Chapter XXXI.
Life of Lord Chancellor Methuen.
THE Methuens,. or Methvens, derive their name from the Barony of Methven, in
Perthshire, granted by Malcolm Canmore, King of Scotland, to one of the
knights escorted Queen Margaret from Hungary in 1070. The name and
achievements of JOHN METHUEN are much more familiar to the diplomatic than
to the legal world; but as he filled the high office of Lord Chancellor of
Ireland for some years, from 1697 to 1701, I give as full an account of him
as my diligence enables me. He was eldest son of Mr. Methuen, of Bishop's
Canning, Wilts, and destined shire. for the legal profession. Having kept
the usual terms, he was called to the bar. After several years of moderate
Practised practice, his talents were employed in the diplomatic service, and
he was despatched to Portugal as Envoy during the reign of King William III.
He was greatly esteemed for his prudence, tact, and general information; so
much so, that when Sir Charles Porter, Lord Chancellor of Ire-land, died
suddenly in 1696, the high character of the Portuguese Envoy then in London,
at once recommended him as a fit and proper person to hold the Irish Great
Seal.
In a letter dated December 2, 1696, addressed by Mr. Vernon to the Duke of
Shrewsbury, we find the character of Mr. Methuen favourably mentioned.
[Letters of the Reign of William III. Vol. i. p. 100.] Alluding to the
recent death of the Lord Chancellor, the letter continues: 'Mr. Secretary
Trumbull came some time after with the accounts he had received of it. So I
don't doubt but he is to dispatch the orders that will be requisite either
for supplying the commission of justices, or appointing com-missioners for
the Seal, till the King thinks of a fit person for Chancellor. I have been
thinking of it in the mean-time, and none occurs to me more fit than Mr.
Methuen, as well for his prudence and principles, as his having been bred up
in these courts.
'I have further considered, that if your Grace should ever go for Ireland,
as was once talked of, [The Duke of Shrewsbnry was Viceroy but not when
Methuen was Chan-cellor.] you would have in this man one that you might
entirely depend on, or otherwise you might oblige him in contributing to his
advancement to that post, and have the Envoyship of Portugal to dispose of,
as once you intended. I was so full of it that I mentioned to my Lord
Portland what I thought of this gentleman's deserts, and he spoke as if he
had a very good opinion of him. I have since taken some notice of it to Mr.
Methuen himself, who apprehends it may be thought too honourable a post for
him; but he don't look upon himself as unqualified to discharge it. [It is
related that he aspired to the Chancellorship of England.]
'I thought it worth while for him to try his friends. He thinks himself very
well already in my Lord Sunder-land's good opinion, and has a friend who can
fix him if he be not engaged. He believes, too, my Lord may have ,
favourably thought of him; and I promised him to open the matter to your
Grace, believing, if you had not pre-viously entered into any consideration
about the disposal of this office, you might wish one so well qualified in
it, and if that were your opinion, you would write to my Lord Keeper about
it. It will not be judged fit, I sup-pose, to take any of the Irish lawyers,
[Very like the modern advertisement ending 'No Irish need apply.'] both as
to the country and the factions they are divided into, and one to be sent
from hence should not be merely chosen for his abilities at the bar; and
when Sir Charles Porter was sent, I think he might as little have pretended
to it as this gentleman, who to his knowledge in the law has added his
experience abroad, and his commendable behaviour in the House of Commons.
'But I submit to all what your Grace shall judge of it.' [Letters of the
Reign of William III. Edited by James, vol. i. p. 101.]
This able and astute letter put the qualifications of Methuen in so
favourable a light, that the Duke of Shrewsbury immediately acted on the
suggestion. Lord Somers, then the powerful Lord Chancellor of England,
recommended him to the King, who consented; but there was some delay in
substituting a successor to carry on the negotiations with Portugal which
Methuen had com-menced. Sir John Rushout was mentioned, but the King would
not agree, and remained undecided with regard to removing Methuen for some
time. At first the English Chancellor was rather surprised to find Mr.
Methuen soli-citing this office and expressed as much. In an interview he
received the Envoy very kindly, told him 'he had been thinking who was
proper for his place, but he had not yet mentioned it to any body; there
were one or two occurred to him, but he doubted whether they would accept it
if it were offered to them. He excused it to him that he could not say he
(Methuen) had been in his thoughts, looking upon him as one that had
addicted himself another way; but he now promised him that he would take no
resolutions without first communicating them to him.' The Chancellor made up
his mind, and the result was alto-gether in favour of the Envoy. The fact of
Lord Somers recommending Methuen to the King, shows he considered Methuen
well qualified for the office, and he was declared A.D. 1696- Chancellor of
Ireland at a Council held in January, 1696-7.
