Rnnic M2^k 2a "^ SI// MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY, FOUNDER OF, AND SECRETARY TO, THE LONDON CORRESPONDING SOCIETY, FOR DIFFUSING USEFUL POLITICAL KNOWLEDGE AMONG THE PEOPLE OF GREAT BRITAIN & IRELAND, AND FOR PROMOTING PARLIAMENTARY REFORM, From its Establishment, in Jan. 1792, UNTIL HIS ARREST, ON A FALSE CHARGE OF HIGH TREASON, On the 12th of May, 1794. WRITTEN BY HIMSELF. He was a man, from vice and folly free — No danger could his steady soul appal ; No slave to prejudice or passion, he Esteem'd his fellow-men as brethren all. Integrity his shield, and Truth his guide, Unaw'd, he laboured in his Country's cause ; For that he liv'd, for that he would have died, A Martyr to her liberty and laws ; — Firm to his purpose, virtuously severe. He fearM his God, but had no other fear. D. Macpherson. LONDON : JAMES RIDGWAY, PICCADILLY M.DCCC. XXXII. TILLING, PRINTER) CHELSEA. TO SIR FRANCIS BURDETT, Bart. M.P, THE FOLLO^VXNa MEMOIR DEDICATED HIS GRATEFUL AND MUCH OBLIGED SERVANT, THOMAS HARDY. ADVERTISEMENT The duty now devolves upon me, of informing the reader, that Mr. Hardy, having lived to see the last sheet of his Me- moir from the press, breathed his last, about eight o'clock on the morning of Thursday, the 11th instant, at his apartments, 30, Queen's Row, Pimlico. His extreme temperance, added to a strong and robust con- stitution, preserved him, through a long life, from many of those chronic disorders which, too often, embitter the lives of men of different habits. Some time before he retired from busi- ness, in 1815, his health suffered from the anxiety attending a losing concern, but, as soon as that was got rid of, he reco- vered, and, with the exception of slight rheumatic pains, occa- sionally, in his legs, he continued almost free from bodily ailments until last year, when, going to the city in a stiff- springed omnibus ^ he was so violently shook, that it brought on a stranguary, which, after much suffering, proved fatal to him. From the beginning of the last severe attack, about three weeks ago, it became evident that he was approaching his end. Of this he himself was pei-fectly sensible, and his mind was prepared to meet it as became a man and a Christian. In his person, Mr. Hardy was of fine proportions, near six feet high, before he began to stoop ; large breasted, broad shouldered, and muscular, without the least inclination to corpulency. He was, indeed, such a man, in body and mind. VI ADVERTISEMENT. as we may suppose the patriots to have been who followed those immortal heroes, an Alfred and a Wallace, in their attempts to give freedom to their respective countries. In his manners he was mild, affable, and unassuming; and it may be safely affirmed, that he never made a personal enemy. The leading features of his character were moral courage, bene- volence, and integrity, from the practice of which virtues no worldly consideration could deter him, if he saw any chance of being useful to his fellow creatures. From vanity he was altogether free, his common saying- being, that the greatest talents, exercised under the controul of the best judgment, and for the best purposes, did not give a man a right to be vain, for, that when a man did all the good in his power, he did no more than his duty. He, however, allowed that the praise of good men is desirable, forasmuch as it confirms our own approbation of our own best actions. Ye vain, ye frivolous, ye prodigal, ye proud, behold this good man's mortal career, and learn to amend your lives, learn that man has not been created for himself alone, but for all mankind. Ye false patriots, think of him, blush, tremble, and reform. Ye true patriots, if a momentary temptation to waver should come across your minds, think of Thomas Hardy, and be firm. Ye who are called noble by descent or creation, contemplate the life of this man, '' who held the patent of his nobility im- mediately from Almighty God,"* and let your actions be suit- able to your exalted ranks ; learn that virtue is true nobility. D. MACPHERSON. October 16, 1832. * Burns. PREFACE. The greater part of the following Memoir was written upwards of thirty-four years ago. It was begun at the solicitation of some friends; but being too much engaged in business at that time to attend to it properly, I was obliged to lay it aside, and it remained in its hiding place until very lately. The London Corresponding Society did more in the eight or nine years of its existence, to diffuse political knowledge among the people of Great Britain and Ireland than all that had ever been done before. Its Members devoted themselves to the cause of justice and humanity. They laboured zealously, intrepidly, and ho- nestly, although they beheld the guilty arm of power suspended over their heads and ready to crush them, in order to promote the happiness of their fellow citizens. A correct history of such a Society, the present generation, — who are likely to reap the fruits of its labours — cannot but highly appreciate; and I am happy to say that such a work is in the course of preparation, by a Gentleman VUl PREFACE. every way we|l qualified for the task, — Mr. Francis Place, who has been upwards of twenty years collecting materials for it. It is for that reason that many things are omitted in the following Memoir, which would otherwise find a place in it ; but brief as these notices are, I earnestly hope they will excite the curiosity of the younger part of the present race to know something of the important Trials for High Treason, which took place near forty years ago, and the issue of which saved them from the most absolute and deplorable slavery being entailed upon them before they were born. I have chosen to write in the third, rather than in the first person, merely, to obviate the neces- sity of calling the great /so repeatedly to my assistance; though I do not, by any means, consider that, what is called, egotism consists in the use, but in the manner of using, that letter. THOMAS HARDY. MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. As every man, whose actions, from whatever cause, have acquired publicity, is sure, in many things, to be misrepresented, such a man has an undoubted right, nay, it becomes his duty, to leave to posterity a true record of the real motives that influenced his conduct. The following Memoir, therefore, requires no apology, and none is offered. Thomas Hardy* was born in the parish of Larbert,f * The first of the name was a Frenchman, who was cup-bearer to John, King of France, and was taken prisoner along with that Monarch, by Edward the Black Prince, and brought to England. At an enter- tainment, the King of England desired his cup-bearer to fill a cup of wine to the worthiest in company, upon which he presented it to his own master. The cup-bearer to the King of France, taking this as an insult offered to his master, struck the English cup-bearer a blow on the ear, upon which the King of France called out trop^ trop, Hardie ; but the King of England exclaimed, sera deshormais Hardie ! Upon this he took the name of Hardie ; and the King of Scotland, who, at that time, was also prisoner in England, upon being set at liberty, carried him along with him to Scotland, and gave him the lands of Corregarff* in Mar, where they flourished, until a quarrel happening with the Clan of Grant, the Hardies murdered the Chief of that Clan, and, in consequence, their estates were forfeited. They were followers of the family of Huntly. Motto of the Hardies : — Sera deshormais Hardie. t About a mile from the forest of Torwood, famous in Scottish history as the place where, in the hollow trunk of an extraordinary large oak tree, many of the exploits of that great man and true patriot, Sir William Wallace, were planned. The writer remembers having often visited B 2 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. in Stirlingshire, in Scotland, on the 3rd day of March, 1752. His Grandfather, Walter Hardy, was an Officer in the Army, in what is called the German war, bat with what rank the writer could not learn. Before he became a soldier he had a small estate, consisting of some houses, both in Edinburgh and Falkirk, which he mortgaged, and was never able to redeem.* His Father, whose name was also Walter, was bred to a sea-faring life in the merchants' service. He married a respectable woman, whose relations were numerous and respectable, and for several years followed his profession with such diligence, that it was supposed when he died, on a homeward voyage from America, he left enough to enable his widow and three children to live comfortably in that cheap part of the country. The death of Walter Hardy happened in 1760, when his eldest son, Thomas, was no more than eight years of age ; and, unfortunately, as is too frequently the case, his affairs having got into bad hands, his widow found her- self unable to give Thomas an education suitable to the clerical profession, according to the original intentions of her deceased husband and herself. Her Father, Thomas Walker, a shoemaker by trade, on learning the hapless state of Mrs. Hardy's affairs, took Thomas under his own care and protection, and put him to school to learn reading, writing, and arithmetic. At Wallace's tree, above sixty years ago ; and he has learnt, with regret, that a Goth, into whose hands the estate fell, has since destroyed every vestige of it. * His Grandson, Thomas, who was his legal heir, after he came of age, took some measures to recover them : with this view he had some com- munications with Mr. Livingston, the person on whom they devolved after the death of him who had advanced the money on them ; but not being in circumstances to incur law expenses, he was obliged to give the matter up, although the first professional gentlemen, both in Stirling and Edinburgh, assured him that the case was quite clear. MEMOIR Ol- THOMAS HARDY. .i that time the price of tuition was no more than a penny a week ; before he left school it rose to three-halfpence, and now it is a shilling. When he arrived at a proper age, his Grandfather taught him his own business. After having learnt as much as he could from his kind relative, he went to Glasgow, that beautiful and populous city, to improve himself in his trade. At that period the traffic between that city and America was very great, and many adven- turers went and established manufactories of various kinds. One of these adventurers, a Mr. Ingram, who had projected a shoe factory at Norfolk, in Virginia, was returned, principally with a view of engaging workmen to go out with him. He engaged many ; and Thomas Hardy entered into an agreement with him to superintend the concern for five years. The terms were flattering ; the agreement was signed on both sides, and they were to embark in a few days ; but his relations interfered and prevented his going, urging that he could not legally enter into an agreement, being then under twenty-one years of age. Very soon after, the town of Norfolk was burnt to ashes, in one of the mad fits of the British Government, in the beginning of the American war. His first project being thus frustrated, he left Glasgow, and went to the iron works at Carron, where he followed the bricklaying business for some time. The Carron Company having just then established their manufactory for cast iron, were much in want of hands to carry on their buildings, and gave great encouragement to bricklayers. While here working with several others, on the second story of a large house that was being built for Mr. Roebuck, one of the proprietors, an accident happened that had nearly cost him his life ; the scaffold gave way, and th^y were precipitated into the cellar, covered with boards, bricks, and mortar. One man b2 4 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. was killed, and others much hurt: Hardy was carried home, much bruised ; but with proper care he soon re- covered^ but returned no more to the bricklaying business. He recommenced the trade of shoemaking with James Wilson, who had just settled in that part of the country from London ; and having much conversation with his master about the metropolis, his curiosity was excited, and he determined to see it. With that view, he engaged a passage on board the Stirling, Carron smack, Stewart Boyd master, and, in eleven days, arrived in London, 23rd April, 1774, where he was a total stranger, with no more than eighteen-pence in his pocket : however, before that was expended, he found employment. He had a letter of introduction from his late master, to Mr. John Kerr, a most worthy character, with whom he lodged the first night, and with whom, and with his amiable family, he maintained afterwards the most friendly intercourse. The acquaintance of Mr. Kerr procured him that of others, of dispositions and turns of mind similar to his own. Hardy was, from his earliest years, of a sedate and serious turn of mind ; avoiding all those scenes of dissi- pation, which, too often, lead astray the youthful and unwary, to the ruin of both their morals and their con- stitutions. It must, however, be owned, that a disposi- tion to what is falsely called a life of pleasure, affords adventures, which, when afterwards related, conduce greatly to the entertainment of certain readers ; but such as peruse these pages must expect nothing of the kind. The life of a plain industrious citizen affords nothing of the light or the ludicrous circumstances which compose a great part of the frivolous reading of the present day. Being of a contemplative and serious turn of mind, Hardy, soon after his settling in London, became ac- quainted with many of the middle and lower classes of MKMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY Dissenters : among these he had a number of highly respected and intimate friends, by whom he was much valued on account of his peaceable disposition and suavity of manners. He became, and continued many years, a member of the congregation which met in Crown Court, Russell Street, Covent Garden, under the ministry of Mr. Cruden. In \7bi, some transactions, to which he was a party, took place in that congregation, and which may not be improper here briefly to relate. The Society was a numerous and highly respectable one, and paid their Pastor a considerable salary. At this period a vacancy occurred, by the death of Mr. Cruden, and can- didates from various parts of England and Scotland, con- tinued, for near two years, to preach in their turns with little approbation. One, however, at length appeared, who gave great satisfaction to the people, a Mr. James Chambers, from Scotland, a very eloquent and powerful preacher. Hardy, being zealously attached to the con- gregation, and having its interest much at heart, observed, with regret, that many of the members were leaving it, on account of its unsettled state. He, therefore, wrote privately to Mr. Chambers, to know if he would accept a call, if one were given him. Mr. Chambers replied by letter in the affirmative, provided the call was signed by a majority of the whole body. He communicated this circumstance to a friend ; and they having consulted two or three others, again wrote to him, and again received a satis- factory reply. They then called a meeting of as many as they could inform of the business. The meeting was held in a large private room, and a greater number attended than was expected from so short a notice. Hardy was appointed chairman, and he opened the business by informing them, in a few words, the purpose for which they were called together. After a good deal b3 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. of conversation, Ihey adjourned, having appointed another meeting, which was still more numerously attended. At that meeting a deputation was appointed to wait upon the Elders or Managers, to request that they would call a general