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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Private Papers of William Wilberforce, by
-William Wilberforce, Edited by Anna Maria Wilberforce
-
-
-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: Private Papers of William Wilberforce
-
-
-Author: William Wilberforce
-
-Editor: Anna Maria Wilberforce
-
-Release Date: February 14, 2014 [eBook #44912]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRIVATE PAPERS OF WILLIAM
-WILBERFORCE***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Charlene Taylor, Anna Granta, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images
-generously made available by Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries
-(https://archive.org/details/toronto)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 44912-h.htm or 44912-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44912/44912-h/44912-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/44912/44912-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
- https://archive.org/details/wilberforcepaper00wilbuoft
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
-
-
-
-
-PRIVATE PAPERS OF WILLIAM WILBERFORCE
-
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM WILBERFORCE, M.P. FOR THE COUNTY OF YORK.]
-
-
-PRIVATE PAPERS OF WILLIAM WILBERFORCE
-
-Collected and Edited, with a Preface, by
-
-A. M. WILBERFORCE
-
-With Portraits
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London
-1897
-
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-William Wilberforce is remembered on account of his long and successful
-efforts for the Abolition of the Slave Trade. In a House of Commons
-that counted Pitt, Fox, Burke, and Sheridan amongst its members, he
-held a front rank both as a speaker and debater. Of one of his speeches
-in 1789 Burke said, "it equalled anything he had heard in modern
-times, and was not, perhaps, to be surpassed in the remains of Grecian
-eloquence." And Pitt said, "Of all the men I ever knew Wilberforce has
-the greatest natural eloquence." But an even greater power than his
-oratory was perhaps the influence that he acquired over all ranks of
-society. Friendship is often the means by which influence is gained,
-and Wilberforce's friendship with Pitt, beginning long before his
-anti-Slave Trade days and continued till the end of Pitt's life, was
-no doubt the source of a strong personal influence.
-
-It has been said that nothing in history is more creditable and
-interesting than Pitt's long and brotherly intimacy with Wilberforce,
-widely as they differed in their views of life.
-
-To give an idea of the terms of their friendship these letters,
-possibly mislaid by the biographers of Wilberforce, from Pitt to
-Wilberforce are now published.[1]
-
-Lord Rosebery thought the letters "among the most interesting we
-possess of Pitt," and we gladly acceded to his wish to print a few
-copies privately.
-
-The Rev. W. F. Wilberforce has kindly consented to the publication of
-the matured estimate of Pitt's character mentioned in the "Life of
-Wilberforce," with an intimation that "it might hereafter appear in a
-separate form."
-
-Other letters from some of the most distinguished men of the time show
-the many and varied interests of Wilberforce's life, and seem to us too
-valuable to remain hidden in obscurity.
-
-The home letters published are from Wilberforce to his daughter
-Elizabeth, and to his son Samuel, afterwards Bishop of Oxford and
-Winchester. The letters to the latter are from the collection of 600
-letters written by the father to the son.
-
- A. M. WILBERFORCE.
-
- LAVINGTON, _September 1, 1897_.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- LETTERS FROM PITT 1
-
- SKETCH OF PITT BY W. WILBERFORCE 43
-
- LETTERS FROM FRIENDS 83
-
- HOME LETTERS 163
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- 1. WILLIAM WILBERFORCE, M.P. FOR THE COUNTY
- OF YORK _Frontispiece._
- (_From a picture by J. Rising._)
-
- 2. WILBERFORCE OAK _Facing page_ 17
- (At the foot of an old tree at Hollwood, after a conversation
- with Pitt, Wilberforce resolved to give notice in
- the House of Commons of his intention to bring forward
- the Abolition of the Slave Trade.)
-
- 3. THE RIGHT HONOURABLE WILLIAM PITT _Facing page_ 79
- (_From a plate taken from an original drawing by the late
- Mr. Sayers._)
-
- 4. BIRTHPLACE OF WILLIAM WILBERFORCE AT _Facing page_ 163
-
- 5. SAMUEL WILBERFORCE, AGED 29 " 245
- (_From a drawing by George Richmond._)
-
-
-
-
-_LETTERS FROM PITT_
-
-
-
-
-LETTERS FROM PITT.
-
-
-THE first of Pitt's letters to Wilberforce is "perhaps the only one
-extant that is racy of those rollicking times when the 'fruits of
-Pitt's earlier rising' appeared in the careful sowing of the garden
-beds with the fragments of Ryder's opera hat."[2]
-
- "GRAFTON STREET,
- "_July 31, 1782_.
-
-"DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I shall not have the least difficulty in applying
-immediately to Lord Shelburne in behalf of your friend Mr. Thompson,
-and the favour is not such as to require a great exertion of interest,
-if there has been no prior engagement. I will let you know the result
-as soon as I can. Pray have no delicacy in mentioning to me whatever
-occurs of any kind in which I can be of any use to you. Whenever there
-is anything to prevent my doing as I should wish in consequence, I
-will tell you, so we shall be upon fair terms. I trust you find all
-possible advantage from sea-bathing and sea-air.... I am as well as it
-is possible in the midst of all this _sin and sea coal_, and, for a
-Chancellor of the Exchequer who has exchanged his _happier hour_, pass
-my time very tolerably. Even Goostree's is not absolutely extinct, but
-has a chance of living thro' the dog days. I shall be happy to hear
-from you, whether in the shape of an official despatch or a familiar
-epistle. I am very glad to see you write without the assistance of a
-secretary. Perhaps, however, you will not be able to read without the
-assistance of a decypherer. At least in compassion to your eyesight it
-is as well for me to try it no further.
-
- "So adieu. Yrs. ever sincerely,
- "W. PITT."
-
-
- "BRIGHTHELMSTONE,
- "_Wednesday, Aug. 6, 1783_.
-
-"DEAR WILBERFORCE,--_Anderson's Dictionary_ I have received, and am
-much obliged to you for it. I will return it safe, I hope not dirtied,
-and possibly not read. I am sorry that you give so bad an account of
-your eyes, especially as this very letter looks as if it would put
-them to a severe trial, and might even defy the decypherer St. John,
-almost without the help of an aenigma. I have only to tell you that
-I have _no news_, which I consider as making it pretty certain that
-there will be none now before the meeting of Parliament. The party
-to Rheims hold of course, at least as far as depends upon me; which
-is at least one good effect certain. I wrote yesterday to Eliot,[3]
-apprising him, that I should be ready to meet him at Bankes's[4] before
-the last day of August; that I conceived we must proceed from thence
-to London, and that we ought to start within the three or four first
-days of September. I hope you will bear all these things in mind, and
-recollect that you have to do with punctual men, who would not risk
-their characters by being an hour too late for any appointment. The
-lounge here is excellent, principally owing to our keeping very much
-to ourselves--that is Pulchritudo, Steele, Pretyman, and myself. The
-Woodlys have been here in high foining, and have talked me to death.
-I would not bind myself to be a listener for life for a good deal.
-Your friend the Commodore treated us with his company at one or two
-assemblies, but was called back to defend some prizes, which there are
-those who contest with him, and which I fancy he thinks _the greatest
-instance of malignity he ever knew_. Mrs. Johnstone and Mrs. Walpole
-are left to dispute the prize here. The first is clearly the handsomer
-woman, but the husband of the latter looks the quieter man, and the
-better part of love as well as valor is discretion. I conclude as
-you did, by desiring you to write immediately. I go from hence to
-Somersetshire this day sennight, and stay till Bankes's. Direct to
-Burton Pynsent, Somerset, and _if you will_, by London.
-
- "Ever sincerely yrs.,
- "W. PITT."
-
-
-Pitt's next letter refers to the General Election of 1784, and William
-Wilberforce's candidature for Yorkshire, which county he represented in
-Parliament for twenty-eight years.
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_Tuesday, April 6, 1784_.
-
-"DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I have received your two expresses, and one this
-morning from Mr. Wyvill. I could not get to town till late last night,
-but sent forward the letters you desired, and have done all I can on
-the several subjects you mention.
-
-"I have applied to our friends in town to pay in the subscriptions, and
-I hope it will be done speedily. I inquired at Cambridge with regard
-to the different colleges. Trinity and St. John's have, I believe,
-as might be expected, the most interest, and will both exert it for
-you. Christ's has some, and I left that in a good train. I have spoken
-to Lord Temple, which is the only channel that has yet occurred to
-me about Oxford, who thinks he can be of use there. Wesley I have
-no doubt may be secured, and I will lose no time in seeing him if
-necessary, which I shall not think _at all awkward_ at such a time.
-Steps are taking to procure a meeting of freeholders in your and
-Duncombe's interest, which I hope will answer. I have sent to Robinson
-and Hamilton. Lady Downe has been applied to, but can be brought to
-nothing more than perfect neutrality. Nesbitt's interest is secured,
-and he is thoroughly zealous. I do not well know how to get at his
-Grace of York, but will try every way I can. Lord Percy, I am afraid,
-cannot be brought to subscribe, tho' I do not quite despair of it.
-His objection seems now from some delicacy towards Weddell, with whom
-he has been much connected. He has, however, written to exert all his
-interest in your cause--particularly to Major Pallerne and Mr. Rayne,
-whom Mr. Wyvill mentions in his last letter. Lord Grantham, as I wrote
-you word before, must go with Weddell. I expect to hear something more
-of Lord Hawke, but I know he is now in the best disposition. I shall
-keep my messenger an hour or two to send the account of to-day's poll
-in Westminster, yesterday and to-day having been considered as the
-great push. Pray send me as quick an account as possible, and continue
-it from time to time, if a poll goes on. I hope you will be ready
-with a candidate at Hull on the supposition of your being seated for
-Yorkshire, which I am sanguine enough hardly to doubt. We are more
-successful everywhere, with only a very few exceptions, than can be
-imagined. I hope you bear all the fatigue tolerably. I wish it was
-over. God bless you.
-
- "Most truly yours,
- "W. PITT.
-
-
-"Compts. to Smith, and many thanks for his letter. I hope he is still
-with you. The numbers at Westminster to-day are--
-
- Hood. Wray. Fox.
- 3936 3622 3413
-
-Sawbridge has beat Atkinson only by seven, and there is to be a
-scrutiny. The other members are Watson, Lewes, and Newnham. Sir R.
-Clayton declines for Surrey. Byng will probably be beat."
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_Sunday, December 19, 1784_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I have been so diligently _turning my thoughts_
-on all sides since we parted, that tho' they have been turned to you
-as often as to any other quarter, I have never found the moment to put
-them into writing till now. I have not time to thank you sufficiently
-for the picturesque and poetical epistle I received from you dated,
-as I remember, from your boat, from the inside and the imperial of
-your postchaise, and two or three places more, and containing among a
-variety of accurate descriptions one in particular, viewed from all
-those different situations, of the sun setting in the middle of the
-day. I hope the whole of your tour has continued to be embellished
-by these happy incidents, and has kept you throughout in as mad and
-rhapsodical a mood as at that moment. I have some remorse in the
-immediate occasion of my writing to you just now; which, however, all
-things considered, I am bound to overcome. Be it known to you, then,
-that as much as I wish you to bask on, under an Italian sun, I am
-perhaps likely to be the instrument of snatching you from your present
-paradise, and hurrying you back to 'the rank vapours of this sin-worn
-mould.' A variety of circumstances concur to make it necessary to
-give notice immediately on the meeting of Parliament of the day on
-which I shall move the question of the Reform. We meet on the _25th of
-January_, and I think _about three weeks after_, which will allow full
-time for a call of the House, will be as late as I can easily defer it.
-I would not for a thousand reasons have you absent, tho' I hate that
-you should come before your time, and if any particular circumstances
-made a week or ten days a matter of real importance to you, I think I
-could postpone it as long as that.
-
-"Only let me hear from you positively before the meeting of Parliament.
-The chief thing necessary is that I should then be able to name _some_
-day, and the precise day is of less consequence. You will hardly
-believe me if I tell you that I entertain the strongest hope of coming
-very near, if not absolutely succeeding. I have seen the Oracle of
-Yorkshire, Wyvill, and made him completely happy with the prospect.
-
-"All things are going, on the whole, exceeding well. You will have
-learnt that the _Old Boy_ at last overcame his doubts, and has ventured
-single into the Cabinet, which is a great point happily settled. God
-bless you.
-
- "Ever most faithfully yours.
- "W. PITT."
-
-
- "1784.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I am sorry to find from your letter from
-Nottingham that the Knight of Yorkshire is in so much dudgeon. Tho',
-to say the truth the instances of neglect you mention are enough to
-provoke common patience. What is worse, I know no remedy for it. My
-letter, which missed you, contained no other information than that
-the place of Marshall of the Admiralty had been long since filled up.
-Some of the world is here at present, and will be multiplying every
-day till the meeting of Parliament. I expect Eliot in a very few days.
-I know nothing of Bankes very lately. Pray come to Wimbledon as soon
-as possible; I want to talk with you about your navy bills, which,
-tho' all your ideas now must go to landed property, you should not
-entirely forget, and about ten thousand other things. By the by, Lord
-Scarborough is risen from the dead, as you probably know. I have just
-received an account from Whitbread that St. Andrew loses his election
-by three; and would probably lose by more if he chooses a scrutiny or a
-petition. Adieu.
-
- "Ever yrs.,
- "W. PITT.
-
-
-"For the sake of this letter I am leaving a thousand others unanswered,
-and a thousand projects unread. You will probably think it was hardly
-worth while."
-
-The brotherly intimacy between Pitt and Wilberforce is clearly shown
-in the next letter. Wilberforce had written to Pitt to tell him of
-the change in his religious opinions, and, in consequence, of his
-probable retirement from political life. He no doubt thought that
-Pitt would fail to sympathise with his altered views, but the man who
-was "so absorbed in politics that he had never given himself time for
-due reflection on religion"[5] wished to understand the religious
-difficulties of his friend, and with the greatest tenderness begs
-him to open his mind to "one who does not know how to separate your
-happiness from his own."
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_December 2, 1785_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--Bob Smith[6] mentioned to me on Wednesday
-the letters he had received from you, which prepared me for that I
-received from you yesterday. I am indeed too deeply interested in
-whatever concerns you not to be very sensibly affected by what has
-the appearance of a new aera in your life, and so important in its
-consequences for yourself and your friends. As to any public conduct
-which your opinions may ever lead you to, I will not disguise to you
-that few things could go nearer my heart than to find myself differing
-from you essentially on any great principle.
-
-"I trust and believe that it is a circumstance which can hardly occur.
-But if it ever should, and even if I should experience as much pain
-in such an event, as I have found hitherto encouragement and pleasure
-in the reverse, believe me it is impossible that it should shake the
-sentiments of affection and friendship which I bear towards you, and
-which I must be forgetful and insensible indeed if I ever could part
-with. They are sentiments engraved in my heart, and will never be
-effaced or weakened. If I knew how to state all I feel, and could
-hope that you are open to consider it, I should say a great deal more
-on the subject of the resolution you seem to have formed. You will not
-suspect me of thinking lightly of any moral or religious motives which
-guide you. As little will you believe that I think your understanding
-or judgment easily misled. But forgive me if I cannot help expressing
-my fear that you are nevertheless deluding yourself into principles
-which have but too much tendency to counteract your own object, and
-to render your virtues and your talents useless both to yourself and
-mankind. I am not, however, without hopes that my anxiety paints this
-too strongly. For you confess that the character of religion is not
-a gloomy one, and that it is not that of an enthusiast. But why then
-this preparation of solitude, which can hardly avoid tincturing the
-mind either with melancholy or superstition? If a Christian may act
-in the several relations of life, must he seclude himself from them
-all to become so? Surely the principles as well as the practice of
-Christianity are simple, and lead not to meditation only but to action.
-I will not, however, enlarge upon these subjects now. What I would ask
-of you, as a mark both of your friendship and of the candour which
-belongs to your mind, is to open yourself fully and without reserve to
-one, who, believe me, does not know how to separate your happiness
-from his own. You do not explain either the degree or the duration of
-the retirement which you have prescribed to yourself; you do not tell
-me how the future course of your life is to be directed, when you think
-the same privacy no longer necessary; nor, in short, what idea you
-have formed of the duties which you are from this time to practise. I
-am sure you will not wonder if I am inquisitive on such a subject. The
-only way in which you can satisfy me is by conversation. There ought
-to be no awkwardness or embarrassment to either of us, tho' there may
-be some anxiety; and if you will open to me fairly the whole state
-of your mind on these subjects, tho' I shall venture to state to you
-fairly the points where I fear we may differ, and to desire you to
-re-examine your own ideas where I think you are mistaken, I will not
-importune you with fruitless discussion on any opinion which you have
-deliberately formed. You will, I am sure, do justice to the motives and
-feelings which induce me to urge this so strongly to you. I think you
-will not refuse it; if you do not, name any hour at which I can call
-upon you to-morrow. I am going into Kent, and can take Wimbledon in my
-way. Reflect, I beg of you, that no principles are the worse for being
-discussed, and believe me that at all events the full knowledge of the
-nature and extent of your opinions and intentions will be to me a
-lasting satisfaction.
-
- "Believe me, affectionately and unalterably yours,
- "W. PITT."
-
-Pitt came the next morning according to his proposal in this remarkable
-letter: when Wilberforce[7] "conversed with Pitt near two hours, and
-opened myself completely to him.... He tried to reason me out of my
-convictions, but soon found himself unable to combat their correctness
-if Christianity were true." To quote Lord Rosebery's Preface[8] to
-these letters: "Surely a memorable episode, this heart-searching of the
-young saint and the young minister. They went their different ways,
-each following their high ideal in the way that seemed best to him. And
-so it went on to the end, Wilberforce ever hoping to renew the sacred
-conversation."
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_September, 23, 1786_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--At length all the obstacles of business, of
-idleness, and of procrastination are so far overcome that I find myself
-with my pen in my hand to answer your three letters. I have seriously
-had it upon my conscience for some time; but yet I believe it is
-another influence to which this present writing is to be immediately
-ascribed. Having yesterday parted with the ornament on my cheek, and
-two or three handkerchiefs for the present occupying the place of it,
-my appearance is better suited to correspondence than conversation; and
-in addition to this I happen to have an interval freer from business
-than at any time since Parliament rose. Our French Treaty is probably
-by this time actually signed, or will at most not require more than
-one more messenger to settle everything; but the winds have been so
-unfavourable that I have been, for some days longer than I expected,
-in suspense as to the issue of it. Two or three more treaties are
-on the anvil, and I think we shall meet with the appearance of not
-having spent an idle or (as I flatter myself) a fruitless summer. The
-multitude of things depending has made the Penitentiary House long in
-deciding upon. But I still think a beginning will be made in it before
-the season for building is over; and if its progress is as quick as
-that of my room at Hollwood, bolts and bars will be useless before
-another season. I am very glad you like our new Board of Trade, which
-I have long felt to be one of the most necessary, and will be now one
-of the most efficient departments of Government. The colony for Botany
-Bay will be much indebted to you for your assistance in providing a
-chaplain. The enclosed will, however, show you that its interests have
-not been neglected, as well as that you have a nearer connection with
-them than perhaps you were yourself aware of. Seriously speaking, if
-you can find such a clergyman as you mention we shall be very glad of
-it; but it must be soon. My sister was brought to bed of a daughter on
-Wednesday, and was at first surprising well; but she has since had some
-fever, which was to such a degree yesterday as to make us very uneasy.
-She is now, however, almost entirely free from it, and going on as well
-as possible. I am in hopes of getting into Somersetshire the middle
-of next week for about ten days. Soon after I hope I may see you at
-Hollwood. Bob Smith was in town lately, much better on the whole, but
-not quite so well as I hoped to see him. Adieu.
-
- "Ever yours,
- "W. PITT."
-
-[Illustration: WILBERFORCE OAK.]
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_Tuesday, April 8, 1788_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I have just received your letter of yesterday,
-and as I can easily imagine how much the subject of it interests you, I
-will not lose a moment in answering it. As to the Slave Trade, I wish
-on every account it should come forward in your hands rather than any
-other. But that in the present year is impracticable; and I only hope
-you will resolve to dismiss it as much as possible from your mind. It
-is both the rightest and wisest thing you can do. If it will contribute
-to setting you at ease, that _I_ should personally bring it forward
-(supposing circumstances will admit of its being brought forward this
-session) your wish will decide. At all events, if it is in such a state
-that it can be brought on, I will take care that it shall be moved in a
-respectable way, and I will take my part in it as actively as if I was
-myself the mover. And if I was to consult entirely my own inclination
-or opinion, I am not sure whether this may not be best for the business
-itself; but on this, as I have said already, your wish shall decide me.
-With regard to the possibility of its being brought on and finished
-this session, I can hardly yet judge. The inquiry has been constantly
-going on, and we have made a great progress. But it takes unavoidably
-more time than I expected. In one word, however, be assured that I will
-continue to give the business constant attention, and do everything to
-forward it. Whenever it is in such a state that you could yourself have
-brought it on with advantage to the cause, I will do it or undertake
-for its being done, in whatever way seems most proper. I mean,
-therefore, to accept it as a trust from you to the whole extent you can
-wish, and to make myself responsible for it, unless it is necessarily
-delayed till you are able to resume it yourself.
-
-"Any applications from your Society shall most certainly be attended
-to. Justice Addington's grievance in particular, which I was before
-acquainted with by a memorial, will be immediately removed. I do not
-like to write you a longer letter than is absolutely necessary. I
-trust I need not lengthen it to tell how impatiently I look to the
-satisfaction of seeing you again, as stout and strong as I hope you
-will return to us. Let me have from time to time a line from any hand
-you can most conveniently employ, to tell me how you go on, and what
-are your motions during the summer. I wish I may be able to arrange
-mine, when holidays come, so as to fall in with you somewhere or other.
-As soon as I can judge about Parliament meeting before Christmas or
-not, you shall hear. If it sits pretty late now, it probably will not
-meet till after. Adieu for the present. Every good wish attend you.
-
- "Ever affectionately yours,
- "W. PITT."
-
-I have had very good accounts of you from two or three quarters.
-
-
- "PEMBROKE HALL,
- "_Saturday, June 28, 1788_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I have no small pleasure in writing to you
-quietly from hence, after hearing the good account you sent me of
-yourself confirmed by those who saw you then, and especially by our
-friend Glynn. I am lucky enough to have a wet evening, which, besides
-the good I hope it will do to the country at large, has the peculiar
-advantage of preventing me from paying my personal respects to anyone
-of my constituents, and so gives me the leisure to answer _seriatim_
-the several sections of your letter. The business respecting the Slave
-Trade meets just now with some rub in the House of Lords, even in the
-temporary regulation respecting the conveyance, which I wonder how any
-human being can resist, and which I therefore believe we shall carry;
-tho' it creates some trouble, and will still protract the session a
-week or ten days. We hear very little yet from the West Indies, but
-a few weeks must bring more, and I have no doubt the summer may be
-employed in treating with foreign Powers to advantage. I shall set
-about it with the utmost activity and with good hopes of success, tho'
-founded as yet rather on general grounds than any positive information.
-There seems not a shadow of doubt as to the conduct of the House of
-Commons next year, and I think with good management the difficulties
-in the other House may be got over. Your plan of a mission to Bengal I
-mention only to show the punctuality of answering your letter, as you
-reserve the discussion till we meet. As for Dr. Glass, I was obliged to
-answer Thornton, who applied to me for some such person (I think for
-this same Dr. Glass), that the state of my engagements leaves me not
-at liberty at present, and if you have any occasion to say anything
-about it to them, be so good to speak of it in the same style. Of the
-Penitentiary Houses what can I say more? But in due time they shall not
-be forgotten.
-
-"My plan of visiting you and your lakes is, I assure you, not at all
-laid aside. I cannot speak quite certainly as to the time, but if
-there happens nothing which I do not now foresee, it will be either
-the beginning or middle of August; I rather think the former, but I
-shall be able to judge better in about a fortnight, and then you shall
-hear from me. Nothing is decided about the meeting of Parliament, but
-it is clear the trial will not go on till February. I rather believe,
-however, that we ought to meet and employ a month before Christmas;
-as what with Slave Trade, Quebec Petition, Poor Laws, Tobacco, &c.,
-we shall have more on our hands than can be got through in any decent
-time while we are exposed to the interruption from Westminster Hall. I
-think I have now dispatched all the points to which I was called upon
-to reply, and come now to open my own budget; which must be done,
-however, in a _whisper_, and must not as yet be repeated even to the
-most solitary echoes of Windermere. You will wonder what mystery I have
-to impart. At the first part you will not be much surprised, which is
-that Lord Howe and his friend Brett are to quit the Admiralty as soon
-as the session closes. The cause (tho' its effects have slept so long)
-is what passed last summer respecting the promotion of Sir Charles
-Middleton. You will not come to the surprising part when I add that
-Lord Howe's successor must be a landman, as there is no seaman who is
-altogether fit for the first place at that board. But what will you
-say when I tell you that the landman in question is no other than my
-brother? He undertakes it very readily, and will I am sure set about
-the business in earnest, to which I believe you think him as equal as
-I do. Lord Hood is to be at the board; not without some risk of losing
-Westminster, but by keeping our secret till the moment, I hope even
-that may be saved; but it is comparatively of little consequence. I
-feel the arrangement is liable to some invidious objections, but I am
-satisfied they are more than counterbalanced by the solid advantage of
-establishing a complete concert with so essential a department, and
-removing all appearance of a separate interest. I shall be impatient,
-however, to hear what you think of my scheme. There is nothing else
-that occurs worth adding to this long scrawl, and I am obliged to
-seal it up, as in spite of the rain which keeps me at home, I am in
-expectation of an agreeable collection of dons whom Turner has convened
-to smoke and sleep round his table this evening. God bless you.
-
- "Believe me, ever affectionately yours,
- "W. PITT."
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_Monday, September 1, 1788_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I have certainly given a considerable latitude
-to my promise of writing in a fortnight, in defence of which I have
-nothing to say, but that in addition to the common causes of delaying
-a letter I could not easily resolve to tell you that my northern
-scheme has for some time grown desperate. Powers farther north and
-the unsettled state of all the Continent (tho' not at all likely to
-involve us in anything disagreeable) require in our present system
-too much watching to allow for a long absence. I have not yet got
-even to Burton, which you will allow must be my first object. But I
-assure you I am not the more in love with Continental politics for
-having interfered with a prospect I had set my heart so much upon, as
-spending some quiet days on the bank of your lake. Pray let me know in
-your turn what your motions are likely to be, and when you think of
-being in this part of the world. Parliament will not meet till after
-Christmas. As to the Slave Trade, we are digesting our Report as far as
-present materials go, and you shall then have it; but we are still in
-expectation of the answer from the Islands. I had a long conversation
-with the French Ambassador on the subject some time ago, just before
-his going to France. He promised to represent it properly, and seemed
-to think there would be a favourable disposition. Their confusion has
-been such since that scarce anything was likely to be attended to; but
-I am in hopes Necker's coming in will prove very favourable to this
-object. The moment I hear anything respecting it I will write again;
-and at all events in less than _my last fortnight_. I must end now in
-haste to save the post and my dinner.
-
- "Ever affectionately yours,
- "W. PITT."
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_Monday, April 20, 1789_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--We have found it necessary to make some
-corrections on looking over the proof sheets of the Report, which will
-delay the presenting it till Wednesday. I shall have no difficulty
-in saying then that the business must of course be postponed on the
-grounds you mention, and I will move to fix it for this day fortnight
-if you see no objection. I imagine the House must meet on Friday on
-account of Hastings's business, but that will probably be a reason for
-their adjourning as soon as they come back from Westminster Hall, and
-your business may, I dare say, wait till Monday. In that case I would
-certainly meet you at Hollwood on Friday, as I wish extremely to talk
-over with you the whole business, and show you our project, with which,
-like most projectors, we are much delighted. From what you mention of
-the parts you have been studying, I do not imagine there is anything
-behind more material than what you have seen, but I see no part of our
-case that is not made out upon the strongest grounds. Steele has shown
-me your letter to him. There certainly cannot be the least reason for
-your coming up merely to attend St. Paul's.
-
- "Ever affectionately yours,
- "W. PITT."
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_Wednesday, February 2, 1796_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I have seen Sir W. Fawcett, &c., and settled
-with them that they shall take _immediately_ the necessary measures for
-having a sufficient number of officers to receive men at additional
-places of rendezvous. They propose for the West Riding (in addition
-to Pontefract), Bradford and Barnsley, as appearing to take in all
-the most material districts, and will send the orders accordingly;
-but any farther arrangement may be made afterwards which may appear
-to be wanting. This and the explanatory act will, I trust, quiet the
-difficulty. My cold is much better, and I have hardly any doubt of
-being in condition for service on Friday, to which day, you probably
-know, the business is put off.
-
- "Yours ever,
- "W. P."
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_August 4, 1796_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I am anxious not to let the post go without
-telling you that I cannot have a moment's hesitation in assuring you
-that in case of the Deanery of York becoming vacant, I shall with the
-utmost pleasure recommend Mr. Clarke to succeed to it. On the important
-points in your other letter, I have not time just now to write at
-large; but I think the idea you suggest very desirable to be carried
-into execution, and I will turn in my mind the means of putting it into
-train. I certainly am not inclined even now to think gloomily of public
-affairs; but I must at the same time own that I feel the crisis to be a
-most serious one, and to require the utmost exertion and management.
-
- "Ever yours sincerely,
- "W. PITT."
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_September 7, 1796_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I think it nearly certain that Parliament will
-meet on the 27th, and I wish much it may suit you to come this way some
-time before.
-
-"Our application is gone for a passport for a person to go directly to
-Paris. The message of the Directory confessing in such strong terms
-their distress (and the Archduke's recent victory on the 22nd, the
-account of which is in last night's _Gazette_, may be relied on), give
-some chance that our overtures may be successful. In the meantime it
-will be indispensable to take very strong measures indeed, both of
-finance and military defence; and if the spirit of the country is equal
-to the exigency, I am confident all will yet end well. An immediate
-Spanish war is, I think, nearly certain. The only motive to it is the
-fear of France preponderating over their fear of us; and the pretexts
-as futile as could be wished. The alarm respecting the effect on our
-trade is greatly overrated, as the whole proportion of our exports
-thither compared with the rest of the world is inconsiderable. You
-will see that an Order of Council is published giving liberty for the
-export of manufactures and the payment of bills, which will, I hope,
-be satisfactory in your part of the world. I delayed writing to Mr.
-Cookson till I could tell him the measure was taken; and when it was
-taken, being in the hurry of a journey to Weymouth and back, I deferred
-it again, so that it was already announced in the _Gazette_, and it
-became too late to write. Perhaps you can make my excuses.
-
- "Ever yours,
- "W. P."
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_September 20, 1797_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I know what your feelings will be on receiving
-the melancholy account which I have to send you, and which reached me
-from Cornwall this morning, that a renewal of Eliot's complaint has
-ended fatally and deprived us of him.
-
-"After the attacks he has had, it is impossible to say that the blow
-could ever be wholly unexpected, but I had derived great hopes from the
-accounts for some time, and was not at this moment at all prepared for
-what has happened. You will not wonder that I cannot write to you on
-any other subject, but I will as soon as I can.
-
- "Ever sincerely yours,
- "W. PITT."
-
-
- "_Friday, 4_ P.M.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I am only anxious to avoid embarrassment to your
-question as well as to the general course of business; and will call
-on you in a few minutes on my way to the House.
-
- "Ever aff. yours,
- "W. P."
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET,
- "_Thursday, August 14, 1800_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I have no thoughts of going to Walmer till the
-very end of the month, and it is doubtful whether I can accomplish it
-then. In the interval the Castle is quite disengaged, and it will give
-me great pleasure if it can afford you any accommodation. If you should
-not find any situation before the 1st of September perfectly to your
-mind, I beg you to believe that your prolonging your stay will be no
-inconvenience and a great pleasure to me, supposing I am able to come.
-The improvements made since you were there, with the help of a cottage
-with some tolerable bedrooms, are quite sufficient for your family, and
-for myself and the only two or three persons who would be likely to
-come with me, such as perhaps Carrington, the Master of the Rolls, and
-Long. Be so good, therefore, to consult entirely your own convenience.
-
- "Ever yours,
- "W. P.
-
-"Let me know what day next week you fix for being there, and everything
-shall be ready for you. You may as well send your servant to my
-manager Bullock, who will arrange everything about cellar and other
-household concerns."
-
-
- "PARK PLACE,
-
- "_October 1, 1801_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I cannot refrain from congratulating you most
-sincerely on the happy event of the Signature of Preliminaries, which
-you will, I believe, hear from Addington. The terms are such as I am
-persuaded you will be well satisfied with, and tho' they are not in
-every point (particularly one material one) exactly all that I should
-have wished, I have no hesitation in saying that I think them on the
-whole highly honourable to the country and very advantageous. The event
-is most fortunate both for Government and the public, and for the sake
-of both, gives me infinite satisfaction. I am but just in time for the
-post.
-
- "Ever sincerely yours,
- "W. PITT."
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET, _Saturday_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I shall be very glad if you can call here any
-time after nine this evening, as I wish to show you a paper from the
-other side of the water, of a very interesting nature, tho' not such as
-was most to be wished or at all to be expected.
-
- "Yours,
- "W. P."
-
-
- "WALMER CASTLE,
-
- "_May 31, 1802_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I found your letter on my arrival here
-yesterday, having escaped to Hollwood on Friday only as a preparation
-for pursuing my journey hither with less interruption than I should
-have been exposed to, starting from town. An absence of ten days or
-a fortnight has been so much recommended, and indeed I began myself
-to feel so much in want of it, that I am afraid I must not think of
-returning for your motion. Indeed, tho' I should most eagerly support
-it (supposing you can provide, as I trust you can, means of making the
-execution in the detail practicable and effectual). I see no chance in
-the present state of the session of your carrying it, unless Addington
-can be brought really to see the propriety of it, and to concur in it
-at once without debate. This last I should hope might be managed, and
-whatever impression parts of his speech may have made on your mind, I
-am sure I need not suggest to you that the best chance of doing this
-will be to endeavour coolly to lay before him the case as it really is,
-unmixed as far as possible with any topics of soreness, which evidently
-were not absent from his mind on Canning's motion. I certainly, on the
-whole, judge much more favourably of his general intentions on the
-whole subject (or, I should rather say, of his probable conduct) than
-you do. But I admit that one part of his speech was as unsatisfactory
-as possible. This I really believe proceeded in a great measure from
-the evident embarrassment and distress under which he was speaking,
-and which I am persuaded prevented him from doing any justice to his
-own ideas. I may deceive and flatter myself, but tho' I know we shall
-be far from obtaining all that you and I wish, I really think there is
-much chance of great real and substantial ground being gained towards
-the ultimate and not remote object of total abolition next session.
-This is far from a reason for not endeavouring, if possible, to prevent
-the aggravation of the evil in the meantime, and I heartily wish you
-may be successful in the attempt.
-
- "Ever affy. yrs.,
-
- "W. P."
-
-
- "WALMER CASTLE,
-
- "_September 22, 1802_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE, I am much obliged to you for your kind letter of
-inquiry. My complaint has entirely left me, I am recovering my strength
-every day, and I have no doubt of being in a very short time as well
-as I was before the attack. Farquhar, however, seems strongly disposed
-to recommend Bath before the winter, and if you make your usual visit
-thither, I hope it is not impossible we may meet. Perhaps you will let
-me know whether you propose going before Parliament meets, and at what
-time. I hardly imagine that the session before Christmas can produce
-much business that will require attendance. I ought long since to have
-written to you on the subject of our friend Morritt. It would give me
-great pleasure to see him come back to Parliament, tho' I hardly think
-the occasion was one on which I
-
-[Rest of letter torn off.]
-
-
- "BATH,
-
- "_October 31, 1802_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--As you are among the persons to whom the author
-of the enclosed high-flown compliments refers for his character for
-a very important purpose, I shall be much obliged to you if you will
-tell me what you know of him. A man's qualifications to give a dinner
-certainly depend more on the excellence of his cook and his wine, than
-on himself but I have still some curiosity to know what sort of company
-he and his guests are likely to prove; and should therefore be glad
-to know a little more about them than I collect from his list of the
-_dramatis personae_, which for instruction might as well have been taken
-from any old play-bill. In the meantime I have been obliged out of
-common civility, _provisoirement_ to accept his invitation. I was very
-sorry that I had too little time to spare in passing thro' town to try
-to see you. I should have much wished to have talked over with you the
-events which have been passing and the consequences to which they seem
-to lead. You know how much under all the circumstances I wished for
-peace, and my wishes remain the same, if Bonaparte can be made to feel
-that he is not to trample in succession on every nation in Europe. But
-of this I fear there is little chance, and without it I see no prospect
-but war.
-
-"I have not yet been here long enough to judge much of the effect of
-these waters, but as far as I can in a few days, I think I am likely
-to find them of material use to me. I mean to be in town by the 18th
-of next month. Paley's work, which you mentioned in your last letter,
-I had already read on the recommendation of my friend Sir W. Farquhar,
-who had met with it by accident, and was struck with its containing the
-most compendious and correct view of anatomy which he had ever seen.
-I do not mean that he thought this its only merit. It certainly has a
-great deal, but I think he carries some of his details and refinements
-further than is at all necessary for his purpose, and perhaps than will
-quite stand the test of examination.
-
- "Ever affy. yrs.,
-
- "W. P."
-
-
- "WALMER CASTLE,
-
- "_August 8, 1803_ (?).
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--Not having returned from a visit to some of my
-corps on the Isle of Thanet till Friday evening, I could not answer
-your letter by that day's post, and I was interrupted when I was going
-to write to you yesterday. It was scarce possible for me, consistent
-with very material business in this district, to have reached town
-to-day; and besides, I confess, I do not think any great good could
-have been done by anything I could say in the House on any of the
-points you mention. I feel most of them, however, and some others of
-the same sort, as of most essential importance; and I have thoughts of
-coming to town for a couple of days (which is as much as I can spare
-from my duties here) towards the end of the week, to try whether I
-cannot find some channel by which a remedy may be suggested on some
-of the points which are now most defective. I think I shall probably
-reach town on Saturday morning, and I should wish much if you could
-contrive to meet me in Palace Yard or anywhere else, to have an
-hour's conversation with you. I will write to you again as soon as I
-can precisely fix any day. We are going on here most rapidly, and in
-proportion to our population, most extensively, in every species of
-local defence, both naval and military, and I trust shall both add
-very much to the security of essential points on this coast, and set
-not a bad example to other maritime districts.
-
- "Ever affy. yours,
-
- "W. P."
