LETTER I
Bath, November 15, 1756
My dear friend:
I received yours yesterday morning together with the
Prussian, papers, which I have read with great attention.
If courts could blush, those of Vienna and Dresden
ought, to have their falsehoods so publicly, and so
undeniably exposed. The former will, I presume,
next year, employ an hundred thousand men, to answer
the accusation; and if the Empress of the two Russias
is pleased to argue in the same cogent manner, their
logic will be too strong for all the King of Prussia’s
rhetoric. I well remember the treaty so often
referred to in those pieces, between the two Empresses,
in 1746. The King was strongly pressed by the
Empress Queen to accede to it. Wassenaer communicated
it to me for that purpose. I asked him if there
were no secret articles; suspecting that there were
some, because the ostensible treaty was a mere harmless,
defensive one. He assured me that there were none.
Upon which I told him, that as the King had already
defensive alliances with those two Empresses, I did
not see of what use his accession to this treaty, if
merely a defensive one, could be, either to himself
or the other contracting parties; but that, however,
if it was only desired as an indication of the King’s
good will, I would give him an act by which his Majesty
should accede to that treaty, as far, but no further,
as at present he stood engaged to the respective Empresses
by the defensive alliances subsisting with each.
This offer by no means satisfied him; which was a
plain proof of the secret articles now brought to light,
and into which the court of Vienna hoped to draw us.
I told Wassenaer so, and after that I heard no more
of his invitation.
I am still bewildered in the changes
at Court, of which I find that all the particulars
are not yet fixed. Who would have thought, a year
ago, that Mr. Fox, the Chancellor, and the Duke of
Newcastle, should all three have quitted together?
Nor can I yet account for it; explain it to me if
you can. I cannot see, neither, what the Duke
of Devonshire and Fox, whom I looked upon as intimately
united, can have quarreled about, with relation to
the Treasury; inform me, if you know. I never
doubted of the prudent versatility of your Vicar of
Bray: But I am surprised at O’Brien Windham’s
going out of the Treasury, where I should have thought
that the interest of his brother-in-law, George Grenville,
would have kept him.
Having found myself rather worse,
these two or three last days, I was obliged to take
some ipecacuanha last night; and, what you will think
odd, for a vomit, I brought it all up again in about
an hour, to my great satisfaction and emolument, which
is seldom the case in restitutions.
You did well to go to the Duke of
Newcastle, who, I suppose, will have no more levees;
however, go from time to time, and leave your name
at his door, for you have obligations to him.
Adieu.
LETTER II
Bath, December 14, 1756.
My dear friend:
What can I say to you from this place, where every
day is still but as the
first, though by no means so agreeably passed,
as Anthony describes his to have been? The same
nothings succeed one another every day with me, as,
regularly and uniformly as the hours of the day.
You will think this tiresome, and so it is; but how
can I help it? Cut off from society by my deafness,
and dispirited by my ill health, where could I be
better? You will say, perhaps, where could you
be worse? Only in prison, or the galleys, I confess.
However, I see a period to my stay here; and I have
fixed, in my own mind, a time for my return to London;
not invited there by either politics or pleasures,
to both which I am equally a stranger, but merely
to be at home; which, after all, according to the
vulgar saying, is home, be it ever so homely.
The political settlement, as it is
called, is, I find, by no means settled; Mr. Fox,
who took this place in his way to his brother’s,
where he intended to pass a month, was stopped short
by an express, which he received from his connection,
to come to town immediately; and accordingly he set
out from hence very early, two days ago. I had
a very long conversation with him, in which he was,
seemingly at least, very frank and communicative;
but still I own myself in the dark. In those
matters, as in most others, half knowledge (and mine
is at most that) is more apt to lead one into error,
than to carry one to truth; and our own vanity contributes
to the seduction. Our conjectures pass upon us
for truths; we will know what we do not know, and
often, what we cannot know: so mortifying to
our pride is the bare suspicion of ignorance!
It has been reported here that the
Empress of Russia is dying; this would be a fortunate
event indeed for the King of Prussia, and necessarily
produce the neutrality and inaction, at least, of that
great power; which would be a heavy weight taken out
of the opposite scale to the King of Prussia.
The ‘Augustissima’ must, in that case,
do all herself; for though France will, no doubt,
promise largely, it will, I believe, perform but scantily;
as it desires no better than that the different powers
of Germany should tear one another to pieces.
I hope you frequent all the courts:
a man should make his face familiar there. Long
habit produces favor insensibly; and acquaintance often
does more than friendship, in that climate where ‘les
beaux sentimens’ are not the natural growth.
Adieu! I am going to the ball,
to save my eyes from reading, and my mind from thinking.
LETTER III
Bath, January 12, 1757
My dear friend:
I waited quietly, to see when either your leisure,
or your inclinations, would al low you to honor
me with a letter; and at last I received one this
morning, very near a fortnight after you went from
hence. You will say, that you had no news to write
me; and that probably may be true; but, without news,
one has always something to say to those with whom
one desires to have anything to do.
Your observation is very just with
regard to the King of Prussia, whom the most august
House of Austria would most unquestionably have poisoned
a century or two ago. But now that ‘terras
Astraea reliquit’, kings and princes die of
natural deaths; even war is pusillanimously carried
on in this degenerate age; quarter is given; towns
are taken, and the people spared: even in a storm,
a woman can hardly hope for the benefit of a rape.
Whereas (such was the humanity of former days) prisoners
were killed by thousands in cold blood, and the generous
victors spared neither man, woman, nor child.
Heroic actions of this kind were performed at the
taking of Magdebourg. The King of Prussia is certainly
now in a situation that must soon decide his fate,
and make him Cæsar or nothing. Notwithstanding
the march of the Russians, his great danger, in my
mind, lies westward. I have no great notions
of Apraxin’s abilities, and I believe many a
Prussian colonel would out-general him. But Brown,
Piccolomini, Lucchese, and many other veteran officers
in the Austrian troops, are respectable enemies.
Mr. Pitt seems to me to have almost
as many enemies to encounter as his Prussian Majesty.
The late Ministry, and the Duke’s party, will,
I presume, unite against him and his Tory friends;
and then quarrel among themselves again. His
best, if not his only chance of supporting himself
would be, if he had credit enough in the city, to hinder
the advancing of the money to any administration but
his own; and I have met with some people here who
think that he has.
I have put off my journey from hence
for a week, but no longer. I find I still gain
some strength and some flesh here, and therefore I
will not cut while the run is for me.
By a letter which I received this
morning from Lady Allen, I observe that you are extremely
well with her; and it is well for you to be so, for
she is an excellent and warm puff.
‘A propos’ (an expression
which is commonly used to introduce whatever is unrelative
to it) you should apply to some of Lord Holderness’s
people, for the perusal of Mr. Cope’s letters.
It would not be refused you; and the sooner you have
them the better. I do not mean them as models
for your manner of writing, but as outlines of the
matter you are to write upon.
If you have not read Hume’s
“Essays” read them; they are four very
small volumes; I have just finished, and am extremely
pleased with them. He thinks impartially, deep,
often new; and, in my mind, commonly just. Adieu.
LETTER IV
Blackheath, September 17, 1757
My dear friend:
Lord Holderness has been so kind as to communicate
to me all the letters which he has received from you
hitherto, dated the 15th, 19th, 23d, and 26th August;
and also a draught of that which he wrote to you the
9th instant. I am very well pleased with all your
letters; and, what is better, I can tell you that
the King is so too; and he said, but three days ago,
to Monsieur Munchausen, he (meaning you) sets
out very well, and I like
his letters; provided that, like
most of my English ministers
abroad, he does not grow idle
hereafter. So that here is both praise to
flatter, and a hint to warn you. What Lord Holderness
recommends to you, being by the King’s order,
intimates also a degree of approbation; for the Blacker
ink, and the Larger character,
show, that his Majesty, whose eyes are grown weaker,
intends to read all your letters himself. Therefore,
pray do not neglect to get the blackest ink you can;
and to make your secretary enlarge his hand, though
‘d’ailleurs’ it is a very good one.
Had I been to wish an advantageous
situation for you, and a good debut in it, I could
not have wished you either better than both have hitherto
proved. The rest will depend entirely upon yourself;
and I own I begin to have much better hopes than I
had; for I know, by my own experience, that the more
one works, the more willing one is to work. We
are all, more or less, ‘des animaux d’habitude’.
I remember very well, that when I was in business,
I wrote four or five hours together every day, more
willingly than I should now half an hour; and this
is most certain, that when a man has applied himself
to business half the day, the other half, goes off
the more cheerfully and agreeably. This I found
so sensibly, when I was at The Hague, that I never
tasted company so well nor was so good company myself,
as at the suppers of my post days. I take Hamburg
now to be ’lé centre du refuge Allemand’.
If you have any Hanover ‘refugies’ among
them, pray take care to be particularly attentive to
them. How do you like your house? Is it
a convenient one? Have the ‘Casserolles’
been employed in it yet? You will find ‘les
petits soupers fins’ less expensive, and turn
to better account, than large dinners for great companies.
I hope you have written to the Duke
of Newcastle; I take it for granted that you have
to all your brother ministers of the northern department.
For God’s sake be diligent, alert, active, and
indefatigable in your business. You want nothing
but labor and industry to be, one day, whatever you
please, in your own way.
We think and talk of nothing here
but Brest, which is universally supposed to be the
object of our great expedition. A great and important
object it is. I suppose the affair must be brusque,
or it will not do. If we succeed, it will make
France put some water to its wine. As for my own
private opinion, I own I rather wish than hope success.
However, should our expedition fail, ‘Magnis
tamen excidit ausis’, and that will be
better than our late languid manner of making war.
To mention a person to you whom I
am very indifferent about, I mean myself, I vegetate
still just as I did when we parted; but I think I
begin to be sensible of the autumn of the year; as
well as of the autumn of my own life. I feel
an internal awkwardness, which, in about three weeks,
I shall carry with me to the Bath, where I hope to
get rid of it, as I did last year. The best cordial
I could take, would be to hear, from time to time,
of your industry and diligence; for in that case I
should consequently hear of your success. Remember
your own motto, ’Nullum numen abest
si sit prudentia’. Nothing is truer.
Yours.
LETTER V
Blackheath, September 23, 1757
My dear friend:
I received but the day before yesterday your letter
of the 3d, from the headquarters at Selsingen; and,
by the way, it is but the second that I have received
from you since your arrival at Hamburg. Whatever
was the cause of your going to the army, I approve
of the effect; for I would have you, as much as possible,
see everything that is to be seen. That is the
true useful knowledge, which informs and improves
us when we are young, and amuses us and others when
we are old; ’Olim haec meminisse juvabit’.
I could wish that you would (but I know you will not)
enter in a book, a short note only, of whatever you
see or hear, that is very remarkable: I do not
mean a German album stuffed with people’s
names, and Latin sentences; but I mean such a book,
as, if you do not keep now, thirty years hence you
would give a great deal of money to have kept.
‘A propos de bottes’, for I am told he
always wears his; was his Royal Highness very gracious
to you, or not? I have my doubts about it.
The neutrality which he has concluded with Marechal
de Richelieu, will prevent that bloody battle which
you expected; but what the King of Prussia will say
to it is another point. He was our only ally;
at present, probably we have not one in the world.
If the King of Prussia can get at Monsieur de Soubize’s,
and the Imperial army, before other troops have joined
them, I think he will beat them but what then?
He has three hundred thousand men to encounter afterward.
He must submit; but he may say with truth, ‘Si
Pergama dextra defendi potuissent’.
The late action between the Prussians and Russians
has only thinned the human species, without giving
either party a victory; which is plain by each party’s
claiming it. Upon my word, our species will pay
very dear for the quarrels and ambition of a few,
and those by no means the most valuable part of it.
If the many were wiser than they are, the few must
be quieter, and would perhaps be juster and better
than they are.
Hamburg, I find, swarms with Grafs,
Graffins, Fursts, and Furstins, Hocheits, and Durchlaugticheits.
