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From the first landing of the new councillors in India, there had been misunderstandings-disputes on matters of etiquette, number of discharges of salute guns, receptions, and first visits. It was manifest the two divisions of the Supreme Council, Messrs. Clavering, Francis, and Monson on one side, and Messrs. Hastings and Barker on the other, were resolved not cordially to amalgamate. At the council-board altercations were incessant; conflicting opinions and recriminations were entered on the minutes; till at length, from daily bickerings, the exasperation between Francis and Hastings became so embittered that the latter seems to have been determined to bring their differences to a short issue by converting them into a personal affair.

Mr. Hastings caused the following minute to be entered in the council-book, and communicated the same to Mr. Francis on the evening of August 14, 1780:-" My authority for the opinions I have declared concerning Mr. Francis depends on facts which have passed within my own knowledge. I judge of his public conduct by my experience of his private, which I have found to be void of truth and honour. This is a severe charge, but temperately and deliberately made, from the firm persuasion that I owe this justice to the public and myself, as the only redress to both, for artifices of which I have been a victim, and which threaten to involve their interests with disgrace and ruin. The only redress for a fraud for which the law has made no provision is the exposure of it."

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Next day they met as usual at the council-board. No notice was taken of this communication till after the conclusion of the business of the day, when Mr. Francis desired to speak to Mr Hastings in private. They withdrew into an adjoining room, when Mr. Francis adopted the unusual course of giving a verbal challenge to Mr. Hastings, which was accepted, and the meeting fixed for an early hour next morning. It was altogether "a silly affair, as Mr. Hastings admits in the account he gave of it to a friend, and cited in his "Life" by Mr. Gleig. A native old woman, Mr. Hastings says, happened to be standing near the spot, and seemed astonished at the strange scene that passed before her, enacted by two Europeans. Two gentlemen meet, take their stand at a measured distance, deliberately fire their pistols at each other; one gentleman falls, and the other runs up to tender him assistance. The ball struck Francis just below the right shoulder, passing out at the lower part of the abdomen. Next day Mr. Hastings sent a messenger to inquire after his health, and expressed a desire to pay a visit of condolence. This civility Mr. Francis politely declined, expressing a due sense of his kindness, and, not to be outdone, assured him that nothing which had passed would, on his part, leave anything like feelings of personal rancour in their future meetings at the council-board.

MR. SERGEANT ROUGH TO MR. BARKER.

"Serjeant's Inn, Chancery Lane, April 12, 1827.

"DEAR SIR,-I hasten to acknowledge your letter, with the printed papers accompanying it, delivered at my chambers by Mr. Maxon. I am sorry, however, that I can render you so very little service in respect of the subjects on which you write. The Letters of Junius to Mr. Wilkes passed through my hands to Mr. Woodfall, and are those which appear in his edition of 1812. They belonged to Mr. P. Elmsley, the late Principal of St. Alban's, who, as I believe, possessed them as executor to his father. His knowledge of me as a brother-Westminster with me and the circumstance of my having married an acknowledged daughter of Mr. Wilkes, induced him to decline letting Mr. Woodfall have them without my assent. They came to me, from my friend Mr. Hallam, to whom they were afterwards returned for Mr. Elmsley. Mr. Wilkes used, I have been told, to say that he knew who the author of Junius was-that it was not Rosenhagen; but he never said it was not Sir P. Francis. The latter used to dine at Kensington frequently, and once cut off a lock of Mrs. Rough's hair (she was then quite a girl). She had an obscure imagination that her father once said, she had met Junius. All this is too slight, I admit, to build any conclusion upon. In the letters, I fear I have to answer for the striking out of a line or two in which the late king was spoken of, upon alleged personal knowledge, with an expression of much bitterness. It was an idle precaution on my part, inasmuch as Junius's opinions could have done little harm to any one, and were sufficiently avowed in other letters. I have never seen the letters about which you enquire, since they were given back by me to Mr. Hallam for Elmsley. I may mention here, that some letters of Mr. Wilkes's, forming a part of his correspondence with his daughter (Mary), and published by Longman and Rees, 1804, also passed through my hands. They were purchased of Sir Robert Baker, Bart., then of Richmond, for £300, by Mr. Hatchard, jointly with Longman and Rees. I was induced to superintend the publication with a view of serving Mr. Hatchard, and of guarding against anything appearing in the letters unpleasant to the feelings of my wife. She was a natural daughter of Wilkes. With him I never was in company; he was dead before I knew his daughter. Of that daughter our dear Dr. Parr thought with veneration. For myself, life has never been what it once was, since I lost her. "There is nothing secret in what I have thus communicated. "I am yours truly, "W. ROUGH.”

"To E. H. Barker, Esq "

INDEX.

The Roman numerals i. and ii. refer to the volumes; and the figures, to
of each volume.

the pages

A. B. letter of, to the Duke of Grafton,
ii. 277; his grace's treatment of
the Duke of Rutland exposed,
277-280; letter to the printer of
the 'Public Advertiser,' in vindica-
tion of Junius, 385-387.
Adair (Mr.), argument against grant-
ing a nol. pros. in favour of the
messengers of the House of Com-
mons, ii. 368-374, n.; named as
the author of Junius, xv.
Addresses from Parliament considered

as a fashionable unmeaning for-
mality, i. 290; their consequences
considered, when they mean exactly
what they profess, 291.
Administration of government, the

ruin or prosperity of a state, i. 104.
Admiralty (Lords of), letter to, on

Mr. Bradshaw's appointment to be
one of their number, ii. 407.
Advocate in the cause of the people,
letter of to Junius, i. 430-432,
notes; reply to by Philo-Junius, 429
-432.

