House Of Commons
Thursday, 14th June, 1877.
Private Business
Metropolitan Street Improvements Bill (By Order)
Consideration
Order for Consideration, as amended, read.
Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Bill be now considered."—( Sir Charles Forster.)
said, it was intended to propose that the Standing Orders should be suspended in order that the Bill might be read a third time to-morrow. He thought Consideration of the measure should be postponed for some days, in order that hon. Members might have an opportunity of forming an opinion as to whether there should not be introduced into it—although it was a Private Bill—clauses of a similar description to those which had been inserted by Parliament in the Artizans' Dwellings Act of 1875, with reference to providing accommodation for the working classes who would be displaced. A very large number of persons would be unhoused by the carrying out of the improvements which the Bill contemplated, and under its provisions nothing like adequate accommodation would be afforded to those who would be so displaced. A sufficient number of houses should be built for the working classes in lieu of those which would have to be taken down. He moved that the Consideration of the Bill be postponed to Tuesday next. Amendment proposed, to leave out the word "now," and at the end of the Question to add the words "upon Tuesday next."—(Sir Sydney Waterlow.) Question proposed, "That the word now' stand part of the Question."
said, that to delay the Bill, as the hon. Baronet appeared to desire, would be equivalent to rejecting it altogether. Unless a Bill of that kind were read a third time before a certain day, according to a Standing Order it could not be proceeded with that Session. The Bill in question had received the assent of a Select Committee, and care had been taken that no injury should be inflicted by it to the working classes without providing a remedy. The Home Secretary had approved of the scheme, and felt satisfied that the parties who should be compelled to remove from their present holdings would be amply provided for by the substitution of new and approved dwellings for them before the year 1878.
said, the Committee on the Bill, over which he had the honour to preside, thought it right to present a special Report to the House. They thought the providing of accommodation for the people who would be turned out by these street improvements ought not to be left to private speculation. The improvements under this Bill were calculated to confer the most beneficial and lasting advantages on the public generally; and though there was no obligation to cover the sites of the dwellings which would be removed under it with houses of a similar character to those demolished, there was ample security given for the erection of dwellings of a new and improved character in lieu of them.
said, he hoped the Amendment would not be pressed. The improvements which the Bill contemplated were of an important and substantial character; and if its progress were obstructed at the present stage he was afraid it would not become law this year at all. He quite agreed that provision ought to be made for securing accommodation for those persons who would be turned out of their dwellings, and who could not secure accommodation for themselves; and when the measure reached the House of Lords the Government would, if necessary, cause the insertion of provisions for the protection of those of the working classes who might be displaced in consequence of the improvements being carried into effect.
said, that upon that understanding he would withdraw his opposition to the Bill being proceeded with.
on behalf of the Metropolitan Board of Works, was prepared to accept any clause for the better protection of the working classes which the Home Secretary might deem requisite. Amendment, by leave, withdrawn. Main Question put, and agreed to. Bill considered.
Ordered, That Standing Order 243 be suspended, and that the Bill be read the third time To-morrow.—(Sir Charles Forster.)
Questions
Public Health—Vaccination
Question
asked the President of the Local Government Board, Whether it is true that a boy, named Thomas Taylor, was certified by an Ipswich surgeon as having been successfully vaccinated by him on 20th May 1868; whether this boy was not returned by the Ipswich medical officer as having died of small pox in the Borough Fever Hospital on the 7th April 1877 unvaccinated; and, whether he will cause inquiry to be made into the circumstances?
I have made some inquiry into this case, and I find that according to the Vaccination Register, it is the fact that the boy in question was certified to have been successfully vaccinated by an Ipswich surgeon on May 20, 1868. He died in the borough hospital on the 7th of April, 1877, of small pox, and the medical officer in attendance certified that he was unvaccinated—first, because there were no vaccination marks to be seen; secondly, because the mother stated that the boy had been vaccinated three times by the assistant of Mr. Adams, but unsuccessfully. The mother is very positive in her statement as to the vaccination not having been successful; in this she is corroborated by a neighbour who remembers the circumstance. It is not easy to explain the discrepancy between the entry in the Vaccination Register and the facts which have now been ascertained; but the vaccination occurred before the Act of 1871, when certificates were sometimes given without inspection of result.
Legal Business Of The Government—Report Of The Departmental Committee—Question
asked the Secretary to the Treasury, What steps, if any, have been taken to give effect to the Reports of the Departmental Committee on the system upon which the Legal Business of the Government is conducted?
The Reports of the Committee, three in number, are divisible as follows:—1. Relating to the remuneration of the Law Officers. The recommendation of the Committee have been generally adopted. A new Treasury Minute amending the definition of "contentious business," as suggested by the Committee, has been issued, and the more comprehensive definition has had the effect, as was contemplated by the Committee, of obviating some questions between the Law Officers and the several Government Departments. 2. (Reports 2 and 3.) Relating to the legal business of the several Government Departments. Of the several Departments reported on by the Committee, the following were the subject of special recommendations:—Office of Works, War Office, Admiralty; while it was suggested that, on the occurence of a vacancy in the office of Queen's Proctor, the business should be transferred to the Department of the Solicitor of the Treasury. The recommendations of the Committee with respect to all the above-mentioned Departments have been carried into effect. The Solicitorships of the Office of Works and of the Admiralty, and the Assistant Solicitorship of the War Office have been abolished, and the Treasury Solicitor has been appointed Queen's Proctor, in which capacity he conducts all the business relating to the administration of the personal estates of intestates, as well as the duties imposed on that officer by statute in reference to intervention in Divorce matters. The financial results of the above change are as follows (omitting the results in respect of the Queen's Proctor's business, as sufficient time has not yet elapsed to test the financial working of the new arrangement, the late Queen's Proctor having been remunerated by bills of cost, not by salary):—Under the old system the legal Staff of the Office of Works cost, for salaries only, £2,985; War Office, £2,850; Admiralty, £2,900—£8,735. The legal work of the above Departments is now transacted in the Department of the Solicitor to the Treasury at a cost of £6,000, showing a saving of £2,735, or over 30 per cent. The above comparison is limited to salaries only. There is, however, little doubt that the concentration of the above legal business under the Treasury Solicitor will lead to a reduction in the ordinary legal charges.
Food And Drugs Act, 1875—Reduced Spirits—Question
asked the President of the Local Government Board, Whether sub-sections 1 and 4 of Clause 6 of "The Food and Drugs Act, 1875," would not exempt from penalties persons selling Spirits reduced with water in the natural and customary course of trade, and without fraud to the purchaser; whether he is aware that prosecutions have recently taken place for reducing Gin by its admixture with water; and, whether, inasmuch as in such case no fraud has been practised or intended, and the sales of Gin so reduced have been made at a lower price, such prosecutions are in accordance with the intentions of the Act; and, whether, if there exists any doubt as to the interpretation of the Act, he is prepared to introduce an amending Bill to exempt from penalties persons who sell Gin reduced with water, and not otherwise adulterated?
In reply to the first Question of my hon. Friend, I may say that if the water is added for the preparation of the gin as an article of commerce in a fit state for consumption, the 1st sub-section applies and no offence is committed; and, so far as in the process of distillation a certain amount of water remains mixed with the spirit, the provisions of sub-section 4 would likewise apply in bar of a prosecution. I am aware that certain prosecutions have recently taken place, and several cases have come before the Judges. The case of "Pashler v. Stevenitt" came before the Judges of Appeal on the 27th ultimo. In that case it appeared that the Justices in Petty Sessions held that gin at 44 per cent below proof could not be considered as gin, and the Judges held that the seller was properly convicted. It appeared that gin sold by retailers varies in strength from proof to 20 per cent under proof. The Judges held that the question was one for the magistrates, who must use their discretion on the facts before them, and that they had rightly decided that a mixture of water so far as 44 per cent below proof was a fraudulent increase of the measure of the liquid. A decision reported in to-day's newspapers is to the same effect. In reply to my hon. Friend's third Question, I cannot but hope that the effect of these decided cases will be to put an end to any uncertainty as to the interpretation of the Act, if such exists, and I am certainly not prepared, as at present advised, to introduce any amending Bill on the subject.
Army — Regimental Lieutenant Colonels—Question
asked the Secretary of State for War, Whether he has any intention of making any change in the rule which compels the Lieutenant Colonel of a regiment to retire after having held the command of it for five years?
in reply, said, the rule referred to, which had been laid down by his Predecessor, had been recently acted upon, and there was no intention of relaxing it.
Criminal Law—Prison And Reformatory Labour—Question
asked the Secretary of State for the Home Department, Whether it has come to his know-lodge that a firm of brushmakers in Bristol have given notice of a reduction of 10 per cent in the wages of their workpeople, in consequence of the competition of prison and reformatory-made brushes in that town?
in reply, said, he had received no complaints upon this subject, and therefore had not made inquiries into it; but he did not think there could be the slightest truth in it, as the last Report he had from the Bristol Reformatory was to the effect that the whole amount of work then going on in this trade was equivalent only to that of four men and nine women working full time. He did not see how this could involve any interference in the trade.
Merchant Shipping Acts — Deck Cargo Space—Question
asked the President of the Board of Trade, If his attention has been directed to an article in the "Scotsman" newspaper of the 11th instant as follows:—
and, whether the Government intend during next Session of Parliament to consolidate the Merchant Shipping Acts, with a view to do away with the anomaly and many others complained of?"On the arrival of the ship" County of Lancaster "at the Tail of the Bank, Greenock, with a cargo of sugar from Java, the Customs officials, in making out the vessel's return, added to the tonnage of the ship 2 84–100ths tons to the gross register in consequence of the vessel carrying on clock two spare spars, a hen coop, and two beef casks, while another section of the Merchant Shipping Act provides that a ship is not seaworthy unless she has two spare spars;"
I do not see The Scotsman, and, therefore, have not seen the article referred to; but I should have been very happy to see the hon. Member, if he has any case to allege of mistake made in measuring deck cargo space. There have been cases in the Clyde, of which the County of Lancaster seems to have been one, in which the space occupied on deck by hen coops, beef casks, and live animals for consumption, and spars, have been included in such measurement; and they have been referred by the Board of Trade to the Board of Customs, whose officers measure those spaces. The Board of Trade have laid down, by instructions to their principal officers, that store spars should be regarded as equipment, and the space they occupy should not be measured as deck cargo space. There is no such section in the Act of last year as stated in the Question, nor any anomalies complained of calling for amendment or consolidation of the Merchant Shipping Acts.
