal disinclination of the
+King. He must therefore probably depend, at least for a good while, upon
+those who bring him thither.' Then comes the sentence about Fox and
+Leicester House which conveys a hint that Pitt, on the contrary, is well
+there. It is impossible to be more adroit. Hardwicke knew that Newcastle
+was fully aware that he hated Fox, and so put his objections in this
+indirect and skilful way. He failed, probably because Newcastle felt
+that to accept Fox would at any rate not necessitate a critical struggle
+with the King, and that Fox himself was more malleable.
+
+Of all strange confidants it was Bubb whom Pitt, on leaving Newcastle,
+proceeded to take into his inmost counsels. There are always parasites
+of this kind in politics, universally mistrusted, and yet constantly
+taken into confidence on grounds of convenience. Always sympathetic,
+always warm, always ready to betray at the first symptom of personal
+advantage, they are nevertheless useful parts of the political machine,
+and not so contemptible as might appear. They profess little, they
+deceive nobody except for a fleeting moment, and they are employed,
+with full knowledge of their character, to sound others and report the
+result, to suggest from their own base experience, to bring statesmen
+into relation with necessary people, and do the work with which
+statesmen will not soil their hands. But they are perilous and slippery
+agents, they attract in the warmth of the moment excessive confidence,
+and while these indiscretions are still ringing in their ears they are
+already in the tents of the enemy. Still, such as they are, they will
+always exist, and always be utilised, for they are part of the fatality
+of politics.
+
+So to Bubb Pitt betook himself on the day after that on which he had
+seen Newcastle, and gave a spirited account of the interview. He then
+spoke fully of his relations with Fox, in which really lay the key to
+the situation. He wished well to Mr. Fox, he did not complain of him,
+but he could not act with him; they could not co-operate because they
+were not on the same ground. Fox was not independent (_sui juris_), but
+he was. He had been ready during the last session to go all lengths
+against the Duke of Newcastle; but when it came to the pinch Fox always
+failed him (under the constraint, it may be presumed, of the Duke of
+Cumberland). _Fox had risen on his shoulders_;[286] he did not blame him
+for it. Fox had taken the smooth part, and left him the brunt; he did
+not complain. Fox, too, lived with his greatest enemies, Carteret,
+Stone, and Murray. And Newcastle had told him that Fox had recently
+offered himself to his Grace. Bubb declared that this was false, to his
+knowledge. Pitt replied that no one knew better than himself how great a
+liar Newcastle could be, and that if Fox denied this he should readily
+take his word against the Duke's. But all that he had recapitulated
+showed how impossible it was for two men to act together who stood on so
+different a footing as Fox and himself.
+
+Bubb now scented business of the kind to which he himself was addicted,
+and broke in with, 'As we who are to unite in this attack _are to part
+no more_,'[287] it would be proper to think what was to be held out to
+the confederates if they succeeded.
+
+Pitt declined to enter into this premature traffic, 'it would look too
+like a faction, there was no country in it'; but expressed himself, in
+the fashion of the day, with warmth and confidence as to Bubb himself.
+He thought Bubb of the greatest consequence; nothing was too good for
+such a man; no one was more listened to in the House and in the country.
+He wished to be connected with Bubb in the strictest sense politically,
+as he already was by marriage.[288]
+
+Bubb demurely records these confidences, and was left happy; glad to
+find, as he writes, that he should receive such support in an opposition
+which, on patriotic and conscientious grounds, he must have pursued even
+had he stood alone.[289]
+
+Once more we have to deplore the hapless destinies of political alliance
+and of Parliamentary twins, united in bonds of principle, who are to
+part no more. This conversation took place on September 3 (1755). On
+November 20 Pitt was dismissed, because of his adherence to the
+virtuous course which Bubb had resolved to pursue without flinching,
+even if isolated, with or without Pitt. Bubb records the removal in a
+terse entry of his diary, and the next, not less terse, records his
+acceptance of a lucrative post tendered by Newcastle. History has to
+note some such incidents, but we know of none so cynically and
+complacently narrated by the renegade himself.
+
+Hardwicke made one last desperate effort to move Pitt, but without
+success. He writes to Newcastle on September 15 (1755): 'I have had a
+long conversation with the _gentleman_ your Grace knows, but with little
+effect. I talked very fully and strongly to him upon every part of the
+case, both as to _persons_ and _measures_. He made great professions of
+his regard and firm attachment to your Grace and me, but adhered to his
+_negative_. He puts that negative upon two things: His objections to the
+two treaties of subsidy ... his other objection arose from _Mr. F._,
+with whom he declared he could not act.'[290]
+
+On this scene, coming more and more into prominence as the King became
+older, and as the Prince of Wales, or rather Bute and his clique, waxed
+bolder, appears the mysterious and elusive influence of Leicester House.
+It is difficult to trace or measure this combination, except in the
+naked fact of an old King and a young heir, nor is it easy to trace the
+connection of Pitt with this party. Every movement in Leicester House
+was jealously watched by the politicians, much as a late Sultan is said
+to have tracked the movements of the least menial of his dethroned and
+secluded predecessor. We read of the Princess being stirred to wrath by
+her father-in-law's project of marrying her son to the daughter,
+supposed to be active and ambitious, of a woman she detested. Then there
+is the suspicion that the Heir Apparent was surrounded by persons who
+were more or less Jacobite; Bute himself having, it was presumed,
+Jacobite leanings. But the King at once desisted with rare good sense
+from any idea of the projected marriage, though no doubt it would have
+given him pleasure. And the danger of an Hanoverian sovereign becoming a
+Jacobite under any influence seems too fantastic for a pantomime. The
+real apprehension was no doubt that Leicester House might shake off the
+domination and destroy the long monopoly of the Whigs, as indeed it
+eventually did. And certainly Leicester House, with the throne full in
+view, was becoming more and more inclined to assert itself. Human nature
+and family relations had, as usual in such cases, much to do with the
+matter. The Hanoverian Kings did not love their heirs apparent. George
+the First hated his, but he had no other son to love, and indeed little
+capacity for loving, except mistresses who found favour with no one
+else. George the Second hated his with a peculiar hatred, and was thus
+able to devote what fatherly affection he had to give to his second son,
+the Duke of Cumberland. These parental preferences, however justifiable,
+do not tend to affection between sons. And so there was no love lost
+between Prince Frederick and his family on the one side, and Duke
+William on the other. These feelings, as is usually the case, survived,
+when Frederick died, with increasing intensity between the widow and her
+brother-in-law. She saw him on the right hand of the King, enjoying all
+his confidence, as was natural, and herself and her bashful son of no
+account; so that a new jealousy was added to the original rancour.
+
+Understanding these facts, we are able to follow the course of Pitt. Fox
+was essentially the Duke of Cumberland's man, and so by the force of
+circumstances Pitt became allied, but not at this moment closely allied,
+to Leicester House. He had been a friend and servant of the dead Prince
+of Wales, then had quarrelled with him, but the original brand was not
+altogether effaced. Now he was the one champion whom the faction of the
+late Heir Apparent could adopt; and so the politicians began to see
+behind Pitt the influence of the coming King, his mother, and their
+favourite. Thus, when Newcastle had to make the option between Fox and
+Pitt, it was not merely the choice between two rival orators, but
+between two rival Courts, the Old and the New. We may be sure that no
+element in this business was more essentially present to the Minister's
+mind.
+
+All this seems petty but essential; but all was petty then, as is proved
+by the mere fact of Newcastle being at the head of the Ministry and
+master of the House of Commons; and it is all essential to the reader
+who would understand the history of those times, because the
+complication of these byways and intrigues is so extreme. There was the
+King with Lady Yarmouth and Cumberland; there were Newcastle and
+Hardwicke, with the House of Commons at their feet, and anxious to
+remain at their feet if that were possible; there was the influence of
+Cumberland apart from the King, and represented by Fox; there was
+Bedford, powerful from his property and connections, with a clique
+hungry for office; there was Pitt with his Grenville relations, who were
+ready to give him their support, but not less ready to withdraw it if
+something better should offer. And around and below these was the great
+shifting mass of politicians by profession and cupidity, the
+parliamentary Zoroastrians, who worshipped the rising sun, when they
+could discern it; the sun which should shed upon them office, salary,
+and titles; striving, sweating, cringing, as Bubb, the most shameless of
+them all, emphasises in capital letters, 'AND ALL FOR QUARTER-DAY.' It
+was through this scene of confusion and intrigue that Pitt had to thread
+his way, not very scrupulously; for he had always lived in this society,
+had lost whatever thin illusions he had ever possessed, and followed the
+clues which his experience had taught him to prize. He played the game.
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 13, 1755.]
+
+The meeting of Parliament took place two months afterwards and that
+period was spent by Newcastle and Hardwicke in arranging to discard Pitt
+and Legge, and to lean on Cumberland and Fox. Newcastle did not yield to
+Fox without reluctance, for it was, in Pitt's words, parting with some
+of his sole power. In his helplessness and despair he even offered to
+cede his place to Granville, who as Carteret had been his most detested
+bugbear, but who had now subsided into a quiescent President of the
+Council. Granville refused with a laugh, and preferred to conduct the
+negotiation with Fox. Fox had to him the merit of keeping out Pitt,
+whose former denunciations he had neither forgotten nor forgiven. So he
+had first endeavoured to inspire Murray to face, and now Fox to
+supplant Pitt. With a flash of his old diplomacy he was able to bring
+together the two mistrustful parties, on terms which Newcastle had
+curtly refused in the first insolence of his power, but which now, at
+the instance of Hardwicke as we have seen, he had to concede. The insane
+plan of a leaderless House of Commons, left like sheep on a barren moor,
+owned by an absentee Duke secluded in the Treasury, was to be abandoned.
+Fox was to be Secretary of State, leader of the House of Commons in name
+and in fact, and what was far more than either, he was authorised to
+announce that he represented the full influence of the King in the House
+'to help or to hurt.' When the two shepherds, the old and the new,
+burning with mutual hatred and distrust, met to ratify the conditions,
+Fox suggested sardonically that it would be best that this should be the
+last time on which they should meet to agree, that there should be a
+final settlement, or none at all, meaning that it should be honest and
+complete. Newcastle, no doubt with a wry face, agreed. 'Then,' said Fox,
+'it shall be so'; though indeed it was not. Fox stipulated for the
+admission or promotion of five persons, the only memorable ones of whom
+were George Selwyn, whose lovable and humorous personality has survived
+that of many more eminent contemporaries, and Hamilton, who is the only
+man, except the less-known Hawkins, who is remembered by a single
+speech. Chesterfield, on hearing of the reconstitution of the Ministry,
+observed with his habitual shrewdness that Newcastle had turned out
+everybody else and had now turned himself out. Fox at once repented of
+his adhesion, for Stone, Newcastle's confidant, informed him that had he
+not joined them the Ministry would have instantly resigned.[291] But
+now he had to content himself with negotiating through Rigby with the
+Bedford group, which he hoped to bring into office for the purpose of
+wrecking the administration.
+
+Robinson made less than no difficulties in accommodating himself to the
+new pretensions. He only yearned to return to the Great Wardrobe of
+which he had been Master. And so with a pension of 2000_l._ a year,
+fixed upon luckless Ireland, he vanishes into space, with the natural
+remark that he had never looked on his seven children with so much
+satisfaction as on the completion of these domestic arrangements.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+This blank though important space in the life of Pitt himself seems
+favourable for picking up a few threads which had to be dropped in the
+narrative of his negotiations with Newcastle.
+
+After the baiting to which Robinson had been subjected in the first days
+of the session he disappeared from debate; and Fox, then in close
+negotiation for a seat in the Cabinet, represented the Government in the
+Commons, and turned a deaf ear to the proposal that he should join Pitt
+in a combined attack on Newcastle. Fox's game, it will be seen, was not
+calculated to win the confidence of Pitt, to whom, however, during the
+session, he showed marked courtesy on the one hand, while negotiating
+with the Duke on the other.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 26, 1755.]
+
+The Lord Advocate had introduced a Bill continuing for a further period
+the provisions passed after the rising of 1745 which had temporarily
+placed the tenure of sheriff-deputyships at the King's pleasure instead
+of for life as before. This seems to have raised an animated debate,
+memorable to us as having produced two fine speeches from Pitt, which
+Horace Walpole alone mentions, and of which he gives a spirited sketch.
+It is only possible to give Walpole's record in his own words, as there
+is no other. Pitt spoke in answer to Murray (who, by-the-by, speaking
+in defence of the Bill, had said that there was not a single Jacobite
+left in Scotland) 'with great fire, in one of his best worded and most
+spirited declarations for liberty, but which, like others of his fine
+orations, cannot be delivered adequately without his own language; nor
+will they appear so cold to the reader, as they even do to myself, when
+I attempt to sketch them, and cannot forget with what soul and grace
+they were uttered. He did not directly oppose, but wished rather to send
+the Bill to the Committee, to see how it could be amended. He was glad
+that Murray would defend the King, only with a salve to the rights of
+the Revolution; he commended his abilities, but tortured him on his
+distinctions and refinements. He himself had more scruples; it might be
+a Whig delicacy--but even that is a solid principle. He had more dread
+of arbitrary power dressing itself in the long robe, than even of
+military power. When master principles are concerned, he dreaded
+accuracy of distinction: he feared that sort of reasoning: if you class
+everything, you will soon reduce everything into a particular; you will
+then lose great general maxims. Gentlemen may analyse a question till it
+is lost. If I can show him, says Murray, that it is not my Lord Judge,
+but Mr. Judge, I have got him into a class. For his part, could he be
+drawn to violate liberty, it should be _regnandi causa_, for this King's
+reigning. He would not recur for precedents to the diabolic divans of
+the second Charles and James; he did not date his principles of the
+liberty of this country from the Revolution; they are eternal rights;
+and when God said, "_let justice be justice_," He made it independent.
+The Act of Parliament that you are going to repeal is a proof of the
+importance of the Sheriffs-depute: formerly they were instruments of
+tyranny. Why is this attempted? is it to make Mr. Pelham more regretted?
+He would have been tender of cramming down the throats of the people
+what they are averse to swallow. Whig and Minister were conjuncts he
+always wished to see. He deprecated (_sic_) those, who had more weight
+than himself in the Administration, to drop this; or besought that they
+would take it for any term that may comprehend the King's life; for
+seven years, for fourteen, though he was not disposed to weigh things in
+such golden scales.' The reader must make of this what he will.
+
+Fox said 'that he was undetermined, and would reserve himself for the
+Committee; that he only spoke now, to show it was not crammed down his
+throat; which was in no man's power to do. That in the Committee he
+would be free, which he feared Pitt had not left it in his own power to
+be, so well he had spoken on one side. That he reverenced liberty and
+Pitt, because nobody could speak so well on its behalf.'[292]
+
+The Bill came up again a few days afterwards, and we find Pitt again
+attacking it, and Fox apparently evading a contest with him. We are once
+more thrown back on Walpole's account. 'Pitt talked on the harmony of
+the day, and wished that Fox had omitted anything that looked like
+levity on this great principle. That the Ministry giving up the _durante
+bene placito_ was an instance of moderation. That two points of the
+Debate had affected him with sensible pleasure--the admission that
+judicature ought to be free, and the universal zeal to strengthen the
+King's hands. That liberty was the best loyalty; that giving
+extraordinary powers to the Crown was so many repeals of the Act of
+Settlement. Fox said shortly, that if he had honoured the fire of
+liberty, he now honoured the smoke.'[293]
+
+These arguments are not easy to follow, so the only faithful course
+seems to be to give the actual record.
+
+Meanwhile it is necessary for a moment to peer outside, and take note of
+the world so far, and only so far, as it affects the life of Pitt; for
+the clouds of war were gathering fast. The Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle was
+only an armed truce, the cupidities and resentments which it had checked
+for the moment were still active, though mute. With two such characters
+as Frederick and Maria Theresa matched against each other, it was
+evident that Silesia would never be surrendered or abandoned without
+another deadly struggle. Moreover, half unconsciously, the two secular
+rivals, France and Britain, were drifting into a contest for supremacy
+over half the globe, to settle the question as to which should become
+the first colonising power of the world. Hostilities in India and in
+North America were always smouldering, and the arrangements of
+Aix-la-Chapelle had not extended to either region. The treaty had in no
+way checked the desperate war carried on in India between the English
+and French Companies, between Clive and Dupleix. That was presently
+closed for the moment by a provisional treaty signed on the spot in
+January 1755. In America the scene was even more poignant. There without
+any declaration of war, in a formal and legal state of peace,
+hostilities were carried on, openly and yet treacherously, by incursions
+connived at by the French Government. And as if to add an additional
+horror to these sinister operations, they were accompanied by all the
+unspeakable barbarities of Indian warfare, the cold-blooded murder of
+men, women and children, rewards from the European governors for the
+scalps thus obtained, and by open cannibalism.[294] Christian
+missionaries were not ashamed to hound on these savages to murder,
+torture, and rapine; nay, their professed converts[295] were sometimes
+the keenest in butchery. For religious fanaticism imparted an ignorant
+zeal to the barbarous combatants, who were taught, it is said, that
+Christ was a Frenchman crucified by the English. The claim that the King
+of France was the eldest son of the Church was construed into a much
+more literal interpretation of divine origin.[296] There was in fact no
+element of atrocity wanting to this war, which was not a war; blasphemy,
+murder, outrage, arson, rape, torture were all employed under the pure
+white banner with its golden lilies. Parkman, the historian of these
+operations, does not record the like of the British. But this is not to
+affirm there were no reprisals. For war carried on in this fashion and
+by the employment of savages can scarcely be one-sided in its
+barbarities.
+
+[Sidenote: July 4, 1754.]
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 1755.]
+
+[Sidenote: July 9, 1755.]
+
+But apart from the perfidious ambitions of governments and the predatory
+lusts of savages, there could not be peace in America, nor in effect had
+there been since the settlement of Utrecht. Boundaries in that trackless
+continent were vague, and constantly overstepped. The proper limits of
+Nova Scotia, and the demarcation between Canada and New England, were
+subjects of acute controversy. Under such circumstances both parties
+plant outposts in disputed territories, and both attempt to dislodge
+each other. French officers headed exploring parties, annexing vast
+territories by the simple expedient of nailing to a tree-trunk a tin
+plate stamped with the arms of France, and burying at the root a leaden
+tablet recording that possession had thus been taken. But there were
+other operations much less bloodless and futile. One of these petty
+engagements survives in history because it marks the first appearance of
+Washington, compelled in 1754 to celebrate the Fourth of July by a
+surrender to the French, who had surrounded him in superior numbers; and
+because it was the commencement of open but not declared warfare between
+the British and the French. Both nations now determined to send out
+reinforcements. 'In a moment,' says Walpole, 'the Duke of Newcastle
+assumed the hero, and breathed nothing but military operations; he and
+the Chancellor held councils of war; none of the ministers except Lord
+Holderness were admitted inside their tent.' With some discount for
+Walpole's malicious pleasantry, the picture, humorous enough to us, must
+have filled men like Pitt with the darkest misgivings. Pitt, as we have
+seen, had once been accidentally admitted into the tent and taken into
+confidence. He must have left it with the feeling that the destinies of
+the Empire were in peril so long as Newcastle was at the helm. A giant
+conflict for the supremacy of the world was preparing, and Newcastle was
+in charge of Great Britain. It was enough to give the bravest patriot a
+qualm. Nor were the military preparations less deplorable. Braddock was
+sent out at the new year with a plan of campaign prepared by
+Cumberland. Cumberland on Braddock was a combination which might make
+the stoutest heart in England quail. Cumberland, who had lost every
+battle but the one-sided affray of Culloden, was the brain to devise.
+Braddock, a brutal soldier of parade experience, whose only warfare had
+been in Hyde Park or Hounslow, was the hand to execute. Braddock took
+his troops through the American bush as if they were marching from
+London to Windsor, and was annihilated ten miles from the French
+stronghold, Fort Duquesne, where now smokes toiling Pittsburg. British
+troops then first faced the most formidable of adversaries, an invisible
+foe. They advanced boldly, cheering and singing 'God save the King.' But
+they found that they were mere targets for a host of concealed
+sharpshooters. Behind every tree and rock there lurked a musket. At last
+they broke ranks and huddled into confusion. 'We would fight,' they
+answered their officers, 'if we could see anybody to fight with.' Some
+survivors declared that they had not seen a single Indian. Others were
+not so fortunate. Twelve unhappy persons were tortured and burned alive
+by the savage allies of the French. Braddock was mortally wounded, and
+died after a long silence, broken only by the one pathetic question,
+'Who would have thought it?'[297] His papers fell into the hands of the
+French and swelled the indictment with which they declared war.[298]
+This evil news arrived in England at the end of August, and no doubt
+precipitated Newcastle's attempt to come to terms with Pitt.
+
+Three months after the departure of Braddock, the French in alarm
+fitted out a fleet of reinforcement, which sailed at the end of April,
+just as George II. was leaving his kingdom for his electorate, amid the
+scarce veiled indignation of his British subjects. The moment was
+critical, the King was old, his heir was young, the French were making
+great warlike preparations, every circumstance pointed to the grave
+impropriety of the departure. But the King was obdurate to all
+remonstrance. Not only was Hanover his home, he was also anxious to
+negotiate treaties of subsidy for its protection; treaties which were
+more conveniently signed away from Great Britain; that country being
+only required to endorse them in order to furnish the necessary
+supplies.
+
+[Sidenote: 1755.]
+
+When it was certain that the French fleet was destined for America,
+Admiral Boscawen was despatched with a squadron to intercept it.
+Boscawen had eleven ships of the line and one frigate, the French fleet
+consisted of eighteen ships, eight of which were lightly armed as
+transports. The two armaments came into collision at the mouth of the
+St. Lawrence on June 7. Three French ships came into conflict with three
+British ships under Captain Howe. The French commander sent to ask 'Is
+it peace or war?' Lord Howe replied that he must ask his admiral, who
+replied 'War.' Thereupon Howe attacked and captured two of the enemy,
+but to the mortification of the British the bulk of the French fleet got
+safely into Louisbourg; then a Gibraltar, now a lonely pasture beaten by
+the surf.
+
+During all this year attempts had been made by negotiation in London
+between Mirepoix, the French Ambassador, and Newcastle, to delimit the
+territories in dispute, but at the news of this conflict Mirepoix left
+London at once. Nevertheless the French behaved with signal
+placability, they even released the _Blandford_ man-of-war, which they
+had captured; and there was at present no formal declaration of open
+hostility. For Louis XV. and his mistress did not desire war with Great
+Britain, nor were they ready for it. A council was held at Compiegne at
+which the opinion of Noailles prevailed. That was to suffer and endure,
+so as to attract the sympathy of all Europe against Britain; only to
+declare war when it was abundantly proved to be inevitable; then to
+limit the operations to the sea, and not to be lured into any warfare on
+the continent of Europe.[299] It was the Government of Newcastle that
+moved towards hostilities. Our Admiralty behaved with great but perhaps
+lawless vigour. It issued letters of marque, and before the end of the
+year 300 French merchant ships and 6000 French seamen had been captured.
+
+War seemed now inevitable, although at earlier stages it might, we
+think, have been avoided without difficulty; and there began a general
+hunt for alliances, which soon developed into a complete reversal of
+former arrangements. Maria Theresa, thirsting for revenge, sought under
+the inspiration of Kaunitz a strict union with France and Russia. The
+tongue of Frederick, biting, uncontrolled, and especially venomous in
+dealing with the frailty of woman, did perhaps more than Austrian
+diplomacy to facilitate these arrangements; for the Empress Elizabeth
+and Madame de Pompadour were both stung to unrelenting animosity by
+Frederick's reckless ribaldry. Frederick, however, took the first step
+himself. While France was secretly carrying on negotiations with
+England, which continued to the end of 1755, and neglecting to renew
+her previous treaty with Prussia which expired in May 1756, Frederick
+signed with Great Britain in January 1756 the Treaty of Westminster, by
+which both parties guaranteed each other's possessions and bound
+themselves to take up arms against any Power which should invade
+Germany. This instrument had the indirect but grave effect of
+neutralising the King's treaty with Russia for the defence of Hanover,
+for it precluded any foreign Power from marching troops into Germany.
+The news of this agreement was received at Versailles with consternation
+and wrath. The French Court replied to it by the Treaty of Versailles
+(May 1, 1756), hurriedly concluded with Austria and extremely one-sided.
+France agreed to respect the Austrian Netherlands, from which she might
+have hoped for some compensation in case of success. Both parties agreed
+to guarantee each other's dominions, and a secret article, aimed at
+Prussia, made the compact more stringent. In August a treaty still more
+advantageous to Austria was concluded between the two Powers; but in
+this some frontier towns in the Austrian Netherlands, though not
+specified, were to be conceded to France, when Austria was once more in
+possession of Silesia and Glatz.[300]
+
+It was believed in Europe that this counterbalancing treaty to that of
+Westminster ensured the peace of the Continent. But the world did not
+yet know Frederick. He was crouching for a spring. Two circumstances
+impelled him. He had become aware through a corrupt Saxon clerk of a
+correspondence between Austria and Saxony concerting a vast confederacy
+against him. The second was this. We have noticed the Russian and
+Hessian treaties of subsidy. That with Russia had been originally
+concluded with a view to operations against Frederick himself,[301] and
+to that purpose the Empress Elizabeth was determined that it should be
+confined. By a personal declaration[302] and by two resolutions of the
+Russian Senate[303] it was made clear that hostility to Frederick alone
+inspired the Russian share of the treaty. He saw the circle closing
+round him. Three outraged women were directing the forces of three
+Empires against him. He had nothing to rely upon but his own country,
+Britain, and himself. Cognizant of the plot against him, he determined
+to have the advantage of attack. Like a leopard he sprang upon Dresden.
+Before the Saxons had well realised that war was impending he was at the
+throat of the electorate, and had seized the capital, the army, and the
+compromising papers which justified his action. This was the beginning
+of the worldwide struggle known as the Seven Years' War, and it occurred
+in September 1756.
+
+This is all that is necessary for our story, a mere glimpse of the
+intrigues and rancours which were lashing all Europe into storm. We must
+now return to the parliamentary arena.
+
+[Sidenote: 1755.]
+
+On September 15, George II. deigned to return to his British dominions,
+and on November 13 he opened his Parliament. Two circumstances were
+considered noteworthy in connection with the formal occasion. Fox, as
+leader of the House, rehearsed the Speech from the Throne, as was then
+the custom, at the Cockpit; but the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the
+Paymaster, and the Grenvilles were conspicuous by their absence. Fox,
+too, summoned his supporters by a note of the kind then, as now,
+customary, but in terms which gave offence to the susceptible
+independence of members; intimating that the King was about to make him
+Secretary of State, though not till after the first debate, 'which may
+be a warm one,' so that his seat might not be vacated until after the
+Address had been voted. He was also to take upon him 'the conduct of the
+House of Commons.' This last expression was animadverted upon in
+Parliament, and Fox admitted that he should have said 'conduct of His
+Majesty's affairs in the House of Commons.' In these days, when 'leader
+of the House of Commons' is the recognised title of the principal
+Minister in the House, it is not without interest to notice this
+constitutional squeamishness.
+
+The King's Speech contained the following paragraph, which strikes the
+reader as something less than candid:--
+
+'With a sincere desire to preserve my people from the calamities of war,
+as well as to prevent, in the midst of these troubles, a general war
+from being lighted up in Europe, I have always been ready to accept
+reasonable and honourable terms of accommodation; but none such have
+hitherto been proposed on the part of France. I have also confined my
+views and operations to hinder France from making new encroachments, or
+supporting those already made; to exert our right to a satisfaction for
+hostilities committed in a time of profound peace: and to disappoint
+such designs as, from various appearances and preparations, there is
+reason to think, have been formed against my kingdoms and dominions.'
+
+Members met to hear the Royal Speech in the electric condition which
+bodes a crisis. There had been a long political truce; but this was
+evidently about to come to an end. Ministers had to bear the burden of
+the Russian and Hessian treaties, which the Speech from the Throne
+commended to the attention of Parliament. War with France was impending;
+indeed, a French invasion was daily expected. There was a new leader,
+and, consequently, a new opposition. Pitt was evidently prepared to
+launch thunderbolts at the Administration. Leicester House was said to
+be behind him. There was an animating sense of conflict in the air.
+
+Once more the parliamentary history fails us, and disdains to record one
+of the most memorable passages in its annals; so once more we are thrown
+on the authority and the sketches of Walpole; sometimes brilliant, but
+more often confused and defective.
+
+The debate in the Commons lasted till near five in the morning, an hour
+then almost unprecedented.
+
+It was distinguished by that famous effort which gave Single-speech
+Hamilton his nickname. Walpole, in recording and eulogising it, says:
+'You will ask, what could be beyond this? Nothing but what was beyond
+what ever was, and that was Pitt.' Pitt, indeed, after sitting through
+the eleven hours of the debate, rose and delivered, with inimitable
+spirit and all the dramatic force that the greatest actor of his age
+could impart, a speech of an hour and a half, which contains his most
+famous figure, and which perhaps he never exceeded.
+
+'His eloquence,' says Walpole, 'like a torrent long obstructed, burst
+forth with more commanding impetuosity.' For ten years he had been
+muzzled, and now he revelled in his freedom. 'He spoke at past one (in
+the morning) for an hour and thirty-five minutes. There was more humour,
+wit, vivacity, fine language, more boldness,--in short, more astonishing
+perfections, than even you who are used to him can conceive.'
+
+He 'surpassed himself, and then I need not tell you that he surpassed
+Cicero and Demosthenes. What a figure would they with their formal
+laboured cabinet orations make vis-a-vis his manly vivacity and dashing
+eloquence at one o'clock in the morning, after sitting in that heat for
+eleven hours!'
+
+This enthusiasm from the least enthusiastic of men adds to our regrets
+that so faint a memory of this dazzling speech remains. And yet perhaps
+we were wise to be grateful that we have only the description. It seems
+not impossible that the words taken down verbatim by some old
+parliamentary hand in the reporters' gallery would seem cold or tawdry
+without the soul and grace which animated them, and which haunted Horace
+Walpole for long years afterwards. Some of the allusions which have been
+noted down seem forced, some of the bursts incoherent, some of the irony
+obscure. But those who heard it palpitated with emotion, they saw the
+divine fire of the orator, while posterity can only grope among the cold
+ashes for the burning fragments poured forth in the wrath of the
+eruption.
+
+'Haughty, defiant, conscious of injury, and of supreme abilities,' he
+offered a great contrast to Legge, who fought by his side with different
+weapons; for Legge was studiously moderate, deferential, and artful;
+'gliding to revenge.' Yet Pitt himself began with expressions of
+veneration for the King, and of gratitude for 'late condescending
+goodness and gracious openings,' alluding to the offer of a seat in the
+Cabinet. It was obvious from this that he did not mean the door of the
+Closet to be closed on him, or to try again to force it by attack. But,
+he continued, the very respect he felt for that august name made him
+deprecate the unconstitutional use made of it in this debate.
+
+Egmont had argued that we were to have the Hessian and Russian
+mercenaries to fall back upon in case our fleets were defeated. Why if
+that were so, asked Pitt, did we not hire of Russia ships rather than
+men? The answer was simple: because ships could not defend Hanover. Must
+we drain, he asked, presumably in obscure allusion to Russia, our last
+vital drop and send it to the North Pole? We had been told that Carthage
+was undone in spite of her navy. But that was not until she betook
+herself to land operations. Carthage, too, he added, pointing directly
+to the enterprises of Cumberland, had a Hannibal who would pass the
+Alps. We were told, too, that we must assist Hanover out of justice and
+gratitude. As to justice, there was a charter which barred any such
+consideration. Gratitude was only in question if Hanover should be
+involved in anything which called down on her the resentment of France
+in consequence of any quarrel of ours. But, to speak plainly, these
+expressions were unparliamentary and unconstitutional. The King owed a
+duty to his people which should not be obscured by such phraseology. Our
+ancestors would never have stooped to such adulation.
+
+Then he turned with the greatest contempt to Sir George Lyttelton: 'A
+gentleman near me has talked of writers on the law of Nations. But
+Nature is the best writer; she will teach us to be men and not to
+truckle to power.' As he proceeded, he slowly swelled into his famous
+burst. 'I, who am at a distance from the _sanctum sanctorum_--I, who
+travel through a desert and am overwhelmed with mountains of
+obscurity--cannot so easily catch a gleam to direct me to the beauties
+of these negotiations. For there are parts of this Address which do not
+seem to come from the same quarter as the rest. I cannot unravel this
+mystery. But, yes!' he exclaimed with an air of sudden enlightenment,
+clapping his hand to his forehead, 'I too am now inspired. I am struck
+by a recollection. I remember at Lyons to have been taken to see the
+conflux of the Rhone and the Saone. The one is a gentle, feeble, languid
+stream, and, though languid, of no depth; the other a boisterous and
+impetuous torrent. Yet they meet at last. And long,' he added, with
+bitter sarcasm, 'may they continue united, to the comfort of each other,
+and to the glory, honour, and security of this nation.'
+
+This is all that we possess of this renowned flight and in this faint
+form it does not strike one as particularly impressive. But the actual
+words of the orator were probably very different; and nothing can
+preserve for us the voice, the eye, the darting accent and the
+concentrated fire of delivery which imparted such tremendous force to
+the apostrophe. In any case, the effect was instant and prodigious.
+After the debate Fox asked Pitt, 'Who is the Rhone?' 'Is that a fair
+question?' answered Pitt, for no orator likes to be cross-examined
+about his metaphors. 'Why,' rejoined Fox good-humouredly, 'as you have
+said so much that I did not wish to hear, you may tell me one thing that
+I want to hear. Am I the Rhone, or Lord Granville?' 'You are Granville,'
+returned Pitt. He meant, of course, what was true, that Fox and
+Granville were now practically one, and one in opposition to himself.
+
+After this climax the notes of the remainder of the speech seem
+comparatively poor. By adopting these measures, he urged, we are losing
+sight of our proper force, the Navy. It was the Navy which, by making us
+masters of Cape Breton in the last war, had secured the restoration of
+Flanders and the Barrier Fortresses. And yet even then we had had to
+conclude a bad peace. Moreover, bad as it was, our Ministers had
+suffered such constant infractions of it that they would have been
+stoned in the streets had they not at last shown signs of resentment.
