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  • July 1, 1797
  • Page 66
  • HOUSE OF COMMONS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, July 1, 1797: Page 66

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Page 66

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

House Of Commons.

There were two great interests concerned in if , those of the public , and those of the Bank proprietors . Some caution and delay were therefore necessary . The Bill , he understood , had not been submitted to the consideration of __ the Bank proprietors , who certainly were entitled to time for calling a meeting ! and laying their opinions before the House . He must object to the clausewhich granted an indemnity to the Bank , without assigning a reason for it ; atid also to the preedent of erecting the Privy . Council into a sort of Board of Coritroul oyer the cBank . the Order of Council

Mr . Hothouse objected to the Bill in Mo , considering as an act of robbery , the sanction of which would be an encouragement to the plunderer to renew his depredations . The Bank of England was the great wheel of our circulation—the life of our interior trade , and . the very soul of our foreign commerce : to arrest the progress of this wheel was to check every means of our prosperity . When this suspension should be taken off the Bank , would not all the holders of bills run in with them ? Would they ever incur the same risk again ? The Bank had met with great difficulties at its Erst institution , and had overcome df

them ; but he feared it would be long before it recovered the same degree respect it had lost . Mr . Bryan Edwards said , the House was in this predicament , tliey either must take off this suspension from the Bank ; or pass some new laws ; in the one case , there would , perhaps , be a Tun upon the Bank ; in the other , if they read this Bill . before receiving the Report of the Committee appointed to enquire into the causes of the suspension , they would act with too great precipitation , and too little respect for the forms df their proceedings . He was therefore against the second reading at present . Lord Hawkesbury stated , that the first Committee liad given their opinion

for confirming and continuing the Order ot Council . Mr . Grey concurred in the second reading of the Bill , but begged leave to state , that one of the accounts of the Exchequer Bills , now laid Upon the table , disclosed some very alarming information . When his Hon . Friend moved to prohibit farther advances to the Emperor , a soft of assurance was given that ' no further sums should be immediately issued to the Emperor . It appeared , how-, e '/ er , frdrh this-account , that no longer ago than the nth of March ; the Bank being then under a . stoppage of payment , Ministers had issued to the Agents of the ooolwhich could not be

Emperor Exchequer Bills to the amount of 12 o , . sum remitted from this country , except in gold and silver . He would admit , that this money was part of the 506 , 000 ! . which Parliament , before Christmas , authorised the Minister to pay the Emperor , if the whole of that sum . should be necessary ; but would they have authorized that payment , if they had foreseen the stopping of the Bank ? And ought not the Minister , under such circumstances , to have forborne from issuing the remainder of that sum ? Was not such a Minister still more desperate than even the desperate situation of the country ? Tbe House ,

he hoped , would restrain him ; " by a resolution , from this ( increasing waste of the public money , and not pursue thai system Of confidence , of which the country was . now feeling the dreadful effects . _ . . ' The Chancellor of the Exchequer would go ' no farther into the present discussion , which was unconnected with the question before the House , than to say , that he had not given such an assurance as was stated ; and to enquire whether the House would now retract the - permission they had before granted . That the payment of this 120 , obol . would be made in cash was not proved ; if the Course of Exchange continued to be- what it had been , the payment would not be made in cash ; aiid it was well known that the Exchequer Bills were payable at a

distant period . Mr . Tierney wished to know who bore the loss arising from the difference between the actual discount of these bills , which were from three to three and a half per cent , ahdthattheywereissue . dat , which was one quarter per cent . It was not a little alarming , that Ministers , by allowing even these five shillings per cent , should acknowledge the public paper to be at a discount , and this too for the purpose of sending money to the Emperor . Mr . Pitt replied , that the individuals to whom they hart been issued , for the use of the Emperor , had agreed to take them at no . greater discount than the ( juarter per cent , at which they were issued , VOX ,. IX , H

