Hitherto, with the exception of some stirrings of
independence amongst the nobles, we have seen nothing to suggest an
upward tendency during our period in the political development of
Scotland; but at this point we pass from stagnation to repression,
and have, therefore, sounded our lowest level. The spirit, which had
so long reigned unquestioned, was indeed still to prevail; but the
forces it defeated were assured of ultimate triumph; and outside the
narrow domain of politics, civil and ecclesiastical, we shall find
that industrial and intellectual energies were everywhere throbbing
into life.
Dundas’s political ambition was never more happily
inspired than when it prompted him to stake his future on the rising
genius of Pitt; and it is probably a well-founded conjecture1 that
he was attracted by the prudence of the young orator as well as by
the precocious abilities which were patent to all. / Pitt’s abuse of
Lord North had almost equalled that of Fox, and he had denounced
“that baleful influence of the Crown” which was protracting “a most
accursed, wicked, barbarous, cruel, unnatural, unjust and diabolical
war”;2 but, unlike Fox, he never failed to discriminate between the
King’s person and his office, to extol his good intentions, and to
represent North as his evil genius rather than his tool. The course
of events was singularly favourable to the position, at once popular
and loyal, which Pitt had thus early assumed. George could not but
be grateful to the man who had rescued him from "the most
unprincipled Coalition the annals of this or any other country can
equal”; and, even had gratitude been wanting, he could not have
dismissed his deliverer without passing again under the yoke. Public
opinion, which vehemently suspected the reconciliation of two such
enemies as Fox and North, and had been taught to believe that they
meant to perpetuate their alliance by engrossing the Indian
patronage, was little less hostile to the Coalition; and the son of
Chatham had won general admiration by showing that, though tenacious
of office, he was no less indifferent than his father to its
pecuniary rewards. A Minister so able, so popular and so
indispensable, could not be manipulated by any exertion of “baleful
influence"; and the personal initiative, which George had ever
striven to acquire or to retain, he now conceded to Pitt.
The man, who had fought at Pitt’s side as
second-in-command against the big battalions of the Coalition,
shared the spoils of victory with his chief; but Dundas had now
emerged from the morass of unsatisfied ambition in which Wedderburn
was still struggling, and it is merely as dictator of Scotland, not
as a British statesman, that his subsequent career falls within the
compass of this work. Leaving Hay Campbell to succeed Henry Erskine,
the Coalition Lord Advocate, he was reappointed Treasurer of the
Navy, and assumed the administration of Indian affairs as ruling
member1 of the Board of Control. In 1791 he was made Home Secretary,
and in 1794 exchanged that office for the new Secretaryship for War.
The constitutional struggle which Pitt brought to a
conclusion had lasted for twenty-three years; and throughout that
period the flame of Scottish liberalism, though always flickering on
the verge of extinction, had never actually gone out. Even in the
days of Bute, when autocracy had the support of national sentiment,
we have seen that four of the Scottish members opposed the Court.
Five of them voted in 1780 for Dunning’s resolution against the
influence of the Crown, and six in 1782 for the motion of
no-confidence, defeated by a bare majority of nine, which led to the
resignation of Lord North. These numbers are but small fractions of
forty-five, but they included one whose influence in the House of
Commons was not to be measured by his vote.
George Dempster entered Parliament in 1762 as member
for Dundee, Perth, Forfar and St. Andrews; and for twenty-eight
years these burghs retained the services of a man whose reputation
for independence, liberality and uprightness was scarcely inferior
to that of Yorkshire’s noble representative, Sir George Savile. A
fluent and effective speaker, handsome in person, engaging in
address, Dempster was an authority on questions of trade and
finance, and appears to have anticipated Pitt in the advocacy of Dr.
Price’s suggestion of a sinking fund for reducing the national
debt. Disapproving of all attempts to coerce the colonies, he
declared in 1774 that “he knew of no Act to which he gave his hearty
consent more willingly than the repeal of the Stamp Act”; in 1775 he
and Fox were tellers for a conciliatory proposal which found only
twenty-one supporters; and four years later, in advocating Burke’s
first and most radical scheme of economical reform, he said, “On my
conscience I am persuaded that the influence of the Crown is the
true cause of the mischievous origin, the destructive progress, the
absurd conduct, and the obstinate prosecution, without view or hope,
of this accursed American war.” The same antipathy to aggression,
always humane, if not always sound or prescient, inspired his
attitude towards the East India Company, of which he was for some
time a director. He insisted that our only real interests in India
were those of commerce, “conjured Ministers to abandon all idea of
sovereignty in that quarter of the globe,” and even “lamented that
the navigation to India had ever been discovered.” In domestic
politics, deferring to the opinion of his constituents, he gave
little or no support to the cause of municipal and parliamentary
reform; but in all other respects he showed a most remarkable zeal
for freedom and the purity of public life. In 1774 we find him
opposing a motion to prosecute the author of a libel on the Speaker
as “levelled entirely at the greatest of blessings we enjoy, the
liberty of the press.”
When North brought in a Bill to override a decision
of the courts in favour of a printer who had challenged the
exclusive right of the Stationers’ Company to print almanacs, he
said that the Scottish almanacs, the product of free competition,
were better than the English, lauded "the enterprising printer," and
remarked that all monopolies—forgetting apparently that of the East
India Company—were “odious and unjust." He was the only Scottish
member who in 1777 opposed the grant of £600,000 to discharge
arrears of the King’s Civil List; and he insisted that, before such
a sum was voted, the public ought to be informed how the debt had
been incurred, and ought to have some assurance “that the burdens
borne by them were not to serve the purposes of corruption by
influencing members of Parliament.” In the course of a debate on the
Army Estimates he exhorted the Government to advertise its
contracts, as he and his fellow-directors had recently done at the
India House. “Jobbers and contractors were,” he said, “at once the
disgrace and the curse of this country"; and he mentioned an
instance during the previous war in which a person, whose contract
amounted only to £1,300,000 had made fully £800,000 profit. On
another occasion, when arguing that members of Parliament should not
be excluded from a commission for examining the public accounts, he
said that he himself was of too little consequence to be a
commissioner, “but so great was his desire to see the public
accounts put in a way of examination that he was ready to become
doorkeeper to the commissioners, to hand them pens, ink and paper,
and to act as their messenger without either fee or reward." Through
the influence of Kockingham he was appointed Secretary to the Order
of the Thistle in 1766; but he neither obtained nor sought any
further recompense; and his independence had little in common with
the highly marketable commodity which Dundas paraded under that
name.
In 1790 Dempster retired from Parliament, but only to
engage in activities which were quite as patriotic, and were
continued for exactly the same period, as those of his political
career. By every means in his power he sought to develop industrial
enterprise on the east coast of Scotland, attempted at great loss to
found a manufacturing village at Skibo in Caithness, and taught the
fishing population, whose interests he had much at heart, to find a
more distant market for their produce by packing it in ice. On his
own estate of Dunnichen, near Dundee, he was indefatigable in
enclosing, draining, and building; and it was soon his happy boast
that every one of his tenants had been freed from vexatious feudal
exactions, had obtained a long lease, and was well clothed and well
housed. A life so valuable to his country,-so invaluable to his
neighbours and dependents, was prolonged to the eighty-fourth year,
and, as it drew towards a close, he wrote thus to a friend: “I was
lately on my death-bed, and no retrospect afforded me more
satisfaction than that of having made some scores— hundreds—of poor
Highlanders happy.”
When Pitt came into power in 1783 the group of Scots
in Opposition, though little stronger in numbers, had obtained two
important recruits. One of these was Sir Gilbert Elliot, son of the
King’s friend, who had entered Parliament, a few months before his
father’s death, in 1776, and, though far from satisfied with the
abilities of North and his colleagues, had supported them as "the
only men who would attempt the recovery of the colonies.” He
believed, not without reason, that this was a legitimate object, and
recoiled with disgust from politicians who took “a parricide joy” in
the disasters of their country, and ventured, even in the House of
Commons, to speak of the American troops as "our army.” In 1780 he
supported Dunning s resolution, mid in 1782, when his “past American
opinions55 had been shaken to their foundation, he voted with
North’s opponents against the continuance of the war, and became the
cordial associate of Fox and Burke. Having succeeded his father as
member for Roxburghshire, he was one of “Fox’s martyrs55 at the
general election of 1784; but Berwick restored him to political life
in 1786, and he was twice proposed by the Opposition as Speaker.
The Coalition claimed another “martyr” in William
Adam, member for the Stranraer district and a nephew of the
well-known architect, who had begun his parliamentary career in 1774
as representative of an English, and particularly rotten, borough.
