Upon the Report which was made by the Chairman of the
Committee next Day to the House, the Estimate for the Regiment to be sent to Georgia was objected to, by some Gentlemen who spoke in the foregoing Debate against the Resolution: Accordingly a Debate ensued.
Colonel Mordaunt.
Sir,
Col. Mordaunt.
'I am surprised to find that some Gentlemen do not distinguish between the Army now proposed to be kept up, and
that Sort of Standing Armies which the Whigs in former
Reigns spoke and wrote so much against. The Whigs, 'tis
true, have always been against keeping up Standing Armies
in Time of Peace by the sole Authority of the King, and without Consent of Parliament; but no Whig ever said that it
was inconsistent with, or that it would be dangerous to our
Constitution, to keep a few regular Troops in Pay for one
Year, in case the Parliament should upon mature Deliberation conclude, that such a Thing was necessary, either for
the securing the Peace and Quiet of the Nation against the
secret Designs of foreign or domestick Enemies, or for giving Weight to any foreign Negotiation our Government
might then have upon the Carpet. This, I say, Sir, no Whig
ever opposed; and for this Reason, the Words, 'unless it be
with Consent of Parliament,' were inserted in the Declaration of our Rights and Liberties, which was presented to the
then Prince and Princess of Orange at the Revolution, and
which may properly be called the second Magna Charta of
this Nation.
'If the Whigs of those Days had been of the same Opinion which some Gentlemen seem now to be of; if they
had thought that the keeping up an Army of any Kind, or
for any Time, was inconsistent with our Constitution, that
Article in the Declaration would certainly have stood thus:
"That the raising or keeping a Standing Army within the
Kingdom, in Time of Peace, is against Law:" And I must
leave to Gentlemen to consider, whether such a Declaration
would not have been in itself ridiculous ? For my own Part,
I must be of Opinion, that it would have been a little inconsistent with common Sense to have declared, that an Army kept up by the Authority, and with the Consent of
King, Lords, and Commons, was an Army kept up against
Law; for it would, in my Opinion, be the same with declaring, that a Law agreed to by all the Branches of our Legislature was against Law. This, Sir, the Whigs of those
Days were sensible of; and if they were now alive, they
would be far from pretending to say, that it was inconsistent
with the Principles of a true Whig, to give his Vote for
keeping up, for one Year, by Authority of Parliament, such
a Number of regular Troops, as he thought absolutely necessary for the publick Good of the Kingdom.
'I have always gloried, Sir, in being thought a Whig;
I hope I shall never, by my Behaviour, either in this House,
or without Doors, give the least Occasion to the World to
think otherwise of me; and for this very Reason I am for
keeping up an Army, because I think the keeping up of an
Army absolutely necessary for supporting the Whig Interest,
and preserving the Peace and Quiet of the People. In every
Dispute that has happened of late Years about our Army, I
have looked upon the Question to be chiefly, whether Whig
or Tory should prevail ? And as I have always thought, as, I
believe, every unprejudiced Whig in the Kingdom thinks, that
if the Army should be disbanded, or very much reduced, the
Tory Interest would prevail; therefore I have generally
been against such Reductions, and always shall be extremely
cautious of agreeing to any such Proposition. Nay, I am
so firmly attached to the Whig Interest, that if I should
think four Times the Number of Troops absolutely necessary
for supporting that Interest, I would be for keeping up a
Standing Army four Times as numerous as that we have now
on Foot.
'That there are Discontents among the People, Sir, and
that those Discontents are too general, I shall readily agree;
but whether they are owing to Disaffection, I shall not pretend to determine: I am sure they are not owing to Reason;
for there is no Country in the World where the Liberties and
Properties of the Subject are more sacredly preserved, nor
are there any Subjects who pay less for the Ease and Security
they enjoy, than the Subjects of this Kingdom; but there
are some Men who seem to think they ought to pay nothing,
nor be at any Trouble, for preserving to themselves the Blessings of Peace and Security. To please such Men, or to prevent their being dissatisfied, is impossible; for Government
must always be expensive: Some Men must be employed for
managing and transacting the Affairs of the Society, and
some must now and then expose themselves to Danger for
the Defence of the Society; and it is both reasonable and necessary, that those who spend their whole Time, or a great
Part of their Time, in Government Affairs, as well as these
who venture their Lives for the Preservation of others, should
be rewarded by those, who by their Means are enabled to
prosecute their own private Affairs with Safety, and without
Interruption. There are other Men, and those not a few,
who are so fond of Novelty and Change, that they are continually wishing for publick Convulsions and Revolutions:
Such Men are of so odd a Temper, that they become dissatisfied with the Security they enjoy, and a long uninterrupted
Course of publick Happiness renders them compleatly miserable; and there are others, who never can be pleased, unless they have the intire Direction of all publick Affairs;
therefore when they are not employed, and chiefly employed, they are continually spreading virulent Libels, and seditious Pamphlets against those that are, by which Means
many unwary Persons are caught, and are made to believe,
that the Nation is ruined and undone, though every Man in
the Nation, who is tolerably frugal and industrious, finds
himself in an easy and thriving Condition. These are three
of the Causes of those Discontents that prevail at present among the People; and if to these we add downright Disaffection, which I am afraid is much more general than some
Gentlemen imagine, I believe we may account for all our
Discontents, without loading our Government with being
the Cause of any of them, except those of the second Sort I
have mentioned; for to the wise and steady Conduct of our
Government, we must attribute the long and uninterrupted
publick Happiness we have enjoyed, and consequently the
Dissatisfaction of all those, who are fond of Novelties and
Changes.
'But, Sir, let the Cause of our Discontents be what it
will, they are so general, that if it were not for our Army,
I am convinced our present Establishment would be
in great Danger of being overturned; I am convinced his
Majesty could not live in Safety in St. James's Palace; nay,
I doubt if our present Royal Family could remain three
Days in the Kingdom: Therefore, as a Standing Army is
at present absolutely necessary for preserving our happy
Establishment, for the Security of our Royal Family, and
for defending his Majesty's Person, no Gentleman, who has
a true Regard for any of the three, can be against keeping
up a Standing Army by Authority of Parliament, at least
for this ensuing Year; and as I am convinced, that a less
Number of regular Troops than we have at present, will
not be sufficient for these great Ends, I must be against the
Reduction proposed, or any Reduction that can be proposed
at present.
'I say, Sir, I am now against any Reduction that can be
proposed; for tho' I do not think we can now with Safety
make the least Reduction of our Army, yet in a few Years,
perhaps next Session, I may be of a different Opinion. I
shall always think that we ought never to keep a greater
Number of Troops in Pay, than is absolutely necessary for
preserving the Peace and Tranquillity of the People; but
my Way of thinking in this Respect does not proceed from
any Apprehensions I am under, that an Army kept up in
the same Method of our present Army is, can ever be
of any dangerous Consequence to our Constitution. No,
Sir, it proceeds entirely from the Expence, which necessarily attends the keeping up of a Standing Army; which
Expence the People must be loaded with; and I shall never
be for loading the People with any greater Expence, than I
think absolutely necessary for their Preservation. For this
Reason, I hope we may soon have an Opportunity of
giving the People a little Ease, by making a Reduction in
our Army; because I am of the same Opinion with my
honourable Friend near me: I believe the Disaffection,
which I take to be the chief Cause of our present Discontents, will diminish by Degrees, nay, I hope it will in a
few Years totally evanish; and if there were no considerable
Disaffection, nor any great Number of Jacobites in the
Kingdom, I am convinced a much smaller Number of
Troops than what we have now on Foot, would be sufficient
for keeping in Awe those Men, who are discontented only
because they are not employed, and also those who are
fond of Changes and Revolutions, as well as those who
are so unreasonable as to expect that their Lives, Liberties,
and Fortunes, should be preserved, without their being ever
obliged to expose themselves to any Danger, or to put themselves to any Trouble or Expence, on that Account.