High Court Of Justice—Mr Justice Fry's Court—Question
asked the First Commissioner of Works, If his attention has been called to the place which under the arrangements of the High Court of Justice, Chancery Division, is used as a Court by Mr. Justice Fry; and, whether it is intended that it should be occupied after the present term and during the winter?
in reply, said, the arrangements by which Mr. Justice Fry's present Court was provided were made by the Office of Works after communication with the Lord Chancellor. Although it was not so large as some of the others, it was well lighted and ventilated. Objection had been taken by the learned Judge to the retiring room, and the question of providing a new retiring room was under consideration. There was no intention of removing Mr. Justice Fry to any other place.
Sale Of Intoxicating Liquors On Sunday (Ireland) Bill
Questions
asked Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer, Whether, as the Select Committee appointed at the instance of the Government, to whom the Sale of Intoxicating Liquors on Sunday (Ireland) Bill was referred, have reported in its favour, the Government are prepared to take the necessary steps for carrying the Bill through its remaining stages during the present Session of Parliament?
asked Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer, If his attention has been directed to the changes in the form and essence of the Sale of Intoxicating Liquors on Sunday (Ireland) Bill, made by the Select Committee to whom the Bill was referred; if he is aware that Notice has been given to move that the Amendments made by the Select Committee to whom the Bill was referred, and especially the alteration in the Preamble of the Bill, not being warranted by the powers entrusted by this House to that Committee, the Bill be re-committed to the Select Committee, in order that they may confine their Amendments within the powers entrusted to them by this House; and, if under these circumstances the Government will afford facilities to the Select Committee for re-considering the said Bill?
The Government are well aware of the interest with which this Bill is regarded by Gentlemen connected with Ireland, representing various interests in that country, and sitting in different parts of this House; and having regard to all that has passed with regard to this measure, it would be a matter of great satisfaction to the Government if they could see their way to its being disposed of in the present Session of Parliament; and, so far as it may be in our power, we should all be glad to assist in bringing about that result. But I must take this opportunity of reminding the House of the position in which we stand. We are now far advanced in the Session. If I were to say that we probably have not more than two months of the Session left, I dare say I should hear a murmur at my even mentioning so long a time; but we are far advanced in the Session, and it cannot be denied that the ordinary Business of the Session is somewhat in arrear. Now with regard to the Business of the Session I must remind the House—without wishing to make anything in the nature of a complaint, which I have no right whatever to do—that in the present Session a much longer time than usual has been spent in the discussion of Business which in most Sessions with which we have been acquainted has been got through with greater rapidity. Bills—and some of them annual Bills—have been discussed much more fully than is usual, and many of the Votes in Supply have also given occasion for much fuller discussion than we have ever known. Nobody can dispute the perfect right of Members of this House to discuss these matters; but the effect of their doing so to the extent to which it has been done in the present Session is to place us at the present moment in a position of some anxiety as to the time within which we can properly get through the necessary Business of Parliament. I can hardly say at this moment, therefore, how far we shall be able to afford days for Business which does not properly belong to the Government measures. We shall have, of course, to get through with Supply. We have certain Bills which have been brought in by the Government, and which are tolerably advanced, but still which must be pressed on if they are to be considered by the other House before the conclusion of the Session; and I am still unable to say how far it may be in our power to dispose of Government nights for the discussion of measures brought in by hon. Gentlemen who are not Members of the Government. I look at the position of this particular Bill, and I see, in the first place, that it has gone through a Committee, but it has come down in an altered shape. It has come down with alterations which, I believe, were carried in the Committee by majorities, and some portions of which I believe were carried against the advice of Members of the Government who were parties to that Committee; and I see that Notices have been given of Amendments on the Bill in Committee, and no less than five Members have given Notice of objections to be raised on the Motion being made that you, Sir, leave the Chair. The hon. Member for Dublin has just called attention to one important question which is to be raised when the Bill is proposed to be again taken in Committee; and without expressing—for I am not able to express—any opinion upon the question which the hon. Gentleman raises as to the propriety of the Amendments that were made, I think it is obvious that the Bill will lead to considerable discussion. Well, that being the case, I must at the present time ask the hon. Member to excuse me giving a definite answer to the Question which ho has put. I am, as I said, anxious to do anything I possibly can to facilitate the discussion of this Bill; and if we should have the assistance of the House generally in getting on with the Business which yet remains before us, we shall be better able to meet the wishes which we know are widely entertained on both sides of the House with regard to this Bill; but the matter really does not entirely rest with ourselves. It is not from any unwillingness on the part of the Government to allow the proper discussion of the Bill; but we feel ourselves so very much in the hands of hon. Members with regard to the transaction of the necessary Business of the Session, that I do not like at the present moment to take upon myself the responsibility of making a promise which, from no fault of our own, we might hereafter find it difficult to fulfil.
I would ask the indulgence of the House while I make a statement, in consequence of the exceedingly unsatisfactory answer of the right hon. Gentleman. I shall put myself formally in Order by concluding with a Motion. I submit to the House that it is altogether too late for the Government to assume a passive attitude, and to manifest a spirit which is practically one of utter indifference to the fate of this Bill during the present Session. ["Order!"]
By the Rules of the House the hon. Member is not at liberty to discuss the Bill upon the Question now before it.
I bow to your decision, Sir, and shall confine myself to the question of procedure. I shall not go back on previous Sessions; but I must ask the House to consider what was done immediately after the meeting of Parliament in the present year. I moved the second reading of this Bill on the 12th of February—the Government having previously opposed the principle of the Bill most strenuously, and taken the most emphatic way of expressing their hostility. ["No, no!"] Well, the Lords of the Treasury were the Tellers in a division on this question, and I do not know that the Government can resort to a more emphatic expression of opinion than by such a course as that. In this Session the Government changed their position, and supported the second reading on a certain condition, which was that the Bill should be referred to a Select Committee, and that certain special questions should be referred to that Committee—namely, the applicability of the Bill to five large cities and towns in Ireland. The general principle of the Bill being conceded by the Government, as undoubtedly their action in the division put beyond a doubt, the promoters of the Bill assented to the proposal of the Government; and I felt that the friends of the measure had ceased to ask the Government to follow them, and that they then became the followers of the Government, because the Government had propounded a definite and positive policy of their own, for which they made themselves responsible. The idea of a Select Committee did not originate with us, but with the right hon. Baronet the Chief Secretary for Ireland. Ho made this proposal, and we merely acceded to it. I have a right to ask, therefore, was that proposal on the part of the Government a friendly or was it a hostile proposition? I went into the Select Committee determined to abide by its decision; and I say now openly in the presence of the right hon. Baronet and the House that he knew that was my resolution long before the decision of the Committee was given, and at a time when I believed that the decision would be contrary to my own views and opinions. Inasmuch as those who previously acted with me went into that Committee in good faith, I think I have a right to ask the Government as far as is in their power—and they have it in their power—to carry out the decision of the Committee. No doubt I was very simple in believing that a Select Committee was to be treated as a sort of tribunal to give judgment on the question referred to it. I find now that, instead of being regarded by the Government as a tribunal in any sense, it has been used to act as a break on the wheels and to stop the train altogether. The Report was made on the 10th May. Why did the Government take away three months from the chances of the measure? What right had they to interpose on the 12th February, so that through the whole of the next three precious months we could not press it through the House? The Bill has many Friends on both sides of the House, and I think the experience of last year will justify me in the statement that if I had had those three months at my disposal, I should have made way in passing the Bill through several of its stages. ["No, no!"] Well, no one can speak with certainty of anything likely to occur in the House of Commons. This time last year, at a very late period of the Session, I got 15 Members to make way for this Bill. Now, I may ask this question—Did the Government recommend the appointment of a Select Committee for the purpose merely of registering a foregone conclusion of their own, because it seems to me that it does not make the slightest difference as regards the duty of the Government whether the Committee reported in favour of the opinions of the Government or in favour of those who supported the original measure. If the Government recommended the Committee merely to register their own opinions, it may be statesmanship; but with every-day people in the outer world it would be designated by a very different name. I submit that this is not a question between the Government and a private Member. The House of Commons by adopting the principle of the Bill by a majority last year, took it out of the hands of private Members, and the Government, by its action this Session, took it out of the hands of the House of Commons, and the Government has now to reckon, not with those whose names are on the back of the Bill, but with the House of Commons itself. It is gone entirely beyond being the Bill of a private Member, and I think it is not competent—I use the word with reference to the wisdom and prudence involved—it is not competent now for the Government to wash their hands of the whole thing, to turn upon me, and to say" We have taken three months from you. The whole future is before you. As for us, we discharge ourselves of our responsibility for the measure." I ask the House whether that is the position the Government is entitled to take? I understand and believe—for I have it on the best authority—that the Irish Conservative Members, almost in a body, have gone the length of imploring the Government to take up and settle this question; and I understand that those Gentlemen from Ireland who are the supporters of the Government in this House have been unceremoniously sent about their business, and practically told not to interfere. I should have thought they might have had influence with the Government; but, unfortunately, there is this flaw in their case, that they are Irishmen as well as Conservatives. I must apologize to the House for having interposed so long; but I have only to add that whatever respect I have for the Gentlemen who occupy the Treasury benches, I with still greater confidence make my appeal from them to the justice and generosity of the House of Commons itself. I move that the House do now adjourn. Motion made, and Question proposed, "That this House do now adjourn."—(Mr. Richard Smyth.)
