'^ .,% -^a .0 o. ,,4 .^^ ^, v-t^' .i\ .-^^ '/, -^A V iV' ^>5> '''^.. ^A V^' ^' u * <»x ^'^^^ .<^' / ^ s c^ •^-. '■'*»!, "^- 4 i ■'>Ar\% ***•*«- wtti*"^^- ' Jp ,A, ^^ 'm TT (T. TkY TT-TT W, 'J^ )^~f[ ^ i s r rilE J.JWE lfI]L,t.IiiM wimi \,*^ £:t^K ■^:;- .^-.-;i <5^«' V////. ///^v/ /' // I ^s \ i L I F E^^ f^^v^e-vV'^ov PATRICK HENRY. BY WILLIAM WIRT. FOURTH EDITION, CORRECTED BY THE AUTHOR. '=In quo hoc maximum est, quod neque ante illuin, quem ille imitarotnr acque post ilium, qui eum imitari posset, inventus est." Paterc. lib. i. cap. v. NEW- YORK .-M'ELRATH & BANGS. 1831. r 50 i C^v^k Sv Trantf»r AUG 12 1927 Entered according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1818, by James Webster, in the Clerk's Office of the District of Penn- sylvania. tf C!;?-. TO THE YOUNG MEN OF VIRGINIA, IS RESPECTFULLY INSCRIBED THE AUTHOR, PREFACE. The reader has a right to know what degree of credit is due to the following narrative ; and it is the object of this preface to give him that satisfaction. It was in the summer of 1805 that the design of writing this biography was first conceived. It was produced by an incident of feeling, which, however it affected the author at the time, might now be thought light and trivial by the reader ; and he shall not, therefore, be detained by the recital of it. The author knew nothing of Mr. Henry, personally. He had never seen him; and -was of course compelled to rely wholly on the information of others. As soon, therefore, as the design was formed of writing his life, aware of the necessity of losing no time in collecting, from the few remaining coevals of Mr. Henry, that personal knowledge of the subject which might ere long be expected to die with them, the author despatched letters to every quarter of the state in which it occurred to him»as probable Vi PP.,EFACE. that interesting matter might be found ; and he was gratified hy the prompt attention which was paid to his inquiries. There were at that time, hving in the county of Hanover, three gentlemen of the first respec- tabihty, who had been the companions of Mr. Henry's childhood and youth : these were, Col. Charles Dabney, Capt. George Dabney, and Col, William O. Winston ; the two first of whom are still Hving. Not having the pleasure of a per- sonal acquaintance with these gentlemen, the author interested the late Mr. Nathaniel Pope in his object, and, by his instrumentality, procured all the useful information which was in their pos- session. Mr. Pope is well known to have been a gentleman of uncommonly vigorous and discrim- inating mind ; a sacred observer of truth, and a man of the purest sense of honour. The author cannot recall the memory of this most amiable and excellent man, to whom (if there be any merit in this work) the friends of Mr. Henry and the state of Virginia owe so many obligations, without paying to that revered memory the tri- bute of his respect and affection. Mr. Pope was one of thos