+And yet, even now, they seem to have already forgotten the cause in
+which they took up arms, for at present they are not acting on behalf of
+Britain. These treaties are not English measures, but Hanoverian. Are
+they indeed measures of prevention? Are they not rather measures of
+aggression and provocation? Will they not irritate Prussia and light up
+a general war? If that be the result, I will follow to the death the
+authors of this policy, for this is the day that I hope will give a
+colour to my life. And yet I fear it is useless to try and stem the
+torrent. Ministers evidently mean a land war, and how preposterous a
+war. Hanover is their only base, for they cannot gain the alliance of
+the Dutch. I remember, everybody remembers, when you did force them to
+join you: all our misfortunes are due to those daring, wicked counsels
+(of Granville's). Out of them sprung a ministry,' he continued,
+referring to the forty-eight hours phantom of Pulteney and Carteret. 'I
+saw that ministry. In the morning it flourished. It was green at noon.
+By night it was cut down and forgotten.' What if a ministry should
+spring out of this subsidy? It is contended, moreover, that it will
+dishonour the King to reject these treaties which he has concluded. But
+was not the treaty of Hanau transmitted to us in the same way and
+rejected here? If these treaties are really a preventive measure, they
+are only preventive of Newcastle's retirement.
+
+Then he ridiculed Murray's elaborate compassion of the aged Sovereign.
+He too could appeal for commiseration of the King. He could picture him
+deprived of any honest counsel, spending his summer in his electorate,
+surrounded by affrighted Hanoverians, without any one near him to keep
+him in mind of the policy and interest of England, or of the fact that
+we cannot reverse the laws of Nature, and make Hanover other than an
+open, defenceless country. He too could foresee the day, within the next
+two years, when the King would be unable to sleep in St. James's; but
+that would be because his slumbers would be disturbed by the clamours of
+a bankrupt people.
+
+These are all the shreds that remain of this glorious rhapsody. It would
+perhaps be better that nothing had survived. Each student must try and
+reconstruct for himself, like some rhetorical Owen, out of these poor
+bones the majestic structure of Pitt's famous speech.
+
+Fox replied with obvious languor and fatigue, and the division was
+taken between four and five. On the first question, that the words
+promising assistance to Hanover should be omitted, the supporters of the
+Government were 311 to 105. On the second amendment, which obscurely
+questioned the policy of both treaties the numbers were 290 to 89. The
+faithful Commons were still able to be loyal to Newcastle. Against that
+pasteboard rock Pitt's billows broke in vain.[304]
+
+Next day (November 15, 1755) Fox received the seals. Five days
+afterwards Pitt, Legge, and George Grenville were dismissed by notes
+from Lord Holdernesse, the colleague of Fox in the Secretaryship of
+State. Fox indeed declares in a letter to Welbore Ellis, then peevish at
+not getting a better place, that he did not know till the last moment of
+the intention to remove anybody but Legge.[305] To George Grenville,
+Bute, now beginning to show himself above ground, but still with
+circumspection, sent a significant note of congratulation. 'Tis
+glorious,' he wrote, 'to suffer in such a cause and with such
+companions.' Pitt received an even more gratifying communication from
+Temple, who settled on him a thousand a year till better times. We
+cannot perhaps blame Pitt for accepting this offer, since probably there
+was no other way of maintaining Lady Hester in decent comfort; for we
+may easily surmise that he had squandered his own fortune on buildings,
+gardens, and the like; as Temple probably knew. But we could wish that
+he had done so with less effusion. 'How decline or how receive so great
+a generosity so amiably offered.' Lady Hester, who had begun the letter
+of thanks, 'was literally not in a situation to write any farther.'
+Pitt was 'little better able to hold the pen than Lady Hester. We are
+both yours more affectionately than words can express. We could have
+slept upon the Earl of Holdernesses' letter (of dismissal). But our
+hearts must now wake to gratitude and you, and wish for nothing but the
+return of day to embrace the best and noblest of brothers.' Even this is
+not sufficient. Next day he must write again to say to Lord Temple,
+'that I am more yours than my own, and that I equally love and revere
+the kindest of brothers and the noblest of men.'
+
+Language less ecstatic would better have become a great man accepting a
+serious pecuniary obligation. In truth Pitt never had any scrupulous
+idea of personal independence. He had accepted a borough from Newcastle,
+whom he then suspected and despised. Now it was an allowance from
+Temple, whom, from close intimacy and kinship, he must have known to be
+an intriguing politician, who was not likely to give without expecting
+return. A few years hence it was to be a pension from the Crown.
+
+With regard to money indeed he had no very careful or exalted standard.
+In such matters he was indifferent, reckless, and heedless of any nicety
+of scruple, except as regards the public. He never seems to have
+considered how important solvency is to character. He was always, after
+his marriage, quite unnecessarily, in desperate straits for money.
+Indifference to the fact that pecuniary independence is a main though
+not necessary base of moral independence was a flaw in his own life, and
+was the worst inheritance that he transmitted to his illustrious son.
+
+The announcement of Legge's successor at the Exchequer provoked
+universal hilarity. It was Lyttelton. We have seen that in the last
+debate Pitt had turned with fierce scorn on his former ally. No doubt he
+was aware of Lyttelton's approaching elevation. But their historic
+friendship had been dissolved for a year. In November 1754, at the
+heedless or mischievous instance of the younger Horace Walpole,
+Lyttelton, with the best intentions and the most inane execution
+possible, had hurried off, without consultation with his friend, to
+effect a reconciliation between Newcastle, Pitt's enemy, and Bedford,
+who was allied to Pitt by a common hatred of the Minister. Newcastle
+received the negotiator with his wonted effervescence, and gave or
+appeared to give full powers. Away sped Lyttelton, bursting with the
+importance of an amateur diplomatist. But at the mere mention of his
+mission the other Duke nearly kicked the messenger of peace downstairs,
+and at once communicated the secret overture to Pitt. The result to
+Lyttelton was for the moment unmixed disaster. Pitt publicly broke with
+him, Newcastle of course disowned him, he indeed disowned himself.
+Henceforth he was banned by the Cousinhood, and incurred a wrath and
+vengeance as implacable as that of the Carbonari. Now, however, he had
+his reward, for it can scarcely be doubted that his elevation to the
+Exchequer was intended partly as a plaster for his diplomatic wounds,
+partly as an annoyance to the party of Pitt. Any motive indeed but
+fitness for the office can be suggested for his promotion, to which he
+was lured by the promise of a peerage.[306] If, however, the annoyance
+it would cause to his late friends was a reason, it failed in its
+object. For Lyttelton, in his new office, gave the amplest opportunity
+for the wreaking of their revenge. He was, as we have seen, grotesque as
+a diplomatist. He was even more unfit to be Chancellor of the Exchequer.
+
+Lyttelton had been a promising young man, but promising young men
+frequently fail to mature, and he became a minor politician, a minor
+poet, a minor historian. As a politician, he was principally known for
+the delivery of pompous prepared harangues. He wrote a pathetic and not
+wholly forgotten monody on the death of his first wife, to which he
+could have added a new and poignant emphasis after his second marriage.
+He wrote a treatise on the conversion of St. Paul, which earned the
+commendation of Dr. Johnson. He wrote some 'Dialogues of the Dead,'
+which Dr. Johnson was not able to commend. He was now writing an
+elaborate History of Henry the Second, on the printer's corrections in
+which he spent a thousand pounds, and was soon to publish with a score
+of pages of errata. But his literary renown rests on the dedication of
+'Tom Jones.'
+
+He was, however, best known to the public at large by his eccentric
+appearance and demeanour. 'Extremely tall and extremely thin, he bent
+under his own weight,' says his nephew Camelford. 'His face was so
+ugly,' says Hervey, 'his person so ill-made, and his carriage so
+awkward, that every feature was a blemish, every limb an incumbrance,
+and every motion a disgrace.' Horace Walpole says of him that he had the
+figure of a spectre and the gesticulations of a puppet. Chesterfield
+portrays him as the embodiment of all in manner and deportment that was
+to be avoided. His legs and arms, said the urbane peer, seem to have
+undergone the rack, his head hanging limp on his shoulder the first
+stroke of the axe. As absent as a Laputan, he leaves his hat in one
+room, his sword in another, and would leave his shoes, if unfastened, in
+a third. 'Who's dat!' wrote the satirist,
+
+ 'Who's dat who ride astride de pony,
+ So long, so lank, so lean and bony?
+ Oh! he be de great orator Little-toney.'
+
+He was obviously something of a butt from his physical peculiarities and
+awkwardness, and a butt is ill placed in high office.
+
+Gawky, fussy, pedantic, he was what in these days we should call a prig;
+a kindly prig, with a warm heart, some literary ability, and strong
+religious feeling; but for all that an unmistakable, inveterate,
+incurable prig. The word 'prig' is untranslatable and uncommunicable. It
+denotes nothing unamiable, nothing distasteful. It marks only a strange
+flaw; partly of intellect, partly of character, partly of accent. And
+one feels that it was impossible not to like Lyttelton, for he was full
+of friendliness and virtue. With Pitt he was reconciled within a decade,
+and mourned his death with a sincere sorrow which was not then abundant.
+
+But the Exchequer is a peculiar office requiring peculiar gifts. A dull
+man may succeed in it if he possess them; without them the greatest
+talents will fail. Lyttelton possessed none of them. He was unable, it
+was alleged, to work out the simplest sum in arithmetic. He was ignorant
+of the first principles of finance. The Exchequer never had a more
+preposterous Chancellor, till Dashwood appeared. He had better have left
+it alone.
+
+Fox, whose accession to the leadership was said to have inspired Murray
+with courage, must have watched with gloomy forebodings the figure set
+up in the Exchequer to face the lightnings of Pitt. The most that he
+could hope was that it would act as an efficient conductor. Yet Fox
+needed all the strength that he could muster. For no one despised his
+chief more than he, or had a greater respect for the powers of his
+rival.
+
+It should further be noted that this ministry had a luckless connection
+which made it known as 'the Duke's ministry'; for it had been formed
+under the auspices and at the recommendation of the disastrous
+Cumberland. 'Never,' says Almon, 'was an administration more unpopular
+and odious.'
+
+[Sidenote: Nov. 21, 1755.]
+
+War had now been declared between the Government and Pitt, who now
+certainly had the latent countenance of the Heir Apparent, or of the
+clique who represented the Heir Apparent; and there was no delay in
+coming to blows. The very day after Pitt's dismissal, Welbore Ellis, a
+Lord of the Admiralty, who was destined to live on as a Nestor in
+politics and be made a peer by Pitt's son, moved for 50,000 seamen,
+mentioning that the peace establishment was 40,000. It was a formal
+motion, and members were leaving the House, when they were recalled by
+the awful tones of Pitt, declaring that he shuddered at hearing that our
+naval resources were so narrowed. He recalled his former protest in 1751
+against reduction. He would hunt down the authors of these disastrous
+measures which made the King's crown totter on his head. This noble
+country of ours was being ruined by the silly pride of one man and the
+subservience of his colleagues, and some day we should have to answer
+for it; unless already overwhelmed by some catastrophe brought about by
+France, our hereditary enemy. All this trouble arose from the petty
+struggle for power. What power was it that was sought, what kind of
+power, was it only that of doing good? On an English question like this
+he would not impede unanimity but implore it; he would ask favours in
+such a cause of any minister, would have gone that morning to Fox's
+first levee to ask him to accept 50,000 men besides marines. (The vote
+asked for was for 50,000 men, including 9113 marines.) If that could be
+obtained it would be the first thing done for this country since the
+Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle. He obscurely intimated charges of treachery
+and collusion. And now, he added, shame and danger had come together. He
+himself had been alarmed by intelligence on the highest authority. These
+terrors had been communicated to the House, which was willing to grant
+the King any assistance for any English object. But there was an
+essential difference between the ministry and that House. The ministry
+thought of everything but the public interest; the House was ready to
+afford everything for it. The House, he added mysteriously, was a
+fluctuating body, but he hoped would be eternal; and he concluded with a
+prayer for the King, with his royal posterity, and for this 'poor,
+forlorn, distressed country.'
+
+It is not always easy to trace the sequence of Pitt's speeches in
+Walpole's notes, nor is it possible to tell whether the confusion is due
+to the oration or the notes. The notes were probably made during the
+debate with the intention of filling in the outlines while recollection
+was still fresh; an intention which, as is usual with such intentions,
+was, it may be safely surmised, never carried out. But we are inclined
+to attribute obscurity in the main to the abrupt rhapsodical transitions
+of Pitt's speeches. They require, as reported by Walpole, almost as much
+interpretation as Cromwell's. In this one we discern great court paid to
+the House of Commons, so hostile to himself; unrelenting scorn of the
+Government; and bitter emphasis on British as opposed to Hanoverian
+interests. The peroration as barely reported seems below the level of a
+debating society. But, then, we must remember that no fervent and
+exalted apostrophe, prolonged as this probably was, can be adequately
+transmitted in a naked sentence, or perhaps in any conceivable report.
+
+Fox replied with admirable temper, a self-control all the more laudable
+and noted because of his usual impetuousness. He took up Pitt's sneer at
+petty struggles for power. What the motives of these struggles for power
+had been let those tell who had struggled most and longest for power.
+They had been told that nobody round the King had sense or virtue, that
+sense and virtue resided somewhere else. How was the King to know where
+they are to be found? for he feared that _this_ House of Commons would
+not point in the required direction. He ended by asking why Pitt had not
+asked sooner for his augmentation of force.
+
+This called up Pitt again, who denied that he had ever asserted that
+there were no sense and virtue near the Throne. No man had ever suffered
+so much as himself from those stilettoes of a Court which assassinate
+the fair repute of a man with his Sovereign. The insinuation of his
+having struggled for power had been received by the House with so much
+approval, that he must take notice of the charge. Had he yielded to the
+poor and sordid measures which are ruining the country he might, no
+doubt, have been admitted to the confidence of the Closet. Then, carried
+by anger beyond the facts, he went further, and said that as he was not
+prepared then to enter into the details of the private transactions of a
+whole summer, he would only say that he might have had what Fox had
+accepted. Unfortunately for himself, however, the measures contemplated
+were so disastrous that his conscience and his honour had forbidden him
+to support them; though he would have strained conscience a little,
+perhaps, to be admitted to the confidence of the King. No, it was not
+failure in the struggle for power that was the cause of his exclusion
+from office. Was it not that he would not approve of the Russian and
+Hessian treaties? He challenged a denial.
+
+Fox rose in reply, and said that he was ready to forget what Pitt had
+said about the lack of sense and virtue near the Throne.
+
+Pitt, evidently beside himself with wrath, interrupted him, and said he
+rose to order, and, on that long-suffering plea, delivered another long
+speech. The phrase about sense and virtue, he declared on his honour,
+was none of his. What he said was that France would found her hopes on
+the want of sense, understanding, and virtue in those that govern here.
+Fox's modesty appeared to have taken these words to himself; but he had
+not put him right sooner, as the statement of the plain truth would
+sooner or later be sufficient. He would remind that gentleman of certain
+efforts which had been made (alluding to their brief coalition against
+Newcastle) to limit the power at which he had hinted. As to invective,
+he was not fond of employing it, but no man feared it less than himself.
+He was, however, complimentary to Fox; would, though no betting man,
+back his sense and spirit; believed that we should get some information
+from abroad now that he was in power; but could not treat him as _the_
+minister, for that he was not yet.
+
+'But[307] he asks why I did not call out sooner. _My_ calling out was
+more likely to defeat than promote. When I remonstrated for more seamen,
+I was called an enemy to Government: now I am told that I want to strew
+the King's pillow with thorns: am traduced, aspersed, calumniated from
+morning to night. _I_ would have warned the King: did _he_? If he with
+his sense and spirit had represented to the King the necessity of
+augmentation, it would have been made--but what! if there is any man so
+wicked--don't let it be reported that I say there is--as to
+procrastinate the importing troops from Ireland, in order to make
+subsidiary forces necessary.[308] This whole summer I have been looking
+for Government. I saw none. Thank God, His Majesty was not here. The
+trade of France has been spared sillily, there has been dead stagnation.
+Orders contradicting one another were the only symptoms of spirit. When
+His Majesty returned, his kingdom was delivered back to him more like a
+wreck than as a vessel able to stem the storm. Perhaps a little
+sustentation of life to the country will be obtained by a wretched
+peace. These are my sentiments, and when a man has truth on his side,
+he is not to be overborne by quick interrogatories. It may be presumed,
+and indeed confidently hoped, that this was not Pitt's actual speech,
+though Walpole gives it as the very words. They are probably only heads.
+He continued with softening expressions to Fox. Want of virtue was the
+characteristic not merely of the Government but of the age. He himself
+was glad to show a zeal not inferior to that of ministers; let them show
+him how to serve the King, and then let them, if they could, tax him
+with strewing the royal pillow with thorns. But what were their own
+services? Murray indeed had boasted that 140,000 of the best troops in
+Europe were provided for the defence of--what? of Hanover. But what of
+England? What of the Colonies? Compare the countries, compare the forces
+destined for the defence of each! Two miserable battalions of Irish, who
+scarcely ever saw one another, had been sent to America as to the
+shambles. If his comparison of forces for Hanover and for the Empire was
+exaggerated, he would be glad to be told his error.
+
+Fox kept his temper, and remained on the defensive. He not unnaturally
+commented on the disorderliness of Pitt's speech to order. He did not
+'on his honour' know what was the offer which Pitt had rejected. He
+himself had waited till everybody had refused, passing the summer at
+Holland House, as happy as any man in Parliament. He was in favour of
+the subsidies, and when that was known he was told 'Then support them';
+and so he did. When his opinion changed he should leave office. He
+wished all evil might befall him if he had injured Pitt with the King,
+for he thought nothing so dishonourable as to accuse a man where he
+could not defend himself.
+
+Murray followed with covert but bitter innuendoes; defended Pelham's
+reduction of 2000 men, and had thought that that Minister had at least
+died in friendship with Pitt. This again brought Pitt on his feet to say
+that his friendship for Pelham had been as real as Murray's. Murray
+continued coolly. The sting of his waspish speech was in its tail. He
+wanted to clear up one particular point for his own information. He
+understood Pitt to say that he had refused the Secretaryship of State:
+pray, had he?
+
+He had his enemy at the point of the sword. Pitt had certainly, as we
+have seen, with incredible rashness, at least insinuated this, if not
+declared it. He now had to rise and eat his words: 'he had only refused
+to come into measures'![309]
+
+Walpole apologises for recording this debate, tedious as it is, at such
+a length. We must do the same, and his excuse is ours. Little was said
+on the question, and indeed there was scarcely a question to discuss.
+But the points of the speeches, so far as we can discern them, throw
+light on the speakers, more especially on the reckless, impetuous
+character of Pitt, even at this time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+
+The bombardment of the new Ministry continued without intermission, for
+Pitt was determined to wreak his vengeance on Newcastle and Fox. We may,
+moreover, presume that, seeing the critical condition of affairs and the
+incompetence of the Ministry to wrestle with them, he, conscious of
+great powers, was determined to become a directing Minister. He was now
+forty-seven, in the full ripeness of character and intellect. Neither he
+nor the country could afford to wait.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 2, 1755.]
+
+Ten days after the last debate, Lord Pulteney, the sole and short-lived
+hope of his famous father, introduced a Bill to give the prizes captured
+before a declaration of war to the seamen who had captured them, should
+war be afterwards declared. Pitt and his section intervened, and the
+engagement developed from a skirmish into a battle. The debate turned
+largely on pressing; that practice having brought great complaints from
+Scotland, where 'mobs are more dangerous and more mischievous than our
+mobs in England, not contenting themselves with clubs and bludgeons, but
+possessing themselves of as many firearms and other mortal weapons as
+they can possibly come at.' This perhaps was not wonderful, when it was
+admitted that a gang had surrounded a church, and pressed part of the
+congregation as it came out. But it soon soared from that point to the
+question of our relations with France.
+
+Fox opposed the Bill, which he said would be considered as a veiled
+declaration of war. France was patient because she wished to persuade
+her allies that we were the aggressors, and so induce them to join her.
+The passing of the Bill would furnish the very proof she required. The
+whole gist of the matter lay in the word 'now,' 'the hinge,' he said
+with a painful confusion of metaphor, 'upon which the very marrow of
+this debate must turn.' Were peace hopeless such a Bill might be
+necessary; now it could only do harm. Pitt followed Fox and made play
+with the word 'now,' for as Murray said in reply: 'He has the happy
+faculty of being able to turn the most important word, the most serious
+argument, into ridicule.' He pointed out from examples in the reign of
+Elizabeth and Charles II. that we might be at war for many years without
+declaring war, and supported the Bill; as did Richard Lyttelton (though
+the House, says Rigby, can no longer be brought to hear a word from
+him), and George Grenville. The most piquant part of the speeches of
+both Pitt and Fox related to Walpole, who had now from a bugbear become
+a fetish. Fox pronounced a high eulogy upon him, but denied that his
+parliaments had been venal. Pitt said that he himself had always opposed
+Walpole when in power, but after resignation had always 'spoken well of
+him as a man.' Here there was a laugh, which Pitt angrily rebuked. Was
+it not more honourable to respect a man when his power had come to an
+end than before? Walpole had no doubt 'for many years an amazing
+influence in this House, and the enquiry, stifled as it was, made it
+pretty evident from whence that influence proceeded!' Legge swelled the
+chorus of devotion to a Minister who had scarce a friend at his fall,
+by declaring that 'he was an honour to human nature and the peculiar
+friend to Great Britain!' Death, in British politics, magnanimously
+closes most accounts with a credit balance.[310]
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 5, 1755.]
+
+Three days afterwards, Barrington, the new Secretary at War, moved the
+Army Estimates. Here we are again thrown upon Walpole, whose records,
+precious as they are, are the notes of an amateur, jotted down at the
+time with the idea of subsequent expansion, but not subsequently
+expanded. Indeed, when he came to use them, his memory, it is probable,
+no longer availed for the purpose. But from the account of the last
+debate on December 2, 1755, the Parliamentary history, incredible as it
+may seem, records no speech of Pitt's till the last month of 1761, and
+then only a formal reply.
+
+Pitt, 'in one of his finest florid declamations,' seconded the motion
+for an army of 34,263 men, which was an augmentation of 15,000 men. He
+would have moved for a larger number, had not Barrington promised to
+move for more men when he brought in a Bill for the better recruiting of
+the army, a pledge which seemed to meet the general anxiety of the
+House. Rigby, who gives us this information, says that Pitt's speech was
+most violent and abusive, but admits that it was a very fine piece of
+declamation.[311] Both Walpole and Rigby, it will be observed, use this
+vigorous substantive to characterise the speech.
+
+Pitt again used the language of tenderness and devotion to the King,
+deplored to see him in his old age, and his kingdom exposed to attack;
+and even his amiable posterity, _born among us_, sacrificed by unskilful
+Ministers.
+
+The innuendo at the King's foreign birth betrays the sarcasm underlying
+Pitt's effusive loyalty. One cannot also but suspect that his constant
+allusions to the venerable age of George II. were not intended to be
+wholly agreeable to a King who piqued himself on being gay and
+libertine. 'He then drew a striking and masterly picture of a French
+invasion reaching London, and of the horror ensuing while there was a
+formidable enemy within the capital itself, as full of weakness as full
+of multitude; a flagitious rabble, ready for every nefarious action; of
+the consternation in the City, where the noble, artificial, yet
+vulnerable fabric of public credit should crumble in their hands. How
+would Ministers be able to meet the aspect of so many citizens dismayed?
+How could men so guilty meet their countrymen?'
+
+The King's Speech of last year, he continued, had been calculated to
+lull the country into repose. Had His Majesty's Ministers not sufficient
+understanding, or foresight, or virtue, he repeated the words that they
+might not again be misquoted, to lay before him the real danger?
+Elsewhere, where the King himself had the slightest suspicion even of a
+fancied danger, we knew what vast preparations had been made. Did the
+subjects of his kingdom lack that prudent foresight which his subjects
+of the electorate possessed in so eminent a degree? Alas! that he should
+live to see a British Parliament so unequal to its duties. There were
+but ten thousand men left in England. Not half that number would be
+available to defend the royal family and the metropolis. 'Half security
+is full danger.'
+
+'Accursed be the man,' he continued, 'who will not do all he can to
+strengthen the King's hands, and he will indeed receive the malediction.
+Strengthen the Sovereign by laying bare the weakness of his Councils:
+urge him to substitute reality to incapacity, futility, and the petty
+love of power. It is the little spirit of domination, the ambition of
+being the only figure among cyphers, which has caused the decay of this
+country. The ignominious indulgence of patronage, the poor desire to
+dispose of places, should be left for times of relaxation: rough times
+such as these require wisdom. The cost of the augmentation proposed
+to-day, two hundred and eighty thousand pounds, would last year have
+given us security. Yet the danger was last year as visible as now to the
+eye of foresight. The first attribute of a wise Minister is to leave as
+little as possible exposed to contingencies. Now, for want of that
+foresight, stocks will fall, and hurry along with them the ruin of the
+City, vulnerable in proportion to its opulence. In other countries the
+treasure remains in a city which is not sacked. But paper credit like
+ours may be wounded even in Kent. It is like the sensitive plant, it
+need not be cropped; extend but your hand, it withers and dies.'
+
+Barrington, the orator continued, had cited the Romans. He need not go
+so far afield, our own days had produced as great examples. In 1746,
+thirteen regiments had been raised by noblemen who, though they had not
+like the Romans left their ploughs, had left their palaces to save their
+country. With what scorn, depression, and cruelty, so far as contempt is
+cruelty, had they been treated!
+
+He wished the country gentry encouraged to raise a militia, for he was
+anxious to call the country out of that enervated condition that the
+menace of twenty thousand men from France could shake it. It was our
+Government that was degenerate, not our people. He wished the breed
+restored that had formerly carried our glory so high. What did those
+Ministers deserve, and again he insinuated mysterious hints of
+connivance and collusion, what did those Ministers deserve, who, after
+Washington had been defeated and our forts taken, advised his Majesty to
+trust to so slender a force as had been sent. He was for no vindictive
+proceedings against them; they erred from the weakness of their heads
+rather than their hearts. But a sagacity something less than that of a
+Richelieu or a Burleigh could have foreseen what would happen.
+
+Fox replied with urbanity and compliment, for there was at this time a
+marked courtesy in the language of the two protagonists, as of men who
+did not know how soon they might be allies. Pitt denounced Newcastle,
+and Fox did not defend him. This, too, must be noticed. Why, Fox now
+asked, had Pitt not made this noble speech sooner, when we were indeed
+asleep, before the French had wakened us. 'If he had made it,' said Fox,
+'I am sure I should have remembered it: I am not apt to forget his
+speeches.' Let Pitt himself take in hand a Militia Bill. It was
+evidently Fox whom Pitt had described as treating the thirteen regiments
+with contempt, at least Fox now fitted the cap on himself. He said that
+he thought obloquy too harsh a term to apply to his language on that
+occasion; nevertheless, he should not disown anything he had said. But
+he must make a clear distinction between these noble persons. He thanked
+God there was one noble duke, able and willing to save his country, who
+went to the King, and offered to go and try if, with his lowlanders, he
+was not a match for any highlanders. This was an elaborate compliment to
+Bedford, whose political lowlanders were now at the service of the
+Government, though not the Chief himself. Fox at the same time made an
+invidious comparison to the detriment of the Duke of Montagu, and was on
+the point of saying that he must discriminate between dukes, for though
+some deserved everything from their country for the part they took, yet
+he should not be for trusting others to raise a regiment who could not
+raise half a crown. There was evidently money to be made out of these
+patriotic impulses.[312]
+
+Pitt excused himself for not having sooner raised the cry of danger on
+the ground that he had been lulled into composure by the previous Speech
+from the Throne. When he became alarmed he made representations in
+private, so long as he was allowed to do so. But now the alarm must be
+sounded in Parliament itself, for we have invited into our bowels a war
+that was the child of ignorance and connivance. If there be justice in
+Heaven, Ministers must some day answer for this.
+
+Nugent, an Irish adventurer of the type known to comedy, paid his court
+to Newcastle by a burlesque attack on Pitt. And even Robinson appeared
+once more on the scene with a panegyric on himself, which, though
+ridiculous to his audience, was by no means superfluous. The other
+notable speeches, delivered by Charles Townshend, Sackville, and
+Beckford, do not affect our subject.[313]
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 8, 1755.]
+
+Five days later, George, who was afterwards Marquis, Townshend, brought
+forward a Militia Bill. Pitt took this occasion of responding to Fox's
+challenge by unfolding a plan of his own. No scheme, he said, could be
+carried out without the co-operation of the Government, the Army, the
+Law, and the country gentry. But he unfortunately came under none of
+these descriptions. He knew no secrets of Government; he had too early
+been driven from the profession of arms; he had never studied the law;
+he was no country gentleman.
+
+His plan was made the groundwork of a Bill, which occupied much time in
+the Commons, but was lost in the Lords.
+
+It provided for an infantry militia of fifty or sixty thousand men, to
+be summoned compulsorily by the civil power: to be exercised twice a
+week, one of these days to be Sunday, if the clergy did not raise too
+much objection. It was to have the same pay as the infantry, but plain
+clothing, 'not pretending to all the lustre of the army.' The
+non-commissioned officers were to be private soldiers, not fewer than
+four to every eighty men.
+
+What millions, he said, would have been saved by such a force during the
+last thirty years! And what an inglorious picture for this country, to
+figure gentlemen driven by an invasion like a flock of sheep, and forced
+to send money abroad to buy courage and defence! If this scheme should
+prove oppressive, provincially or parochially, he was willing to give it
+up. But surely it was preferable to waiting to see if the wind would
+blow you subsidiary troops. These, always an eyesore, you would never
+want again if this Bill were passed. This speech marked another step
+forward in Pitt's career; for he opened his plan with a plain precision,
+a mastery of detail, and a business-like clearness the House had not
+expected from him. 'He had never shone in this light before.'[314]
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 10, 1755.]
+
+Two days later, again the treaties were discussed in both Houses.
+
+The debate in the Lords does not concern us. It was spirited and bitter.
+Temple raised the storm, while the future George III. sate and took
+notes. In the Commons there was a new feature. Newcastle, doubtful of
+the zeal of Fox and Murray on his behalf, had retained for his defence
+Hume Campbell, the brother of Marchmont; with the Paymastership as a
+retaining fee, had not Fox, who always had his eye on this lucrative
+place, vetoed the appointment.[315] Walpole describes the new gladiator
+as eloquent, acute, abusive, corrupt, insatiable. To this accumulation
+of epithets we need and can add nothing. He had been in opposition with
+Pitt, and had had a brush with him already, but had almost given up
+attendance in Parliament.
+
+Hume Campbell, raised to this bad eminence, seems to have acquitted
+himself ably in his opening attack, and to have delivered a masterly
+speech. He could see no reason, he said, why gentlemen were suffered to
+come every day to the House merely to threaten and arraign the conduct
+of their superiors. Such behaviour was unparliamentary and
+unprecedented. 'Let the House punish,' he said, 'these eternal
+invectives.' Pitt angrily called him to order for so describing the
+debates of that House. Horace Walpole, the elder, said, with some
+reason, that Pitt ought to be the last man in the House to complain of
+irregularity. Pitt declared that Campbell's words struck directly at the
+liberty of debate; that he had a mind to move to have the words taken
+down, but would refrain till the orator had explained himself. Campbell
+then proceeded with his discourse. He was followed by other speakers,
+Murray delivering a fine argument in defence of the treaties. Pitt,
+meanwhile, contrary to his habit, possessed himself in silence,
+collecting all his powers for his reply. When he arose he delivered one
+that was memorable and overwhelming. 'You never heard such a philippic
+as Pitt returned. Hume Campbell was annihilated. Pitt, like an angry
+wasp, seems to have left his sting in the wound, and has since assumed a
+style of delicate ridicule and repartee. But think how charming a
+ridicule must be that lasts and rises, flash after flash, for an hour
+and a half! Some day perhaps you will see some of the glittering
+splinters that I gathered up.'
+
+So wrote Horace Walpole in the first enthusiasm produced by this effort.
+But the more deliberate record in his memoirs reveals few of the
+flashing splinters that he thought to have garnered. Luckily, Sir
+William Meredith has left a very brief account[316] of the tilt between
+Campbell and Pitt, which we can collate with Walpole's.
+
+So slight had been the defence, said Pitt, that he did not know how to
+deal with it; only little shifts or evasions worthy of a pie-poudre
+court, but not of Parliament. As for Hume Campbell, he had him in his
+power, he could bring him to his knees at the bar of the House as a
+delinquent for such an assault on the privileges of Parliament. If
+members were to be threatened for speaking with freedom of Ministers,
+all liberty of debate would be at an end. As he revered the profession
+of the law, so he grieved to hear it dishonoured by language that fixed
+an indelible blot on him that spoke it. 'Superior' was a word that he
+disdained. That hon. gentleman might indeed have his superiors. But he
+knew that when sitting, speaking, and voting in his legislative capacity
+the King himself was not his superior. And he could assure the hon.
+gentleman that such freedom in speaking of ministers was neither
+unparliamentary nor unprecedented. For even in the profligate
+prerogative reign of James I., when a great duke, as now, monopolised
+power, the House of Commons possessed an honest member who dared to call
+that duke _stellionatus_, a beast of most hideous deformity, covered
+with blurs and blotches and filth, an ideal monster, fouler than exists
+in nature. Yet a grave and venerable member of parliament thought this
+no unfit comparison for that great duke, who no doubt had his slaves all
+about him who called him Superior, yet durst not bring such language
+into the House of Commons. And we had then a wretched King who would
+have been glad of the assistance of a great lawyer, could he have one to
+have threatened a member of parliament for exposing the arbitrary and
+pernicious designs that he was carrying on by his ministers against his
+people. Thank God! we had no such King. If we had, he would not want a
+slavish lawyer to abet the worst measures that can be devised to ruin
+and enslave this country.
+
+'But I will not dress up this image under a third person,' he exclaimed,
+turning full round and facing Hume Campbell, 'I apply it to him; his is
+the servile doctrine; he is the slave; and the shame of his doctrine
+will stick to him as long as his gown sticks to his back. After all, his
+trade is words; they were not provoked by me, but they have no terrors
+for me, they provoke only my ridicule and contempt.'
+
+Then turning to Murray, he denounced the treaties as a violation of the
+Act of Settlement. The article to which, it may be presumed, he referred
+was as follows:
+
+'That in case the Crown and Imperial Dignity of this realm shall
+hereafter come to any person, not being a native of this Kingdom of
+England, this nation be not obliged to engage in any war for the defence
+of any dominions or territories which do not belong to the Crown of
+England without the consent of Parliament.'
+
+It cannot be said that this enactment had been specially present to the
+mind of George II. at any period of his reign. Murray had defended the
+treaties thinly against the charge of infringement by declaring that if
+this treaty violated the Act of Settlement all our defensive treaties
+had done the same, and had ended by the quaint and almost cynical remark
+that 'we could not enjoy the blessing of the present Royal Family
+without the inconveniences.'
