Debate on a Motion, to address the King for a farther Reduction of the Forces.
Jan. 29. A Motion was made, That an humble Address
be presented to his Majesty, to acquaint him with the Readiness, wherewith his faithful Commons had agreed to the
Continuance of the extraordinary Expence, which he had
thought necessary in the present Juncture; in which Resolution they had concurred with the greater Chearfulness, as a
grateful Return to his Royal Goodness, in ordering so considerable a Reduction of his Forces both by Sea and Land,
as soon as the present Posture of Affairs would permit; and
in full Confidence, that it was his Royal Intention, as soon
as there should be a more perfect Reconciliation among the
several Powers of Europe, to make such farther Reduction
of his Forces, as might be consistent with the Security and
Dignity of his Majesty's Royal Person and Government, and
with our present happy Constitution; not doubting, but that,
from his Fatherly Compassion to his People, he would be
graciously pleased to direct, that whatever Land-Force should
thereafter be thought necessary, should be established in such
a Manner, as should make the Saving more sensible, and the
future Burthen less grievous to the Nation.
This Motion was supported by Mr John Pitt, Lord Polwarth, Mr Pulteney, Mr Gybbon, Sir John Barnard, Mr
Sandys, and Mr Walter Plumer; and was oppos'd by Mr
Winnington, Col. Bladen, Sir William Yonge, and Mr
Conduit. But the Question being at last put, in was carried
in the Negative without a Division.
February 2. The House having ordered, that the proper
Officer should lay before them an Account of all the publick
Debts, at the Receipt of his Majesty's Exchequer, due or
standing out at Christmas, 1735, with the annual Interest
paid for the same; Mr Sandys stood up, and spoke as follows.
Mr Sandys's Motion for raising, within the Year, the Supplies necessary for the current Service. ; Debate thereon.
Sir,
'Every Man is now, I believe, convinced that the great
Debt we groan under, is a most heavy Clog upon all publick Measures, and will certainly, while it continues, prevent its being in our Power to act upon any Occasion with
that Vigour we ought, either in Vindication of the Honour
and Interest of this Nation, or in Defence of our Allies.
This of itself is a most terrible Misfortune, but what still
adds to it is, that these our unlucky Circumstances are well
known to all our Neighbours, which is, I believe, the principal Cause of our having so little Influence on the Councils
of other Nations; and while this Load continues we may
expect to be insulted by them, as often as they can find
the least Pretence for so doing. In such Circumstances therefore it is the most pernicious Thing we can do, to run the
Nation any farther in Debt by creating new Funds, or to
prevent that Fund, which was long since appropriated,
from being religiously applied to the extinguishing yearly a
Part of that Debt contracted before the Year 1716; for if
we do so in Time of Peace, it will convince our Neighbours, that it would be impossible for us to support an expensive War, which will of course render us contemptiele
in the Eyes of all foreign Nations. And with respect to
our Domestick Affairs, the Consequences of pursuing any
such Measure are full as pernicious; for every new Mortgage we make, becomes a sort of Prop for supporting the
Interest payable upon the former; whereas we ought to
use all possible Means to reduce that Interest, not only for
the Encouragement of Trade among us, but to encrease the
Sinking Fund, which would enable us to pay off all our old
Debts much sooner, than it will otherwise be possible for us
to do: Nay, I am almost certain, that if no new Debts
had been contracted since the Year 1716, nor any Part of
the Sinking Fund converted to other Uses than it was originally designed for, the Interest upon all our Funds would
have been long since reduced to 3 l. per Cent. and a much
greater Part of our old Debt would have been paid, by
which we should have been enabled to have taken off some
of those heavy Taxes, under which the poor Labourers and
Manufacturers have groaned for so many Years. The loading Posterity with new Debts, in order to give a little Ease
to the present Generation, may be a good temporary Expedient for a Minister; and may prevent the People's making
too particular an Inquiry into that Expence, which his Measures have brought upon them: But it is a most pernicious Expedient both for the Royal Family, and for the Nation in general. For when any Sum of Money is raised for
the Service of the ensuing Year, by contracting a new Debt,
and creating a new Fund for the Payment of that Debt, it
is subjecting the Nation to pay at least double that Sum in
the End; because in every such Case, the Nation is obliged
to pay Interest for the Money raised, and the Expences of collecting for many Years, besides paying the Principal at last;
this shews the Loss the Nation sustains by the contracting
of any such Debt for the current Service. By a long
Continuation of such Measures the People may come to
be so loaded with Taxes, and those Taxes so much engaged
for the Payment of former Mortgages, that it may be impossible for his Majesty, or some of his Successors, to vindicate the Rights of the Nation, without loading them
with heavier Taxes than they are able to bear, which
may very probably raise a general Disaffection against our
present happy Establishment; and may be of the most dangerous Consequence even to the Creditors themselves; for if
ever we should be reduced to such Circumstances, that either the Nation must be ruined, or the publick Creditors left
unpaid, it is easy to see which Side of the Dilemma would
be chosen. The proper Method to prevent our running into
Debt is to diminish our yearly Expence; but as the Number of our Forces for the Service of the ensuing Year has
already been agreed to; I cannot now propose any Diminution of our Expence for this Year. We have already granted a great Part of the Supplies necessary for the Service, and
we are to go this Day into a Committee of Ways and Means
for raising those Supplies. What Methods may then be pro
posed for that Purpose I do not know; but as I am of Opinion, that no Consideration ought to prevail with us to
contract any new Debt, or to prevent that Fund which
stands appropriated for the Payment of the old, I shall take
the Liberty to make a Motion which I hope the House will
agree to. For if our usual Funds cannot answer the Service
we have already agreed to, I think it will be better to lay
some new Taxes upon the Luxuries of Life, than to create
new Funds; otherwise we run the Hazard of reducing our
Posterity to the Want even of the Necessaries of Life, that
we ourselves may live in Afluence; for this Reason, before
we go into the Committee of Ways and Means, I shall take
the Liberty to move to resolve, 'That this House will raise
within the Year the Supplies necessary for the current Service.' Mr Sandys being seconded by Sir John Barnard and
Mr Willimot, the same was opposed by Sir William Yonge,
Mr Winnington, Mr Heathcote, and Sir Robert Walpole as
follows:
Sir,
'If the Question, now before us, depended solely upon the
Influence this Nation has at present in the Councils of all
the Powers of Earope, or upon the Regard our Neighbours
have shewn to this Nation in all their Measures, a few
Words would be sufficient to shew, that we ought not to
come to any such Resolution as has been proposed; for it is
certain that we never had a greater Influence than we have
at present in every Court of Europe, and that Influence is
founded upon the strongest Reason; because our Neighbours
all know very well, that we have now two Funds sufficient
for supporting any War we may be engaged in, and which
we can upon any such Occasion make use of, without overloading the Subject, or raising Discontent in the Nation;
and these Funds are the Land-Tax and the Sinking-Fund.
Tho' our landed Gentlemen would think it hard to pay 4 s.
in the Pound Land-Tax, during a Time of Peace, yet they
would not certainly grudge that Tax, if they saw the Nation necessarily involved in a War; and tho' the SinkingFund is to be applied in the most religious Manner to the
Payment of our old Debts, yet, in Case of a War, I believe
no Gentleman will say, but that it would be proper to suspend such Payments (especially as none of the publick
Creditors are desirous of having their Money) and to apply
that Fund towards supporting the War; so that our Neighbours know extremely well that we have a Revenue of above
two Millions, besides our usual Supplies, which we may
raise towards supporting a War without laying any new Tax
upon our People.'
'I shall admit, Sir, that the Sinking Fund would be a
Gainer, by the Reduction of the Interest payable upon the
old Funds, and that it would be an Advantage to the Nation to have the Sinking Fund increased; but I very much
question if it would be possible to reduce the Interest payable
upon our old Funds lower than it is at present, even tho' we
should never hereafter contract one Shilling new Debt. I
have indeed heard of a great many Projects for that Purpose;
and some of them have appeared well in Theory, but when
they came to be examined, it has always been found that
they would not do in Practice, and therefore they have been
laid aside: Besides, Sir, it would be an Experiment of the
most dangerous Consequence, to reduce the Interest payable
upon our old Funds lower than it is at present, because it
would probably induce Foreigners to draw their Money all
at once out of our Funds, which would of course bring our
publick Credit into great Distress, and would drain us of all
the ready Specie now circulating in the Nation; and if the
publick Credit of the Nation should be once brought into
any great Distress, most of our own People would take the
Alarm, which would run it so low, that the Restoring of it
would be impracticable.
