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Title: Cursory Strictures
Author: William Godwin
Date: October 21, 1794
Language: en
Topics: justice, court, grand jury
Source: Retrieved on 25th September 2020 from http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/anarchist_archives/godwin/cursory.html

William Godwin

Cursory Strictures

A Special Commission was opened on the second day of October, for the

trial of certain persons apprehended upon suspicion of High Treason, the

greater part of whom were taken into custody in the month of May 1794.

Upon this occasion a charge was delivered to the Grand Jury, by Sir

James Eyre, Lord Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas.

It is one of the first privileges of an Englishman, one of the first

duties of a rational being, to discuss with perfect freedom, all

principles proposed to be enforced upon general observance, when those

principles are first disclosed, and before they have yet, by solemn and

final proceeding, been made part of a regular established system. The

Chief Justice, in his charge to the Jury, has delivered many new and

extraordinary doctrines upon the subject of treason. These doctrines,

now when they have been for the first time stated, it is fit we should

examine. In that examination, I shall deliver my opinions in a manner

perfectly frank and explicit. No man should seek to offend high

authorities and elevated magistracy; but the object before us is of an

importance paramount to these considerations. Decorum is an excellent

thing; but we ought not to sacrifice to the fastidious refinements of

decorum, all that is most firm in security, or most estimable in social

institution.

The Chief Justice has promised a publication of his charge, and I should

have been glad to have waited for the opportunity of an authentic copy.

But there are only a few days remaining, previous to the commencement of

trials, of the highest expectation, and most unlimited importance. He

who thinks, as I think, that the best principles of civil government,

and all that our ancestors most affectionately loved, are struck at in

the most flagrant manner in this charge, will feel that there is not an

hour to be lost. While I animadvert upon its enormities, it is with some

pleasure that I shall reflect upon the possibility of the enormities

being aggravated or created by the imperfect and irregular form of the

publication before me. Every friend of his country will participate the

highest satisfaction, at finding them answered, by a regular publication

of the charge to the Grand Jury, stripped of the illegal and destructive

doctrines that now appear to pollute it.

Among the various branches of the English Constitution that have for

centuries been a topic of unbounded praise, there is none, that has been

more, or more deservedly, applauded, than that which relates to the law

of treason. “The crime of of high treason,” says Chief Justice Eyre,[1]

“though the greatest crime against faith, duty, and human society, and

though the public is deeply interested in every well founded prosecution

of this kind, has yet, at the best times, been the object of

considerable jealousy, in respect of the prosecutions instituted against

it: they are State prosecutions.” It is therefore of the utmost

consequence, that the crime of high treason should be clearly defined,

and the exquisite jealousy allayed, which must otherwise arise in every

benevolent mind. This has been done by the act 25 Edward III, one of the

great palladiums of the English Constitution. This law has been

sanctioned by the experience of more than four centuries; and, though it

has been repeatedly attacked by the incroachments of tyrannical princes,

and the decisions of profligate judges, Englishmen have always found it

necessary in the sequel to strip it of mischievous appendages and

artificial glosses, and restore it to its original simplicity and

luster. By this law all treason, exclusively of a few articles of little

general concern, is confined to the “levying war against the King within

the realm, and the compassing or imagining the death of the King.” Nay,

the wise framers of the law were not contented to stop here: they not

only shut out the the mischief of arbitrary and constructive treason for

themselves, but inserted a particular clause, providing that “if in any

future time it might be “necessary to declare any new treasons, that

should only be done by a direct proceeding of parliament for that

special purpose.”

It is obvious upon the face of this wise and moderate law, that it made

it extremely difficult for a bad king, or an unprincipled

administration, to gratify their resentment against a pertinacious

opponent by instituting against him a charge of treason. Such kings and

ministers would not fail to complain, that the law of Edward III shut up

the crime within too narrow bounds; that a subtle adversary of the

public peace would easily evade these gross and palpable definitions;

and that crimes of the highest magnitude, and most dangerous tendency,

might be committed, which could never be brought under these dry, short

and inflexible clauses. It is not to be denied, that some mischief might

arise from so careful, lenient, and unbloody a provision. No doubt

offences might be conceived, not less dangerous to the public welfare,

than those described in the act under consideration. But our ancestors

exposed themselves to this inconvenience, and found it by no means such

as was hard to be borne. They experienced a substantial benefit, a proud

and liberal security, arising out of this statute, which amply

compensated for the mischief of such subterfuges as might occasionally

be employed by a few insignificant criminals. If we part with their

wisdom and policy, let us beware that we do not substitute a mortal

venom in its stead.

The Chief Justice has thought proper to confine himself to that article

of the statute of King Edward III, which treats of “compassing and

imagining the death of the King.” This compassing and imagining, he very

properly observes, “requires that it should be manifested by overt

acts;”[2] and he adds, “that they who aim directly at the life of the

King, are not the only persons, who may be said to compass or imagine

his death. The entering into measures, which in the nature of things do

obviously tend to bring the life of the King into danger, is also

compassing and imagining the death of the King; and the measures which

are taken, will be at once evidence of the compassing and overt acts of

it. The instances which are put under this head by Sir Michael Foster

and Sir Mathew Hale, and upon which there have been adjudged cases, are

{principally four, viz.} of a conspiracy to depose the King, to imprison

him, to get his person into the power of the conspirators, and to

procure an invasion of the kingdom.”[3] He further states, “that

occasions have unhappily but too frequently brought overt acts of this

species of treason under consideration, in consequence of which we are

furnished with judicial opinions upon many of them. We are also

furnished with opinions drawn from these sources, “sources, of text

writers, some of the wisest and most enlightened men of their time,

whose integrity has always been considered as the most prominent feature

of their character, and whose doctrines do now from great land marks, by

which posterity will be enabled to trace with considerable certainty the

boundary line between High Treason, and offences of a lower order and

degree. It is a fortunate circumstance,” continues the Chief Justice,

“that we are thus assisted. I can easily conceive that it must be a

great relief to Jurors, placed in the responsible situation in which you

now stand; and sure I am that it is a consolation and comfort to us, who

have upon us the responsibility of declaring what the law is, in cases

in which the public and the individual are so deeply interested.”[4]

In all this preamble of the Chief Justice, there is certainly something

extremely humane and considerate. I trace in it the language of a

constitutional lawyer, a sound logician, and a temperate, discreet, and

honest man. I see rising to my view by just degrees a judge resting upon

the law as it is, and determinedly setting his face against new,

unprecedented, and temporizing constructions. I see a judge, that scorns

to bend his neck to the yoke of any party, or any administration; who

expounds the unalterable principles of justice, and is prepared to try

by them, and them only, the persons that are brought before him. I see

him taking to himself, and holding out to the Jury the manly

consolation, that they are to make no new law, and force no new

interpretations; that they are to consult only the statutes of the

realm, and the decisions of those writers who have been the luminaries

of England. Meanwhile what would be said by our contemporaries and by

our posterity, if this picture were to be reversed; if these promises

were made, only to render our disappointment more bitter; if these high

professions served merely as an introduction to an unparalleled mass of

arbitrary constructions, of new fangled treasons, and doctrines equally

inconsistent with history and themselves? I hope these appearances will

not be found in the authentic charge. But whoever be the unprincipled

imposter, that thus audaciously saps the vitals of human liberty and

human happiness, be he printer, or be he judge, it is the duty of every

friend to mankind to detect and expose his sophistries.