No less anti-American than his friend Dundas, and rather more
independent, Adam was an adept in the art of ironical praise, and
his “arguments of pretended panegyric” were observed to make an
impression even on the equable and drowsy temper of Lord North. In
1779 he announced his intention to support a Ministry, which,
however incompetent, was no worse than its opponents; and the
remarks of Fox on this cynical declaration led to a duel in which
the critic was slightly wounded. In the following year he was
appointed Treasurer of the Ordnance. He now became the champion and
the confidant of Lord North; but the Coalition, which he actively
promoted, brought him into close association with Fox; and to that
statesman, once a target for his pistol, he loyally adhered, even
after Fox’s sympathy with the French Revolution had estranged Burke,
Elliot, and the great majority of his friends. Such constancy was a
rebuke to those who in 1780 had taunted him with selling his
independence for “a thousand or twelve hundred a year."
Mention has been made of the popular agitation in
England with which the House of Commons expressed its concurrence in
1780. Its immediate object was attained when the Rockingham
Ministry, by reducing pensions and sinecures, disfranchising revenue
officers, and excluding contractors from Parliament, had dealt a
heavy blow at the corrupt influence of the Crown; and the county
associations, which had organised the movement, then demanded a
better system of representation, and found in Pitt an able exponent
of their views. Pitt urged the necessity of parliamentary reform in
1782, in 1783, and, as Prime Minister, in 1784; but he himself, in
reconciling the antagonism of Crown and people, had much diminished
the practical importance of the question; and, whilst in 1782 his
motion for the appointment of a committee had been defeated by only
twenty votes, his Reform Bill of 1784 was thrown out on the first
reading by a majority of seventy-four.
Meanwhile the spirit which was a spent force in
England had spread to Scotland, and was there troubling the waters,
no less muddy than stagnant, of public life. It was natural that
efforts should be made for a reform of county representation, for
that cause, without making the least progress, had been in agitation
since the Union. We have seen that the remodelled oath imposed in
1734 had failed to check the creation, for political purposes, of
merely nominal voters; and, soon after the accession of George III.
had given a new zest to electioneering, the Court of Session began
to supplement it by a series of queries, “which, like the spear of
Ithuriel, made the spectres stand forth in their true shape.” This
method of detection was, however, condemned incidentally by the
House of Lords as ultra vires in 1768; and thenceforth the counties
were more and more haunted by these “perfect ghosts, mere phantoms,”
which had been conjured out of the vasty deep of corruption by a
Duke of Gordon or an Earl of Fife. In 1775 a Bill to annul
fictitious qualifications was brought into Parliament by Lord
Advocate Montgomery, seconded by Dundas as Solicitor-General. It was
promptly strangled by those who were vaguely denominated “the folks
above,” and was derided by at least one vigorous reformer, who
contended that by greatly reducing the small county electorate it
would make the great landowners more powerful than ever, and
that no real good could be effected so long as a superior receiving
a farthing of feu-duty had a vote, whilst his vassal, with perhaps
an estate of £10,000 a year, had none.
In 1783, influenced by the movement headed by Pitt,
three of the Scottish counties passed resolutions in favour of
reform, and in a general meeting at Edinburgh a committee was
appointed, and money was subscribed, with a view to taking
proceedings in Parliament. The project, however, never took shape in
a Bill, and would probably have been quite fruitless if the
landowners of Morayshire, provoked out of all patience by the Earl
of Fife’s twenty-seven “ghosts” and the Duke of Gordon’s twenty-one,
had not themselves attempted the task of exorcism. In the- autumn of
this year they presented a petition to the House of Commons
complaining that both their electorate and their magistracy were
swamped by “ignorant and servile dependents”; and, when a Mr. Cuming
was defeated as candidate for the county by the Earl of Fife at the
general election of 1784, he prosecuted two of that nobleman’s
voters for perjury in taking the trust-oath. He failed, of course,
to obtain a conviction; but the Court of Session was so scandalised
by the state of things disclosed at these trials that they
tentatively revived their old queries; and the Lords on April 19,
1790, reversing or rather explaining away their former decision,
emphatically approved of this course. Two months later, the queries
were put to three of the Duke of Gordon’s voters in Aberdeenshire;
and these, having admitted with great candour that their
qualifications had been framed with a view to increasing the Duke’s
political influence, were struck off the roll. This was hailed by
the reformers as a decisive victory; but the manipulation of
superiorities, after being for some time in abeyance, was revived in
a form not easily intelligible to any but the legal mind, and seems
to have been as prevalent as ever in the years preceding the Reform
Bill.
The influence on Scotland of the English reform
movement of 1780 was more conspicuous in the municipal than in the
constitutional sphere. In 1782 a committee was formed at Edinburgh,
and another at Aberdeen, to agitate against the reign of monopoly in
the royal burghs; and in 1784 a convention of delegates from
thirty-three, or one half of these burghs, resolved unanimously to
make all legal exertions with a view to putting the election of
magistrates, town councillors and representatives in Parliament
“upon a proper liberal and constitutional footing.” Disheartened,
however, by the failure of Pitt’s proposals in favour of
parliamentary reform, the delegates at their next convention decided
not to touch the relation of the burghs to Parliament, except in so
far as this must necessarily be altered by a popular election of
councils, and to concentrate their efforts on a reform of “the
internal government.” The arguments in favour of such a reform had
been steadily accumulating ever since “common, simple persons "were
deprived of their electoral rights by the Act of 1469. That Act
provided, as we have seen," that the old council of the toun shall
choose the new council,” or, in other words, that the majority of
the council who kept their seats should nominate persons to replace
the minority whose turn it was to retire; and, as the persons
nominated were usually those who had gone out the year before, the
council was practically not only self-elected, but elected for life.
Men who held office on such a tenure were not unlikely to abuse
their power, particularly as no tribunal existed competent to call
them to account. It had been the duty of the Lord Chamberlain in his
annual circuits through the burghs to supervise their financial
administration; but this office was abolished in 1503, and in 1535
the burghal jurisdiction, which had accrued to it, was vested in the
Court of Exchequer. The remedy thus provided was, however, too
expensive, and in most cases too distant, to be of any great value
to oppressed burgesses; and the judges in a recent decision had
disclaimed it—presumably on the ground of disuse. It was alleged in
quarters hostile to reform that magistrates were accountable to the
Convention of Royal Burghs; but that body, a mere emanation of town
councils, could have been anything but a satisfactory censor, and
the claims made on its behalf had also been judicially repelled.
It was no new indictment which was now being prepared
against the municipal authorities of Scotland. Within twenty years
of its disfranchising statute, we find the legislature condemning
the election of officials “by partiality or mastership" the reason
assigned for subjecting the burghs to the Court of Exchequer was
that through the misconduct of their rulers they had been “put to
poverty, wasted and destroyed in their goods and policy”; and in
1684 and 1694, in consequence of “numberless murmurs and
complaints,” commissions were appointed to rectify the
administration of revenues which had “been either profusely
dilapidated or privately peculated, and for the most part have been
applied to ends and purposes totally different from those directed
by law.” The reformers of 1784, however, were not content to rest
their case on merely historical grounds; and the local knowledge of
delegates soon supplied them with an armoury of facts.
Though the Scottish Parliament had abolished popular
election, it had not failed to enact that none “but honest and
substantial burgesses, merchants and indwellers" should be eligible
for municipal office; but the territorial magnate, for whom burghs
existed only to return members of Parliament, paid no respect to
this law. Whether or not the great man himself entered the council,
he took care either to procure the election of burgesses who were
not honest and were not substantial, or, more frequently, to intrude
a gang of non-residents—friends, tenants or servants of his own or
revenue officers. Thus the factors of the Earl of Bute had been
provosts of Rothesay for the last forty years. The Dukes of Argyll
during the same period had governed Dumbarton by means of "councillors
elected from every corner of the country.” The councils of Whithorn
and Wigton were manned mainly by dependents of the Earl of Galloway,
who was a member of both; and the oldest inhabitant of Stranraer,
which was managed by the Earl of Stair, could not recall a resident
provost. The Earl of Eglinton held sway in Irvine as a “merchant
councillor,” and he and his friends were superior to the law of
rotation, as “they always took in two silly persons to shift.”
People who obtained office under such conditions had little
difficulty in holding it for life or even in transmitting it to
their sons. The Provost of Lanark, though still young, had been in
power for ten or twelve years, and his father and grandfather had
each officiated for thirty-five years. Where a proportion of the
council had to be chosen from lists submitted by the incorporated
trades, the merchant councillors, who were self-elected, contrived
to perpetuate their supremacy by making it a rule that the minority
of their own members at any private meeting should always concur
with the majority in public.
