CLOSE OF APPRENTICESHIP
(1839-1841)
What are great gifts but the correlative
of great work? We are not born for ourselves,
but for our kind, for our neighbours, for our country:
it is but selfishness, indolence, a perverse fastidiousness,
an unmanliness, and no virtue or praise, to bury our
talent in a napkin. CARDINAL NEWMAN.
Along with his domestic and parliamentary
concerns, we are to recognise the ferment that was
proceeding in Mr. Gladstone’s mind upon new veins
of theology; but it was an interior working of feeling
and reflection, and went forward without much visible
relation to the outer acts and facts of his life during
this period. As to those, one entry in the diary
(Feb 1st, 1839) tells a sufficient tale for the next
two years. ’I find I have, besides family
and parliamentary concerns and those of study, ten
committees on hand: Milbank, Society for Propagation
of the Gospel, Church Building Metropolis, Church
Commercial School, National Schools inquiry and correspondence,
Upper Canada, Clergy, Additional Curates’ Fund,
Carlton Library, Oxford and Cambridge Club. These
things distract and dissipate my mind.’
Well they might; for in any man with less than Mr.
Gladstone’s amazing faculty of rapid and powerful
concentration, such dispersion must have been disastrous
both to effectiveness and to mental progress.
As it is, I find little in the way of central facts
to remark in either mental history or public action.
He strayed away occasionally from the Fathers and
their pastures and dipped into the new literature
of the hour, associated with names of dawning popularity.
Carlyle he found hard to lay down. Some of Emerson,
too, he became acquainted with, as we have already
seen; but his mind was far too closely filled with
transcendentalisms of his own to offer much hospitality
to the serene and beautiful transcendentalism of Emerson.
He read Oliver Twist and Nicholas Nickleby,
and on the latter he makes a characteristic comment ’the
tone is very human; it is most happy in touches of
natural pathos. No church in the book, and the
motives are not those of religion.’ So
with Hallam’s History of Literature,
’Finished (Oct 10, 1839) his theological chapter,
in which I am sorry to find amidst such merits, what
is even far more grievous than his anti-church sarcasms,
such notions on original sin.
He found Chillingworth’s Religion of Protestants
’a work of the most mixed merits,’ an
ambiguous phrase which I take to mean not that its
merits were various, but that they were much mixed
with those demerits for which the puritan Cheynell
baited the unlucky latitudinarian to death. About
this time also he first began Father Paul’s famous
history of the Council of Trent, a work that always
stood as high in his esteem as in Macaulay’s,
who liked Sarpi the best of all modern historians.
To the great veteran poet of the time
Mr. Gladstone’s fidelity was unchanging, even
down to compositions that the ordinary Wordsworthian
gives up:
Read aloud Wordsworth’s Cumberland
Beggar and Peter Bell. The former
is generally acknowledged to be a noble poem.
The same justice is not done to the latter; I
was more than ever struck with the vivid power
of the descriptions, the strong touches of feeling,
the skill and order with which the plot upon Peter’s
conscience is arranged, and the depth of interest
which is made to attach to the humblest of quadrupeds.
It must have cost great labour, and is an extraordinary
poem, both as a whole and in detail.
Let not the scorner forget that Matthew
Arnold, that admirable critic and fine poet, confesses
to reading Peter Bell with pleasure and edification.
In the political field he moved steadily
on. Sir R. Peel spoke to him (April 19, 1839)
in the House about the debate and wished him to speak
after Sheil, if Graham, who was to speak about 8 or
9, could bring him up. Peel showed him several
points with regard to the committee which he thought
might be urged. ’This is very kind in him
as a mark of confidence; and assures me that if, as
I suspect, he considers my book as likely to bring
me into some embarrassment individually, yet he is
willing to let me still act under him, and fight my
own battles in that matter as best with God’s
help I may, which is thoroughly fair. It imposes,
however, a great responsibility. I was not presumptuous
enough to dream of following Sheil; not that his speech
is formidable, but the impression it leaves on the
House is. I meant to provoke him. A mean
man may fire at a tiger, but it requires a strong
and bold one to stand his charge; and the longer I
live, the more I feel my own (intrinsically) utter
powerlessness in the House of Commons.
But my principle is this not to shrink
from any such responsibility when laid upon me by a
competent person. Sheil, however, did not speak,
so I am reserved and may fulfil my own idea, please
God, to-night.’
THE JAMAICA
CASE
We come now to one of the memorable
episodes in this vexed decade of our political history.
The sullen demon of slavery died hard. The negro
still wore about his neck galling links of the broken
chain. The transitory stage of apprenticeship
was in some respects even harsher than the bondage
from which it was to bring deliverance, and the old
iniquity only worked in new ways. The pity and
energy of the humane at home drove a perplexed and
sluggish government to pass an act for dealing with
the abominations of the prisons to which the unhappy
blacks were committed in Jamaica. The assembly
of that island, a planter oligarchy, resented the
new law from the mother country as an invasion of
their constitutional rights, and stubbornly refused
in their exasperation, even after a local dissolution,
to perform duties that were indispensable for working
the machinery of administration. The cabinet
in consequence asked parliament (April 9th) to suspend
the constitution of Jamaica for a term of five years.
The tory opposition, led by Peel with all his force,
aided by the aversion of a section of the liberals
to a measure in which they detected a flavour of dictatorship,
ran the ministers (May 6th) within five votes of defeat
on a cardinal stage.
‘I was amused,’ says Mr.
Gladstone, ’with observing yesterday the differences
of countenance and manner in the ministers whom I met
on my ride. Ellice (their friend) would not look
at me at all. Charles Wood looked but askance
and with the hat over the brow. Grey shouted,
“Wish you joy!” Lord Howick gave a remarkably
civil and smiling nod; and Morpeth a hand salute with
all his might, as we crossed in riding. On Monday
night after the division, Peel said just as it was
known and about to be announced, “Jamaica was
a good horse to start."’ Of his own share in
the performance, Mr. Gladstone only says that he spoke
a dry speech to a somewhat reluctant House. ’I
cannot work up my matter at all in such a plight.
However, considering what it was, they behaved very
well. A loud cheer on the announcement of the
numbers from our people, in which I did not join.’