Chief Justice Eyre after having stated the treasons which are most

strictly within the act of Edward III, as well as those which are

sanctioned by high law authorities, and upon which there have been

adjudged cases, proceeds to reason in the following manner.

“If a conspiracy to depose or imprison the King, to get his person into

power of the conspirators, or procure and invasion of the kingdom,

involves in it the compassing and imagining his death, and if steps

taken in prosecution of such a conspiracy, are rightly deemed overt

“acts of the treason of compassing the King’s death, what ought to be

our judgment, if it should appear that it had entered into the heart of

any man, who is a subject of this country, to design to overthrow the

whole government of the country, to pull down and to subvert from its

very foundations the British Monarchy, that glorious fabric, which it

has been the work of ages to erect, maintain, and support; which has

been cemented with the best blood of our ancestors; to design such a

horrible ruin and devastation, which no king could survive?”[5]

Here we are presented with a question which is no doubt of the utmost

magnitude and importance. Is the proceeding thus described matter of

high treason, or is it not? It confessedly does not come within the

letter of 25 Edward III. It does not come within the remoter instances

“upon which there have been adjusted cases.” Chief Justice Eyre has

already enumerated there, and, having finished that part of his subject,

gone on to something confessedly different.

Are we reasoning respecting law, or respecting a state of society,

which, having no fixed rules of law, is obligated to consult the

dictates of its own discretion? Plainly the former. It follows,

therefore, that the aggravations collected by the Chief Justice, are

totally foreign to the question he had to consider. Let it be granted,

that the crime, in the eye of reason and discretion, is the most

enormous, that it can enter into the heart of man to conceive, still I

shall have a right to ask is it a crime against law? Show me the stature

that describes it; refer me to the precedent by which it is defined;

quote me the adjudged case in which a matter of such unparalleled

magnitude is settled.

Let us know the ground upon which we stand. Are we to understand that,

under Chief Justice Eyre, and the other Judges of the Special

Commission, reasonings are to be adduced from the axioms and dictums of

moralists and metaphysicians, and that men are to be convicted,

sentenced, and executed, upon these? Are we to understand that

henceforth the man most deeply read in the laws of his country, and most

assiduously conforming his actions to them, shall be liable to be

arraigned and capitally punished for a crime, that no law describes, and

that no precedent or adjudged case ascertains, at the arbitrary pleasure

of the administration for the time being? Such a miserable miscellany of

law and metaphysical maxims, would be ten thousand times worse, than if

we had no law to direct our actions. The law in that case would be a

mere trap to delude us to our ruin, creating a fancied security, an

apparent clearness and definition, the better to cover the concealed

pitfalls with which we are on every side surrounded.

The Chief Justice is by no means unaware of the tremendous consequences

that would result from such an administration of criminal law. He speaks

respecting it, when the subject is first started, with great temperance

and caution. He says, “That “ That the crime of conspiring to overthrow

the monarchy, is such a one, as no lawgiver in this country has ever

ventured to contemplate in its whole extent. If any man of plain sense,

but not conversant with subjects of this nature, should feel himself

disposed to ask, whether a conspiracy of this extraordinary nature is to

be reached by the statute of treasons, whether it is a specific treason

to compass and imagine the death of the King, and not specific treason

to conspire to subvert the Monarchy itself? I answer, that the statute

of Edward III, by which we are bound, has not declared this, which

undoubtedly in all just theory of treason is the greatest of all

treasons, to be a specific high treason. I said, NO LAWGIVER HAD EVER

VENTURED TO CONTEMPLATE IT IN ITS WHOLE EXTENT.” [6]

The language here employed is no doubt manly and decisive. From hence it

follows, with the most irresistible evidence, that that “which the

statute by which we are bound, has not declared to be treason,” that

“which no lawgiver has ever ventured to contemplate,” can never be

construed intro treason, till all law is annihilated, and all maxims of

jurisprudence trampled under foot and despised.

No author has reasond with greater accuracy, And in a more satisfactory

manner upon this important branch of the English constitution than the

celebrated David Hume, in his History of England. This author is well

known to have Been sufficiently favourable to the prerogative, yet His

reasonings upon this subject, in the case of Lord Strafford, are as

minutely applicable to the case before us, as if he had written them

with the proceedings of the Special Commission of October 1974, being

before him upon his table.

“ Of all species of guilt, the law of England has, with the most

scrupulous exactness, defined that of treason ; because on that side it

was found most necessary to protect the subject against the violence of

the King and of his Ministers. In the famous statute of Edward III. all

the kinds of treasons are enumerated, and every other crime, beside such

as are there ex- pressly mentioned, is carefully excluded from that

appellation. But with regard to this guilt, An edeavour to subvert the

fundemental laws, the statute of treason is totally silent ; and

arbitrarily to introduce it into the fatal catalogue, is it self a

subversion of all law ; and, under colour of defending liberty, reverses

a statute the best calculated for the security of liberty, that was ever

enacted by an English Parliament.” [7]

The following are a few sentences from teh defence of Lord Strafford, as

quoted by Mr. Hume, a nobleman, whom the republicans of that time so

vehemently hated, and were s fixed to destroy, as to render them little

scrupulous of overstepping the simple and unbending provisions of the

law.

“Where has this species of guilt lain so long concealed? Where has this

fire been so long buried, during so many centuries, that no smoke should

appear till it burst out at once to consume me and my children? Better

it were to live under no law at all, and, by the means maxims of

cautious prudence, to conform ourselves the best we can to the arbitrary

will of a master, than fancy we have a law on which we can rely, and

find at last, that this law shall inflict a punishment precedent to the

promulgation, and try us by maxims unheard of till the very moment of

the prosecution. Where is the mark set upon this crime? Where the token

by which I should discover it? It has lain concealed ; and no human

prudence, no human innocence, could save me from the destruction with

which I am at present threatened.”

“It is now full two hundred and forty years since treasons were defined.

