would have justified that. The stirring excitement
of the three months’ contest between the great
rivals led them to pronounce upon the transaction as
a whole, and to leave unnoticed what seemed for the
moment to be the minor issues—the moves,
if we may borrow a metaphor from the chess-table,
which opened the game; and it may be observed that,
though, on the 17th of December, Pitt resisted Mr.
Baker’s resolution with his utmost energy, in
the numerous debates which ensued he carefully avoided
all allusion to Lord Temple’s conduct, or to
the measure which had led to the dismissal of his
predecessors, farther than was necessary for the explanation
of the principles of his own India Bill. It may
even be surmised that, if he had been inclined to
recognize Lord Temple’s interference as warrantable,
the breach between that peer and himself, which occurred
before the end of the week, would not have taken place,
since it seems nearly certain that the cause of that
breach was a refusal on the part of Pitt to recommend
his cousin for promotion in the peerage, a step which,
at such a moment, would have had the appearance of
an approval of his most recent deed,[94] but which
he could hardly have refused, if it had been done
with his privity. The battle, as need hardly
be told, was first fought among the representatives
of the people in the House of Commons; for there was
only one occasion on which the opinion of the Lords
was invited, when they declared in favor of Pitt by
a decisive majority.[95] But in the Lower House the
contest was carried on for more than two months with
extraordinary activity and ability, by a series of
resolutions and motions brought forward by the partisans
of the coalition, and contested by the youthful minister.
In one respect the war was waged on very unequal terms,
Pitt, who had been but three years in Parliament,
and whose official experience could as yet only be
counted by months, having to contend almost single-handed
against the combined experience and eloquence of Lord
North, Fox, and Burke. Fortunately, however,
for him, their own mismanagement soon turned the advantage
to his side. They were too angry and too confident
to be skilful, or even ordinarily cautious. The
leaders on both sides made professions in one respect
similar; they both alike denied that a desire of office
influenced either their conduct or their language (a
denial for which Pitt’s refusal of the Treasury,
a year before, gained him more credit than could be
expected by Fox after his coalition with Lord North),
and both alike professed to be struggling for the constitution
alone, for some fundamental principle which each charged
his antagonist with violating; Fox on one occasion
even going so far as, in some degree, to involve the
King himself in his censures, declaring not only that
“the struggle was, in fact, one between Pitt
himself and the constitution,” but that it was
also one “between liberty and the influence
of the crown,” and “between prerogative