'When the disaffected Party becomes inconsiderable, I
shall with Pleasure, Sir, give my Consent for making a
Reduction in our Army; but 'till then I cannot agree to it;
and I must say, I can never suppose the disaffected Party inconsiderable, as long as I see the Discontented numerous,
without an apparent Cause for such a general Discontent,
from some notorious Oppressions or Malversations in our Administration; for unless some Cause be evident, I shall
always believe that most of those who appear discontented,
are really disaffected. As I must look upon such a Discontent
as incurable, I shall always be for treating those that
are under it in the same Way with Incurables of another
Sort, that is, by putting it out of their Power to do Mischief;
which can be done only by keeping up a sufficient Number
of regular Troops.
'But even suppose, Sir, that the Discontents of the
People proceeded from notorious Oppressions or Malversations in our Government: Surely, no Gentleman will say
our Army ought to be reduced before those Discontents are
removed in a proper and legal Way; because, by so doing,
you would encourage your People to take Vengeance of
those that had injured them in a riotous and tumultuous
Manner, which is a Method of doing Justice, that I am
sure ought not to be encouraged in any well regulated Society.
In such a Case, the only prudent Method we could take, is
that which is prescribed to us by our happy Constitution, I
mean that of a Parliamentary Enquiry; and after you have
satisfied your People by bringing the Guilty to condign Punishment, in a legal and Parliamentary Method, you might
then with Safety venture to make a Reduction of your Army.
'Thus, Sir, if there are such Discontents in the Nation,
as the Gentlemen of the other Side of the Question seem to
think there are, let those Discontents proceed from what
Cause you will, the present must appear to be a very improper
Season for making any Reduction of your Army; and as to
the Charge of keeping up about 6000 Men for one Year
only, which is all the Difference between us, tho' I shall
grant it is a Charge the Nation ought not to be unnecessarily loaded with, yet it is not so great, as to make any considerable Addition to the publick Debts newly contracted,
nor can it greatly prevent our being able to pay off the old;
for the Difference as to Expence, between maintaining
18,000 Men, and maintaining 12,000 for one Year only, does
not exceed 216,000 l. which can make no very extraordinary
Figure in the publick Accounts of this Nation, and must be
looked on as a Sum most wisely and frugally expended, because the Nation is thereby insured against the vast Expence,
as well as Danger, the Naion would be put to, by an Insurrection or Invasion, which might probably be the Consequence of any present Reduction of our Army.
'But suppose, Sir, there were no Discontents or Disaffection among our People, suppose we were in no possible
Danger of any Insurrection or Invasion; yet considering
the present State of our foreign Affairs, considering the
precarious State of the Peace now subsisting between Spain
and us, and the many Grounds of Quarrel we have with that
Nation, I must think it would be very imprudent in us,
at present, to make any Reduction of our regular Troops;
for the Regard a Nation meets with in all foreign Negotiations, very much depends upon the Opinion Foreigners have of
her Power; and that Opinion now depends chiefly upon the
Number of regular Troops she has in her Pay. None of
our Neighbours put any Trust in their own Militia, and
therefore it cannot be suposed they have any Regard for ours,
or that, they would shew us any Respect on Account of our
Militia were it in a much better Condition than it is in at
present, or were it in as good a Condition as any Militia can
be put in. For this Reason, to the End that this Nation may have
its due Weight in all foreign Negotiations, we ought always to
keep up a good Body of regular Troops; and particularly at present, if we have a Mind to obtain any Redress from Spain, we
ought not to reduce any Part of our Army; for that Redress
must be obtained either by Negotiation or by Force of Arms:
If we propose to obtain it by Negotiation, a Reduction of
our Army would diminish the Weight of any Negotiation
we can carry on for that Purpose; and if we propose, or
should be obliged, to make Use of Force for obtaining it,
we must rather add to than diminish our Army. From all
which I must conclude, that at present it would be highly
imprudent in us to make any Reduction, especially such a
considerable Reduction as is now proposed.
The Right Hon. Lord (fn. 1) Polwarth spoke to this Effect, viz.
Lord Polwarth.
Sir,
'I am sorry to find the Opinions of our Whig Ancestors,
about Standing Armies, so much mistaken as they seem to
be by some Gentlemen who have spoke in this Debate; for
with Respect to the Effects or Consequences of a Standing
Army, it will appear that our Anceitors thought there was
no Difference, between a Standing Army kept up without
the Authority of a Parliament, and a Standing Army, or a
Land Force, as the Courtiers affected to call it, kept up
from Year to Year by the Authority of Parliament. I shall grant,
that before the Revolution all our Disputes about Standing
Armies, related to such as were kept up by the sole Authority of the King, and without Consent of Parliament: For
before that Time no Whig supposed that a free Parliament
would ever give their. Consent to the keeping up of a Standing
Army within the Kingdom in Time of Peace. This was the true
Reason for their agreeing to the inserting those Words, "unless
it be with Consent of Parliament," in the Declaration of our
Rights and Liberties. By these Words they thought they
could not in the least derogate from our Security, against
the keeping up a standing Army in Time of Peace; because
they could not suppose that a free Parliament would ever
consent to any such Thing: But if they had forseen or imagined, that some future Parliament might be prevailed on to
give their Consent to the keeping up of a standing Army in
Time of Peace, that Article in the Declaration of our
Rights and Liberties, would certainly have been drawn up
in such Terms as not to admit of any such Exception.
They would not have said, that the raising or keeping up
a Standing Army within the Kingdom, in Time of Peace,
is against Law; because the Expression would have been
improper, and such as could not have been made Use of by
any Man who understood our Language; but they might,
and would have said, that the raising or keeping up a Standing Army within the Kingdom, in Time of Peace, is inconsistent with our Constitution; for tho' a Law agreed to
by King, Lords, and Commons, cannot be said to be against Law, yet it may be, and may properly be said to be,
inconsistent with our Constitution. If in some future ambitious Reign, and during the Course of a corrupt and dependent Parliament, our King, Lords, and Commons,
should agree to a Law for vesting an absolute Power in the
King, such a Law could not be said to be against a Law;
but surely such a Law might properly be said to be inconsistent with our Constitution.
'I shall not say, Sir, that the passing of a Law for providing our King with such a Standing Army, as may be
sufficient for enabling him to assume an arbitrary Power
whenever he pleases, is a Law of this Nature; because I
am not of Opinion with Mr. Hobbes, that Power gives
Right; but I must be of Opinion, that he who gives another Man Power to take his Right from him, may in some
measure be said to give up his Right; for Right is seldom
of any Signification against a Power that cannot be resisted;
and a standing Army kept up from Year to Year, by Authority of Parliament, is certainly as irresistible, and consequently as inconsistent with the Preservation of our Rights
and Liberties, as a standing Army kept up from Year to
Year without any such Authority. The Distinction between these two Sorts of standing Armies, is a Distinction
which could not be made, nor ever was made, in this Kingdom, till the Year 1697: Then, indeed, the Courtiers,
who were for obtaining the Consent of Parliament to the
keeping up of a standing Army in Time of Peace, found
out this Distinction; for I must observe, that in all Reigns,
Courtiers seem to have been pretty quick at finding a Distinction without a Difference; but when I reflect upon the
Transactions of that Year, I am extremely surprized to
hear any Gentleman affirm, that no Whig ever said, that it
was inconsistent with, or that it would be dangerous to, our
Constitution, to keep a few regular Troops in Pay for one
Year, in Case the Parliament should give their Consent.