I am very reluctant to speak on one of these Motions which tend to delay the regular Business, but I am desirous to say a very few words, and I wish to say them early because, while I would make a strong appeal to my right lion. Friend opposite and the Government, I am still able to bear testimony to the difficulties under which he labours. These are not difficulties merely put forward for the sake of making an excuse or of fencing with the question. They are real; and all those who have been closely concerned in carrying on the Business of this House, although they could not be at all surprised at a small degree of impatience on the part of my hon. Friend who is so devoted to this measure, yet they know likewise that it is not an easy matter for a Government to balance together, especially at a certain period of the Session, the various considerations which determine their duty in the choice of this or that particular measure to be submitted to the House. We are undoubtedly, however, approaching that period of the Session when the power of the Government over the time of the House will be increased. I do think that there are some special considerations which I hope will lead my right hon. Friend and the Government to consider this question as a special one; and I may mention them without any reproach, although they are directly connected with the conduct of the Government itself. This is a very peculiar measure in respect to its representing a very extraordinary union of opinion and sentiment in Ireland; but I will not dwell upon considerations which will occur to the mind of every man as giving very great force to the plea that on account of that union of sentiment we should view favourably the demand that was made for the progress of this measure. Now, what is the demand made of my right hon. Friend? As far as I understand, my hon. Friend (Mr. Smyth) is himself willing to use every exertion that he can use, and all the time that as a private Member, favoured in some respects by such large support from various quarters he can procure, he is most willing to exert himself in procuring. Therefore, he does not endeavour to throw the whole difficulty of pushing forward this measure upon the Government; but my hon. Friend knows quite well that his resources in that respect are essentially limited resources; and where there is a keen opposition to a Bill, even though it be an opposition within a very narrow circle, the Members of the Government know perfectly well that the vigour and persistence of that opposition very much depends upon their knowing or not knowing that the promoters of the Bill have but limited resources at their command. Now, what occurs to me is this. This is one of the cases in which the Government has seen cause to change its course, and I do not think they are open to any reproach whatever for having thought so, or for having opposed this Bill at the outset if they thought, as they did, that it involved questions of difficulty connected with the peace of Ireland and with the tranquillity of the great towns; but, as a matter of fact, having offered it a strenuous opposition in the first instance, they must see that they gave a much greater importance and weight to the general opposition to the Bill than it could possibly have acquired unless they had themselves shared in it. Now, my recollection of former practice is that where a Government has seen cause to alter its course in such a manner upon a particular Bill, and when they themselves, by taking a marked share in the proceedings upon the Bill, have stamped it as a measure of very great importance, it no longer remains to them to be neutral parties about that Bill. If they do not persist in their opposition, but arrive at the conclusion that it is better upon the whole that the Bill should be passed and the experiment tried; if, even further than that, they indicate and exorcise an influence upon the course of proceedings with respect to the Bill, and if the effect of their conduct is to deprive my hon. Friend behind me of the disposal of the principal portion of the Session during which he might in all likelihood have pushed his Bill forward to a successful issue, and to bring him to the latter part of Juno before ho is in a position to attempt it—what I wish to press upon my right hon. Friend opposite is, that the claim which thus arises is a claim of a very special character; and I am inclined to believe that if he does so regard it, and is willing to make an addition from his own larger resources to the smaller means of my hon. Friend, then in all probability there will be no undue attempt to obstruct the passage of the Bill through the House. I am bound to say that I think Her Majesty's Government are not bound to regard the decision of the Committee as a final decision upon any serious matters with regard to which they differ from the Committee. If they think fit to raise and submit for the judgment of the House questions upon which the Committee did not agree with them, it does not appear to me that they are acting in any degree beyond the fair exercise of their discretion. Still, I think even that again strengthens their obligation, if I may presume to say so, to prevent the renewed failure of this Bill after those many failures that have oc- curred through want of time. I venture to commend these considerations to the minds of my right hon. Friend and the Government, with the hope that the result will be such as will be satisfactory to my hon. Friend.
wished to state that he had not been sent to that House to represent either Whigs or Tories, but to represent the people. He was sent there, perhaps, by the largest majority that ever returned any man in Ireland, and he was determined to oppose the Bill in every way in which the Forms of the House would permit, because it was a measure which interfered with the rights and liberties of the working classes in Ireland.
reminded the hon. Gentleman that he was out of Order in discussing on the Motion before the House the merits of the Bill.
said, as the hon. Member for Londonderry had discussed the merits of the Bill, he did not think he was out of Order in doing the same. Still, he would bow to the Speaker's decision. He would like to add that the object of the hon. Member for Londonderry in moving the Adjournment of the House was not to adjourn the House, but to elicit an opinion in favour of the Bill, and to force the House into a false position on its merits. The House had before decided on the Bill, and ho (Mr. O'Sullivan) could assure the House that a greater delusion was never brought before it than to attempt to make it appear that the people of Ireland were in favour of it.
said, the observation of the Chancellor of the Exchequer that the Bill had been altered in Committee was not strictly correct. The point was whether the Bill should extend to certain large towns. As it went into the Committee it extended to all those towns which the Chancellor of the Exchequer wished should be excluded from its operation. In other words, the Government wished to modify the Bill from the shape in which it had passed the House on the second reading, while the Committee resolved upon retaining it in the form in which it had passed the House. Might not the present difficulty be met by the Government fixing a Saturday for the consideration of the Bill? ["No, no"] He fully sympathized with the hon. Gentlemen who cried " No, no;" but if they sat as long on the Committee as he did, they would entertain a different opinion.
wished, as a Member of the Committee, to point out that the Bill in its present shape was not at all the same measure which was referred to them by the House.
said, the hon. Member was not in Order in entering into a discussion of that question.
I beg to make an appeal to the House to allow us to get on with our Business. A good deal has been said about the Bill before us which, under other circumstances, might have been worthy of consideration; but I think it will be admitted that the real difficulty which lies in the way of our acceding to the request now made is want of time. Hon. Members cannot fail to see this, and to remark that every half-hour unnecessarily spent over fruitless discussion will inevitably tend to increase that difficulty. With reference to the remark that has fallen from the hon. Member for Glasgow (Dr. Cameron), allow me to explain that when I referred to the changes made in the Bill, I did not so much refer to these changes as showing why the Bill should not be allowed to proceed, as to the very considerable time that would be occupied in getting the Bill through Committee in consequence of those changes. I admit there is a desire on the part of a majority of the Members of this House to discuss this Bill. Well, if the Government promise to do everything they can, there ought, I think, to be a similar desire manifested on the part of hon. Members. But the prospect, as I have admitted, is not encouraging, and every unnecessary consumption of time makes it more hopeless. I find by reference to the Orders that on Wednesday, the 27th of June, the hon. Baronet the Member for Carlisle (Sir Wilfrid Lawson) has a Bill which stands first upon the list. Perhaps he may desire to assist the hon. Gentleman who introduced this Bill. Of course, I do not know what may be the feeling of the hon. Baronet the Member for Carlisle on this matter; but if he and the hon. Member for Londonderry would communicate with each other, they might strike out something between them. All I now ask the House to do is to allow us to go on with our Business. Only a few weeks remain to us, and it would be well for us to proceed with what we have to do in as businesslike a fashion as possible.
I, for one, Sir, do not want to waste the time of the House, yet I feel I must offer a single remark or two on this question. I do not think, from the tone of the observations of the right hon. Gentleman, that it is quite fair to charge him with being absolutely inaccessible to reason on this question. Perhaps he is willing to go even further. The Bill, I believe, only consists of six clauses, and it strikes me that so short a Bill, especially as it has the support of so large a majority, ought to be very soon disposed of. That majority would even be largely increased if the right hon. Gentleman would only give the Bill his support, and ask the House to unite with the Government in getting it carried. There are, it is true, a few Members from Ireland who are opposed to the measure; but even they, when they see the House is so unmistakeably in its favour, and that no hope of permanent obstruction to its progress need be entertained, would at once withdraw that obstruction. This is a question between the Government and the people of Ireland. As I understand it, the feeling in Ireland is unanimous in favour of the Bill. Only this morning I saw an extract from a Dublin newspaper—the only newspaper which has opposed this Bill—and I find that it has given up its opposition. It even goes further, and says that after the evidence given before the Select Committee, and the general opinion expressed in this House, the wisest course to adopt would be to pass the Bill at once. Seeing, then, that the Bill had received almost the unanimous support —
rose to Order. Ho wished to ask the Speaker whether the right hon. Gentleman was not contravening the Rules of the House in discussing a measure which was not before it ?
am bound to say the right hon. Gentleman was exceeding the rules of Order.
I was referring to that point merely as an argument addressed to the right hon. Gentleman the Chancellor of the Exchequer, because I thought that he, as Leader of the House and the Government, could not be insensible to the force of a consideration urged on behalf of the vast majority of the Irish people. But I do not wish to go further in that direction. I do think that the right hon. Gentleman would consult the character of his Government, the reputation—shall I call it ?—of Parliament in Ireland, and the interests of the Irish nation in general, if he would give not an indifferent, but a hearty and cordial support to this measure. His Government is much more feeble than I take it to be if he cannot find some means by which this Bill may be disposed of this Session.
said, it was perfectly well known to Members that the second reading of the Bill was carried by a majority of 171 to 23. The Select Committee was appointed to consider the applicability of the measure to some large towns, and by a majority of 9 to 7 the views of the Government were overborne.
said, it was not competent for the hon. Gentleman to enter into a discussion of the proceedings in the Committee on the present Motion.
said, he wished to testify to the strong current of opinion on the subject in the part of Ireland which he represented; and he wished to call the attention of the House to the fact that there was not only a reluctance on the part of the Government to give facilities for the carrying out of the measure, but that a word of sympathy or support had never been uttered. If the Government had promised to make a measure of the question next Session, he would have been content; but they had remained silent except on the non possums theory, which was very unsatisfactory to most of their supporters in the North of Ireland.
wished to point out that if the remarks that the Chancellor of the Exchequer had just made were a premium upon obstruction, his hint would not be lost upon those 13 or 14 Irishmen who were against the Bill. He had said that if hon. Gentlemen would facilitate the Business of the House, they would consider how far they could assist in the passing of this Bill. The right hon. Gentleman had found that two Members could obstruct the Business again and again. Minorities had appeared upon this Bill of from 5 to 14, and it sometimes suited the policy of the Government to believe that these small minorities represented the people of Ireland. The Government were underrating the activity of the 13 who were against Sunday closing. They would be heard on the Prisons Bill and on many other Bills, with the understanding that if they were sufficiently obstructive, no facilities would be given for the passing of the Sunday Closing Bill. The reputation of the Government was at stake on this question. Were they going to force Sunday drinking upon the people for another year ? He appealed to the Chancellor of the Exchequer to re-consider his decision; because if not, the minority of Irish Members against the Bill would take care that what he had suggested should be carried out.
said, he rose with some fear, because after what had happened he supposed that he, too, would soon be called to Order. He would, however, do his best to keep in Order. The Chancellor of the Exchequer had very kindly and courteously recommended him to make some confidential communication to the Irish Members for the purpose of facilitating the passing of this Bill. Now, he would not hold a private communication with anybody outside that House. The right hon. Gentleman asked him whether he would give up his day for the discussion of the Permissive Bill in order to further the discussion on the Sunday Closing Bill for Ireland. Well, he would. [Cheers.] Gentlemen were cheering much too soon. He was determined to have his pound of flesh. He would only give up his day on condition that the Chancellor of the Exchequer would make the Irish Closing Bill a Government measure, and would use his influence to get it carried to the House of Lords in time for its full discussion. That, he thought, was a fair offer, and if the Government did not accept it, why then the House would have its own opinion about them. The question before them was not so much the Adjournment of the House, as whether this Bill was to be got through Parliament this Session or not, and whether, if it did not, Ireland was to be left for another year to endure all the horrors of the Sunday drink traffic. It was said that hon. Members from Ireland were unanimous on this subject. Well, he heard of united Irishmen, but he never heard of unanimous Irishmen. He believed the Bill was opposed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the Chief Secretary for Ireland, and a few Irish Members only, whom he would call the Blue Book Brigade, inasmuch as they read Blue Books by the hour because they had no arguments to urge in support of their case. Those hon. Members with lip service declared their adhesion to Home Rule; but when their country was united on a great question they endeavoured, with the aid of the " Saxon oppressor," to fasten an evil system upon Ireland. All the lion. Gentlemen returned by Irish constituencies at bye elections during the past year had been in favour of the Sunday Closing Bill. He thought the House ought to take this measure into its own hands and endeavour to get it passed. Over and over again they had been told that if Ireland would only come to Parliament and demand a general measure which that country wanted, that measure would be granted. Could there be a stronger case than the present ? Was it wise for them to ride off on a mere plea of delay? Were it a Coercion Bill it would be passed without trouble.
