precedent to be followed. Accordingly, on the
20th of December he proposed for the adoption of the
House of Commons the same resolutions which Pitt had
carried twenty-two years before—that the
King was prevented by indisposition from attending
to public business; that it was the duty of Parliament
to provide means for supplying the defect of the personal
exercise of the royal authority, and its duty also
to determine the mode in which the royal assent to
the measures necessary could be signified. And
he also followed Pitt’s example in expressing
by letter to the Prince of Wales his conviction that
his Royal Highness was a person most proper to be
appointed Regent, and explaining at the same time the
restrictions which seemed proper to be imposed on
his immediate exercise of the complete sovereign authority;
though the advanced age at which the King had now
arrived made it reasonable that those restrictions
should now be limited to a single year. The Prince,
on his part, showed that time had in no degree abated
his repugnance to those restrictions, and he answered
the minister’s letter by referring him to that
which he had addressed to Pitt on the same subject
in 1788. And he induced all his brothers to address
to Perceval a formal protest against “the establishment
of a restricted Regency,” which they proceeded
to describe as perfectly unconstitutional, as being
contrary to and subversive of the principles which
seated their family upon the throne of this realm.[165]
Perceval, however, with Pitt’s example before
him, had no doubt of the course which it was his duty
to pursue; and the Opposition also, for the most part,
followed the tactics of 1789; the line of argument
now adopted by each party being so nearly identical
with that employed on the former occasion, that it
is needless to recapitulate the topics on which the
different speakers insisted; though it is worth remarking
that Lord Holland, who, as the nephew of Fox, thought
it incumbent on him to follow his uncle’s guidance,
did on one point practically depart from it.
As his uncle had done, he denied the right of the Houses
to impose any restrictions on the Prince’s exercise
of the royal authority; but, at the same time, he
consented to put what may be called a moral limitation
on that exercise, by adding to an amendment which he
proposed to the resolution proposed by the minister
an expression of “the farther opinion of the
House that it will be expedient to abstain from the
exercise of all such powers as the immediate exigencies
of the state shall not call into action, until Parliament
shall have passed a bill or bills for the future care
of his Majesty’s royal person during his Majesty’s
present indisposition.”