'Another Consideration, Sir, of great Weight with me,
is, That we cannot well reduce the Interest upon our publick
Funds any lower than it is at present, without reducing at
the same Time the Interest of Money in general; and I am
persuaded the reducing the Interest of Money in general, to
a lower Rate than what it is at present, would bring great
Difficulties upon all Ranks of Men in the Kingdom. With
respect to the publick Creditors the Difficulties are apparent; for a third Part of their yearly Income has been taken
from them by the Reduction already made; and if a farther
Reduction of one per Cent. should be made, they would
then have but one half of that Revenue, which they supposed
they were to have when they first lent their Money to the
Publick.
'Then with respect to the Landed Gentlemen, the reducing Interest so low would be a great Hardship, for they
would be obliged to give each of their younger Children at
least 5 or 6000 l. whereas when Interest is at 5 or 6 per
Cent. one half of that Sum will enable them to live in a
genteel Manner; so that the reducing of Interest so low
would lay all our Landed Gentlemen under a Necessity of
ruining their Estates, or at least of mortgaging them very
deeply, to provide for their younger Children. And lastly,
Sir, with respect to the Trading Part of the Nation, it is
very well known, that every Branch of Trade in the Kingdom is already so overstocked, that it is almost impossible
for one half of our Tradesmen to live by their Business;
and a farther Reduction of Interest would drive so many
into Trade, that no Man could live by any Trade he could
engage in. Even our Borrowers of Money, Sir, or Gentlemen who owe any Money at Interest, would be reduced to
great Difficulties; for the Profit to be got by lending Money,
or by leaving Money in any Man's Hand at Interest, would
be so small, that no Man would think of employing it in that
Way; this would of course bring a general Demand upon
all those in the Kingdom who owe any Money at Interest,
and at the same Time would render it impossible for them
to find any Money for answering that Demand. From all
which I think it inconsistent with the publick Good of the
Nation, and with that of every particular Man, to reduce
the Interest payable upon our publick Funds lower than it is
at present. Whatever may be the Consequence with respect
to Ministers, I am very certain, Sir, it would be an Expedient of very bad Consequence with respect to his present
Majesty, to load his People with Taxes which they may
think unnecessary; for the People will always pay voluntarily and freely such Taxes as they think are absolutely necessary for the Support of the Nation, but it will always
raise Disaffection to the King upon the Throne, to load the
People with Taxes which they think unnecessary at the
Time they are laid on. It is for this Reason that in Time
of War, a Government may venture to subject the People
to Taxes, which would raise terrible Complaints, if they
should be raised in Time of Peace; and for the same Reason I am of Opinion, that we ought rather to convert a Part
of the Sinking Fund to the current Service of the Year,
than to increase any of our old Taxes, or load the People
with any new; for as there is at present no Demand for
paying off any of our old Debts, and as none of the publick
Creditors desire to have their Money, I am convinced the
Generality of the People would think it unnecessary to load
them with any new Tax, when they know we have such a
Fund, to which we may have Recourse for making good the
current Service of the Year; and therefore we may presume, that the loading of them at present with any new Tax
would raise a general Disaffection to his present Majesty's
Person and Government, and consequently be a most pernicious Expedient.
'It has been said, that by contracting a new Debt, and
creating a new Fund for the current Service of the Year,
the Nation comes at last to be loaded with double the Sum
so raised, by Means of the Interest and Expences of Management, which they are obliged to pay yearly till the Principal be paid off: But I cannot admit of the Justness of this
Calculation; for, with respect to the Expences of Management, it is well known that no new Debt we have lately
contracted, has occasioned any great new Expence; because
the Fund for paying off that Debt has always been committed to the Offices already erected, so that it has occasioned no additional Expence, but that of adding perhaps
two or three Under Clerks to some of the Offices before
established: And as to the Interest paid yearly by the Nation, does not every private Man save that Interest yearly,
or make as much by the Share which he must have contributed to that principal Sum, in case it had been raised within the Year? If every Man in the Nation should be obliged
this Year to contribute 10 s. towards the current Service of
the Year, does not he lose the Interest of that 10 s. for all
Years to come? And if by borrowing a Sum of Money upon
the publick Credit at 3 or 4 per Cent. that 10 s. should be
lest in every private Man's Pocket, may he not make every
Year 5 per Cent. of that Money so left in his Pocket? From
hence it must be granted, that the contracting of a new
Debt at a low Interest, instead of raising the Money within
the Year, is an Advantage rather than a Loss to the Nation
in general.
'As the Forces necessary for the Service of the ensuing Year both by Sea and Land, have been already agreed
to, they must be provided for some Way or other; and if
the usual Taxes shall be found insufficient for that Purpose,
every one knows we have but three Ways to make good
that Deficiency. We must make it good either by increasing
some old Taxes, or by laying on new Taxes, or by taking
so much from the Sinking Fund as will make good that
Deficiency. As for the first Method, none of our old Taxes
will admit of any Increase, except the Land-Tax; and,
considering the heavy Load that has for many Years lain
upon the Landed Gentlemen of this Kingdom, I am really
surprized, that they have so long allowed themselves to be
so loaded by the Trading Interest; therefore for the sake of
Prudence, as well as Justice, we ought not to think of increasing the Land-Tax; and I hope, in all our future Measures, we shall impose such Taxes as may fall with an equal
Weight upon all the Subjects, in Proportion to their yearly
Revenues or Profits, whether those yearly Revenues and Profits proceed from Land, Trade or Money. With respect to
the second Method, I wish with all my Heart several of the
Luxuries which have been lately introduced, or very much
increased, were taxed more heavily than they are at present:
But I am of Opinion, that it is a dangerous Experiment to
lay on any new Tax, in a Time of profound Peace, even
upon the Luxuries of Life; especially as it is generally
known, that we have another Fund to which we may have
Recourse, without injuring in the least the publick Credit of
the Nation, or laying any additional Load upon any Rank
of People: And if we should venture upon any such Measure, it would not be proper to make use of any such Tax
for the current Service of the Year, because it is impossible
to guess how much the Produce of a new Tax will amount
to, and I cannot think it would be right to appropriate an
uncertain Produce for the Payment of a certain Sum. It
is well known, that a great Part of the Debts we are now
loaded with, and of which some Gentlemen take all Occasions to complain in the most grievous Manner, were occasioned by that very Method of laying on a new Tax, the
Produce of which must always be uncertain, and appropriating that uncertain Produce towards the Payment of a certain Sum; therefore if Gentlemen have a Mind to lay any
new Taxes upon the Luxuries of Life, I shall not be against
it; but I hope they will order the whole Produce to remain
in the Exchequer, in order to attend the future Disposition
of Parliament; for before next Session the Amount of such
new Tax will be known, or may be nearly guessed at, and
then it may safely be appropriated to the current Service
of the then ensuing Year; or be made a Fund for answering
the current Service of that Year. Whether the usual Taxes
will be sufficient to answer the Services already voted, and
the other Services that may be thought necessary for the
ensuing Year, I shall not pretend to determine; but if they
are not, I think it is plain that we must have Recourse to the
Sinking Fund, as the most proper Method of providing for
any Deficiency: However, we are not at present to determine this Question absolutely; when Gentlemen begin to
consider of Ways and Means for raising the Sums necessary
for the Service of the ensuing Year, they ought, and they
certainly will agree to raise them in that Manner, which
shall appear to be the least burthensome to the People; and
therefore I think it would be very wrong in us, to restrain
ourselves in the Manner proposed by the Motion now before
us. But that we may be left altogether free to do in this
Respect what we may think proper when we go into the
Committee of Ways and Means, I shall propose, that the
previous Question may be put, with regard to the Question
now before us.'
Mr Sandys. Sir John Barnard. Mr Willimot.
To this it was replied by the same Members, who were
for the Motion, as follows:
Sir,
'It has been often observed, That new Measures must always be supported by new Doctrines, and it may as justly be
observed, that wrong Measures must be supported by wrong
Doctrines. This is the Case with respect to the Question
now before us. The Doctrines advanced in favour of that
Measure against which the present Question is intended, are
all so deceitful, that they are a plain Proof that the Measure
must be wrong. What Influence our Ministers may think
they have in the Councils of Foreign Powers, I shall not determine; but I am sure it does not appear that we have any
great Influence, either from the Advantages that have been
lately obtained in Favour of this Nation, or from the late
Behaviour of some of our Neighbours towards our Allies.