reminded the hon. Baronet that he was out of Order in making these observations.
said, he was extremely sorry he had got out of Order. He had expected that he should. He did not mean to discuss the Bill, but only to urge upon the Government the necessity of taking it up. A majority of the Irish publicans themselves were in its favour. He could, in fact, conceive of nobody who was opposed to it except the English publicans.
pointed out that both the hon. Member for Meath (Mr. Parnell) and the hon. Member for Cavan (Mr. Biggar) were supporters of the Bill, and that they, at all events, would not throw any obstruction in its way. He believed the question of a Catholic University for Ireland was of more importance than this Bill, and if a day be set aside for any Irish measure, it should be for that object.
thought there was too much assumption in the statement that the unanimous feeling of the Irish people was in favour of the Bill. He himself represented one of the largest constituencies in Ireland, and he stated distinctly that the masses of the people for whose benefit the Bill was designed were opposed to it. He had as good a personal knowledge of the people of Ireland as the hon. Member, and he must say they were unanimously against the Bill. The appearance of a majority in its favour was owing to the organized exertions of a central committee which had ample funds at its command. Motion, by leave, withdrawn.
gave Notice that he would ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer whether he would afford him an early opportunity of moving—
"That this House is of opinion that it would be detrimental to the interests of the country to allow the question of the sale on Sunday of intoxicating liquors in Ireland to remain unsettled for another year."
Cattle Plague And Importation Of Live Stock—Question
asked the Under Secretary of State for the Home Department, Whether he has taken, or will take, any steps to provide that evidence may be laid before the Committee How sitting to inquire into the diseases of cattle, as to the condition and treatment of live animals on beard the vessels employed to convey such animals to this country from the different ports in Ireland?
The Committee appointed by the Lord President in 1869 to inquire into the transit of animals by sea and land made certain recommendations, which were embodied in the "Transit of Animals Order, 1870," and continued in the consolidated "Animals Order, 1875." There are now five travelling Inspectors engaged in superintending the carrying into effect of the Regulations, as suggested by the Committee of 1873, and the best results have ensued. It is impossible entirely to prevent the suffering of animals during transit; but the condition of things is much improved, and under these circumstances it would hardly be advisable, unless further evidence of the suffering of these animals came to the notice of the Committee, to re-open evidence which was fully gone into by a previous Committee.
Russia And Turkey—The War—The Suez Canal—Question
asked Mr. Chancellor of the Exchequer, If he will be good enough to inform the House of the nature of the replies or communications received from Russia, the Porte, and the Khedive of Egypt relative to the intimation of Her Majesty's Government forbidding the exercise of belligerent rights on the Suez Canal during the continuance of the present war?
The substance of the communication from the Russian Government is that they will neither impede nor interrupt the free navigation of the Suez Canal. No communication has been received from the Porte or from Egypt on the matter.
Egypt—The Egyptian Corvette, "Latief"—Question
asked the President of the Board of Trade, If the Egyptian Government has rewarded the crews of two English ships for gallantly assisting an Egyptian corvette in distress ?
in reply, said, that the Egyptian Government had placed in the hands of the Board of Trade the sum of £200 for the crews of the English ships Agra and Myra, in acknowledgment of assistance rendered to the Egyptian corvette Latief when on fire, on the 10th of March last, 50 miles off Suez; and he understood that they purposed some further reward to the officers.
Orders Of The Day
Prisons Bill—Bill 121
( Mr. Assheton Cross, Sir Henry Selwin-Ibbetson.)
Consideration
Bill, as amended, further considered.
moved a new Clause—
(Test of malingering to be made only with authority of visiting committee.)
"That where the prison medical officer considers it necessary to apply any painful test to a prisoner to detect malingering or otherwise, such test shall only be applied by authority of an order from the visiting committee of justices, and the prisoner shall be entitled to name any duly qualified surgeon or physician residing in the locality to be present during the application of the test."
Clause brought up, and read the first and second time.
said, he would accept the hon. Member's clause if the word " Commissioners " were substituted for " visiting justices," and the rest of the clause left out.
accepted the Amendment. Clause, as amended, agreed to.
next moved that—
If the right hon. Gentleman would provide for this being done in the prison rules he would withdraw the clause. Clause brought up, and read the first time. Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the said Clause be now read a second time.""No prisoner who, previous to his conviction, has been in the habit of wearing flannels shall be deprived of them during his imprisonment."
was understood to say that flannels were always offered to prisoners. Motion and Clause, by leave, withdrawn.
then moved the following Clause:— (Restraint of prisoners.)
When the question was before the House it was urged that the use of irons was necessary to the personal safety of the prison officials. He had framed this clause to meet that case. Prison officials had been in the habit of punishing prisoners by putting them in irons. He thought that the inflicting of punishment by irons ought to be done away with; and his opinion was that prisoners should be no longer punished, but restrained by officials where restraint was necessary. The Bill of 1865 said that it should be lawful for the gaoler to order the prisoner to be put in irons in case of "urgent necessity;" but it did not say what was meant by " urgent necessity." He thought that " urgent necessity " should only exist where the safety of the prison officials or the prisoner himself was involved, or where the prisoner would tear the furniture. Clause brought up, and read the first time. Motion made and Question proposed, "That the said Clause be now read a second time.""No prisoner shall be put in irons, or under mechanical restraint, by the gaoler of any prison, or by order of the visiting committee of justices, except such restraint be necessary to secure the personal safety of the prison officials."
said irons were not used except in cases of absolute necessity. He could not accept the clause, which provided only for the personal safety of the prison officials; but, a prisoner in a desperate state might, if not put under restraint, tear his own clothing, destroy furniture, or do injury to his fellow-prisoners or himself. He believed that everything that was necessary was provided for by the 59th rule, and he hoped the hon. Member would not press the clause.
would suggest that the hon. Member for Meath should amend his clause so as to enlarge its scope by taking in the various matters spoken to by the Home Secretary.
said, the question seemed to be whether they should leave prisoners to knock out each other's brains. They sometimes fell foul of each other, and he thought they ought to be restrained.
wanted to know if the Home Secretary intended to make any additional rules to those in the old Act of Parliament? He had a very strong opinion that irons should not be used as a means of restraint at all. In the case of lunatics irons had been abandoned and strait-waistcoasts had been substituted, and he did not see why they should not be adopted in gaols.
said, the hon. Member for Meath had moved his clause, because he considered the expression " urgent necessity " in the Act of 1865 to be rather ambiguous. It rather depended upon the opinion of those who inflicted the punishment as to when an "urgent necessity" arose. If the object of the law was only for the purpose of restraint, and not for punishment, he did not see why they should take the trouble to amend the law. In order to express that intent more clearly, that could be done by amending the present clause, and he should propose—
Question put. The House divided:—Ayes 43; Noes 298: Majority 255.—(Div. List, No. 172.) On the Motion of Mr. PARNELL, the following Clauses were agreed to, and added to the Bill:— (Limitation of time of confinement.)"That prisoners shall not be put in irons by the gaoler of any prison, or by order of the visiting committee of justices, as a punishment, but only for the purpose of restraint."
(As to inquests on the bodies of prisoners.)"It shall not be lawful for the gaoler to order any prisoner to be confined in a punishment cell for any term exceeding twenty-four hours; nor shall it be lawful for the visiting committee of justices to order any prisoner to be punished by confinement in a punishment cell for any term exceeding fourteen days."
Clause 10 (Report to contain information as to manufacturing processes in prison)."In no case, where an inquest is held on the body of a prisoner who dies within the prison, shall any person engaged in any sort of trade or dealing with the person, be a juror on such inquest."
moved, in page 4, line 3, at beginning, to insert—
"Whereas it is expedient that the expense of maintaining in prison prisoners who have been convicted of crime should in part be defrayed by their labour during the period of their imprisonment, and that, with a view to defraying such expenses, and also of teaching prisoners modes of gaining honest livelihoods, means should be taken in promoting in prison the exercise of and instruction in useful trades and manufactures, so far as may be consistent with a due regard on the one hand to the maintenance of the penal character of prison discipline, and on the other to the avoidance of undue pressure on, or competition with, any particular trade or industry, Be it enacted, That."
expressed his acknowledgments to the Home Secretary for the fair spirit in which he had dealt with the matter involved in the Amendment. Amendment agreed to. Clause 14 (Duties of visiting committee). Amendment proposed,
Question proposed, "That those words be there inserted."In page 5, line 18, after the word " intervals," to insert the words " and at least twice in each week."—(Mr. Parnell.)
hoped the House would not insert the Amendment. He felt sure there was not the least doubt of the visiting justices performing their duties in a satisfactory way.
thought there should be something more definite laid down than the words "frequent intervals." Heretofore the justices had various duties to discharge, among them the tempting duty of filling appointments. Now, that that patronage was withdrawn, he feared there might be no inducement to attend, and it might be, as it was often with members of the Poor Law Board, who never attended on occasions when there was no election or other little matter to be carried out in which they were interested. Twice a-week might be too often to visit prisons, but some safeguard as to intervals should be provided. Amendment, by leave, withdrawn. Amendment proposed,
Question proposed, "That those words be there inserted."In page 5, line 20, after the word " prisoners," to insert the words " privately, and not in the presence of any of the prison officials."—(Mr. Parnell.)
said, he had no objection to the spirit of the Amendment, and if it were withdrawn he would propose other words to carry out the object of the hon. Member.
condemned the Amendment as "sentimental," and. thought its adoption would be very inconvenient. It would depend a good deal on the character of the prisoner whether the visiting justice would grant him a private interview. Amendment, by leave, withdrawn.
moved, in page 5, line 33, to insert as a separate paragraph—
Motion agreed to. Paragraph inserted. Clause 15 (Visits to prison by any justice)."Provided, That an offender shall not be punished under the said sections fifty-eight and fifty-nine, or either of them, by personal correction except in pursuance of the order of two justices of the peace after such inquiry upon oath and determination concerning the matter reported to them as is mentioned in the said regulation numbered fifty-eight."
moved, in page 6, at end of Clause, to add—
He reminded the House of the value of independent inspection. At present, the only persons to whom prisoners might make known their complaints were the visiting justices. The House had declined to lay down rules for the time of the visits of those magistrates, and their duties were of a purely honorary character, and having no penalty for neglect. If prisoners attempted complaints in their letters, allowed every four months, those letters were immediately confiscated. Nor were the prisoners to make complaints to their friends who visited them at intervals of four months. Seeing that all the proposals which had previously been made by himself or by hon. Members around him had been rejected, he trusted the right hon. Gentleman would see his way to accepting the present one. He could see no practical objection to it. Of course, visits might be made by Members of Parliament to prisoners with whom they felt some sympathy, but those prisoners might also be visited by those whose views were antagonistic, and so there was no fear of misrepresentation; while it would provide Members with the opportunity of verifying cases — such as that mentioned the other night by the hon. Member for Leicester (Mr. P. A. Taylor), on the authority of a discharged. prisoner — before bringing such cases before the House. Amendment proposed,"and any Member of either House of Parliament may, when he thinks fit, enter into and examine the condition of any prison and of the prisoners therein, and he may enter any observations he may think fit to make in reference to the condition of the prison or abuses therein in the visitors' book to be kept by the gaoler; and it shall be the duty of the gaoler to draw the attention of the visiting committee, at their next visit to the prison, to any entries made in the said book."