I am glad of it, for you must necessarily be in the
midst of them; and I am still more glad, that, being
in the midst of them, you must necessarily be under
some constraint of ceremony; a thing which you do
not love, but which is, however, very useful.
I desired you in my last, and I repeat
it again in this, to give me an account of your private
and domestic life.
How do you pass your evenings?
Have they, at Hamburg, what are called at Paris
‘des Maisons’, where one goes
without ceremony, sups or not, as one pleases?
Are you adopted in any society? Have you any rational
brother ministers, and which? What sort of things
are your operas? In the tender, I doubt they
do not excel; for ‘mein lieber schatz’,
and the other tendernesses of the Teutonic language,
would, in my mind, sound but indifferently, set to
soft music; for the bravura parts, I have a great
opinion of them; and ‘das, der donner
dich erschlage’, must no doubt, make a
tremendously fine piece of ‘recitativo’,
when uttered by an angry hero, to the rumble of a
whole orchestra, including drums, trumpets, and French
horns. Tell me your whole allotment of the day,
in which I hope four hours, at least, are sacred to
writing; the others cannot be better employed than
in Liberal pleasures. In short, give me a
full account of yourself, in your un-ministerial character,
your incognito, without your ‘fiocchi’.
I love to see those, in whom I interest myself, in
their undress, rather than in gala; I know them better
so. I recommend to you, ‘etiam atque
etiam’, method and order in everything you
undertake. Do you observe it in your accounts?
If you do not, you will be a beggar, though you were
to receive the appointments of a Spanish Ambassador
extraordinary, which are a thousand pistoles a
month; and in your ministerial business, if you have
no regular and stated hours for such and such parts
of it, you will be in the hurry and confusion of the
Duke of N-----, doing everything by halves, and nothing
well, nor soon. I suppose you ’have been
feasted through the Corps diplomatique at
Hamburg, excepting Monsieur Champeaux; with whom,
however, I hope you live ‘poliment
et galamment’, at all third places.
Lord Loudon is much blamed here for
his ‘retraite des dix milles’,
for it is said that he had above that number, and
might consequently have acted offensively, instead
of retreating; especially as his retreat was contrary
to the unanimous opinion (as it is now said) of the
council of war. In our Ministry, I suppose, things
go pretty quietly, for the D. of N. has not plagued
me these two months. When his Royal Highness comes
over, which I take it for granted he will do very soon,
the great push will, I presume, be made at his Grace
and Mr. Pitt; but without effect if they agree, as
it is visibly their interest to do; and, in that case,
their parliamentary strength will support them against
all attacks. You may remember, I said at first,
that the popularity would soon be on the side of those
who opposed the popular Militia Bill; and now it appears
so with a vengeance, in almost every county in England,
by the tumults and insurrections of the people, who
swear that they will not be enlisted. That silly
scheme must therefore be dropped, as quietly as may
be. Now that I have told you all that I know,
and almost all that I think, I wish you a good supper
and a good-night.
LETTER VI
Blackheath, September 30, 1757
My dear friend:
I have so little to do, that I am surprised how I can
find time to write to you so often. Do not stare
at the seeming paradox; for it is an undoubted truth,
that the less one has to do, the less time one finds
to do it in. One yawns, one procrastinates, one
can do it when one will, and therefore one seldom
does it at all; whereas those who have a great deal
of business, must (to use a vulgar expression) buckle
to it; and then they always find time enough to do
it in. I hope your own experience has by this
time convinced you of this truth.
I received your last of the 8th.
It is now quite over with a very great man, who will
still be a very great man, though a very unfortunate
one. He has qualities of the mind that put him
above the reach of these misfortunes; and if reduced,
as perhaps he may, to the ‘marche’ of
Brandenburg, he will always find in himself the comfort,
and with all the world the credit, of a philosopher,
a legislator, a patron, and a professor of arts and
sciences. He will only lose the fame of a conqueror;
a cruel fame, that arises from the destruction of the
human species. Could it be any satisfaction to
him to know, I could tell him, that he is at this
time the most popular man in this kingdom; the whole
nation being enraged at that neutrality which hastens
and completes his ruin. Between you and me, the
King was not less enraged at it himself, when he saw
the terms of it; and it affected his health more than
all that had happened before. Indeed it seems
to me a voluntary concession of the very worst that
could have happened in the worst event. We now
begin to think that our great and secret expedition
is intended for Martinico and St. Domingo; if
that be true, and we succeed in the attempt, we shall
recover, and the French lose, one of the most valuable
branches of commerce I mean sugar.
The French now supply all the foreign markets in Europe
with that commodity; we only supply ourselves with
it. This would make us some amends for our ill
luck, or ill conduct in North America; where Lord
Loudon, with twelve thousand men, thought himself no
match for the French with but seven; and Admiral Holborne,
with seventeen ships of the line, declined attacking
the French, because they had eighteen, and a greater
weight of Metal, according to the new sea-phrase,
which was unknown to Blake. I hear that letters
have been sent to both with very severe reprimands.
I am told, and I believe it is true, that we are negotiating
with the Corsican, I will not say rebels, but asserters
of their natural rights; to receive them, and whatever
form of government they think fit to establish, under
our protection, upon condition of their delivering
up to us Port Ajaccio; which may be made so strong
and so good a one, as to be a full equivalent for
the loss of Port Mahon. This is, in my mind,
a very good scheme; for though the Corsicans are a
parcel of cruel and perfidious rascals, they will in
this case be tied down to us by their own interest
and their own danger; a solid security with knaves,
though none with fools. His Royal Highness the
Duke is hourly expected here: his arrival will
make some bustle; for I believe it is certain that
he is resolved to make a push at the Duke of N., Pitt
and Co.; but it will be ineffectual, if they continue
to agree, as, to my certain knowledge, they
do at present. This parliament is theirs, ‘caetera
quis nescit’?
Now that I have told you all that
I know or have heard, of public matters, let us talk
of private ones that more nearly and immediately concern
us. Admit me to your fire-side, in your little
room; and as you would converse with me there, write
to me for the future from thence. Are you completely
‘nippe’ yet? Have you formed
what the world calls connections? that is, a certain
number of acquaintances whom, from accident or choice,
you frequent more than others: Have you either
fine or well-bred women there? ‘Y a-t-il
quelque bon ton’? All fat and fair,
I presume; too proud and too cold to make advances,
but, at the same time, too well-bred and too warm
to reject them, when made by ’un honnête
homme avec des manieres’.
Mr.------is to be married, in about a month, to Miss------. I am very
glad of it; for, as he will never be a man of the world, but will always
lead a domestic and retired life, she seems to have been made on purpose
for him. Her natural turn is as grave and domestic as his; and she seems
to have been kept by her aunts ‘a la grace’, instead of being raised in a
hot bed, as most young ladies are of late. If, three weeks hence, you
write him a short compliment of congratulation upon the occasion, he, his
mother, and ‘tutti quanti’, would be extremely pleased with it. Those
attentions are always kindly taken, and cost one nothing but pen, ink,
and paper. I consider them as draughts upon good-breeding, where the
exchange is always greatly in favor of the drawer. ‘A propos’ of
exchange; I hope you have, with the help of your secretary, made yourself
correctly master of all that sort of knowledge Course of Exchange,
‘Agie, Banco, Reiche-Thalers’, down to ‘Marien Groschen’. It is very
little trouble to learn it; it is often of great use to know it.
Good-night, and God bless you!
LETTER VII
Blackheath, October 10, 1757
My dear friend:
It is not without some difficulty that I snatch this
moment of leisure from my extreme idleness, to inform
you of the present lamentable and astonishing state
of affairs here, which you would know but imperfectly
from the public papers, and but partially from your
private correspondents. ‘Or sus’
then Our in vincible Armada, which cost
at least half a million, sailed, as you know, some
weeks ago; the object kept an inviolable secret:
conjectures various, and expectations great.
Brest was perhaps to be taken; but Martinico and
St. Domingo, at least. When lo! the important
island of Aix was taken without the least resistance,
seven hundred men made prisoners, and some pieces of
cannon carried off. From thence we sailed toward
Rochfort, which it seems was our main object; and
consequently one should have supposed that we had
pilots on board who knew all the soundings and landing
places there and thereabouts: but no; for General
M-----t asked the Admiral if he could land him and
the troops near Rochfort? The Admiral said, with
great ease. To which the General replied, but
can you take us on board again? To which the
Admiral answered, that, like all naval operations,
will depend upon the wind. If so, said the General,
I’ll e’en go home again. A Council
of War was immediately called, where it was unanimously
resolved, that it was advisable to return; accordingly
they are returned. As the expectations of the
whole nation had been raised to the highest pitch,
the universal disappointment and indignation have arisen
in proportion; and I question whether the ferment
of men’s minds was ever greater. Suspicions,
you may be sure, are various and endless, but the most
prevailing one is, that the tail of the Hanover neutrality,
like that of a comet, extended itself to Rochfort.
What encourages this suspicion is, that a French man
of war went unmolested through our whole fleet, as
it lay near Rochfort. Haddock’s whole story
is revived; Michel’s representations are combined
with other circumstances; and the whole together makes
up a mass of discontent, resentment, and even fury,
greater than perhaps was ever known in this country
before. These are the facts, draw your own conclusions
from them; for my part, I am lost in astonishment
and conjectures, and do not know where to fix.
My experience has shown me, that many things which
seem extremely probable are not true: and many
which seem highly improbable are true; so that I will
conclude this article, as Josephus does almost every
article of his history, with saying, but of
this every man will believe
as he thinks proper. What
a disgraceful year will this be in the annals of this
country! May its good genius, if ever it appears
again, tear out those sheets, thus stained and blotted
by our ignominy!
Our domestic affairs are, as far as
I know anything of them, in the same situation as
when I wrote to you last; but they will begin to be
in motion upon the approach of the session, and upon
the return of the Duke, whose arrival is most impatiently
expected by the mob of London; though not to strew
flowers in his way.
I leave this place next Saturday,
and London the Saturday following, to be the next
day at Bath. Adieu.
LETTER VIII
London, October 17, 1757.
My dear friend:
Your last, of the 30th past, was a very good letter;
and I will believe half of what you assure me, that
you returned to the Landgrave’s civilities.
I cannot possibly go farther than half, knowing that
you are not lavish of your words, especially in that
species of eloquence called the adulatory. Do
not use too much discretion in profiting of the Landgrave’s
naturalization of you; but go pretty often and feed
with him. Choose the company of your superiors,
whenever you can have it; that is the right and true
pride. The mistaken and silly pride is, to Primer
among inferiors.
Hear, O Israel! and wonder. On
Sunday morning last, the Duke gave up his commission
of Captain General and his regiment of guards.
You will ask me why? I cannot tell you, but I
will tell you the causes assigned; which, perhaps,
are none of them the true ones. It is said that
the King reproached him with having exceeded his powers
in making the Hanover Convention, which his R. H.
absolutely denied, and threw up thereupon. This
is certain, that he appeared at the drawing-room at
Kensington, last Sunday, after having quitted, and
went straight to Windsor; where, his people say, that
he intends to reside quietly, and amuse himself as
a private man. But I conjecture that matters
will soon be made up again, and that he will resume
his employments. You will easily imagine the
speculations this event has occasioned in the public;
I shall neither trouble you nor myself with relating
them; nor would this sheet of paper, or even a quire
more, contain them. Some refine enough to suspect
that it is a concerted quarrel, to justify somebody
to somebody, with regard to the Convention;
but I do not believe it.
