Part 9 (1/2)
”I thank you from the bottom of my heart for the kind way in which you have received this toast. My health has been proposed twofold--first for myself, and also in my position as President of the Royal Agricultural Society of England. I can a.s.sure you it was great honour that was conferred upon me when I was asked to a.s.sume this presidency, and my only regret is that this office has been a mere nominal one, and that I have not been able to be of so much use as I should have liked. At the same time I feel a pride in being President of a Society which has existed for so long, and which is one of the greatest agricultural societies anywhere, always helping forward improvements in agriculture. It was a great satisfaction to this Society to hold one of its annual meetings at Manchester, one of the greatest manufacturing towns of England. It is my duty as President of the Society to return, in the name of the Society, our most cordial and our warmest thanks for the extensive and liberal way in which the local committee have made their arrangements. It is to them we owe this magnificent entertainment in this fine tent, and also the excellent arrangements which we see before us. Lord Sefton told us not to make many speeches or long ones. I will, therefore, not make any further remarks, but, before sitting down, allow me to thank you in the name of the Princess for the kind way in which you have received her. I can a.s.sure you it has given her great pleasure to be present at this second visit to the Royal Agricultural Society, and this her first visit to Manchester. We both feel deeply grateful for the kind and hearty welcome which we have received, not only from Manchester, but from the inhabitants of Lancas.h.i.+re.”
THE PEABODY MEMORIAL. UNVEILING OF THE STATUE IN THE CITY OF LONDON.
_July 23rd, 1869._
The best memorials of George Peabody, American citizen and philanthropist, are the piles of buildings which stand as monuments of his generous liberality, and of his desire to advance the physical and moral welfare of the poor of London. He received from the Queen of England, and from many public and official bodies, warm recognition of his beneficence. But it was also fitting and right that in some public place a Statue should be erected, to perpetuate his name and his likeness, as well as to commemorate his good deeds. The citizens of London, headed by all the leading men of the Metropolis, subscribed for the Statue, which now adorns the site on the east of the Royal Exchange.
The Prince of Wales, having consented to perform the ceremony of unveiling the Statue, was received at the Mansion House by the Lord Mayor, where a distinguished company had a.s.sembled. In response to the toast of his health, the Prince said:--
”I thank you for the compliment you have paid me in drinking my health. I a.s.sure you it is always a pleasure to me to be present here at the Mansion-house. It is not, indeed, the first time I have received the hospitality of the Lord Mayor and of the City of London. We are a.s.sembled to take part in a great ceremony, and I accepted with much pleasure the invitation and the privilege of unveiling the statue of Mr. George Peabody. After the appropriate remarks the Lord Mayor has made concerning him I have little to say except to indorse what has been so well expressed by his Lords.h.i.+p. He is a man whose name will go down to posterity as a great philanthropist, and you, my Lord Mayor, and the citizens of London in particular, can never be sufficiently grateful to him for what he has done.”
After the luncheon His Royal Highness was escorted to the site of the memorial. Here Sir Benjamin Phillips, Chairman of the Committee, addressed the Prince, concluding with these words:--”Let us hope that this statue, erected by the sons of free England to the honour of one of Columbia's truest and n.o.blest citizens, may be symbolical of the peace and goodwill that exist between the two countries, and that a people springing from the same stock, speaking the same language, and inspired and animated by the same love of freedom and progress may live in uninterrupted friends.h.i.+p and happiness. Your Royal Highness may remember the language so beautifully expressed by George Peabody, in the letter that accompanied his last n.o.ble gift, when, speaking of America he said, 'I will pray that Almighty G.o.d will give to it a future as happy and n.o.ble in the intelligence and virtue of its citizens as it will be glorious in unexampled power and prosperity.' Your Royal Highness, these are the sentiments uttered by a man of ripe age, and alike applicable to the land of his birth and to the country of his adoption. May they inspire us, may they animate us, and may they find an echo throughout the length and breadth of our own free and happy homes.”
His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales than presented himself to speak, and was hailed with enthusiastic cheers. He said:--
”Sir Benjamin Phillips, my Lord Mayor, Ladies, and Gentlemen,--I feel sure that all those who have heard the words which have just been uttered cannot but be gratified with what has been said. Allow me to say to you that among the many duties which I have to perform, and which I have the privilege of performing, none could have given me greater pleasure than to a.s.sist and take part in the unveiling of this statue on this occasion. The name of George Peabody is so well known to all of you that really I feel some difficulty in saying anything new of that remarkable man; but, at the same time, it affords me the deepest gratification to join in paying a mark of tribute and respect to the name of that great American citizen and philanthropist--I may say, that citizen of the world. England can never adequately pay the debt of grat.i.tude which she owes to him--London especially, where his wonderful charity has been so liberally distributed. For a man not born in this country to give a sum, I believe, more than a quarter of a million of pounds sterling for purposes of benevolence is a fact unexampled. His name will go down to posterity as one who, as Sir Benjamin Phillips so justly remarked, has tried to ameliorate the condition of his poorer fellow-citizens, and especially to benefit their moral and social character. I have not yet had the opportunity of seeing the statue which is about to be unveiled, but having had the privilege of knowing the sculptor, Mr. Story, for a s.p.a.ce of now about ten years, I feel sure it will be one worthy of his reputation, and worthy also of the man to whom it is dedicated.