+
+Pitt can have had, and in fact had, but little difficulty in dealing
+with Murray. 'It is difficult to know where to pull the first thread
+from a piece so finely spun. Constructions ought never to condemn a
+great minister, but I think this crime of violating the Act of
+Settlement is within the letter. If the dangerous illegality of this is
+to be inquired into, it should be referred to a committee of the whole
+House, not to a Committee of Supply. Inquired into it must be, for I
+will not suffer an audacious minister to escape the judgment of
+Parliament. For if a Cabinet have taken upon them to conclude treaties
+of subsidy without the consent of Parliament, shall they not answer for
+their action?'
+
+He derided Murray's precedents. For in 1717 or 1718 Ministers stated
+that there was danger to be apprehended from Sweden, and then asked for
+money. Would any lawyer plead that when his Britannic Majesty speaks of
+dominions in a treaty, he can mean any but his British dominions? We
+were not to be explained out of our liberties.
+
+He then criticised the conduct of the Hessians in the last war; except
+on one occasion, when they were forced at Munich, they had not behaved
+well.
+
+There Horace Walpole's notes branch off into a tangle of headings and
+exclamations which it is difficult and unnecessary to unravel. Pitt
+emphatically denied that the Crown had a power of concluding treaties of
+subsidy that led to war. He was sorry to hear it avowed that Hanover was
+concerned in all the treaties which had been cited. It was clearly a
+time to make a stand, now that we had arrived at that pitch of adulation
+that we were ready to declare openly that Hanover was at the back of
+all. He wished that the circumstances of this country would enable us to
+extend this protecting care to Hanover, but they would not. For no
+consideration would he have set his hand to these treaties.
+
+Fox in reply defended Hume Campbell with spirit, and made ironical
+retorts to Pitt, some of them now obscure, none of them now pertinent to
+this narrative. Such speeches become trivial within forty-eight hours of
+their delivery. The bones of Pitt's preserved by Walpole scarcely claim
+any better right of survival. To tell the bare truth, what survives of
+these debates is incomparably tedious and confused. But it is evident
+that Pitt had amazed the House by disclosing a new weapon, the power of
+ridicule. 'His antagonists endeavoured to disarm him. But as fast as
+they deprive him of one weapon, he finds a better. I never suspected him
+of such an universal armoury; I knew he had a Gorgon's head, composed of
+bayonets and pistols, but little thought that he could tickle to death
+with a feather.'
+
+Whatever the relative arguments may have been, the legions were
+faithful, and voted the treaties by 318 to 126.
+
+[Sidenote: 1755.]
+
+On December 12 the general engagement on the treaties was renewed, when
+Barrington brought them forward in Committee, and Charles Townshend
+distinguished himself by a speech which, Pitt declared, displayed such
+abilities as had not appeared since that House was a House. He himself
+spoke at length, but poorly and languidly, not deigning to answer Hume
+Campbell, who once more appeared, with manner and matter both 'flat and
+mean.'
+
+Pitt said, in the few sentences into which Walpole condenses his speech,
+that he did not pretend to eloquence, but owed all his credit to the
+indulgence of the House. He looked with respect on the King's
+prejudices, he added with the finesse of a courtier or the irony of a
+foe, and with contempt on those who encouraged them. Was everything to
+be called invective that had not the smoothness of a court compliment?
+Old Horace Walpole had said that if one spoke against Hanover it might
+cause a rebellion. That was the chatter of a boarding-school miss. Lord
+Townshend and Sir Robert Walpole had withstood Hanover. 'Sir Robert
+thought well of me, died in peace with me. He was a truly English
+minister, and kept a strict hand on the Closet; when he was removed the
+door was flung open (to dangerous advisers?). His friends and followers
+had then transferred themselves to that minister, Lord Granville, who
+transplanted (_sic_) that English minister. Even Sir Robert's own
+reverend brother has gone over to the Hanoverian party!'
+
+Fox merely tried in reply to keep Pitt at bay, so he said little of the
+treaties, but seems to have attacked his rival with some acrimony. He
+recalled all the treasonable songs and pamphlets of the former
+Opposition, all directed by Pitt, no doubt for the good of the country!
+But he could never forgive any man who had the heart to conceive, the
+head to contrive, and the hand to execute so much mischief. 'The right
+honourable gentleman professes pride at acting with some here; I am
+proud of acting with so many! But because he wishes that Hanover should
+be separated from England, is it wise to act as if it were already
+separated?'
+
+The legions once more prevailed, and approved both treaties by 289 to
+121.
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 15, 1755.]
+
+If Pitt was held to have been below himself in this debate, he was
+considered to have surpassed himself, when the treaties came up on
+report three days afterwards, in a speech 'of most admirable and ready
+wit that flashed from him for the space of an hour and a half,
+accompanied with action that would have added reputation to Garrick.' He
+denounced Murray for attempting to hide the points at issue in a cloud
+of words. But in fact these treaties from simple questions had become
+all things to all men, as a conjuror plays with a pack of cards,
+passing them in turn to each spectator, receiving and keeping the money
+of all. Then he turned to Russia. 'Let us consider this Northern Star,
+that will not shine with any light of its own, but requires to be rubbed
+up into lustre; for could Russia, without our assistance, support her
+own troops? She will not prove a Star of the Wise Men, yet they must
+approach her with presents. The real Wise Man "Quae desperat tractata
+nitescere posse relinquit."
+
+'By this measure you are throwing Prussia into the arms of France. What
+can Frederick answer if France proposes to march an army into Germany?
+If he refuses to join her will she not threaten to leave him at the
+mercy of Russia? This is one of the effects of our sage
+negotiations--not to mention that we have wasted ten or eleven millions
+in subsidies.
+
+'Shall we not set the impossibility of our carrying on so extensive a
+war against the contention that his Majesty's honour is engaged? Our
+Ministers foresaw our ill-success at sea, and prudently laid a nest-egg
+for a war on the Continent. We have as an inducement to engage in this
+war been referred to the examples of Greece and Carthage. These ancient
+histories, no doubt, furnish ample matter for declamation. It is long
+since I read them, but I think I recollect enough to show how
+inapplicable they are to our present circumstances. Suppose Thebes and
+Sparta and the other Greek Commonwealths fallen from their former power,
+would Athens have gone on alone and paid all the rest? No, Athens put
+herself on board her fleet to fight where she could be superior, and so
+recovered her land.'
+
+'Not giving succour to Hannibal was indeed wrong, because he was already
+on land and was successful, and might have done something of the kind
+that Prince Eugene proposed, and marched with a torch to Versailles. But
+another poet says, I recollect a good deal of poetry to-day, another
+poet says, "Expende Hannibalem," "weigh him, weigh him." I have weighed
+him. What good did his glory procure to his country? Remember what the
+same poet says: "I, demens, curre per Alpes, ut pueris placeas et
+declamatio fias."'
+
+This flight, it may be surmised, was aimed at Cumberland.
+
+He once more expressed his dutiful feelings to the King, and
+acknowledged how difficult it was for Ministers to be honest with him.
+But yet the resistance to these treaties might save us from a
+Continental war. In any case, speaking for himself, he would never again
+give his confidence in the nation's advisers or adopters of this
+measure. He could only hope that our perverted Ministers might yet yield
+to conviction and save us, and that a British spirit might influence
+British councils.
+
+In the division which followed, the Hessian treaty appeared somewhat
+less acceptable than the Russian. The former was voted by 259 to 72 and
+the latter by 263 to 69. This was the net result. Yet, as Horace Walpole
+wrote at the time, 'Pitt had ridden in the whirlwind and directed the
+storm with abilities beyond the common reach of the genii of the
+tempest.' Eloquence, reason, and argument avail little against a compact
+parliamentary majority.[317]
+
+The reader will scarcely regret that an adjournment for Christmas
+followed this debate, for nothing is so tantalising as these barren
+husks of great speeches. The Minister employed his holiday appropriately
+in distributing gifts of office to his friends, and the reconstruction
+of the Government was completed. No part of it directly touches our
+story, but some features are of interest. The Dukes of Newcastle and
+Bedford, the Chancellor and Fox were each allowed to nominate a member
+of the Board of Trade. But Newcastle would not allow Fox a single voice
+in the appointment of the Lords of the Treasury; for he guarded that
+department with the jealousy of a Turk. The other point of interest was
+the cost to the public of these manipulations. To get rid of Sir Thomas
+Robinson it had been necessary to settle a pension on him of 2000_l._ a
+year for thirty-one years. To make a place for Lord Hillsborough, Mr.
+Arundel had a pension of 2000_l._ in exchange for the sinecure office of
+Treasurer of the Chamber. Lord Lothian had 1200_l._ a year to vacate the
+Clerk Registership of Scotland for Hume Campbell. Lord Cholmondeley, who
+held the Vice-Treasurership of Ireland with one colleague, had 600_l._ a
+year to induce him to accept a third partner of the office. Sir Conyers
+Darcy had 1600_l._ a year for vacating the Comptrollership of the
+Household. In all a burden of 7400_l._ a year was settled on the public
+to patch up a feeble and odious Ministry for ten months.
+
+While the gentle showers of office and pensions were descending on
+parched politicians, Pitt wended his valetudinarian way, as usual, to
+Bath. But when Parliament met in January, he was in his place, alert and
+thirsting for combat.
+
+[Sidenote: 1756.]
+
+We first catch a glimpse of him, on January 23, paying great court to
+Beckford; with conspicuous success as it happened, for Beckford
+hereafter was to be his devoted follower, and his invaluable agent in
+the City of London. On the same day the new Chancellor of the Exchequer
+unfolded his Budget, better than was expected, but bewildered with the
+figures. 'He stumbled over millions, and dwelt pompously over
+farthings.' His Budget dealt with figures enviably small; duties on
+plate, calculated to produce 30,000_l._ a year, which produced
+18,000_l._; on bricks and tiles which were to produce 30,000_l._ a year,
+and on cards and dice which were to produce 17,000_l._ Bricks and tiles
+failed the Government; the tax was too unpopular; so, it is scarcely
+necessary to state, it was moved on to ale-houses. A generation, which
+passes tens of millions of expenditure without breaking silence, looks
+back with awe on that which deployed the full splendour of eloquence on
+taxes which altogether were not to produce 80,000_l._ a year. Pitt, who
+was almost as ignorant of finance as the Chancellor of the Exchequer,
+attacked him with vigour, but Lyttelton replied effectively. In speaking
+he mentioned Pitt as his friend, but corrected it to 'the gentleman.'
+This raised a laugh, when Lyttelton remarked, not without pathos, 'If he
+is not my friend, it is not my fault,' and the contest, after lasting
+some time, mellowed into good humour.
+
+[Sidenote: Jan. 28, 1756.]
+
+A few days later Pitt broke out again and declared that the Ministry was
+disjointed, and united only in corrupt and arbitrary measures. Fox
+denied this publicly and privately; publicly sneering at Pitt's family
+connection, privately assuring Pitt that, so far from there being any
+disunion between Newcastle and himself, the two Townshends had offered
+to join the Duke if he would give up Fox, and that the Minister had
+refused them.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 9, 1756.]
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 10, 1756.]
+
+The next battle was on a proposal to raise four Swiss battalions to be
+employed in America, when Pitt, as usual, censured the dilatoriness of
+the Government and flouted their 'paper' forces. Lord Loudoun commanded
+only a scroll, he said; the suggested battalions were only adding paper
+to paper; and so forth. Next day he diverted the debate from its tedious
+course by accusing the Government of having cashiered a brave officer,
+Sir Henry Erskine, a friend of Bute's by the by, on account of his vote
+in Parliament. But this ended in nothing.
+
+[Sidenote: Feb. 20, 1756.]
+
+At a later stage, Pitt ironically described the plan for the Swiss
+auxiliaries as a fortuitous blessing, for had not Prevot, the adventurer
+who was to command the battalions, been taken prisoner by the French and
+found his way from Brest hither, and had he not then taken it into his
+head that he would like to command a regiment, nothing would have been
+heard of it. He hoped this Ulysses-like wanderer might be as wise as his
+prototype and so forth; one can imagine the sort of pleasantry. But it
+was Charles Townshend who, 'content with promoting confusion,' chiefly
+shone at this time. On the other hand, one of Pitt's speeches, urging
+that the Colonies should be heard on this Swiss scheme, is described as
+lasting an hour and a half without fire or force. Indeed, Walpole writes
+of this debate that 'the opposition neither increase in numbers or
+eloquence; the want of the former seems to have damped the fire of the
+latter,' and that 'the House of Commons has dwindled into a very
+dialogue between Pitt and Fox ... in which, though Pitt has attacked,
+Fox has generally had the better.' Pitt seemed to be becoming dull and
+diffuse. 'Mr. Pitt talks by Shrewsbury clock, and is grown almost as
+little heard as that is at Westminster.' Still one wishes that the
+chronicler had reported the speeches of either as faithfully as he
+reports his own.
+
+The apprehension of a French invasion, which had been present for
+months, became acute in March and April (1756). The Government asked for
+the troops which Holland was, it was held, bound to furnish, and they
+were refused. Thereupon Lord George Sackville, probably by concert with
+the Court or to gain its favour, suggested a preference for Hanoverians,
+whose soldierlike qualities he commended. The hint was acted upon with
+suspicious promptitude; and on March 29, Fox formally moved to address
+the King to send for his Electoral troops.[318]
+
+Pitt, swathed as an invalid, opposed the motion in a long speech. He
+alleged his respect for the King as the ground of his opposition. For
+this address would be advice to the King in his Electoral capacity which
+we had no claim to offer, and which, moreover, might involve his
+Electorate in a peril equal to our own. He seems to have argued against
+any fear of invasion, on the ground that in the Dutch war, with a
+suspected King, we had coped with Holland and France; that in 1690, when
+the French had beaten our fleet at Beachy Head and had an army actually
+in Ireland, we had surmounted that danger; and that de Witt, the
+greatest man since the men of Plutarch, had proposed an invasion to
+d'Estrades, who had treated it as a chimerical suggestion. In any case
+the natural force of the nation was sufficient to repel any attack of
+the enemy. That state alone is a sovereign state 'qui suis stat viribus,
+non alieno pendet arbitrio,' which subsists by its own strength, not by
+the courtesy of its neighbours:[319] words which may have inspired Lord
+Lyndhurst, a century afterwards, with his famous phrase with regard to a
+State existing on sufferance. He would vote, Pitt proceeded, for raising
+any numbers of British troops. The late war had formed many great
+officers, and he would not interpose foreigners to hinder their
+promotion; nor would he force this vote on the King when he might send
+for his troops without.[320] The motion was agreed to by 259 to 92. Bubb
+comically commented on the readiness of the King, who had then amassed,
+it was believed, an immense treasure in Hanover, to make the nation pay
+for this defence of himself, by declaring that 'His Majesty would not
+for the world lend himself a farthing.' Not less humorous is the story
+preserved by Horace Walpole that the night the Hanoverian troops were
+voted, he summoned his German cook and ordered himself an exceptionally
+good supper. 'Get me all de varieties,' said the homely monarch, 'I
+don't mind expense.' A lampoon in the form of an anecdote, it is to be
+supposed.
+
+[Sidenote: March 30, 1756.]
+
+Next day Pitt had another opportunity for attack on the charge involved
+by the employment of Hessian troops, who, he declared, would cost
+400,000_l._ more than the same number of British troops. But, a few days
+afterwards, there was a still better occasion, when Barrington brought
+forward the estimate for the Hanoverian troops, and commended it as a
+better bargain than the Hessian, which had been passed, and was
+therefore secure. Pitt at once harped on the same strain, and, lauding
+the Hanoverian estimate, fell still more vehemently on the Hessian. No
+one could find fault with the Hanoverian, that we owed to His Majesty;
+but the subsidiary juggle with Hesse was the work of his Ministers.
+'Nothing but good flows from the King; nothing but ruin from his
+servants. I choose that they shall fall by a friendly hand, and that the
+condemnation of his patrons should come from the noble lord himself
+(Barrington). But must we engage mercenaries because France does? She
+engages them,' he said, with one of his phrases of picturesque energy,
+'because she has not blood enough in her own veins for the purpose of
+universal monarchy.' He despaired of preserving Minorca, he continued
+with gloomy prescience, yet the waste on these Hessians would have saved
+that island, would have conquered America. He broke out bitterly against
+the departmental character of the Government. 'I don't call this an
+administration, it is so unsteady. One is at the head of the Treasury;
+one, Chancellor; one, head of the Navy; one great person, of the Army.
+But is that an administration? They shift and shuffle the charge from
+one to another. One says, "I am not the General;" the Treasury says, "I
+am not the Admiral;" the Admiralty says, "I am not the Minister." From
+such an unaccording assemblage of separate and distinct powers with no
+system, a nullity results. One, two, three, four, five lords meet. If
+they cannot agree, "Oh, we will meet again on Saturday!" "Oh," but says
+one of them, "I am to go out of town." Alas! when no parties survive to
+thwart them, what an aggravation it is that no good comes from such
+unanimity!'
+
+Fox, in reply, asked if Pitt wished to see a sole Minister, a question
+that suggests that there was already an impression abroad that Pitt was
+aiming at the dictatorship which he afterwards received, or else that
+Pitt, if he obtained office, would be so overbearing as to become the
+sole Minister.
+
+Pitt, at any rate, did not accept the allusion as to himself. He said
+that he did not wish to see a single Minister, but system and decision.
+Indeed, he gracefully added, were Fox sole Minister there would be
+decision enough.[321]
+
+On May 11 (1756) a royal message apprised Parliament of the treaty
+concluded with Prussia (the Convention of Westminster, signed January
+1756), and asking his faithful Commons for supplies.
+
+The House promptly voted a million on account, but Pitt as usual uttered
+eloquent lamentations on the incapacity of Ministers and the calamitous
+situation of affairs. What was this vote of credit for? Was it to raise
+more men? We had already 40,000 British and 14,000 foreign troops. Was
+it for the purpose of marine treaties? Then he would joyfully vote it.
+For a naval war we could and ought to support, but a Continental war on
+the present system we could not. Regard should no doubt be had to
+Hanover, but a secondary regard. For if Hanover was to be our first
+object it would lead us to bankruptcy. It was impossible to defend
+Hanover by subsidies. How could an open country be defended against an
+enemy who could march 150,000 men into it, and if necessary reinforce
+them by as many more? Should Hanover suffer by her connection with Great
+Britain, we ought not to make peace without exacting full and ample
+compensation for all the damage and injury she might have sustained. But
+the idea of defending Hanover by subsidies was preposterous, absurd, and
+impracticable. Then, excited by this favourite theme beyond the limits
+he had imposed on himself, he struck home at the King and his darling
+patrimony. This system, he said, would in a few years, cost us more
+money than the fee simple of the electorate was worth, a place which
+after all could not be found in the map. He ardently wished us to break
+those fetters which chained us like Prometheus to that barren rock. (The
+metaphor which made a rock of Hanover does not strike one as one of his
+happiest efforts).
+
+If Lyttelton could not state the purpose for which this credit was
+designed, perhaps he could say for what it was not designed. Still, Pitt
+added sardonically, he was of so compounding a temper that he should
+assent to it.
+
+Ministers bragged of their unanimity and spirit. But what had all this
+army of councils and talents, this universal aye, produced? Were we
+safe? Had we inflicted any damage on the enemy? If so, when and where?
+
+He had no particular pleasure in thus speaking. He did not wish to load
+the unhappy men who had undone their country, most unhappy if they did
+not realise it. And our activity! Philosophers indeed had a phrase _vis
+inertiae_ by which they denoted the inactivity of action (_sic_). Was it
+by that that we were to be saved?
+
+His charge against the Government was this: that we had provoked before
+we could defend, and neglected after provocation; that we were left
+inferior to France in every quarter; that the vote of credit had been
+misapplied to secure Hanover; and that we had bought a treaty with
+Prussia by sacrificing our rights. He would not have signed such a
+treaty to have the five great places of those who had signed it. Yet if
+this treaty were restrained to the defence of the King's dominions he
+should not know how to oppose it.
+
+He had no feeling of resentment against the Government, no one had
+injured him. Yet he could not but think ill of their capacity and their
+measures. Could he, then, every day, arraign their policy and feel
+confidence in them? Pelham indeed had intended economy, but he was
+dragged into this foreign policy by his brother, now at the head of the
+Treasury. And if he, Pitt, saw Newcastle like a child driving a go-cart
+with that precious freight of an old King and his family on to a
+precipice, was he not bound to try and take the reins from his hands?
+And with a gloomy foreboding which must have chilled the anxious House,
+he solemnly prayed that the King might not have Minorca written on his
+heart, as Calais had been, in the dying declaration of Mary, engraved on
+hers.
+
+The debate ended with a bitter rally between Pitt and Lyttelton, the
+fiercer for their former friendship. Lyttelton had sneered at his
+epithets. This came well, said Pitt, from Lyttelton, whose own character
+was a composition of epithets. He himself had used no epithets that day,
+so Lyttelton had chosen ill the occasion for his taunt. But in any case
+the House was not an academy for the exchange of compliments. And when
+Lyttelton disclaimed any share in framing the motion, it was obvious
+that he was not at liberty to change it. If Lyttelton would declare that
+he had no more resources, he would only say that Lyttelton was
+incapable.
+
+The new Chancellor of the Exchequer, whose heart was still warm with his
+old affection, was hurt by this attack, but he maintained his ground.
+'He says I am but a thing made up of epithets. Is not this the language
+of Billingsgate? The world is complaining that the House was turned into
+a bear garden. I do not envy my friend the glory of being the Figg or
+Broughton of it.' Pitt retorted that Lyttelton was a very pretty poet,
+and that there was no one whom he more respected pen in hand. 'But it is
+hard that my friend, with whom I have taken sweet counsel in epithets,
+should now reproach me with using them.' Lyttelton replied once more
+that it was not his fault if he and Pitt were not still friends.[322]
+
+[Sidenote: May 14, 1756.]
+
+A day or two later Lyttelton unfolded to the House the provisions of the
+Treaty of Westminster. It had cleared up some small pecuniary claims on
+both sides, so much to Frederick for losses from British privateers, so
+much from Frederick for arrears of interest on the Silesian loan, a
+balance of 40,000_l._ due on the whole to Great Britain. On this, Pitt,
+inveterate against the Ministry, fulminated once more. He declared that
+by payment, even of a small sum, we had conceded the principle of our
+Empire over the sea, and went off into the usual rhetoric. 'For himself
+he should affect no superiority but what was common to him with the
+twelve millions of his countrymen, innocence of his country's ruin, the
+superiority of the undone over the undoers.'
+
+All that is notable in these crumbs of debate is the strategy of Pitt;
+to hammer at the enemy without ceasing, not to allow him a moment to
+breathe or recover, but to display him to the country day and night
+pummelled, bewildered and helpless, until he should succumb from
+exhaustion; when the country should insist on the removal of the
+defeated combatant, and the substitution of his conqueror. Pitt was
+openly set on the destruction of the Newcastle Government for more
+reasons than one. He was vindictive and had been slighted; he was
+profoundly anxious about the position of the country, and convinced of
+the incapacity of Newcastle to govern; he wished to try his own hand at
+the game, believing that he could do better, convinced that he could do
+no worse, than the Ministers whom he had seen at work.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+
+But national calamity was now to lend irresistible force to his attacks.
+It had been known for some time that France was meditating an attack on
+Gibraltar or Minorca, and in the beginning of March it became certain
+that Minorca was to be the object.[323] During the first week of May the
+Government received the news that the French had actually landed on the
+island. War was formally and not prematurely declared on May 18. Six
+weeks earlier the ill-fated Byng had sailed with a fleet to relieve the
+fortress. The country waited for news with bated breath. The King
+declared that he could neither eat nor sleep. Saunders, afterwards to be
+Pitt's First Lord of the Admiralty, reassured his Sovereign by saying
+that they should screw his heart out if Byng were not at that moment
+(June 7) in the harbour of Mahon.[324] Then came the news that Byng,
+after an indecisive engagement with the French fleet, had sailed back to
+Gibraltar and left Minorca to its fate. Still the nation, though raging
+against Byng, hoped against hope, till on July 14 the news came that
+Fort St. Philip, the British fort, had surrendered after a gallant
+defence on June 28, and that Minorca was in the hands of the French. The
+long-compressed anxiety exploded in a terrible outburst of wrath against
+Byng. Addresses poured in from every part of England demanding vengeance
+upon him. The unhappy Admiral was brought back to Greenwich Hospital as
+a prisoner to await a court-martial. But, the nation had already turned
+its thumb downwards. Perhaps the best idea of the popular sentiment is
+conveyed by the fact that Byng's brother, who went to meet the Admiral,
+was stricken to death by the popular fury wherever he passed; so that he
+fell ill at the first sight of the prisoner, and died next day in
+convulsions. There was no chance of a fair trial for the unhappy man. To
+the merchants of London bringing one of the addresses for his exemplary
+punishment Newcastle, not sorry to have a scapegoat, had blurted out,
+'Oh! indeed he shall be tried immediately: he shall be hanged directly.'
+And executed he was, after an agony of eight months, in spite of
+justice, in spite of Pitt, who had the fine courage to support him, in
+deference to the nation and the King who were bent on his death.
+Voltaire, who had tried with real humanity to save him, sardonically
+described the execution in Candide, 'Dans ce pays-ci il est bon de tuer
+de temps en temps un amiral pour encourager les autres,' a phrase which
+he appears to have borrowed from the Knights of Malta.[325]
+
+Something less, much less than Nelson, might have saved Minorca. The
+truth seems to be that Byng, who was personally brave, sailed from
+Gibraltar with the preconceived impression that Minorca was lost, and
+acted throughout under this conviction, without energy or resource. So
+far as his countrymen, or rather, their rulers, were concerned, they had
+long done their best to lose it. They had, in spite of constant appeals,
+starved and neglected it. But there was worse than this. On one side of
+the mouth of the harbour of Mahon is a site easily rendered impregnable,
+on the other a plain which nothing can secure. John Duke of Argyle had
+begun a fort on the first site, but Lord Cadogan out of hatred to him,
+it was said, destroyed it and built Fort St. Philip at a vast expense on
+the second. The thing is incredible to the traveller who sees the place.
+If the story be true (Horace Walpole is the authority), it is on the
+head of Cadogan and not of Byng that should be laid the loss of Minorca,
+a loss which can neither be forgotten nor forgiven.
+
+This tragic incident only touches Pitt's life in so far as it
+precipitated the disgrace of Newcastle. The Duke was indeed getting
+deeper and deeper. In May he declared that no one blamed him, for every
+one knew that the sea was not his province, and Fox had replied that as
+to public censure, his information was exactly the reverse. In September
+he could scarcely conceal from himself that he was being mobbed and
+pelted in his coach, and that his coachman was urged by the shouting
+crowd to drive his Grace straight to the Tower. Ballads swarmed of which
+the burden was, 'To the block with Newcastle and to the yard-arm with
+Byng.' Even the docile allegiance of the House of Commons can scarcely
+have allayed the veteran's rising anxiety. 'This was the year of the
+worst administration that I have seen in England,' says Walpole, though
+he was the close friend of Fox, 'for now Newcastle's incapacity was
+allowed full play.' Fox indeed found that he was not admitted to real
+confidence or to the counsels of Newcastle and Hardwicke. He was
+therefore in a state of swelling discontent, ready to break away at the
+first opportunity. He declared that he had urged that a strong squadron
+should be sent for the relief of the fortress during the first week of
+March, but was overruled. The fall of Minorca and the storm of national
+fury which followed increased his anxiety to be out of this disastrous
+Ministry. He was, we suspect, already determined not to meet Parliament
+again as Newcastle's talking puppet, possibly his scapegoat.
+
+The House had risen on May 27. Two days earlier occurred an event which
+was to remove one of the three intellects of the Government, Fox and
+Hardwicke, of course, being the other two. Ryder, the Chief Justice of
+the King's Bench, died, and Murray at once laid claim to the succession.
+This demand drove Newcastle to despair. He offered Murray exorbitant and
+increasing terms to remain, for he regarded Murray as his sole protector
+in the House of Commons against his doubtful friend, Fox, and his open
+enemy, Pitt. But offers of the Duchy of Lancaster for life with a
+pension of 2000_l._ a year, with permission to remain Attorney-General
+at a salary of 7000_l._ a year, and a reversion of one of the Golden
+Tellerships of the Exchequer for his nephew Stormont, left Murray
+unmoved. For months the game of temptation was played. At the beginning
+of October the Prime Minister had raised the proposed pension to
+6000_l._ a year. Murray remained firm. He stipulated, indeed, for more
+than the Chief Justiceship; he demanded a peerage as well; he would not
+take the one without the other; and in no case would he remain
+Attorney-General. We can imagine Newcastle's tears and caresses; they
+were in vain. Vain, too, was his attempt to fob off his rebellious
+subordinate with the reluctance of the King. Murray, indeed, hinted that
+when he became a private member of the House of Commons he might go into
+Opposition. We may be sure, at any rate, that he had no intention of
+facing an angry nation and Parliament in defence of Newcastle and the
+loss of Minorca. This hint probably clinched the matter. Newcastle
+capitulated; though, said Fox, from 'wilful trifling,' he deferred the
+performance of his promise as long as possible.[326] It was not till the
+eve of the Duke's fall that, on November 8, Murray was sworn in as Chief
+Justice and created a Peer as Lord Mansfield.
+
+[Sidenote: 1756.]
+
+What glimpses are there meanwhile of Pitt? He had just got possession of
+Hayes, and was there in May, building and improving, as usual, but
+speaking brilliantly on the Militia Bill in the House, so brilliantly as
+to earn a patronising note of approval from Bute, beginning 'My worthy
+friend'; an indication that the bond between Pitt and the young Court
+was now close. Indeed, Pitt seems now to have been the principal adviser
+of that increasingly powerful connection.
+
+Potter, whom Pitt had come to describe as 'one of the best friends I
+have in the world,' wrote to Pitt, ten days after Ryder's death,
+conveying the news from an inspired source that if Murray went on the
+bench Newcastle would invite Pitt to join the Government, for he could
+repair the loss in no other way. But he adds, shrewdly enough, that the
+Duke was evidently ignorant of his own strength, for if he had to rely
+on Lyttelton and Dupplin (then Joint Paymaster of the Forces) alone,
+though the debates would no doubt be shorter, he would not, such was the
+temper of the House, lose a single vote. He added that, in his judgment,
+the Opposition had not made themselves popular by their conduct, because
+of the fear of invasion. Hanover treaties and Hanover troops had become
+popular; opposition to them must be wrong 'when we are ready to be eat
+up by the French.'[327]
+
+But these anticipations were premature, for the struggle with Murray
+lasted, as we have seen, from May till November. So that Pitt had
+leisure to squander on his improvements and to receive his eldest son
+John on John's entrance into the world. But his eye was vigilantly fixed
+on the distresses of the country. 'Quae regio in terris nostri non plena
+laboris?' he writes to George Grenville (June 5, 1756). 'It is an
+inadequate and a selfish consolation, but it is a sensible one, to think
+that we share only in the common ruin, and not in the guilt of having
+left us exposed to the natural and necessary consequences of
+administration without ability or virtue.' Grenville, determined not to
+be undone, replies in a letter stuffed with Latin quotation. 'Distress,'
+rejoins Pitt (June 16, 1756), 'infinite distress seems to hem us in on
+all quarters. I am in most anxious impatience to have the affair in the
+Mediterranean cleared up. As yet nothing is clear but that the French
+are masters there, and that probably many an innocent and gallant man's
+honour and fortune is to be offered up as a scapegoat for the sins of
+the Administration.' In July he paid a visit at Stowe, and in August he
+was laid up at Hayes with 'a very awkward, uneasy, but not hurtful'
+malady.
+
+He must have seen with poignant interest Frederick's fierce irruption
+into Saxony, but all seems absorbed in his anxiety for his wife and his
+overflowing delight at the birth of his son. This event occurred on
+October 10, at a moment when the ministerial crisis had become acute.
+
+No one in fact was willing to face even an abject House of Commons with
+the loss of Minorca on his back. Newcastle was near the end of his
+tether. Murray had gone. Whether Chief Justice or not, he was determined
+to be out of the Ministry; and if disappointed of his just claim to the
+Bench he was not likely to face a storm on behalf of the Minister who
+had refused it. Murray had gone, Fox was going; for his chagrin was
+patent, and Newcastle 'treated him rather like an enemy whom he feared
+than as a minister whom he had chosen for his assistant.' He was no
+better used by the King. The Duke, moreover, was at war with the waxing
+power of Leicester House. With this Court indeed he managed to patch up
+a hollow peace at the expense of Fox; offending one Court and not
+appeasing the other. But that did not help him to an agent in the House
+of Commons.
+
+And worse was still to come, disaster followed on disaster. To a nation
+freshly smarting with the fall of Minorca there came tidings of
+catastrophe from the East and the West. In June Calcutta had been
+captured by Surajah Dowlah, followed by the horrors of the Black Hole,
+which still linger in the proverbial dialect of this country. Then in
+August fell Oswego, the most important British fortress in North
+America. Situated on Lake Ontario it was a permanent menace to the
+French, for British command of that lake would mean the separation of
+Canada from Louisiana. Montcalm, a general of high merit, who has had
+the singular good fortune to leave a name consecrated by the common
+veneration of friend and foe, had arrived to take the command of the
+French forces in Canada. Two months after landing he marched on Oswego,
+and, investing it with a greatly superior force, soon compelled it to
+capitulate. Its garrison of 1400 men surrendered as prisoners of
+war.[328] A hundred pieces of artillery and great stores of ammunition
+fell into the hands of the French. The forts, three in number, and the
+vessels were burned. It was a real triumph for the French, and a
+proportionate disaster for their foes. 'Such a shocking affair has never
+found a place in English annals,' wrote one American officer. 'The loss
+is beyond account; but the dishonour done his Majesty's arms is
+infinitely greater.' 'Oswego,' wrote Horace Walpole, 'is of ten times
+more importance even than Minorca.'
+
+Scarcely less consternation was caused in England, where the news
+arrived on September 30. People there were getting dazed with disaster,
+and the men who ruled became more and more abhorrent. Already, on
+September 2, Newcastle had written to the Chancellor that people were
+becoming outrageous in the North of England, and that a petition was
+being largely signed in Surrey demanding 'justice against persons
+however highly dignified or distinguished.' This, he adds drily, may
+mean you or me, or 'perhaps somebody more highly dignified and
+distinguished than either of us.'[329] Who could be found to bear such a
+burden of shame and ignominy, and affront the storm that threatened to
+burst at once in overwhelming popular fury?
+
+Not Fox, undaunted though he might be. Like the condottiere that he was,
+he did not heed hard knocks provided the pay were good. But here he was
+defrauded of his deserts, of the promised confidence of the King and his
+Minister. For Newcastle had betrayed him to the last; the magpie cunning
+of that old caitiff paralysed every arm that might have defended him.