I hope it will not be said, that the Courts of Vienna and
Madrid had any great Regard for us, when they concluded
that Treaty of Vienna which produced the Treaty of
Hanover, and made such a Bustle in Europe; and I am
sure it cannot be said, that the Courts of Paris, Madrid,
and Turin, shewed any great Regard for us, when they made
that private Alliance, by which they parcelled out among
them, our Ally the Emperor's Dominions in Italy; nor
can it, I think, be said, that the Emperor placed any great
Confidence in our Assistance, when, in order to obtain a
Peace, he agreed to yield up to France the whole Dutchy of
Lorrain.
'I have not the Honour, Sir, to be in the Secret of Affairs, therefore I must judge from publick Appearances;
and from them it is to me evident, that our Influence has of
late greatly decayed, and will, I am afraid, decay more and
more: Foreigners, Sir, know our Circumstances better than
we seem to do ourselves: They know that now, after a
Term of twenty Years Peace, our publick Debts are very near
as great, and our Circumstances as bad as they were at the
End of the last War: They know that by a Land-Tax of
2 s. in the Pound, we cannot provide for the yearly Supplies
we think necessary, even in Time of Peace, without running ourselves into some new Debt, to the Amount of 5 or
600,000 l. yearly, or taking so much from the Sinking
Fund; and they know that, as the Sinking Fund we now
have arises wholly from our Consumptions being much
greater in Time of Peace than in Time of War, the greatest Part of it would be annihilated in case we should engage
in a War; from which, every Foreigner must conclude,
and I should think every Englishman too, that with 4 s. in
the Pound Land-Tax, we could not raise 500,000 l. a Year
more than has been found necessary for supporting our Government in Time of Peace; and that therefore we could
not support a War without loading the People with many
new Taxes, or greatly increasing those we now have; neither of which, I am afraid, our People would patiently submit to.
'Now, Sir, give me Leave to consider the extraordinary
Doctrines advanced, for the Support of that Measure which
the opposing of this Question seems to point at: In the first
Place we are told, it would not be possible for us to reduce
the Interest payable upon our old Debts, even tho' we should
never contract any new Debt: This, Sir, is contrary to one
of the most established Maxims, which is, That the natural
Interest of Money must always depend upon the Proportion
there is in any particular Country between the Demand for
borrowing Money at Interest, and the Demand for lending
Money at Interest; for as we have a Sinking Fund capable
of paying off a very large Sum yearly, if we never perverted any Part of that Fund, which is always the same
with contracting a new Debt, we should be every Year diminishing the Demand for borrowing, and increasing the
Demand for lending; so that the natural Interest of Money,
would necessarily of itself decrease, without any Projects for
that Purpose.
'This, I say, Sir, would of course happen in a few Years;
but even at present, if no new Debts were to be contracted, I
do not know but Methods might be found for reducing immediately the Interest of all our Funds to 3 and a half, perhaps to 3 per Cent. what these Methods may be, I shall not
take upon me to mention, because some Gentlemen seem
resolved that no Proposition shall be received, except those
offered by themselves. And to frighten us from any such
Projects, we are told, that the Foreigners would, in such
a Case, draw their Money out all at once, and drain us of
all the current Specie in the Kingdom; but to those who
understand the Circumstances of Europe, and are apprised
of the Lowness of Interest in some Countries, and the Precariousness of the Security in others, this must appear to be
a meer Bugbear.
'Besides, Sir, the Thing would either be in itself impossible, or it is an Event we have no Occasion to be afraid
of; for if Foreigners should all at once resolve to sell out,
it would either run the Price of all our Funds a great deal
below Par, or it would not; if it did, they would be obliged
to suspend their Resolution, and take 3 per Cent. rather than
sell out a 100 l. Stock for 80 or 90 l. in ready Money; and
if their selling out did not run the Price of our Stocks below Par, we can have no Occasion to be afraid of any such
Resolution; because their selling out could not ruin our publick Credit, and the ready Specie they could carry out would
soon be replaced by the general Balance of our Trade, if
we had no Interest to pay yearly to them; for it has been
for many Years, and while it continues, it must always be a
terrible Drawback upon our general Balance of Trade, to
have a Sum of 4 or 500,000 l. sent yearly out of the Nation, in order to pay the Interest due to them, every Farthing
of which is entirely lost to us; because the whole is spent by
them in their own Countries, or converted into Principal
here, to increase their future yearly Demand.
'Another Paradox, advanced against the Question now
before us is, That the reducing the Interest of Money in general, would bring great Difficulties upon all Ranks of Men
in the Kingdom. This, Sir, is evidently contrary to another established Maxim, which is, That the lower the Interest of Money is in any Country, the more flourishing it
must be in its Trade and Commerce: I shall grant, that it
would diminish the Revenue of our publick Creditors, as
well as of all other Money-Lenders, but it would not diminish their Capital, and those that could not live idly upon
the Interest of their Money, would be obliged to betake
themselves to Trade, or to some other industrious Employment, which might be a Service to themselves, and a certain
Advantage to their Country.
'As to the Landed Gentlemen, I am surprized, Sir, to
hear it said, that the reducing of Interest would be a Hardship upon them, considering how many, I am afraid too
many of them, are like their Country, involved in Debts
and Mortgages. On the contrary, it would be a great Advantage to every Landed Gentleman in the Kingdom, because, besides reducing the Interest he is to pay for the Debt
he owes, if he has any, it would greatly increase the Value
of his Lands, as well as of all the Lands in the Kingdom;
and as for his younger Children, he would be under no Necessity to give them any greater Fortunes than before; but,
if he were, a Mortgage of 6000 l. at 3 per Cent. is no
greater Burthen upon an Estate, than a Mortgage of half
that Sum at 6 per Cent. Interest; and if any Part of the
Estate were to be sold for the raising of that Money, as the
Price of Lands will always rise in Proportion as the Interest
of Money falls, when Money comes to be at 3 per Cent.
Interest, the same Parcel of Land to be sold, will then fetch
6000 l. which would have sold but for 3000 l. when Money
was at 6 per Cent. I do not know what the honourable
Gentleman means by enabling younger Children to live in
a genteel Manner; unless he means in an idle and extravagant Manner; and the fewer there are of such Persons in
any Country, I am sure it is the better for the Country;
which would be the Consequence in the present Case: For as
few Gentlemen could propose that their younger Children
should live upon the Interest of the Fortunes they could give
them, they would breed them all up to some Trade or Business; so that instead of a great Number of idle and extra
vagant Gentlemen, we should have a great Number of in-
dustrious and frugal Tradesmen or Merchants; and which
would be of most Advantage to the Country, is very easy to
determine.
'It is, Sir, a very great Mistake, to imagine that there
can be in any Country too great a Number of Merchants and
Tradesmen, or that any Sort of Trade, which deserves that
Name, can be overstocked. Shopkeeping, or any other Bu-
siness, which tends to support the Luxury of a People, may,
'tis true, be overstocked; and it is always a Disadvantage to
the People to have too great a Number of such among
them; but as for Merchants, Manufacturers, and Mecha-
nicks, there can never be too great a Number of them in
any Country; because the more there are of them, the more
foreign Trade the Nation will have, the greater its Exports
will be, and the more easy will it be for every particular
Man, if he be industrious and frugal, to provide a Support
for himself and Family. This is justified by Experience in
all Countries, and in all Times; and therefore among the
many other Misfortunes attending our publick Funds, this
may be reckon'd as one, that a great Number of our Peo-
ple are thereby enabled to live idly upon the Interest of their
Money, which must necessarily diminish the Number of our
Merchants, Manufacturers, and Mechanicks.
'To imagine, Sir, that the reducing of Interest to 3 per
Cent. would bring any Distress upon those who have Occasion
for Money, is something very new; for the more Trade
there is in a Country, the more Money there will al-
ways be to be lent at Interest; and those who have more Mo-
ney by them than they can make use of in their Trade, will
always lend it upon good Security, even at 1 per Cent. ra-
ther than keep it in their own Coffers. But upon this Occa-
sion I cannot omit taking Notice, that in this Respect too,
our publick Funds are of great Detriment to the Trade and
private Credit of the Nation, because the monied Men of
the Kingdom have so ready a Way of getting an Interest for
their Money by Means of these Funds, that they never think
of lending their Money to private Men, but at an extrava-
gant Interest or Premium; by which Means our private Cre-
dit between Man and Man is very much lessened, and great
Sums of Money drawn out of Trade, which is therefore a
very strong Argument in favour of the Question now be-
fore us.
