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gociation, as calculated to humiliate his royal highness in the eyes of the country."

Mr Ponsonby denied that the intention of the household officers to resign had been intimated to his noble friends; and, in defence of their conduct, entered into a full account of the negociations. Mr Sheridan, however, in the course of an explanatory speech, which he delivered to refute some groundless accusations made against him in the public newspapers, confirm ed the statement of Lord Yarmouth; and confessed, that the determination of the officers of the household to resign so soon as a new administration should be formed, had been communicated to him.-Lord Castlereagh, in the following manly and statesman-like speech, explained his grounds for opposing the motion; defended the conduct of himself and his colleagues, and touched on all the most interesting points connected with the late transactions. "In commenting on transactions of such a delicate nature, he would be cautious," he said, "not to aggravate the differences of public men, or to widen breaches, injurious to the welfare of the state. With respect to the motion, the expressions which it contained were unexceptionable. In the first place, the thanks to the Regent for his gracious attention to the express wishes of the House; in the second, the regret that his royal highness had not found it possible to form a more comprehensive administration, were stated in the motion. To all this he would have no hesitation in being a party, and to the further expression of hope, that his royal highness would avail himself of any opportunity that might occur for strengthening his present administration. But when it came to be asked, with what motive this address was moved, he put it to the House, if the obvious import of it was not calculated to throw a shade

over the administration, which (subject to the view of parliament) was charged

with the fate and the interests of the country. The address was uncalled for by any message from the crown. It could lead to no practical result. Its only effect would be to bring the administration under the insinuation, founded on its external structure, and not on its conduct, that it was not likely to possess the confidence of the country. He trusted, therefore, that the honourable gentleman would withdraw his motion-for he could not conceive it possible that the House would sanction it for no other purpose but to disqualify the government from executing the arduous task in which it had engaged. With respect to that administration, whatever might have been their public services, they certainly had not shewn any disposition to stand between the crown and the people.-All parties, it was confessed, had acted, during the late transactions, with the greatest liberality. Three or four distinct negociations had failed, and the crown was obliged to call on the present administration to charge itself with the affairs of the country. It was his consolation that while on the one hand he and his colleagues had never stood between the crown and the people, so on the other hand they had never shewn a disposition to shrink from the discharge of public duties, deterred as they otherwise might be by the accumulated difficulties which the late transactions had occasioned. Ministers were ready to do all that was required of them, trusting that parliament would give them fair and full confidence. They wished their conduct to be judged by their acts, in order that they might receive the support of parliament, if they were deserving of it, and if they were not, that they might bow to the decision of the House. He hoped that the late trans

actions would induce the House not again to push the principle which they had so strongly asserted. Those must be blind who could not see the calamitous consequences which the occurrences of the last three weeks were

calculated to produce on our foreign and domestic relations. For although the sentiments manifested in the various negociations had been honourable to all parties, he could not help thinking that the mode which seemed to be in practice in modern times of forming an administration, was most injurious, and might be fatal to the interests of the country. Never, in ancient times, had a negociation between public men been exhibited to the eye of parliament and the country at large, and exposed to all the invidious comments which the malignity and the ignorance of mankind passed upon them. For his part he could never augur well of any negociation in which two men could not approach each other in a private room, although on public principles, without coming armed with pen and ink, and prepared to allow every thing they might utter to go forth immediately for the judgment of the public. After the termination of such a negociation, it had been common for something of the proceedings to be made public, but never till of late had it been the practice of those who were forming an administration, to submit their propositions and intentions to the public while yet they were but in progress. The consequences of such conduct, as developed in the present instance, would, he trusted, have the effect of preventing the recurrence of such scenes for the time to come. He had now to speak to that part of the late transactions with which he was connected. He had waited on his royal highness on the night of the 21st, to report to him the proceedings in parliament, previously to his majesty's ministers giving their advice on the

