[The History of the Rise, Progress and Accomplishment of the by Thomas Clarkson]@TWC D-Link bookThe History of the Rise, Progress and Accomplishment of the CHAPTER XXII 29/49
He did not apprehend, as the examinations before the privy council would yet take up some time, that the subject could be fully investigated in the present session of parliament; but said he would consider whether the forms of the house would admit of any measures that would be obligatory on them to take it up early in the ensuing session." In about a week after this conference, Mr.Morton Pitt was deputed by the minister to write to the committee, to say that he had found precedents for such a motion as he conceived to be proper, and that he would submit it to the House of Commons in a few days. At the next meeting, which was on the 6th of May, and at which Major Cartwright and the Manchester delegates assisted, Mr.Morton Pitt attended as a member of the committee, and said that the minister had fixed his motion for the 9th.
It was then resolved, that deputations should be sent to some of the leading members of parliament, to request their support of the approaching motion.
I was included in one of these, and in that which was to wait upon Mr.Fox.We were received by him in a friendly manner.
On putting the question to him, which related to the object of our mission, Mr.Fox paused for a little while, as if in the act of deliberation; when he assured us unequivocally, and in language which could not be misunderstood, that he would support the object of the committee to its fullest extent, being convinced that there was no remedy for the evil, but in the total abolition of the trade. At length, the 9th, or the day fixed upon, arrived, when this important subject was to be mentioned in the House of Commons for the first time[A], with a view to the public discussion of it.
It is impossible for me to give, within the narrow limits of this work, all that was then said upon it; and yet as the debate which ensued was the first which took place upon it, I should feel inexcusable if I were not to take some notice of it. [Footnote A: David Hartley made a motion some years before in the same house, as has been shown in a former part of this work; but this was only to establish a proposition, That the Slave Trade was contrary to the Laws of God and the Rights of Man.] Mr.Pitt rose.
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