Before leaving London the diplomatic Chancellor tried to do a service, as
was but natural, to his son. He repre-sented that young gentleman as the
fittest person to suc-ceed him as Envoy in Portugal; the most capable and
acceptable minister that could be sent there. He was young, to be sure -
twenty-four years of age, - but ,a great favourite with the King of
Portugal, and a good linguist, speaking French, Spanish, Portuguese, and
Italian, with great fluency and exactness.
[His future career justified the Chancellor's encomium. He was the
cele-brated Sir Paul Methuen, he lived much on the Continent and was bred to
diplomacy. In 1706, he succeeded the Right Hon. Richard Hill as minister to
the Duke of Savoy. In September of that year, when the French were beaten
before Turin, he was in attendance on the Duke, and shared his battles and
skir-mishes. Voltaire, who entertained a warm friendship for him, says that
Methuen gave him an account of the battle and the dying words of Marshal
Marsin. In the 'Siècle de Louis XIV,' Voltaire says, 'Le chevalier Methuen
ambassadeur de l'Angleterre auprès le duc de Savoye, était le plus génereux,
le plus franc, et le plus brave homme de son pays qu'on ait jamais employe
dans les ambassades. Il avait toujours combattu à côté de ce souverain.' He
was the friend of Pope and Gay, the latter paid him this compliment:--
'Methuen of sincerest mind,
As Arthur brave, as soft as womankind.']
On June 15, 1697, the Lord Chancellor took the oaths and subscribed the
declaration, pursuant to the Act for abrogating the Oath of Supremacy in
Ireland. On that day he attended the House of Lords in Ireland as Speaker,
and took his seat on the Woolsack. [Lords' Jour. Ir. vol. i. p. 696. His
patent is dated March 11, 1697.]
The Lord Bishop of Derry being dissatisfied with an order made by the Lord
Chancellor of Ireland, on June 22, in a cause wherein William Lord Bishop of
Derry was plaintiff, the Society of the Governor and Assistants, London, for
the New Plantation of Ulster, and the Mayor, Commonalty, and Citizens of
Londonderry and others were defendants, petitioned the House of Lords of
Ireland, praying to have an appeal received and to be re-lieved against the
order.
The Lords were willing to grant the prayer of the petition considering they
had the right to hear appeals, thereupon the following protest was entered
on the Journals of the Lords :-'We, whose names are underwritten, do dissent
from the last vote, for receiving the Bishop of Derry's Appeal. We think it
right not to have been received now, because we conceive that the said
Bishop was relievable in the inferior Courts of Justice, and therefore this
appeal was not brought regularly before this House.
'That if upon any order of Court appeals be admitted, when such order tends
only to the better information of the Judges, everyone who is impatient of
such post delay will bring his appeal, and the proceedings of the inferior
Courts of Justice will be much interrupted; and we do not find that this
House has received appeals but in cases where judgments or decrees were
given, which was not in this case.
'MOUNT ALEXANDER,
'LOFTUS.
'MASSAREENE.'
Notwithstanding the protest, the case was argued at the Bar on September 22,
in the presence of Counsel. It was concerning the possession of some portion
of land called Moylenan, in the city of Londonderry; and upon due
consideration, and of the answer of the respondents, and of the proofs made,
'the Lords Spiritual and Temporal ordered and adjudged that the orders of
June 22, 1697, be reversed, but that the respondents should have liberty to
try them both at law.' [Lord's Jour. Ir. vol. i. p. 695.] Some doubts having
arisen whether the rights of the Church should be in any way prejudiced by a
Bill entitled 'An Act for confirming estates and possessions held and
enjoyed under the Acts of Settlement and Explanation,' the matter was
referred to the Judges, whose opinion was reported to the House of Lords by
Chief Justice Pyne, on October 28, 1698, in these words: 'On consideration
of the Bill entitled "An Act for confirming estates and possessions enjoyed
under the Act of Settlement and Explanation," there appears nothing therein
to us that does, in anywise, prejudice the rights of the Church.' [Ibid.
vol. i. p. 696.]
This decision of the Judges did not give consolation to several of the
Bishops, who, on the majority of the Peers voting for the Bill, entered a
protest: '1. Because by the Acts several Bishops were to have augmentations
which had not been satisfied. 2. Because by the aforesaid Acts all rights to
the Church were saved, and all lands, &c. of which the Church was possessed
in 1641 were to be restored, which was not done, and by this Act the Church
would be barred from recovering them. 3. Because by the clause for
discharging patentees' lands from ancient encumbrances and debts, rent
charges payable to Bishops and other Protestants would be discharged. 4.