subject of that vote; and from that night, till he and his colleagues were recalled to their offices, excepting in the circle at the levee, he had never seen the prince. He had only been connected with the negociations when the Marquis Wellesley invited the members of the late cabinet to form an administration. It was a painful task for him to speak on this subject, but he disclaimed every thing like personal animosity to the noble marquis. He trusted it was not necessary to go through the whole of the detail, as the circumstances must be fresh in the memory of the House. The paper which had been published, he understood to have been published without the consent of the noble marquis; but after such a paper had appeared, describing the late minister and those who had acted with him, as the paper to which he alluded did, he would put it to the House, if gentlemen situated as were his colleagues, could, without degradation, meet such a proposition in any other way than that in which it had been met. For the noble marquis he entertained the sincerest respect, with the highest admiration for his accomplishments and his talents; all he felt in this respect was heightened by the consideration, that he was the brother of the greatest soldier this country had produced. It was therefore a peculiarly painful task for him to be called upon to decide on such a question, as the propositions of the noble marquis brought before him; but the feelings of his colleagues were naturally such, that but one answer could be given. This he (Lord Castlereagh) felt, and though he was not included in this description, yet the description given of his colleagues being unjust and inaccurate, according to his ideas, he must have abandoned every sense of duty if he had not been anxious to repel the charge. It was under these circumstances that the answer

had been returned to the Marquis Wellesley; but that the proposition which he had made had been rejected with any thing of personal animosity, was an idea which he trusted the House and the country would dismiss altogether. Such an idea was now, he trusted, dismissed from the breast of the noble marquis himself; for as he (the marquis) had declared that he would never again, under any circumstances, serve under his departed friend Mr Perceval, as well might he (Lord C.) accuse the noble marquis of having cherished a feeling of animosity against that illustrious character, as he (the marquis) could accuse him (Lord C.) and his colleagues of such a feeling from their recent conduct. No feeling was more distant from their mind, nor more abhorrent to their nature, than a feeling like that which he had described on such an occasion. With respect to the late negociations he would say, that if there were in the first instance difficulties in forming an administration, those difficulties must have been always increased when the negociations were exposed in their progress to the observations of the critic. Parliament had no reason to be afraid of such negociations being privately carried on.He declared, that in the English history, a proceeding so sudden, with so short a notice, was not to be found as that which they had lately seen, when the House decided, not against a government who by their own immediate and direct conduct had proved themselves unworthy of confidence, but against an administration, of which the formation was but in progress. He hoped their conduct, in this instance, would form a precedent which future parliaments would never follow.-A great deal had been said of the unconstitutional conduct of the administration, because each member of the cabinet would be left to act in his indivi

dual character on the catholic question; but really he did not see that there were any grounds for all the horror expressed by his right honourable friend and the gentlemen opposite. The gentlemen opposite who were so much struck with this arrangement, on looking more closely into the business would find that it was only a plagiarism on their own conduct. In Lord Grenville's administration, though the catholic question was a cabinet measure, it was allowed to two of the cabinet (Lords Sidmouth and Ellenborough) to defend their own opinions, which were in opposition to the concession; and he hoped the present government might be sheltered under the wing of such a precedent from the charge of venturing upon new principles. For himself he felt perfectly at liberty to take any course on the catholic question which his judgment might dictate; and he had no hesita tion in saying, he should be willing to go into a discussion on that subject with any man in or out of that House, that seemed to promise to lead to any practical and beneficial result. Adverting to the point on which the last ne gociation, that of the Earl of Moira, had broken off, he would say, (though he would be the last man to impute any thing of disrespect to the crown on the part of either of the noble lords,) that the point for which they had contended, though he would never say that it ought to be placed on any footing distant from other political arrangements, had never been contended for as in the present instance, prior to the discussion of the other arrangements. It was clear Lord Moira had understood this to be the subject of after consideration, as he had declared, that it was impossible for him to concur in making the exercise of power over the household officers, a positive and indispensable condition in the formation of a government.' The subject had unforte

nately been taken up in a tone of harshness which the country would never countenance in those who approached the throne.

