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See also: Warden See also: Flood, chief See also: justice of the See also: king's bench in
See also: Ireland, was See also: born in 1732, and was educated at Trinity See also: College, See also: Dublin, and after-wards at Christ See also: Church,
See also: Oxford, where he became proficient in the See also: classics
.
His See also: father was a See also: man of See also: good See also: birth and, See also: fortune, and he himself married a member of the influential See also: Beresford See also: family, who brought him a large fortune
.
In his early years he was handsome, witty, good-tempered, and a brilliant conversationalist
.
His See also: judgment was See also: sound, and he had a natural gift of eloquence which had been cultivated and See also: developed by study of classical oratory and the practice of elocution
.
Flood therefore possessed every See also: personal See also: advantage when, in 1759, he entered the Irish parliament as member for See also: Kilkenny in his twenty-seventh See also: year
.
There was at that See also: time no party in the Irish See also: House of See also: Commons that could truly be called See also: national, and until a few years before there had been none that deserved even the name of an opposition
.
The Irish parliament was still constitutionally subordinate to the See also: English privy council; it had practically no See also: powers of See also: independent legislation, and none of controlling the policy. of the executive, which was nominated by the ministers in See also: London (see See also: GRATTAN, See also: HENRY)
.
Though the
See also: great majority of the See also: people were See also: Roman Catholics, no See also: person of that faith could either enter parliament or exercise the franchise; the penal See also: code, which made it almost impossible for a Roman Catholic to hold See also: property, to follow a learned profession, or even to educate his See also: children, and which in numerous particulars pressed severely on the Roman Catholics and subjected them to degrading conditions, was as yet unrepealed, though in practice largely obsolete; the industry and commerce of Ireland were throttled by restrictions imposed, in accordance with the economic theories of the See also: period, in the See also: interest of the See also: rival See also: trade of Great Britain
.
Men like Anthony See also: Malone and Hely-Hutchison fully realized the See also: necessity for far-reaching reforms,; and It only needed the ability and eloquence of Flood in the Irish House of Commons to raise up an independent party in parliament, and to create in the country a public opinion with definite intelligible aims
.
The chief See also: objects for which Flood strove were the shortening of the duration of parliament—which had then no legal limit in Ireland except that of the reigning See also: sovereign's See also: life,—the. reduction of the scandalously heavy pension See also: list, the establishment of a national militia, and, above all, the See also: complete legislative independence of the Irish parliament
.
For some years little was accomplished; but in 1768 the English See also: ministry, which had See also: special reasons at the moment for avoiding unpopularity in Ireland, allowed an octennial See also: bill to pass, which was the first step towards making the Irish House of Commons in some measure representative of public opinion
.
It had become the practice to allow See also: crown patronage in Ireland to be exercised by the owners of See also: parliamentary boroughs in return for their under-taking to See also: manage the House in the See also: government interest
.
But during the viceroyalty of See also: Lord Townsend the aristocracy, and more particularly these " undertakers " as they were called, were made to understand that for the future their privileges in this respect would be curtailed
.
When, therefore, an opportunity was taken by the government in 1768 for reasserting the constitutional subordination of the Irish parliament, these powerful classes were thrown into temporary See also: alliance with Flood
.
In the following year, in accordance with the established procedure,. a See also: money bill was sent over by the privy council in London for acceptance by the Irish House of Commons
.
Not only was it rejected, but contrary to See also: custom a reason for this course was assigned, namely, that the bill had not originated in the Irish House
.
In consequence parliament was peremptorily prorogued, and a recess of fourteen months was employed by the government in securing a majority by the most extensive corruption.' Nevertheless when parliament met in See also: February 1771 another money bill was thrown out on the motion of Flood; and the next year Lord Townsend, the lord See also: lieutenant whose policy had provoked this conflict, was recalled
.
The struggle was the occasion of a publication, famous in its See also: day, called Baralariarta, to which
' Walpole's See also: George III., iv
.
348
.
525
of powerful letters after the his collaborators being Henry
Flood contributed a series manner of Junius, one of Grattan
.
The success which had thus far attended Flood's efforts had placed him in a position such as no Irish politician had previously attained
.
He had, as an eminent historian of Ireland observes,
proved himself beyond all comparison the greatest popular orator that his country had yet produced, and also a consummate master of parliamentary tactics
.