'The People, Sir, never grudge the contributing what
is necessary for the Support of the Government in Time of
Peace, no more than they grudge what is necessary for the
Support of the Government in Time of War: The only
Thing they grudge is, to find the Nation loaded with an
Expence that is not necessary, or the Money they contribute
improperly applied; and tho' the perverting of the Sinking
Fund, or running the Nation in Debt, may prevent the
People of the present Generation from being sensible of an
unnecessary Expence, and consequently may prevent their inquiring strictly into that Expence, yet such a Measure will
make the present Expence fall with double Weight upon
their Posterity, and when they find themselves obliged to
submit to heavy new Taxes, because all the Old stand en
gaged for the Payment of old Debts, which will certainly
be the Case as soon as the Nation comes to be engaged in
any War, they will then with Reason complain, that an insupportable Load has been thrown upon them, for the Sake
of a temporary Ease given to their Ancestors. This may
very probably raise a general Disaffection to the present Establishment, and it will be the more dangerous, because it
will happen at a Time when our Enemies will certainly be
in Earnest about playing the Pretender upon us. This Consideration must, in my Opinion, have great Weight with
every Gentleman, who has a sincere Regard for the illustrious Family now upon the Throne, and especially for that
Royal Prince, who, 'tis to be hoped, will one Day sway the
Scepter of this Kingdom; for by thus perverting the Sinking Fund, or running the Nation into new Incumbrances,
even in Time of Peace, he may be left in such Distress, as
not to have it any Way in his Power to support the Government with any Lustre, or to vindicate the Rights of the
Nation with any Vigour.
'That no new Office or Officer has lately been created
may be true, but, Sir, we know that a very great and a
very grievous Office, and a great Number of Officers, were
lately revived in Pursuance of the same Measures now pointed
at; [The Salt-Tax. See Vol II. p. 159.] and we likewise
know that the collecting of our Taxes, and the managing of
our Funds, cost the Nation a most prodigious Sum of Money
yearly, a much greater Sum, I believe, than is necessary for
that Purpose; for if a narrow Scrutiny were made into that
Affair, I am convinced it would be found, that the Business
of two or three Offices might be managed by one, without
employing a greater Number of Officers and Clerks in that
one, than is now employed in any one of the three; so that
several Offices, and a great Number of Officers and Clerks
might be laid aside, by which a very large Sum of Money
might be saved yearly to the Publick. This would contribute greatly towards preventing our loading the People
with new or additional Taxes, or running the Nation in Debt,
by creating new Funds, or perverting the old; and this the
People would certainly insist on, if they were every Year
made sensible of the Sums necessary for the publick Service;
but this, it may be presumed, will always be avoided by
those who have the Disposal of such lucrative Posts and
Employments.
'It has been insinuated, as if it were an Advantage to
the People to run the Nation in Debt yearly, rather than
raise the Sums necessary within the Year; because the
Money is thereby saved in every private Man's Pocket; of
which he may, as long as he keeps it in his own Possession, make an Interest or a Profit of 5 per Cent. perhaps
more; whereas the Publick may borrow at 3 per Cent. or 4
at most; and from the same Way of Reasoning, it may be
argued, that it will be an Advantage to the People to run
the Nation every Year into some new Debt, and never pay
off one Shilling of the old. But do not we know, Sir, that
in all Countries, People look upon the publick Taxes as a
Part of their yearly Expence; when those Taxes are high,
every Man must contract his yearly Expence in other Articles, and when the publick Taxes are low, every Man may,
and generally does launch out a little into Expences upon
other Articles, which he would otherwise have saved; so
that if by borrowing a Sum of Money upon the publick
Credit for the Service of this Year, we should prevent our
being under a Necessity of imposing a Tax of Ten Shillings
upon every Man in the Kingdom, that Ten Shillings would
not be saved and laid out at Interest by any Man in the
Kingdom, at least not by any Man, I believe, with a View
to answer his Share of the Principal and Interest of that Sum
that had been borrowed by the Publick: No, Sir, every
Man would live in his usual Way, as if no such Ten Shillings had been, or were ever to be paid; no Man would
contract his usual annual Expence on account of his Share
of that Sum borrowed by the Publick; so that the Sum
so borrowed by the Publick, and the Interest thereof, would
remain a Charge upon every Man's Posterity, without their
having any Thing left them by their Ancestor for answering
that Charge. Even the Posterity of the most frugal Man in
the Kingdom would not be One Shilling the richer, on account of that Ten Shillings which was saved in the Pocket
of their Ancestor; because he might have saved Ten Shillings of his yearly Expence in any one Year, and would
certainly have saved it, if he had found himself under a Necessity of paying a Tax of Ten Shillings to the Publick.
'Sir, we have seen of late Years several Attempts made
to throw a Division, and to breed a Dissension between the
Landed Interest and the Trading Interest of this Nation;
but such Attempts will, I hope, always prove fruitless, for
their Interests are inseparable, and will always be thought
so by every Man who has a Respect for either. There is
not a Landed Gentleman of any Sense in the Kingdom, but
knows how greatly the Rents of his Estate would be diminished, if our Trade should be undone; and therefore he
will never consent to the throwing of any unnecessary Burthen upon it. There is not a Trading Man in the Kingdom, of any Consequence, but has a View to settle himself
or his Posterity in a Land-Estate, and therefore he will never
agree to the throwing of any unnecessary Burthens upon
Land: But, Sir, there has been lately a third Interest reared
up in this Kingdom, inconsistent with both: I mean, Sir,
the Interest of those concerned in our public Funds: This
is an Interest for the Support of which both our Landed Interest, and our Trading Interest are now greatly distressed;
and it is an Interest which some Gentlemen seem to have a
much greater Regard for than for either of the other two:
Such Gentlemen will, I believe, always be for creating new
Funds, as long as we have any Thing left unmortgaged, or
any Thing upon which a new or additional Tax can be laid;
because the creating of new Funds will always increase that
Interest which they seem to have so much at Heart; and
will prevent its being ever in our Power to diminish those
Annuities we are obliged to pay them; but they ought to
consider, that the Number of Men concerned in our Landed
and Trading Interest, must always be much greater than the
Number of those concerned in our Funds; so that if People
find that either our Landed Interest, and our Trading Interest
must be destroyed, or our publick Fund Interest annihilated,
it is easy to see upon whom the Ruin must fall; and therefore, if those Gentlemen consider right, they must conclude
that it is against the Interest of the Proprietors of our Funds
to make any Additions to them, or to divert that Money
which is appropriated, and ought to be applied yearly, to the
diminishing of them.
'Whether or no it may be necessary to impose any new
Taxes, I shall not determine; I hope not, but if it should
be found necessary, the Produce of a new Tax may be appropriated to the current Service, as well as the Produce of
an old; because if any Deficiency happen, it may and ought
to be made good out of the Grants of the succeeding Year;
for our present Debts did not proceed from appropriating the
Produce of any new Tax, but from not taking Care to make
good in every succeeding Year the Deficiencies, which had
happened in the Grants for the Service of the former. We
all know, Sir, how dangerous it is to have Money lying in
the Exchequer unappropriated; we know what a Temptation it is for some Gentlemen to form extravagant Projects,
and to put the Nation to a needless Expence: Nay, we know
how apt some Gentlemen are to break thro' the most strict,
and the most necessary Appropriations, in Cases where there
is not an immediate absolute Necessity to apply the Sums so
appropriated to the Uses for which they were originally designed; and our Experience in this Particular is one of the
chief Reasons, and one of the strongest Arguments for the
Question now before us; therefore if we agree to the laying
on of any new Tax, I hope it will be immediately appropriated to the Service of the ensuing Year.
