On Monday, May 16th. A Bill entitled, " An Act to
disable Alexander Wilson, Esq; from taking, holding, or enjoying any Office or Place of Magistracy in the
City of Edinburgh, or elsewhere in Great Britain, and for
imprisoning the said Alexander Wilson, and for abolishing
the Guard kept up in the said City, commonly called the
Town Guard, and for taking away the Gates of the Nether-Bow Part of the said City, and keeping open the
same."
James Oglethorpe, Esq;
The Title of the Bill being read,
James Oglethorpe, Esq; opposed the receiving the Bill at
all: Because he was of Opinion that 'the House of Lords
would refuse to receive from that House any Bill of Pains
and Penalties, which might affect any Member of their
House: And that if such a Precedent was set, as that a
House of Peers for every Offence committed, or supposed to
be committed by a Commoner, might send down a Bill of
Pains and Penalties to be passed in the House of Commons,
the Independency of the Commons must be utterly broken.'
Sir John Barnard.
Sir John Barnard. 'Suppose the Bill which is sent down
had enacted, that among other Pains and Penalties the City
of Edinburgh should from henceforth cease to be a City or
Corporation. Could any Gentleman, after the passing such
a Bill, have kept his Seat in this House as Member for that
City or Corporation ? Sir, he must have ceased to be a
Member, as soon as the Corporation he represented ceased to
be a Corporation: And shall we ever receive a Bill from the
other House for turning one of our own Members out of
Doors? This House ought to shew as much Respect for
their Constituents, from whom they derive their Right of
sitting here, as they would do to their Representatives themselves. If any Preference is due, it is due to that Body from
whom they derive their Right of sitting in this Place; for
while they are judging one of their own Members, they are
judging of their own Privileges; but while they are judging
of their Constituent's Rights or Properties, they are judging
of what is not their own, but what they have only in Trust;
and of which they therefore ought to be more tender.
Duncan Forbes, Esq.
Duncan Forbes, Esq; (fn. 1) 'It would found very ill, that a
British House of Commons, in which there are but Forty
five Representatives for Scotland, should receive such a Bill:
Edinburgh is now a City of Great Britain, nay, the second
City. And I appeal to the Gentlemen who represent the
Cities and Boroughs of England, to know in what Manner
they would treat a Bill inflicting such Pains and Penalties upon any of the Cities which they represent. They are in
Honour obliged to protect the Commons of Scotland as
much as the Commons of England; because the Scots trusted
to their Honour, when they united with them upon the
Terms they did. They are in Prudence obliged to protect
the Privileges of every Borough of Scotland as much as the
Privileges of any Borough of England; because no Incroach
ment can be made, no Injury done to the one, but what
may be made a Precedent for doing the same to the other:
If they allow the other House to incroach upon the Privileges of the Commons of Scotland, it will be a Precedent
for their incroaching upon the Commons of England. If
they accept of this Bill, if they give it a Reading, I shall
soon expect to see a Bill brought them from the other House,
for turning some of their Members out of Doors.'
Sir William Yonge.
Sir William Yonge. 'The other House has a Power of
enquiring. When they begun the Exercise of that Power;
they found it necessary to go a Step farther, and to punish
as well as enquire, which they could do no otherwise than
by the Bill now before us. As this is their only Aim, as
it is an Aim which cannot but be approved, I hope this
House will not be too jealous of its Privileges on such an
Occasion; for even tho' it were indisputable that the other
House ought not to be allowed to bring in a Bill for inflicting Pains and Penalties upon any City or Borough of
Great Britain, yet in a Case where no Incroachment is
intended, and which may so greatly contribute to the domestic Peace and Quiet of the Kingdom, it is absolutely
necessary for both Houses, not to be over-scrupulous in
Point of Privilege.'
Sir Robert Walpole.
Sir Robert Walpole. 'It was very natural for the other
House to enter upon this Enquiry, because there is generally a Kind of Cessation of Business in that House,
during the first three or four Weeks of the Session, which
are generally in the House of Commons taken up in settling
the Supplies for the current Services of the Government.
I am as jealous of the Rights of this House, as any Gentleman here; but I think too scrupulous a Jealousy may at
this Time be attended with the worst of Consequences. As
to what my Honourable and Learned Friend behind me
mentioned, about the Tenderness we ought to shew to the
Corporations and Boroughs we represent, especially those
of Scotland; I think, Sir, our going upon this Bill is the
greatest Mark of Tenderness we can shew. It is in order
to punish, in a more examplary Manner, a Practice, that
has been but too much encouraged of late; a Practice,
that if not suppressed, must destroy the Right of all Corporations, and perhaps abolish the Privileges of this House,
and the very Form of our Constitution. The other
House having entered upon this Enquiry, has brought the
Bill to such a Forwardness, that perhaps it may come Time
enough to prevent the Consequences before it is too late;
therefore, I think, we are rather obliged to the Care and
Concern they have taken in this Affair, and I hope Gentlemen will not oppose the Bill, without better Reasons than
any that have yet appeared.'
Sir William Windham.
Sir William Windham. 'I am very sorry that what the
Honourable Gentleman who spoke last has said is but too
true. The first Part of our Session is commonly spent in
granting Money to the Crown; but formerly it was otherwise; and if this House had taken Example by their Ancestors, instead of voting a Supply the 2d or 3d Day of the
Session, they would have voted an Enquiry into those Riots
and Tumults, which of late have been so frequent and so
general all over the Kingdom; for the People never grow
tumultuous without some Cause, and 'tis very probable the
late Tumults have proceeded from some Abuses or some
Grievances which they ought to enquire into. The best
Way of judging of Men's Intentions is by their Actions;
and as the Bill brought from the other House is certainly,
as we think, an Incroachment upon the Privileges of this
House, the surest and safest Way of judging is, to suppose
an Incroachment was intended. Incroachments have always
been made at the most favourable Junctures; and if ever
the other House should endeavour to incroach upon this,
they will always take Occasion to do it, with respect to
Bills which seem absolutely necessary; so that if we made
the Expediency, or even the Necessity of a Bill, a good
Reason for submitting to an Incroachment, we should very
soon have no Privileges left. As this House is the Grand
Inquest of the Nation, it is their proper Business to enquire
into all public Abuses, especially where any of their own
Members are concerned; and if the other House does upon
any Occasion take upon them to enquire into any such public Abuse, they ought to proceed no further; they might
then at a Conference communicate to that House the Discoveries they had made, and leave it to that House to proceed by Impeachment, or by a Bill of Pains and Penalties;
which the other House might have done in the present
Case; and their not having done so seems to shew, they
had an Intention to take Advantage of that favourable Opportunity for making a little Incroachment upon a Privilege, which they knew would have otherwise been strenuously contested. Whether or no there is a Necessity for
punishing the City, or any of the Magistrates of Edinburgh,
cannot appear to us now, and therefore cannot be an Argument of the least Weight in this Debate; but suppose
there is such a Necessity, there is no Necessity of the
Session's breaking up at a certain Day. We may go upon
an Enquiry immediately; the Witnesses are all in Town;
these Witnesses may soon be examined; and upon that Examination, we may order a new Bill to be brought in, if we
saw Cause; and that new Bill may pass through both
Houses long before it will be absolutely necessary to put an
End to the Session: Therefore, I see no Inconvenience that
can ensue from not receiving the Bill now brought from
the other House; and for that Reason cannot agree to its
being read a first Time.'
Patrick Lindsay, Esq;
The Bill however was read a first Time, and upon a
Motion for reading it a second Time, Patrick Lindsay, Esq;
Member for Edinburgh, spoke as follows.
Mr. Speaker,
Sir,
'The Concern which I have in this Bill, as it affects the
Rights, the Privileges, and Franchises of the City which
I have the Honour to represent in this House, as well as it
affects personally him who has now the Honour to be the
Chief Magistrate of that City; this Concern, I say, Sir,
will (I hope) plead my Excuse to this Honourable House,
for presuming to take upon me, Sir, to submit to your Consideration, my Sense of this Bill, and of the Effects of it,
should it pass into a Law. Sir, That cruel, barbarous and
inhuman Murder, that most outragious and atrocious Riot,
which was committed at Edinburgh the 7th of September last,
must affect every Person of Humanity with Horror: And
as it was, Sir, a trampling upon all Civil Governments,
and a bold and manifest Violation of the Laws, and a direct
Insult upon the legal Authority, it cannot fail to raise
Gentlemen's Indignation, and to rouse the Resentment of
every true Briton to do Justice to the Public, by pursuing
any Measure that may be most likely to punish so black
a Crime, a Crime so dangerous to civil Society, and to
bring the execrable and desperate Authors of it to condign
Punishment.—But, Sir, I hope Gentlemen's Zeal for
Justice will not so far blind their Understanding, as to allow
themselves to be diverted from the Pursuit of Justice, and
to be misled from the right Scent by falling upon the Innocent, and there to allow the Guilty to escape and to pass
unheeded.—By whom, Sir, was this bloody Murder, this
outrageous Riot committed? By a Mob, Sir; a Mob composed, as Mobs commonly are, of the lowest Class of the
People, by Persons of dissolute and bad Lives, and of worse
Manners; Persons who despise the Office of Magistracy, and
hate the Persons of Magistrates, because Magistrates punish
and controul their Crimes, and restrain them from Acts of
Violence, and from committing Disorders; Persons who are
prone to do Mischief, and when they can do it with hopes
of Impunity, rarely fail to insult and abuse the Persons of
Magistrates—And who, Sir, are by this Bill to be punished for this Riot? Those who committed the Insult?
No, Sir; by this Bill those who were insulted are to be
punished. Is the Insolence of the Multitude to be represt
by this Bill? No, Sir; the Hands of the Civil Magistrate
are to be weakened by this Bill. In a free Country, Sir,
the Civil Magistrate only can suppress and prevent Riots
and Disorders: And how? By punishing of Rioters and disorderly Persons. And if the Hands of the Civil Magistrate
are not strengthened, the Office of Magistracy must become
useless.—Sir, I have observed, since I came last to this
Place, that a very odd Notion has prevailed here, and with
great Grief and Concern, Sir, I find this Notion to be general, that Persons of all Ranks, (in that Country where
that abominable Crime was committed) favour this foul, this
black, this most detestable Crime; than which, Sir, nothing
is more unjust, nothing more false and untrue. I therefore
beg Leave to explain this a little.—The Mobs in that part
of the Kingdom, Sir, resemble very much the Mobs here;
they are composed here as well as there (and I believe
every where) of such Persons as I have just now described
to you; but there is one Difference betwixt the Mobs in
that Country and your Mobs here, and that is, however
wicked the Mobs in that Country may be, yet they are not
so abandoned as to do Mischief with their Eyes open. But,
Sir, the lowest Class of People in that Country have generally speaking a Turn to Enthusiasm, and so strong is the
Influence, such is the Force of Delusion, that they can
work themselves up to a firm Persuasion and thorough Belief that any Mischief they are to do is not only lawful but
laudable; that it is their Duty to do it, and from a religious Principle, to do it at any risque, even at the risque of
their Lives.
'Hence it is, Sir, that Riots and Disorders are less frequent in that Country than here, and when Mobs do rise
there, they are more determined, and consequently more
dangerous.