-
-
- "WALMER CASTLE,
-
- "_January 5, 1804_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE--Your letter reached me very safe this morning,
-and I thank you very much for its contents. I hope it will not be long
-before I have an opportunity of talking over with you fully the subject
-to which it relates. From what I have heard since I saw you, it will be
-necessary for me pretty soon to make up my mind on the line to pursue
-under the new state of things which is approaching. In the meantime,
-I shall not commit myself to anything without looking to _all_ the
-consequences as cautiously as you can wish; and before I form any final
-decision, I shall much wish to consult yourself and a few others whose
-opinions I most value. If no new circumstance arises to revive the
-expectation of the enemy, I mean to be in town the beginning of next
-week, and will immediately let you know. Perhaps I may be able to go on
-to Bath for a fortnight.
-
- "Ever affy. yours,
-
- "W. P."
-
-
-Two examples are here given of Wilberforce's letters to Pitt. The
-first is written in the character of a country member and political
-friend. The second is one in reference to his work on Practical
-Religion.[9] They are both, as is generally the case with his letters
-to Pitt, undated, but the post-mark of the second bears "1797."
-
-
-_Mr. Wilberforce to Right Hon. William Pitt._
-
-"MY DEAR PITT,--My head and heart have been long full of some thoughts
-which I wished to state to you when a little less under extreme
-pressure than when Parliament is sitting. But my eyes have been very
-poorly. I am now extremely hurried, but I will mention two or three
-things as briefly as possible that I may not waste your time. First,
-perhaps even yet you may not have happened to see an Order in Council
-allowing, notwithstanding the War, an intercourse to subsist between
-our West Indian Colonies and those of Spain, in which negro slaves are
-the chief articles we are to supply. I know these commercial matters
-are not within your department, and that therefore your assent is
-asked, if at all, when your mind is full of other subjects. But let me
-only remind you, for it would be foolish to write what will suggest
-itself to your own mind, that the House of Commons did actually pass
-the Bill for abolishing the foreign slave trade; and that if contracts
-are made again for supplying Spain for a term of years, it may throw
-obstacles in the way of a foreign slave-trade abolition. It would give
-me more pleasure than I can express to find any further measures, or
-even thoughts, on this to me painful subject, for many reasons, by
-hearing the order was revoked. Second, I promised by compulsion (I
-mean because I dislike to bore you) to state to you on the part of the
-Deputy Receiver General for the North and East Ridings of Yorkshire
-and Hull that it would tend materially both to facilitate and cheapen
-the collection of the new assessed taxes to let them be collected at
-the same time as the old ones. This will make the rounds four times
-per annum instead of ten, and he says the expense of collecting, if
-incurred six times per annum, will amount to full one-half of all the
-present salaries of the Receivers General in the Kingdom. As he is a
-most respectable man, I ought to say that he gives it as his opinion
-that the Receivers General are not overpaid, all things considered.
-But for my own opinion let me add that his principal really has none
-of the labours of the office, and the deputy even finds his securities
-for him. Third, surely there ought at the Bank to be a distinction
-between what is paid for assessed taxes and what as free donation, when
-the subscription includes both: your own and those of many others are
-under that head. Fourth, I suppose you are now thinking of your taxes.
-Do, I beseech you, let one of them be a tax on all public diversions
-of every kind, including card-playing. I can't tell you how much their
-not being taxed has been mentioned with censure, and I promised to
-send you the enclosed letter from a very respectable man. I am sorry I
-did, but now have no option. But my first great object in writing to
-you is most earnestly to press on your attention a manuscript, which I
-have been desired to lay before you, relative to Naval Discipline. You
-must allow the writer to express himself with some perhaps unpleasant
-idea of self-importance. But he clearly foresaw the late Mutiny, and
-most strongly urged the adoption of preventive measures, which, had
-they been taken, I verily believe the greatest misfortune this country
-ever suffered would not have happened. That nothing was done is in my
-mind--But I need not run on upon this to me most painful topic, because
-it often suggests doubts whether I have not been myself to blame, who
-perused the scheme two years ago. Let me earnestly entreat you, my dear
-Pitt, to peruse it most seriously and impartially, and then let Dundas
-read it. If you judge it proper, then either send it Lord Spencer or
-to the writer, who is a good deal nettled at his former communications
-to Lord Spencer not being attended to. I will send the manuscript by
-to-morrow's mail.
-
- "Yours ever sincerely,
-
- "W. W.
-
-"Every one is calling out for you to summon the nation to arm itself
-in the common defence. You hear how nobly my Yorkshire men are acting.
-I must have more discussion on that head, for they still wish you to
-impose an equal rate on all property."
-
-
- "BATH, _Easter Sunday_.
-
-"MY DEAR PITT,--I am not unreasonable enough to ask you to read my
-book: but as it is more likely that when you are extremely busy than at
-any other time you may take it up for ten minutes, let me recommend it
-to you in that case to open on the last section of the fourth chapter,
-wherein you will see wherein the religion which I espouse differs
-practically from the common orthodox system. Also the sixth chapter
-has almost a right to a perusal, being the basis of all politics, and
-particularly addressed to such as you. At the same time I know you will
-scold me for introducing your name. May God bless you. This is the
-frequent prayer of your affectionate and faithful.
-
- "W. W."
-
- [Postmarked 1797.]
-
-
-Here ends the hitherto unpublished correspondence between Pitt and
-Wilberforce. On the occasion of Pitt's death, his brother, Lord
-Chatham, writes with regard to his funeral:
-
-
-_Lord Chatham to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "DOVER STREET,
- "_February 15, 1806_.
-
-"I have many thanks to offer you for your very kind letter which I
-received this morning. Knowing, as I do, how truly the sentiments of
-friendship and affection you express, were returned on the part of my
-poor brother towards you, I can only assure you that it will afford me
-a most sensible gratification that you should have, as an old, intimate
-friend, some particular situation allotted to you in the last sad
-tribute to be paid to his memory. Believe me, with sincere regard, my
-dear sir,
-
- "Yours very faithfully,
- "CHATHAM."
-
-
-Pitt was one of the few men whose lives have affected the destiny
-of nations. The actions of such men are so far-reaching, and the
-possibilities of the might-have-been so great, that history hardly
-ever passes a final verdict upon them. Wilberforce had unexampled
-opportunities of gauging the character and motives of Pitt, and
-certainly had no strong partisan bias to warp his judgment. His matured
-estimate of Pitt cannot fail therefore to be of peculiar interest. It
-was written in 1821, sixteen years after Pitt's death, and is printed
-exactly as Wilberforce left it. It will no doubt recall to the mind of
-the reader Scott's well-known lines:
-
- "With Palinure's undaunted mood,
- Firm at his dangerous post he stood;
- Each call for needful rest repelled
- With dying hand the rudder held
- Till, in his fall, with fateful sway
- The steerage of the realm gave way!"[10]
-
-
-
-
-_SKETCH OF PITT BY W. WILBERFORCE_
-
-
-
-
-SKETCH OF PITT BY W. WILBERFORCE.
-
-
-Considering the effect of party spirit in producing a distrust of all
-that is said in favour of a public man by those who have supported
-him, and the equal measure of incredulity as to all that is stated of
-him by his opponents, it may not be without its use for the character
-of Mr. Pitt to be delineated by one who, though personally attached
-to him, was by no means one of his partisans; who even opposed him on
-some most important occasions, but who, always preserving an intimacy
-with him, had an opportunity of seeing him in all circumstances and
-situations, and of judging as much as any one could of his principles,
-dispositions, habits, and manners.
-
-It seems indeed no more than the payment of a debt justly due to
-that great man that the friend who occasionally differed from him
-should prevent any mistake as to the grounds of those differences;
-and that as he can do it consistently with truth, he should aver,
-as in consistency with truth he can aver, that in every instance
-(with perhaps one exception only) in which his conscience prompted
-him to dissent from Mr. Pitt's _measures_, he nevertheless respected
-Mr. Pitt's _principles_; the differences arose commonly from a
-different view of facts, or a different estimate of contingencies and
-probabilities. Where there was a difference of political principles, it
-scarcely ever was such as arose from moral considerations; still less
-such as was produced by any distrust of Mr. Pitt's main intention being
-to promote the well-being and prosperity of his country.
-
-Mr. Pitt from his early childhood had but an indifferent constitution;
-the gouty habit of body which harassed him throughout his life, was
-manifested by an actual fit of that disorder when he was still a boy.
-As early as fourteen years of age he was placed at Pembroke Hall,
-Cambridge; he had even then excited sanguine expectations of future
-eminence. His father had manifested a peculiar regard for him; he had
-never, I believe, been under any other than the paternal roof, where
-his studies had been superintended by a private tutor; and besides
-a considerable proficiency in the Greek and Latin languages, he had
-written a play in English, which was spoken of in high terms by those
-who had perused it. I am sorry to hear that this early fruit of genius
-is not anywhere to be found.
-
-While he was at the University his studies, I understand, were carried
-on with steady diligence both in classics and mathematics, and though
-as a nobleman he could not establish his superiority over the other
-young men of his time by his place upon the tripos, I have been assured
-that his proficiency in every branch of study was such as would have
-placed him above almost all competitors. He continued at the University
-till he was near one-and-twenty, and it was during the latter part of
-that period that I became acquainted with him. I knew him, however,
-very little till the winter of 1779-80, when he occupied chambers in
-Lincoln's Inn, and I myself was a good deal in London. During that
-winter we became more acquainted with each other; we used often to meet
-in the Gallery of the House of Commons, and occasionally at Lady St.
-John's and at other places, and it was impossible not to be sensible of
-his extraordinary powers.
-
-On the calling of a new Parliament in the beginning of September,
-1780, I was elected one of the Members for Hull. Mr. Pitt, if I
-mistake not, was an unsuccessful candidate for the University of
-Cambridge; but about Christmas 1780-81, through the intervention of
-some common friends (more than one have claimed the honour of the
-first suggestion, Governor Johnston, the Duke of Rutland, &c.), he
-received and accepted an offer of a seat in Parliament made to him in
-the most handsome terms by Sir James Lowther. From the time of his
-taking his seat he became a constant attendant, and a club was formed
-of a considerable number of young men who had about the same time left
-the University and most of them entered into public life. The chief
-members were Mr. Pitt, Lord Euston, now Duke of Grafton, Lord Chatham,
-the Marquis of Graham, now Duke of Montrose, the Hon. Mr. Pratt, now
-Marquis of Camden, the Hon. St. Andrew St. John, Henry Bankes, Esq.,
-the Hon. Maurice Robinson, now Lord Rokeby, Lord Duncannon, now Lord
-Besborough, Lord Herbert, postea Earl of Pembroke, Lord Althorp, now
-Lord Spencer, Robert Smith, Esq., now Lord Carrington, Mr. Bridgeman,
-Mr. Steele, several others, and myself. To these were soon afterwards
-added Lord Apsley, Mr. Grenville, now Lord Grenville, Pepper Arden,
-afterwards Lord Alvanley, Charles Long, afterwards Lord Farnborough,
-Sir William Molesworth, &c. &c. Of the whole number Mr. Pitt was
-perhaps the most constant attendant, and as we frequently dined,
-and still more frequently supped together, and as our Parliamentary
-attendance gave us so many occasions for mutual conference and
-discussion, our acquaintance grew into great intimacy. Mr. Bankes
-and I (Lord Westmoreland only excepted, with whom, on account of his
-politics, Mr. Pitt had little connection) were the only members of
-the society who had houses of their own, Mr. Bankes in London, and I
-at Wimbolton[11] in Surrey. Mr. Bankes often received his friends to
-dinner at his own house, and they frequently visited me in the country,
-but more in the following Parliamentary session or two. In the spring
-of one of these years Mr. Pitt, who was remarkably fond of sleeping in
-the country, and would often go out of town for that purpose as late as
-eleven or twelve o'clock at night, slept at Wimbolton for two or three
-months together. It was, I believe, rather at a later period that he
-often used to sleep also at Mr. Robert Smith's house at Hamstead.[12]
-
-Mr. Pitt was not long in the House of Commons before he took a part
-in the debates: I was present the first time he spoke, and I well
-recollect the effect produced on the whole House; his friends had
-expected much from him, but he surpassed all their expectations,
-and Mr. Hatsell, the chief clerk and a few of the older members who
-recollected his father, declared that Mr. Pitt gave indications of
-being his superior. I remember to this day the great pain I suffered
-from finding myself compelled by my judgment to vote against him on
-the _second_ occasion of his coming forward, when the question was
-whether some Commissioners of public accounts should, or should not,
-be members of Parliament: indeed I never can forget the mixed emotions
-I experienced when my feelings had all the warmth and freshness of
-early youth, between my admiration of his powers, my sympathy with his
-rising reputation, and hopes of his anticipated greatness, while I
-nevertheless deemed it my duty in this instance to deny him my support.
-
-Mr. Pitt was a decided and warm opponent of Lord North's
-administration; so indeed were most of our society, though I
-occasionally supported him. From the first, however, I concurred with
-Mr. Pitt in opposing the American War, and we rejoiced together in
-putting an end to it in about March, 1782, when Lord North's ministry
-terminated; and after a painful, and I think considerable, interval,
-during which it was said the King had even talked of going over to
-Hanover, and was supposed at last to yield to the counsels of the
-Earl of Mansfield, a new administration was formed consisting of the
-Rockingham and Shelburne parties, the Marquis of Rockingham being
-First Lord of the Treasury, and Lord Shelburne and Mr. Fox the two
-Secretaries of State. But though the parties had combined together
-against their common enemy, no sooner had he been removed than mutual
-jealousies immediately began to show themselves between the Rockingham
-and Shelburne parties. I well remember attending by invitation at Mr.
-Thomas Townshend's, since Lord Sydney, with Mr. Pitt and most of the
-young members who had voted with the Opposition, when Mr. Fox with
-apparent reluctance stated that Lord Rockingham had not then been
-admitted into the King's presence, but had only received communications
-through Lord Shelburne; and little circumstances soon afterwards arose
-which plainly indicated the mutual distrust of the two parties. Lord
-Rockingham's constitution was much shaken, and after a short illness
-his death took place before the end of the session of Parliament, about
-the middle of June, 1782.[13] Mr. Pitt had taken occasion to declare
-in the House of Commons that he would accept no subordinate situation,
-otherwise there is no doubt he would have been offered a seat at the
-Treasury Board, or indeed any office out of the Cabinet; but on Lord
-Rockingham's death, notwithstanding Mr. Fox's endeavour to prevent a
-rupture by declaring that _no disunion existed_,[14] the disagreement
-between the parties, of which so many symptoms had before manifested
-themselves, became complete and notorious. Lord Shelburne being invited
-by the King to supply Lord Rockingham's place, Mr. Fox with most of the
-Rockingham's party retired from office, and Mr. Pitt accepted the offer
-made him by Lord Shelburne of becoming Chancellor of the Exchequer: he
-had completed his twenty-third year the 28th of May preceding.
-
-There was more than one day of debate even during that session, in
-which Mr. Pitt indicated that gravity and dignity which became the high
-station which he had assumed at so early an age. He continued in office
-till the ensuing winter, when, after peace had been made both with
-America and her continental allies France and Spain, Lord Shelburne's
-administration was removed through the unprincipled coalition between
-Lord North and Mr. Fox and their respective parties. It was supposed to
-have been brought about in a great degree through the influence of Lord
-North's eldest son, who had maintained a friendly acquaintance with
-Mr. Fox, a man the fascination of whose manners and temper was such as
-to render it impossible for any one to maintain a personal intercourse
-with him without conceiving for him sincere and even affectionate
-attachment. I seconded the motion for the address on the peace, and I
-well remember a little before the business began writing a note in my
-place with a pencil to Bankes, who was, I saw, at a little distance,
-inquiring of him whether a union between North and Fox was really
-formed, and whether I might publicly notice it; "Yes," he replied, "the
-more strongly the better." Mr. Pitt on that night was very unwell; he
-was obliged to retire from the House into Solomon's Porch by a violent
-sickness at the very moment when Mr. Fox was speaking. He himself
-afterwards replied in a speech of some hours' length, but he certainly
-on that night fell short of our expectations; a second discussion,
-however, took place a few days after, and his speech on that occasion
-was one of the finest that was ever made in Parliament, both in point
-of argument and power of oratory. I never shall forget the impression
-produced by that part of it in which he spoke of his own retirement,
-closing with that passage out of Horace, "Laudo manentem," &c., though
-I must add that I retain no recollection whatever of the circumstance
-mentioned by Sir N. Wraxall; indeed I cannot but be strongly persuaded
-that he must have been misinformed. Well also do I remember our all
-going to Mr. Pitt's from the House of Commons after our defeat about
-eight in the morning, where a dinner had been waiting for us from
-eleven or twelve the preceding night, and where we all laughed heartily
-at some characteristic traits exhibited by Lord Stanhope,[15] then
-Lord Mahon. An administration was then formed of which the Duke of
-Portland was at the head, and Lord North and Mr. Fox joint Secretaries
-of State. It was in the autumn of this year, 1783, during the recess of
-Parliament, that I accompanied Mr. Pitt and Mr. Eliot, who afterwards
-became his brother-in-law, to France: our plan was to spend a few weeks
-in a provincial town, there to acquire something of the language,
-and afterwards to make a short stay at Paris. Accordingly we went to
-Rheims, where we continued for about six weeks. It was not until we
-were on the point of going abroad (when Mr. Eliot came out of Cornwall,
-Mr. Pitt from seeing his mother in Somersetshire, and I met them
-both at Sittingbourne) that we recollected that we were unprovided
-with letters of recommendation, which each of the party had perhaps
-trusted to the other for obtaining. Accordingly we requested Mr. Smith
-to obtain them for us of Mr. Thellusson, afterwards Lord Rendlesham,
-who, we knew, had correspondencies all over France. Thellusson replied
-that he would gladly do his best for us, but that he rather conceived
-from circumstances that his correspondent at Rheims was not a person
-of any commercial distinction. We, however, abided by our decision
-in favour of Rheims. The day after we arrived there, having sent our
-letter of recommendation the preceding evening to the person to whom
-it was addressed, we were waited upon by a very well-behaved man with
-a velvet coat, a bag, and sword, who conversed with us for a short
-time. The next day we repaid his visit, and were a good deal surprised
-to find that he was a very little grocer, his very small shop being
-separated by a partition from his very small room. But he was an
-unaffected, well-behaved man, and he offered to render us every service
-in his power, but stated distinctly that he was not acquainted with
-the higher people of the place and neighbourhood. For a few days we
-lived very comfortably together, but no French was learned except from
-the grammar, we not having a single French acquaintance. At length we
-desired our friend the _epicier_ to mention us to the Lieutenant of
-Police, who, I think we had made out, had been employed to collect
-evidence in the great Douglas cause, and was therefore likely to
-know something of our country and its inhabitants. This expedient
-answered its intended purpose, though somewhat slowly and by degrees.
-The Lieutenant of Police, Du Chatel, an intelligent and apparently
-a respectable family man, came to visit us, and he having stated to
-the Archbishop of Rheims, the present Cardinal de Perigord, whose
-palace was about a mile from the city, that three English Members of
-Parliament were then residing in it, one of whom was Mr. Pitt, who had
-recently been Chancellor of the Exchequer, his Grace sent his Grand
-Vicaire, the Abbe de la Garde, to ascertain the truth or falsehood of
-this statement. The Abbe executed his commission with great address,
-and reporting in our favour, we soon received an invitation to the
-Archbishop's table, followed by the expression of a wish that during
-the remainder of our stay at Rheims we would take up our residence in
-his palace. This we declined, but we occasionally dined with him, and
-from the time of our having been noticed by the Lieutenant we received
-continual invitations, chiefly to supper, from the gentry in and about
-the place. They were chiefly persons whose land produced the wine of
-the country, which, without scruple, they sold on their own account.
-And I remember the widow of the former Marshal Detree intimating a wish
-that Mr. Pitt would become her customer.
-
-Thence we went to Paris, having an opportunity during that time of
-spending four or five days at Fontainebleau, where the whole Court
-was assembled. There we were every evening at the parties of one or
-other of the French Ministers, in whose apartments we also dined--the
-Queen being always among the company present in the evening, and
-mixing in conversation with the greatest affability; there were also
-Madame la Princesse de Lamballe, M. Segur, M. de Castres, &c. Mr.
-George Ellis, who spoke French admirably, was in high favour for the
-elegance of his manners and the ease and brilliancy of his wit; and
-Mr. Pitt, though his imperfect knowledge of French prevented his doing
-justice to his sentiments, was yet able to give some impression of
-his superior powers--his language, so far as it did extend, being
-remarkable, I was assured, for its propriety and purity. There M. le
-Marquis de la Fayette appeared with a somewhat affected simplicity of
-manner, and I remember the fine ladies on one occasion dragging him
-to the card-table, while he shrugged up his shoulders and apparently
-resisted their importunities that he would join their party: very few,
-however, played at cards, the Queen, I think, never. During our stay
-at Paris we dined one day with M. le Marquis de la Fayette with a very
-small party, one of whom was Dr. Franklin; and it is due to M. le
-Marquis de la Fayette to declare that the opinion which we all formed
-of his principles and sentiments, so far as such a slight acquaintance
-could enable us to form a judgment, was certainly favourable, and his
-family appeared to be conducted more in the style of an English house
-than any other French family which we visited. We commonly supped in
-different parties, and I recollect one night when we English manifested
-our too common indisposition to conform ourselves to foreign customs,
-or rather to put ourselves out of our own way, by all going together
-to one table, to the number of twelve or fourteen of us, and admitting
-only one Frenchman, the Marquis de Noailles, M. de la Fayette's
-brother-in-law, who spoke our own language like an Englishman, and
-appeared more than any of the other French to be one of ourselves.
-We, however, who were all young men, were more excusable than our
-Ambassador at the Court of France, who, I remember, joined our party.
-
-It was at Paris, in October, that Mr. Pitt first became acquainted
-with Mr. Rose, who was introduced to him by Lord Thurlow, whose
-fellow-traveller he was on the Continent; and it was then, or
-immediately afterwards, that it was suggested to the late Lord Camden
-by Mr. Walpole, a particular friend of M. Necker's, that if Mr. Pitt
-should be disposed to offer his hand to Mademoiselle N., afterwards
-Madame de Stael, such was the respect entertained for him by M. and
-Madame Necker, that he had no doubt the proposal would be accepted.
-
-We returned from France about November. Circumstances then soon
-commenced which issued in the turning out of the Fox administration,
-the King resenting grievously, as was said, the treatment he
-experienced from them, especially in what regarded the settlement
-of the Prince of Wales. I need only allude to the long course of
-political contention which took place in the winter of 1783-84, when
-at length Mr. Pitt became First Lord of the Treasury; and after a
-violent struggle, the King dissolved the Parliament about March, and
-in the new House of Commons a decisive majority attested the truth of
-Mr. Pitt's assertion that he possessed the confidence of his country.
-In many counties and cities the friends of Mr. Fox were turned out,
-thence denominated Fox's Martyrs.[16] I myself became member for
-Yorkshire in the place of Mr. Foljambe, Sir George Savile's nephew, who
-had succeeded that excellent public man in the representation of the
-county not many weeks before. I may be allowed to take this occasion of
-mentioning a circumstance honourable to myself, since it is much more
-honourable to him, that some years after he came to York on purpose to
-support me in my contest for the county. It is remarkable that Lord
-Stanhope first foresaw the necessity there would be for Mr. Pitt's
-continuing in office notwithstanding his being out-voted in the House
-of Commons, maintaining that the Opposition would not venture to refuse
-the supplies, and that at the proper moment he should dissolve the
-Parliament.[17]
-
-And now having traced Mr. Pitt's course from childhood to the period
-when he commenced his administration of sixteen or seventeen years
-during times the most stormy and dangerous almost ever experienced
-by this country, it may be no improper occasion for describing his
-character, and specifying the leading talents, dispositions, and
-qualifications by which he was distinguished. But before I proceed to
-this delineation it may be right to mention that seldom has any man had
-a better opportunity of knowing another than I have possessed of being
-thoroughly acquainted with Mr. Pitt. For weeks and months together I
-have spent hours with him every morning while he was transacting his
-common business with his secretaries. Hundreds of times, probably,
-I have called him out of bed, and have, in short, seen him in every
-situation and in his most unreserved moments. As he knew I should not
-ask anything of him, and as he reposed so much confidence in me as to
-be persuaded that I should never use any information I might obtain
-from him for any unfair purpose, he talked freely before me of men and
-things, of actual, meditated, or questionable appointments and plans,
-projects, speculations, &c., &c. No man, it has been said, is a hero to
-his _valet de chambre_, and if, with all the opportunities I enjoyed
-of seeing Mr. Pitt in his most inartificial and unguarded moments, he
-nevertheless appeared to me to be a man of extraordinary intellectual
-and moral powers, it is due to him that it should be known that this
-opinion was formed by one in whose instance Mr. Pitt's character was
-subjected to its most severe test, which Rochefoucault appeared to
-think could be stood by no human hero.
-
-Mr. Pitt's intellectual powers were of the highest order, and in
-private no less than in public, when he was explaining his sentiments
-in any complicated question and stating the arguments on both sides,
-it was impossible not to admire the clearness of his conceptions, the
-precision with which he contemplated every particular object, and a
-variety of objects, without confusion. They who have had occasion
-to discuss political questions with him in private will acknowledge
-that there never was a fairer reasoner, never anyone more promptly
-recognising, and allowing its full weight to every consideration and
-argument which was urged against the opinion he had embraced. You
-always saw _where_ you differed from him and _why_. The difference
-arose commonly from his sanguine temper leading him to give credit to
-information which others might distrust, and to expect that doubtful
-contingencies would have a more favourable issue than others might
-venture to anticipate. I never met with any man who combined in an
-equal degree this extraordinary precision of understanding with the
-same intuitive apprehension of every shade of opinion, or of feeling,
-which might be indicated by those with whom he was conversant. In
-taking an estimate of Mr. Pitt's intellectual powers, his extraordinary
-memory ought to be specially noticed. It was indeed remarkable for
-two excellencies which are seldom found united in the same person--a
-facility of receiving impressions, and a firmness and precision in
-retaining them. His great rival, Mr. Fox, was also endowed with a
-memory which to myself used to appear perfectly wonderful. Often in
-the earlier part of my Parliamentary life I have heard him (Fox) at a
-very late hour speak, without having taken any notes, for two or three
-hours, noticing every material argument that had been urged by every
-speaker of the opposite party: this he commonly did in the order in
-which those arguments had been delivered, whereas it was rather Mr.
-Pitt's habit to form the plan of a speech in his mind while the debate
-was going forward, and to distribute his comments on the various
-statements and remarks of his opponents according to the arrangement
-which he had made. Such was his (Pitt's) recollection of the great
-classical authors of antiquity that scarcely a passage could be
-quoted of their works, whether in verse or prose, with which he was
-not so familiar as to be able to take up the clue and go on with what
-immediately followed. This was particularly the case in the works of
-Virgil, Horace, and Cicero, and I am assured that he was also scarcely
-less familiar with Homer and Thucydides.
-
-He had considerable powers of imagination and much ready wit, but this
-quality appeared more to arise from every idea, and every expression
-that belonged to it, being at once present to his mind, so as to enable
-him at will to make such combinations as suited the purpose of the
-moment, than as if his mind was only conscious at the time of that
-particular coruscation which the collision of objects caused to flash
-before the mental eye. It arose out of this distinctive peculiarity
-that he was not carried away by his own wit, though he could at any
-time command its exercise, and no man, perhaps, at proper seasons
-ever indulged more freely or happily in that playful facetiousness
-which gratifies all without wounding any. He had great natural courage
-and fortitude, and though always of a disordered stomach and gouty
-tendencies (on account of which port wine had been recommended to him
-in his earliest youth, and drinking French wine for a day or two would
-at any time produce gouty pains in the extremities), yet his bodily
-temperament never produced the smallest appearance of mental weakness
-or sinking. I think it was from this source, combined with that of his
-naturally sanguine temper, that though manifestly showing how deeply he
-felt on public affairs, he never was harassed or distressed by them,
-and till his last illness, when his bodily powers were almost utterly
-exhausted, his inward emotions never appeared to cloud his spirits, or
-affect his temper. Always he was ready in the little intervals of a
-busy man to indulge in those sallies of wit and good humour which were
-naturally called forth.
-
-Excepting only the cases of those who have had reason to apprehend the
-loss of life or liberty, never was a public man in circumstances more
-harassing than those of Mr. Pitt in 1784: for several weeks the fate
-of his administration and that of his opponents were trembling on the
-beam, sometimes one scale preponderating, sometimes the other; almost
-daily it appeared doubtful whether he was to continue Prime Minister
-or retire into private life. Yet though then not five-and-twenty I do
-not believe that the anxiety of his situation ever kept him awake for
-a single minute, or ever appeared to sadden or cast a gloom over his
-hours of relaxation.
-
-It cannot perhaps be affirmed that he was altogether free from
-pride, but great natural shyness,[18] and even awkwardness (French
-_gaucherie_), often produced effects for which pride was falsely
-charged on him; and really that confidence which might be justly
-placed in his own powers by a man who could not but be conscious of
-their superiority might sometimes appear like pride, though not fairly
-deserving that appellation; and this should be the rather conceded,
-because from most of the acknowledged effects of pride upon the
-character he was eminently free. No man, as I have already remarked,
-ever listened more attentively to what was stated against his own
-opinions; no man appeared to feel more for others when in distress; no
-man was ever more kind and indulgent to his inferiors and dependents
-of every class, and never were there any of those little acts of
-superciliousness, or indifference to the feelings and comforts of
-others, by which secret pride is sometimes betrayed. But if Mr. Pitt
-was not wholly free from pride, it may truly be affirmed that no man
-was perhaps ever more devoid of vanity in all its forms. One particular
-more in Mr. Pitt's character, scarcely ever found in a proud man, was
-the extraordinary good humour and candour with which he explained and
-discussed any plan or measure, of which he had formed the outline
-in his mind, with those professional men who were necessarily to be
-employed in giving it a Parliamentary form and language. I do not
-believe that there is a single professional man or the head of any
-board who ever did business with him, who would not acknowledge that
-he was on such occasions the most easy and accommodable man with whom
-they ever carried on official intercourse. One instance of this kind
-shall be mentioned as a specimen of the others. He had formed a plan of
-importance (I think in some Revenue matter) on which it was necessary
-for him to consult with the Attorney-General of the day, I believe
-Chief Baron Macdonald; Mr. Pitt had been for some time ruminating
-on the measure, his mind had been occupied for perhaps a month in
-moulding it into form and in devising expedients for its more complete
-execution. It may here be not out of place to mention as a peculiarity
-of his character that he was habitually apt to have almost his whole
-thoughts and attention and time occupied with the particular object
-or plan which he was then devising and wishing to introduce into
-practice. He was as usual full of his scheme, and detailed it to his
-professional friend with the warmth and ability natural to him on such
-occasions. But the Attorney-General soon became convinced that there
-were legal objections to the measure, which must be decisive against
-its adoption. These therefore he explained to Mr. Pitt, who immediately
-gave up his plan with the most unruffled good-humour, without
-attempting to hang by it, or to devise methods of propping it up, but,
-casting it at once aside, he pursued his other business as cheerfully
-and pleasantly as usual.
-
-But there are many who with undisturbed composure and with a good grace
-can on _important_ occasions thus change their line of conduct and
-assume a course contrary to that which they would have preferred. It
-is, however, far more rare to find men who on little occasions, which
-are not of sufficient moment to call a man's dignity into action, and
-which are not under the public eye, can bear to have their opinions
-opposed and their plans set aside, without manifesting some irritation
-or momentary fretfulness. But on the lesser scale as well as on the
-greater Mr. Pitt's good-humour was preserved. This same disposition of
-mind was attended with the most important advantages, and in truth was
-one which eminently qualified him to be the Minister of a free country.
-
-If towards the latter end of his life his temper was not so entirely
-free from those occasional approaches to fretfulness which continued
-disease and the necessity of struggling against it too often produce,
-it ought to be taken into account that another powerful cause
-besides human infirmity might have tended to lessen that kindness
-and good-humour for which he was for the greater part of his life
-so remarkable. The deference that was paid to him was justly great,
-but though no man less than himself exacted anything like servility
-from his companions, it is impossible to deny that there were those
-who attempted to cultivate his favour by this species of adulation.
-Another particular in Mr. Pitt, seldom connected with pride, was the
-kind interest he took in the rising talents of every young public man
-of any promise whose politics were congenial with his own; as well as
-the justice which he did to the powers of his opponents--a quality
-which it is but fair to say was no less apparent in Mr. Fox also. If he
-sometimes appeared to be desirous of letting a debate come to a close
-without hearing some friends who wished to take a part in it, this
-arose in some degree in his wishing to get away, from his being tired
-out with Parliamentary speaking and hearing, or from thinking that the
-debate would close more advantageously at the point at which he stopped.
-
-In society he was remarkably cheerful and pleasant, full of wit and
-playfulness, neither, like Mr. Fox, fond of arguing a question, nor yet
-holding forth, like some others.[19] He was always ready to hear others
-as well as to talk himself. In very early life he now and then engaged
-in games of chance, and the vehemence with which he was animated was
-certainly very great; but finding that he was too much interested by
-them, all at once he entirely and for life desisted from gambling.
-
-His regard for truth was greater than I ever saw in any man who was
-not strongly under the influence of a powerful principle of religion:
-he appeared to adhere to it out of respect to himself, from a certain
-moral purity which appeared to be a part of his nature. A little
-incident may afford an example of his delicacy in this respect. A
-common friend of ours, a member of the House of Lords, was reflected
-upon with considerable acrimony in the House of Commons by one of Mr.
-Pitt's political opponents. Being with him, as often happened, the next
-morning, while he was at breakfast, I told him that the animadversions
-which had been made on our friend the night before were stated in
-the newspaper, and I expressed some surprise that he himself had not
-contradicted the fact which was the ground of the reprehension. "This,"
-said he, "I might have done, but you will remember that it was a
-circumstance in which, if I deviated from strict truth, no other man
-could know of it, and in such a case it is peculiarly requisite to keep
-within the strictest limits of veracity."
-
-The remark I am about to make may deserve the more attention on account
-of its general application, and because it may probably tend to
-illustrate other characters. It may, I believe, be truly affirmed that
-the imputations which were sometimes thrown out against Mr. Pitt, that
-he was wanting in simplicity and frankness, and the answers he made to
-questions put to him concerning his future conduct, or the principles
-which were regulating the course of measures he pursued, were in truth
-a direct consequence of that very strictness and veracity for which
-he was so remarkable. When men are not very scrupulous as to truth,
-they naturally deal in broad assertions, especially in cases in which
-their feelings are at all warmly engaged; but it seldom happens that
-a political man can thus assume a principle and apply it to all the
-cases, which, in the use he is about to make of it, it may be supposed
-to comprehend, without some qualifications and distinctions; and a man
-of strict veracity therefore makes a conditional declaration or gives
-a qualified assurance. The same remark applies to the judgments we
-may express of the character and conduct of public men. In order to
-be strictly correct we cannot always use broad and strong colouring,
-but there must be shades and gradations in our draught. Yet such is
-the natural and even commendable love which men generally have of
-truth and honesty, that we feel an instinctive preference of simple
-and strong affirmations or negations as indicating more blunt and
-straightforward principles and dispositions, than where men express
-themselves in measured and qualified and conditional propositions. No
-man, I believe, ever loved his country with a warmer or more sincere
-affection; it was highly gratifying to converse familiarly with him
-on the plans he was forming for the public good; or to witness the
-pleasure he experienced from indulging speculations of the benefits
-which his country might derive from the realising of such or such a
-hope.
-
-But notwithstanding all my admiration of Mr. Pitt's extraordinary
-powers, and still more, with the deepest and most assured conviction
-of his public spirit and patriotism, I cannot but think that even his
-uncommon excellencies were not without some alloy of human infirmity.
-In particular he appeared to me to be defective in his knowledge of
-human nature, or that from some cause or other he was less sagacious
-than might have been expected from his superior talents, in his
-estimate of future events, and sometimes in his judgment of character.
-This might probably arise in part from his naturally sanguine temper,
-which in estimating future contingencies might lead him to assign
-too little weight to those probabilities which were opposed to his
-ultimate conclusion. But if I must be honest in delineating Mr. Pitt's
-character and qualities, I must also confess that in considering their
-practical influence on the fortunes of his country, I have sometimes
-been almost ready to believe that powers far inferior to his, under
-the direction of a mind equally sincere and equally warm in its zeal
-for the public good, might have been the instrument of conferring far
-greater benefits on his country. His great qualities, under the impulse
-and guidance of true religion, would probably have been the means of
-obtaining for his country much greater temporal blessings, together
-with others of a far higher order, and more durable effects. The
-circumstances of the period at which he first came into the situation
-of Prime Minister were such as almost to invest him with absolute
-power. All his faculties then possessed the bloom of youthful beauty
-as well as the full vigour of maturer age: his mind was ardent, his
-principles were pure, his patriotism warm, his mind as yet altogether
-unsullied by habitually associating with men of worldly ways of
-thinking and acting, in short, with a class which may be not unfitly
-termed trading politicians; this is a class with which perhaps no
-one, however originally pure, can habitually associate, especially in
-the hours of friendly intercourse and of social recreation, without
-contracting insensibly more or less defilement. No one who had not
-been an eye-witness could conceive the ascendency which Mr. Pitt then
-possessed over the House of Commons, and if he had then generously
-adopted the resolution to govern his country by _principle_ rather
-than by _influence_, it was a resolution which he could then have
-carried into execution with success, and the full effects of which,
-both on the national character, interests, and happiness, it is
-scarcely possible perhaps to estimate; but it would be a curious
-and no unprofitable speculation to trace the probable effects which
-would have resulted from the assumption of this high moral tone, in
-the actual circumstances of this country, in reference both to our
-internal interests and our foreign relations. This is a task I cannot
-now undertake, but I may remind the reader that the principles were
-then beginning to propagate themselves with the greatest success which
-not long after exhibited their true nature and ruinous effects in the
-French Revolution. Such a spirit of patriotism would have been kindled,
-such a generous confidence in the King's government would have been
-diffused throughout all classes, that the very idea of the danger of
-our being infected with the principles of French licentiousness, which
-might have produced among our people a general taint of disloyalty,
-would have been an apprehension not to be admitted into the bosom of
-the most timid politician; while the various reforms which would have
-taken place, and the manifest independence of Parliament would have
-generated and ensured in the minds of all reasonable men a continually
-increasing gratitude and affection for the constitution and laws of our
-country. On the other hand, the French, infatuated as they were, and
-wicked as were the men who then possessed the chief influence in the
-counsels of that country, could never have been so blind to their own
-manifest interest, as to have engaged their people in a war with Great
-Britain from any idea of our confederating with the Crowned Heads of
-Europe to crush the rising spirit of liberty in France. Hence we should
-have escaped that long and bloody war, which, however, in its ultimate
-issue justly deserving the epithet of glorious, is nevertheless the
-cause of all our present dangers and sufferings, from the insupportable
-burdens with which it has loaded us. Nor is it only _Financial_ evils
-of which our long protracted warfare has been the cause; to this
-source also we must probably trace much of that _Moral_ evil, which
-in so many different forms has been of late beginning to manifest
-itself, especially among the lower orders of our people. The gracious
-Providence of God has indeed abundantly answered the prayers of many
-among us, who I trust have all along been looking up to the Giver of
-all Good for their country's safety and prosperity; and while those
-causes were in operation which were hereafter to manifest themselves
-in various forms of social and domestic evil, it pleased God to
-diffuse a spirit of an opposite kind, which began to display its love
-of God and love of man by the formation of societies of a religious
-and moral nature, which have already contributed in no small degree
-to bless almost all nations, while they have invested our own country
-with a moral glory never before enjoyed by any nation upon earth. The
-diffusion of the Sacred Scriptures, the establishment of societies for
-spreading throughout the world the blessings of religious light and
-of moral improvement, the growing attention to the education of our
-people, with societies and institutions for relieving every species
-of suffering which vice and misery can ever produce among the human
-race,--what would have been the effects of all this, if not obstructed
-and counteracted in all the various ways by which war, that greatest
-scourge of the human race, carries on its baleful and wide wasting
-operations.[20]
-
-Is it not a melancholy consideration that this very country, the
-constitution and laws of which have been the objects of the highest
-possible admiration of the wisest men, should be in such a state
-that but too large a part of the great body of our people, instead of
-looking up to Heaven with gratitude for being favoured with blessings
-never before enjoyed by any nation, should be led by their sufferings
-to regard that very constitution and those very laws with disgust and
-aversion? Of this unhappy state of things the war, as having been
-the cause of our financial distresses and difficulties, is in fact
-the source. But there is nothing in which we are so apt to deceive
-ourselves as in conceiving that we are capable of estimating the
-full amount of moral good or evil; short-sighted as we are, there is
-nothing in which our views are more manifestly narrow and contracted;
-an important, nay, an awful consideration, which, while it may well
-encourage to activity in all good, should make us tremble to admit
-(the slightest speck) the smallest seed of moral evil to pollute our
-country's soil. But I have been led to expatiate more than I intended
-on this topic, though merely glancing at some of the most important
-of the considerations which it presents to the view even of the most
-superficial observer.