+When it came to the point he could not bring himself to part with his
+monopoly of patronage, and of power as he understood power. He was like
+a drowning miser with his treasure on him, who will not part with his
+gold to save his life. So the Duke preferred to sink with all his
+influence rather than take the chance of floating without it. First he
+set the King against Fox. The Duke had tried to appease Leicester House
+by getting the appointment of Groom of the Stole for Bute. The King,
+suspecting Bute's intimacy with the Princess, detested that fascinating
+courtier. So Newcastle, to divert from himself the King's wrath at
+having to make this nomination, told His Majesty that Fox made Bute's
+appointment a condition of his retaining the seals; and then without
+telling Fox that his name had thus been mentioned to the Sovereign,
+informed him that the King was exasperated against him.[330]
+
+Then there arose the eternal question of patronage. Fox had been
+promised by the King himself that on becoming Secretary of State he
+should have the conduct of the House of Commons with all that that
+involved. But Newcastle could not bring himself to fulfil the royal
+pledges or his own. When the list of the Prince of Wales's household was
+published, Fox saw in it the names of eight or ten members of Parliament
+as to whom he had never been even consulted. Newcastle moreover, as Fox
+asserted, broke a solemn promise that Fox's nephew, Lord Digby, should
+be included. A still greater affront was that he told Fox that he
+destined a vacant seat at the Board of Trade for a person whom he was
+not at liberty to mention. More than this, he took occasion to remind
+Fox of a former offer to make way for Pitt if it were for the King's
+service, and Fox again readily agreed. All this took place on September
+30.[331] Such an insulting and accumulated want of confidence between
+the leaders of the two Houses was not to be tolerated, and Fox wrote at
+once to Bubb that things were going ill. The final explosion was caused
+by the exclusion of Digby, which was notified to Fox on October 5. The
+King, said the Duke, refused this nomination peremptorily and bitterly,
+but had said that, if the Duke himself pressed it, he would yield to
+oblige the Duke. On receiving this letter, Fox wrote a furious letter
+to Stone, Newcastle's secretary. The draft of a letter commonly reveals
+much more of the writer's mind than the letter itself, and the draft of
+this is fortunately preserved.[332] 'I do not know,' wrote Fox, 'whether
+I am to imagine from hence that the negotiation with Mr. Pitt is far
+advanced, but I am told it is not begun. In these circumstances, dear
+Sir, I must beg you to stop it. I retract all good-humoured dealing. I
+may be turned out, and I suppose shall. But I will not be used like a
+dog without having given the least provocation (suppose I should say
+with the utmost merit to those who use me so) and be like that dog a
+spaniel. I do not consent that Mr. Pitt should have my place, and
+promise to be in good humour or even on any terms with those who give it
+him.'[333] Fox was in a blind fury, but sensibly expunged all this from
+the letter he sent. To Welbore Ellis, his confidant, he wrote: 'The King
+has carried his displeasure to me beyond common bounds, and I vow to God
+I don't guess the reason. The Duke of Newcastle, instead of growing
+better, has outdone himself, and show'd me the Prince's establishment on
+which eight members of the House of Commons are plac'd whose names he
+never mention'd to me, and he had the assurance to make a merit of
+shewing me the List after it was _fix'd_ with the King. He has been Fool
+enough to ask my consent, and to intend to offer my place to Mr. Pitt
+without (as I believe) trying whether or no he will accept it. This
+makes it necessary for me to take a step in which my view is to get out
+of court and never come into it again.... If you think it worth while to
+get up very early to-morrow morning you may be at Holland House before
+I go to Lady Yarmouth, to desire and humbly advise H.M. to conclude the
+Treaty with Mr. Pitt, promising my assistance in a subaltern employment,
+and shewing the impossibility of my appearing and my determination not
+to appear in the H. of Commons as Secy. of State.'[334] While he was
+writing this, Newcastle was despatching a note giving way as to Digby's
+nomination,[335] with much the same effect as a cup of cold water poured
+with the best intentions on a burning city.
+
+Whether with or without the companionship of Ellis, Fox went straight to
+Lady Yarmouth. She was out. Newcastle had already sent her a note
+enclosing Fox's resignation, and assuring her that Fox was bringing it
+to her for transmission to the King.[336] When Fox found her, later in
+the day, and handed her his paper, she denied any idea of Pitt ever
+having been suggested to the King, but besought him to reconsider his
+determination. 'Monsieur Fox, vous etes trop honnete homme pour quitter
+a present. S'il y avait quatre ou cinq mois avant que le Parlement
+s'assemble; a la fin de la session vous ferez ce que vous voudrez, mais
+a present de jeter tout en confusion! Regardez a la position des
+affaires. Non, je n'excuse pas le Duc de Newcastle; c'est dur, c'est
+penible, mais quand vous aurez pense un peu au Roi, a la patrie, vous
+continuerez cette session,' perhaps the only articulate utterance of
+Lady Yarmouth that we possess.[337] Failing in this, she begged at least
+that Granville might hand the resignation to the King instead of
+herself. Fox agreed to this.[338]
+
+Fox's note to Newcastle was terse and sombre:
+
+'My Lord, I return Your Grace many thanks for the letter which, not
+being at home, I did not receive till late last night, and I am much
+obliged to you for the contents of it.
+
+'The step I am going to take is not only necessary but innocent. It
+shall be accompany'd with no complaint. It shall be follow'd by no
+resentment. I have no resentment. But it is not the less true that my
+situation is impracticable.'
+
+To the King he sent a formal paper of grievance and resignation, which
+has already been printed and need not be repeated here. He took great
+pains over it, as the drafts testify. The substance of it was that he
+had been loyal to Newcastle, but that he had not received support in
+return, and so could not carry on the business of Government in the
+House of Commons as it should be carried on. But he would gladly serve
+the King outside the Cabinet. This meant that he would gladly exchange
+offices with Pitt. At the same time he told Cumberland and wrote to
+Devonshire that if Newcastle had been such a fool as to offer the seals
+to Pitt without knowing whether he would take them, he (Fox), to prevent
+the general confusion that would ensue, would continue for another
+session. No notice was taken of this offer.[339] It does not seem
+certain that it ever reached either Newcastle or the King.
+
+Granville found the King prepared for the resignation, and very angry
+with Fox for deserting him. 'Would you advise me to take Pitt?' he
+asked. 'Well, Sir!' replied Granville, 'you must take somebody.' 'Ah!
+but,' said the monarch, pensively, 'I am sure Pitt will not do my
+business.' The business to which the Sovereign referred was, of course,
+electoral. He considered that he had in various ways shown Fox great
+favour, and that Fox had acted ill in throwing up his office when the
+meeting of Parliament was near at hand.
+
+Newcastle received Fox's resignation at the Treasury. Though he was
+planning to discard Fox for Pitt, he was thunderstruck at finding that
+Fox had anticipated him. He hurried to Court, and found the King in good
+humour except with the resigning Secretary. His Majesty gave Newcastle
+the paper which he had received from Granville, having underlined the
+passage which had mainly offended him: 'for want of support, and think
+it impracticable for me to carry on His Majesty's affairs as they ought
+to be carried on;' and then recited, with the aid of Newcastle as
+prompter, all the favours shown to Fox. But the more urgent and
+practical question was not the ingratitude of Fox, but what was to be
+done now that he had gone. The King, with that shrewd and redeeming
+touch of humour which we constantly discern in him, said that a sensible
+courtier, Lord Hyde, had told him that there were but three things to
+do. The King recited them thus: 'to call in Pitt, to make up with my own
+family, and, my lord, I have forgot the third.' The third probably
+related to Newcastle himself, and may therefore have been difficult of
+repetition to the Duke. But without hesitation the King empowered
+Newcastle to approach Pitt, and to tell him that if he would take
+office he should have a good reception. Pitt was also to be offered the
+seals, but not at first, on the fatuous principle on which all
+Newcastle's negotiations were conducted; to hope against hope that the
+object he coveted could be got for much less than its value.
+
+But then the King asked 'the great question ... which,' says Newcastle,
+'I own I could not answer: what shall we do if Pitt will not come? Fox
+will then be worse.' Then the King, with still increasing acuteness,
+asked, 'Suppose Pitt will not serve with you?' 'Then, Sir, I must go.'
+And so it was to end. But Newcastle would not without a struggle
+renounce the deleterious habit of office. He summoned Hardwicke to town
+for the purpose of approaching Pitt. He hurried to Lady Yarmouth and
+took counsel with her. All agreed that the only resource was Pitt, and
+that Hardwicke alone could sound him. Pitt was at Hayes, but leaving
+immediately for Bath. Time was short, the crisis acute, so Newcastle
+wrote, 'don't boggle at it.'[340]
+
+There was no boggling or hesitation on the part of the Chancellor: he
+hurried to London and saw Pitt on Tuesday, October 19. The interview
+lasted three hours and a half. When it was over, Hardwicke despatched a
+despairing note to Newcastle: 'I am just come from my conference, which
+lasted full 3-1/2 hours. His answer is an absolute final negative
+without any reserve for further deliberation. In short there never was a
+more unsuccessful negotiator.'[341] In a longer letter to his son Lord
+Royston, Hardwicke added but little more. On the main point Pitt was
+inexorable; he would have nothing to do with Newcastle. Hardwicke could
+not move him an inch. He was obdurate on 'men and measures.'[342] But
+'men and measures' only meant Newcastle. Pitt had been repeatedly
+tricked by him; he had seen Fox repeatedly tricked by him when the
+meanest self-interest dictated honesty; he would not fall into the trap
+into which Fox had fallen; to join Newcastle now would be to be a
+willing dupe, and he was determined to govern if he was to govern,
+without this perpetual ambush at his side. Nor would he have any
+dealings with Fox. He thought, truly or untruly, that Fox had betrayed
+him, and he intended to try and do without treachery. He wished to enter
+on power clear of all suspicious connections, and indeed with little but
+the influence of his wife's family. So he resolved to see nothing even
+of Bute before meeting Hardwicke, and he summoned the Grenvilles to
+receive his report immediately after seeing Hardwicke.[343]
+
+Pitt, however, having no access to the King and being anxious to
+communicate with him directly, made overtures elsewhere. On October 21,
+the palace was disturbed by an unwonted agitation. Pages and lackeys
+were seen in sudden perturbation calling to each other that Mr. Pitt had
+arrived to see my Lady Yarmouth. Lady Yarmouth's position was singular
+enough. She had once been the declared mistress of George the Second;
+'My lady Yarmouth the comforter,' wrote a ribald wit.[344] She still
+lived under his roof, when it was her business to keep him amused, if
+possible, during the long dull evenings. But from being a favourite, she
+had developed into an institution. Her apartment, immediately below the
+King's, was little less than an office. There, it was said, peerages or
+bishoprics might sometimes be bought, and some patronage was perhaps
+facilitated or dispensed. On the other hand, Lord Walpole declared at an
+earlier period that she asked for nothing, and that one of her principal
+charms with the King was that she did not importune him for favours. At
+any rate, persons wanting anything did well to write to her. Thither,
+too, a circumstance of much significance, Ministers repaired before or
+after their audience with the King, to anticipate the royal disposition
+or to report the royal utterances. 'I went below stairs,' was the
+phrase. They took close counsel with the lady, she told them her
+impressions of the King's real views, and usually added some shrewd
+observations of her own. Her action seems to have been wholly
+beneficial; she appeased jealousies, conciliated animosities,
+administered common sense, spoke ill of nobody, and, so far as we can
+judge, was eminently good natured in the best sense of that tortured
+epithet. Perhaps her most useful function was that of acting as a
+conciliatory channel for those who had something to say to the King
+which they could not say themselves. Both Fox and Newcastle had at once
+hurried to her, as we have seen, when the crisis took place. And so Pitt
+now found it necessary to pay his first visit to her.
+
+He had heard perhaps that the King had said, 'I am sure Pitt will not do
+my business,' and had come to give soothing insinuations. But he also
+entertained a well-founded doubt as to whether he had fair play with
+the King, and whether he could trust Newcastle and Hardwicke to
+represent him fairly to the Sovereign.[345] So he came to Lady Yarmouth
+as his only means of direct communication with the Closet, and stated
+his real terms, handing her a written list of the men he proposed for
+office, a list which still exists.[346] He would not serve with
+Newcastle, but the King might find in getting rid of Newcastle that
+Hanover had other unsuspected friends.[347] But he also 'sent,' says
+Fox, 'the terms of a madman to the King.' They do not seem very mad to
+us: Ireland for Temple, the Exchequer for Legge, the Paymastership for
+George Grenville, the Irish Secretaryship for James Grenville, the
+Treasury for Devonshire. Townshend was to be Treasurer of the Chambers,
+Dr. Hay a Lord of the Admiralty, and places were to be found for George
+Townshend, Erskine, Lord Pomfret, and Sir Richard Lyttelton. For his
+colleague in the Secretaryship of State he proposed, most marvellous of
+all, Sir Thomas Robinson! The overture, however, irritated the King,
+partly from the demands, partly because it showed that people thought
+that he was influenced by Lady Yarmouth. 'Mr Pitt,' he said,'shall not
+go to that channel any more. She does not meddle and shall not
+meddle.'[348] Nevertheless the hint dropped by Pitt was probably useful
+and fruitful. Pitt himself said afterwards that this interview put an
+end to the indecision of the King, who had remained sullen and
+passive.[349]
+
+The next point to be noted is Pitt's second interview with Hardwicke.
+And though the minute of Hardwicke's conversation with Pitt on October
+19 appears to be lost, we have his record[350] of this second meeting
+between them on October 24, which he read to the King on October 26, and
+which contains the main points at issue.
+
+Hardwicke began by telling Pitt that he had sent for him at the King's
+command; that he had on October 20 faithfully narrated to the King all
+that had passed at the interview of October 19, and that the King had
+summoned him on October 23, the day previous to the present meeting, in
+order to send the following message--
+
+'The King is of opinion that what has been suggested is not for his and
+the public service.'
+
+Pitt thereupon bowed and said that His Majesty did him the greatest
+honour in condescending to return any answer to anything that came from
+him. He then repeated the message word for word, and desired Hardwicke
+to bear in mind that all that he _had suggested_ was by way of
+objection; that he had not suggested anything _affirmative_ as to
+measures of any kind. Hardwicke replied that he had repeated to the King
+exactly what had passed, and recapitulated the five heads under which
+Pitt had summed up the previous conversation.
+
+'1. That it was impossible for him to serve with the Duke of Newcastle.
+
+'2. That he thought enquiries into the past measures absolutely
+necessary, that he thought it his duty to take a considerable share in
+them, and could not lay himself under any obligation to depart from
+that.
+
+'To this I said that the King was not against a fair and impartial
+enquiry.
+
+'3. That he thought his duty to support a Militia Bill, and particularly
+that of the last session.
+
+'I told him that the King and his ministers were not against _a_ Militia
+Bill.
+
+'4. That the affair of the Hanoverian soldier[351] he thought of great
+importance; that what had been done ought to be examined, and, he
+thought, censured.
+
+'5. That if he came into His Majesty's service, he thought it necessary,
+in order to serve him, and to support his affairs, to have such powers
+as belonged to his station, to be in the first concert and concoction of
+measures, and to be at liberty to propose to His Majesty himself
+anything that occurred to him for his service, originally, and without
+going through any other minister.'
+
+Pitt, who was evidently disappointed, acknowledged the accuracy of
+Hardwicke's recital, and desired to know if the message from the King
+was _an answer to the whole_. Hardwicke replied that it was the King's
+answer in the King's own words,[352] and that he could not take on
+himself to explain it; but that he understood it as _an answer to
+everything that had been conveyed by Mr. Pitt to the King_.
+
+To this Pitt rejoined with thanks for the King's condescension that he
+would say to Hardwicke, '_as from one private gentleman to another_,'
+that he would not come into the service, in the present circumstances of
+affairs, upon any other terms for the whole world.
+
+'I then,' continues the Chancellor, 'said that undoubtedly He must judge
+for himself; But I would also say to Him, _as from Lord Hardwicke only
+to Mr. Pitt_--
+
+'That, as He professed great Duty to the King & Zeal for his Service, &
+I dared to say had it; That as He had expressed an Inclination to come
+into his Majesty's service, in order _really_ to assist in the support
+of his Government;
+
+'That as He was a Man of Abilities & knowledge of the World; That, as
+Men of Sense, who wish the End, must naturally wish the means; why would
+He at the same time make _the thing_ impracticable?
+
+'To This He answered that he would say to me _in the same private
+manner_ That he was surprized that it should be thought possible for Him
+to come into an Employment to serve with the D. of Newcastle, under
+whose Administration the things he had so much blamed had happened, &
+against which the Sense of the Nation so strongly appeared; & I think
+he added,--which Administration could not possibly have lasted, if he
+had accepted.
+
+'In answer to That I said some general things in the same sense with
+what I had mentioned on that head on Tuesday last.
+
+'He then rose up & we parted with great personal Civility on both
+sides.'
+
+Meanwhile Newcastle, proscribed by Pitt and spurned by Fox, knew not
+whither to turn. He broke out in a wail against them to the Chancellor,
+the keeper of his conscience even more than of the King's. 'My dearest
+Lord,' he writes (October 20, 1756), 'tho' a consciousness of my own
+innocence and an indifference as to my own situation may, and I hope in
+God will, support me against all the wickedness and ingratitude which I
+meet with, yet your Lordship cannot think that I am unmindful of or
+senseless to the great indignity put upon me by these two gentlemen.'
+Newcastle in the character of a Christian martyr, the prey of heathen
+raging furiously, has something humorous and incongruous about it, were
+the attitude less abject. But in a sentence or two he returns to a more
+familiar character. 'Allow me only to suggest to your Lordship the
+necessity of making the King see that the whole is a concert between Mr.
+Pitt and Mr. Fox. The news and principles upon which they act are the
+same, viz., to make themselves necessary, and masters of the King ...
+that the only thing Mr. Pitt alledges against me is the _conduct of the
+war_.' ... 'Quit before the Birthday I must and will.' He goes on to
+consult the Chancellor as to whether he shall ask any favours for his
+relations.[353]
+
+So the falling Minister in his straits tried to play upon the King's two
+strongest passions, fear of being dominated and fear for Hanover. How
+wise Pitt was to go straight to Lady Yarmouth! But Newcastle had tried
+other measures as well after Fox's resignation. The very day he received
+it he had hurried to his old enemy Granville, now comfortably ensconced
+in the Presidency of the Council, and offered to exchange offices with
+him, giving him his friend Fox as Chancellor of the Exchequer.[354]
+Granville, he remembered, had once been willing to face far greater
+hazards with Pulteney. But Granville was ten years older; he had, to use
+his own expression, put on his nightcap; and he laughed the suppliant
+Duke out of the room. 'I will be hanged a little before I take your
+place,' he said, not perhaps without some relish for his chief's terror
+and distress, 'rather than a little after.' But he added more gravely
+that '_we_ must determine either to give Mr. Fox what he wants, or to
+take in Mr. Pitt; who,' Newcastle adds piteously, 'will not come.'[355]
+Then Newcastle tried Egmont and Halifax. Egmont was willing to take the
+seals with a British peerage. But it was in the House of Commons that
+strength was wanted. No such strength was to be found without Pitt or
+Fox. Dupplin, one of the Paymasters, an able man of business and much in
+Newcastle's confidence, said broadly and truly, 'Fox and Pitt need only
+sit still and laugh, and we must walk out of the House!' And yet the
+House of Commons was almost unanimous in devotion to the Minister. Was
+there ever so strange a situation?
+
+In view of this last fact Hardwicke urged Newcastle to hold on; and
+Lyttelton, to inspirit him, offered to accept any office. This
+well-intentioned proposal failed to animate the Duke, though it was
+gratefully recognised. There was nothing left but the rank and file;
+ardent supporters with nothing to support. The Government was doomed.
+
+Instructions from counties and boroughs were coming up as in the days of
+the impeachment of Walpole. Addresses were presented to the Throne. The
+country was thoroughly roused. And its hopes and gaze were fixed solely
+on Pitt, a private member, untried in affairs, with scarce a follower in
+Parliament. He, at any rate, had not failed, a negative merit indeed,
+but one which he alone of the leading statesmen of the time could claim.
+
+Newcastle was left alone with Hardwicke. Around them that desert had
+begun to form which portends the fall of a Ministry; though their
+faithful Commons still awaited their bidding in silence. And at last the
+old Duke realised that he must resign, but determined that Hardwicke
+should resign too, perhaps to make his own resignation regretted,
+perhaps because he would not leave behind him an asset of such value.
+'My dearest, dearest Lord,' he wrote, 'you know how cruelly I am treated
+and indeed persecuted by all those who now surround the King.'
+Hardwicke's friendship, he said, was now his only comfort, Hardwicke's
+resignation would be his honour, glory, and security. 'But, my dearest
+Lord, it would hurt me extremely if yours should be long delayed.' And
+indeed, Hardwicke, to the regret of all, consented to leave the woolsack
+and follow his friend. Newcastle was shrewd enough to know that under
+the existing conditions in Parliament he could scarcely fail soon to
+return to office. But Hardwicke did not return.
+
+[Sidenote: Oct. 28, 1756.]
+
+When the King was sure that Newcastle was really going, he sent for Fox
+and bade him try if Pitt would join him. 'The Duke of Newcastle whom you
+hate will retire,' said the Sovereign; 'try your hand and see what you
+can do with Pitt.'[356] Next day Fox went to the Prince's levee at
+Saville House, and engaged Pitt in close and animated conversation for
+some twenty minutes. 'Mr. Pitt exceeding grave, Mr. Fox very warm. They
+did not seem to part amicably.'[357] Of this talk a famous fragment
+survives, characteristic of political language in those days. 'Are you
+going to Stowe?' asked Fox. 'I ask because I believe you will have a
+message of consequence from people of consequence.' 'You surprise me,'
+answered Pitt, 'are you to be of the number?' 'I don't know,' said Fox,
+taken aback. 'One likes to say things to a man of sense,' rejoined Pitt,
+'and to men of your great sense, rather than to others. And yet it is
+difficult even to you.' Fox caught his hint at once. 'What! You mean
+that you will not act with me as Minister.' 'I do,' replied Pitt. But a
+moment after he felt that he had been too abrupt, and expressed a
+courteous hope that Fox would take an active part, which his own health
+would not permit him to do.[358]
+
+Was Pitt right in refusing the concurrence of Fox? On that question we
+must allow him to be the best judge, as it is obvious that he did not
+act in heat or passion, and that we cannot know the situation as he
+did. To us now, viewing the poverty of his following and the useful
+abilities of Fox, it would seem that he made a palpable mistake. Fox
+would have taken the second place; as a matter of fact he was content to
+subside into the gilded subordination of the Paymastership. His talents
+as a debater were second only to Pitt's with the possible exception of
+Charles Townshend's; but Townshend was only a shooting star, and did
+not, like Fox, represent the important influence of Cumberland. Fox
+would have fought stolidly for the side he espoused; he had a leaning to
+Pitt, and shared Pitt's detestation of Newcastle, who was the common
+enemy. But Pitt evidently had determined that he must sever himself
+entirely from Newcastle and Newcastle's Minister in the House of
+Commons. On both these rested the taint of corruption and national
+disaster. He must, if he was to keep the confidence of the country, cut
+himself clear from these personalities and their traditions. He could
+estimate the weight of odium which rested upon them, which we cannot. He
+had all the facts of the case before him, which we have not. He knew,
+what we do not know for certain but cannot doubt, that Leicester House
+made the exclusion of Fox or of Cumberland in any form a condition of
+cordial support. He realised the weakness of his own parliamentary
+position, he well understood the value of Fox's co-operation, but he
+also knew the temper of the nation, and so we cannot doubt that he came
+to the right decision.
+
+In any case Fox was not to blame. He offered, and we think cordially
+offered, to co-operate with Pitt, and, indeed, serve under Pitt. Public
+spirit perhaps was not his main motive. He did not, he confessed, feel
+equal to the principal place. He had written in July: 'Though I see how
+fatally things are going, as I don't know how to mend them, I am not
+unreasonable enough to wish for what I could not conduct.'[359] And
+things were much worse now. Moreover, he saw, as others saw, that it was
+only the combination of himself with Pitt that could keep out Newcastle.
+But in public affairs the best and fairest course is not to analyse
+motives. He made the offer, he made it sincerely, and must have the
+credit of it.
+
+But Pitt was inflexible. Those who had made him feel the weight of their
+proscription should feel the weight of his. Fox would have liked to be
+Paymaster. In that subordinate but opulent post he would have been
+content to give support. But Pitt would have none of him. He refused him
+this slight favour on the mysterious ground that it 'would be too like
+Mr. Pelham in 1742.'[360] He would not touch Fox or Newcastle.
+
+The day after Fox's conversation with Pitt at the levee, the King sent
+for Devonshire, and bade him form a Ministry. This Duke was now Lord
+Lieutenant of Ireland and Fox's closest friend. The King probably hoped
+in this way to bring about the union between Pitt and Fox, which almost
+every one desired, save Pitt himself. Pitt himself had nominated
+Devonshire, but without consulting him, in the interviews with
+Hardwicke. Devonshire had written to Fox in approval of the resignation
+as soon as he had heard of it. Five days afterwards he wrote again: 'If
+my friendship or assistance can be of any use you can command me,' and
+went on to say, 'Nothing has hurt Mr. Pitt so much as his having shown
+the world that in order to gratify his resentment and satisfy his
+ambition he did not value the confusion or distress that he might throw
+this country into. This I own has in some degree altered the good
+opinion I had of him.'[361] Devonshire therefore did not seem a
+propitious Prime Minister for Pitt. But dukes counted for much in those
+days. No one can read the history of those times without seeing the vast
+importance attributed to forgotten princes like Marlborough, Bedford,
+and Devonshire.
+
+Fox soon quarrelled with Devonshire. He considered that Devonshire had
+abandoned him. The Duke had been his confidential friend, and had left
+him to help Pitt, and act as Pitt's figurehead. At first he affected to
+approve. But his wrath only smouldered. On one of the eternal questions
+of patronage it broke out. Fox wrote to him a note of real dignity and
+pathos. 'The Duke of Bedford has just now told me that Mr. John Pitt is
+to kiss hands to-morrow for Mr. Phillipson's place;' (promised,
+according to Fox, to his friend Hamilton). 'Consider, my Lord,
+everything that has pass'd, and do not drive me from you. I neither mean
+to do you harm, nor can do you harm if you think. But Your Grace's own
+reflections will not please you when you have done so.'[362] Devonshire
+was a weak man, but he was unconscious of blame and was deeply hurt.
+Political friendships, when paths diverge, are more difficult to
+maintain than men themselves realise at the moment of separation.
+
+[Sidenote: Oct. 31, 1756.]
+
+Devonshire was now sent to Pitt in the country,[363] but found that his
+terms were such as the King could not be brought to accept. He
+positively declined association with Fox in any shape, but deigned to
+apologise to the Duke for having nominated him without previous
+consultation. It was necessary, he said, to place some great lord there
+to whom the Whigs would look up, and his partiality had made him presume
+to suggest his Grace.[364]
+
+Then the King, refusing Pitt's terms, and aware that he had been
+misinformed as to Fox's language about Bute, sent for Fox and offered
+him the government. 'I was never dishonest, rash, or mad enough for half
+an hour to think of undertaking it,' says Fox.[365] And again, 'I am not
+capable of it,' and goes on to give the reason. 'Richelieu, were he
+alive, could not guide the councils of a nation, if (which would be my
+case) he could not from November to April have above two hours in the
+four-and-twenty to think of anything but the House of Commons.'[366] If
+that were Fox's need in 1756, it is difficult to imagine the kind of
+physical and intellectual combination that he would have thought
+adequate to the stress of affairs in the twentieth century. But in spite
+of Fox's private opinion thus expressed, his friend Walpole records that
+he offered at the worst to take the Treasury and go to the Tower if it
+would save his Sovereign from having 'his head shaved.' 'Ah!' replied
+the King with his usual shrewdness, 'if you go to the Tower I shall not
+be long behind you.'[367]
+
+Then the distracted monarch, at the instigation of Fox, tried the fatal
+expedient of an Assembly of Notables, and summoned all the leading
+nobles and commoners who were at hand to meet at Devonshire House.[368]
+But this meeting never took place, for Devonshire postponed or got rid
+of it. It was to have recommended that Devonshire should have the
+Treasury, Fox the Exchequer, and Legge be content with a peerage. Pitt
+himself was to have the seals, with _carte blanche_ for his other
+friends and dependents. Temple was to be First Lord of the
+Admiralty.[369]
+
+Fox declares that Devonshire put an end to this plan by positively
+refusing the Treasury.[370] Holdernesse sent word to Newcastle that _les
+Renardins_ (the followers of Fox) were less sanguine.[371] And indeed,
+on November 4, the day after that fixed for the assembly, Devonshire
+went in to the King and came out from his audience having accepted the
+Treasury. Bubb says that he stipulated for Fox as Chancellor of the
+Exchequer.[372] This is at least doubtful. 'This question,' Fox
+afterwards wrote, 'I beg may be asked: whether at the time his Grace did
+take it with Legge I was not pressing him strongly to another thing,
+viz., to offer to take it with me. I pressed this even to ill-humour at
+his own house with Grenville at night. He refused absolutely, and the
+next morning what he would not take with me he took with Legge.'[373]
+This would seem conclusive, were it not that Bubb evidently had his
+information from Fox at the time; but politicians are prone to illusions
+on the subject of office. In any case, Devonshire left the Closet First
+Lord of the Treasury with Legge as Chancellor of the Exchequer; the man
+with whom two days before he had refused under any circumstances to
+serve,[374] and whom the King had absolutely refused to take. Fox and
+Bedford were in the anteroom as he came out, and were thunderstruck.
+Bedford broke into passionate expostulation; Fox scented an intrigue.
+However, the deed was done.[375]
+
+Fox says that Devonshire offered him, and he refused, the Pay
+Office.[376] This is difficult to believe, and does not accord with his
+other statements that he had offered to serve in a subordinate capacity
+and been refused. Moreover, it was the office for which he always
+hankered, with its vast profits and safe obscurity, as compared with the
+Spartan frugality and dangerous prominence of the Secretaryship of
+State.[377]
+
+As to the intrigue, Fox's instinct did not deceive him. The fact was
+that Horace Walpole, having heard of the scheme of the Notables, saw at
+once that it must put an end to the new arrangement, as it was one that
+Pitt could not accept. Walpole feared no doubt that, in case of failure,
+Newcastle, the object of his special detestation, might return to
+office. So he sent his cousin Conway to alarm the Duke of Devonshire,
+who consequently suppressed the meeting, and who went himself, as we
+have seen, to the King to accept office.[378] Horace might well pique
+himself on his powers of intrigue or duplicity, for a week before he had
+spontaneously written to Fox to say that he heard that the King and Lady
+Yarmouth were persuaded that Fox would not take the Treasury, but he
+hoped they were wrong.[379]
+
+The new First Lord of the Treasury may have resisted having Legge as his
+Chancellor of the Exchequer, but was easily overborne. What is more
+difficult to understand is the King's nominating Legge, whom he
+detested. It was a rude shock for Fox, who had planned the meeting of
+Notables and framed the scheme it was to advise. Henceforth he
+controlled himself no more, and became the sleepless enemy of the new
+administration, which can be no matter of surprise. Pitt had made his
+total exclusion as absolute a condition as that of Newcastle, and Fox
+after his warm offers of co-operation and assistance could not but be
+bitterly mortified. He believed, perhaps justly, that the proscription
+laid on him proceeded from Leicester House.[380] Henceforth during the
+short life of the new government he plotted and planned against it,
+inspiring 'The Test,' a new paper under an old designation, with
+venomous articles, and ready to form alternative administrations at a
+moment's notice.[381]
+
+One great difficulty, the King's repugnance to Legge, had been
+surmounted one does not know how; but there were still minor obstacles.
+The whole arrangement was odious to the Sovereign: he could not bear
+even to turn the first page of Devonshire's appointments. Pitt, who was
+to succeed Newcastle in the Southern department, wished to exchange this
+for the Northern. The King objected, for the Northern department
+included Hanover, and Pitt eventually yielded. The new Secretary, as we
+have seen, wished for Sir Thomas Robinson, his old butt, as a colleague,
+on the singular ground that he knew nothing of the office he was
+undertaking, and required Sir Thomas's guidance.[382] Pitt had compared
+Robinson to a jack-boot; but personal opinions vary according to points
+of view; Sir Thomas might be contemptible as a leader, but useful as a
+dry-nurse. Holdernesse however remained. Then over every petty office,
+coffererships, masterships of the Wardrobe, keeperships of the jewels,
+treasurerships of the Household, there was snarling and struggling as of
+dogs over bones. Bedford was secured as Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland,
+mainly, it would appear, through the agency of Fox, who wished to secure
+as many ministerial posts as possible for his friends, and who was in
+hopes that the Duke would traverse Pitt. Bedford cared little for
+office; perhaps not much for Fox. His political passions were inspired
+by his personal hatreds, of Newcastle now, as later of Pitt.[383] But
+Fox, aided by the Duchess's ambition, prevailed. Amid these changes one
+provokes a smile; Bubb was as usual dismissed.
+
+But the greatest and most grotesque disability lay with Pitt himself.
+After all his struggles to be in the position of forming a Ministry, he
+had no Ministry to produce. He could not fill a fraction of the offices.
+His personal followers, all told, hardly exceeded a dozen. When he had
+provided for the Grenvilles, Potter, and Legge, he had scarcely any one
+to name. So this Ministry was doomed from the beginning. Pamphleteers
+could not fail to observe Pitt's predicament. One lampoon, in the form
+of a royal degree, 'Given at our imperial seat at Hayes,' and
+countersigned 'John Thistle,' (a premature allusion to Bute), sets
+forth: 'We will that you give lucrative employments to all Our Brethren,
+uncles, cousins, relations and namesakes.'[384] Outside this category
+Pitt's subordinates were mostly the friends of Newcastle or Fox, and so
+his secret enemies, or waiters upon Providence who were not sufficiently
+sure of his stability to call themselves his friends. Holdernesse,
+Pitt's colleague in the Secretaryship of State, and Barrington,
+Secretary for War, kept Newcastle fully informed of all that went on in
+the administration and of all that they knew. Holdernesse also sent
+abstracts of the despatches that came from abroad.[385] So that Pitt was
+betrayed from the first. Ministries formed by one man seldom last long
+under another. But Ministries which pass between two declared enemies
+have not from the beginning any chance of life. This one was stillborn.
