Treasury, and contented himself with the Privy Seal;
but he had constructed it of such discordant elements[43]
that no influence but his own could preserve consistency
in its acts or harmony among its members, as nothing
but his name could give it consideration either in
Parliament or in the country. In the first months
of the next year, 1767, he was attacked with an illness
which for a time disabled him from attending the cabinet,
being, apparently, the forerunner of that more serious
malady which, before the end of the summer, compelled
his long retirement from public life; and the Opposition
took advantage of the state of disorganization and
weakness which his illness caused among his colleagues,
to defeat them on the Budget in the House of Commons,
by an amendment to reduce the land-tax, which caused
a deficiency in the supplies of half a million.
This deficiency it, of course, became necessary to
meet by some fresh tax; and Townsend—who,
though endowed with great richness of eloquence, was
of an imprudent, not to say rash, temper, and was
possessed of too thorough a confidence in his own
ingenuity and fertility of resource ever to be inclined
to take into consideration any objections to which
his schemes might be liable—proposed to
raise a portion of the money which was needed by taxes
on glass, paper, tea, and one or two other articles,
to be paid as import duties in the American Colonies.
His colleagues, and especially the Duke of Grafton
himself, the First Lord of the Treasury, and as such
the nominal Prime-minister, having been also, as Secretary
of State, a member of Lord Rockingham’s ministry,
which had repealed the former taxes, did not consent
to the measure without great and avowed reluctance;
but yielded their own judgment to the strong feeling
in its favor which notoriously existed in the House
of Commons.[44] Indeed, that House passed the clauses
imposing these import duties without hesitation, being,
probably, influenced in no small degree by the evidence
given in the preceding year by Dr. Franklin, who, as
has been already seen, had explained that the Colonists
drew a distinction between what he called “internal
taxes” and import duties “intended to
regulate commerce,” and that to the latter class
they were not inclined to object. And a second
consideration was, that these new duties were accompanied
and counterbalanced by a reduction of some other taxes;
so that the ministry contended that the effect of
these financial measures, taken altogether, would
be to lower to the Colonists the price of the articles
affected by them rather than to raise it. But
one of the resolutions adopted provided that the whole
of the money to be raised from these taxes should
not be spent in America, but that, after making provision
for certain Colonial objects specified, “the
residue of such duties should be paid into the receipt
of his Majesty’s Exchequer, and there reserved,
to be from time to time disposed of by Parliament toward
defraying the necessary expenses of defending, protecting,
and securing the said Colonies and plantations.”
And this clause seems to have been understood as designed
to provide means for augmenting the number of regular
troops to be maintained in the Colonies, whose employment
in the recent disturbances had made them more unpopular
than formerly.[45]