meeting of the Church, to consider the pro- priety of giving Mr. Chambers a call. With this request the Elders refused to comply, alledging, or, at least, insinuating, that there was some- thing wrong in his character ; but what it was they would not satisfy the deputation. By the people, who very much esteemed Mr. Chambers, this was deemed calumny; and the consequence was, that the congregation became divided into two parties, the Elders, and their adherents on the one side, and the friends of Chambers, the greater number, on the other, A correspondence was commenced immediately with many Ministers and others in Scotland, who knew Chambers, in order to learn if his moral character was good ; and many certificates of his unblemished reputation were received. In the mean time, the Elders were ransacking all quarters, in order to discover something to justify them in their objections, and to verify their insinuations : and they, at last, succeeded in discovering that he had two wives then living, one in Scotland, and another in Eng- land. Upon this, a meeting of both parties was thought requisite, and also to have Mr. Chambers present, that the affair might be publicly and properly discussed. The result was, that both sides became pretty well satisfied of the truth of what had been alledged against Chambers. Thus ended a controversy, which had been carried on smartly for nearly two years, and which had threatened the dissolution of the Society; the people contending that they had a right to the man of their choice, and the MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 7 Elders as strenuously resisting that right. This circum- stance illustrates the saying, ** how small a spark kindleth a great fire." Another disagreeable circumstance happened one Sunday at the Chapel of the same congregation, of which Hardy was also the innocent cause. Happening to meet Lord George Gordon, with whom he was intimate, he asked his Lordship to come next Sunday, to hear a young man from the Highlands of Scotland, preach. Lord George said he would, and seemed even anxious to hear him; but it happened, through some accident or disap- pointment, that Mr. Bean, the gentleman of whom Hardy spoke, did not preach that day, but another in his place, who was not very acceptable to the congregation. This man read his sermon in a monotonous manner, and without the least animation, which so displeased Lord George, that he interrupted him in the midst of his discourse, by telling him, that it was contrary to the rules of the Kirk of Scotland for the Minister to read his sermon from the pulpit ; and this he proceeded to prove from the Confession of Faith, and Directory for public worship. However lightly they might have thought of the preacher, so extraordinary an interruption gave great offence to many of the congregation, and much confusion consequently ensued. Lord George knew no person present, very few of them knew him, and, unfortunately, Hardy happened to be detained at home by the illness of one of bis family. Lord George seeing none whom he knew, called loudly for Hardy, who had invited him there, and who he supposed had played him a trick ; the congregation, on the other hand, thought that Hardy had sent Lord George to the meeting to create a disturbance, so that poor Hardy between them was in an awkward situation ; yet it must be confessed, though he was per- b4 8 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. fectly ignorant and innocent of the whole affair, that the conclusion which each of the parties had drawn, though hasty, was not unreasonable. Hardy, as already mentioned, was very intimate with Lord George Gordon, but was, by no means, an approver of any of his wild schemes : so far from it, that he often told him, with honest bluntness, both verbally and by letter, how much he differed from him in opinion on many subjects. Nevertheless, he always entertained, and expressed a sincere respect for the many virtues, and amiable qualities of that misguided, but much injured man ; and was of opinion, that his life fell a sacrifice to the malice of his persecutors. Here, however, it may not, perhaps, be prudent to state who they were, whether ecclesiastical or political, or probably both. At the period of his arrival in London, the American war was commenced, and then, as well as now, politics were the general topics of conversation in almost every company. His heart always glowed with the love of freedom, and was feelingly alive to the sufferings of his fellow creatures. He listened with attention to the arguments he heard advanced for and against the conduct of the Administration towards the Colonies ; and as he was then unwilling to believe it as bad as it was represented by the partizans of the American people, he found him- self frequently involved in disputes in their defence. In those disputes, however, he felt rather diffident of his own knowledge on the subject. This was the state of his mind with respect to the American war, until he met with and read Dr. Price's celebrated Treatise on Civil Liberty. The arguments brought forward in that masterly work, were, to him, so convincing, that he found himself com- pelled to adopt its principles. He saw that it was not only necessary for the happiness of the trans-atlantic patriots themselves, that the struggle should terminate in their ^m^ favou MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. i) favour ; but that even the future happiness of the whole human race was concerned in the event. From that moment he became one of the warmest and most sincere advocates for the right cause. In the year 1781, he married the youngest daughter of Mr. Priest, a carpenter and builder in Chesham, in Buckinghamshire, with whom he lived, in spite of all the tricks of fortune, in the most perfect state of connubial happiness. She bore him six children, who all died young — the last of them, still-born, found a grave with its hapless mother, who died on the 27th of August, 1794, in the unfortunate manner which shall be hereafter related. For many years after his marriage he followed his business with various success, and refused several advantageous offers which had been made to him if he would go to America ; but he was strongly attached to his native country, and besides something always happened, in a manner to him unaccountable, to overthrow every mo- mentary inclination of his own, and every effort of those who endeavoured to persuade him to emigrate. In the latter end of the year 1791, a proposal was made to him, as it was pretended, very much calculated to advance his circumstances, to enter into a partner- ship with a currier and a leather cutter, who undertook, if he would engage in the manufactory of boots and shoes, to furnish leather, and to find a market for as many as he should make. To this proposal he agreed, and for that purpose took the house, afterwards so ivell known. No. 9, Piccadilly, and began with that active industry which nothing could ever depress, to fulfil his part of the contract he had entered into ; when, lo \ one of those instances of treachery, too common, but too little attended to, in corrupt and luxurious communities, threatened to overwhelm him and his family in utter ruin. Before he was well settled in the house he had engaged. 10 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. his pretended friends deserted him, broke through the agreement they had made, sent in their bills at a short date, which, to avoid law expenses, he paid when due. The only excuse that can be offered for such conduct is, that their own affairs were not so prosperous as they expected. In this affair he experienced the great value of a good character; for having no capital of his own, he must, unavoidably, have given up business, had not unso- licited friendship come forward, with timely aid, which enabled him to carry on his trade until the memorable period at which he was arrested for High Treason, which circumstance shall be more particularly noticed presently. However, notwithstanding every personal effort of his own, and the support of his friends, he soon began to feel the heavy pressure of the daily accumulating taxes, and the consequent rise in the prices of all the necessaries of life. He knew the country to be productive, and its inhabitants to be industrious and ingenious ; therefore, the distress which he saw every where around him could not arise from the fault of the soil, or of those who occupied it, and the cause must be sought for somewhere else. It required no extraordinary penetration, once the enquiry was begun, to be able to trace it to the corrupt practices of men falsely calling themselves the representa- tives of the people, but who were, in fact, selected by a comparatively few influential individuals, who preferred their own particular aggrandisement to the general interest of the community. The next enquiry naturally arose— Was the cause of the people hopeless ? Must they and their posterity for ever groan under this intolerable load ? Could not the nation, by a proper use of its moral powers, set itself free? Hardy thought it could; and he projected the plan of ** the London Corresponding Society," as a means of informing the people of the violence that had been MEMOIR or THOMAS HAIIUY. 11 committed on their most sacred rights, and of uniting them in an endeavour to recover those rights. Why the Father of that Society remained unknown, except to two or three persons, until after the State Trials, is thus accounted for. He saw, with pleasure, that it was bidding fair to overturn a long established system of cor- ruption and oppression, and he was afraid that it might operate to its prejudice were it made publicly known, that so obscure an individual was its founder. He saw his intentions to do good in the course of being fulfilled, and he never had any vanity to gratify. He was often asked who began the Society, but for the above reason he always evaded the question. Some said it was J. Home Tooke; others, that it was Thomas Paine; but neither of them had any hand in it. So prevalent, however, was the opinion, that the At- torney General, in his opening speech, on Hardy's trial, made use of the following words, which may be found in the report of that trial, taken in short hand by Mr. Ramsay, and published by Mr. Ridgway, page 57. " The London Corresponding Society was modelled by some of the leading Members, and owes its corporate existence, and was formed under the Constitutional Society." It has been already shewn that this must have been an error ; for, in fact, the Constitutional Society had ceased its meetings for several years, and was not re-opened until three months after the London Corresponding Society had been modelled by Hardy, as above : and it was at their first meeting, after being re-opened, that they received a copy in manuscript of the address and resolu- lutions of the London Corresponding Society. The enve- lope was signed by Hardy, but the address itself had no signature ; and as the Constitutional Society resolved to publish it, it is probable that Mr. Tooke put Hardy's name to it before it was entered in the books, and 12 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. sent to the newspapers. That circumstance is suffi- cient to account for the mystery which so puzzled the Attorney Genera!, why the name of Thomas Hardy, Secretary, was in the hand writing of Mr. Tooke. The address thus signed was seized among the papers of Mr. Adams, Secretary to the Constitutional Society ; and from that circumstance and others, equally mistaken, jumbled together, the Attorney General inferred and asserted, that the London Corresponding Society was modelled by the Constitutional Society — meaning Tooke, and Felix Vaughan. Gurney's Report has the same in substance, at pages 69, 77, and 78. At this period he had some leisure from his usual em- ployment, and he occupied the time in re-perusing a col- lection of political tracts, published by the Society for Constitutional Information, in the years 1779, 1780, 1781, 1782, and 1783, which had been presented to him by a Member of that Society, T. B. Hollis, Esq. This drew his attention more closely to the subjects on which he had been accustomed to think and talk a great deal during the American war. He drew up some rules, with a preamble to them, for the management of the Society which he had projected. These rules he submitted to three friends, whom he engaged to supper with him one night, with a view of obtaining their opinions on the subject. His friends highly approved of them, as proper fundamental regulations for a Society, whose efforts were to be employed in endeavouring to restore to Britons those civil rights of which they had been deprived by the unholy union of force and fraud, at various periods, and by all parties that had obtained power — Whigs, then, as well as Tories. These outlines being agreed upon between him and his three friends, they, next, resolved to meet weekly in future at a public house, and to invite as many of their MEMOIR Ol' THOMAS HARDY. 13 friends as they thought were likely to exert themselves in promoting- the object of the Society. " What great events arise from little things \" This Society, consisting at first of no more than four members, plain homely citizens, soon acquired an influ- ence, and encreased to a magnitude too well known to require any particular description. However, it is necessary to follow its progress a little. In the beginning of January, 1792, the first meeting was held at the sign of the Bell, in Exeter Street, in the Strand, when there were present only nine persons, all acquainted with each other. They had finished their daily labour, and met there by appointment. After having had their bread and cheese and porter for supper, as usual, and their pipes afterwards, with some conver- sation on the hardness of the times and the dearness of all the necessaries of life, which they, in common with their fellow citizens, felt to their sorrow, the busi- ness for which they had met was brought forward — Parliamentary Reform — an important subject to be deliberated upon, and dealt with by such a class of men. Hardy then produced the rules and preamble which he had drawn out; and after they had been read twice, it was proposed that all who wished to become members should subscribe them, and engage to endea- vour, by all the means in their power, to promote the objects the Society had in view. To this proposal all present, except one man, readily agreed. This man said he would take a week to consider of it ; and he also became a member at the next meeting. Hardy presented a book which he had bought for the purpose, that those who became members might put down their names, and pay one penny, which was to be continued weekly, as one of the rules expresses. 