Was not this the very Question then in Dispute? And did
not all the true Whigs range themselves upon the affirmative Side of the Question? Did not they all, both in their
Speeches and Writings, affirm, that the keeping up of a
standing Army from Year to Year, whether with or without the Consent of Parliament, would be of the most dangerous Consequence to our Constitution? They did not then
say that the Parliament ought not to consent to the keeping
up a standing Army in Time of Peace, because we were
then under no Necessity for so doing; but they said we never
could be under any such Necessity; because the Danger we
subjected ourselves to, by keeping up a standing Army in
Time of Peace, was greater, and more to be dreaded, than
any other Danger we could ever be exposed to.
'This, Sir, will appear from the whole Tenor and
Spirit of the Pamphlets that were wrote by the staunch Whigs
upon that Occasion; particularly from the two Arguments
against a standing Army, published in the Year 1697, and
said to have been wrote by a Gentleman, whom all the
World must allow to have been a true Whig, and an honest
Man; I mean the late Mr. Trenchard, who in one of these
Pamphlets expresly says, that an authorized standing Army
(meaning an Army kept up by Authority of Parliament)
is worse than a foreign Invasion, and Conquest from abroad.
This, Sir, he not only gives as his own Opinion, but he
gives very substantial Reasons for supporting his Opinion.
That honest Gentleman was in the same Case with many
Gentlemen now in this House: He could not distinguish, at
least he could find but very little Difference, between a standing Army kept up by Authority of Parliament, and a
standing Army kept up without any such Authority; for he
says, the Army kept up by the late K. James were Aids and
Instruments of arbitrary Government, without any legal
Authority, and therefore might have been resisted and removed as a Nusance, as soon as the Nation found itself able;
and an Army kept up by Authority of Parliament, he
likewise calls Aids and Instruments of arbitrary Government; but, says he, they are legal Instruments, and therefore may enslave us by Authority; nor can they be resisted,
because they can plead our own Act and Deed against us.
So that in this Gentleman's Opinion, a standing Army kept
up by Authority of Parliament, is worse than a standing
Army kept up without any such Authority; and therefore,
if he were still alive, we may suppose he would insist upon
its being inconsistent with the Principles of a true Whig, to
give his Vote in Parliament for keeping up a standing Army,
but for one. Year; for he then foretold what we have since
in Part found by Experience to be true, that by the Parliament's giving its Consent for keeping up a standing Army in
Time of Peace, but for one Year, the Courtiers always
mean a Consent for keeping it up in Secula Seculorum.
'Having thus, Sir, shewn the true Sentiments of the old
Whigs, and by that Means justified their Memory against
what I take to be an Aspersion thrown upon their Understanding, I must now endeavour to vindicate the present
Whig Interest, by shewing the Impropriety of that Compliment, which the honourable Gentleman has been pleased to
pass upon the Tories. He has told us, that a standing Army
is necessary for preserving the Whig Interest, and that if our
Army should be disbanded, or very much reduced, the Tory
Interest would certainly prevail. God forbid, Sir, it should
be so ! for if it were, I am sure I should very soon become a Tory; but I differ so much from the honourable
Gentleman, that I am convinced the Whig Interest never
will be supported by an Army, nor can the Tory Interest be
supported by any other Means. This is my Opinion; but as he
and I probably differ extremely in what we call the Whig and
the Tory Interest, I must explain what I mean by them, and what
Sort of Gentlemen ought, in my Opinion, to be called Whigs
or Tories. The Whig Interest I take to be that Party of Men in
the Kingdom, who have a due Respect to the antient Powers and
Perogatives of the Crown, but think that they ought always
to be made subservient to the publick Good, and that they
are bounded by the Rights and Liberties of the People:
The Tory Interest, again, I take to be that Party of Men
in the Kingdom, who have such a Veneration for the Powers
and Perogatives of the Crown, as to think, that the publick
Good may sometimes be made subservient to them, and that
they can be bounded by nothing but the Pleasure of the
King and his Ministers. In short, the former is the Party
that sets up for the Liberty of the Subject, without incroaching upon any Power or Perogative the Crown can justly
claim; the latter is that which sets up for giving such a
Loose to the Powers and Perogatives of the Crown, as to
leave no Liberty to the Subject.
'Now, Sir, I do not call a Man a Whig or Tory from
his Behaviour twenty, a dozen, or half a dozen Years ago:
I give every Man the Denomination of Whig or Tory according to his present Behaviour. If a Man set out in the
first Part of his Life with the Character of a Tory, and acted
as such for several Years, yet if he now appears in the
Cause of Liberty, and opposes every Scheme that he thinks
may tend towards the Establishment of arbitrary Power, I
must call such a Man a Whig, and while he behaves in the
same Manner, I shall always suppose him to be in the Whig
Interest. On the other hand, suppose a Man to have been
twenty Years since, or but one Year since, one of the most
zealous Assertors of Liberty in the Kingdom, yet if I find
that he is now a sanguine Supporter of Prerogative, and ready to contrive or agree to any Scheme that may tend to increase the Power of the Crown, I must call such a Man a
Tory, and I must call that Interest which he is ingaged in,
the Tory Interest. But I am apt to suspect that my honourable Friend calls this the Whig Interest, and if so, I shall
readily agree with him, that what he calls the Whig Interest,
being that which I call the Tory Interest, cannot be supported
without a Standing Army. This may be a prevailing Argument with him for being against any Reduction, but it is an
Argument that has a quite different Influence with me; for I
think no Interest, nor any Party of Men, ought to be supported, if a Standing Army becomes necessary for their Support.
'I come now, Sir, to an Argument which I mention
with Regret. I am sorry to hear it said by any Gentleman
in this House, that because the People of this Nation are discontented, therefore they must be oppressed; for whatever
other Gentlemen may think, I take this to be the true
Meaning of the Argument, when they say, That because
the People are discontented, therefore a numerous Standing
Army must be kept up for keeping them in Obedience. To
justify their making use of this Argument, we are told that
the present Discontents among the People are chiefly owing
to Disaffection. If this were the Case, I must confess I
should be under a very perplexing Dilemma between the Regard I have for the illustrious Family now upon the
Throne, and the Regard I have for the Liberties of my
Country; but, thank God! this is far from being the Case;
there is not the least Pretence for saying that any of our present Discontents are owing to Disaffection, because in all
the Riots and Tumults we have lately had, there has not
been the least Muttering heard against the King, nor the
least Indignity offered, no not so much as to any Servant
belonging to the Royal Family; and, if any of these Mobs
or Riots had proceeded from Disaffection, if the People had
been spirited up by Jacobites, if they had been governed by
any Sort of Jacobite Principles, or if they had entertained
in their Hearts any Sort of Rancour, Malice, or Disaffection
against the Royal Family, we cannot suppose them such Politicians, or that they would have put such a Restraint upon
their private Sentiments, as not to shew the least Sign of
them upon such Occasions.
'This shews, Sir, how groundless it is to pretend that our
present Royal Family could not remain three Days in England,
if it were not for our regular Troops, especially that such a
numerous Standing Army as we have at present, is necessary
for defending his Majesty's Person from Insults or Dangers.
