Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 33.djvu/415

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He secured a clerkship in the treasury, and seems to have been appointed receiver-general and paymaster of the band of gentlemen-pensioners 7 March 1761. Through the influence of his brother Philip he became secretary to George Grenville when prime minister (1763–5). While in office Grenville appointed him receiver of Gibraltar, but Lord Rockingham, on succeeding to the premiership, removed him from the office. He became, however, deputy-teller of the exchequer in 1767.

Lloyd distinguished himself as a political pamphleteer in Grenville's interest, and he was absurdly suspected by Lord North of being the author of the ‘Letters of Junius.’ As the editor of ‘Junius's Correspondence’ (3 vols. 1812) points out, ‘Lloyd was on his deathbed at the date of the last of Junius's private letters.’ He died, after a long illness, 22 Jan. 1773. He was elected a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries 17 Nov. 1763.

Lloyd's chief pamphlets were: 1. ‘The Anatomy of a late Negotiation,’ severely commenting on the negotiations between George III and Mr. Pitt in 1763. 2. ‘A Vindication of the Conduct of the Ministry in the case of Mr. Wilkes.’ 3. ‘A Defence of the Majority in the House of Commons on the question relating to General Warrants,’ 1764. 4. ‘An Honest Man's Reasons for Declining to take a part in the New Administration,’ 1765 (i.e. Lord Rockingham's, which succeeded Grenville's in 1765). 5. ‘A Critical Review of the New Administration,’ in opposition to Sir Grey Cooper, who had praised in print Rockingham's ministry. 6. ‘A True History of a late Short Administration,’ 1766, being an answer to a pamphlet of Burke's written in praise of the Rockingham ministry, and entitled ‘A Short Account of a Short Administration.’ 7. ‘An Examination of the Principles and Boasted Disinterestedness of a late Right Honourable Gentleman; in a Letter from an Old Man of Business to a Noble Lord’ (i.e. Lord North). This was written upon the accession of the Grafton ministry in 1766. Pitt is much blamed for accepting the offers of the court. 8. ‘The Conduct of the late Administration examined relative to the Repeal of the Stamp Act,’ 1767. Much of this pamphlet, which runs to two hundred pages, was dictated by Grenville himself. It is the best existing collection of arguments on behalf of the Stamp Act. The latter part is devoted to an attempt to show that the Rockingham ministry, by refusing to check the American resistance to the English customs duties, were opening a way for the loss of the American colonies. 9. ‘A Word at Parting to his Grace the Duke of Bedford,’ occasioned by the duke's friends joining the Grafton ministry in 1767 while Grenville still remained out of office.

[Grenville Correspondence, index sub nom.; Almon's Biographical Anecdotes, vol. ii. ch. xx.; Gent. Mag. 1773; Alumni Westmonasterienses, pp. 362, 573; Foster's Alumni Oxon.; Albemarle's Memoirs of Rockingham; Letters of Junius.]

G. P. M-y.

LLOYD, CHARLES (1748–1828), philanthropist, born at Birmingham 22 Aug. 1748, was second son of Sampson Lloyd, banker, of Birmingham, a descendant of an old Montgomeryshire family and a member of the Society of Friends, by his second wife, Rachel, daughter of Nehemiah Champion of Bristol. Charles was educated at a private school, whence he passed into his father's counting-house. He found time, however, to make himself no mean classical scholar. After his father's death he carried on the banking business with eminent success, was a preacher, and otherwise a man of great influence among the Friends. Though debarred from public offices by his religious principles, he was universally respected as a citizen, and was one of the pioneers of the movement for the emancipation of the West Indian slaves, a supporter of the Bible Society and of unsectarian education, and one of the founders of the Birmingham General Hospital. He died on 16 Jan. 1828. His residence, Bingley House, near Birmingham, gave its name to Bingley Hall, the well-known place of assembly within the town.

Lloyd married, on 13 May 1774, Mary, daughter of James Farmer of Birmingham, by whom he had fifteen children. His eldest son was Charles Lloyd (1775–1839) [q. v.] the poet; his eldest daughter, Priscilla, married Christopher Wordsworth [q. v.], afterwards master of Trinity College, Cambridge, and brother of William Wordsworth the poet.

A ‘Translation of the Twenty-fourth Book of the Iliad of Homer,’ in heroic couplets, after Cowper, was printed anonymously by Lloyd for private circulation in 1807 and 1810, Birmingham, 8vo. He also translated the first seven books of the ‘Odyssey,’ which appeared in 1810, Birmingham, 12mo. Between 1808 and 1812 he published in the ‘Gentleman's Magazine’ metrical translations of ‘Horace,’ Lib. i. Od. i., Lib. i. Ep. i. ii. iii. iv. vii. and x. In 1812 he printed for private circulation ‘The Epistles of Horace translated into English Verse,’ Birmingham, 12mo. Another of his essays in verse, a translation in the heroic couplet of an Alcaic ode on the death of Dr. Parr, by his grandson, Charles Wordsworth