THE DAILY LViG 0 ZQU1I WZLUX2S. Tbo London Athentnim, in a review of series of pkotchos of celebrated English wen, entitled "Hifltorical Gleaning," by James E. Thorold Honors, which has just been published by Macniilian & Co., in London, gives the following interesting review of the career of the celebrated John Wilkes: Wilkes' expulsion from the IToufle of Com mons was the great event of a life which filled np seventy years of the last century, 1727-97. Of that long period, Wilkes was an active politician during thirty years, that is, from 17.14, when he stood for Berwick-on-Tweed, till 1781, when de abandoned all political activity. Mr. ltogors goes lightly, but not very good-naturedly, over the various incidents in Wilkes' career. It is an old story at the best, and Mr. Rogers has little or nothing to add to it. We see the distiller's eon bred like a gentleman, marrying an heiress, ten or eleven years oldor than him self, and leading the life that men so settled or unsettled in marriage might in those days be eipected to lead. We find him spending money lavishly to obtain a seat in Parliament; but we may twjpoat here what has before been Stated in the Atheiumim, that Wilkes did not attempt to enter on a parliamentary career as a means of repairing his supposed shattered fortunes. If he had been a place-hunter be would not hav shown the hostility to Lord Bute and the Government, which culminated in the famous No. 45 of the North Briton, Nor does Mr. Rogers give any reason for asserting that Wilkes' hostility would have given way if the Government would have officially employed him. To the modorn sense the famous No. 45 seems not merely inoffen sive, but mild and justifiable. It treated the King's speech as the speech of his ministers, and showed that King James was proved to be considered nothing more than the first magistrate in the realm, and that King George might well be content with the same position. Mr. Rogers here speaks of one of the best educated men of his day, a man who had spent thousands to enable him to satisfy his ambition by entering Parliament, and was not more. immoral than the distinguished persons with whom he associated, but who carried the fashion of immorality a little beyond the mode. Mr. Rogers speaks of Wilkes as a man who was living by his wits, and he describes him as an unprincipled adventurer. Even if Wilkes had been all this, the mistakes and malice of the Gov ernment converted the adventurer into a popular hero for the issue of the General Warrant by which Wilkes, with printers, pub lishers, and others, were arrested, without being designated by name, led to all the triumph whioh ensued. The Judgment of Chief Justice Pratt that such warrants were illegal, the protection which the habeas corpus afforded to persons so accused and impri soned, and the heavy pecuniary damages which they who had acted illegally were con demned to pay, were triumphs for which the public were indebted, and continue to be in debted, to the resolution of Wilkes. Cut for him, we might still be liable to arrest and to being kept in prison at the mere will of a couple of envious secretaries. The next mistake of the Government only increased the power and popularity of Wilkes, lie was prosecuted for printing and publish ing an obscene libel a fragment of a poem called an "Essay on Woman." We have said before that Wilkes could not be proved to have written this parody on Pope and War burton, and that it was never published till a copy stolen from Wilkes' house was read in the House of Lords by Lord Sandwich, who bad previously heard it read in private, and expressed his delight at what now he affected to read with disgust. We have, on former occasions, protested against any idea of our being apologists for Wilkes' immorality, or for this wretched fragment of a dirty poem, & true copy of whioh probably does not exist, but, as we have remarked before, Wilkes was a better man than most of his accusers. He was infinitely superior, at all events, to Lord Sandwich. This exemplary peer, the "Jem my Twitcher" of his time, scandalized moun- ; tebanks by his blasphemy, and had a volume of sermons dedicated to him by Warburton, who compared Wilkes to the Devil, and then asked pardon of the Devil for damaging him by such a comparison. It must have been by some such parson as Risdale, who was the tool of Sandwich, that the profane parallel was made in the pulpit between that peer and our Saviour, with a shade of superiority awarded to the peer 1 Such were the man ners of the times; and we must not judge of Wilkes by the manners of our own. It is hardly necessary to go over the well known story Wilkes' journey abroad, his outlawry, his return, his imprisonment, his repeated elections for Middlesex, the scandal of which was at its height when the House declared that Luttrell, who had the fewer votes, was the duly elected member. "If once," said Wilkes, "the ministry shall be permitted to say whom the freeholders shall not choose, the next step will be to tell them whom they shall chose." The minis try