No, Sir, whatever may be the Case of some of those who are
near St. James's Palace, I am sure his Majesty and all the rest
of the Royal Family might remain at St. James's Palace, or any
other Part of the Kingdom, in the utmost Safety, tho' neither
of them had any such Thing as that now called a Soldier to
attend them. Of this now we have a glaring Proof every
Day before our Eyes. His Royal Highness the Prince of
Wales has at present no Guards to attend him: He passes
every Day to and fro in the Streets of London, and travels
every where about London, without so much as one Soldier
to guard him: Nay he has not so much as one Centry upon
his House in St. James's Square; and yet his Royal Highness
lives, I believe, in as great Security at his House in St. James's
Square, without one Centry to guard him, as his Majesty can be
suppos'd to do in St. James's Palace with all the Guards about him.'
Mr. Lytelton spoke next in Substance thus:
Mr. Lytelton.
Sir,
'By what I can collect from the long Debate we have had
upon this Question, I find the three chief Arguments made
use of against the Reduction proposed are, the Fears we are
under from the Pretender, the Discontents that are among
our People, and the Care we ought to take of preserving that
Weight and Influence, which this Nation ought to have in
all foreign Negotiations. These, Sir, are the Reasons,
and these only are given as the Reasons, for keeping up the
same Number of mercenary Troops but for this insuing
Year, which I must think is a little surprising; for if there
be any Weight in any of these Reasons, I think it may be
easily shewn, that they will always be as good as they are at
present; and therefore, if any one of them be an Argument for
keeping up the same Number of mercenary Troops but for
one Year longer, it must be an Argument for keeping up the
same Number for ever. Nay, I believe every one of them
will gather new Weight every succeeding Year, and
however imaginary they may be at present, I am afraid
they will at last become real, and may become good
Reasons, not only for keeping up the same Number we have
at present, but for keeping up a much greater Number: I am
even convinced they will at last become good Reasons for introducing and keeping up a large Body of foreign mercenary
Troops; for if our People should become generally disaffected, as well as discontented, our Government could not rely upon an Army raised and recruited from a People generally disaffected: The Soldiers, at least, of such an Army,
would be apt to embrace the first Opportunity for following
their natural Inclinations.
'As to the Discontents that are said to be at present so
general among our People, I must with Sorrow confess that I
think they are but too general; but I think their Causes are far
from being such as have been assigned. An hon. Gentleman has
indeed given us a very ingenious Description of what he takes to
be the Causes of our present Discontents; but these Causes, Sir,
are such as must for ever subsist, and must for ever produce
the same Effects; so that if there are no Discontents in the
Nation, but what proceed from one or other of these Causes,
we can never expect to see an End or a Diminution of our
Discontents, and consequently we can never expect to see an
End or a Diminution of our standing Army. The first two,
I mean the Discontents of those, who are so unreasonable as
to expect Safety and Security, without their being at any
Trouble or Expence for that Purpose, and the Discontents of
those who are so fond of Changes, as to risk their own Destruction rather than not to have one, must both be perpetual;
for if there are any such Men in the Kingdom as either of
these, there is no Reason to expect they will ever be fewer:
Nay, as these Causes are such as proceed from the Nature of
Mankind, they are such as must not only for ever subsist, but
must in every Nation subsist; and consequently, the Discontents proceeding from these, must be a Reason for keeping
a numerous standing Army on Foot, not only at all Times,
but in all Nations. From hence I may say, that some of
our Neighbours, as well as we, are much obliged to the honourable Gentleman, for furnishing them with a Pretence for
keeping up great Armies, which I am persuaded none of
them ever thought of before. But every Man who knows
any Thing of the Nature of Mankind, must be convinced
that there cannot be in this Nation, nor in any other, a
great Number of such Men; and therefore no Government
can stand in need of a numerous mercenary Army, for keeping
such Men in Obedience.
'Another Cause, Sir, which the honourable Gentleman
has been pleased to assign for our Discontents, is likewise a
Cause which must for ever, and every where, subsist, because
it depends upon the Nature of Mankind; and it must in every
free Country produce the same Effects it does in this. In
every free Country the People have a Right to make their
own Laws, and to enquire into the Administration of their
publick Affairs; therefore they have a Right to know what
may be said for or against either. In such Countries, the
most wise and just Administration, the most prudent and necessary Laws or publick Measures, may be traduced and misrepresented by some Men, for selfish Ends; but in every such
Dispute, the Government has, from the very Nature of all
Governments, a great Advantage: Those who speak or
write against the Measures of the Government, even supposing those Measures to be oppressive and unjust, or absurd
and ridiculous, are always under a great Restraint; they are
always in Danger of exceeding those Bounds that are prescribed
by the Laws of their Country, and have often suffered severely on that Account: On the other Hand, those who speak
or write in support of such Measures, are never under any
such Restraint, and are always richly rewarded; which is
an Encouragement their Antagonists can seldom expect,
and much seldomer meet with. For this Reason it is impossible to suppose, that by any Sort of Enquiry, by any
Sort of Writing or Speaking, any general Discontent can be
raised against a just and wise Administration: On the contrary, the more their Measures are canvassed, the more general Satisfaction they must give; for Truth always appears
brighter, the more it is exposed to the Light.
The next Cause of Discontent, which the honourable
Gentleman has been pleased to call downright Disaffection,
is, 'tis true, something peculiar to this Nation; but this
Cause must likewise for ever subsist, because, I believe, we
shall always have a Popish Pretender without, and some few
Papists within the Kingdom: Nay, I know not but that we
may always have some Protestants possessed with the Notions
of passive Obedience and Non-resistance, however ridiculous
they may appear to those who can reason coolly upon the Subject; but I am sure the Number of this Sort of Protestants,
is not considerable at present, nor is the Number of Papists so
considerable as to afford any Colour for saying, that downright Disaffection is one of the principal Causes of those Discontents, which are at present so general among our People.
'Thus, Sir, I have shewn, I think, that all the Causes of
Discontent, that have been assigned by those who argue in favour of a standing Army, are such as must for ever subsist, and
such as must always have the same Effect they have at present;
so that if there are now no Discontents among us, but such as
proceed from one or other of these Causes, our Discontents, as
I have said, must always be as general as they are at present, and consequently we must always have the same Reason for keeping up the same Number of mercenary Troops:
But I am of Opinion, that most of our present Discontents proceed from very different Causes, and that the keeping up of
such a numerous standing Army within the Kingdom, in
Time of Peace, is one of the chief, tho' not the only Cause,
of most of our present Discontents. The honourable Gentleman has told us, that none of our Discontents can be
owing to Reason, because there is no Country in the World
where the Liberties and Properties of the Subject are more
sacredly preserved, nor are there any Subjects who pay less
for the Ease and Security they enjoy, than the Subjects of
this Kingdom. This may, perhaps, be his Opinion; but
even he himself must acknowledge there are Multitudes of
Men in the Kingdom, who think otherwise; Men who are
neither Jacobites, nor fond of Changes, nor such as would
grudge to pay their proportionable Share towards every necessary publick Expence. Can any Man think his Property
sacredly preserved, when he is obliged to pay heavy Taxes
for supporting a publick Expence, for which he thinks there
is not the least Occasion? This is the Case of most Men in
the Nation: I believe nine Parts in ten of our People think
a standing Army of 12,000 Men, more than we have Occasion for in Time of Peace; therefore nine Parts in ten
of our People must think the keeping up of the supernumerary 6,000 a publick Expence for which there is not the
least Occasion, and consequently, nine Parts in ten of our
People must think their Property is not so sacredly preserved as it ought to be. Can any Man think either his Liberty or Property secure, who thinks that both depend upon the
Moderation of a Court, and the Honour of a mercenary
Army? This I think has been clearly shewn, in the Course
of this Debate, to be our Case at present, and that it must
always be our Case as long as we keep such a numerous mercenary Army within the Kingdom; and no Man who thinks
so, which is, I believe, the Case of most thinking Men in
the Kingdom, can think either his Liberty or Property so
secure as it ought to be.