'The very Question now before us is, whether we ought
to lay a Restraint upon ourselves, with respect to the contracting of any new Debt, or diverting the Sinking Fund
from that Use for which it was originally designed, and to
which it stands appropriated by the express Words of those
Acts of Parliament by which it was established? The Restraint now proposed, is only for this Session; but I wish
the Restraint were for all Sessions to come; and I am sure
if we have any Regard for our Posterity, if we have any Regard for the present illustrious Family, if we have any Regard for the future Happiness, I may say Preservation, of
the Nation, we will at least for this Session act as if we
were under such a Restraint; therefore there can be no
Harm in laying ourselves under any such. And there is the
more Occasion for it, because of the frequent Deviations
we have lately made from this necessary Rule, and because
of the bad Use that may be made of some late Precedents;
for if a Check be not speedily put to such Measures, as all
Administrations are but fleeting Things, we may expect that
every Administration will endeavour to make themselves
easy, and to put off the evil Day as long as they can, by
contracting some new Debt every Year, and mortgaging
some Part of the Sinking Fund as long as there is a Shilling
of it left. As we have at present a pretty considerable Sinking Fund, this Measure may perhaps support the present
Administration as long as it can well be supposed to last,
especially if no War happens in the mean Time; but sad and
melancholy will the Reckoning certainly come to be at last,
when we find ourselves engaged in a dangerous and expensive
War, our People loaded with as heavy Taxes as they can
possibly bear, and all those Taxes mortgaged for the Payment of Debts, except just as much as may be sufficient for
the Support of our Civil Government. This Prospect, Sir,
gives me a most terrible Alarm, and therefore I am most
heartily for the Question before us.'
Then the Question being put, That the Question be
now put; it was carried in the Negative without a Division.
Mr Heathcote voted duely elected for Southwark.
Feb. 17. The House resolv'd, Nem. Con. That George
Heathcote, Esq; was duely elected a Burgess for Southwark:
Mr Sheppard the Petitioner having some Days before given
up the Dispute.
A Petition of the Justices of Peace for Middlesex, against the excessive Use of Spirituous Liquors, which is referr'd to a Committee of the whole House.
Feb. 20. A Petition of his Majesty's Justices of the Peace
for the County of Middlesex, in their general Quarter Sessions assembled, was presented to the House and read, setting forth, That the drinking of Geneva and other distilled
Spirituous Liquors, had for some Years past greatly increased,
especially among the People of inferior Rank; and that the
constant and excessive Use thereof had already destroyed
Thousands of his Majesty's Subjects, and rendered great
Numbers of others unfit for useful Labour and Service, dehauching at the same Time their Morals, and driving them
into all manner of Vice and Wickedness; and that that pernicious Liquor was then sold, not only by the Distillers and
Geneva Shops but many other Persons of inferior Trades;
by which Means, Journeymen, Apprentices, and Servants,
were drawn in to taste, and by Degrees to like, approve, and
immoderately to drink thereof; and that the Petitioners apprehended the publick Welfare and Safety, as well as the
Trade of the Nation, would be greatly affected by it, as
that Practice was dangerous and mischievous to the Health,
Strength, Peace, and Morals, and tended greatly to diminish the Labour and Industry of his Majesty's Subjects; and
therefore praying that the House would take the Premises
into their serious Consideration, and apply such Remedy as
the House should judge most proper. This Petition was
ordered to be referred to a Committee of the whole House;
and it was resolved that the House would resolve itself into
a Committee of the whole House, on the 23d, to consider
of the said Petition.
Four Resolutions of the said Committee thereupon.
Feb. 23. The House having resolved itself into the said
Committee, Sir Joseph Jekyll mov'd for the following Resolutions, viz. I. That the low Price of Spirituous Liquors
was the principal Inducement to the excessive and pernicious
Use thereof. II. That in order to prevent the excessive
and pernicious Use of Spirituous Liquors, a Discouragement
should be given thereto by a Duty to be laid on all such
Liquors by Retail. III. That the vending, bartering, or
uttering the said Liquors should be restrained to Persons
keeping publick Brandy-Shops, Victualling Houses, CoffeeHouses, Ale-Houses and Innholders, and to such Apothecaries and Surgeons, as should make use of the same by way
of Medicine only. IV. That no Person keeping a publick
Brandy-Shop, a publick Victualling House, Coffee-House or
Ale House, or being an Innholder, should be permitted to
vend, barter, or utter the said Liquors, but by Licence,
with a Duty payable thereupon.
Which are agreed to by the House.
These Resolutions were all agreed to without Debate in
the Committee, and being next Day reported to the House,
were there likewise agreed to. Then it was ordered, That
the said Report be referred to the Committee of the whole
House, to whom it was referred to consider farther of Ways
and Means for raising the Supply.
Proceedings on the Petition of Sir R. Winn, complaining of an undue Election for the County of York.
Feb. 24. The House proceeded, according to Order, to
the Hearing of the several Petitions, complaining of an
undue Election and Return for the County of York, and
the Deputy Clerk of the Peace for the East-Riding of the
said County, having produced several Books, as the original
Poll taken at the said Election; and being examined as to
the Time, Place, and Manner of the Delivery thereof to
him by the High-Sheriff of the said County; the Counsel
for the sitting Member, Sir Miles Stapylton, Bart. against
whom only the Petitions were aimed, objected that the said
Books ought not to be admitted as Evidence, the same not
having been delivered over upon Oath, nor within the Time
limited by Law, nor any Proof given, that no Alterations
had been made therein after the said Election, and before
the said Delivery. Upon this Objection the Counsel of both
Sides being heard, and the Preamble and the fifth Section of
an Act made in the 10th Year of Queen Anne, intitled, An Act for the more effectual preventing fraudulent
Conveyances, in order to multiply Votes for electing Knights
of Shires to serve in Parliament, was read, whereby it was
enacted, 'That in taking the Poll, the Sheriff, &c. shall
enter the Place of the Elector's Freehold, and of his
Abode, and shall mark Jurat. against his Name, and the
Returning-Officer shall, within twenty Days after the Election, deliver over to the Clerk of the Peace all the PollBooks, on Oath made before the two next Justices of the
Peace, Quorum unus, &c. without Imbezzlement or Alteration; and in such Counties where there are more than one
Clerk of the Peace, then he shall deliver the original PollBooks to one, and the attested Copies to the rest, to be
preserved amongst the Records of the Sessions of the Peace.'
Then the Journal of the House of the 12th of March, 1727,
in relation to the Report from the Committee of Privileges
and Elections, touching the Election for the County of Bucks
was read; after which the said Clerk was again called in
and examined as to the keeping of the said Books, since the
Time of the said Delivery thereof, and as to the taking
Copies of and collating the said Books, and as to the Declarations of the said High-Sheriff, and other Circumstances
before and at the Time of such Delivery: After which the
following Question was proposed, 'That Books, called the
Original Poll-Books of the last Election of Members to serve
in Parliament for the County of York, produced by Robert
Appleton, Deputy-Clerk of the Peace for the East-Riding
of the said County, and which were delivered over to him
by the High-Sheriff of the said County in open Court, at
the Quarter-Sessions of the Peace for the said Riding, about
two Months after the said Election, as the original Poll
taken at the said Election, and which have been kept by
him the said Deputy-Clerk of the Peace ever since among the
Records of the Sessions of the Peace for the said Riding, the
said Books not being delivered over by the said Sheriff within
the Time, nor upon Oath, as required by the Act of the
10th Year of the Reign of Queen Anne, For the more effectual preventing fraudulent Conveyances, in order to multiply Votes for electing Knights of Shires to serve in Parliament, be admitted as Evidence?
After Debate, the Question being put, it was carried in
the Affirmative, by 201 to 164: Hereupon the said PollBooks, and Copies of them, were delivered in; and then
it was ordered that the farther Hearing of the said Petitions
be adjourned to the 26th.
A Bill ordered in, for limiting the Number of Officers in the House of Commons.
Feb. 25. Mr Sandys moved for Leave to bring in a Bill,
For the better securing the Freedom of Parliaments, by limiting the Number of Officers in the House of Commons; and
Leave was accordingly given, and Mr Sandys, Mr Greenville,
Mr Gore, and Mr Howe, were ordered to prepare and
bring in the same.
Second Debate on the Yorkshire Election.
Feb. 26. The House proceeded to the farther Hearing of
the Petitions complaining of an undue Return for the County of York, and the Counsel for the Petitioner Sir Rowland
Winn, Bart. and the other Petitioners, having proposed, in
order to disqualify John Maken, who voted for Sir Miles
Stapylton at the said Election, and then swore that he was a
Freeholder, to prove by Parol-Evidence, that he had no
Freehold at the Time of the said Election, in the Place
where he then swore that his Freehold did lie: The admitting of such Evidence was objected to by the Counsel for the
sitting Member, who alledged, that no Man's Parol-Evidence
could be admitted, or received as any Proof, against the Affidavit of another Man; and the Counsel on both Sides being heard upon this Objection, and several Journals relating
to it read, the following Question was proposed, viz. 'That
the Counsel for the Petitioners be admitted to give ParolEvidence, as to a Person being no Freeholder at the Time
of the Election, who swore himself then to be a Freeholder?