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-07-01, Page 66” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 26 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01071797/page/66/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
Untitled Article 3
LONDON: Article 3
PREFACE TO VOLUME THE NINTH. Article 5
THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 7
TEMPERATE REFLECTIONS SUITED TO THE PRESENT TIME. Article 8
AN APOLOGY FOR THE CHARACTER AND CONDUCT OF SHYLOCK. Article 10
MEMOIRS OF CHARLES MACKLIN, Article 15
ACCOUNT OF CADIZ. Article 18
REFERENCES TO THE PLATE. Article 22
MEMOIR OF WILLIAM MASON, A.M. Article 23
VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY. Article 25
HISTORY OF THE ARTS AND SCIENCES FOR 1797. Article 26
ADDITIONAL ACCOUNT OF THE GYPSIES. Article 29
ORIGIN OF DRINKING HEALTHS. Article 29
CEREMONIAL OF THE EXECUTION OFRICHARD PARKER, FOR MUTINY. Article 30
A BRIEF SYSTEM OF CONCHOLOGY. Article 34
ESSAY ON THE WRITINGS OF LORD CHESTERFIELD. Article 38
AN ACCOUNT OF THE FISHERIES OF THE RIVER BAN, IN IRELAND. Article 41
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 42
THE INFLUENCE OF FREEMASONRY ON SOCIETY Article 44
NOTICE OF A MASONIC DESIDERATUM. Article 47
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 48
NOTICE. Article 49
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 50
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 56
POETRY. Article 58
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 62
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 63
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 68
DOMESTIC NEWS. Article 71
OBITUARY. Article 78
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 81
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Page 66

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

House Of Commons.

There were two great interests concerned in if , those of the public , and those of the Bank proprietors . Some caution and delay were therefore necessary . The Bill , he understood , had not been submitted to the consideration of __ the Bank proprietors , who certainly were entitled to time for calling a meeting ! and laying their opinions before the House . He must object to the clausewhich granted an indemnity to the Bank , without assigning a reason for it ; atid also to the preedent of erecting the Privy . Council into a sort of Board of Coritroul oyer the cBank . the Order of Council

Mr . Hothouse objected to the Bill in Mo , considering as an act of robbery , the sanction of which would be an encouragement to the plunderer to renew his depredations . The Bank of England was the great wheel of our circulation—the life of our interior trade , and . the very soul of our foreign commerce : to arrest the progress of this wheel was to check every means of our prosperity . When this suspension should be taken off the Bank , would not all the holders of bills run in with them ? Would they ever incur the same risk again ? The Bank had met with great difficulties at its Erst institution , and had overcome df

them ; but he feared it would be long before it recovered the same degree respect it had lost . Mr . Bryan Edwards said , the House was in this predicament , tliey either must take off this suspension from the Bank ; or pass some new laws ; in the one case , there would , perhaps , be a Tun upon the Bank ; in the other , if they read this Bill . before receiving the Report of the Committee appointed to enquire into the causes of the suspension , they would act with too great precipitation , and too little respect for the forms df their proceedings . He was therefore against the second reading at present . Lord Hawkesbury stated , that the first Committee liad given their opinion

for confirming and continuing the Order ot Council . Mr . Grey concurred in the second reading of the Bill , but begged leave to state , that one of the accounts of the Exchequer Bills , now laid Upon the table , disclosed some very alarming information . When his Hon . Friend moved to prohibit farther advances to the Emperor , a soft of assurance was given that ' no further sums should be immediately issued to the Emperor . It appeared , how-, e '/ er , frdrh this-account , that no longer ago than the nth of March ; the Bank being then under a . stoppage of payment , Ministers had issued to the Agents of the ooolwhich could not be

Emperor Exchequer Bills to the amount of 12 o , . sum remitted from this country , except in gold and silver . He would admit , that this money was part of the 506 , 000 ! . which Parliament , before Christmas , authorised the Minister to pay the Emperor , if the whole of that sum . should be necessary ; but would they have authorized that payment , if they had foreseen the stopping of the Bank ? And ought not the Minister , under such circumstances , to have forborne from issuing the remainder of that sum ? Was not such a Minister still more desperate than even the desperate situation of the country ? Tbe House ,

he hoped , would restrain him ; " by a resolution , from this ( increasing waste of the public money , and not pursue thai system Of confidence , of which the country was . now feeling the dreadful effects . _ . . ' The Chancellor of the Exchequer would go ' no farther into the present discussion , which was unconnected with the question before the House , than to say , that he had not given such an assurance as was stated ; and to enquire whether the House would now retract the - permission they had before granted . That the payment of this 120 , obol . would be made in cash was not proved ; if the Course of Exchange continued to be- what it had been , the payment would not be made in cash ; aiid it was well known that the Exchequer Bills were payable at a

distant period . Mr . Tierney wished to know who bore the loss arising from the difference between the actual discount of these bills , which were from three to three and a half per cent , ahdthattheywereissue . dat , which was one quarter per cent . It was not a little alarming , that Ministers , by allowing even these five shillings per cent , should acknowledge the public paper to be at a discount , and this too for the purpose of sending money to the Emperor . Mr . Pitt replied , that the individuals to whom they hart been issued , for the use of the Emperor , had agreed to take them at no . greater discount than the ( juarter per cent , at which they were issued , VOX ,. IX , H

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