Let us be content with what our fathers left us ; let not our ambition

carry us to be more learned than they were, in these killing and

destructive arts! To all my afflictions add not this, my Lords, the most

severe of any, that I, for my other sins, not for my treasons, be the

means of introducing a precedent so pernicious to the laws and liberties

of my native country!”[8] Chief Justice Eyre’s charge consists of three

parts. The first five pages contain principally a sound and

constitutional exposition of the lw of treason, as exhibited in the

books. In the two following pages we are presented with this portentious

speculation, this new treason of “conspiring to subver: the Monarchy;”

though the Chief Justice, as has already appeared, has qualified his

speculation, with expressions, proving, by accumulated evidence, and in

the most precise terms, that his new imaginary treason is no treason by

the laws of England.

Here, as the Chief Justice observes, the charge might have concluded.

Here, if a proper regard has been paid to the essential principals of

criminal justice, it would have concluded; if not in reality a little

sooner. The remainder of the charge is made up of hypothesis,

presumption, prejudication, and conjecture. There is scarcely a single

lien that is not deformed with such phrases as “public notoriety”,

“things likely,” “purposes imputed,” “measures supposed,” and “imaginary

cases.”

The plain reason of all this is, that the Chief Justice suspected, that

the treason described in the stature 25 Edward III, and those founded

upon precedent, or deducible from adjudged cases, even with the addition

of the Chief Justice’s new constructive treason, founded, as he

confesses, upon no law, precedent, or case, and which therefore is in

reality no treason, did not afford sufficient ground of crimination

against the prisoners. He is therefore obliged to leave the plain road,

and travel out of the record. No law, no deduction, or construction of

law, that could be forced or drawn out of a mere view of the statute,

would answer the purposes of the Special Commission. He is therefore

obliged to indulge himself in conjecture, as to what the prisoners may

have done, and and what are “the facts likely to be laid before the

jury.”[9] Two flagrant iniquities are included in this mode of

proceeding. First, the Chief Justice implicitly confesses himself

unable, by direct deductions of law, to show us what it is we ought to

avoid, and is reduced to the necessity of reasoning, not forward from

general rules of action to the guilt or innocence of particular men, but

backward from actions already performed to the question, whether or no

they shall fall under such or such provisions of law. Secondly, by this

perverted mode of proceeding, he completely prejudges the case of the

prisoners. He does not proceed, as a judge ought to proceed, by

explaining the law, and leaving the Grand Jury to fix its application

upon individuals; but leads them to the selection of the individuals

themselves, and centres in his own person the provinces of judge and

accuser. It may be doubted whether, in the whole records of the legal

proceedings of England, another instance is to be found, of wild

conjecture, such premature presumption, imaginations so licentious, and

dreams so full of sanguinary and tremendous prophecy. The conjectures of

the Chief Justice respecting the probable guilt of the accused fall

under two heads. First, “associations, the professed purpose of which

has been a change in the Constitution of the Commons House of

parliament, and the objaining of annual Parliaments.”[10] Secondly, “the

project of a Convention to be assembled under the advise and direction

of some of these asociations.”[11]

The treasons which the Chief Justice imagines himself capable of fixing

upon some of these associations for a parliamentary reform, are of two

kinds.

Before we enter upon these, let us pause a moment, and consider the

unexpored country before us. Every paragraph now presents us with a new

treason, real or imaginary, pretendedly direct, or avowedly

constructive. Division and subdivision rise upon us, and almost every

one is concluded with the awful denunciation of treason. The Chief

Jusice is no loger contented with the plain treasons of 25 Edward III,

or the remoter treasns of Foster and Hale. His whole discourse hangs by

one slender thread. He perpetually refers to the new and portentous

treason of his mere creation, “a conspiracy to subvert the “Monarchy;” a

treason, which he ingenuously avows “no lawgiver in this country has

ever ventured to contemplate,: and “the statute of Edward III, by which

we are bound, has not declared.” Upon this self-constituted treason he

hangs his other conjectures and novelties as well as he is able, by the

help of forced constructions, of ambiguous and deceitful words, and all

the delusions of a practised sophister. Was it necessary for the

destruction of twelve private and untitled men, to create all this

confusion, to produce all this ruin, to overturn every thing that is

valuable in English liberty, and place us for time coming under the most

atrocious and inexplicable despotism that the world ever saw?

Let us attend to the opinion of Judge Blackstone upon this subject.

“By ancient common law, there was a great latitude left in the breast of

the judges, so to determine what was treason or not so; whereby the

creatures of tyrannical princes had opportunity to create abundance of

constructive treasons : that is, to raise, by forced and arbitrary

constructions, offences into the crime and punishment of treason, which

were never suspected to be such. To prevent these inconveniences, the

statute 25 Edward III, chapter 2, was made.[12] --This is a great

security to the public, and leaves a weighty memento to judges to be

careful, not overhasty in letting in treasons by construction or

interpretation, especially in new cases that have not been resolved and

settled.--The legislature was extremely liberal in declaring new

treasons in the unfortunate reign of King Richard the Second; but, in

the first year of his successor’s reign, an act was passed, which at

once swept away this whole load of extravagant treasons. Afterwards,

particularly in the bloody reign of Henry VIII, the spirit of inventing

new and strange treasons was revived; all which new-fangled crimes were

totally abrogated by the stature 1 Mary, chap.1; since which time the

legislature has become more cautious upon this subject.”[13]

The first mode in which, according to Chief Justice Eyre, an association

for Parliamentary Reform, may incur the penalties of High Treason, is,

when “other purposes besides those of Parlimentary Reform, and of the

most traiterous nature, are hidden under this veil.”[14] The purposes he

may be supposed to mean are those of his new-fangled treason, of

“conspiring to subvert the Monarchy.” Thus, in the first place, we have

an innocent purpose constituting the professed object of this supposed

association; and behind that the Grand Jury are to discover, if they

can, a secret purpose, totally unlike that which the associators

profess; and this purpose Chief Justice Eyre declares to be treason,

contrary, as he avowedly confesses, to all law, precedent, and

adjudicated cases.

The second mode, in which the Chief Justice is willing to pre-suppose

High Treason in an association for Parliamentary Reform, is by such an

association, not in its own nature, as he says, “simply unlawful, too

easily degenerating, and becoming unlawful in the highest degree.”[15]

It is difficult to comment upon this article with the gravity, that may

seem due to a magistrate, delivering his opinions from a bench of

justice. An association for Parlimentary Reform may “degenerate, and

become unlawful in the highest degree, even tp the enormous extent of

the crime of High Treason.” Who knows not that? Was it necessary that

Chief Justice Eyre should come in 1794, solemnly to announce to us so

irresistible a proposition? An association for Parliamentary Reform may

desert its object, and be guilty of High Treason. True: so may a card

club, a bench of justices, or even a cabinet council. Does Chief Justice

Eyre mean to resinuate, that there is something in the purpose of a

Parliamentary Reform, so unallowed, ambiguous and unjust, as to render

its well wishers objects of suspicion, rather than their brethren and

fellow subjects? What can be more wanton, cruel, and inhuman, than thus

gratuitously to single out the purpose of Parliamentary Reform, as if it

were of all others, most especially connected with degeneracy and

treason?