+
+Pitt himself lay ill with the gout at Hayes; so he had to leave his
+affairs to be managed by a little clique in London, of which Temple of
+course was the chief, and which was in close communion with Leicester
+House. For every day Leicester House waxed and Kensington Palace waned
+in importance, as the King advanced in years. Nothing in the history of
+those days is more difficult to trace and yet nothing is more
+significant than this invisible Court of the Heir-Apparent, which was
+felt rather than seen, but towards which courtiers kept one anxious eye
+during their dutiful attendance on the King. All felt that the centre of
+power was shifting thither, and the uneasiness of those who wished to be
+well with both Courts was manifest and irrepressible. The constant
+anxiety of Fox to be Paymaster was largely due to his desire to be
+sheltered from the hatred of the young Court in the reign that seemed
+imminent. All this could not but increase the jealousy and irritability
+of the old Sovereign, at a time when he was undergoing a new Ministry
+most repulsive to him. Distasteful as it was in almost every respect,
+what was perhaps most abhorrent was the consciousness that it was
+imposed upon him by his daughter-in-law and her favourite, that it
+rested on their support, and was indeed the Ministry of George III.
+rather than of George II.
+
+Bute was the object of the King's chief detestation, a righteous
+aversion if his suspicions were well founded; and Bute was now
+undisguisedly prominent in the negotiations for the new Government. The
+King treated Temple and his friends so ill at the levee, that the
+injured nobleman went to Devonshire to say that he feared he could not
+proceed a step further in the negotiations. On this mission he was
+accompanied by Bute, for the purpose, apparently, of making the world
+realise that Leicester House and all its influence were behind Pitt.
+And Bute availed himself of this opportunity to make use of 'expressions
+so transcendently obliging to us,' writes Temple, 'and so decisive of
+the determined purposes of Leicester House towards us in the present or
+any future day, that your lively imagination cannot suggest to you a
+wish beyond them.' By Temple, too, he sent word to Pitt that he could
+not advise, that he left all to Pitt, determined to support and approve
+whatever Pitt decided.[386] This was the one element of strength to the
+new Government, besides Pitt himself. And yet, so elusive was this
+mysterious Court, that in September the town had been ringing with the
+coolness of Pitt's reception at Leicester House, more especially by
+Bute.[387] The fact is that there had evidently been a coldness, but
+that the fall of Newcastle had brought the two together again.[388]
+
+[Sidenote: Dec. 4, 1756.]
+
+After Devonshire had kissed hands on November 4 there were however few
+difficulties. Temple's cold reception at Court, on the very day of
+Newcastle's resignation, which had made him declare with his usual
+arrogance to Devonshire that all was over, was only a passing incident,
+due to the fact that the King could not abide the very sight of Temple.
+Pitt no doubt counselled moderation from Hayes, not desiring to lose the
+fruit of so many years for a slight to his relative. And so, a week
+after Temple's fiery declaration to Devonshire, the new Board of
+Admiralty was gazetted with Temple at its head. Three days before, the
+Board of Treasury had been declared with Devonshire and Legge as its
+chiefs. One Grenville was included in this. For George Grenville and
+Potter treasurerships and paymasterships were found. There were indeed
+but few traces of Pitt's small connection in the Government. He, still
+an invalid, received his seals a little later. He had also to change his
+seat. He could not condescend to be re-elected for Newcastle's borough
+of Aldborough; indeed, he had held it too long. Nor indeed would
+Newcastle nominate him.[389] So now he accepted an olive branch from
+Lyttelton, who shared the control of Okehampton with the Duke of
+Bedford, and generously named his old friend and recent foe.[390] It may
+have been that Pitt was desirous of cutting the last link with Newcastle
+before entering upon office, and had deferred receiving the seals till
+he was independent. Be that as it may, he was only to hold them four
+months. During most of that time he was ill, during all of it he was
+surrounded by conspiracies, and he was soon intrigued out of office,
+though he never actually vacated it. But his short term had taught him
+one priceless lesson; that genius and public spirit were not enough,
+that a practical and even sordid leaven was required, and that if he
+would not do the necessary work of political adjustment himself, he must
+find somebody to do it for him, or give up all idea of being a powerful
+Minister.
+
+It has been thought well to narrate at length the circumstances of the
+final breakdown of the King's veto on Pitt's accession to office and the
+struggle which preceded it; partly because some of the documents are
+new, partly because it is a curious picture of character and intrigue,
+partly because it is the fifth and culminating act of this long drama.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+
+But with this Government we have nothing to do. We have reached our
+limits. The youth of Pitt has passed, his apprenticeship is over, he has
+now his foot in high office, he is soon to be supreme. The weary period
+of proscription and conflict has come to an end, he is henceforth to
+command where he has obeyed, and he is to raise his country to a
+singular height of glory and power. That splendid period is beyond the
+scope of this book, which only records the ascent and the toil; the
+lustre of achievement and reward require a separate chronicle. The next
+scenes require a broader canvas and brighter colours.
+
+But before we leave him let us try and realise his appearance. When we
+read about any one we naturally wish to know what manner of man he was
+in the flesh. In this case we seem but scantily provided with portraits.
+We have glanced at the one by Hoare, to the accuracy of which Pitt
+himself bears emphatic testimony. Of this one Hoare painted several
+replicas, one of the worst of which, very bilious in colouring, is in
+the National Portrait Gallery. There is another at Orwell which seems to
+have more force in it; it could not have less. The original represents a
+comely, graceful and elegant being without a symptom of anything but
+comeliness, grace and elegance, and might be the portrait of any man of
+fashion of the time. Great men have sometimes piqued themselves on being
+dandies, and it may have been this air which recommended the picture to
+its subject. This portrait, of which the large engraving, containing
+only the head, is infinitely better than the original, duly arrived at
+Stowe. Thence at the dispersal of that great collection it passed to
+Drayton, having been purchased by Sir Robert Peel, and has lately found
+a final home at Pittsburg.
+
+There is another portrait by Hoare, at full length, in the coronation
+robes which Pitt never can have worn, which was painted for the
+Corporation of Bath ten years after that for Temple. It leaves no
+special impression. There was a portrait by Reynolds at Belvoir. But
+that, alas! disappeared with so much else in the great fire which
+ravaged that noble structure. Towards the end of his life (in 1772) he
+was painted in peer's robes by Brompton. The engraving of this is at
+full length, but the picture itself is a kitcat, so that it was probably
+cut down. This picture is at Chevening, and Lord Sidmouth, if we are not
+mistaken, owns a replica or another version of this picture. Pitt's
+grand-daughter, Lady Hester Stanhope, who was brought up with it, says
+that it is the best portrait of him. As she was only two years old when
+he died, her testimony, though given with confidence, has no personal
+value; but she had relations who may have told her. She piqued herself
+on her resemblance to him. But no value is to be attached to the
+utterances of this vain and crazy woman, unless one can believe, which
+is difficult, that she repeated faithfully what more trustworthy people
+had told her. However, this portrait may well be the best, where the
+other is so poor. It is in itself impressive, representing a solemn,
+noble, melancholy figure, such as Chatham must have been in his last
+cheerless decade.
+
+There are more busts. There is one of him in youth, perhaps at
+five-and-twenty, handsome, bright, alert, with a smile that is almost
+saucy. The original of this was, it is believed, also at Stowe; also,
+perhaps, purchased by Sir Robert Peel. There is more than one by Wilton.
+One, dated 1759, grim and masterful, with a touch of scorn, the man
+himself at his time of power. There are others of him in old age, with
+less expression, ponderous and saturnine; they are posthumous, and dated
+1781. One of these is at Dropmore, another at Belvoir, another at
+Lowther.
+
+There are probably other portraits or busts, but these are all that are
+known to the present writer.
+
+His appearance at his best must have been extremely attractive. Tall and
+slender, 'his figure genteel and commanding,' he had cultivated all the
+arts of grace, gesture and dramatic action. 'Graceful in motion,' says
+his reluctant nephew, 'his eye and countenance would have conveyed his
+feelings to the deaf.'[391] All authorities dwell on the magic of his
+eye. His eyes, said his grand-daughter, presumably on family tradition,
+were grey, but by candlelight seemed black from the intensity of their
+expression. When he was angry or earnest no one could look him in the
+face. No one indeed seems to have been able to abide the terrors of his
+glance.
+
+Of his manners and conversation in private life we know singularly
+little. Chesterfield gives us perhaps the best glimpse. 'He had manners
+and address; but one might discern through them too great a
+consciousness of his own superior talents. He was a most agreeable and
+lively companion in social life, and had such a versatility of wit that
+he could adapt it to all sorts of conversation.' Of his early powers of
+fascination we have an authentic instance. He was seen walking with the
+Prince of Wales in the gardens at Stowe, and Cobham, watching them with
+anxiety, expressed some apprehension of Pitt's persuading the Prince to
+adopt some measures of which Cobham disapproved. A Mr. Belson said that
+the interview could not be long. 'You don't know Mr. Pitt's power of
+insinuation,' said Cobham. 'In a very short quarter of an hour he can
+persuade anyone of anything.'
+
+Butler, 'the Reminiscent,' who had this anecdote from Belson himself,
+goes on to say that 'as a companion in festive moments, Mr. Pitt was
+enchanting.' He also quotes Wilkes, who was a good judge of social
+qualifications. 'Mr. Pitt, by the most manly sense and the fine sallies
+of a warm and sportive imagination, can charm the whole day, and, as the
+Greek said, his entertainments please even the day after they are
+given.' But, after all, these must have been rare occasions, as Pitt
+does not seem to have seen much of society, for his health kept him a
+recluse; and as years went on he seems to have found it both irksome and
+impolitic to see much of mankind. We fancy that he was a man, like his
+son, of small and intimate companies; partly from a haughty aloofness,
+partly because he could not partake of the pleasures of the table.
+
+'As a private man,' says Lord Camelford, 'he had especially in his youth
+every talent to please when he thought it worth while to exert his
+talents, which was always for a purpose, for he was never natural. His
+good breeding never deserted him unless when his insolence intended to
+offend. He was, however, soon spoilt by flattery, which gave him the
+humours of a child. He was selfish even to trifles in his own family and
+amongst his intimates to the forgetting the preferences due to the other
+sex, of which I have heard many ridiculous instances; but this was much
+owing to a state of health which made him fretful, at the same time that
+it called his attention to his own person. When I first saw him he was
+intemperate towards his servants full as much as my own father, but it
+is to his honour that when he owed a better example to his children he
+got the better of that habit. His first and only friendships were with
+Lord Lyttelton and his sister Ann.' In a later passage he adds: 'He
+lived and died without a friend.'
+
+Camelford, it will be observed, speaks with confidence about Pitt's
+youth, of which he can have known nothing except from tradition, and
+Pitt's family traditions were not likely to err on the side of
+benignity. What he says about early friendships is obviously inaccurate;
+he is quoting Pitt's impulsive note of Oct. 24, 1734.[392] The
+Grenvilles, the other Lytteltons, and Gilbert West at once occur to one
+as friends to whom Pitt in youth was tenderly attached. We may indeed
+take it for granted that this curious piece refers to Pitt's middle
+life, which Camelford knew personally; but it is too interesting to be
+omitted here.
+
+His great and singular power lay in his eloquence, and yet even there we
+are left largely to the recollection and testimony of his
+contemporaries, for there was in those days no reporting as we
+understand it, and therefore no reports. There are, of course,
+professed reports, but to these little credence can be attached. Dr.
+Johnson and a Scottish clergyman named Gordon wrote a great number of
+them, based on very inadequate materials, if any materials at all. Men
+carried away some noble outburst or some striking metaphor tingling in
+their ears, and repeated it. Others would be able to recall the line of
+argument, if indeed there was an argument to follow. But the result is
+scarcely authentic. Pitt the younger must have known, and he declared
+that no specimens of his father's eloquence remained. Butler says that
+the person to whom he made this remark (no doubt Butler himself) begged
+him to read slowly his father's speeches on the Stamp Act, and endeavour
+as he did so to recall the figure, look and voice with which his father
+would have delivered them. Pitt did so, and admitted the probable effect
+of the speech thus delivered. But it is to be observed that he did not
+admit the accuracy. Almon, who knew something of this matter, says that
+none of the reports of Pitt's speeches before 1760 can be depended upon.
+In 1766 Almon began reporting the debates himself, and so would claim
+greater exactness, and may easily have attained it.
+
+One is in fact thrown back on the impressions and the descriptions of
+those who heard him. Horace Walpole, who at this time admired Pitt as
+much as he could admire anybody, gives us striking glimpses, some of
+which we have already quoted; one of which, that of the answer to Hume
+Campbell, is exquisite in felicity of phrase. Chesterfield says that
+Pitt's 'eloquence was of every kind, and he excelled in the
+argumentative as well as in the declamatory way. But his invectives were
+terrible, and uttered with such energy of diction, and stern dignity of
+action and countenance that he intimidated those who were the most
+willing and the best able to encounter him. Their arms fell out of their
+hands, and they sank under the ascendant which his genius gained over
+theirs.' In a note Chesterfield tells us that the last phrases allude to
+Murray and Hume Campbell. 'Mr. Pitt,' he says elsewhere, 'carried with
+him unpremeditated the strength of thunder and the splendour of
+lightning.' These extracts convey the impression made by Pitt on one of
+the acutest judges of the time, himself an orator of eminence, and no
+friend to his subject.
+
+Bishop Newton gladly avails himself of the same familiar metaphor: 'What
+was said of the famous orator Pericles, that he lightened, thundered,
+and confounded Greece, was in some measure applicable to him.' 'He had,'
+says the Bishop, 'extraordinary powers, quick conceptions, ready
+elocution, great command of language, a melodious voice, a piercing eye,
+a speaking countenance, and was as great an actor as an orator. During
+the time of his successful administration he had the most absolute and
+uncontrolled sway that perhaps any member ever had in the House of
+Commons. With all these excellences he was not without his defects. His
+language was sometimes too figurative and pompous, his speeches were
+seldom well connected, often desultory and rambling from one thing to
+another, so that though you were struck here and there with noble
+sentiments and happy expressions, yet you could not well remember nor
+give a clear account of the whole together. With affected modesty he was
+apt to be rather too confident and overbearing in debate, sometimes
+descended to personal invectives, and would first commend that he might
+afterwards more effectually abuse, would ever have the last word, and
+right or wrong still preserved (in his own phrase) an unembarrassed
+countenance. He spoke more to your passions than to your reason, more to
+those below the bar and above the throne than to the House itself; and,
+when that kind of audience was excluded, he sunk and lost much of his
+weight and authority.'[393]
+
+Grattan's testimony, as that of a famous orator, cannot here be passed,
+though it refers to a later period. 'He was a man of great genius, great
+flight of mind. His imagination was astonishing.... He was very great
+and very odd. He spoke in a style of conversation, not however what I
+expected. It was not a speech, for he never came with a prepared
+harangue. His style was not regular oratory, like Cicero or Demosthenes,
+but it was very fine and very elevated, and above the ordinary subjects
+of discourse.... His gesture was always graceful. He was an incomparable
+actor. Had it not been so he would have appeared ridiculous.... His
+tones were remarkably pleasing. I recollect his pronouncing one word
+"effete" in a soft charming accent. His son could not have pronounced it
+better.... His manner was dramatic. In this it was said that he was too
+much the mountebank; but if so it was a great mountebank. Perhaps he was
+not so good a debater as his son, but he was a much better orator, a
+better scholar, and a far greater mind. Great subjects, great empires,
+great characters, effulgent ideas and classical illustrations formed the
+material of his speeches.' Grattan gives examples, and even notes of one
+of his speeches, but they are all outside our period.[394]
+
+These notes on Pitt's oratory cannot well be omitted, though they are
+almost too familiar to quote. But there is one, never yet published,
+which is written by an intimate but merciless critic. Lord Camelford was
+only nineteen at the time when our narrative terminates, but he must
+already and for some years afterwards have been steeped in his uncle's
+eloquence, so that his description is of peculiar interest.
+
+'In Parliament he never spoke but to the instant, regardless of whatever
+contradictions he might afterwards be reduced to, which he carried off
+with an effrontery without example. His eloquence was supported by every
+advantage that could unite in a perfect actor. Graceful in motion, his
+eye and countenance would have conveyed his feelings to the deaf. His
+voice was clear and melodious, and capable of every variety of
+inflection and modulation. His wit was elegant, his imagination
+inexhaustible, his sensibility exquisite, and his diction flowed like a
+torrent, impure often, but always varied and abundant. There was a style
+of conscious superiority, a tone, a gesture of manner, which was quite
+peculiar to him--everything shrunk before it; and even facts, truth and
+argument were overawed and vanquished by it. On the other hand, his
+matter was never ranged, it had no method. He deviated into a thousand
+digressions, often reverted back to the same ground, and seemed
+sometimes like the lion to lash himself with his own tail to rouse his
+courage, which flashed in periods and surprised and astonished, rather
+than convinced by the steady light of reason. He was the very contrast
+of Lord Mansfield, his competitor in eloquence, who never appealed but
+to the conviction of the understanding, with an arrangement so precise
+that every sentence was only the preparation for the force that the next
+was to obtain, and scarce a word could be taken away without throwing
+the whole argument into disorder; the other bore his hearers away by
+rapid flights into a region that looked down upon argument, and opposed
+the transport of feeling to conviction.'
+
+This appears to be a description as accurate as it is vivid, and perhaps
+none gives the personality and manner of Pitt with more effect. The
+style of conscious superiority, peculiar to him, before which everything
+shrank; the way in which the orator worked himself into wrath, like a
+lion lashing himself with his own tail; the eye and countenance which
+would have conveyed his meaning to the deaf; these are touches which we
+feel to be accurate, and which seem to explain much of the effect of
+Pitt's oratory. Let us here note that Cradock gives a curious account of
+an oratorical failure of Pitt's in later life and of his consequent
+irritation, eminently comforting to humbler speakers.[395]
+
+We value sketches like these much more than any professed reports of
+Pitt's speeches, which cannot be accurate reproductions. But, even if
+they were, they would, we are told, be but pale shadows of the reality,
+for so much depended on the soul and grace with which they were uttered;
+for the majesty of his presence, his manly figure, his exquisite voice,
+his consummate acting, his harmonious action, and above all the
+lightning of his eyes inspired reluctant awe before he uttered a word.
+We can fancy him rising in the House, which subsides at once into
+silence and eager attention. On not a few faces there will be
+uneasiness and alarm; on the ministerial bench some agitation, for it is
+there probably that the thunderbolts may fall. His opening is solemn and
+impressive. Then he warms to his subject. He states his argument. He
+recalls matters of history and his own personal recollections. Then with
+an insinuating wave of his arm his voice changes, and he is found to be
+drowning some hapless wight with ridicule. Then he seems to ramble a
+little, he is marking time and collecting himself for what is coming.
+Suddenly the rich notes swell into the fullness of a great organ, and
+the audience find themselves borne into the heights of a sublime burst
+of eloquence. Then he sinks again into a whisper full of menace which
+carries some cruel sarcasm to some quivering heart. Then he is found
+playing about his subject, pelting snowballs as he proceeds. If the
+speech is proceeding to his satisfaction it will last an hour or perhaps
+two. Its length will perhaps not improve it, but no one can stir. There
+may be ineffective, tedious, obscure passages, but no one knows what may
+be coming, these vapours often precede a glowing sunburst. So all
+through the speech men sit as though paralysed, though many are heated
+with wine. He will not finish without some lofty declamation which may
+be the culminating splendour of the effort. If any effective replies are
+made, he will reply again and again, heedless of order, vehement,
+truculent, perhaps intemperate. And as he sits down perhaps with little
+applause, the tension of nerves, almost agonising in its duration and
+concentration, snaps like a harpstring; the buzz of animated
+conversation breaks forth with an ecstasy of relief. The audience
+disperses still under the spell. As it wears off, hostile critics begin
+to declare that it is all acting; the fellow acts better than Garrick.
+Garrick, indeed, himself declared that had Pitt originally preferred the
+stage of Drury Lane for that of St. Stephen's, he would almost have
+annihilated the stage by distancing all competition.[396] He was,
+without doubt, an incomparable actor, for no less a power would have
+enabled him to engage in some of his most famous flights with effect, or
+without reaction or ridicule. His action, his inflections, his vehemence
+are no doubt at least as good as Garrick's. But these are merely the
+accessories which to the shallow or cynical observer seem to be the
+heart or the whole of the matter. One might as well say that it is the
+varnish that makes the picture, or the goblet that makes the vintage.
+The orator is probably unconscious or at most half-conscious of what
+seems dramatic, he is moved by an irresistible blast of passion which
+carries him as well as his audience away. The passion may have been
+stirred beforehand, but at the moment of outpouring it is genuine
+enough. Pitt no doubt had trained himself to be graceful in animation,
+had studied and enhanced the beauties of his voice, so that when excited
+his tones were always musical, and his action harmonious. He may in
+earlier days have rehearsed speeches in private, though he probably
+delivered something different when the time came. But to imagine that
+when he spoke he was acting a prepared speech is to ignore the main
+features of his oratory, the force coming from an internal impulse which
+was for the moment irresistible. It should be remembered too, that in
+one sense he was always acting in the common business of life; when he
+chipped an egg, or talked to his gardener, or mounted his horse, he was
+acting. He might not, indeed, study his gesture at the moment, but that
+was because he had been studying gestures half his life. He had
+appropriated the dramatic way of doing things till it had become a
+second nature to him; thus, what would have been acting in others was
+natural to him. And indeed, he had so adjusted and prepared and schooled
+himself, that all his emotions were effectually concealed. The fierce
+character of the man would sometimes be irrepressible, but even then it
+would be vented with an awful grace. And so when he was said to be
+acting in the House he was natural, for acting had become a second
+nature to him. When this is so, acting has ceased to be acting. Mrs.
+Siddons would give her orders at dinner in the awful tones of Lady
+Macbeth. This was not acting but nature, trained but unconscious nature.
+So it was with Pitt. He would not laugh, because it was undignified to
+laugh. If he had a book or a play to read aloud and came to a comic
+part, he passed it to another to read and resumed the volume when the
+humorous part was over, lest, we may presume, he should smile or become
+incidentally ridiculous. His countenance was, so to speak, enamelled
+with such anxious care, that a heedless laugh might crack the elaborate
+demeanour. And so he lived in blank verse, and conducted himself in the
+heroic metre. We should surmise, though not with certainty, that some of
+his more famous flights, such as the comparison of the Rhone and the
+Saone, were prepared to some extent, but that there was nothing
+written. This is only guesswork, for of his method of preparation we
+know nothing. But his diction was habitually perfect. To improve it he
+had twice read through Bailey's Dictionary, and had plodded through
+masses of sermons, particularly those of Barrow, Abernethy, and 'the
+late Mr. Mudge of Plymouth.'[397] 'Every word he makes use of,' said
+Chesterfield as early as 1751, 'is the very best, and the most
+expressive that can be used in that place.' That was the result of
+constant and familiar effort. Like Bolingbroke he had trained himself to
+spare no pains in ordinary conversation to attain accuracy of
+expression, so as to be sure of himself in public. 'It would not be
+believed how much trouble he took to compose the most trifling note.' He
+told Shelburne that a phrase he had used in one of his speeches could
+not be taken exception to, as he had tried it on paper three times
+before employing it in public. Assiduous study of words, constant
+exercise in choice language, so that it was habitual to him even in
+conversation, and could not be other than elegant even in unpremeditated
+speech, this combined with poetical imagination, passion, a mordant wit
+and great dramatic skill, would probably seem to be the secrets of
+Chatham's oratorical supremacy. And yet it is safe to predict that a
+clever fellow who had mastered all this would produce but a pale
+reflection of the original. It is not merely the thing that is said, but
+the man who says it which counts, the character which breathes through
+the sentences. Mirabeau would, as we know, take a manuscript speech
+produced by a laborious friend, in itself a dull thing, and read it from
+the tribune with such energy of inspiration that it would carry the
+Assembly by storm. This is the more marvellous when we remember that a
+man who reads the best possible speech with the most effective elocution
+is heavily handicapped. And so it may safely be assumed that imitation
+of Pitt would be doomed to disastrous failure. The secret of oratory
+like this evades the most anxious student: its effect both on the
+immediate audience and on posterity seems beyond definition or adequate
+explanation.
+
+Some orators impress their audience, some their readers, a very few
+posterity as well. The orators who impress their audience rarely impress
+their readers, and those who impress their readers are usually less
+successful with their audience. Few indeed are those who reach posterity
+or indeed survive a year. Pitt, if any one indeed can be said to have
+read his speeches, combined all three forms of supremacy. More than
+this, his utterances with a sort of wireless telegraphy seemed to thrill
+the nation which neither heard nor read them. In the century which
+followed Chatham's death there was an illustrious succession of orators
+and debaters. And yet none of these eminent men with all their
+accurately reported speeches have left so deep an impress of eloquence
+as the elder Pitt, who was not reported at all. We cannot doubt that it
+is better for his fame that he was unreported. Sheridan never did
+anything wiser than when in his need he refused the most splendid offers
+to revise his Begum speech for publication. Pitt's speeches would have
+lost half their force without the splendour of delivery. His unreported
+eloquence has become matter of faith, and so it is likely to remain.
+
+Mr. Lecky, from whom it is difficult to differ, thinks that his
+speeches were deficient in pathos and wit. As to this last, the
+testimony of his contemporaries is emphatic the other way, and they are
+loud in extolling Pitt's piercing wit. We have seen how Walpole and
+Murray concur in extolling his powers of ridicule. 'He can turn anything
+into ridicule,' Murray had said. 'He can tickle to death with a
+feather,' was Walpole's description. Nor should we imagine he was
+defective in pathos; not perhaps in youth, for youth is not the season
+of pathos, but certainly in later years. The speeches, for example,
+delivered in the garb of an invalid, abounded we should surmise in
+pathos, to which the costume was preliminary and accessory. But pathos,
+which has something of humility in its tenderness, was, it must be
+admitted, alien to the haughty superiority which Pitt asserted and
+assumed.
+
+One word more of fascinating conjecture. Would he have been a great
+popular orator at mass meetings and the like? We cannot imagine Pitt a
+platform speaker, yet we can scarcely imagine a better. His graceful
+appearance, his terrible eye, the winning and majestic modulations of
+his voice, his spontaneity, his magnetic power, his wealth of ridicule,
+his poignant personalities, his dramatic force, his variety and
+unexpectedness constituted the most formidable equipment for platform
+oratory ever possessed by mortal man. And yet we cannot regret that he
+never was tried.
+
+Pitt's life marks itself out with singular distinctness into definite
+periods. From 1708 to 1734 is the period of obscure youth, on which this
+volume should throw some light. From 1734 to 1745 is the period of
+reckless and irresponsible opposition, when he is trying the temper of
+his weapons. From 1745 to 1754 he remains in the shadow of subordinate
+office. From 1754 to 1756, though still partly in office, he emerges as
+an independent figure of extraordinary and irresistible force. From 1756
+to 1761 is the period of power, four years of which are unrivalled in
+the annals of Great Britain. From 1761 to 1770 is the period of
+detachment, or attempted detachment, from party. It includes some tenure
+of office, much obscurity and illness, some actual insanity. And from
+1770 till his death in 1778 he appears sometimes to be attempting to
+make his peace with the party system, having found it impracticable to
+stand alone; sometimes he seems to be retiring once more into his cell.
+
+Few careers can be marked out so clearly; few have such a glamour. But
+the glamour and the glory are yet to come; they lie beyond this book.
+Already indeed there are confidence and hope, confidence in his vigour,
+his honesty, and his uprightness; but this is due rather to others than
+to himself. Every one else has failed, this may be the man of destiny.
+
+And yet up to this time the career of Pitt has been, eloquence apart,
+not unlike that of other ambitious and not very scrupulous politicians.
+He begins by attacking Sir Robert Walpole. Why? He has no particular
+objection to Sir Robert Walpole; in after years he acknowledges that he
+was a great statesman. It was partly a freak of youth. Who is the
+biggest man to attack, the man by combating whom one can acquire the
+most honour and reputation? Obviously Walpole. So tilt at him. He is
+asked to an important house; for the first time he finds himself in the
+great world. He is caressed, perhaps flattered; for he has a school
+renown, and is a lad to be secured. He is with his Eton friends, and
+they think all the world of Cobham, his wisdom, his courage, his
+magnificence; they all in a measure depend on him. Thus he is allured
+into the charmed circle, and they form much the same group as that which
+was in our own days called the Fourth Party.
+
+So they enter the House of Commons in high spirits, and lay about them
+with reckless intrepidity. Pitt is soon marked out for martyrdom by the
+Minister. But in a short time he is conspicuous for other reasons. He
+towers from the waist above his comrades as a bitter, incisive speaker.
+Walpole begins to take notes of his speeches; he is the coming man, and
+is at once secured for the faction of the Prince of Wales. Then Walpole
+falls. There is a great crash, and the spectators expect to see the
+world in ruins. But when the dust has cleared away it is seen that
+things are much as they were; Wilmington, scarcely visible, in Walpole's
+seat; Newcastle rooted in his own; Walpole, with Pulteney his
+protagonist, seated smug and dumb among the distant peers. There is no
+room for Pitt among our governors; the only new figure that strikes one
+is Carteret, he is evidently the moving spirit of the piece. As the
+prominent Minister, and as an object of hatred to Cobham, he is
+obviously the man for Pitt now to attack, and he trounces Carteret as
+recklessly as he had Walpole; only Walpole was able to reply, and
+Carteret cannot; for he sits where Walpole sits. Carteret, again, he
+mainly attacks for his eminence. He calls Carteret execrable now, but,
+when the battle is over, takes pride in declaring that to his patronage,
+to his friendship, to his instruction 'I owe whatever I am.' Still, the
+business of party must be done, and so Carteret must be assailed. Then
+Carteret disappears, and Pitt is without a target. But the young man
+has to realise that in his reckless onslaughts he has incidentally but
+mortally wounded the honour of the King. Walpole and Carteret are off
+the scene; and the stage is now occupied, so far as he is concerned, by
+a monarch who is an incarnate veto as regards him, and who can never
+forgive him. This produces a new situation. Pitt is as strenuous to be
+pardoned as he was to offend; he is all milk and honey in public, but
+apprises the Pelhams, who are now in sole possession of the
+administration, that he is not disposed to be long-suffering, and that
+the ordinary rewards of political warfare are overdue. They are fully
+alive to the situation, and attempt to mollify the Sovereign. But their
+labour is in vain, and so, with more subtlety than patriotism, they
+produce a ministerial crisis when civil war is alive in the island. The
+King has to yield, and, in angry submission, receive Pitt. The new
+placeman, having achieved office, subsides into a long silence. Pelham
+dies at last, and the great inheritance has to be divided. Pitt is ill
+and absent; his rival is at once preferred (though alienated); while
+Pelham's brother attempts to guide, with the help of the Master of the
+Great Wardrobe, what Pelham could not control. The result is easily
+foreseen. The rivals unite to tear the Master limb from limb, and one of
+them has to be bought off. That one is not Pitt. And now something,
+pique or patriotism or marriage, one cannot analyse it now, perhaps he
+could not have analysed it himself, lifts him into new splendours of
+eloquence. His rival seems cowed by the harness without the confidence
+of office. Pitt stands alone, no one dare face him. Meanwhile he
+receives new authority from disaster. In every region where Britain is
+interested calamity follows calamity. The country is roused to a passion
+of wrath and vengeance. It demands victims. Byng in prison remains an
+open wound to remind the nation of its miscarriages. They are resolved
+to shoot him, at any rate; they would not be unwilling to hang others
+whom they hold responsible for his miscarriage, who are perhaps corrupt,
+and who are certainly incapable and untoward Ministers; failing that,
+they will at least get rid of them. They look round and see no one but
+Pitt. He has been persecuted, he has been ignored by these Ministers,
+and yet his eloquence, commanding in itself, has the true note of energy
+and patriotism. He shall be tried; and they call for him with as much
+energy as the French once called for Necker, but with a truer instinct.
+
+Strangely enough, there is so far little vigour in Pitt except in his
+speeches. Half his life is spent in prostration and seclusion, under the
+martyrdom of gout. As we have seen, on the very brink of his Ministry,
+he assured Fox that his health would not allow him to hold office. And,
+indeed, in the whole life of this singular man there is nothing more
+remarkable than this, that in the glimpses we obtain of himself, apart
+from great speeches and the result of victorious policy, we almost
+always find him prostrate with illness. It is generally the gout or its
+allies which disable him; but later it is disorder akin to if not
+identical with insanity. Not unnaturally, even among those less prone by
+profession to suspicion than the expert politician, his ill-health is
+often supposed to be an assumption or a screen. But in this calmer
+generation we can see that it was not, that the man never enjoyed
+health, as it is ordinarily understood, for a moment. He was always
+distempered, irritable, or hysterical, when not in pain. His public life
+was scarcely more than the intervals between fits of gout or nervous
+collapse. We are reminded of the sufferings of his son, as he approached
+the end of a long ministerial career, struggling against constant
+sickness and a wrecked constitution, when we contemplate the lifelong
+contest between the elder Pitt and hereditary disease.
+
+Heredity counts for much, for more than we reckon in these matters. We
+breed horses and cattle with careful study on that principle; the prize
+bull and the Derby winner are the result. With mankind we heed it little
+or not at all. With Pitt it was everything or almost everything. From
+his ancestors, most probably the Governor, who, we infer, was a free
+liver in a tropical climate, he derived the curse of gout. From the same
+progenitor he inherited a nervous, violent temperament, and some taint
+of madness. All this told partly for him, partly against him. The gout
+drove him to study and reflection, but it constantly disabled him. His
+temperament roused him to great heights of energy and passion both in
+eloquence and politics, but it also alienated his fellow-men, and made
+him sometimes eccentric, and sometimes turbulent. We cannot in such a
+matter hold the balance. What is genius? None can tell. But may it not
+be the result in character of the conflict of violent strains of
+heredity, which clash like flint and steel, and produce the divine
+spark?
+
+This takes us beyond our limits, more especially those of time; for
+within those limits the genius of Pitt has only been displayed in the
+barren gift of eloquence. But when we consider his disabilities of
+heredity and of accident we deem him already heroic. Everything has been
+against him. He has contended against poverty and disease and contempt.
+He has been wounded in the house of his family. He has been constantly
+betrayed. He has had to suffer for long years in silence. He is
+forty-eight when he at last attains anything like power. From this point
+of view his career is pathetic. It seems such a waste of time and
+opportunity. But through these long impatient years he was being
+trained, hardened, one may almost say, baked in the furnace. In silence
+and bitterness the force was being accumulated that was to electrify the
+Empire.