'The unthinking Multitude, Sir, are but too much encouraged in this by the Clergy; for, Sir, when the Clergy
are like to be defeated or disappointed in any particular
View of disposing of any Ecclesiastical Benefice and Preserment as they have a Mind, because the Law stands in their
way, they abuse the unwary People, Sir, and spirit them up
to despise and disobey the Law, by this dangerous Doctrine,
too often inculcated—upon such Occasions, that such a Law
is Iniquity—established by Law.
'This dangerous Doctrine, this seditious Practice, in openly and publicly maintaining it, cannot be charged, Sir,
upon the Church of Scotland, or upon the Clergy of that
Country in general. They, Sir, by much the major Part of
them, are good Men as well as good Christians, Men
of found Principles in their Lives, and in their Practice,
blameless; Men who think, as every Gentleman of this
House does, Sir, that the Laws of every Country ought to
be obey'd, as the sole and only Rule of Government in
every Country; but this seditious Doctrine is preached up
by those wild, hot-headed, violent High Church Clergy,
who are not to be satisfied with any Power, unless they
possess all Power; and by them only. Yes, Sir, I am sorry to say it, we have High-church Presbyterians, who have
higher Notions of Clerical Power, than any Protestant
Clergy whatever; some there are, Sir, who assert and
maintain an absolute Independency on the Civil Power.—
Sir, the dangerous Effect of Doctrines of this Kind is, that
when Men are taught and brought to believe, that any Law
whatever in Iniquity established by Law, and while it remains in Force under the Sanction of the Legislature it may
nevertheless be disobey'd, and the Civil Magistrate resisted
in the Execution of it, Men of weak Understanding and
strong Passions will easily deceive themselves, and look
upon every Law that interferes with their Passions to be
Iniquity; especially, Sir, if they have, as all weak People
commonly have, a good Opinion of themselves and of
their own superior Sanctity and Holiness.
'Now, Sir, I must beg Leave to explain the Source of
these late Disorders, that have given so much Trouble to
the Legislature.
'The pernicious Practice of Smuggling prejudicial to
the fair Trader, and so hurtful to the common and general
Good of the Nation, has prevailed but too much in that
Country, Sir, as well as in this. Whoever, Sir, may be
the Importers and Proprietors of Run Goods, it is most
certain, that the lowest Class of Men, the Dregs of the
People, those Persons who compose Mobs, are the Persons
employ'd in the running of these Goods, and they get so
much more, Sir, by this illicit Trade, than they can by
honest Labour, that they neglect their Labour for the
Sake of this vile and destructive Trade.
'As this lowest Herd of Mankind, Sir, have been taught
that one Law is Iniquity, they have taught themselves that
some other Laws are so too; if one may judge of their
Principles by their Practice, all your Revenue Laws stand
in an unfavourable Light with them, Sir.'
'Every Gentleman, Sir, has heard of the Execution of
that noted Smuggler Andrew Wilson, whence all this Mischief has flowed. That deluded Man, Sir, maintained to
the Hour of his Death, that he was most unjustly condemned, and died with great Tranquillity; so firm, so fixed
was he in the Belief of his own Innocence; he maintained
this, Sir, in a Debate with one of the Rev. Ministers of
Edinburgh, and a very able Clergyman he is. When this
Minister, Sir, was endeavouring to underceive him, and bring
him to a Sense of his Guilt of the Crime for which he was
condemned, he admitted that he had taken Money from
a Collector of the Revenue by Violence; that he did it because
he knew no other way of coming at it; that the Officers
of the Revenue had by their Practice taught him this was
lawful, for they had often seized and carryed off his Goods
by Violence, and so long as they had Goods of his of
greater Value in their Hands than all the Money he took
from them, they were still in his Debt, and he had done no
Wrong.
'I am afraid, Sir, this Martyr to this new heretical Sect
of Smuggling was too much favoured by the misled and
unwary Multitude; too many of them thought, as he himself did, Sir, that he was unjustly condemned, and every one
who firmly believed this would, no doubt, think it his Duty
to save and to rescue this innocent Person (as they thought
him) from the Rigour of Law; and, Sir, if the Magistrates
of Edinburgh had not taken extraordinary Precautions to
put this Sentence in Execution, he, this Wilson, Sir, would
very probably have been rescued by the Multitude.—But,
Sir, when they saw themselves disappointed, no sooner was
this Execution over; than they began to wreck their Malice
upon that Guard which had, upon many other Occasions
as well as that; supprest their Disorders, and restrained their
guilty Hands from doing of Mischief, and committing of
real not imaginary Iniquity; upon that Guard, Sir, which
is to be abolished by this Bill. — Upon this Occasion,
Sir, the unhappy Person who then commanded the Guard,
did, from an Apprehension I suppose that he might be overpowered by the great Crowds of People then assembled, defend himself and his Men by their Fire Arms, whereby several of the Multitude were killed and wounded: And
what were the Effects of this, Sir? — The Persons who
were then killed and wounded were of that Class of People
who commonly attend such melancholy Spectacles, Sir,
that is, of the lowest Class. The Mob, Sir, from that
Moment began to murmur, from an Apprehension, that because no Person of Rank and Condition had been killed,
therefore would this barbarous Murderer (as they called
him) escape from Justice by the Favour of Persons of Condition. And in this, Sir, they were not mistaken, for —
No sooner was this unhappy Person condemned by Law,
Sir, than Numbers of Persons of Condition set a Petition on
foot to intercede with her Majesty (then Guardian of the
Realm) for Mercy; they did this, Sir, not so much out of
Tenderness to this Man, that they thought his Case hard,
as from another Motive, a Motive of a public Nature;
and that was, Sir, should this Sentence have taken Effect,
the Mob would become more insolent, when they found
that the Civil Magistrate, or other Persons acting under
his Authority, were in no better Case than they who resisted the Civil Magistrate in the Execution of the Law; but
if by this Man's Pardon, if by the Interposition of Mercy
from the Crown, they were convinced, that every Person
who acted by Law, to put the Laws in Execution, acted
safely, and that every Person that acted otherwise did it
with a Rope about his Neck, that would effectually suppress the Insolence of the Multitude, and force Obedience
to the Law, even from those base Minds who by Force alone
are to be driven into a Sense of their Duty.—Who
then, Sir, of that Country approves of that wicked Murder and Riot? The Mob only, Sir, by whom it was committed; Persons who have no Property, and therefore are
fond of Disorders, because they can lose nothing by Disorders, and if they can escape Corporal Punishment, are often Gamers by public Calamity and Disorder.
'This then, Sir, appears plainly to be a Dispute betwixt
the People of Scotland, (by whom, Sir, I mean every Man
of Property, every Freeman, every Man who may suffer
by the Subversion of the Laws, and by the Loss of Liberty)
and whom, Sir? The Canalzie, the Dregs of the People of
Scotland, that Class who are anciently call'd by your Law,
Villains; that ignorant Herd of Bigots, who are always
missed by crafty and ill-designing Clergymen; for Men of
Sense and Knowledge, Sir, have a much surer and a better
Guide, that is, right Reason, that eternal and unerring
Rule.
'Sir, It is a great Misfortune to that Country where this
bloody Tragedy was acted, that many Gentlemen who hear
me are so much Strangers to it, Strangers to its Laws and
Customs, Strangers to the Manners and Tempers of the
People, Strangers to these different Ways of thinking of the
People of Knowledge and Condition, from the Principles of
the inferior Multitude, which I have now, Sir, been endeavouring to explain to you, so far as they relate to the present Case.
'Therefore, Sir, if it is the Sense of the House to proceed upon this Bill, the Consideration of it requires the
greater Attention, the Interest of England makes it necessary; 'tis an Affair of the utmost Consequence to the Liberty
of the Subject, and as it ought, it will no doubt be treated
as such, for the United Kingdom is greatly interested in the
Manner of determining of this Bill, as well as in the Fate
of it.
'Sir, While the two Nations remained in a State of Independency, those frequent Wars, which are but too common betwixt neighbouring Nations, begot mutual Fears,
mutual Jealousies and Distrusts, national Hatred, and national Aversions: But as the Cause of these national Feuds
and Enmities most happily ceased by the Union of the
Crowns, I hope, Sir, the Effect also ceased with the Cause.
— From that happy Period, Sir, both Nations were
embark'd upon the same Bottom; the Honour and Interest
of both became the common and inseperable Cause of both;
the Honour and Interest of one could not be hurt without
affecting the other; and I think, Sir, the Subjects of both
Nations became very soon sensible of this, that by that
happy Accident they were reduced from a State of Enmity
to a State of perpetual Friendship; and I think we may
observe from Experience, that those national Prejudices
and Distrusts began very soon to abate: Even so early, Sir,
as the unhappy Civil War in the Reign of King Charles I.
which broke out within less than 40 Years after the Union
of the Crowns. May we not observe, Sir, the Subjects of
both Nations, who were of the same Sentiments and Opinions with regard to the Causes of that unhappy War,
making and entering into Alliances and Confederacies with
one another against the Subjects of both Nations who were
of contrary Sentiments? Was not that War carried on by
Scotsmen and Englishmen against Englishmen and Scotsmen
without the least national Distinction, or national Distrust?
They were even at that time, Sir, perfectly sensible, that
the Liberties of any one of the Nations could not be subverted without destroying the Liberties of the whole, and that
the whole could not be preserved unless the Liberty of every
Part of the whole was preserved and secured upon the same
Footing.
'The same Thing appeared, Sir, at the late happy Revolution: Were not the Subjects of both Nations equally
forward, equally zealous in the Cause of Liberty, a Cause
inseparably common to both? And did not a few of both
Nations, without Distinction, adhere to what they called
the Prerogative of the Crown, and the indefeasible Right
of the unhappy and unfortunate Prince then upon the
Throne? But now, Sir, we are in a Situation very different
from that; we are now, Sir, by an incorporating Union
become one and the same People, bound and cemented
together by all the Ties that bind Individuals in civil
Society.
'The representative Body of the People of Scotland did,
upon that Occasion, Sir, express an absolute Trust and Confidence in this Nation of England; no Security, no Guarantee whatever, was on their Part required for the Performance
of the several Articles and Conditions stipulated by that
Treaty in our Favour, other than the Faith of a British Parliament. In this, Sir, they acted most wisely; for what
Security, what Force, what Power, what Constitution could
have been contriv'd, that could have proved so absolute,
so real, and so effectual a Security, as the Faith, the Justice,
the Honour, the Candour of an English Parliament; I say
an English Parliament, Sir; for in a Parliament of GreatBritain, the Representatives of that Part of the United
Kingdoms do not make up the tenth Part of either
House.
'We had, Sir, the Experience of Ages to induce us to
follow so wise a Course; the Legislature of England had
always acted wisely, never like arbitrary Governments from
Caprice or Humour, but had always steadily pursued the
real Interests of the Nation of England with great Judgment,
great Sagacity and Forecast; and we, Sir, were sensible that
our Interests were the same with yours, that so long as you
minded your own Interests, ours must be safe in your Hands.
Then, Sir, however weak and ignorant People may think
or act, People who are weak enough to be misled by national
Prejudices, yet the Wisdom of the Nation will always act
uniformly, always act wisely.'