But what is principally worthy of observation in both these cases, is,

the easy and artful manner in which the idea of treason is introduced

into them. First, there is a “concealed purpose,” or an insensible

“degeneracy,” is supposed to tend directly to this end, the “subversion

of the “Monarchy.” Lastly, a “conspiracy to subvert “the Monarchy,” is a

treason, first discovered by Chief Justice Eyre in 1794, never

contemplated by any lawgiver, or included in any statute. Deny the Chief

Justice any one of his three assumptions, and his whole deduction falls

to the ground. Challenge him, or any man living, to prove any of them;

and you require of him an impossibility. And it is by this sort of

logic, which would be scouted in the rawest graduate in either of our

Universities, that Englishmen are to be brought under the penalties of

treason!

Of these assumptions, the most flagrant perhaps, if in reality there can

be any gradation in such groundless assertions, is that which imputes to

the associations a “ conspiracy to subvert the “Monarchy.” The Chief

Justice knows, for no man is ignorant, that there is not the shadow of

evidence of such a conspiracy. If any man in England wishes the

subversion, if effected at all, can only be effected by an insensible

revolution of opinion? Did these associations plan the murder of the

King, and the assassination of the royal family? Where are the proofs of

it? But the authors of the present prosecution probably hope, that the

mere names of Jacobin and Republican will answer their purposes; and

that a Jury of Englishmen can be found who will send every man to the

gallows without examination, to whom these appellations shall once have

been attributed!

If Chief Justice Eyre, or his Majesty’s servant, have any charge of High

Treason to advance, let them advance it. The purpose of Parliamentary

Reform, as the Chief Justice confesses, so far from being treasonable,

is not “simply unlawful.” If the persons now under confinement, have

been guilty of High Treason, that is the point to which our attention is

to be called. Their treason is neither greater nor less, for their being

engaged in a lawful object, the associating for a Parliamentary Reform.

Tell us what they have done that is criminal, and do not seek to excite

extrajudicial against them for what is innocent.

Having dismissed the immediate purpose of a Parliamentary Reform, the

Chief Justice goes on in the last place to consider “the project of a

Convention, to be assembled under the advice and direction of some of

these associations.”[16]

And here it was impossible not to recollect, that Conventions and

meetings of delegates are by no means foreign to the English history;

and that twelve or fourteen years ago, many of his Majesty’s present

Ministers were deeply engaged in a project of this nature. Accordingly,

the Chief Justice takes a very memorable distinction. He calls it “a

project, which in better times would have been hardly thought worthy of

grave consideration, but, in these, our days, when it has been attempted

to be put in execution in a distant part of the united kingdom, and with

the example of a neighbouring country before our “eyes, is deservedly

become an object of jealousy to the law.”[17]

This remark constitutes one of the most flagrant violations of the

principles of executive justice, that was ever heard of or imagined. If

the times require different measures of justice, we are already

instructed by the act 25 Edward III, as to the proceeding fitting to be

employed. “The Judge,” says the act,” shall tarry, without going to

judgment of the treason, till the cause be shown and declared before the

King and his Parliament, whether it ought to be judged treason or other

felony.” Parliament, the legislative authority of the realm, may make

new provisions of law in accommodation to circumstances; but the Judges,

the bare expounders of the law, are bound to maintain themselves in an

atmosphere unaffected by the variations of popular clamour, ministerial

vengeance, or the ever changing nature of circumstances. They are to be

severely and unalterably the same. The meaning they found in the statute

yesterday, that meaning, and no other, they are to find today. An

interpretation, shifting with every gale of accident, may produce

undefinable terrors in its miserable victims, may devote its authors to

eternal execration, but can have none of the venerable features either

of law or justice.

Some of the dreadful consequences involved in this loose and fluctuating

interpretation, show themselves in the very next sentence.

“It will be your duty,” says the Chief Justice to to the Jury, “ to

examine the evidence on this head very carefully, and to sift it to the

bottom; to consider every part of it in itself, and as it stands

connected with other parts of it ; and to draw the conclusion of fact,

as to the existence, the nature and object of this proposed Convention,

from the whole.

“In the course of the evidence you will probably hear of bodies of men

having been collected together, of violent resolutions voted at this and

other meetings, of some preparation of offensive weapons, and of the

adoption of the languge and manners of those Conventions in France,

which have possessed themselves of the government of that country. I

dwell not on these particulars, because I consider them not as

substantive treasons, but as circumstances of evidence, tending to

ascertain the true nature of the object which these persons had in

view.”[18]

Here we have set before us in the most unblushing and undisguised

manner, that principle of Constructve Treason, which has upon all

occaisons formed an object of execration in English history. Let us hear

what Hume says upon the subject in the farther progress of that very

passage which has been already quoted.

“ As this species of treason, discovered by the Commons,” in the case of

Lord Stafford, “is entirely new and unknown to the laws; so is the

species of proof by which they pretend to fix that guilt upon the

prisoner. They have invented “a kind of accumulative or constructive

evidence, by which man actions, either totally innocent in themselves,

or criminal in a much inferior degree, shall, when united, amount to

treason, and subject the person to the highest penalties inflicted by

the law. A hast and unguarded word, a rash and passionate action,

assisted by the malevolent fancy of the accuser, and tortured by

doubtful constructions, is transmuted into the deepest guilt, and the

lives and fortunes of the whole nation, no longer protected by justice,

are subjected to arbitrary will and pleasure.”[19]

It is not easy to conceive of two passages more parallel to each other,

than the doctrines here delivered by Chief Justice Eyre, and the

condemnation pronounced upon them by war of anticipation by the

illustrious Hume. Thus, “a hasty and unguarded word,”-“Adoption of the

language of the Convention in France.” — “A rash and passionate action,”

— “Violent resolutions voted at the and other meetings-some preparation

of offensive weapons.” — “Actions either totally innocent in themselves,

or criminal in a much inferior degree,” — “I consider not the

particulars as substantive Treasons.”

Can any thing be more atrocious, than the undertaking to measure the

guilt of an individual, and the interpretation of a plain and permanent

law, by the transitory example that may happen to exist “before our eyes

in a neighbouring country?”