The reformers, in endeavouring to expose the fruits
of this system, were much obstructed by the councils, which in many
cases refused access to their books;1but it was matter of general
complaint that these self elected and irremovable corporations had
incurred heavy liabilities, assessed unfairly the public burdens,
and alienated for quite inadequate sums the public estates. Stirling,
for example, had had to sell all its lands in order to pay its
debts, and corruption in this case was so notorious that Dundas,
when Lord Advocate, had confiscated the charter. Wigton had assigned
to its patron, the Earl of Galloway, for £16 of feu-duty land which
now yielded annually £400. The heirs of eleven provosts of Dumfries
owned property which had once belonged to the burgh. Dumfries had a
treasurer, but, as other people had to be provided with salaries, he
was assisted by a chamberlain and no fewer than five collectors. The
Perth reformers complained that their public contracts were
ruinously jobbed, and stated that the council had spent £3000 in
rebuilding a single arch of the bridge over the Earn, whilst an
entire bridge, three miles further up the river, had been built by
subscription for £500. When a new church was required at Peebles, a
wealthy townsman offered to build it for £850; but this tender, and
three others almost equally moderate, were rejected, and the work
was executed by a mason, who was also the burgh treasurer, at a cost
of £1600. In Edinburgh the activity of investigators seems to have
been effectually foiled; but the administration of that city as
disclosed by an ex-magistrate, fifteen years later, did not redound
to its credit. It appeared that the corporation were using as part
of their ordinary income £400 appropriated to the relief of indigent
burgesses, £1500 illegally levied, and £3000 of their ecclesiastical
funds; and yet there was an annual deficit, apart from interest on
the debt, of £6060.
Such evils could not be remedied by any but
legislative means, and the provisions of a Bill for this purpose
were unanimously approved in 1785 by a convention of delegates from
49 out of the 66 royal burghs. Popular election of town councils was
to be substituted for self election; but the franchise was to be
restricted to actual burgesses, resident for at least a year,
tax-payers or householders, engaged or formerly engaged in business
within the burgh; and the burgesses, thus qualified, were to be
authorised to appoint auditors of public accounts, from whose
decision there should be an appeal to the Court of Exchequer.
Dempster was selected by the reformers as the most suitable person
to take charge of their Bill on account of “the patriotic character
and independent spirit which he has always maintained," and so sure
were they of his consent that they "scarcely looked towards any
other.” Dempster, however, disappointed his admirers, stating that
he could not assist in destroying the corporations to which he was
indebted for his seat; and the committee of delegates, finding no
Ministerialist willing to undertake their cause, were compelled to
have recourse to the Opposition, and, on the advice of Fox, sought
and obtained the services of Sheridan. Meanwhile the Convention of
Royal Burghs had declared against this attempt to “unhinge a
constitution which has stood the test of ages.” Dunfermline indeed
had so little respect for this venerable constitution that it
unanimously adhered to the cause of reform; but the other
corporations were so active and so successful at Westminster that no
Scottish member, with one exception,1 ventured to support the
project, and Dundas in opposing it was usually seconded by
Anstruther, one of the Scottish Whigs.
Sheridan opened the business on May 28, 1787, when
petitions were presented from Glasgow and Dundee. The petitioners
must have been very simple and very sanguine people if they imagined
that their case was at all likely to be considered on its merits.
Pitt’s Government, strong as it was, could not afford to endanger
its ascendency by introducing a principle so potent and so
infectious as that of popular election into the Scottish burghs; and
Dundas, whilst totally denying the facts alleged, endeavoured on one
pretext or another to prevent them being put to the proof. He
asserted that there was no illegal taxation in the burghs, no
dilapidation of revenues, no gross misrule. Councillors, if they
misapplied public funds, were liable to be prosecuted by the Lord
Advocate, and were, moreover, responsible to that epitome of
themselves, the Convention of Eoyal Burghs. The Scottish
municipalities were at all events no worse than the English. Their
charters, being royal charters, could not be summarily recast
without “a bold infringement of the prerogative,” and, being secured
to them by the Union, “ought to be regarded as sacred.” A petition
signed by 1500 or even by 9000 persons was no great matter, and
Sheridan “would have had followers of some description ”if he had
brought in a Bill to make the people electors of the King or Lord
Chancellor. The honourable gentleman, though no statues had yet been
erected in his favour, was obviously aspiring to be a popular hero;
and his proposal to institute yearly in Scottish towns “a species of
dissipation,” which had long been confined to a septennial general
election, was so unfavourable to the morals of the people that it
ought to have been entitled “a Bill for the encouragement of
debauchery.”
The fabian tactics of their antagonist were, however,
better calculated to wear out the patience of the reformers than
these denials and sneers to prejudice their cause. When Sheridan
made his first motion in 1787, Dundas objected, with the sanction of
the Speaker, that it was too late in the session to receive what was
technically a private petition. In 1788, as Pitt expressed a desire
to know its contents, the Bill was read a first time and ordered to
be printed. In 1789 Dundas taxed the petitioners with demanding a
remedy for grievances which might prove on examination to have no
existence; and Sheridan, deferring to this objection, consented to
withdraw the Bill and move for a committee of inquiry. At this point
the town councils, conforming to the strategy of their general,
contrived to keep the matter in suspense for three years, first by
delaying to comply with the order for production of papers, and then
by taking care to have no representative in London when Sheridan, in
1791, moved that the petitions and burgh accounts should be referred
to a committee. It was, indeed, resolved that the committee should
be appointed early next session; but the “man of talents"
unaccompanied by integrity was not yet at the end of his shifts. In
1792 he admitted that the councils were so far irresponsible that
there was no legal authority for auditing their accounts; and,
whilst offering to find a remedy for this defect, which he had
hitherto denied, he opposed the motion for a, committee, which he
had himself suggested, on the ground—surely the most singular that
has ever been alleged for such a purpose in Parliament—that “it
might give the country reason to believe that the grievances really
existed, whereas he believed they did not.” The motion was rejected
by 69 votes to 27; and Dundas’s idea of remedying the
irresponsibility of town councils was disclosed in a Bill providing
that the accounts of these bodies, which were still to be
self-elective, should be audited by persons appointed by themselves.
This scheme, repudiated by the last annual convention at Edinburgh,
was soon dropped; and in 1793 the delegates had obtained not only
the appointment of a committee, but the presentation of a favourable
report, when, on the advice of their friends in London, they bowed
to that French revolutionary terror which, in the words of their
secretary, put “an end for a time to every idea of reform.” Thus
ended a project which had been in agitation for eleven years; and
the member who had given a name to the Rolliad no doubt spoke for
many more than himself when he said "that his regard for the
constitution led him to oppose every motion for reform that had been
or could be brought forward.”
The political career of Dundas was marked at almost
every stage by the combination of audacity and caution— one might
almost say, of effrontery and cunning—which characterised his
attitude towards the question of burgh reform. In 1781 a loan of
twelve millions had been 'raised by Lord North on terms so
favourable to the lenders, who were chiefly supporters of the
Government, that the shares could be sold at a profit of from 8 to
10 per cent. The Lord Advocate was then planning one of those
changes of front which he had always in view when he talked of his
independence; yet he did not scruple to scandalise public opinion by
asserting that if any private advantages were to be derived from the
subscription, “it was natural and justifiable for the noble lord in
the blue ribbon to distribute these benefits among his
friends." Adam once defended the coalition of North and Fox by
asserting that that of Dundas and Pitt was “to the full as
extraordinary" and, though this was .rather an extravagant
assertion, it may be noted that the man who, at no small sacrifice
of consistency, had become the most zealous of Pitt’s colleagues,
was not the most steadfast during his temporary eclipse. When George
III. in 1801 refused to consummate the Union with Ireland by
assenting to Catholic Emancipation, Dundas retired with his chief;
but the latter had too little faith in his friend’s renunciation of
office not to dissuade him from taking as his motto Jam rude donatus. Before
the next year closed, Dundas had accepted a peerage from Addington,
the new Premier, to the great surprise of Pitt, who had neither seen
him nor heard from him for six months; in February, 1803, there was
“a strong rumour” that he was about to join the Addington Ministry;
and, a few months later, he inflicted a wound on Pitt’s pride, which
never wholly healed, by making, on behalf of Addington, “the very
unexpected proposal” that the two statesmen should serve as
Secretaries of State under the nominal premier-, ship of Pitt’s
brother, the Earl of Chatham.
The spirit of intrigue which every Ministerial crisis
developed in Dundas is difficult to reconcile, not only with his
public professions, but with the openness and geniality of his
private life. The pietistic Wilberforce looked with suspicion on
this “loose man” of very convivial habits and fashionable morals who
had acquired so great an influence over Pitt; but he admitted his
“frank and joyous temper,” and, far from concurring in the common
opinion of him as “a mean and intriguing creature,” pronounced him
“in many respects a fine warm-hearted fellow." There is no prominent
politician of those days in the descriptions of whose character the
word "manly" so invariably occurs; and amongst the details which
produced this general impression may be mentioned a tall and
imposing figure, a powerful and sonorous voice, an open, cheerful
countenance, “tinged with convivial purple,” and a blunt and
forcible style of oratory, seldom aspiring to eloquence and
enlivened with occasional flashes of coarse wit. “Never did any
man,” it has been said, “conceal deeper views of every kind under
the appearance of careless inattention to self-interest.” It must
not, howevef, be supposed that Dundas’s pretensions to political
disinterestedness and independence imposed on anybody who did not
wish to be deceived. The King—not a very competent judge— always
disliked him; in the opinion of Horace Walpole, he was “the rankest
of all Scotsmen,” notorious for rapacity and want of principle;
Wraxall, whilst respecting his abilities, described him as carrying
them to market and in his native dialect exclaiming “Wha wants
me?” Fox and Sheridan exhausted their ingenuity in comparing him to
“a political weathercock”; and in the Rolliad his shamelessness and
inconsistency are mercilessly satirised. The best of the "Political
Miscellanies” appended to the criticisms on that imaginary epic is
perhaps the parody of the witches’ incantation in Macbeth; and
amongst the ingredients thrown into the cauldron we find
“Clippings of Corinthian brass
From the visage of Dundas.”