-
-Returning to the consideration of the effect of true religion on the
-character and conduct of the great man who has been the subject of this
-inquiry, I am naturally led to remark that there can be no possible
-occasion on which the application of the principle on which I have been
-lately speaking would suggest wider scope for our reflection. But if
-we consider the effect which true religion would have produced either
-in himself or in others around him, how immense would appear the mass
-of benefits, in the employment of his time, in the application of his
-faculties, in the selection of his companions, perhaps, above all, in
-his giving their just weight to religious and moral principles and
-character in the exercise of his unlimited patronage, both in Church
-and State; and considering that every religious and good man, who by
-him should have been invested with power and influence, would _himself_
-have selected others of similar principles and character, throughout
-the descending series of official appointments, and through all the
-variety of social occupations, who can say what would have been the
-effect of these religious and moral secretions, if they may be so
-termed, which throughout the whole political body would have been
-gradually producing their blessed effects in augmenting its fulness,
-symmetry, and strength?[21] And these effects, remember, would have
-been of a merely public, still less of a merely political character.
-They would have been, to say the least, full as manifest, and even more
-fertile in the production of happiness in all the walks of private
-life and all the varieties of social combination.
-
-In considering the estimates which were formed of Mr. Pitt's and Mr.
-Fox's characters respectively, more especially in point of what may be
-called popularity; and also as to their reputation for genius, wit,
-and classical taste, it should be remembered that Mr. Fox happened to
-have become connected, both at school and at Oxford, with a circle of
-men eminent for talents and classical proficiency, men also who were
-not shut up in cloisters, but who lived in the world, and gave the
-tone in the highest and most polished societies of the metropolis.
-Among these were Mr. Hare, General Fitzpatrick, Lord John Townshend;
-and to these must be added Mr. Windham, Mr. Erskine, and, above all,
-Mr. Sheridan. Mr. Pitt had also several college friends who came into
-Parliament about the same period with himself, men of no inferior
-consideration---Mr. Bankes, Mr. Eliot, Lord Abercorn, Lord Spencer, and
-several others. But these, it must be confessed, were by no means men
-of the same degree of brilliancy as the former set; nor did they in
-the same degree live in the circle of fashion and there diffuse their
-own opinions. Again Mr. Fox's political connections were numerous, and
-such as naturally tended to stamp a high value on his character. Burke,
-Barre---for there were those also who though not of Fox's party,
-often associated with him in private, and tended to sustain the general
-estimate of his superiority; of these were Gibbon, Lord Thurlow,
-Dunning, Jeykell.
-
-[Illustration: THE RIGHT HONBLE. WILLIAM PITT.]
-
-Again, the necessity under which Mr. Pitt often lay of opening and
-speaking upon subjects of a low and vulgarising quality, such as
-the excise on tobacco, wine, &c., &c., topics almost incapable with
-propriety, of an association with wit or grace, especially in one
-who was so utterly devoid of all disposition to seek occasions for
-shining, tended to produce a real mediocrity of sentiment and a lack
-of ornament, as well as to increase the impression that such was
-the nature of his oratory. Also the speeches of a minister were of
-necessity more guarded, and his subjects, except where he was opening
-some new proposition or plan, were rather prescribed to him by others,
-than selected by himself.[22]
-
- * * * * *
-
-The MS. of Canning's lines on Pitt is amongst the Wilberforce Papers;
-they are so little known that no apology is needed for inserting them
-here. Canning wrote them for the feast in honour of Pitt's birthday,
-May 28, 1802. It will be remembered that Pitt had resigned in 1801,
-because the King would not accept his Irish policy. A vote of censure
-had been moved, and was not merely rejected, but, by an overwhelming
-majority, it was carried "that the Right Hon. William Pitt has rendered
-great and important services to his country, and especially deserved
-the gratitude of this House."[23]
-
-
- THE PILOT THAT WEATHER'D THE STORM.
-
- (_A Song written in 1802._)
-
- If hush'd the loud whirlwind that ruffled the deep,
- The sky, if no longer dark tempests deform;
- When our perils are past, shall our gratitude sleep?
- No! Here's to the Pilot that weather'd the storm!
-
- At the footstool of Power let flattery fawn,
- Let faction her idols extol to the skies;
- To Virtue, in humble retirement withdrawn,
- Unblam'd may the merits of gratitude rise.
-
- And shall not his memory to Britain be dear,
- Whose example with envy all nations behold;
- A Statesman unbias'd by int'rest or fear,
- By pow'r uncorrupted, untainted by gold?
-
- Who, when terror and doubt through the universe reigned,
- While rapine and treason their standards unfurl'd,
- The heart and the hopes of his country maintained,
- And one kingdom preserv'd midst the wreck of the world.
-
- Unheeding, unthankful, we bask in the blaze,
- While the beams of the sun in full majesty shine;
- When he sinks into twilight, with fondness we gaze,
- And mark the mild lustre that gilds his decline.
-
- Lo! Pitt, when the course of thy greatness is o'er,
- Thy talents, thy virtues, we fondly recall!
- Now justly we prize thee, when lost we deplore;
- Admir'd in thy zenith, but lov'd in thy fall.
-
- Oh! take, then--for dangers by wisdom repelled,
- For evils, by courage and constancy brav'd--
- Oh take! for a throne by thy counsels upheld
- The thanks of a people thy firmness has sav'd.
-
- And oh! if again the rude whirlwind should rise!
- The dawning of peace should fresh darkness deform,
- The regrets of the good, and the fears of the wise,
- Shall turn to the Pilot that weather'd the storm.
-
-
-
-
-_LETTERS FROM FRIENDS_
-
-
-_The letters which follow are from friends of Wilberforce between the
-years 1786-1832: they touch on a variety of subjects. George Rose[24]
-writes in 1790 in the full flush of excitement on the news of "peace
-certain and unequivocal on the very terms prescribed from hence."_
-
-
-
-
-LETTERS FROM FRIENDS
-
-
-_Right Hon. George Rose to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "OLD PALACE YARD,
-
- "_November 4, 1790_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I was shocked this morning in putting my papers
-in order on my table to find a letter I wrote to you before I went into
-the country; you must have thought me shamefully inattentive to you,
-which I trust I never shall be while I retain my senses, for anxious
-as I am to avoid such an imputation in general I do assure you I am
-particularly so to stand clear of that in your opinion. I will now,
-however, make you ample amends for the seeming neglect by telling you
-that the expected messenger is arrived and brings us an account of
-peace _certain_ and _unequivocal_, on the very terms (I may say to you)
-_prescribed_ from hence; they secure to us great and essential points
-important to the interests of the country, and must prevent future
-occasions of quarrel with Spain; war with all its certain and possible
-consequences are (_sic_) avoided. So much for public benefits; what
-it must produce to the individual[25] to whom the merit is justly and
-fairly to be ascribed it is impossible at once to foresee--I mean with
-respect to character of everything that can be valuable to a man in his
-situation.
-
-"I have actually been drunk ever since ten o'clock this morning, and
-have not yet quite the use of my reason, but I am
-
- "Yours most faithfully and cordially,
-
- "GEORGE ROSE."
-
-
-Pitt's views as to a bounty on corn in the scarcity then[26] prevailing
-are given by Rose in the next letter.
-
-_Right Hon. G. Rose to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--It would be very odd if your writing to me on
-the subject of your last, or indeed on any other, could require an
-apology; I regret only that I cannot give you the light upon it you
-wish.
-
-"With respect to measures within the reach of Government to relieve the
-scarcity I fear none can be effectual. Mr. Pitt cannot, as you know,
-after his declaration in Parliament, import at the expense or risk
-of the public, but he is inclined to give a bounty on corn imported
-when it shall be _below_ a certain price within a limited time. This
-is a new principle, but I really believe it would produce much good.
-The idea occurred to him on reading Mr. Richardson's letter to you,
-who stated the great discouragement of individuals importing to be the
-risk of prices being low on the arrival of cargoes in the spring; I was
-so much struck with Mr. Richardson's observations that I wrote to beg
-him to call on me last Monday, but he had unfortunately set off that
-morning for Liverpool. I am more than half disposed to take the chance
-of prevailing with him to come up again.
-
-"During our late sitting the Scotch distilleries were stopped, but
-the prices of barley in England were not _then_ such as to induce any
-man to hint even at the English; and of course there is now no power
-to prevent them going on. We did prohibit the distillation of wheat;
-and allowed the importation of starch at the Home Duty, which will
-stop that manufactory; but I deplore most sincerely and earnestly any
-agreement against the use of hair powder, not merely for the sake of a
-large revenue, but to avoid other mischief which I am very sure is not
-enough attended to, the distinction of dress and external appearance.
-The inattention to that has been a great support of Jacobinism.
-
-"The resolutions which were taken in the last scarcity for restraining
-the use of flour, &c., were so little attended, and were on the whole
-productive of so little good that Mr. Pitt has not thought it yet
-advisable to recur to them. I believe _much_ may be done, especially in
-towns, by soup shops, respecting which I should think Mr. Bernard can
-inform you as fully as any one, from the share he took in the conduct
-of them in London last winter. Perhaps the article may be made somewhat
-cheaper here than anywhere else from there being a larger quantity of
-coarse parts of the meat than in any country place, but the soup was
-made admirably good, palatable and nutritive for twopence a quart,
-and retailed at half that price; one pint an ample allowance for each
-person, taking adults and children together, so that for one halfpenny
-a day a comfortable mess was provided for a poor person. I am making
-the experiment both at Christ Church and Lyndhurst and I shall soon
-see how it will answer. I am not sure but that some general plan of
-that sort will be as likely as any other to be useful now. I think also
-of importing a cargo of corn now, as I did pork on the last occasion,
-and it may be a good thing to encourage others to do the same for the
-supply of their respective neighbourhoods, which people will be more
-disposed to do if Mr. Pitt should propose the bounty I have alluded to.
-
-"The dry weather during the last twelve days I hope will be productive
-of infinite good; nothing could be more fortunate, as the seed I hope
-will now be all well got in, which may have an immediate effect in
-lowering the prices."
-
-A letter of a later date from Rose follows as to the payment of Pitt's
-debts by subscription amongst his friends. Wilberforce was sanguine as
-to the success of this plan "considering the number of affluent men
-connected with Pitt, some of whom have got great and lucrative places
-from him." Wilberforce drew up a list of sixty-three persons who "might
-be expected to contribute." But the plan of a private subscription fell
-to the ground.
-
-
-_Right Hon. G. Rose to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "OLD PALACE YARD,
-
- "_January 25, 1806, Saturday_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I told you, immediately after the receipt of
-your former letters, that all thought of applying to Parliament for
-payment of Mr. Pitt's debts was abandoned; and measures are taking for
-the attainment of that object, which will be very greatly assisted by
-your endeavours I am sure. Mr. Samuel Thornton and Mr. Angerstein are
-to meet several gentlemen in the city on Tuesday morning to promote a
-private subscription, and whatever may be necessary to be done at this
-end of the town I trust will be effected. I hope I expressed myself
-intelligibly respecting your motives--you cannot be more certain of
-them than I am--and I felt deeply obliged by the plainness with which
-you expressed your sentiments; they decided my conduct instantly, as I
-told you before.
-
-"As to the wish expressed by our late inestimable friend relative to
-the Stanhopes, I suggested to you that as provision had been made
-for the husbands of the two elder ones, equal to L1,000 a year, I
-believe, for each, I thought a further one by Parliament could hardly
-be acquiesced in. For Lady Hester I hoped no difficulty would be made
-in providing an annuity to that amount. The two young men are in the
-army--_they_ are not of Mr. Pitt's blood and small sinecure employments
-are given to them which will aid their income.
-
-"Three gentlemen are to meet in the city on Monday to concert the best
-measures for promoting the subscription, and you shall know the result.
-You will, I am persuaded, come in to attend the House on that day.
-
- "The Bishop of Lincoln is at the Deanery.
- "I am, my dear Wilberforce,
- "Most truly yours,
- "GEORGE ROSE."
-
-
-The next two letters are from Dundas, afterwards Lord Melville,[27]
-"the only minister to whose judgment Pitt greatly deferred."
-Wilberforce writes of him as "an excellent man of business and a fine,
-warm-hearted fellow," but later on he says, "his connection with Dundas
-was Pitt's great misfortune."[28] The first letter is on the subject of
-free exports of our manufactures to Holland.
-
-
-_Right Hon. Henry Dundas to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "WIMBLEDON, _August 15, 1796_.
-
-"MY DEAR W.,--I have spoke both with Mr. Pitt and Lord Grenville
-on the subject of a free exportation of our manufactures from this
-country to Holland. I think they agree with me in thinking that if the
-restraint was ever a politick one the time is passed. Lord Liverpool, I
-believe, is of a different opinion, but it will immediately come under
-discussion, and I would hope he will act wisely upon it. For my own
-part, I am of opinion that it is a degree of infatuation at the present
-moment to prevent the trade and manufactures of the country finding an
-exit and a vent in any mode and by any channel the enterprise of the
-merchants can devise. I am as well as can be under all the anxieties
-which the state of the country naturally suggests, and the pain
-arising from that anxiety is not diminished by feeling oneself free
-from the blame of all the mischief which is going on. Who would have
-thought not many years ago that in the year 1796 Great Britain should
-be the only nation to be found true to its own interests, or in a
-situation to maintain them. But I find my pen running away with me, and
-must conclude with congratulating you on the fine weather and luxuriant
-crops, and with being, my dear Wil,
-
- "Yours sincerely,
- "HENRY DUNDAS."
-
-Dundas's remarks on the defence of the country and the raising of
-volunteer and yeomanry corps in 1798 are not without interest in 1897.
-
-
- "WIMBLEDON, _January 29, 1798_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--There can not be a doubt of the wishes of
-Government to bring forward the zeal and exertions of the country in
-every practicable shape; at present I am not aware that any thing
-cheaper (if really efficient) can be resorted to than the system of
-volunteer corps and yeomanry corps to which every encouragement is
-given. At the same time if any proposal through the regular channel
-can be laid before Government having the same tendency, there can
-not be a doubt of its being duly attended to. The only satisfactory
-answer therefore which I can make to your letter is to suggest to you
-the propriety of mentioning to your friends who have applied to you,
-that it would be best for them to put in writing the specified plan
-they would severally wish to adopt, and if that is sent to the Duke
-of Portland by the Lord Lieutenant, I have no reason to doubt that it
-will be duly attended to. If a copy of the proposal is at the same time
-extra officially laid before me, it might be the means of expediting
-the consideration of it, as I have frequent opportunities of conversing
-with the Dukes of York and Portland, and likewise with Mr. Pitt on all
-subjects of that nature. Indeed the proper defence of the country by
-every possible means it can be done with effect and economy occupies my
-unremitting attention, and if I observe it neglected in any department,
-it vexes and distresses me more than I can describe, and perhaps more
-than is convenient consistently with keeping one's mind in a constant
-tenor of steady and unruffled attention. I was sorry to learn within
-these two days that Mrs. Wilberforce is ailing, and
-
- "I remain, my dear Wilberforce,
- "Yours very sincerely,
- "HENRY DUNDAS."
-
-
- In his later days when he had withdrawn to
- a great extent from the society which he had
- charmed in his youth Wilberforce's chief female
- friends were Hannah More, of whose letters hundreds
- remain, Martha More, Mrs. Fry, Maria
- Edgeworth. In strong contrast stand out the
- friendships of the youthful days, when Wilberforce's
- Wimbledon villa was the resort of witty
- and fashionable, rather than of learned and charitable
- ladies, when he was "sitting up all night
- singing" and when the society he frequented
- included Mrs. Siddons, Mrs. Crewe, Mrs. Sheridan,
- the Duchess of Portland, and last but not
- least, the beautiful and bewitching Jane Duchess
- of Gordon, she who raised the regiment of Gordon
- Highlanders by giving, as was said, the
- shilling from her mouth to the recruits.
-
- The Duchess of Gordon writes to William
- Wilberforce in July, 1788, of "the many happy
- hours I have spent at Wimbledon," and from
- Keswick this versatile woman tells him of the
- "sweet church" she had passed by and how she
- "found myself repeating the lines, 'Remote from
- man with God he passed his days, Prayer all
- his business, all his pleasure praise': it is thus
- I should like to live, the world forgetting, by
- the world forgot." She tries to tempt him to
- Gordon Castle in these words: "I know that
- 'silent glens have charms for thee,' and this is the
- country in which you will find those silent and
- peaceful abodes. Nature bestowed every wild,
- uncultivated beauty, with a purer air and brighter
- horizon. Here Hygeia is to be found; we lead
- the lives of hermits. Dr. Beattie shall be our
- companion. We go to bed at eleven, and sometimes
- visit the majestic ocean before breakfast.
- I am certain the air of this country would perfectly
- re-establish your health, which would give
- joy to thousands, and no one more than, &c.,
-
- "J. GORDON."
-
-
-In this letter the Duchess encloses her correspondence with Dundas, who
-was one of the circle at that Liberty Hall of Wimbledon.
-
-The Duchess had had a misunderstanding with Dundas which she wished
-Wilberforce to heal through his influence with Pitt. She had "dropped
-some words" respecting Dundas to Pitt which had "got round" to the
-former. Dundas writes to her:
-
- "INDIA OFFICE,
-
- "_July 4, 1788_.
-
-"DEAR DUCHESS,--I received your affectionate note previous to your
-departure for Scotland. A great part of its contents are more fit for
-discussion in free conversation than by letter. I have only to beg of
-you always to keep in remembrance the long letter I wrote to you in
-consequence of some words you dropped to Mr. Pitt respecting me last
-winter.
-
-"It is scarcely possible for you to put me out of humour, because
-however much you may at times forget yourself, and get into sallies
-of unguarded expression, you would be almost the worst of beings if
-you was seriously to entertain for me any other sentiments than those
-of perfect regard and affection. I therefore never suspect you of any
-serious alteration of your regard. But let me for your own sake entreat
-you to reflect that everybody does not make the same allowance that
-I do. You judge truly when you think that you have many enemies, and
-be assured that there is no such good receipt for having enemies than
-to talk rashly or disrespectfully behind their backs; and be sure of
-it these things in some way or other get round, and no after-civility
-is received as an expiation. On the contrary, it brings upon you the
-imputation of duplicity which of all other ingredients in a character
-ought (even the suspicion of it) to be avoided.
-
-"After so long a lecture, I think it right to console you with
-enclosing Sir George Young's note just received. I leave you to say
-anything you please about me to Mrs. Gordon, only let her not imagine
-that I made professions even in the middle of a country dance without a
-perfect determination to realise them. Remember me affectionately to
-everybody, and
-
- "I remain,
- "Yours sincerely,
- "HENRY DUNDAS."
-
-The Duchess's answer to Dundas is so full of piquancy that it helps one
-to realise the personality of this remarkable woman.
-
-
-_Duchess of Gordon to Right Hon. Henry Dundas._
-
- "GORDON CASTLE,
- "_July 13, 1788_.
-
-"I have this morning yours, and though not a little confused with the
-bustle of joy that surrounds me, cannot delay answering it. There is
-something in the strain of your letters so unlike the ideas that you
-convey in our conversation that I cannot think they are wrote by the
-same person.
-
-"Why mention duplicity to me? You know there is not a human being
-further from it; and I know you don't in your heart believe one word
-upon the subject. If you do, you have not the penetration the world
-gives you; for I can assure you with the firmest confidence you are
-most egregiously mistaken. It would be better for me if I had a
-little more of that detestable vice, or even the policy to conceal my
-sentiments, for I am convinced my enemies are the offspring of too much
-openness; far, very far, from that detested duplicity, or any of its
-hateful train. I never expressed an idea of you or your conduct that
-I did not express to yourself. It was the impulse of the moment; and
-I feel too independent of any man's power, however much I may choose
-to depend upon their good opinion and friendship, to suppress my
-sentiments when justly founded. For many years of my life my confidence
-in you was unbounded. You said you loved me with all the extravagance
-of passion; at the same time that respect, esteem, and veneration made
-you express sentiments that did you honour to feel and me to follow.
-You certainly did not act to my brother as I would have done to yours
-or to anyone you protected. What Mr. Pitt told you I could not tell
-him as a secret. You have often told me he has none from you. I do
-not doubt--I could not doubt--that the Duke and I were the persons
-on earth you wished most to serve, and yet my brother has met with
-the most cruel disappointments. In this, my good friend, there is no
-duplicity. Not even to your enemies did I express an idea that could
-lead them to think that I ever doubted your honour, your sincerity, or
-your talents as a statesman. No dark hints and half-sentences; but an
-open declaration of my friendship and a dependence upon yours. That
-your friends and that society was where we spent the happiest hours.
-However impolitic, I always openly declared my decided preference to
-those parties, and I don't doubt it but it made enemies of those that
-had felt and expressed very different sentiments--I know it did. But
-to gain one friend such as I could name, more than repaid a legion of
-such insipid triflers and ignorant puppies. When I wrote you my note
-from London I had resolved to obliterate all causes of complaint, and
-only remember with gratitude the pleasant parties we had enjoyed at
-your house; but your letter makes it necessary that I bring to your
-view from how many different sources any dissatisfaction on my part
-arose. The last cause--your conduct relative to our politics--I thought
-both impolitic as a statesman and unkind as a friend. You say you
-thought otherwise, and your kind proposal of the Duke's succeeding to
-Lord Marchmont's office will more than cancel his disappointment. This
-is a true picture of my mind. After eighteen years' acquaintance, you
-would have drawn a much more flattering one; indeed, till the last few
-months of my life, you certainly thought me all perfection--so no more
-duplicity, or I must attribute eighteen years of that most horrid vice
-to you, and only a few months' sincerity. So I know, whatever you may
-amuse yourself with writing, that it is still, and must be, your firm
-belief. I would not have said so much upon the subject, but I tremble
-for I don't know what. I had hints in London. I had forgot them, till
-your letter brings them with redoubled force to my remembrance. I
-could not believe them; for you had convinced me Mr. Pitt had some
-unfavourable impressions of me, and that you had removed them. For no
-one favour did I feel more grateful. But I shall never have done. I
-was happy to see all your family in Edinburgh well and happy; I found
-my little boy the most lovely creature I ever saw. My Duke is most
-sincerely yours; he cannot doubt your friendship, as that office had
-long been the object of his wishes and expectations. No one is better
-entitled and no one more worthy of it. Once more adieu. May the races
-afford you much amusement, and may the paths of Melville and Duneira
-be strewed with roses, without one care from public or private life to
-cause a gloom.
-
- &c., &c.,
- "J. GORDON."
-
-
-The Duchess, in enclosing this correspondence, begs Wilberforce to
-be her defender if he hears her character attacked on the ground of
-"duplicity" or "inaccuracy;" his influence with Pitt was one reason for
-her troubling him with the subject.
-
-Later on she writes to Wilberforce, who was gradually withdrawing
-himself from fashionable society, a note docketed "before 1800," to
-say:--
-
-"Am I never to see you more? The Duchess of Leeds and her sister sing
-here Monday evening. Pray come; I shall be delighted to see you, and
-much mortified if you don't come.
-
-
- "Ever yours most truly, &c.,
- "J. GORDON."
-
-After 1800 Wilberforce seems in great measure to have cut himself
-loose from society that he considered frivolous; and to have used
-the extraordinary influence he possessed over his friends to
-endeavour to induce them also to forsake the world of fashion. The
-long letter which follows is from Lord Calthorpe (a relation of
-Barbara,[29] Wilberforce's wife), who had been strongly advised by
-Wilberforce not to spend a Sunday with the Duchess of Gordon in
-Scotland. Lord Calthorpe writes in great chagrin at having neglected
-the good advice of his mentor, had found the warnings against her
-fascinations very necessary, and had had the mortification of seeing
-her go to sleep while he read Leighton's "Commentary" to her. It would
-be of interest to know what were the "full and useful directions for
-public speaking" for which Lord Calthorpe is grateful to Wilberforce.
-
-
-_Lord Calthorpe to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "KINRARA,
- "_September 2, 1801, Saturday_.
-
-"MY DEAR SIR,--I have just evinced a proof of want of vigilance and
-self-discipline which vexes me so much that I am endeavouring to find
-relief from my vexation by telling it to you, as it is a satisfaction
-to me to think that you will pity me, in spite of the neglect of your
-advice, which I have betrayed. After having had the carriage at the
-door to leave this place (the Duchess of Gordon's) in order that we
-might spend to-morrow quietly, about twenty miles off, I have suffered
-myself to be persuaded to stay here till Monday. O how subtle are the
-devices of the enemy of our peace, and how weak our natural means of
-defence; the real cause of my falling into this temptation is now plain
-enough, but the shadow of delusion that for a moment imposed upon me
-was the idea of having some serious conversation with the Duchess, when
-we were likely to be almost alone, and which company has hitherto given
-me but little opportunity for; and this I was weak enough to indulge in
-spite of more sober convictions and the advice of Mr. Gorham and other
-objections, and I am just awakened to see the extent of my folly,
-conceit, and wilful depravity, by finding that we are to have no chance
-of having my imagination gratified, as Sir Wm. Scott has written word
-that he is coming to-morrow, and the delight with which the Duchess
-welcomed the intelligence has opened my eyes to my sottishness in
-thinking her sincere in her wish that I might pass a Sunday with her. I
-cannot conceive a scene more calculated to excite feelings of devotion
-and to expose worldly vanities than this spot, which is quite lovely,
-yet here I have found how strongly the world may engage the affections;
-there is something in the Duchess that pleases, although against the
-judgment (perhaps a little in the way of Falstaff), and makes her
-entertaining even when she is the subject of melancholy reflections;
-indeed, I feel how necessary your warnings against her fascinations
-were; she talked a great deal about her friend Wilberforce, and
-threatens you with a letter about me, and told me all my faults which
-she intended to report to you; I have not spent a Sunday (for it is
-now over) with so much self-reproach since I came into Scotland. She
-seems to be on the same kind of terms with religion as she is with
-her Duke, that is, on terms of great nominal familiarity without ever
-meeting each other except in an hotel or in the streets of Edinburgh.
-She fell asleep on Sunday while I was reading to her part of Leighton's
-Commentary and awoke with lively expressions of admiration at what
-she had not heard; she talks of setting off for Ireland in a few weeks
-and of going to London afterwards, so I hope that she will do no harm
-at Edinburgh next winter. I left Kinrara on Monday and got to Blair at
-night; I found there more of ancient stateliness than I have yet seen,
-and I think the Duke of Athol is fond of keeping it up; he has some
-very fine scenery about him there, and his other place Dunkeld, which
-is twenty miles off, is perhaps more beautiful although less wild and
-magnificent. Sir W. Scott (whom I never see without thinking of you) is
-on a visiting tour, and went from Blair with Lord Frederick Campbell
-to Lord Melville's and from thence goes to the Duke of Argyle's and
-Montrose's back to Edinburgh; he was very tortuous and amusing. I have
-written this by scraps, and am ashamed to have been so long about it.
-Many thanks for your last letter, and especially for your kindness in
-giving me such full and useful directions for acquiring a talent for
-public speaking; I will endeavour, as far as I am able, to do justice
-to them, and I expect to find your technical lines of great service to
-me. I believe that the plan of religious reading which you mention is
-the best, and surely I have no small encouragement to pursue it, and
-when I am so great a gainer by its beneficial effects in your case.
-I spent yesterday at Lord Mansfield's, at Scoone, where the Kings of
-Scotland used to be crowned; the old palace has been pulled down, and
-a very large Gothic house built upon its site. I hope you are enjoying
-health and quiet where you are, and every other blessing. Give my
-kindest remembrance to Mrs. W.
-
- "Believe me, my dear sir,
- "Affectly yours,
- "CALTHORPE.
-
-"You shall hear from me again."
-
-Wilberforce's influence with Pitt was also known to Maria, Duchess of
-Gloucester.[30] It will be remembered that Henry William, third son of
-George II. (created Duke of Gloucester in 1764), married Maria, Dowager
-Countess of Waldegrave, in 1766. This lady writes to Wilberforce,
-hoping that through his "mediation with Pitt" a regiment of dragoons
-may be given to her son Lord Waldegrave.
-
-
-_The Duchess of Gloucester to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "GENOA, _February 4, 1786_.
-
-"SIR,--Although you did not succeed in one of my requests to Mr.
-Pitt, you were more successful in the other; and for that I return
-you my thanks. I did not very much flatter myself that Mr. Pitt would
-add a place to what Lord Waldegrave at present possesses, indeed a
-regiment is almost the only addition he is likely to gain; and as Mr.
-Pitt has expressed his satisfaction in the marks of favour already
-received from the King, may I hope, through your mediation, that Mr.
-Pitt will be so good as to remind His Majesty how very acceptable a
-regiment of dragoons will be to Lord Waldegrave. If Lord Waldegrave
-was distressed from his own extravagance I would not trouble Mr. Pitt,
-but my daughter's father left his brother a clear estate which is now
-encumbered as much as if the late Lord Waldegrave had come to the
-title and estate, at twenty-four, instead of forty-four. The Duke of
-Grafton's reconciliation with his son is now so old a story that I only
-mention it as a fact that I am sensible gives you pleasure? Mr. Pitt
-is so much attached to Lord Euston, that I must take part in an event
-that I know gives him so much pleasure. I hope Lord Lucan will suffer
-the match to take place, but till it is over I shall have my doubts. If
-Mrs. Wilberforce and your sister are in town will you give them my best
-compliments. Sophia and William are both as tall as yourself.
-
- "Sir,
- "I remain yours, &c., &c.,
- "MARIA."
-
-The next letter is from the same lady, thanking Wilberforce for having
-written "so full an explanation of what so few people understand" in
-his work on "Practical Christianity."
-
-
- "GLOUCESTER HOUSE,
- "_April 14, 1797_.
-
-"I received your inimitable book the day before I got your letter, and
-had read a good way in it. I have continued to read in it with the
-greatest satisfaction, and beg of you to accept of my thanks for having
-written so full an explanation of what so few people understand. I hope
-and trust it will be universally read, and that with attention, as then
-the good it will do will be infinite. Mrs. H. More was with me last
-night; she is so exalted by your book that she almost forgets humility
-is one of the Christian requisites.
-
- "I remain, dear sir,
- "Your _very_ much obliged, &c.,
- "MARIA."
-
-
-Let us turn to the more serious friendships of Wilberforce's middle
-age. So much of his correspondence with Hannah More has been published
-that it is only lightly touched on here.
-
-In 1809 Hannah More wrote to Mr. Wilberforce: "Oh, if I could have had
-the benefit of your assistance in Coelebs![31] but I could not be such
-an unfeeling brute as to ask it. 'Tis not to _make a speech_ when I say
-that _you_ are the _only being_ whose counsels would _in all points_
-have exactly fallen in with my own ideas from your uniting a critical
-knowledge of the world in its higher classes with such deep religious
-feelings--either of these I might have found in a very few, but not
-both in any."
-
-Hannah More and her friends had apparently unfortunate experiences with
-regard to the spiritual help to be obtained from the higher ranks of
-the clergy at that time, as she writes: "I have had many interviews
-with Ladies Waldegrave and Euston. They told me that, though acquainted
-with several bishops, they never could get a word of seriousness or
-profit from any of them." Whether it was the "critical knowledge of
-the world in its higher classes" joined to "deep religious feeling"
-mentioned by Hannah More, or the "indulgent benevolent temper, with
-no pretension to superior sanctity or strictness," of which Maria
-Edgeworth writes,[32] certain it is that Wilberforce became a guide
-of the religious life of many of his friends. For instance, Mr. Eliot,
-the brother-in-law of Pitt, writes from Burton Pynsent a letter, marked
-"very pleasing and serious" by Wilberforce, in which he says in answer
-to Wilberforce, who "hoped he had been going on in a regular, steady
-way," that he had been "endeavouring to work a good will into a good
-habit, that so the habit may come in turn to the assistance of the
-will, which, as you very truly say, I am sure (except under the special
-favour of God's grace), will flag and waver in its best pursuits and
-firmest intention. My chief reading for the month has been Warburton."
-
-Mrs. Elizabeth Fry writes to Wilberforce to say:--
-
-"When thou hast leisure, advise with me as with a child if thou hast
-any hint to give me in my new circumstances. I look before long once
-more to entering the prisons. The cause is near my heart, and I do not
-see that my husband, having lost his property, should, when he and my
-family do not want me, prevent my yet attending to these duties; in
-this I should like to have thy advice."
-
-In 1801 the question of Irish Union divided educated opinion. Dr.
-Burgh,[33] a well-known man at this time and friend of Wilberforce,
-takes one side, and Lord Hardwicke, Viceroy of Ireland, the other.
-
-
- _Dr. Burgh to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "YORK, _February 9, 1801_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBER.,--I sincerely thank you for the communication you
-have made to me, and assure you that you may rely upon my profoundest
-silence. The cruel and corrupt means that were adequately resorted to,
-in order to effect the revolutionary Union which has subverted the
-prescriptive constitution of both these kingdoms, have so entirely
-infected the sweetness of affiance in my bosom, that whatever systems
-or changes are adopted my eye sets instantly to search among all
-possible motives in order to find the worst of issues. Can I see
-Addington climb upon the stooping neck of Mr. Pitt, and not believe
-that it is done in hostility, or in a masked confederacy? If the
-former, how am I to estimate the man who comes in? If the latter,
-what judgment can I form of the man who goes out? Is a retiring
-administration to be allowed, in a temporary agreement with opposition,
-to support the claims of Irish Popery, and by carrying their point in
-their new character, to exonerate the Cabinet of the charge; and are
-they to re-occupy their posts when there are no farther measures to be
-carried by them in their unresponsible situations? All this I foresaw,
-though not perhaps in the detail; and, indeed, it required no prophet's
-eye to foresee it, when hints which bind not were conscientiously
-substituted for promises in order to purchase a momentary calm. The
-downfall of the Church of England is still involved, and however the
-Papists of Ireland, on merging the two kingdoms into each other, may
-be considered as outnumbered by the Protestants, it is not by the
-Protestants of the Establishment, who will, on the whole, be outweighed
-by the incorporated force of the Protestant Dissenters with those of
-the same description in Ireland, who will derive the most unqualified
-assistance from the Romish body. Show favour to Popery, and the
-Dissenters' claims will be abetted by millions who will only infer a
-kind of right against all anticipation of consequences; or, on the
-other hand, deny the demands of Popery, and you instantly and directly
-unite the two denominations against the Church of England. I know but
-one mode to prevent all these, and ten thousand other unconsidered
-evils; at once declare the impracticability of carrying conditions into
-execution, and dissolve this ill-starred Union, from which no benefit
-will ever flow, but every evil that imagination can picture.
-
-"I will trouble you no farther now except to desire that you will not
-charge me with defective candour; the things that are already done will
-surely too clearly justify whatever inference I have drawn from them.
-
-"May every happiness attend you and yours--in opposition to prospects I
-say it; but if a few good men may not save a nation, they yet may save
-and purchase favour to themselves.
-
- "I am ever, my dear Wilber.,
- "Most fervently yours,
- "W. B."
-
-
- _Lord Hardwicke to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "_September 30, 1801._
-
-"I think the alterations made by the Union are in some respects
-likely to facilitate the conduct of public business in this country
-with a view to the public benefit. I have hitherto had great reason
-to be satisfied with my reception. The city of Dublin, I mean the
-leading part of it, is extremely loyal and attached to Government,
-but they still consider the Union as having affected in some degree
-their local interests, and it will be some time before this feeling
-is entirely removed. There can however be little doubt that when they
-see the United Parliament as attentive to Irish as they have been to
-British interests, and disposed to promote them by the same liberal
-encouragement, that whatever partial dissatisfaction may remain
-will gradually wear off. If the French do not succeed in landing a
-considerable body of troops in this country we shall certainly continue
-to enjoy tranquillity, but if the enemy effect a landing in force, we
-must expect rebellion to revive."
-
-The state of Ireland at a later date after the Union is alluded to
-in the next letter from Lord Redesdale,[34] who was apparently much
-aggrieved at the treatment which he had experienced in giving up
-the Lord Chancellorship of that country. The letter is marked by
-Wilberforce "Lord Redesdale shamefully used on being turned out of
-Chancellorship."
-
-
-_Lord Redesdale to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "ELY PLACE, DUBLIN,
- "_March 5, 1806_.