14 MEMOIR or THOMAS HARDY. There was some conversation about what name should be given to the Society ; some would have it called " The Patriotic Club," some the ^* Reformation Society," when Hardy shewed them some cards upon which he had written " The London Corresponding Society, No. 1, 2, 3, &c. ;" and that denomination was unanimously adopted. Hardy was then appointed Secretary and Treasurer. There were eight persons who had subscribed the rules, and paid a penny each, consequently there was eight pence in the treasury, — a mighty sum! Next weekly meeting, nine more joined the Society, which encreased the fund to two shillings and one penny. The third meeting brought an accession of twenty-four new members, which made the treasury rich to the important amount of four shillings and one penny. The first correspondence of the Society was the following letter, addressed by Hardy to the Rev. Mr. Bryant, of Sheffield. It was private; but, on reading that gentleman's answer to the assembled members, the transaction was adopted as that of the whole body. The letter is here inserted, because, on the trial, the Attorney General, now Lord Eldon, lamented very much — he is good at lamentations — that he had not posses- sion of it, and because the reply which it elicited tended very much to animate the Corresponding Society in the great cause of Parliamentary Reform. London, Sth March, 1792. Reverend Sir, I hope you will pardon that freedom which 1 take in troubling you with the following sentiments ; nothing but the importance of the business could have induced me to address one who is an entire stranger to me, except MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 15 only by report. Hearing from my friend, Gustavus Vassa, the African, who is now writing memoirs of his life in my house, that you are a zealous friend to the abolition of that cursed traffic, the Slave Trade, I infer, from that circumstance, that you are a zealous friend to freedom on the broad basis of the RIGHTS OF MAN. I am fully persuaded that there is no man, who is, from principle, an advocate for the liberty of the black man, but will zealously support the rights of the white man, and vice versa. The reason why I write to you, at this time, is this. There are some tradesmen, mechanics, and shopkeepers here in London, forming a Society for a Reform in Par- liament, which, in our opinion, is of all other things most deserving the attention of the public. We are more and more convinced, from every day's experience, that the restoring the right of voting to every man, not incapa- citated by nature for want of reason, nor by law for the commission of crimes, together with annual election, is the only reform that can be effectual and permanent. It has been a long, and very just complaint, that a very great majorit}^ of the people of this country are not repre- sented in Parliament; that the majority of the House of Commons are chosen by a number of voters, not ex- ceeding twelve thousand ; and that many large and popu- lous towns bave not a single vote for a representative : such as Birmingham, containing upwards of 40,000 inha- bitants; Manchester, above 30,000; Leeds, above 20,000 ; besides Sheffield, Bradford, Halifax, Wolverhampton, &c. &c. &c. ; since that estimate of the inhabitants was made, their number has been more than doubled. The views and intentions of this Society are directed towards ascer- taining the opinion, and to know the determination, as far as possible, of the unrepresented part of the people. From these considerations we have taken the name of u / IfJ MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. The London Corresponding Society^ for restoring the right of suffrage to the unrepresented of the people of Great Britain. The following are our leading rules. That the number of our Members be unlimited. That no one can become a Member unless he be proposed by one of the Members and seconded by another. That he be above the age of twenty years, and resident in Great Britain one year. And to be esteemed a Member of the Society, it is requisite that he pay, at least, one penny a week, towards defraying the necessary expenses of the Society. I have here given you some of our reasons and motives for associating, and our terms of admission. Since we did associate, we have heard that there are Societies also forming in Sheffield for promoting the same important cause. As I do not know either the President, or the Secretary, and presuming you are a Member, I trust you will oblige me with all the information you judge prudent, concerning the government of your Society, as ours is not yet per- fectly organized. Any information from you, or the Society at Sheffield, tending to facilitate the grand and ultimate end, or even any advice, will be gratefully re- ceived by him who begs leave to subscribe himself, Reverend Sir, Your most obedient and most Humble Servant, THOMAS HARDY. 4, Taylor's Buildings, St. Martin's Lane. On the 2nd of April, 1792, the London Corresponding Society came before the public with an address and reso- lutions, in which their principles and views were clearly and unequivocally stated. This first address was written MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 17 by Mr. Margarot ; and it was judged requisite and proper that some person should sign it as Chairman ; more espe- cially as it was their first public act. It was proposed to several persons to allow their names to appear, but some objected, and others pleaded private reasons, best known to themselves, in excuse. However, as the Society deemed it necessary to have a name, it was at last pro- posed to Hardy to allow his to appear. He had no other objection than the probability that it might prove pre- judicial to the Society, to have their first document pub- lished under the sanction of so obscure a name. This objection was overruled, and his name alone, as Secretary, appeared to the first Address and Resolutions, of which the following is a true copy : — LONDON CORRESPONDING SOCIETY, Held at the Belly Exeter Street, Strand, Man, as aw individual, is entitled to liberty — it is his birth- right. As a member of society, the preservation of that liberty becomes his indispensable duty. When he associated, he gave up certain rights, in order to secure the possession of the remainder ; But, he voluntarily yielded up only as much as was neces- sary for the common good: He still preserved a right of sharing in the government of his country; — without it, no man can with truth call himself FREE. Fraud or force, sanctioned by custom, with-holds that right from (by far) the greater number of the inhabitants of this country. The few with whom the right of election and representa- tion remains, abuse it, and the strong temptations held out to electors, sufficiently prove that the representatives of this C 18 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. country seldom procure a seat in Parliament, from the unhought suffrages of a free people. The nation at length perceives it, and testifies an ardent desire of remedying the evil. The only difficulty, therefore, at present is, the ascertain- ing the true method of proceeding. To this end, different and numerous Societies have been formed in various parts of the nation. Several likewise have arisen in the Metropolis ; and among them, (though as yet in its infant state) the London Corres- ponding Society, with modesty intrudes itself and opinions, on the attention of the public, in the following Resolutions ; 1. Resolvedy — That every individual has a right to share in the government of that Society of which he is a Member — unless incapacitated : 2. Resolved, — That nothing but non-age, privation of reason, or an offence against the general rules of society, can incapacitate him. 3. Resolved, — That it is no less the right than the duty of every citizen, to keep a watchful eye on the government of his country; that the laws, by being multiplied, do not degenerate into Oppression; and that those who are entrusted with the Government, do not substitute Private Interest for Public Advantage. 4. Resolved, — That the people of Great Britain are not effectually represented in Parliament. 5. Resolved,— Tha.t in consequence of a partial, unequal, and therefore inadequate Repi'esentation, together with the corrupt method in which Representatives are elected ; oppres- sive taxes, unjust laivs, restrictions of liberty, and wasting of the public money, have ensued. 6. Resolved, — That the only remedy to those evils is a fair, equal, and impartial Representation of the people in Parliament. 7. Resolved,— ThaX a fair, equal, and impartial Represen- tation can never take place, until all partial privileges are abolished. *^ MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 19 B. Resolved, — That this Society do express their abhorrence of tumult and violence ; and that, as they aim at Reform, not anarchy; reason, firmness, and unanimity are the only arms they themselves will employ, or persuade their fellow-citizens to exert, against ABUSE OF power. Ordered, — That the Secretary of this Society do transmit a copy of the above to the Societies for Constitutional Infor- mation, established in London, Sheffield, and Manchester. By Order of the Committee, T. HARDY, Secretary. April 2, 1792. A copy of these Resolutions was sent to the Society for Constitutional Information, as already mentioned, and they were, by that Society, published in the newspapers. They were afterwards published by the London Corres- ponding Society itself, in the form of hand-bills, and thousands of them distributed in London^ and throughout the country. It was about this period that Hardy became acquainted with a gentleman, whose acquaintance and friendship was a real honour — J. Home Tooke — that steady and intrepid champion of freedom ; that unflinching supporter of Parliamentary Reform ; and with many others of the friends of that cause, which promised peace and happi- ness to their fellow men. These virtuous men have been since falsely represented by successive governments and their hirelings, as traitors and enemies to their country ; a dark and shameful blot on the annals of this civilized land, that its destinies should be confided to the manage- ment of men, either so ignorant or so wicked ! The discerning and unprejudiced part of the nation, however, see clearly who are, and who have been the real enemies of their country ; who have been aiding and abetting the c2 20 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. robbery and murder of their fellow creatures, both at home and abroad. And these are the men who have been active in slandering and persecuting the friends of justice and humanity. He acquired the acquaintance of Thomas Paine, also, about the same time ; a man whose political writings, especially his celebrated " Rights of Man," seemed to electrify the nation, and terrified the imbecile government of the day into the most desperate and un- justifiable measures. The next transaction of the London Corresponding Society, was a congratulatory Address to the National Convention of France, of which the following is a copy* It was confided to the French Ambassador, who was, soon after, suddenly ordered to quit this country. In the Convention it was received with rapturous applause, as the first address from this country ; and was afterwards one of the documents brought against the prisoners tried for High Treason. The National Convention distributed printed copies throughout all the Departments of France, where it caused a very great sensation. The London Corresponding Society's Congratulatory Address to the National Conve7ition of France. " Frenchmen, " While foreign robbers are ravaging your territories, under the specious pretext of justice, cruelty and desolation leading on their van, perfidy, vf'iih treachery, bringing up their rear ; yet mercy and friendship, impudently held forth to the world as the sole motives of their incursions, the oppressed part of mankind forgetting, for a while, their own sufferings, feel only for yours, and with an anxious eye watch the event, fervently supplicating the Almighty Ruler of the universe to be favourable to your cause, so intimately blended with their own. MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 21 ** Frowned upon by an oppressive system of controul, whose gradual, but continued encroachments, have deprived this nation of nearly all its boasted liberty, and brought us almost to that abject state of slavery, from which you have so emerged, 5,000 British citizens, indignant, manfully step forth to rescue their country from the opprobrium brought upon it by the supine conduct of those in power. They conceive it to be the duty of Britons to countenance and assist to the utmost of their power, the champions of human happiness, and to swear to a nation, proceeding on the plan you have adopted, an inviolable friendship. Sacred from this day be that friend- ship between us ! and may vengeance to the uttermost, over- take the man who hereafter shall attempt to cause a rupture. ** Though we appear so few at present, be assured. French- men, that our number encreases daily ; it is true, that the stern uplifted arm of authority at present keeps back the timid, that busily circulated impostors hourly mislead the credulous, and that Court intimacy, with avowed French traitors, has some effect on the unwary, and on the ambitious. But, with cer- tainty, we can inform you, friends and freemen, that informa- tion makes a rapid progress among us. Curiosity has taken possession of the public mind ; the conjoint reign of ignorance and despotism passes away. Men now ask each other. What is freedom ? What are our rights ? Frenchmen, you are already free, and Britons are preparing to become so. ** Casting far from us the criminal prejudices artfully incul- cated by evil-minded men, and wily Courtiers, we, instead of natural enemies, at length discover in Frenchmen our fellow citizens of the world, and our brethren by the same Heavenly Father, who created us for the purpose of loving and mutually assisting each other ; but not to hate, and to be ever ready to cut each others throats, at the commands of weak or ambitious Kings, and corrupt Ministers. ** Seeking our real enemies, we find them in our bosoms, we feel ourselves inwardly torn by, and ever the victims of a restless, all consuming aristocracy, hitherto the bane of every c3 I 22 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. nation under the sun ! Wisely have you acted in expelling it from France. ** Warm as our wishes for your success, eager as we are to behold freedom triumphant, and man every where restored to the enjoyment of his just rights, a sense of our duty, as orderly citizens, forbids our flying in arms to your assistance ; our government has pledged the national faith to remain neutral : — in a struggle of liberty against Despotism, Britons remain neutral ! oh shame ! But we have entrusted our King with discretionary powers ! — we, therefore, must obey ;— our hands are bound, but our hearts are free, and they are with you. ** Let German despots act as they please. We shall rejoice at their fall, compassionating however their enslaved subjects. We hope this tyranny of their masters will prove the means of reinstating, in the full enjoyment of their rights and liberties, millions of our fellow creatures. *' With unconcern, therefore, we view the Elector of Hanover join his troops to traitors and robbers ; but the King of Great Britain will do well to remember, that this country is not Hanover. — Should he forget this distinction, we will not. ** While you enjoy the envied glory of being the unaided defenders of freedom, we fondly anticipate, in idea, the nume- rous blessings mankind will enjoy ; if you succeed, as we ardently wish, the triple alliance (not of Crowns, but) of the people of America, France, and Britain, will give freedom to Europe, and peace to the whole world. Dear friends, you combat for the advantage of the human race. How well pur- chased will be, though at the expense of much blood, the glorious, the unprecedented privilege of saying mankind is free ! Tyrants and tyranny are no more ! Peace reigns on the earth ! And this is the work of Frenchmen ! " The desire of having the concurrence of different Societies to this Address, has occasioned a month's delay in presenting it. Success, unparallelled, has now attended your arms. We congratulate you thereon. That success has removed our MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 23 anxiety, but it has no otherwise influenced our sentiments in your behalf. Remember, Frenchmen, that although this testi- mony of friendship only now reaches your Assembly, it bears date the 27th September, 1792." (Signed by Order) MAURICE MARGAROT, President. THOMAS HARDY, Secretary. We