'I know, Sir, 'tis the Way of speaking without Doors
among such weak and foolish People, that the Legislature
may be unconcerned and indifferent as to any public Measure
as to Scotland; that 'tis a Matter of no Moment how, or in
what Manner any public Law affects that Country; whether
these People are dissatisfied or not, should they be ever so
much displeased, ever so much angry, it is of no Consequence; should they even take it into their Heads to mutiny
and to rise in Rebellion, it signifies nothing, for we have
always as many Troops quartered amongst them as are
sufficient to conquer them.
'This is easily said, Sir, and I admit it might be as
easily done too; but because such a Thing might be done,
would such a Measure be just, would it be a wise Measure?
Sir, so foolish and so foul a Deed as this would be falsely
called Conquest; it would be an Act of Treachery, it
would be Treason, Sir, Treason of the blackest Kind!
Treason against the People! If any Person of Condition
was to talk thus, should the greatest Person of the Nation
infinuate such a Thing by way of Advice', this House would
take Notice of it, Sir; this House would impeach such a
Person as an Enemy to the Public, as a most dangerous
public Enemy; and give me Leave to say, Sir, that if ever
the Legislature should be so blind to its own Interest, so
false to the Trust reposed in them by the People, as to allow such a Use to made as this of those Forces, which
are maintained by the People, for the Preservation of their
Liberty, the same Number that could conquer Scotland,
could with much greater Facility conquer England.
'Such Conquests as these, Sir, are easily made; very little
Skill would be required in the General that would make
so glorious a Conquest; Treachery, Treachery alone is
the only Qualification necessary for the Executioner of
such a Project: But would the Conquest be as easily maintained as made? No, Sir.
'It is a common Saying, Sir, That Oppression makes
all Men of one Mind. In that Event, Sir, ten Times
the Number of Forces that made this Conquest, and perhaps made it with Ease too, would prove too few to maintain it.
'Every Gentleman, who is the least acquainted with
History, knows what Miracles Oppression hath work'd
upon the Oppressed. Do not the States of Holland owe
their Being to Oppression? Do not the Swiss Cantons owe
their Freedom and Independency to Oppression? Does not
Portugal owe its Independency to the indiscreet and oppressive Measures of the Court of Spain? But I beg Leave,
Sir, to bring one Instance nearer home.
'The Cambrian Gauls were reduced by force of Arms.
As the Conquest of this powerful Country was once determined by the Fate of one Battle at Hastings, so they, Sir,
after the Loss of a Battle, were obliged (as you did) to submit to Necessity. This Conquest was easily made; but was
it as easily maintained? No, Sir; every one knows what
Blood and Treasure it cost you to keep this Province in
Subjection; and so sensible were your Ancestors of this,
that after the Experience of near three Centuries, Sir, such
was their Wisdom, that they of their own accord, and a
wise Measure it was, Sir! I say, of their own accord,
made that brave and invincible People a free People; and
how, Sir? By admitting them to share as the Legislature
in this House, by making them one and the same People
nationally with yourselves, and removing, as far in you
lay, all National Distinctions, that there should be no more
Difference betwixt an English and a Welsh Man than there
now is betwixt an antient Briton, a Roman, a Saxon, an
Angle, a Jute, a Dane, or a Norman.
'Is it then to be imagined, Sir, that the Legislature of
Great Britain could be capable of such Indiscretion, as to
destroy, or in the least to impair and abate, that Harmony
between the two United Nations, upon which the Happiness of both so much depends? That you, Sir, could by
any unequal Dealing, or partial Procedure, force that antient and invincible Nation, that free and independent
Nation, who, of their own accord, freely, without the least
Restraint or Necessity, trusted themselves absolutely to your
Faith, after both Nations had from an Experience of
100 Years, from a just Sense of their true and real Interests, come to an absolute and determined Resolution to
become absolutely and entirely one and the same People!
That you, Sir, who are the sole and only Guarantees of
this Treaty, should force this Nation from this State of
Friendship, a Friendship secured by every Tye that can
bind Friends! That you, I say, Sir, should force them back
again into a State of Enmity! That you should, contrary
to all common Sense and common Honesty, betray this
great Trust, and by Acts of Severity and Oppression, drive
this Nation into a State of Slavery! This, Sir, is absolutely
impossible so long as Mankind are possest of Common Sense
in the smallest Degree; for no Argument is necessary, Sir,
to convince you, that if ever any Part, especially so great
and considerable a Part of this United Kingdom, is reduced
to a State of Slavery, the whole must soon undergo the
same Fate. We are now too closely united, not only
bound but cemented together, by too many and too strong
Tyes to be ever separated, without tearing out the Vitals
of the United Kingdom, and rending it into Pieces. In all
Events, both must share the same Fate, both must be free,
or both must be Slaves. A free State, Sir, knows no
Master but the Law; Freemen are governed by Law, and
by Law only; Slaves are governed not by Law but by
Arbitrary Rule, by Acts of Violence, and by Military
Force; and whoever is Master of that Force, must be
Master of all. If any part of the United Kingdom must
submit to Slavery, all and every part must submit to
Slavery, for no Proposition is more obvious and self-evident
than this, that in a National Sense, Scotland is as much a
Part of England as the Counties of Kent or Cornwall
are; and this County of Middlesex, and every Part of England is as much a Part of Scotland as the County of Edinburgh is: That the Interests of all and of every Part of
Great Britain are so absolutely and so entirely the same,
that no one Part can be hurt without affecting the whole,
no more than the natural Body can be hurt or maim'd in
any of its Members without feeling Pain; and therefore,
Sir, every Part of the Whole must be equally the Care of
the Legislature: And if this be so — then, Sir, this Bill
must stand or fall by its own Merits. It will be try'd by this
House, Sir, with the utmost Impartiality, and with the
strictest Regard to Justice.—It will be considered by this
House, Sir, as if this unhappy Disorder had been committed in the City of London, in York, Bristol, or any other
Corporation in England; and I submit it to Gentlemen's
Consideration, how they, especially they who represent
Cities and Burghs, how they, I say, like Bills of this kind.
—Because a Disorder and a Crime has been committed,
and because the Criminals have escaped and fled from
Justice, therefore the Magistrates of that City or Burgh
are to be punished by Bill, and the Corporation itself suffer
in its Rights and Franchises, and be deprived of its Privileges. I have already hinted at the first Attempt that was
made upon the Liberties of this Island: Gentlemen will observe where that first Attempt was made, and where it
pointed, and they may thank their Ancestors of that Generation, who had Sagacity and Forecast enough to foresee
where it must end, and foresaw it before it was too late.
Principiis obsta is a good Maxim. — I am not Lawyer
enough, Sir, to form any Opinion of Bills of this Nature,
but one part of the Procedure in another Place, in order to
found this Bill, appears to me to be somewhat dangerous to
the Privileges of the Commons of Great Britain; and that
is, Sir, — the Magistrates of Edinburgh are ordered to attend at the Bar of another House on a certain Day, they
appear, but we are not told whether they are ordered to
attend as Evidences to give Information, or as Persons accused of any thing. No, Sir; they are directly put upon
Oath; and severally examined, direct Questions put, and
direct and categorical Answers insisted upon, under no less
Penalty than Contempt. They are not told, Sir, your
Answer to this or to that Question may affect yourself
penalty, and therefore you are at Freedom to answer it or
not; and nevertheless, Sir, upon those Answers is the Bill
founded.—I say, Sir, I shall not pretend to form any Opinion of Bills of this kind. In my present way of thinking, Sir, every State must have a Power to save itself, that
the whole Legislature may use any Method whatever to save
the Public; but I have always understood that Proceedings
by Bills, such as this, were always consider'd as Remedies in
Cases of extreme Necessity, and in such only. Therefore
the first Question before you, Sir, is, Whether this be a
Case of that kind.— I am sensible, Sir, I cannot now enter
upon the Merits of this Bill, but I hope it will not be
improper, if I explain to the House, Sir, the Occasion of
this Bill.—The Report, Sir, that the Mob would make
an Attempt to commit this Crime was pretty universal,
and that this Attempt was to be made upon the Day appointed for this unhappy Man's Execution, unless he was
executed at the usual Hour according to his Sentence.
Agreeable to this Intelligence the Magistrates of Edinburgh
used Precautions, and proper Precautions they were, Sir,
to prevent this Mischief; but the Mob, Sir, they were likewise sensible that their wicked Purpose might reach the
Ears of the Magistrates, and if it did, Sir, were likewise sensible, from fatal and dear-bought Experience, that
the Magistrates of Edinburgh had always, and upon all former Occasions, by the means of this City Guard, Sir,
supprest Mobs and Tumults, and punished the Authors and
Ringleaders of them with great Severity. By all that can
be learned, Sir, (and great Pains have been taken to
make Discovery) I say, Sir, it appears by the Discoveries that have been made, that the Mob despaired
of Success, and therefore, Sir, a Number of the most determined entered into a Conspiracy, and bound themselves
by a solemn Oath to execute any Purpose that should be
agreed on by the Majority, and to lose their Lives rather
than to discover this Secret, or to discover one another;
and if Gentlemen knew how strong and sacred a Tye an
Oath is with these People, they would not be surprized
that this Secret was so well kept.—There is no direct
Proof of this, Sir, but the Presumption from several Circumstances is very strong, and the Event makes it highly
probable. For this Attempt to surprize and disarm the
City Guard, upon which the Success of their whole Scheme
depended, was executed in a Moment, upon a Signal, and
at a Time, when no Magistrate or Citizen of Edinburgh
had the least Suspicion of it, nor indeed any other Person,
unless those who were in the Plot: This, Sir, plainly appears to have been the Case; and if it is so, where is the
Guilt of the Magistrates or Citizens of Edinburgh? — All
the World heard, Sir, of Mischiefs that were threatened
by the Mob here, when the Gin-Act was to take place, and
agreeable to these Reports, Precautions were taken to prevent these Riots and Disorders that were threatened; but
when, Sir? upon Michaelmas-Eve only, and not before.
Now, Sir, suppose a Number of this Mob had engaged
themselves in a Plot, and kept their Secret, and had the
Night before these Precautions were taken committed any
outrageous and criminal Act of Violence, and had under
the Favour of the Night and other Disguises of Apparel all
of them made their Escape, would it have been thought
necessary to have brought in a Bill to punish the Magistrates and the Cities of London and Westminster? Sir, I
think this is precisely the Case, and I therefore submit it
to the House, Sir, if there is the least Foundation for this
Bill? Should this Bill, Sir, pass into a Law, the Office of
Civil Magistracy would become so dangerous that no wise
Man, no prudent Man, would ever accept of it; and if
the Magistrates of this City have been, at this Period, unable to suppress a Tumult, when they had Power to support
their Authority, how can they preserve the Peace of this
populous City, when that Power is taken from them?—
This City Guard, Sir, is a Watch, a Watch by Day as
well as by Night; it is a Creature of the Civil Magistrate,
under his Direction only; it is subject to no Mutiny Act,
but governed by the same Law, that other Subjects are,
and if it should be abolished, what would be the Consequence? If this Bill should pass into a Law, this ancient
City, this Metropolis of one of the United Kingdoms, must
either be reduced to a State of Anarchy and Confusion, to
be governed by the licentious and unruly Multitude, or,
which is worse, Sir, it must submit to a Military Government, and so by a Side-Wind, and without any Design, you
shall in consequence of this Bill introduce a Practice that
must very soon put an End to all Liberty.— For, Sir, when
you cannot execute the Law, nor preserve the Peace without Military Force, when those who have the Direction of
that Force shall become sensible that they, and they alone,
can execute your Laws, they will soon become the Makers
as well as the Executioners of your Laws, as once happened to this Nation already,—when your own Army
under that crafty Traitor Cromwell usurped the whole
Power of the Legislature, and of the Civil Magistrate.