+
+Still the dazzling result must not blind us to the facts as they stand
+at the moment when we are surveying and taking leave of them. Much in a
+man's life obviously depends on life: much too depends on death. 'Felix
+opportunitate mortis' is a pregnant saying. How many village Hampdens,
+how many Miltons have passed away, inglorious because mute, and mute
+from premature death. Had Caesar or Marlborough died before middle age
+their military reputation would have been slender indeed. For how many
+men, on the other hand, has death come too late. What would have been
+the place in history of Napoleon III., had Orsini been a successful
+assassin? What that of Tiberius, had he died at sixty? The authors who
+have survived themselves are as the sands of the sea; indeed the
+exceptions are those who have not. The politicians in the same case are
+less conspicuous, for they crumble into the House of Lords. Historians
+and rhetoricians have vied with each other in setting forth the glories
+of Pitt's supreme years. What we have to consider is his position in
+1756, when we part from him in professed ignorance of what is to come.
+How would Pitt appear to us had he died when he was still forty-seven?
+He was forty-eight the day before Devonshire, in his name, assumed the
+government. That is a respectable age. The younger Pitt never reached
+it, though he had been Prime Minister for near a score of years.
+Napoleon closed his career at forty-six. It is needless to detail
+examples. But at forty-seven the elder Pitt could only claim that he had
+been Paymaster of the Forces, and had cowed but not persuaded the House
+of Commons by his oratory. He had, too, the faith of the people,
+unearned except by vague echoes of purity and eloquence. Otherwise his
+career had been much like other careers, denouncing, or coquetting and
+even pressing for office, equable in expectation, and vindictive if
+refused. Pride was his besetting sin; yet he had stooped, to conquer.
+
+All seems to depend on this point, so difficult to decide: was there
+patriotism in all this alloy? Was the anxiety for office the mere
+craving of the politician for reward, or was it the real consciousness
+of capacity, purity, and inspiration? It may well in earlier days have
+been the more vulgar ambition, vulgar but not reprehensible; for office
+is the legitimate end and object of the public man; and Pitt had earned
+it a hundred times over by ordinary standards, while compelled to stand
+aside and see his inferiors promoted. But at the period which we have
+reached we think the nobler sentiment is unmistakable. He will not hold
+out a finger, he spurns all assistance, he builds without any foundation
+but himself. Had he wished only for the snug and secure possession of
+office he would have welcomed the co-operation of Newcastle and Fox,
+invaluable allies in their different ways. But at this time he will have
+none of them, he dreams of a government which free from taint or
+suspicion shall appeal for the confidence of the country on the highest
+and purest grounds.
+
+Here we feel, and feel with relief, that we can give a clear verdict.
+The rest matters little. The path of the statesman rarely skirts the
+heights, it is rough, rugged, sometimes squalid, as are most of the
+roads of life. We are apt to make idols, to ignore shadows, and to fancy
+that we see stars; not too apt, for it is an illuminating worship. But,
+that being so, let not those who have to scrutinise therefore condemn.
+All careers have their blots. The best and happiest are those in which
+the blemishes are obscured by high achievement. That was supremely the
+case with Pitt. His upward ascent was much like other ascents, neither
+better nor worse. But when he reached the summit, and acted in full
+light and freedom, his triumph was so complete that none deem it worth
+while to scan his previous record. None should care now, were it not a
+healthy propensity to seek to know as much as possible of the lives of
+great men. It is preposterous to depict Pitt as an angel of light. But
+yet, judged by the standard of his day, the only proper standard to
+apply, and indeed by the standard of any day, he must be held even in
+his darkest hours not to have compromised his historical future.
+
+Whatever his failings may have been, his countrymen have refused, and
+rightly refused, to take heed of them. They have refused to see anything
+but the supreme orator, the triumphant Minister of 1757-1761, the
+champion of liberty in later years at home and in the West. With Pitt,
+as with Nelson, his country will not count flaws. What do they matter?
+How are they visible in the sunlight of achievement? A country must
+cherish and guard its heroes.
+
+We have climbed with him in his path to power. We have seen him
+petulant, factious, hungry, bitter. And yet all the time we have felt
+that there was always something in him different in quality from his
+fellow-politicians when they aired the same qualities, that there was an
+imprisoned spirit within him struggling for freedom and scope. At last
+it bursts its trammels, he tosses patronage and intrigue to the old
+political Shylocks, and inspires the policy of the world. Vanity of
+vanities! Twenty years after his epoch of glory, three years after his
+death, Britain has reached the lowest point in her history. But still
+she is the richer for his life. He bequeaths a tradition, he bequeaths a
+son; and when men think of duty and achievement they look to one or the
+other. It will be an ill day for their country when either is
+forgotten.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ Aberdeen, Lord, 145
+
+ Abernethy, Dr., sermons by, 501
+
+ Achilles, 332
+
+ Addison, Joseph, 'Cato' referred to, 154
+
+ 'Additional MSS.' referred to, 196, 248, 281, 287, 301, 306, 313,
+ 316, 332, 337, 349, 351, 374, 380, 458, 461, 464, 467, 468, 472,
+ 483, 485
+
+ Aix-la-Chapelle, Peace of, 169, 395;
+ Treaty of, 213;
+ debate on Treaty of, 277, 278
+
+ Aldborough Election, 313, 323, 332, 349
+
+ Allen, Ralph, 112, 303
+
+ Allworthy, Squire, see Fielding, Henry
+
+ Almon, John, 300, 301, 493
+
+ Althorp, Lord, 21, 262
+
+ Alsace, Austrian armies in, 209
+
+ 'Ambulator, The,' 308
+
+ Amelia, Princess, 280
+
+ America, smuggling invasion of, 165;
+ hostilities in, 350-1, 372, 395, &c.
+
+ Angel Inn, Oxford, Chatham at, 363
+
+ Anne, Empress of Russia, death of, 202
+
+ Anne, Queen of England, 222
+
+ Anson, Lord, 341, 351
+
+ Anstruther, General, 330
+
+ Antwerp, French enter, 212
+
+ Argyll Buildings, Chatham's marriage at, 356
+
+ Argyll, Duke of, 343, 452
+
+ 'Army, History of the British,' see Fortescue, J.W.
+
+ Arundel, Mr., 439
+
+ Ashbourne, Lord, 355
+
+ Ashburnham Park, 305
+
+ Ashley, ----, 261
+
+ 'Assembly of Notables,' 479
+
+ Astrop Wells, Chatham's visit to, 304, 350
+
+ Austria, House of, 286
+
+ Austrian Netherlands, French in possession of, 212
+
+ Austrians, War of the Succession, 202, 402;
+ defeated at Molwitz, 203;
+ defeated at Chotusitz, 206;
+ victorious in Bohemia, 207, 209;
+ in Flanders, 211
+
+ Aylesbury, dispute over the Assizes at, 271-5, 289;
+ purchase of manor of, 275
+
+ 'Aylesbury, History of,' see Gibbs
+
+ Ayscough, Dr., 54, 57, 58, 62, 66, 69, 78, 291, 356
+
+
+ Bailey's 'Dictionary,' Pitt's study of, 501
+
+ Baldwin, Lord Chief Justice, 275
+
+ Ballantyne, Archibald, 'Life of Lord Carteret,' quoted, 146, 179
+
+ Baltimore, Lord, 178
+
+ Bampton, 84
+
+ Banquier, Alexandre, 45, 69
+
+ Barnard, Sir John, 148
+
+ Barre, Isaac, 268
+
+ Barrington, Viscount, 249, 363, 424, 426, 435, 444, 483
+
+ Barrow, sermons of, 501
+
+ Bath, 8, 29, 38, 57-9, 63, 66, 97, 99, 104-6, 112-16, 234, 303, 313,
+ 348, 355
+
+ Bath, Earl of, see Pulteney, Sir William
+
+ Battle Abbey, 305
+
+ Bavaria, protests against the succession of Maria Theresa, 202;
+ seized by General Khevenhueller, 205;
+ taken by Frederick II., 209
+
+ Bavaria, Elector of, see Frederick II.
+
+ Bave, Dr. Charles, 57, 60
+
+ Bays, Mr., 79
+
+ 'Bedford Correspondence,' 154, 478, 480-2
+
+ Bedford, Duke of, 236, 237, 246, 248, 249, 279, 280, 282, 300, 388,
+ 412, 428, 439, 477, 480, 482, 486
+
+ Bedlam, 8
+
+ Beckford, Alderman William, 166, 428, 440
+
+ Bellamy, a frame maker, 80
+
+ Belleisle, Marshal, 204, 205, 207
+
+ Belson, Mr., 491
+
+ Bentinck, Lord George, 190
+
+ Bentley, Richard, Walpole's letter to, 344
+
+ Bergen, 3
+
+ Berkeley of Stratton, Lord, 252
+
+ Berkshire, land purchased in, 6
+
+ Berlin, 202, 210;
+ Treaty of, 206
+
+ Besancon, 45, 68, 69, 352
+
+ Best, Mr., 24
+
+ Bland, Dr., 28
+
+ Blandford, 5, 58
+
+ 'Blandford,' a man-of-war, 400
+
+ Blandford, Vicar of, see Pitt, John
+
+ Blount, Martha, 79
+
+ Boconnoc, 3, 6, 14, 23, 24, 43, 54, 56, 58, 61;
+ Chatham's early life at, 43;
+ his reasons for living at, 58, 59
+
+ Bohemia, Frederick II. proclaimed king in Prague, 205;
+ taken by Frederick II., 209
+
+ Bolingbroke, Lady, 85, 86
+
+ Bolingbroke, Lord, 132, 144, 148, 176, 235, 258;
+ nicknamed the Pitts, 54;
+ called the 'intellectual Samson of Battersea,' 328;
+ accuracy of expression of, 501;
+ his newspaper, 'The Craftsman,' 163;
+ 'Remarks on History of England,' 328
+
+ Bolton, Duke of, 252
+
+ Boone, Mr., 252
+
+ Boscawen, Admiral, 399
+
+ Boswell, James, 303
+
+ Bourchier, Colonel, 44
+
+ Bourbons, extravagance of the, 195;
+ union of the, 208
+
+ 'Boy Patriots, The,' 131
+
+ Braddock, General, 397, 398
+
+ Breda, peace negotiations at, 212
+
+ Breslau, Peace of, 206
+
+ Brest, 226
+
+ Bridport, Lord, 353
+
+ Bright, John, 262
+
+ Bristol, 104, 105
+
+ Broad-Bottom Administration, 239
+
+ Broglie, Marshal, 204, 205
+
+ Bromley, 310
+
+ Brompton, Richard, portrait-painter, 489
+
+ Browne, Lancelot, 132
+
+ Broxom, 79
+
+ Brussels, French enter, 212
+
+ Bubb, see Dodington, George Bubb
+
+ Buchan, Lord, 39
+
+ Buckhurst, 305
+
+ Buckingham, the representation of, 133;
+ dispute over the Assizes at, 271-5, 289
+
+ Buckingham, Duke of, see Grenville, Richard Temple, Earl Temple
+
+ Burchett, Will., 28, 29
+
+ Burdett, 261, 262
+
+ Burke, Edmund, 21, 133
+
+ Burleigh, Lord, 427
+
+ Burton-Pynsent, 124, 125, 307
+
+ Bute, Earl of, 21, 87, 116, 121, 122, 125, 126, 138, 292, 296, 386,
+ 387, 410, 441, 454, 458, 465, 483, 484
+
+ Bute, Lady, 126
+
+ Butler, 'the Reminiscent,' 359, 364, 491, 493
+
+ Byng, Admiral, 450-2, 507
+
+
+ 'Cabinets, History of,' see Torrens, W.T. McC.
+
+ Cadogan, Charles, 2nd Baron, 452
+
+ Calcraft, John, letter to Digby, 359
+
+ Camden, Earl of, see Pratt, Sir Charles
+
+ Camelford, Lord, see Pitt, Thomas, 1st Baron Camelford
+
+ 'Camelford MSS.' referred to, 85, 256, 412, 490
+
+ Campbell, Hume, 430, 432, 434, 435, 439, 493, 494
+
+ Canning, George, 160
+
+ Canons, Palace of, 257
+
+ Cardigan, Lady, 84
+
+ Cardross, Lord, 39
+
+ Carlisle, 154
+
+ Carlisle, Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of, 159;
+ 'Papers' referred to, 159
+
+ Carlyle, Thomas, 'Frederick the Great' referred to, 202, 402
+
+ Caroline, Princess, 153, 370
+
+ Caroline, Queen, 53, 197
+
+ Carteret, John, Earl Granville, 255, 408, 409, 436;
+ statesmanship of, 144;
+ ability and distinction of, 148, 178;
+ secret negotiations of, 176;
+ Pitt's animosity to, 178, 187, 190, 218, 219, 280;
+ Pitt's admiration of, in later years, 220;
+ his relations with George II., 196;
+ ability recognised by George II., 245;
+ his knowledge of the classics, 179;
+ as a linguist, 180;
+ his contempt for money, 180;
+ Chesterfield's opinion of, 182;
+ supports the Earl of Bath, 216;
+ downfall of, 229, 235-9;
+ Administration against, 248;
+ Secretary of State, 250;
+ President of the Council, 300, 472;
+ Walpole's distrust of, 315;
+ on North American affairs, 350, 351;
+ on subsidies, 380;
+ Fox's enmity against, 384;
+ Newcastle's negotiations with, 389;
+ his forty-eight hours' Ministry, 409;
+ Fox's resignation, 461-3;
+ attacks of Pitt upon, 505, 506;
+ 'Life of Carteret,' see Ballantyne, A.
+
+ Chaillot, 99
+
+ Chambers, 140
+
+ Chandos, Duke of, 140;
+ Dukedom of, 257
+
+ Charleroi, taken by the French, 212
+
+ Charles II., 393, 423
+
+ Charles III., 205
+
+ Charles VI., 202, 203, 213
+
+ Charles VII., 209
+
+ Charles Edward, 'the Young Pretender,' see Stuart
+
+ Chatham, Lady, see Grenville, Lady Hester
+
+ 'Chatham MSS.' referred to, 50, 51, 92, 99, 254, 455, 485
+
+ Chatham, William Pitt, 1st Earl of, parentage, 1, 8, 11;
+ birth, 26;
+ death, 126, 312;
+ appearance and characteristics, 421, 488-90;
+ at Eton, 27;
+ at Oxford, 31;
+ father, 8, 12, 14-16, 38, 48;
+ mother, 12, 14, 26, 38-46;
+ Governor Pitt's regard for, 11, 26;
+ sisters, 48-128;
+ quarrels with his sister Ann, 53, 83, 85-8, 115, 116, 256;
+ family quarrels, 19, 22, 50, 83, 509;
+ affected by gout, 28, 30, 39, 46, 96, 98, 117, 234, 298, 303, 304,
+ 313, 315, 316, 318, 332, 483, 486, 507;
+ military service, 43-7, 60, 63, 130, 132, 157, 158, 160, 163;
+ marries Lady Hester Grenville, 97, 98, 102, 253, 352, 356;
+ letters to Hester Grenville described, 355;
+ lives and dies at Hayes, 103, 110, 312, 454;
+ birth of children, 111, 455, 456;
+ legacy of Duchess of Marlborough to, 233, 234;
+ anecdotes of, 307, 308, 363;
+ recommends Bolingbroke's works, 328;
+ 'History of Chatham,' see Thackeray, Francis
+ Correspondence--with his father, 29, 34;
+ to his mother, 38-46;
+ sister Ann, 56-84, 88-93, 101, 104-112;
+ sister Mary, 96;
+ Duke of Newcastle, 97, 329-32, 335;
+ Sir George Lyttelton and Grenville, 316-18;
+ Chancellor Hardwicke, 324, 325, 337
+ Appointments--Groom of the Bedchamber, 162, 240;
+ Paymaster, 85, 133, 254, 475, 510;
+ Privy Seal, 125;
+ Secretary of State, 103, 480;
+ Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, 253, 261, 265
+ Parliamentary Career--Begins at Stowe, 77;
+ represents Old Sarum, 129, 270, 313;
+ elected for Seaford, 270;
+ chosen for Aldborough, 333, 349, 486;
+ represents Okehampton, 486;
+ his first session in Parliament, 143, 157;
+ George II.'s regard for, 108, 157, 196, 245, 249, 250, 252, 262,
+ 341, 349, 377, 465, 478, 486, 506;
+ his regard for the King, 242, 465;
+ Order of the Garter for Temple, 139;
+ member of the 'Junto,' 236;
+ forcing his hand, 247;
+ wields power through the people, 358, 475;
+ views and plans on political situation, 316, 321;
+ apologies from Duke of Newcastle, 335, 348;
+ exclusion from Government, 338, 415;
+ American War, 350;
+ his finest speeches, 293, 357-8;
+ strong remarks on Sir Thomas Robinson, 360;
+ distrust of, and attitude to Fox, 352, 365, 370, 474, 476, 478;
+ Parliamentary intrigue, 370;
+ as Leader of the House, 376;
+ eulogises Legge for a position, 377;
+ pecuniary awards to, 410;
+ and Newcastle Ministry, 460-5, 471;
+ negotiations with Hardwicke, 468;
+ co-operation sought with, 475;
+ fails to form a Ministry, 483-6;
+ connection with Leicester House, 353, 386-8, 404, 454, 475, 481,
+ 485;
+ his oratory, 357-8, 492-503;
+ periods of his life, 503, 504;
+ effect of his life's mission, 512
+ Speeches, extracts of--On royal marriage, 157;
+ reduction of army, 164;
+ convention with Spain, 167;
+ denounces Walpole's administration, 184, 505;
+ subsidies for foreign powers, 209, 237, 379, 380, 434;
+ transfer of Hanoverians, 241, 242, 410;
+ Bucks Assizes, 274;
+ compensation of Glasgow, 276;
+ peace of Aix-la-Chapelle, 278, 416;
+ opposes navy reduction, 289, 419;
+ opinion on Regency Bill, 292, 293;
+ Jews' Naturalisation Act, 299;
+ relief of Chelsea pensioners, 356;
+ on election petitions, 358;
+ tenure of sheriff-deputyships, 392, 394;
+ against the Newcastle Ministry, 404;
+ seamen's prize money, 422;
+ army estimates, 424;
+ Militia Bill, 428, 469;
+ reprimands Hume Campbell, 430-3;
+ foreign treaties, 433-8;
+ attacks Budget, 440, 447;
+ on Swiss auxiliaries, 441;
+ criticism on army grant, 445
+
+ Chesterfield, Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of, and Ann Pitt, 54, 65;
+ statesmanship of, 144;
+ his ability and distinction, 148;
+ his opinion of Pulteney, 176;
+ quotations from his Letters, 182;
+ character of George II., 198;
+ opposed to the Hanoverian vote, 225;
+ bequest to, by the Duchess of Marlborough, 233;
+ member of Opposition Committee, 236;
+ Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, 240;
+ letter from Newcastle, 248;
+ resignation of, as Secretary of State, 279;
+ eulogises Pitt and Murray, 302;
+ on the reconstruction of the Ministry, 390;
+ on the character of Pitt, 490, 491, 493;
+ on Pitt's study of words, 501
+
+ Chevening, residence of Stanhope, 3, 126, 307
+
+ Chippenham Election, 172
+
+ Cholmondeley, Lord, Vice-Treasurer of Ireland, 253, 439
+
+ Cholmondeley, Mrs., death of, 97
+
+ Cholmondely, Charles, 14
+
+ Chotusitz, Battle of, 206
+
+ Clement XII., Pope, death of, 201
+
+ Climenson's 'Mrs. Montague' referred to, 303, 304, 309
+
+ Clive, Lord, 395
+
+ Cobbett, William, 134;
+ 'Parliamentary History' referred to, 165, 167, 168, 183, 186, 187,
+ 188, 218, 219, 220, 225, 241, 242, 243, 271, 275-8, 285, 287, 443
+
+ Cobden, Richard, 261, 262
+
+ 'Cobham's Cubs,' 131
+
+ Cobham, Lord, see Temple, Sir Richard, afterwards Lord Cobham
+
+ Cobham Party (The), 217
+
+ Colchester, Petition for, 360
+
+ Colebrooke's 'Memoirs,' 296, 346
+
+ Cologne, Elector of, 286
+
+ Compiegne, Council at, 400
+
+ Congreve, William, 132
+
+ Conway, a cousin of Walpole's, 160, 289, 481
+
+ Corbett, Mr., marriage of, 49
+
+ Corbett, Sir William, 49
+
+ Cornbury, Lord, 84
+
+ Cornwall, 6, 16, 43, 58, 61
+
+ Cornwall, Duchy of, 17
+
+ Cornwall, Duke of, 18
+
+ Cotton, Sir John Hinde, 224, 236-7
+
+ 'Cousins, The,' 131
+
+ Coxe, William, 'Memoirs of Henry Pelham' quoted 249, 250, 278, 282,
+ 286;
+ 'Memoirs of Sir Robert Walpole' quoted, 166, 168, 172, 216, 369
+
+ Cradock, Joseph, 'Literary Memoirs' referred to, 497
+
+ 'Cranford,' see Gaskell, Mrs.
+
+ Cresset, Mr., 87, 115, 116
+
+ Cricket, played at Stowe, 80
+
+ Crowhurst, Colonel Pelham's place at, 305
+
+ Culloden, Battle of, 269, 398
+
+ Cumberland, Duke of, Grenville's hatred of, 21;
+ attempts to form a Pitt Ministry, 139;
+ George II.'s affection for, 387;
+ defeated at Fontenoy, 210;
+ and at Lauffeld, 212;
+ projected marriage of, 229;
+ awarded a pension, 269, 270;
+ objections to, as Regent, 293;
+ a member of the Regency Council, 370;
+ his devotion to Fox, 294, 352, 365, 380, 384, 388;
+ alliance of Newcastle with, 389;
+ plan of campaign, 398;
+ influence of, 475
+
+
+ Darcy, Sir Conyers, 439
+
+ Dashwood, Francis, Baron, 414
+
+ Delamere, Lord, 14
+
+ Delaval, John, speech at Berwick, 358
+
+ Delany, Mrs., 'Memoirs of,' referred to, 52, 125, 126
+
+ Denbigh, Lord, 249
+
+ Derby, Prince Charles Edward marches on, 244
+
+ Dettingen, Battle of, 214, 218;
+ George II. at, 193, 194;
+ Pitt's view of the, 222
+
+ Devonshire, land purchased in, 6
+
+ Devonshire, Duke of, 339, 379, 380, 462, 467, 476-86
+
+ Devonshire House, assembly at, 479
+
+ De Witt, Jan, 443
+
+ Diamond, transaction of the Pitt, 3, 4
+
+ Dickins and Stanton, 'An Eighteenth Century Correspondence'
+ referred to, 134
+
+ Digby, Lord, 359, 459, 461
+
+ Disraeli, Benjamin, 172
+
+ 'Divinity Pitt,' 54
+
+ Dodington, George Bubb, 135, 140, 155, 224, 236, 237, 292, 346, 349,
+ 350, 370, 373, 380, 383-6, 388, 443, 459, 479, 480, 483
+
+ Dorsetshire, lands purchased in, 6
+
+ Dover, Lord, 156
+
+ Dresden, occupied by Frederick II., 210;
+ Peace of, 246
+
+ 'Dropmore Papers' quoted and referred to, 8, 13, 26, 56
+
+ Duffell, Dr., 126
+
+ Dundonald, Lord, 'Autobiography of,' referred to, 134
+
+ Dunkirk, 277
+
+ Dupleix, 395
+
+ Dupplin, one of the Paymasters, 455, 472
+
+ Duquesne Fort, 398
+
+ Dutch Expedition up the Thames recalled, 226
+
+ Dutens, Louis, reception by the Pitts, 50, 51;
+ 'Voyage' referred to, 174
+
+
+ East India Company, 2
+
+ Education, Chatham's letters on, 20
+
+ Edward III., 179
+
+ Egmont, Earl of, 277, 284, 292, 373, 406, 472
+
+ 'Eighteenth Century Correspondence,' see Dickins and Stanton
+
+ Election expenses, 143
+
+ Elizabeth, Empress of Russia, 206, 207, 400, 402
+
+ Elizabeth, Queen of England, 423
+
+ Ellis, Welbore, 410, 415, 460, 461
+
+ Enfield Chase, 308
+
+ England, indifference of George II. and William III. to, 198, 199;
+ pledged to the Pragmatic Sanction, 203;
+ 'Remarks on the History of,' see Bolingbroke, Lord
+
+ Epsom, 154
+
+ Eridge, 305
+
+ Erskine, Sir Henry, 39, 441, 467
+
+ Erskine, Thomas, 39
+
+ Esmond, Will, 13
+
+ Essex, Lady, see Pitt, Essex
+
+ Esther, name given to Chatham's wife, 356
+
+ Eton, 11, 27-30, 160
+
+ Eugene, Prince, 438
+
+ Excise scheme, 287, 288
+
+
+ Fairly Farm, 305
+
+ Falmouth, Lord, 18
+
+ Fane, Lord, 360
+
+ Feilding, Charles, amiability of, 61, 73
+
+ Fielding, Henry, on Lord Chatham, 27;
+ 'Squire Allworthy' referred to, 112, 303;
+ 'Tom Jones' referred to, 27
+
+ Finch, Edward, 248, 252
+
+ Finch, William, 248, 252
+
+ Fitzgerald, Hon. Edward Villiers, 26
+
+ Fitzmaurice, Lord, 'Life of Shelburne' referred to, 27, 47, 49, 166,
+ 172, 176, 467, 501
+
+ Flanders, British troops in, 188, 205;
+ military operations in, 211, 223, 224
+
+ Florence, 49, 50
+
+ Fontainebleau, Treaty of, objects of the, 208
+
+ Fontenoy, Battle of, 210, 214, 243, 246
+
+ Foote, Samuel, 174, 298;
+ 'Table Talk' referred to, 499
+
+ Fort St. George, 3, 9
+
+ Fortescue Family, nickname of the, 58
+
+ Fortescue, J.W., 'History of the British Army,' quoted, 221
+
+ Fox, Charles, illness of, 340
+
+ Fox, Henry, at Eton with Chatham, 27;
+ temperament, 230, 294-7;
+ sketch of his character, 294-7;
+ regarded as odious, 327;
+ peerage endowment from Paymastership, 257, 296, 314;
+ candidate for Secretaryship of State, 279, 282;
+ the Buckingham Assize dispute, 272;
+ the Marriage Act, 305;
+ admitted to the Cabinet, 367, 368, 370;
+ member of the Council of Regency, 367, 370;
+ Newcastle's choice between Fox and Pitt, 388;
+ stipulations for promotions of friends, 390;
+ position on Provisioning Bill, 394;
+ as leader of the House, 330, 335, 402, 410, 415, 417-20;
+ opposes Bill for war prizes, 423;
+ his challenge accepted, 428;
+ vetoes an appointment, 430;
+ defends Hume Campbell, 434;
+ no voice in Treasury appointment, 439;
+ questions of dictatorship, 445;
+ parliamentary intrigues and position, 458-67;
+ mistakes concerning--resume of parliamentary life, 474-84;
+ on Ann Pitt, 50;
+ prospects of the Young Pretender, 244;
+ George II.'s inclination to, 318, 341;
+ gratified with Chatham, 218;
+ opposed to Chatham, 268, 292, 294, 349, 350, 365, 407, 416-20,
+ 430, 436, 440, 445;
+ visits Chatham, 326;
+ placed over Chatham, 330;
+ agreement with Chatham, 352;
+ description of Chatham's outburst with Newcastle, 357;
+ meets Chatham at Holland House, 370;
+ sends apologies to Hardwicke, 341;
+ hatred of Newcastle, 374, 389;
+ and Newcastle's disgrace, 452, 453, 471, 472;
+ rivalries referred to, 283;
+ his enemies, 384;
+ metaphors used by, 407;
+ letters quoted, 343, 359, 364;
+ Walpole on, 442
+
+ 'France, Histoire de,' see Martin
+
+ France, Wars of, 204, 205, 207, 209, 212, 226, 233, 395, &c.