certainly did a good deal in those days to exasperate the people. There was a riot in St. Georges Fields when Wilkes was released from prison, and in the tumult, provoked by the interference of the military, an eminent man was murdered. Lord Barrington conveyed to the troops the assurance of the pleasure with which the King had heard of the readiness of the sol diery to perform their duty, and the satisfac tion he had in the thought that they would always perform such duty with alacrity. The word was as ill-timed as another charge of borse and foot. ; The last great service of Wilkes was rendered when, as alderman and sheriff, he protected one Whebloy, who had dared ' to publish the debates of the House of Commons. The protection was dis tasteful to the King, but it prevailed over privilege, and Mr. Rogers acknow ledged that "Wilkes indicated the right of f the people to learn the expressed opinion of their representatives, and therefore to keep them in check." This was not all. Let us set aside the individual, and note what was done by the publio man. Wilkes weakened arbitrary power, secured liberty for the people, asserted the freedom of the press, prepared the way for a change in the once atrocious law of libel; and he not only stood up for free election by a free people, but was ' among the first who saw the necessity for parliamentary rform. The publication of "No. 45" and the prosecu. . Uon which followed seemed to prepare all parties for the inevitable contest which en sued. Its importance and its issues struck vervone. Jso wonder that "Fortv-Ave" en tered into everybody's thoughts and oaloula- tlonsj Orthodox Tories discovered in it the 7" umbor of the Beast: the Heir Apparent - shouted it in his father's ears; it was chalked on the soles of the shoes of the ambassador ,..., from the Emperor after the mob had stopped ,( , lis chariot for the purpose, A patriotio oon- . : "J CIA '!TAH fusion took possession of the popular brain, and one man is reoorded as beginning a letter with the words "I take the Wilkes and Lib erty to inform you;" and there wsi a found ing of a new, or refounding of an old, club in the city of Cork, the members of which had names which contained forty-five lottcrs; they me at a tavern where they spent forty five pence each; every man drank forty-five wine-glasses of punch, in colobration of forty five toasts, which were chiefly directed against the despotism of rulers in general. Perhaps the greatest triumph that Wilkes had, when the effervescence was at its greatest, consisted not so much in members of the Royal Family "lighting np" to save their windows, nor in lords, who hated the Tribune, having the panels of their carriages scratched all over with "No. 45," but in the Duke and Duchess of Northumberland appearing in their bal cony to salute the Wilkes mob, and in Lord Bute illuminating his house so brilliantly (of course to protect it) that all South Audley street seemed in a blaze. We must not for- et the chandler who sent to Wilkes a gift of orty-flve dozen of candles 1 Uhe North Briton put Wilkes lire in pern at various times, but no one could seriously doubt Wilkes' courage. Lord Talbot chal lenged him on a passage in one of the num bers, the authorship of which Wilkes would neither avow nor deny, till they had fought upon it. When they had exchanged shots he confessed himself to be the author of the insulting paragraph; but Lord Talbot, instead of demanding another shot, declared himself satisfied, and the combatants finished the affair by drinking a bottle of claret together. Wilkes did not seek this duel, and would have avoided it probably if he had been able, but once entered on the quarrel he bore himself becomingly. If .there were some farcical incidents in this encounter there was a real tragto element in it menacing to Wilkes. He fought with a halter round his neck, for if he had killed Lord Talbot he would certainly have been hanged. With this knowledge ho confided his daughter to the guardianship of Lord Temple before he went to meet what, no doubt, he wished he could have avoided. After this celebrated affair Wilkes could afford to disregard any sneer against his courage when he refused in Paris to fight a certain Scotch captain named Forbes unless the latter could find a seoond, or some one who could vouch for his being a gentleman. The grievance of Forbes was like that of the would-be assassin Dunn. A quip against Scotland or Scottish- men was an insult to them individually, but Forbes would have avenged it like a "man of honor," while Dunn meant nothing else than cutting Wilkes' throat to satisfy the honor of his country. The duel into which the North Briton brought Wilkes with Martin, Secre tary of the Treasury, was the one most peri lous to Wilkes. The North Briton not only attacked "a certain Secretary" as the basest of mankind, but identified him a3 having "a snout worthy of a Portuguese inquisitor." Martin charged the anonymous writer in the Houso w ith cowardly stabbing in the dark; and at that charge Wilkes avowed himself the author. A rather