Question proposed, "That those words be there inserted."In page 6, line 13, after the word "treatment," to insert the words " and any Member of either House of Parliament may, when he thinks fit, enter into and examine the condition of any prison and of the prisoners therein, and he may enter any observations he may think lit to make in reference to the condition of the prison or abuses therein in the visitors' book to be kept by the gaoler; and it shall be the duty of the gaoler to draw the attention of the visiting committee, at their next visit to the prison, to any entries made in the said book."—(Mr. O'Connor Power.)
opposed the Amendment. The Houses of Parliament did not administer, but they had the control of the administration through the responsible Ministers of the Crown, and it would be going beyond the functions of Members to undertake the supposed duty. Besides, the Bill already provided a very extensive machinery for the visiting of prisons. There were the Prison Commissioners, the Inspectors, and the visiting justices, and, moreover, every single justice of the peace of the county, and every justice of the peace where the prisoner came from, if he happened to be taken out of his jurisdiction and removed into a prison in another county, had the power of visiting prisoners.
appealed to the hon. Gentleman not to saddle Members with a new and probably onerous task.
suggested that every justice of the peace should have power to visit prisons without restriction.
said, that if this clause were adopted it would create a divided responsibility between visiting justices and Members of Parliament. Moreover, the Home Secretary would be no longer responsible if such a power were given to Members of Parliament.
said, that if such a power was granted to the Queen's counsel, he did not see why it should not be granted to a Member of Parliament.
said, that practically any Member of Parliament who actually desired to visit a prison could obtain permission, and he knew of cases in which such permission had been granted. To give power to every Member of Parliament to visit prisons would be as absurb as it would be unwise to introduce politics into prisons.
said, that he had previously voted with his Friends for the protection of prisoners; but he should be against this clause, for the protection of Members of Parliament. The immediate result of such a clause would be that Members of Parliament all over the country would be solicited by numerous persons to inquire into their complaints. In a borough such as that he had the honour to represent, with a large county prison in it, he could see for himself an almost continual residence there. He would certainly divide against the proposed Amendment. Question put. The House divided:—Ayes 13; Noes 282: Majority 269.—(Division List, No. 173.) Clause 18 (Compensation to be made to prison authority in respect of accommodation provided for prisoners of some other authority).
moved, in page 7, line 39, at end of Clause, to add, as separate paragraphs—
"Provided also, That no compensation shall be payable under such provision as last aforesaid in respect of any prison discontinued within two years after the commencement of this Act.
Motion agreed to. Paragraphs inserted. Clause 25 (Confinement of prisoners after conviction)."A prison authority shall not be entitled to receive under his section more than one hundred and twenty pounds in the whole in respect of the same cell."
moved, in page 9, line 38, to leave out the words " be entitled to," the effect of which would be that all prisoners confined in prisons beyond the limits of the " county, borough, or place " where they were convicted should receive on their discharge at the public expense the means of reaching the place where they were convicted. The hon. Gentleman remarked that the practice was already in operation in convict prisons. In agricultural districts, where they had little crime and large prisons, it was possible the right hon. Gentleman would shortly be making them available for the prisoners from other districts, where the gaol accommodation was less ample, and it was undesirable that there should be any possibility of persons from other districts being turned adrift without the means of getting home. The clause, as it present stood, stated that the prisoner should be "entitled to be taken back." He wished to make it an absolute right, which the prisoner could demand, and he hoped his right hon. Friend would see his way to accepting the Amendment.
said, he had no objection to offer to the principle of the Amendment; but he was not sure that the simple device of leaving out the words, as proposed by the hon. Gentleman, would effect its object. All prisoners would undoubtedly be sent back; and if the hon. Gentleman thought there was a possibility that they might not under the clause as it stood, he had no objection to accept the Amendment, on condition that it might be found necessary to alter the wording in " another place," if it was thought there would be any practical difficulty in carrying it out. Amendment agreed to. Clause 39 (Special rules as to treatment of unconvicted prisoners and certain other prisoners).
moved, in page 15, to add the following Proviso:—
The hon. Gentleman said, it had been shown in previous discussions of this Bill that a scandalous system had grown up, under which outrages had been committed on persons who were awaiting their trial. A large proportion of these persons were acquitted, and therefore these outrages were inflicted upon them in violation of the law. The Home Secretary had shown, in carrying this Bill through the House, that he was a master in the art of Parliamentary government. He had stated that any rules and regulations which he might make would be submitted to Parliament, and that there would be an opportunity of amending and repealing them. He (Mr. Sheridan) contended, on the other hand, that Parliament ought to govern and control these rules and regulations, and that the House ought to declare in the text of the Act what were the rights of unconvicted prisoners. There might come times of political trouble and excitement, and if the right hon. Gentleman represented the Prerogatives of the Crown, the House of Commons represented the rights and liberties of the people, and would neglect its duty if it allowed the clause to pass without the introduction of these words. There was nothing in the Amendment he proposed which would in any way conflict with the Bill, or change the law as enacted by it. All that was involved was, that persons who were in prison simply for the purpose of detention should not be subject to the same treatment as convicts; and although the rules to be drawn up by the Secretary of State might be satisfactory, it was desirable to have the distinction clearly laid down in the text of the Act. All that was of a popular character in the government of prisons was being swept away; and, although it might be said they were parting with a shadow, let them take care that in parting with the shadow they did not also part with the substance. Amendment proposed,"Provided always, That no unconvicted person, or prisoner on remand or under any Act suspending the Habeas Corpus Act, shall be subject to the ordinary prison rules or discipline save so far as may be necessary to secure order and safe detention."
Question proposed, "That those words be there inserted."In page 16, line 18, after the word " regarded," to insert the words " Provided always, That no unconvicted person, or prisoner on remand or under any Act suspending the Habeas Corpus Act, shall be subject to the ordinary prison rules or discipline save so far as may be necessary to secure order and safe detention."—(Mr. B. Sheridan.)
thought the proposed Amendment would not at all interfere with the principle of the measure, and he hoped the Homo Secretary would be able to accept it. The Amendment was a perfectly harmless and innocent one. Ho had found, on visiting a prison—the House of Detention at Clerkenwell — that no distinction was made between persons who were simply under detention and others who were being imprisoned without hard labour.
said, it by no means followed it would be so under this Bill, for the Preamble of the clause made it imperative that a distinction should be made, and no rules, original or amended, could come into force until they had laid on the Table of the House 40 days. Question put, and negatived. Clause 40 (Treatment of prisoners convicted of sedition, &.).
moved, in page 16, line 20, after "libel" to insert—" Or treason-felony, or offences of a political nature." His object was to extend to political prisoners generally the exemptions and alleviations of discipline which were under the Bill to be allowed to persons convicted of libel and other offences. The Prison Commission reported in favour of separating political prisoners from other offenders. When a Commission, composed of such men as sat on this Commission, had made such a recommendation, it certainly deserved the most careful consideration. Political prisoners were now treated worse than they were in the days of O'Connell; and while the let of all other classes of prisoners had been mitigated, that of political prisoners had been materially aggravated. So far the feeling of loyalty had not been promoted by this treatment of political prisoners, the contrary had been the case; nor did he know of anything which had so much stimulated the hostility of Irishmen to the English Government as the stories which reached them of the ill-treatment to which Fenian prisoners were subjected in prison. He trusted that even if the Home Secretary did not assent to this clause, he would, at least, indicate to the House that he did not regard the severe treatment of political prisoners as a means of promoting loyalty, and that he would hold out some hope of adopting some measures to separate from ordinary prisoners men who, however mistaken might be their aims or ther modes of action, were of perfectly good moral character. Amendment proposed,
Question proposed, "That those words be there inserted."In page 16, line 20, after the word "libel, "to insert the words" or treason-felony or offences of a political nature."—(Mr. O'Connor Power.)
observed that this subject had already been discussed at considerable length, and he thought they had arrived at the conclusion on sufficient grounds that these words should not be introduced. The statute gave considerable latitude to the Judge who tried the case. It was left to the Judge to say whether the offence was so slight that it deserved only a very light punishment. In such cases hard labour would not be imposed, and the prisoner would be more leniently treated. At the present moment there was not a single prisoner in England or Ireland who, if the Amendment were inserted, would be affected by it. It would not affect any political prisoner who was in custody at the present moment; because the Bill related entirely to county gaols; whereas any prisoners said to be political prisoners now in confinement were suffering penal servitude in convict prisons. There was another ground on which he must oppose the Amendment. If they adopted it they would, while passing a Prisons Bill, be really altering the sentences which the Judges had pronounced for certain offences.
suggested a compromise by inserting after " libel " the words " treason-felony without hard labour." This would be perfectly consistent with the clause, and would only extend the regulations to a class of prisoners to whom they were not at present applicable.
could not see any reasonable objection to an Amendment, the principle of which the Home Secretary had already conceded by admitting the application of the proposition embodied to sedition and seditious libel.
also urged that the principle of the Amendment was conceded by the application to prisoners guilty of seditious libel. He did not regard the power vested in a Judge to mitigate a sentence as at all meeting the case to be dealt with by the clause, because the truth was that in Ireland, at all events, the Judges did not command the confidence of the people.
hoped the right hon. Gentleman would leave the matter as it stood. It had been fully discussed in Committee and a compromise had been arrived at, which had been accepted as a settlement of the question.
also expressed his opinion that prisoners were not always justly treated by the Judges in Ireland.