The chief Justice speaks of two sorts of Convention. The first, “a

Convention, in imitation of those which we have heard of in France, in

order to usurp the government of the country.”[20]

There lurks a memorable ambiguity under this word Convention. A

Convention was held no long time ago, of delegates from the royal burghs

in Scotland, to consider of a reformation in the administration of those

burghs. Of this Convention, the present Lord Advocate of Scotland, among

others was a member. A Convention was proposed in 1780, of delegates

from the different country meetings held at that period. Both those

Conventions were considerably more formidable in their structure that

that which is the subject of present animadversion. The royal burghs,

and the meetings of freeholder in the several counties, consist of

bodies more or less recognized by the constitution, and possessing a

degree of inherent authority. The Convention propose in the present

instance, was simply of delegates from the different societies,

voluntarily associated for the purpose of Parliamentary Reform. They

could possess no inherent authority. The persons who constituted them,

must have been actuated by the most perfect insanity, before they could

have dreamed of usurping the government of the country. No delusion

therefore can be more gross, than an attempt to style, as Chief Justice

Eyre styles, such a convention as “A Convention of the People.”[21]

In describing his first sort of Convention the Chief Justice roundly

affirms, “that the project of such a Convention, and any one step taken

towards bringing it about, such as, for instance, consultations, forming

committees to consider of the means, or acting in those committees,

would be a case of no difficulty: it would be the clearest High Treason;

it would be compassing and imagining the King’s death; and not only his

death, but the death and destruction of all order, religion and laws, of

all property, and security for the lives and liberties of the King’s

subjects.”[22]

There is a figure in speech, of the highest use to a designing and

treacherous orator, which has not yet perhaps received a name in the

labours of Aristotle, Quintillian, or Farnaby. I would call this figure

incroachment. It is a proceeding, by which an affirmation is modestly

insinuated at first, accompanied with considerable doubt and

qualification; repeated afterwards, unaccompanied with these

qualifications; and at least asserted in the most peremptory and

arrogant terms. It is thus that Chief Justice Eyre expresses himself,

respecting a “conspiracy to overturn the Monarchy.” It is first a

Treason, “not declared by the statute 25 Edward III;” a Treason, “which

no lawgiver in this country has ever ventured to contemplate;” a

Treason, “not resting for its authority upon any law, precedent or

adjudged case.” It is not this thing, nor it is not that; “the seditio

regni spoken of by some of our ancient writers,” but which is no part of

our law, “seems to come the nearest to it,”[23] but will not apply. “The

particular nature of the traiterous attempt, will fall within one or

other of the specific treasons of the statue of Edward III.”[24] A

strange crime, which the judge knows is provided against by the first or

the second principal clause, but is unable to determine whether it is by

the former or the latter! Afterwards the Chief Justice speaks of it with

less hesitation; and at least, as we have seen, affirms it to be “a case

of no difficulty, and the clearest High Treason.”

Can any play upon words be more contemptible, than that by which the

Chief Justice, finding the King’s death the subject of one of the

clauses, and determined to trace at least some remote analogy between

that and the subversion of the monarchy, describes the latter by the

appellation of “the death and destruction of all order, religion, &c.

&c.?”

The second sort of Convention in Chief Justice Eyre’s arrangement, is a

Convention, which, not intending to usurp the government of the country,

“has for its sole object the effecting a change in the mode of

representation of the people in Parliament, and the obtaining that

Parliaments should “be held annually. And here,” says the Chief Justice,

“ there is room to distinguish. Such a project of Convention, taking it

to be criminal,” — [25]

“ Taking it to be criminal!” Was ever postulate, more extraordinary, or

more intolerable? Did ever Judge, sitting upon the bench, previously to

this instance, assume the whole question; affirm at his ease, and

without the shadow of an authority, scriptural or nuncupatory, stature

or report, the whole criminality; and then proceed at his leisure to

distribute the assumed criminality into all its different degrees?

Meanwhile, after this loud and peremptory preamble, the Chief Justice is

obliged to grant, that one sort of Convention, one “degree of

criminality,” “a Convention, having for its sole object a dutiful and

peaceable application to Parliament by petition, cannot of itself be

ranked among this class of offences.”[26] He dares not affirm that it is

to be ranked among any class of offences whatever. — But to proceed to

the distinctions he undertakes to enumerate.

The first sort of “Convention, which has for its object the obtaining a

Parliamentary Reform, and that object only, is a Convention, proposing

to obtain it without the authority of Parliament,” and for that purpose

“usurping, at least in this instance, the functions of legislation.”[27]

This the Chief Justice determines, upon just the same grounds as in the

preceding instances, “would be High Treason in every one of the

actors.”[28] After this laborious discussion, Chief Justice Eyre is not

yet satisfied that he has framed a construction, strong enough to ensare

the persons now under confinement. He has promulgated at least five or

six different classes of treason, not found in the direct provisions of

25 Edward III, not supported, as he explicitly confesses, by any law,

precedent or adjudged case. But all this he does in the mere wantonnes

of his power. If any of the prisoners now under confinement has acted

according to all the enumerations of his imaginary case, it may safely

be affirmed, that, upon any sober trial upon a charge of High Treason,

they must infallibly be acquitted. But the Chief Justice implicitly

confesses, that they have not acted according to any one of his cases.

All this profusion of fiction, hypothesis, and prejudication, is brought

forward for the sole purpose, either of convincing us of the

unparalleled ingenuity of the Lord Chief Justice of his Majesty’s Court

of Common Pleas, or to bewilder the imaginations, so throw dust in the

eyes, and confound the understandings of the Grand Jury and the nation.

If this last be the purose conceived, and if it could possibly be

supposed that it should be successful for a moment, early would be the

repentance, deep the remose, and severe, it is to be feared, the

retribution!

The Chief Justice then, having hitherto talked of every thing that is

not to the purpose, comes at last to speak of the matter in hand. Here

he employs all his ingenuity, exerts all his arts, and displays his

utmost intrepidity of countenance. This part of the case is opened as

follows.

“Whether the project of a Convention, having for it’s object the

collecting together a power, which should overawe the legistative bod,

but not suspend it, or entirely determines its fuctions, if acted upon,

will also amount to High Treason, and inmagining the King;s death, is

more doubtful question. Thus far is clear: a force upon the Parliament,

must be immediately directed against the KIng. It must reach the King,

or it can have no effect at all. The laws are enacted in Parliament by

the King’s Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords of

Commons in Parliament assembled. A fource mediated against the

parliament therefore, is a force mediated against the King, and seems to

fall within the cases described.”[29]

Nothing Can be more gross to the view of any one who will attentively

read this paragraph, than its total want of all definite aud

intelligible meaning. The chief Justice talks of “ collecting together a

power,” and of “ a force” exercised upon the Parliament. What is here

intended by the words power and force? Under the kindly ambibuity of

these words, the Chief Justice seems very willing to slip upon us the

idea of an armed power and a military force. But this can scarcely by

any construction be reconciled to the idea of a Convention. An army of

delegates was an idea reserved for Chief Justice Eyre to introduce into

the world. Well then: let’s suppose that arms and violence are not

intended; yet the Chief Justice says, that the project of a Convention

has for its object “the collecting together a power, which should

overawe the legislative body.” This word is still more ambiguous than

any of the rest. What are we to understand by the phrase “to overawe?”