The Liberties and Properties of the Subject may be as secure and as sacredly preserved in this, as in any neighbouring
Country; but this, Sir, is not sufficient. If our Neighbours are
all Slaves, are we to be pleased with being less Slaves, or happier Slaves, than they? No, Sir: Nothing can please our
People, nor ought they to be pleased with any Thing less
than having their Liberties and Properties as secure and as sacredly preserved, as they ought to be by the Nature of our
Constitution; and this they never can, as long as we unnecessarily keep up a numerous Standing Army in Time of
Peace. It is not therefore a comparative, it is a real Security our People expect; and every one must be discontented,
who thinks he does not enjoy that Security. This, I say, Sir,
is one of the chief Causes of our present Discontents; and as
it has been admitted on all Sides, that Discontent may at last
deviate into Disaffection, those who are really afraid of the Pretender, and have nothing else to fear, ought, and certainly will;
be for removing this Cause of Discontent as soon as possible.
'It may, as I have said, Sir, be true, that in this Country the Liberties and Properties of the Subject are as sacredly
preserved as in any other; but I am surprised to hear it said,
that there are no Subjects who pay less for the Ease and Security they enjoy, than the Subjects of this Kingdom; for I
will venture to affirm, and, if it were necessary, I could
from Calculation and Comparison make it appear, that the
Taxes paid by the People of this Kingdom yearly, amount
to a greater Sum, in Proportion to their Numbers, than is
paid yearly by any People, I believe, under the Sun; therefore, if there be any publick Expence incurred, that is not
absolutely necessary, or if any Man has of late Years with
Impunity involved the Nation in Expences, which were
not necessary, whoever thinks so, must have Reason to be
discontented, without imputing his Discontent to any of the
Causes the hon. Gentleman has been pleased to assign; and I
am afraid there are but too many who think so; but whether
they have just Ground to think so, I shall not take upon me to
determine. If they have not, surely some proper Methods may
be found, to perswade them they are in the wrong; for to
pretend to convince them by a Standing Army, I must look
on to be the same with that Method of Arguing, which Popish
Inquisitions make use of for the Conversion of Hereticks and
Infidels; or, as a facetious Author of our own has expressed it,
Such as do build their Faith upon
The holy Text of Pike and Gun. (fn. 2)
'I come now, Sir, to the third Reason that has been
insisted on for our keeping up the same Number of regular
Troops, which is, That it is necessary for preserving the
Weight and Influence this Nation ought to have in all foreign Negotiations. This likewise is brought as a Reason
for keeping up the same Number of Forces, only for this
ensuing Year; but does not every one see, that this must be
as strong a Reason with next Session, and with every succeeding Session of Parliament, as it can be with the present? If
the Weight and Influence we now have in foreign Negotiations depend upon the Number of mercenary Troops we
keep in our Pay, what Reason can be assigned for its not
depending a Year hence, or two Years hence, upon the same
Cause, as much as it can be supposed to do at present? This
Reason, therefore, like the two former, must be a perpetual
Reason for keeping up the same Number of mercenary
Troops; for I fancy it will not be supposed there can ever
happen a Time, when we shall have no Occasion for having
any Influence in foreign Negotiations; but this, Sir, can be
no Reason for keeping up a numerous Standing Army in
Time of Peace, either in the present or any future Time;
for I am certain, the Weight and Influence of this Nation in
foreign Negotiations of all Kinds, and in all Countries, must
depend upon the Wisdom of our Councils, and the Unity
and Confidence that subsists between our King and People.
Our Neighbours are fully sensible of the Power of this Nation, and will always have a due Regard for that Power,
when they think it is united, and prudently directed. This
we may be convinced of from every Part of our History,
and this is one of the strongest Arguments with me for reducing our Army; for by keeping up a numerous Standing
Army in Time of Peace, we shall always convince Foreigners, that there are Discords and Animosities between our
King and People, or that there is great Folly in our Councils;
because, if there are no Discords or Animosities between our
King and People, considering the Situation of our Country,
and the Superiority of our Fleet, we can have no Occasion
for keeping up a numerous Land Army in Time of Peace;
therefore no wise Administration will put their People to
such an unnecessary Expence; and no Foreigner will have
any great Regard for our Power, if it were much greater
than it is, as long as they are convinced, that our Power is
disunited, or that it is under the Direction of weak and ridiculous Councils.
'This, Sir, I am afraid is an Effect which we feel at
present. We have for so many Years kept up a numerous
Standing Army in Time of Peace, that Foreigners, I am afraid, begin to think the Power of this Nation is disunited, or
not prudently directed; and therefore have not shewed us so
much Regard, in some late Negotiations, as they ought to
have done. I am convinced they will find themselves mistaken, if they should at last by their Conduct oblige us to
make use of our Power, in order to convince them of their
Error; for this is one of those few Errors which can be removed only by Force of Arms; but a numerous Land Army
can never be the most proper Sort of Force for this Nation to
make use of, even for such a Purpose; and much less can it
be proper or necessary for us to provide any such Army, till
we have Occasion for them. Our Neighbours all know we
can have such Armies whenever we have a Mind, because we
have Money to pay for them; and if we cannot march them
by Land, they know we have an irresistible Fleet, which
can convey them where-ever we please to direct our Vengeance.
'With respect to Spain, Sir, I am sorry to say it must
be confessed, that we have negotiated in vain, and they have
plundered with Success for too many Years; but what can
this be owing to? Can it be thought they are ignorant of the
Power of Great Britain, or that they would dare to stir it up
to Vengeance, if they thought it were united, and wisely
conducted: No, Sir, this is not to be presumed: They are
certainly of Opinion, that there are Discords and Animofrties
subsisting between his Majesty and his People; and this Mistake of theirs can be owing to nothing but to our having kept
up in this Island, for so many Years, such a numerous Standing Army; therefore, if we expect to obtain Redress from them
by Negotiation, the most probable Way of succeeding would
be, to make an immediate Reduction of our Army. But suppose we can expect no such Thing; suppose we are now
fully convinced, that the only Way of obtaining Reparation
must be by Force of Arms, what Reason can we have for
keeping up a numerous Land Army for that Purpose? No
Man will pretend, that in Case of a War with Spain, we
can or ought to invade that Kingdom with such a Land Force,
as may be superior to any Army they can send against it: All
we have Occasion for, is to send a superior Fleet, with some
Land Forces on board, to infest, their Coasts, till we have
brought them to reasonable Terms; and for this Purpose we
could spare Troops enough from Britain and Ireland, even
though the present Reduction should be agreed to; or if we
could not spare enough of our own, what should hinder us
from hiring as many from some of our Neighbours, as we
can have Occasion for upon any such Occasion?
'For this Reason, Sir, I little expected that the present
Situation we are in with respect to Spain, should have been
mentioned as a Reason for Land Forces; but I am surprised
they should mention it for this Purpose, after they had forgot to make the least mention of it, when they were racking their Invention to find Reasons for the general Discontent that reigns at present among our People; for can it
be questioned but that the Depredations and Barbarities committed by the Spaniards with Impunity, for so many Years,
against our Merchants and Seamen, occasion great Discontents and great Heart-burnings among our People? Every
Man who has been plundered, insulted, or cruelly used by
the Spaniards, and who has complained in vain to those who
are in Duty bound to give Ear to his Complaints, must be
dissatisfied; and all those who have heard their melancholy
Tale, must be dissatisfied, if they have any Regard for the
Honour, the Trade, or the Happiness of their native Country, which must all be greatly affected by suffering such Indignities to pass unpunished. I hope we have always been,
I hope we still are, in a Condition to take proper Vengeance,
whenever we find that no Sort of peaceable Measures can
procure us Reparation or Security; but if we are not, I suspect there must be some Fault in our late Conduct; and if
there is, it ought to he inquired into in a proper Way, and
punished in a severe Manner: It would give some Satisfaction to the Sufferers and to the People, to see Justice done
upon those (if there be any such) who, by their ill Conduct, have brought the Nation into such a forlorn and helpless Condition.