So distinguished and so whole-hearted a Scotsman was
not likely to be judged by his own countrymen in any impartial
spirit. It would, of course, have been impossible for Dundas in his
legal, and afterwards in his political, capacity to dissociate
himself from Scotland, had such been his wish, in the manner of
Mansfield and Loughborough; but, unlike these great lawyers, who
seldom or never revisited their native land and were at pains to
eliminate all traces of it from their speech, he took a worthy pride
in his northern birth, and furnished another proof of manliness by
disdaining to address the House of Commons in accents more familiar
to its ear than those of his northern tongue. One can easily imagine
what merriment as well as indignation must have been caused when he
coined for anti-American purposes his famous word starvation; and
the uncouth tones and phrases, which gave a ludicrous turn to his
most impassioned philippics, are said to have “chequered with
momentary good humour the personalities of debate.” His political
predominance in Scotland, if less interrupted, was never more
complete than that of the third Duke of Argyll; but the democratic
spirit, which hardly existed in the reign of George II., was now a
growing power; and Dundas could not have obtained so great an
ascendency if to manners far more popular than those of Argyll he
had not added a much wider command of patronage. In the bestowal of
all offices outside the borders of North Britain Argyll had been
dependent on the complaisance of Walpole, of Pelham or of Newcastle;
but Dundas, besides being “the Minister for Scotland," was at one
and the same time Treasurer of the Navy, leading member of the India
Board, and either Home Secretary or War Secretary; and he had
befriended the Jacobite interest no less decisively than Argyll by
restoring, as we shall see, the forfeited estates. All the various
departments which he managed or influenced, but especially that of
India, were called into requisition to provide for Scottish peers,
members and electors, their relatives and friends; and in the same
spirit, quickened no doubt by patriotic motives, he pursued a policy
which would be much appreciated at the present day—that of
endeavouring to multiply places in Scotland and to direct thither as
large a stream as possible of public money. As an example of this
policy, it may be mentioned that he increased the number of royal
chaplains from six to ten. Lord Sydney, in forwarding to Pitt a list
of Indian field-officers, remarked “I believe three are as many
English and Irish names as there are among them.” His patronage was,
of course, professedly administered only within party lines; but the
man was not wholly merged in the Minister; and one of his opponents
admitted that “there was scarce a gentleman’s family in Scotland, of
whatever politics,” which had not received from him "some Indian
appointment or other act of, in many cases quite disinterested,
kindness." Beautiful and high-born women are said to have been
unduly favoured in his allotment of pensions;4 but Wilberforce
records with admiration that rank and nationality were alike
disregarded when he assigned the Governor-Generalship of India, “the
most important office in the King’s gift,” to Sir John Shore; and a
letter is extant in which he intimates to the Countess of Sutherland
that no "person connected with the local or political interests of
the county, or embarrassed in any degree by its local attachments,”
could be appointed sheriff.
It was, however, as a master of electioneering that
Dundas was and is best known to his countrymen, and he has been
compared to a beacon—“the Pharos of Scotland”—guiding storm-tossed
office-seekers to their desired haven. “Who steered upon him was
safe; who disregarded his light was wrecked.” Lord Brougham was
probably right in assuming that "the old feudal habits of the
nation” were at least one cause of that "submission to men in high
place which was so much more absolute in Scotland than in England;
and he has drawn a vivid and not unfaithful picture of Scottish
politics during the three years of Addington’s Ministry, when
neither Pitt nor Dundas was in power. “Those who are old enough to
remember that dark interval may recollect how the public mind in
Scotland was subdued with awe, and how men awaited in trembling
silence the uncertain event, as all living things quail during the
solemn pause that precedes an earthquake. It was in truth a crisis
to try men’s souls. For a while all was uncertainty and
consternation; all were seen fluttering about like birds in an
eclipse or a thunder-storm; no man could tell whom he might trust;
nay, worse still, no man could tell of whom he might ask anything.’'
The effect of the French Revolution in arresting the
municipal reform movement in Scotland was only one result of the
great influence it was exerting on British politics. Ever since the
deposition of James II. in 1689, the Whigs had regarded France as an
irreconcilable enemy; and they viewed with general exultation the
beginning of a course of events which threatened to put an end to
her career as a despotic and aggressive Power. Even Burke, the most
conservative of their number, whilst dreading the enthusiasm and
ferocity of the French and doubting whether they were “fit for
liberty,” found it impossible not to admire their spirit; but the
capture of the Bastille on July 14, 1789, which excited in him these
mixed feelings, was hailed by Fox in terms of unqualified
laudation—“How much the greatest event it is that ever happened in
the world, and how much the best!” And this divergence of opinion
between the two leaders continued to increase on the side of Burke
till it had produced amongst their followers a complete schism. In
February, 1790, their dissension was displayed for the first time in
Parliament—the one rejoicing that the Revolution had been supported
by the French army, the other denouncing its authors as "the ablest
architects of ruin that had hitherto existed.” Fox spoke so
affectionately of his friend “that he was almost seen to weep ” ;
but the effect of this personal appeal was quite spoiled by
Sheridan, who applied to himself as Fox’s counsellor certain
strictures in Burke’s speech, and attacked the latter in “as violent
a philippic as he ever uttered against Pitt or Dundas.” In the
autumn of this year appeared the “Reflections on the French
Revolution.” The work made a profound impression, and was warmly
commended by the Duke of Portland and other Whig nobles; but a
party, which was not prepared as yet to admit its disunion, had good
reasons for preferring Burke as a speculative writer to Burke as a
practical politician, and, six months later, he was condemned to
complete isolation in consequence of the speech (May 6, 1791), in
which he pushed to a crisis the political dispute with Fox and
publicly renounced his friendship.
However blind Burke may have been to the real
significance of the Revolution as an immense step in human progress,
he predicted, as early as November, 1790, that its reformed kingship
would give place to republicanism, republicanism to anarchy, and
anarchy to military despotism; and, when events began to shape
themselves in accordance with this prediction without at all
disconcerting the English clubs and societies which drew their
inspiration from Paris, the disruption of the Whig party could no
longer be concealed. Fox vehemently attacked the proclamation of
May, 1792, in which the King warned his subjects against “divers
wicked and seditious writings"; but it was cordially welcomed by the
larger or “Portland part” of his friends, to whom indeed it had
previously been submitted. Pitt offered to develop his alliance with
this section of the Opposition by admitting them to a share of
office; and, though his overtures produced no definite result at
this period, the growing danger from France, which was now at war
with Austria and Prussia, caused them to be renewed before the close
of the year. On September 21 a republic was proclaimed at Paris
after scenes of riot and massacre which engrossed the thoughts and
even haunted the dreams of many sober people who, like Dr.
Somerville, had contemned Burke’s essay as “the ranting declamations
of aristocratic pride and exuberant genius.” And even Burke’s
forebodings had fallen short of the truth; for the ‘ ‘ architects of
ruin ’ ’ were exposing their neighbours to more tangible dangers
than those of revolutionary contagion; and, far from having done
more than “twenty Ramillies or Blenheims” to disable France, they
were reviving her traditions as a conquering Power. On November 19
appeared the decree, translated into all languages, which promised
assistance to any people which should rise against its rulers. Savoy
and Nice were soon annexed, and British interests were directly
menaced by the occupation of Belgium, the opening of the Scheldt,
which had been closed to navigation by the Treaty of Utrecht, and
the threatened invasion of Holland.
One member at least of the Portland group had been
much chagrined at the failure of Pitt’s overtures, and cordially
welcomed their renewal. The great office, which the Coalition, had
it triumphed at the general election of 1784, would certainly have
bestowed on Lord Loughborough, still continued to elude his grasp;
and he had suffered another disappointment in 1788-9, when the King
became insane and recovered just in time to prevent his Chief
Justice of the Common Pleas becoming Lord Chancellor under the
Prince of Wales as Regent Thurlow, presuming on the royal favour,
had long made himself obnoxious to Pitt, and on May 6, 1792, five
days before the proclamation against seditious writings, he received
notice of dismissal; but Thurlow's rival did not at once secure the
reversion of his post. Pitt and his friends objected to a general
coalition with the Whigs under a new Premier, and the Portland Whigs
were still reluctant to accept the advice of Burke, who exhorted
them to avow their separation from Fox and to permit Loughborough as
their representative to enter the Cabinet. The Great Seal was,
therefore, put into commission; and it was not till January 28,
1793, when the execution of Louis XVI. had deepened the Whig schism,
that Loughborough attained the object of his ambition. He had been
in no haste to quarrel with the Revolution; but he now expressed
such horror of French republicanism and infidelity that Burke
pronounced him “the most virtuous man in the kingdom.” In July,
1794, the Duke of Portland himself and three of his friends took
office under Pitt.