For these Reasons, Sir, I hope you will proceed no further
upon this Bill.'
Sir John Barnard.
These and the foregoing Reasons had such Weight with
the House, that tho' the Bill was ordered a second Reading,
the House agreed upon a Motion made by Sir John Barnard.
'That the Lords be desired, that the Grounds upon which
the said Bill proceeded in their House may be communicated to the House of Commons at a Conference.'
May 18. The Lords at a Conference delivered to the
Managers for the House of Commons, an Authentic
Extract of the Proceedings in the Trial of Captain John
Porteous, wherein was contained the Verdict against the said
Captain Porteous, the Sentence of the Lords of the Justiciary
of Scotland against him, and the Reprieve of the said Captain Porteous granted by her Majesty as Guardian of the
Realm. As also
A Letter from Alexander Wilson, Provost of Edinburgh,
to Major General Moyle, dated Edinburgh, April 13, 1736.
Which Authentic Extract and Letter were brought up to
the Table, and the Report being read, it was ordered,
'That Mr. Attorney General, and Mr. Sollicitor General,
take Care that the Evidence for the ingrossed Bill from the
Lords (entitled as before mentioned) be ready to be produced to the House upon that Day Sevennight; and likewise, that Mr. Attorney General appoint Counsel learned in
the Law, to produce and manage the Evidence at the Bar
of the House upon that Day Sevennight, to make good
the Allegation of the said Bill; and that the following
Persons attend the House on that Day Sevennight, viz.
(fn. 2) Major General Moyle. (fn. 3) Colonel Duroure. (fn. 4) Major Poole; Captain Bendish; Lieutenant Ashton. (fn. 5) Major
Roberton. (fn. 6)
John Din. (fn. 7) Mr. John Bailey. (fn. 8) Mr.
Alexander Nisbet. (fn. 9) Mr. Robert Stewart. (fn. 10) Mr. George
Irvine; Mr. Thomas Young. (fn. 11) Mr. Roderie Brown. (fn. 12)
Mr. Christopher Chissolm.
On Friday the 20th, was presented to the House, and
read a Petition of Alexander. Wilson, Esq; Lord Provost of
the City of Edinburgh, averring his intire Innocence of
the several Matters alledged against him in the Preamble
of a Bill, then depending in that House, (entitled, as before
mentioned) and therefore praying that he might be heard
by his Counsel against the said Bill, at the second Reading
thereof, which was accordingly ordered. And on the Tuesday
following, was presented to the House, and read, A Petition
of the Magistrates and Town Council of the City of Edinburgh, in the Name of themselves, and Community of the
same, setting forth 'That the Petitioners apprehended, that
if the Bill then depending in that House (entitled, as before
mentioned) should pass into a Law, it would greatly affect,
and tend to destroy, the Rights, Franchises, Privileges,
and Liberties of the said City of Edinburgh; and therefore
praying that the Premises might be taken into Consideration, and that the Petitioners might be heard by their
Counsel against such Parts of the said Bill, as affected the said
City. 'Which was accordingly ordered. And then Captain
Lind and Mr. James Allen were ordered to attend that
House next Morning, when upon reading the Order of the
Day, for that Bill's being read a second Time, it was proposed
to put off the second Reading of it for a Month. But a
Motion being made for reading it a second Time on that
Day Se'nnight, after some Debate the Question was put
upon the Motion for reading it a second Time on that
Day Se'nnight, which upon a Division was carried in the
Affirmative by 140 to 99; after which the several Persons
who were ordered to attend on that Day, were ordered
to attend on that Day Se'nnight.
Accordingly, on Wednesday, June 1, the Order of the
Day being read, the Counsel for and against the Bill were
called in, and the Bill being read a second Time, the
Hearing of Counsel, and Examination of Witnesses began,
and was continued all that Day, all Thursday, Friday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday following. And,
Mr. Lind, Captain of the City Guard, the Night of the
Riot, declared, 'That on Friday before he waited on the
Provost, and finding him in Company with Mr. Lindsay,
Member for the City, and several other Magistrates, he
called him aside, and acquainted him with the Report;
who desired the said Captain Lind, to repeat the same
Things before the Company, which he did, and they were
all of Opinion there was no Foundation for the Report;
however, desired him to enquire into the Grounds of it:
That he (Captain Lind) was out of Town till the Monday
Evening, and after he came to Town heard the Report
again; and repaired to Muirhead's Coffee-House, to talk
with the Provost, and sending his Name in, had for Answer,
That the Provost was busy, but that he would be in the Council
Chamber about four o'Clock; when he accordingly went to
receive his Orders for next Day, but had none for preventing the Riot.'
One Din, and one Baily, were the only Witnesses who
declared 'that they had heard such a Report, and that they
believed it long before the Riot.'
Bailey being examined about a Conversation he had with
Din on the Monday, declared 'that Din spoke to him
of it as a foolish Story, and said that he himself did not
believe it.'
Sir James Campbell, Mr. Hamilton, and Mr. Lindsay,
Members of the House, declared, 'That the present Magistracy could not enter upon their Offices till he (Din)
was removed, on account of the Infamy of his Character.'
The Evidence against the Bill endeavoured to prove,
'That altho' the Report went of such a Design for some
Time before, yet there was nobody believed it: That the
Day given out was Wednesday, the Day on which Porteous
was to have been executed: That the Lord Provost had
thereupon determined, in Council, that the whole three
Companies of the Town Guard should mount upon that
Day, and that both he and the other Magistrate, with the
Members of the Town Council, should be ready to attend
with the Badges of their respective Offices in quelling the
Mob, should any happen.'
It was on the other Side proved 'that there was no Order
given for that Purpose to the Captain of the Guard upon
the Tuesday; neither was there any Ammunition distributed,
which Precautions had been used at the Time of Wilson's
Execution; and that it appeared there was not a Flask of
Powder, nor a Pound of Shot amongst all the Town Guard.
To this it was answered, that if the Provost had made any
such Preparations before the Riot, it would have been the
readiest Way to have created one; that if the Guard
wanted Ammunition, it was their Captain's Fault, because
he always, when his Men wanted Ammunition, got an Order from the Treasurer, empowering the Store-keeper to
deliver out what was necessary for that Purpose.' Young, the
Treasurer's, and Hislop, the Store-keeper's Evidence confirmed this.
It was then objected to the Provost, 'That there were two
Ways, by which Porteous might have been secured from
the Mob. The first was, to have sent him to the Castle.
The other, that he might have been sent to the Cannongate Tolbooth. In Answer to this it was said, that the
Sentence pronounced on Porteous by the Lords Justuciary
run, 'That he should be sent back to the Tolbooth
of Edinburgh, there to remain till the Execution of the
Sentence'; and that it was not in the Provost's Power to
have sent him to the Castle, there being no Instance of such
a Power's having been exerted since the Union, and that
even before the Union, it could only have been done by a
Warrant from the Privy Council of Scotland; and as for
sending him to the Cannongate, he had as little Power, because the Cannongate was a Regality, and governed by its
own Magistrates.'
A Scotish Clergyman, Mr. Yates, declared, 'That being
appointed to preach in the Church where Porteous was allowed to hear a Sermon on the Sunday before his Murder,
he afterwards waited on Porteous, and took occasion to acquaint him with the Report he had heard, desiring him
at the same Time to take Care whom he admitted into his
Room.' Mr. Yates added, 'That Porteous slighted his Imformation, and said, Were be once at Liberty, be was so little
apprehensive of the People, that be would not fear to walk
at the Cross of Edinburgh, with only his Cane in his Hand
as usual.
But the most material Evidence against the Provost, was
the aforesaid Bailey, who insisted that he heard it in every
Company, that the Design was to be put in Execution on
the Tuesday, and that he drank with several who had openly
approved of it. To which it was answered, That if Bailey
kept such Company, there was little Stress to be laid on
his Evidence; especially as he did not pretend to affirm
that he had ever acquainted the Provost either with the
Report, or the Person's Name who approved the Design.
As to what passed during the Time of the Riot, Captain Lind said, 'That being informed that the Mob was gathering, he went to Clark's Tavern; where the Provost was
drinking with Mr. Bur, and other Officers of his Majesty's
Ship the Dread nought, then stationed in the Road of Leith,
and upon acquainting him with the Danger, the Provost
desired him to go immediately back, and draw out his
Men, and that he would instantly follow him, and put
himself at the Head of the Guard to face the Mob. That
he accordingly went to the Guard, but found that the Mob
was already in Possession of the Guard-house, having disarmed them, and that they were distributing the Arms of
the Guard out at the Window; whereupon they instantly
returned, and met the Provost coming towards the Guard.
That they immediately resolved to send Mr. Lindsay to General Moyle, who went accordingly: That they marched
again out of the Tavern, to which they were obliged to
retire, to quel the Mob; and after a fruitless Attack upon
the Mob, in which some of the Provost's Company were
wounded, they were beat back: He likewise said, there
were but ten or twelve Men, besides the Serjeant, Corporal
and Drummer, upon Guard that Night, there being eight
or nine in Prison on account of Wilson's Execution, and
as many absent either with or without Leave. That
when he appeared first to the Mob, they desired him to
be gone, for they had nothing to say to him.'
One Hunter declared in a very distinct Manner, 'That
when the Mob began to gather at the Nether-Bow, he was
coming by the Guard, and told the Serjeant, or the Sentry,
The Mob was gathered, and seemed resolved to have their
Will, and bid them take Care of themselves. That Captain
Lind, in the mean Time, came down from the Provost, and
that he neither heard nor saw him give any Orders to the
Guard, only when he saw the Mob gathered towards the
Head of Black-friar Wind, he clapt his Hand to his Sword,
and cry'd, God's Mercy, What's that? And away he run as
fast as his Feet could carry him.'
Sutherland, the Serjeant, said, 'That when the Captain was
gone, a Fellow with a blue Cap came up and asked the
Sentry what it was o'Clock? This it seems was the Signal agreed on by the Conspirators; for in a Trice the same
Fellow, backed by ten or twelve more, beat the Sentry on
his Back, rushed in, and made themselves Masters of the
Guard and their Arms, being followed by many more.
However, it appears by Lind's Evidence, that they were
moderate enough in the Use of Power, at least at that
Juncture; for when he came, they very civilly desired
him to be gone, for they wanted nothing with him, and
warned him of his Danger if he offered to resist.