'This, Sir, leads me naturally to consider a Supposition
that has been made, and an Argument for a numerous Standing
Army that has been drawn from it, by an honourable Gentleman in this Debate, with both of which I am not a little
surprized. It has been supposed, that the Discontents of
our People proceed from notorious Oppressions or Malversations in our Administration, and from thence it has been argued, that our Army ought not to be reduced till the Authors of such Oppressions and Malversations have been tried
and punished in a proper and legal Method. With respect to
any of our present Discontents, or our present Administration,
I am sure no such Supposition can be made; but allow me,
Sir, to make such a Supposition with respect to some future
Administration. Suppose then, that in some future Age, an
Administration, or a Set of Ministers, or, if you please, one
prime and sole Minister, should for several Years, under the
Shadow and Protection of a Standing Army, carry on oppressive and ridiculous Measures; would not these Ministers,
or that Minister, during that whole Time, endeavour to put
the Army entirely under the Command of his Creatures and
Dependants? And would not he, at the same Time, endeavour to bring as many of those Creatures and Dependants
into Parliament as possible? By this latter Method he might,
perhaps, be able to prevent any Enquiry or Prosecution's being brought into Parliament against him; and in case, by
the Virtue, or the Resentment of the People, he should fail
in this Method of protecting himself, he might then probably, by Means of the former Method, be able to treat the
Parliament as Oliver Cromwell treated the Parliament in his
Time. Now, I would be glad to know, what Gentleman
would be such a Fool as to move for any Sort of Prosecution
in Parliament against a Minister, who, he knew, had a
Majority in that very Parliament, that would justify him at
any Rate: Or what Parliament would be such Fools as to
begin a Prosecution against a Minister, that had an Army
at his Beck sufficient for turning them out of Doors.
'In every such Case, Sir, a Reduction of the Army must
be the first Step, that could possibly with any Prudence be
taken; for if the Friends of the People should find themselves
disappointed in that Step, it would be ridiculous, it would
be Madness in them, to expect Success in any legal Method
they could take, for bringing the Authors of such Oppressions
or Malversations to Justice.
'But if they should succeed in this, they might from thence
conceive some Hopes; and the People would look upon it as
a preparatory Step for relieving them from all their Grievances: They would then begin to put a Trust and Confidence in their Parliament, and would wait with Patience for
that Relief, which they saw their Parliament was about to
give them; for there is no Example in our Histories, of our
People's ever endeavouring to take Vengeance, or to do themselves Justice, in a riotous and tumultuous Manner, as long
as they have any Hopes of obtaining it in a legal or Parliamentary Method. Therefore, if ever this Nation should
happen to fall into such unfortunate Circumstances, as have
been supposed, a Reduction of the Army would be the most
proper Method the Parliament could take, for preventing
Mobs, Tumults, or Insurrections among the People; and it
would be the only Method, by which the Parliament, or at
least the People's Friends in Parliament, could hope for Success in their generous Design of relieving their Country.
'Thus, Sir, I think I have shewn, that none of the Arguments made use of for our keeping up the same Number
of Forces for this ensuing Year, are such as can be of any
Weight, and that if they were now of any Weight, they
are such as not only must have always the same Weight, but
must every Year acquire an additional Weight: Therefore,
with Mr. Trenchard, who has been already mentioned in
this Debate, I must conclude, that those who make use of
such Arguments, for keeping up such an Army for one Year
only, are really in their Hearts for keeping up such an Army in Secula Seculorum; and to make us swallow this bitter Pill the more glibly, we are told, why would you make
a Reduction in your Army? The few additional Troops
you propose to reduce, cost the Nation but a mere Trifle
yearly: You will save but 216,000 l. a Year by the Reduction proposed; which can make no extraordinary Figure in
the publick Accounts of this Nation. What Figure such a
Saving may make in that Gentleman's Eyes, I do not know,
Sir; but a Saving of 216,000 l. will, I am sure, make a
very considerable Figure in the Eyes of every Gentleman,
who is not accustomed to deal in Millions. Even this Saving
alone for twenty Years past, would have paid off above six
Millions of publick Debt; for an Annuity of 216,000 l. at
Four per Cent. compound Interest, amounts in twenty Years
to near 6,500,000 l. and notwithstanding the great Debt we
owe, I must think that a Payment of 6,500,000 l. would
make no inconsiderable Figure, when compared with the
Sum Total of our publick Debts. But this is not all; for
if we had reduced our Army twenty Years since to twelve
thousand Men, we might long before now have reduced
them to a much less Number; for the Nature of a Standing
Army is such, that the more you reduce it, the more you
may, and the more you increase it, the greater Reason will
you always have to increase it.
'Every one knows, Sir, how our Parliamentary Armies
have increased, since the Year 1697, which was the first
Time such a Thing was introduced by Consent of Parliament. It was then asked but for one Year, but the Nation
has never since been able to get rid of it, and it has vastly
increased since that Time. I doubt much if it is yet come
to its full Growth; for I do not know but that twenty
Years hence, or under some future Administration, I may
see a Standing Army of thirty thousand thought as necessary,
and agreed to by Parliament as unanimously, as an Army
of eighteen thousand is now. Even this very Year, though
no Addition has been made to our Troops here in Britain,
yet an Addition of one Regiment is, I hear, to be made, or
has already been made, to our Troops in the Plantations.
I do not say, Sir, but that it was necessary to send some additional Troops to that Country. I wish most of the
Troops we now have in Great Britain were always kept
there. In that Country they might sometimes be useful, and
could never be dangerous to their native Country; and the
honourable Gentleman, who is to have the Command of the
Troops to be sent thither, will, I am sure, make the best
Use of them upon any Occasion that shall offer; but I think
there was no Necessity for raising a new Regiment for that
Purpose; I think one of the Regiments we have at home
might have been sent thither; I am sure we could have
spared half a Dozen. This new Regiment is a new Addition to the annual Charge of the Nation, I reckon, of near
10,000 l. if not more, as will appear by comparing the Estimate of the Charge of his Majesty's Forces in the Plantations, Minorca, and Gibraltar, for this next ensuing Year,
with the Sum granted by Parliament for the same Purpose
last Year: I say, upon comparing these two Sums together,
it will be found that the former exceeds the latter by at least
10,000 l. And considering the great Debt we owe, and the
many heavy Taxes our People are obliged to pay, I think
nothing but the most absolute Necessity should induce us to
load the Nation with the most trifling Addition to its present
annual Charge.