His R. H.’s people load the
Hanover Ministers, and more particularly our friend
Munchausen here, with the whole blame; but with what
degree of truth I know not. This only is certain,
that the whole negotiation of that affair was broached
and carried on by the Hanover Ministers and Monsieur
Stemberg at Vienna, absolutely unknown to the English
Ministers, till it was executed. This affair
combined (for people will combine it) with the astonishing
return of our great armament, not only ‘re infecta’,
but even ‘intentata’, makes such a jumble
of reflections, conjectures, and refinements, that
one is weary of hearing them. Our Tacituses and
Machiavels go deep, suspect the worst, and, perhaps,
as they often do, overshoot the mark. For my
own part, I fairly confess that I am bewildered, and
have not certain ‘postulata’ enough, not
only to found any opinion, but even to form conjectures
upon: and this is the language which I think
you should hold to all who speak to you, as to be sure
all will, upon that subject. Plead, as you truly
may, your own ignorance; and say, that it is impossible
to judge of those nice points, at such a distance,
and without knowing all circumstances, which you cannot
be supposed to do. And as to the Duke’s
resignation; you should, in my opinion, say, that
perhaps there might be a little too much vivacity in
the case, but that, upon the whole, you make no doubt
of the thing’s being soon set right again; as,
in truth, I dare say it will. Upon these delicate
occasions, you must practice the ministerial shrugs
and ‘persiflage’; for silent gesticulations,
which you would be most inclined to, would not be
sufficient: something must be said, but that something,
when analyzed, must amount to nothing. As for
instance, ’Il est vrai qu’on
s’y perd, maïs que voulez-vous
que je vous dise? il
y a bien du pour et du contre;
un petit Resident ne voit guères lé
fond du sac. Il faut attendre. Those
sort of expletives are of infinite use; and nine people
in ten think they mean something. But to the Landgrave
of Hesse I think you would do well to say, in seeming
confidence, that you have good reason to believe that
the principal objection of his Majesty to the convention
was that his Highness’s interests, and the affair
of his troops, were not sufficiently considered in
it. To the Prussian Minister assert boldly that
you know ‘de science certaine’,
that the principal object of his Majesty’s and
his British Ministry’s intention is not only
to perform all their present engagements with his Master,
but to take new and stronger ones for his support;
for this is true at least at
present.
You did very well in inviting Comte
Bothmar to dine with you. You see how minutely
I am informed of your proceedings, though not from
yourself. Adieu.
I go to Bath next Saturday; but direct
your letters, as usual, to London.
LETTER IX
Bath, October 26, 1757.
My dear friend:
I arrived here safe, but far from sound, last Sunday.
I have consequently drunk these waters but three days,
and yet I find myself something better for them.
The night before I left London. I was for some
hours at Newcastle House, where the letters, which
came that morning, lay upon the table: and his
Grace singled out yours with great approbation, and,
at the same time, assured me of his Majesty’s
approbation, too. To these two approbations
I truly add my own, which, ‘sans vanité’,
may perhaps be near as good as the other two.
In that letter you venture ‘vos petits
raisonnemens’ very properly, and then as properly
make an excuse for doing so. Go on so, with diligence,
and you will be, what I began to despair of your ever
being, somebody. I am persuaded, if you
would own the truth, that you feel yourself now much
better satisfied with yourself than you were while
you did nothing.
Application to business, attended
with approbation and success, flatters and animates
the mind: which, in idleness and inaction, stagnates
and putrefies. I could wish that every rational
man would, every night when he goes to bed, ask himself
this question, What have I done to-day? Have
I done anything that can be of use to myself or others?
Have I employed my time, or have I squandered it?
Have I lived out the day, or have I dozed it away
in sloth and laziness? A thinking being must be
pleased or confounded, according as he can answer
himself these questions. I observe that you are
in the secret of what is intended, and what Munchausen
is gone to Stade to prepare; a bold and dangerous
experiment in my mind, and which may probably end
in a second volume to the “History of the Palatinate,”
in the last century. His Serene Highness of Brunswick
has, in my mind, played a prudent and saving game;
and I am apt to believe that the other Serene Highness,
at Hamburg, is more likely to follow his example than
to embark in the great scheme.
I see no signs of the Duke’s
resuming his employments; but on the contrary I am
assured that his Majesty is coolly determined to do
as well as he can without him. The Duke of Devonshire
and Fox have worked hard to make up matters in the
closet, but to no purpose. People’s self-love
is very apt to make them think themselves more necessary
than they are: and I shrewdly suspect, that his
Royal Highness has been the dupe of that sentiment,
and was taken at his word when he least suspected it;
like my predecessor, Lord Harrington, who when he
went into the closet to resign the seals, had them
not about him: so sure he thought himself of being
pressed to keep them.
The whole talk of London, of this
place, and of every place in the whole kingdom, is
of our great, expensive, and yet fruitless expedition;
I have seen an officer who was there, a very sensible
and observing man: who told me that had we attempted
Rochfort, the day after we took the island of Aix,
our success had been infallible; but that, after we
had sauntered (God knows why) eight or ten days in
the island, he thinks the attempt would have been
impracticable, because the French had in that time
got together all the troops in that neighborhood,
to a very considerable number. In short, there
must have been some secret in that whole affair that
has not yet transpired; and I cannot help suspecting
that it came from Stade. We had not been
successful there; and perhaps we were not desirous
that an expedition, in which we had neither been
concerned nor consulted, should prove so; M t
was our creature, and a word to the wise will
sometimes go a great way. M t
is to have a public trial, from which the public expects
great discoveries Not I.
Do you visit Soltikow, the Russian
Minister, whose house, I am told, is the great scene
of pleasures at Hamburg? His mistress, I take
for granted, is by this time dead, and he wears some
other body’s shackles. Her death comes
with regard to the King of Prussia, ’comme
la moutarde âpres diner’.
I am curious to see what tyrant will succeed her, not
by divine, but by military right; for, barbarous as
they are now, and still more barbarous as they have
been formerly, they have had very little regard to
the more barbarous notion of divine, indefeasible,
hereditary right.
The Praetorian bands, that is, the
guards, I presume, have been engaged in the interests
of the Imperial Prince; but still I think that little
John of Archangel will be heard upon this occasion,
unless prevented by a quieting draught of hemlock
or nightshade; for I suppose they are not arrived
to the politer and genteeler poisons of Acqua
Tufana, [Acqua Tufana, a Neapolitan
slow poison, resembling clear water, and invented by
a woman at Naples, of the name of Tufana.] sugar-plums,
etc.
Lord Halifax has accepted his old
employment, with the honorary addition of the Cabinet
Council. And so we heartily wish you a goodnight.
LETTER X
Bath, November 4, 1757
My dear friend:
The Sons of Britain, like those of Noah, must cover
their parent’s shame as well as they can; for
to retrieve its honor is now too late. One would
really think that our ministers and generals were all
as drunk as the Patriarch was. However, in your
situation, you must not be Cham; but spread your cloak
over our disgrace, as far as it will go. M t
calls aloud for a public trial; and in that, and that
only, the public agree with him. There will certainly
be one, but of what kind is not yet fixed. Some
are for a parliamentary inquiry, others for a martial
one; neither will, in my opinion, discover the true
secret; for a secret there most unquestionably is.
Why we stayed six whole days in the island of Aix,
mortal cannot imagine; which time the French employed,
as it was obvious they would, in assembling their
troops in the neighborhood of Rochfort, and making
our attempt then really impracticable. The day
after we had taken the island of Aix, your friend,
Colonel Wolf, publicly offered to do the business
with five hundred men and three ships only. In
all these complicated political machines there are
so many wheels, that it is always difficult, and sometimes
im possible, to guess which of them gives direction
to the whole. Mr. Pitt is convinced that the principal
wheels, or, if you will, the spoke in his wheel, came
from Stade. This is certain, at least that M t
was the man of confidence with that person. Whatever
be the truth of the case, there is, to be sure, hitherto
an ‘hiatus valde deflendus’.
The meeting of the parliament will
certainly be very numerous, were it only from curiosity:
but the majority on the side of the Court will, I
dare say, be a great one. The people of the late
Captain-general, however inclined to oppose, will
be obliged to concur. Their commissions, which
they have no desire to lose, will make them tractable;
for those gentlemen, though all men of honor, are
of Sosia’s mind, ’que lé vrai
Amphitrion est celui où l’on
dine’. The Tories and the city have engaged
to support Pitt; the Whigs, the Duke of Newcastle;
the independent and the impartial, as you well know,
are not worth mentioning. It is said that the
Duke intends to bring the affair of his Convention
into parliament, for his own justification; I can
hardly believe it; as I cannot conceive that transactions
so merely electoral can be proper objects of inquiry
or deliberation for a British parliament; and, therefore,
should such a motion be made, I presume it will be
immediately quashed. By the commission lately
given to Sir John Ligonier, of General and Commander-in-chief
of all his Majesty’s forces in Great Britain,
the door seems to be not only shut, but bolted, against
his Royal Highness’s return; and I have good
reason to be convinced that that breach is irreparable.
The reports of changes in the Ministry, I am pretty
sure, are idle and groundless. The Duke of Newcastle
and Mr. Pitt really agree very well; not, I presume,
from any sentimental tenderness for each other, but
from a sense that it is their mutual interest:
and, as the late Captain-general’s party is
now out of the question, I do not see what should
produce the least change.
The visit made lately to Berlin was,
I dare say, neither a friendly nor an inoffensive
one. The Austrians always leave behind them pretty
lasting monuments of their visits, or rather visitations:
not so much, I believe, from their thirst of glory,
as from their hunger of prey.
This winter, I take for granted, must
produce a piece of some kind or another; a bad one
for us, no doubt, and yet perhaps better than we should
get the year after. I suppose the King of Prussia
is negotiating with France, and endeavoring by those
means to get out of the scrape with the loss only
of Silesia, and perhaps Halberstadt, by way of indemnification
to Saxony; and, considering all circumstances, he would
be well off upon those terms. But then how is
Sweden to be satisfied? Will the Russians restore
Memel? Will France have been at all this expense
‘gratis’? Must there be no acquisition
for them in Flanders? I dare say they have stipulated
something of that sort for themselves, by the additional
and secret treaty, which I know they made, last May,
with the Queen of Hungary. Must we give up whatever
the French please to desire in America, besides the
cession of Minorca in perpetuity? I fear we must,
or else raise twelve millions more next year, to as
little purpose as we did this, and have consequently
a worse peace afterward. I turn my eyes away,
as much as I can, from this miserable prospect; but,
as a citizen and member of society, it recurs to my
imagination, notwithstanding all my endeavors to banish
it from my thoughts. I can do myself nor my country
no good; but I feel the wretched situation of both;
the state of the latter makes me better bear that of
the former; and, when I am called away from my station
here, I shall think it rather (as Cicero says of Crassus)
‘mors donata quam vita erepta’.
I have often desired, but in vain,
the favor of being admitted into your private apartment
at, Hamburg, and of being informed of your private
life there. Your mornings, I hope and believe,
are employed in business; but give me an account of
the remainder of the day, which I suppose is, and
ought to be, appropriated to amusements and pleasures.
In what houses are you domestic? Who are so in
yours? In short, let me in, and do not be denied
to me.
Here I am, as usual, seeing few people,
and hearing fewer; drinking the waters regularly to
a minute, and am something the better for them.
I read a great deal, and vary occasionally my dead
company. I converse with grave folios in the
morning, while my head is clearest and my attention
strongest: I take up less severe quartos after
dinner; and at night I choose the mixed company and
amusing chit-chat of octavos and duodecimos.
‘Ye tire parti de tout ce
gué je puis’; that is my philosophy;
and I mitigate, as much as I can, my physical ills
by diverting my attention to other objects.
Here is a report that Admiral Holborne’s
fleet is destroyed, in a manner, by a storm:
I hope it is not true, in the full extent of the report;
but I believe it has suffered. This would fill
up the measure of our misfortunes. Adieu.
LETTER XI
Bath, November 20, 1757
My dear friend:
I write to you now, because I love to write to you;
and hope that my letters are welcome to you; for otherwise
I have very little to inform you of. The King
of Prussia’s late victory you are better informed,
of than we are here. It has given infinite joy
to the unthinking public, who are not aware that it
comes too late in the year and too late in the war,
to be attended with any very great consequences.
