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pur- CHAP. XXIV.

saw it; that he practised the meanest arts for the
pose of depressing it; that those whom he protected
and enriched were not men of ability and virtue, but
wretches distinguished only by their sycophancy and
their low debaucheries. And this was said of the man
who made the fortune of Joseph Addison, and of Isaac
Newton.

Nothing had done more to diminish the influence of
Montague in the House of Commons than a step which
he had taken a few weeks before the meeting of the
Parliament. It would seem that the result of the
gene-
ral election had made him uneasy, and that he had
looked anxiously round him for some harbour in which
he might take refuge from the storms which seemed to
be gathering. While his thoughts were thus employed,
he learned that the Auditorship of the Exchequer had
suddenly become vacant. The Auditorship was held for
life. The duties were formal and easy. The gains
were uncertain: for they rose and fell with the public
expenditure: but they could hardly, in time of peace,
and under the most economical administration, be less
than four thousand pounds a year, and were likely, in
time of war, to be more than double of that sum.
Montague marked this great office for his own. He
could not indeed take it, while he continued to be in
charge of the public purse. For it would have been
indecent, and perhaps illegal, that he should audit his
own accounts. He therefore selected his brother Chris-
topher, whom he had lately made a Commissioner of
the Excise, to keep the place for him. There was, as
may easily be supposed, no want of powerful and noble
competitors for such a prize. Leeds had, more than
twenty years before, obtained from Charles the Second
a patent granting the reversion to Caermarthen. Godol-
phin, it was said, pleaded a promise made by William.

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1698.

CHAP.
XXIV.

But Montague maintained, and was, it seems, right in maintaining, that both the patent of Charles and the 1698. promise of William had been given under a mistake, and that the right of appointing the Auditor belonged, not to the Crown, but to the Board of Treasury. He carried his point with characteristic audacity and celerity. The news of the vacancy reached London on a Sunday. On the Tuesday the new Auditor was sworn in. The ministers were amazed. Even the Chancellor, with whom Montague was on terms of intimate friendship, had not been consulted. Godolphin devoured his ill temper. Caermarthen ordered out his wonderful yacht, and hastened to complain to the King, who was then at Loo. But what had been done could not be undone.

This bold stroke placed Montague's fortune, in the lower sense of the word, out of hazard, but increased the animosity of his enemies and cooled the zeal of his adherents. In a letter written by one of his colleagues, Secretary Vernon, on the day after the appointment, the Auditorship is described as at once a safe and lucrative place. "But I thought," Vernon proceeds, "Mr. Montague was too aspiring to stoop to anything below the height he was in, and that he least considered profit." This feeling was no doubt shared by many of the friends of the ministry. It was plain that Montague was preparing a retreat for himself. This flinching of the captain, just on the eve of a perilous campaign, naturally disheartened the whole army. It deserves to be remarked that, more than eighty years later, another great parliamentary leader was placed in a very similar situation. The younger William Pitt held in 1784 the same offices which Montague had held in 1698. Pitt was pressed in 1784 by political difficulties not less than those with which Montague had contended in

XXIV.

1698.

1698. Pitt was also in 1784 a much poorer man than CHAP. Montague in 1698. Pitt, in 1784, like Montague in 1698, had at his own absolute disposal a lucrative sinecure place in the Exchequer. Pitt gave away the office which would have made him an opulent man, and gave it away in such a manner as at once to reward unfortunate merit, and to relieve the country from a burden. For this disinterestedness he was repaid by the enthusiastic applause of his followers, by the enforced respect of his opponents, and by the confidence which, through all the vicissitudes of a chequered and at length disastrous career, the great body of Englishmen reposed in his public spirit and in his personal integrity. In the intellectual qualities of a statesman Montague was probably not inferior to Pitt. But the magnanimity, the dauntless courage, the contempt for riches and for baubles, to which, more than to any intellectual quality, Pitt owed his long ascendancy, were wanting to Montague.

The faults of Montague were great; but his punishment was cruel. It was indeed a punishment which must have been more bitter than the bitterness of death to a man whose vanity was exquisitely sensitive, and who had been spoiled by early and rapid success and by constant prosperity. Before the new Parliament had been a month sitting it was plain that his empire was at an end. He spoke with the old eloquence; but his speeches no longer called forth the old response. Whatever he proposed was maliciously scrutinised. The success of his budget of the preceding year had surpassed all expectation. The two millions which he had undertaken to find had been raised with a rapidity which seemed magical. Yet for bringing the riches of the City, in an unprecedented flood, to overflow the Exchequer he was reviled as if his scheme had failed more

XXIV.

1698.

CHAP. ludicrously than the Tory Land Bank. Emboldened by his unpopularity, the Old East India Company presented a petition praying that the General Society Act which his influence and eloquence had induced the late Parliament to pass, might be extensively modified Howe took the matter up. It was moved that leave should be given to bring in a bill according to the prayer of the petition; the motion was carried by a hundred and seventy five votes to a hundred and forty eight; and the whole question of the trade with the Eastern seas was reopened. The bill was brought in but was, with great difficulty and by a very small majority, thrown out on the second reading.* On other financial questions Montague, so lately the oracle of the Committee of Supply, was now heard with malevolent distrust. If his enemies were unable to detect any flaw in his reasonings and calculations, they could at least whisper that Mr. Montague was very cunning, that it was not easy to track him, but that it might be taken for granted that for whatever he did he had some sinister motive, and that the safest course was to negative whatever he proposed. Though that House of Commons was economical even to a vice, the majority preferred paying high interest to paying low interest, solely because the plan for raising money at low interest had been framed by him. In a despatch from the Dutch embassy the States General were informed that many of the votes of that session which had caused as tonishment out of doors were to be ascribed to nothing but to the bitter envy which the ability and fame of

* Commons' Journals, February 24. 27.; March 9. 1698. In the Vernon Correspondence a letter about the East India question which belongs to the year 1988 is put under the date of Feb. 10. 1693.

99

The

truth is that this most valuable cor respondence cannot be used to good purpose by any writer who does not do for himself all that the editor

ought to have done.

Montague had excited. It was not without a hard struggle and a sharp pang that the first Englishman who has held that high position which has now been long called the Leadership of the House of Commons submitted to be deposed. But he was set upon with cowardly malignity by whole rows of small men none of whom singly would have dared to look him in the face. A contemporary pamphleteer compared him to an owl in the sunshine pursued and pecked to death by flights of tiny birds. On one occasion he was irritated into uttering an oath. Then there was a cry of Order; and he was threatened with the Serjeant and the Tower. On another occasion he was moved even to shedding tears of rage and vexation, tears which only moved the mockery of his low minded and bad hearted foes.

If a minister were now to find himself thus situated in a House of Commons which had just been elected, and from which it would therefore be idle to appeal to the electors, he would instantly resign his office, and his adversaries would take his place. The change would be most advantageous to the public, even if we suppose his successor to be both less virtuous and less able than himself. For it is much better for the country to have a bad ministry than to have no ministry at all; and there would be no ministry at all if the executive departments were filled by men whom the representatives of the people took every opportunity of thwarting and insulting. That an unprincipled man should be followed by a majority of the House of Commons is no doubt an evil. But, when this is the case, he will nowhere be so harmless as at the head of affairs. As he already possesses the power to do boundless mischief, it is desirable to give him a strong motive to abstain from doing mischief; and such a motive he has from the mo

CHAP.

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1698.

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