[]

A CIRCULAR LETTER TO THE SEVERAL PETITIONING COUNTIES, CITIES, AND TOWNS, Addreſſed to their reſpective general Meetings, againſt the late Propoſition for a triennial Election of REPRESENTATIVES, By GRANVILLE SHARP.

SECOND EDITION.

To the Gentlemen, Clergy, Freeholders, and other Inhabitants, of the

[]
GENTLEMEN,

THE laſt general meeting of the County of York having adopted a propoſition to ſhorten the duration of parliament to a term not exceeding three years, the worthy gentlemen of your own committee may probably have been induced, by the laudable deſire of preſerving unanimity with that reſpectable county, to recommend the ſame propoſition for your adoption. Be pleaſed, therefore, previouſly to conſider, whether it is probable that a majority of the freeholders, &c. of the Yorkſhire meeting did really mean to prefer triennial elections to the ancient legal uſage and conſtitution of annual parliaments, or whether they may not rather have been induced to poſtpone the open declaration of their loyal attachment to that ancient law for frequent parliaments, (viz. [4] every year once, and more often if need be,) merely through a deſire to preſerve the unanimity of their own meeting, by yielding a little, for the preſent, to the prejudices of a few particular gentlemen among them, (perſons, indeed, of great worth and eſteem, in many reſpects, and whoſe ſentiments in general deſerve the utmoſt attention and regard, but) who unhappily, in this point, are apt to conceive, that annual elections, and more often if need be, would be attended with ſome inconveniences to themſelves.

You have undoubtedly, in your own county, alſo, ſeveral worthy gentlemen of fortune, to whom great reſpect is due from the people, on account of their known independence, and ſteady oppoſition to bad meaſures in general, who nevertheleſs, perhaps, may entertain the ſame erroneous conceptions of frequent elections; and therefore you can, by your own feelings, (I mean your reſpect and [5] eſteem for ſuch worthy men,) more eaſily judge of the effect which the ſame kind of laudable influence muſt neceſſarily have cauſed in the Yorkſhire meeting; which is the beſt reaſon, I believe, that can be aſſigned for their having adopted that unconſtitutional meaſure.

You are therefore moſt earneſtly requeſted to conſider the following plain propoſitions.

I. That, though great deference and reſpect be certainly due to ſuch worthy and independent gentlemen as I have deſcribed, yet your condeſcenſion to them ought to have ſome due limitation.

II. That the bounds of the ancient parliamentary conſtitution of the kingdom ought ſurely to mark out the utmoſt extent of your compliance with the worthy part of the ariſtocratical intereſt.

III. That if, on the contrary, your endeavours to preſerve UNANIMITY [6] ſhould carry you beyond theſe legal bounds, you will really injure thoſe very gentlemen whom you wiſh to oblige, as well as the whole ariſtocratical intereſt (the crown, the lords, the country gentlemen in general); becauſe there is but one true common intereſt, which the fundamental laws of the conſtitution alone can preſerve. Conſider alſo,

IV. That unanimity is as baneful in a bad meaſure as it is ſalutary in a good one: and,

V. That, if any compliance in proceedings is to be made at all for the ſake of unanimity, it ought certainly to be made where a compliance is moſt due; viz. to the conſtitutional reſolutions of a ſelect body of intelligent gentlemen, deputed to a national conference, by freely-elected committees from a very conſiderable proportion of the counties and moſt populous cities and towns in England;—to reſolutions, which were unanimouſly agreed upon by the ſaid deputies; and, therefore, [7] "a compliance, for the ſake of unanimity," was moſt juſtly due to them; and, the more eſpecially, as it appears that they formed their concluſions by the fundamental laws and uſages of the conſtitution. The ſtriking, ſimilarity alſo of this deputation, in many reſpects, to an ancient example of a national deputation from all the counties, cited, on this occaſion, by lord Carysfort,* from Hoveden, adds great weight to the reſolutions in queſtion, as well as to the importance of that unanimity with which they were formed.