There are six or seven thousand of the human species
less than there were a month ago, and that seems to
me to be all. However, I am glad of it, upon
account of the pleasure and the glory which it gives
the King of Prussia, to whom I wish well as a man,
more than as a king. And surely he is so great
a man, that had he lived seventeen or eighteen hundred
years ago, and his life been transmitted to us in
a language that we could not very well understand I
mean either Greek or Latin we should have
talked of him as we do now of your Alexanders, your
Caesars, and others; with whom, I believe, we have
but a very slight acquaintance. ‘Au
reste’, I do not see that his affairs are
much mended by this victory. The same combination
of the great Powers of Europe against him still subsists,
and must at last prevail. I believe the French
army will melt away, as is usual, in Germany; but
this army is extremely diminished by battles, fatigues,
and desertion: and he will find great difficulties
in recruiting it from his own already exhausted dominions.
He must therefore, and to be sure will, negotiate
privately with the French, and get better terms that
way than he could any other.
The report of the three general officers,
the Duke of Marlborough, Lord George Sackville, and
General Waldegrave, was laid before the King last
Saturday, after their having sat four days upon M t’s
affair: nobody yet knows what it is; but it is
generally believed that M t will
be brought to a court-martial. That you may not
mistake this matter, as most people here do,
I must explain to you, that this examination before
the three above-mentioned general officers, was by
no means a trial; but only a previous inquiry into
his conduct, to see whether there was, or was not,
cause to bring him to a regular trial before a court-martial.
The case is exactly parallel to that of a grand jury;
who, upon a previous and general examination, find,
or do not find, a bill to bring the matter before
the petty jury; where the fact is finally tried.
For my own part, my opinion is fixed upon that affair:
I am convinced that the expedition was to be defeated;
and nothing that can appear before a court-martial
can make me alter that opinion. I have been too
long acquainted with human nature to have great regard
for human testimony; and a very great degree of probability,
supported by various concurrent circumstances, conspiring
in one point, will have much greater weight with me,
than human testimony upon oath, or even upon honor;
both which I have frequently seen considerably warped
by private views.
The parliament, which now stands prorogued
to the first of next month, it is thought will be
put off for some time longer, till we know in what
light to lay before it the state of our alliance with
Prussia, since the conclusion of the Hanover neutrality;
which, if it did not quite break it, made at least
a great flaw in it.
The birth-day was neither fine nor
crowded; and no wonder, since the King was that day
seventy-five. The old Court and the young one
are much better together since the Duke’s retirement;
and the King has presented the Prince of Wales with
a service of plate.
I am still unwell, though I drink
these waters very regularly. I will stay here
at least six weeks longer; where I am much quieter
than I should be allowed to be in town. When
things are in such a miserable situation as they are
at present, I desire neither to be concerned nor consulted,
still less quoted. Adieu!
LETTER XII
Bath, November 26, 1757
My dear friend:
I received by the last mail your short account of the
King of Prussia’s victory; which victory, contrary
to custom, turns out more complete than it was at
first reported to be. This appears by an intercepted
letter from Monsieur de St. Germain to Monsieur d’Affry,
at The Hague, in which he tells him, ‘Cette
arme est entièrement fondue’,
and lays the blame, very strongly, upon Monsieur de
Soubize. But, be it greater or be it less, I
am glad of it; because the King of Prussia (whom I
honor and almost adore) I am sure is. Though ‘d’ailleurs’,
between you and me, ‘où est-ce
que cela mène’? To nothing,
while that formidable union of three great Powers
of Europe subsists against him, could that be any
way broken, something might be done; without which
nothing can. I take it for granted that the King
of Prussia will do all he can to detach France.
Why should not we, on our part, try to detach Russia?
At least, in our present distress, ‘omnia
tentanda’, and sometimes a lucky and unexpected
hit turns up. This thought came into my head this
morning; and I give it to you, not as a very probable
scheme, but as a possible one, and consequently worth
trying. The year of the Russian subsidies (nominally
paid by the Court of Vienna, but really by France)
is near expired. The former probably cannot,
and perhaps the latter will not, renew them.
The Court of Petersburg is beggarly, profuse, greedy,
and by no means scrupulous. Why should not we
step in there, and out-bid them? If we could,
we buy a great army at once; which would give an entire
new turn to the affairs of that part of the world
at least. And if we bid handsomely, I do not
believe the ‘bonne foi’ of that Court would
stand in the way. Both our Court and our parliament
would, I am very sure, give a very great sum, and
very cheerfully, for this purpose. In the next
place, Why should not you wriggle yourself, if possible,
into so great a scheme? You are, no doubt, much
acquainted with the Russian Resident, Soltikow; Why
should you not sound him, as entirely from yourself,
upon this subject? You may ask him, What, does
your Court intend to go on next year in the pay of
France, to destroy the liberties of all Europe, and
throw universal monarchy into the hands of that already
great and always ambitious Power? I know you
think, or at least call yourselves, the allies of
the Empress Queen; but is it not plain that she will
be, in the first place, and you in the next, the dupes
of France? At this very time you are doing the
work of France and Sweden: and that for some miserable
subsidies, much inferior to those which I am sure you
might have, in a better cause, and more consistent
with the true interest of Russia. Though not
empowered, I know the manner of thinking of my own
Court so well upon this subject, that I will venture
to promise you much better terms than those you have
now, without the least apprehensions of being disavowed.
Should he listen to this, and what more may occur to
you to say upon this subject, and ask you, ’En
écrirai je d ma cour? Answer
him, ‘Ecrivez, ecrivex, Monsieur hardiment’.
Je prendrai tout cela sur moi’.
Should this happen, as perhaps, and as I heartily wish
it may, then write an exact relation of it to your
own Court. Tell them that you thought the measure
of such great importance, that you could not help taking
this little step toward bringing it about; but that
you mentioned it only as from yourself, and that you
have not in the least committed them by it. If
Soltikow lends himself in any degree to this, insinuate
that, in the present situation of affairs, and particularly
of the King’s Electoral dominions, you are very
sure that his Majesty would have ’une reconnoissance
sans bornes’ for all those by whose
means so desirable a revival of an old and long friendship
should be brought about. You will perhaps tell
me that, without doubt, Mr. Keith’s instructions
are to the same effect: but I will answer you,
that you can, if you please, do it
better than Mr. Keith; and in the next place that,
be all that as it will, it must be very advantageous
to you at home, to show that you have at least a contriving
head, and an alertness in business.
I had a letter by the last post, from
the Duke of Newcastle, in which he congratulates me,
in his own name and in Lord Hardwicke’s, upon
the approbation which your dispatches give, not only
to them two, but to others. This success,
so early, should encourage your diligence and rouse
your ambition if you have any; you may go a great way,
if you desire it, having so much time before you.
I send you here inclosed the copy
of the Report of the three general officers, appointed
to examine previously into the conduct of General
M t; it is ill written, and ill
spelled, but no matter; you will decipher it.
You will observe, by the tenor of it, that it points
strongly to a court-martial; which, no doubt, will
soon be held upon him. I presume there will be
no shooting in the final sentence; but I do suppose
there will be breaking, etc.
I have had some severe returns of
my old complaints last week, and am still unwell;
I cannot help it.
A friend of yours arrived here three
days ago; she seems to me to be a serviceable strong-bodied
bay mare, with black mane and tail; you easily guess
who I mean. She is come with mamma, and without
‘caro sposo’.
Adieu! my head will not let me go on longer.
LETTER XIII
Bath, December 31, 1757
My dear friend:
I have this moment received your letter of the 18th,
with the inclosed papers. I cannot help observing
that, till then, you never acknowledged the receipt
of any one of my letters.
I can easily conceive that party spirit,
among your brother ministers at Hamburg, runs as high
as you represent it, because I can easily believe
the errors of the human mind; but at the same time
I must observe, that such a spirit is the spirit of
little minds and subaltern ministers, who think to
atone by zeal for their want of merit and importance.
The political differences of the several courts should
never influence the personal behavior of their several
ministers toward one another. There is a certain
‘procède noble et galant’,
which should always be observed among the ministers
of powers even at war with each other, which will
always turn out to the advantage of the ablest, who
will in those conversations find, or make, opportunities
of throwing out, or of receiving useful hints.
When I was last at The Hague, we were at war with
both France and Spain; so that I could neither visit,
nor be visited by, the Ministers of those two Crowns;
but we met every day, or dined at third places, where
we embraced as personal friends, and trifled, at the
same time, upon our being political enemies; and by
this sort of badinage I discovered some things which
I wanted to know. There is not a more prudent
maxim than to live with one’s enemies as if they
may one day become one’s friends; as it commonly
happens, sooner or later, in the vicissitudes of political
affairs.
To your question, which is a rational
and prudent one, Whether I was authorized to give
you the hints concerning Russia by any people in power
here, I will tell you that I was not: but, as
I had pressed them to try what might be done with
Russia, and got Mr. Keith to be dispatched there some
months sooner than otherwise, I dare say he would,
with the proper instructions for that purpose.
I wished that, by the hints I gave you, you might
have got the start of him, and the merit, at least,
of having ‘entame’ that matter with
Soltikow. What you have to do with him now, when
you meet with him at any third place, or at his own
house (where you are at liberty to go, while Russia
has a Minister in London, and we a Minister at Petersburg),
is, in my opinion, to say to him, in an easy cheerful
manner, ’He bien, Monsieur, je
me flatte que nous seróns bientôt
amis publics, aussi bien qu’amis
personels’. To which he will probably ask,
Why, or how? You will reply, Because you know
that Mr. Keith is gone to his Court with instructions,
which you think must necessarily be agreeable there.
And throw out to him that nothing but a change of their
present system can save Livonia to Russia; for that
he cannot suppose that, when the Swedes shall have
recovered Pomerania they will long leave Russia in
quiet possession of Livonia.
If he is so much a Frenchman as you
say, he will make you some weak answers to this; but,
as you will have the better of the argument on your
side, you may remind him of the old and almost uninterrupted
connection between France and Sweden, the inveterate
enemy of Russia. Many other arguments will naturally
occur to you in such a conversation, if you have it.
In this case, there is a piece of ministerial art,
which is sometimes of use; and that is, to sow jealousies
among one’s enemies, by a seeming preference
shown to some one of them. Monsieur Hecht’s
reveries are reveries indeed. How should his
Master have made the Golden arrangements
which he talks of, and which are to be forged into
shackles for General Fermor? The Prussian finances
are not in a condition now to make such expensive
arrangements. But I think you may tell Monsieur
Hecht, in confidence, that you hope the instructions
with which you know that Mr. Keith is gone to Petersburg,
may have some effect upon the measures of that Court.
I would advise you to live with that
same Monsieur Hecht in all the confidence, familiarity,
and connection, which prudence will allow. I
mean it with regard to the King of Prussia himself,
by whom I could wish you to be known and esteemed
as much as possible. It may be of use to you
some day or other. If man, courage, conduct, constancy,
can get the better of all the difficulties which the
King of Prussia has to struggle with, he will rise
superior to them. But still, while his alliance
subsists against him, I dread ‘les gros
escadrons’. His last victory, of the
5th, was certainly the completest that has been heard
of these many years. I heartily wish the Prince
of Brunswick just such a one over Monsieur de Richelieu’s
army; and that he may take my old acquaintance the
Marechal, and send him over here to polish and perfume
us.
I heartily wish you, in the plain,
home-spun style, a great number of happy new years,
well employed in forming both your mind and your manners,
to be useful and agreeable to yourself, your country,
and your friends! That these wishes are sincere,
your secretary’s brother will, by the time of
your receiving this, have remitted you a proof, from
Yours.
LETTER XIV
London, February 8, 1758.
My dear friend:
I received by the same post your two letters of the
13th and 17th past; and yesterday that of the 27th,
with the Russian manifesto inclosed, in which her
Imperial Majesty of all the Russias has been pleased
to give every reason, except the true one, for the
march of her troops against the King of Prussia.
The true one, I take it to be, that she has just received
a very great sum of money from France, or the Empress
queen, or both, for that purpose. ’Point
d’argent, point de Russe’, is now become
a maxim. Whatever may be the motive of their march,
the effects must be bad; and, according to my speculations,
those troops will replace the French in Hanover and
Lower Saxony; and the French will go and join the
Austrian army. You ask me if I still despond?