Sutherland, the Serjeant, agreed with Hunter in the main,
only that Hunter's Words to the Sentry were, 'The Mob is
up, I advise you to give them good Words, for they will
have their Will. He said, that indeed Captain Lind desired him to take Care of the Guard; but that availed little,
for not one of the Soldiers would have minded him; nay,
they were so intimidated by what had happened to those
under Porteous's Command, that he believed, except himself, scarce nay of them would have obey'd the Captain
himself had he staid. Yet all agreed, that had the Captain
been present and assembled all the Soldiers, who for the
most Part lived within a Stone's-throw of the Guard-house,
they might have easily prevented the Mob's taking Possession of the Guard-house. The Captain said in his Defence, that he had Orders from the Provost to return the first
Time, that he thought no Messenger so proper as himself.'
It was proved by the Evidence of (fn. 13) Mr. Baird, and
several others, that the Magistrates endeavour'd to raise the
Train'd Bands, or Militia of the City; for which Purpose
they dispatch'd one Haliburton their Commandant, to Mr.
Rollo, at whose House were the Books, which contained the
Names and Places of Abode of every Captain of a Company; but when he came there he was denied Access by Mr.
Rollo's Wife, who desir'd him to be gone. They then propos'd to ring the alarm Bell, but found the Mob had taken
the Precaution to secure the Tower in which it hangs.
Hislop the Store-keeper and several others prov'd, 'that
the Magistrates next sent to the Magazine for Arms, and
that the Mob had likewise secured that.'
'It had been much insisted upon by the Counsel for the
Bill, that the Provost ought to have put a Guard of Men
in the Justiciary or Tolbooth-Room, which are it seems but
a short Distance from one another, but it appeared by all
the Evidence that in the Situation Affairs were then in it
was quite impracticable.
Walker, the Town Officer, whom the Mob had so
pelted that he was oblig'd to through off his Livery-Coat,
declar'd, 'he was by when they murder'd him, and that one
more forward than the rest was check'd by the others and
desired to wait for Orders; that he thereupon quitted the
end of the Rope, which by this Time, being about Porteous's
Neck, he was ready to have hoisted up, and went about to
another, who very composedly gave him Orders, and that
he return'd and drew the Rope up, which hang'd Porteous.
It farther appeared that the Magistrates were all this
Time getting what Information they could by sending People who might mix in the Mob, and endeavour to know
some of their Faces, but all in vain; only one Man return'd, who said he knew one Person there. The Magistrates desir'd him to name him, which it seems he did, and
was desir'd to be in Readiness to give in what Evidence he
could against him, when call'd upon.
Mr. Lindsay said, 'That he return'd about five in the
Morning, and with several who had been with the Provost
all Night, went to the Grass-Market where the Body of
Porteous yet hung, and several People, to the Number of
twenty or thirty as they thought in a Body, standing about:
Most of the Evidence seem'd to think those were some
of the Rioters, and said, they advis'd them to depart. One
was seiz'd upon, but besides that they could make nothing
of him; they had no Prison in which they could confine him;
so thought it the most prudent Method to dismiss him: For
being but a few of themselves, and the Mob seeming resolute,
they had no Reason to doubt but they would rescue him;
and perhaps, as they had committed such Outrages already,
would not stick a greater. The King's Council laid great
hold of this Circumstance to prove the Negligence both of
the Provost and of the Town, but it was observ'd by Mr.
Murray, Counsel for the Provost, that he was not then present, consequently admitting it to be a Neglect, not answerable for it.
Mr. Lindsay farther declar'd, 'That when he return'd from
Major-General Moyle's, the Mob was pouring in vast Shoals
out of the Town into the Country, and that he did not remember any one Face of the many hundreds he met with,
tho' he had liv'd and born the highest Offices of the City
for several Years.' Another of the Witnesses declar'd, 'That
being at Dalkeith, a Village about five Miles from Edinburgh,
10 or 12 Days before the Riot, he there heard a Report
that a Conspiracy to murder Porteous, if repreiv'd, was form'd
by the Friends of one Ballantine, a Youth of that Town,
who went thence to see Wilson's Execution, and was one
of them killed by Porteous, but that no Body believ'd
it.
An Act made in the 9th of Queen Mary of Scotland,
Anno, 1563, by which it was enacted that all Citizens who
assembled to suppress any Riot within the Town of Edinburgh, without Authority from the Provost, incurr'd the
Pains of Death, was produced and admitted an Evidence.
Another Act of James II. of Scotland, Anno 1451, by
which no Corporation was lyable to Punishment; for the
Provost or any of the Magistrates Fault was likewise admitted an Evidence. The Articles of the Union were
likewise insisted on, by which the Privileges of the
Boroughs are to remain inviolable; and Mr. Hamilton,
Council for the Town, offer'd in Evidence an Extract of
the Minutes and Debates of the Session of Parliament in
Scotland, in which the Articles anent the Privileges of
Royal Boroughs is settled, whereby it appears that upon a
Motion made to submit them to the Alterations of a British
Parliament, a Debate arose, and it was resolv'd in the Negative, but this was refus'd as Evidence.
It was prov'd against the City that Porteous was insulted,
going to his Trial, by the Mob: This was confirm'd by
the Testimony of my Lord Advocate, who said he believ'd,
that had it not been for the Guard he would have been torn
in Pieces between the Tolbooth and the Justiciary Room,
tho' not forty Paces distance from one another. The Fact
was admitted, but Evidence was given that the Mob, who
insulted Porteous, had no Interest in the Corporation who
was to suffer by the present Bill, being either the lowest
Dregs of the Inhabitants or People from the Country whose
Relations had been kill'd on the Day of Wilson's Execution.
It was likewise prov'd that almost all they who were kill'd
were People from the Country.
Mr. Lindsay, Mr. Young, and several more were examined
to prove the Usefulness of the Town guard, particularly in
two Respects, viz. That of extinguishing Fires and quelling
former Mobs. It was plainly made out, that in a City so
populous, and so close built, where 40 or 50 Families live
under one Roof as in Edinburgh, it would be impossible to
quench Fires, or to preserve the Goods during Fires without
such an armed Force.
My Lord Advocate, and Patrick Lindsay, were asked,
when upon Examination, whether, if the Town-guard had
been under Arms and not surprized, they did believe the
Guard would have been able to have quell'd the Mob; they
answer'd they did, and most of the Evidence declar'd, that
they believ'd, had the Guard been properly arm'd and commanded, the Rioters would not have attempted what they
did.
As to what related to the taking away the Nether-BowGate,
it was prov'd unanimously that the said Gate was of absolute
Consequence to collecting the City Revenue, and that it
prevented Smuggling. One of the honourable Gentlemen
abovementioned said, that he did not think its being demolish'd would answer the Intentions of the Bill, because
it was easy for a small Body to defend the Pass, where it was
built against a much larger, even tho' the Gate was open.
Several Evidences were produced, particularly the Act of
Parliament by which the City collected two Pennys Scots,
upon every Scots Pint of Ale vended within the Town, to
prove the Loyalty of the Citizens on former Occasions,
especially in the Year 1715, when they rais'd some Companies, and by their Zeal and Conduct prevented the surprizing the Castle by the Rebels.
Mr. Irvine, the Town Clerk, said, they had during
that Period, and upon other Occasions, manifested their
Loyalty much to the Prejudice of their Revenue, which is
scarce able to defray the necessary Expence of their
Town.
Mr. Young declar'd, that he found a Bond for some hundreds of Scots Marks, granted by the City of Edinburgh to
one Wightman, who was obliged to advance that Money
for the Payment of the Minister's Salary, the Revenue of
the Town having been so exhausted; and all agreed in its
having the most sincere Attachment to the Protestant Succession in the present Royal Family.
'We have given the Sum of this Examination, because
without that the Extracts from the following Speeches would
not be intelligible. The hearing of Counsel for and against
the Bill being ended, and the Counsel withdrawn, Mr. Speaker
open'd the Bill, whereupon a Motion was made by Mr.
Attorney General for its being committed, in which he was
seconded by Mr. Solicitor General, but it being late, the
Consideration of the said Motion was adjourn'd till next
Morning, being
June the 9th, when the said Motion was reassum'd; upon
which a long Debate arose, of which we shall give Extracts.
Mr. Attorney General.
Mr. Attorney General.
Sir,
'The Bill now before us, I will venture to say is a
Bill that at this Juncture must greatly contribute to the
Peace and Tranquillity of this Nation. I am sorry to say
it, but it is too visible that the Spirit of Dissaffection and
Riot seems to have been gone abroad; and if a timely and
an effectual Stop is not put to it by a vigorous Interposition
of the Legislature, no Gentleman can take it upon him to
say where it may stop It has in the Chief City of our
Part of the United Kingdom already left but too melancholy Proofs of its fatal Tendency; and how soon it
may communicate itself to the other I tremble to imagine.
'The other House, Sir, by the seasonable Enquiry has,
already set us the Example, in what Manner we ought to
treat, and in what Manner we ought to punish such unheardof Insolence and Barbarity, as the Action which gave Rise
to this Bill. I hope, Sir, we never shall be upbraided with
being cold in seconding their Zeal; I hope, Sir, that it
never shall be laid to the Charge of a British House of Commons, that it has been remiss in punishing an audacious Insult upon all Law and Majesty, while the House of Peers has
appeared zealous and forward in vindicating both.
'Tis true the Charge against the Provost and Citizens
of Edinburgh consists in their neglecting to prevent the
Tumult before it happened; in their neglecting to suppress
it, or take proper Measures for that Purpose after it had
happen'd, and in their neglecting to discover, apprehend,
and secure those who were guilty of that audacious Riot
and cruel Murder. But this Charge, which is the Foundation of the Bill, is not to be consider'd as Negligence only;
for he who does not prevent a Crime which he might and
ought to have prevented, has always in Law been looked
upon as some way guilty of that very Crime, therefore if
it should appear that the Magistrates and Citizens of Edinburgh might and ought to have prevented this Tumult, or
rather Insurrection, or that they might and ought to have
suppressed it, or that they might and ought to have discover'd, apprehended, and secur'd the Rioters and Murderers. If it should appear that they neglected any of those
Measures which were obvious for accomplishing either of
those Ends, the Neglect must then be look'd on as a sort
of wilful Neglect, and consequently they must be look'd
on as guilty in some Measure of all those Crimes which
were committed. And so every Gentleman who considers
their Case in this Light, the Punishment propos'd by this
Bill must appear merciful as well as mild.'
Mr. Solicitor General.
Mr. Solicitor General set out with the following remarkable Introduction.
Sir,
'I have the Pleasure to observe that every one who has
Occasion to speak upon this Head, expresses the utmost
Detestation for the Actors of what was not only an Insult
upon Majesty but an open Rebellion against Justice, nay,
against Mercy itself. It has, I think, been universally
allow'd, that it is out of the Reach of Common Law, to
punish the Neglect of Duty in the Provost and Citizens of
Edinburgh, it being attended with some peculiar Circumstances; and as I believe every Gentleman of this House
is of Opinion, that such a Neglect ought to be punished,
I may venture to affirm, that there was no other Method
of doing it, but in the Method that has been taken. The
Objection that seems to have the greatest Weight as to this
Method is the Hardship of a Man's suffering by an Act ex
post facto. But the supposing any such Hardship is to question the Justice and Wisdom of former Parliaments, who
have ever proceeded in this Manner upon Misdemeanors
which were out of the Reach of the common Forms of
Law. Great Pains have been taken to find a Difference
betwixt the Misdemeanors for which other Cities were
punished by this House, and the Behaviour of the City of
Edinburgh, in the late Riot. But, Sir, tho' two Cases of this
Nature cannot be parallel to each other, in every Circumstance, every Case of a City losing its Privileges by the
Censure of Parliament, amounts to a Proof that there have
been Precedents of this Nature, 8 or 9 of which have been
produc'd by the Gentleman who spoke against the Bill.