Awe in its true acceptatiun has always been understood to mean deference

or respect. It cannot mean any thing else here, since, as we have

already seen, armed power and military force are out of the question.

But in this sense what is the object of every species of Convention or

political association whatever? It is always intended to produce

deference and respect. Thus the Chief Justice very properly observes,

that “a Convention, having for its sole object a dutiful and peaceable

application to Parliament,” does not fail to find that application

attended with “respect and credit, in proportion to its

universality.”[30] Indeed there can be no doubt, that there are but two

ways of operating upon men’s conduct, the one, by exhibiting arguments

calculated to prevail upon their own inclinations and conviction, the

other a perceiving how much the thing required accords with the sense of

numerous bodies of men, and bodies of men intitled to eminent credit.

Such being the substance of the most material paragraph paragraph in the

charge to the Grand Jury, let us see in what manner this paragraph is

concluded, and what are the inferences drawn from it. What is the

treatment due to this force which is no force; this collecting together

a power, unarmed, and entitled to credit only for its universality? What

shall be done to the men who thus overawe the legislative body, by

exciting its deference and respect; or, failing this, do not overawe it

at all, inasmuch as they have no power to inforce their demands?

“Whether or no,” as Chief Justice Eyre sagaciously observes, “the

project of such a Convention will amount to “High Treason, is a more

doubtful question.” He adds, “in this case it does not appear to me,

that I am warranted by the authorities, to state to you as clear law,

that the mere conspiracy to raise such a force [recollect what has been

said upon the nature of this force], and the entering into consultations

respecting it, will alone, and without actually raising the force,

constitute the crime of High Treason. What the law is in that case, and

what will be the effect of the circumstance of the force being thus

meditated, will be fit to be solemnly considered and determined when the

case shall arise.”[31]

Here the Chief Justice speaks with a proper degree of modesty and

precaution, so far as relates to the supposed guilt of the persons under

confinement but when he has occasion to resume the subject, he, in his

usual manner, introduces a variation variation into the statement. “It

may perhaps be fitting,” says he, “if you find these persons involved in

such a design, and if the charges of High Treason are offered to be

maintained against them upon that ground, that in respect of the

extraordinary nature, the dangerous extent, and at the best, the very

criminal complexion of such a conspiracy, this case, which I state to

you as a new and a doubtful case, should be put into a judicial course

of inquiry, that it may receive a solemn adjudication, whether it will

or will not amount to High Treason.” [32]

It is difficult to conceive of any thing more abhorrent to the genuine

principles of humanity, than the doctrine here delivered. The Chief

Justice, after having enumerated various sorts of treason, respecting

which he speaks diffidently at first, and peremptorily at last, but

which are all the mere creatures of his own imagination, comes to a case

upon which even he hesitates to decide. He dares not aver the proceeding

described in it to be treason. Well, then; what is the remedy he

proposes? Surely a new Act of Parliament ; the rememdy prescribed by the

act of Edward III, “in cases of treason, which may happen in time to

come, but which could nto then be thought of or declared.” No such

thing. Upon this case, which he does not venture to pronounce to be

treason, he directs the Grand Jury to find the bills to be true bills!

He tells them “that it is fitting that this case,” which he “States as

new and “doubtful, should be put into a judicial course of enquiry, that

it may receive a solemn adjudication, whether it will or will not amount

to High Treason!”

The Chief Justice, in this instance, quits the character of a criminal

judge and a civil magistrate, and assumes that of a natural philosopher

or experimental anatomist. He is willing to dissect the persons that

shall be brought before him, the better to ascertain the truth or

falsehood of his pre-conceived conjectures. The plain English of his

recommendations is this : “Let these men be put upon trial for their

lives ; let them and their friends, through the remotest strainers of

connection, be exposed to all the anxieties incident to so uncertain and

fearful a condition ; let them be exposed to ignominy, to obloquy, to

the partialities, as it may happen, of a prejudiced judge, and the

perverseness of an ignorant jury : we shall then know how we ought to

conceive of similar cases. By trampling upon their peace, throwing away

their lives, or sporting with their innocence, we shall obtain a basis

upon which to proceed, and a precedent to guide our judgment in future

instances.”

This is a sort of language which it is impossible to recollect without

horror, and which seems worthy of the judicial ministers of Tiberius or

Nero. It argues, if the speaker understood his own meaning, or if the

paper before me has faithfully reported it, the most frigid indifference

to human happiness and human life. According to this method of estimate,

laws, precedents, cases and reports are of high value, and the hanging a

few individuals is a very cheap, economical and proper way of purchasing

the decision of a doubtful speculation.

Surely it would be worthy, if not of the Judges, at least of the

immediate Ministers of the Sovereign, to consider whether, if they mean

to put us under a new rule of criminal law, it be not better solemnly to

originate that law in the two Houses of Parliament, than to suffer it to

be made out of new constructions of old statutes, contrary to all law

and precedent, and contrary to the security and liberty of the subject.

In Ireland, some time ago, it was thought proper to bring forward a

COnvention-Bill, declaring such proceedings, as are the subjects of the

forced constructions of Chief Baron Eyre, to amount to High Treason.

When the Habeas Corpus act was suspended in England, we were given to

understand that this proceeding was thought sufficient for the present,

and that a Convention-Bill, similar to the Irish, and other severe

measures, were reserved to be adopted, as the case might acquire This

fallacious show of lenity, now turns out to be the most unprincipled

tyranny. Mr. Dundas and others talked in the last Session of Parliament,

of bringing home the Scottish principles of jurisprudence, if need were,

to England, and rendering associations and Conventions a subject of

transportation to Botany Bay. They have since refined upon their plan,

and carried the law of England, or what they are pleased to call so,

into Scotland, rendering these offences, real or imaginary, a subject of

the penalties of High Treason. Such have been the incroachments upon the

Constitution, by men who have the audacity to call themselves its

champions, that a man who should have pretended to foretel, from six

months to six months, the measures they would think proper to pursue,

would have been laughed at for the improbability and utter absurdity of

his tale. Britons will at length awake, and the effects of reason and

conviction upon them, will not be less formidable or less unacceptable

to their oppressors, than the effects that might flow from a course of

violence!

I have hitherto abstained from saying any thing respecting the personal

character of the men now under accusation. If their abilities be as

rare, and their merits as high as their warmest admirers can conceive

them, it would still be foreign to the question I purpose to consider.