savage duel ensued, in which Wilkes fell, grievously wounded. In prospect of death, as it seemed, Wilkes gene rously did his best to shield Martin from the consequences; but he could not control his wit, which would have its fling at the ruling powers. "It's clear enough, " said the wounded suf ferer, "that Martin did not use Government powder." This was uttered with the more delight as it struck at both Government and its servants. The most of Wilkes' brightest utterances are too well remembered to need being repeated. His reputation in Paris as a wit has not died out. "I have been told by M. Louis Blano," says Mr. Rogers, "that his witticisms are even now stock French stories, as Sydney Smith's jests are with us." We regret that the biographer has not given us some sample of the exprit which has received the stamp of Parisian sanction. In England, one of the best things ever uttered by Wilkes has been preserved by Lord Lytton, but not without a "slap in the face" of the utterer. We refer our readers to the concluding para graph of "Paul Clifford," where Wilkes' life, patriotism and morals find harsh treat ment where he is called "the Drawcansir of Liberty;" but where he is allowed to have said "one excellent thing, for which we look on you with benevolence nay, almost with respect;" namely, words that are acknow ledged as being bom witty and wise, and which are to the effect that "the very worst use to which you can put a man is to hang mm. Wilkes may have been "dull in Parlia ment;" he did bright things there, but he said his brightest among his private friends. His wit was easy and brilliant; not played off for en ect, but otten uttered tor tne conveyance of truth. "How far does the liberty of the press extend in England ?" said the Prince de Croy to him, at Calais. "I cannot tell," was the reply of Wilkes to the Governor, "but I am trying to know." Like Chesterfield, he uttered more wit than he wrote. It was bold often impudent; but - spontaneous. When the King was about to go to St. Paul's to offer publio thanksgiving Wilkes expressed a hope that Lord George Germain (who had been charged with show ing less valor than discretion at Minden) would bs appointed "to carry the sword" before his Majesty in the procession. His innuendo eut assharply as his wit. At the time that George the Third was treating his brothers with severity, the audacious mem ber for Middlesex took occasion to praise tne fraternal anection or tne King of France; "unlike," he said, '"the gloomy tyrant . . . and then he paused, while every ear was pricked up to catch his words, "Louis the Eleventh. The loyalist men could not keep from laughing. Of course, the King of England could not be expected to be glad at Wilkes' election to the Mayoralty of Lon don. . A rumor was circulated that the Lord Chancellor, on Wilkes being presented to that official, would signify to mm that the King did not approve of the citizens' choice. "If he dares," said Wilkes, "I will tell him to inform the King that I am as fit to be Lord Mayor as he (Lord Bathurst) is to be Chan- cellor,' and as Wilkes would have kept his word, the formal approval of the election was duly made. The man who did not fear kings was not likely to be in awe of aldermen. There was, however, some want of courtesy in the wit he applied to the awkward attempt at carving a pudding by Alderman Bnrnell, who had been a brick layer "Take a trowel to it!" As for the wit by which he expressed a seeming hatred to the Scotch, it was made all the sharper by the rage with which it inspired oeotenmen. lie seemeu to naie me nation when he really hated only an individual be longing to it, in which he recognized an enemy to the British country and constitu tion. If, when he was committed to the Tower, he wounded the pride of Lord Egre- mont, by refusing to be confined in tne same room where that Lord's father had been a prisoner for his Jacobitism if he provoked the anger of Bute by further desiring that he might not be lodged in any room in which a Scotchman hud been kept there were many Fcots who could laugh at both jests. When his wound in the duel with Martin pre- vented him from defending himself in the face, of Parliament, the Government fiarty, which body suspooted that ho was do nding them, Wilkes oeolined to receive the physician sent officially to visit him, but re quested the attendance of the King's physi cian and the bergeant-surgeon, on the ground that if he was to be watched, a couple of Scotchmen were the most proper fellows to act as spies. This is rude wit, but all Scotchmen were not irreconcilably of fended by it. It was nothing that Dr. Johnson should say of him "Jack is a gentleman and a scholar," but it was much that Lord Mansfield, a Scotchman who had (as it was said) drunk the Chevalier's health on his knees, should testify that Wilkes was "the pleasantest companion, the politest gentleman, and the ablest scholar he ever knew." After this evidence from an enemy, the tattle of Mrs. Boscawen and the fine gentleman's malice of Walpole signify little. The lady affected