entered a protest against the distinction constantly drawn in the House between political offenders and other criminals. In his opinion—an opinion which was shared by many others—no distinction could be drawn in favour of a political offender. From his point of view the political offenders were infinitely more dangerous, infinitely more culpable, and infinitely more deserving of punishment than the poor, misguided, ignorant wretches who were to be found in the same prisons with them, and the enormity of whose crime consisted in stealing a pocket handkerchief or embezzling a shilling. In no other country in Europe would the language which was openly held in that House and out of it with respect to the Government of the country be permitted without stern and speedy repression following. If they attempted to suppress seditious talk and writing their conduct would be denounced as an instance of Saxon tyranny and persecution. It was the privilege of England, Scotland, and Ireland, that they had free writing, and, he might say, very free speaking not only in the House, but elsewhere, and it was one of the consequences of that privilege that whoever did not confine himself to that free debate, free writing, and free speaking, by means of which we endeavoured to get our opinions believed in and maintained, but stepped over the line and resorted to violence, disloyalty, inciting to civil war and that which would lead to bloodshed and death, must take the consequences to the fullest extent, and his blood must be on his own head. That, at all events, was the feeling of the great majority of the people of this country when, presuming upon the liberty of speech and writing which they had in England and Ireland, men so far forgot themselves as to become involved in direct and open treason against Her Majesty, the crime of which they were guilty was not a crime to be talked of with forgiveness in the sense in which it had been talked of in that House; it should not to be spoken of with a kind of patronizing air; the House ought not to be told that it must draw a distinct line between these people " who were really only political offenders " and others, and that it should treat them with greater consideration than the poorer, more ignorant, more needy, more pitiable, people who had committed crimes of infinitely less magnitude and infinitely less peril to the State. He felt the time had come when a distinct protest should be entered against the false feeling which endeavoured to raise political offenders almost into heroes, instead of keeping them in their proper position as criminals. Political offenders, as they were called, had done far more in this country to disturb peace, spread mischief, and cause panic, than almost any other class of criminals.
said, he had no wish to take part in the discussion, and had not heard what had been previously said in support of the Amendment, but he could not pass in silence the most extraordinary speech just delivered by the hon. and learned Member for Barnstaple. As an English Liberal—or rather as an English Radical—he lodged his protest against such observations. He had the opportunity, when the Bill was in Committee, of speaking his views with regard to the treatment of political prisoners, and he had no wish to repeat what he then said; but the argument of the hon. and learned Member for Barnstaple went absolutely to the very root of constitutional government, and against the very existence of the House of Commons itself. Some of the most distinguished Members of this House, notably the Leader of the Opposition, represented the struggle against despotism of a large portion of the people of this country in 1688. Magna Charta, the Bill of Rights, and other great constitutional triumphs were all won in direct antagonism to the principles laid down by the hon. and learned Member who had given expression to doctrines such as were seldom heard from any Gentleman on the other side. His speech was one of unqualified opposition to constitutional government. Not very long ago a distinguished Member of the English Peerage proclaimed openly in his place in Parliament that the subjects of every Sovereign in Europe were not only justified in rising against their Governments, but that their resistance was sanctified by the best feelings of Christianity and humanity. But the hon. and learned Member from the Liberal side of that House had expressed a very different view. No doubt an attempt to overturn the constituted authorities of a country was most unwise, and in a sense criminal. We had in this country the largest measure of liberty enjoyed by any people. We had the fullest liberty of speech and of public meeting and it was most unwise for men, for the sake of liberty, to attempt to appeal to physical resistance. But there were times when men's feelings got the better of their judgment, and when their passions overruled their reason, and that had been the case to a great extent in Ireland quite recently. All that the Mover of the Amendment contended for was, that when men had overstepped that boundary, they should be treated with some measure of consideration, and not be classed in the same way as men who broke the law for their own personal advantage. If a man stole a pocket-handkerchief or a purse, he did it for his own personal aggrandizement; but if a man attempted to revolutionize the law of a country, he acted unwisely and illegally, perhaps, but what he did was done from patriotic feelings, and for what he believed the general advantage of mankind. That man might be mistaken in the view he took, but his actions were for the advantage of others; and they ought not to treat a man who broke the law foolishly and indiscreetly for the benefit, or the supposed benefit, of the nation at large, in the same way as they treated a man who broke the law for his own benefit. All that was asked for by any reasonable man was, that when men had been convicted of a political offence, and sent to prison or to penal servitude, they should be treated with some measure of consideration. Let them be restrained by imprisonment from inciting to rebellion or sedition, as long as it was for the interest of the State that they should be so restrained. He should have no hesitation in sanctioning the confinement of a dozen, or 20, or 100, or 1,000 men, who conspired unwisely and unjustly against the rule of the authority of the Government, to prevent these men from engaging again in similar pursuits; but what the Mover of the Amendment wished to enforce was, that confinement should be sufficient, and that there should be a distinction between crime as against an individual, and crime as against a nation. He understood that the Home Secretary had, to a certain extent, assented to the Amendment, and he thanked the right hon. Gentleman cordially for the concession he had made. He was satisfied with the advance that had been made in that direction; but what he understood the Mover of the Amendment to desire was that the same measure of leniency should be extended to treason-felony as to other political offences. He had no wish to detain the House by any lengthened observations; his only object was to protest against the arbitrary, despotic, and most uncon- stitutional doctrines which had been preached by the hon. and learned Member for Barnstaple.
said, that the persons who offended in the way referred to were not to be blamed so much as the officers whom they obeyed. The Roman Catholic priesthood were the officers of a Power which was treason itself, and their avowed duty was to preach and teach by every possible means—in the pulpit, the confessional, and the schools —how to bring to the ground and destroy—[Cries of "Question!"]
wished to ask whether the hon. Gentleman was in Order in the observations he was now making?
said, the hon. Gentleman was discussing a question not before the House, and was quite out of Order.
had thought he was safe. With what justice could the Government treat these poor Fenians thus, and yet continually grant large sums—the other day, £9,000—
asked the hon. Member to confine his remarks to the Question before the House.
said, he was endeavouring to do so. The Government, by every means at their command, in the Army, by-and-by, he supposed, in the Navy—[" Question!"]
again interposed and informed the hon. Member that the Amendment before the House related to the treatment of persons confined for treason-felony, and that his remarks must be confined to that subject.
resumed his seat.
expressed his regret at the language used by the hon. and leaned Member for Barnstaple (Mr. Waddy). He thought that these prisoners should be treated in a more lenient manner. In other countries the greatest leniency was shown, with a most satisfactory result. Prisoners convicted of treason-felony would be sent to the convict prisons, not to the county and berough prisons. The proposal of the Devon Commission ought to be adopted. It would be a great advantage if such persons were sent to some particular prison or section of a prison.
said, it appeared that the position which the Home Secretary occupied with reference to this clause was a slightly inconsistent one, because the right hon. Gentleman consented that prisoners convicted of sedition and seditious libel should be treated as first-class misdemeanants, while he refused to permit prisoners convicted of treason-felony to be in the same category. As it appeared to him, it would frequently happen that a man convicted of sedition would be morally quite as guilty as a man convicted of treason-felony, and the distinction attempted to be drawn was extremely fine, and in practice would not be found just. He asked the Home Secretary, also, to remember that the Treason-Felony Act was an innovation, only introduced some 30 years ago, and passed, as many thought, with the view of vindictively punishing Irish political prisoners. He thought the time for the vindictive punishment of political offences had gone by; and when the prison laws were being amended it would show a spirit much to be regretted if men of a class who had risen to high positions in the State were still to have cast upon them the odium of being treated like common felons, of being herded with the worst class of felons.
wished to endorse the views expressed by his right hon. Friend the Member for Chester (Mr. Dodson), and should, therefore, be disposed to oppose this Amendment. He did not think that it would be wise on the part of the House of Commons to apply any kid glove treatment to the crime of treason, or to allow themselves to be carried away on this subject by any sentimental feelings. There was, in his opinion, no sound reason why the great crime of inciting others to make war against the Queen should not be dealt with rigorously and according to the law of the country. He should deeply regret if any large number of hon. Members on that side of the House were to use language with regard to treason-felony which would tend to show that they sympathized with those who committed crimes against the law of the land, or that they scarcely thought that treason-felony was a crime at all. A few hon. Members appeared to think that they could go behind a crime and look into the motives that led to the crime being committed; but, in his opinion, nothing could be more dangerous than to attempt to gauge the various motives which led men to commit crimes and to contend that they should be treated, not according to the crimes they committed, but according to the particular frame of mind which they happened to be in at the time they committed them. Murder itself might be justified on such grounds as those, because it might he said—" Here is a man whose death will be a great benefit to mankind, and therefore it is right to kill him." He was satisfied that such a doctrine as that would not find favour in that House. These offences were characterized as crimes by the Statute Book, and it was for the general safety of the State that those who perpetrated them should be treated as criminals. He trusted, therefore, that the House of Commons would not enter into the dangerous course of extenuating these offences, and would declare its opinion that all who committed them deserved rigorous punishment.
said, that if the speech of the right hon. Gentleman to which the House had just listened was to be taken as representing the opinion of the Liberal Leaders in Parliament, he feared that the friends of humanity and progress would wish a long career of office to Her Majesty's present Government. The right hon. Gentleman had lent the prestige of his much-respected name, and the reputation of his past official life, to a doctrine which was unworthy of an Englishman. The proposition advanced by the right hon. Gentleman was that political prisoners in this country, and this alone, should be treated on a level with the common felon, thief, and murderer. The right hon. Gentleman said that political prisoners ought not to be handled with kid gloves; but could he point to any country in Europe where, in the wildest times, such prisoners were treated as the Irish political prisoners had been in recent years ? What would be thought of an ex-Minister of France if he were to rise in the French Assembly and say that French political offenders should be treated as pickpockets and garotters ? What would be said if the Emperor of Austria treated the Hungarian rebels as the right hon. Gentleman would treat them if he happened to be in power in Austria? But, happily for Austria, the right hon. Gentleman's services had been reserved for this country. This odious, re-actionary, and barbarous policy was disgraceful to the country. Would the right hon. Gentleman tell him in what way the great Republic of America would receive this proposition? Would it be listened to with patience? Even after the Civil War to uphold the Union, during which whole families were decimated, the people would have spat with scorn if the suggestion were made that Jefferson Davis should be treated as a thief. He (Mr. Sullivan) said that the declaration of the right hon. Gentleman was unworthy of that Assembly, and was unworthy of the right hon. Gentleman himself, for whom personally he had the highest respect. A man who committed a political offence had to face his fate, but magnanimity ought at any rate to be the characteristic of a nation which owed everything to a great rebellion. He was not an Englishman, and his countrymen had fought for the English King when his own subjects had adopted a foreigner in his place. Cromwell, Charles, and James no doubt put down rebellion with a strong arm. They gave capital punishment, but they never degraded their prisoners. The most despotic Sovereigns they ever had used to punish severely, but they never wounded the prisoners as political prisoners were wounded at the present day. He happened to know some of the released men, and had heard them say they would rather suffer death than endure the sufferings and indignities put on them in prison, and one of them said his flesh crept at the indignities heaped upon him. He (Mr. Sullivan) did not believe, if he went round England and canvassed the country on the subject, but that he would gain the voices of nine out of every ten Englishmen against the doctrine which had been laid down by the right hon. Gentleman.