Not so much as I did after the battle of Colen:
the battles of Rosbach and Lissa were drams to me,
and gave me some momentary spirts: but though
I do not absolutely despair, I own I greatly distrust.
I readily allow the King of Prussia to be ‘nec
pluribus impar’; but still, when the ‘plures’
amount to a certain degree of plurality, courage and
abilities must yield at last. Michel here assures
me that he does not mind the Russians; but, as I have
it from the gentleman’s own mouth, I do not believe
him. We shall very soon send a squadron to the
Baltic to entertain the Swedes; which I believe will
put an end to their operations in Pomerania; so that
I have no great apprehensions from that quarter; but
Russia, I confess, sticks in my stomach.
Everything goes smoothly in parliament;
the King of Prussia has united all our parties in
his support; and the Tories have declared that they
will give Mr. Pitt unlimited credit for this session;
there has not been one single division yet upon public
points, and I believe will not. Our American
expedition is preparing to go soon; the dis position
of that affair seems to me a little extraordinary.
Abercrombie is to be the sedantary, and not the acting
commander; Amherst, Lord Howe, and Wolfe, are to be
the acting, and I hope the active officers. I
wish they may agree. Amherst, who is the oldest
officer, is under the influence of the same great
person who influenced Mordaunt, so much to honor and
advantage of this country. This is most certain,
that we have force enough in America to eat up the
French alive in Canada, Quebec, and Louisburg, if
we have but skill and spirit enough to exert it properly;
but of that I am modest enough to doubt.
When you come to the egotism, which
I have long desired you to come to with me, you need
make no excuses for it. The egotism is as proper
and as satisfactory to one’s friends, as it
is impertinent and misplaced with strangers.
I desire to see you in your every-day clothes, by your
fireside, in your pleasures; in short, in your private
life; but I have not yet been able to obtain this.
Whenever you condescend to do it, as you promise,
stick to truth; for I am not so uninformed of Hamburg
as perhaps you may think.
As for myself, I am very unwell,
and very weary of being so; and with little hopes,
at my age, of ever being otherwise. I often wish
for the end of the wretched remnant of my life; and
that wish is a rational one; but then the innate principle
of self-preservation, wisely implanted in our natures
for obvious purposes, opposes that wish, and makes
us endeavor to spin out our thread as long as we can,
however decayed and rotten it may be; and, in defiance
of common sense, we seek on for that chymic gold,
which beggars us when old.
Whatever your amusements, or pleasures,
may be at Hamburg, I dare say you taste them more
sensibly than ever you did in your life, now that you
have business enough to whet your appetite to them.
Business, one-half of the day, is the best preparation
for the pleasures of the other half. I hope,
and believe, that it will be with you as it was with
an apothecary whom I knew at Twickenham. A considerable
estate fell to him by an unexpected accident; upon
which he thought it decent to leave off his business;
accordingly he generously gave up his shop and his
stock to his head man, set up his coach, and resolved
to live like a gentleman; but, in less than a month,
the man, used to business, found, that living like
a gentleman was dying of ennui; upon which he bought
his shop and stock, resumed his trade, and lived very
happily, after he had something to do. Adieu.
LETTER XV
London, February 24, 1758
My dear friend:
I received yesterday your letter of the 2d instant,
with the inclosed; which I return you, that there
may be no chasm in your papers. I had heard before
of Burrish’s death, and had taken some steps
thereupon; but I very soon dropped that affair, for
ninety-nine good reasons; the first of which was,
that nonody is to go in his room, and that, had he
lived, he was to have been recalled from Munich.
But another reason, more flattering for you, was,
that you could not be spared from Hamburg. Upon
the whole, I am not sorry for it, as the place where
you are now is the great entrepôt of business;
and, when it ceases to be so, you will necessarily
go to some of the courts in the neighborhood (Berlin,
I hope and believe), which will be a much more desirable
situation than to rush at Munich, where we can never
have any business beyond a subsidy. Do but go
on, and exert yourself were you are, and better things
will soon follow.
Surely the inaction of our army at
Hanover continues too long. We expected wonders
from it some time ago, and yet nothing is attempted.
The French will soon receive reinforcements, and then
be too strong for us; whereas they are now most certainly
greatly weakened by desertion, sickness, and deaths.
Does the King of Prussia send a body of men to our
army or not? or has the march of the Russians cut him
out work for all his troops? I am afraid it has.
If one body of Russians joins the Austrian army in
Moravia, and another body the Swedes in Pomerania,
he will have his hands very full, too full, I fear.
The French say they will have an army of 180,000 men
in Germany this year; the Empress Queen will have
150,000; if the Russians have but 40,000, what can
resist such a force? The King of Prussia may
say, indeed, with more justice than ever any one person
could before him, ‘Moi. Medea superest’.
You promised the some egotism; but
I have received none yet. Do you frequent the
Landgrave? ‘Hantex vous les grands
de la terre’? What are the
connections of the evening? All this, and a great
deal more of this kind, let me know in your next.
The House of Commons is still very
unanimous. There was a little popular squib let
off this week, in a motion of Sir John Glynne’s,
seconded by Sir John Philips, for annual parliaments.
It was a very cold scent, and put an end to by a division
of 190 to 70.
Good-night. Work hard, that you may divert yourself
well.
LETTER XVI
London, March 4, 1758.
My dear friend:
I should have been much more surprised at the contents
of your letter of the 17th past, if I had not happened
to have seen Sir C. W., about three or four hours
before I received it. I thought he talked in
an extraordinary manner; he engaged that the King of
Prussia should be master of Vienna in the month of
May; and he told me that you were very much in love
with his daughter. Your letter explained all this
to me; and next day, Lord and Lady E-----gave me innumerable
instances of his frenzy, with which I shall not trouble
you. What inflamed it the more (if it did not
entirely occasion it) was a great quantity of cantharides,
which, it seems, he had taken at Hamburgh, to recommend
himself, I suppose, to Mademoiselle John. He
was let blood four times on board the ship, and has
been let blood four times since his arrival here; but
still the inflammation continues very high. He
is now under the care of his brothers, who do not
let him go abroad. They have written to this same
Mademoiselle John, to prevent if they can, her coming
to England, and told her the case; which, when she
hears she must be as mad as he is, if she takes the
journey. By the way, she must be ‘une
dame aventurière’, to receive a note
for 10,000 roubles from a man whom she had known but
three days! to take a contract of marriage, knowing
he was married already; and to engage herself to follow
him to England. I suppose this is not the first
adventure of the sort which she has had.
After the news we received yesterday,
that the French had evacuated Hanover, all but Hamel,
we daily expect much better. We pursue them, we
cut them off ‘en detail’, and at last we
destroy their whole army. I wish it may happen;
and, moreover, I think it not impossible.
My head is much out of order, and
only allows me to wish you good-night.
LETTER XVII
London, March 22, 1758
My dear friend:
I have now your letter of the 8th lying before me,
with the favorable account of our progress in Lower
Saxony, and reasonable prospect of more decisive success.
I confess I did not expect this, when my friend Munchausen
took his leave of me, to go to Stade, and break the
neutrality; I thought it at least a dangerous, but
rather a desperate undertaking; whereas, hitherto,
it has proved a very fortunate one. I look upon
the French army as ‘fondue’; and, what
with desertion, deaths, and epidemical distempers,
I dare say not a third of it will ever return to France.
The great object is now, what the Russians can or will
do; and whether the King of Prussia can hinder their
junction with the Austrians, by beating either, before
they join. I will trust him for doing all that
can be done.
Sir C. W. is still in confinement,
and, I fear, will always be so, for he seems ‘cum
ratione insanire’; the physicians have collected
all he has said and done that indicated an alienation
of mind, and have laid it before him in writing; he
has answered it in writing too, and justifies himself
in the most plausible arguments than can possibly be
urged. He tells his brother, and the few who
are allowed to see him, that they are such narrow
and contracted minds themselves, that they take those
for mad who have a great and generous way of thinking;
as, for instance, when he determined to send his daughter
over to you in a fortnight, to be married, without
any previous agreement or settlements, it was because
he had long known you, and loved you as a man of sense
and honor; and therefore would not treat with you
as with an attorney. That as for Mademoiselle
John, he knew her merit and her circumstances; and
asks, whether it is a sign of madness to have a due
regard for the one, and a just compassion for the
other. I will not tire you with enumerating any
more instances of the poor man’s frenzy; but
conclude this subject with pitying him, and poor human
nature, which holds its reason by so precarious a
tenure. The lady, who you tell me is set out,
’en sera pour la seine et les fraix du voyage’,
for her note is worth no more than her contract.
By the way, she must be a kind of ‘aventurière’,
to engage so easily in such an adventure with a man
whom she had not known above a week, and whose ‘debut’
of 10,000 roubles showed him not to be in his right
senses.
You will probably have seen General
Yorke, by this time, in his way to Berlin or Breslau,
or wherever the King of Prussia may be. As he
keeps his commission to the States General, I presume
he is not to stay long with his Prussian Majesty;
but, however, while he is there, take care to write
to him very constantly, and to give all the information
you can. His father, Lord Hardwicke, is your
great puff: he commends your office letters,
exceedingly. I would have the Berlin commission
your object, in good time; never lose view of it.
Do all you can to recommend yourself to the King of
Prussia on your side of the water, and to smooth your
way for that commission on this; by the turn which
things have taken of late, it must always be the most
important of all foreign commissions from hence.
I have no news to send you, as things
here are extremely quiet; so, good-night.
LETTER XVIII
London, April 25, 1758.
Dear friend: I am now
two letters in your debt, which I think is the first
time that ever I was so, in the long course of our
correspondence. But, besides that my head has
been very much out of order of late, writing is by
no means that easy thing that it was to me formerly.
I find by experience, that the mind and the body are
more than married, for they are most intimately united;
and when the one suffers, the other sympathizes.
‘Non sum qualis eram’: neither
my memory nor my invention are now what they formerly
were. It is in a great measure my own fault; I
cannot accuse Nature, for I abused her; and it is reasonable
I should suffer for it.
I do not like the return of the impression
upon your lungs; but the rigor of the cold may probably
have brought it upon you, and your lungs not in fault.
Take care to live very cool, and let your diet be rather
low.
We have had a second winter here,
more severe than the first, at least it seemed so,
from a premature summer that we had, for a fortnight,
in March; which brought everything forward, only to
be destroyed. I have experienced it at Blackheath,
where the promise of fruit was a most flattering one,
and all nipped in the bud by frost and snow, in April.
I shall not have a single peach or apricot.
I have nothing to tell you from hence
concerning public affairs, but what you read in the
newspapers. This only is extraordinary: that
last week, in the House of Commons, above ten millions
were granted, and the whole Hanover army taken into
British pay, with but one single negative, which was
Mr. Viner’s.
Mr. Pitt gains ground in the closet,
and yet does not lose it in the public. That
is new.
Monsieur Kniphausen has dined with
me; he is one of the prettiest fellows I have seen;
he has, with a great deal of life and fire, ’les
manieres d’un honnête homme,
et lé ton de la Parfaitement
bonne compagnie’. You like him
yourself; try to be like him: it is in your power.
I hear that Mr. Mitchel is to be recalled,
notwithstanding the King of Prussia’s instances
to keep him. But why, is a secret that I cannot
penetrate.
You will not fail to offer the Landgrave,
and the Princess of Hesse (who I find are going home),
to be their agent and commissioner at Hamburg.
I cannot comprehend the present state
of Russia, nor the motions of their armies. They
change their generals once a week; sometimes they march
with rapidity, and now they lie quiet behind the Vistula.
We have a thousand stories here of the interior of
that government, none of which I believe. Some
say, that the Great Duke will be set aside.
Woronzoff is said to be entirely a
Frenchman, and that Monsieur de l’Hopital governs
both him and the court. Sir C. W. is said, by
his indiscretions, to have caused the disgrace of
Bestuchef, which seems not impossible. In short,
everything of every kind is said, because, I believe,
very little is truly known. ‘A propos’
of Sir C. W.; he is out of confinement, and gone to
his house in the country for the whole summer.