This Motion likewise occasioned a long Debate, but at
last the Question being put, it was carried in the Affirmative
by 206 against 152; after which the farther Hearing of the
Matters of the said Petitions was adjourned to the 2d of
March.
Debate on a Motion for enabling the King to borrow 600,000 l. at 3 l. per Cent. chargeable on the Sinking Fund.
Feb. 27. The House having resolved itself into a Committee, to consider farther of Ways and Means for raising the Supply granted to his Majesty, and the Surplusses stated at LadyDay and Michaelmas having been referred to the said Committee, a Motion was made, That towards raising the Supply granted to his Majesty, his Majesty be enabled to borrow any Sum or Sums of Money not exceeding 600,000 l.
at an Interest not exceeding 3 l: per Cent. per Ann. by Loans
to be charged upon the Surplusses, Excesses, or overplus Monies commonly called the Sinking Fund, redeemable by Parliament.
Upon this Motion there was a Debate, in which the Courtiers urged, The Necessity of raising, some Way or other,
the Supplies voted for the current Service of the Year; the
Impossibility that there was of raising them any other Way,
but by throwing the Burden upon the landed Interest, which
would be the more unreasonable, because that Interest had
been for many Years overloaded, and obliged to contribute
much more than their proportional Share towards the annual publick Expence; the absolute uncontroulable Right
the Parliament had to dispose of the Sinking Fund yearly
to such Purposes, as they should think most for the Benefit
of the Nation in general; the Inconvenience of paying off
too much of the publick Debt at once; the Unwillingness
of the publick Creditors to receive their Money; and the
small Interest the Nation would be obliged to pay for what
Money was necessary to be borrowed upon the Credit of the
Sinking Fund.'
To this it was answered, 'That the Supplies, necessary
for the current Service of the Year, might have been greatly
reduced, if some Gentlemen had thought fit; in which Case
they would not have been obliged either to throw an additional Burden on the landed Interest, or to incroach upon
that Fund, which had always, till of late Years, been deemed sacred to the Payment of our publick Debts: That if
Words in an Act of Parliament could appropriate any Sum
to a particular Use, the Sinking Fund was originally appropriated, in the most express Terms, to the Payment of the
publick Debts contracted before the Year 1716; and the
only Power that was left to future Parliaments, by its original Constitution, was to dispose of it to the Payment of
such of those Debts, as should at the Time be thought
most necessary to be paid off: That it would be happy for
the Nation, if they could pay off all their publick Debts at
once: That the Unwillingness of the publick Creditors to
receive their Money was a certain Sign of their having an
advantageous Bargain; and was therefore a Demonstration,
that it was the Interest of the Publick to pay them off as fast
as possible: And that, tho' they might perhaps be able to
borrow the Sum then proposed at 3 l. per Cent. yet even
at that Rate, it was adding to the future yearly Expence of
the Nation a Sum of 18,000 l. per Ann. for ever; which,
tho' perhaps a small Sum in the Eyes of Gentlemen who
dealt in Millions, was however a Sum, that might thereafter be greatly wanted for the current Service of some succeeding Year: That considering the great Expence we had
been at in the then current Year, and the great Expence we
were like to be put to in the next, for the Defence of a Foreign Nation, they were surprized to find that no Subsidy
had been received, nor any Sum like to be brought, at
least to the publick Account, for answering the Expence we
had been, or were like to be at on that Occasion: That we
found by Experience, no Nation would so much as promise
us any Assistance, without our granting them a large annual
Subsidy, to commence as soon as the Promise was made, and
to be paid, tho' no such Assistance should ever be wanted:
That even when some of our Allies had, for very valuable
Considerations, engaged to assist us at their own Expence,
yet when that Assistance was required, they had always found
Pretences for not complying, 'till we engaged to defray any
Expence they should be put to upon that Account: That
it was certainly our Interest to protect our Allies, and to
prevent any one of our Neighbours growing too powerful by
conquering another; but if we always shewed ourselves ready to protect the weakest Side at our own Expence, every
one would find Pretences for throwing all the Burden upon
our Shoulders, by which Management we must necessarily
at last become the weakest of all our Neighbours; and
having thus spent our whole Force, and thrown away all
our Money in the protecting of others, we should at last have
nothing lest wherewithal to protect or support ourselves.'
To this it was replied again, 'That we had given no
Assistance, nor had lately put ourselves to any Expence in the
Defence of any Nation, but what we were obliged to, not
only by the most solemn Treaties, but even for the Sake of
our own Preservation: That with regard to the Nation supposed to be meant [Portugal] it was very well known, that
we were as much interested in the Defence and Preservation
of that Nation as of any other; and it was likewise known,
that we were far from being at all the Expence, for that Nation
itself had been at a very great Expence in providing for its
own Defence, and a great Part of the Money laid out in
that Provision had been brought to this Kingdom: That as
that Affair was then upon the Anvil, it could not at this Time
be fully explained, but a Time would come when it might;
and when that Time did come, the House might then, if
they thought fit, inquire into it; upon which Occasion the
Necessity, the Justice, and the Wisdom of our present Conduct would, they believed, be easily explained to the Satisfaction of almost every Gentleman, who might then have
the Honour of being a Member of that House.'
Then the Question being put for agreeing to the Motion, it was carried in the Affirmative without a Division.
Farther Debate on the Yorkshire Election.
March 2. The House having re-assum'd the Hearing of
the Petitions relating to an undue Election for the County of
York, the Counsel for the Petitioners examin'd Joshua Wilson, in order to disqualify the above-mentioned John Maken,
as having had no Freehold, at the Time of the said Election,
in the Place where he then swore that his Freehold did lie;
and the said Wilson beginning to give Evidence of that Disqualification, by relating the Confession of the said John
Maken, he was interrupted by the Counsel for the sitting
Member, who said, That as the House would not admit of a
Man's Confession, even before them, as an Evidence against
what he had swore at the Time of an Election, they would
not surely admit of a Man's private Confession to a Neighbour in the Country, as an Evidence against what he had
swore at the Time of an Election. Upon this the Counsel
of both Sides were heard, and several Journals read, particularly the Resolution of that House of the 12th of Feb.
then last, in the Case of the Election of the Borough of
Southwark, against admitting the Petitioner's Counsel to examine Thomas Gaman, in Contradiction to his Oath at that
Election: And then the following Question was proposed,
viz. 'That the Counsel for the Petitioners be admitted to
give Evidence, as to what a Voter confessed of his having
no Freehold, who at the Time of the Election swore he
had.' Upon this Motion there was also a Debate; but
upon the Question's being put, it was carried in the Affirmative by 181 to 132.
After this the Counsel for the Petitioners proceeded to examine the said Wilson and several other Witnesses, in order
to disqualify several other Persons, who voted for the said
sitting Member at the said Election; and having begun to
examine a Witness, in order to disqualify one of those Persons, to whom the Petitioners, in the Lists by them deliver'd, pursuant to the Order of the House of the 16th of
January last, had objected, that he was not assessed, nor had
a Freehold of 40 s. per Ann. in the Place, where, at the
Time of the said Election, he swore that his Freehold did
lie; and it appearing that the Evidence, which the Witness gave, tended to prove that such Person had no Freehold
at all there, he was interrupted in his Evidence by the Counsel for the sitting Member, who said, That by the said Order,
Petitioners were obliged to deliver to the sitting Members
Lists of the Persons intended by the Petitioners to be objected
to, who voted for the sitting Members, giving in the said
Lists the several Heads of Objection, and distinguishing the
same against the Names of the Voters excepted to: That as
the Petitioners had not objected to this Person that he had
no Freehold at all, but only that he had not a Freehold of
40 s. a Year, where, at the Time of the said Election, he
swore that his Freehold did lie; therefore no Evidence was
to be admitted for proving that he had no Freehold at all.
The Counsel of both Sides being heard upon this Objection,
after some Debate, the Question was put, and carried, That
the Counsel for the Petitioners be admitted to give Evidence
as to a Person's having no Freehold at all, to whom the Petitioners had objected, in their List of Objections, that such
Person had not a Freehold of 40 s. per Annum. Then the
farther Hearing of this Affair was adjourned to the 4th Instant.