said, he was glad to hoar that the Liberals had openly declared against Ireland, and that the right hon. Gentleman had at last shown himself in his true colours.
rose to Order. He wished to explain that he had not spoken against Ireland, but against treason-felony, without particular reference to Ireland.
said, everyone knew that the debate had turned upon the question of Irish political prisoners. The right hon. Gentleman had dealt exclusively with them.
denied having alluded to Irish political prisoners specially.
observed that this discussion had been provoked by the cruel and unwarranted attack made by the hon. and learned Member for Barnstaple (Mr. Waddy) upon Irish political prisoners.
rose to Order. He had never used the expression "Irish political prisoners" from beginning to end. A man guilty of treason-felony in England was worse than one guilty of the same offence in Ireland, and he was not aware that Ireland had a monopoly of treason-felony.
said, that whenever, in foreign countries, individuals revolted against the constituted authorities and afterwards escaped to England, they were received with open arms by Members of the English Liberal Party. He regretted that the hon. and learned Gentleman, who was of Irish descent, had wounded and insulted the very country he had sprung from. He thought the time had come when offences of this kind might be forgiven, and the political prisoners at present in gaol might be liberated.
said, that in the course taken by the right hon. Gentleman the Member for the City of London (Mr. Goschen) he was quite consistent, as, like a strict disciplinarian as he was, he had opposed the Motion for the abolition of flogging last year, and this year did the same, though he stood alone on the front Opposition bench. He would, however, rather have the consistency of the right hon. Gentleman than the inconsistency of the hon. and learned Member for Barnstaple, who signed a Petition in favour of the release of the political prisoners last year, and afterwards said he had signed it by mistake. He (Captain Nolan) advocated the milder treatment of political prisoners, because England by adopting that course would act consistently with the policy she had pursued with regard to political refugees from foreign countries. There was no finer thing in England's history than the manner in which she had defended political offenders who had sought refuge on her shores; and it was inconsistent, therefore, to seek to degrade and lower men who had committed political offences at home. The great Republic of America and the small Republic of Switzerland had shown them an example of how to treat political prisoners, which it would be for the advantage and honour of this country to follow.
rejoiced that the right hon. Gentleman the Member for the City of London had not charge of a Prisons Bill. If he had, it would be immensely more severe than the measure which had been introduced by the Government, and which would add one more to the honours which the right hon. Gentleman the Home Secretary had won in that House. After such an expression from the right hon. Gentleman the Member for the City of London, he, for one, hoped that he would not bask in the sunshine of Office for the next 20 years to come. He (Mr. Macdonald) was in favour of extending as much kindness as possible towards political prisoners, so as to wean them back to their duties as citizens.
must say that some of his hon. Friends had been rather too hard upon the hon. and learned Member for Barnstaple. He had, on former occasions, heard the hon. and learned Member, Hecuba-like, bewail the evils of the past, and then, Cassandra-like, prophesy dire evils for the future. He had heard him persistently advocate certain measures in the House, and a few days after express his regret for the manner in which he had acted. Perhaps, on this matter also, the hon. and learned Member would, after a few hours' consideration, come to see the error of his way, and would repent of his conduct in "sackcloth and ashes." It was necessary for the hon. Member for Mayo (Mr. O'Connor Power) and his Friends to raise the question on this Amendment, as it could not be raised in any other manner. He reminded the House that the Devon Commission had recommended that certain relaxations should be made in the treatment of political prisoners, and that they should be kept apart from other convicts, and he called on all who approved of those recommendations to support the Amendment. The words "treason-felony" were new-fangled, and altogether new terms that ought not to be applied to political prisoners. They were terms that were not known 30 years ago, when certain persons were prosecuted and transported for political offences, and amongst them his predecessor in that House, the late John Martin, than whom there could not be a more amiable and just man. The late John Mitchell wrote his recollections of the manner in which he was treated as a political prisoner. His book was entitled Gaol Life, and in it he stated that he was not in his exile obliged to associate with criminal prisoners, but was allowed a cell to himself. John Martin, also, left a written record of the manner in which he was treated in his imprisonment—a manner similar to that which John Mitchell described. It was the greatest pride and glory of this country that the political prisoners who sought an asylum were treated with so much liberality; and he trusted the Home Secretary would see that the time had come for an alleviation of prison discipline with regard to those prisoners who had been convicted of offences connected with Fenianism, and for extending to them such privileges as had been recommended by the Devon Commission. Question put. The House divided:—Ayes 54; Noes 135: Majority 81.—(Div. List, No. 174.) Clause 47 (Rules of Secretary of State and repeal of inconsistent enactments).
moved, in page 18, line 24, after " laid," to insert—
Amendment agreed to."In a complete form, after the same shall have been settled and approved by such Secretary of State."
moved, in page 18, line 33, at end to add " and have been approved by Resolution of each House of Parliament." Under the present Bill it was proposed to give power to the Home Secretary to alter the rules of prison discipline from time to time as he might think proper. Now, that was a large power to place in the hands of a Secretary of State, and Parliament should certainly take care and hold a power in its own hands which would give to any private Member the privilege of bringing forward any objection or alteration which he might think proper in reference to those rules. During his time in that House he did not know of any instance wherein private Members had not the power to call attention to, and with the sanction of Parliament cause a change in the rules of, prison discipline. The provision that the rules should be on the Table of the House 40 clear days before they acquired force was a delusion for all practical purposes, and the object of adding these words to the clause was to oblige the Government to afford the House an opportunity of discussing them. Amendment proposed,
Question proposed, "That those words be there inserted."In page 18, line 33, after the word "days," to add the words " and have been approved by Resolution of each House of Parliament (Mr. Serjeant Simon.)
said, he hoped the House would excuse him from going into this subject again, having already discussed it in Committee. He had every respect for Acts of Parliament and for the guiding principles laid down in them; but really to legislate on these small matters would be carrying legislation to excess. What was wanted was that Parliament should know what the rules were, and they would be on the Table for 40 days. All the rules he made would be in mitigation of those which now existed. There would be ample opportunity for any hon. Member to challenge them and raise a discussion when they were on the Table.
said, the object the hon. and learned Member for Dewsbury (Mr. Serjeant Simon) had in view was shared by many others near him. All along the proposition had been met by the Home Secretary with a reference to the rules and the right hon. Gentleman's personal assurances. He had urged that Parliament should not be called on to approve of all these minute rules; but, as a matter of fact, all the rules would be considered at once, and one debate would cover the whole ground. The Home Secretary, with his experience of office, must know how difficult it was to become acquainted with the whole subject. He (Mr. O'Connor Power) did not pretend to appreciate all the right hon. Gentleman's ability and industry; but if he possessed the ability of a dozen Home Secretaries, he was putting upon himself an immense responsibility, which he would do well to ask the House to share. This reasonable proposition would, he hoped, be pressed to a division.
supported the Amendment, as it would give the magistrates some inducement to look after prison discipline.
likewise supported the Amendment, as he was of opinion that the Home Secretary should, when the rules were drawn up, propose them to the House for its sanction. Question put. The House divided:—Ayes 101; Noes 140: Majority 39.—(Div. List, No. 175.) Bill to be read the third time upon Monday next.
Universities Of Oxford And Cambridge Bill—Bill 183
( Mr. Gathorne Hardy, Mr. Assheton Cross, Mr. Walpole.)
Consideration
Bill, as amended, considered.
Clause 25 (Saving respecting Snell Exhibitions at Oxford).
moved after the clause to insert the following clause:—
New Clause—(Mr. Goschen,)—brought up, and read the first and second time, and added. Clause 4 (Nomination of Oxford Commissioners)."The Commissioners, in a statute made by them for the University of Oxford or for Oriel College in Oxford, may, if they think fit, with the assent of Oriel College signified under its common seal and with the concurrence of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners for England, provide that the canonry in the chapter of the cathedral church of Rochester, which is now annexed and united to the provostship of Oriel College, shall on a vacancy be severed therefrom, and may also, with the concurrence of the said Ecclesiastical Commissioners, provide that such canonry shall be thenceforth permanently annexed and united to some office or place of a theological or ecclesiastical character in or connected with the University of Oxford, or may, with the concurrence aforesaid, make such other provisions for the future disposal and patronage of such canonry as they shall think fit; and, in case any such statute shall be made annexing such canonry to such office or place as aforesaid, such canonry, or the income thereof, may, if they think fit, be reckoned and taken, in whole or in part, as a contribution of Oriel College out of its revenues to University purposes."
moved, as an Amendment, to add to the clause which nominated the gentlemen who were to act as Oxford Commissioners, the name of Sir Henry Sumner Maine, Doctor of Civil Law. He could not imagine why the name of so distinguished a gentleman, after having been inserted in the measure of last year, should have been omitted from the Bill now under consideration. Amendment proposed,
In page 3, line 20, at end, to add the words "Sir Henry Sumner Maine, Doctor of Civil Law."— (Sir George Campbell.) Question proposed, "That those words be there inserted."
said, there was no one who could speak of Sir Henry Maine in stronger praise than himself. Everyone who knew him knew that he was thoroughly independent, and that he could hold his own against any man; but Sir Henry Maine had himself suggested that his name should be omitted, and therefore it had been done.
said, that not a more fit man could have been appointed'; but the omission of his name from the list would not be accepted as any slur upon it. Amendment, by leave, withdrawn. Clause 11 (Power for Universities and Colleges to make statutes).
moved in page 5, at end of clause, to insert as a new paragraph—
Paragraph inserted. Clause 13 (Limitation of fifty years)."The commissioners shall not approve a statute so made by a college until they have published, in such form as to them may seem fit, a statement with respect to the main purposes relative to the University for which, in their opinion, provision should be made under this Act, the sources from which funds for those purposes should be obtained, and the principles on which contributions from the colleges for those purposes should be assessed."