now arrive at a period which draws the subject of this Memoir forth from the humble occupation of a shoe- maker, in which he had hitherto laboured with great credit to himself, to take his stalld by the side of those immortal heroes, in whose praise the tongues of Britons will never cease to speak with rapture and grateful vene- ration. With that patriotic band who broke the ruffian arm of arbitrary power, and dyed the field and the scaffold with their pure and precious blood, for the liberties of their country, — Hampden, Russell, Sidney ; ye intrepid martyrs to freedom ! All hail to your ever glorious memory ! Alas ! how near was the page of our history to being again stained with the record of another bloody tragedy, similar to that which terminated your bright and honourable career ! But, thanks to the firmness and integrity of twelve honest Britons, the page which was again intended for so foul a record has been preserved pure, and, for the happiness of millions, has been made the splendid recorder of the triumph of truth and justice. But to return to the subject, from which the warmth of honest feeling has caused us to digress. Before the end of the "year 1792, such is the prevalence of truth, and such is the weight and force of her arguments, the London Corresponding Society, to which Hardy was still Secre- tary, formed an intimate connexion, and had frequent c4 24 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARBY. correspondence with every Society in Great Britain, which had been instituted for the purpose of obtaining, by legal and constitutional means, a Reform in the Commons' House of Parliament. The correspondence with these Societies, and with others which continued to be daily form- ing, in all parts of England and Scotland, was regular, until they were deranged in November, by the starting up of a Society, hostile to liberty, under the denomination of ** An Association for protecting property against repub- licans and levellers," which met at the Crown and Anchor Tavern. This Society was not merely coun- tenanced, but actually appointed by the Ministers of that day, for the express purpose of calumniating the best friends of the country, that they might plunder and tyran- nize, uncontrolled, over the people, in which, in a great measure, they succeeded. John Reeves, Charles Yorke, and Mr. Devaynes, were at the head of the Association. In this deranged state of the London Corresponding Society, they published an Address to the Nation, vin- dicating their character from the base lies propagated against them by the new Association, every member of which was interested in preventing Reform. The whole body, with their connexions, were, in fact, plundering the nation of millions, which has since been clearly proved ; so that if a Reform had taken place at that time, these few worthless individuals would have been reduced to comparative poverty, and the nation saved. Mr. Margarot signed the Address as Chairman, and Hardy as Secretary. The copies were printed in the form of large broadsides, and posted up in various parts of London. As a preli- minary to what was to be expected to follow, the bill- sticker was apprehended, and afterwards tried, found guilty, and sentenced to six months imprisonment and a fine, which was paid by the Society. The Address is here given at length, that the present generation may see MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 25 the severity with which liberal principles were dealt with in the days of their fathers, and that if these fathers did not recover the liberty that had been wrested from their ancestors, it was not for want of struggling, and braving every danger in the cause. It was written by Felix Vaughan, Esq. Barrister at Law, and Member of the Society. ADDRESS OF THE LONDON CORRESPONDING SOCIETY, To the other Societies of Great Britain, UNITED FOR THE OBTAINING A REFORM IN PARLIAMENT. Friends, and Fellow Countrymen, Unless we are greatly deceived, the time is approaching when the object for which we struggle is likely to come within our reach. — That a nation like Britain should be free, it is requisite only that Britons should will it to become so ; that such should be their will, the abuses of our original Constitution, and the alarm of our aristocratic enemies, suflSciently witness. — Confident in the purity of our motives, and in the justice of our cause, let us meet falsehood with proofs, and hypocrisy with plainness. — Let us persevere in declaring our principles, and Misrepresentation will meet its due reward — Contempt. In this view the artifices of a late aristocratic associa- tion, formed on the 20th instant, call for a few remarks, on account of the declaration they have published relative to other Clubs and Societies formed in this nation ; it is true that this meeting oi gentlemen (for so they style themselves), have mentioned no names, instanced no facts, (pioted no 26 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. authorities; but they take upon themselves to assert, that bodies of their countrymen have been associated, professing opi- nions favourable to the RIGHTS of MAN, to LIBERTY AND EQUALITY; and moreover that those opinions are conveyed in the terms NO KING ! NO PARLIAMENT ! — So much for their assertions. If this be intended to include the Societies to which we respectively belong, we here, in the most solemn manner, deny the latter part of the charge; while, in admitting the former, we claim the privilege, and glory in the character of Britons. Whoever shall attribute to us (who wish only the restoration of the lost liberties of our country) the expressions of no King ! no Parliament ! or any design of invading the PROPERTY of other men, is guilty of a wilful, an impu- dent, and a malicious falsehood. We know and are sensible that the wages of every man are his right; that difference of strength, of talents, and of industry, do and ought to afford proportional distinctions of property, which, when acquired and confirmed by the laws, is sacred and inviolable. We defy the most slavish and malevolent man in the meeting of the 20th instant, to bring the remotest proof to the contrary. If there be no proof, we call upon them to justify an insidious calumny, which seems invented only to terrify independent Britons from reclaiming the rightful Constitution of their country. We admit and we declare, that we are friends to CIVIL LIBERTY, and therefore to NATURAL EQUALITY, both of which we consider as the RIGHTS of MANKIND — could we believe them to be ** in direct opposition to the laws of this land,^^ we should blush to find ourselves among the number of its inhabitants ; but we are persuaded that the abuses of the constitution will never pass current for its true principles, since we are told in its first Charter that all are EQUAL in the sight of the law, which ** shall neither he sold, nor refused, nor delayed, to any free man whatsoever J^ Should it ever happen that " right and justice" are opposed by MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 27 expence, by refusal, or by delay, then is this principle OF equality violated, and we are no longer FREEMEN. Such are our notions of those rights, which it is boldly maintained are ** inconsistent with the well-being of Society,'' But let us not suffer men who avow no principles of liberty, whose favourite cry is INEQUALITY OF PROPERTY, to estrange others of our countrymen from aiding us in serving the community, and from recovering to the nation that share of its sovereignty, which has unhappily been sacrificed to CORRUPT COURTIERS and intriguing BOROUGH MONGERS. If our laws and constitution be just and wise in their origin and their principle, every deviation from them as first esta- blished must be injurious to the people, whose persons and property were then secured; if, at the Revolution, this country was adequately represented, it is now so no longer, and therefore calls aloud for REFORM. If it be true that the people of Britain are superior to other nations, is it that our taxes are less burthensome, or that our provisions are less expensive? Is it from the various productions of our soil that we are rich? Is it owing to the majority of our numbers that we are strong? Certainly not! France has the advantage in all these respects, and up to this period she has never been our superior in wealth, in power, in talents, or in virtues. But let us not deceive ourselves ; the difference between us and that nation was, formerly, that our Monarchy was limited, while theirs was absolute; that the number of our aristocracy did not equal the thousandth part of theirs; that we had Trial by Jury, vv^hile they had none; that our persons were protected by the laws, while their lives were at the mercy of every titled individual. We, therefore, had that to fight for, which to them was unknown, since we were MEN while they were SLAVES. The scene indeed has changed : like our brave ancestors of the last century, they have driven out the family that would have destroyed them; they have scattered the mercenaries who 28 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. invaded their freedom, ** and have broken their chains on the heads of their oppressors." If during this conflict with military assassins and domestic traitors, cruelty and revenge have arisen among a few inhabitants of the capital, let us lament these effects of a bloody and tyrannous MANI- FESTO; but let us leave to the hypocrite pretenders to humanity, the task of blackening the misfortune, and attri- buting to a whole nation the act of an enraged populace. As we have never yet been cast so low at the foot of despotism, so is it not requisite that we should appeal to the same awful tribunal with our brethren on the Continent. May our enmities be written in sand, but may our rights be engraven on marble ! We desire to overthrow no property but what has been raised on the HUINS OF OUH LI- BERTY! We look with reverence on the landed and commercial interests of our country ; but we view with abhor- rence that MONOPOLY of BURGAGE TENURES, unwarranted by law or reason, in this or any other nation in Europe. Let us then continue, with patience and firmness, in the path which is begun ; let us then wait and watch the ensuing Sessions of Parliament, from whom we have much to hope, and little to fear. The House of Commons may have been the source of our calamity ; it may prove that of our deliverance. Should it not, we trust we shall not prove unworthy of our forefathers, WHOSE EXERTIONS IN THE CAUSE OF MANKIND SO WELL DESERVE OUR IMITATION. M. MARGAROT, Chairman, T. HARDY, Secretary. The signing of this Address, though it was so public, and its principles, it is to be hoped, were those of every rational being, was brought against Hardy as an act of High Treason. Other documents, equally devoid of treason, were also brought against him, some of which shall be hereafter MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 29 noticed ; but to notice tliem all would be to republish the Attorney General's speech, which took hiiu nine hours to deliver. In the Spring of the year 1793, petitions were pro- moted by the different Constitutional Societies in their respective towns and neighbourhoods, not in their capa- cities of members of the Societies, but as members of the community deprived of their rights, and desiring that those rights might be restored to them. These petitions were presented to the House of Com- mons, for the purpose of strengthening Mr. Grey's motion for Reform. Some of them were read and animadverted upon with great asperity by many of the members of that House, for speaking with a bolder tone of remonstrance than was agreeable to the prejudices and opinions of a great majority of them. These, of course, were all re- jected. Others, less offensive, were ordered to lie on the table, or, in other words, were consigned to oblivion without observation. In October, 1793, a Convention of the different Societies of Scotland was held in Edinburgh, with the view of obtaining the Reformation of Parliament ; pre- viously to which Mr. Skirving, the Secretary, wrote to Mr. Hardy, Secretary to the London Corresponding Society, requesting that Society to send delegates to the Convention in Scotland, and also a request that he and the other members would use their influence with other English Societies to do the like. A similar letter was sent, by Mr. Skirving, to the London and Sheffield Con- stitutional Societies, with a similar request, all of which requests were complied with ; and these three Societies, on the 9th of November, 1793, sent delegates ac- cordingly. It is almost unnecessary to say any thing upon a sub- ject so well known ; but as the thread of our story requires 30 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. to be preserved unbroken, we shall be as concise as pos- sible. The Convention met in Edinburgh on the 19th of November, 1793 ; the delegates of the three English Societies being of the number that attended. They pro- ceeded to business with a regularity, decorum, and dignity, by no means unworthy of the imitation of assemblies of a much longer standing. They met with no interruption for upwards of a fortnight. Their proceed- ings were open to the public at large, and their resolutions debated and adopted in the presence of all who chose to attend. A short time after the meeting of the Convention, Mr. Margaret, delegate from the London Corresponding Society, received authority from the United Societies of Norwich to act for them ; and Mr. C, Brown, from the Sheffield Society, received a similar commission from the Society at Leeds. Every week fresh Societies were springing up, even to the utmost parts of Scotland, and sending delegates to Edinburgh to the Convention. The €yes of the whole nation were so anxiously and steadily fixed upon its proceeding's, that the servants of Govern- ment became alarmed, and all at once, in defiance of justice, the law of Scotland, and in the face of Magna Charta, and the Bill of Rights, the Magistrates of Edin- burgh, attended by a posse of constables, thief catchers, and others, armed with bludgeons, pistols, and hangers, invaded the Convention, and insisted on dispersing it, which, after some struggle, they effected. What followed, is well known. The English delegates were all held to bail, and some of them indicted. Margaret and Gerald were tried for sedition ; and with Skirving, the Secretary to the Scottish Societies and Convention, Thomas Muir, and F. Palmer, were convicted, and sentenced to fourteen years transportation to Botany Bay. The English Societies, whose rights had been thus wantonly trampled upon, in the severe and unjust punish- MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 31 ment inflicted upon their delegates, held frequent meet- ings, and passed some strong resolutions on the subject, expressive of their indignation ; and after many consulta- tions and communications, it was at length resolved to call another Convention to be held in England, and to which the Scottish Societies should be requested to send delegates. The English Ministers being advised, through their spies and informers, that this measure was about to be adopted, took the alarm, and employed such means to prevent it as reflect disgrace upon their memories, and astonished, not only Great Britain, but also all Europe. On the memorable 12th of May, 1794, at half- past six o'clock in the morning, Mr. Lazun, junior, the son of the King's messenger of that name, and who was himself afterwards made an assistant messenger, as a reward for his activity on that occasion, gave a thundering knock at the door, No. 9, Piccadilly, before the shop was opened ; and Hardy, having no suspicion of what had been pre- pared for him, jumped out of bed, and went, half-dressed, to see what could be