VI. That the members of the late deputation have unanimouſly declared, in their [8] memorial, that annual parliaments are the ancient conſtitution of this kingdom, and the birthright of Engliſhmen; and, in the three laſt paragraphs of their memorial, which are highly worthy your moſt careful attention, have not only proved that the old laws, requiring ‘a parliament to be holden every year once, and more often if need be,’ meant a new parliament every year, &c. (by the inſtances of writs iſſued ‘two or three times in the ſame year, for new elections,’) but they alſo prove, from the experience of former ages, that theſe very frequent elections were not attended with any ſuch inconveniences, as the advocates for long parliaments commonly pretend, but, on the contrary, recommend them, "as conſiſtent with the greateſt peace," &c.* [9] And, therefore, you are deſired to conſider,

[10]VII. That the Yorkſhire propoſition for ſhortening ‘the duration of parliaments to a term, not exceeding three years,’ is totally different from the ſhortening of duration, explained and recommended by the ſaid deputies, as ‘the ancient conſtitution of the kingdom, and the birthright of Engliſhmen;’ and, what is worſe, has been adopted without the leaſt mention of that birthright in any ſaving clauſe, to aſſert and preſerve your juſt claim to it for a future time: whereby it is manifeſt, that the promoters of this triennial ſcheme have really been the firſt [11] offenders againſt that deſirable unanimity, which the conference of deputies was intended to effect; and, therefore, the cry of "neceſſary unanimity," by which alone that unconſtitutional propoſition is at preſent recommended, deſerves not the leaſt attention. What! would you be unanimous againſt the ancient legal parliamentary conſtitution of the kingdom, which the triennial ſcheme is manifeſtly calculated to ſupplant? You ought never to forget,

VIII. That the people have already been betrayed by a triennial parliament! That the repreſentatives of the people, in a triennial parliament, uſurped the legiſlative authority of their conſtituents for a longer time than it was delegated; and treacherouſly preſumed, ‘without conſulting their countries,’ to prolong the duration of parliaments to the preſent unreaſonable term of ſeven years; whereby [12] by they eſtabliſhed the baſis of that deteſtable ſyſtem of corruption which has been the true ſource of all your preſent grievances! And, therefore, be pleaſed to conſider, —

IX. That triennial parliaments, as well as ſeptennial, are manifeſtly dangerous to the ſtate, and ſo groſſly inconſiſtent with the ancient legal parliamentary conſtitution of this kingdom, that the moſt eſſential laws and uſages, by which that conſtitution is declared and known, are really ſuſpended by them. You cannot, therefore, without notorious diſloyalty, (in the ſtricteſt ſenſe of the word,) adopt the propoſition for triennial parliaments: ſo that you have a moſt ample excuſe for not concurring with a few particular gentlemen, (whom you would otherwiſe wiſh to oblige,) viz. that your compliance with them, in this matter would exceed the conſtitutional bounds of condeſcenſion, (mentioned [13] in the three firſt propoſitions,) and would really tend to ſubvert the people's juſt right to more frequent elections. — Becauſe it is manifeſt, —

X. That the conceſſion of a popular right, made by the people themſelves in their collective capacity, at their ſeveral county-meetings, is infinitely more binding upon them (to exclude any future claim to the ceded right) than the ſame conceſſion would be, if made merely by their repreſentatives in parliament, without the inſtruction or concurrence of the people. And, therefore, you ought to be particularly thankful, —

XI. That the people themſelves, the great body of conſtituents, have never yet, by any ſuch conceſſion, betrayed that valuable birthright, (as the deputies call it,) the ancient law for annual parliaments. It has too often been ſuſpended indeed; ſometimes through the diſloyalty [14] of kings, and laſtly even by the diſloyalty of parliament itſelf, (of which the tyrannical triennial and ſeptennial acts are lamentable inſtances); yet, as the ſuſpenſion of it has never been promoted by the requiſition or inſtruction of the people at large, their right to it remains intire. The preſumption and treachery of their repreſentatives, in conſenting to the triennial and ſeptennial acts, cannot injure their juſt title to it; becauſe, in both theſe inſtances, the repreſentatives preſumed to act contrary to an eſtabliſhed rule of parliament, by adopting a new device, (which even affected a fundamental law of the kingdom,) ‘without conſulting their countries,’ which the conſtitution abſolutely requires in ſuch an important caſe; ſo that even that unwarrantable preſumption of the repreſentatives (in neglecting to conſult the people) is the very circumſtance which ſtill preſerves [15] that fundamental and eſſential law as a part of the conſtitution, and as a juſt right of the people, which they are entitled to demand and reſume whenever they ſhall be pleaſed to inſtruct their repreſentatives for that purpoſe; and to charge all perſons with diſloyalty, and even treaſon to the conſtitution, who ſhall dare to oppoſe them! But if, on the contrary, the people themſelves, in their ſeveral county-courts, or aſſemblies, ſhould be ſo inconſiderate, or ſo depraved, as to conſent indiſcriminately to the propoſition for a triennial election, without a ſaving clauſe to aſſert their birthright and reſerve their title to more frequent elections, (which the Yorkſhire meeting has unwarily done,) know, for a certainty,—

XII. That, in ſuch an unhappy inattention to their own rights, (which, I pray to God, they may never be curſed with,) they would betray the conſtitution [16] of the kingdom! — they would betray a fundamental law of their anceſtors; which would mark their character with an eternal ſtain of diſloyalty! And as they may, perhaps, never have again ſo favourable an opportunity, as the preſent, of recovering their ancient birthright of annual elections, it would probably be loſt, irretrievably loſt, for ever! Your new triennial repreſentatives (in ſuch a caſe) would moſt likely behave as former triennial repreſentatives have heretofore done, — betray and enſlave you by another ſeptennial ſyſtem of corruption! And (what is worſe) you yourſelves would moſt juſtly deſerve it!

