to languish which a few months since were so strong,
and do not negligently or timidly descend from those
heights of magnanimity to which as a Nation we were
raised, when they first represented to us their wrongs
and entreated our assistance, and we devoted ourselves
sincerely and earnestly to their service, making with
them a common cause under a common hope; if we are
true in all this to them and to ourselves, we shall
not be at a loss to conceive what actions are entitled
to our commendation as being in the spirit of a friendship
so nobly begun, and tending assuredly to promote the
common welfare; and what are abject, treacherous,
and pernicious, and therefore to be condemned and abhorred.
Is then, I may now ask, the Convention of Cintra an
act of this latter kind? Have the Generals, who
signed and ratified that agreement, thereby proved
themselves unworthy associates in such a cause?
And has the Ministry, by whose appointment these men
were enabled to act in this manner, and which sanctioned
the Convention by permitting them to carry it into
execution, thereby taken to itself a weight of guilt,
in which the Nation must feel that it participates,
until the transaction shall be solemnly reprobated
by the Government, and the remote and immediate authors
of it brought to merited punishment? An answer
to each of these questions will be implied in the
proof which will be given that the condemnation, which
the People did with one voice pronounce upon this
Convention when it first became known, was just; that
the nature of the offence of those who signed it was
such, and established by evidence of such a kind,
making so imperious an exception to the ordinary course
of action, that there was no need to wait here for
the decision of a Court of Judicature, but that the
People were compelled by a necessity involved in the
very constitution of man as a moral Being to pass
sentence upon them. And this I shall prove by
trying this act of their’s by principles of
justice which are of universal obligation, and by a
reference to those moral sentiments which rise out
of that retrospect of things which has been given.
I shall now proceed to facts. The dispatches
of Sir Arthur Wellesley, containing an account of
his having defeated the enemy in two several engagements,
spread joy through the Nation. The latter action
appeared to have been decisive, and the result may
be thus briefly reported, in a never to be forgotten
sentence of Sir Arthur’s second letter.
’In this action,’ says he, ’in which
the whole of the French force in Portugal was employed,
under the command of the DUC D’ABRANTES in person,
in which the enemy was certainly superior in cavalry
and artillery, and in which not more than half of
the British army was actually engaged, he sustained
a signal defeat, and has lost thirteen pieces of cannon,
&c. &c.’ In the official communication,
made to the public of these dispatches, it was added,
that ’a General officer had arrived at the British