the matter at that early hour. Upon the door being opened, Lazun rushed in, followed by John Gurnel, the King's messenger, P. Macmanus, and John Townsend, Bow Street officers — better known by the appellation of thief takers— Mr. John King, private Secretary to Mr. Dundas, and two or three others whose names Hardy did not learn. Lazun seized him, and pro- ceeded to search his pockets, where he found some letters and papers, besides his pocket book, containing two bills of exchange to the amount of £196. Hardy desired to know by what authority he was thus treated, when Lazun shewed him a paper, which he called a warrant for his apprehension, on a charge of High Treason : but before he could read more than a few lines, the young upstart in authority, re-folded, and put it again in his pocket. He observed, however, something about High Treason, con- 32 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. nected with his own name, but had not an opportunity then of observing by whom it was signed. Lazun was very active in rumaging all the drawers, even those containing Mrs. Hardy's clothes. He demanded the key of a bureau, which happened to be locked, and when he found he could not obtain it, he threatened to break it, and proceeded to put his threat in execution by trying to force it open with the poker. Mrs. Hardy entreated him to desist, and Mr. King called in a smith, who was in waiting, with a box full of all sorts of pick- locks, and skeleton keys. This man did his business very expeditiously. He picked the lock of the bureau, and those of some trunks, and the party soon had four large silk handkerchiefs filled with letters and other papers ; among which were many of Hardy's private letters from friends in America, and at home. Mr. King then called a hackney coach, which was in attendance, into which Mr. Hardy and the four bundles of papers were put, accompanied by Gurnel and Townsend, and carried to the messenger's house in King Street, corner of Charles Street, Westminster. The rest of the party remained behind, at No. 9, Piccadilly, and, not content with manuscripts, took as many books and pamphlets as nearly filled a corn sack, without marking one article. The feelings of poor Mrs. Hardy, on that occasion, may be easier imagined than described. In an advanced state of pregnancy, sitting in bed all the time, and unable to dress before so many unwelcome visitors, whom she could hardly consider in a better light than that of robbers. Hardy remained in the custody of Mr. Gurnel, by whom, and his family, he was civilly treated, from the 12th to the 29th of May. During that time he under- went several examinations before the Privy Council, con- sisting of Messrs. Pitt, and Dundas, the Duke of Mon^ trose, the Marquis of Stafford, Lords Grenville, Hawkes- f-'"' ■ MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 33 bury, and Salisbury, the Lord Chancellor, the Attorney and Solicitor General, White, Solicitor to the Treasury, John Reeves, of notorious memory, Falkner, &c. The first examination took place at eleven o^clock on the morning on which he was taken ; when, being asked by Mr. Dundas his name and occupation, he gave a ready answer. He was then asked many questions to which he could not reply ; and many letters and papers were shewn to him which he had never seen before, and of which, of course, he knew nothing ; but the letters and papers he had written and signed, he readily acknowledged. On Tuesday and Wednesday his examination was con- tinued ; but he was not again called before the Council until Monday, when he was questioned about guns, pikes, and other warlike instruments. Of such instruments he knew nothing. It is impossible that so many Societies as then existed, could be without some violent characters, among which might be included the Government spies ; but whatever such unworthy persons may have hinted, in any of the numerous Societies, about arms. Hardy, and the real patriotic part of them, abhorred the very idea of having recourse to violence of any sort. All their efforts were directed to the recovery of the lost rights of themselves and of their fellow citizens — in fact, to the attainment of Parliamentary Reform, by constitutional and peaceable means. On the very day of Hardy's capture, a Message from the King was brought down to the Commons, by Mr. Dundas, announcing that the seditious practices which had been for some time carried on by certain Societies in London, in correspondence with Societies in different parts of the country, had lately been pursued with in- creased activity and boldness, and had been avowedly directed to the object of assembling a general convention of the people, in contempt and defiance of the authority D 34 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. of Parliament, and on principles subversive of the ex- isting laws and Constitution, and directly tending to the introduction of that system of anarchy and confusion which had fatally prevailed in France, That, in conse- quence, his Majesty had given directions for seizing the books and papers of the said Societies in London, which had been seized accordingly ; and that these books and papers, appearing to contain matters of great importance to the public, his Majesty had given orders for laying them before the House of Commons ; and his Majesty recommended it to the House to consider the same, and to take such measures thereupon as might appear to be necessary, for effectually guarding against the further prosecution of those dangerous designs, and for preserving to his Majesty's subjects the enjoyment of the blessings derived to them by the Constitution happily established in these kingdoms. On the 14th, a Committee was appointed for examining the papers, which Committee was afterwards accused, and not without apparent reason, of falsifying and garbling the documents. On the 16th, Mr. Pitt brought up the Report, and moved '' for leave to bring in a bill to em- power his Majesty to secure and detain all such persons as shall be suspected of conspiring against his person and Government :" which, after an animated debate, during which the House divided thirteen times, was granted. A^fter another debate, in which the minority, though small, displayed splendid talents, the bills passed, of course. On the 17th, a similar Message was presented by Lord Grenville, from his Majesty, to the House of Lords, when the Ministers were attacked by the Duke of Grafton, and Lord Stanhope. The latter nobleman defended the Societies. " These papers," said he, *' are written by a set of men, honest in their intentions, though not rich, nor of high rank. They may, from a defect of MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 35 education, have been somewhat inaccurate in their ex- pressions — (the Ministers laughed at this) ; but their in- tentions were clearly legal, as their professed aim was to obtain a redress of grievances by legal means. The bill for suspending the Habeas Corpus passed the Lords on the 22d of May, and was protested against by the foUowing noblemen :— Earl Stanhope, Duke of Bedford, the Earls of Albemarle, Lauderdale, and Derby. In spite, however, of all these severe measures, it is pretty clear, had this country remained at peace, that nothing short of an extensive and efficient Reform would have satisfied the people. The Ministers were ** wise in their generation ;" they saw this, and, with a view of diverting the public mind from the subject, plunged the country into a destructive war, which has caused an accu- mulation of debt and misery, dreadful to contemplate. The industrious have complained, and have had oppres- sion added to oppression. They have been answered as Rehoboam answered the people of Israel : — ** My Father hath chastised you with whips, but I will chastise you with scorpions." And what was the consequence ? The people said, ** what portion have we in David .** neither have we inheritance in the son of Jesse. To your tents, Israel; now see to thine own house David. So Israel rebelled against the House of David unto this day." — 1 Kings, chapter xii. verses 16, 19. But to resume our subject. Hardy was, on the 29th of May, 1794, committed to the Tower, on a warrant from the Privy Council, on a charge of High Treason, with orders that none should be admitted to see him, except such as brought a precept for that purpose, from those under whose authority he was committed. After some days had elapsed, the faithful partner of his bosom, who has been already mentioned as far advanced in a state of pregnancy, obtained permission, by virtue of such precept, to pay d2 36 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. him a mournful visit, and was allowed after to see him twice a week ; but not to remain with him more than two hours at a time ; sometimes no more than one, and that always in the presence of the Gaoler, one of the Wardens, or a Serjeant, whom the Gaoler ordered to prevent any private conversation inaudible to him. If they happened to whisper, they were told to speak up, that they might be heard. In the mean time, the newspapers, particularly the Times Newspaper, teemed with the most wicked and shameful misrepresentation of the views and intentions of the unfortunate prisoner. He was loaded with every degree of calumnious accusations, with a view of inflaming and prejudicing the public mind against him. Even his innocent and unprotected family was persecuted with the most dastardly and unmanly rancour. The following well known fact will evince this beyond contradiction. It happened on the 11th of June, 1794, the night on which the illumination took place in London, to commemorate Lord Howe's victory over the French fleet. - On that night a large mob of ruffians assembled before his house. No. 9, Piccadilly, and without any ceremony began to assail the windows with stones and brick-bats. These were very soon demolished, although there had been lights up as in the adjoining houses. They next attempted to break open the shop door, and swore, with the most horrid oaths, that they would either burn or pull down the house. The unfortunate Mrs. Hardy was within, with no other protector than an old woman who attended her as nurse. Weak and enfeebled as she was, from her per- sonal situation, and from what she must have suffered on account of her husband, it is no wonder that she should have been terrified by the threats and assaults of such a crowd of infuriated desperadoes. We have seen the rea- diness with which the military have been sent to the aid MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 37 of the civil power, to preserve crimping houses, but neither civil nor military power interfered to preserve the property of this persecuted man, nor that of the exalted patriot, Lord Stanhope, from the violence of a lawless mob, more than suspected of having been hired for the base purpose. Mrs. Hardy called to the neighbours who lived at the back of the house, and who were in a state of great anxiety for her safety, in case the villains should have effected their purpose of breaking into the premises. They advised her to make her way through a small back window, on the ground floor, which she accordingly attempted, but being very large round the waist, she stuck fast in it, and it was only by main force that she could be dragged through, much injured by the bruises which she received : and as, when brought to bed, soon after- wards, the child was dead, it may reasonably be con- cluded that it lost its life by the violent compression which the unfortunate mother suffered in that afilicting business. The unceasing and merciless system of defamation which continued to be pursued against her husband, had such an evident effect upon the mind of Mrs Hardy, that her health began rapidly to decline ; yet she strove to appear as cheerful as possible, and continued her visits to the Tower, as often as she was permitted, until the very day of her death. On the 27th of August, 1794, she was taken in labour, and delivered of a dead child. She de- clared, soon afterwards, that she found her own death fast approaching, and that she believed it to be entirely owing to what she had suffered in her person, and in her mind, on account of the confinement of her husband. About two o'clock of the same day she had parted with her husband, in as good spirits as was possible in her situa- tion — took her lust farewell— it was her last — for they d3 38 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. were doomed never to see each other again in this vale of tears. The following is the beginning of a letter which Mrs. Hardy was writing to her husband^ a few hours before she died, August 27th, 1794 ; but a summons of eternal importance to her own soul obliged ber to drop the pen without finishing it. ** My dear Hardy, " This comes with my tenderest affection for you. You are never out of my thoughts, sleeping or waking. Oh, to think what companions you have with you ! None that you can con- verse with either on temporal or spiritual matters ; but I hope the Spirit of God is both with you and me, and I pray that he may give us grace to look up to Christ. There all the good is that we can either hope or wish for, if we have but faith and patience, although we are but poor sinful mortals. My dear, you have it not in " To describe the state of the unfortunate prisoner's feel- ings, on receiving the mournful account of his loss, next morning, would be impossible, Let us think better of human nature than to suppose it necessary. The reader who can peruse the tragic story without a double emotion of indignation and pity, is not to be envied his feelings. The following beautiful poem, written by *' A friend to the distressed Patriots," appeared some time afterwards, and merits a place here. The author. Citizen Lee, went to America, in 1796, and died soon after. He wrote many beautiful poems, which have been published in several volumes. Free for ever be the land which afforded an asylum and a grave to the patriot bard ! MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 39 ON THE DEATH OF MRS. HARDY, Wife of Mr. Thomas Hardy, of Piccadilly ; IMPRISONED IN THE TOWER ON A CHARGE OF HIGH TREASON. She expired in Child-bed, on Wednesday, August 27, 1794 ; and declared, in her last moments, that she died a martyr to the sufferings of her husband. Exalted hero ! glory of my verse ; Thy WEIGHTY SUFFERINGS ! would the Muse rehearse ! With melting lays obtain the listening ear, And draw from Pity's eye the pearly tear. I see thee, fetter'd in tyrannic chains. Thy spirit laden with a thousand pains ; Yet heedless to the mighty load of woe. No plaint is heard, no tears are seen to flow ; The pleasing hope of bringing slaves relief, Inspires thy gen'rous soul, and lulls thy grief. On Heav'n reclining, still thou hop'st to see All tyrants dead, and heav'n-born liberty Her gentle sway extending all around. Each human forehead with her laurels crown'd ! But why art thou enchain'd ? What hellish might Presumed to rob thee of thy dearest right ? To rob the world ? So good a man confin'd, He suffers not alone, but all mankind ! Twas tyranny's fell deed ; his haggard eyes. Saw truth in thee, reflected from the skies ; Bright as the morning planet, with her light, Chasing the shadows of retreating night ; And trembled lest the secrets should be known. That are in hell conceal'd and prop his Throne, D 4 40 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. With the strong energy of fear imprest, Thee, son of heaven ! his iron hands arrest : Grasp not alone the common joys of life. But ev'n the brightest gem, thy loving wife : Inhuman monster ! smiling at the smart. That nature shot thro' each united heart. Behold the scene, the piercing scene appears I Imagination drops a pitying tear. Bereft of thee, thy tender partner pines. Thinks of thy state, and dangers new divines : 'Till in her bosom black despair conceives, Nor beam of hope the pungent pain relieves ; Tho' thy misfortunes all her efforts claim, The hand of nature bears upon her frame : Feeble, and unassisted, hear her cry, " For thee, husband! 