Under parliamentary conditions that were exceedingly unfavourable, and in an atmosphere charged with corruption, venality and subserviency, he had created a party before which ministers had begun to quail, and had inoculated the See also: Protestant constituencies with a genuine spirit• of liberty and self-reliance."' Lord See also: Harcourt, who succeeded Townsend as See also: viceroy, saw that Flood must be See also: con-ciliated at any price " rather than See also: risk the opposition of so formidable a See also: leader." Accordingly, in 1775, Flood was offered and accepted a seat in the privy council and the office of See also: vice-treasurer with a See also: salary of £3500 a year
.
For this step he has been severely criticized
.
The See also: suggestion that he acted corruptly in the See also: matter is groundless; and although it is true that he lost influence from the moment he became a See also: minister of the crown, Flood may reasonably have held that he had a better prospect of advancing his policy by the leverage of a ministerial position than by means of any opposition party he could hope to muster in an unreformed House of Commons.' The result, however; Was that the leadership of the national party passed from Flood to Grattan, who entered the Irish parliament in the same session that Flood became a minister
.
Flood continued in office for nearly seven years
.
During this long period he necessarily remained silent on the subject of the independence of the Irish parliament, and had to be content with advocating minor reforms as occasion offered
.
He was thus instrumental in obtaining bounties on the export of Irish corn to See also: foreign countries and some other trifling commercial concessions
.
Qn the other See also: hand he failed to procure the passing of a Habeas Corpus bill and a bill for making the See also: judges irremovable, while his support of Lord See also: North's See also: American policy still more gravely injured his popularity and reputation
.
But an important event in 1778 led indirectly to his recovering to some extent his former position in the country; this event was the alliance of See also: France with the revolted American colonies
.
Ireland was thereby placed in peril of a French invasion, while the English government could provide no troops to defend the See also: island
.
The celebrated volunteer See also: movement was then set on See also: foot to meet the emergency; in a few See also: weeks more than 40,000 men, disciplined and equipped, were under arms, officered by the country gentry, and controlled by the wisdom and patriotism of Lord Charlemont
.
This volunteer force, in which Flood was a colonel, while vigilant for the defence of the island, soon made itself felt in politics
.
A Volunteer See also: Convention, formed with all the See also: regular organization of a representative See also: assembly, but wielding the power of an army, began menacingly to demand the removal of the commercial restrictions which were destroying Irish prosperity
.
Under this pressure the government gave way; the whole colonial trade was in 1779 thrown open to Ireland for the first time, and other concessions were also extorted
.
Flood, who had taken an active though not a leading See also: part in this movement, now at last resigned his office to rejoin his old party
.
He found to his chagrin that his former services had been to a great extent: forgotten, and that he was eclipsed by Grattan . When in a debate on the constitutional question in 1779 Flood complained of the small consideration shown him in relation to a subject which he had been the first to agitate, he was reminded that by theSee also: civil See also: law " if a man should See also: separate from his wife, and abandon her for seven years, another might then take her and give her his See also: protection." But though Flood had lost control of the movement for independence of the Irish parliament, the agitation, backed as it now was by the Volunteer Convention
2 W
.
E
.
H
.
Lecky, Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland (enlarged
edition, 2 vols., 1903), I
.
48
.
3 nee See also: Hardy's Life of Charlemont, i
.
356
.
and by increasing signs of popular disaffection, led at last in 1782 to the concession of the demand, together with a number of other important reforms (see GRATTAN, HENRY)
.
No sooner, however, was this great success gained than a question arose—known as the See also: Simple Repeal controversy—as to whether See also: England, in addition to the repeal of the Acts on which the subordination of the Irish parliament had been based, should not be required expressly to renounce for the future all claim to control Irish legislation
.
The chief See also: historical importance of this dispute is that it led to the memorable rupture of friendship between Flood and Grattan, each of whom assailed the other with unmeasured but magnificently eloquent invective in the House of Commons
.
Flood's view prevailed—for a Renunciation See also: Act such as he advocated was ungrudgingly passed by the English parliament in 1783—and for a time he regained popularity at the expense of his rival
.
Flood next (28th of See also: November 1783) introduced a reform bill, after first submitting it to the Volunteer Convention
.
The bill, which contained no See also: provision for giving the franchise to Roman Catholics—a proposal which Flood always opposed—was rejected, ostensibly on the ground that the attitude of the See also: volunteers threatened the freedom of parliament
.
The volunteers were perfectly loyal to the crown and the connexion with England
.
They carried an address to the king, moved by Flood, expressing the hope that their support of parliamentary reform might be imputed to nothing but a sober and laudable See also: desire to uphold the constitution
.