Before concluding the few imperfect remarks which I have ventured to address to you, let me thank Mr. Motley, the American Minister, for his presence on this occasion, and a.s.sure him what pleasure it gives me to take part in this great and I might almost say, national ceremonial of paying a tribute to the name of his great and distinguished countryman. Be a.s.sured that the feelings which I personally entertain towards America are the same as they ever were. I can never forget the reception which I had there nine years ago, and my earnest wish and hope is that England and America may go hand in hand in peace and prosperity.”
At the conclusion of His Royal Highness's address the Statue was uncovered, and at a signal from the Lord Mayor a loud and prolonged cheer was raised on its being exposed to view.
His Excellency, the American Minister, then addressed the vast audience.
He said, towards the close of his speech, ”It is a delightful thought that the tens of thousands who daily throng this crowded mart will see him almost as accurately as if in the flesh, and that generations after generations--that long, yet unborn, but I fear, never ending procession of London's poor--will be almost as familiar in the future with the form and features of their great benefactor as are those of us who have enjoyed his acquaintance and friends.h.i.+p in life.”
Mr. Story, the sculptor, having been called on, said he had no speech to make. He added, significantly pointing to the Statue, ”That is my speech,”--a remark which occasioned much merriment and cheering.
The ceremony was then brought to a close, and the Prince took his leave.
His Royal Highness, as he did so, was repeatedly cheered.
THE SCOTTISH HOSPITAL.
_November 30th, 1869._
The Scottish Corporation is commonly called the Scottish Hospital, but this is rather misleading as to the uses of the charity. Its objects are to a.s.sist, by pensions, poor aged natives of Scotland living in London, to afford temporary relief to Scotchmen in distress, or to aid them to return to their own country; and also to educate poor Scottish children.
The last-named object is also carried out by a kindred inst.i.tution, the Royal Caledonian Asylum, which receives some children of indigent Scotchmen in London, although its main purpose is the maintenance and education of children of soldiers, sailors, and marines, natives of Caledonia. The Scottish Hospital possesses funded property to the amount of 40,000, and the annual receipts are about 5000. In trust to the Scottish Hospital there is also attached the ”Kinloch Bequest,” for granting pensions to Scottish soldiers and sailors, resident in the United Kingdom, who have been wounded or have lost their sight in the service of the country, and whose incomes do not exceed 20 from other sources.
The anniversary festival of the Scottish Corporation is always held on the 30th of November, St. Andrew's day. In 1869 His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales presided at the dinner. The guests at this festival are mostly Scottish, and a large muster of Highland Chiefs and Lowland Lairds, as well as prosperous Scotchmen of London, supported the Royal chairman upon this occasion. Prince Christian and other distinguished visitors were also present. Many of the stewards wore the garb of old Gaul, and the tartans, scarves, flags, and decorations made the Hall of the Freemasons' Tavern a.s.sume a national appearance. The ”bagpipes” were also in honourable use, the Prince being conducted to the chair to the tune of the Highland laddie, played by the Queen's piper, the Prince's first piper, and the piper of the Royal Caledonian Asylum. The Prince had previously been received by a guard of honour of the London Artillery, whose band played the National Anthem, while the band of the London Scottish Volunteers performed a selection of Scotch music during the dinner. The three pipers also, at intervals, paraded the hall, and regaled the guests with their stirring strains.
The health of the Queen was drunk with enthusiasm, specially as the patroness of the Scottish Hospital. To the toast of ”the Princess of Wales and the rest of the Royal Family,” proposed by the Duke of Roxburghe, the Prince responded, and then gave: ”The Army, Navy, Militia, and Volunteers,” referring in his speech to the Kinloch Bequest, which provides pensions for about 400 disabled soldiers and sailors. A Scotch vocalist, Mr. Maclagan, sang ”Scots wha hae wi'
Wallace bled.” Then the Prince rose to give the toast of ”Prosperity to the Scottish Hospital”:--
”Your Royal Highness, my Lords, and Gentlemen,--I have now to give you the toast of the evening: 'Prosperity to the Scottish Hospital.' I feel a.s.sured that it is a toast which the numerous a.s.sembly I see before me will drink in b.u.mpers. As you know, the Queen is patroness of this hospital; she has been so for thirty-seven years, and she has contributed to its funds between 3000 and 4000. At twenty different anniversaries the late King William, as Duke of Clarence, presided. The Duke of Kent, the Duke of Suss.e.x, and the Duke of Cambridge also presided at various anniversaries, and contributed largely to the funds of the hospital.