A Political Diary 1828-1830, Volume II eBook

Edward Law, 1st Earl of Ellenborough
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 397 pages of information about A Political Diary 1828-1830, Volume II.

A Political Diary 1828-1830, Volume II eBook

Edward Law, 1st Earl of Ellenborough
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 397 pages of information about A Political Diary 1828-1830, Volume II.

We then talked of Ireland.  The Grand Jury Presentment Bill is not yet prepared.  The plan for a police is to place the nominations in the hands of the Lord-Lieutenant.  To send stipendiary magistrates when and where they are wanted.

Peel’s suggestions went much further; but Lord F. Gower seems to me to be only a clever boy.  He has as yet proposed nothing worthy of adoption, and he has often been near the commission of errors from which he has been saved only by Peel’s advice.

He wished to establish stipendiary magistrates in every county, the effect of which would have been to disgust all the gentlemen magistrates, and to lead them to the abandonment of their duty.  He wished too to unite in all cases the inspectorships of police with the office of stipendiary magistrate, to avoid collision; but the duties of inspector are of a mere ministerial and inferior character, and would not agree well with those of a magistrate.

I must read to-morrow all the late protocols and despatches.  The Russians and French have agreed to make Leopold Prince of Greece, but the King cannot endure the idea.  Aberdeen thinks he has made a great conquest in carrying the point of Leopold’s election.  I confess I cannot understand the great advantage we derive from it.  What an extraordinary scene!  Those monarchical states, the most adverse to revolution, combine to assist the rebellion of a people against its sovereign, a rebellion commenced by murder and continued by treachery, stained with every crime that ever disgraced human nature! [Footnote:  The massacres by the Greeks at Tripolitza and Athens, the latter in direct breach of a capitulation, had, according to a not unfavourable historian, cast a dark stain on the Greek cause and diminished the interest felt for it in foreign countries.  (Alison, Hist.  Europe, 1815-52, iii. 150.)] They destroy the fleet of an unoffending Power in a time of profound peace in his own port.  They thus facilitate the attack of an enemy, and in the extreme peril of the defeated sovereign they increase their demands in order to form a substantive State out of the ruins of his Empire.  They then elect a Prince unknown to the people over whom he is to reign, and support him by equal assistance in ships and money!  Those monarchical states set up a revolutionary government and maintain it in coparcenary!  It was reserved for these times to witness such contradictions.  I do not think any one is very well satisfied with them but Aberdeen.  He is charmed.

Sunday, January 10.

Cabinet.  Conversation first as to an intended publication by Mr. Stapleton of a ‘Life of Canning,’ in which he means to insert the substance, if not the copies, of public papers relating to transactions not yet terminated.  He has had it intimated to him that he will do so at his peril.  He holds an office under the Government during pleasure.  I said he had no right over private letters relating

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A Political Diary 1828-1830, Volume II from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.