+
+ Franche-Comte, 69
+
+ Francis, Duke, 72
+
+ Frankfort, 207, 209
+
+ Frederick II. (the Great), accession of, 201;
+ in Silesia, 202, 203;
+ proclaimed Emperor at Frankfort, 205;
+ his claim of Silesia, 395;
+ War of Austrian Succession, 206, 209, 400-02;
+ subsidy to, 286-7, 289
+
+ 'Frederick the Great,' see Carlyle, Thomas
+
+ 'Frederick II. and his Times,' see Raumer
+
+ Frederick, Prince of Wales, heir apparent, 148-51;
+ marriage of, 151, 157;
+ his character and conduct, 149, 150;
+ banished from Court, 152;
+ expelled from St. James's, 161;
+ Dr. Ayscough adviser to, 54;
+ father of George II., 195;
+ friendship with Thomas Pitt, 17;
+ at the General Election, 171;
+ Carteret a favourite of, 180, 219, 237;
+ congratulates Walpole, 228;
+ quarrels with Pitt, 256;
+ negotiations with Pitt, 291, 293;
+ decline of affection for Lady Hamilton, 352;
+ overtures to Fox, 365;
+ death of, 261, 292
+
+ Frederick William, of Prussia, death of, 201
+
+ Free Trade, 231
+
+
+ Gage, Mr., M.P., 270
+
+ Gainsborough, Thomas, portrait by, 353
+
+ Gambier, Lord, 'Memorials,' 305
+
+ Garrick, David, 499
+
+ Gaskell, Mrs., 'Cranford' referred to, 352
+
+ Gay, John, 54
+
+ 'Gazetteer, The,' newspaper, 163
+
+ 'Gentleman's Magazine, The,' 188
+
+ George I., 156, 163, 200, 387
+
+ George II., his dual personality, 192, 204, 207, character of, 192;
+ his political character, 194;
+ Lord Hervey's unworthy portrayal of, 197;
+ his courage, 220, 221;
+ with Lady Yarmouth at Richmond, 193;
+ devotion for Hanover, 195, 198, 446;
+ as Elector of Hanover concludes a treaty with the French, 204;
+ on the security of the Electorate of Hanover, 286;
+ placed under arrest by his father, 150;
+ his hatred of his son the Prince of Wales, 162, 387;
+ the Dutch War, 212;
+ in Hanover, 53, 54, 399, 402;
+ at Dettingen, 207;
+ at Oudenarde, 194;
+ signs the Treaty of Worms, 208;
+ the Treaty of Berlin, 206;
+ speech in Parliament, 1755, 403-4;
+ gives Premiership to Pelham, 216, 217;
+ his aversion to the Earl of Bath, 217;
+ his anger with Newcastle, 458;
+ dismissal of Carteret, 229, 238;
+ Pitt's first visit to, 63;
+ his hatred of Pitt, 108, 157, 179, 190, 191, 253, 482;
+ reason for this hatred, 157;
+ Pitt's apparent loyalty to, 424, 425;
+ Pitt's desire for reconciliation with, 459, &c., 465-72;
+ testifies to Walpole's bravery, 146;
+ discourteous treatment of Temple, 484;
+ repugnance to Legge, 481-2;
+ the execution of Admiral Byng, 451
+
+ George III., as a lad, 292;
+ compared with George II., 200;
+ in the Lords, 430;
+ and Mr. Fox, 342, 365, 367, 459, 474;
+ endeavours to form a Pitt Ministry, 139, 140;
+ Newcastle refuses a pension offered by, 174;
+ on Pelham's death, 313;
+ treaties with Hesse-Cassel and Russia, 371
+
+ 'George III., Memoirs of the Reign of,' see Walpole, Horace
+
+ George IV., extravagance of, 195;
+ compared with George II., 200
+
+ Georgia, 167, 208
+
+ Germaine, Lady Betty, 107
+
+ Germany, 109, 165, 194, 206
+
+ Gibbs' 'History of Aylesbury' referred to, 275
+
+ Gibbon, Edward, 47
+
+ Gibraltar, proposed restoration to Spain, 208
+
+ Gladstone, Rt. Hon. W.E., 230
+
+ Glasgow and the Jacobite occupation, 276
+
+ Glatz, ceded to Frederick II., 206, 210
+
+ Glenfinnan, the Young Pretender at, 243
+
+ Glover, Richard, 176, 177, 236, 237, 259, 346
+
+ Gordon, Rev., 493
+
+ Gower, Granville Leveson, 237, 247, 248
+
+ Grafton, Duke of, 264
+
+ Grandison, Catherine, Viscountess of, 26
+
+ Grandison, Lord, 12, 15, 41, 46
+
+ Granville, Earl, see Carteret, John
+
+ 'Grattan, Life of,' referred to, 85, 86, 495
+
+ Gray, Sir James, 70
+
+ Gray, Thomas, lampoon on Fox, 297
+
+ Grenville, Family of, Pitt united to the, 17, 130, 131, 389
+
+ 'Grenville Papers' referred to, 86, 131, 132, 134, 234, 277, 316,
+ 319, 321, 327, 333, 465, 482
+
+ Grenville, George, opposed the war in Flanders, 223;
+ the Buckingham Assizes, 272;
+ speech on unrest with Spain, 167;
+ offices held by:--
+ Prime Minister, 130;
+ Lord of the Treasury, 239, 486;
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer, 346;
+ Paymastership, 467;
+ Secretaryship of State offered to, 138;
+ congratulated by Pitt, 348;
+ Bill _re_ vessels captured before declaration of war, 423;
+ position and reasons for his hatred of Pitt, 21, 131;
+ opposition to Pitt, 268;
+ letters from Pitt to, 141, 260, 276, 277, 455;
+ Letters from Lyttelton to, 317, 327;
+ visit to Bath, 328
+
+ Grenville, Henry, 133
+
+ Grenville, Lady, inherits Boconnoc, 24, 133
+
+ Grenville, Lady Hester, 410, 411;
+ wife of Chatham, 53, 102, 352, 353, 356;
+ letters of, and reference to, 99-102, 105, 110, 112-15, 124, 125,
+ 311, 312;
+ her character, 355;
+ pension to, 124
+
+ Grenville, James, 133, 139, 311, 372, 467
+
+ Grenville, Richard Temple, afterwards Earl Temple, 81;
+ resigned Privy Seal, 139;
+ proposed as Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, 467;
+ proposed as First Lord of the Admiralty, 479;
+ refused to be First Lord of the Treasury, 136, 139;
+ Order of the Garter, 139;
+ his ambition a Dukedom, 140;
+ application for title, 138;
+ his bet, 138;
+ apologises to Hervey, 138;
+ cold reception at Court, 484-5;
+ visits Chatham at Bath, 348;
+ voted against the Hanoverians, 254;
+ pensioned, 410;
+ the Buckingham Assizes dispute, 272, 290;
+ Letters to, 319-21, 326-7, 332;
+ 'Letters of Junius' ascribed to, 136
+
+ Grenville, Thomas, killed in action off Cape Finisterre, 133
+
+ Grenvilles, the, 130, 137, 465, 483;
+ public money drawn by, 134;
+ friends of Pitt, 492
+
+ Grub Street, 298
+
+ Guernsey, 80
+
+
+ Hagley, Lord Lyttelton's seat at, 306, 307, 313
+
+ Hague, Embassy to the, 240
+
+ Halifax, Earl of, 472
+
+ Hamilton, Duke of, 6, 390, 404, 477
+
+ Hamilton, Lady Archibald, 352
+
+ Hamilton, Lord Archibald, 178
+
+ Hampden, Lord, attack on Pitt, 268, 290
+
+ Hampden, Richard, estate of, 233, 234
+
+ Hampshire, land purchased in, 6
+
+ Hampton Court, 84, 151, 198
+
+ Hannan, John, 52
+
+ Hannan, Sir William, 52
+
+ Hannibal, 191, 438
+
+ Hanover, Pitt's contempt for, 178, 186;
+ George II.'s devotion to, 188, 189, 195, 198;
+ his visit to, 194;
+ his ideas for safeguarding, 286;
+ Convention signed at, between Britain and Prussia, 210;
+ George III.'s visit to, 371
+
+ Hanoverian Guards substituted for English Guards, 218
+
+ Hanoverians, allies of Britain, 211;
+ English hatred of the, 218;
+ vote for maintenance of the, 224, 225;
+ transferred to Maria Theresa, 241, 242
+
+ Hapsburg, House of, 204
+
+ Hardwicke, Philip Yorke, Earl of, letters to, 259, 324, 325, 333,
+ 337, 350, 351, 458;
+ letters from, 351, 380, 381;
+ on the alienation of the Prince of Wales from his parents, 156;
+ as Newcastle's mentor and counsellor, 175, 314, 315;
+ on Pitt's popularity in the Commons, 185;
+ on Pitt's acrimoniousness, 219;
+ and George II., 238, 239;
+ on the foreign military policy, 246;
+ his treatment of Newcastle, 279;
+ supports Newcastle, 340;
+ supports Pitt, 371-3;
+ antagonism over Marriage Act, 305;
+ as the brains of the Cabinet, 315-16;
+ political unrest and intrigue of 1755-6, 386-90, 453, 464-5,
+ 467-73, 476;
+ 'Life of Hardwicke,' see Harris, George
+
+ Harrington, Earl of, 240, 246, 251
+
+ Harris, George, 'Life of Hardwicke' referred to, 152, 464, 465, 471
+
+ Harrison, Mr., 74, 75
+
+ Hartington, Lord, 289, 341, 343;
+ Letters from Fox to, 359, 364
+
+ Hastings, 305
+
+ Hawke, Lord, 174
+
+ Hawkins, ----, 390
+
+ Hay, Dr., 467
+
+ Hayes, 103, 110, 111, 113, 114, 125, 306, 310, 311
+
+ Hedges, William, quotations from, 2
+
+ Hell-fire Club, 275
+
+ Henley, Robert, 155
+
+ Herrenhausen, 198
+
+ Hertford, Lord, 140
+
+ Hervey, Lord, 138, 153, 160, 164, 197, 413;
+ 'Memoirs' referred to, 153, 162, 164
+
+ Hesse, Landgrave of, 209
+
+ Hesse-Cassel, Treaty with, 371, 374, 378, 379
+
+ Hessians, allies of Britain, 211
+
+ Hillsborough, Lord, 369, 439
+
+ Hoare, William, portrait of Pelham, 314;
+ portraits of Pitt, 488, 489
+
+ Hochkirch, Battle of, 106
+
+ Holdernesse, Lady, 115, 116
+
+ Holdernesse, Lord, 282, 300, 397, 410, 411, 479, 482, 483
+
+ Holland, 40, 41, 199;
+ the Dutch as allies, 211;
+ guarantee of assistance to, 246, 247
+
+ Holland, Lady, 'Journal' quoted, 24
+
+ Holland House, meeting of Chatham and Fox at, 370
+
+ 'Holland House MSS.' referred to, 296, 340, 342, 343, 350, 410, 431,
+ 454, 459, 460, 476, 477, 479, 480-3, 486
+
+ Hollins, ----, 63
+
+ Holyrood, Prince Charles Edward at, 243, 244
+
+ 'Homer, Original Genius of,' see Wood, Robert
+
+ Hood, Admiral, 353
+
+ Houghton, Walpole at, 147, 228;
+ his burial at, 229
+
+ Howard, Frederick, see Carlisle, Earl of
+
+ Howe, Captain Lord, 399
+
+ Hungary, Queen of, 202;
+ subsidy voted to, 205
+
+ Hurstmonceux, 305
+
+ Hyde, Lord, 462
+
+
+ Impiger, 332
+
+ India, Governor Pitt's progress in, 2, 3
+
+ Innes Family, 7
+
+ Iracundus, 332
+
+ Irwin, Lady, 159
+
+ Italy, war in, 213
+
+
+ Jacobinism, Governor Pitt on, 10
+
+ Jamaica, position of the Governorship of, 5
+
+ James I., 432
+
+ James II., 243, 276, 393
+
+ Jenkins' Ear, story of, 166
+
+ Jews' Naturalisation Act, 298, 299
+
+ Johnson, Dr., 257, 413, 493
+
+
+ Kaunitz, adviser of Maria Theresa, 400
+
+ Kensington, 82, 114-16, 118, 198
+
+ Khevenhueller, General, occupies Munich, 205
+
+ Kielmansegge's 'Diary,' quoted, 303
+
+ Kildare, Lord, 459
+
+ 'Kildare, Narrative to,' quotations from, 476, 478, 479, 482
+
+ King, Mr., 305
+
+
+ Land's End, 226
+
+ Lanoe, Colonel, 58, 60
+
+ Lauffeld, Battle of, 212, 214
+
+ Leadam, quoted, 208
+
+ Leasowes, Shenstone's house at, 307
+
+ Lecky, W.E.H., 502
+
+ Lee, Dr., 155, 255, 268, 272, 275, 373
+
+ Legge, Henry Bilson, 330, 336, 380-2;
+ letter to Chatham, 308, 309;
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer, 346, 349, 405, 410, 411, 467, 480, 481;
+ a Lord of the Treasury, 486;
+ Pitt's Ministry, 483;
+ the King's repugnance to, 482;
+ proposed Peerage for, 479;
+ on Chatham's speech, 360;
+ refused to sign the Hesse-Cassel Treaty, 374;
+ distrusted by Newcastle, 374;
+ in praise of Walpole, 423
+
+ Leicester House, 115, 155, 291-4, 318, 353, 368, 370, 371, 383,
+ 386-8, 404, 456, 475, 481, 483-5
+
+ Lifeguards escort George II., 193
+
+ Ligonier, General, 212
+
+ Limerick, Lord, 184, 185, 187
+
+ Lincoln, acts as mediator between the Pelham brothers, 291
+
+ Linz, Archduke proclaimed in, 205
+
+ Liverpool, Lord, 141
+
+ 'London Magazine, The,' 188
+
+ Londonderry, Lord, 1, 5, 6
+
+ Loo, 198
+
+ Lothian, Lord, 439
+
+ Loudoun, Lord, 441
+
+ Louis XIV., 133, 192, 193
+
+ Louis XV., 193, 208, 209, 212, 400;
+ 'Louis XV. et la Renversement des Alliances,' see Waddington,
+ Richard
+
+ Louis XVIII., 141
+
+ Louisbourg, 113, 243
+
+ Low Countries, 188, 212
+
+ Luneville, 45, 71, 72
+
+ Lyndhurst, Lord, 443
+
+ Lyte, Sir Henry, 'Dunster,' quoted, 6;
+ 'History of Eton' referred to, 29
+
+ Lyttelton, Christian, marriage with Thomas Pitt, 17, 41, 130;
+ her character, 17
+
+ Lyttelton, Sir George, afterwards Baron Lyttelton, Pitt
+ correspondence referring to, 28, 41, 42, 49, 54, 58, 63, 77, 78,
+ 317, 318, 321-4, 329, 331, 348;
+ his companions in youth, 141;
+ friendship with William Pitt, 130, 492;
+ supports Pitt, 289;
+ quarrel with Pitt, 407;
+ reconciliation, 414;
+ private secretary to Prince of Wales, 162;
+ return to Parliament, 159;
+ and standing army, 164;
+ and Spanish War, 167-8;
+ influence over Pulteney, 177;
+ secret terms with Walpole, 177;
+ policy concerning war in Flanders, 223-4;
+ a Lord of the Treasury, 236, 237, 239;
+ arranged coalition between forces of Stowe and Leicester House, 291;
+ Cofferer, 346, 347;
+ attempts reconciliation between Newcastle and Bedford, 412;
+ Chancellor of the Exchequer, 412;
+ his Budget, 440;
+ War supplies, 446-8;
+ Joint-Paymaster of the Forces, 455;
+ character, 414;
+ couplet, 158;
+ works, 413;
+ 'Memoirs and Correspondence of,' see Phillimore, R.J.
+
+ Lyttelton, Molly, 74, 353
+
+ Lyttelton, Sir Richard, 111, 130, 327, 423, 467 473
+
+ Lyttelton, Sir Thomas, 16
+
+ Lyttelton, William, 306
+
+
+ Macaulay, 31, 214
+
+ Macclesfield, Lord, death of, 134
+
+ Madras, 11
+
+ Maestricht, siege of, 278
+
+ Magyars appealed to by Maria Theresa, 205
+
+ Mahon, Lady, 126
+
+ Maillebois, Marshal, 204
+
+ Mainz, Elector of, 286
+
+ 'Malta, Knights of,' see Porter
+
+ Mann, Sir Horace, 'Letters to Horace Walpole,' 50, 126, 138, 234, 253
+
+ Mansfield, Lord, see Murray, William, Earl of
+
+ Marchmont, Earl of, Duchess of Marlborough's bequest to, 234
+
+ 'Marchmont Papers' quoted, 155, 168, 180, 224, 234, 235, 240
+
+ Maria Theresa, the War of Austrian Succession, 202-5, 208, 210,
+ 213-15, 221, 222, 241, 242, 246, 247, 286, 395, 400;
+ her character, 214, 215
+
+ Marlborough, Duke of, 131, 170, 343, 366, 477
+
+ Marlborough, Sarah, Duchess of, death and bequests of, 21, 233, 234
+
+ 'Marlborough, Duchess of, Life of,' see Thomson
+
+ Marriage Act, 305
+
+ Marseilles, 45, 70
+
+ Martin's 'Histoire de France,' quoted, 208
+
+ Martin, Mr., 357
+
+ Martyn, Mr., 46
+
+ Mayo, Mr., 39
+
+ Mediterranean, English fleet in, 205
+
+ Medmenham, Brotherhood of, 272
+
+ Meehan's 'Famous Houses of Bath,' quoted, 303, 304
+
+ Meredith, Sir William, 431
+
+ Middlesex, Lord, M.P. for Old Sarum, 270
+
+ Milan, 208
+
+ Miller, Mr. Saunderson, 307
+
+ 'Ministry, The New,' a collection of songs, &c., 139
+
+ Minorca, 208, 294;
+ fall of, 450-1
+
+ Mirabeau's power of oratory, 501
+
+ Mirepoix, Duchess of, 109
+
+ Mirepoix, Duke of, 399
+
+ Mohawks, 23
+
+ Mohun, Lord, sells Boconnoc, 6
+
+ Molinox, Mr., 63
+
+ Molwitz, Austrians defeated at, 203
+
+ Monmouth, Duke of, at Sedgemoor, 187
+
+ Mons, capture of, 212
+
+ Montagu, Duke of, 428
+
+ Montagu, Mrs. Elizabeth, 52, 54;
+ 'Letters' quoted, 305, 306, 309, 353
+
+ Montcalm, General, 457;
+ 'Montcalm and Wolfe,' see Parkman
+
+ Montespan, 192
+
+ Montpelier, 45, 71
+
+ Morayshire, 7
+
+ 'Moreau, Souvenirs de,' referred to, 398, 400
+
+ Mudge, Mr., 501
+
+ Mug, Matthew, 299
+
+ Murray, William, Earl of, formerly Lord Mansfield, oratorical powers,
+ 302;
+ precision of, 496-7;
+ eminence of, 340;
+ Solicitor-General, 223, 318;
+ Attorney-General, 453-5;
+ his chance of promotion, 338;
+ _re_ new Cabinet, 380;
+ changes in the Cabinet, 389;
+ _re_ Jacobites, 392;
+ _re_ subsidy treaties, 431-4, 436;
+ attitude towards Pitt, 268, 421;
+ Pitt's attack on, 359, 360, 363-5;
+ on Pitt's powers of ridicule, 503;
+ enemy of Fox, 384;
+ coolness towards Newcastle, 430;
+ correspondence regarding, 54, 335, 336
+
+ Mutiny Bill, 276
+
+
+ Namur, capture of, 212
+
+ Naples, 195, 205
+
+ Napoleon I., 136, 215, 269
+
+ Napoleon III., 509
+
+ Navy, proposed reduction of the, 289
+
+ Necessity Fort, surrender of, 350
+
+ Nedham, Mrs. Catherine, see Pitt, Catherine
+
+ Nedham, Robert, his marriage with Catherine Pitt, 49;
+ nominated for Old Sarum, 129
+
+ Nevers, 98
+
+ Newbury, 46, 74
+
+ Newcastle, Sir Thomas Pelham, afterwards Duke of, his character, 138,
+ 173-4;
+ an incident at his uncle's death, 138;
+ refuses a pension, 174;
+ contempt of George II. for, 150, 196, 245;
+ supports Henry Pelham, 216, 217;
+ blunder in the Lords, 227;
+ supports the Dutch cause, 247;
+ the Ministerial crisis of 1746, 248, 249, 252;
+ the Seaford election, 270;
+ his jealous nature, 279;
+ his dislike for Bedford, 279, 280;
+ views on the Hanoverian question, 286;
+ Pitt's enmity with, 422, 427, 453, 471, 481, 486;
+ profession of gratitude to Pitt, 290, 291;
+ Fox's vengeance on, 296;
+ his jealousy of Fox, 439;
+ Fox's hatred of, 482;
+ the Jews' Naturalisation Act, 298, 299;
+ letters and correspondence, 97, 139, 281, 313, 316, 329-33, 347,
+ 351, 386, 461-2;
+ Secretary of State, 319, 321, 323;
+ his appointments, 340;
+ words with Chatham, 357;
+ his power in the Commons, 361, 382;
+ negotiations with Fox, 368-9;
+ Prime Minister, 388;
+ formation of Cabinet, 389;
+ councils of war, 397;
+ and Hanoverian treaties, 409;
+ attempted negotiations between Newcastle and French Ambassador, 399;
+ loyalty of Commons to, 410;
+ Pitt's suspicions of, 411;
+ attempted reconciliation between Newcastle and Bedford, 412;
+ his opinion of Lyttelton, 412;
+ political unrest, 430, 441, 453-5, 458-70;
+ _re_ execution of Byng, 451, 452;
+ deserted by his friends, 471-5;
+ resignation, 485
+
+ 'Newcastle MSS.,' 316, 328, 349, 351, 374, 474, 486
+
+ Newdigate, Sir Roger, 363
+
+ Newton, Bishop, 'Works' referred to, 176;
+ metaphor of, 494
+
+ Niesse ceded to Frederick II., 206
+
+ Nivernois, M. de, 121
+
+ Noailles, 400
+
+ Norfolk, election expenses in, 143
+
+ Norfolk House, 162
+
+ North, Lord, 265
+
+ Northampton, 43, 60, 64, 65, 234
+
+ Nugent, Robert, Earl, 140, 272, 275, 363, 428
+
+ Nuthall, Thomas, 312
+
+
+ Okehampton, 5, 75
+
+ Oliver, Dr., 106, 113
+
+ Onslow, Rt. Hon. Arthur, Chatham's appeal to, 359
+
+ Orange, House of, returned to power, 212
+
+ Orford's 'George III.,' see Walpole, Horace
+
+ Orleans, Regent of, 4
+
+ Orsini, 509
+
+ Orwell, portrait at, 353
+
+ Oswald, James, 292
+
+ Oswego, fall of, 457
+
+ Oudenarde, Battle of, George II. at, 194
+
+ Oxford, 10, 30, 31, 54, 119, 363
+
+
+ Pall Mall, 5, 26, 35
+
+ Pan, Temple of, 309
+
+ Paris, 45, 68, 109, 181, 182
+
+ Parkman's 'Montcalm and Wolfe' quoted, 396, 398, 457
+
+ Parliamentary History, see Cobbett, William
+
+ Parma, proposed reconquest of, 208
+
+ Paulett, Lord, 112
+
+ Peel, Sir Robert, 172, 224, 489, 490;
+ a comparison, 230, 231
+
+ Pelham, Colonel, 305
+
+ Pelham, Rt. Hon. Henry, effect of his death, 96, 97, 301, 313-15, 506;
+ the King's regard for, 196, 251, 313;
+ eager for peace, 212;
+ becomes Premier, 216, 217, 314;
+ Chatham's support, 227, 291, 394;
+ Carteret's support, 227, 291, 394;
+ Carteret's dismissal, 235, 245;
+ assistance to the Dutch, 246;
+ refuses office perquisites, 256-8, 269, 314;
+ on Aix-la-Chapelle Treaty, 277;
+ eulogy of Chatham, 278, 315;
+ seeks retirement, 283;
+ foreign policy, 289, 447;
+ 'Memoirs of Henry Pelham,' see Coxe, William
+
+ Pelham, Sir Thomas, see Newcastle, Duke of
+
+ Pembroke, Lord, 1st Dragoon Guards, 43, 76
+
+ Penshurst, Chatham visits, 305
+
+ Peter the Great, 147, 207
+
+ Philip, Don, designs on Milan, 208
+
+ Phillimore, R.J., 'Memoirs and Correspondence of Lyttelton' referred
+ to, 140, 306, 324, 325, 338
+
+ Phillips, Mrs., 57, 63
+
+ Phillipson, Mr., 477
+
+ Pitt, Dr., 117
+
+ Pitt, Ann (sister to Lord Chatham), friendships, 41, 49, 53, 54;
+ State appointments, 53, 87;
+ nicknames, 55;
+ correspondence with her brother, 55-84, 88-125, 492;
+ quarrels with Chatham, 83, 85-7, 115, 256;
+ retires to France, 92, 95;
+ returns to England, 102-4;
+ health and mental condition, 107, 115, 116, 120;
+ income increased to, 121;
+ resides at Kensington, 125;
+ grief at death of brother, 127;
+ under restraint, death, 126
+
+ Pitt, Betty (sister to Lord Chatham), history and description of,
+ 49-52
+
+ Pitt, Catherine (sister to Lord Chatham), afterwards Nedham, 49, 84,
+ 95, 96-8
+
+ Pitt, Clara Villiers, see Pitt, Betty
+
+ Pitt, Elizabeth, see Pitt, Betty
+
+ Pitt, Essex (daughter of Governor Pitt), marriage, death, 12, 14, 96
+
+ Pitt, George (of Strathfieldsaye), 26
+
+ Pitt, Harriot, wife of Robert Pitt, see Villiers
+
+ Pitt, Harriot (sister of Lord Chatham), matrimonial designs on, 41,
+ 42, 44;
+ her character, 48;
+ marriage of, 49;
+ illness, 60, 70, 74
+
+ Pitt, Hester, wife of Chatham, see Grenville
+
+ Pitt, John (great-grandfather of Chatham), Vicar of Blandford, 1
+
+ Pitt, John (son of Governor Pitt), disposition, 6, 12, 13
+
+ Pitt, John, a Dorsetshire kinsman, 305, 327
+
+ Pitt, John (eldest son of Lord Chatham), 455, 456, 477
+
+ Pitt, Lucy (daughter of Governor Pitt), marriage, death, 12-14
+
+ Pitt, Mary (sister of Lord Chatham), referred to, 95, 102, 103, 106,
+ 107, 110, 113, 115;
+ described, 49, 52;
+ letter to Lady Suffolk, 102
+
+ Pitt, Robert (son of Governor Pitt, father of Lord Chatham), family
+ relationships, 8, 12, 14-16, 26, 48;
+ character, 12, 14;
+ death, 5, 15, 19, 38;
+ correspondence from son's tutor, 28, 31
+
+ Pitt, Thomas ('The Governor') parentage, characteristics, 1-5, 7, 14,
+ 24, 508;
+ prescience regarding Chatham, 11, 26;
+ mourning item, 34
+
+ Pitt, Thomas (son of Robert, brother of Lord Chatham), conduct and
+ characteristics, 14-16;
+ seeks appointment, 18;
+ marriage, 41;
+ charge against, 49;
+ parliamentary career, 129, 159, 270
+
+ Pitt, Thomas (son of Thomas Pitt), 1st Baron Camelford, letters
+ quoted and referred to, 1, 3, 4, 6, 7, 12, 15, 17, 44, 48, 50,
+ 52, 54, 85-7, 92, 93, 102, 103, 111, 114, 116, 121, 127, 130,
+ 159, 160, 413, 491, 496;
+ created Baron Camelford, 19;
+ on Chatham's marriage, 354, 355;
+ bias toward Chatham, 23, 50, 102, 127, 257
+
+ Pitt, Villiers Clara, see Pitt, Betty
+
+ Pitt, William, 1st Earl of Chatham, see Chatham
+
+ Pitt, William (the younger), birth, 111;
+ death, 353
+
+ Place Bill, extension of, 245
+
+ Plutarch, referred to, 443
+
+ Poetical quotations, 19, 62, 143, 148, 158, 174, 177, 211, 254, 298,
+ 307
+
+ Poland, partition of, 215
+
+ Poland, King of, Berlin Treaty and the, 206
+
+ Poland-Saxony, claims of Austria on, 203
+
+ Polwarth, against Walpole, 148
+
+ Pomfret, Lord, 467
+
+ Pompadour, Madame de, 400
+
+ Pope, Alexander, quoted, 79, 131, 132, 197
+
+ Porritt's 'Unreformed House of Commons' referred to, 129
+
+ Porte, Mr. de la, 102
+
+ Porter's 'History of the Knights of Malta' quoted, 451
+
+ Portsmouth, Duchess of, intercedes for Governor Pitt, 3
+
+ Potter, Thomas, supports petition against Seaford, 271;
+ Bucks Assize dispute, 272-5;
+ Chatham's praise of, 454;
+ position found for, 483, 486;
+ opposes navy reduction, 289
+
+ Pragmatic Sanction, maintenance of, 202, 203
+
+ Prague, King of Bohemia proclaimed in, 205
+
+ Pratt, Charles, 1st Earl Camden, 27, 311
+
+ Preston, Mr., 50
+
+ 'Pretyman Papers,' referred to, 355
+
+ Prevot, as a prototype, 441
+
+ Prior Park, 112
+
+ Protestant Succession, endurance to secure, 198
+
+ Prussia, Convention signed at Hanover, 210
+
+ Pulteney, Sir William, Earl of Bath, Ann Pitt's designs on, 54, 107;
+ entertained at Stowe, 132;
+ his wit, 254;
+ idolised by the people, 175, 262;
+ Walpole's use of, 176, 219, 505;
+ stands aside for Carteret, 178;
+ popularity declines, 184, 259;
+ nettled at criticism, 185;
+ claims head of Government, 216;
+ forms a Government--its failure, 250, 251, 409;
+ proscribed, 252;
+ lack of character, 258;
+ introduces Prize Bill, 422;
+ Newcastle's reflection on, 472
+
+
+ Queensbury, Duchess of, 54, 84
+
+ Queensbury, Duke of, 249
+
+
+ Radway, 307
+
+ Ranby, Dr., 229
+
+ Raumer's 'Frederick II. and his Times,' 402
+
+ Reading, 43, 360
+
+ Redhall, 8
+
+ 'Rejected Addresses,' see Smith, Horatio
+
+ Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 23, 489
+
+ Rhine, River, 207
+
+ Richelieu, Duke of, 204, 427
+
+ Richmond, 147, 193
+
+ Richmond, Duke of, 295
+
+ Ridgeway, Earl of Londonderry, 12
+
+ Rigby, Richard, 424
+
+ Rivers, Lord, 1
+
+ Robinson, Sir Thomas, his appointments, 345;
+ Master of the Wardrobe and Secretary of State, 330, 337, 344, 345,
+ 349, 467, 482;
+ pensioned, 391, 392, 439;
+ Chatham's remarks to, 360;
+ Newcastle's praise of, 344, 345;
+ panegyric on himself, 428
+
+ Rochester, 104
+
+ Rogers, Samuel, 'Recollections of Samuel Rogers' referred to, 85, 86;
+ 'Table Talk,' 364
+
+ Rolt, Bayntun, 172
+
+ Rolliad, quotation from, 19
+
+ Rondet, the royal jeweller, 4
+
+ Ross, Man of, 303
+
+ Roucoux, French victory at, 212
+
+ Royston, Lord, 465
+
+ Russell, Lord John, 231
+
+ Russia, George III.'s treaty with, 371, 378, 379
+
+ Ryder, Sir Dudley, 453, 455
+
+
+ Sackville, Lord George, 428, 442
+
+ St. James's Square, 105, 108, 110, 112, 113, 118, 120, 151, 162
+
+ St. Lawrence, River, naval battle at mouth of, 399
+
+ St. Rumbald, spring at, 304
+
+ Salisbury, 129
+
+ Samson of Battersea, nickname of Bolingbroke, 328
+
+ Sancho Panza, 191
+
+ Sandwich, Earl of, 279, 282
+
+ Sandys, Baron, 148
+
+ Sardinia, 203, 208;
+ King of, 225, 258
+
+ Sarpedon, 181
+
+ Sarum, Old, 2, 4-6, 129, 270
+
+ Saunders, Sir Charles, 450
+
+ Savile, Sir George, 191
+
+ Savoy, House of, 208
+
+ Saxe, Marshal, marches against Austria, 209;
+ successes in the Low Countries, 212
+
+ Saxons, as allies of Britain, 211
+
+ Saxony, entered by Frederick II., 210;
+ Elector of, 206, 286, 289
+
+ Schwerin, Marshal, defeats Austrians at Molwitz, 203
+
+ Scrope, John, 187
+
+ Seaford, election of Chatham for, 270, 358
+
+ Sedgemoor, 187
+
+ Seine, River, 199
+
+ Selwyn, George, 109, 345, 390
+
+ Seward's 'Anecdotes' referred to, 55, 161, 172, 180, 501
+
+ Shelburne, Lord, thoughts on Thomas Pitt, 18;
+ on the madness of the Pitts, 24;
+ on Pitt's use of words, 501;
+ on Richard Temple, 131;
+ troop offered to, 160;
+ on Pulteney's oratory, 176;
+ 'Life of Shelburne,' see Fitzmaurice, Lord
+
+ Shenstone, William, 306
+
+ Sheridan, R.B., 502
+
+ Shippen, William, 148
+
+ Siddons, Mrs., 500
+
+ Sidmouth, Lord, 489
+
+ Silesia, 209
+
+ Sinclair, Sir John, 7
+
+ Sion, 115, 116
+
+ 'Skew,' a nickname, 58, 69
+
+ Smith, Horatio, 'Rejected Addresses' referred to, 23
+
+ Smollett, Tobias, 174
+
+ Soho, 6
+
+ Solomon, name given to Chatham, 356
+
+ South Lodge, 308, 309
+
+ South Sea Bubble, 5
+
+ Spain, extravagance of the Bourbons, 195;
+ claim on Austria, 203;
+ cause of war with, 213;
+ Walpole's policy, 145, 165, 167;
+ war declared against, 201;
+ 'Britons in Spanish prisons' cry, 167;
+ peace question raised by Lord Egmont, 284
+
+ Spencer, Lady Diana, 151
+
+ Spencer, John, bequests to and from, 234
+
+ Sporus, 197
+
+ Stair, Lord, 207, 218
+
+ Stanhope, George, death of, 98
+
+ Stanhope, Lady Hester, 7, 139, 489;
+ 'Memoirs,' 139
+
+ Stanhope, James, 1st Earl, 31;
+ soldier and statesman, 5, 46;
+ marriage with Lucy Pitt, 14
+
+ Stanhope, Philip Dormer, see Chesterfield, Earl of
+
+ Stanhope, Sir William, speech on the Bucks Assize dispute, 272-4
+
+ Stanislas, 71
+
+ Stanley, Hans, 327
+
+ Stannaries, Thomas Pitt, Warden of, 18
+
+ States General, a party to the Treaty of Berlin, 206
+
+ Stephen, Leslie, 'English Literature and Society in the Eighteenth
+ Century,' 214, 307, 353
+
+ Stewart, General, 26
+
+ Stockwell, I., as tutor to Lord Chatham, 31
+
+ Stone, Andrew, 384, 390, 460
+
+ Stone House, 304
+
+ Stormont, 453
+
+ Stowe, 77-82, 130, 132, 272, 291, 306, 352, 355
+
+ Strange, Lord, 277
+
+ Stratford, 5, 28
+
+ Stuart, House of, 144
+
+ Stuart, Charles Edward, 'the Young Pretender,' 199, 210, 211, 222,
+ 226, 243
+
+ Stuart, Mrs., 96
+
+ 'Sublimity Pitt,' 54
+
+ Subsidies, On, 205, 209, 289, 379, 380, 430-4, 436
+
+ Suffolk, 234
+
+ Suffolk, Lady, letters referred to, 12, 53, 54, 57, 76, 78, 79, 81,
+ 86, 102, 104, 107, 127, 161
+
+ Sunninghill, 304
+
+ Surajah Dowlah, 457
+
+ Sussex, tour in, 305
+
+ Swallowfield, 5, 11, 43, 57
+
+ Sweden, King of, 209
+
+
+ Talbot, Lord, evil living of, 49
+
+ Taylor, Miss, 51
+
+ Temperley's 'Essay on the Causes of War with Spain' referred to, 166
+
+ Temple, Countess, see Grenville, Lady
+
+ Temple, Lord, see Grenville, Richard Temple, afterwards Earl Grenville
+
+ Temple, Sir Richard, Viscount Cobham, 17, 77, 81, 236, 245, 292, 304,
+ 346, 505;
+ builder of palace of Stowe, 130, 131;
+ his entertainments at, 132;
+ served under Marlborough, 131;
+ called 'the brave Cobham,' 131;
+ his great riches, 134, 141;
+ various titles and honours conferred on, 131;
+ opposed to the Excise Bill, 132;
+ sides with Pitt, 22;
+ Pitt devoted to Cobham, 160, 161, 178;
+ quarrel with Pitt, 256;
+ on the war in Flanders, 223, 224, 227;
+ growing jealousy of his 'young patriots,' 273, 276;
+ nicknames to, 131;
+ death of, 133, 138
+
+ Temple Bar, 169
+
+ Thackeray, Francis, 'Life of Chatham' referred to, 28, 54, 163, 363
+
+ Thackeray, W.M., referred to, 13;
+ satire on George II. mentioned, 196
+
+ Thames, Dutch ships in the, 226
+
+ 'The Test,' a newspaper, 50
+
+ Thessaly, 332
+
+ Thirsk, 4
+
+ Thomson's 'Life of the Duchess of Marlborough,' 234
+
+ Timbs, 'Anecdote biography,' 308
+
+ 'Tom Jones,' see Fielding, Henry
+
+ Torrens, W.T. McC., 'History of Cabinets,' 276
+
+ Towcester, 80
+
+ Townshend, Lady, 356
+
+ Townshend, Charles, 428, 435, 441, 467, 475
+
+ Townshend, Colonel, 277
+
+ Townshend, George, 428, 441, 467
+
+ Trinity College, Chatham admitted to, 30
+
+ Trojans, 332
+
+ Tunbridge, 306
+
+ Tunbridge Wells, 304, 309, 313
+
+ Twickenham, 5, 125
+
+
+ Underwood's 'Historical MSS.' quoted, 257
+
+ Utrecht, 18, 21, 39, 43
+
+
+ Vale Royal, 14
+
+ Valliere, La, 192
+
+ Vauxhall, New, 304
+
+ Vere, Lady, 107
+
+ Vere, Lord, 107
+
+ Versailles, 109;
+ Palace at, 192;
+ replica of, in a Bavarian lake, 192;
+ Treaty of, 401
+
+ Very, Count, 109
+
+ Vesey, Mr., 39
+
+ Vienna threatened by the French army, 205
+
+ Villiers, George, Duke of Buckingham, 26
+
+ Villiers, Harriot, marriage with Robert Pitt, 12, 26;
+ mother of Lord Chatham, 12;
+ her family, 15;
+ returns to France, 15;
+ correspondence with her son, 38-46;
+ death of, 48
+
+ Villiers, Lord, 39-41
+
+ Voiture, 61
+
+ Voltaire's 'Candide' referred to, 451
+
+
+ Waddington, Richard, 'Louis XV. et le Renversement des Alliances'
+ referred to, 401
+
+ Waldegrave, Lady Betty, 108, 109
+
+ Waldegrave, James, Earl, procures Pitt letters of introduction at
+ Paris, 70;
+ on the character of George II., 194, 195;
+ on Sir Thomas Robinson, 345;
+ negotiates for Fox to enter the Cabinet, 366-8;
+ 'Correspondence' referred to, 359, 364
+
+ Waldegrave, John, Earl, 109
+
+ Waller, 224, 236; appointed Cofferer, 237
+
+ Walpole, Horace, 2nd Earl of Orford (son of Sir Robert Walpole),
+ 283, 412
+
+ Walpole, Horace, 4th Earl of Orford (brother of Sir Robert Walpole),
+ his kinship with Lord Hervey, 197;
+ affection for Lord Camelford, 19;
+ as a gossip, 352;
+ on Thomas Pitt, 18;
+ charge against Betty Pitt, 49;
+ _re_ Ann Pitt, 53, 54, 92, 116, 125-7;
+ on Pitt's behaviour to his sisters, 50;
+ on the Grenvilles, 133, 137, 139, 140;
+ on George II., 193;
+ on Pitt's speeches, 392, 394, 405, 421, 424, 431, 434-5, 438, 441;
+ his admiration for Pitt, 341, 493, 503;
+ on Pitt's impatience for office, 244;
+ on Pitt's change of opinion, 288;
+ on Pitt's sudden illness, 298;
+ on Dr. Lee's attack on Pitt, 254-5, 268;
+ on Pitt's resentment against the Newcastles, 300, 357;
+ his partiality for Fox, 368;
+ on Sir Thomas Robinson's appointment, 344;
+ on Lyttelton, 413;
+ on Lord Wilmington, 179;
+ opposes Saxon subsidy, 289;
+ on the Bath Ministry, 250;
+ on the loss of Minorca, 452, 457;
+ on the American war;
+ on the scheme of the Notables, 480-1;
+ letter to Bentley, 344.