-
-"MY DEAR SIR,--I rely upon your letter, desiring to know whether
-there was any establishment in this country by contribution to which
-you could forward its civilisation, for excusing my sending you
-'observations on the necessity of publishing the Scriptures in the
-Irish language,' by Dr. Stokes, of the College, who is engaged in
-such a work, without any view of emolument, but merely to promote
-the civilisation of the country, and the propagation, as much as
-possible, of the Christian religion in its purity. He is supported by
-contribution of the college, and some private contributions; but such
-is the temper of the Irish that even their charities, liberal as they
-frequently are, are more the result of pride and vanity than of any of
-the true feelings of the charitable mind. I think Dr. Stokes's work
-will be very useful; and that in spite of all the arts of the priests,
-the circulation of the Scriptures will prevail amongst the lower
-orders, and must reform even the Irish Catholic Church, which I take to
-be the most corrupt now remaining of all the members of the Church of
-Rome. It will also have the effect of enabling the Protestant clergy
-of the Establishment to perform their duty; namely, to endeavour to
-instruct those who do not understand the English language; and I think
-it will also enable the gentlemen of the country to gain so much of
-the Irish language as will give them some intercourse with their poor
-neighbours, where the English language is not spoken; and I think it
-will also contribute to diffuse the English language, which I think
-is a most important advantage. I have thought it my duty to subscribe
-ten guineas for the encouragement of Dr. Stokes, and I believe a
-few subscriptions with what the College proposes to give him, will
-encourage him to proceed with activity; as I have strong assurances
-that he seeks for nothing but indemnity and desires no compensation
-for his time or his labour. I yesterday gave up the Great Seal, in
-consequence of Lord Spencer's having thought fit to advise His Majesty,
-after he had signed a warrant for Mr. Ponsonby's appointment, to sign
-another for putting the Great Seal in commission, and then to send
-it _by express_, directing the Lord Lieutenant to _lose no time_ in
-procuring the Commission to pass the Seal. This has been done in so
-much hurry that I have great doubts of its regularity; and if it had
-been the case of any man but myself, I should have refused to put the
-Great Seal to the patent, without further consideration; and I find the
-Lords Commissioners are very much puzzled how to act. But this I feel
-principally as a marked and gross personal affront to me, and through
-me to the Lord Lieutenant.
-
-"I could do nothing (without the Lord Lieutenant's warrant) but
-despatch the business of the Court of Chancery; and yet I am not to be
-trusted with the Great Seal _for a few days_ till the arrival of Mr.
-Ponsonby for that purpose; and the suitors of the Court of Chancery
-were to be equally injured; for the Commissioners being the Chief
-Justice and Chief Baron, who have too much business in their own
-courts to sit in the Court of Chancery, and the Master of the Rolls who
-cannot (from the state of his health) do more business than he does
-as Master of the Rolls, very little of the business which would have
-been dispatched by me can be done till the arrival of Mr. Ponsonby; and
-by that time all the counsel will be gone the circuit. I must confess
-I resent this wanton and childish insult (for I have no doubt the
-affront was intended by Lord Spencer) much more than my removal from
-my office, and nothing could be more insulting than the terms of the
-letters written by my old friend C. W. Wynne, by order of Lord Spencer,
-with the directions to have the patent to the Commissioners sealed
-forthwith. From Lord Spencer and from Wynne I had certainly a claim at
-least to personal civility. But it is the miserable effect of party
-violence to blind all those who suffer themselves to be led by it. I
-have the satisfaction of knowing that all those persons here whose
-good opinion is of any value regret my removal, and have given me most
-affectionate testimonies of their regard. I am sorry to add that the
-conduct of His Majesty's ministers, in various instances, has raised
-in the Protestant inhabitants of this country great and serious alarm.
-The expressions of Mr. Fox on the subject of the Union have sunk deep
-into their minds; and though it has been contrived to quiet those
-adverse to the Union for the moment, with a view to prevent alarm, the
-poison is working in their minds, and you will probably soon perceive
-its effects. Mr. Fox's answer to Lord Shrewsbury and Mr. Scully, as
-stated in the papers, has also had a very unfortunate effect. It is
-a libel on the Government of the country in all its parts; imputing
-to it gross partiality even in the administration of justice, and it
-promises the Roman Catholics a different order of things; not by the
-interposition of the legislature, but _by the influence and favour
-of the executive_ government; and it applies itself directly and
-particularly to the _army_, as if it were intended to frighten the
-Protestants into acquiescence. It should be recollected that Lord
-Shrewsbury is not connected in any way with Ireland, except by a claim
-of peerage; and that Mr. Scully is the author of a pamphlet in which
-he writes of James the Second as _the lawful King of Ireland_ at the
-battle of the Boyne, and King William as a _Dutch invader_. You can
-have no conception of the gloom which prevails in the minds of thinking
-people in this country. Our Chief Justice and Chief Baron, both very
-sound men and highly esteemed, are very strongly affected. The Chief
-Justice forebodes every species of mischief. Lord Norbury, who is
-Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, is of a lighter turn of mind, and
-irritated by a gross and ridiculous affront in omitting his name in the
-Commission for custody of the Great Seal--evidently a mere piece of
-party malice. But he also is full of gloomy apprehensions of the result
-of the measures likely to be adopted.
-
-"But my apprehensions are greatly increased by observing that Lord
-Grenville and Lord Spencer are mere dupes to the other party in the
-Cabinet with respect to Ireland, if not generally so. Lord Grenville
-and Lord Spencer perhaps imagine that they may have some influence in
-Ireland through Mr. Elliott and Sir J. Newport. Most certainly they
-will have none. The Ponsonby family will govern Ireland through the
-Lord Lieutenant, who is completely in their hands. Lord Grenville and
-Lord Spencer seem also to have put Scotland and India out of their
-control; and with the influence of all the great appendages of the
-Empire against them, and a majority in the Cabinet to contend with at
-home, what can they hope for? As the least of two evils, I shall yet
-feel it my duty to support them against their rivals in the Cabinet,
-though the personal insults I have received have come through them,
-and their rivals have been comparatively civil. I shall get rid of
-my property here as soon as I can, and with the miserable remains
-transport myself to England for the rest of my days.
-
-"I have had enough of office, and especially in my last change, which
-has had the effect of making me pay a fine of at least twenty thousand
-pounds for the honour of serving four years in a laborious office,
-separated from my family and all my old friends, I shall return to
-England, however, with pleasure; for though I shall be reduced to
-practise an economy to which for thirty years I have been a stranger,
-I shall return to my old friends, and to a country where my life will
-probably be in no greater danger than that of any other person, and
-where Lady Redesdale will be relieved from the fear and anxieties
-which have long agitated her mind, and made her ardently wish that I
-had never taken the office of Chancellor of Ireland; a wish in which I
-most heartily concur. The remainder of my life I trust will be passed
-more quietly than the last three years. Lady Redesdale begs to join in
-respects to Mrs. Wilberforce, and I am
-
- "Truly, my dear sir,
- "Your faithful, humble servant,
- "REDESDALE."
-
-
-Sydney Smith writes in 1807 with regard to the Yorkshire election,
-and the state of Ireland: his letter is marked "characteristic" by
-Wilberforce.
-
-"DEAR SIR,--If Mrs. S. remains in her present state of health I hardly
-know how I can go down to Yorkshire at all. It is eight weeks since
-her lying-in, and she cannot yet stand upon her feet. If I do come I
-will certainly vote for Lord Milton and for you. I hope now you have
-done with Africa you will do something for Ireland, which is surely
-the greatest question and interest connected with this Empire. There
-is no man in England who from activity, understanding, character, and
-neutrality could do it so effectually as Mr. Wilberforce--and when this
-country conceded a century ago an establishment to the Presbyterian
-Church, it is horrible to see four millions of Christians of another
-persuasion instructed by ragged priests, and praising their Creator
-in wet ditches. I hope to God you will stir in this great business,
-and then we will vote you the consulship for life, and you shall be
-perpetual member for Yorkshire.
-
-"In the meantime I remain, with great respect,
-
- "Your obedient servant,
- "SYDNEY SMITH."
-
-
-Wilberforce had evidently written to Lord Eldon begging him not to
-take up the great question of abolition of slavery on party grounds;
-and Lord Eldon wrote that he wished that the House of Lords might
-not disgrace itself by its mode of proceeding, as he saw a strong
-inclination to do justice, "if abolition be justice, in a most unjust
-mode." This letter is undated; it was probably written in 1802.
-
-_Lord Eldon to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
-"DEAR SIR,--I thank you for your book, and I add my thanks for your
-letter. You may be assured that I am incapable of 'taking up this
-great question on party grounds.' As a proof of that, I may mention
-that after listening more than once, with the partiality which my love
-of his virtues created, to Mr. Pitt himself in the House of Commons,
-and discussing the subject with him in private, again and again, the
-difficulties which I had upon immediate abolition, and abolition
-without compensation previously pledged (not compensation for British
-debts out of African blood, but out of British treasure) never were so
-far surmounted, as to induce me to think I had clear grounds for voting
-_with him_. After such a statement, I need not say that, although
-my political life has, at least so I fancy, for near twenty-four
-years been so far really regulated by a sincere belief that I am
-acting according to the dictates of duty in an uniform uninterrupted
-opposition to some persons now in power that I feel it very difficult
-to class among my honourable friends gentlemen who have never, that I
-know of, disavowed the principles against which I have been waging war,
-and who, I presume, have never disavowed them because they entertained
-them, as sincerely as I detest them; yet, in a case of this sort, I
-know that I must either stand or fall by taking diligent heed that in
-what I do or forbear to do I am governed by the best lights, which my
-own reason, aided by information, can afford me; and I should think
-myself a worse man, if I was influenced by party considerations in
-such a business, than indiscreet zeal has yet represented a West India
-planter to be.
-
-"What I shall finally do I know not. I wish the House of Lords may
-not disgrace itself by its mode of proceeding. I see or think I see a
-strong inclination, if abolition be justice, to do justice in a most
-unjust mode. Perhaps the dilatory conduct of that House formerly, it
-is now thought, can be atoned for by hurry and precipitation. And that
-its character will be best maintained by its being doubly disgraced.
-I wish my mind had been so framed as to feel no doubts on this awful
-and fearful business, but as that is not the case, I must endeavour to
-do as rightly as, with my infirmities of mind I may be able to act.
-I shall see to-day what course the matters take, and if my view of
-the subject leads me to determine to vote and I feel it likely to be
-beneficial to converse upon facts, as well as to read all I can find,
-I shall seek the benefit you kindly offer me.
-
- "Yours sincerely,
- "ELDON."
-
-
-Wilberforce had met Lord Ellenborough on the Continent in 1785, and
-had maintained a friendly intercourse with him. The following letter
-from Lord Ellenborough shows his attitude towards abolition. Though he
-acknowledged the viciousness of the system he was extremely alarmed at
-the consequences of disturbing it (especially in the then convulsed
-state of the world). At the same time he said that he should not be
-governed by any supposed policy of man, if he were clear as to the
-will of God on the point. His letter is marked "truly pleasing" by
-Wilberforce.
-
-_Lord Ellenborough to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "BLOOMSBURY SQUARE,
- "_June 27, 1802_.
-
-"MY DEAR SIR,--I recollect perfectly the conversation between us
-in the House of Commons to which you allude, and should be extreme
-happy to appoint a time when I might have the benefit, which I should
-certainly derive from a communication with you upon the important
-subject mentioned in your letter,--if I could do so with convenience
-to you, and without breaking in upon my necessary attendance during
-the sittings at Westminster and Guildhall--and which occupy me from
-half-past eight to four or later every day--and on some days I am
-afterwards obliged to attend the House of Lords till between five and
-six. If there be any morning this week during which my sittings will
-continue at Westminster, when it might be convenient to you to be at my
-chamber at Westminster, called the King's Bench Treasury Chamber, by
-half-past eight, I would be down there by that time, which would allow
-me the satisfaction of seeing you for half hour before my sittings,
-which commence at nine, begin. I feel the infinite importance of the
-question of abolition, and will give no vote upon it at all, unless I
-can do so with a much more satisfied judgment and conscience on the
-subject than I have attained at present. I have always felt a great
-abhorrence of the mode by which these unfortunate creatures are torn
-from their families and country, and have doubted whether any sound
-policy could grow out of a system which seemed to be so vicious in
-its foundation; but I am extremely alarmed at the consequences of
-disturbing it, particularly in the present convulsed state of the
-world. In short, my dear sir, I am almost ashamed to say that I tremble
-at giving their full effect to the impressions which the subject
-naturally makes on my mind, in the first view of it, as a man and a
-Christian. I am frightened at the consequences of any innovation upon
-a long-established practice, at a period so full of danger as the
-present. At the same time I cannot well reconcile it with the will of
-God,--and if I was quite clear on that head, I should be decided by it,
-and should not be governed by any supposed policy of man which might be
-set up in opposition to it. I write this in confidence to yourself. I
-remain, my dear sir, with very sincere respect,
-
- "Your obedient servant,
- "ELLENBOROUGH."
-
-
-Wilberforce had written to Lord Ellenborough on the evils of his having
-a seat in the Cabinet, Lord Ellenborough being at that time Lord
-Chief Justice of the King's Bench, and the next letter contains Lord
-Ellenborough's defence of his conduct, which does not err on the side
-of brevity and which Wilberforce describes as "a very handsome answer."
-
-_Lord Ellenborough to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "BLOOMSBURY SQUARE,
- "_February 4, 1806_.
-
-"MY DEAR SIR,--I sit down to thank you for the favour of your letter
-in the very instant in which I have received it. I regret very much
-that I have no opportunity of personal communication with you on the
-subject of it: if I had I could explain more perfectly and unreservedly
-than I can do by letter all the motives which have induced my reluctant
-acquiescence in a nomination of myself to a place in the Cabinet.
-The situation has not only not been sought by me, but I appeal to
-every member of the Government about to be formed who is acquainted
-with the transaction, whether it was not accepted by me with extreme
-reluctance, and after objections raised by myself which nothing but a
-superior sense of the present duty and a prospect of present usefulness
-to the public would have surmounted. If I had felt that a situation
-in the Cabinet would have placed me under circumstances inconsistent
-with the due and impartial discharge of my judicial functions, no
-consideration on earth would have induced me to accept it. A member
-of the Cabinet is only a member of a Select Committee of the Privy
-Council, of which Privy Council at large every justice of the K.B. is
-of course a member. In that larger Privy Council his Majesty may and
-frequently does take the opinion of its members on matters which may
-come in question judicially before some of them. But I think that no
-man can correctly act in both capacities, and therefore when a question
-of a high criminal nature was about a year ago under discussion at a
-Privy Council at which I was particularly desired by the Chancellor to
-attend, I stipulated expressly with my Lord Chancellor that I should
-not be included in a Special Commission to try the offence then under
-consideration. I think both my Lord C. J. Holt, and very lately my
-Lord C. J. Eyre would have done better to have forborne being present
-at the preliminary inquiries before the Privy Council, the subjects
-of which in the result might be, and afterwards in fact were, tried
-before them; but the objection is not so much in my opinion that I
-might be led to participate in the counsels of the Executive Government
-upon questions connected with the criminal jurisdiction which I am to
-exercise elsewhere (because from these I should of course invariably
-withdraw myself) but because it might give a political cast and bias
-to a judicial mind, might generate views of ambition, and destroy
-that indifference and impartiality on all questions which is the
-proper characteristic of a British judge, and even if it had not that
-effect, it might be supposed by the world at large to produce it, which
-very opinion of others would detract much from the public credit and
-consequent usefulness of the person so circumstanced.
-
-"The consideration of this objection at first gave my mind no small
-degree of anxiety. I was conscious to myself that I had no views of
-ambition to gratify. Those views, if I had entertained any such, would
-have been better consulted by accepting the Great Seal, and with it a
-highly efficient place in the public Councils--but which I had already
-refused--indeed every view of that kind has been long since more than
-satisfied. I lent myself at the earnest solicitation of others to the
-great public object of forming a strong and united administration,
-which, perhaps, without my consent to accept this situation could
-not, from particular circumstances and difficulties which I am not at
-liberty to state, have been formed.
-
-"In accepting it I have stipulated that I should not be expected
-to attend except on particularly important occasions, and on such
-occasions some of my predecessors and particularly Lord Mansfield has,
-I understand, been called upon for his advice, and indeed, in virtue
-of my oath as Privy Councillor I am bound to give that advice when
-required.
-
-"Will you acquit me of vanity?--I hope you will, when I give one reason
-more for my consenting to become for a time (I hope it will be a short
-one) an ostensible member of his Majesty's select and confidential
-Council. As I had, so I hoped I should be understood to have, no motive
-of ambition or interest inducing me to take this place in his Majesty's
-Councils. I had in general been supposed on most subjects to think
-for myself. I had, I believe, been considered in general as a zealous
-friend to the just prerogatives of the Crown. I had no particular stain
-upon my private character: in the miscellaneous composition of every
-administration, and of this, amongst others, I thought a person such
-as I might be esteemed to be, and on the ground of that estimation
-particularly, would be an ingredient not wholly without its use.
-
-"So it appeared to some of my friends. So it did (I speak it in
-confidence) particularly to Lord Sidmouth, as to the purity of whose
-views and conduct in the formation of the present arrangement I can
-bear the fullest testimony, and whose earnest request (I speak it still
-in the same confidence) overcame my reluctance, and induced me to make
-this sacrifice of private convenience and to incur the hazard which
-your kind and honourable letter represents to me as greater than I had
-thought it, of suffering in the good opinion of others. If, after this
-explanation, unavoidably less perfect than I could have wished to make
-it, you shall still retain your unfavourable opinion of the step I have
-taken, I shall learn it from you (and I am sure in that case you will
-have the frankness to tell me so) with inexpressible pain. As long as
-I shall continue a member of his Majesty's Councils (and I hope the
-necessity which induced my acceptance of the situation will not be of
-long continuance) I will give a faithful, honest, and fearless opinion
-upon the subjects under consideration, and, although it is possible
-that good men may doubt of the prudence or propriety of my conduct in
-accepting it, I am confident that no good man who shall have the means
-of knowing the actual course I shall pursue in that situation will
-have reason to blame it. The explanation I have given you is entirely
-confidential. With an anxious wish consistently to perform all the
-various duties which press upon me at this moment and to preserve the
-good opinion of good men, and especially of one whom on many accounts I
-have so long and so highly esteemed as yourself,
-
- "I remain, my dear sir,
- "Most sincerely and faithfully yours,
- "ELLENBOROUGH."
-
-
-In 1802, on the supposition that Lord Wellesley's resignation as
-Governor-General of India was imminent, an idea had been entertained
-that Lord Castlereagh should be offered the Governor-Generalship, and
-Wilberforce had been asked to approach him on the subject. From Lord
-Camden's letter to Wilberforce, given below, it will be seen that Pitt
-had objected to an appointment that would take Lord Castlereagh from
-the House of Commons, which he thought should be the theatre of his
-future fame.
-
-_Lord Camden to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "_January 7, 1802._
-
-"DEAR WILBERFORCE,--I lament extremely that Lady Camden and I have been
-deprived of the pleasure we should have had in receiving you and Mrs.
-Wilberforce here, and still more that you should have been confined
-to London by the very anxious attendance you have undergone. I thank
-you for communicating with me on the subject of Lord Castlereagh, and
-I will explain to you all I know of his objects as connected with the
-situation you have mentioned.
-
-"Amongst the many unpleasant circumstances attending our secession
-from office I have considered Lord Castlereagh's actual situation as
-one peculiarly awkward to himself, and I have also thought that in the
-present dearth of men of spirit and sense who _can_ take office it was
-unfortunate for the country that he should be excluded. With a view of
-relieving him, if possible, from such exclusion, I contrived that he
-should meet Pitt here about a month ago, and have a full and explicit
-conversation with him and me relative to the future views of the one
-and the future prospects of the other. (I confess I was not indifferent
-at the same time to the consideration of the line I may myself
-hereafter think it right to adopt.) In a previous conversation I had
-with Pitt respecting Lord Castlereagh, he expressed his anxiety that
-he should take office, and he is desirous of contriving it if possible
-with credit to him; and amongst the objects to which Lord Castlereagh
-might look, he took notice to me of an idea which he knew had been
-entertained of sending him to the East Indies as Governor-General. He
-(Pitt), however, expressed an objection to this appointment, as it
-would take him from the House of Commons, which _he_ thought should be
-the theatre of his future fame, and where, whenever Lord Hawkesbury
-is removed, he will be much wanted. In preparing Lord Castlereagh for
-his conversation with Pitt I mentioned to him the idea which had been
-entertained of his going to India, but I took notice of it as a mere
-floating idea that had not been matured, and in the short conversation
-upon that part of the subject which ensued, his impression appeared to
-be an unwillingness to banish himself from his country and to withdraw
-for ever (as he should conceive he did, by now abandoning it) from
-the situation he had a right to look for in the House of Commons. In
-the subsequent conversation with Pitt at which I was present, not a
-word passed on this subject, and I should therefore conceive that Lord
-Castlereagh has never had the subject fairly before him. I am convinced
-he would have communicated with me if he had; and although I should
-conceive it very doubtful if the event might turn out as you wish, if
-the proposition were made to him, I yet think if the directors of the
-East India Company have really thought of him, he ought to have the
-opportunity of weighing a subject of this great importance in his mind
-before he has been understood to decline the offer. By way of apprising
-Lord Castlereagh upon the subject I will enclose him your letter (if
-you have no objection), which I think will give him the opinion of
-a person indifferent to everything concerning him except his public
-character, and open the business in as advantageous a manner as it can
-be done.
-
- "Believe me,
-
- "Ever most sincerely yours,
-
- "CAMDEN."
-
-
-In 1803 the tardiness of our military preparations had been accentuated
-in a debate on the second reading of the Army Reserve Bill. Windham,
-of whom Wilberforce says that "he had many of the true characteristics
-of a hero, but he had one great fault as a statesman, he hated the
-popular side of any question," gives as his opinion in the next letter,
-that he saw no impossibility in two armies of from twenty to thirty
-thousand men being landed in different places, and being opposed only
-by yeomanry and volunteers they might advance to London or wherever
-else they pleased. "Government acknowledge that there is an utter want
-of firearms."[35] Windham's hope was that Buonaparte might, for some
-reason or other, not come; though he confesses that he did not know of
-any foundation for such hope.
-
-
- _Right Hon. William Windham to Mr. Wilberforce._
- "BEACONSFIELD,
- "_August 18, 1803_.
-
-"DEAR WILBERFORCE,--The breaking up of Parliament, advanced as the
-season is, I can hardly help regretting on another account. One wants
-a means of publishing the abominable backwardness in which things are
-with respect to defence: so as literally to put us in the situation,
-described by some writer in the _Moniteur_, namely that if fifty
-thousand men can anyhow get on shore, they must conquer the island.
-What shall we say to the fact, that at the end of now more than five
-months since the King's message not a single ball cartridge (I suppose)
-has been fired from one end of the country to the other, unless
-perhaps a few that I have desired to be fired just by me in Norfolk,
-and some that I hear Grey has been using upon the same principle in
-Northumberland?--that the corps, which have been raising, such as they
-are, remain to this moment for the greater part without arms?--that
-excepting, I am afraid, a very few thousand men to the army of reserve,
-not the smallest addition has been or can be made to a force truly
-regular, such as can alone be opposed upon equal terms to the troops
-by which we shall be invaded?--and that the whole assistance, that
-would be to be received from works, of whatever sort, is all yet to
-be begun, and even settled? When men talk of the difficulties and
-impracticability of invasion, of the impossibility of conquering a
-country such as this, they say what may be true, but which is certainly
-not so for any reasons which they can, or at least which they do,
-give. It is all a kind of loose, general vague notion founded on what
-they have been accustomed to see and to conceive, to which the answer
-is that so was everything which we have seen successively happen for
-these last fourteen years. Considering things not in much detail, but
-upon principles somewhat less general than those which I have been
-alluding to, I can see no impossibility in the supposition of two
-armies landing in different places of from twenty to thirty thousand
-men each, of their beating, severally, the troops immediately opposed
-to them, and that having nothing then to encounter but volunteers and
-yeomanry, and other troops of this description, in the midst of all the
-confusion and panick which would then prevail, that they might advance
-to London or wherever else they pleased. What the further consequences
-might be, one has no pleasure in attempting to trace; but I should be
-obliged to anyone who would show me some distinct limits to them. The
-persons to do this are, I am sure, not those who talk so glibly of
-crushing and overwhelming, and smothering, and I know not what all;
-without the least idea how any of these things are to be done, while
-the persons attacking us know how these things are, sometimes at least,
-not done, by the example of the numerous countries which they have
-overrun in spite of all such threatened opposition. I shall go from
-here, that is from London, as soon as I have settled some necessary
-business, and see whether I can be of any use in Norfolk, though I do
-not perceive how with the aid of only a single regiment of militia (all
-our present force) we are to stop a body of even one thousand men, or
-how for the present, anything at all can be done, when there is not
-as yet a provision for even the delivery of arms. All the firelocks
-which they have as yet got immediately about here have been sent down
-at my own expense. My chief hopes are I confess that Buonaparte may,
-for some reason or another, not come, or at least for some time; but
-what foundation there is for any such hope I confess I do not know.
-Forgive my running on at this rate. The importance of the subject would
-certainly warrant me if I had anything new to say.
-
- "Yours very truly,
-
- "W. WINDHAM."
-
-
-Lord Chatham[36] at that time Master-General of the Ordnance, writes on
-the same subject: at any rate there were "one hundred thousand pikes
-ready for the defence of the country, but there was an indisposition to
-take them."
-
-
- _Lord Chatham to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "ST. JAMES' SQUARE,
-
- "_September 2, 1803._
-
-"I had certainly felt it my duty (as only following up the plan
-proposed before I came to the Ordnance) to endeavour to restore at
-the Peace, and with such improvements as could be suggested, the
-manufacture of the old Tower musquet, which our troops used to have,
-but which the necessities of the late war, and the naked state of
-our arsenals at its commencement, had obliged us to depart from, and
-to have recourse to an inferior arm. I found of course considerable
-opposition to any improvement, not only from the manufacturers, but
-from all the inferior servants of the Ordnance. This was, however,
-nearly surmounted, and the manufacture of the better sort of arm on the
-point of taking place, when this sudden and unprecedented demand for
-arms took place. I ought here to state that had it not been with a view
-to improvement, and intending gradually to dispose of those of inferior
-quality through the medium of the India Company, we should not have
-been, previous to the war breaking out, carrying on any manufacture
-of arms, our arsenals being overflowing, calculating on the most
-extended scale the Department had ever been called upon to furnish. I
-have, however, in consequence of the extraordinary calls of the present
-crisis, determined to use every effort to meet it, and directions have
-been given to the Board of Ordnance to revert to the same arm as was
-made last war, and to manufacture to the utmost possible extent the
-musquet of the India pattern. You will easily believe I must have felt
-some reluctance in being obliged to take this step after all the pains
-I have bestowed, but I hope I have judged for the best. I have great
-satisfaction in thinking that the stock of arms we possess will enable
-us in the first instance, to arm to a considerable extent perhaps all
-that is really useful, and as arms come in, which with the exertions
-of the manufacturers they will do quickly, and with the aid of what we
-expect from abroad the remainder will be provided before long. We have
-already one hundred thousand pikes, and can increase them rapidly, but
-in general there is an indisposition to take them. I should like much
-to talk over with you, not only the subject of arms, but the whole
-question of volunteering which I contemplate as a most serious one.
-Excuse great haste with which I have written, and with Lady Chatham's
-very best remembrances to you,
-
- "Believe me, yours very sincerely,
- "CHATHAM."
-
-Henry Bankes, the old friend of both Pitt and Wilberforce, writes on
-the political situation in 1807 as follows:--
-
-
- _Mr. Bankes to Mr. Wilberforce._
- "KINGSTON HALL,
- "_January 1, 1807_.
-
-"MY DEAR WILBERFORCE,--Upon perusing the French papers I am well
-satisfied with the conduct of our Government. The tone is firm and
-uniform, and the demands such that we might have felt extremely happy
-to have made peace if we could have obtained them. There is somewhat of
-a blundering about the basis, which you will recollect Lord Malmesbury
-wrote so much ingenious nonsense about upon a former occasion, and it
-is to be lamented that Mr. Fox (whose letters upon the whole do him
-great honour) laid down an indistinct and indefinite basis in general
-terms of loose construction instead of binding that Proteus, his friend
-Talleyrand, to whom in his first address he professes the most perfect
-_attachment_ (what a word from a Minister not born in the days of
-Charles II.!) to the sense in which he meant to interpret, fairly as I
-think, his words, and the words of his master.
-
-"Nothing can equal the shabbiness, chicanery, and double dealing of the
-French negotiators, and their proceedings do in fact but little credit
-to their understandings, if they have any opinion of ours.
-
- "Believe me, my dear Wilberforce,
- "Most sincerely yours,
- "HENRY BANKES."
-
-
-Lord Harrowby, who twice refused the Premiership, writes of the state
-of parties in 1809.
-
- _Lord Harrowby to Mr. Wilberforce._
- _Friday, September 22, 1809._
-
-"DEAR WILBERFORCE,--You must have thought me a great bear not to have
-thanked you sooner for your kind recollection of my wish to see a
-sketch of Mrs. H. More's rustic building. It is much more finished than
-I wished, and shall be sent to Kensington as soon as Mrs. Ryder has
-taken a slight sketch of it.
-
-"I have, since I received it, taken two journies into Devonshire, upon
-Maynooth business, and have not had, when in town, a spare moment
-from Indian and domestic torments. The history of the latter could
-not be put upon paper, and if it could, would be as voluminous as an
-Indian despatch. You know enough of the parties not to suspend your
-opinion till you know as much as is necessary to form it. The Duke
-of Portland's resignation has only accelerated the crisis, and you
-know enough of Perceval to be sure that we are not broken up, because
-_he_ insists upon having the whole power in his own hands, and will
-not serve under any third person. Under these circumstances, and a
-thousand others, there seemed no resource left, but to attempt an
-overture to Lord Grey and Grenville jointly, which is made with the
-King's consent and authority. If it is met in the spirit in which it
-is made, I trust it will be successful. Whatever we may be _driven_
-to do, if they shut their ears to the proposal of an extended and
-combined administration, we shall not, in my opinion, have been
-justified in our own eyes or in those of the country, if any party
-feelings prevented us from _endeavouring bona fide_ to form such a
-Government as may both protect the King, and be fit for these times.
-They are, I believe, as little able to form a separate Government as
-ourselves, unless they mean to re-unite themselves with those at whose
-proceedings they were so evidently alarmed last year. If they come in
-alone by force, they will have the Catholic question as a millstone
-round their necks. The very fact of an union with us who are known to
-entertain a decidedly opposite opinion upon that question (some of us
-for ever, and all during the King's life) would enable them to get rid
-of it for the present, as, without any pledge, which, after all that
-has passed, could neither be asked nor given, that question could never
-be made a Government question without the immediate dissolution of the
-administration.
-
-"You express a very flattering satisfaction at my return to public
-life. It will probably be a very short excursion, and certainly a most
-painful one. I look for no comfort but in planting turnips in my Sabine
-farm.
-
- "Yours ever most sincerely,
-
- "HARROWBY."
-
-
-Lord Erskine writes in 1813, to Wilberforce:--
-
-"I cannot sufficiently discharge a duty I owe to the public without
-telling you what I think of the speech you sent me on the Christian
-question in India. The subject, though great and important, was local
-and temporary; but the manner in which you treated it made your speech
-of the greatest value in the shield of Christianity that eloquence and
-faith could possibly have manufactured.
-
-"I read it with the highest admiration, and as I am now a private man
-for the remaining years of my life, I may say, without the presumption
-of station to give weight to my opinion, that it deserves a place in
-the library of every man of letters, even if he were an atheist, for
-its merit in everything that characterises an appeal to a Christian
-assembly on the subject of Christianity. With the greatest regard I
-ever am,
-
- "My dear sir,
-
- "Your most faithful servant,
-
- "ERSKINE."
-
-
-Rowland Hill, the celebrated preacher, the disciple of Whitefield, and
-the founder of the Surrey Chapel, writes to bring before Wilberforce's
-notice the question of "untaxed worship," with regard to his chapel.
-
-_Rev. Rowland Hill to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
-"SURREY CHURCH,
-
-"_April 16, 1814_.
-
-"MY DEAR SIR,--Another prosecution for poor rates on our chapel has
-commenced. Though the appellant, Mr. Farquarson, a man of no character
-and involved in debt, is the ostensible person, yet all the evil arises
-from a Mr. Whitlock, who has a place in the lottery office under
-Government, who probably might have been quiet had he received a hint
-from the Government that his designs were not correspondent with their
-wishes. As matters are, the most vexatious and perplexing consequences
-must be the result. Different persons are subpoena'd down as far as
-Rygate, while these large expenses _a third time over_ is the least
-of the evil that must result. If they gain a verdict, for the sake of
-thousands of religious people that must be ruined by such a taxation,
-we must and shall resist. Surely the present mild Government will not
-suffer us to be deprived of the privilege of untaxed worship that we
-have uninterruptedly so long enjoyed.
-
-"If, dear sir, you could but hint to Mr. Vansittart what must be the
-result of his neglecting to answer our respectful petitions so as to
-obtain some redress on our behalves, thousands would have to bless you,
-and none more so than
-
- "Yours most respectfully,
-
- "ROWLAND HILL.
-
-
-"It should appear according to the new French constitution that our
-religious liberties in England are soon likely to be much inferior to
-those in France.
-
-"We humbly conceive we have some little claim on the attention of
-the Government against these vexatious disputes, having made the
-largest collection of any place of worship in the kingdom on different
-patriotic calls."
-
-It will be remembered that when the Duke of Wellington was ambassador
-to Paris in 1814 he took up very warmly the question of the Slave
-Trade, himself circulating in Paris Wilberforce's letter to his
-Yorkshire constituents on the subject, which Madam de Stael had
-translated at the Duke's suggestion, and also undertaking to disperse
-Wilberforce's pamphlet to Talleyrand. The Duke writes from Paris,
-December 14, 1814.
-
-
-_The Duke of Wellington to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
-"It is impossible to describe the prejudice of all classes here
-upon the subject, particularly those of our determined enemies, the
-principal officers and _employes_ in the public departments. I was
-in hopes that the King's measures had changed the public opinion in
-some degree, of which the silence of the public journals appeared an
-evidence. But I found yesterday that I was much mistaken and that the
-desire to obtain the gain expected in the trade is surpassed only by
-that of misrepresenting our views and measures, and depreciating the
-merit we have in the abolition. I was yesterday told gravely by the
-Directeur de la Marine that one of our objects in abolishing the Slave
-Trade was to get recruits to fight our battles in America! and it was
-hinted that a man might as well be a slave for agricultural labour as a
-soldier for life, and that the difference was not worth the trouble of
-discussing it."
-
-The Duke goes on to complain that what was taking place in Paris as to
-the Slavery question had got into the English newspapers.
-
-_The Duke of Wellington to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
-"I am quite convinced that the only mode in which the public opinion
-upon it here can be brought to the state in which we wish to see it,
-is to keep the question out of discussion in England by public bodies
-and by the newspapers, and I must say that it is but fair towards the
-King of France not to make public in England that which he has not
-published to his subjects. We shall do good in this question in France
-only in proportion as we shall anticipate and carry the public opinion
-with us; and in recommending to avoid discussion at present in order
-to make some progress in the opinion of France, I may lay claim to the
-merit of sacrificing the popularity which I should have acquired by
-having been the instrument to prevail upon the French Government to
-prevent the renewal of the trade on that part of the coast on which we
-had effectually abolished it during the war. I see that Mr. Whitbread
-mentioned the subject at a public meeting in the city, which I hope
-will be avoided at least till the French Government will have carried
-into execution all it proposes to do at present.
-
- "Ever, my dear sir, yours most faithfully,
-
- "WELLINGTON."
-
-
-The Duke of Wellington's letter to General Macaulay is on the same
-subject: he says that in the case of the Slave Trade he could only be
-successful in France by being secret. He evidently disapproves of the
-people "who will have news and newspapers at their breakfasts," and
-thinks that the great cause had suffered from prematurely published
-reports.
-
-
- _The Duke of Wellington to General Macaulay._
-
- "PARIS, _December 22, 1814_.
-
-"MY DEAR MACAULAY,--I received only yesterday your letter of the 9th,
-and I had already received one from Mr. Wilberforce on the same
-subject, to which I have written an answer. I am quite certain that he
-has nothing to say to the publication in question.
-
-"It is, I believe, very true that secrecy in such a matter cannot
-be expected, but the people of England ought to advert to this
-circumstance when they are pushing their objects, and if they will
-have news and newspapers at their breakfasts they should show a little
-forbearance towards their Governments, if Foreign Courts are a little
-close towards their agents. In the case of the Slave Trade I could be
-successful in this country only by being secret, and in proportion as
-we should be secret. And in point of fact I have found the agents of
-this Government much more disposed lately to oppose our views than they
-were six weeks ago, and I have been reproached with having allowed what
-has been done to be published in our newspapers.
-
-"I must observe also that though Mr. Wilberforce could not prevent what
-was published from appearing in the newspapers, Mr. Whitbread might
-have avoided to mention the subject at a public meeting held in London
-upon some other subject; but the truth is that we mix up our party
-politics with our philanthropy and everything else, and I suspect we
-don't much care what object succeeds or fails provided it affects the
-Ministers of the day.
-
-"Matters here are apparently in the same state as when you went
-away, but I believe are really in a better state; the appointments
-of Monsieur Didule to the Police and of Marshal Soult to the War
-Department have done some good.
-
- "Ever yours,
- "WELLINGTON."
-
-
-Wilberforce was a member of a committee for the relief of the "poor
-German sufferers," the wounded Prussians in 1814-15. The translation of
-Marshal Blucher's letter to the Managing Committee after Waterloo is as
-follows.[37]
-
-
- "CHATILLON SUR SAMBRE,
- "_June 24, 1815_.
-
-"Are you now satisfied? In eight days I have fought two bloody battles,
-besides five considerable engagements. I have taken one fortress, and
-keep three more surrounded. Yesterday the worthy Wellington was with
-me: we are agreed, we go hand in hand: the blockaded fortresses will
-not stop our operations, and if the Austrians and Russians do not
-speedily push forward, we shall finish the game ourselves. Farewell,
-and remember me to all England.
-
- "BLUCHER.
-
-
-"It is all very well, but I have twenty-two thousand killed and
-wounded. It is one consolation that they fell in the cause of humanity.
-I hope in England care will be taken of our suffering brethren; put it
-to the feelings of Mr. Wilberforce and other friends."
-
-In a later letter to Wilberforce, Marshal Blucher disclaims the idea
-that personal affection for himself had had anything to do with
-the unexampled liberality of the English to his suffering fellow
-countrymen. For this liberality he begs to be allowed to offer other
-motives. 1. The flattering description by the Duke of Wellington of
-the conduct of the Prussians at the Battle of Waterloo; 2. The command
-of the Prince Regent to make collections for them in all the churches
-of Great Britain; and 3. Wilberforce's "own noble exertions in their
-behalf." He entreats Wilberforce to be the organ of his gratitude to
-the whole English nation.