Many Protestants would be barred from recovering lands if the Bill passed.
And 5. No saving for the King as in the Acts of Settlement and Explanation.'
This protest was signed by five Irish Bishops.
An Act meeting the wishes of the Bishops was then prepared and passed.
The Lord Chancellor as Speaker of the Lords had to open the engrossed Bills
sent up by the House of Com-mons in January 1698, entitled 'An Act to
prevent Papists being solicitors,' which was speedily passed. [Lords' Jour.
Ir. vol. i. p. 748] Some useful Acts also passed. One against 'Gaming,'
another for 'Determining Differences by Arbitration;' another for
encouraging 'Planting and Preserving Timber Trees and Woods.'
As might have been expected from one who, as Lord Chancellor Somers
remarked, 'had addicted himself an-other way,' from his profession, Lord
Chancellor Methuen made a bad and dilatory Equity Judge. He was very
desirous to do what was right, but was doubtful how to do it, and, afraid of
committing grave mistakes, postponed deciding any but the plainest causes.
When the cause presented matter for more than one decision, he occasionally
made a decree partly for the plaintiff and partly for the defendant, so that
he might, if possible, satisfy all parties. The Court of Chancery in his
time was grown very costly for suitors; office rules and general orders
beset the clients at every step, while the repeated delays occasioned by the
absence of the Lord Chancellor in Eng- land amounted to a denial of justice.
During the eleven years of William III.'s reign, I do not find more than
ninety eight decrees enrolled, though I am quite certain many more must have
been pronounced.
Hyde, Earl of Rochester, Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland from 1701 to 1703, is
mentioned by Dean Swift in very high praise. He began early to distinguish
himself in the public service, an passed through the highest employments of
the-State in most difficult times, with great credit and unstained honour.
His principles of religion and loyalty were instilled into him by his
illustrious father and other noble spirits who had exposed their lives and
fortunes for Charles I.
Pulcherrima proles,
Magnanimi heroes natis melioribus annis.
His first great action was, like Scipio, to defend his father when oppressed
by numbers; and his filial piety was not only rewarded with a long life, but
high and distin-guished appointments.
The state of parties in Ireland had no attractions either for Lord Rochester
or the diplomatist. While Methuen was Lord Chancellor, he was, as I already
mentioned, frequently absent, [From December 11, 1697, to August 15, 1698;
again from January 20, 1700, to July 7, 1701. He returned to England.
December 1701 and did not again resume his judicial duties in Ireland,] and
England was a country he was much happier in than that which might be
regarded as -the proper sphere of his duties. When an opportunity presented
itself of his filling a high position as repre-sentative of England at the
Court of Portugal, all his old love of the Continent and diplomativ life
returned with full force. He gladly accepted the offer made him, and without
a sigh, saw the once coveted Great Seal of Ireland, transferred to his
veteran successor, Sir Richard Cox. He filled the important office of
Ambassador at the Court of Lisbon, and was responsible for the Treaty which
bears his name. [The Methuen Treaty was for the mutual interchange of port
wine and woollen manufactures, and regulated this trade until very recently]
This Methuen Treaty was so distasteful to the Portuguese, that it is said,
when, in 1701, it was carried to King Pedro II. for his signature, he
vigorously set to and kicked it about the room. It is likewise related the
Ambassador himself was so little pleased with his own work, that he
privately advised Queen Anne not to ratify it. The Ambassador died at his
post in Lisbon in the year 1706. His death was sudden, and his loss much
lamented by the politicians of the time. The Duke of Marlborough, writing to
Mr. Secretary Harley from the Camp at Helchin, on August 12, 1706, thus
refers to him: -'I had an account from Mr. Secretary Hodges of the sud-den
death of Mr. Methuen, at Lisbon, when the situation of affairs in Spain
seemed most to require his assistance, since we have no account yet of King
Charles's approach to Madrid. His timely appearance there would, in all
probability, put an end to the war on that side.' [The Marlborough
Despatches, vol. iii. p. 78.] In a letter to Mr. Secretary Hodges the Duke
alluded to the same subject: 'I have received the favour of your letter of
26th past, giving an account of the sudden death of Lord Ambassador Methuen,
which is very unlucky at this critical juncture, when our affairs in Spain
seem much to want his assistance in encouraging the Court of Portugal to
continue steady and resolute in pursuing the war, under the difficulties we
are like to meet with for want of King Charles's timely appearance at
Madrid.' [Ibid. vol. iii. p. 79.]
The family has since been ennobled, and is now represented by Frederick,
second Baron Methuen, married to Anna, daughter of the Reverend John
Sandford of Nynehead Somerset, and has issue.