If they be men, exceptionable in their character, ambiguous in their

designs, and mischievous in their counsels, that also ought to be put

out of the consideration. The ENglish Constitution is strong enough to

disarm all the adversaries of the public peace, without its being

necessary for that purpose to destroy its very essence. Twelve men are

apparently concerned, but the liberties and happiness of all are at

stake. If these new treasons be establish, we may say, as the Parliament

of Henry the Fourth did, speaking of he new-fangled treasons under

RIchard the Second, that “no man can know how “he ought to behave

himself, to do, speak, or say, for doubt of the pains of treason.”[33]

The constructions of Chief Justice Eyre, and the Special Commission, put

a perpetual bar to all associations, delegations, and consultings

respecting any species of grievance. Will any man venture to say, that

we shall never stand in need of these expedients ; or shall we consent

for all time coming, to hold every possible reform and amendment at the

mere will of the administration? If these principles be established,

utterly subcersive as they are of the principles of the English

government, who will say that we shall stop here ? Chief Justice Eyre

says to-day, “all men may, nay, all men must, if they possess the

faculty of thinking, reason upon every thing, that sufficiently

interests them to become an object of their attention ; and among the

objects of attention of freemen, the principles of government, the

constitution of particular governments, and, above all, the constitution

of the government under which they live, will naturally engage attention

and provoke speculation.” But who will say how long this liberty will be

tolerated, if the principles, so alarmingly opened in the charge to the

Grand Jury, shall once be established ? This is the most important

crisis, in the history of English liberty, that the world ever saw. If

men can be convincted of High Treason, upon such constructions and

implications as are contained in this charge, we may look with conscious

superiority upon the republican speculations of France, but we shall

certainly have reason to envy the milder tyrannies of Turkey and

Ispahan.

From what has been said it appears, that the whole proceedings intended

in the present case, are of the nature of an ex post facto law. This is

completely admitted by the Chief Justice. In summing up the different

parts of his charge, he enumerates three cases, in the first of which he

directs the Grand Jury to throw out the bills, and in that of the two

last to find them true bills. One of these two relates to Chief Justice

Eyre’s new treason of “a conspiracy to subvert the Monarchy,” a treason

which, he says, is not declared by the statue of Edward III, and no law-

giver in this country has ever ventured to contemplate. The other, “that

of overawing Parliament,” he states to be a new and doubtful case, and

reccomends, that it should be “ put into a judicial course of enquiry,

that it may receive a solemn adjudication whether it will or will not

amount to High Treason.”

Thus it is fully admitted, respecting the persons now under accusation,

that they could find no reason, either in the books of our law, or of

any commentators of received authority, to suppose that they were

incurring the guilt of treason. “The mark set upon this crime, the token

by which it could be discovered, lay entirely concealed; and no human

prudence, no human innocence, “could save them from the destruction with

which they are at present threatened.[34]”

It is pretty generally admitted, that several of these persons, at

least, were honest and well-intentioned, though mistaken men. Punishment

is awarded in human Courts of Justice, either according to the

intention, or the mischief committed. If the intention be alone to be

considered, then the men of whom I speak, however unguarded and

prejudicial their conduct may be supposed to have been, must on that

ground be infallibly acquitted. If, on the other hand, the mischief

incurred be the sole measure of the punishment, we are bound by every

thing that is sacred to proceed with reluctance and regret. Let it be

supposed, that there are cases, where it shall be necessary, that a well

designing man should be cut off, for the sake of the whole. The least

consideration that we can pay in so deplorable a necessity, is, to warn

him of his danger, and not suffer him to incur the penalty, without any

previous caution, without so much as the knowledge of its existence.

I anticipate the trials to which this charge is the prelude. I know that

the Judge will admit the good intention and honest design of several of

the persons arraigned: it will be impossible to deny it; it is notorious

to the whole universe. He has already admitted, that there is no law or

precedent for their condemnation. If therefore he address them in the

frank language of sincerity, he must say: “Six months ago you engaged in

measures, which you believed conducive to the public good. You examined

them in the sincerity of your hearts, and you admitted them with the

full conviction of the understanding. You adopted them from this ruling

motive, the love of your country and mankind. You had no warning that

the measures in which you engaged were acts of High Treason: no law told

you so; no precedent recorded it; no man existing upon the face of the

earth could have predicted such an interpretation. You went off to your

beds with a perfect and full conviction , that you had acted upon the

principles of immutable justice, and that you had offended no provision

or statute that was ever devised. I, the Judge sitting upon the bench,

you, Gentlemen of the Jury, every inhabitant of the island of Great

Britian, had just as much reason to conceive they were incurring the

penalties of the law, as the prisoners at the bar. This is the nature of

the crime; there are the circumstances of the case.

“And for this, the sentence of the Court [but not of the law] is, That

you, and cach of you, shall be taken from the bar, and conveyed to the

place from where you came, and from thence be drawn upon a hurdle to the

place of execution, there to be hanged by the neck, but not until you

are dead: you shall be taken down alive, your privy members members

shall be cut off, and your bowels shall be taken out and burnt before

your faces ; your heads shall be severed from your bodies, and your

bodies shall then be divided into four quarters, which are to be at the

King’s disposal ; and the Lord have mercy on your souls !”

APPENDIX, No. I.

A More minute attention appears to be due to Chief Justice Eyre ‘s new

treason of a “conspiracy to subvert the Monarchy.” The term. in which

the idea is conveyed are strong and impressive ; and many persons, who

shall be convinced by what has been already offered, that by the law of

England this is no teason, will yet perhaps entertain a wish that a new

law were framed for the purpose of making it treason. Thousands and tens

of thousands of the inhabitants of England, are deeply attached to that

Constitution, under which our ancestors made so conspicuous a figure in

the face of the world. The attachment they feel is no doubt a virtuous

attachment ; but it is not every method that can be proposed for

preserving what we love that is entitled to our approbation. Let us

consider a litle this phrase, a “conspiracy to subvert the Monarchy.”

There are but two ways in which such a subversion can be attempted. The

first, argument, all writing, and familiar speaking, by which a man, by

himself, and without confederacy with others, shall seek to prevail upon

his countrymen to adopt sentiments similar to his own. This, by the very

meaning of the term, cannot be conspiracy.

Two observations will suffice to clear up this article. First, it might

be supposed that he who is attached to the Monarchy, believing, of

course, that the Monarchy is a good thing, should feel little reluctance

to commit his opinions to the fair field of argument, and entertain

small doubt that truth must prove more vigorous and of longer life than

falsehood. Secondly, if it should be said, that some writings may be

exceedingly inflammatory, we have already Laws of Libel. These Laws

might be made still stronger ; but at all events the inflammation

constitutes the offense, and not the object proposed, whether it be the

subversion of the Monarchy, or of the Athanasian creed. As to familiar

and unconfederate conversation, there can be little danger of

inflammation in that. The only offense committed, will be an offense

against decorum. Whether or no hanging men is the most suitable way of

teaching them good manners, is a point that will remain to be

considered.