In February, 1793, for the fifth time during the
•eighteenth century, Great Britain and France found themselves at
war. Within a few weeks the heads of clans were called upon to make
their usual contribution to the forces of the Crown, and their
response can have been none the less hearty because the disabilities
and penalties of 1746-7 had recently been removed. During the
American war, when so many kilted clansmen were .attesting their
loyalty in the field, the Highlanders had ventured, for the most
part, to resume their native dress; and in 1782 the law which
prohibited the wearing of tartan was repealed. In 1784 the
confiscated estates were restored; but, in order to avoid “giving a
premium for rebellion,” it was provided that the heirs of forfeited
persons should receive their property as it stood in 1747, and that
the capital accruing from mortgages paid off by Government during
its thirty-seven years of ownership should be devoted to the
completion of certain public works—£15,000 to the Register House at
Edinburgh, which had been built out of the produce of these estates,
and £50,000 to the Forth and Clyde Canal. In 1793-4, following the
example of his father and Lord North, Pitt added five Highland
regiments to the line; and during the war twenty-four additional
battalions were raised in the Highlands, whose service was at first
confined to Scotland and was never extended beyond England and
Ireland. These “Fencibles 55 were, however, a nursery for the
regular army, and many depleted regiments were filled up from their
ranks.
The outbreak of war was scarcely needed to complete
the disruption of the Whigs; for, whilst one section had declared
for Burke and repression, the other was emphasising its
determination to persevere in the cause of parliamentary reform. In
April, 1792, many of Fox’s friends, without his sanction and
probably even without his knowledge,3 formed themselves into an
association for the purpose of procuring more equal representation
and shorter Parliaments, which they called “The Friends of the
People.” These objects were to be pursued rather in spite of, than
in unison with, the French Revolution; but other societies existed
whose Gallican sympathies were frankly avowed. The chief of these
was the Society for Constitutional Information; and about this
period some of its leading members either created or remodelled a
still more extreme club, which was known as the London Corresponding
Society. Both of these societies disseminated the works of Thomas
Paine, who maintained that England's constitution—in so far as it
had one—had been poisoned by monarchy, and that even the Bill of
Rights, that palladium of the Revolution Settlement, was ‘‘more
properly a bill of wrongs and insult”; and on May 11 the parent
society sent over a deputation to congratulate the Jacobins as
“Brothers and Fellow-Citizens of the World.”
Scotland was not inadequately represented among these
leaders of radical reform. The Earls of Lauderdale and Buchan, Lord
Daer, the Earl of Selkirk’s eldest son, and Colonel Macleod of
Macleod, member of Parliament for Inverness-shire, had joined the
Friends of the People; and one of the society’s joint-treasurers was
Lord Kinnaird. Returned in 1780 for a Cornish borough, Lord
Maitland, as he then was, had distinguished himself as one of
North’s keenest opponents; and his liberal enthusiasm showed no
diminution when, as Earl of Lauderdale, he was elected in 1790 to
the House of Lords. A bold, restless, indefatigable man, with "a
studied contempt of general opinion," he was admitted to the closest
intimacy by Fox, who had been heard to say "I wonder how the world
went on when there was no Lauderdale to help it, or what will become
of it when he leaves it.” A man of much more extreme principles was
Lord Sempill, an officer in the Foot Guards and a burgh reformer,
who was frequently chairman of the Constitutional Society, and on
November 9, 1792, signed as such a remarkable address to the French,
congratulating them on the establishment of their bloodstained
republic, and intimating that “the soldiers of liberty” were to be
presented weekly for at least six weeks with a thousand pairs of
shoes.
The Friends of the People and societies of the more
extreme type favoured by Lord Sempill soon extended their influence
to Scotland; but the first impulse to disorder proceeded from the
attitude of the Government towards municipal reform. In the spring
of 1792 Dundas was burned in effigy at Aberdeen, Dundee and other
towns; and Lanark all but demolished in person its hereditary
provost. Letters threatening his life and property were dropped in
the streets; his orchard was totally wrecked; and two shots passed
unpleasantly near him as he sat in his house. On June 4, 1792, the
King’s birthday, a more serious disturbance commenced at Edinburgh.
The magistrates, warned by placards of an intended demonstration
against their patron, had obtained military assistance; and the
populace on that day contented themselves with hissing and stoning
the dragoons and throwing dead cats at the city-guard. On the
following evening, however, they burnt a figure of straw before
Dundas’s house in George Square; and, when some of the statesman’s
friends attempted to drive them off, they broke his windows and also
those of his nephew, the Lord Advocate. On the arrival of a
detachment from the Castle, they became “outrageous,” and, the
troops after great provocation having been ordered to fire, several
persons were wounded—one mortally. Next night they assembled in the
New Town with a view to attacking the Lord Provost’s house, but
dispersed at once on the appearance of dragoons and marines.
The agitation for burgh reform continued; but popular
passion, finding no outlet in this direction, was diverted into more
dangerous channels. Branches of the new Whig society had been formed
in various parts of Scotland ; and the first step towards
centralisation was taken on July 26, when a meeting at Edinburgh
constituted itself a permanent society as “The Associated Friends of
the People.” Dundas was kept fully informed by his correspondents as
to the growth of this movement, and the accounts he received can
hardly have contributed to his peace of mind. “Mad ideas” were said
to be spreading in all the principal towns, except Aberdeen, where,
indeed, a tree of liberty was planted, but proved to be “an idle,
silly thing.” In Dundee “the general disposition of the people” was
very bad, all the lower classes and many of the merchants being
“violent for reform.” Perth was considered “a very dangerous place”;
all the weavers were disaffected, and there were nine societies,
about 1200 strong. At Montrose there was a society of 200, “very
violent”; in several of the Fife burghs similar clubs had been
established, and the Reformers boasted that they numbered 6000 at
Stirling, and in the west—chiefly at Glasgow, Kilmarnock and
Paisley—50,000. Small towns and even mere villages had their
societies, and amongst “the disaffected” in those early days were
not a few landed and professional men. Meanwhile the General
Association at Edinburgh was exerting itself to bring these
scattered forces into line. During the month of September committees
were appointed—one for declaration, another for correspondence,
another for organisation; and a circular letter was prepared and
approved, inviting the local societies to send members to a general
convention which was to be held on December 11. These steps were
ratified by a more representative body, consisting of delegates from
all the societies in and around Edinburgh, on November 21; and two
resolutions were adopted and sent to the newspapers—one that, if any
member was found guilty of riot or sedition, his name should be
expunged, the other that any member unjustly punished by “the arm of
power” should be protected by the society to which he belonged.
Colonel Macleod attended this meeting and greatly delighted the
delegates by assuring them that “he would support their liberties
with his pen, and, if necessary, defend them with his sword at the
peril of his life.”
That a society should have been established to
procure by constitutional means more representative and shorter
Parliaments was not in itself either a novel or an alarming fact;
but some of the members had undoubtedly deeper designs; and the
controversy aroused by the French Revolution had excited an
extraordinary ferment in the public mind. A writer in the Scots
Magazine for October, 1792, remarked that the “keenness of political
inquiry, which for a long time seemed to be confined to England, has
now reached this northern clime”; and, referring to the effect
produced by the writings of Burke and Paine, he said that “one half
of the people seem to have become politically mad.” Not only amongst
the weavers of Dundee and Paisley, but in remote rural districts
Paine’sRights of Man found many readers. A Dumfriesshire baronet,
writing to the Duke of Buccleuch, said that a twopenny abridgment of
this pamphlet was “in the hands of almost every countryman”; and,
with a view to enlightening the Highlanders, it was translated into
Gaelic. The proclamation of May 25 served merely to advertise
Paine’s writings; and, when it was read at Banff by the town crier,
a Mr. Leith, president of the local society, followed him through
the streets “abusing and interrupting him.” Dr. Somerville spent
much of his time going from house to house amongst his parishioners
at Jedburgh to combat the spread of seditious principles, but found
all his efforts “unprofitable and fruitless.” Medals stamped with
democratic mottoes were sent out anonymously from Edinburgh; and
towards the end of September Captain Johnston, chairman of the
General Association and formerly an officer in the army, established
the Edinburgh Gazetteer, the prospectus of which announced that it
should “attach itself to the party of the people.” Dundas was told
that this paper “makes the farmers wild for Reform"; and one of his
spies assured him that he had attended a meeting at which it was
said that a king ought to be sacrificed to the people once in every
hundred years.