-
-
- _Marshal Blucher to Mr. Wilberforce._
- "BONN, _December 7, 1815_.
-
-"SIR,--Your letter dated the 31st of October, reached me in safety, and
-with it the cheering intelligence that the English nation, and all the
-subscribers for the relief of the Prussians who have suffered in the
-present war, and for the survivors of those who have fallen, have borne
-an honourable testimony to their lively interest in the cause, by the
-greatest and most unexampled liberality.
-
-"In your letter, sir, you are so good as to say, that it is in some
-measure owing to the personal affection felt for me by your countrymen,
-that this liberality has exceeded any which in similar circumstances
-has ever been exhibited; and you appeal to my own experience in the
-support of this assertion. It is true that during my residence in
-England I met everywhere with the most flattering reception; and I hope
-I shall always remember it with gratitude. But this very recollection
-confirms my belief, that the imagination of my services was magnified
-by that affectionate goodwill which is always the result of personal
-intercourse. I cannot otherwise account for the attentions which I
-received.
-
-"But, sir, allow me to say that other motives than those of personal
-goodwill to me have quickened the exertions of the British nation for
-the relief of the suffering Prussians. I allude to the flattering
-description of their conduct at the battle of Waterloo, by the most
-noble the Duke of Wellington, and to the command of His Royal Highness
-the Prince Regent, to make collections for them in all the churches
-of Great Britain; neither let me forget to mention as a most powerful
-cause your own noble exertions in their behalf.
-
-"Allow me, sir, to present you my most cordial thanks for this fresh
-service which you have rendered to suffering humanity. Let me also
-entreat you, my truly noble friend, you, who so richly deserve the
-blessings of the whole human race, for having so courageously defended
-their rights, to be the organ of my gratitude, and to present my
-acknowledgments to the whole English nation for their very generous
-assistance to my brave companions in arms, and to the survivors of
-those who have fallen. May this liberality, which we cannot but
-receive as an undoubted proof of the truest friendship and esteem,
-prove a fresh bond of union between us. We fought for the highest
-blessings which human nature is capable of enjoying--for Liberality
-and Peace. May our high-spirited people be firmly united in so noble a
-confederacy, and may that union never be interrupted.
-
-"Much as, at my advanced age, I cannot but feel the necessity of
-repose, still should it please Providence to prolong my life, I shall
-yet hope once more to revisit England, and to repeat my thanks for the
-sympathy of that generous nation.
-
-"I entreat you to accept the assurances of my sincere esteem and high
-consideration; and I have the honour to remain, sir, your most devoted
-servant,
-
- "BLUCHER."
-
-
-Lord Holland,[38] described as "truly fascinating, having something of
-his uncle's good humour," by Wilberforce, writes of Abolition to him
-in 1815, and thinks "the cause had been very coldly supported, if not
-actually betrayed, at Paris, at Madrid, and at Rio Janeiro; and that we
-ought to have imposed conditions on this subject when Ferdinand VII.
-wanted money, instead of giving him the money first."
-
-
- _Lord Holland to Mr. Wilberforce_.
-
- "HOLLAND HOUSE,
- "_November 13, 1815_.
-
-"DEAR SIR,--I heard that you were anxious to get some paper on the
-Slave Trade translated into Italian. An Italian gentleman who is upon
-a visit to me will, I am sure, very willingly undertake it, and is
-well qualified for the task, as he writes his language with great
-elegance and understands ours. I am afraid you will not find his
-Holiness as much disposed to anathematise rapine and murder committed
-under the sanction of the powerful Crown of Spain, as to disdain the
-extravagances of the Catholicks in Ireland. There was no difficulty
-in abolishing the French Slave Trade last year but in the breasts of
-the Bourbons and their adherents. Bonaparte by doing it at once lost
-no adherents either in France or in the colonies, and the repugnance
-felt in 1814 to the measure _at Court_ originated from their persuasion
-that the principles of all Abolitionists, as well as of all toleration
-in religion, are more or less connected with notions of political
-liberty which they know to be incompatible with their system of
-Government. True French Royalists, and many English Royalists too, make
-no difference between you and me or between me and Tom Paine. We are
-all equally heretics in Religion and Jacobins in Politics. There is
-therefore nothing to be done with that class of men in the great cause
-of Abolition, but by fear. We have already lost many opportunities, and
-if we do not now insist on Portugal and Spain abandoning the trade, and
-on France and the other powers treating it as piracy if they do not, we
-shall have shifted the ignominy from ourselves, but we shall not have
-rescued the world from the evil. May I ask if you understand why the
-complete abolition in France (if that measure of Bonaparte be really
-and in proper form confirmed) does not make part of the treaty? It
-seems to me that at Paris, at Madrid, and at Rio Janeiro the cause has
-been very coldly, or at least very inefficiently, supported, if it has
-not been actually betrayed. When Ferdinand VII. wanted money we might
-have imposed conditions on this and on other subjects, but we gave the
-money first, and he now sets us at defiance. With many apologies for
-the length of my letter,
-
- "I am, sir, yours truly,
-
- "VASSALL HOLLAND."
-
-
-Early in 1825, William Wilberforce's brilliant Parliamentary career
-came to an end by his own voluntary retirement. The Speaker's[39]
-letter is the expression of a very general feeling both in the House
-and outside it.
-
-
- _The Right Hon. Speaker of the House of
- Commons to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "PALACE YARD,
-
- "_February 19, 1825_
-
-"MY DEAR SIR,--With respect to your quitting us for more private
-retirement, permit me to say with the truest sincerity, and in
-accordance I am persuaded with the unanimous sentiment of the whole
-House, that we shall feel we have lost one of our brightest ornaments,
-and whatever may be the honest variance of opinion on political
-questions, I know we must all be of one mind in regretting the absence
-of one as distinguished for every moral virtue as for the brilliancy of
-his talents.
-
-"That retirement into more private life may contribute largely to your
-personal ease, and to the entire restoration of your health, is, my
-dear sir, the sincere wish of your most faithful and respectful
-
- "Friend and servant,
-
- "C. MANNERS SUTTON."
-
-
-Lord John Russell's answer to Wilberforce's anti-bribery suggestions at
-the time of the first Reform Bill is given below. It is marked "kind
-and pleasing" by Wilberforce.
-
-
- _Lord John Russell to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
- "SOUTH AUDLEY STREET,
-
- "_June 3_.
-
-"MY DEAR SIR,--I was very much gratified at receiving your letter, not
-only for the kind sentiments personally expressed towards me, but still
-more for the high testimony of your authority in favour of the course
-I have been pursuing. The resolutions I lately moved were directed
-against the very practice of which you complain in your letter; only
-instead of an election committee I propose a separate public committee
-for the purpose. The expenses of an election committee are such as to
-deter any from seeking that remedy but a candidate who has hopes of
-acquiring the seat himself, and the public is wronged for want of some
-one bound over to prosecute these offences.
-
-"After all, we must trust more to the frequent canvassing of the
-question, and the improvement of moral feeling, which may be expected
-from education, than to the letter of any law that we can frame.
-
-"I showed your letter to Mr. Pitt and Mr. Wynne, and should have
-been glad to have read it to the House, but I did not like to do so
-without your permission. Wishing you many years of happiness in your
-retirement, enhanced by reflecting on the usefulness of your past life,
-
- "I remain, yours faithfully,
- "J. RUSSELL."
-
-
-Wilberforce writes on the same subject in October, 1831, to an old
-friend:--
-
-
-"I cannot but think the Lords managed it very ill not to attempt the
-discovery of some compromise, giving up the rotten boroughs, granting
-members to great towns, accepting the new county members, and yet
-somewhat raising the qualification (surely no pauper should have the
-right of voting); this must at least have prevented the common fraud
-now practised on the people, that of imputing to those who voted at
-all against the Bill that they wished to retain all the worst abuses,
-which, in fact, they were as willing as the reformers to abolish. But
-I must break off. You, and I hope I, are prompted to say with old
-Hooker, I have lived long enough to see that the world is made up of
-perturbations. But, blessed be God, there remaineth a rest for the
-people of God. May I be permitted to meet you there, my dear sir."
-
-On the different effects of the Oxford and Cambridge system on the
-minds of young men, Wilberforce writes to a friend:--
-
-
- _Mr. Wilberforce to Mr. William Gray._
- "_December 31_, 1830.
-
-"It is curious to observe the effects of the Oxford system in producing
-on the minds of young men a strong propensity to what may be termed
-Tory principles. From myself and the general tenour of our family and
-social circle, it might have been supposed that my children, though
-averse to party, would be inclined to adopt Liberal or, so far as would
-be consistent with party, Whig principles, but all my three Oxonians
-are strong friends to High Church and King doctrines. The effects I
-myself have witnessed would certainly induce me, had I to decide on
-the University to which any young protege of mine should go, were he
-by natural temper or any other causes too prone to excess on the Tory
-side, I should decidedly send him to Cambridge, Trinity; were the
-opposite the case he should be fixed at Oriel, Oxford.
-
-"As for the gentleman you mention,[40] his character is not to be
-expressed in a few words. Of his extraordinary powers no one ever
-entertained a doubt. There are also very pleasing traits of private
-character: I have been assured of his incessant and kind attentions to
-his old mother. On his brother's failing, I believe, in business, he
-paid his debts to a large amount and took on himself, I am assured,
-before being in office, the charge of his eight or nine children. Of
-his own little girl he was excessively fond, and he was always kind in
-what concerned friends or acquaintances. I cannot also but hope that he
-has seen so much of religious men as almost to have superior confidence
-in them. But you suppose me to be more personally acquainted with him
-than I am."
-
-The next letter, to Mr. Manning, contains an allusion to his son Henry,
-afterwards Cardinal Manning, of whom it will be noted that Wilberforce
-"forms sanguine hopes that he will be a blessing to his fellow
-creatures."
-
-At the time the letter was written, Wilberforce's large fortune had
-been seriously diminished, though he was far from being, as his letter
-would lead one to suppose, in the same unfortunate position as Mr.
-Manning.[41] The effect of his own loss was as he says, "greatly to
-augment his happiness." Enough was left for his comfort. It is true he
-gave up his home, and was no longer able to practise indiscriminate
-hospitality; also his subscriptions had to be curtailed, such as those
-to the York charities, as to which he "had been reminded in 1831 that
-they were larger than those of any other subscriber."
-
-
- _Mr. Wilberforce to Mr. Manning.
- "June 11, 1832._
-
-"I am truly rejoiced, my dear friend, to hear that you are so
-comfortably circumstanced. I also have abundant cause for thankfulness.
-The loss of fortune was graciously delayed in my instance until all
-my children having been educated, and two of them supplied with
-comfortable residences (Robert, my second son, recently by the
-perfectly spontaneous kindness of Lord Brougham), so that the effect
-of my loss of fortune has been greatly to augment Mrs. W.'s and my own
-happiness. What can be more delightful than to be the daily witness of
-our children having a large measure of conjugal happiness, the best
-of this world's goods, while at the same time they are discharging
-conscientiously and zealously the important duties of the pastoral
-office. It gave me real pleasure that your son had given up the
-situation at the Treasury for the Church. I have heard such an account
-of him from my sons, as gives me reason to form sanguine hopes that he
-will be a blessing to his fellow creatures."
-
-The next extract refers to the painting of the well-known picture of
-Wilberforce now in the National Portrait Gallery.
-
-
- _Sir Thomas Lawrence to Mr. Wilberforce._
-
-"You make a too flattering apology for sending me but your name in your
-own handwriting. I hardly know what other word in our language could
-boast of equal interest, and you may be assured, my dear sir, that by
-those the nearest to me it will be equally prized when the person to
-whom it is written can no longer produce it as evidence of his too
-fortunate career."
-
-The date of the following lines of Cowper and also of Hayley is not
-given. They are marked "Verses sent to me by Cowper and Hayley."
-
-
- _To William Wilberforce, Esqre._
-
-SONNET.
-
- Thy country, Wilberforce, with just disdain,
- Hears thee by cruel men and impious called
- Fanatic, for thy zeal to loose th' enthralled
- From exile, public sale, and slav'ry's chain.
- Friend of the poor, the wronged, the fetter gall'd,
- Fear not lest labour such as thine be vain.
- Thou hast achieved a part--hast gained the ear
- Of Britain's senate to thy glorious cause;
- Hope smiles, joy springs, and though cold caution pause
- And weave delay, the better hour is near
- That shall remunerate thy toils severe
- By peace for Afric fenced with British laws.
- Enjoy what thou hast won, esteem and love
- From all the good on earth, and all the Blest above!
-
- WILLIAM COWPER.
-
-
-_To William Wilberforce, Esqre, on the preceding Sonnet._
-
- When Virtue saw with brave disdain
- Lucre's infuriate sons profane
- Her Wilberforce's worth;
- As she beheld with generous ire,
- His image fashioned for the fire
- Of diabolic mirth:
-
- "Firm friend of suffering slaves!" she cried,
- "These frantic outrages deride,
- While I protect thy name!
- Soon shall one dear selected hand
- Richly o'erpay at my command,
- Indignity with Fame:
-
- "Since thou hast won, in Nature's cause,
- My fondest love, my prime applause,
- Thy Honour is my care;
- Now shall my favourite Bard be thine:
- My Cowper, guard of glory's shine!
- Shall grave thy merits there."
-
- WILLIAM HAYLEY.
-
-
-[Illustration: BIRTHPLACE OF WILLIAM WILBERFORCE, AT HULL.]
-
-
-
-
-_HOME LETTERS_
-
-
-
-
-HOME LETTERS.
-
-
-The family letters which follow are some of a religious character,
-while others turn on more general topics.
-
-Four letters written by Wilberforce to his daughter Elizabeth, aged
-fifteen at the date the correspondence begins, show the care with which
-he instilled into her mind all that he considered of most moment; also
-how he exercised "the privilege of a friend," for such he considered
-himself to his daughter, and "told her frankly all her faults."
-
-
- _Mr. Wilberforce to his daughter Elizabeth.
- "November 30, 1816._
-
-"This is but a short letter to my dear Elizabeth. When I do address my
-dear girl, I ought to consider how I can best testify my friendship:
-for friendship let there be between us; never can you have a friend
-more warmly attached to you or more interested in your welldoing and
-happiness than myself. But if we are to be friends, you must allow
-me the privilege of a friend, a privilege by far the most valuable of
-all its excellencies. So thought your dear Uncle Stephen,[42] when
-in the very extreme bitterness of his grief, which was as great as
-that of any one I ever witnessed, though he is now able to control
-his feelings before company, he said to me while enlarging on the
-various particulars of my dear sister's extraordinary character, 'O,
-she was a friend to my soul! She told me frankly all my faults,' an
-office in which, I am obliged to confess, he charged me with having
-been deficient. This has arisen, however, solely from my scarcely
-ever having seen him alone, when only I could converse with him
-confidentially. But if I am to exercise this best prerogative, this
-most sacred and indispensable duty of friendship, it will be necessary
-for my dear Elizabeth to prepare her mind and temper for receiving it
-properly, and for deriving from it all the benefits it is capable of
-imparting. Shall I be honest, and I must be so or be silent; were I
-otherwise, the very sheet which I am writing would rise up in judgment
-against me at the last day; if then, I am frank and honest, I must
-declare to you, that it is on this quarter that it will be necessary
-for my dear girl to guard herself with the utmost watchfulness, and,
-still more, to _prepare herself_ with conscientious care. This is what
-St. Paul terms "exercising herself to maintain a conscience void of
-offence towards God and towards man": what the Book of Proverbs styles,
-"keeping the heart _with all diligence_:" for unless we have accustomed
-ourselves to _self-suspicion_, if I may use such a phrase, we never
-benefit as we might from the friendly reproofs of a real friend. We may
-receive his remarks with civility, and even give him credit for his
-kind intentions, but we shall be almost sure to let it appear to any
-acute observer at least, that we rather tolerate his frankness out of
-principle, or put up with it in consideration of the friendly motives
-by which it has been prompted, than that we listen to it with a sincere
-desire of profiting from it, still less that we welcome it as one of
-the most valuable services in design, even when not in fact, that could
-be rendered to us. The grand preparation that is needed is, Humility:
-that sense of our own infirmities and our own weakness, which is felt
-by every true, at least by every flourishing Christian. We read in the
-Scripture that 'our hearts are deceitful above all things:' by which
-is meant, that we are all prone to flatter ourselves, to form too high
-an estimate of our own good qualities, and too low an idea of our bad
-ones. Now it is the first office of the Holy Spirit to teach us to
-know ourselves, and immediately to _suspect_ ourselves as the first
-effect of that knowledge. Now be honest with yourself, my very dear
-child. Have you been accustomed to distrust the judgment you have been
-in the habit of forming of your own character, as you would have done
-if it had been formed and stated to you by any one whom you knew to be
-a notorious liar? Yet this is really the way in which we ought to feel;
-I know how difficult it is in practice from my own experience; and
-because it is so difficult, it is here that we need the special aid of
-the Holy Spirit, and should earnestly pray for His blessed influence to
-teach us to know ourselves. Be earnest, then, in prayer, my very dear
-Elizabeth, and frequent in self-examination on this very point. I have
-often detected my own self-partiality and self-deceit by observing how
-differently the same fault, be it small or great, appears to me when
-committed by myself, and when committed by others, how much more ready
-I am with apologies for it, or with extenuations for its guilt. If a
-servant has done anything wrong, or omitted some act of duty, I observe
-_how_ it appears to me, and if I have done much the same fault, or been
-guilty of the same omission, how much less does it impress itself on
-me, how much sooner do I forget it. I assure you, I speak sincerely
-when I tell you I find this the case with myself: now observe
-whether you do; and if so, then it will be a subject for humiliation
-before God, and a motive for earnest prayer. Let my dearest Lizzie be
-particularly watchful to improve the present season; for as you have
-heard me say, Christ--as is stated in Rev. iii.--'stands at the door
-and knocks,' that is, He uses particular events and circumstances of
-our lives, for impressing us with the importance of spiritual things,
-and if the event and the circumstances pass over without producing
-their proper effect, there is always a positive bad consequence. So
-much grace is, as it were expended on us in vain. The heart becomes
-harder and less favourably disposed on another occasion. And though
-we must not limit the grace and power of God, yet it is a great point
-to know what the Scripture (2 Cor. vi.) terms "our appointed time,
-our day of salvation." I am sure you find your heart softened and
-affected more than usual just now. O try, my beloved girl, to render
-this permanently, let me say eternally, useful to you. I understand
-you are reading Doddridge's 'Rise and Progress.' You cannot read a
-better book. I hope it was one of the means of turning my heart to God.
-Certainly, there are few books which have been so extensively useful.
-Pray over some of the prayers at the conclusion of the chapters; as,
-for instance, if I remember right, that at the end of the chapter,
-'After a state of spiritual decay.' But I have not the book at hand,
-and cannot quote it from memory. Don't read this till you have half an
-hour's leisure."
-
-Of the privilege of friendship alluded to in this letter, Wilberforce
-also writes later to his daughter Elizabeth: "You will never find
-telling Robert" (afterwards Archdeacon Wilberforce), "of any fault
-offend him, if you do it when you are _tete a tete_, and when he sees
-from your manner and from the circumstances that you can only have his
-happiness at heart, I mean that this friendly regard can alone prompt
-you to such a proof of real attachment."
-
-
- _Mr. Wilberforce to his daughter Elizabeth._
- "HASTINGS,
- "_January 17, 1817._
-
-"MY DEAREST LIZZY,--Your letter to-day gives me pleasure. We heard
-from Marianne (Thornton) of her having paid you a visit. Her friendly
-attachment to Barbara[43] and you, I account as one of the special
-blessings of Providence; and there are many particulars, though not
-all, in which I should be very glad to have her the object of your
-imitation. I am half asleep from not having had a good night, and find
-myself occasionally writing one word instead of another--a slip which
-I sometimes witness in my dear Lizzy's case; I know not whether it
-be from the same cause, I hope not. For my last night's wakefulness
-arose in part from my thinking on some subjects of deep interest from
-which, though I made several efforts, I could not altogether withdraw
-my thoughts. My mind obeyed me indeed while I continued wide awake,
-but when dropping half asleep, it started aside from the serious and
-composing train of ideas to which I had forced it up, and like a
-swerving horse, it chose to go its own way rather than mine. It is a
-delightful consideration, my dearest child, that there is a gracious
-and tender Saviour who, in our sleeping as well as waking hours, is
-watching over us for good, if we are of the number of those who look to
-Him habitually for consolation and peace, and such I trust will be more
-and more the case of my dear Elizabeth."
-
-The next letter is in a more lively strain and explains to Elizabeth
-the system of Bishop Berkeley.
-
-
- _Mr. Wilberforce to his daughter Elizabeth._
- "HIGHWOOD HILL,
- "_July 13, 1830_.
-
-"MY DEAR LIZZY,--If many intentions to write could be admitted as
-making up one letter, you would have to thank me for being so good a
-correspondent. But I fear that this is a mode of calculation that
-will only come into use, when the system of good Bishop Berkeley has
-become established. I cannot explain what this is so well as Robert
-could, but its distinctive principle is that there are no such things
-as substances. You may suppose that you have had the pleasure of
-re-visiting a very dear friend, called Miss Palmer, and you probably
-would assure me, if I asked you whether they still continued at the
-Hall any such vulgar practice as that of eating, that the turkies and
-fowls were as good and as freely bestowed as when I used to partake of
-them in earlier years. All mere delusion. All imagination. All ideal.
-There is no Elizabeth (she only _appeared_ to occupy an ideal place
-in an ideal carriage, when she travelled down to Mosely and Elmdon),
-there is no Miss Palmer, nor are the fowls and turkies a whit more
-substantial than the supposed eaters of them, I really am serious--such
-is the system of one of the ablest and best of men (he was spoken
-of by Pope as 'Having every virtue under heaven'); he held that the
-Almighty formed us so as to have impressions produced on us as if these
-were realities, but that this was all. I little intended when I took
-up my pen to give you such a Lecture in Metaphysics. I am sure I have
-had a Lecture, a practical one, on the duty of bearing interruptions
-with good humour. This morning (it is now 4 p.m. and dinner taking on
-the table) I took up my pen at 10 o'clock, and my first thoughts were
-naturally drawn to you. Scarcely had I finished my first sentence when
-in came Knowles (as queer he is as ever) and announced Lord Teignmouth.
-Up I went to him in the drawing-room, and as cordial a shake of the
-hand he received from me as one friend can give to another. But I
-own I began to wish I could be in two places at once. I had secured
-as I thought, several hours of quiet, and my eyes happened to be
-better than for sometime past, and I was therefore hoping to pay away
-a great part of my epistolary arrears, when in comes my friend, and
-remains with me between three and four hours, refusing to stay dinner,
-but not departing till after the post had gone out. However, such
-incidents are salutary, they accustom us to bear with cheerfulness
-the little vexatious interruptions which people sometimes bear with
-less equanimity than more serious grievances. Here enter Uncle
-Stephen----But with some pressing I have got him to agree to stay till
-to-morrow morning, so I may finish my letter. I must first tell you
-what I think a remarkably well-expressed description of Lady Raffles,
-contained in a letter from the Duchesse de Broglie, to whom I gave Lady
-R. a letter of introduction--'C'est une personne qui inspire un profond
-interet. Elle a tant de dignite et de douceur.' The epithets appear
-to me very happy. And now, my dear Lizzy, I must conclude my very
-disjointed letter, written _a plusiers reprises_ as the French phrase
-it."
-
-Elizabeth would seem to have written to her father as to her
-solitariness of spirit in so confidential a strain that his sympathy
-had been thoroughly awakened. In his answer he excuses himself for
-not having been more of a companion to her on the ground that he had
-been so long engaged in public business, and also that as he had been
-almost an old bachelor before he married, he had got out of the habit
-of tender attention to young women of education and delicacy; but
-he assures her she will always find in him unfeigned tenderness of
-spirit for all her feelings, and all her infirmities. His remedies for
-"solitariness of spirit" are most practical.
-
-
- _Mr. Wilberforce to his daughter Elizabeth._
- "HIGHWOOD HILL,
- "_July 26, 1830_.
-
-"MY VERY DEAR LIZZY,--Though, owing to my having been betrayed into
-forgetfulness of the flight of time while sitting under the shade of
-the lime tree it is now so late that I shall not be able to write to
-you so fully as I wished and intended, I must not be so unjust to
-myself or so unkind to you as I certainly should be if I were not
-to reply to your last interesting letter as soon as possible. And
-yet, my dear girl, it could be only from nervous sensibility that you
-could doubt of my putting the right construction on your opening your
-heart to me without disguise. I wish you could have seen the whole
-interior of mine when I had read through it: I am not ashamed to say
-that I melted into tears of affectionate sympathy. Your letter really
-contained nothing but what tended to call forth feelings of esteem
-and regard for you. My dear Lizzy, I will return your openness by a
-similar display of it. I will confess to you that I have not seldom
-blamed myself for not endeavouring more to cheer your solitary hours,
-when you have had no friend of your own sex to whom you could open your
-heart, and I will try to amend of this fault. My not walking with you
-more frequently has, however, been often caused by the circumstance you
-mention, that at the very hour at which I can get out, just when the
-post has departed, you are yourself employed in a way of which I always
-think with pleasure, and which I doubt not will bring down a blessing
-on your head. But there is another cause which may have some effect
-in rendering me less tenderly attentive than young women of education
-and delicacy like persons to be, and must in some measure find them,
-before they can open their hearts to them with unreserved freedom. I
-allude to my having been so long and so constantly engaged in public
-business and having been almost an old bachelor before I married. Let
-my dear child, however, be assured that she will always experience from
-me an unfeigned tenderness of spirit and a kind consideration for all
-her feelings and even, shall I say it, all her infirmities. Meanwhile
-let me advise you, my dear child, whenever you do feel anything of that
-solitariness of spirit of which you speak, to endeavour to find an
-antidote for it in prayer. There is often much of bodily nervousness
-in it. I am ashamed to acknowledge that I am sometimes conscious of
-it myself. Another method which I would recommend to you for getting
-the better of it, is to engage in some active exertion, teaching
-some child, instructing some servant, comforting some poor sufferer
-from poverty and sickness. I deeply feel the Bishop and Mrs. Ryder's
-kindness to you, but it is of a piece with all their conduct towards me
-and mine. God bless them, I say from the heart."
-
-In 1814, Mr. Wilberforce at the age of fifty-five, begins his
-correspondence with his son Samuel, aged nine. The father is already
-seeking for a proof of the grand change of conversion in his child.
-
-
- _Mr. Wilberforce to his son Samuel.
- "September 13, 1814._
-
-"I was shocked to hear that you are nine years old; I thought it was
-eight. You must take great pains to prove to me that you are nine not
-in years only, but in head and heart and mind. Above all, my dearest
-Samuel, I am anxious to see decisive marks of your having begun to
-undergo the _great change_. I come again and again to look to see if it
-really be begun, just as a gardener walks up again and again to examine
-his fruit trees and see if his peaches are set; if they are swelling
-and becoming larger, finally if they are becoming ripe and rosy. I
-would willingly walk barefoot from this place to Sandgate to see a
-clear proof of the _grand change_ being begun in my dear Samuel at the
-end of my journey."[44]
-
-
- _"March 25, 1817._
-
-"I do hope, my dear Samuel, like his great namesake at a still earlier
-period of life, is beginning to turn in earnest to his God. Oh,
-remember prayer is the great means of spiritual improvement, and guard
-as you would against a wild beast which was lying in a bush by which
-you were to pass, ready to spring upon you--guard in like manner,
-I say, against wandering thoughts when you are at prayer either by
-yourself or in the family.[45] Nothing grieves the Spirit more than
-our willingly suffering our thoughts to wander and fix themselves on
-any object which happens at the time to interest us."
-
-
- "_June 5, 1817._
-
-"MY DEAR SAMUEL,--Loving you as dearly as I do, it might seem strange
-to some thoughtless people that I am glad to hear you are unhappy. But
-as it is about your soul, and as I know that a short unhappiness of
-this kind often leads to lasting happiness and peace and joy, I cannot
-but rejoice. I trust, my dear boy, it is the Spirit of God knocking at
-the door of your heart, as the Scripture expresses it, and making you
-feel uneasy, that you may be driven to find pardon and the sanctifying
-influences of the Holy Spirit, and so be made one of Christ's flock and
-be taken care of in this world and be delivered from hell, and be taken
-when you die, whether sooner or later, to everlasting happiness in
-heaven. My dearest boy, whenever you feel in this way, I beseech you,
-get alone and fall on your knees, and pray as earnestly as you can to
-God for Christ's sake to forgive you and to sanctify you, and in short
-to make you to be born again, as our Saviour expressed it to Nicodemus."
-
-
- "_July 19th._
-
-"I will procure and send you Goldsmith's 'Grecian History,' if you will
-read it attentively, though it is by no means so good a history as
-Mitford's; it is little better than an epitome. Let me tell you I was
-pleased with your skeleton of Mr. Langston's sermon, and I should be
-glad of such another bag of bones. My dear boy, whenever you feel any
-meltings of mind, any sorrow for sin, or any concern about your soul,
-do not, I beg of you, stifle it or turn away your thoughts to another
-subject, but get alone and pray to God to hear and bless you, to take
-away the stony heart and substitute a heart of flesh in its place."
-
-
- "_August 15th, 1817._
-
-"The great rule practically for pleasing our Saviour in all the little
-events of the day is to be thinking of Him occasionally and trying to
-please Him, by not merely not doing evil, but by doing good; not merely
-negatively trying not to be unkind, not to be disobedient, not to give
-pain, but trying positively, to _be kind_, to be obedient, to give
-pleasure."
-
-
- "_November 1, 1817._
-
-"MY VERY DEAR SAMUEL,--Though some company who are to dine with me are
-already in the drawing-room, I must leave them to themselves for two
-minutes while I express the very great pleasure I have received from
-Mr. Marsh's account of both my dear boys. Being a political economist,
-I cannot but admit the beneficial effects which always flow from the
-division of labour, and must therefore rather commend than blame the
-instance of it which is afforded by your writing the letter while Bob
-is building the house. It is quite a drop of balm into my heart when I
-hear of my dear boys going on well."
-
-
- "_May 2, 1818._
-
-"Could you both but look into my heart and there see the tender and
-warm love I feel for you! How my heart bleeds at the idea of your being
-drawn into the paths of sin and bringing the grey hairs of your poor
-old father with sorrow to the grave--a most unlikely issue I do really
-hope; and, on the other hand, could you witness the glow of affection
-which is kindled by the prospect of your becoming the consolation of my
-declining years, you would want no more powerful motives to Christian
-obedience."
-
-
- "_April 25, 1818._
-
-"Our West Indian warfare is begun, and our opponents are commencing
-in the way of some (I won't add an epithet) classes of enemies by the
-poisoned arrows of calumny and falsehood. But how thankful should we be
-to live in a country in which the law protects us from personal injury!"
-
-
- "_June 26, 1818._
-
-"My dear children little think how often we parents are ruminating
-about them when we are absent from them, perhaps in very bustling
-scenes like that from which I come. Mr. Babington is a candidate
-for the county of Leicester, and I really trust he will succeed; the
-two other candidates are Lord Robert Manners, the Duke of Rutland's
-brother, and Mr. Phillips, a country gentleman of large property. My
-dear Samuel, keep going on well. Prayer and self-denial, as you used to
-be taught when a very little boy, are the grand things."
-
-
- "_February 13, 1819._
-
-"I am very glad that you like your new situation. One of the grand
-secrets to be remembered, in order to enable us to pass through life
-with comfort, is not to expect too much from any new place or plan, or
-from the accomplishment of any new purpose."
-
-
- "_March 12, 1819._
-
-"On the whole, Mr. Hodson's report of you is a gratifying one. But
-there is one ground for doubts and fears, and I hope my beloved child
-will endeavour to brighten that quarter of my prospect. I fear you
-do not apply to your business with energy. This, remember, was your
-fault at Mr. Marsh's, and you alleged, not without plausibility, that
-this arose in a great degree from your wanting spirits, in consequence
-of your having no play-fellows for your hours of recreation, no
-schoolmates for your season of business. A horse never goes so
-cheerfully alone as when animated by the presence of a companion, and a
-boy profits from the same quickening principle. But my dearest Samuel
-has not now this danger to plead at Mr. Hodson's, and I hope he will
-now bear in mind that this indisposition to work strenuously[46] is one
-of his besetting sins."[47]
-
-
- "_May 22, 1819._
-
-"I hear with pleasure of your goings on, and I may add that we all
-thought our dear boy greatly improved when he was last with us. How
-delightful will it be to me in my declining years to hear that my
-dearest Samuel is doing credit to his name and family!"
-
-
- "_May 25, 1819._
-
-"I do not like to write merely on the _outside_ of this cover, though I
-have time to insert very little within, yet as when you were a little
-boy I used to delight in taking a passing kiss of you, so now it is
-quite gratifying to exchange a salutation with you on paper, though but
-for a minute or two. The sight of my handwriting will call forth in the
-mind of my dear, affectionate Samuel all those images of parental and
-family tenderness with which the Almighty permits us to be refreshed
-when children or parents are separated from each other far asunder. You
-have a Heavenly Father, too, my dearest boy, who loves you dearly, and
-who has promised He will never leave you nor forsake you if you will
-but devote yourself to His service in His appointed way. And so I trust
-you are resolved to do. I hope you got your parcel safe, and that the
-lavender-water had not oozed out of the bottle; the cork did not seem
-tight. Farewell, my very dear Samuel."
-
-
- "_September 17, 1819._
-
-"MY DEAR BOY,--It is a great pleasure to me that you wish to know your
-faults. Even if we are a little nettled when we first hear of them,
-especially when they are such as we thought we were free from, or such
-as we are ashamed that others should discover, yet if we soon recover
-our good-humour, and treat with kindness the person who has told us
-of them, it is a very good sign. It may help us to do this to reflect
-that such persons are rendering us, even when they themselves may not
-mean it, but may even only be gratifying their own dislike of us, the
-greatest almost of all services, perhaps may be helping us to obtain an
-eternal increase of our happiness and glory. For we never should forget
-that though we are reconciled to God through the atoning blood of
-Christ, altogether freely and of mere undeserved mercy, yet when once
-reconciled, and become the children of God, the degrees of happiness
-and glory which He will grant to us will be proportioned to the degree
-of holiness we have obtained, the degree (in other words) in which we
-have improved the talents committed to our stewardship."
-
-
- "WEYMOUTH, _September, 1820_.
-
-"I have this day learned for the first time that there were to be
-oratorios at Gloucester, and that some of the boys were to go to them.
-I will be very honest with you. When I heard that the cost was to be
-half a guinea, I greatly doubted whether it would be warrantable to
-pay such a sum for such a performance for such _youth_. This last
-consideration has considerable weight with me, both as it renders
-the pleasure of the entertainment less, and as at your early age the
-sources of pleasure are so numerous. But my difficulties were all
-removed by finding that the money would not merely be applied to the
-use of tweedledum and tweedledee (though I write this, no one is fonder
-than myself of music), but was to go to the relief of the clergy widows
-and children. I say therefore yes. Q.E.D."
-
-
- "_September 4, 1820._
-
-"I am persuaded that my dear Samuel will endeavour to keep his
-mind in such a right frame as to enable him to enjoy the pleasures
-of the scenes through which he is passing, and to be cheered by the
-consciousness that he is now carrying forward all the necessary
-agricultural processes in order to his hereafter reaping a rich and
-abundant harvest. Use yourself, dear boy, to take time occasionally for
-reflection. Let this be done especially before you engage in prayer,
-a duty which I hope you always endeavour to perform with all possible
-seriousness. As I have often told you, it is the grand test by which
-the state of a Christian may always be best estimated."
-
-
- "BATH, _September 23, 1820_.
-
-"Did you ever cross a river with a horse in a ferry boat? If so, you
-must have observed, if you are an observing creature, which if you are
-not I beg you will become with all possible celerity, that the said
-horse is perfectly quiet after he is once fairly in the boat--a line
-of conduct in which it would be well if this four-footed navigator
-were imitated by some young bipeds I have known in their aquatic
-exercitations. And so said animal continues--the quadruped I mean,
-mind--perfectly quiet until he begins to approach the opposite shore.
-Then he begins to show manifest signs of impatience by dancing and
-frisking sometimes to such a degree as to overset the boat, to the
-no small injury of others (for whom he very little cares) as well as
-himself. This is what may be well called making more haste than good
-speed. None the less, though I am fully aware that the same frisking
-quadruped is a very improper subject of imitation, not only to an
-old biped but to an experienced M.P. of forty years' standing, yet I
-find myself in a state of mind exactly like that of the horse above
-mentioned, though it has not the same effects on my animal powers, and
-though, being on dry land and in a parlour, not a boat, I might frisk
-away if I chose with perfect impunity to myself and others. But to
-quit metaphor which I have fairly worn out, or, rather, rode to death,
-when I was a hundred miles from my dear Samuel, though my affection
-for him was as strong and my sentiments and feelings as much employed
-in him as now, yet these are now accompanied with an impatient longing
-to extinguish the comparatively little distance that is between us,
-and to have my dearest boy not only in my heart but in my arms, and
-yet on reflection this very feeling is beneficial. I recollect that
-our separation is an act of self-denial, and I offer it up to my
-Saviour with a humble sense of His goodness, in subjecting me to such
-few and those comparatively such easy crosses. My dearest Samuel will
-remember to have our blessed Lord continually in remembrance, and by
-associating Him thus with all the little circumstances of life, it is
-that we are to live in His love and fear continually."
-
-
- "_November 20, 1820._
-
-"We quite enjoyed your pleasure in Robert's visit. In truth the
-gratification we parents derive from our children's innocent, much more
-their commendable, enjoyments is one of the greatest of our pleasures."
-
-
- "BATH, _November 18, 1820_.
-
-"MY DEAR SAMUEL.--I am sorry to hear that your examination is, or
-part of it at least, disadvantageous to you. Does not this arise in
-part from your having stayed with us when your school-fellows were at
-Maisemore? If so, the lesson is one which, if my dear boy duly digests
-it and bottles it up for future use, may be a most valuable one for
-the rest of his life. It illustrates a remark which I well remember
-in Bishop Butler's 'Analogy,' that our faults often bring on some bad
-consequence long after they have been committed, and when they perhaps
-have been entirely banished from our memory. Some self-indulgence
-perhaps may have lost us an advantage, the benefit of which might have
-extended through life. But it is due to my dear Samuel to remark that,
-though his stay was protracted a very little out of self-indulgence (as
-much ours as his), yet it was chiefly occasioned by the necessity of
-his going up to London on account of his ancle. (By the way, tell me in
-two words--ancle better or worse or _idem._) But my Samuel must not vex
-himself with the idea of falling below the boy who has commonly been
-his competitor, owing to his stay having prevented his reading what
-is to be in part the subject of the examination. It would really be
-quite wrong to feel much on this account, and that for several reasons.