To have won the race by so narrow
a majority as five seemed to the whigs, wearied of
their own impotence and just discredit, a good plea
for getting out of office. Peel proceeded to begin
the formation of a government, but the operation broke
down upon an affair of the bedchamber. He supposed
the Queen to object to the removal of any of the ladies
of her household, and the Queen supposed him to insist
on the removal of them all. The situation was
unedifying and nonsensical, but the Queen was not
yet twenty, and Lord Melbourne had for once failed
to teach a prudent lesson. A few days saw Melbourne
back in office, and in office he remained for two
years longer.
II
MARRIAGE
In June 1839 the understanding arrived
at with Miss Catherine Glynne during the previous
winter in Sicily, ripened into a definite engagement,
and on the 25th of the following July their marriage
took place amid much rejoicing and festivity at Hawarden.
At the same time and place, Mary Glynne, the younger
sister, was married to Lord Lyttelton. Sir Stephen
Glynne, their brother, was the ninth, and as was to
happen, the last baronet. Their mother, born Mary
Neville, was the daughter of the second Lord Braybrooke
and Mary Grenville his wife, sister of the first Marquis
of Buckingham. Hence Lady Glynne was one of a
historic clan, granddaughter of George Grenville, the
minister of American taxation, and niece of William,
Lord Grenville, head of the cabinet of All the Talents
in 1806. She was first cousin therefore of the
younger Pitt, and the Glynnes could boast of a family
connection with three prime ministers, or if we choose
to add Lord Chatham who married Hester Grenville,
with four. ‘I told her,’ Mr. Gladstone
recorded on this occasion of their engagement (June
8th), ’what was my original destination and
desire in life; in what sense and manner I remained
in connection with politics.... I have given her
(led by her questions) these passages for canons of
our living:
’Le fronde, onde
s’infronda tutto l’orto
Dell’ Ortolano eterno,
am’ io cotanto,
Quanto da lui a lor
di bene e porto.’
And Dante again
’In la sua volontade e nostra
pace:
Ella e quel mare, al
qual tutto si muove.’
In few human unions have the good
hopes and fond wishes of a bridal day been better
fulfilled or brought deeper and more lasting content.
Sixty long years after, Mr. Gladstone said, ’It
would not be possible to unfold in words the value
of the gifts which the bounty of Providence has conferred
upon me through her.’ And the blessing remained
radiant and unclouded to the distant end.
At the close of August, after posting
across Scotland from Greenock by a route better known
now than then to every tourist, the young couple made
their way to Fasque, where the new bride found an auspicious
approach and the kindest of welcomes. Her ’entrance
into her adoptive family was much more formidable
than it would be to those who had been less loved,
or less influential, or less needed and leant upon,
in the home where she was so long a queen.’
At Fasque all went as usual. Soon after his arrival,
his father communicated that he meant actually to transfer
to his sons his Demerara properties Robertson
to have the management. ’This increased
wealth, so much beyond my needs, with its attendant
responsibility is very burdensome, however on his part
the act be beautiful.’
III
The parliamentary session of 1840
was unimportant and dreary. The government was
tottering, the conservative leaders were in no hurry
to pluck the pear before it was ripe, and the only
men with any animating principle of active public
policy in them were Cobden and the League against
the Corn Law. The attention of the House of Commons
was mainly centred in the case of Stockdale and the
publication of debates. But Mr. Gladstone’s
most earnest thoughts were still far away from what
he found to be the dry sawdust of the daily politics,
as the following lines may show:
March 16th, 1849. Manning
dined with us. He kindly undertook
to revise my manuscript
on ‘Church Principles.’
March 18th. Yesterday
I had a long conversation with James Hope.
He came to tell me, with great generosity, that he
would always respond to any call, according to
the best of his power, which I might make on
him for the behalf of the common cause he
had given up all views of advancement in his profession he
had about L400 a year, and this, which includes
his fellowship, was quite sufficient for his
wants; his time would be devoted to church objects;
in the intermediate region he considered himself as
having the first tonsure.
Hope urged strongly the principle,
’Let every man abide in the calling ’
I thought even over strongly. My belief is that
he foregoes the ministry from deeming himself
unworthy.... The object of my letter to
Hope was in part to record on paper my abhorrence
of party in the church, whether Oxford party or
any other.
March 18th. To-day
a meeting at Peel’s on the China question; considered
in the view of censure upon the conduct of the administration,
and a motion will accordingly be made objecting to
the attempts to force the Chinese to modify their
old relations with us, and to the leaving the
superintendent without military force. It
was decided not to move simultaneously in the Lords particularly
because the radicals would, if there were a double
motion, act not on the merits but for the ministry.
Otherwise, it seemed to be thought we should carry
a motion. The Duke of Wellington said, ‘God!
if it is carried, they will go,’ that they
were as near as possible to resignation on the last
defeat, and would not stand it again. Peel
said, he understood four ministers were then
strongly for resigning. The duke also said, our
footing in China could not be re-established,
unless under some considerable naval and military
demonstration, now that matters had gone so far.
He appeared pale and shaken, but spoke loud and a good
deal, much to the point and with considerable
gesticulation. The mind’s life I never
saw more vigorous.
THE CHINA
QUESTION
The Chinese question was of the simplest.