To political was added social discontent. The weather
during the greater part of 1792 was exceedingly wet and inclement,
and on June 24 the Border districts experienced a short but violent
storm of snow and huge hailstones, the effect of which was described
as “Christmas Day in the midst of summer.” The harvest, though late,
appears to have been less deficient than in England; but the
long-continued rains had much impeded the cutting and drying of
peat, and the country people, particularly in the north, suffered
greatly from want of fuel. In Ross-shire the displacement of labour
due to the introduction of sheep-farming provoked a very serious
disturbance, which, however, cost no lives, though the peasantry had
purchased £16 worth of powder. Throughout the Lowlands the toll
money necessitated by new and improved roads was much resented by
the poor, and riots due to this and other fiscal grievances were
reported from Dunse, Langholm, and Newburgh. In certain districts
the colliers refused to work, influenced, it was supposed, by “some
new notions”; and a prolonged strike of sailors took place at Leith
and Aberdeen, as well as at various English ports. These outbreaks
had little in common with the great festival held at Sheffield on
October 22 to celebrate the retreat of the Allies from France; but
something of this kind did occur, about three weeks later, at
Dundee. The disturbance was said to have been caused by the | high
price of meal; but a tree of liberty was planted, bells were rung, a
huge bonfire was made of oil-cakes, and cries were raised of “No
Excise,” “No King.”
Prefaced by these signs of excitement and tumult,
must have been relieved to find that “distrust and want of harmony”
were conspicuous in the debates. The first step of the delegates was
to verify their powers, and some of the commissions were said to
begin “Citizen President.” An election to offices was then proposed.
Lord Daer, however, reminding his “Fellow Citizens” that they were
pledged to liberty and equality, cautioned them "against the
establishment of an aristocracy in their own body” ; and, Colonel
Dalrymple having spoken to the same effect, it was agreed that the
office of president should be held from day to day. Daer suggested
certain rules for the conduct of business, every one of which was
opposed by Muir; but the first serious dissension seems to have
arisen when the latter read and commended an address from the United
Irishmen of Dublin. In one passage of this paper satisfaction was
expressed that Scotland “now rises to distinction, not by a calm,
contented, secret wish for a reform in Parliament, but by openly,
actively and urgently willing it with the unity and energy of an
embodied nation.” Daer, Dalrymple, and other speakers commented on
these words "as bordering on treason"; and it was resolved that the
address “shall not lie on the table.” In advocating a petition to
Parliament, Muir insisted that their great object must be to obtain
a vote for every man over twenty-one years of age; and at the close
of the proceedings we find him complimenting his associates on "the
little regard they have paid to the authority of leaders." Several
persons dissented from the petition on the ground that it mentioned
"King, Lords and Commons”; and a motion was said to have been made,
but withdrawn, that every delegate should be provided with a musket
and bayonet “to repress any appearance of riot or sedition.” The
climax of excitement was, however, reached when the members rose
from their seats, and, with right hand uplifted, took “the French
oath to live free or die”—much to the dismay of Colonel Dalrymple,
who had consented with great reluctance to take the chair at the
first day’s meeting on the ground that, being a military officer, he
might be charged “with a design of raising a rebellion.” On December
13 the Convention adjourned till the following April.
In the course of its debates the Convention had
discussed the propriety of uniting with the Burgh Beformers, and a
motion to that effect had been lost by the narrow majority of 42 to
40. We have seen that these men had made it a principle of their
agitation not to touch, directly at least, the political status of
the town councils; but several of their Scottish leaders, such as
Lauderdale and Daer, had enrolled themselves as Friends of the
People, and it was not without some vacillation and dissension that
they adhered to their original design. At a general meeting in
Edinburgh it was resolved with practical unanimity that a deviation
into the path of parliamentary reform would be contrary to the
“original constitution"; but at a subsequent committee meeting a
disposition was shown to reconsider this step. The proposal was,
however, warmly condemned by Henry Erskine, who had not attended the
committee, as a breach of faith, and it must soon have been dropped.
Erskine had served for five months as the Coalition Lord Advocate,
and had recently succeeded Dundas as Dean of Faculty. He was, of
course, favourable to Parliamentary reform; but, thinking this “the
most improper time ” to bring forward such a measure, he had
declined to join the Friends of the People at the solicitation of
his two brothers, the Earl of Buchan and Thomas Erskine, who was
soon to be Lord Chancellor.
When we consider that the country was rapidly
advancing in population and wealth, and that the reforming movement
initiated by the fall of North’s Ministry was still in progress, it
is not difficult to account for the effects produced in Scotland by
the French Revolution; but the upper classes, confronted for the
first time by a really democratic spirit, looked upon it as an
aggravation of the evil that such a ferment had arisen at a period
of growing industry and trade. Whilst expatiating with just pride on
the excellence of what had once been the English, and was now the
British, constitution, conservative pamphleteers appealed to
national prosperity in mitigation of its defects, and were fond of
quoting the epitaph on a valetudinarian in Addison’s Spectator—“I
was well, I would be better, and here I am.” If the people
complained that they had no voice in public affairs, they were
offered the illogical consolation that Lauder and Jedburgh with
representation were much less flourishing places than Ilawick and
Greenock without it, or the unchristian one that the great majority
of wealthy men were in the same position; and, if anybody insisted
that, at all events, bogus freeholders and self-elective
corporations could not be defended, he was reminded that there was a
limit to that “pitch of perfection to which one may reasonably
expect human nature and human affairs to attain.” Towards the end of
1792, town councils, merchant and trade guilds, inhabitants of towns
and parishes, and even the Edinburgh Burgess Golfing Society began
to pass resolutions "in support of the constitution"; suggestions
were made, and in some cases adopted, that workmen and servants who
had attached themselves to the Friends of the People should be
dismissed from their' employment; and probably not a few persons
were as much alarmed as the writer to the newspapers, whose
imagination, distorted by the lurid glare of Parisj represented
every reformer he met “as carrying a dagger or a torch in his hand
to stab myself or to burn my wife and children.”
Early in 1793, prompted no doubt by this general
alarm, the Crown lawyers addressed themselves to the task of
repression. Pamphlets gave rise to three of the six prosecutions
which were instituted during the months of January and February, and
two of these publications were certainly seditious—one in which the
people were advised to present their petitions for reform, not to
the House of Commons, which was “a vile junto of aristocrats,” but
to the King, and, if he did not afford them redress, to refuse
payment of taxes; the other describing Parliament as “a mere outwork
of the Court, a phalanx of mercenaries,” who had imposed taxes for
which they deserved to be hanged. Two over-zealous reformers were
charged with founding an association at Partick, “under the name of
the Sons of Liberty and the Friends of Man,” to propagate the
doctrine of that “immortal author,” Thomas Paine; and three penitent
young printers were condemned to several months’ imprisonment for
having proposed a seditious toast,
"George the third and last, and damnation to all
crowned heads,” whilst drinking with some soldiers in Edinburgh
Castle. A similar sentence was passed on Captain Johnston,
proprietor of the Edinburgh Gazetteer for publishing what was
alleged to be an untrue and unjust account of this trial. In several
of the cases proceedings were adjourned in order to allow time for
the apprehension of one of the accused, and were not resumed. Such
remissness or clemency on the part of the public prosecutor received
no encouragement from the judges, for the most remarkable feature of
these trials was the illiberal and even brutal temper displayed on
the bench. Lord Abercromby in the Edinburgh Castle case remarked
that if the youthful toast-drinkers had “gone a little further they
would have been guilty of high treason"; and Lord Henderland said he
would have had no hesitation in banishing them to Botany Bay, had
they been “aged and inveterate offenders whom there were little
hopes to reclaim—be they of what profession they may—the more
literary the better for such punishment.”
It was not the fault of the Government that no
reference was made in the course of these proceedings to the late
Convention; for Muir, who had been so conspicuous in that assembly,
was arrested on January 2, and, having gone to France, professedly
to intercede for the life of Louis XVI., he forfeited his bail and
was declared an outlaw. Returning at the end of July, he was at once
apprehended, and appeared before the High Court of Justiciary on
August 30. It is unnecessary to recapitulate the history of this
thoroughly infamous trial. The principal articles of the indictment
were that the prisoner had made seditious speeches, had circulated
Paine’s and other seditious writings, and in the Convention had read
and commended the intemperate, but by no means criminal, address
from the United Irishmen. The prosecution failed to prove or even to
insinuate that Muir had incited to sedition, and, with the exception
of one most suspicious witness—a maid-servant of surprising
erudition—the evidence went to show that, far from urging people to
read Paine’s book, he had warned them against its errors. It was no
doubt as the most zealous of the Friends of the People, and the only
one of their leaders who had defended the Irish address, that Muir
was condemned. Posterity, to which the hapless prisoner appealed,
has admitted the justice of his plea that his real offence was the
advocacy of parliamentary reform; and Lord Braxfield, in summing up,
put this beyond a doubt when he said that in his opinion it was
sedition to go about among the lower classes and induce them "to
believe that a reform was absolutely necessary to preserve their
safety and their liberty.” Tried by a jury drawn wholly from a
constitutional or |Burkified" society which had refused to admit him
to its membership, denounced by the Lord Advocate as “tainted from
head to foot,” as “unworthy to live under the protection of the
law,” and bullied by judges who paraded their belief in his guilt,
Muir can have had no hope of acquittal; but he was probably as much
surprised as the public when he found himself sentenced to
transportation for fourteen years. Such a sentence, after the
authors of a pamphlet describing Parliament as fit for the gallows
had been punished with a few weeks’ imprisonment, was too much even
for the "Burkified" jury, and they are said to have resolved on a
petition when fears of assassination impelled them to disperse.