I am far from believing that the Provost and Magistrates
of Edinburgh were actually aiding to the Rioters when the
unfortunate Porteous was murdered; for if they had, the
Punishment would have been much more severe than what
is imply'd in the present Bill. And to shew that I am
willing to allow all that can reasonably be expected in favour of the Lord Provost and City of Edinburgh, I shall
premise two or three Things: The first is, that I lay no
Stress on the Circumstances preceding the Murder of
Porteous, nor do I think that the Town of Edinburgh shew'd
any personal Rancour to the unfortunate Man in prosecuting him at their Expences. It was no more, Sir, than
what their Duty requir'd of them, as he was a Servant
of their own, and the Crime he committed was done while
he was cloathed with their Authority, and in Effect committed against them. Nor am I, Sir, of Opinion, that
they discover'd any Malice, but rather Favour in taking
away his Pension, and leaving him half a Guinea a Week
for his Subsistence while in Prison, since it comes out in
Evidence that they did not put it in their own Pocket but
gave it to the other two Captains who perform'd his Duty,
nor could the Magistrates have been blam'd, had they depriv'd him of the whole. I farther admit, that the Provost
behav'd both circumspectly and impartial, by leaving
him to the Judgment of another Court, since by his own
Authority he might have try'd him and condemned him in
his own.'
We have thought it proper to give this remarkable Introduction in order to shew the Candour of the Gentlemen
who were for the Bill. Mr. Solicitor then took a View of
the Provost's Conduct in these three different Periods of
Time, viz. before, during, and after the Murder of Porteous; and endeavour'd from a Deduction of Circumstances
to prove that he had been Guilty of great Neglect, first,
in not securing the Prisoner Porteous in the Castle of Edinburgh, upon the first Surmise of the Conspirators Intentions;
secondly, that he had not acted with that Vigour which he
ought during the Time of the Riot.
He then proceeded to consider the Case of the City of
Edinburgh as affected by the Bill, and observed, it was highly
improbable that the Citizens were innocent, and that there
being no positive Proof of a Citizen of Edinburgh being
concerned in the Riot was owing to a Confederacy among
themselves. As to the Hardship of taking their Watch
from them, they had enjoy'd that Privilege in its present
Form only since the Revolution, and they might return to
their old Custom of Watch and Ward: And concluded his
Speech in the following Terms:
'The Gentlemen on the other Side have likewise insisted upon the Hardships of proceeding against the Provost
and City of Edinburgh in this Manner: There are only
three Methods, Sir, by which a Parliamentary Prosecution
can be or hath been carried on. One, which as been long
out of Use, I hope never shall be revived; the second is
by Impeachment; and the third is by Bill, as in the present
Case. The two last are the only Methods that could have
been used against the Provost and Citizens of Edinburgh.
Had they been proceeded against by an Impeachment, they
could have had no Chance to be acquitted but one, which
is the Judgment of the House of Peers, the Law having
put it out of the King's Power to interpose where the Commons are the Prosecutors. But by the present Method, if
the Party proceeded against is censured by the Peers, he has
the Chance of being acquitted by the Commons, and if
condemned by both, he has still a further Chance that the
King will not pass the Bill. For these Reasons, I am heartily
for the Commitment of this Bill.'
Duncan Forbes, Esq;
Duncan Forbes, Esq; after expressing the utmost Abhorrence of the Crime and its Authors, and clearing himself
from the Suspicion of all National Prejudice, went on as
follows:
The Citizens of Edinburgh, Sir, are divided into two
Classes: One of which composes the Corporation, pays
Scot and Lot, and has the only Right to vote in chusing
their Magistrates and Representatives in Parliament: The
other Class, Sir, consists of the very Dregs of the People,
who have not the least Interest in any of these Points;
they easily embrace, and are much pleased with, every Opportunity of being tumultuous. Should the present Bill
pass into a Law, it would be directly formed to favour the
latter, who were the Authors of the Murder of Porteous,
in case he was murdered by any who lived within the Jurisdiction of the City of Edinburgh, and to censure the former, who, it appears from the Evidence given at this Bar,
has an Interest in quelling every Riot of the like Nature
with that which is now under your Consideration, and who
actually, as I hope to shew more at large by and by, did
use their utmost Endeavours to quell the Riot which gives
Rise to the present Bill.'
He then, after describing the City of Edinburgh, took
Notice that the Situation of the City Guard was such as
that it could not be removed without the greatest Inconveniency, and that the Citizens returning to their old
Custom of Watch and Ward must be attended with the Ruin
of their Trade, since they were by that Custom to mount
Guard, each Man in his own Person for five or six Days in a
Month. He then gave some affecting Instances of the
Fury of Mobs in Edinburgh, and the Usefulness of the
City Guard in quelling them.
'Allow me now, Sir, continues he, to consider the Conduct of the Lord Provost of Edinburgh, during that unparallel'd Insult upon all Laws and Government, which
happened when the unfortunate Porteous was murdered.
And indeed, Sir, I own I think it comes pretty plain out in
the Evidence, that he behaved not only with Prudence but
Zeal, nay with a Courage which could scarce be expected
in a much younger and much more active Man. No Evidence of any Credit, Sir, has yet pretended to say, that
the Lord Provost, or Magistrates of Edinburgh, had Information of this Riot's being to happen on the Day on which it
did happen. It is true, one Baily is so rash as to own that
he drank with some of the Conspirators, who defended the
Justice of the Murder, some Days before it was perpetrated,
and that he himself was present during the Riot: After an
Acknowledgement of this Kind, I leave it to this House to
judge what Credit ought to be given to a Man, who in some
Sense owns his being accessory to the Murder himself. As
to Mr. Dun, the other Evidence that spoke the fullest to
this Point, the House has already heard too much of his
Character, from Gentlemen of unquestioned Probity and
Honour, for me to make any Remarks upon what he has
advanced. It is true, there is one Evidence of an undoubted
Character, (I mean Captain Lin) who seems to make it
suspected that the Lord Provost had Information given him
of the Riot's being to happen on the Wednesday: But, Sir,
does it appear by that Gentleman's Evidence that, if he
did believe it himself, he acquainted the Provost, or any of
the Town Council of his Grounds of Belief? He says, he
came and acquainted the Lord Provost that such a Report
was current; the Lord Provost asked him, if he believed
such an Attempt would be made? Of whom he had heard
the Report? And if it met with any Credit among the
Men of Sense he conversed with? His Answers to these
Questions were, That if such an Attempt was made, he did
not believe it would be before the Day fix'd for the Execution of Porteous; and that the Report was spread only
among Women and Children, and entertain'd by Fools.
And, Sir, he gave a very good Reason before this House,
why he did not believe it; which was, That he judg'd it
impracticable for the Mob to undertake and to succeed in
any such Attempt. I must further observe, with respect
to the Lord Provost, that he was so cautious and so unwilling
to let slip any Opportunity of receiving any Information in
this Affair, that he caused Captain Lin to walk into the
Room where the other Gentlemen in Company were, and
to repeat what he had said; asking at the same Time of
these other Gentlemen (one of whom is a worthy Member
of this House) if they had heard of any such Report; who
all agreed that they had heard nothing of it, except from
Persons of so little Authority and Credit, that they did not
think it worth while to raise any Alarm about it. I cannot but observe likewise, that the Captain's own Conduct
shewed how little Credit he thought was to be given to the
Report, since he left the Town on the Friday Afternoon,
and did not return till the Monday following, which was the
Day before the Riot happened. But, Sir, to put the Zeal
and Care of the Lord Provost beyond the Possibility of being
question'd, he did not flight this Information, groundless
as it seemed, but called a Council, where it was resolved to
have all the three Companies of the City Guard upon Duty,
and that the Officers of the Train'd Bands should be in
Readiness upon the Wednesday; for I must again observe,
Sir, that there has not the least Circumstance come out in
Evidence to prove that the Report went of the Riot being
to happen upon the Tuesday, the Day on which it actually
happened. The Objection, Sir, that is made with respect
to the City Guard not being provided with Powder or Shot,
if we consider the Evidence upon that Head, can never affect
the Lord Provost. It appears that the Officer who commanded the Guard always apply'd to the City Treasurer when
his Men wanted Powder and Shot, who gave an Order to
the Storekeeper for what Ammunition was required. If no
such Intimation, Sir, was made to the Lord Provost or to
the City Treasurer; if the Captain, whose Business it was,
did not make the usual Application in order to have his
Men supplied with Ammunition, I hope no Gentleman in
this House will impute it to the Lord Provost, who is no
military Man, and cannot be supposed to be acquainted with
these Matters, that they were not supplied. In short, Sir,
I cannot see the least Grounds for founding the present Bill
upon any Circumstance of the Lord Provost's Behaviour
before the Riot happened. It appears to me, Sir, that he
used all the Precautions that any wise Man could have used
upon such an Occasion, and that he committed no other Blunder
in Conduct, except that of not acting contrary to the Advice
and Judgment of every Man about him, who were all
of Opinion, that if there was any Foundation for the Report
of a Riot's being to happen on that Occasion, it would not
happen before the Wednesday, which was the Day appointed
by the Judges of Porteous for his Execution, and that to
make any Appearance of providing against the Riot before
the said Day, was the readiest way to occasion a Riot. And
allow me, Sir, to say, the Thing speaks itself; the Rebels
had no Certainty of any Reprieve having come to the unfortunate Person; so that it was fairly to be presumed, they
would wait to see if they could obtain, in the Course of
Law, what they otherwise were resolved to obtain by Violence.
'As to the Lord Provost's Behaviour during the melancholy Time when that barbarous Riot happened, I think,
Sir, it has been admitted by the learned Gentlemen who
spoke for the Commitment of this Bill, that he had used
several Efforts to quell it, but might have used more and
stronger; it has likewise been said, Sir, that he neglected
the proper Means of suppressing it. How he could have
used stronger Efforts than he did use, is, Sir, what I cannot
easily apprehend.
'Has it not appeared from the Evidence given at the Bar
of this House, that he no sooner was informed of the Appearance of a Disorder, than he dispatched away the Captain of the City Guard, in order that he might draw out
his Men, that he (the Lord Provost) might put himself at
their Head and march against the Rebels? Has it not appeared, Sir, that he was as good as his Word, that he followed the Captain with as much, nay more Expedition than
could have been expected from his Age and Infirmities?