British subjects insisted on smuggling opium into
China in the teeth of Chinese law. The British
agent on the spot began war against China for protecting
herself against these malpractices. There was
no pretence that China was in the wrong, for in fact
the British government had sent out orders that the
opium-smugglers should not be shielded; but the orders
arrived too late, and war having begun, Great Britain
felt bound to see it through, with the result that
China was compelled to open four ports, to cede Hong
Kong, and to pay an indemnity of six hundred thousand
pounds. So true is it that statesmen have no
concern with pater nosters, the Sermon on the Mount,
or the vade mecum of the moralist. We shall
soon see that this transaction began to make Mr. Gladstone
uneasy, as was indeed to be expected in anybody who
held that a state should have a conscience. On
April 8, 1840, his journal says: ’Read on
China. House.... Spoke heavily; strongly
against the trade and the war, having previously asked
whether my speaking out on them would do harm, and
having been authorised.’ An unguarded expression
brought him into a debating scrape, but his speech
abounded in the pure milk of what was to be the Gladstonian
word:
I do not know how it can be urged as
a crime against the Chinese that they refused
provisions to those who refused obedience to their
laws whilst residing within their territory. I
am not competent to judge how long this war may
last, nor how protracted may be its operations,
but this I can say, that a war more unjust in
its origin, a war more calculated in its progress to
cover this country with disgrace, I do not know
and I have not read of. Mr. Macaulay spoke
last night in eloquent terms of the British flag waving
in glory at Canton, and of the animating effect produced
upon the minds of our sailors by the knowledge
that in no country under heaven was it permitted
to be insulted. But how comes it to pass
that the sight of that flag always raises the spirits
of Englishmen? It is because it has always
been associated with the cause of justice, with
opposition to oppression, with respect for national
rights, with honourable commercial enterprise, but
now under the auspices of the noble lord [Palmerston]
that flag is hoisted to protect an infamous contraband
traffic, and if it were never to be hoisted except
as it is now hoisted on the coast of China, we
should recoil from its sight with horror, and should
never again feel our hearts thrill, as they now
thrill, with emotion when it floats magnificently
and in pride upon the breeze.... Although
the Chinese were undoubtedly guilty of much absurd
phraseology, of no little ostentatious pride, and of
some excess, justice in my opinion is with them,
and whilst they the pagans and semi-civilised
barbarians have it, we the enlightened and civilised
Christians are pursuing objects at variance both with
justice and with religion.
May 14th. Consulted
[various persons] on opium. All but Sir R. Inglis
were on grounds of prudence against its [a motion against
the compensation demanded from China] being brought
forward. To this majority of friendly and
competent persons I have given way, I hope not
wrongfully; but I am in dread of the judgment of God
upon England for our national iniquity towards
China. It has been to me matter of most
painful and anxious consideration. I yielded
specifically to this; the majority of the persons
most trustworthy feel that to make the motion
would, our leaders being in such a position and
disposition with respect to it, injure the cause.
June 1st. Meeting of the Society
for Suppression of the Slave Trade. [This was
the occasion of a speech from Prince Albert, who presided.]
Exeter Hall crammed is really a grand spectacle.
Samuel Wilberforce a beautiful speaker; in some
points resembles Macaulay. Peel excellent.
June 12th. This evening I voted for
the Irish education grant; on the ground that
in its principle, according to Lord Stanley’s
letter, it is identical practically with the English
grant of ’33-8, and I might have added with
the Kildare Place grant. To exclude doctrine
from exposition is in my judgment as truly a
mutilation of scripture, as to omit bodily portions
of the sacred volume.
SOCIAL DIVERSION
His first child and eldest son was
born (June 3), and Manning and Hope became his godfathers;
these two were Mr. Gladstone’s most intimate
friends at this period. Social diversions were
never wanting. One June afternoon he went down
to Greenwich, ’Grillion’s fish dinner to
the Speaker. Great merriment; and an excellent
speech from Stanley, “good sense and good nonsense.”
A modest one from Morpeth. But though we dined
at six, these expeditions do not suit me. I am
ashamed of paying L2, 10s. for a dinner. But
on this occasion the object was to do honour to a
dignified and impartial Speaker.’ He had
been not at all grateful, by the way, for the high
honour of admission to Grillion’s dining club
this year, ’a thing quite alien to
my temperament, which requires more soothing and domestic
appliances after the feverish and consuming excitements
of party life; but the rules of society oblige me to
submit.’ As it happened, so narrow is man’s
foreknowledge, Grillion’s down to the very end
of his life, nearly sixty years ahead, had no more
faithful or congenial member.
July 1st. Last evening
at Lambeth Palace I had a good deal of conversation
with Colonel Gurwood about the Duke of Wellington and
about Canada. He told me an anecdote of Lord
Seaton which throws light upon his peculiar reserve,
and shows it to be a modesty of character, combined
no doubt with military habits and notions. When
Captain Colborne, and senior officer of his rank
in the 21st foot, he [Lord Seaton] was military
secretary to General Fox during the war.
A majority in his regiment fell vacant, Gen. Fox desired
him to ascertain who was the senior captain on
the command. ’Captain So-and-so
of the 80th [I think].’ ’Write to
Colonel Gordon and recommend him to his royal
highness for the vacant majority.’ He did
it. The answer came to this effect: ’The
recommendation will not be refused, but we are
surprised to see that it comes in the handwriting
of Captain Colborne, the very man who, according to
the rules of the service, ought to have this
majority.’ General Fox had forgotten
it, and Captain Colborne had not reminded him!
The error was corrected. He (Gurwood) said
he had never known the Duke of Wellington speak
on the subject of religion but once, when he quoted
the story of Oliver Cromwell on his death-bed, and
said: ’That state of grace, in my
opinion, is a state or habit of doing right,
of persevering in duty, and to fall from it is to cease
from acting right.’ He always attends
the service at 8 A.M. in the Chapel Royal, and
says it is a duty which ought to be done, and the
earlier in the day it is discharged the better.
July 24th. Heard [James] Hope in the House
of Lords against the Chapters bill; and he spoke
with such eloquence, learning, lofty sentiment, clear
and piercing diction, continuity of argument,
just order, sagacious tact, and comprehensive
method, as one would say would have required
the longest experience as well as the greatest natural
gifts. Yet he never acted before, save as
counsel for the Edinburgh and Glasgow railway.
If hearts are to be moved, it must be by this speech.
July 27th. Again went over and got
up the subject of opium compensation as it respects
the Chinese. I spoke thereon 11/2 hours
for the liberation of my conscience, and to afford
the friends of peace opposite an opportunity,
of which they would not avail themselves.
In August he tells Mrs. Gladstone
how he has been to dine with ’such an odd party
at the Guizots’; Austin, radical lawyer; John
Mill, radical reviewer; M. Gaskell, Monckton Milnes,
Thirlwall, new Bishop of St. David’s, George
Lewis, poor law commissioner. Not very ill mixed,
however. The host is extremely nice.’
An odd party indeed; it comprised four at least of
the strongest heads in England, and two of the most
illustrious names of all the century in Europe.