They say he is now very cool and well. I have
seen his Circe, at her window in Pall-Mall; she is
painted, powdered, curled, and patched, and looks
‘l’aventure’. She has been offered,
by Sir C. W ’s friends, L500
in full of all demands, but will not accept of it.
’La comtesse veut plaider’,
and I fancy ’faire autre chose
si elle peut. Jubeo to bene
valere.
LETTER XIX
Blackheath, May 18, O. .
My dear friend:
I have your letter of the 9th now before me, and condole
with you upon the present solitude and inaction of
Hamburg. You are now shrunk from the dignity
and importance of a consummate minister, to be but,
as it were, a common man. But this has, at one
time or another, been the case of most great men;
who have not always had equal opportunities of exerting
their talents. The greatest must submit to the
capriciousness of fortune; though they can, better
than others, improve the favorable moments. For
instance, who could have thought, two years ago, that
you would have been the Atlas of the Northern Pole;
but the Good Genius of the North ordered it so; and
now that you have set that part of the globe right,
you return to ‘otium cum dignitate’.
But to be serious: now that you cannot have much
office business to do, I could tell you what to do,
that would employ you, I should think, both usefully
and agreeably. I mean, that you should write
short memoirs of that busy scene, in which you have
been enough concerned, since your arrival at Hamburg,
to be able to put together authentic facts and anecdotes.
I do not know whether you will give yourself the trouble
to do it or not; but I do know, that if you will,
‘olim hcec meminisse juvabit’.
I would have them short, but correct as to facts and
dates.
I have told Alt, in the strongest
manner, your lamentations for the loss of the House
of Cassel, ‘et il en féra
rapport a son Sérénissime Maitre’.
When you are quite idle (as probably you may be, some
time this summer), why should you not ask leave to
make a tour to Cassel for a week? which would certainly
be granted you from hence, and which would be looked
upon as a ‘bon procède’ at Cassel.
The King of Prussia is probably, by
this time, at the gates of Vienna, making the Queen
of Hungary really do what Monsieur de Bellisle only
threatened; sign a peace upon the ramparts of her capital.
If she is obstinate, and will not, she must fly either
to Presburg or to Inspruck, and Vienna must fall.
But I think he will offer her reasonable conditions
enough for herself; and I suppose, that, in that case,
Caunitz will be reasonable enough to advise her to
accept of them. What turn would the war take
then? Would the French and Russians carry it on
without her? The King of Prussia, and the Prince
of Brunswick, would soon sweep them out of Germany.
By this time, too, I believe, the French are entertained
in America with the loss of Cape Breton; and, in consequence
of that, Quebec; for we have a force there equal to
both those undertakings, and officers there, now,
that will execute what Lord L------never would so
much as attempt. His appointments were too considerable
to let him do anything that might possibly put an
end to the war. Lord Howe, upon seeing plainly
that he was resolved to do nothing, had asked leave
to return, as well as Lord Charles Hay.
We have a great expedition preparing,
and which will soon be ready to sail from the Isle
of Wight; fifteen thousand good troops, eighty battering
cannons, besides mortars, and every other thing in
abundance, fit for either battle or siege. Lord
Anson desired, and is appointed, to command the fleet
employed upon this expedition; a proof that it is not
a trifling one. Conjectures concerning its destination
are infinite; and the most ignorant are, as usual,
the boldest conjecturers. If I form any conjectures,
I keep them to myself, not to be disproved by the event;
but, in truth, I form none: I might have known,
but would not.
Everything seems to tend to a peace
next winter: our success in America, which is
hardly doubtful, and the King of Prussia’s in
Germany, which is as little so, will make France (already
sick of the expense of the war) very tractable for
a peace. I heartily wish it: for though people’s
heads are half turned with the King of Prussia’s
success, and will be quite turned, if we have any
in America, or at sea, a moderate peace will suit
us better than this immoderate war of twelve millions
a year.
Domestic affairs go just as they did;
the Duke of Newcastle and Mr. Pitt jog on like man
and wife; that is, seldom agreeing, often quarreling;
but by mutual interest, upon the whole, not parting.
The latter, I am told, gains ground in the closet;
though he still keeps his strength in the House, and
his popularity in the public; or, perhaps, because
of that.
Do you hold your resolution of visiting
your dominions of Bremen and Lubeck this summer?
If you do, pray take the trouble of informing yourself
correctly of the several constitutions and customs
of those places, and of the present state of the federal
union of the Hanseatic towns: it will do you
no harm, nor cost you much trouble; and it is so much
clear gain on the side of useful knowledge.
I am now settled at Blackheath for
the summer; where unseasonable frost and snow, and
hot and parching east winds, have destroyed all my
fruit, and almost my fruit-trees. I vegetate
myself little better than they do; I crawl about on
foot and on horseback; read a great deal, and write
a little; and am very much yours.
LETTER XX
Blackheath, May 30, 1758.
My dear friend:
I have no letter from you to answer, so this goes to
you unprovoked. But ‘a propos’ of
letters; you have had great honor done you, in a letter
from a fair and royal hand, no less than that of her
Royal Highness the Princess of Cassel; she has written
your panegyric to her sister, Princess Amelia, who
sent me a compliment upon it. This has likewise
done you no harm with the King, who said gracious things
upon that occasion. I suppose you had for her
Royal Highness those attentions which I wish to God
you would have, in due proportions, for everybody.
You see, by this instance, the effects of them; they
are always repaid with interest. I am more confirmed
by this in thinking, that, if you can conveniently,
you should ask leave to go for a week to Cassel, to
return your thanks for all favors received.
I cannot expound to myself the conduct
of the Russians. There must be a trick in their
not marching with more expedition. They have either
had a sop from the King of Prussia, or they want an
animating dram from France and Austria. The King
of Prussia’s conduct always explains itself by
the events; and, within a very few days, we must certainly
hear of some very great stroke from that quarter.
I think I never in my life remember a period of time
so big with great events as the present: within
two months the fate of the House of Austria will probably
be decided: within the same space of time, we
shall certainly hear of the taking of Cape Breton,
and of our army’s proceeding to Quebec within
a few days we shall know the good or ill success of
our great expedition; for it is sailed; and it cannot
be long before we shall hear something of the Prince
of Brunswick’s operations, from whom I also
expect good things. If all these things turn
out, as there is good reason to believe they will,
we may once, in our turn, dictate a reasonable peace
to France, who now pays seventy per cent insurance
upon its trade, and seven per cent for all the money
raised for the service of the year.
Comte Bothmar has got the small-pox,
and of a bad kind. Kniphausen diverts himself
much here; he sees all places and all people, and is
ubiquity itself. Mitchel, who was much threatened,
stays at last at Berlin, at the earnest request of
the King of Prussia. Lady is safely delivered
of a son, to the great joy of that noble family.
The expression, of a woman’s having brought
her husband a son, seems to be a proper and cautious
one; for it is never said from whence.
I was going to ask you how you passed
your time now at Hamburg, since it is no longer the
seat of strangers and of business; but I will not,
because I know it is to no purpose. You have sworn
not to tell me.
Sir William Stanhope told me that
you promised to send him some Old Hock from Hamburg,
and so you did not. If you meet with any superlatively
good, and not else, pray send over a ‘foudre’
of it, and write to him. I shall have a share
in it. But unless you find some, either at Hamburg
or at Bremen, uncommonly and almost miracuously good,
do not send any. Dixi. Yours.
LETTER XXI
Blackheath, June 13, 1758.
My dear friend:
The secret is out: St. Malo is the devoted place.
Our troops began to land at the Bay of Cancale
the 5th, without any opposition. We have no further
accounts yet, but expect some every moment. By
the plan of it, which I have seen, it is by no means
a weak place; and I fear there will be many hats to
be disposed of, before it is taken. There are
in the port above thirty privateers; about sixteen
of their own, and about as many taken from u
Now for Africa, where we have had
great success. The French have been driven out
of all their forts and settlements upon the Gum coast,
and upon the river Senegal. They had been many
years in possession of them, and by them annoyed our
African trade exceedingly; which, by the way, ‘toute
proportion gardee’, is the most lucrative
trade we have. The present booty is likewise
very considerable, in gold dust, and gum Seneca; which
is very valuable, by being a very necessary commodity,
for all our stained and printed linens.
Now for America. The least sanguine
people here expect, the latter end of this month or
the beginning of the next, to have the account of the
taking of Cape Breton, and of all the forts with hard
names in North America.
Captain Clive has long since settled
Asia to our satisfaction; so that three parts of the
world look very favorable for us. Europe, I submit
to the care of the King of Prussia and Prince Ferdinand
of Brunswick; and I think they will give a good account
of it. France is out of luck, and out of courage;
and will, I hope, be enough out of spirits to submit
to a reasonable peace. By reasonable, I mean
what all people call reasonable in their own case;
an advantageous one for us.
I have set all right with Munchausen;
who would not own that he was at all offended, and
said, as you do, that his daughter did not stay long
enough, nor appear enough at Hamburg, for you possibly
to know that she was there. But people are always
ashamed to own the little weaknesses of self-love,
which, however, all people feel more or less.
The excuse, I saw, pleased.
I will send you your quadrille tables
by the first opportunity, consigned to the care of
Mr. Mathias here. ’Felices faustaeque sint!
May you win upon them, when you play with men; and
when you play with women, either win or know why you
lose.
Miss------marries Mr.-------next week. Who Proffers love, Proffers death,
says Weller to a dwarf: in my opinion, the conclusion must instantly
choak the little lady. Admiral marries Lady; there the danger, if danger
is, will be on the other side. The lady has wanted a man so long, that
she now compounds for half a one. Half a loaf
I have been worse since my last letter;
but am now, I think, recovering; ’tant
va la cruche a l’eau’; and
I have been there very often.
Good-night. I am faithfully and truly yours.
LETTER XXII
Blackheath, June 27, 1758.
My dear friend:
You either have received already, or will very soon
receive, a little case from Amsterdam, directed to
you at Hamburg. It is for Princess Ameba, the
King of Prussia’s sister, and contains some books
which she desired Sir Charles Hotham to procure her
from England, so long ago as when he was at Berlin:
he sent for them immediately; but, by I do not know
what puzzle, they were recommended to the care of Mr.
Selwyn, at Paris, who took such care of them, that
he kept them near three years in his warehouse, and
has at last sent them to Amsterdam, from whence they
are sent to you. If the books are good for anything,
they must be considerably improved, by having seen
so much of the world; but, as I believe they are English
books, perhaps they may, like English travelers, have
seen nobody, but the several bankers to whom they were
consigned: be that as it will, I think you had
best deliver them to Monsieur Hecht, the Prussian
Minister at Hamburg, to forward to her Royal Highness,
with a respectful compliment from you, which you will,
no doubt, turn in the best manner, and ‘selon
lé bon ton de la parfaitement bonne
compagnie’.
You have already seen, in the papers,
all the particulars of our St. Malo’s expedition,
so I say no more of that; only that Mr. Pitt’s
friends exult in the destruction of three French ships
of war, and one hundred and thirty privateers and
trading ships; and affirm that it stopped the march
of threescore thousand men, who were going to join
the Comte de Clermont’s army. On the other
hand, Mr. Fox and company call it breaking windows
with guineas; and apply the fable of the Mountain and
the Mouse. The next object of our fleet was to
be the bombarding of Granville, which is the great
‘entrepôt’ of their Newfoundland fishery,
and will be a considerable loss to them in that branch
of their trade. These, you will perhaps say,
are no great matters, and I say so too; but, at least,
they are signs of life, which we had not given them
for many years before; and will show the French, by
our invading them, that we do not fear their invading
us. Were those invasions, in fishing-boats from
Dunkirk, so terrible as they were artfully represented
to be, the French would have had an opportunity of
executing them, while our fleet, and such a considerable
part of our army, were employed upon their coast.
But my Lord Ligonier does
not want an army at home.