A Petition of the Quakers for Relief, relating to Tithes; A Bill order'd in accordingly.
The same Day a Petition of the Quakers was presented
to the House, and read, setting forth, 'That notwithstanding the several Acts of Parliament made for the more easy
Recovery of Tithes, Church-Rates, Oblations, and other
Ecclesiastical Dues, in a summary Way, by Warrant from
Justices of the Peace; yet as the said People conscientiously
refused the Payment thereof, they were not only liable to,
but many of them had undergone grievous Sufferings by Prosecution in the Exchequer, Ecclesiastical, and other Courts,
to the Imprisonment of their Persons, and the Impoverishing and Ruin of them and their Families, for such small
Sums as were recoverable by those Acts; and therefore praying, that the House would be pleased to take the Premises
into Consideration, and afford them such Relief therein, as
to the House should seem meet. Hereupon it was order'd,
that Leave be given to bring in a Bill to amend, and render
more effectual the Laws then in being, for the more easy
Recovery of Tithes, Church-Rates, Oblations, and other
Ecclesiastical Dues from the People called Quakers, and that
Mr (fn. 1) Glanville, Sir William (fn. 2) Yonge, Mr Henry Archer,
and Mr Hampden, should prepare and bring in the same.
Sir J. Jekyll's Motion for a Duty of 20s. per Gallon to be laid on all Spirituous Liquors.
March 8. The House being in a Grand Committee on
the Supply, Sir Joseph Jekyll mov'd to resolve, That for all
Spirituous Liquors, which any Retailer thereof should, from
and after the 24th Day of June, 1736, be possessed of, there
should be granted to his Majesty a Duty of twenty Shillings
per Gallon: But this was oppos'd by several Members, who
thought the laying on so high a Duty was in some Measure
a Prohibition: And upon this Occasion Mr William Pulteney stood up, and spoke as follows:
Mr Pulteney's Speech against the Motion.
Sir,
'I believe it will be admitted by every Gentleman, that the
constant and excessive Use of spirituous Liquors among the
inferior Rank of our People, is a Practice which has of late
Years grown to a monst'rous Height, and it will be as generally and as readily admitted, that this Practice is dangerous and mischievous to the Health, Strength, Peace, and
Morals of the People; and that it tends greatly to diminishing the Labour and Industry of his Majesty's Subjects; therefore I believe we shall all agree in this, that some Method
ought to be taken for putting a Stop to this Practice; but
whether it be necessary for this End, to lay a total Prohibition upon the Retail of such Liquors, is a Question that
will, in my Opinion, admit of some Doubt, and deserves
our most serious Consideration, because of the many bad
Consequences with which such a Prohibition must certainly
be attended.
'Let us consider, Sir, that the Distilling Trade is a Business which has been carried on by Royal Authority for
about an hundred Years, and that it has been not only highly
approved, but very much encouraged by several Acts of
Parliament passed since the Revolution. Under such publick, such great, and such solemn Sanctions, what Person
in the Kingdom could imagine that the Trade was in itself
pernicious, or that it was inconsistent with the Health and
Welfare of the People; no Man could: And accordingly
great Numbers of his Majesty's Subjects, especially within
these last forty Years, have betaken themselves to this Business, and have employed all the Money they were Masters
of in providing Materials proper for the Business. And farther, Sir, as the distilling of such Spirits has met with great
Encouragement from the Legislature for many Years past, so
likewise the Retail of them hath been so much encouraged,
or at least connived at, and there is not now an Inn, an
Alehouse, for a Coffeehouse in the Kingdom, but what
owes a great Part of its Profits to the Retail of such Liquors: By which Means there are now such Multitudes
of Families in the Kingdom who owe their chief, if not
their only Support to the distilling, or to the retailing
such Liquors, that they very well deserve the Care and the
Consideration of a British House of Commons. The only
Complaint now before us, Sir, is against the constant and
excessive Use of spirituous Liquors among Persons of inferior Rank: There is no Complaint against the Liquors
themselves, nor was it ever said that a moderate Use of
any fort of such Liquors was hurtful; nay, it will be granted, I believe, that the moderate Use of them is upon many
Occasions convenient, if not necessary; so that by a total
Prohibition of such Liquors by Retail we seem to be carrying the Remedy much farther than the Disease, even with
respect to our home-made Spirits. But with respect to Rum,
I am sure there never was any Complaint against the constant
and excessive Use of that Liquor among Persons of inferior
Rank; therefore I can see no Reason for putting a Stop
to the Retail of that Liquor; and when we consider the
present low and distressed Condition of our Sugar-Colonies,
and that they are now chiefly supported by the Sale of their
Rum, I think we ought not to put almost an intire Stop to
the Consumption of that Liquor, without some very strong
and very urgent Reasons for so doing.
'From what I have said, Sir, I hope no Gentleman will
suppose or imagine, that I am arguing against our taking
some Method for putting a Stop to the constant and excessive Use of such Liquors amongst Persons of inferior
Rank. No, Sir, I shall readily and willingly agree to any
proper Method for that Purpose; but I must declare that
my Concern is so great for the Multitudes of Families both
in this Island and in the West-Indies, who now owe their
chief Support to the making and vending of such Liquors,
that I cannot give my Consent to any Regulation which
will turn them entirely, and at once, out of the Business to
which they at present owe their chief Support; especially,
as I am convinced the Disease we have under our Consideration does not any Ways stand in need of such a desperate
Cure: And I have likewise so great a Regard for his Majesty and his illustrious Family, and for the Peace and Quiet
of this Kingdom, that I cannot give my Consent to a Regulation which I foresee will raise great Disaffection to the
present Government, and may produce such Riots and Tumults, as may endanger our present Establishment, or at
least such as cannot be quelled without spilling the Blood of
many of his Majesty's once faithful Subjects, and putting an
End to the Liberties of the People. It is a dangerous, it
is, Sir, a terrible Thing, to reduce many thousands of Families at once to a State of Despair, which will be the certain Consequence of laying such high Duties upon the Retail of spirituous Liquors as will amount to a total Prohibition.
'The constant and excessive Use of spirituous Liquors, amongst the inferior Rank of our People, is the only Complaint now properly before us, and as it is evident that this
Grievance proceeds entirely from the low Price of our homemade spirituous Liquors, it is certain that a Duty upon all
such, perhaps less than that which was imposed by the late
Act against Geneva, would prevent the constant and excessive Use of such Liquors amongst the inferior Rank of our
People: This, Sir, I think is evident from the Effect of
those high Duties which are laid upon Brandy and Rum;
for it is certain that Brandy and Rum are more coveted
by the Vulgar, and may easily be made more palatable
than any sort of home-made Spirit; yet we have never
heard of great Complaints made against the constant and
excessive Use of Brandy or Rum among Persons of inferior
Rank; the Reason of which certainly is, because the Duties upon these Liquors have raised the Price so high, that
the lower fort of People cannot afford to make a constant
and excessive Use of them; and therefore it is plain, that if
the Price of all home-made Spirits were, by a Duty to be
laid upon them, made as high as the Price of Rum is at
present, it would prevent the constant and excessive Use of
them among the Vulgar.
'It cannot be said, Sir, that nothing but a total Prohibition can be an effectual Remedy against the Evil complained
of, because we all know that the late Act against Geneva
was effectual so far as it went: It was made, we know, to
extend only to Compound Spirits, and with respect to
them it was an effectual Remedy, for it put an entire Stop
to the constant and excessive Use of such Spirits amongst
those of inferior Rank; but some of the Distillers immediately began to make a fort of plain Spirit, which, I believe, in Derision of the Act, they called Parliament Brandy,
and this the Common People made as constant and as excessive an Use of, as they had before done of Compound Spirits: This was the Case of that Act, and if it had been
amended, and made to extend to all home-made Spirits, instead of being repealed, there would never have been Occasion for any such Complaint as that we have now before
us: How it comes to be repealed, I shall not now take upon
me to explain; but upon recollecting what was the Effect
of that Act, I think we need not give ourselves any great
Trouble in searching after a Remedy for the Disease now
complained of: Let us but revive that Act, extend it to all
home-made Spirits, and add some Clauses for preventing any
Person's selling spirituous Liquors without a Licence, and I
am convinced the Remedy will be found to be effectual.