"And now all I have to say for ministers," concluded the noble lord, "is, that they claim the constitutional support of parliament, till their actions seem to speak them unworthy of it; and though the present government may not possess within itself all those attributes which we have heard given to broad and extended administrations, they have at least one recommendation to public confidence (and it is not a small one,) that they have no disunion among themselves. We have no private ends to answer; we are all anxious to serve our country, to do our best, and to submit our conduct to the judgment of parliament.

This excellent speech had a great effect; the House and the country were tired of the late proceedings; the motion of Mr Wortley was negatived by a great majority; and the ministers were fully established in power.

An impartial review of these transactions will enable every man to form an opinion as to the views and conduct of the different competitors for power. We find Lords Grey and Grenville, in the first instance, breaking off the negotiation with Marquis Wellesley because a sufficient share of influence was denied them; yet, out of a cabinet of thirteen persons, they were to have the recommendation of a majority, including Lords Moira and Erskine. They afterwards refused to negociate with Lord Moira, because he would not accede to their condition of dismissing the household officers; because he would not consent that his royal master should be deprived of the companions of his private hours, on the pretence of a secret influence, of which much had been said, but nothing proved; and, finally, because he would not submit to the humiliation of con

ceding that as a preliminary, which the noble lords well knew would at all events have followed as a consequence of their accession to power. The maintenance of the dignity of the sovereign-the protection of the crown against usurpation, is essential to the welfare both of the prince and the people; and the firmness and fidelity of the Earl of Moira upon this occasion, will entitle him to the lasting gratitude of his country. The grounds upon which the whig lords refused to accept of office, after every thing politically important had been conceded to them-after an offer had been made them of powers, the exercise of which they deemed essential to the salvation of the country, gave some countenance to charges which had been often made against them by their enemies; and they were, without a murmur, except among their own adherents, allowed to betake themselves to retirement.

The Marquis Wellesley stood in a different situation. He had committed errors; he had pleaded guilty to a dereliction in some degree of the duty which he owed the public, by continuing to act on principles which he disapproved; he had vainly indulged the hope of uniting with men with whom his whole political life had been at variance; he had, through negligence, allowed a publication to appear, which we have his own authority for saying that he deeply regretted; and he had hastily charged to “dreadful personal animosities" sentiments which were the result of the most honourable feelings. But his character for energy and talent stood high with the country; and his exclusion from power was sincerely regretted. The refusal of Mr Canning, whose brilliant talents were so highly admired, to accept of office, was no less lamented by the ministers than by the country.

The conduct of the ministers in the course of the negociations seems de

serving of approbation. They did not obtrude their services on the country, but retired with a modesty which might have been advantageously imitated in other quarters; and so long as the negociations depended, they not only put themselves entirely out of consideration, but gave every facility which their principles and feelings would permit to the arrangements so anxiously desired. A sense of duty, however, called for a change of conduct on their part, when the negocia tions had failed, and when it became apparent that without their interposition the prince and the country must have been exposed to great difficulties. They knew when it was their duty to step forward; they hesitated not to encounter the awful responsibility which belonged to a crisis so momentous; they had no other object but the service of their country; and their ability to serve it with advantage was soon acknowledged throughout Europe.

They were in the meantime completely successful at home, by obtain ing the confidence and approbation of parliament and of the country. As they were anxious, however, that the general sentiment in their favour should

be unequivocally declared, and as the parliament was drawing towards its natural termination, they wisely resol ved on making an immediate appeal to popular opinion in the manner which is authorised by the constitution. The parliament was accordingly dissolved: and while their enemies hailed this measure with shouts of triumph, the ministers waited with silent confidence the result of the election. Their opponents affected to see the overthrow of the government in the issue of this experiment; and resorted to every art for counteracting the general popularity which the ministers were fast acquiring. But the hopes of the opposition were still disappointed: Sir Samuel Romilly was unfortunate at Bristol, and Mr Brougham, after a warm contest, was obliged to yield to Mr Canning at Liverpool. The friends of the opposition had the same fortune in various other quarters, and the influence of the whigs seemed to experience a rapid decline; while the ministers derived a great accession of strength from an experiment which it was predicted would disappoint all their expectations, and prove fatal to the sta bility of their power.

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