-First, everybody about you will know the disadvantages under which you
-start, and will make allowances accordingly. Next, if you do as well
-or better in the parts you _have_ read, you will show the probability
-of your having done well in the other also, if you had possessed with
-it the same advantage. And what I wish my dearest boy seriously to
-consider is, that any uneasiness he might feel on account of this
-circumstance would deserve no better a name than emulation, which the
-apostle enumerates as one of the lusts of the flesh. You should do your
-business and try to excel in it, to please your Saviour, as a small
-return for all He has done for you, but a return which He will by no
-means despise. It is this which constitutes the character of a real
-Christian: that, considering himself as bought with a price--viz., that
-of the blood of Jesus Christ--he regards it as his duty to try and
-please his Saviour in everything. And to be honest with you, my very
-dear boy, let me tell you that it appears to me very probable that
-the Heavenly Shepherd, whose tender care of His people is, you must
-remember, described to us as like that of a shepherd towards the tender
-lambs of his flock, may have designed by this very incident to discover
-to you that you were too much under the influence of emulation, and
-to impress you with a sense of the duty of rooting it out. Emulation
-has a great tendency to lessen love. It is scarcely possible to have
-a fellow-feeling (that is, duly to sympathise) with anyone if we are
-thinking much about, and setting our hearts on, getting before him, or
-his not getting before us. This disposition of mind, which includes
-in it an over-estimation of the praise of our fellow-creatures, is
-perhaps the most subtle and powerful of all our corruptions, and that
-which costs a real Christian the most trouble and pain; for he will
-never be satisfied in his mind unless the chief motive in his mind and
-feelings is the way to please his Saviour. The best way to promote
-the right temper of mind will be after earnest prayer to God to bless
-your endeavours, to try to keep the idea of Jesus Christ and of His
-sufferings, and of the love which prompted Him willingly to undergo
-them, in your mind continually, and especially when you are going to
-do, occasionally when you are doing, your business. And then recollect
-that He has declared He will kindly accept as a tribute of gratitude
-whatever we do to please Him, and call to mind all His kindness, all
-His sacrifices; what glory and happiness He left, what humiliation and
-shame and agony He endured; and then reflect that the only return He,
-who is then, remember, at that very moment actually looking upon you,
-expects from you, is that you should remember His Heavenly Father who
-sent Him, and Him Himself, and (as I said before) endeavour to please
-Him. This He tells us is to be done by keeping God's commandments.
-And my dear Samuel knows that this obedience must be universal--all
-God's commandments. Not that we shall be able actually to do this;
-but then we must wish and desire to do it. And when, from our natural
-corruption, infirmities do break out we must sincerely lament them, and
-try to guard against them in future. Thus a true Christian endeavours
-to have the idea of his Saviour continually present with him. To do his
-business as the Scripture phrases it, unto the Lord and not unto men.
-To enjoy his gratifications as allowed to him by his merciful and kind
-Saviour, who knows that we need recreations, and when they are neither
-wrong in kind nor excessive in degree they may and should be enjoyed
-with a grateful recollection of Him who intends for us still nobler and
-higher pleasures hereafter. This is the very perfection of religion;
-'Whether we eat or drink or whatever we do, do all to the glory of God.'
-
-"All I am now contending for is that my dearest Samuel may at least
-endeavour to do his school business with a recollection of his Saviour,
-and a wish to please Him, and when he finds the feeling of emulation
-taking the place of this right principle look up and beg God's pardon
-for it, and implore the Holy Spirit's help to enable you to feel as you
-ought and wish to feel. But let me also ask my dear Samuel to reflect
-if he did not stay too long at home in the last holidays. Too much
-prosperity and self-indulgence (and staying at home may be said to be a
-young person's indulgence and prosperity) are good neither for man nor
-boy, neither for you nor for myself."[48]
-
-
- "DOWNING STREET, _December 11, 1820_.
-
-"Three words, or, rather, five lines, just to assure you that in the
-midst of all our Parliamentary business I do not forget my very dear
-Samuel; on the contrary, he is endeared to me by all the turbulence of
-the element in which I commonly breathe, as I thereby am led still more
-highly to prize and, I hope, to be thankful to God for domestic peace
-and love. Pray God bless you, my dearest boy, and enable you to devote
-to Him your various faculties and powers."
-
-The mutual affection of father and son is touchingly shown in many
-passages scattered through their letters. Two may serve as specimens:--
-
-
- "_February 24, 1821._
-
-"Perhaps at the very time of your being occupied in reading my
-sentiments, I may be engaged in calling you up before my mind's eye and
-recommending you to the throne of grace."
-
-
- "_September 5._
-
-"Probably at the very same time you will be thinking of me and holding
-a conversation with me."
-
-
- "LONDON, _June 30, 1821_.
-
-"MY VERY DEAR BOY,--I congratulate you cordially on your success, and I
-rejoice to hear of your literary progress. But I should have been still
-more gratified, indeed beyond all comparison more, had Mr. Hodson's
-certificate of your scholarship been accompanied, as it formerly was,
-with an assurance that you were advancing in the still more important
-particulars of self-control, of humility, of love--in short, in all
-the various forms and phases, if I may so term them, which St. Paul
-ascribes to it in his beautiful eulogium (1 Cor. xiii.). Oh, my dear
-boy, I should be even an unnatural father instead of what I trust I
-am, an affectionate one, if, believing as I do, and bearing in mind
-that you are an immortal being who must be happy or miserable for
-ever, I were not, above all things, anxious to see you manifest those
-buds and shoots which alone are true indications of a celestial plant,
-the fruits of which are the produce of the Garden of God. My dear
-Samuel, be honest with yourself; you have enjoyed and still enjoy many
-advantages for which you are responsible. Use them _honestly_; that is,
-according to their just intention and fair employment and improvement.
-Above all things, my dearest boy, cultivate a spirit of prayer. Never
-hurry over your devotions, still less omit them. Farewell, my dearest
-boy."
-
-
- "_1821._
-
-"In speaking of the pros and cons of Maisemore, you spoke of one
-great boy with whom you disagreed. I always meant to ask you about
-the nature, causes, and extent of your difference. And the very idea
-of a standing feud is so opposite to the Christian character that I
-can scarcely understand it. I can, however, conceive a youth of such
-crabbed and wayward temper that the only way of going on with him
-is that of avoiding all intercourse with him as much as possible.
-But, nine times out of ten, if one of two parties be really intent
-on healing the breach and preventing the renewal of it, the thing
-may be done. Now, my dear Samuel, may not you be partly in fault? If
-so, I beg of you to strive to get the better of it. I have recently
-had occasion to observe how much a frank and kind demeanour, when we
-conceive we have really just cause for complaint, disarms resentment
-and conciliates regard. Remember, my dearest boy, that you have
-enjoyed advantages which probably R. has not, and that therefore more
-Christian kindness and patience may be expected from you than from him.
-Again, you would be glad, I am sure, to produce in his mind an opinion
-favourable to true religion, and not that he should say, 'I don't see
-what effect Christianity has produced in Samuel Wilberforce.' Oh, my
-dear Samuel, I love you most affectionately, and I wish you could see
-how earnestly I long hereafter (perhaps from the world of spirits) to
-witness my dearest boy's progress into professional life that of a
-growing Christian, 'shining more and more into the perfect day.' My
-Samuel's conduct as it respects his studies, and, what I value much
-more, his disposition and behaviour, has been such for some time as
-to draw on him Mr. Hodson's eulogium, and so I trust he will continue
-doing."
-
-
- "_October 12, 1821._
-
-"It is quite delightful to me to receive such an account of you as is
-contained in the letter Mama has this day had from Mr. Hodson. Oh that
-I may continue to have such reports of my dear Samuel wherever he may
-be. They quite warm his old father's heart, and melt his mother's."
-
-
- "_February 20, 1822._
-
-"You never can have a friend, your dear affectionate mother alone
-excepted, whose interests and sympathies are so identically the
-same. Yet I have known instances in which, though children have been
-convinced in their understandings of this being the case between them
-and their parents, yet from not having begun at an early period of life
-to make a father a confidant, they could not bring themselves to do it
-when they grew older, but felt a strange shrinking back from opening
-their minds to the parent they cordially loved, and of whose love to
-them they were fully satisfied. I hope you will continue, my dear
-Samuel, to speak to me without constraint or concealment.
-
-"The two chief questions you ask relate to Repentance and to
-Predestination. As to the former--sorrow for sin is certainly a part
-of it, but the degree of the feelings of different people will be as
-different as their various tempers and dispositions. If the same person
-whose feelings were very tender and susceptible on other topics and
-occasions were very cold in religion, that doubtless of itself is no
-good sign. But remember, repentance in the Greek means a change of
-heart, and the test of its sincerity is more its rendering us serious
-and watchful in our endeavours to abstain from sin and to practise
-known duty, than its causing many tears to flow, which effect may be
-produced in a susceptible nature with very little solid impression
-on the heart and character. The grand mark, I repeat it, of true
-repentance, is its providing a dread of sin and a watchfulness against
-it. As for Predestination, the subject is one the depths of which no
-human intellect can fathom. But even the most decided Predestinarians I
-have ever known have acknowledged that the invitations of God were made
-to all without exception, and that it was men's own fault that they
-did not accept these invitations. Again, does it not appear undeniably
-from one end of Scripture to the other that men's perishing, where they
-do perish, is always represented as their own bringing on? Indeed the
-passage in Ezekiel, 'As I live, saith the Lord, I have no pleasure in
-the death of a sinner, but that he should repent and live.' Again, do
-compare the ninth of Romans, in which that awful passage is contained:
-'Hath not the potter power over the clay to make one vessel to honour,
-and another to dishonour? What if God,' &c., &c.; and compare this with
-Jeremiah, I think xviiith, to which passage St. Paul manifestly refers,
-and you will see there that the executing or remitting a threatening
-of vengeance is made to depend on the object of the threats turning
-from his evil way or continuing in it. This is very remarkable. Only
-pray, my dearest boy, and all will be well; and strive not to grieve
-the Holy Spirit. Before you actually engage in prayer always pause
-a minute or two and recollect yourself, and especially practise my
-rule of endeavouring to imagine myself in the presence of God, and to
-remember that to God all the bad actions, bad tempers, bad words of my
-whole life are all open in their entire freshness of circumstances and
-colouring; and when I recollect how I felt on the first committing of
-a wrong action, and then call to mind that to God sin must appear in
-itself far more hateful than to me, this reflection I often find to
-produce in me a deep humiliation; and then the promise is sure--the
-Lord is nigh to them that are of a contrite heart, and will save such
-as be of a humble spirit. I rejoice that it has pleased God to touch
-your heart. May I live, if it please God, to see you an honour to your
-family and a blessing to your fellow-creatures."
-
-
- "_March 30, 1822._
-
-"It is scarcely possible for children to have an adequate conception of
-the delight it gives to a parent's heart to receive a favourable report
-of a dear child. And of late God has been very gracious to me in this
-particular. I trust I shall continue to enjoy such gratification, and
-that the day will come when my dear Samuel will in his turn become a
-parent and be solaced and cheered with such accounts as he himself will
-now furnish. And then, when I am dead and gone, he will remember his
-old father, and the letter he had from him on Sunday, 31st March, 1822."
-
-
- "_April, 1822._
-
-"Though honestly my purse is in such a state that I cannot buy books
-except very sparingly, I beg you will buy Hume and Smollett, 13 vols.
-large 8vo, for L5 10s., and Gibbon's 'Rome' you may also purchase, if
-you wish it, for L4 10s., 12 vols. But you must take these two birthday
-presents for Scotch pints--each double. Had I as much money as I have
-good will you should wish for no book that I would not get you."
-
-
- "_October 22, 1822._
-
-"The train of your idea and feelings is precisely that which I believe
-is commonly experienced at the outset of a religious course. It was
-my own, I am sure; I mean specially that painful apprehension of
-which you speak, lest your sorrow for sin should be less on account
-of its guilt than its danger, less on account of its hatefulness in
-the sight of God, and its ingratitude towards your Redeemer, than on
-that of its subjecting you to the wrath and punishment of God. But, my
-dear Samuel, blessed be God, we serve a gracious Master, a merciful
-Sovereign, who has denounced those threatenings for the very purpose
-of exciting our fears; and thereby being driven to flee from the wrath
-to come and lay hold on eternal life. By degrees the humble hope of
-your having obtained the pardon of your sins and the possession of the
-Divine favour will enable you to look up to God with feelings of filial
-confidence and love, and to Christ as to an advocate and a friend. The
-more you do this the better. Use yourself, my dearest Samuel, to take
-now and then a solitary walk, and in it to indulge in these spiritual
-meditations. The disposition to do this will gradually become a habit,
-and a habit of unspeakable value. I have long considered it as a great
-misfortune, or rather, I should say, as having been very injurious to
-your brother William, that he never courted solitude in his walks, or
-indeed at any time. Some people are too much inclined to it, I grant;
-they often thereby lose the inestimable benefit which results from
-having a friend to whom we open our hearts, one of the most valuable
-of all possessions both for this world and the next. When I was led
-into speaking of occasional intervals of solitude ('when Isaac, like
-the solitary saint, Walks forth to meditate at eventide,' you remember
-the passage, I doubt not), I was mentioning that holy, peaceful,
-childlike trust in the fatherly love of our God and Saviour which
-gradually diffuses itself through the soul and takes possession of it,
-when we are habitually striving to walk by faith under the influence
-of the Holy Spirit. When we allow ourselves to slacken or be indolent
-in our religious exercises, much more when we fall into actual sin,
-or have not watched over our tempers so as to be ashamed of looking
-our Heavenly Father in the face (if I may so express myself, I am sure
-with no irreverent meaning), then this holy confidence lessens and
-its diminution is a warning to us that we are going on ill. We must
-then renew our repentance and supplications, and endeavour to obtain
-a renewed supply of the blessed influences of the divine Spirit; and
-then we shall again enjoy the light of God's countenance. There are
-two or three beautiful sections in Doddridge's 'Rise and Progress'
-on these heads, and I earnestly recommend especially to you that,
-the subject of which is, I think, the Christian under the hiding of
-God's presence. I have been looking, and I find the section, or rather
-chapter I allude to, is that entitled, 'Case of spiritual decay and
-languor in religion.' There is a following one on 'Case of a relapse
-into known sin,' and I trust you have a pretty good edition of this
-super-excellent book.
-
-"I have a word to say on another topic--that, I mean, of purity--the
-necessity of most scrupulous guarding against the very first
-commencement or even against the appearance of evil is in no instance
-so just and so important as in the case of all sins of this class.
-Many a man who would have been restrained from the commission of sins
-of this class by motives of worldly prudence or considerations of
-humanity, has been hurried into sin by not attending to this warning.
-I myself remember an instance of this kind in two people, both of whom
-I knew. And as Paley truly remarks that there is no class of vices
-which so depraves the character as illicit intercourse with the female
-sex, so he likewise mentions it as a striking proof of the superior
-excellence of Christ's moral precepts, that in the case of chastity and
-purity it lays the restraint on the _heart_ and on the _thoughts_ as
-the only way of providing against the grossest acts of disobedience.
-Oh, my dear Samuel, guard here with especial care, and may God protect
-and keep you. Indeed, I trust He will, and it is with exceeding
-pleasure that I think of you, and humbly and hopefully look forward on
-your advancing course in life. I did not intend saying half so much,
-but when I enter into conversation with my Samuel I know not how to
-stop. 'With thee conversing I forget all course of seasons and their
-change.'"
-
-
- "_October 26, 1822._
-
-"I cannot to-day send you the account of _time_, but I will transmit
-it to you. It was a very simple business, and the chief object was to
-take precautions against the disposition to waste time at breakfast and
-other _rendezvous_, which I have found in myself when with agreeable
-companions, and to prove to myself by the decisive test of figures that
-I was not working so hard as I should have supposed from a general
-survey of my day. The grand point is to maintain an habitual sense of
-responsibility and to practise self-examination daily as to the past
-and the future day."
-
-
- "_March 17, 1822._
-
-"No man has perhaps more cause for gratitude to God than myself. But
-of all the various instances of His goodness, the greatest of all,
-excepting only His Heavenly Grace, is the many kind friends with whom
-a Gracious Providence has blessed me. Oh remember, my dearest boy, to
-form friendships with those only who love and serve God, and when once
-you have formed them, then preserve them as the most valuable of all
-possessions.
-
-"One of my chief motives now for paying visits is to cultivate the
-friendship of worthy people who, I trust, will be kind to my dearest
-children when I am no more. I hope you and the rest will never act so
-as to be unworthy of the connections I have formed."
-
-
- "_November 22, 1822._
-
-"Robert Grant's[49] election has cost my eyes more than they could well
-expend on such a business. But both his hereditary, and his personal,
-claim to all I could do was irresistible. Your mother, Elizabeth, and
-I have of late been moving from place to place, staying a few days
-with the Whitmores, with the Gisbornes and Evans's, and from them with
-a Mr. Smith Wright and his wife, Lady Sitwell. She is a sensible,
-interesting woman. They live in a residence, Okeover, which is in the
-most beautiful part of Derbyshire, very near Dovedale, close to Ilam,
-&c. My dear Samuel will one day, I trust, delight himself in these
-beautiful and romantic vallies. My chief object in these visits was
-to provide future intimacies and I hope friendships for you and your
-brothers. And how thankful ought we to be, to be enabled thus to select
-for our associates the best families in so many different counties;
-best, I mean, in the true sense of the word,--men of real worth, who,
-I am sure, will always receive you with kindness for my sake. I often
-look up with gratitude to the Giver of all good, for the favour with
-men--which it would be affectation not to confess where it is not
-improper to mention such things, that He has graciously given me,
-chiefly in the view of its ensuring for my children the friendly regard
-and personal kindnesses of many good people after I shall be laid low
-in the grave.
-
-"I could have made them acquainted with great people, but I have always
-avoided it, from a conviction that such connections would tend neither
-to their temporal comfort in the long run, nor to the advancement of
-their eternal interests. But it is most gratifying to me to reflect
-that they will be known to some of the very best people in the kingdom,
-and to good people of other countries also. Oh, my dear Samuel, how
-thankful should we be to our Heavenly Father who has made our cup to
-overflow with mercies. How rich will our portion appear when compared
-with that of so many of our fellow-creatures. It used, when I was a
-bachelor especially, when I often spent my Sundays alone, to be my
-frequent Sunday habit to number up my blessings, and I assure you it is
-a most useful practice; _e.g._, that I had been born in Great Britain,
-in such a century, such a part of it, such a rank in life, such a class
-and character of parents, then my personal privileges. But I have no
-time to-day for long conversation."
-
-The next letter touches on topics of the day, and then refers to the
-son's question, Why had not his father a settled home? Evidently Samuel
-felt it a desolate arrangement, but Wilberforce, as was his wont, finds
-certain advantages in the very discomforts of the plan.
-
-
- "_December 5, 1822._
-
-"I believe I never answered your question who it was that advised me to
-retire from Parliament. I entirely forget. Your question, Will there
-be war? I answer, I know no more than you do, but I am inclined to
-believe the French will attack Spain, very unadvisedly in my opinion,
-and I shall be surprised if the French Government itself, however
-priding itself on its policy, will not ultimately have reason to form
-the same judgment.... Never was there before a country on earth, the
-public affairs of which (for many years past at least I may affirm it,)
-were administered with such a simple and strong desire to promote the
-public welfare as those of Great Britain. And it is very remarkable
-that some of those very measures which were brought forward and carried
-through with the most general concurrence have subsequently appeared
-most doubtful. The present extreme distress of the agricultural class
-throughout the whole kingdom, is admitted by all to have been in some
-degree, by many to have been entirely, caused by our ill-managed if
-not ill-advised return to cash payments, in which nearly the whole of
-both Houses concurred. Surely this should teach us to be diffident in
-our judgments of others, and to hold our own opinions with moderation.
-In short, my dear Samuel, the best preparation for being a good
-politician, as well as a superior man in every other line, is to be a
-truly religious man. For this includes in it all those qualities which
-fit men to pass through life with benefit to others and with reputation
-to ourselves. Whatever is to be the effect produced by the subordinate
-machinery, the main-spring must be the desire to please God, which,
-in a Christian, implies faith in Christ and a grateful sense of the
-mercies of God through a Redeemer, and an aspiration after increasing
-holiness of heart and life. And I am reminded (you will soon see the
-connection of my ideas) of a passage in a former letter of yours
-about a home, and I do not deny that your remarks were very natural.
-Yet every human situation has its advantages as well as its evils.
-And if the want of a home deprive us of the many and great pleasures
-which arise out of the relations and associations, especially in the
-case of a large family, with which it is connected, yet there is an
-advantage, and of a very high order, in our not having this well-known
-anchoring ground, if I may so term it. We are less likely to lose the
-consciousness of our true condition in this life; less likely to forget
-that while sailing in the ocean of life we are always exposed to the
-buffeting of the billows, nay, more, to the rock and the quicksand.
-The very feeling of desolateness of which you speak--for I do not deny
-having formerly experienced some sensations of this kind, chiefly when
-I used to be long an inmate of the houses of friends who had wives and
-families to welcome them home again after a temporary absence--this
-very feeling led me, and taught me in some measure habitually to look
-upwards to my permanent and never failing inheritance, and to feel that
-I was to consider myself here as a pilgrim and a stranger who had no
-continuing city but who sought one to come. Yet this very conviction is
-by no means incompatible with the attachment and enjoyment of home-born
-pleasures, which doubtless are natural and virtuous pleasures, such as
-it gratifies me and fills me with hope to see that my very dear Sam
-relishes with such vivid delight and that he looks forward to them with
-such grateful anticipations.
-
-"I have not time now to explain to you, as otherwise I would, how it
-happened that I do not possess a country house. But I may state to
-you in general, that it arose from my not having a large fortune,
-compared, I mean, with my situation, and from the peculiar duties and
-circumstances of my life."
-
-
- "_March 23, 1823._
-
-"Above all remember _the one thing needful_. I had far rather that
-you should be a true Christian than a learned man, but I wish you to
-become the latter through the influence of the former. I had far rather
-see you unlearned than learned from the impulse of the love of human
-estimation as your main principle."
-
-On the 15th of May Mr. F. Buxton moved this resolution in the House of
-Commons: "That the state of slavery is repugnant to the principles of
-the British Constitution and of the Christian Religion, and that it
-ought to be abolished gradually throughout the British Colonies with
-as much expedition as may be found consistent with a due regard to the
-well-being of the parties concerned." The main point was that all negro
-children born after a certain day were to be free.
-
-
- "_May 17, 1823._
-
-"The debate was by no means so interesting as we expected. Buxton's
-opening speech was not so good as his openings have before been. His
-reply however, though short, was, not sweet indeed, but excellent. I
-was myself placed in very embarrassing circumstances from having at
-once to decide, without consulting my friends, on Mr. Canning's offers,
-if I may so term them. However, I thank God, I judged rightly, that
-it would not be wise to press for more on that night, as subsequent
-conversation with our friends rendered indubitably clear; and on the
-whole we have done good service, I trust, by getting Mr. Canning
-pledged to certain important reforms. I should speak of our gain in
-still stronger terms but for his (Canning's) chief friend being a West
-Indian, Mr. Charles Ellis, a very gentlemanly, humane man, but by no
-means free from the prejudices of his caste.
-
-"Dear Robert has just been prevailed on by William's kind importunity
-to try to study for a while at Brompton Grove. I am glad of it on all
-accounts. It would add substantially to the pleasures of my life, if
-my dear boys could acquire firmness enough to study at home. I would
-do my best to promote the success of the experiment; but, believe me,
-it is a sad habit that of being able to study only when you have 'all
-appliances and means to boot.'
-
-"I just recollect this letter will reach you on the Sunday. Allow me,
-therefore, to repeat my emphatic valediction _Remember_. You will be
-in my heart and in my prayers, and probably we shall be celebrating
-about the same time the memorial of our blessed Lord's suffering and
-the bond of the mutual affection of His disciples towards each other.
-The anniversaries which have passed remind me forcibly of the rapid
-flight of time. My course must be nearly run, though perhaps it may
-please that God who has hitherto caused goodness and mercy to follow me
-all my days, to allow me to see my dear boys entered into the exercise
-of their several professions, if they are several. But how glad shall I
-be if they all can conscientiously enter into the ministry, that most
-useful and most honourable of all human employments."[50]
-
-
- "_June 14._
-
-"All may be done through prayer--almighty prayer, I am ready to say;
-and why not? for that it is almighty is only through the gracious
-ordination of the God of love and truth. Oh then, pray, pray,
-pray, my dearest boy. But then remember to estimate your state on
-self-examination not by your prayers, but by what you find to be the
-effects of them on your character, tempers, and life."
-
-
- "_July 12, 1823._
-
-"It has often been a matter of grief to me that both Henry and Robert
-have a sad habit of appearing, if not of being, inattentive at church.
-The former I have known turn half or even quite round and stare (I use
-the word designedly) into the opposite pew. I am not aware whether you
-have the same disposition (real or apparent) to inattention at public
-worship. I trust I need not endeavour to enforce on you that it is a
-practice to be watched against with the utmost care. It is not only a
-crime in ourselves, but it is a great stumbling-block of offence to
-others. The late Mr. Scott, though an excellent man, had contracted a
-habit of staring in general while reading the prayers of our excellent
-liturgy; and he once told me himself he actually did it most, when
-his mind was most intent on the solemn service he was performing. But
-to others he appeared looking at the congregation, especially at any
-persons entering the chapel, and many I fear were encouraged to a
-degree of distraction and inattention in prayer by the unseemly habit
-he had contracted. Now let me entreat you, my dearest boy, to watch
-against every approach to inattention in yourself, and to help dear
-Henry, in whom I have remarked the practice, to get the better of it. I
-have always found it a great aid in keeping my thoughts from wandering
-at church to repeat the prayers to myself, either in a whisper or
-mentally, as the minister has being going along, and I highly approve
-of making responses, and always when you were children tried to have
-you make them; but I used to think your mother did not join me in this
-when you were next to her, partly probably from her own mind being
-more closely engaged in the service--prayer being the grand means of
-maintaining our communication with heaven, and the life of religion in
-the soul claiming all possible attention."
-
-In the next letter Wilberforce mentions that he had limited his
-personal expenditure so as to have larger sums to give away. He
-says that he had left off giving claret, then a costly wine, and
-some other expensive articles still exhibited by those of his rank.
-He speaks strongly against gratifying all the cravings of fashion,
-thoughtlessness, or caprice.
-
-
- "BARMOUTH, _October 14, 1823._
-
-"MY VERY DEAR SAMUEL,--I again take up my pen to give you my sentiments
-on the important subject on which I promised to write to you, and on
-which you have kindly asked my advice. But before I proceed to fulfil
-this engagement let me mention what I had intended to state in my last,
-but omitted, that I have reason to believe dear Robert has suffered
-in the estimation of some of my friends, whether rightly or wrongly I
-really know not, from the idea that his associates were not religious
-men (irreligious in its common acceptation would convey more than
-I mean), and therefore that he preferred that class of companions.
-Now when people have once conceived anything of a prejudice against
-another, on whatever grounds, they are disposed to view all he says and
-does with different eyes, and to draw from it different conclusions
-from those which would otherwise have been produced, and I suspect dear
-Robert has suffered unjustly in this way. However, he will, I doubt
-not, live through it, and so long as all is really right, I care less
-for such temporary misconceptions, though, by the way, they may be
-very injurious to the temporal interests, and to the acceptance of the
-subject of them.
-
-"But now let me state to you my sentiments concerning your principles
-and conduct as to society, and first I must say that if I were in your
-case I should be very slow in forming new acquaintances. Having already
-such good companions in Robert, Sir G. Prevost, and I hope Ryder, it
-would surely be wise to be satisfied with them at the first, unless
-there were any in whose instance I was sure I was on safe and good
-ground. But now to your question itself. There are two points of view
-in which this subject of good associates must naturally be regarded.
-The one in that which is the ordinary object of social intercourse,
-that I mean of recreation: for it certainly is one of the very best
-recreations, and may be rendered indeed not merely such, but conducive
-to higher and better ends. On this first head, however, I trust I
-need say nothing in your case, I will therefore pass it by for the
-present. It would, I am persuaded, be no recreation to you to be in a
-party which should be disgraced by obscenity or profaneness. But the
-second view is that which most belongs to our present inquiry--that,
-I mean, of the society in which it may appear necessary to take a
-share on grounds of conformity (where there is nothing wrong) to the
-ordinary customs of life, and even on the principle of 'providing
-things honest in the sight of all men' (honest in the Greek is [Greek:
-dikaios]) and not suffering your good to be evil spoken of. Now in
-considering this question, I am persuaded I need not begin in my dear
-Samuel's instance with arguing for, but may assume the principle that
-there are no indifferent actions properly speaking, I should rather
-say none with which religion has nothing to do. This however is the
-commonly received doctrine of those who consider themselves as very
-good Christians. Just as in Law it is an axiom, 'De minimis non curat
-lex.' On the contrary, a true Christian holds, in obedience to the
-injunction, 'Whatever you do in word or deed' that the desire to please
-his God and Saviour must be universal. It is thus that the habit of
-living in Christ, and to Christ is to be formed. And the difference
-between real and nominal Christians is more manifest on small occasions
-than on greater. In the latter all who do not disclaim the authority
-of Christ's commands must obey them, but in the former only they will
-apply them who do make religion their grand business, and pleasing
-their God and Saviour, and pleasing, instead of grieving the Spirit,
-their continual and habitual aim. We are therefore to decide the
-question of the company you should keep on Scriptural principles, and
-the principle I lately quoted 'Provide things honest,' &c. (There
-are several others of a like import, and I think they are not always
-sufficiently borne in mind by really good people, this of course
-forbids all needless singularities, &c.) That principle must doubtless
-be kept in view. But again, _you_ will not require me to prove that
-it can only have any jurisdiction where there is nothing wrong to be
-participated in or encouraged. And therefore I am sure you will not
-deny that you ought not to make a part of any society in which you
-will be hearing what is indecent or profane. I hope that there are
-not many of the Oriel undergraduates from whom you would be likely to
-hear obscenity or profaneness, and I trust that you will not knowingly
-visit any such. As to the wine parties, if I have a correct idea of
-them they are the young men going after dinner to each other's rooms
-to drink their wine, eat their fruit, &c.; and with the qualification
-above specified, I see no reason for your absenting yourself from them,
-if your so doing would fairly subject you to the charge of moroseness
-or any other evil imputation. I understand there is no excess, and that
-you separate after a short time. Its being more _agreeable_ to you to
-stay away I should not deem a legitimate motive if alone. But in all
-these questions the _practical_ question often is, how the expenditure
-of any given amount of time and money (for the former I estimate full
-as highly as the latter) can be made productive of the best effect.
-There is one particular member of your college with whom I hope you
-will form no acquaintance. Would it make it more easy for you to avoid
-this, if you were able to allege that I had exacted from you a promise
-to that effect? It was not from Robert, but from another person, that I
-heard of him a particular instance of misconduct, which I believe even
-in the more relaxed discipline of Cambridge would have drawn on the
-offender exemplary punishment. Such a man must, I am sure, be a very
-dangerous companion. If it be necessary for you to know him, of course
-you will treat him like a gentleman; but further than this I hope you
-will not go. From what Robert said to me I have a notion that there is
-a very foolish practice, to call it by the softest name, of spending
-considerable sums in the fruit and wine of these wine drinkings, where
-I understood that there was no excess, every man also being allowed
-to please himself as to the wine he drinks. But for a young man, the
-son perhaps of a clergyman who is straining to the utmost to maintain
-him at college, stinting himself, his wife and daughters in comforts
-necessary to their health, for such a young man to be giving claret
-and buying expensive fruit for his young companions is absolutely
-criminal. And what is more, I will say that young men are much altered
-if any youth of spirit who should frankly declare, 'My father cannot
-afford such expensive indulgences, and I will not deprive him or my
-brothers and sisters for my own gratification,' would not be respected
-for his manliness and right feeling. Your situation is different,
-though, by the way, your father has left off giving claret except
-in some very special cases, and has entirely left off several other
-expensive articles, which are still exhibited by others of his rank.
-But then I know this will not commonly be imputed to improper parsimony
-in me. And if you or any other Oxonian could lighten the pressure on
-young men going to college, you would be rendering a highly valuable
-service to the community, besides the too little considered obligation
-of limiting our own expenditure for our own indulgence as much as we
-can, consistently with 'good report,' and with not suffering our good
-to be evil spoken of. I say this deliberately, that it is a duty not
-sufficiently borne in mind even by real Christians, when we read the
-_strong_ passage in the 15th of Deuteronomy, and still more when we
-remember our Saviour's language in the 25th of St. Matthew, we shall
-see reason to be astonished that the _generality_ of those who do
-fear God, and mean in the main to please Him, can give away so small
-a proportion of their fortunes, and so little appear sensible of the
-obligation under which they lie to economise as much as they can for
-the purpose of having the funds for giving away within their power. We
-serve a kind Master, who will even accept the will for the deed when
-the deed was not in our power. But this will not be held to be the case
-when we can gratify all the cravings of fashion and self-indulgence,
-or even thoughtlessness or caprice. What pleasure will a true Christian
-sometimes feel in sparing himself some article which he would be glad
-to possess, and putting the price instead into his charity purse,
-looking up to his Saviour and in heart offering it up to His use. Oh,
-my very dear Samuel, be not satisfied with the name of Christian.
-But strive to be a Christian 'in life and in power and in the Holy
-Ghost.' I think a solitary walk or ride now and then would afford an
-excellent opportunity for cultivating _spirituality of mind_, the grand
-characteristic of the thriving Christian.
-
-"But my feelings draw me off from the proper subject I was writing
-upon--expense. And really, when I consider it merely in the view of the
-misery that may be alleviated, and the tears that may be wiped away
-by a very little money judiciously employed, I grow ashamed of myself
-for not practising more self-denial that I may apply my savings to
-such a purpose. Then think of the benefits to be rendered to mankind
-by missionary societies. Besides all this, I really believe there is
-commonly a special blessing on the liberal, even in this life, and on
-their children; and I hesitate not to say to you that, as you will,
-I hope, possess from me what, with the ordinary emoluments of a
-profession, may afford you a comfortable competence, I am persuaded I
-shall leave you far more likely to be happy than if you were to have
-inherited from me L10,000 more (and I say the same for your brothers
-also), the fruits of my bachelor savings. In truth, it would be so
-if the Word of God be true, for it is full of declarations to that
-effect. Now all this is general doctrine. I am aware of it. I can only
-give you principles here. It must be for you to apply them, and if you
-apply them with simplicity of intention, all, I doubt not, will be
-well. But again I cannot help intimating my persuasion that you would
-do well to confine yourself at first to the few friends you already
-have and on whom you can depend. And also let me suggest that it would
-be truly wise to be looking around you, and if you should see anyone
-whose principles, and character, and manners are such as suggest the
-hope that he might be desirable even for a friend, then to cultivate
-his acquaintance. May our Heavenly Father direct and prosper you, carry
-you safely through the ordeal into which you are just about to enter,
-and at length receive you into that blessed world where danger will be
-over, and all will be love and peace and joy for evermore.
-
- "I am ever affectionately yours,
-
- "W. WILBERFORCE."
-
-
- "_November 5, 1823._
-
-"I trust I scarcely need assure you that I must always wish to make you
-comfortable _quoad_ money matters, and on the other hand that the less
-the cost of rendering you so, the more convenient to me. My income is
-much diminished within the last few years, while the expenses of my
-family have greatly increased....
-
-"What a comfort it is to know that our Heavenly Father is ever
-ready to receive all who call upon Him. He delighteth in mercy,
-and ever remember that as you have heard me say, mercy is kindness
-to the guilty, to those who deserve punishment. What a delightful
-consideration it is that our Saviour loves His people better than we
-love each other, than an earthly parent loves his child."
-
-
- "_November 7, 1823._
-
-"There is a vile and base sentiment current among men of the world
-that, if you want to preserve a friend you must guard against having
-any pecuniary transactions with him. But it is a caution altogether
-unworthy of a Christian bosom. It is bottomed in the mistakenly
-supposed superior value of money to every other object, and in a very
-low estimate of human friendship. I hope I do not undervalue my money,
-but I prize my time at a still higher rate, and have no fear that any
-money transaction can ever lessen the mutual confidence and affection
-which subsists between us and which I trust will never be diminished.
-And let me take this opportunity also of stating that you would give me
-real pleasure by making me your friend and opening your heart to me as
-much in every other particular. I trust you would never find me abusing
-your confidence. Even any indiscretions or faults, if there should be
-any, if I can help to prevent your being involved in difficulties by
-them. But I hate to put such a case. It is no more than what is due to
-my dear Samuel, to say that my anticipations are of a very different
-sort. And I can truly declare that the good conduct and kindness of my
-children towards me is a source of the purest and greatest pleasure I
-do or can enjoy."[51]
-
-
- "_August 6, 1824._
-
-"I can bear silence no longer, and I beg you will in future send me
-or your dear mother a something, be it ever so short, in the way of a
-letter once a week, if it be merely a certificate of your existence.
-I have been for some days thinking of writing to you, in consequence
-of my having heard that your friend Ryder and Sir George Prevost were
-reading classics with Mr. Keble. Could you not have been allowed to
-make it a triumvirate? Much as I value classical scholarship, I prize
-still more highly the superior benefit to be derived from associating
-with such good young men as I trust the two gentlemen are whose names
-I have mentioned, and I have the satisfaction of knowing that you have
-the privilege of calling them your friends. Is it yet too late?"
-
-
- "_September 10, 1824._
-
-"As I was talking to your mother this morning on money matters it shot
-across my mind that you had desired me to send you a supply, which I
-had neglected to do. I am truly sorry for my inadvertency, and will
-send you the half of a L20 bank note which I happen to possess, the
-other half following of course to-morrow. Ask for what you want, and
-we will settle when you are here. It gives me real pleasure to believe
-that you are economical on principle, and it is only by being so that
-one can be duly liberal. Without self-denial every man, be his fortune
-what it may, will find himself unable to act as he ought in this
-particular, not that _giving_ is always the best charity, far from it;
-employing people is often a far preferable mode of serving them. To
-you I may say that if I have been able to be liberal not less before
-my marriage than after it, it was from denying myself many articles
-which persons in my own rank of life and pecuniary circumstances
-almost universally indulged in. Now when I find my income considerably
-decreased on the one hand, and my expenses (from my four sons) greatly
-increased on the other, economy must even be made parsimony, which,
-justly construed, does not in my meaning at all exclude generosity."