'Tisfor thee I die .'" The martyr falls — Angelic guides convey The spirit to the climes of endless day. Ah ! now the cruel tidings reach thine ear. Thy dauntless courage melts into a tear : Thy joints relax, thy fearful face grows wan. And all the stoic softens into man : For one soft moment other cares resign'd, Ev'n LIBERTY, her image fills thy mind ; Yet in the cause thy soul unmov'd remains^ And from th' oppressor's rod new vigour gains. How great thy sufferings ! how amazing great ! Thy patience future poets shall relate ! Man shall record with gratitude thy name. The winds from pole to pole shall waft thy fame. And (if the Muse her object may pursue. And set futurity to mortal view ;) Ere thou rejoicing yield'st thy fleeting breath, Thy wife to follow thro' the paths of death ; Freedom shall reign ! from earth thou shalt arise ; And bear the tidings to th' impatient skies. MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 41 And will ye deign to hear my mean applause, Ye friends of man, and pillars of the cause ! Who, firm as rocks, amid the storm have stood, And dar'd all dangers for the public good ; Ye, who with Hardy now are doom'd to feel The lawless vengeance of ambitious zeal ! How would my heart with gen'rous rapture glow. Could my weak strain alleviate your woe ; Inspire some noble bosom to a deed. Humanity and Nature's dictates plead, To pity your misfortunes ; and impart His needful succour : — Every feeling heart, Eager must yield the strongest aid it can. To prop the cause of Gody of Angela and of Man / A Friend to the distressed Patriots. One would have naturally supposed that the wretches, who had so long amused themselves by sporting with the feelings of this unfortunate couple, would have been dis- armed of their malignity, by the death of a much injured and amiable woman, and would have stopped in the midst of their shameful career ; but the diabolical rancour of their minds was not to be thus satisfied. It is scarcely credible, that in a country celebrated for its humanity and liberality, such conduct should have been still pursued ; yet so it was ; for on the very day, or the day but one after the death of Mrs. Hardy, calumnious paragraphs appeared in the Times Newspaper. Hardy's place of confinement was a small room above the western gate of the Tower. Mr. Thelwall's room was next, and Mr. Tooke's below. Here he remained for about ten or twelve days after the mournful event already narrated, without taking his accustomed walks — for the prisoners had been permitted to walk on the ramparts and paradei some hours each day, for some time before — in a sf-ate of mind impossible for tongue or pen to describe, 42 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. deprived of the faithful and beloved partner of his bosom, the participator of all his joys, and the kind and tender alleviator of all his sorrows ; and without that variety of objects and occupations which divert the minds of men in Society, in a certain measure, from continually brood- ing over their afflictions ; his mental sufferings must have been extreme. At length his fellow prisoners not meeting him in their daily rounds, his friend, Mr. Tooke, found means, privately, of advising him not to confine himself so closely, but to walk out and meet his friends in the dif- ferent rendezvous which they had appointed ; that, by seeing, and privately conversing with them, it might relieve his spirits, and enable him, with more fortitude, to meet the tremendous trial which awaited him; for, about this time, there were some hints in the public papers that they were to be tried for High Treason. The Special Commission of Oyer and Terminer, for en- quiring into, and hearing and determining of all High Treasons, and misprison of Treason, in compassing or imagining the death of the King, &c. was dated the J 0th of September, 1794. The volume of written evidence was so enormous, that the Attorney General was upwards of nine hours in opening the case to the Jury. Never was such a host of Crown Lawyers employed against any per- son tried for High Treason ; and they certainly did justice to their employers, for they strained every nerve, in order to criminate their intended victim. The whole weight of the arm of power was employed to crush him ; for if his ruin could be once accomplished, the other eleven who were in the indictment with him, were reckoned upon as an easy sacrifice. It appears that the Government felt so confident of a conviction, that they had prepared eight hundred war- rants, three hundred of which were actually signed, in order to be ready to be executed that very night and the next MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 43 morning, in case a verdict of guilty were returned. Who the pers(»ns thus marked for destruction were, Hardy did not learn, but he is compelled to believe the authority upon which he states the damning fact. No means, how- ever unjustifiable, were spared, that could effect his ruin. Letters written by others to different persons, without his knowledge or consent, and which he had never seen or heard of, until they were produced in Court, were attempted to be read in evidence against him, and one of that description was actually admitted. The following papers, which he found means of convey- ing privately to his brother-in-law, Mr. Walne, two days previously to his removal from the Tower, will shew what desperate means Hardy's blood thirsty enemies had recourse to, in order, if possible, to take away his life, so plainly, that it needs no comment. *' On Thursday last, Mr. Kinghorn, the Gentleman Gaoler, and Underwood, a Warder, came into my room. Mr. Kinghorn seemed much agitated, and asked me to step with him to the Governor's,- where he said a gentle- man was waiting, who wished to speak with me. I in- quired who it was, and what it was about ? Mr. King- horn replied, that he did not know, but believed it to be something about subpoenas. Not suspecting that a trap had been laid for me, I went readily with him, and two Warders, to the Governor's house on the parade. In the dining-room into which I was shewn, one of the clerks of Mr. White, Solicitor to the Treasury, was sitting alone. When we entered, he arose from his seat, with what might be taken for an innocent smile on his countenance, and, addressing his discourse to me, said, * Mr. Hardy, Mr. White omitted to inform you, when he delivered the indictment, that your Solicitor, by applying at the Crown Office, may have subpoenas for your witnesses without any expense to you.' All that I said in reply was, very well 44 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. and with a low bow returned with the Gaoler and the two Warders, in order to return to my room. In my way back I met Mr. Clarkson, my Solicitor, and told him where I had been^ and what orders I had to give him. He replied that he had received a letter from Mr. White, the day before, to the same purport. While we were standing- together talking, another of Mr. White's clerks, with a woman on his arm, came close up to us, and the female stared very hard at me. They walked on a few paces, then returned, and stared as before. 1 then recollected having seen the same couple standing opposite the Governor's door, apparently watching me as I came out. These two clerks were with White when he delivered the indictment ; and this is the Miss Jane Partridge, of Not- tingham, one of the witnesses for the Crown. They have had recourse to this artifice, to give her an opportunity of identifying my person. Before I had returned to my room five minutes, the same man whom I saw at the Governor's house came up to Thelwall, who is in the next room to me, and told him the same he had told me. This conduct caused some suspicion. Why should there have been such parade about my going to the Governor's, and yet the same message be delivered to Thelwall in his own room? We have enquired, and find that no such message has been sent to any of the other prisoners. There must, therefore, be some design in it. '* The mystery has been unfolded. Mr. Joyce, of Essex Street, informs us, that this woman has been brought to the Tower on purpose to see me; and it seems she is satisfied that I am the person who travelled with her from Nottingham to London, in the stage coach, about two years ago ; and what she is to swear to is this : that I said to her in the coach that I would no more mind cutting off the King's head than I would shaving myself. Take par- ticular notice of this woman ; if she swears to such words, MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 45 she perjures herself, for I never was at Nottingham in my life, nor farther north from London, by land, than Hamp- stead or Highgate." Tower, 20th October, 1794. How to counteract the evidence of this very wicked, or very much mistaken woman, was a very material point, and to be immediately considered. The circumstance was, without delay, communicated to the friends of the prisoners, and they set actively to work, and found per- sons who could prove satisfactorily that Hardy was not out of London one whole day, for more than a year before, and after the time she was to swear to. The hand of Providence is evident in the manner in which the testimony that Jane Partridge was to give was discovered. What evidence the other witnesses for the Crown were to give, had been pretty well ascertained ; but to what circumstance she was to bear witness, puzzled the friends of the prisoners. It happened, that the same evening she had been at the Tower to see Hardy, she drank tea with a party of young ladies, among whom there chanced to be the sister of Mr.Wardle, one of those in the indictment, but not in custody. Here Miss Wardle learnt the nature of Jane Partridge's evidence, and immediately communicated the circumstance to Mr. Joyce, of Essex Street, who went instantly to the Tower, and informed Hardy. Thus, great danger was averted ; for had nothing been known of the nature of her evidence before her coming into Court, it would then be difficult to rebut it : there would be no witnesses prepared to prove that Hardy had not been at Nottingham, and, conse- quently, could not have travelled with Jane Partridge from that town to London. When the trial came on, and she was ordered into Court, she fainted in the room where the Crown witnesses were. When recovered, she was again 46 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. called in, and again fainted. Whether the managers of the prosecution thought it best to dispense with her evi- dence, from a fear of its containing some fatal self-con- tradictions, or whether they found it impossible, from the effect that conscious guilt had upon her, to obtain that evi- dence, we know not ; but she was no more called. It is clear, however, were her nerves as strong as her heart, and those of her employers were corrupt and wicked, that she would have ventured her eternal salvation by trying, falsely, to swear away the life of a man whom she had never seen, until she went to the Tower for that purpose. It is to be hoped she lived to repent of her iniquity. If she is still living, it may be some consolation to her mind to know, that the man whom she would have destroyed forgives her. A full report of the trial is already before the public. It lasted nine days, on the last of which, after the fullest investigation that ever took place in this or any other country. Hardy was pronounced " NOT GUILTY,"* by the unanimous voice of as respectable a jury as ever was empannelled. A jury, which, with unremitting patience, underwent a fatigue and confinement unparal- lelled in the annals of our courts of justice. A jury, on whose awful voice depended the liberties of eleven mil- lions of their fellow citizens. A jury, whose integrity established on a firm basis the first and most important pillar of the English Constitution,— THE Trial by Jury, which had been greatly on the decline, and much tampered with, for some time before, and thereby entitled * On hearing of the acquittal of Hardy, John M^Creery, the printer and poet, wrote the following lines : — Twelve true hearted men held the balance of fate, While these Shylocks were whetting the knife : Of th' existence of thousands they lengthened the date — Their Verdict was Freedom and Life. MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 47 themselves to the grateful acknowledgments and applause, both of the present and of future generations. Having thus seen the subject of our Memoir delivered by twelve honest men from the power of his merciless persecutors, it will not, we trust, be deemed altogether foreign to our purpose to say a few words respecting the others who were in the same indictment with him. Mr. Tooke was the subject of vindictive persecution and prosecution, because he had been from early life an ardent supporter of the rights of his fellow men. His talents were of the first order, and he distinguished himself as an active and formidable champion in favour of, what was then called, Wilkes and liberty. On that occasion his oratory and writings were equally admired, for their energy, perspicuity, independence, and constitutional spirit. In spite of the oppressions and violence of the Court, Mr. Wilkes, in 1768, became a candidate for the county of Middlesex. On that occasion, Mr. Home rode through- out the whole county, canvassing for him, which was the principal cause of his being elected. Mr. Home was brought to the bar of the House of Commons, for a letter signed ** Strike but Hear,'' published in The Public Advertizer, 14th of February, 1774, in favour of a petition of W. Tooke, Esq. respecting the enclosing of an estate. Shortly afterwards, by virtue of an Act of Parliament, he took the name of Tooke, at the desire of the same gentle- man, who adopted him, and left him that estate which he had preserved from being swallowed up to satisfy the cormorant appetite of the law, at a time when he expected no other advantage from such essential services, than the conscious satisfaction of having procured justice to be done to a fellow citizen, about to be injured under the mask of legal forms. It is gratifying to see such eminent virtue and talent meet with their well merited reward, in 48 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. such very unequivocal testimony of friendship and grati- tude, as was thus given by Mr. Tooke to Mr. Home, now Home Tooke. Mr. Tooke's trial lasted six, Thelwall's four days ; and the prosecutors, finding they could not obtain a conviction, declined proceeding with the trials of the other nine. Mr. John Thelwall is well known, and highly esteemed as a public lecturer on politics, classical literature, and general education, in London, and various other parts of England and Scotland. He is also the author of many valuable works in prose and verse, and still lives highly and deservedly respected by a great number of his coun- trymen. Stewart Kyd was an eminent barrister, author of a great law work, and of several political productions. Augustus Bonney, an attorney of great repute. Jeremiah Joyce, a man of great worth, and highly esteemed by all who knew him ; was some years in the family of the late Earl Stanhope, as tutor to his sons. He was the author of several excellent sermons, some political tracts, and various valuable works on the arts and sciences. Thomas Holcroft, a celebrated novelist, dramatic writer, and traveller. The other five were John Richter, Thomas Wardle, Matthew Moore, Richard Hodgson, and John Baxter : all excellent men, and sincere and