. . and to perpetuate the cordial union of both kingdoms." The convention then dissolved, though Flood had desired, in opposition to Grattan, to continue it as a means of putting pressure on parliament for the purpose of obtaining reform
.
In 1776 Flood had made an attempt to enter the English House of Commons
.
In 1783 he tried again, this time with success
.
He See also: purchased a seat for Winchester from the duke of Chandos, and for the next seven years he was a member at the same time of both the English and Irish parliaments
.
He reintroduced, but without success, his reform bill in the Irish House in 1784; supported the movement for protecting Irish See also: industries; but See also: short-sightedly opposed Pitt's commercial propositions in 1785
.
He remained a See also: firm opponent of Roman Catholic emancipation, even defending the penal See also: laws on the ground that after the Revolution they " were not laws of persecution but of See also: political necessity "; but after 1786 he does not appear to have attended the parliament in Dublin
.
In the House at See also: Westminster, where he refused to enrol himself as a member of either political party, he was not successful
.
His first speech, in opposition to See also: Fox's See also: India Bill on the 3rd of See also: December 1783, disappointed the expectations aroused by his celebrity
.
His speech in opposition to the commercial treaty with France in 1787 was, however, most able; and in 1790 he introduced a reform bill which Fox declared to be the best scheme of reform that had yet been proposed, and which in Burke's opinion retrieved Flood's reputation . But at the dissolution in the same year he lost his seat in both parliaments, and he then retired to Farmley, his residence in county Kilkenny, where he died on the 2nd of December 1791 . WhenSee also: Peter Burrowes, notwithstanding his close personal friendship with Grattan, declared that Flood was " perhaps the ablest man Ireland ever produced, indisputably the ablest man of his own times," he expressed what was probably the general opinion of Flood's contemporaries
.
Lord Charlemont, who knew him intimately though not always in agreement with his policy, pronounced him to be " a man of consummate ability." He also declared that avarice made no part of Flood's character
.
Lord Mountmorres, a critic by no means partial to Flood, described him as a pre-eminently truthful man, and one who detested flattery
.
Grattan, who even after the famous See also: quarrel never lost his respect for Flood, said of him that he was the best tempered and the most sensible man in the See also: world
.
In his youth he was genial, See also: frank, sociable and witty; but in later years disappointment made him gloomy and taciturn
.
As an oYator he was less polished, less epigrammatic than Grattan; but a closer reasoner and a greater master of See also: sarcasm and invective
.
Personal ambition often governed his actions, but his political judgment was usuallysound; and it was the opinion of Bentham that Flood would have succeeded in carrying a reform bill which might have preserved Irish parliamentary independence, if he had been supported by Grattan and the rest of his party in keeping alive the Volunteer Convention in 1783
.
Though he never wavered in See also: loyalty to the See also: British crown and See also: empire, Ireland never produced a more sincere patriot than Henry Flood
.
See Warden Flood, See also: Memoirs of Henry Flood (London, 1838) ; Henry Grattan, Memoirs of the Life and Times of the Right Hon
.
H
.
Grattan (5 vols., London, 1839–1846) ; See also: Charles
See also: Phillips, Recollections of See also: Curran and some of his Contemporaries (London, 1822); The Irish Parliament 1775, from an official and contemporary See also: manuscript, edited by See also: William
See also: Hunt (London, 1907) ; W
.
J
.
O'Neill Daunt, Ireland and tier See also: Agitators; Lord Mountmorres, See also: History of the Irish Parliament (2 vols., London, 1792) ; W
.
E
.
H
.
Lecky, History of England in tke Eighteenth Century (8 vols., London, 1878–189o) ; and Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland (enlarged edition, 2 vols., London, 1903); J
.
A
.
See also: Froude, The English in Ireland, vols. ii. and iii
.
(London, 1881) ; Horace Walpole, Memoirs of the Reign of George III
.
(4 vols., London, 1845, 1894) ; See also: Sir Jonah See also: Barrington, Rise and Fall of the Irish Nation (London, 1833) ; See also: Francis Plowden, Historical Review of the See also: State of Ireland (London, 1803); See also: Alfred Webb, Compendium of Irish Biography (Dublin, 1878) ; F
.
Hardy, Memoirs of Lord Charlemont (London, 1812), especially for the volunteer movement, on ;which see also Proceedings of the Volunteer Delegates of Ireland 1784 (Anon
.
Pamphlet, Brit
.
See also: Mus.) ; also The Charlemont Papers, and Irish Parl
.
Debates, vols. i.-iv.)
.
(R
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