EXAMINER
AT ETON
In March (1840) Mr. Gladstone and
Lord Lyttelton went to Eton together to fulfil the
ambitious functions of examiner for the Newcastle
scholarship. In thanking Mr. Gladstone for his
services, Hawtrey speaks of the advantage of public
men of his stamp undertaking such duties in the good
cause of the established system of education, ’as
against the nonsense of utilitarians and radicals.’
The questions ran in the familiar mould in divinity,
niceties of ancient grammar, obscurities of classical
construction, caprices of vocabulary, and
all the other points of the old learning. The
general merit Mr. Gladstone found ’beyond anything
possible or conceivable’ when he was a boy at
Eton a dozen years before:
We sit with the boys (39 in number)
and make about ten hours a day in looking over
papers with great minuteness.... Although it is
in quantity hard work, it is lightened by a warm
interest, and the refreshment of early love upon
a return to this sweet place. It is work
apart from human passion, and is felt as a moral relaxation,
though it is not one in any other sense....
This is a curious experience to me, of jaded
body and mind refreshed. I propose for Latin
theme a little sentence of Burke’s which runs
to this effect, ’Flattery corrupts both
the receiver and the giver; and adulation is
not of more service to the people than to kings.’
April 2nd. The statistics become
excessively interesting. Henry Hallam gained,
and now stands second [the brother of his dead friend].
April 3rd. In, 6 hours; out,
from 4 to 5 hours more upon the papers.
Vinegar, thank God, carries my eyes through so much
MS., and the occupation is deeply interesting,
especially on Hallam’s account. Our
labours were at one time anxious and critical, the
two leaders being 1388 and 1390 respectively.
At night, however, all was decided. April
4th. 12.2. Viva voce for fourteen
select. At 21/2 Seymour was announced scholar
to the boys, and chaired forthwith. Hallam,
medallist. It was quite overpowering.
Henry Hallam was the second son of
the historian, the junior of Arthur by some fourteen
or fifteen years. Mr. Gladstone more than a generation
later described a touching supplement to his Eton story.
’In 1850 Henry Hallam had attained an age exceeding
only by some four years the limit of his brother’s
life. During that autumn I was travelling post
between Turin and Genoa, upon my road to Naples.
A family coach met us on the road, and the glance
of a moment at the inside showed me the familiar face
of Mr. Hallam. I immediately stopped my carriage,
descended, and ran after his. On overtaking it,
I found the dark clouds accumulated on his brow, and
learned with indescribable pain that he was on his
way home from Florence, where he had just lost his
second and only remaining son, from an attack corresponding
in its suddenness and its devastating rapidity with
that which had struck down his eldest born son seventeen
years before.’
At Fasque, where his autumn sojourn
began in September, he threw himself with special
ardour into his design for a college for Scotch episcopalians,
especially for the training of clergy. He wrote
to Manning (Aug 31, 1840):
Hope and I have been talking and writing
upon a scheme for raising money to found in Scotland
a college akin in structure to the Romish seminaries
in England; that is to say, partly for training the
clergy, partly for affording an education to the children
of the gentry and others who now go chiefly to
presbyterian schools or are tended at home by
presbyterian tutors. I think L25,000 would do
it, and that it might be got. I must have
my father’s sanction before committing
myself to it. Hope’s intended absence for
the winter is a great blow. Were he to be
at home I do not doubt that great progress might
be made. In the kirk toil and trouble, double,
double, the fires burn and cauldrons bubble:
and though I am not sanguine as to very speedy
or extensive resumption by the church of her
spiritual rights, she may have a great part to play.
At present she is very weakly manned, and this
is the way I think to strengthen the crew.
GLENALMOND
The scheme expanded as time went on.
His father threw himself into it with characteristic
energy and generosity, contributing many thousand
pounds, for the sum required greatly exceeded the modest
figure above mentioned. Mr. Gladstone conducted
a laborious and sometimes vexatious correspondence
in the midst of more important public cares. Plans
were mature, and adequate funds were forthcoming,
and in the autumn of 1842 Hope and the two Gladstones
made what they found an agreeable tour, examining
the various localities for a site, and finally deciding
on a spot ’on a mountain-stream, ten miles from
Perth, at the very gate of the highlands.’
It was 1846 before the college at Glenalmond was opened
for its destined purposes. We all know examples
of men holding opinions with trenchancy, decision,
and even a kind of fervour, and yet with no strong
desire to spread them. Mr. Gladstone was at all
times of very different temper; consumed with missionary
energy and the fire of ardent propagandism.
LETTER FROM COBDEN
He laboured hard at the fourth edition
of his book, sometimes getting eleven hours of work,
’a good day as times go,’ Montesquieu,
Burke, Bacon, Clarendon, and others of the masters
of civil and historic wisdom being laid under ample
contribution. By Christmas he was at Hawarden.
In January he made a speech at a meeting held in Liverpool
for the foundation of a church union, and a few days
later he hurried off to Walsall to help his brother
John, then the tory candidate, and a curious incident
happened:
I either provided myself, or I was
furnished from headquarters, with a packet of
pamphlets in favour of the corn laws. These I
read, and I extracted from them the chief material
of my speeches. I dare say it was sad stuff,
furbished up at a moment’s notice. We carried
the election. Cobden sent me a challenge to attend
a public discussion of the subject. Whether
this was quite fair, I am not certain, for I
was young, made no pretension to be an expert, and
had never opened my lips in parliament on the
subject. But it afforded me an excellent
opportunity to decline with modesty and with
courtesy as well as reason. I am sorry to say
that, to the best of my recollection, I did far
otherwise, and the pith of my answer was made
to be that I regarded the Anti-Corn Law League as
no better than a big borough-mongering association.
Such was my first capital offence in the matter
of protection; redeemed from public condemnation
only by obscurity.
The letters are preserved, but a sentence
or two from Mr. Gladstone’s to Cobden are enough.
’The phrases which you quote from a report in
the Times have reference, not to the corn law,
but to the Anti-Corn Law League and its operations
in Walsall. Complaining apparently of these,
you desire me to meet you in discussion, not upon the
League but upon the corn law. I cannot conceive
two subjects more distinct. I admit the question
of the repeal of the corn laws to be a subject fairly
open to discussion, although I have a strong opinion
against it. But as to the Anti-Corn Law League,
I do not admit that any equitable doubt can be entertained
as to the character of its present proceedings; and,
excepting a casual familiarity of phrase, I adhere
rigidly to the substance of the sentiments which I
have expressed. I know not who may be answerable
for these measures, nor was your name known to me,
or in my recollection at the time when I spoke.’