-
-This letter is here interrupted, he says, by "two young widows--both of
-whom had recently lost their husbands in India--with their four little
-children, all in deep mourning. Yet the two widows have the best of
-all supports in the assured persuasion that their husbands were truly
-pious, and in the hope that they themselves are so."
-
-It is easy to imagine the reception given to the "two young widows"
-by Wilberforce. He had not yet learned the lesson of "economy or even
-parsimony" as regarded his charities--even when he had to reduce his
-expenses he spent L3,000[52] in one year on charity.
-
-
- "_December 10, 1824._
-
-"I have deemed it quite a duty on this delicious day to prolong my
-country walk in a _tete-a-tete_ with your dear mother, a _tete-a-tete_,
-however, from which our dear children's images are not excluded. I
-own that those who are termed Methodists by the world do give more
-liberally to the distressed than others, yet that I think they do
-not in this duty come up to the full demands of Scripture. The great
-mistake that prevails as I conceive is, it's being thought right that
-all persons who are received on the footing of gentlemen are to live
-alike. And without economy there cannot be sufficient liberality. I can
-sincerely declare that my wish that my sons should be economical, which
-is quite consistent with being generous, nay, as I said before, is even
-necessary to it, arises far more from my conviction of the effects of
-economical habits on their minds and happiness in future life, than on
-account of the money that will be thereby saved. You have heard me, I
-doubt not, praise Paley's excellent remark on the degree in which a
-right constitution of the habits tends to produce happiness, and you
-may proceed with the train of ideas I have called up in your mind."
-
-
- "_October 26, 1825._
-
-"You ask me about your Uncle Stephen's having been a newspaper
-reporter. He was. The case was this. At the age of, I believe,
-eighteen, he came up to town to study the law, when the sudden death of
-his father not only stopped his supplies, but threw on his hands the
-junior branches of the family, more especially three or four sisters.
-Seeing no other resource, he embraced an offer, made to him I believe
-through or by Mr. Richardson, the friend of poor Sheridan. Richardson
-afterwards came into Parliament, and the fact respecting Stephen came
-out thus, a few years ago. A regulation was proposed by some of the
-benchers of Lincoln's Inn that no one should be permitted to be called
-to the Bar who ever had practised the reporting art. Sheridan brought
-the question forward in the House of Commons. Stephen, who was then in
-Parliament, spoke to the question, and in arguing against the illiberal
-and even cruel severity of the regulation, put a supposed case, that
-the son of a gentleman, by a father's sudden death was at once deprived
-of the means of pursuing the legal profession on which he was just
-entering, being also harassed in his mind by the distressed state of
-some affectionate sisters. Thus embarrassed, he received an offer of
-employment as a reporter, and gladly accepted it and discharged its
-duties, thereby being enabled to prosecute his professional studies
-as well as to assist his relatives. 'But,' added Stephen, 'the case
-I have just stated is no imaginary one. It is the story of a living
-individual. It is that, sir, of the individual who has now the honour
-to address you.' There is in all bodies of Englishmen a generous
-feeling which is always called forth powerfully when a man confesses,
-or rather boldly avows any circumstance respecting himself which,
-according to the false estimate of the world, might be supposed to
-disparage him; as when Peel at the meeting for a monument to James Watt
-declared that, 'owing all his prosperity to the successful industry
-of a person originally in the humble walks of life,' the applause was
-overpowering. And I never remember a more general or louder acclamation
-than immediately broke out when Stephen had (indeed before he had
-completely) closed his declaration."
-
-
- "_December 16, 1825._
-
-"It is Henry Thornton[53] that was connected with the house of Pole
-& Co. He became a partner about five months ago. The storm through
-which he has been passing has been indeed violent; but the call
-for self-possession, temper, judgment, and above all scrupulous,
-punctilious integrity has been abundantly answered. He has behaved so
-as to draw on him the universal applause of all who have witnessed
-his conduct. Mr. Jno. Smith especially speaks of it in the highest
-terms, and has been acting towards him with corresponding generosity
-and kindness. It has been very strikingly evidenced that commercial
-transactions on a great scale enlarge the mind, and the obedience
-which, with men of real principle, is paid to the point of mercantile
-honour, produces a habit of prompt, decisive integrity in circumstances
-of embarrassment and distress. I am happy to be able to tell you that
-there is reason to believe that while Henry will gain great credit
-he will lose no money. He has borne the trial with the calmness of a
-veteran."
-
-
- "_Sunday, January 22, 1826._
-
-"You may have heard me mention, that when in my solitary bachelor state
-I was alone all day on the Sunday, I used after dinner to call up
-before me the images of my friends and acquaintances, and to consider
-how I could benefit or gratify them. And when the mind is scarcely
-awake, or, at least, active enough for any superior purpose, this is
-no bad employment for a part of the day, especially if practised with
-religious associations and purposes. The day is so raw here that I have
-yielded to your mother's kind entreaties that I would not go to church,
-where the greater part of the family now is at afternoon service. So I
-am glad to spend a part of my day with my dearest Samuel.
-
-"I will remind you of an idea which I threw out on the day preceding
-your departure--that I feared I had scarcely enough endeavoured to
-impress on my children the idea that they must as Christians be a
-peculiar people. I am persuaded that you cannot misunderstand me to
-mean that I wish you to affect singularity in indifferent matters.
-The very contrary is our duty. But from that very circumstance of its
-being right that we should be like the rest of the world in exterior,
-manners, &c., &c., results an augmentation of the danger of our not
-maintaining that diversity, nay, that contrast, which the Eye of God
-ought to see in us to the worldly way of thinking and feeling on
-all the various occasions of life, and in relation to its various
-interests. The man of the world considers religion as having nothing to
-do with 99-100ths of the affairs of life, considering it as a medicine
-and not as his food, least of all as his refreshment and cordial. He
-naturally takes no more of it than his health requires. How opposite
-this to the apostle's admonition, 'Whatever ye do in word or deed, do
-all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father
-through Him.' This is being spiritually-minded, and being so is truly
-declared to be life and peace. By the way, if you do not possess that
-duodecimo volume, 'Owen on Spiritual Mindedness,' let me beg you to
-get and read it carefully. There are some obscure and mystic passages,
-but much that I think is likely to be eminently useful; and may our
-Heavenly Father bless to you the perusal of it...."
-
-
- "_February 27, 1826._
-
-"Let me assure you that you give me great pleasure by telling me
-unreservedly any doubts you may entertain of the propriety of my
-principles or conduct. I love your considering and treating me as a
-friend, and I trust you will never have reason to regret your having so
-done, either in relation to your benefit or your comfort. In stating
-my suspicions that I had not sufficiently endeavoured to impress on
-my children, and that you were scarcely enough aware of the force of
-the dictum that Christians were to be a peculiar people, I scarcely
-need assure you that I think the commands, 'Provide things honest in
-the sight of all men, whatever things are lovely, whatsoever of good
-report,' &c. (admirably illustrated and enforced by St. Paul's account
-of his own principles of becoming all things to all men), clearly prove
-that so far from being needlessly singular, we never ought to be so,
-but for some special and good reason. Again, I am aware of what you
-suggest that, in our days, in which the number of those who profess a
-stricter kind of religion than the world of _soi-disant_ Christians in
-general, there is danger lest a party spirit should creep in with its
-usual effects and evils. Against this, therefore, we should be on the
-watch. And yet, though not enlisting ourselves in a party, we ought, as
-I think you will admit, to assign considerable weight to any opinions
-or practices which have been sanctioned by the authority of good men in
-general. As again, you will I think admit, that in any case in which
-the more advanced Christians and the less advanced are both affected,
-the former and their interests deserve more of our consideration than
-the latter. For instance, it is alleged in behalf of certain worldly
-compliances, that by making them you will give a favourable idea,
-produce a pleasing impression of your religious principles, and dispose
-people the rather to adopt them. But then, if you thereby are likely
-to become an _offence_ (in the Scripture sense) to weaker Christians,
-(persons, with all their infirmities, eminently dear to Christ,)
-you may do more harm than good, and that to the class which had the
-stronger claim to your kind offices. Let my dear Samuel think over
-the topic to which I was about next to proceed. I mean our Saviour's
-language to the Laodicean Church expressing His abhorrence and disgust
-at lukewarmness, and the danger of damping the religious affections
-by such recreations as He had in mind. Of course I don't object to
-domestic dances. It is not the act, the _saltus_, but the _whole tone_
-of an assembly."
-
-
- "CLIFTON, _May 27, 1826._
-
-"I am very glad to think that you will be with us. Your dear mother's
-spirits are not always the most buoyant, and, coming first to reside
-in a large, new house without having some of her children around her,
-would be very likely to infuse a secret melancholy which might sadden
-the whole scene, and even produce, by permanent association, a lasting
-impression of despondency. I finish this letter after hearing an
-excellent sermon from Robert Hall. It was not merely an exhibition
-of powerful intellect, but of fervent and feeling piety, especially
-impressing on his hearers to live by the faith of the love of Christ
-daily, habitually looking to Him in all His characters. Prayer,
-prayer, my dear Samuel; let your religion consist much in prayer. May
-you be enabled more and more to walk by faith and not by sight, to
-feel habitually as well as to recognise in all your more deliberate
-calculations and plans, that the things that are seen are temporal,
-but the things that are not seen are eternal. Then you will live above
-the world, as one who is waiting for the coming of the Lord Jesus
-Christ."[54]
-
-
- "_April 20, 1826._
-
-"I would gladly fill my sheet, yet I can prescribe what may do almost
-as well. Shut your door and muse until you fancy me by your side, and
-then think what I should say to you, which I dare say your own mind
-would supply."
-
-
- "_September 30._
-
-"I am thankful to reflect that at the very moment I am now thinking of
-you and addressing you; you also are probably engaged in some religious
-exercise, solitary or social (for I was much gratified by learning from
-a passage in one of your letters to your mother that you and Anderson
-went through the service of our beautiful liturgy together). Perhaps
-you are thinking of your poor old father, and, my dear boy, I hope you
-often pray for me, and I beg you will continue to do so.
-
-"I am not sure whether or not I told you of our having been for a
-week at Lea,[55] having been detained there by my being slightly
-indisposed. But it was worth while to be so, if it were only to
-witness, or rather to experience, Lady Anderson's exceeding kindness. I
-really do not recollect having ever before known such high merits and
-accomplishments--the pencil and music combined with such unpretending
-humility, such true simplicity and benevolence. With these last
-Sir Charles is also eminently endowed. He reads his family prayers
-with great feeling, and especially with a reverence which is always
-particularly pleasing to me. There is, in 'Jonathan Edwards on the
-Religious Affections,' a book from which you will, I think, gain much
-useful matter, a very striking passage, in which he condemns with great
-severity, but not at all too great, _me judice_, that familiarity
-with the Supreme King which was affected by some of the religionists
-of his day, as well as by Dr. Hawker recently, and remarks very truly
-that Moses and Elijah, and Abraham the friend of God (and all of them
-honoured by such especial marks of the Divine condescension), always
-manifested a holy awe and reverence when in the Divine presence."
-
-Samuel Wilberforce had written to his father asking him what advice he
-should give to a friend whose family was very irreligious. In the house
-of this friend 'it was a common phrase accompanying a shake of each
-other's hands on meeting, "May we meet together in _hell_."' The answer
-to the appeal for advice is as follows:--
-
-
- "_July 28, 1826._
-
-"I will frankly confess to you that the clearness and strength of the
-command of the apostle, 'Children, obey your parents in all things'
-(though in one passage it is added, 'in the Lord') weighed so strongly
-with me as to lead me, at first, to doubt whether or not it did not
-overbalance all opposing considerations and injunctions, yet more
-reflection has brought me to the conclusion, to which almost all those
-whom I consulted came still more promptly, that it is the duty of
-your young friend to resist his parents' injunction to go to the play
-or the opera. That they are quite hotbeds of vice no one, I think,
-can deny, for much more might be said against them than is contained
-in my 'Practical View,' though I own the considerations there stated
-appear to my understanding such as must to anyone who means to act on
-Christian principles be perfectly decisive. One argument against the
-young man's giving up the point in these instances, which has great
-weight with me, is this, that he must either give himself entirely up
-to his friends and suffer them at least to dictate to him his course
-of conduct, or make a stand somewhere. Now I know not what ground he
-will be likely to find so strong as this must be confessed to be, by
-all who will argue the question with him on Scriptural principles, and
-more especially on those I have suggested in my 'Practical View' of the
-love of God, and I might have added, that of the apostle's injunction,
-'Whatever ye do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord
-Jesus, giving thanks to God and the Father through Him.' I scarcely
-need remark that the refusal should be rendered as unobjectionable as
-possible by the modest and affectionate manner of urging it, and by
-endeavouring to render the whole conduct and demeanour doubly kind and
-assiduous. I well remember that when first it pleased God to touch
-my heart, now rather above forty years ago, it had been reported of
-me that I was deranged, and various other rumours were propagated to
-my disadvantage. It was under the cloud of these prejudices that I
-presented myself to some old friends, and spent some time with them
-(after the close of the session) at Scarborough. I conversed and
-behaved in the spirit above recommended, and I was careful to embrace
-any little opportunity of pleasing them (little presents often have no
-small effects), and I endeavoured to impress them with a persuasion
-that I was not less happy than before. The consequence was all I could
-desire, and I well recollect that the late Mrs. Henry Thornton's
-mother, a woman of very superior powers and of great influence in our
-social circle, one day broke out to my mother--she afterwards said to
-me something of the same kind, not without tears--'Well, I can only
-say if _he_ is deranged I hope we all shall become so.' To your young
-friend again I need not suggest the duty of constant prayer for his
-nearest relatives. By degrees they will become softened, and he will
-probably enjoy the delight of finding them come over to the blessed
-path he is himself pursuing. He will also find that self-denial, and a
-disposition to subject himself to any trouble or annoyance in order to
-promote his friends' comfort, or exemption from some grievance, will
-have a very powerful effect in conciliating his friends. With all the
-courtesy that prevails in high life, no one, I think, can associate
-with those who move in it, without seeing how great a share selfishness
-has in deciding their language and conduct, saving themselves trouble
-or money, &c., &c. Happily the objections of worldly parents to their
-children becoming religious are considerably weakened since it has
-pleased God to diffuse serious religion so much through the higher
-ranks in society: they no longer despair, as they once did, of their
-sons and daughters not forming any eligible matrimonial alliance or
-any respectable acquaintances or friendships. The grand blessing of
-acting in the way I recommend is the peace of conscience it is likely
-to produce. There are, we know, occasions to which our Saviour's words
-must apply, 'He that loveth father and mother more than Me is not
-worthy of Me,' and I doubt not that if your friend does the violence
-to his natural feelings which the case supposes, in the spirit of
-faith and prayer, he will be rewarded even by a present enjoyment of
-spiritual comfort. If I mistake not I wrote to you lately on the topic
-of the joy which Christians ought to find familiar to them, still more
-the peace; and the course he would pursue would, I believe, be very
-likely to ensure the possession of them. We have been, and still are,
-highly gratified by finding true religion establishing itself more and
-more widely. Lord Mandeville, whose parent stock on both sides must
-be confessed to be as unfavourable as could be well imagined in this
-highly favoured country, is truly in earnest. He, you may have forgot,
-married Lady Olivia's only daughter. He is a man of very good sense;
-though having been destined to the Navy, which had been for generations
-a family service, his education was probably not quite such as one
-would wish. He is a man of the greatest simplicity of character, only
-rather too quiet and silent."
-
-
- "HIGHWOOD HILL,
- "_November 27, 1826._
-
-"I hope you are pleased, I assure you I am, with the result of your
-B.A. course. And I scarcely dare allow myself to wish that you may be
-in the 1st class, or at least to wish it with any degree of earnestness
-or still less of anxiety. The Almighty has been so signally kind to me
-even in my worldly affairs, and so much more gracious than I deserved
-in my domestic concerns, that it would indicate a heart never to be
-satisfied were I not disposed in all that concerns my children, to cast
-all my care on Him: indeed, you pleased me not a little by stating your
-persuasion that it _might be_ better for you ultimately not to have
-succeeded (to the utmost) on this very occasion. And I rejoice the more
-in this impression of yours, because I am sure it does not in your
-instance arise from the want of feeling; from that cold-blooded and
-torpid temperament that often tends to indolence, and if it sometimes
-saves its proprietor a disappointment, estranges him from many who
-might otherwise attach themselves to him, and shuts him out from many
-sources of pure and virtuous pleasure.
-
-"Your dear mother in all weather that is not bad enough to drive the
-labourers within doors, is herself _sub dio_, studying the grounds,
-giving directions for new walks, new plantations, flower-beds, &c. And
-I am thankful for being able to say that the exposure to cold and dew
-hitherto has not hurt her--perhaps it has been beneficial."
-
-
- "_August 25, 1827._
-
-"I was lately looking into Wrangham's 'British Biography,' and I
-was forcibly struck by observing that by far the larger part of the
-worthies the work commemorates were carried off before they reached
-to the age I have attained to. And yet, as I think, I must have told
-you, Dr. Warren, the first medical authority of that day, declared in
-1788 that I could not then last above two or three weeks, not so much
-from the violence of an illness from which I had then suffered, as
-from the utter want of stamina. Yet a gracious Providence has not only
-spared my life, but permitted me to see several of my dear children
-advancing into life, and you, my dear Samuel, as well as Robert,
-about to enter into Holy Orders so early that if it should please God
-to spare my life for about a couple of years, which according to my
-present state of health seems by no means improbable, I may have the
-first and great pleasure of witnessing your performance of the sacred
-service of the Church. It is little in me--I mean a very ordinary
-proof of my preference of spiritual to earthly things, of my desiring
-to walk rather by faith than by sight--that I rejoice in the prospect
-of your becoming a clergyman rather than a lawyer, which appeared the
-alternative in your instance; but it is due to you, my dear Samuel,
-to say that it is a very striking proof of your having been enabled
-by, I humbly trust, the highest of all influences, to form this
-decision, when from your talents and qualifications it appeared by no
-means improbable that in the legal line you might not improbably rise
-into the enjoyment of rank and affluence. It is but too true that my
-feelings would, at your time of life, have been powerfully active in
-another direction. Perhaps this very determination may have been in
-part produced by that connection to which you look forward. And may it
-please God, my dear Samuel, to grant you the desire of your heart in
-this particular and to render the union conducive to your spiritual
-benefit and that of your partner also, so that it may be looked back
-upon with gratitude even in a better world, as that which has tended
-not only to your mutual happiness during the journey of life, but has
-contributed to bring you both after its blessed termination to the
-enjoyment of the rest that remaineth for the people of God."
-
-This letter refers to Samuel Wilberforce's marriage with Emily Sargent,
-as to which his father remarks: "Viewed in a worldly light, the
-connection cannot be deemed favourable to either of you."
-
-
- "_March 20, 1828._
-
-"The cheerfulness, which at an earlier period of my life might have
-been a copious spring supplying my letters with a stream of pleasant
-sentiments and feelings, has been chilled even to freezing by advancing
-years, and yet, to do myself justice, though this may have dulled the
-activity and liveliness of my epistles, I think it has not cooled the
-kindly warmth of heart with which I write to my friends and least of
-all to my children."
-
-
- "_July 22, 1828._
-
-"I am glad that any opportunity for your coming forward as a public
-speaker has occurred, I mean an opportunity proper for you to
-embrace, in which you were rather a drawn (though not a pressed) man
-and not a volunteer. We have had the great pleasure of having dear
-Robert officiate twice, both in the reading-desk and the pulpit.
-The apparent, as well as real, simplicity of his whole performance
-must have impressed every observant and feeling hearer with a very
-favourable view of his character. His language remarkably simple,
-much every way in his sermon to esteem and love. It suggested one
-or two important topics for consideration, which I shall be glad to
-talk over with you hereafter, as well as with Robert himself. One is,
-whether he did not fall into what I have often thought an error in the
-sermons of sound divines, and in those perhaps of Oxonians more than
-Cantabs--that I mean of addressing their congregations as being all
-real Christians--children of God, &c.--who needed (to use our Saviour's
-figure in John xiii.) only to have their feet washed. Whatever may be
-the right doctrinal opinion as to baptismal regeneration, all really
-orthodox men will grant, I presume, that as people grow up they may
-lose that privilege of being children of God which we trust they who
-were baptised in their infancy did enjoy, and would have reaped the
-benefit of it had they died before, by the gradual development of their
-mental powers, they became moral agents capable of responsibility.
-And if so, should not their particular sins of disposition, temper,
-or conduct be used rather to convince them of their being in a sinful
-state, and as therefore requiring the converting grace of God, than as
-merely wanting a little reformation?"
-
-
- "_November 20, 1828._
-
-"Has Sargent[56] heard of the fresh explosion in the British and
-Foreign Bible Society? I truly and deeply regret it. It has proceeded
-from a proposal to print the Septuagint. In the discussion that
-took place on that topic it was perhaps unwarily said there was no
-proper standard of the Holy Scriptures. No standard!!!!! Then we
-have no Bible! You see how a little Christian candour would have
-prevented this rupture. Oh that they would all remember that the end
-of the commandment is Love. I fear this is not the test by which in
-our days Christians are to be ascertained: may we all cultivate in
-ourselves this blessed principle and pray for it more earnestly. I
-am quite pleased myself, Robert is delighted, by the appointment to
-the Professorship (Hebrew) of Pusey--above L1,200 per annum. Pusey
-had opposition, and is appointed by the Duke of Wellington, solely we
-suppose on the ground of superior merit."
-
-
- "_February 20, 1829._
-
-"Legh Richmond,[57] though an excellent man, was not a man of
-refinement or of taste. I cannot deny the justice of your remarks
-as far as I can fairly allow myself to form a judgment without
-referring to the book. I entirely concur in your censure of Richmond's
-commonplace, I had almost termed it profane, way in which he speaks of
-the Evil Spirit. This falls under the condemnation justly pronounced by
-Paley against levity in religion.
-
-"When I can spare a little eyesight or time, I feel myself warranted
-to indulge the pleasure I always have in the exercise of the domestic
-affections, and in gratifying you (as I hope it is not vanity to think
-I do) in writing to you at a time when you are in circumstances of more
-quiet than usual, though I am aware that a man of your age, who is
-spending his first year of married life with a partner, between whom
-and himself there was great mutual attachment, grounded on esteem, and
-a mutual acquaintance with each other's characters and dispositions,
-can never be so happy as when he is enjoying a _tete-a-tete_ with his
-bride. By the way, do you keep anything in the nature of a journal?
-A commonplace book I take it for granted you keep; and speaking of
-books, let me strongly urge you to keep your accounts regularly, and
-somewhat at least in the mode in which we keep ours--under different
-heads. If you have not the plan, tell me and I will send it to you.
-Its excellence is that it enables you with ease to see how your money
-goes; and remember we live in days in which a single sovereign given by
-an individual is often productive of great effects. Where is it that a
-single drop (stalactite) from a roof, falling into the ocean, is made
-to bemoan itself on being lost in the abyss of waters, when afterwards
-it became the seminal principle of the great pearl that constituted the
-glory of the Great Mogul? And now also, remember the Church Missionary
-Society is so poor, that it will be compelled to quit some fields
-whitening to the harvest, unless it can have its funds considerably
-augmented."
-
-[Illustration: SAMUEL WILBERFORCE, Aged 29.]
-
-The next letter refers to the offer of the vicarage of Ribchester,
-near Preston, in Lancashire, made by the Bishop of Chester to Samuel
-Wilberforce.
-
-
- "_March 3, 1829._
-
-"Whether regarded in relation to your bodily strength, your spiritual
-interests, or to prudence in affairs, I should be disposed to advise
-you to decline, with a due sense of kindness, &c., the Bishop's offer.
-Your constitution is not a strong one, and it is highly desirable in
-that view alone that you should for a time officiate in a small sphere,
-and if it may be in a place where, as from your vicinity to Oxford,
-you can have assistance when you are not equal yourself to the whole
-duty. With such a scattered population, there must be a call I conceive
-for great bodily strength. Secondly, the situation appears to me still
-less eligible considered on higher grounds. It is no ground of blame
-to you that your studies have not hitherto been of divinity. Supply
-all that I should say under that head, were I not writing to one who
-is capable himself of suggesting it to his own mind. Again, you cannot
-have that acquaintance with human nature, either in general, or in
-your own self, which it would be desirable for any one to possess who
-was to be placed in so wide and populous a field, especially in one so
-circumstanced as this particular place. Then you would be at a distance
-from almost all your friends, which I mention now in reference to
-the spiritual disadvantages of the situation, not in relation to your
-comfort and Emily's, in which, however, it may be fairly admitted to
-some weight. Again, _I_ should much regret your being placed where you
-would naturally be called to study controversial anti-Roman Catholic
-divinity, rather than that which expects the cultivation of personal
-holiness in yourself and your parishioners. I could say much on this
-head. Thirdly, Mr. Neale sees the objections on the ground of pecuniary
-interest, as alone of so much weight, as to warrant your refusing the
-offer--a vicarage. Its income is commonly derived from small payments,
-and in that district probably of poor people whom you would not, could
-not squeeze, and yet without squeezing from whom you probably would get
-nothing. Most likely a curate would be indispensable."
-
-On the same topic Wilberforce writes again:--
-
-
- "_March 17th, 1829._
-
-"I ought to tell you that in the reasons I assigned to the Bishop
-for declining his offer, one, and in itself perhaps the strongest,
-(nay, certainly so, not perhaps,) was my persuasion that for any
-one educated and associated as you have been, it was of very great
-importance with a view to your spiritual state, (more especially for
-the cultivation of devotional feelings and spirituality of mind,)
-that he should in the outset of his ministerial course be for some
-time in a quiet and retired situation, where he could live in the
-enjoyment of domestic comfort, of leisure for religious reading and
-meditation, and devotional exercises; while, on the contrary, it was
-very undesirable in lieu of these to be placed in circumstances in
-which he would almost necessarily be almost incessantly arguing for
-Protestant principles--in short, would be occupied in the religion of
-the head rather than of the heart. I own to you in confidence (though
-I believe I shall make the avowal to my dear Robert himself) that I am
-sometimes uneasy on a ground somewhat congenial with this, about the
-tutor of Oriel. For though I doubt not the solidity of his religious
-character, yet I fear his situation is far from favourable to the
-growth in grace, and would, alas! need every help we can have for the
-advancement of personal religion within us, and can scarcely bear
-without injury any circumstances that have an unfavourable tendency. I
-trust my dear Samuel will himself consider that he is now responsible
-for living in circumstances peculiarly favourable to the growth of
-personal piety, and therefore that he should use his utmost endeavours
-to derive the benefits that appear, (humanly speaking,) to be placed
-within his reach. Oh, my dearest boy, we are all too sadly lukewarm,
-sadly too little urging forward with the earnestness that might justly
-be expected from those that are contending for an incorruptible crown.
-Did you ever read Owen on spiritual-mindedness? There are some passages
-that to me appear almost unintelligible (one at least), but it is in
-the main, I think, a highly useful book. I need not say how sorry we
-are to hear of Emily being poorly. But our gourds must have something
-to alloy their sweets. D. G. your mother is recovering gradually,
-and now profits much from a jumbling pony-chair; its shaking quality
-renders its value to her double what it would be otherwise."[58]
-
-
- "_March 19, 1829._
-
-"In speaking of Whately's book I ought to have said that I had not got
-to the part in which he speaks of imputed righteousness. I remember it
-was an objection made to my 'Practical View' by a certain strange head
-of a college that I was silent on that point. The honest truth is, I
-never considered it. I have always been disposed to believe it to be
-in some sort true, but not to deem it a matter of importance, if the
-doctrine of free grace and justification by faith be held, which are,
-I believe, of primary importance. Hooker, unless I forget, is clearly
-for it; see his sermon on Justification. I trust I need not fear your
-misconstruing me, and supposing I can be advising you, either to be
-roguish, or shabbily reserved. But really I do think that you may
-produce an unfavourable and false impression of your principles and
-professional character, by talking unguardedly about _Methodistical_
-persons and opinions. Mrs. R. may report you as UNSOUND to the Bishop
-of Winchester, and he imbibe a prejudice against you. Besides, my
-dear Samuel, I am sure you will not _fire_ when I say that you may
-see reason on farther reading, and reflection, and more experience to
-change or qualify some of the opinions you may now hold. I own, (I
-should not be honest if I did not say so,) that I think I have myself
-witnessed occasions which have strengthened with me the impression that
-you may need this hint.... Have you any parishioners who have been
-used to hear Methodists or Dissenters, or have you any who appear to
-have had, or still to have, much feeling of religion? I cannot help
-suspecting that it is a mistaken notion that the lower orders are to
-be chiefly instructed in the ordinary practical duties of religion,
-whereas I own I believe them to be quite capable of impressions on
-their affections: on the infinite love of their God and Redeemer, and
-of their corresponding obligation to Love and Obedience. We found
-peasants more open to attacks on their consciences, on the score of
-being wanting in gratitude, than on any other."
-
-
-"_April 3, 1829._
-
-"Articles sent to Mr. Samuel--Bewick, Venn's Sermons (2 vols.), White's
-'Selborne' (2 vols. bound in one), 2nd vol. of 'The Monastery.' A
-lending library is, I think, likely to be considerably beneficial.
-It cannot but have a tendency to generate in the poor a disposition
-favourable to domestic habits and pleasures, and to seek their
-enjoyments at home rather than in the alehouse, and it strikes me as
-likely to confirm this taste, to encourage the poor people's children
-to read to them. Send me a list of any books you will like to have for
-your lending library, and I will by degrees pick them up for you....
-
-"We ought to be always making it our endeavour to be experiencing peace
-and joy in believing, and that we do not enjoy more of this sunshine
-of the breast is, I fear, almost always our own fault. We ought not to
-acquiesce quietly in the want of them, whereas we are too apt to be
-satisfied if our consciences do not reproach us with anything wrong,
-if we can on good grounds entertain the persuasion that we are safe;
-and we do not sufficiently consider that we serve a gracious and kind
-master who is willing that we should taste that He is gracious. Both
-in St. John's first general Epistle, and in our Lord's declaration in
-John xv., we are assured that our Lord's object and the apostles' in
-telling us of our having spiritual supplies and communion, is that
-our joy may be full. It is a great comfort to me to reflect that you
-are in circumstances peculiarly favourable to your best interests. To
-be spiritually-minded is both life and peace. How much happier would
-your dear mother be if she were living the quiet life you and Emily do,
-instead of being cumbered about many things; yet she is in the path of
-duty, and that is all in all."
-
-
- "_September 7, 1829._
-
-"An admirable expedient has this moment suggested itself to me, which
-will supersede the necessity for my giving expression to sentiments and
-feelings, for which you will give me full credit, though unexpressed.
-It is that of following the precedent set by a candidate for the City
-of Bristol in conjunction with Mr. Burke. The latter had addressed his
-electors in a fuller effusion of eloquence than was used to flow even
-from his lips, when his colleague, conscious that he should appear to
-great disadvantage were he to attempt a speech, very wisely confined
-himself to, 'Gentlemen, you have heard Mr. Burke's excellent speech. I
-say ditto to the whole of it.' Sure I am that no language of mine could
-give you warmer or more sincere assurances of parental affection than
-you will have received in the letter of your dear mother, which she
-has just put into my hands to be inserted into my letter. To all she
-has said, therefore, I say ditto. My dear Samuel, I must tell you the
-pleasure with which I look back on what I witnessed at Checkendon,[59]
-and how it combines with, and augments the joyful gratulations with
-which I welcome the 7th of September.[60] I hope I am deeply thankful
-to the bountiful Giver of all good for having granted me in you a
-son to whose future course I can look with so much humble hope, and
-even joyful confidence. It is also with no little thankfulness that
-I reflect on your domestic prospects, from the excellent qualities
-of your, let me say _our_, dear Emily. I must stop, the rest shall
-be prayer, prayer for both of you, that your course in this life may
-be useful and honourable, and that you may at length, accompanied by
-a large assemblage of the sheep of Christ, whom you have been the
-honoured instrument of bringing to the fold of Christ, have an abundant
-entrance into the everlasting kingdom of God."
-
-
- "_September 28, 1829._
-
-"How much do they lose of comfort, as well as, I believe, in incentives
-to gratitude and love, and if it be not their own fault thereby in
-the means of practical improvement, who do not accustom themselves to
-watch the operations of the Divine Hand. I have often thought that,
-had it not been for the positive declarations of the Holy Scriptures
-concerning the attention of the Almighty Governor of the universe to
-our minutest comforts and interests enforced by a comparison with
-the [Greek: storge] of parental affection, we should not dare to be
-so presumptuous as to believe, that He who rolls the spheres along,
-would condescend thus to sympathise with our feelings, and attend
-to our minutest interests. Here also Dr. Chalmers' suggestions,
-derived from the discoveries made to us through the microscope, come
-in to confirm the same delightful persuasion. I am persuaded that
-many true Christians lose much pleasure they might otherwise enjoy
-from not sufficiently watching the various events of their lives,
-more especially in those little incidents, as we rather unfitly term
-them; for, considering them as links in the chain, they maintain the
-continuity, as much as those which we are apt to regard as of greater
-size and consequence."
-
-
- "_November 21, 1829._
-
-"We have been for a few days at Battersea Rise. But your mother will, I
-doubt not, have told you the memorabilia of this visit, and especially
-the inexhaustible conversational powers of Sir James Mackintosh. I
-wish I may be able, some time or other, to enable you to hear these
-powers exerted. Poor fellow! he is, however, the victim of his own
-social dispositions and excellences. For I cannot but believe, that
-the superfluous hours dissipated in these talks, might suffice for
-the performance of a great work. They are to him, what, alas! in some
-degree, my letters were to me during my Parliamentary life, and even to
-this day."
-
-
- "_December 17, 1829._
-
-"We ought not to expect this life to flow on smoothly without rubs
-or mortification. Indeed, it is a sentiment which I often inculcate
-on myself that, to use a familiar phrase, we here have more than our
-bargain, as Christians, in the days in which we live; for I apprehend
-the promise of the life that now is, combined with that which is to
-come, was meant to refer rather to mental peace and comfort, than to
-temporal prosperity. My thoughts have been of late often led into
-reflections on the degree in which we are wanting to ourselves, in
-relation to the rich and bright prospects set before us as attainable
-in the Word of God. More especially I refer to that of the Christian's
-hope and peace and joy. Again and again we are assured that joy is
-ordinarily and generally to be the portion of the Christian. Yet how
-prone are but too commonly those, whom we really believe to be entitled
-to the name of Christians, disposed to remain contented without the
-possession of this delightful state of heart; and to regard it as the
-privilege of some rarely gifted, and eminently favoured Christians,
-rather than as the general character of all, yet I believe that except
-for some hypochondriacal affection, or state of spirits arising from
-bodily ailments, every Christian ought to be very distrustful of
-himself, _and to call himself to account, as it were_, if he is not
-able to maintain a settled frame of 'inward peace,' if not joy. It is
-to be obtained through the Holy Spirit, and therefore when St. Paul
-prays for the Roman Christians that they may be filled with all _peace_
-and _joy_ in believing, and may abound in hope, it is added, through
-the power of the Holy Ghost."
-
-
- "HIGHWOOD HILL,
- "_December 31, 1829._
-
-"MY DEAR CHILDREN,--For to both of you I address myself. An idea, which
-for so old a fellow as myself you will allow somewhat to be deserving
-the praise of brightness, has just struck my mind, and I proceed to act
-upon it. Are you Yorkshireman enough to know the article (an excellent
-one it is) entitled a Christmas, or sometimes a goose or a turkey pie?
-Its composition is this. Take first the smallest of eatable birds,
-as a snipe, for instance, then put it within its next neighbour of
-the feathered race, I mean in point of size, the woodcock, insert the
-two into a teal, the teal into a duck, the duck and Co. into a fowl,
-the fowl into a goose, the goose and Co. into a turkey. In imitation
-of this laudable precedent, I propose, though with a variation, as
-our Speaker would say, in the order of our proceeding, that this
-large sheet which I have selected for the purpose should contain the
-united epistles of all the family circle, from the fullest grown if
-not largest in dimensions, myself, to the most diminutive, little
-William.[61] As the thought is my own, I will begin the execution of
-it, and if any vacant space should remain, I will fill it, just as any
-orifices left vacant in said pie are supplied by the pouring in of the
-jelly. But I begin to be ashamed of this jocoseness when I call to mind
-on what day I am writing--the day which, combined with the succeeding
-one, the 1st of January, I consider, except perhaps my birthday, as
-the most important of the whole year. For a long period (as long as
-I lived in the neighbourhood of the Lock, or rather not far from it)
-I used to receive the Sacrament, which was always administered there
-on New Year's Day. And the heart must be hard and cold, which that
-sacred ordinance in such a relation, would not soften and warm into
-religious sensibility and tenderness. I was naturally led into looking
-backwards to the past days of my life, and forward to the future; led
-to consider in what pleasant places my lines were fallen, how goodly
-was my heritage, that the bounds of my life should be fixed in that
-little spot, in which, of the whole earth, there has been the greatest
-measure of temporal comforts, and of spiritual privileges. That it
-should be also in the eighteenth century, for where should I have
-been, a small, weakly man, had I been born either among our painted or
-skin-clothed ancestors, or in almost any other before or after it? As
-they would have begun by exposing me, there need be no more inquiry as
-to the sequel of the piece. Next take my station in life, neither so
-high as naturally to intoxicate me, nor so low as to excite to envy
-or degradation. Take then the other particulars of my condition, both
-personal and circumstantial. But I need go no farther, but leave it to
-you to supply the rest. And you will likewise, I doubt not, pursue the
-same mental process in your own instance also, and find, as may well be
-the case, that the retrospect and prospect afford abundant matter for
-gratitude and humiliation, (I am sure I find the latter most powerfully
-called forth in my heart by my own survey). Many thanks for your last
-kind letter. You have precisely anticipated what was said by the
-several _dramatis personae_. It is a real sacrifice for Emily and you
-to be absent from my family circle. But the sacrifice is to duty, and
-that is enough. And you have no small ground for comfort, from your not
-having to go through the 'experiment solitary,' as Lord Bacon terms
-it, but to have one, to whom you may say that solitude is sweet. But I
-must surrender the pen to your dear mother."
-
-The country was at that time extremely disturbed by what were known
-as the "Swing Riots."[62] Bands of rioters went about, burning ricks
-and threshing machines, then newly introduced, and considered by the
-labourers as depriving them of the winter threshing work. Wilberforce
-seems to have shared this feeling.