The parliament is prorogued by a most
gracious speech neither by nor from his Majesty, who
was too ill to go to the House; the Lords
and Gentlemen are, consequently, most of them, gone
to their several counties, to do (to be sure) all
the good that is recommended to them in the speech.
London, I am told, is now very empty, for I cannot
say so from knowledge. I vegetate wholly here.
I walk and read a great deal, ride and scribble a
little, according as my lead allows, or my spirits
prompt; to write anything tolerable, the mind must
be in a natural, proper disposition; provocatives,
in that case, as well as in another, will only produce
miserable, abortive performances.
Now that you have (as I suppose) full
leisure enough, I wish you would give yourself the
trouble, or rather pleasure, to do what I hinted to
you some time ago; that is, to write short memoirs
of those affairs which have either gone through your
hands, or that have come to your certain knowledge,
from the inglorious battle of Hastenbeck, to the still
more scandalous Treaty of Neutrality. Connect,
at least, if it be by ever so short notes, the pieces
and letters which you must necessarily have in your
hands, and throw in the authentic anecdotes that you
have probably heard. You will be glad when you
have done it: and the reviving past ideas, in
some order and method, will be an infinite comfort
to you hereafter. I have a thousand times regretted
not having done so; it is at present too late for
me to begin; this is the right time for you, and your
life is likely to be a busy one. Would young men
avail themselves of the advice and experience of their
old friends, they would find the utility in their
youth, and the comfort of it in their more advanced
age; but they seldom consider that, and you, less
than anybody I ever knew. May you soon grow wiser!
Adieu.
LETTER XXIII
Blackheath, June 30, 1758.
My dear friend:
This letter follows my last very close; but I received
yours of the 15th in the short interval. You did
very well not to buy any Rhenish, at the exorbitant
price you mention, without further directions; for
both my brother and I think the money better than the
wine, be the wine ever so good. We will content
our selves with our stock in hand of humble Rhenish,
of about three shillings a-bottle. However, ’pour
la rarity du fait, I will lay out twelve ducats’,
for twelve bottles of the wine of 1665, by way of
an eventual cordial, if you can obtain a ’senatus
consultum’ for it. I am in no hurry
for it, so send it me only when you can conveniently;
well packed up ‘s’entend’.
You will, I dare say, have leave to
go to Cassel; and if you do go, you will perhaps think
it reasonable, that I, who was the adviser of the
journey, should pay the expense of it. I think
so too; and therefore, if you go, I will remit the
L100 which you have calculated it at. You will
find the House of Cassel the house of gladness; for
Hanau is already, or must be soon, delivered of its
French guests.
The Prince of Brunswick’s victory
is, by all the skillful, thought a ‘chef d’oeuvre’,
worthy of Turenne, Conde, or the most illustrious human
butchers. The French behaved better than at Rosbach,
especially the Carabiniers Royaux, who could
not be ‘entames’. I wish the siege
of Olmutz well over, and a victory after it; and that,
with good news from America, which I think there is
no reason to doubt of, must procure us a good peace
at the end of the year. The Prince of Prussia’s
death is no public misfortune: there was a jealousy
and alienation between the King and him, which could
never have been made up between the possessor of the
crown and the next heir to it. He will make something
of his nephew, ‘s’il est du
bois don’t on en fait’. He is
young enough to forgive, and to be forgiven, the possession
and the expectative, at least for some years.
Adieu! I am unwell, but affectionately yours.
LETTER XXIV
Blackheath, July 18, 1758.
My dear friend:
Yesterday I received your letter of the 4th; and my
last will have informed you that I had received your
former, concerning the Rhenish, about which I gave
you instructions. If ’vinum Mosellanum
est omni tempore sanum’, as the Chapter
of Treves asserts, what must this ‘vinum
Rhenanum’ be, from its superior strength and
age? It must be the universal panacea.
Captain Howe is to sail forthwith
somewhere or another, with about 8,000 land forces
on board him; and what is much more, Edward the White
Prince. It is yet a secret where they are going;
but I think it is no secret, that what 16,000 men
and a great fleet could not do, will not be done by
8,000 men and a much smaller fleet. About 8,500
horse, foot, and dragoons, are embarking, as fast
as they can, for Embden, to reinforce Prince Ferdinand’s
army; late and few, to be sure, but still better than
never, and none. The operations in Moravia go
on slowly, and Olmutz seems to be a tough piece of
work; I own I begin to be in pain for the King of
Prussia; for the Russians now march in earnest, and
Marechal Dann’s army is certainly superior in
number to his. God send him a good delivery!
You have a Danish army now in your
neighborhood, and they say a very fine one; I presume
you will go to see it, and, if you do, I would advise
you to go when the Danish Monarch comes to review
it himself; ’pour prendre langue
de ce Seigneur’. The rulers
of the earth are all worth knowing; they suggest moral
reflections: and the respect that one naturally
has for God’s vicegerents here on earth, is
greatly increased by acquaintance with them.
Your card-tables are gone, and they
inclose some suits of clothes, and some of these clothes
inclose a letter.
Your friend Lady------is gone into the country with her Lord, to
negotiate, coolly and at leisure, their intended separation. My Lady
insists upon my Lord’s dismissing the------, as ruinous to his fortune;
my Lord insists, in his turn, upon my Lady’s dismissing Lord----------;
my Lady replies, that that is unreasonable, since Lord creates no expense
to the family, but rather the contrary. My Lord confesses that there is
some weight in this argument: but then pleads sentiment: my Lady says, a
fiddlestick for sentiment, after having been married so long. How this
matter will end, is in the womb of time, ‘nam fuit ante Helenam’.
You did very well to write a congratulatory
letter to Prince Ferdinand; such attentions are always
right, and always repaid in some way or other.
I am glad you have connected your
negotiations and anecdotes; and, I hope, not with
your usual laconism. Adieu! Yours.
LETTER XXV
Blackheath, August 1, 1758
My dear friend:
I think the Court of Cassel is more likely to make
you a second visit at Hamburg, than you are to return
theirs at Cassel; and therefore, till that matter
is clearer, I shall not mention it to Lord Holderness.
By the King of Prussia’s disappointment
in Moravia, by the approach of the Russians, and the
intended march of Monsieur de Soubize to Hanover,
the waters seem to me to be as much troubled as ever.
’Je vois très noir actuellement’;
I see swarms of Austrians, French, Imperialists, Swedes,
and Russians, in all near four hundred thousand men,
surrounding the King of Prussia and Prince Ferdinand,
who have about a third of that number. Hitherto
they have only buzzed, but now I fear they will sting.
The immediate danger of this country
is being drowned; for it has not ceased raining these
three months, and withal is extremely cold. This
neither agrees with me in itself, nor in its consequences;
for it hinders me from taking my necessary exercise,
and makes me very unwell. As my head is always
the part offending, and is so at present, I will not
do, like many writers, write without a head; so adieu.
LETTER XXVI
Blackheath, August 29, 1758.
My dear friend:
Your secretary’s last letter brought me the good
news that the fever had left you, and I will believe
that it has: but a postscript to it, of only
two lines, under your own hand, would have convinced
me more effectually of your recovery. An intermitting
fever, in the intervals of the paroxysms, would surely
have allowed you to have written a few lines with
your own hand, to tell me how you were; and till I
receive a letter (as short as you please) from you
yourself, I shall doubt of the exact truth of any
other accounts.
I send you no news, because I have
none; Cape Breton, Cherbourg, etc., are now old
stories; we expect a new one soon from Commodore Howe,
but from whence we know not. From Germany we
hope for good news: I confess I do not, I only
wish it. The King of Prussia is marched to fight
the Russians, and I believe will beat them, if they
stand; but what then? What shall he do next,
with the three hundred and fourscore thousand men
now actually at work upon him? He will do all
that man can do, but at last ‘il faut
succomber’.
Remember to think yourself less well
than you are, in order to be quite so; be very regular,
rather longer than you need; and then there will be
no danger of a relapse. God bless you.
LETTER XXVII
Blackheath, September 5, 1758
My dear friend:
I received, with great pleasure, your letter of the
22d August; for, by not having a line from you in
your secretary’s two letters, I suspect that
you were worse than he cared to tell me; and so far
I was in the right, that your fever was more malignant
than intermitting ones generally are, which seldom
confines people to their bed, or at most, only the
days of the paroxysms. Now that, thank God, you
are well again, though weak, do not be in too much
haste to be better and stronger: leave that to
nature, which, at your age, will restore both your
health and strength as soon as she should. Live
cool for a time, and rather low, instead of taking
what they call heartening things: Your manner
of making presents is noble, ’et sent la grandeur
d’ame d’un preux Chevalier’.
You depreciate their value to prevent any returns;
for it is impossible that a wine which has counted
so many Syndicks, that can only be delivered by a
‘senatus consultum’, and is the
panacea Of the North, should be sold for a ducat
a bottle. The ‘sylphium’ of the Romans,
which was stored up in the public magazines, and only
distributed by order of the magistrate, I dare say,
cost more; so that I am convinced, your present is
much more valuable than you would make it.
Here I am interrupted, by receiving
your letter of the 25th past. I am glad that
you are able to undertake your journey to Bremen:
the motion, the air, the new scene, the everything,
will do you good, provided you manage yourself discreetly.
Your bill for fifty pounds shall certainly
be accepted and paid; but, as in conscience I think
fifty pounds is too little, for seeing a live Landgrave,
and especially at Bremen, which this whole nation knows
to be a very dear place, I shall, with your leave,
add fifty more to it. By the way, when you see
the Princess Royal of Cassel, be sure to tell her how
sensible you are of the favorable and too partial testimony,
which you know she wrote of you to Princess Amelia.
The King of Prussia has had the victory,
which you in some measure foretold; and as he has
taken ‘la caisse militaire’,
I presume ’Messieurs les Russes
sont hors de combat pour cette
campagne’; for ’point d’argent,
point de Suisse’, is not truer of the laudable
Helvetic body, than ’point d’argent, point
de Russe’, is of the savages of the Two Russias,
not even excepting the Autocratrice of them both.
Serbelloni, I believe, stands next in his Prussian
Majesty’s list to be beaten; that is, if he will
stand; as the Prince de Soubize does in Prince Ferdinand’s,
upon the same condition. If both these things
happen, which is by no means improbable, we may hope
for a tolerable peace this winter; for, ‘au
bout du compte’, the King of
Prussia cannot hold out another year; and therefore
he should make the best of these favorable events,
by way negotiation.
I think I have written a great deal,
with an actual giddiness of head upon me. So
adieu.
I am glad you have received my letter of the Ides
of July.
LETTER XXVIII
Blackheath, September 8, 1758.
My dear friend:
This letter shall be short, being only an explanatory
note upon my last; for I am not learned enough, nor
yet dull enough, to make my comment much longer than
my text. I told you then, in my former letter,
that, with your leave (which I will suppose granted),
I would add fifty pounds to your draught for that
sum; now, lest you should misunderstand this, and
wait for the remittance of that additional fifty from
hence, know then my meaning was, that you should likewise
draw upon me for it when you please; which I presume,
will be more convenient to you.
Let the pedants, whose business it
is to believe lies, or the poets, whose trade it is
to invent them, match the King of Prussia With a hero
in ancient or modern story, if they can. He disgraces
history, and makes one give some credit to romances.
Calprenede’s Juba does not now seem so absurd
as formerly.
I have been extremely ill this whole
summer; but am now something better. However,
I perceive, ‘que l’esprit et
lé corps baissent’; the former is
the last thing that anybody will tell me; or own when
I tell it them; but I know it is true. Adieu.
LETTER XXIX
Blackheath, September 22, 1758
My dear friend:
I have received no letter from you since you left
Hamburg; I presume that you are perfectly recovered,
but it might not have been improper to have told me
so. I am very far from being recovered; on the
contrary, I am worse and worse, weaker and weaker every
day; for which reason I shall leave this place next
Monday, and set out for Bath a few days afterward.
I should not take all this trouble merely to prolong
the fag end of a life, from which I can expect no pleasure,
and others no utility; but the cure, or at least the
mitigation, of those physical ills which make that
life a load while it does last, is worth any trouble
and attention.
