Four Early Pamphlets eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 164 pages of information about Four Early Pamphlets.

Four Early Pamphlets eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 164 pages of information about Four Early Pamphlets.
celebrated hero, that had lately been the object of his attack.  By this person he was introduced to a considerable post in administration.  In office, he is chiefly remembered by the very decisive stile of authority and censure he employed, in a public letter, relative to the resistance that was made to the act of 1767, for imposing certain duties in America.  From his resignation with lord Chatham, he uniformly and strenuously opposed the measures that were adopted for crushing that resistance.  He persevered, with much apparent constancy, in one line of conduct for near ten years, and this is certainly the most plausible period of his story.  He first called forth the suspicions of generous and liberal men in every rank of society, by his resolute opposition to the American independency in 1778.  But it was in the administration, that seemed to have been formed under so favourable auspices in the spring of 1782, that he came most forward to general examination.

The Rockingham connexion, in conformity to what were then supposed to be the wishes of the people, united, though not without some hesitation, with the noble earl and his adherents, in the conduct of public affairs.  And how did he reward their confidence?  He was careful to retain the question respecting his real sentiments upon the business of America, in as much obscurity as ever.  He wrote officially a letter to sir Guy Carleton, which has never seen the light, by which that officer was induced to declare the American independency already irreversibly recognised by the court of London; by which he appears to have deceived all his brother ministers without exception; and by which Mr. Fox in particular, was induced to make the same declaration with general Carleton to foreign courts, and to come forward in the commons peremptorily to affirm, that there was not a second opinion in the cabinet, upon this interesting subject.  How must a man of his undisguised and manly character have felt, when, within a week from this time, he found the noble earl declaring that nothing had ever been further from his thoughts, than an unconditional recognition; and successfully exerting himself to bring over a majority in the cabinet to the opposite sentiment?  Lord Shelburne’s obtaining, or accepting, call it which you will, of the office of first lord of the treasury, upon the demise of lord Rockingham, without the privity of his fellow Ministers, was contrary to every maxim of ingenuous conduct, and every principle upon which an association of parties can be supported.  The declaration he made, and which was contradicted both by his own friends in the cabinet, and those of Mr. Fox, that he knew of no reason in God’s earth for that gentleman’s resignation, but that of his having succeeded to the office of premier, was surely sufficiently singular.

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Four Early Pamphlets from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.