A fortnight after the conclusion of this trial
another victim was found in Thomas Fyshe Palmer, a Unitarian
clergyman, who had revised and published a pamphlet in which the
people were exhorted to assert their right to universal suffrage on
the ground that the House of Commons had joined the coalition
against them, that the little liberty they still possessed was “fast
setting, we fear, in the darkness of despotism and tyranny" and
that "a wicked ministry and a compliant Parliament" had plunged them
into a war, "the end and design of which is almost too horrid to
relate—the destruction of a whole people merely because they will be
free." Such language was certainly more like sedition than anything
that had been alleged against Muir; and, if the latter had not
suffered as an example to the Friends of the People, it is difficult
to account for the fact that he was transported for fourteen years,
whilst this member of a more extreme society—the Friends of Liberty
at Dundee—was transported for only seven. In dealing with Muir both
prosecutor and judges laid stress on the fact that he had agitated
for reform at a time of great discontent, when “good men felt and
trembled"; but Lord Abercromby, in summing up against Palmer,
pronounced it an aggravation of the charge that he had disturbed the
country when it “was enjoying peace and tranquility," and “all alarm
had ceased."
This tranquil state of affairs had lasted since the
beginning of the year and was to continue till the autumn. The
enthusiasm displayed at the Convention did not long survive its
adjournment on December 13. According to information transmitted to
Dundas during the next month, the Edinburgh societies, despite the
exertions of Lord Daer and Colonel Macleod, seemed to be “much out
of spirits,” their meetings were thinly attended, and more than one
member had proposed that, considering the discredit into which their
principles and their very name had fallen, the Friends of the People
“should lie by and wait the event of their petition.” On March 1,
1793, it was reported that the Lawnmarket Society had ceased to
meet, and that the Abbeyhill Society had not only dissolved itself
but burnt its books. At the end of April, however, the Convention
reassembled in somewhat diminished numbers, and seems to have been
occupied chiefly in collecting addresses. On May 6 petitions for
reform were presented to the House of Commons from several English
and from fourteen Scottish towns, and on the same day Grey presented
the well-known petition from the Friends of the People, in which the
anomalies of representation were temperately, but forcibly, exposed.
Grey’s petition was rejected by 282 votes to 41; and from this point
the agitation in Scotland entered on a more dangerous phase.
The fate of Muir, far from intimidating the
reformers, at once aroused them to “new life and vigour ” ; and the
magistrates of Edinburgh caused Dundas to be informed that the
meetings of the societies had again become frequent, that
inflammatory papers were posted up, and that several of the jury had
received threatening letters. The first Scottish Convention, and no
doubt also the second, had been affiliated to no English society but
that of the Friends of the People; but on May 17, 1793, the London
Corresponding Society wrote to the Edinburgh reformers, expressing a
desire for union, and, as all the petitions had been unsuccessful,
requesting their advice with regard to the adoption of "some more
effectual means,” which, however, were still to be constitutional.
In his reply to this letter Skirving, the Edinburgh secretary,
warmly commended the project of union and remarked that, as the
Scottish societies were more democratic than the English—were in
fact "the people themselves"— they were not unfitted to take the
lead. Palmer’s pamphlet, intended to rouse popular enthusiasm, was
circulated by Skirving; and he no doubt hoped to see a union
accomplished when the Convention reassembled, as had been agreed at
its last meeting, on October 29. A number of English societies
intimated their concurrence, but very few of them sent
representatives, and the delegates that were sent arrived too late.
The London Friends of the People were also said to have expressed
approval, but this can hardly have been unqualified; for as early as
July 23 their secretary had stated that a meeting of delegates
would "operate, like many rash steps of some who wish well to the
cause, much to its disadvantage”; and, writing on the day of meeting
at Edinburgh, he expressed a hope that ££none of the violence which
has done mischief to the cause of reform in England will be imported
into the Scottish Convention.”
As the vagueness of the recent petitions had been
cited against them, the October Convention passed resolutions in
favour of manhood suffrage and annual elections; and, having
condemned the slave trade and resolved to present another petition
to the House of Commons, it adjourned till the following April on
November 1. A few days later, four English delegates arrived—Gerald
and Margarot from the London Corresponding Society, Sinclair from
the London Constitutional Society, Brown from a society at
Sheffield, and two United Irishmen who were not delegates—Butler and
Hamilton Bowan. Becalled by a summons from Skirving, the members
reassembled on November 29. They now styled themselves "The British
Convention of Delegates of the People, associated to obtain
Universal Suffrage and Annual Parliaments"; and much enthusiasm was
evoked by this spontaneous union of two nations as “an event
unparalleled in the history of mankind.5’ They courted publicity,
and the authorities did not interfere till a resolution was passed
that on the first announcement of a Bill to prohibit conventions or
to suspend the Habeas Corpus Act, or in case of invasion or the
admission of foreign troops, they should meet at a place to be fixed
by a secret committee. On December 5 Skirving and several other
members were arrested, and the Convention was dispersed. It
reassembled at the Canongate Lodge, but on the following evening,
deferring to a mere show of force, it finally broke up.
Men who had suffered for the writing or circulation
of thoroughly seditious pamphlets were invariably regarded as
martyrs by these Friends of the People; but it is stated on the
authority of moderate Whigs, who disapproved of the Convention but
were intimately acquainted with its Lord Daer was still a member of
the Convention, but not Colonel Macleod, who thought that the people
were “not ripe at present for universal suffrage and annual
elections.” proceedings, that it aimed at nothing more than the
advocacy of its two avowed demands; and Skirving at his trial
explained certain peculiarities of its procedure by saying that he
and his friends meant to hold up “empty bugbears to the deluded as
nurses do to children to frighten them to sleep.” If fright has ever
been known to induce sleep in children, it had quite the opposite
effect on the public, particularly as the “bugbears ” had been
imported from France. The delegates addressed each other as
“Citizen” or “Citizen President” ; they divided themselves into
sections, which met at such places as Liberty Court or Liberty Hall,
and submitted reports, some of which began Vive la Convention and
ended Qa ira; it was even proposed to parcel out the country into
departments; and the minutes were inscribed “1st year of the British
Convention.” Approximating thus closely in form to its prototype at
Paris, the Convention was assumed to be no less republican in
spirit; and the existence of Crown and Parliament was believed to be
endangered by this assembly of Scottish mechanics, which became
“British” on,the arrival of four English delegates, collected its
revenue in a plate at the door, noted “2s. 6d. of overplus at
dinner,” and awarded to the patriotic donor of 5s. an honourable
mention in its minutes. Nevertheless, “the wit and humour of a very
few individuals,” alleged by Skirving to be the authors of this
farce, might surely have devised a less dangerous pastime than that
of playing at the French Revolution; for Scottish judges and juries
could hardly be expected to appreciate the jest. In 1794 sentences
of fourteen years’ transportation were passed on Skirving and two of
the English delegates, Margarot and Gerald. Proceedings were
instituted, but abandoned, against Sinclair, another English
delegate; and Scott, the printer of the Edinburgh Gazetteer, was
outlawed.
The dispersion of the British Convention was keenly
resented by its friends in England. At a meeting on January 17,
1794, the Constitutional Society passed a series of resolutions
denying the duty of obedience to law when it had become an
instrument of oppression, declaring that the time was fast
approaching when tyranny must be opposed ‘c by the same means by
which it is exercised,” and extolling the conduct of their Scottish
comrades who, “though assailed by force, had not been answered by
arguments." Three days later, the Corresponding Society ordered a
hundred thousand copies to be printed of an address to the people in
which Englishmen and Irishmen were exhorted to stand or fall with
those patriots at Edinburgh who had suffered from ‘c the wicked hand
of power”; and, repeating in almost identical terms the resolution
which had led to that disaster, they determined that "upon the first
introduction ’ of any measure hostile to liberty, such as a motion
for bringing in foreign troops, for suspending the Habeas Corpus
Act, for instituting martial law or for prohibiting the meeting of
delegates, the representatives of each division and the secretaries
of affiliated societies should be summoned to concur in “a general
convention of the people.” Both address and resolution were adopted
by the Constitutional Society; and, though no action was yet being
taken in Parliament, a joint committee had been appointed to
organise "another British Convention" when the papers of the
societies were seized and their leading members arrested. Margarot,
writing from captivity at Edinburgh, had advocated the forming of
“armed associations"; and in a handbill distributed by the
Corresponding Society the same advice was given— "Get arms and learn
the use of them.” It subsequently transpired that in several places
in and around London men were being secretly trained to the use of
firelocks, and that pikes and caltrops were being manufactured at
Sheffield. The papers of the societies, having been laid before
Parliament, were referred to a secret committee, and the
presentation of its report was followed by a Habeas Corpus
Suspension Act. In the autumn several of the prisoners were brought
to trial for high treason; but Thomas Erskine argued that their
proceedings, however seditious, could not justify so grave a charge,
and all of them were acquitted.