The second method that may be employed for teh “subversion of the

Monarchy,” is open force, But let this force be a little examined. is it

to be employed upon all Members of the Constitution at once ; and is the

present race o traitors, like Guy Fawkes of old, to blow up King, Lords,

and Commons with gunpowder, on the first day of the Session of

Parliament? If “war be levied against the King within the realm,” this

is already treason by 25 Edward III. If the plan be “to depose the King,

to imprison him, or to get his person into the power of the

conspirators,” this also, if we are to credit the authorities of Foster

and Hale, is already High Treason. But let us not be deceived with high

sounding words. An attempt to subvert the Monarchy is nothing, if it be

not definite, and capable of some clear and precise explanation. An

attempt to procure a reform in the Commons’ House of Parliament, through

the medium of associations and Conventions, is not a conspiracy to

subvert the Monarchy. If it be a crime, it will not be less so, for

being called by its appropriate name. The attempt to involve a man in

the penalties of High Treason, by calling evidence to prove that he has

done one action, and then bestowing upon that action another

appellation, will be regarded with contempt by every man of common

sense, and with the deepest abhorrence by every man of common humanity.

APPENDIX, No. II.

HITHERTO I have confined myself to an examination of the charge to the

Grand Jury. But there is something so peculiarly flagitious in the

manner of preparing the indictment, and the list of witnesses, that it

seems improper to dismiss an Essay, the object of which is to call the

attention of Englishmen to the present state of the proceedings against

the prisoners in his Majesty’s goals of Newgate and the Tower, without a

few words upon the subject.

The law of High Treason differs from our other criminal laws, by

allowing the persons accused an interval of ten days, between the

delivery of the indictment and list of witnesses, and the day of trial.

The object of the law apparently is, that he may have adequate time, in

a matter of so extraordinary magnitude, to prepare his defence. This

object is completely defeated in the in the present instance. One

indictment is preferred against twelve of the most eminent persons

involved in the accusation. It consists of nine counts, and it is well

known, that several of these counts will not be attempted to be proved

against the majority of the prisoners. Every man is left to pick out, as

he can, the articles, which the sobriety or the wantonness of accusation

may think proper to allege against him. In the same manner one list of

witnesses is delivered to all. This list consists of more than two

hundred persons.

Thus are the lenity and humanity of this provision baffled. For what

reason is this? Shall we be told that it saves trouble to the Crown

lawyers? This is perhaps the most plausible pretence that can be

adduced. And yet, in that case, it would scarcely have been less decent,

to have saved trouble, by hanging the accused without the form of trial.

But this is not the real reason. The most temperate and scrupulous man

cannot fail to confess, that the object is, to facilitate the conviction

of persons so much the object of detestation to be the present Ministry.

Government hastily involved itself in a dilemma, by apprehending these

men for the sake of propagating alarm; and it is thought better to hang

a few innocent persons, than that the Minister should stand detected in

an error, or that the arm of government should be weakened by an act of

justice.

It is a memorable fact, and well worthy to be revived in the present

crisis, that on the eighth of April 1793, Mr. Pitt openly and

unhesitatingly delivered, in the face of the House of Commons, the

doctrine which he has now reduced to practice. The report upon the bill

for preventing traitorous correspondence with France was on that day

read; and an amendment moved by Mr. Adams, and supported by Mr. Fox, to

allow “The persons, who should hereafter be arraigned upon this act, the

same interval of ten days, that is allowed to other persons accused of

the crimes of high treason.” This clause was opposed by the Chancellor

of the Exchequer, who alleged, that “the proposed allowance would be of

little use to the culprit. A list of such a cloud of witnesses might be

sent him, as would render it impossible for him, with all the assiduity

of his friends, to enquire into their characters in the space of ten

days.”

Mr. Fox professed his “utter astonishment at such language from the

Minister of the Crown. It must be in great measure by his advice that

the law officers for the crown are to conduct prosecution for treason;

and that such a person, in such a situation, should suggest even the

possibility, of a public accuser swelling the number of witnesses, for

no other purpose than that of baffling the law, was a declaration of the

most alarming nature. He hoped no such infamous trick would be

attempted. But, if it were, he trusted that there was spirit enough in

the people to bring its authors to a proper accounty.”[35]

From this citation it appears, that the present proceedings is by no

means the suggestion of the hour; and that there is a man in his

Majesty’s councils, capable of brooding in the solitary majesty of his

mind, upon the different modes of defeating, to the person he shall

select as the object of his vengeance, the purpose of substantial

justice.

Reports have been propagated of a very extraordinary nature, respecting

the manner of forming the Jury. These reports, if not legally proved,

have never been contradicted; and there for ought to be stated, that, if

false, they may be contradicted. It is said, that the Sheriff’s, instead

of suffering the Jury to be struck, at the place where the book of the

Freeholders is kept, and used be the Officers to whom that care

ordinarily falls, sent for the book from the office, and took the task

upon themselves. It is further affirmed, that, in consequence, various

mistakes were made; the same persons were summoned upon the Grand Jury,

and the Petty Jury; and letters of summons sent to the one, that ought

to have been sent to the other. Officers of the great and important

trust, ought not to content themselves with acting from pure and

disinterested motives, but should refrain from affording even a color of

suspicion. It is obvious that every person who casts his eye over the

list, that it consist of a most extraordinary assemblage, King’s

tradesmen, contractors, and persons laboring under every kind of bias

and influence; very few indeed that can at all pretend to independence

and impartiality; and perhaps those few to be ultimately challenged by

the officer of the crown. Thus every part of the transaction appears to

be uniform, and marks an administration, calloused to public character,

and determined to apply all means indiscriminately to effect their

sanguinary purposes.

[1] P.4. He adds, “it is not to be dissembled,” — Will any one venture

to say, that the Judges of England would dissemble, if they could, in

matters of the utmost value to the subject; and that it is with

reluctance they confess anything, that tends most to general security,

equity, and welfare?

[2] P.s.

[3] P.5.

[4] P.4.

[5] Page 6.

[6] Page 6.

[7] Vol. vi. chap. iv. p. 403.

[8] Ibid

[9] Page 8.

[10] Page 8

[11] Page 10

[12] Book iv. chap. 6. p. 7.

[13]

P. 85, 86.

[14]

P. 8.

[15]

P. 9.

[16]

P. 10.

[17]

P. 10.

[18]

P. 11.

[19]

P. 403.

[20]

P. 11.

[21]

P. 10.

[22]

P. 11.

[23]

P. 6.

[24]

P. 7.

[25] P.12.

[26] P.14.

[27] P.12.

[28] P.12.

[29] P.13.

[30] P.14.

[31] P.13.

[32] P.15.

[33] Blackstone, book iv, chap. 6, p. 86.

[34] Hume, vol. vi, ch. liv. p. 404

[35] Senator, vol.vii, p. 580, 588.