active promoters of Par- liamentary Reform. As severe sufferers in the same great cause, it is to be hoped that a very brief notice of those gentlemen who were tried at Edinburgh, will not be deemed out of place here. They were all men of education and talents, and their only crime was being sincere in a cause from which Mr. Pitt had become an apostate. The proceedings as:ainst them in the Court of Justiciary of Scotland, ex- MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 49 cited universal odium throughout the country, and were execrated in terms of indignation by several Members of both Houses of Parliament. Skirving and Gerald did not live long after their arrival at Botany Ba}'. Palmer, and another, purchased a vessel which had been a prize taken into Botany Bay, and intended coming home in her ; but she was very leaky, and they were obliged to put into, as it happened, the very port to which the vessel belonged, where she was re- seized with ber cargo, consisting of poor Palmer's whole property. Here all his sufferings closed soon after. Mr. Margaret was a man of a strong philosophical understanding, ready wit, undaunted courage, and incor- ruptible integrity. He was the only one, of the five^ who returned to his native country. He died about fifteen years ago. Mr. Thomas Muir, younger, of Hunter's Hill, was a man animated by strong enthusiasm, insomuch that even some Reformers blamed him for the indiscretion of his zeal ; but it must be admitted that the zeal that is re- quired to reform a system of abuses, ought to be intense, and should obtain forgiveness for any slight excesses it may run into. The following letter, written by Hardy to a friend, with a print of Muir, and containing quotations from his address to the Jury, and the Lord Justice Clerk, will clearly evince the rectitude of his intentions, and that he did not think his punishment, by any means, an igno- miny. " Dear Sir, I was very much gratified when you informed me, the other day, that you had in your possession a, box of manuscripts, letters, and papers, of that excellent man, the late Thomas Muir, who was cruelly sentenced hy the Court of Justiciary, of Edin- 50 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY* burgh, on the 31st of August, 1793, to 14 years transportation, to the inhospitable shore of Botany Bay. For what ? Whatwas his crime ? Strange to tell — for a life of virtuous conduct up to that hour. Hear what he says to the Jury at the close of his celebrated defence. " This is now, perhaps, the last time that I shall address my country. I have explored the tenor of my past life. Nothing shall tear me from the record of my de- parted days. From my infancy to this moment, I have de- voted myself to the cause of the people. It is a good cause ; it shall ultimately prevail; it shall finally triumph. Say then, openly, in your verdict, if you do condemn me, which I presume you will not, that it is to this cause alone, and not for those vain and vrretched pretexts stated in the indictment, intended only to colour and disguise the real motives of my accusation. Weigh well the verdict you are to pronounce. As for me, I am careless and indifferent to my fate. I can look danger, I can look death in the face, for I am shielded by the consciousness of my own rectitude. Nothing can deprive me of the resolution of the past. Nothing can destroy my inward peace of mind, arising from the remembrance of having done my duty." After the Judge had delivered the sentence, Mr. Muir rose, and said : — " My Lord Justice Clerk, I have only a few words to say. I shall not animadvert on the severity or the leniency of my sentence. Were I to be led this moment from the bar to the scaffold, I should feel the same calmness and serenity which I now do. My mind tells me, that I have acted agreeably to my cmiscience, and that I have engaged in a good — a just and a glorious cause, a cause which sooner or later must, and will pre- vail; and, by a timely reform, save this country from destruc- tion." With this I send a print of Thomas Muir for your ac- ceptance. When the Surprise transport was tyiiag off Portsmouth, at Motherbank, in which these persecuted patriots, Muir, Palmer, Margarot, and Skirving, were sent to Botainy Bay, I was on MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 51 board of her at the time, and saw Mr. Banks, who was an eminent statuary, take a cast from Muir's face, from which he afterwards made a bust, and from which the present engraving is taken. It is a good likeness. Accept, Dear Sir, the best wishes of THOMAS HARDY." Srd March, 1821. To Mr. Wither spoon ^ Cheapside. Mair escaped from Botany Bay, on board a South Sea Whaler ; was shipwrecked on the coast of South Ame- rica, and after a variety of hardships reached the Ha- vaunah. His misfortunes did not end here. He took a passage on board of a Spanish vessel for Europe ; and this country being- at that time at war with Spain, they were attacked by a British frigate, off Cadiz. In this rencounter a splinter struck Muir on the cheek, part of which it car- ried away, and destroyed the sight of one of his eyes. The Spanish vessel was boarded, and he was recognized, while lying among the wounded, by a British officer, as an old acquaintance, and this circumstance enabled him to get to Spain. At the invitation of the National Con- vention, he went soon afterwards to France, where the Government granted him a pension, which he enjoyed until his death. The particulars of his eventful life have been recently published. It was a most fortunate circumstance that the public prosecutor made choice of Hardy as the first victim to be sacrificed to ministerial vengeance. Had the friends of Reform themselves the election, a better could not have been made. Perhaps there never was a man, in any country, brought to the bar of a Court of Justice, for an imputed great crime, who could find so many respectable and creditable persons to testify to the uniform goodness of e2 52 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. his private and moral character. So numerous, indeed, were they, that his learned, eloquent, and excellent counsel, Erskine, and Gibbs, deemed it unnecessary to bring any thing like the whole of them forward. During the whole of the trial, the conscious rectitude of his own heart shone conspicuously through that index of the mind, the face. There the court, the jury, the learned bar, and the anxious and highly interested audi- tory, might plainly read the integrity of the honest man ; the inflexible firmness of the patriot, proud of having been called to answer, even with his life, for his exertions in the cause of freedom ; for his efforts to obtain for him- self, and fellow countrymen, a restoration of those inesti- mable rights which had raised the British name to that pre-eminence it had so long held among surrounding nations, and the abandoning" of which would have de- graded it to a level with the most slavish of them. The room in which he was confined in Newgate, during his trial, was in the inner prison, and he had, every morn- ing, to walk through the yard in which the felons were allowed to walk. They were heavily ironed, some with single, and some with double fetters. They were upon each side, and as he walked through the middle, he found that even men of that description could distinguish between a man suffering for the assertion of honest prin- ciples, and those suffering for a breach of those moral restraints that bind society together. They all expressed their good wishes towards him, in one way or other, and congratulated him on his good spirits. When he passed the room in which Mr. Kyd was con- fined, every morning, they shook hands through the iron grating. On the third day, he said cheerfully to Kyd, ** Now, Kyd, this day, death or liberty ;" but he was mis- taken, for his persecutors protracted the struggle as long as they had any hopes of success. MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 53 Mr. Ridgway, Mr. Symonds, and others, were confiued on the State side of the prison for libels, or, in other words, for publishing the truth. As he passed here every morning, on his way to the court, they crowded to the gate, anxious to shake hands with him, and to express their good wishes. One morning as he passed the gate in high spirits, he said to Ridgway, ** We are going to have another long spell at it to-day." On the Sunday before the trial finished, as he was walking in the yard with Mr. Kyd, and some others of his fellow prisoners, Mr. Kirby, the Keeper of Newgate, asked him if he would like to see the condemned cells— he accepted the invitation, without any hesitation, and went along with Kirby, accompanied by his friend Kyd. The poor unfortunate men were then walking in a small yard opposite the doors of their melan- choly dwellings ; consequently the cells were empty. What conversation took place, or what remarks were made by Hardy on those horrible places, it is unnecessary to repeat; but we may conceive that the sight was not very pleasing to a man in his situation, when it was un- certain whether he might not be lodged in one of them himself in two or three days. Immediately on the words '* Not Guilty" being pronounced by the foreman of the worthy jury, the Ses- sions House, where the court sat, was almost rent with loud and reiterated shouts of applause. The vast multi- tude that were waiting anxiously without, caught the joy- ful sound, and like an electric shock, or the rapidity of lightning, the glad tidings spread through the whole town, and were conveyed much quicker than the regular post could travel, to the most distant parts of the island, where all ranks of people were anxiously awaiting the result of the trial. After these extraordinary effusions of joy had a little e3 54 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. abated in the court, Mr. Kirby, the Gaoler, advised Hardy to go through the prison to the debtor's door, where a coach was in readiness to convey him, according to his directions, to tiie house of his brother-in-law, Mr. Walne, in Lancaster Court, in the Strand ; for he had no house of his own left to go to, nor family to welcome him home. Although he went into the coach as privately as possible, and drove down Snow Hill, yet he was observed by some persons, and the circumstance was announced to the mul- titude, who turned it into another direction, drove it along Fleet Market ; and when they came to the end of Fleet Street, the concourse of people was very great, though it was a bleak rainy afternoon in the gloomy month of November. Here they stopped the coach, took out the horses, and drew it along Fleet Street, the Strand, Pall- Mall, St. James's Street, Piccadilly, the Haymarket, and back again to Lancaster Court, where he alighted. He addressed the people from the window in a short speech, after which they gave three cheers, and quietly dispersed, leaving him to enjoy the evening with some particular friends, among whom were the Rev. Dr. Bogne, and Rev. James Steven. During the procession, the people fre- quently stopped, and shouted at different places, such as Charing Cross, Carleton House, and St. James's Palace. At No. 9, Piccadilly, his former comfortable habitation, they stopped a few minutes in solemn silence. The joy that appeared in every countenance of the vast multitudes of people who thronged the windows of the houses, in the streets through which the procession passed, was truly gratifying. In fact, the general joy that the acquittal of Hardy diffused throughout the country, was never exceeded, perhaps never equalled. It was heartfelt and extensive ; the triumph of freedom was complete over those who wished to crush it at one blow; and every liberal-minded man felt himself, and not without reason. MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 55 as if anexpectedly relieved from some terrible impendiog^ danger. Shortly after a public meeting, at which Earl Stanhope presided, was held at the Crown and Anchor, to celebrate the result of the State Trials. All parts of the house were filled, and it was calculated that the assemblage consisted of no fewer than a thousand persons. This meeting was addressed by the noble chairman, by Sheridan, and other gentlemen, with animation and effect ; and the friends of Parliamentary Reform have met annually on the 5th of November, to commemorate the acquittal of Thomas Hardy from a charge of High Treason, on the same day of the month, 1794. On these occasions it is expected, when a gentleman's health is drank, that, on returning thanks, he will make a speech ; but Hardy, not being an orator, has, of late years, previously committed to paper what he had to say on his health being drank. Three such addresses, with their dates, will be placed at the end of this sketch, and in which will be found an interesting account of some circumstances relating to the London Corresponding Society, not mentioned in the Memoir. We shall close the political part of this Memoir with the following address to the jury, the counsel, and his friends in general ; and we hope that the reader, who has thus far ac- companied us, will find it consistent with the proper feel- ing evinced by Hardy throughout the whole of his impri- sonment and trial. It was published in all the News- papers of the time. ADDRESS TO THE PUBLIC. a \\riTH a heart overflowing with gratitude, I now sit down to the most pleasing task which I have experienced in the course of my life. Little did I imagine that the public efforts I have made, in support of that cause which I deemed it my duty to promote to the utmost of my power, would have ex- e4 66 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. eited, in so great a degree, the most lively emotions of affec- tionate regard in the bosoms of thousands to whom I am un- known, but by name. — But so it has happened, and I fee/ myself labouring under a weight of obligations, which I am ardently anxious to discharge, as far as my ability will permit. ** Untutored in any language but that of truth, I proceed, without fear of the attack either of prejudice or malevolence, to pay the debt I owe, as far as I am able. " To Mr. Erskine and Mr. Gibbs, the two learned Counsel appointed for my defence, 1 beg permission, in this public manner, to return my best and warmest acknowledg- ments. — Any words in my power to use, would fall far short of expressing what they truly deserve, and what I reallY FEEL they deserve. I have, however, this animating reflec- tion in my mind, that every defect in my powers of expression to do them justice, is abundantly compensated by the force and eloquence of their own respective exertions, and that their transcendant talents and integrity cannot fail to stand recorded, not only on the minds of the present race, but will receive ad- ditional lustre in every progressive movement their names shall make through the progress of time. ** To THAT Public, whose servant I have always been proud to acknowledge myself, I am equally at a loss for words to express the grateful sensations of my heart.