Those of the Scottish reformers, mostly of humble
rank, who had not grown weary of agitation, threw themselves
heartily into this scheme. The British Convention had enjoined its
members to impress upon their constituents the necessity of choosing
new delegates and contributing to their support; and, under the
direction of a Committee of Union, acting in concert with the London
societies, delegates were elected at Perth and Strathaven, and
probably at other places, to attend the convention which was to be
held in England. The Committee of Union had, however, a secret
executive of seven, known as the Committee of Ways and Means; and
this council had engaged in more audacious designs. The Commons’
Committee of Secrecy presented its second report on June 6, 1794;
and, a month or two later, Watt and Downie, the leading Scottish
agitators, were tried for high treason. The evidence showed that an
insurrection had been planned; that emissaries had been sent on this
quest to Paisley, which was “ in a state of great readiness,” and to
other manufacturing towns; that attempts had been made to seduce the
troops, or at all events to dissuade the Fencibles from serving in
England; that the inevitable pikes had been forged; and that Watt
had proposed a scheme for kidnapping the Edinburgh garrison and
surprising the Castle. Both men were convicted, but Watt alone
suffered death. This person had recently been in correspondence with
Lord Advocate Dundas; but the argument of his counsel that he had
engaged in this conspiracy with a view to giving information to
Government was refuted by the prisoner himself in a sealed
confession. His zeal for democracy, once the mask of an informer,
had apparently become sincere.
Scotland and England had thus each in turn become a
focus of revolutionary intrigue, and now the centre of agitation was
to be shifted to Ireland. Abuses of patronage and representation
were naturally carried to great lengths in Ireland after the
Parliament in 1782 had achieved legislative independence; and
corruption was a more serious evil in Dublin than at Westminster
since it maintained the predominance, not of a party, but of an
alien Government. The influence of the American Eevolution had
induced the Protestant Irish to assert the freedom of their
legislature, and the effect of the French Eevolution was to inflame
them against the system by which that concession was neutralised.
Sir Samuel Eomilly remarked that the impression produced in Ireland
by Paine’s reply to Burke was “hardly to be conceived,” and that if
any violent outbreak was to be apprehended, it would certainly begin
there. In 1791 Wolfe Tone founded at Belfast the Society of United
Irishmen. Its object was to enlist both Protestants and Catholics in
an attempt to combat English influence “by a complete and radical
reform of the representation of the people in Parliament,” and it
anticipated the British societies in demanding universal suffrage
and annual elections. For several years, during which Presbyterian
Ulster was its chief support, it continued to agitate on these
lines; but religious dissension soon revived; Ulster Eadicalism
developed into Orange-ism; and in 1796 the United Irish consisted
mainly of Catholics who were conspiring with France to establish an
independent republic.
By this time the Friends of the People and even that
very extreme body, the Society for Constitutional Information, had
desisted from their labours; but the London Corresponding Society
was no less active and even more mischievous than ever. Bepublican
and treasonable designs are said to have been no longer concealed at
its meetings, and most of the affiliated societies had been
reconstituted on the Irish model as societies of United Englishmen.
In Scotland the remnants of an earlier system had undergone a
similar development, and societies of United Scotsmen existed
amongst the weavers of Fifeshire and Forfarshire, but principally at
Glasgow and throughout the industrial districts of the west. These
Scottish clubs appear to have approximated more closely than the
English to the organisation which had been established in Ireland.
Their basis was societies of not more than sixteen members; and over
these by successive delegations was formed a hierarchy of
committees—parochial, county, provincial and national. A secret
executive of seven, nominated by the national committee, which
usually met at Glasgow, governed the whole. Elections were conducted
in such a way that the persons chosen were known only to the
secretary, and various oaths were exacted, one of which bound the
subscriber never to inform or give evidence against any member.
Three repressive measures had recently become law—one to put down
seditious meetings, and two to extend the law of treason; and, in
order to check this subterranean activity in favour of Irish rebels
and foreign enemies, an Act was passed in 1797 against the
imposition of unlawful oaths. George Mealmaker, a Dundee weaver, who
had written the pamphlet for circulating which Palmer had suffered,
was sentenced under this statute to fourteen years’ transportation;
and James Paterson, another United Scotsman, was transported for
five years.
The liberal spirit, which had at last asserted itself
in Scottish politics, was not to be extinguished either by external
pressure or by its own excesses; but for many years it seemed to be
utterly crushed. The supremacy of Dundas, won by his own exertions,
cannot have been difficult to maintain; for the dread of Jacobinism
had created an enthusiasm for submission, and had put an end, as we
have seen, to the powerful movement in favour of burgh reform,
which, had it succeeded, must have sapped the basis of his power.
Throughout Great Britain the controversy excited by the French
Revolution embittered social as well as political life; but in
Scotland its influence knew no bounds. ‘“Everything,” it has been
said, “not this or that thing, but literally everything, was soaked
in this one event.” The persistence of feudal habits and ideas,
which we have so often had occasion to remark, probably-contributed
as much to this result as temporary panic. Braxfield, who as Lord
Justice-Clerk presided at the trial of Muir, was no doubt the worst
specimen of his class; but in his own brutal fashion he was merely
expressing the sentiment of what Lord Cockburn calls “the hard old
aristocracy” when he said from the bench: “A Government in every
country should be just like a corporation; and in this country it is
made up of the landed interest, which alone has a right to be
represented. As for the rabble, who have nothing but personal
property, what hold has the nation on them?” Such being the temper
of the time, Henry Erskine had certainly the courage of his opinions
when in November, 1795, he took part in a public meeting to protest
against the Sedition and Treason Bills, and it is not surprising
that the Faculty of Advocates resolved by a large majority to
dispense with his services as Dean. Erskine pointed out to his
leading opponents that “political discussions and considerations”
had never influenced the bestowal or the tenure of this post; and
they of course retorted that the issue at stake was “nothing less
than this, whether the happy government and constitution of these
realms shall stand or fall?”1 Other instances of intolerance are
recorded more difficult to credit. Young men of birth or promise, on
seeking admission to the Bar, were expected to subscribe a political
confession; and a certain advocate, who had refused this test, found
it advisable to serve for a time as a Fencible officer in Ireland.
Most of the leading Edinburgh Whigs were advocates, and thirty-eight
of the Faculty voted against the dismissal of Erskine. These and
other gentlemen were wont to dine together on Fox’s birthday, and
sheriff’s officers were usually stationed at the door to take down
their names. An Edinburgh congregation, whose senior minister had
died, petitioned Government, which held the patronage, that the
second minister should be promoted to his place. “A member of the
Cabinet,” who can hardly have been other than Dundas, replied “that
the single fact of the people having interfered so far as to express
a wish was conclusive against what they desired; and another
appointment was instantly made.”
Here we conclude our survey of the political
condition of Scotland during the latter half of the eighteenth
century, and the reader need hardly be reminded how greatly that
condition had changed. The national and ecclesiastical interests
which gave to the Scottish kingdom its distinctive character had
lost their significance at the Union, and for more than fifty years
the Scots had failed to assimilate the constitutional tradition
which had so long ennobled the public life of England. From the
accession of George III. we have seen that three successive causes
had operated to dispel this torpor— the pretensions of royal
absolutism, the revolt of America, in so far at least as it
contributed to the fall of Lord North, and the French Revolution.
The first cause had provoked some of the peers to attempt the
recovery of their electoral freedom; the second had prompted the
middle class to engage in an eleven years’ struggle for municipal
reform; and the third had revealed a new world of thought and action
to the masses of the people. There was truth as well as eloquence in
these words of the Constitutional Society to their friends in
France: “The sparks of liberty preserved in England for ages, like
the coruscations of the northern aurora, served but to show the
darkness visible in the rest of Europe. The lustre of the American
republic, like an effulgent morning, rose with increasing vigour,
but still too distant to enlighten our hemisphere, till the
splendour of the French Revolution burst forth upon the nations in
the full fervour of a meridian sun. It dispels the clouds of
prejudice from all people, reveals the secrets of all despotism, and
creates a new character in man.” Nor could religion any more than
politics escape the illumination of these piercing rays. Only a few
years had passed since the claim of the masses to participate in
public affairs had been limited to the election of their pastors,
and Hume’s criticisms, addressed to the learned, had been the worst
assault— and none could be more deadly—that orthodoxy had to face.
Now ultra-democratic and even republican ideas were being debated
and propagated throughout a network of village clubs, and such
doctrines were none the less popular because they emanated from a
writer who was so far from respecting what Hume called "our most
holy religion" that he pronounced more than half of the Bible to be
more like "the work of a demon than the word of God.” Scotland could
not have been so profoundly affected by the French Revolution if
economic forces had not previously transformed its industrial life;
but, before the action of these forces is considered, it will be
well to extend our survey from civil to ecclesiastical politics. |