-
-
- "HIGHWOOD HILL,
- "_November 25, 1830._
-
-"Your mother suggests that a threshing machine used to be kept in one
-of your barns. If so I really think it should be removed. I should be
-very sorry to have it stated that a threshing machine had been burnt
-on the premises of the Rev. Samuel Wilberforce; they take away one of
-the surest sources of occupation for farmers in frost and snow times.
-In what a dreadful state the country now is! Gisborne, I find, has
-stated his opinion, that the present is the period of pouring out the
-7th Vial, when there was to be general confusion, insubordination,
-and misery. It really appears in the political world, like what the
-abolition of some of the great elements in the physical world would
-be; the extinction, for instance, of the principle of gravity."
-
-
- "_December 9, 1830._
-
-"I have been delaying the books that all might go together. Mather's
-'Magnalia'[63] shall be one of them. There is a very curious passage in
-it early in the volume, in which in Charles I's time, he says, expenses
-have been increasing so much of late years that men can no longer
-maintain their rank in society. Assuredly this Government is greatly to
-be preferred before the last. Brougham better than Copley, and several
-highly respectable besides, the Grants (Charles is in the Cabinet),
-Lord Althorp, Sir James Graham, Lord Grey himself, highly respectable
-as family men; Denman a very honest fellow. The worst appointment is
-Holland, Duchy of Lancaster; he has much church patronage which, though
-I love the man, I cannot think decorous. Lord Lansdowne, very decent,
-Lord Goderich ditto. But your mother is worrying me all this time to
-force me out, and Joseph declares the letters will be too late. So
-farewell."
-
-
- "_December 17, 1830._
-
-"I have always thought that your having a strong virtuous attachment
-when you first went to the University was a great security to you. The
-blessed effects of this safeguard we shall one day know. It will be a
-mutual augmentation of attachment and happiness to find that those whom
-we loved best had been rendered the instruments more or less of our
-salvation....
-
-"That religious feelings are contagious (if I may use the word so), is
-undeniable, and there may be temporary accesses of religious feeling,
-which may produce a temporary effervescence, with little or none of the
-real work of God on the heart. But you and I, who are not Calvinists,
-believe that even where the influence of the Holy Spirit was in the
-heart, that Spirit may be grieved and quenched. The good seed in the
-hearts of the stony-ground hearers is just an instance in point. When
-my friend Terrot was chaplain, of the _Defence_ I think, great numbers
-of the rough sailors were deeply affected by his conversation and
-sermons, of whom, I think he said, thirty only appeared in the sequel
-to be permanently changed."
-
-
- "_January 4, 1831._
-
-"You are now a man possessed of as much leisure as you are ever likely
-to possess. What think you of laying in materials for a Doctrinal and
-practical History of Religion in England, in different classes of
-society, and of males and females, from the time of the Reformation to
-the present time or perhaps to 1760. It was once my wish to write such
-a work, but the state of my eyes long ago rendered it impracticable.
-The sources from whence the particulars for the work must be derived
-are chiefly Lives and Memoirs. Numbers of these have been published
-of late years, and the object is one which would give opportunities
-for exercising sagacity, as well as candour. There is this also of
-good in it that, _nullus dies sine linea_, you might be continually
-finding some fresh fact or hint, which would afterwards be capable of
-being turned to good account. The Annual Registers and the different
-magazines and reviews would be rich mines of raw material. Do meditate
-on these suggestions. How very strong has dear Henry become both in
-his opinions and his language! Really if he were to go into the law,
-which Robert seems to think not improbable, there would be considerable
-danger of his getting into quarrels which might draw on him challenges,
-the more probably because people might suppose from his parentage,
-&c., that he most likely would not answer a call to the field. I must
-say that the becoming exempt, even in the world's estimate, from the
-obligation to challenge or being challenged may be no unfair principle
-of preference of an ecclesiastical profession to any other. The subject
-of duelling is one which I never saw well treated; a very worthy and
-sensible man, a Scotchman who was shipwrecked in Madagascar, I forget
-his name (was it Duncan?) sent me one, his own writing, but I thought
-it _naught_. And now my very dear boy farewell."
-
-Wilberforce writes to Mrs. Samuel Wilberforce the day after his
-daughter Elizabeth's marriage.
-
-
-_Mr. Wilberforce to Mrs. Samuel Wilberforce._
-
- "HIGHWOOD HILL,
- "_January 12, 1831._
-
-"MY DEAR EMILY,--We had a delightful day yesterday for our ceremony,
-and after the indissoluble knot had been tied in due form, the parties
-drove off about 12 o'clock to spend a few days at Mr. Stephen's
-favourite residence of Healthy Hill, as he terms it, Missenden. I
-really augur well of this connection, having strong reasons for
-believing Mr. James to be a truly amiable as well as pious man, and my
-dear Lizzy is really well fitted for the office of a parson's aider
-and comforter. It has given me no little pleasure to have been assured
-by Mr. Dupre, the curate of the parish, that she has been truly useful
-to the poor cottagers around us. His expression was, 'She has done
-more good than she knows of.' This event, combined with the close of
-another year and the anniversary of my own dear wife's birthday, has
-called forth in me a lively sense of the goodness of that gracious
-Being who has dealt so bountifully with me during a long succession
-of years. Dr. Warren, in 1788, as I was reminded when at Brighstone,
-declared that for want of stamina there would be an end of my feeble
-frame in two or three weeks, and then I was a bachelor. After this,
-near ten years after, I became a husband, and now I have assured me
-full grown descendants, and an offset in my Elizabeth. I have been
-receiving many congratulations from being perhaps the only living
-father of three first-class men, one of them a double first and the
-two others in the second also. Above all their literary acquirements
-I value their having, as I verily believe, passed through the fiery
-trial of an university, for such I honestly account it, without injury.
-And it gives me no little pleasure (as I think I have before assured
-you), to add that I ascribe this in part to the instrumentality of a
-certain young lady, who was a sort of guardian angel hovering around
-him in fancy and exerting a benign influence over the sensibility and
-tenderness of his lively spirit. Farewell, my dear Emily.
-
- "Believe me, begging a kiss to baby,
- "Ever affectionately yours,
- "W. WILBERFORCE."
-
-
-_Mr. Wilberforce to the Rev. Samuel Wilberforce._
-
- "_February 8, 1831._
-
-"MY DEAR SAMUEL,--Pray both for your mother and for poor William that
-they may be delivered from [Greek: merimna]. The former, alas! lies
-awake for hours in the morning, and cannot banish from her mind the
-carking cares that haunt and worry her. We profess to believe in the
-efficacy of prayer. Let us prove the truth of our profession by at
-least not acquiescing, without resistance, in such assailments. It is
-more from natural temperament than from any higher attainment that
-I am not the prey of these corrosions. Something may be ascribed to
-the habit of controlling my thoughts which I acquired when in public
-life.... You might, I believe, have shone in political life; but you
-have chosen the better part. And if you can think so now when in your
-younger blood, much more will you become sensible of it by and by when
-you look back, if God should so permit, on a long retrospect, studded
-with records of the Divine blessing on your ministerial exertions.
-Kindest remembrances to dear Emily, and a kiss to little Emily, and the
-blessing of your affectionate father,
-
-"W. WILBERFORCE."
-
-
- "HIGHWOOD HILL,
- "_March 4, 1831._
-
-"I will frankly confess to you that I almost tremble for the
-consequences of Lord Russell's plan of Reform if it should be carried.
-I wish the qualification had been higher. The addition to the County
-Representation lessens the danger. Much in the judgments we form on
-such practical questions depends on our period of life. I find myself
-now at seventy-one and a half far more timid and more indisposed to
-great changes, and less inclined to promise myself great benefit from
-political plans. I own I scarcely can expect the plan to succeed,
-especially in the House of Lords. We understand your invitation to be
-for July and August. But I foretell you plainly you shall not regularly
-walk with me, or break off any habits which can in any degree interfere
-with duty. We have not yet settled our plans. Indeed, they may greatly
-depend on the convenience of our friends. I well remember the Dean of
-Carlisle used to say when invitations multiplied, 'Do you think that
-if you wanted a dinner there would be so many disposed to give you
-one?' We are now about to put this to the proof. I own now that it
-comes to the point I am a little disposed to exclaim, 'O happy hills! O
-pleasing shades!' &c. But I should be ashamed were I to have any other
-prevailing feeling than thankfulness. I feel most the separation from
-my books. However, _sursum corda_."
-
-Wilberforce writes to his friend Babington on Lord Russell's
-propositions:--
-
-
-_Mr. Wilberforce to Mr. Babington._
-
- "HIGHWOOD HILL,
- "_March 14, 1831._
-
-"MY DEAR TOM,--I fear you will be again disposed to accuse me of
-treating you with neglect (not, I hope, with unkindness) in suffering
-week after week to pass away without returning answers to your kind
-letters. I have really had as much necessary writing on my hands,
-as even when I was member for Yorkshire. But I cannot bear to think
-that you are, day after day, looking out for my handwriting (as you
-are opening your daily packets), and looking out in vain. There have
-been many topics, I assure you, on which I should have been glad to
-communicate with you had I been able. I know not how you have felt,
-but I must say I felt glad by the consciousness that I was not now in
-a situation to be compelled to approach, and act upon, the important
-question of Lord John Russell's proposition. On the whole, I think I
-should have been favourable to it; chiefly, or rather most confidently,
-from trusting that we shall do away with much vice and much bribery
-which now prevail. I am persuaded also that the change will be for the
-benefit, and greatly so, of our poor West India clients. I should like
-to know your sentiments on the plan."
-
-
-_Mr. Wilberforce to the Rev. Samuel Wilberforce._
-
- "_April 8, 1831._
-
-"And now, my dear Samuel, we have commenced our wanderings. I write
-from Daniel Wilson's, who treats us with the utmost kindness."
-
-From this time Wilberforce had no house of his own, but spent the
-remaining years of his life with his sons and with his friends. In his
-own language, he "became a wanderer without any certain dwelling-place."
-
-
- "KENSINGTON GORE,
- "_April 20th._
-
-"It must be three weeks or more since Lord Brougham, when on the
-woolsack, called Stephen,[64] then attending the House of Lords, quasi
-master (two of their description you perhaps know are required to be
-always present; they take down their Lordships' Bills to the House of
-Commons), and after expressing in very strong language his concern at
-having heard such an account as had reached him of the state of my
-finances, and more particularly of its being necessary for me to quit
-my own house, and become a wanderer without any certain dwelling-place,
-he stated that he had lately heard of my having sons and a son-in-law
-in the Church, and that he should be most happy to do what he could
-for them. Lord Milton afterwards, as I understand from Dan Sykes,
-expressed to Lord Brougham some kind intentions towards me, and more
-especially that he waived a claim or an application he had been making
-for the living of Rawmarsh, as soon as he learned that Lord Brougham
-had destined it to me. Robert would not accept any living which would
-not afford me a suitable residence."
-
-
- "_April 23, 1831._
-
-"You cannot conceive how little time I appear to have at my own command
-while passing our lives in this vagarious mode, which, however, calls
-forth emotions of gratitude to the Giver of all good, who has raised
-up for me so many and so kind friends. I ought not to forget, while a
-Gracious Providence has granted me a good name which is better than
-great riches, that many public men as upright as myself have been the
-victims of calumny. I myself indeed have had its envenomed shafts at
-times directed against me. But on the whole few men have suffered from
-them so little as myself."
-
-
- "BATH, _October 19, 1831._
-
-"I am but poorly, and I am bothered (a vulgar phrase, but having been
-used in the House of Lords I may condescend to adopt it) with incessant
-visitors. There is a person come over to this country from the United
-States, of the Society of Quakers, for the excellent purpose of
-obtaining popularity and support for a society which has been in being
-for nine or ten years--the American Colonisation Society. I could not
-but assent to his proposal to pay me a visit at this place. The time
-was when such a visitor would have been no encumbrance to me. But now
-that he takes me in hand when I am already tired by others, (though
-it is only justice to him to say no one can be less intrusive or more
-obliging than he is), I do sink under it. My dear Samuel, it is one of
-the bad consequences of the plan you prescribed that I exhibit myself
-to you in the state of mind in which I am at the moment, though I
-should not otherwise have selected it for that purpose.
-
-
- "_Friday, 12 o'clock, October 21st._
-
-"Our American friend has left us this morning But, alas! he has
-requested me to write in his album. What a vile system is the album
-system! No, I do not, I cannot think so, though I am somewhat ruffled
-by being called on for my contingent, when I have little or no supplies
-left to furnish it."
-
-Wilberforce goes on to express his gratitude for the safety of his
-daughter Elizabeth (Mrs. James), who had been confined of a daughter.
-
-"The mere circumstance that a new immortal being is produced and
-committed to our keeping is a consideration of extreme moment. Though I
-own it sometimes tends to produce emotions of a saddening character,
-to consider into what a world our new grandchild has entered, what
-stormy seas she will have to navigate. I will enclose an interesting
-passage I have received from Tom Babington, giving an account of Dr.
-Chalmer's speculations.
-
-"I own I am sadly alarmed for the Church. There is such a combination
-of noxious elements fermenting together, that I am ready to exclaim,
-'There is death in the pot,' and there will be, I fear, no Elisha
-granted to us to render the mess harmless. But yet I am encouraged to
-hope that the same gracious and longsuffering Being who would have
-spared Sodom for ten, and Jerusalem even for one righteous man's sake,
-may spare us to the prayers of the many who do, I trust, sincerely
-sigh and cry in behalf of our proud, ungrateful land. Yet, again, when
-I consider what light we have enjoyed, what mercies we have received,
-and how self-sufficient and ungrateful we have been, I am again tempted
-to despond. I wish I could be a less unprofitable servant. Yet I must
-remember Milton's sonnet, 'They also serve who only stand and wait.'
-Let us all be found in our several stations doing therein the Lord's
-work diligently and zealously. What do you think of Shuttleworth's new
-translation of St. Paul's Epistles? I have borrowed but not yet read
-them. Affectionate remembrances to dear Emily, and a kiss to sweet
-baby."
-
-
- "BLAIZE CASTLE,[65]
- "_October 31, 1831._
-
-"You will hear what dreadful work has been going on at Bristol for the
-last eight and forty hours. Sir Charles Wetherell[66] escaped from
-the fury of the mob by first hiding himself in some upper room in the
-Mansion House and then passing, disguised in a sack jacket, from the
-roof of the Mansion House to that of another house, whence he got to
-a distant part of the town, and in a chaise and four returned in all
-haste, (they say) to London. He was, as Recorder, to have opened the
-Commission and tried all the prisoners to-day. However, the latter
-are now all at work again in their accustomed callings. Not a single
-gaol, I am assured, is left undestroyed. The Bishop's Palace, (and
-Deanery too I am told), burnt to the ground. The Custom House ditto,
-Mansion House ditto. Poor Pinney, the Mayor, I was assured, behaved on
-Saturday with great presence of mind. The populace, however, got into
-the Mansion House before the corporation went to dinner; so all the
-good things regaled the [Greek: hoi polloi]. Strange to say, (just as
-in the London riots), people were allowed to walk the streets in peace,
-and last night half the people in the square were looking on at the
-depredations committing by the other half. Well-dressed ladies walked
-about great part of the night staring as at a raree show. The redness
-of the sky from the conflagration was quite a dreadful sight to us in
-the distance. It is said they are endeavouring to organise a force for
-the defence of the city. It is very strange that this has been so long
-delayed. I'm assured pillage has latterly been the grand object. The
-deputation, I am told, were followed by a cart, in which, as they went
-along, they stowed the plunder. I have not said it to your mother, for
-fear of her becoming still more nervous,[67] (which need not be), by
-her finding me entertaining such cogitations, but if I perceive any
-grumblings of the volcano at Bath, before the lava bursts forth I shall
-hurry your mother to a certain quiet parsonage--though, alas! I cannot
-but fear for the Church in these days."
-
-
- "BLAIZE CASTLE, _November 2._
-
-"The Bristol riots, though in some particulars the accounts were
-as usual exaggerated, were quite horrible, and the _great_ events
-as reported. But a striking instance was afforded how easily
-perpetrations, if I may use the word, the most horrible may be at
-once arrested by determined opposition. On Monday morning early the
-mobs were parading about without resistance. But on that morning the
-troops, a small body of dragoons, charged them repeatedly at full
-speed, and not sparing either the momentum or the sharpness of their
-swords, no attempt at making a head afterwards appeared. Afterwards
-the day was properly employed in appointing a great number of special
-constables and other civil force, and every night, as well as day,
-since has passed in perfect quiet. A great part of the plunder has been
-recovered, and numbers of criminals have been seized--some of them sent
-to a gaol about seven miles off; and happily the condemned cells have
-escaped the fury of the mob, and have afforded a stronghold for keeping
-the prisoners. I need not tell you in what a ferment the mind of our
-host was thrown, indeed with great reason. He had been threatened with
-a visit at this place, and the best pictures were stowed away in safe
-custody. I am persuaded it has become indispensably necessary to form
-in all our great cities and neighbourhoods a civil police, properly
-armed and drilled. And thus, as usual, out of evil good may arise."
-
-
- "BATH, _November 13, 1831._
-
-"I think you know Mr. Pearse of this place, an excellent and very
-agreeable man, and master of the Grammar School at this place, a large
-and flourishing one. He is a very musical man, an intimate and long
-attached friend of Dr. Crotch. I will consult him about your organ. I
-believe I told you that I scarcely ever remember finding my time so
-little equal to the claims on it as at this place, though were I asked
-'What are you doing?' I should, alas! say 'Nothing'; and even, 'What
-have you to do?' still the same reply, 'Nothing'. I have one occupation
-of an interesting and in some degree of an embarrassing nature. Soon
-after our arrival, I learnt that the only other inmate of our house was
-a gentleman who had been confined to his sofa for many months from the
-effects of a rheumatic fever. He had no friends with him, only a family
-servant who attended on him. Naturally feeling for the poor man, he
-and ourselves being the only inmates, I sent a message to him to say
-that, if agreeable, I should be happy to wait on him for a few minutes.
-He returned an assenting and courteous reply. Accordingly I called,
-and found a very civil and well-behaved man. I found that he had been
-fond of game, and had expressed his regret that he could not purchase
-it (this was his servant's report). Accordingly I sent him some now
-and then. I soon afterwards was told that he was a Roman Catholic.
-He is by profession a lawyer at Pontypool. I have since had several
-conversations with him, and find him a decided Roman Catholic, but a
-man apparently of great candour and moderation. I was not surprised to
-find him strongly prejudiced against Blanco White.[68] 'Oh,' he cried,
-'I assure you, sir, that book is full of the grossest falsehood.' But
-I was a good deal surprised to receive from him an assurance that he
-had been reading with great pleasure in a book of my writing; and I
-found, to my surprise, that quite unknown to me Kendal had lent him the
-book. I durst not have done it, but the event has taught me that we may
-sometimes be too timid or delicate. Can you suggest any mode of dealing
-with my fellow lodger? Hitherto I have gone on the plan of cultivating
-his favourable opinion by general kindness, sending him game, &c.,
-and endeavouring to press on him the most important doctrines of true
-Christianity and of showing where the case is really so, that he may
-embrace those doctrines and still continue a good Roman Catholic.
-There is in the _Christian Observer_ for September last a critique on
-Dr. Whately's sermons by the Bishop of Chichester. He is said, in the
-outset, to have stated in a pamphlet on the Bible Society controversy,
-that the only books in the Scriptures which were fit or useful for
-general circulation were Genesis, Exodus, Job, Psalms, Proverbs, I
-think Isaiah, but am not sure, the four Gospels, Acts, 1st Timothy,
-1st Peter, 1st John and Jude; all the rest likely to do more harm than
-good."
-
-
- "BATH, _December 6, 1831._
-
-"I am unaffectedly sorry for having been apparently so dilatory in
-complying with your request for hymns and tunes. I use the word
-_apparently_, because to any charge of suffering any opportunity of
-executing the commission to pass by unimproved, I may boldly plead
-not guilty. There never, surely, was such a place as this for the
-frittering away of time. Two visits before breakfast to the Pump Room,
-and two again from 2 to 3 1/4 o'clock in the afternoon, make such a
-chasm in the day, that little before dinner (about 4 3/4) is left for
-any rational occupation. Then not being able, for many reasons, to
-receive company at dinner, we often invite friends to breakfast, and as
-we cannot begin the meal till 10 1/2 at the soonest, we seldom have a
-clear room till after 12. Sometimes morning callers come in before the
-breakfasters are gone (as has been the case this morning, when my old
-friend Bankes has entered, taking Bath in his way from his son in North
-Wales into Dorsetshire). You owe this account of expenditure of my
-time to my feeling quite uncomfortable, from the idea of neglecting a
-commission you wished to consign to me for prompt execution. I will put
-down in any letter I may write to you any hymns and hymn tunes which I
-like ('Happy the heart where graces reign,' Lock tune), and you may add
-together the _disjecta membra_ into one list. But I have not hymn-books
-here except G. Noel's. At Highwood I have a considerable number. Your
-poor mother is worried to pieces by company and business. I am fully
-persuaded, my dear Samuel, that you wish to lighten the pressure on me
-as much as possible, and on the other hand I doubt not you give me full
-credit for wishing to make you as comfortable as I can, and I really
-hope I shall be able to go on allowing my children what is necessary
-for their comfort."
-
-
- "_January 19, 1832._
-
-"St. John says, you will remember, 'I have no greater joy than to
-know that my children walk in the truth.' This he could declare
-concerning his figurative children. And well, therefore, ought we to
-be able, at least, to desire to feel similar sensations on witnessing
-the graces of our true, real children. And I am in a situation to
-feel this with peculiar force. Indeed, I hope I can say with truth
-that the more frequent, more continued and closer opportunities of
-witnessing your conscientious and diligent discharge of your pastoral
-duties--opportunities which I probably should not have enjoyed in the
-same degree had I still a residence of my own--more than compensate
-all I suffer from the want of a proper home. Indeed, there are but
-two particulars that I at all feel, _i.e._, the absence of my books,
-and the not being able to practise hospitality; though that is rather
-a vulgar word for expressing my meaning, which is, the pleasure of
-receiving those we love under our own roof, joining with them morning
-and night in family prayers, shaking hands with them, and interchanging
-continual intercourse of mutual affection. Well, the time is short,
-even for those who are far less advanced than myself in the journey of
-life."
-
-
- "BATH, _June 14, 1832._
-
-"I forget whether you know the Dean of Winchester[69] or not. We have
-many a discussion together, and I now and then stroke his plumage
-the wrong way to make him set up his bristles. He holds the great
-degeneracy of these times. I, on the contrary, declared to him that,
-though I acknowledged the more open prevalence of profaneness, and of
-all the vices which grow out of insubordination, yet that there had
-been also a marked and a great increase of religion within the last
-forty years. And as a proof I assigned the numerous editions of almost
-all the publications of family prayers, beginning with the Rector of
-St. Botolph's (Bishop of London's)."
-
- "_July 12, 1832._
-
-
-"Though I do not like to mention it to your mother, I feel myself
-becoming more and more stupid and inefficient. I think it is chiefly
-a bodily disease, at least there, I hope, is the root of the disease.
-I am so languid after breakfast that, if I am read to, I infallibly
-subside into a drowsiness, which, if not resisted by my getting up and
-walking, or taking for a few minutes the book Joseph may be reading
-to me, gradually slides into a state of complete stupor. Yet it is
-downright shocking in me to use language which may at all subject me
-justly to the imputation of repining. And to be just to myself, I do
-not think I am fairly chargeable with that fault. I hope that which
-might at first sight seem to have somewhat of that appearance is rather
-the compunctious visitings of my better part grieving over my utter
-uselessness. I do not like to give expression to these distressing
-risings, because I may not unreasonably appear to be calling for
-friendly assurances in return of my having been an active labourer.
-Yet when I am pouring forth the effusions of my heart to a child to
-whom I may open myself with the freedom I may justly practise towards
-you, I do not like to keep in reserve my real feelings. My memory is
-continually giving me fresh proofs of its decaying at an accelerated
-rate of progress. But I will not harass your affectionate feelings;
-and however I may lament my unprofitableness, and at times really feel
-depressed by it, yet my natural cheerfulness of temper produces in my
-exterior such an appearance of good spirits that I might be supposed by
-my daily associates to be living in an atmosphere of unclouded comfort.
-So you need not be distressing yourself on my account."
-
-The rest of this letter shows that Wilberforce had asked the advice of
-Samuel as to the wisdom of engaging a Roman Catholic tutor for his
-grandson "dear little William."[70] Samuel's answer was couched in
-decisive terms against this step. Wilberforce, however, was reconciled
-to the idea by the knowledge that "dear little William's mother will
-be always on the spot, always on her guard, watchful and ready to
-detect and proceed against any attempt whatever which might be made to
-bias William's mind into undervaluing the importance of the difference
-between the Roman Catholic and the Protestant system, or still more to
-infuse into his pupil's mind any prejudices against our principles or
-personages, or any palliations of the Popish tenets."
-
-In the concluding year of Wilberforce's life, though he complains of
-"becoming more and more stupid and inefficient," the feelings and
-thoughts which animated his life appear in full vigour. His watchful
-love for his children, his hospitality, the steady, faithful looking
-forward to the life everlasting--all are there. Nor, until he has made
-one more effort to secure the freedom of the slaves, does the weary,
-diligent hand finally "lay down the pen."
-
-
- "_December 18, 1832._
-
-"Although we should use great modesty in speculating on the invisible
-and eternal world, yet we may reasonably presume from intimations
-conveyed to us in the Holy Scriptures, and from inferences which they
-fairly suggest, that we shall retain of our earthly character and
-feelings in that which is not sinful, and therefore we may expect
-(this, I think, is very clear), to know each other, and to think and
-talk over the various circumstances of our lives, our several hopes and
-fears and plans and speculations; and you and I, if it please God, may
-talk over the incidents of our respective lives, and connected with
-them, those of our nearest and dearest relatives. And, then, probably
-we shall be enabled to understand the causes of various events which at
-the time had appeared mysterious."
-
-
- "_December 28, 1832._
-
-"I should wish to suggest to you an idea that arises from a passage in
-a letter from William Smith.[71] The idea is that it might have a very
-good effect, for any of my reverend children to be known to manifest
-their zeal in the great cause of West Indian emancipation, and slaves'
-improvement. And as I am on that topic let me tell you, I need not
-say with how much pleasure, that I really believe we are now going on
-admirably. The slaves will, I trust, be immediately placed under the
-government of the same laws as other members of the community, instead
-of being under the arbitrary commands of their masters, and (perhaps
-after a year) they will be still more completely emancipated. I was
-truly glad to find in the evidence taken before the House of Commons'
-Committee (which the indefatigable Zachary[72] is analysing), highly
-honourable testimony to our friend's (Wildman's) treatment of his
-slaves. But I ought not to conceal from you the connection in which W.
-Smith's suggestion of the great benefit that would result from my sons
-taking a forward part in befriending the attempts that would be made to
-stir up a petitioning spirit in support of our cause, (for he informed
-me that efforts for that purpose would be made). He stated that it had
-been observed almost everywhere that the clergy had been shamefully
-lukewarm in our cause; and of course this, which I fear cannot be
-denied, has been used in many instances for the injury of the Church.
-You and I see plainly how this has happened: that the most active
-supporters of our cause have too often been democrats, and radicals,
-with whom the regular clergy could not bring themselves to associate.
-Yet even when subjected to such a painful alternative, to unite with
-them, or to suffer the interests of justice and humanity, and latterly
-of religion too, to be in question without receiving any support from
-them, or to do violence to, I will not say their prejudices, but their
-natural repugnance to appearing to have anything of a fellow-feeling
-with men who are commonly fomenting vicious principles and propositions
-of all sorts; when placed, I say, in such distressing circumstances,
-they should remember that their coming forward, in accordance with
-those with whom they agree in no other particular, will give additional
-weight to their exertions, and prove still more clearly how strongly
-they feel the cause of God, and the well-being of man to be implicated,
-when they can consent to take part with those to whom in general
-they have been opposed most strongly. The conduct of the Jamaica
-people towards the missionaries has shown of late, more clearly than
-ever before, that the spiritual interests of the slaves, no less
-than their civil rights, are at stake. In such a case as this, it is
-not without pain and almost shame that I urge any argument grounded
-on the interests of the clergy; and yet it would be wrong to keep
-considerations of this sort altogether out of sight, because one sees
-how malignantly and injuriously to the cause of religion the apathy
-of the clergy may, and will, be used, to the discredit of the Church,
-and its most attached adherents. It is not a little vexatious to find
-people so ignorant, as too many are, concerning the real state of the
-slaves, notwithstanding all the pains that have been taken to enlighten
-them. Stephen's book in particular has, I fear, been very little read.
-When we were at Lord Bathurst's I saw plainly that the speeches of a
-Mr. Borthwick, who had been going about giving lectures in favour of
-the West Indians, had made a great impression on Lady Georgiana. But I
-must lay down my pen."
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[Footnote 1: All Pitt's letters are carefully preserved in the library
-of Lavington House with the exception of this series which was found in
-a disused cupboard.]
-
-[Footnote 2: Lord Rosebery's preface to "Pitt and Wilberforce Letters,"
-privately printed.]
-
-[Footnote 3: Hon. Edward James Eliot, brother-in-law of Pitt.]
-
-[Footnote 4: Mr. Henry Bankes, Wilberforce's life-long friend.]
-
-[Footnote 5: "Life of Wilberforce," vol. i. p. 95.]
-
-[Footnote 6: Afterwards first Lord Carrington.]
-
-[Footnote 7: "Life of Wilberforce," vol. i. p. 95.]
-
-[Footnote 8: Privately printed.]
-
-[Footnote 9: "A Practical View of the Prevailing Religious System of
-Professed Christians," &c., London, 1797.]
-
-[Footnote 10: "Marmion," Introduction to Canto 1.]
-
-[Footnote 11: Wimbledon.]
-
-[Footnote 12: Hampstead.]
-
-[Footnote 13: Here Mr. Wilberforce adds a pencilled note: "Devonshire
-House Ball. King."]
-
-[Footnote 14: Mr. Wilberforce has written over this in pencil:
-"Qy.--Not a stroke of Providence could sever."]
-
-[Footnote 15: Mr. Wilberforce has erased here "for desiring Mr. Pitt
-before he went out to pass his register bills."]
-
-[Footnote 16: Mr. Wilberforce has written here in pencil on the margin,
-"Fox's Martyrs. Qy. number."]
-
-[Footnote 17: Mr. Wilberforce adds here a pencil note in his own
-handwriting: "Remarkable that when I entered York, in order to attend
-a public meeting which was about to take place, there was but one
-gentleman with whom I had the smallest acquaintance, the Rev. Wm.
-Mason, the poet."]
-
-[Footnote 18: Here there is a pencil note: "For he was one of the
-shyest men I ever knew."]
-
-[Footnote 19: Pencil note: "Wyndham."]
-
-[Footnote 20: A note: "Vary here."]
-
-[Footnote 21: A note:--"Dilate, and Figure."]
-
-[Footnote 22: Here is added in pencil, "2nd Nov. 1821."]
-
-[Footnote 23: Rosebery's "Life of Pitt," p. 233.]
-
-[Footnote 24: Then Clerk of Parliaments. Rose writes to Wilberforce
-later: "I shall never find words, either in speaking or writing, to
-express what I think of you."]
-
-[Footnote 25: Pitt.]
-
-[Footnote 26: About 1802.]
-
-[Footnote 27: Lecky, vol. vii. p. 32.]
-
-[Footnote 28: Dundas, who had been Treasurer to the Navy, was impeached
-on April 29, 1805, on a charge of misappropriating L10,000 worth of
-public money. He was acquitted June 12, 1805.]
-
-[Footnote 29: William Wilberforce married Barbara, daughter of Isaac
-Spooner; she was the seventh Barbara in her family, the name having
-been handed down from mother to daughter. The first Barbara was
-daughter of Viscount Fauconberg and wife of Sir Henry Slingsby, Bart.,
-who was beheaded on Tower Hill June 8, 1658, by Oliver Cromwell, for
-loyalty.]
-
-[Footnote 30: She was second daughter of Sir Edward Walpole; her uncle
-Horace Walpole writes of her: "For beauty I think she is the first
-match in England, she has infinite wit and vivacity."]
-
-[Footnote 31: "Coelebs in Search of a Wife," published 1809. Of her
-publishing experiences, Hannah More writes: "One effect of Coelebs has
-pleased me. I always consider a bookseller in respect to a book as I do
-an undertaker with regard to death--one considers a publication as the
-other does a corpse, as a thing to grow rich by, but not to be affected
-with. Davies (Cadell's partner) seems deeply struck, and earnestly
-implores me to follow up some of the hints respecting Scripture in a
-work of which he suggests the subject."]
-
-[Footnote 32: "Life and Letters of Maria Edgeworth," by Augustus J. C.
-Hare.]
-
-[Footnote 33: "Poor Burgh almost mad about the Union" ("Life of
-Wilberforce," vol. ii. p. 359).]
-
-[Footnote 34: Lord Redesdale was appointed Lord High Chancellor of
-Ireland March 15, 1802; he resigned February, 1806.]
-
-[Footnote 35: Wilberforce to Henry Bankes. "Life of W. Wilberforce."]
-
-[Footnote 36: Brother to Mr. Pitt, of whom Lord Eldon gave it as his
-deliberate opinion that "the ablest man I ever knew in the Cabinet was
-Lord Chatham."]
-
-[Footnote 37: Part of this letter only is printed in "Life of William
-Wilberforce."]
-
-[Footnote 38: The third Lord Holland was Fox's nephew, and converted
-his palace at Kensington into a sort of temple in honour of Fox's
-memory.]
-
-[Footnote 39: Charles Manners Sutton, Speaker of the House of Commons,
-1817-1834; created Viscount Canterbury 1835; died 1845.]
-
-[Footnote 40: Mr., afterwards Lord, Brougham.]
-
-[Footnote 41: Mr. Manning became bankrupt in the winter of 1830-31.]
-
-[Footnote 42: Mr. James Stephen married Wilberforce's sister.]
-
-[Footnote 43: Mr. Wilberforce's second daughter.]
-
-[Footnote 44: Part of this letter is in "Life of Wilberforce."]
-
-[Footnote 45: This thought, thus strongly impressed on Samuel's mind,
-was many years afterwards expanded by him into the lovely allegory of
-the "Children and the Lion," published in "Agathos and other Stories."]
-
-[Footnote 46: Bishop Wilberforce once told Dr. Woodford (Bishop of Ely)
-that he was naturally indolent and had at first "to flog himself up
-to his work." (Life, vol. iii. p. 305). To those who remember Bishop
-Wilberforce, and to readers of his Life, these passages must appear
-surprising indeed. They afford a striking instance of a natural defect
-turned into the contrary Christian grace.]
-
-[Footnote 47: Part of this letter is in the "Life of Wilberforce."]
-
-[Footnote 48: Part of this letter is in Bishop Wilberforce's Life.]
-
-[Footnote 49: Born 1779, younger son of Wilberforce's intimate friend,
-Right Hon. Charles Grant. Robert was in Parliament, 1818-34: was
-Judge-Advocate-General: knighted, 1834, and made Governor-General
-of Bombay: a persistent advocate of Jewish emancipation: author of
-pamphlets on Indian affairs and many well-known hymns: died 1838.]
-
-[Footnote 50: Part of this letter is in the "Life of Wilberforce."]
-
-[Footnote 51: Part of this letter is in the "Life of Wilberforce."]
-
-[Footnote 52: A single year's almsgiving exceeded L3,000. "Life of
-Bishop Wilberforce," vol. i. p. 22.]
-
-[Footnote 53: Eldest son of Wilberforce's old friend and ally, Henry
-Thornton, of Battersea, Rise, who died in 1815. The Henry Thornton of
-the text was only twenty-five years old when this letter was written.]
-
-[Footnote 54: The beginning of this letter is in the "Life of
-Wilberforce."]
-
-[Footnote 55: Lea, Lincolnshire--the residence of Sir C. and Lady
-Anderson. The son, in his turn, Sir Charles Anderson, was Bishop
-Wilberforce's life-long friend.]
-
-[Footnote 56: The Rev. John Sargent, of Lavington, father of Mrs.
-Samuel Wilberforce.]
-
-[Footnote 57: His life had been recently published.]
-
-[Footnote 58: The first few lines of this letter are in the "Life of
-Bishop Wilberforce."]
-
-[Footnote 59: Checkendon, on the Chiltern Hills in Oxfordshire, Samuel
-Wilberforce's first curacy, where his memory was long cherished.]
-
-[Footnote 60: Samuel's birthday.]
-
-[Footnote 61: Only son of Wilberforce's eldest son William.]
-
-[Footnote 62: The leader of these riots, whose exact personality is
-unknown, was called "Jack Swing," and in this name the mob sent their
-threats and summonses.]
-
-[Footnote 63: "Magnalia Christi Americana, or Ecclesiastical History of
-New England," by Cotton Mather, D.D. It was a costly book with a large
-map. Southey considered it one of the most "singular books in this or
-any other language."]
-
-[Footnote 64: Mr. Wilberforce's brother-in-law.]
-
-[Footnote 65: The seat of J. S. Harford, Esq.]
-
-[Footnote 66: Lord Grey's Reform Bill had amongst its most vehement
-opponents Sir C. Wetherell, Recorder of Bristol. On his arrival in
-that city the riots began there by an attack upon his carriage, after
-which "Bristol was the theatre of the most disgraceful outrages that
-have been perpetrated in this country since the riots of London, 1780."
-(_An. Reg._ 1831.)]
-
-[Footnote 67: Mrs. Wilberforce writes to her son Samuel: "Shall I send
-you the deeds, &c., to take care of for the family, and the plate to
-bury in your garden? I think you will be safe in the Isle of Wight. Do
-not let my fears be mentioned; they say we should all appear brave and
-bold."]
-
-[Footnote 68: T. Blanco White, a Spaniard by birth, left the Church of
-Rome and joined the Church of England, and also became a naturalised
-Englishman. He was closely connected with the Oxford movement, but
-lapsed into Socinianism. He died in 1841.]
-
-[Footnote 69: Dr. Thomas Rennell: he was appointed in 1805 and was
-succeeded in 1840 by Dr. Garnier.]
-
-[Footnote 70: Only son of Wilberforce's eldest son William.]
-
-[Footnote 71: "My most faithful friend, William Smith" ("Life of
-Wilberforce," vol. iii. p. 536).]
-
-[Footnote 72: Macaulay.]
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-The following corrections have been made:
-
-Page 10, "compleatly" changed to "completely" (completely happy)
-
-Page 22, "compleat" changed to "complete" (complete concert)
-
-Page 241, "worldy" changed to "worldly" (viewed in a worldly)
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRIVATE PAPERS OF WILLIAM
-WILBERFORCE***
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