Almon (Mr.), prosecution of, for libel,
i. 94. 256. 306, notes; remark on his
exaggerated statements, i. 256, n.;
inaccuracies in his edition of Junius
detected, 75; extract from, respect-
ing Mr. Wilkes, 477, n.; Lord
Chatham's speech communicated to,
by Sir Philip Francis, ii. xlii. lxii. ;
his intimacy with Lord Temple, and
his connection with Junius, ii.
lxvi.

America, patronised by Mr. Pitt and

Lord Camden, i. 107; new office
established for transacting its af-

fairs, 108; origin of that office, ib.
n.; effects of the Stamp Act in, ii.
145, et seq. See Colonies.

Amicus Curiæ, letter of, on the
ministerial controversy, ii. 269-
271.

Amherst (Sir Jeffery), his dismissal
from the government of Virginia, i.
10, 20; suffered to be sacrificed,
119; dismissed from his govern-
ment in America, ii. 195; strictures
of L. L. on this measure, 196;
Lord Hillsborough's conduct to-
wards him considered, 201. 206.
210. 213; his negotiation with the
Duke of Grafton considered, 215;
letter of the Earl of Hillsborough to
him, 216, 217; the chief command
of the American troops was never
offered to Sir Jeffery, 221; further
remarks on this affair, 222-232;
his noble and disinterested conduct
in America, 237, 238.
Anonymous letters, to the printer of
the Public Advertiser,' ii. 137;
strictures on the dispute with Ame-
rica, 145-148; that a minister
who is determined to do wrong,
must be a man of abilities and cou-
rage, 149; the establishment of
the high offices of state, a check on
the prerogative of the crown, 151;
to the Duke of Grafton, 172; on his
grace's indelicate conduct at the
Opera House, ib.; to the printer of
the 'Public Advertiser,' 191; the
state of the colonies considered, 191
-195; to the printer of the Pub-
lic Advertiser,' 197; the effects of

the Stamp Act and other acts on
the colonies, considered, 199; to
the right hon. Geo. Grenville, 259;
his influence and integrity stated
and considered, 260, 261.
Anti-Belial, letter of, on Junius's at-
tack upon Lord Mansfield, 389;
letter of, from the pen of Junius, ii.
390; further vindication of Junius,
395, 396.

Anti-Fox, letter of, to the printer of
the Public Advertiser,' ii. 384;
on Junius's conduct to Lord Hol-
land, ib.
Anti-Junius, letter of, to Junius, on
his strictures on the bailing of Mr.
Eyre, ii. 386, n.; extract from his
answer to Junius's 67th letter,
391, 392, notes; reply thereto, 390, |
391.

Anti-Sejanus, letter of, to the printer
of the Public Advertiser,' ii. 118;
the mischiefs of Lord Bute's govern-
ment stated, 119.
Anti-van-Teague, letter of, on Sir

William Lowther's grant, ii. 160;
reply to, by Anti-Stewart, 161,

et seq.
Arbitrary principles, growth of, in
this country, ii. 159, 160.
Ashburton, (Lord). See Dunning,
infra.

Attic wit, on the characteristics of, i.
219, n.

Atticus, one of the assumed signatures

of Junius, i. 8; his first letter un-
der this signature written in 1768,
9; his letter to the printer of the
'Public Advertiser,' ii. 202; not
Junius, 202, n.; the state of the
country considered, previously to
the war with America, 203-206;
defends his statement, 238-241;
review of the measures of ministers,
243-250; the statements of Atti-
cus vindicated by Brutus, 252, 253;
to the printer of the 'Public Adver-
tiser,' 254; the most contemptible
character is that which possesses
neither judgment nor inclination to

do right, nor resolution enough to
be consistent in doing wrong, ib.;
this remark illustrated in the Duke
of Grafton's administration, 254-
257; Junius availed himself of the
materials of, 257, n.

Augur, letter of, on the Duke of Graf-

ton's administration, ii. 276, 277.
Aylesbury election, resolution of the
House of Commons concerning, ii.
361, n.

Bail, statement of the law of, i. 445,
et seq.

Barker (E. H.), Dr. Good's letter to,
i. 184.

Barré (Col.), a claimant to the author-
ship of Junius, ii. xxi. xxix.; his
letters to Pitt and David Hume,
ii. 417, 418, 419; biographical no-
tice of, 417; speech against Pitt,
418; genealogy of, 419.

Barrell (Mr. S.), presides at a meeting
for supporting the Bill of Rights, ii.
71.
Barrington (Lord), notices of the let-
ters to, i. 36. 99; Junius's antipathy
to, 42. 55. 59. ii. 397; secretary at
war, i. 104; expels Mr. D'Oyley
and Mr. Francis (afterwards Sir
Philip Francis) from the War Of-
fice, ii. xxxiv. 55. 327. 392, R.,
398. 404, 405; notices of, 59, n.;
portrait of, by Correggio, 123; let-
ter from, justifying the conduct of
the troops in the Wilkes' riots,
182; his conduct, as secretary at
war, condemned by Testis, 310;
ironically defended by Testiculus,
311, 312; letters of a Veteran
to him on his choice of a deputy
secretary, 392, et seq.; curious dia-
logue, supposed to have passed in
his office, 393, 394; his lordship
charged with ruining Gen. Fowke,
397; state of the fact, ib. n.; his
political changes examined, 397,
398; his changes in the War Office,
ib.; conversation of his Majesty
with Lord B., 398; the affair of St.

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