display. Of his
learning he was proud--but rather as adding
lustre to his
celebrity for
universal tastes. He was not at all
ashamed, but rather gloried in being able to describe himself as
a fool, as he does in his verses to Mrs Crewe:--
"Is't reason? No; that my whole life will belie;
For, who so at variance as reason and I?
Is't
ambition that fills up each chink in my heart,
Nor allows any softer
sensation a part?
Oh! no; for in this all the world must agree,
_ONE FOLLY WAS NEVER SUFFICIENT FOR ME_."
`Sensual and self-indulgent--with a grossness that is even patent
on his very
portrait [and bust], Fox had
nevertheless a manner
which enchanted the sex, and he was the only
politician of the
day who
thoroughly enlisted the personal sympathies of women of
mind and
character, as well as of those who might be captivated
by his profusion. When he visited Paris in later days, even
Madame Recamier, noted for her
refinement, and of whom he
himself said, with his usual
coarse ideas of the
sphere of woman,
that "she was the only woman who united the attractions of
pleasure to those of modesty,"
delighted to be seen with him!
At the time of which we are
speaking the most
celebrated beauties
of England were his most
ardent supporters.
`The
election of 1784, in which he stood and was returned
for Westminster, was one of the most famous of the old riotous
political demonstrations. . . . . Loving _
hazard_ of all kinds
for its own sake, Fox had made party
hostility a new
sphere of
gambling, had adopted the
character of a demagogue, and at a time
when the whole of Europe was undergoing, a great revolution in
principles, was welcomed
gladly as "The Man of the People." In
the
beginning, of the year he had been convicted of bribery, but
in spite of this his
popularity increased. . . . The
electionfor Westminster, in which Fox was opposed by Sir Cecil Wray, was
the most tempestuous of all. There were 20,000 votes to be
polled, and the opposing parties resorted to any means of
intimidation, or
violence, or
persuasion which political
enthusiasm could suggest. On the eighth day the poll was against
the popular member, and he called upon his friends to make a
great effort on his
behalf. It was then that the "ladies'
canvass" began. Lady Duncannon, the Duchess of Devonshire, Mrs
Crewe, and Mrs Damer dressed themselves in blue and buff--the
colours of the American Independents, which Fox had adopted and
wore in the House of Commons--and set out to visit the
purlieus of Westminster. Here, in their
enthusiasm, they shook
the dirty hands of honest
workmen, expressed the greatest
interest in their wives and families, and even, as in the case of
the Duchess of Devonshire and the
butcher, submitted their fair
cheeks to be kissed by the possessors of votes! At the
butcher's
shop, the owner, in his apron and sleeves, stoutly refused his
vote, except on one condition--"Would her Grace give him a
kiss?" The request was granted; and the vote thus purchased
went to swell the majority which finally secured the return of
"The Man of the People."
`The
colouring of political friends, which concealed his vices,
or rather which gave them a false hue, has long since faded away.
We now know Fox as he _WAS_. In the latest journals of Horace
Walpole his inveterate gambling, his open profligacy, his utter
want of honour, is disclosed by one of his own opinion.
Corrupted ere yet he had left his home,
whilst in age a boy,
there is, however, the comfort of reflecting that he outlived his
vices which seem to have "cropped out" by his ancestral
connection in the
female line with the reprobate Charles II.,
whom he was thought to
resemble in features. Fox,
afterwards, with a green apron tied round his waist, pruning and
nailing up his fruit trees at St Ann's Hill, or
amusing himself
innocently with a few friends, is a
pleasing object to remember,
even
whilst his early
career occurs
forcibly to the mind.'
Peace, then, to the shade of Charles James Fox! The three last
public acts which he performed were
worthy of the man, and should
suffice to prove that, in spite of his terrible failings, he was
most useful in his
generation. By one, he laboured to
repair the
outrages of war--to
obtain a breathing time for our
allies; and,
by an
extension of our
commerce, to afford, if necessary, to his
country all the advantages of a renovated
contest, without the
danger of drying up our resources. By another, he attempted to
remove all legal disabilities arising out of religion--to unite
more closely _THE INTERESTS OF IRELAND WITH THOSE OF ENGLAND;_
and thus, by an
extension of common rights, and a participation
of common benefits,
wisely to render that which has always been
considered the weakest and most troublesome
portion of our
empire, at least a useful and
valuable part of England's
greatness among the nations. Queen Elizabeth's Minister,
Lord Burleigh, in the presence of the `Irish difficulty' in his
day, wished Ireland at the bottom of the sea, and
doubtless many
at the present time wish the same; but Fox endeavoured to grapple
with it manfully and
honestly, and it was not his fault that he
did not settle it. The vices of Fox were those of the age in
which he lived; had he been reserved for the present epoch, what
a different
biography should we have to write of him! What a
helmsman he might be at the present time, when the ship of Old
England is at sea and in peril!
It appears from a letter addressed by Lord Carlisle to Lady
Holland (Fox's mother) in 1773, that he had become
security for
Fox to the
amount of fifteen or sixteen thousand pounds; and a
letter to Selwyn in 1777, puts the ruinous
character of their
gaming transactions in the strongest light. Lord Ilchester
(Fox's cousin) had lost thirteen thousand pounds at one sitting
to Lord Carlisle, who offered to take three thousand pounds down.
Nothing was paid. But ten years afterwards, when Lord Carlisle
pressed for his money, he complained that an attempt was made to
construe the offer into a _remission_ of the ten thousand
pounds:--`The only way, in honour, that Lord Ilchester could
have accepted my offer, would have been by
taking some steps to
pay the L3000. I remained in a state of
uncertainty, I think,
for nearly three years; but his
taking no notice of it during
that time, convinced me that he had no
intention of availing
himself of it. Charles Fox was also at a much earlier period
clear that he never meant to accept it. There is also great
injustice in the behaviour of the family in passing by the
instantaneous
payment of, I believe, five thousand pounds, to
Charles, won at the same sitting, without any observations. _At
one period of the play I remember there was a balance in favour
of one of these gentlemen (but which I protest I do not remember)
of about fifty thousand_.'
At the time in question Fox was hardly eighteen. The following
letter from Lord Carlisle, written in 1771, contains highly
interesting information
respecting the
youthful habits and
already vast
intellectual pre-eminence of this memorable
statesman:--`It gives me great pain to hear that Charles begins
to be unreasonably
impatient at losing. I fear it is the
prologue to much fretfulness of
temper, for
disappointment in
raising money, and any serious reflections upon his
situation, will (in spite of his
affected spirits and
dissipation) occasion him many
disagreeable moments.' Lord
Carlisle's fears proved groundless in this respect. As before
stated, Fox was always
remarkable for his
sweetness of
temper,
which remained with him to the last; but it is most
painful to
think how much mankind has lost through his
recklessness.
Gibbon writes to Lord Sheffield in 1773, `You know Lord Holland
is paying Charles Fox's debts. They
amount to L140,000.'[125]
[125] Timbs, _Club Life in London_.
His love of play was
desperate. A few evenings before he moved
the
repeal of the Marriage Act, in February, 1772, he had been at
Brompton on two errands,--one to
consult Justice Fielding on the
penal laws, the other to borrow L10,000, which he brought to
town at the
hazard of being robbed. He played
admirably both at
Whist and Piquet,--with such skill, indeed, that by the general