+
+ Walpole, Horace, 'Memoirs of the Reign of George III.,' quotations
+ from, 92, 140, 268, 359, 367, 370, 374, 394-5, 462, 467, 469,
+ 478-81.
+
+ Walpole, Sir Robert, 1st Earl of Orford, character of, 132, 144, 146,
+ 254;
+ his love for sport, 147;
+ his relations with George II., 196, 219;
+ on the political character of George II., 194;
+ his relations with Pitt, 74, 75, 158-60, 170, 178, 186, 187;
+ his attitude towards the Prince of Wales, 152, 157;
+ his attitude towards Newcastle, 175-7;
+ supports Pelham, 314-15;
+ his policy regarding Spain, 145, 167, 169, 201;
+ on the Army, 164;
+ on the Secessions, 168;
+ supports Maria Theresa, 203;
+ favours the Hanoverian vote, 225;
+ speech on threatened landing of the Pretender, 227;
+ temporary resignation of, 179;
+ inquiry into administration of, 184;
+ punishment of, 183;
+ succeeded by Lord Carteret, 205;
+ fall of, 148, 149, 171-3, 178, 505, 506;
+ resignation of, and papers burnt by his brother Horace, 172;
+ impeachment of, 473;
+ illness and death of, 228, 229;
+ compared with Pitt and Peel, 230-2;
+ 'Memoirs of Sir Robert Walpole,' see Coxe, William
+
+ Walpole, Thomas, purchases Hayes, 310
+
+ Washington, George, General, 350, 397
+
+ Webster, Sir Whistler, 305
+
+ West, Gilbert, 304, 307, 309, 492;
+ his house at Wickham, 356
+
+ West, Molly, 352
+
+ Westminster, Treaty of, 401
+
+ Westminster School, 359
+
+ Westphalia, 306;
+ Treaty of, 286
+
+ Whately, Mr., 'Observations on Modern Gardening,' 309
+
+ Wickham, Chatham's honeymoon spent at, 356
+
+ Wilberforce, William, 261
+
+ Wilhelmine, Princess of Prussia, afterwards Margravine of Bareith,
+ 151
+
+ Wilkes, John, 136, 358, 359, 491
+
+ Wilkins' 'Political Ballads,' 298
+
+ William III., indifference to England, 198, 199;
+ Pitt's story of his coming, 276
+
+ Williams, Sir Charles Hanbury, 174;
+ lampoon on Pitt, 235;
+ 'Works of,' quoted, 211, 235, 465
+
+ Wilmington, Lord, 179, 216, 217, 314, 505
+
+ Wilton, Joseph, 490
+
+ Wiltshire, lands purchased in, 6
+
+ Wimbledon, Duchess of Marlborough's estate at, 234
+
+ Windsor, 156
+
+ 'Wingfield MSS.' quoted, 343, 359, 474, 485
+
+ Winnington, Thomas, 250, 254
+
+ Wood, Robert, 'Essay on the Original Genius of Homer' quoted, 182
+
+ Worms, Treaty of, 208, 225
+
+ Wotton, residence of George Grenville, 113, 352, 354
+
+ Wyndham, Baron, 148, 254
+
+ Wynn, Sir Watkin, 224
+
+
+ Yarmouth, Lady, 280, 388, 481;
+ and George II., 193, 371, 464;
+ mistress of George II., 465;
+ and Pitt, 108-10, 263, 464, 472;
+ Fox solicits her influence to obtain a peerage, 296;
+ and Fox's overtures with the King, 341;
+ her utterance regarding, 461
+
+ Yonge, Lady, 240
+
+ Yorke, Charles, 371, 372;
+ interview with Chatham, 373
+
+ Yorke, Joseph, 185
+
+ Yorke, Philip, see Hardwicke, Earl of
+
+
+ Zoroastrians, politicians compared with, 389
+
+
+LONDON: STRANGEWAYS, PRINTERS.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] Camelford.
+
+[2] Diary of William Hedges, III. x.
+
+[3] Hedges, III. xii.
+
+[4] He purchased it from Lord Salisbury about 1690. Hedges, III. xxx.
+
+[5] The portrait of the Governor at Boconnoc represents him with the
+diamond in his hat. That at Chevening with the diamond in his own shoe.
+
+[6] Camelford.
+
+[7] Camelford.
+
+[8] Lyte's Dunster, 494.
+
+[9] This and the following extracts from the Governor's correspondence
+are all taken from the Dropmore Papers (Hist. MSS.).
+
+[10] Lady Suffolk's Letters, i. 101-4.
+
+[11] Camelford (italics his).
+
+[12] Camelford.
+
+[13] Dropmore Papers, i. 70.
+
+[14] Camelford.
+
+[15] Ib.
+
+[16] Dropmore Papers, i. 75.
+
+[17] Camelford.
+
+[18] Camelford.
+
+[19] Journal, ii. 45.
+
+[20] Dropmore Papers, i. 38, 41.
+
+[21] Tom Jones, Book xiii. Chapter i.
+
+[22] Life of Shelburne, i. 72.
+
+[23] Addressed: To Robert Pitt, Esqr, at Stratford, near Old Sarum,
+Wilts. Endorsed: 'Mr. Burchet's letter about my Sons att Eton. Febry
+4th, 1722.'
+
+[24] Lyttelton's Misc. Works, p. 650. 'Written at Eaton School, 1729.'
+The date is obviously wrong, for Pitt and Lyttelton both went to Oxford
+in 1726.
+
+[25] Endorsed: 'from my Son William Sept. 29th: recd Oct. 10th,
+1723.'
+
+[26] Endorsed: 'from Mr. Stockwell about ye charges of my Sons going to
+Oxon: Novr 1726 ansd Decr 1st.'
+
+[27] Mourning for the Governor.
+
+[28] Endorsed: 'from Mr Stockwell about my Son Wm from Oxon: Decr
+22d ansd 29th 1726.'
+
+[29] Paduasoy.
+
+[30] Endorsed: 'from my Son Willm Oxon Jany 20th wth ye acct
+ye 100 answd ye 24th 1726/7.'
+
+[31] Endorsed: 'from my Son Willm Aprill 10th wth an acct
+ of 3 mos expences 47 05 0
+ Rems in his hand 9 15 0
+ In all 57 0 0
+
+ Answd Aprill 25th, wth leave to draw for 25l.'
+
+[32] Lyttelton, Misc. Works, 665.
+
+[33] Always spelt Needham in the peerage books, always Nedham by the
+family and those concerned.
+
+[34] 'Villiers Pitt' to William Pitt. 'Tours, June 1, 1752.' Chatham
+MSS.
+
+[35] Mann and Manners at the Court of Florence, i. 382.
+
+[36] 'The Test' was a weekly paper published in 1756-7, written
+principally by Arthur Murphy, and inspired by Henry Fox, as may be seen
+from his letters. See too Orford, ii. 276, and Walpole to Mann, Jan. 6,
+1757. There had been a previous 'Test' in 1756, of which there was
+published only one number, written by Charles Townshend. See Orford, ii.
+218.
+
+[37] Walpole to Mann, Jan. 17, 1757.
+
+[38] To William Pitt, Oct. 10, 1751. Chatham MSS.
+
+[39] Dutens' Memoires d'un Voyageur qui se repose, i. 31-42.
+
+[40] Tours, June 11, 1752. Villiers Pitt to W. Pitt. Chatham MSS.
+
+[41] Or 1787? as says a note in the Delany Memoirs, iv. 266. It matters
+little.
+
+[42] Climenson's 'Elizabeth Montagu,' ii. 53. See, too, Mrs. Montagu's
+Letters, vol. iii.
+
+[43] Suffolk Letters, ii. 233.
+
+[44] Camelford MS. Cf., too, William's letter of Sept. 29, 1730.
+
+[45] Thackeray, i. 158 note.
+
+[46] There is a crayon portrait of her at Boconnoc, which the writer has
+not seen. It 'represents the strong contemplative face of a woman well
+past her first prime,' and was taken, apparently, in 1765.
+
+[47] Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 355.
+
+[48] All these letters from William to Ann Pitt come from the papers at
+Dropmore, unless where noted otherwise.
+
+[49] 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt, at Mrs. Phillips's, at Bath. T. Pitt Free.'
+
+[50] Dr. Charles Bave, a physician of the highest character at Bath. See
+note on Vol. I., p. 408, of Lady Suffolk's Letters.
+
+[51] This must almost certainly be Ayscough, in spite of 'Skew's' being
+the hereditary nickname of the Fortescue family.
+
+[52] These are probably Colonel and Mrs. Lanoe, with whom Ann appears to
+be staying at Bath.
+
+[53] Lyttelton's Misc. Works, 619.
+
+[54] 'Mrs. Ann Pitt, at Col. Lanoe's at Bath.'
+
+[55] 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt jun. at Boconnock near Bodmin Cornwall.'
+
+[56] 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt at Mrs. Phillips's at Bath. T. Pitt Free.'
+
+[57] Same address.
+
+[58] 'To Mrs. Ann Pitt, at Bath.'
+
+[59] Ante, p. 56.
+
+[60] Dr. Ayscough?
+
+[61] 'To The Honble Mrs. Ann Pitt at St. James's House Londres.'
+
+[62] Illegible.
+
+[63] 'To The Honble Mrs Ann Pitt at Mrs Richard's In Pallmall,
+London. Angleterre.'
+
+[64] 'To the Honble Mrs Ann Pitt at St. James's House London.
+Angleterre.'
+
+[65] 'To the Honble Mrs Ann Pitt at St. James's London.
+Free--Will, Herbert.'
+
+[66] Doubtless his brother.
+
+[67] His brother.
+
+[68] Sir William Corbett.
+
+[69] 'To The Honble Mrs Ann Pitt at St. James's London.'
+
+[70] Elected Feb. 18, 1735.
+
+[71] Doubtless his brother.
+
+[72] Lyttelton--a mere guess.
+
+[73] Doubtless his brother.
+
+[74] N.B.--Pope was at Stowe during this month. See Lady Suffolk's
+Letters, ii. 143.
+
+[75] 'To the Honble Mrs Pitt at Kensington House Middlesex.
+Free--W. Pitt.'
+
+[76] Camelford MS.
+
+[77] Recollections of Samuel Rogers, p. 104.
+
+[78] Grenville Papers, i. 13.
+
+[79] Chatham MSS.
+
+[80] Orford, i. 85.
+
+[81] His aunt.
+
+[82] Their cousin, Colonel the Hon. George Stanhope, who distinguished
+himself at Falkirk and Culloden.
+
+[83] Letter dated Oct. 21, 1754, in the Chatham MSS.
+
+[84] 'To The Honourable Mrs. Ann Pitt, W. Pitt.'
+
+[85] Lady Suffolk's Letters, ii. 251.
+
+[86] Delany, iv. 156.
+
+[87] Walpole to Mann, Oct. 30, 1778.
+
+[88] Ib. May 9, 1779.
+
+[89] Delany, v. 403-5.
+
+[90] Lady Suffolk's Letters, ii. 234.
+
+[91] Porritt's Unreformed House of Commons, i. 35. T. Mozley when the
+nineteenth century was well advanced saw the constituency of Old Sarum
+in the person of 'a bright looking old fellow with a full rubicund face
+and a profusion of white hair.' Reminiscences, ii. 13.
+
+[92] Grenville Papers, i. 423.
+
+[93] Grenville Papers, i. 423-5.
+
+[94] Grenville Papers, ii. 496.
+
+[95] Ib. ii. 512.
+
+[96] Lord Dundonald in his 'Autobiography' says that it produced
+20,693_l._ p.a.
+
+[97] Dickins and Stanton. 'An Eighteenth Century Correspondence,' 193.
+
+[98] It seems best to call this worthy, who assumed the name of
+Dodington, by his patronymic; for it is his own name, and the most
+appropriate.
+
+[99] Walpole to Mann, Feb. 25, 1750.
+
+[100] Memoirs of Lady Hester Stanhope, iii. 179.
+
+[101] See 'The New Ministry, containing a collection of all the
+satyrical poems, songs, &c. 1742.'
+
+[102] Phillimore's Lyttelton, 681.
+
+[103] Orford's George III. iii. 137.
+
+[104] Ballantyne's Carteret, 107.
+
+[105] Harris's Hardwicke, i. 382.
+
+[106] These expressions are taken from Hervey's Memoirs.
+
+[107] Dated Feb. 8, 1748. Bedford Correspondence, i. 320.
+
+[108] Marchmont Papers, i. 84.
+
+[109] Lord Dover's note to H. Walpole's letter of March 21, 1751.
+
+[110] Carlisle Papers (Hist. MSS.), 172.
+
+[111] Seward, ii. 362.
+
+[112] Lady Suffolk's Letters, ii. 151.
+
+[113] Hervey, ii. 195.
+
+[114] Hervey, ii. 80.
+
+[115] Ib. ii. 82.
+
+[116] Parl. Hist. x. 464-7.
+
+[117] Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 575.
+
+[118] Life of Shelburne, i. 46.
+
+[119] Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 580 note.
+
+[120] See Temperley's Essay on the causes of this war in Trans. of Royal
+Hist. Soc. Series II. vol. iii. p. 207.
+
+[121] Parl. Hist. x. 1284.
+
+[122] Parl. Hist. x. 1280-3.
+
+[123] Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 594 note.
+
+[124] Marchmont Papers, ii. 180, note by Rose.
+
+[125] Life of Shelburne, i. 37. Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 309.
+
+[126] Coxe's Sir R. Walpole, i. 695.
+
+[127] Sir C.H. Williams, ii. 140-1.
+
+[128] Dutens' Voyage, &c., i. 142.
+
+[129] Life of Shelburne, i. 45.
+
+[130] Bishop Newton's Works, i. 93.
+
+[131] Ballantyne's Carteret, 2.
+
+[132] Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 280.
+
+[133] Marchmont Papers, i. 42, 73.
+
+[134] Wood's Essay on the Original Genius of Homer, p. vii. n. (Ed.
+1775).
+
+[135] Chesterfield, v. 65.
+
+[136] Chesterfield's Letters, iv. 358.
+
+[137] Parl. Hist. xii. 416-427.
+
+[138] Harris, ii. 31.
+
+[139] Parl. Hist. xii. 561.
+
+[140] Ib. xii. 488.
+
+[141] Parl. Hist. xii. 490.
+
+[142] Parl. Hist. xii. 940 note.
+
+[143] Ib. xii. 1033.
+
+[144] Orford, Rem. 97.
+
+[145] Hervey, ii. 182, 228.
+
+[146] Holdernesse to Newcastle, Nov. 22, 1756. Add. MSS. 32869.
+
+[147] Frederick, iii. 141.
+
+[148] Martin, Hist. de France, xv. 265. Leadam, 376.
+
+[149] Sir C.H. Williams, i. 247.
+
+[150] L. Stephen, English Literature and Society in the Eighteenth
+Century, 138.
+
+[151] Parl. Hist. xiii. 136.
+
+[152] Parl. Hist. xiii. 473 (note). Cf. Phillimore, 226. But Carteret
+had taken the lead of the Prince's party in the House of Lords so far
+back as 1737.
+
+[153] Parl. Hist. xvi. 1097.
+
+[154] Fortescue, Hist. of the Army, ii. 101.
+
+[155] Marchmont Papers, i. 80.
+
+[156] Ib. i. 176.
+
+[157] To Mann, Jan. 24, 1744. Cf. Parl. Hist. xiii. 467 note.
+
+[158] Orford, ii. 132.
+
+[159] Thomson's Life of the Duchess of Marlborough, ii. 571-2.
+
+[160] Marchmont Papers, ii. 338.
+
+[161] H. Walpole to Montagu, June 24, 1746. Cf. Grenville Papers, i.
+131. Camelford MS.
+
+[162] H. Walpole to Mann, June 20, 1746.
+
+[163] Marchmont Papers, i. 70.
+
+[164] Works of Sir C.H. Williams, 1822, ii. 152.
+
+[165] Glover, 30.
+
+[166] Marchmont Papers, i. 67, 172. It was said that Harrington, from an
+interest in Lady Yonge, wife of the actual incumbent of the office, did
+his best to prevent Pitt's becoming Secretary for War. Ib. 97. But there
+was a more majestic obstacle.
+
+[167] Parl. Hist. xiii. 1054-6.
+
+[168] Parl. Hist. xiii. 1176.
+
+[169] Parl. Hist. xiii. 1177.
+
+[170] Bedford is ranked by Newcastle among the Cobham deputation, though
+he was First Lord of the Admiralty at the time. Perhaps he was the
+honest broker.
+
+[171] Newcastle to Chesterfield, Nov. 20, 1745. Add. MSS. 32705.
+
+[172] Newcastle to Chesterfield, Feb. 18, 1746, in Coxe's Pelham Adm. i.
+292.
+
+[173] Newcastle to Chesterfield, Feb. 18, 1746, in Coxe's Pelham Adm. i.
+293.
+
+[174] Coxe's Lord Walpole, ii. 142.
+
+[175] Coxe's Lord Walpole, ii. 133.
+
+[176] Newcastle to Chesterfield, Feb. 18, 1746.
+
+[177] Orford, i. 110. Walpole to Mann, April 2, 1750.
+
+[178] Cartwright to Pitt, Feb. 27, 1745 (Chatham MSS.). We obtain the
+exact salary more or less correctly from a lampoon.
+
+ 'Hibernia, smile!
+ Thrice happy isle,
+ On thy blest ground
+ Twelve thousand pound
+ For Stanhope's found,
+ Three thousand clear
+ For Pitt a year;
+ So shalt thou thrive,
+ Industrious hive,
+ While these and more
+ Increase thy store.'
+
+ Sir C.H. Williams, ii. 166.
+
+
+[179] Camelford.
+
+[180] Cf. Underwood MSS. (Hist. MSS.), p. 405.
+
+[181] He avowed this to Newcastle (Orford, George III. i. 82 note). But
+it was otherwise patent.
+
+[182] Parl. Hist. xiv. 103.
+
+[183] See the debate in Parl. Hist. xiv. 204.
+
+[184] Gibbs' History of Aylesbury, 502.
+
+[185] Torrens says (History of Cabinets, ii. 119) that this speech was
+revised by Pitt, but gives no authority. Almon (i. 172) specifically
+declares that it was written by Gordon.
+
+[186] Parl. Hist. xiv. 502.
+
+[187] Grenville Papers, i. 93-5.
+
+[188] Parl. Hist. xiv. 664.
+
+[189] Parl. Hist. xiv. 692-6.
+
+[190] Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 370.
+
+[191] Add. MSS. 32721.
+
+[192] July 20, 1750. Add. MSS. 32721.
+
+[193] Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 131, 370.
+
+[194] Ib. ii. 396.
+
+[195] Parl. Hist. xiv. 801.
+
+[196] Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 225, 359.
+
+[197] Parl. Hist. xiv. 967.
+
+[198] Stone to Newcastle, Feb. 22, 1750/1. Add. MSS. 32724.
+
+[199] Parl. Hist. xiv. 970.
+
+[200] Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 144.
+
+[201] Coxe's Pelham Adm. ii. 165.
+
+[202] Holland House MSS.
+
+[203] Colebrooke's Memoirs, i. 63.
+
+[204] Earl of Rochester. Ib. 73.
+
+[205] Wilkins, Political Ballads, ii. 312.
+
+[206] Parl. Hist. xv. 154.
+
+[207] September, 1749.
+
+[208] Almon, i. 195.
+
+[209] Pitt to Newcastle, July 25, 1753. Add. MSS. 32732.
+
+[210] Pitt to Newcastle, March 6, 1754. Add. MSS. 32734.
+
+[211] Feb. 11, o.s. 1751. Letters, ii. 97.
+
+[212] Climenson's Mrs. Montague, ii. 51. Kielmansegge's Diary, 131.
+
+[213] Meehan's Famous Houses of Bath, 112.
+
+[214] Meehan, 111.
+
+[215] Climenson.
+
+[216] Mrs. Montagu's Letters, iii. 235.
+
+[217] Memorials of Lord Gambier, i. 61. Cf. Mrs. Montagu's Letters, iii.
+240.
+
+[218] Pitt to Newcastle. Tunbridge, Aug. 14, 1753. Add. MSS. 32732.
+
+[219] Phillimore, 265.
+
+[220] An Eighteenth Century Correspondence, 388 n. See too Harris's
+Hardwicke, ii. 456.
+
+[221] Timbs, Anecdote Biography, 156, quoting from The Ambulator (1820).
+
+[222] Legge to Pitt. Berlin, July 10, 1748. Chatham MSS.
+
+[223] Climenson, ii. 9-10. Mrs. Montagu's Letters, iii. 181.
+
+[224] Nuthall to Lady Chatham, March 25, 1768. Chatham MSS.
+
+[225] Chatham to Nuthall, Oct. 7, 1772. Chatham MSS.
+
+[226] October 6, 1753. Add. MSS. 32733.
+
+[227] October 13, 1753. Add. MSS. 32733.
+
+[228] Pitt to Newcastle, March 7, 1754. Add. MSS. 32734.
+
+[229] Grenville Papers, i. 109.
+
+[230] Ib. i. 111.
+
+[231] Pitt to Newcastle, March 11, 1754. Add. MSS. 32734.
+
+[232] Murray.
+
+[233] This seems an allusion either to Leicester House, or, less
+probably, to Newcastle.
+
+[234] Grenville Papers, i. 106.
+
+[235] Granville Papers, i. 110.
+
+[236] Pitt was member for Aldborough, one of Newcastle's boroughs.
+
+[237] Phillimore's Lyttelton, 449.
+
+[238] Phillimore's Lyttelton, 453.
+
+[239] Grenville Papers, i. 112.
+
+[240] Add. MSS. 32734. f. 322.
+
+[241] Grenville Papers, i. 116.
+
+[242] Pitt to Newcastle, April 2, 1754. Add. MSS. 32735. The more
+elaborate draft of this letter is given with a wrong date in the Chatham
+Corr. i. 85.
+
+[243] Chatham Corr. i. 89.
+
+[244] Chatham Corr. i. 95.
+
+[245] Add. MSS. 32735. f. 21.
+
+[246] Harris's Hardwicke, iii. 8.
+
+[247] The sense shows clearly that Pitt intended to write 'unwilling'.
+
+[248] Phillimore, 466.
+
+[249] Holland House MSS.
+
+[250] Holland House MSS.
+
+[251] H. Fox to Argyll, Sept. 26, 1755 (H.H. MSS.).
+
+[252] H. Fox to the Duke of Marlborough, March 22, 1754 (H.H. MSS.).
+
+[253] Wingfield MSS. 224b in Hist. MSS.
+
+[254] Walpole to Bentley, March 17, 1754.
+
+[255] Colebrooke, i. 18.
+
+[256] An Eighteenth Century Correspondence, 230.
+
+[257] Newcastle to Pitt, April 2, 1754, Chatham Corr.
+
+[258] Supra, p. 335.
+
+[259] Add. MSS. 32733. Pitt to Newcastle, April 22, 1754.
+
+[260] Bubb, 304.
+
+[261] Aug. 29, 1754. H.H. MSS.
+
+[262] Bubb, 317.
+
+[263] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Oct. 2, 1754. Add. MSS. 32737.
+
+[264] Hardwicke to Newcastle, Oct. 3, 1754. Add. MSS. 32737.
+
+[265] Orford, i. 78.
+
+[266] An Eighteenth Century Correspondence, p. 154.
+
+[267] Mrs. Montagu's Letters, iii. 273.
+
+[268] Orford, i. 406-7.
+
+[269] Fox to Hartington, Nov. 26, 1754, in Waldegrave, p. 146. Orford,
+i. 408. Cf. Calcraft to Digby, Nov. 26, 1754, in Wingfield MSS.
+
+[270] Butler's Rem. i. 144.
+
+[271] Waldegrave, 149-50
+
+[272] Fox to Hartington, Nov. 28, 1754, in Waldegrave, p. 150. Orford,
+i. 142.
+
+[273] Butler's Reminiscences, i. 145.
+
+[274] Table Talk of S. Rogers, p. 100.
+
+[275] Orford, i. 417.
+
+[276] Ib. 418.
+
+[277] See Pitt's obscure note in Chatham Corresp. i. 130, and the
+interpretation in Orford, i. 419.
+
+[278] Orford, i. 420.
+
+[279] Coxe's Lord Walpole, ii. 406.
+
+[280] Bubb, 319-21. Orford, ii. 37.
+
+[281] The accession of Fox to the Cabinet is beset with small
+difficulties of chronology. Horace Walpole in his Memoirs (i. 147) tells
+us that the King sent for Fox on November 29, 1754, and in a letter of
+January 9, 1755, announces that Fox had been admitted to the Cabinet.
+Yet we have Fox's own letter to Pitt of April 26, 1755, announcing that
+the King that afternoon had signified to him his admission to the
+Cabinet. (Chatham Corresp. i. 132). It is evident that Horace Walpole
+believed, prematurely, that the matter was settled early in January.
+Strangely enough our surest authority in all these transactions, except
+Waldegrave, who is vague and dateless, is the corrupt and perfidious
+Bubb.
+
+[282] Thackeray gives a different account of this interview and of that
+with Charles Yorke, we know not whence derived. The account in the text
+is that of Charles Yorke and Hardwicke themselves (Harris, iii. 29-34)
+and in part Bubb, on the authority of James Grenville (p. 340).
+
+[283] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Sept. 3, 1755. Add. MSS. 32858. See too
+Orford, ii. 40.
+
+[284] Add. MSS. 32858.
+
+[285] These two sentences are transposed for the sake of clearness.
+
+[286] Italics ours.
+
+[287] Italics ours.
+
+[288] There was some family connection between Bubb and the Grenvilles,
+though it is not easy to trace. Bubb's property indeed, to his disgust,
+was entailed on Temple.
+
+[289] Bubb, 370.
+
+[290] Add. MSS. 32859, f. 86.
+
+[291] Orford, ii. 45.
+
+[292] Orford, ii. 7-9.
+
+[293] Orford, ii. 17.
+
+[294] 'Montcalm and Wolfe,' i. 483.
+
+[295] Ib. i. 510.
+
+[296] Ib. i. 54, 66.
+
+[297] 'Montcalm and Wolfe,' i. 214-26.
+
+[298] Souvenirs de Moreau, i. 62.
+
+[299] Moreau, i. 58.
+
+[300] Waddington. Louis XV. et le Renversement des Alliances, pp. 471-6.
+
+[301] Baumer, Frederick II. and his Times, 227.
+
+[302] Ibid. 233.
+
+[303] Carlyle, Frederick, iv. 509.
+
+[304] Orford, ii. 55-62.
+
+[305] Fox to Ellis. Holland House MSS.
+
+[306] Camelford.
+
+[307] Walpole here professes to give Pitt's words exactly.
+
+[308] _I.e._, suppose any man should have purposely put off bringing
+hither troops from Ireland, with the object of making this country
+appear so unprotected as to require foreign mercenaries.
+
+[309] Orford, ii. 67-76.
+
+[310] Parl. Hist. xv. 544-616.
+
+[311] Bedford Corr. ii. 179.
+
+[312] Bedford Corr. ii. 180.
+
+[313] Orford, ii. 86-97.
+
+[314] Orford, ii. 98-101.
+
+[315] Orford, ii. 107.
+
+[316] Holland House MSS.
+
+[317] Orford, ii. 135-9.
+
+[318] Orford says that Sackville moved for them on April 29. The
+Parliamentary History says that Fox moved for them on March 29 (xv.
+702).
+
+[319] Parl. Hist. xv. 702.
+
+[320] Orford, ii. 185-6.
+
+[321] Orford, ii. 188-90.
+
+[322] Orford, ii. 193-7.
+
+[323] The Consul at Genoa had warned Newcastle early in February that a
+surprise attack on Minorca was meditated. Mr. Corbett, who states this,
+(England in the Seven Years War, i. 97) excuses Newcastle for neglecting
+the information, one does not see why. More attention was paid to an
+intercepted despatch of the Swedish minister at Paris, dated February
+25, 1756.
+
+[324] Walpole to Chute, June 8, 1756.
+
+[325] 'So also we find it recorded during the siege of Malta, that some
+hesitation having displayed itself on the part of the slaves in exposing
+themselves, during their pioneering labours, to a fire more than
+ordinarily deadly, the Grand Master directed some to be hanged and
+others to have their ears cut off, "pour encourager les autres" as the
+chroniclers quaintly and simply record.' Porter's 'History of the
+Knights of Malta,' ii. 272.
+
+[326] Fox to Ellis, July 12, 1756. Holland House MSS.
+
+[327] Chatham Corr. i. 158.
+
+[328] 'Montcalm and Wolfe,' i. 413.
+
+[329] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Sept. 2, 1756. Add. MSS. 35416.
+
+[330] Fox to Kildare. This, an undated narrative among the Holland House
+MSS., seems to me the best statement from Fox's point of view. From Lord
+Kildare's reply it is evident that it was written and despatched towards
+the end of Nov. 1756.
+
+[331] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[332] Fox to Stone, October 7, 1756. Holland House MSS.
+
+[333] Ib.
+
+[334] Fox to Ellis. H.H. MSS., Oct. 12, 1756.
+
+[335] Newcastle to Fox, Oct. 12, 1756. H.H. MSS.
+
+[336] Newcastle to Lady Yarmouth, Oct. 13. Add. MSS. 32868.
+
+[337] Fox to Digby, Oct. 1756. Wingfield MSS. in Hist. MSS.
+
+[338] Orford, ii. 253.
+
+[339] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[340] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Oct. 15, 1756. Harris, iii. 73.
+
+[341] Hardwicke to Newcastle, Oct. 19, 1756. Add. MSS. 32868.
+
+[342] Harris, iii. 77.
+
+[343] Grenville Papers, i. 178.
+
+[344] Sir C.H. Williams, iii. 41.
+
+[345] Shelburne, i. 83.
+
+[346] Add. MSS. 35416; cf. Orford, ii. 257.
+
+[347] Orford, ii. 259.
+
+[348] Leadam, 445 note. Orford, ii. 259.
+
+[349] Shelburne, i. 83 note.
+
+[350] Add. MSS. 35870 'Powis Ho., October 24, 1756. Sunday night.'
+
+[351] This poor Hanoverian victim, as completely as Andersen's Tin
+Soldier, has melted into nothingness. But he once caused a mighty stir.
+He bought four handkerchiefs, and by mistake, as was universally
+conceded, took the whole piece, which contained six. Yet he was put in
+prison on a charge of theft. His commanding officer demanded his
+enlargement. Failing in this attempt, he obtained a warrant from
+Holdernesse for his release. The whole country was aflame in an instant
+with the old hostility to German mercenaries, Holdernesse was severely
+threatened, and the innocent soldier cruelly flogged. See Orford, ii.
+248-9.
+
+[352] Strangely enough there is a different answer appended to this
+report.
+
+'That H.M. had been desirous, in this time of difficulty, to have the
+assistance of Mr. Pitt in his service, and for that purpose to consider
+him and those connected with him in a proper manner. That H.M. continues
+in the same disposition, tho' what has been suggested by Mr. Pitt will
+not in the King's opinion form a system for carrying on H.M.'s service.'
+
+This may have been the first draft, and it may have been found, as
+usual, that the less said the better.
+
+[353] Partly given in Harris, iii. 80.
+
+[354] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Oct. 13, 5 o'clock, 1756. Add. MSS. 32868,
+f. 251.
+
+[355] Ib.
+
+[356] Digby to Lord Digby, Oct. 28, 1756. Wingfield MSS. in Hist. MSS.
+
+[357] West to Newcastle, Newcastle MSS.
+
+[358] Orford, ii. 262.
+
+[359] Fox to Ellis. July 15, 1755. Holland House MSS.
+
+[360] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[361] October 20, 1756. Holland House MSS.
+
+[362] Holland House MSS.
+
+[363] Bubb, 389.
+
+[364] Orford, ii. 263.
+
+[365] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[366] Bedford Corresp. ii. 210.
+
+[367] Orford, ii. 266.
+
+[368] See the summonses in the Holland House MSS. For example, that to
+the Duke of Marlborough. 'Nov. 2, 1756. My dear Lord, H.M. desires Your
+Grace would without fail be in town to-morrow evening. You shall find at
+Marlbro' House a summons to the place of meeting, and I leave to Mr.
+Hamilton to acquaint Your Grace more fully than I have time to do with
+the intention of it. Adieu. The D. of Bedford is kept in town and all
+great Lords within reach are sent to.'
+
+[369] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[370] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[371] Holdernesse to Newcastle, Nov. 2, 1756. Add. MSS. 32868.
+
+[372] Bubb, 390.
+
+[373] Fox to Marlborough, 1756. Holland House MSS.
+
+[374] Bedford Corresp. ii. 208.
+
+[375] Orford, ii. 269.
+
+[376] Bedford Corresp. ii. 210.
+
+[377] The salary and allowances of Secretary of State were 2680_l._, as
+appears from a paper of Fox's. But there was also 3000_l._ for Secret
+Service which Fox appears to reckon as salary. H.H. MSS.
+
+[378] Orford, ii. 268.
+
+[379] Holland House MSS. H. Walpole to Fox, Oct. 27, 1756.
+
+[380] Fox to Bedford, Nov. 23, 1756.
+
+[381] H.H. MSS.
+
+[382] Narrative to Kildare.
+
+[383] Bedford Corr. ii. 170, 220. Bedford to Fox, Nov. 17, 1755 (H.H.
+MSS.).
+
+[384] Holland House MSS.
+
+[385] Add. MSS. 32869.
+
+[386] Chatham Corr. i. 190-4.
+
+[387] Newcastle to Hardwicke, Sept. 2, 1756. Add. MSS. 35416.
+
+[388] Fox to Digby. Wingfield MSS. in Hist. MSS.
+
+[389] 'As your Lordship is of opinion that I cannot (which is firmly my
+own) rechuse Mr. Pitt,' &c. Newcastle to Hardwicke, Nov. 3, 1756.
+
+[390] 'Do you know that Sir George now Lord Lyttelton, who had engaged
+with the Duke of Bedford for one and one at Okehampton, named Pitt to
+His Grace as the man to be chosen in his room?' Fox to ----, Dec. 14,
+1756 (H.H. MSS.).
+
+[391] Camelford.
+
+[392] Supra, p. 75.
+
+[393] Works, i. 135.
+
+[394] Life of Grattan, i. 234.
+
+[395] Cradock's Literary Memoirs, i. 100-1.
+
+[396] Foote's Table Talk, p. 103.
+
+[397] Seward's Anecdotes, ii. 357.
+
+
+ Transcriber's Notes:
+ Many sentences in letters start with lower case.
+ Inconsistent and dubious spellings have been retained.
+ Many french accents missing.
+ Superscripts formatted with carets eg: Septembr ye 29th
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lord Chatham, by
+Archibald Phillip Primrose Rosebery
+
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