moved the omission of the clause pro formâ, to enable the Secretary of State for War to offer an explanation as to its effect. The clause provided that the Commissioners should not make a statute altering the trusts, conditions, or directions affecting a University or College emolument unless the instrument of foundation or of endowment thereof was made or executed more than 50 years before the passing of the Act. It appeared to him that the words of the clause, as they stood, went further than the intentions of the right hon. Gentleman opposite, which, he believed, were limited to private endowments, and would leave old endowments to be dealt with according to the discretion of the Commissioners. Perhaps the right hon. Gentleman would promise to re-consider the matter, with a view, if necessary, to the clause being amended in " another place." Amendment proposed, to leave out Clause 13.—(Mr. Goschen.) Question proposed, "That Clause 13 stand part of the Bill."
took the meaning of the clause to be what ho had stated it to be when the Bill was in Committee—namely, that new gifts to the University made within 50 years would be excluded. The draftsmen had made no suggestion for an alteration of the clause, because it carried out what he had before described as its meaning. But he was willing to re-consider thepoint as suggested by the right hon. Gentleman opposite.
also expressed a hope that the wording of the clause would be re-considered in the manner indicated by the right hon. Member for the City of London.
protested against the introduction into that discussion of the name of the draftsman, a person not known to the law of Parliament, and who ought not to be brought upon the stage, though he might occupy the prompter's box. The Law Officers of the Crown were the responsible authorities to state to the House the legal bearing of Government Bills.
said, the draftsman had of late years been brought into the Committees upstairs very much to bring Bills into a good shape. Amendment, by leave, withdrawn. Clause 14 (Regard to main design of founder).
moved the omission of the clause which provided that in making a statute affecting a University or College emolument the Commissioners should have regard to the main design of the founder, except where the same had ceased to be observed before the passing of the Act, or where the trusts, conditions, or directions affecting the emolument had been altered in substance by or under any other Act. He proposed the omission upon two grounds, the first being that when the same question was discussed in Committee the division took place during the dinner hour, and it therefore scarcely represented the opinion of the House; and, secondly, that the clause as it stood would materially hamper the action of the Commissioners dealing with what were called clerical restrictions. Amendment proposed, in page 5, to leave out Clause 14.— (Mr. Osborne Morgan.) Question proposed, "That Clause 14 stand part of the Bill."
said, the question had really been adequately discussed in Committee. It involved nothing more than had been already decided by Parliament under the auspices of the right hon. Gentleman the Member for Greenwich and by the Acts of 1854 and 1869.
suggested that the right hon. Gentleman the Secretary of State for War should consider whether the words "shall take into consideration the design of the founder, &.," would not express his intention as well as those now in the clause, "shall have regard to." It seemed to him that if the words he suggested were inserted the Commissioners would not be bound to further the designs of the founder, which was the practical effect of the clause as it now stood.
said, he had not the slightest objection to accept those words if there was no division on the clause.
said, he could not see that the words suggested by the hon. and learned Member made much difference, and he would recommend his hon. and learned Friend (Mr. Osberne Morgan) to press his Amendment. Question put. The House divided:—Ayes 170; Noes 105: Majority 65.—(Div. List, No. 176.) Clause 16 (Objects of statutes for University.)
moved, in page 6, after line 33. to insert—
Owing to the qualifications that were required before matriculation, it was unusual to matriculate before the age of about 18; but it was often the case that the student was perfectly well qualified at that stage to pass also the succeeding examination. Three or four years' residence was at present necessary before a degree could be taken; but he contended that two years' residence would be enough. If an Undergraduate had reached the age of 23 before he was allowed to take his degree, he still required two or three years of training for any commercial or professional career, and so late a start in life was such a serious disadvantage that many who would gladly send their sons to the Universities were deterred from doing so. As the Terms extended to only 17 or 18 weeks a-year, the difficulty might be met by taking into account residence during the vacation. Amendment proposed,"For regulating the residence of Undergraduates at the Universities and the number and length of the terms to be kept by them as a qualification for a degree."
Question proposed, "That those words be there inserted."In page 6, line 33, after the word " students,' to insert the words " For regulating the residence of undergraduates at the Universities and the number and length of the terms to be kept by them as a qualification for a degree."—(Mr. Gregory.)
hoped the right hon. Gentleman would assent to the proposal. It was possible in two years to lay a foundation of law and history, the most useful and practical preparatory studies. It was often a great hardship to men going into commerce to remain nearly four years at the University.
trusted his right hon. Friend would not accept the Amendment. Young men did not go up to the University merely to pass examinations. They went there to learn social qualities as well, and for that purpose it was necessary that they should be there at least three years.
would not follow the last speaker into the social advantages of spending three years at a University. If a man were fit to take his degree at the end of two years, he saw no reason why he should be prohibited from doing so. He hoped his hon. and learned Friend would press the Amendment.
supported the Amendment. He thought that for a common pass degree two years were sufficient.
said, that according to the arrangements made by the University of Oxford with reference to the Indian Civil Service, only two years' academical training would be necessary before a young man went out to India. The same time ought to suffice for the B.A. degree, and therefore he should support the Amendment.
said, that the Amendment would give the Commissioners the power of regulating the number of Terms to be kept by Undergraduates, but that duty might very well be left to the University itself, especially as it had recently made special regulations for the Indian Civil Service students. The question was, whether the Commissioners were to force their views upon the University. He could not think it desirable to do so, as the University was quite competent to govern its own internal affairs.
remarked that the Bill already contained many directions as to the matters with which the Commissioners were to occupy themselves, and the Amendment would serve as an indication of the opinion of Parliament on this particular point. Commercial men who were anxious for their sons to obtain academic rank thought three years' residence too long.
as a man of business, expressed his hope that the Government would accept the Amendment. He knew from personal experience that many men were prevented from going to the -University by- the length of time necessary for a degree. He would vote for the Amendment because, while it would not diminish the value of a degree, it would admit a large proportion of men intended for professions and business.
supported the Amendment.
said, that the Amendment dealt entirely with a matter of discipline, and if the House was prepared to deal with it, many similar Amendments might be moved which could hardly be considered. He concurred, however, as to the desirability of altering the length of the University course. He deprecated the introduction of new matter into the Bill, and was of opinion that the Universities might be trusted to do what was right on the question.
remarked that the Governing Bodies of the Universities were the proper persons to deal with this matter; but he hoped that the general expression of opinion on both sides of the House would not be without fruit. It was most desirable that young men should be able to receive the advantages of University education without being required to spend three years before they could take a degree. He trusted the right hon. Gentleman would introduce some words which would show the wish of the House.
differed from the hon. Member for Chester (Mr. Raikes), who considered this as a question of discipline, and not of teaching. What could relate to teaching if the length of time the student was to reside at the University did not?
said, that this was a matter far more within the competency of the Universities than of any body of Commissioners. In the University to which he belonged (Cambridge) this question had exercised, and would exercise, the most careful attention of the authorities, and the House might be satisfied to leave it to them.
expressed on behalf of the commercial classes, whom he might claim to represent to a certain extent, their anxiety that some such clause as that proposed should be inserted in the Bill. As a strong Tory, he would say to the Tory Government, restore the ancient Oxford custom, whereby the people were admitted to that which was now the privilege of one class. If the Government did so they would not be creating a revolution nor damaging the University of Oxford.
supported the Amendment. He considered it would be a great advantage to that large class of the community who could not spend three years at the Universities if they were enabled to obtain their degrees in a shorter period.
thought the views expressed by those who represented the commerce of the country ought to commend themselves to the Government. The University authorities were favourable to this proposal, and a Resolution of the House would strengthen their hands in carrying it out.
said, the House was asked to put into the hands of the Commissioners functions which ought to be in the hands of the Universities themselves. The Universities were carefully considering the question. Question put. The House divided:—Ayes 143; Noes 197: Majority 4.—(Div. List, No. 177.) Amendment proposed, In page 8, line 29, to leave out from the word "learning," to the word "University," in line 32, inclusive.—(Mr. Gosehen.) Question, "That the words proposed to be left out stand part of the Bill," put, and agreed to. Clause 29 (Saving for Headship of Magdalene College, Cambridge).
moved the omission of the clause, providing—
He did this to obtain an explanation from the Government. Amendment proposed, to leave out Clause 29.— (Sir Charles W. Dilke.) Motion made, and Question proposed, "That Clause 29 stand part of the Bill.""That a statute made by the Commissioners shall not affect the right of nominating or appointing to the Headship of Saint Mary Magdalene College in the University of Cambridge, unless the consent by deed of the person entitled to that right is first obtained."
suggested that there might be a clause to this effect—that the Commissioners should consider whether some better arrangement than that which was now in practice should be brought into operation to regulate the appointment of the Mastership of Magdalene. He, however, moved the Adjournment of the Debate, that the matter might be fully discussed. Motion made, and Question proposed, "That the Debate be now adjourned." Fawcett.)
said, that there had been plenty of time to put down an Amendment if any hon. Member had wished to do so, and it would be most unreasonable to obstruct the Bill that night because that had not been done.
thought it was perfectly wonderful that Parliament should put in a clause which declared that the Commissioners should not have power to deal with the extraordinary anomaly that the Mastership of a Collegiate Institution should be attached to the ownership of an estate belonging to an institution. There might be a vested interest, and money might be required to get rid of it, but the Commissioners should have power to dispose of the vested interest.
supported the clause. It could not now be amended.
hoped his hon. Friend (Mr. Fawcett) would withdraw his Motion. They did not want any alternative clause. They were competent to deal with the question at once by voting for or against this clause.
said, that the clause ought to be amended by the Government, and by providing compensation to the persons holding the Mastership if it should be found necessary to do so.
recommended the withdrawal of the Motion for adjourning the debate. Question put. The House divided:—Ayes 61; Noes 183: Majority 122.—(Div. List, No. 178.) Original Question put. The House divided:—Ayes 144; Noes 95: Majority 49.—(Div. List, No. 179.) Clause 36 (Election of Commissioners by Colleges.) Amendment proposed, in page 12, line 37, to leave out the werd "three," in order to insert the word " two."— (Mr. Goschen.) Question proposed, "That the word 'three ' stand part of the Bill."
said, he had given consideration to this matter since the Bill was in Committee, and he was still of opinion that three was a better number than two; but he proposed as a compromise that in cases where there was already one member of the College upon the Commission the number should be reduced to two.
suggested the acceptance of the compromise.
whilst not approving of the arguments by which the compromise was supported, thought they might content themselves by recording their protest and not troubling the House by going to a division. Question put, and agreed to.
moved, in page 12, line 39, after " college," to insert—
"Provided always That, in the case of any College, one or more members of which shall be appointed by name Commissioners under this Act, no more than one person shall be so elected."
suggested that "one person" should be altered to "two persons." Amendment, as amended, agreed to. Bill to be read the third time upon Monday next.
House adjourned at a quarter before Two o'clock.