Forsyth, a highly distinguished barrister and author of numerous works on legal, historical and literary matters, came in as a Conservative for Cambridge at the 1865 general election, but was subsequently unseated on technical grounds. Although he later represented Marylebone, he never fully met the high expectations that were formed of him when he first entered the Commons. It was later noted that he was ‘more of a student and man of letters than a politician’.
Born at Greenock, Forsyth was the eldest son of Thomas Forsyth, who hailed originally from Birkenhead. After attending the King’s school at Sherborne, Dorset, he excelled academically at Cambridge, where he was awarded the second chancellor’s medal when he took his BA in classics in 1834. In 1835 he became a fellow of Trinity College. Called to the bar in 1839, he practised on the Midland circuit, where he enjoyed great success as an advocate.
Beginning in 1841 with his On the Law of Composition with Creditors, Forsyth produced several well-received treatises, including Hortensius, or duty and office of an advocate (1849) and History of trial by jury (1852). A keen student of the French revolutionary period, he also wrote the three-volume History of the captivity of Napoleon at St Helena (1853). His undoubted skills as a writer earned him the editorship of the Annual Register in 1842, a position he kept until 1868, while his Life of Marcus Tullius Cicero (1864) brought him widespread praise in the literary world.
At the 1865 general election Forsyth stood in the Conservative interest for Cambridge in place of the sitting Member Kenneth Macaulay, an eminent queen’s counsel, who had retired on the eve of the contest following a paralytic fit.
Unsurprisingly, Forsyth’s defeated opponents announced their intention of petitioning against his return, a move that ‘disturbed’ his confidante Lord Brougham, the former Whig lord chancellor, who warned him not to enter the Commons until the petition was disposed of, in case he incurred a financial penalty.
After leaving his position as counsel to the secretary of state for India in 1872, Forsyth sought a return to the Commons. He was defeated at Bath in 1873 before being elected for Marylebone the following year, holding the seat until 1880. He spoke regularly in the House, mostly from a legal perspective, but, as was later noted, ‘men of less knowledge and experience, but with a greater command over the House, easily passed him by in the race’.
Forsyth died at his London residence on Boxing Day 1899.