We are come off but scurvily from
our second attempt upon St. Malo; it is our last for
this season; and, in my mind, should be our last forever,
unless we were to send so great a sea and land force
as to give us a moral certainty of taking some place
of great importance, such as Brest, Rochefort, or
Toulon.
Monsieur Munchausen embarked yesterday,
as he said, for Prince Ferdinand’s army; but
as it is not generally thought that his military skill
can be of any great use to that prince, people conjecture
that his business must be of a very different nature,
and suspect separate negotiations, neutralities, and
what not. Kniphausen does not relish it in the
least, and is by no means satisfied with the reasons
that have been given him for it. Before he can
arrive there, I reckon that something decisive will
have passed in Saxony; if to the disadvantage of the
King of Prussia, he is crushed; but if, on the contrary,
he should get a complete victory (and he does not
get half victories) over the Austrians, the winter
may probably produce him and us a reasonable peace.
I look upon Russia as ‘hors de combat’
for some time; France is certainly sick of the war;
under an unambitious King, and an incapable Ministry,
if there is one at all: and, unassisted by those
two powers, the Empress Queen had better be quiet.
Were any other man in the situation of the King of
Prussia, I should not hesitate to pronounce him ruined;
but he is such a prodigy of a man, that I will only
say, I fear he will be ruined. It is by this
time decided.
Your Cassel court at Bremen is, I
doubt, not very splendid; money must be wanting:
but, however, I dare say their table is always good,
for the Landgrave is a gourmand; and as you are domestic
there, you may be so too, and recruit your loss of
flesh from your fever: but do not recruit too
fast. Adieu.
LETTER XXX
London, September 26, 1758
My dear friend:
I am sorry to find that you had a return of your fever;
but to say the truth, you in some measure deserved
it, for not carrying Dr. Middleton’s bark and
prescription with you. I foresaw that you would
think yourself cured too soon, and gave you warning
of it; but bygones are bygones, as Chartres,
when he was dying, said of his sins; let us look forward.
You did very prudently to return to Hamburg, to good
bark, and, I hope, a good physician. Make all
sure there before you stir from thence, notwithstanding
the requests or commands of all the princesses in
Europe: I mean a month at least, taking the bark
even to supererogation, that is, some time longer
than Dr. Middleton requires; for, I presume, you are
got over your childishness about tastes, and are sensible
that your health deserves more attention than your
palate. When you shall be thus re-established,
I approve of your returning to Bremen; and indeed
you cannot well avoid it, both with regard to your
promise, and to the distinction with which you have
been received by the Cassel family.
Now to the other part of your letter.
Lord Holdernesse has been extremely civil to you,
in sending you, all under his own hand, such obliging
offers of his service. The hint is plain, that
he will (in case you desire it) procure you leave
to come home for some time; so that the single question
is, whether you should desire it or not, now.
It will be two months before you can possibly undertake
the journey, whether by sea or by land, and either
way it would be a troublesome and dangerous one for
a convalescent in the rigor of the month of November;
you could drink no mineral waters here in that season,
nor are any mineral waters proper in your case, being
all of them heating, except Seltzer’s; then,
what would do you more harm than all medicines could
do you good, would be the pestilential vapors of the
House of Commons, in long and crowded days, of which
there will probably be many this session; where your
attendance, if here, will necessarily be required.
I compare St. Stephen’s Chapel, upon those days,
to ‘la Grotta del Cane’.
Whatever may be the fate of the war
now, negotiations will certainly be stirring all the
winter, and of those, the northern ones, you are sensible,
are not the least important; in these, if at Hamburg,
you will probably have your share, and perhaps a meritorious
one. Upon the whole, therefore, I would advise
you to write a very civil letter to Lord Holdernesse;
and to tell him that though you cannot hope to be of
any use to his Majesty’s affairs anywhere, yet,
in the present unsettled state of the North, it is
possible that unforeseen accidents may throw in your
way to be of some little service, and that you would
not willingly be out of the way of those accidents;
but that you shall be most extremely obliged to his
Lordship, if he will procure you his Majesty’s
gracious permission to return for a few months in
the spring, when probably affairs will be more settled
one way or another. When things tend nearer to
a settlement, and that Germany, from the want of money
or men, or both, breathes peace more than war, I shall
solicit Burrish’s commission for you, which is
one of the most agreeable ones in his Majesty’s
gift; and I shall by no means despair of success.
Now I have given you my opinion upon this affair,
which does not make a difference of above three months,
or four at most, I would not be understood to mean
to force your own, if it should happen to be different
from mine; but mine, I think, is more both for your
health and your interest. However, do as you please:
may you in this, and everything else, do for the best!
So God bless you!
LETTER XXXI
Bath, October 18, 1758.
My dear friend:
I received by the same post your two letters of the
29th past, and of the 3d instant.
The last tells me that you are perfectly
recovered; and your resolution of going to Bremen
in three or four days proves it; for surely you would
not undertake that journey a second time, and at this
season of the year, without feeling your health solidly
restored; however, in all events, I hope you have
taken a provision of good bark with you. I think
your attention to her Royal Highness may be of use
to you here; and indeed all attentions, to all sorts,
of people, are always repaid in some way or other;
though real obligations are not. For instance,
Lord Titchfield, who has been with you at Hamburg,
has written an account to the Duke and Duchess of
Portland, who are here, of the civilities you showed
him, with which he is much pleased, and they delighted.
At this rate, if you do not take care, you will get
the unmanly reputation of a well-bred man; and your
countryman, John Trott, will disown you.
I have received, and tasted of your
present; which is a ‘très grand vin’,
but more cordial to the stomach than pleasant to the
palate. I keep it as a physic, only to take occasionally,
in little disorders of my stomach; and in those cases,
I believe it is wholsomer than stronger cordials.
I have been now here a fortnight;
and though I am rather better than when I came, I
am still far from well.
My head is giddier than becomes a
head of my age; and my stomach has not recovered its
retentive faculty. Leaning forward, particularly
to write, does not at present agree with, Yours.
LETTER XXXII
Bath, October 28, 1758.
My dear friend:
Your letter has quieted my alarms; for I find by it,
that you are as well recovered as you could be in
so short a time. It is your business now to keep
yourself well by scrupulously following Dr. Middleton’s
directions. He seems to be a rational and knowing
man. Soap and steel are, unquestionably, the
proper medicines for your case; but as they are alteratives,
you must take them for a very long time, six months
at least; and then drink chalybeate waters. I
am fully persuaded, that this was your original complaint
in Carniola, which those ignorant physicians called,
in their jargon, ‘Arthritis vaga’,
and treated as such. But now that the true cause
of your illness is discovered, I flatter myself that,
with time and patience on your part, you will be radically
cured; but, I repeat it again, it must be by a long
and uninterrupted course of those alterative medicines
above mentioned. They have no taste; but if they
had a bad one, I will not now suppose you such a child,
as to let the frowardness of your palate interfere
in the least with the recovery or enjoyment of health.
The latter deserves the utmost attention of the most
rational man; the former is the only proper object
of the care of a dainty, frivolous woman.
The run of luck, which some time ago
we were in, seems now to be turned against us.
Oberg is completely routed; his Prussian Majesty was
surprised (which I am surprised at), and had rather
the worst of it. I am in some pain for Prince
Ferdinand, as I take it for granted that the detachment
from Marechal de Contade’s army, which enabled
Prince Soubize to beat Oberg, will immediately return
to the grand army, and then it will be infinitely
superior.
Nor do I see where Prince Ferdinand
can take his winter quarters, unless he retires to
Hanover; and that I do not take to be at present the
land of Canaan. Our second expedition to St.
Malo I cannot call so much an unlucky, as an ill-conducted
one; as was also Abercrombie’s affair in America.
‘Mais il n’y a pas
de petite perte qui revient souvent’:
and all these accidents put together make a considerable
sum total.
I have found so little good by these
waters, that I do not intend to stay here above a
week longer; and then remove my crazy body to London,
which is the most convenient place either to live
or die in.
I cannot expect active health anywhere;
you may, with common care and prudence, effect it
everywhere; and God grant that you may have it!
Adieu.
LETTER XXXIII
London, November 21, 1758.
My dear friend:
You did well to think of Prince Ferdinand’s ribband,
which I confess I did not; and I am glad to find you
thinking so far beforehand. It would be a pretty
commission, and I will ‘accingere me’
to procure it to you. The only competition I
fear, is that of General Yorke, in case Prince Ferdinand
should pass any time with his brother at The Hague,
which is not unlikely, since he cannot go to Brunswick
to his eldest brother, upon account of their simulated
quarrel.
I fear the piece is at an end with
the King of Prussia, and he may say ‘ilicet’;
I am sure he may personally say ‘plaudite’.
Warm work is expected this session of parliament,
about continent and no continent; some think Mr. Pitt
too continent, others too little so; but a little
time, as the newspapers most prudently and truly observe,
will clear up these matters.
The King has been ill; but his illness
is terminated in a good fit of the gout, with which
he is still confined. It was generally thought
that he would have died, and for a very good reason;
for the oldest lion in the Tower, much about the King’s
age, died a fortnight ago. This extravagancy,
I can assure you, was believed by many above peuple.
So wild and capricious is the human mind!
Take care of your health as much as
you can; for, To be, or not To be, is
a question of much less importance, in my mind, than
to be or not to be well. Adieu.
LETTER XXXIV
London, December 15, 1758.
My dear friend:
It is a great while since I heard from you, but I hope
that good, not ill health, has been the occasion of
this silence: I will suppose you have been, or
are still at Bremen, and engrossed by your Hessian
friends.
Prince Ferdinand of Brunswick is most
certainly to have the Garter, and I think I have secured
you the honor of putting it on. When I say secured,
I mean it in the sense in which that word should always
be understood at courts, and that is, insecurely;
I have a promise, but that is not ‘caution bourgeoise’.
In all events, do not mention it to any mortal, because
there is always a degree of ridicule that attends a
disappointment, though often very unjustly, if the
expectation was reasonably grounded; however, it is
certainly most prudent not to communicate, prematurely,
one’s hopes or one’s fears. I cannot
tell you when Prince Ferdinand will have it; though
there are so many candidates for the other two vacant
Garters, that I believe he will have his soon, and
by himself; the others must wait till a third, or rather
a fourth vacancy. Lord Rockingham and Lord Holdernesse
are secure. Lord Temple pushes strongly, but,
I believe, is not secure. This commission for
dubbing a knight, and so distinguished a one, will
be a very agreeable and creditable one for you, ‘et
il faut vous en acquitter
galamment’. In the days of ancient
chivalry, people were very nice who they would be
knighted by and, if I do not mistake, Francis the First
would only be knighted by the Chevalier Bayard, ’qui
etoit preux Chevalier et sans reproche’;
and no doubt but it will be recorded, ’dans
les archives de la Maison de Brunswick’,
that Prince Ferdinand received the honor of knighthood
from your hands.
The estimates for the expenses of
the year 1759 are made up; I have seen them; and what
do you think they amount to? No less than twelve
millions three hundred thousand pounds: a most
incredible sum, and yet already subscribed, and even
more offered! The unanimity in the House of Commons,
in voting such a sum, and such forces, both by sea
and land, is not the less astonishing. This is
Mr. Pitt’s doing, and it is marvelous
in our eyes.
The King of Prussia has nothing more
to do this year; and, the next, he must begin where
he has left off. I wish he would employ this winter
in concluding a separate peace with the Elector of
Saxony; which would give him more elbowroom to act
against France and the Queen of Hungary, and put an
end at once to the proceedings of the Diet, and the
army of the empire; for then no estate of the empire
would be invaded by a co-estate, and France, the faithful
and disinterested guarantee of the Treaty of Westphalia,
would have no pretense to continue its armies there.
I should think that his Polish Majesty, and his Governor,
Comte Bruhl, must be pretty weary of being fugitives
in Poland, where they are hated, and of being ravaged
in Saxony. This reverie of mine, I hope will be
tried, and I wish it may succeed. Good-night,
and God bless you!