Volume IX Part 18 (2/2)
We shall afterwards show what infinite mischief has followed in the case of Benares, upon which he first laid his hands; next, in the case of the Begums of Oude.
We shall then lay before you the profligate system by which he endeavored to oppress that country: first by Residents; next by spies under the name of British Agents; and lastly, that, pursuing his way up to the mountains, he has found out one miserable chief, whose crimes were the prosperity of his country,--that him he endeavored to torture and destroy,--I do not mean in his body, but by exhausting the treasures which he kept for the benefit of his people.
In short, having shown your Lords.h.i.+ps that no man who is in his power is safe from his arbitrary will,--that no man, within or without, friend, ally, rival, has been safe from him,--having brought it to this point, if I am not able in my own person immediately to go up into the country and show the ramifications of the system, (I hope and trust I shall be spared to take my part in pursuing him through both,) if I am not, I shall go at least to the root of it, and some other gentleman, with a thousand times more ability than I possess, will take up each separate part in its proper order. And I believe it is proposed by the managers that one of them shall as soon as possible begin with the affair of Benares.
The point I now mean first to bring before your Lords.h.i.+ps is the corruption of Mr. Hastings, his system of peculation and bribery, and to show your Lords.h.i.+ps the horrible consequences which resulted from it: for, at first sight, bribery and peculation do not seem to be so horrid a matter; they may seem to be only the transferring a little money out of one pocket into another; but I shall show that by such a system of bribery the country is undone.
I shall inform your Lords.h.i.+ps in the best manner I can, and afterwards submit the whole, as I do with a cheerful heart and with an easy and a.s.sured security, to that justice which is the security for all the other justice in the kingdom.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] 2d year of George II.
[2] See his letter of the 11th of July, 1785, at the end of the Charges.
[3] 13 Geo. III. c. 63, -- 10.
[4] 29 February, 1784.
[5] Dated, Benares, 4th of November, 1781.
[6] Revenue Consultation, 28th January, 1775.
[7] Revenue Board, 14th May, 1772.
[8] Address to the Court of Directors, 25th March, 1775.
[9] 3d November, 1772.
[10] 24th October, 1774.
[11] 22d April, 1775.
[12] 5th February, 1777; 4th July, 1777.
[13] 3d November, 1772.
[14] 14th May, 1772.
[15] See his letter of the 11th July, 1785, at the end of the Charges.
[16] Sic orig.
[17] 28th May, 1782.
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