Time soon changed all this, and showed who was teacher
and who the learner.
By and by the session of 1841 opened,
the whigs moving steadily towards their fall, and
Mr. Gladstone almost overwhelmed with floods of domestic
business. He settled in the pleasant region which
is to the metropolis what Delphi was to the habitable
earth, and where, if we include in it Downing Street,
he passed all the most important years of his life
in London. Though he speaks of being overwhelmed
by domestic business, and he was undoubtedly hard
beset by all the demands of early housekeeping, yet
he very speedily recovered his balance. He resisted
now and always as jealously as he could those promiscuous
claims on time and attention by which men of less
strenuous purpose suffer the effectiveness of their
lives to be mutilated. ‘I well know,’
he writes to his young wife who was expecting him
to join her at Hagley, ’you would not have me
come on any conditions with which one’s sense
of duty could not be quieted, and would (I hope) send
me back by the next train. These delays are to
you a practical exemplification of the difficulty of
reconciling domestic and political engagements.
The case is one that scarcely admits of compromise;
the least that is required in order to the fulfilment
of one’s duty is constant bodily presence in
London until the fag-end of the session is fairly
reached.’
Here are a few examples of the passing days:
March 12th, 1841. Tracts
for the Times, No 90; ominous. March
13th. Went to see Reform Club.
Sat to Bradley 21/2-4. London Library committee.
Carlton Library committee. Corrected two proof-sheets.
Conversed an hour and a half with Mr. Richmond, who
came to tea, chiefly on my plan for a picture-life
of Christ. Chess with C. [his wife]. March
14th (Sunday). Communion (St.
James’s), St. Margaret’s afternoon.
Wrote on Ephes. , and read it aloud to servants.
March 20th. City to see Freshfield.
Afternoon service in Saint Paul’s.
What an image, what a crowd of images! Amidst
the unceasing din, and the tumult of men hurrying
this way and that for gold, or pleasure, or some
self-desire, the vast fabric thrusts itself up
to heaven and firmly plants itself on soil begrudged
to an occupant that yields no lucre. But the city
cannot thrust forth its cathedral; and from thence
arises the harmonious measured voice of intercession
from day to day. The church praying and
deprecating continually for the living mass that are
dead while they live, from out of the very centre of
that mass; silent and lonesome is her shrine,
amidst the noise, the thunder of multitudes.
Silent, lonesome, motionless, yet full of life;
for were we not more dead than the stones, which built
into that sublime structure witness continually
to what is great and everlasting, did
priest or chorister, or the casual worshipper but
apprehend the grandeur of his function in that
spot, the very heart must burst with
the tide of emotions gathering within it. Oh
for speed, speed to the wings of that day when
this glorious unfulfilled outline of a church
shall be charged as a hive with the operations
of the Spirit of God and of His war against the world;
when the intervals of space and time within its
walls, now untenanted by any functions of that
holy work, shall be thickly occupied; and when
the glorious sights and sounds which shall arrest
the passenger in his haste that he may sanctify his
purposes by worship, shall be symbols still failing
to express the fulness of the power of God developed
among His people.
March 21. Wrote on
1 Thess. v 17, and read it to servants. Read
The Young Communicants; Bishop Hall’s
Life. It seems as if at this time
the number and close succession of occupations without
any great present reward of love or joy, and chiefly
belonging to an earthly and narrow range, were
my special trial and discipline. Other I
seem hardly to have any of daily pressure. Health
in myself and those nearest me; (comparative)
wealth and success; no strokes from God; no opportunity
of pardoning others, for none offend me.
April 3. Two or three
nights ago Mrs. Wilbraham told Catherine that
Stanley was extremely surprised to find, after his
speech on the Tarmworth and Rugby railway bill,
that Peel had been very much annoyed with the
expression he had used: ’that his right
hon. friend had in pleading for the bill made
use of all that art and ingenuity with which
he so well knew how to dress up a statement for
that House,’ and that he showed his annoyance
very much by his manner to him, S., afterwards.
He, upon reflecting that this was the probable
cause, wrote a note to Peel to set matters to rights,
in which he succeeded; but he thought Peel very
thin-skinned. Wm. Cowper told me the other
day at Milnes’s that Lord John Russell is remarkable
among his colleagues for his anxiety during the recess
for the renewal of the session of parliament;
that he always argues for fixing an early day
of meeting, and finds pleas for it, and finds
the time long until it recommences.
A visit to Nuneham (April 12) and
thence to Oxford brought him into the centre of the
tractarians. He saw much of Hamilton, went to
afternoon service at Littlemore, breakfasted in company
with Newman at Merton, had a long conversation with
Pusey on Tract 90, and gathered that Newman thought
differently of the Council of Trent from what he had
thought a year or two back, and that he differed from
Pusey in thinking the English reformation uncatholic.
Mr. Gladstone replied that N had the appearance
to his mind of being written by a man, if in, not of,
the church of England; and would be interpreted as
exhibiting the Tridentine system for the ideal, the
anglican for a mutilated and just tolerable
actual. Then in the same month he ’finished
Palmer on the Articles, deep, earnest, and generally
trustworthy. Worked upon a notion of private
eucharistical devotions, to be chiefly compiled; and
attended a meeting about colonial bishoprics,’
where he spoke but indifferently.
IV
NEW FISCAL
POLICY
In 1841 the whigs in the expiring
hours of their reign launched parliament and parties
upon what was to be the grand marking controversy
of the era. To remedy the disorder into which
expenditure, mainly due to highhanded foreign policy,
had brought the national finance, they proposed to
reconstruct the fiscal system by reducing the duties
on foreign sugar and timber, and substituting for
Wellington’s corn law a fixed eight shilling
duty on imported wheat. The wiser heads, like
Lord Spencer, were aware that as an electioneering
expedient the new policy would bring them little luck,
but their position in any case was desperate.