'I shall conclude, Sir, with observing, that even the honourable Gentlemen who have spoken against the Question
now under our Consideration, have furnished us with a most
powerful Argument in its Favour. They have told us, that a
Standing Army can never contribute towards the Overthrow
of our Constitution, without its being properly garbled for that
Purpose. I do not know what these Gentlemen call garling, but when I see Gentlemen of the Army turned out of
their Commissions, or threatened to be turned out, without
a Pretence of their having been guilty of any military Crime;
when I see others advanced and preferred out of their Turn,
to the Prejudice of those whose Turn it was to have that Preferment, without so much as a Pretence of any superior military Virtue in the former; I say, Sir, when I see such
Things done, and frequently done, I must call it garbling
the Army; for when a Man is punished for a Vice, or rewarded for a Virtue, which he that is the Cause of inflicting the Punishment, or bestowing the Reward, dares not, or
is ashamed to own, I shall always suspect that the natural
Course of Things is inverted, that the Vicious only can expect to be rewarded, and that the Virtuous are sure of being discouraged, if not punished, as soon as their virtuous
Disposition begins to appear. Julius Cæsar had as great Reason as any Man can ever have, to discourage Virtue and reward the Vicious: Julius Cæsar did sometimes threaten Men
for doing their Duty; but Julius Cæsar was always extremely shy of putting such Threats in Execution. We are told,
that when he went to seize upon the sacred Treasure of Rome,
and was opposed by Metellus, the Tribune, he threatened to
kill Metellus, and at the same Time told him, Istud nonne
scis adolescentule, longe mibi difficilius dicere, quam facere.
This was threatening a Man for doing his Duty, but Julius
Cæsar took care not to put that Threat in Execution. In
this Age, and in this Country, we have heard of Men's
having been threatened for doing thetr Duty: We have not
only heard of such Threats being made, but we have some
Reason to suspect they have sometimes been put in Execution;
for when an Officer of the Army is turned out of his Commission without any publick Accusation, whatever Accusation may have been privately brought against him, we have
Reason to suppose the Accusation false, and that the true
Cause of such an Accusation's being brought against him
was, his having done his Duty, or his having refused to do
what he thought was inconsistent with his Honour. If such
Practices have been lately introduced, I must think that
those who have introduced them, have begun to garble the
Army; and therefore, even according to the Opinion of
those Gentlemen who have argued against this Question, it
is now high Time for the Parliament to think of reducing
the Army; for if the first Session of Parliament after such
Practices have been introduced, should pass them over without Notice, it may probably be put out of the next, or any
future Session, to take the least Notice of them, or to prevent the fatal Effects of them by a Reduction.'
The next that spoke was Sir Thomas Sanderson, whose
Speech was to this Effect, viz.
Sir T. Sanderson.
Sir,
'I seldom give this House the Trouble of hearing what I
can say upon any Question that happens to be before them;
but sometimes the Spirit moves, and then I must out with
it. However, tho' I am at present moved by a Sort of
Spirit, yet I cannot pretend it is a Spirit of Prophecy:
I cannot pretend to tell what will happen twenty Years
hence, or under any future Administration: I have
not so much Foresight; nor have I so sharp an Eye towards
any future Administration, as some Gentlemen seem to have
who have spoke before me in this Debate. Whether any
future Administration will think a greater Number of regular
Troops necessary than we have at present, is what I shall
not pretend to determine; but this I may venture to foretel,
that no future Administration will think a less Number necessary; and if I live to see a new Administration, I may
happen to see some of those Gentlemen, who have this Day
argued so strenuously against the present Number, then
arguing as strenuously for keeping up a greater Number.
'Those who call themselves Whigs, are, indeed, the
only Persons who can, with any Confidence, argue against a
Standing Army; for if any noted Tory, or suspected Jacobite, should argue against our keeping up a few regular
Troops by Authority of Parliament, it would be easy to answer him. Every Man would compare him to the fat Man,
who muttered and complained against the Crowd, which he
himself was the principal Cause of; but I wish those Whigs
who now argue against a Standing Army, would consider
what they have been, or what they may be. If the Journals of this House had been exactly taken, and religiously
preserved, I do not know but it might have been found, that
some of them are now making use of the Arguments, which
they themselves have formerly with great Strength of Reason refuted; and others may, for what they know, be
laying themselves under very great Difficulties; for they
may perhaps be now laying a Foundation for bringing their
own Authority against their future Opinion. 'Tis true, a
Man may change his Opinion; but whatever Cause he may
find from a Change in his own Circumstances, he may perhaps find it hard to give a Reason for changing his Opinion
from any Change in the Nature of Things, or in the Circumstances of the Nation; and no Man will then chuse, I believe,
to say, that he is now for a standing Army, because he is a
Minister, and was formerly against it because he was not.
'But, Sir, of all those who have this Day declared themselves against a Standing Army, I am surprized at those who
are called by the Patriots, Placemen. I know they call us
so by Way of Contempt; but whatever they think, I shall
never be ashamed of serving my Country, in any Post the
Crown pleases to put me in, nor can I look upon it as a
Discredit to have an Honour conferred upon me, by what even the Patriots themselves must allow to be the only Fountain of Honour in this Nation. I am convinced all Placemen are of my Opinion, and I am surprized to hear any
Placemen arguing in favour of a Reduction of the Army;
for we, who have Commissions in the Army, must be allowed
to be Placemen as well as others; and if the Spirit of reducing should prevail, with Respect to military Placemen,
our civil Placemen would do well to look to themselves, for
many of our civil Posts may be thought as dangerous and as
useless as most of our military: Nay, I do not know but
this Spirit may at last attack our established Church, by reducing all the useless ecclesiastical Posts in the Kingdom; in
which Case I do not know but it might with some Reason
be said, the Church is in Danger. It is commonly said,
that two of a Trade can never agree; and yet we find it is natural for all those of a Trade to unite together, and to form
a Sort of Society for their mutual Support; I think we
Placemen ought to do the same: Tho' we sometimes fall out
about which of us shall have the better Place; yet when the
Places themselves are attack'd, we ought to unite together
for supporting the Craft.
'I have been long conversant among Soldiers, Sir, and I
must say, I could never find they were less reasonable
Creatures, or more fond of arbitrary Power, than other
Men; therefore, I must presume, that they will always be
as zealous for supporting our Constitution as any other Set of
Men in the Kingdom; and, I cannot think a Man's receiving Pay as a Soldier, will make him less zealous than he would
be if he were to receive none. Therefore, I can never think
our Constitution will be in any Danger from a regular Army
of our own Subjects; and those who stand the Brunt while their
Country is in Danger, certainly deserve some Reward after
the Danger has been repelled, and Peace restored to their
Country, by their Means; for I hope it will not be said,
that the Pay a Soldier receives while the War continues, is
to be looked on as a Reward for his Services; it is given
only as a Subsistence; his Reward he must expect from the
Gratitude of his Country, if he lives to see an End of the
War. In Kingdoms or States that have but small Territories, their Wars seldom last long, nor have their Armies
far to march, so that they can easily send out one Army, or
one Body of Men, to relieve another; therefore, their
whole People march out by Turns, and every Man of the
Society has his proportionable Share of the Fatigue and Danger of the War; for this Reason, no Man can expect any
extraordinary Reward, because no Man performs any extraordinary Service; but when the Dominions of a Kingdom or State become extensive, their Wars last long, and
are at such a Distance, that one Army cannot be sent out to
relieve another; one Part of the Society, or one certain
Body of Men, are therefore employed to carry on the War,
while most of the rest, even during the War, enjoy all the
Blessings of Peace; for this Reason it is but just, that those
who are employed as Soldiers, should be subsisted during the
War, and that, after Peace is restored, they should receive
some Reward, for the extraordinary Services they have performed. This has always made, and always will make,
Standing Armies necessary, in all States or Kingdoms, whose
Dominions are extensive. Therefore, to turn all Soldiers
adrift, as soon as by their Valour they have restored Peace
to their Country, would, in my Opinion, be unjust, and, I
think, I may say, the Height of Ingratitude. It would
verify a little Epigram I have heard, which I shall not repeat, because some Gentlemen might think it irreligious;
but the Purport of it is, That our Behaviour towards a Soldier, is the same with that which is too often our Behaviour
towards God: They are both forgotten, as soon as the Danger
is over.'