He met the Captain returning from the Guard House, from
whence the Violence of the Rioters had forced him. The
Hopes of suppressing them by means of the Guard having
failed, the most probable Method was to apply for Assistance
from the King's Troops. This dangerous Commission was
readily accepted of by an honourable Member of this House,
who executed it with great Difficulty and Hazard. It has
been objected, Sir, that no Letter was written requiring
General Moyle to march his Troops into the City, and that
without such a Letter there was no Reason to expect that
he would come to the Assistance of the Magistrates; but,
Sir, it appears there was not Time even to write a Letter
tho' it had been as short as was proposed by a learned Gentleman; and the honourable Gentleman who was dispatched
from the Street (for I must observe that he went from the
Street, not the Tavern) has declared in Evidence, that tho'
such a Letter had been written he would not have carried
it, because if he had been seiz'd upon by the Rioters, and if
such a Letter had been found about him, there was no room
to doubt but that they would have treated him with as little
Ceremony as they afterwards shewed to Porteous.
'In the mean Time, Sir, it seems, the Violence of the
Mob rose to such a Height, that there was a Necessity for
the Magistrates to take some other Measures for the common
Safety. It was proposed that the Alarm Bell should be rung.
in order to bring the Citizens to the Relief of their Magistrates: But such, Sir, was the Foresight of the Rebels,
that they had seized the Tower in which this Bell hung,
so that there was no Possibility of getting at it. It was then
proposed, Sir, to send the proper Officer to raise the Captains
and Heads of the Train'd-Bands; but this Expedient fail'd
likewise; you have heard by what Means it did fail, and
that neither the Lord Provost, nor any other Magistrate was
to blame.
'The Lord Provost, that nothing on his Part might be
omitted, likewise made another Attempt, in Person, to suppress the Rioters. And it was, Sir, an Attempt so hazardous, that there are very few Civil Magistrates but wou'd
have thought they had done their Duties very well, tho'
they had not gone so far. The Numbers that accompanied
the Lord Provost, Sir, were much disproportion'd to that
of the Rebels; the Rebels were arm'd, those with the Lord
Provost without Arms; yet all this did not hinder the Lord
Provost from advancing against them, till several of his
Company were wounded with Stones, till even Fire-Arms
were level'd at them, and till the bravest and boldest in the
Company thought it prudent to retreat, because to have
done otherwise wou'd have been for the Magistrates to have
exposed both their Persons and Authority to the Insults of a
barbarous and an enraged Multitude. The Lord Provost at
last, Sir, did retreat, and the Rebels perpetrated their bloody
Resolutions. Now, Sir, if we take a View of the Provost's
whole Conduct upon this melancholy Occasion, I wou'd gladly
know of any Gentleman, who has heard the Examinations
of the Evidence, if it appears that the Lord Provost omitted
any one Measure that was proposed to him for the Suppression of this unhappy Riot.
'As to his Behaviour after the Riot was over, Sir, I have
heard of only one positive Circumstance that has been advanc'd against it, which is, the not imprisoning the Man
who was seiz'd in the Grass-Market the next Day. But
how, Sir, can that Circumstance affect the Lord Provost,
who appears never once to have seen or to have heard of
that Man till he was dismiss'd? And indeed I think the
Gentlemen who seiz'd that Man, had they pretended to
have put him in Prison, wou'd have bid fair to have renew'd
the Tumult; since, as you have heard, the Rebels were yet
upon the Spot in great Numbers, and with a Shew of Resolution; this, Sir, the Rioter who was seiz'd seems to have
been well aware of; otherwise it can never be supposed he
wou'd have been so mad as to remain upon the very Spot
of Execution, and to allow himself tamely to be seiz'd.
'The Hon. Gentleman, Sir, a worthy Member of this
House, who is my Colleague in the Post I have the Honour
to fill in that Country, is a Person whose Zeal for his Majesty's Service can be as little question'd as his Abilities, which
I am sure are very great; that Hon. Gentleman, Sir, I say,
can witness how indefatigable, how zealous, nay, I may say,
how keen the Lord Provost was in promoting whatever
cou'd contribute to discovering the Conspirators, so that if
they were not discover'd, it was not owing to him but to us;
and if this House is resolv'd to pass the present Bill into a
Law, on account of any Neglect that happen'd upon that
Occasion, it is but just that you shou'd strike his Name out of
the Bill, and clap in the Names of a Couple of your own
Members.
'Thus, Sir, I have given my Opinion with respect to the
Insufficiency of the Evidence for passing the present Bill
into a Law, and I have done it in the Sincerity of Heart;
for what Motive, Sir, can I have in what I have spoken,
but the Discharge of my Duty as a Member of this House?
It is more than probable, Sir, that I shall never trouble you
again with my Sentiments upon this or any other Subject,
but my Conscience wou'd ever afterwards have accus'd me,
it I had quitt d my Seat here before I had given my Reasons
why I think the present Bill shou'd not be committed.'
Gen. Wade.
General Wade observ'd, that there was one Circumstance
that prov'd three Things; first, that the original Design of
the Conspirators was to have murder'd Porteous on the
Tuesday; secondly, that it was talk'd of openly; and thirdly,
that the Citizens and Inhabitants of Edinburgh were the
Murderers. The Instance was the Case of a Servant to
one Colin Alison, who swore that a Fellow came into his
Master's Shop, on the Thursday or Friday before the Murder
was committed, and inform'd him that Tuesday following was
the Day appointed for revenging innocent Blood.
He observ'd that the Riot deserv'd the Name rather of a
well conducted Conspiracy, than the Proceedings of a Mob:
And then vindicated Mr. Moyle, the commanding Officer at
Edinburgh, upon the Principles of military Discipline.
Mr. Shippen then spoke against the Committment, and
Charles Erskine, Esq: who was the Solicitor for Scotland,
answer'd that Part of General Wade's Speech relating to
Alison's Servant. Mr. Serjeant Skinner then spoke for the
Committment, and observ'd, that in other Countries the
Common-People are generally on the side of Mercy, but
that it was otherwise on this Occasion. Lord Cornbury then
spoke against the Commitments, and took Notice that it
was extremely impolitical as well as unjust to provoke the
Scots: For, continued his Lordship, if they should say,
let us fall with the Philistines, who knows but that they
might have Strength enough to shake the Pillars of this
House, even tho' they shou'd bury themselves under the
Ruins of the Constitution.
Henry Fox, Esq; then spoke for the Commitment, and
Lord Glenorchy against it. As did Mr. Oglethorpe.
We have omitted giving the Extracts of what was excellently said by each of these Gentlemen on this Occasion,
because the Reader will find the Force of their Arguments
already stated.
The next who spoke, was Mr. Erskine, who took Notice
of one Thing overlook'd in the Debate, 'And that, said he,
Sir, is with regard to the Punishment inflicted by the present
Bill upon the Citizens of Edinburgh; what I mean is the
demolishing the City-Gate. If this Gate, Sir, were the
Property of the Persons who by the present Bill are supposed to be guilty, and if these Persons were proved to be
guilty, I shall not deny but the Punishment would be adequate to the Offence: But the Case, Sir, is otherwise; the
Gate belongs to the Corporation, and Corporations, in the
Sense both of our Law and the Civil Law, are in some
measure looked upon as Minors, whose Estates the Magistracy of the City, and the Electors of that Magistracy,
which are the Town Council, and the Constituents of that
Town-Council, which are the Merchants and Traders, are
no other than the Trustees and the Guardians. Hence,
Sir, it is plain, that if we shall think fit to punish the Corporation for a Misdemeanor committed by the Magistrates
and Traders, we shall do the same thing, as if a Judge,
for a Fault committed by the Guardian of a Minor, should
give Sentence, that the Damage sustained by the Misdemeanor should be made up out of his Pupil's Estate. If Gentlemen view the present Bill in this Light, and at the same
Time reflect, that, besides the inhuman Insult committed
upon Majesty and Government by the barbarous Riot we
are now considering, the Corporation itself was a very great
Sufferer; and had it not been for the Measures taken by the
Magistrates, in all Appearance, there would have been still
a greater by that Riot. I say, Sir, if Gentlemen would be
pleased to consider this, I am persuaded they would be very
cautious in giving their Votes for inflicting the Censure
proposed by the present Bill.'
He then took Notice that the Imputation of Barbarity
was not peculiar to the common People of Scotland, for
that one poor Fellow had been pelted to Death but a few
Days before on the Pillory in Westminster.
Sir William Yonge.
Sir William Yonge then spoke for the Commitment,
and seem'd to think that the Concessions made by Mr.
Solicitor General were rather too favourable for the Provost
and the Citizens of Edinburgh.
Lord Polwarth rose next, and spoke in Substance as follows:
Lord Polwarth.
Sir,
Ever since this Bill was brought before us, I have endeavoured, by a close Attendance in the House, to make
myself as much Master of what could be said for or against
it, as I was able; and if any Gentleman will shew where
one Argument in the Charge against the Lord Provost and
City of Edinburgh has been proved (fn. 14) , I will this instant
give my Vote for the Commitment of the Bill: I say it
again, Sir, if any Gentleman will shew one Article that
has been proved against the Lord Provost and the City of
Edinburgh, I will give my Vote for the Commitment of
this Bill. The Honourable and Learned Gentleman who
seconded the Motion, in his Observations upon the Evidence, was pleased to advance, "That during the Time of
the Riot a Person came into the Tavern where the Lord
Provost and Magistrates were, and affirmed, that he knew
one of the Rioters, offering at the same Time to name him,
but that he was forbidden by some of the Company, who
desired him to wait till a more proper Opportunity.' I
think there was not one Article advanced by any of the
Witnesses that escaped my Notice; and I dare venture to
affirm, that not one of them gave any such (fn. 15) Evidence.
Nay, I appeal to the Minutes of the Examinations, and sit
down (fn. 16) till the Clerk shall read them. I shall make a
Remark or two upon one Part of the Speech that was delivered by the Honourable Gentleman who spoke last;
the rest of it I think requires none. The Honourable
Gentleman seems to be satisfied in general with the Truth
of what is laid down in the Preamble of the Bill; but has
not been pleased to shew how one particular Circumstance
has been proved. It has always been my Opinion, Sir,
that as we are the Judges of this Affair, we ought to act
upon the same Grounds, and be determined by the same
Rules of Equity, as other Judges are. As we have gone
thro' a long Course of Evidence, we can have no other
Foundation to build our Judgment upon, than the Facts
that have appeared from that Evidence; else, why have we
spent so much Pains and Time upon it, at such an advanced
Season of the Year? And we have heard Evidences, Sir,
who have seemed to be very much disposed to have aggravated every Circumstance of Misconduct or Negligence,
could they affix either of them upon the Provost or Magistrates of Edinburgh. Something indeed was advanced
that looked that way, and has been much insisted upon by
the Gentlemen who have spoken for the Motion, tho' the Account given by Gentlemen of undoubted Honour and Probity
of the Personal Character of these Witnesses, and the many
Inconsistences of their Evidence, make it surprizing to me,
that they ever should be mentioned but with Indignation.
I am perswaded, Sir, that if Gentlemen would lay their
Hands upon their Hearts, and ask of themselves, whether
they would have voted in the Manner they have done, had
the Case of the City of Edinburgh been that of the Cities
of Bristol, York, or any of the large Cities of England; I
say, Sir, I am perswaded Gentlemen would have required,
that every Tittle of their Charge against them should have
been fully and undeniably proved. It is true, Sir, that
none of the Authors of this detestable Murder have ever
been apprehended: But, Sir, is it necessary, that, in order
to make a decent and plentiful Execution, we should punish
those who seem to have no other Crime but their Endeavouring to suppress the Crimes of others; and must the
Innocent be punished, because the Guilty have gone unpunished? As this seems to me, Sir, to be the Case with respect
to our Proceeding on the present Bill, I heartily give my
Vote against the Motion.'