'But admitting that nothing but a total Prohibition will
do; yet, for God's Sake, Sir, let us have some Regard to the
many poor Families that are now supported by the distilling
and vending of spirituous Liquors: Do not let us, for God's
Sake, turn them all at once out of their Livelyhood: Let us
consider how difficult it is for a Man who has been bred up
to, and long exercised one fort of Business, to turn himself
all at once to another, by which he may support his Family: Let us consider what a Loss he must sustain by the
Sale of those Utensils he had occasion for in his former
Way of Business; The Difficulty must upon all Occasions
be great, the Loss must be considerable; but by turning such
Multitudes adrift at once, we shall make the Difficulty insurmountable, and the Loss irreparable; for there will be
such Numbers brought at once to look out for new Employments, that it will make it impossible for any one of them
to succeed; and there will be such a large Quantity of a
certain Sort of Materials brought at once to the Market, that
none of them will bear any Price. In short, Sir, the Difficulties and Distresses which many poor Families must be drove
to, raise in me the most melancholy Reflections, and they
must raise in the Breast of every Man that hears me, the most
compassionate Concern; therefore, if it be thought absolutely
necessary to lay on such Duties as will amount to a Prohibition, I hope they will not be laid on all at once: We may now
lay on a small Duty upon all sorts of Spirits sold by Retail, and a small Duty upon Licences for selling by Retail;
we may increase those Duties the next Session, and we may
go on increasing yearly, till they be at last brought up so high
as to amount to a Prohibition: By this Method People will
have time to look about them, and will get out of the Trade
by Degrees; which will make it the less hurtful to every
particular Man, and the more easy for him to fix himself in
some new Way of Business, by which he may be able to
support his Family.
'I have often heard, Sir, of Sumptuary Laws, by which
certain Sorts of Apparel, or rather Decorations, have been
forbid to be worn by Persons of inferior Rank; but I never
yet heard of a Sumptuary Law, by which any Sort of Victuals or Drink were forbid to be made use of by Persons of
a low Degree; yet this is, as it appears to me, what seems
to be now intended: We are absolutely to forbid the Use of
Spirituous Liquors to all those, who are not able to purchase
a certain Number of Gallons at a Time: A poor Journeyman
or Labourer shall not have a Dram, shall not have a Glass of
Punch, unless he can spare to lay out eight or ten Shillings at
a Time, which I am sure two Thirds of our People cannot
well spare to do: Whereas, if a Man is rich enough to lay
out eight or ten Shillings at a Time, or profligate enough to
pawn his Coat, in order to raise the Money, he may drink
as much, he may commit as many Debauches in that Liquor
as he pleases; the Law, contrived by the Wisdom of the British Legislature against the excessive Drinking of Spirits, shall
put no Restraint upon any such Man: If Spirituous Liquors,
even when taken in the most moderate Way, are of such a
pernicious Nature, that they ought never to be tasted without the Advice and Prescription of a Physician, we ought
to take Care of the Rich as well as of the Poor, by putting it out of the Power of the former, as well as of the
latter, to taste the bewitching Cup without such Advice and
Prescription; but if the moderate Use of such Liquors be no
way hurtful, I can see no Reason for our making any invidious Distinction between the Poor and the Rich; let us
leave the moderate Use of such Liquors to all, and take all
proper Methods for preventing their being immoderately
used by any. This, I think, Sir, may be done by a much
lower Duty than that now proposed, and therefore, tho' I
have as great a Regard for the Health and the Morals of the
People, as any Gentleman in this House; yet I cannot but
be against the Motion now made to you, because of the
terrible Consequences with which it must necessarily be attended.'
Arguments in Behalf of the Motion.
In answer to the above Speech of Mr Pulteney's it was
urg'd, 'That no sort of distilled Spirituous Liquor was absolutely necessary for the Support of Nature; that such Liquors were at first used only by Physicians, in some dangerous Distempers, and were never dispensed but in small
Quantities; but when such Liquors were to be met with
at every Corner, and People left at Liberty to take as much
of them as they pleased, few could keep themselves within
any Bounds, because a small Quantity deprived them of
their Reason, and the Companions they usually met with
at such Places, encouraged them to drink to Excess: That
it was impossible to prevent this Excess, without diminishing
the Number of Retailers of such Liquors, and raising the
Price so high, as to put them out of the Reach of Persons of inferior Rank, who were the only Sort of People
apt to make a Custom of getting drunk with such Liquor;
for that very few of the better Sort had ever been found to
commit frequent Debauches in such Liquors; and even
with respect to them, by putting it out of their Power to
meet with such Liquors at a cheap Rate in any Place of
publick Resort, the Temptations which might arise from
promiscuous Company, would be entirely taken away, and
very few Persons were so ridiculously abandoned as to get
drunk by themselves.
'That they were very sensible of the Difficulties to which
great Numbers of his Majesty's Subjects would be reduced
by the Duties to be laid upon the Retail of such Liquors;
but the Interest of every particular Man must give way to
the general Interest; and where the Preservation of the Society was so essentially concerned, the Prejudice of some few
particular Persons was not to be regarded. However, that
all possible Care would be taken of those that might suffer
by the Duties to be laid upon the Retail of Spirituous Liquors, in order that they might be enabled to fall upon
some other Way of supporting their Families; and as every
one would be convinced that their being turned out of their
present Way of supporting them, was necessary for the publick Good, it was to be presumed that every Man would
willingly submit to such a Regulation; so that it could not
raise any Disaffection to his Majesty's Government.
'That with respect to Rum and Brandy, it was very certain that they likewise had been often drank to great Excess,
notwithstanding the high Duties laid upon them, and were
as pernicious, both to the Health and the Morals of the People, as any home-made Spirit: That it would be ridiculous
to lay a higher Duty upon home-made Spirits, which were
the Manufacture of the Subjects of this Island, than upon
Rum and Brandy, especially the latter; and that if our Sugar-Islands should suffer a little by our lessening the Consumption of Rum, they could not complain, when they considered that it was for the Sake of preserving their MotherCountry, the general Interest of which was always to be
preferred to the particular Interest of any Colony; for if
any sort of Spirit should be exempted from the Duties then
to be imposed, the Retailers would sell all Sorts of Spirits
under that Denomination, and the Distillers would compound
them in such a Manuer, that it would be impossible to discover the Fallacy.
'That they would willingly agree to the Method proposed by the honourable Gentleman, of laying on but a
small Duty at once, and raising that Duty by Degrees; but
they were very sure the laying on a small Duty would not
be an effectual Remedy for the Evil so loudly complained
of: And if the Resentment, then in the Nation against all
Sorts of distilled Spirituous Liquors, should be allowed to
subside, they were afraid they would never be able to get
a new Act passed for raising that Duty, because of the Multitudes of People that would always be engaged, by their own
private Interest, to oppose the passing of any such Law;
therefore they thought it was absolutely necessary to take
Advantage of present Conjuncture, to put an effectual Stop
to a Practice so long, and so justly complained of; and for
that Reason they were for agreeing with the Motion.'
The Motion for laying a Duty of 20 s. per Gallon on all Spirituous Liquors agreed to in the Grand Committee, who resolve also, That all Retailers thereof shall pay 50 l. yearly for a License.
The Question being then put upon Sir Joseph Jekyll's
Motion, the same was agreed to without any farther Debate;
as was likewise the following, viz. That from and after the
24th Day of June, 1736, the Sum of 50 l. yearly should
be paid to his Majesty, for a Licence, to be taken out yearly
by every Person keeping a publick Brandy-Shop, a publick
Victualling-House, Coffee-House, or Ale-House, or being an
Innholder, who shall vend, barter, or utter, any such Spirituous Liquors.
Sir Robert Walpole moves, That the Committee might sit again, to make good what Deficiencies might happen in the Civil Lift, by the above Resolutions, which is agreed to.
The Chairman of the Committee being about to make a
Report of the two foregoing Resolutions to the House,
Sir Robert Walpole stood up and mov'd, 'That the Committee might fit again before any Report was made to the
House, because as the Duties proposed to be laid upon Spirituous Liquors would certainly very much diminish the Consumption of such Spirits, it was not to be expected that the
Duties upon such Spirits would produce so much yearly as
they had formerly done; and as the former Produce stood
appropriated for answering certain Annuities and Payments,
particularly to the Civil List, it would be necessary to consider of Ways and Means to make good the Deficiencies,
that might happen by the two Resolutions they had then
agreed to: Hereupon the Committee agreed to sit again
upon that Affair before making any Report.