— The feeling manner in which they have sympathized in my sufferings, while it gives a delight to my heart which no language can describe, almost disables me, from the overflowings of that source of sensibility, to perform my duty ; — but the softness of nature gives way to the impetus of gratitude, and I beg leave to say to a generous public, be pleased to accept my thanks. *' Acquitted by the unanimous voice of a jury of my country, from the charge of a crime at which my soul revolts, and my nature shudders, I find it impossible to express my gra- titude to THEM in any degree adequate to what I feel. I must, therefore, intreat them for a moment to suppose them- selves in my situation, and conceive what they would have MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 57 said to me, had I, in similar circumstances, been their arbiter, and given the same decision in their behalf. I have no doubt but, in the consciousness of the rectitude of their ov\^n hearts, they feel a far greater reward than any in the power of mortal man to bestow ; — but what I can I will : — I sincerely and FERVENTLY THANK THEM, " Small, indeed, is the return for the preservation of life and honour ; — it is only the grateful effusions of a plain and poor man, but it comes warm from the heart, and, like the widow's mite, is all I have to give. *' Restored to my friends and country after an absence of several months, in the course of which, all my family have descended into the peaceful tomb, I find my business ruined, and I have the world to begin again. I therefore take this opportunity of informing my friends, in particu- lar, and the public in general, that I intend to resume my occupation, and to support myself as heretofore, by honest in- dustry. I have not yet been able to find an eligible situation for opening a shop ; but as soon as I can accomplish that object, I shall take the liberty of making it known, and have no doubt of receiving that encouragement and support which injured in- nocence never yet has failed to obtain in this generous and liberal island. *' THOMAS HARDY." Lancaster Court, Strand, Nov. 11, 1794. It has already been mentioned that Hardy had many flattering offers made to him, if he would go and settle in America,* and it is no wonder, on his acquittal, finding * When Mr. Adams, the first Ambassador from the United States, was in this country, his son-in-law, Col. Smith, was his private Secretary. With that gentleman Hardy was very intimate, and supplied him with boots and shoes while he remained in England. Colonel Smith held out great encouragement to him if he would go and carry on his business in America. Hardy called on him one day, at the beginning of the London Corresponding Society, and shewed liiin the first Address, with which he 68 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. himself pennyless, his whole property having been ex- pended in defending himself from the base charges ex^- hibited against him, and his trade totally ruined, in conse- quence of his imprisonment, that he should have formed a resolution of bidding an everlasting adieu to a country where he had been thus maltreated : to a country where he had been so incurably wounded in his dearest affec- tions ; where he saw the most exalted virtues treated as the greatest crimes ; where he had been persecuted to the imminent danger of his life, for what he himself, and all such as he could consider upright men, deemed his virtuous efforts, to restore to his fellow countrymen the inestimable blessing of a Free Parliament, fairly chosen by the people. For these reasons, and they were sufficiently weighty, he finally determined to expatriate himself; but alt human intentions must yield to the overruling power of the Omnipotent, who, in his wisdom, thought fit it should be otherwise. Though moneyless, he was not friendless ; for, in fact, his friends were numerous, and some of them were sanguine in their hopes that, if he would recommence business in London, he would soon realize an independent fortune, which they said would prove some recompense, though an inadequate one, for all his wrongs and suffer- ings. He suffered himself, therefore, to be persuaded ; altered his resolution, and recommenced business, in Tavistock Street, Covent Garden, on the 29th of November, 1794, The public were certainly much interested in his favour; and the orders which he received, for the first two weeks, employed himself, and another man, merely to take mea- sure^ and to enter them in the book. Many paid for their ■was well pleased, and, for his encouragement, said to Hardy, " Hardy, the Government will hang you." Though this prophecy was afterwards too near being fulfilled, yet he still lives a monument of the excellence of the Trial by Jury. MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY, 69 orders at the time of giving- them ; some ordered two pair of shoes, and paid a guinea, and a few paid a guinea for one pair ; and these the newspapers magnified to a thou- sand, at a guinea a pair. Multitudes of people, of all ranks and sexes, in carriages, and on foot, came to congra- tulate him; and crowds of persons were continually collected about the door and the windows, out of curiosity to see him. The shop, though large, was always full, from morning till night, and thus continued for, perhaps, two or three months, when it fell off gradually. He employed, at first, six shopmen, to assist in carrying on the business ; and it was, at one time, apparently en- creasing ; but when the public curiosity was satisfied, it began to decrease, and, at the end of six months, he found occasion for no more than two shopmen, and, within twelve months, for only one. After his business had thus fallen to the level of ordi- nary trade, he found that, what with a large house, high rent, and high taxes, he was retrograding as rapidly as he had at first progressed. There were many unfounded reports spread abroad of the patronage which he received from a variety of quarters, which, though many wished and be- lieved them true, operated greatly to his disadvantage. For instance, it was said, his landlord, the Duke of Bed- ford, had given him the house he inhabited rent free ; that another nobleman had made him a present of five hundred pounds ; and another had settled a hundred a year upon him. In consequence of these, and similar rumours, many gentlemen, who had intended to befriend him,^ thought it unnecessary, as they were led to believe he was already liberally provided for by the noble and the wealthy. They, therefore, turned their benevolence into other channels, and bestowed their favours upon others who they thought stood more in need of them — and, alas ! many, there were who liad really need of support from the 60 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. benevolent, at that time. So very injurious did these reports prove, that one of his leather merchants, in little more than a year, refused him credit. This was the son of the worthy Alderman Newman, who had so kindly called upon him the second day after his acquittal^ and gene- rously offered him credit, if he designed to go into busi- ness again, which kind offer he accepted. Another of his leather merchants actually served him with a copy of writ for a sum under ten pounds, which had been standing two months longer than the usual time of credit. His journeymen, too, believing that he had greater profits on his goods than others had, struck for higher wages ; but as they are a class of intelligent men, who can readily appreciate any question that is clearly stated to them, the following letter convinced them of the propriety of returning to their work at the same wages. The cir- cumstance, however, which no doubt was owing to the unfounded stories which were afloat, was of some incon- venience to their employer, who was very busy at the time. 36, Tavistock Street , 24th April, 1795. " Fellovv^ Citizens, ** It is with no small degree of pain, I now address you on a subject of considerable importance to me, and, I think I may add, of no less importance to you, as a body. " I presume you are not unacquainted with the very pecu- liar situation I have been in since the beginning of last May. Six months of that time I was immured in a prison ; and it must be fresh in the memory of every one of you the cruel persecution I suffered, and the probability there was of my being hurried from the prison to the scaffold ; but thank God it has been ordered otherwise, for the happiness of individuals, and the peace of the nation. Immediately on my regaining my liberty, T had some thoughts of leaving that country in which I had been so maltreated ; but 1 found a great number of my MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 61 friends, and friends also to the happiness of mankind, solici- tous that I should remain in London, and go into business again, as I might be sure of a very extensive trade among those who felt for my situation, and were friendly to the cause I had espoused and suffered for. Accordingly, I was pre- vailed upon, took the house I now occupy; and, certainly, I have done a great deal of business within the last five months. N^umbers employed me from real friendship ; some came to see me from motives of curiosity, and gave orders, whom it is not likely I shall ever see again. Others, who came from the mere novelty of the thing, honestly told me that they did not mean to continue after the first orders, but to return again to their old shoemakers : very few have given me a second or- der. The whole of my customers are among what is called the middling and lower class of the people, who cannot, or who do not choose to give a high price for their shoes and boots. They must, also, have them strong, or, to use a common phrase, they must have a pennyworth for their penny. Not so the generality of the higher ranks of society, who care not how light their goods are, nor how high the prices. I have to inform you that my price for boots is £1. 8s., and for shoes 8s. 6d., some lower. When I opened this shop, I advanced the journeymen sixpence a pair on the shoes and boots above what I formerly used to give, which some of you may remem- ber. Bootcloser's wages I also advanced. *' I have chosen to give you an open and candid statement of facts, which you, as a collective body, are to judge of be- twixt me and those whom I formerly employed ; and I think you have sufficient discernment to discover why T could not comply with the demand of my workmen. *' I ask no favour; I only wish for that which is just be- tween man and man. — I have here to remark, that, according to my feeble ability, I have always been an enemy to all in- justice and oppression, and for my opposition to them have suffered persecution ; but I am still determined, as far as I can, to resist injustice or oppression, from whatever quarter 02 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. they may be attempted, whether by my declared enemies, or my professed friends, though I should fall in the conflict. " These few hasty thoughts I leave to your deliberation ; and if there is any thing which I have not stated of which you wish to be informed, I am ready to explain, or give every rea- sonable information in my power to any two or three intelligent men you may depute for that purpose. I conclude, with sin- cerely wishing you, and all mankind, health and fraternity. " THOMAS HARDY." To the Society of Journeymen Boot and Shoemakers* Though this letter dispelled the delusion under which the journeymen had laboured, with respect to their em« ployer's growing fortunes, yet others continued still in that delusion. Soon after the State Trials, in 1794, John Redman, Esq. of Hatton Garden, made a will, in which he put Hardy down for a legacy ; but, in a subsequent one, made about four years afterwards, his name was omitted, for which no reason can be assigned, except that the testator, like many others, thought the bequest un- necessary. This is the more likely, as Mr. Redman, as iong as he lived, continued to employ him as his shoe- maker. A few days after that gentleman's death. Dr. Cooke called upon Hardy, in Fleet Street, and congratu- lated him upon the fortune that had been left him : though he did not then know but it might be true that such was the case, yet, having been amused with so many stories of great things, for some years past, he did not feel much elated at the intelligence. He merely thanked the Doctor for his good wishes, and observed, that if it was large it should be applied to benevolent purposes, and if small, it would assist him in carrying on his business, for he then had need of assistance — and if it should prove as MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. 63 unreal as the other gifts and legacies he had been pro- mised, and said to have received, he could jog on his old way without it : for his happy temper enabled him to take all things very easy, whether adverse or prosperous. Another legacy, which another gentleman was reported to have left to him, turned out to be as unsubstantial as the last. One disappointment, in the legacy way, is particularly worthy of remark. A gentleman, of large fortune, in Derbyshire, of the name of Kant, soon after the State Trials, in 1794, made his will, and in testimony of his approbation of the ability, patriotic exertions, and splendid eloquence, displayed by Mr. Erskine, in his defence of Hardy, bequeathed him an estate worth up- wards of thirty thousand pounds. Hardy himself was, also, handsomely mentioned in the will, to which Mr. Kant afterwards added a codicil. He died about seven years afterwards, and his attorney came up to London with the will inclosed in a letter, written by the gentleman himself at the time of making it. After Mr. Erskine had read the letter, he asked the attorney if he had taken the proper legal steps to make the codicil valid. He replied, no : then said Mr. Erskine, " By God you have lost me the estate !" Mr. Erskine sent for Hardy a few days after- wards, told him what had happened, and said that the will was void, through the ignorance, or villainy, of a stupid country attorney. Thus ended the last of the legacies. That the rumours which were afloat, respecting the generous and liberal support which Hardy was receiving from the wealthy friends of liberty, should have been so readily, and so generally believed, may seem somewhat strange ; but the following letters will, perhaps, in a great measure, account for some, if not for all of them. There the nucleus will be seen ; and we know that rumour, in its 64 MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY. nature, very much resembles a snow-ball, which gathers fresh matter rapidly as it rolls along. " Friend Lauderdale, '' I cannot help addressing you by that familiar and endear- ing title. You have boldly exerted yourself in defence of the rights, and done what you could to promote the happiness of the people, both in your place in the Senate, and on other public occasions, in opposition to an all-powerful and an all- devouring Oligarchy. — From such conduct, persevered in, you deserve the title of Friend to your country. When I have said this much, I am not sensible that I have said any thing more than the truth. Give me leave now to turn your attention to a few facts which concern myself, and which you have either forgotten, or are perhaps unacquainted with. Of some of those, however, I know you are not ignorant, and I think they cannot have escaped your memory. " Upwards of two years ago, a few days after my acquittal from the charge of High Treason, Mr. Jaques, the coal mer- chant, called upon me with a message, to wait upon you the next evening. He told me, also, that he understood from you, that something handsome was to be done for me. This intelli- gence, no doubt, was very pleasing; especially from the quar- ter from which it came, and as my circumstances were then in such a state as required the assistance of friends. I readily embraced the flattering invitation ; with a chearful heart I set off to wait upon you, and was soon admitted into the room where you. Colonel Maitland, and Dr. Moore,* were sitting. After some very friendly and familiar conversation about the trial, the treatment I met with during my confinement, the state of my mind during the trial, and my own opinion as to the event of it, with a variety of things, which were the com- mon topics at that important period, important to me, at least. You then informed me that you, and several gentlemen, con-r * The father of the brave General Sir Joljn Moore, MEMOIR OF THOMAS HARDY.