The handling of their proposals was curiously maladroit;
and even if it had been otherwise, ministerial repute
alike for competency and for sincerity was so damaged
both, in the House of Commons and the country, that
their doom was certain. The reduction of the duty
on slave-grown sugar from foreign countries was as
obnoxious to the abolitionist as it was disadvantageous
to the West Indian proprietors, and both of these
powerful sections were joined by the corn-grower, well
aware that his turn would come next. Many meetings
took place at Sir Robert Peel’s upon the sugar
resolutions, and Mr. Gladstone worked up the papers
and figures so as to be ready to speak if necessary.
At one of these meetings, by the way, he thought it
worth while to write down that Peel had the tradesmen’s
household books upon his desk a circumstance
that he mentioned also to the present writer, when
by chance we found ourselves together in the same
room fifty years later.
On May 10th, his speech on the sugar
duties came off in due course. In this speech
he took the sound point that the new arrangement must
act as an encouragement to the slave trade, ’that
monster which, while war, pestilence, and famine were
slaying their thousands, slew from year to year with
unceasing operation its tens of thousands.’
As he went on, he fell upon Macaulay for being member
of a cabinet that was thus deserting a cause in which
Macaulay’s father had been the unseen ally of
Wilberforce, and the pillar of his strength, ’a
man of profound benevolence, of acute understanding,
of indefatigable industry, and of that self-denying
temper which is content to work in secret, and to seek
for its reward beyond the grave.’ Macaulay
was the last man to suffer rebuke in silence, and
he made a sharp reply on the following day, followed
by a magnanimous peace-making behind the Speaker’s
chair.
DEFEAT OF WHIG
MINISTRY
Meanwhile the air was thick and loud
with rumours. Lord Eliot told Mr. Gladstone in
the middle of the debate that there had been a stormy
cabinet that morning, and that ministers had at last
made up their minds to follow Lord Spencer’s
advice, to resign and not to dissolve. When the
division on the sugar duties was taken, ministers were
beaten (May 19) by a majority of 36, after fine performances
from Sir Robert, and a good one from Palmerston on
the other side. The cabinet, with, a tenacity
incredible in our own day, were still for holding on
until their whole scheme, with the popular element
of cheap bread in it, was fully before the country.
Peel immediately countered them by a vote of want of
confidence, and this was carried (June 4) by a majority
of one:
On Saturday morning the division in
the House of Commons presented a scene of the
most extraordinary excitement. While we were in
our lobby we were told that we were 312 and the
government either 311 or 312. It was also
known that they had brought down Lord
who was reported to be in a state of total idiocy.
After returning to the House I went to sit near
the bar, where the other party were coming in.
We had all been counted, 312, and the tellers at the
government end had counted to 308; there remained
behind this unfortunate man, reclining in a chair,
evidently in total unconsciousness of what was
proceeding. Loud cries had been raised from
our own side, when it was seen that he was being brought
up, to clear the bar that the whole House might
witness the scene, and every one stood up in
intense curiosity. There were now only this figure,
less human even than an automaton, and two persons,
R. Stuart and E. Ellice, pushing the chair in
which he lay. A loud cry of ‘Shame,
Shame,’ burst from our side; those opposite were
silent. Those three were counted without
passing the tellers, and the moment after we
saw that our tellers were on the right in walking
to the table, indicating that we had won.
Fremantle gave out the numbers, and then the
intense excitement raised by the sight we had witnessed
found vent in our enthusiastic (quite irregular) hurrah
with great waving of hats. Upon looking back
I am sorry to think how much I partook in the
excitement that prevailed; but how could it be
otherwise in so extraordinary a case? I thought
Lord John’s a great speech it
was delivered too under the pressure of great indisposition.
He has risen with adversity. He seemed rather
below par as a leader in 1835 when he had a clear
majority, and the ball nearly at his foot; in
each successive year the strength of his government
has sunk and his own has risen.
Then came the dissolution, and an
election memorable in the history of party. Thinking
quite as much of the Scotch college, the colonial
bishoprics, and Tract Ninety, as of sugar duties or
the corn law, Mr. Gladstone hastened to Newark.
He was delighted with the new colleague who had been
provided for him. ‘As a candidate,’
he writes to his wife, ’Lord John Manners is
excellent; his speaking is popular and effective,
and he is a good canvasser, by virtue not I think of
effort, but of a general kindliness and warmth of
disposition which naturally shows itself to every
one. Nothing can be more satisfactory than to
have such a partner.’ In his address Mr.
Gladstone only touched on the poor law and the corn
law. On the first he would desire liberal treatment
for aged, sick, and widowed poor, and reasonable discretion
to the local administrators of the law. As to
the second, the protection of native agriculture is
an object of the first economical and national importance,
and should be secured by a graduated scale of duties
on foreign grain. ‘Manners and I,’
he says, ’were returned as protectionists.
My speeches were of absolute dulness, but I have no
doubt they were sound in the sense of my leaders Peel
and Graham and others of the party.’ The
election offered no new incidents. One old lady
reproached him for not being content with keeping bread
and sugar from the people, but likewise by a new faith,
the mysterious monster of Puseyism, stealing away
from them the bread of life. He found the wesleyans
shaky, partly because they disliked his book and were
afraid of the Oxford Tracts, and partly from his refusal
to subscribe to their school. Otherwise, flags,
bands, suppers, processions, all went on in high ceremonial
order as before. Day after day passed with nothing
worse than the threat of a blue candidate, but one
Sunday morning (June 26) as people came out of church,
they found an address on the walls and a dark rumour
got afloat that the new man had brought heavy bags
of money. For this rumour there was no foundation,
but it inspired annoying fears in the good and cheerful
hopes in the bad. The time was in any case too
short, and at four o’clock on June 29 the poll
was found to be, Gladstone 633, Manners 630, Hobhouse
391. His own election safely over, Mr. Gladstone
turned to take part in a fierce contest in which Sir
Stephen Glynne was candidate for the representation
of Flintshire, but ’bribery, faggotry, abduction,
personation, riot, factious delays, landlord’s
intimidations, partiality of authorities,’
carried the day, and to the bitter dismay of Hawarden,
Sir Stephen was narrowly beaten. One ancient
dame, overwhelmed by the defeat of the family that
for eighty years she had idolised, cried aloud to
Mrs. Gladstone, ’I am a great woman for thinking
of the Lord, but O, my dear lady, this has put it
all out of my head.’ The election involved
him in what would now be thought a whimsical correspondence
with one of the Grosvenor family, who complained of
Mr. Gladstone for violating the sacred canons of electioneering
etiquette by canvassing Lord Westminster’s tenants.