Sir John Barnard, among other things, spoke to the
following Effect:
Sir John Barnard.
Sir,
'As I have some Concern in the Civil Magistracy of a
City, and probably may have more, I don't think it sufficient
for me barely to give my Vote against the present Motion,
without taking Notice, that we are now upon a Point that
may some time or other equally affect every Civil Magistrate,
and every Community in the Kingdom. If the Lord Provost of Edinburgh was guilty of any Fault during the Time
of this unhappy Riot, it was of too much Rashness, and too
much Zeal, in exposing his Person and Character in order to
suppress it. For my Share, Sir, I cannot see what View
the Lord Provost could have, if he did not act with Zeal
and in good Earnest, to expose both his own Life, and that
of his Friends, in his repeated Endeavours to suppress the
Riot: And had I been in his Case, Sir, I doubt very much
if I had gone so far as he did. I know the Behaviour of
the Gentleman who was Lord Mayor of London, when a Mob
happened upon the Anniversary of the memorable ExciseBill's being set aside, has been mentioned upon this Occasion:
But all the World condemned that Gentleman for exposing
his Person so much as he did to the Fury of the Populace,
and there was not a Friend he had but blamed him for his
Rashness. But setting aside all these Considerations, Sir,
I think that our proceeding by Bills of this Nature has so
dangerous a Tendency, that tho' I did think the Subjects of
the Bill guilty, I should never give my Vote for proceeding
against them in this Manner. It may be a Precedent, Sir,
for a future Minister to wreck his Indignation upon any
Civil Magistrate; but we have no room to imagine that he
would bring in any such Bill against another Minister, let
him hate him ever so much, because that may be a Preparative for serving himself in the same Manner by a succeeding Minister who is in Power, and who hates him.
Sir Robert Walpole spoke next to the following Effect:
Sir Robert Walpole.
Sir,
'Ever since I had the Honour to sit in this House, I
never heard any Affair more dispassionately examined into,
more candidly discussed, and more patiently attended to,
than the present, especially by the Gentlemen of the Country where this Scene of Murder and Rebellion happened;
and indeed, as I stand affected in the present Question, I
could be almost tempted to wish, that the Gentlemen of that
Country had defended the Cause of their City and its Magistrates with less Eloquence and Calmness than they have
done; and at the same Time that some other Gentlemen had
behaved with more Decency and Temper: For after the
impartial Behaviour of this House, Sir, in the present
Question, I cannot see the good Tendency of these inflammatory Speeches that have been thrown out by some Gentlemen upon this Occasion. For my Part, Sir, I disdain the
Distinction that has been made between Civil Magistrate
and Minister of State. And, I hope, I never have given any Grounds, by my Behaviour as a Minister, to imagine I would have a Regard to any such Distinction. And
I am sure, Sir, the Behaviour of the Ministry upon this Occasion can give no room for any of these inflammatory Infinuations. The Subject of the present Bill was thought to
be in the other House of so important a Nature, that they
spent a great deal of the present Session in the Examination
of this Affair, and have sent down the Bill to us in the
Shape it is at present. We ourselves, Sir, after a long and
painful Examination, have found there has been a cruel
Murder and a Rebellion committed in that City. There is
no Gentleman but must own, that these are two Crimes that
ought to be severely punished, upon not only the Authors,
but even upon such as in the most distant Manner were
their Abettors. And, Sir, from the Course of Evidence
that has been laid before this House, I can with a good Conscience say, that had the Towns of Bristol, Norwich, &c. or
any of our great Incorporations in England, behaved in the
Manner the Magistrates and Citizens of Edinburgh did in
the present Occasion, I should have been as forward as any
Gentleman in this House to have inflicted as severe, if not
a severer Punishment upon them, than what is implied by
this Bill against the other. In short, Sir, I think that we
should err against all Prudence and good Politics, should we,
without once committing it, reject the present Bill. If, after it is committed, Gentlemen should think fit to make
such Amendments upon it, as may leave the Privileges of
the Incorporation of Edinburgh untouched, and remit the
most penal Part of the Punishment of the Lord Provost:
And if these Amendments should be founded upon Reason
and Equity, I shall by no means be against them: But in
the mean Time I heartily vote for committing the Bill.'
W—r P—r, Esq; stood up next, and among
other Things said, 'He was of Opinion there could nothing
new come out in Debate, when the Bill should be committed, that did not then appear; and that as they had heard
the Evidence examined, he thought there was no occasion
to take up the House's Time longer about it at this advanced
Season. For since they had no other Rule to go by in the
present Affair, than what arose from the Evidence; and as
that appeared so lame, that not a single Point was proved
against the Provost or Citizens of Edinburgh, he was of
Opinion, they could do nothing more agreeable to Equity
or Reason, or to the Honour and Dignity of Parliament,
than to drop the Bill entirely.'
It was then resolved, that the Bill should be committed
to a Committee of the whole House: It was next resolved,
that the House would on the Monday following resolve itself into a Committee upon the said Bill.
Upon this Occasion it was at first proposed, that the
House should next Day resolve itself into the said Committee; but some Members took Notice, that next Day,
being the 10th of June, they thought it a very improper
Day for them to go into a Committee on such a Bill. The
Scope of the Bill, as it then stood, was for demolishing the
Ports, and dismissing the Guard of the City of Edinburgh,
those very Ports, and that very Guard which had enabled
that City to keep the Pretender out in the Year 1715; and
for doing this they were to chuse that very Day which was
celebrated by all Jacobites as the Pretender's Birth-Day.
This they thought was not very prudent; it would be a
Matter of Triumph to all Jacobites, who would not fail to
represent it as a Judgment upon the City of Edinburgh for
shutting their Gates against their lawful and rightful Sovereign, as Jacobites were pleased to call the Pretender to
his Majesty's Crown and Kingdoms. This Consideration,
they hoped, would have some Weight against agreeing to
that Part of the Bill, when they went into a Committee
upon it; but they took Notice of it at that time only
to prevent the House's going into a Committee upon such a
Bill on such a Day. For this Purpose they hoped it would
be of sufficient Weight; and that therefore no Gentleman
would insist upon the House's going into a Committee upon
that Bill till Monday then next.
This seemed to be the Occasion of putting off the Commitment of the Bill till Monday; and on Monday the House
having resolved itself into the said Committee, the Preamble
and every Clause of it was opposed, and upon each there
was a Sort of distinct Debate, several of which were pushed
so vigorously, and with so much Success by the opposing
Party, that the Bill not only changed its Name, but in some
manner its Form.
Nay, in the Committee, the Bill run a very great Risk of
being quite lost; for after all the Amendments had been
made, the Bill then appeared to be so very different from
what had been sent them by the Lords, that when a Motion
was made for reporting the Bill with the Amendments to the
House, the same was strenuously opposed; and after a long
Debate, when the Question was put, the Division was 130
for reporting, and 130 against it; so that it came to the
casting Vote of Colonel Bladen, who was Chairman of
the Committee, and who gave his Vote in favour of the
Bill. But there was another Circumstance which contributed to the passing of this Bill, or rather prevented its being lost; for at this very time, when this equal Division happened, J—s E—ne of G——ge, Esq; and Mr.
S——r G——l for Scotland, were both in the House of
Peers engaged as Counsel in the Hearing of an Appeal
there; which both of them endeavoured as much as they
could to have put off, in order that they might be present
and upon their Duty in the House of Commons; but this
Request was refused; so that neither of them was present,
upon this Debate or Division in the House of Commons;
and as both of them had often before declared themselves
against every Part of this Bill, it is probable, if they had
been present, they would have voted against reporting the
Bill, which would have prevented its being in the Chairman's Power to do what he did.
The Motion being thus carried for reporting the Bill
with the Amendments, the Report was ordered to be received the next Morning; and Colonel Bladen having accordingly reported the Amendments that Day, the first Amendment made by the Committee, which was that for
leaving out the several Clauses for demolishing the NetherBow Port, and for taking away the Guard of the City of
Edinburgh, was read a second Time, and agreed to by the
House; then the other Amendment made by the Committee,
being the Clause for imposing a Fine upon the Corporation
of the City of Edinburgh, was read the second Time; and
a Motion being made for re-committing that Amendment,
after a long Debate, the Question was put upon that Motion,
and was carried in the Negative, by 144 to 123; after
which this Amendment was agreed to by the House; and
then the Bill was ordered to be read a third Time next
Morning.
The Bill relating to the City of Edinburgh, on account of Porteous's Murder; pass'd into an Act.
June 13. The said Bill was read a third Time; and several Amendments were made to the Title; which had
become necessary from the Amendments made in the Committee to the Bill itself; after which a Motion was made
for passing the Bill; and upon the Question's being put, it
was carried in the Affirmative by 128 to 101; and Colonel
Bladen was ordered to carry, the Bill to the Lords, and
acquaint them that the House had agreed to the same with
some Amendments, to which they desired the Concurrence
of their Lordships, which were agreed to, and the Bill
pass'd into an Act.
June 21. The King came to the House of Peers, and
put an End to the Session, with the following Speech.
The King's Speech at putting an End to the Third Session.
My Lords and Gentlemen,
"I am come to put an End to this Session of Parliament,
that you may be at Liberty to retire into your several
Countries, and, in your proper Stations to promote the
Peace and Welfare of the Kingdom.
"I return you my Thanks for the particular Proofs
you have given me of your Affection and Regard to my
Person and Honour; and hope, the Wisdom and Justice;
which you have shewn upon some extraordinary Incidents, will prevent all Thoughts of the like Attempts
for thé future. The Conduct of this Parliament has
been so uniform in all your Deliberations upon publick
Affairs, that it would be as unjust not to acknowledge
it, as it is unnecessary to enumerate the several Particulars,
Gentlemen of the House of Commons,
"Your Care, as well in raising the Supplies necessary
for the Service of the current Year, as in doing it in the
Manner least grievous and burthensome to my People, is
a fresh Instance of your equal Concern for the Support
of my Government, and for the true Interest of your
Country.
My Lords and Gentlemen,
"You cannot be insensible, what just Scandal and Offence the Licentiousness of the present Times, under the
Colour and Disguise of Liberty, gives to all honest and
sober Men, and how absolutely necessary it is to restrain
this excessive Abuse, by a due and vigorous Execution of
the Laws; Defiance of all Authority, Contempt of Magistracy, and even Resistance of the Laws, are become
too general, altho' equally prejudicial to the Prerogative
of the Crown, and the Liberties of the People, the Support of the one being inseparable from the Protection of
the other. I have made the Laws of the Land the constant Rule of my Actions; and I do, with Reason, expect in Return all that Submission to my Authority and
Government, which the same Laws have made the Duty,
and shall always be the Interest of my Subjects."
The Parliament prorogued.
Then the Lord Chancellor, by the King's Command,
prorogued the Parliament to the 4th of August.