After him, William Pitt Esq; spoke in Substance as
follows, viz.
William Pitt Esq;
Sir,
'If the Question now before us were not an Affair of
too serious a Nature, it would be extreamly easy to be witty
upon it, especially, as the honourable Gentleman who spoke
last has given us so good a Handle; but, I must confess, it
seems to me of so much Importance with Respect to our
Constitution, and the Happiness of our Country, that I cannot, and I think no Gentlman ought to make himself merry
upon such an Occasion; for tho' the Preservation of our
Constitution were no Way concerned, yet the Loading of
of our People with an additional Expence of 2 or 300,000 l
is, in my Opinion, an Affair of too affecting a Nature to be
treated in a ludicrous Manner.
'As to what the Honourable Gentleman has been pleased
to say about those he calls Placemen, I shall agree that, if
they were to be directed in their Opinions by the Places they
possess, they might perhaps unite for the Support of one another, against the common Good of the Society; but I hope
none of them are under any such Direction; I am sure the
Honourable Gentleman himself is not, and therefore, I am
convinced he is not serious, when he talks of being surprized
at any Placeman's declaring for a Reduction of our Army;
for, of all Men, those who enjoy any Places of Profit under
our Government, ought to be the most cautious of loading the
People with any unnecessary Tax or Expence; because, as
the Place they possess generally brings them in more than
their Share of all our Taxes can amount to, it may be properly said, that by consenting to any Article of publick Expence, they lay a Load upon others which they themselves
bear no Share of.
'I must look upon myself, Sir, as a Placeman, as well as
the honourable Gentleman who spoke last: I am in the Service
of one of the Branches of the Royal Family, and think it my
Honour to be so; but I should not think it, if I were not as free
to give my Opinion upon any Question that happens in this
House, as I was before I had any such Place; and, I believe, from
the Behaviour of Gentlemen, upon this very Occasion,
it will appear, that all those who are in the same Service with
me, are in the same State of Freedom; because I believe,
they will, upon the Question now before us, appear to be of
different Opinions, But, there is another Set of Placemen,
whose Behaviour surprizes me not a little; because, upon
every Question that occurs relating to publick Affairs, they
are always unanimous; and I confess, it is to me a little astonishing, that 2 or 300 Gentlemen should, by an unaccountable Sort of Unanimity, always agree in Opinion upon
the many different Sorts of Questions that occur yearly, and
that not for one, but for several Years together. I am convinced this surprizing Unanimity does not proceed from any
Effect of the Places they have under the Crown; for if it
did, a Man's being possessed of any Place under the Crown,
would, in such a Case, I am sure, be an infallible Reason
for the People not to trust him with the Preservation of their
Liberties, or the Dispensation of their Properties in Parliament.
'Then, Sir, as to the Tories and suspected Jacobites, I
am surprized to hear any Comparison made between them
and the fat Man in the Crowd: There are so few of either
in the Kingdom, that I am sure they can give no Man an Occasion for being afraid of them, and therefore there is not the
least Shadow of Reason for saying, they are the Occasion
of our being obliged to keep up such a numerous Standing
Army. The Army, indeed, or rather those who have been
the chief Advocates for our keeping up such a numerous Standing Army, may properly be compared to the fat Man in the
Crowd; for the keeping up of such an Army is the chief
Cause of our Discontents, and those Discontents are now, we
find, made the chief Pretence for keeping up such a numerous
Army. Remove therefore but the Army, or a confiderable
Part of it, and the Crowd, or the Discontents you complain
of, will cease. The Consequences, 'tis true, may be fatal to
some of those, who have been the Causes of loading the Nation so long with such an unnecessary Expence; but no honest
Man, I am sure, will think that their Safety is to be put in
the Balance, with the Stisfaction of the People, and the
Safety of the Nation.
'I come now, Sir, to the only Argument the honourable
Gentleman made Use of, which can admit of a serious Consideration; and if our Army were entirely, or but generally,
composed of old Veterans, inured to the Fatigues and the
Dangers of War, and such as had often ventured their
Lives against the Enemies of their Country, I confess the Argument would have a great deal of Weight; but considering the Circumstances of our present Army, I can
hardly think my Honourable Friend was serious, when he
made Use of such an Argument. As for the Officers of the
Army, they are quite out of the Question; for in Case of
a Reduction, there is a handsome Provision for every one of
them: No Man can doubt, nor would any Man oppose, their
being all put upon half Pay; and I must observe that our
half Pay is better, or as good as full Pay, I believe, in any
other Country of Europe; for in the Method our Army is
now kept up, I could shew by Calculation, that it costs the
Nation more than would maintain three Times the Number
of Men, either in France or Germany. And as for the
Soldiers, I believe it may be said of at least three fourths of
them, that they never underwent any Fatigue except that of
a Review, nor were ever exposed to any Danger except in
apprehending Smugglers or dispersing Mobs; therefore I
must think they have no Claim for any greater Reward than
the Pay they have already received, nor should I think we
were guilty of the least Ingratitude, if they were all turned
adrift to-morrow Morning.
'But suppose, Sir, the Soldiers of our Army were all
such as had served a Campaign or two against a publick Enemy; is it from hence to be inferred, that they must for ever
after live idly, and be maintained at the Expence of their
Country, and that, in such a Manner, as to be dangerous to
the Liberties of their Country ? At this Rate, if a Man has
but once ventured his Life in the Service-of his Country, he
must for ever after be not only a Burden, but a Terror to
his Country. This, Sir, would be a Sort of Reward, which
I am sure no brave Soldier would accept of, nor any honest
one desire. That we should shew a proper Gratitude to those
who have ventured their Lives in the Service of their Country, is what I shall readily acknowlege; but this Gratitude
ought to be shewn in such a Way, as not to be dangerous to
the Liberties, nor too burdensome to the People of our
Country; and therefore, after a War is at an End, if a Soldier can provide for himself, either by his Labour, or by
means of his own private Fortune, he ought not to expect,
and, if he is not of a mercenary Disposition, he will scorn to receive, any other Reward, than that which consists in the peculiar Honours and Privileges that may and ought to be conferred upon him, by the established Laws of his Country.
'That we ought to shew a proper Gratitude, that we
ought to give a proper Regard to every Man, who has ventured his Life in the Cause of his Country, is what I am sure
no Gentleman will deny: But when I have said this, Sir, I
cannot help observing how defective our Laws and Customs
are in this Respect. Is not this an unanswerable Argument
for establishing this Gratitude, and ascertaining this Reward,
by a publick Law ? Yet as the Laws now stand, an old Officer, a Man who has often ventured his Life, and often
spilt his Blood, in the Service of his Country, may be dismissed, and reduced, perhaps, to a starving Condition, at
the arbitrary Will and Pleasure, perhaps at the Whim of a
favourite Minister; so that by the present Establishment
of our Army, the Reward of a Soldier seems not to depend upon the Services done to his Country, but upon the Services he
does to those who happen to be the favourite Ministers at
the Time. Must not this, Sir, be allowed to be a Defect
in the present Establishment of our Army ? And yet when a
Law was proposed for removing this Defect, we may remember what Reception it met with, even from those who
now insist so highly upon the Gratitude we ought to shew to
the Gentlemen of our Army.
The Question being put the Motion was rejected: Noes 249,
Yeas 164. So the Resolution was agreed to.