’I did think,’ says the wounded patrician,
’that interference between a landlord with whose
opinions you were acquainted and his tenants was not
justifiable according to those laws of delicacy and
propriety which I considered binding in such cases.’
ELECTION
OF 1841
At last he was able to snatch a holiday
with his wife and child by the seaside at Hoylake,
which rather oddly struck him as being like Paestum
without the temples. He read away at Gibbon and
Dante until he went to Hawarden, partly to consider
the state of its financial affairs; as to these something
is to be said later. ’Walked alone in the
Hawarden grounds,’ he says one day during his
stay; ’ruminated on the last-named subject [accounts],
also on anticipated changes [in government]. I
can digest the crippled religious action of the state;
but I cannot be a party to exacting by blood opium
compensation from the Chinese.’ Then to
London (Aug 18). He attended the select party
meetings at Sir Robert Peel’s and Lord Aberdeen’s.
Dining at Grillion’s he heard Stanley, speaking
of the new parliament, express a high opinion of Roebuck
as an able man and clear speaker, likely to make a
figure; and also of Cobden as a resolute perspicacious
man, familiar with all the turns of his subject; and
when the new House assembled, he had made up his mind
for himself that ‘Cobden will be a worrying
man on corn.’ This was Cobden’s
first entry into the House. At last the whigs
were put out of office by a majority of 91, and Peel
undertook to form a government.
Aug 31/41. In consequence
of a note received this morning from Sir Robert
Peel I went to him at half-past eleven. The following
is the substance of a quarter of an hour’s
conversation. He said: ’In this
great struggle, in which we have been and are to be
engaged, the chief importance will attach to
questions of finance. It would not be in
my power to undertake the business of chancellor of
the exchequer in detail; I therefore have asked
Goulburn to fill that office, and I shall be
simply first lord. I think we shall be very strong
in the House of Commons if as a part of this arrangement
you will accept the post of vice-president of
the board of trade, and conduct the business
of that department in the House of Commons, with
Lord Ripon as president. I consider it an office
of the highest importance, and you will have
my unbounded confidence in it.’
I said, ’of the importance and
responsibility of that office at the present
time I am well aware; but it is right that I should
say as strongly as I can, that I really am not
fit for it. I have no general knowledge
of trade whatever; with a few questions I am acquainted,
but they are such as have come across me incidentally.’
He said, ’The satisfactory conduct of an
office of that kind must after all depend more
upon the intrinsic qualities of the man, than upon
the precise amount of his previous knowledge.
I also think you will find Lord Ripon a perfect
master of these subjects, and depend upon it
with these appointments at the board of trade we shall
carry the whole commercial interests of the country
with us.’
VICE-PRESIDENT OF
THE BOARD OF TRADE
He resumed, ’If there be any
other arrangement that you would prefer, my value
and “affectionate regard” for you would
make me most desirous to effect it so far as
the claims of others would permit. To be
perfectly frank and unreserved, I should tell you,
that there are many reasons which would have made
me wish to send you to Ireland; but upon the
whole I think that had better not be done.
Some considerations connected with the presbyterians
of Ireland make me prefer on the whole that we
should adopt a different plan. Then, if
I had had the exchequer, I should have asked
you to be financial secretary to the treasury; but
under the circumstances I have mentioned, that
would be an office of secondary importance and
I am sure you will not estimate that I now propose
to you by the mere name which it bears.’
He also made an allusion to the admiralty of
which I do not retain the exact form. But
I rather interposed and said, ’My objection on
the score of fitness would certainly apply with
even increased force to anything connected with
the military and naval services of the country, for
of them I know nothing. Nor have I any other
object in view; there is no office to which I
could designate myself. I think it my duty to
act upon your judgment as to my qualifications.
If it be your deliberate wish to make me vice-president
of the board of trade, I will not decline it;
I will endeavour to put myself into harness, and
to prepare myself for the place in the best manner
I can; but it really is an apprenticeship.’
He said, ’I hope you will be content to
act upon the sense which others entertain of your
suitableness for this office in particular, and
I think it will be a good arrangement both with
a view to the present conduct of business and
to the brilliant destinies which I trust are in store
for you.’ I answered, that I was deeply
grateful for his many acts of confidence and
kindness; and that I would at once assent to the plan
he had proposed, only begging him to observe that I
had mentioned my unfitness under a very strong
sense of duty and of the facts, and not by any
means as a mere matter of ceremony. I then added
that I thought I should but ill respond to his confidence
if I did not mention to him a subject connected
with his policy which might raise a difficulty
in my mind. ‘I cannot,’ I said, ’reconcile
it to my sense of right to exact from China, as a term
of peace, compensation for the opium surrendered
to her.’... He agreed that it was
best to mention it; observed that in consequence of
the shape in which the Chinese affair came into the
hands of the new government, they would not be
wholly unfettered; seemed to hint that under
any other circumstances the vice-president of board
of trade need not so much mind what was done
in the other departments, but remarked that at
present every question of foreign relations and
many more would be very apt to mix themselves with
the department of trade. He thought I had
better leave the question suspended.
I hesitated a moment before coming
away and said it was only from my anxiety to
review what I had said, and to be sure that I had
made a clean breast on the subject of my unfitness
for the department of trade. Nothing could
be more friendly and warm than his whole language
and demeanour. It has always been my hope, that
I might be able to avoid this class of public
employment. On this account I have not endeavoured
to train myself for them. The place is very
distasteful to me, and what is of more importance,
I fear I may hereafter demonstrate the unfitness
I have to-day only stated. However, it comes
to me, I think, as a matter of plain duty; it may
be all the better for not being according to my
own bent and leaning; I must forthwith go to
work, as a reluctant schoolboy meaning well.