when Wilkes was made Chamberlain of London to fear for the orphans whose funds wonld pass through his hands. Walpole described one of the pictures at the Exhibition of 1779, containing portraits of Miss Wilkes and her father two beings who loved each other above everything else on earth, as Wilkes " looking no squinting ten derly at his daughter." lie further called the group a caricature of the Devil "acknowledging Miss Sin, in Milton." In face of these witnesses, it need only be said that Wilkes died in straitened circum stances. No farthing of public or official money was ever unlawfully touched by him. If he had been careful of his own, he would, no doubt, have been more deserving of the abiding love of his only child; but she in herited the fruit of his better action. 4 When the great proconsul," says Mr. Rogers, allud ing to Warren Hastings, "was under impeach ment, Wilkes faithfully supported him; and Hastings was not forgetful of benefits, least of all of benefits conferred at that crisis." Nor was his wife. Mrs. Hastings offered Miss Wilkes a home at Daylesford; and the offer could be accepted without humiliation. The whole story of the mutual love between Wilkes and his child will remind the reader of the affection whioh existed between Atter bnry and his daughter. In reading Wilkes' letters to his daughter it is as necessary to remember the manners and outspokenness of the times as it is, when judging of him in other respects, to judge from a contemporary point of view. Undoubt edly subjects are mentioned in mat corre spondence which no father would now bring to the notice of a child; but, this objection apart, the letters display the wit, the scholar, the thinker, and tbo experienced politician. Here is one remark about which there can not be two opinions: "Amongst the regular and the thinking the superiority of parts is neither felt on the one side nor acknow ledged on the other in the same extreme mat it is among tne dissolute. inis is undeniable; and it reminds us of the with ering contempt with which Wilkes spoke of his companions at Medmenham Abbey, with the exception of Dashwood, in whom he recognized a certain imaginative power. He made as full recognition of the conscience within, and of the necessity of its being heeded. "Any strong presentiment is found ed, whence arisen I know not, but always attended to, as Socrates did to the whispers of his good genius. Witn all these ideas, I am certainly the least superstitious of men; but I never did neglect any such inward warn ings of futurity." It is well known that in what are coiled tne luots or .London Wilkes acted so firmly and promptly as a magistrate that he received tho thanks of the Privy Council. Tne retired "demagogue wrote to his daughter: "The raging of the seas puts me as well as the Psalm ist in mind of the madness of the multi tude." Later, when the Whigs proposed that the Prince of Wales should be Regent, with kingly power, as his inherent right, but failed, the Irish Parliament hastened to adopt the proposal and to place Ireland, at least, under the rule of an irresponsible Regent. Wilkes wrote of this mischievous act of the Irish legislature in this wise: "The Irish Parliament justify Swift's remarks that they are to an English Parliament what a monkey is to a man but now they have the mischie vous qualities of the monkey without his imi tative qualities." To return to an illustration of his love for his daughter: here is a pretty idea prettily expressed: "I cut off all the rose-buds of the trees in our little garden (which is a secret) to moke them blow at the end of the season, when I hope to enjoy your company there after our trees." We conclude with observing that the popu lar gratitude towards Wilkes has not died out, at least in one particular sense. There was a time when publicans suspended his neau irom uieir sign-posts, tne oetter to attract customers. "The fellow," said an angry old Church-and-King lady, "swings everywnere but wnere ne snould be swm ing ! ' Those signs of the popular regard have not entirely disappeared. Wilkes' Head squints invitation to the thirsty over a Staffordshire publio house at Leak-with- Jjowe. Another does the same office in Bridges street, St. Ives. Not very long ago, Wilkes figured as one of "The Three Johns' a tavern sign in Westminster, Bloomsbury, and Pentonville. The nersonaces were John Wilkes. John Home Tooke, and Sir John Glyn, Serieant-at-Law the last of whom enjoyod his little day as Wilkes counsel, and his nominee for Middle sex when Wilkes himself was in prison. The prisoner triumphed when the House erased from their journals the censures they had flung at him; and he must have thoroughly enjoyed the opportunity of which he once availed himself of assuring the King, whom he had so often exasperated, that he (Wilkes) was less of a Wilkite than any other of that party throughout the kingdom. FURNITURE. RICHMOND & CO., , FIRST-CLASS FURNITURE WAR ERO OMS, No. 45 SOUTH SECOND STREET, ; XAST BIDE. ABOVE CHKSNUT. 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