But I hope better things of you; and I truſt alſo that you will excuſe the ſeverity of my expreſſions in this addreſs, as being prompted merely by an ardent zeal for your proſperity.

Granville Sharp.
Notes
The deputies, in their memorial, declare, that ſhortening the duration of the ſitting of parliament can only be done, CONSISTENTLY WITH THE CONSTITUTION, or with the beſt policy in any enlarged view, BY SHORTENING IT TO THE PERIOD OF A YEAR.’ And this they farther explain in the words of the old ſtatutes, viz. that a parliament ſhould be holden ONCE every year, and MORE OFTEN if need be; from whence it is manifeſt, that the longeſt duration, conſiſtent with the conſtitution, is the period of one ſingle ſeſſion, even though two or more ſuch ſeſſions ſhould be neceſſary in one or the ſame year.
*
See page 15 of his lordſhip's very judicious and loyal letter to the committee of the county of Huntingdon.
*

‘The fact is, (ſay the deputies from the ſeveral petitioning counties, &c.) during the whole of that reign, (king Edw. III.) and for the firſt eighteen years of the following one, writs were annually iſſued, and, in ſome inſtances, two or three times in the ſame year, for new elections, till Richard II. made himſelf abſolute. And various were the occaſions, in thoſe times, when the commons gave for anſwer, to any new propoſitions of magnitude, that THEY DARED NOT AGREE WITHOUT CONFERENCE WITH THEIR COUNTRIES. At what period then was it, that the conſent of the people was aſked and obtained to ſo momentous a propoſal as that of diveſting them of their expected controul over their repreſentatives? in fact, of changing the terms on which the delegation had paſſed from their hands? ANNUAL PARLIAMENTS are, therefore, the ANCIENT CONSTITUTION of England, and the BIRTHRIGHT of Engliſhmen.’

‘Nor are they leſs beneficial in policy than unalienable in right. In the language of ancient times, before the prejudices of habit had thrown falſe colours over names and things, they were ever deſcribed as conſiſtent with the greateſt peace, and moſt peaceably conducted. And, in parliamentary records, for more than two hundred years together, from 49 Hen. III. till 22 Edw. IV. we find not ſo much as one double return, nor more than two or three inſtances of elections queſtioned on any ground;— a circumſtance ſurely moſt inviting, when put in contraſt with that multitude of perplexing enquiries which, of late years, hath conſumed ſo much time in committees, to the great hindrance of the national buſineſs. The plain reaſon is founded not in the time, but in the nature, of the thing; the duration of the ſeat was not an object for a violent conteſt. This will alſo diſpel the objection ariſing from the probability of tumult and expenſiveneſs; to remove which it will farther contribute not a little, if we would give attention to what paſſes now among thoſe large bodies of electors, who annually chooſe their corporate officers. But the argument againſt corruption ſurmounts every thing elſe. Nothing can give ſo much aſſurance of defeating it as this limitation. A ſeat for three years might induce a man's attention to a bribe. He that ſits but for one is very unlikely to experience ſuch an offer, or will certainly reject it, if he would not wiſh to put all his future expectations to an imminent riſque.’

‘When once the conſtitution of parliament is improved in theſe leading points, every thing elſe, that may appear to have its ſhare in reformation, muſt be ſubordinate in its claſs, and muſt follow in its time. And, the more effectually to inſure theſe, we entreat you, neither at the next or any future election, to engage your ſupport to any candidate, before you are ſatisfied that he will give his aſſiſtance, in parliament, to the eſtabliſhment of ſo much of theſe reforms as may not then be accompliſhed.’

Distributed by the University of Oxford under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License

Citation Suggestion for this Object
TextGrid Repository (2020). TEI. 5410 A circular letter to the several petitioning counties cities and towns addressed to their respective general meetings against the late proposition for a triennial election of representatives By G. University of Oxford Text Archive. . https://hdl.handle.net/21.T11991/0000-001A-5E1C-D