Sept 3. This day
I went to Claremont to be sworn in. When the
council was constructed, the Duke of Buckingham
and Lord Liverpool were first called in to take
their oaths and seats; then the remaining four
followed, Lincoln, Eliot, Ernest Bruce, and I. The
Queen sat at the head of the table, composed but
dejected one could not but feel for
her, all through the ceremonial. We knelt down
to take the oaths of allegiance and supremacy and stood
up to take (I think) the councillor’s oath,
then kissed the Queen’s hand, then went
round the table shaking hands with each member, beginning
from Prince Albert who sat on the Queen’s
right, and ending with Lord Wharncliffe on her
left. We then sat at the lower end of the table,
excepting Lord E. Bruce, who went to his place behind
the Queen as vice-chamberlain. Then the
chancellor first and next the Duke of Buckingham
were sworn to their respective offices. C. Greville
forgot the duke’s privy seal and sent him off
without it; the Queen corrected him and gave
it.... Then were read and approved several
orders in council; among which was one assigning a
district to a church and another appointing Lord
Ripon and me to act in matters of trade.
These were read aloud by the Queen in a very clear
though subdued voice; and she repeated ‘Approved’
after each. Upon that relating to Lord R.
and myself we were called up and kissed hands
again. Then the Queen rose, as did all the members
of the council, and retired bowing. We had
luncheon in the same room half an hour later
and went off. The Duke of Wellington went in an
open carriage with a pair; all our other grand
people with four. Peel looked shy all through.
I visited Claremont once before, 27 years ago
I think, as a child, to see the place, soon after the
Princess Charlotte’s death. It corresponded
pretty much with my impressions.
SWORN OF THE
PRIVY COUNCIL
He secured his re-election at Newark
on September 14 without opposition, and without trouble,
beyond the pressure of a notion rooted in the genial
mind of his constituency that as master of the mint
he would have an unlimited command of public coin
for all purposes whether general or particular.
His reflections upon his ministerial position are of
much biographic interest. He had evidently expected
inclusion in the cabinet:
Sept 16. Upon quietly
reviewing past times, and the degree of confidence
which Sir Robert Peel had for years, habitually I may
say, reposed in me, and especially considering
its climax, in my being summoned to the meetings
immediately preceding the debate on the address
in August, I am inclined to think, after allowing for
the delusions of self love, that there is not
a perfect correspondence between the tenor of
the past on the one hand, and my present appointment
and the relations in which it places me to the
administration on the other. He may have made
up his mind at those meetings that I was not
qualified for the consultations of a government,
nor would there be anything strange in this, except
the supposition that he had not seen it before.
Having however taken the alarm (so to speak)
upon the invitation at that time, and been impressed
with the idea that it savoured of cabinet office, I
considered and consulted on the Chinese question,
which I regarded as a serious impediment to office
of that description, and I had provisionally
contemplated saying to Peel in case he should offer
me Ireland with the cabinet, to reply that I would
gladly serve his government in the secretaryship,
but that I feared his Chinese measures would
hardly admit of my acting in the cabinet. I am
very sorry now to think that I may have been
guilty of an altogether absurd presumption, in
dreaming of the cabinet. But it was wholly suggested
by that invitation. And I still think that there
must have been some consultation and decision
relating to me in the interval between the meetings
and the formation of the new ministry, which
produced some alteration.... In confirmation of
the notion I have recorded above, I am distinct
in the recollection that there was a shyness
in Peel’s manner and a downward eye, when he
opened the conversation and made the offer, not usual
with him in speaking to me.
In after years, he thus described
his position when he went to the board of trade:
I was totally ignorant both of political
economy and of the commerce of the country.
I might have said, as I believe was said by a
former holder of the vice-presidency, that my mind
was in regard to all those matters a ‘sheet
of white paper,’ except that it was doubtless
coloured by a traditional prejudice of protection,
which had then quite recently become a distinctive
mark of conservatism. In a spirit of ignorant
mortification I said to myself at the moment:
the science of politics deals with the government
of men, but I am set to govern packages. In my
journal for Aug 2 I find this recorded:
‘Since the address meetings’ (which
were quasi-cabinets) ’the idea of the Irish secretaryship
had nestled imperceptibly in my mind.’
The vice-presidency was the post,
by the way, impudently proposed four years later by
the whigs to Gobden, after he had taught both whigs
and tories their business. Mr. Gladstone, at
least, was quick to learn the share of ‘packages’
in the government of men.
REFLECTIONS ON
HIS OFFICE
Sept 30. Closing
the month, and a period of two years comprehended
within this book, I add a few words. My position
is changed by office. In opposition I was
frequently called, or sometimes at least, to
the confidential councils of the party on a variety
of subjects. In office, I shall of course have
to do with the department of trade and with little
or nothing beyond. There is some point in
the query of the Westminster Review: Whether
my appointments are a covet satire? But they
bring great advantages; much less responsibility,
much less anxiety. I could not have made myself
answerable for what I expect the cabinet will do in
China. It must be admitted that it presents
an odd appearance, when a person whose mind and
efforts have chiefly ranged within the circle of
subjects connected with the church, is put into office
of the most different description. It looks
as if the first object were to neutralise his
mischievous tendencies. But I am in doubt whether
to entertain this supposition would be really
a compliment to the discernment of my superiors,
or a breach of charity; therefore it is best
not entertained.
Paragraphs appeared in newspapers
imputing to Mr. Gladstone a strong reprobation of
the prime minister’s opinions upon church affairs,
and he thought it worth while to write to Sir Robert
a strong (and most excessively lengthy) disclaimer
of being, among other things, an object of hope to
unbending tories as against their moderate and cautious
leader. ‘Should party spirit,’ he
went on, ’run very high against your commercial
measures, I have no doubt that the venom of my religious
opinions will be plentifully alleged to have infused
itself into your policy even in that direction, ...
and more than ever will be heard of your culpability
in taking into office a person of my bigoted and extreme
sentiments.’ Peel replied (October 19, 1841)
with kindness and good sense. He had not taken
the trouble to read the paragraph; he had read the
works from which a mischievous industry had tried to
collect means of defaming their author; he found nothing
in them in the most distant manner to affect political
co-operation; and he signed his name to the letter,
’with an esteem and regard, which are proof against
evil-minded attempts to sow jealousy and discord.’