The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, D.D. — Volume 09 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 428 pages of information about The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, D.D. — Volume 09.

The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, D.D. — Volume 09 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 428 pages of information about The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, D.D. — Volume 09.

In this print Louis XIV. is made to thank the Tories for “what hath given me too deep and lasting impressions of respect, and gratitude, ever to be forgotten.  If I should endeavour to recount all the numerous obligations I have to you, I should not know where to begin, nor where to make an end....  To you and your predecessors I owe that supineness and negligence of the English court, which, gave me opportunity and ability to form and prosecute my designs.”  Alluding to William III. he says:  “To you I owed the impotence of his life and the comfort of his death.  At that juncture how vast were my hopes?...  But a princess ascended your throne, whom you seemed to court with some personal fondness ...  She had a general whom her predecessor had wrought into the confidence and favour of the Allies....  It is with pleasure I have observed, that every victory he hath obtained abroad, hath been retrieved by your management at home....  What a figure have your tumults, your addresses, and the progresses of your Doctor, made in my Gazettes?  What comfort have I received from them?...  And with what impatience do we now wait for that dissolution, with the hopes of which you have so long flattered us ?...  Blessed be the engines, to which so glorious events are owing.  Republican, Antimonarchical, Danger of the Church, Non-resistance, Hereditary and Divine Right, words of force and energy!...  How great are my obligations to all these!” In a postscript, King Louis is made to say further:  “My Brother of England [i.e. the Pretender] ... thanks you for ... your late loyal addresses; your open avowal in them of that unlimited non-resistance by which he keeps up his claim,” etc. [T.S.]]

[Footnote 6:  “Lieut.-Gen. Meredith, Major-Gen. Macartney, and Brigadier Honeywood were superseded, upon an information laid before the Q——­, that these three gentlemen had, in their cups, drank Damnation and Confusion to the new ministry, and to those who had any hand in turning out of the old.”—­TINDAL, iv. 195.  See also No. 21 and note, p. 127. [T.S.]]

[Footnote 7:  William Gregg, a clerk in Harley’s office, who was convicted of a treasonable correspondence with France.  See Swift’s “Some Remarks,” etc., in vol. v., p. 38, of present edition. [T.S.]]

[Footnote 8:  “For what condition of peace is that in which nothing is conceded him with whom you are making peace?” [T.S.]]

[Footnote 9:  The two pamphlets referred to were both written by Dr. Francis Hare, chaplain-general to the Duke of Marlborough, and afterwards Bishop of Chichester.  The first was dated November 23rd, 1710, and was entitled, “The Management of the War.  In a Letter to a Tory-Member.”  The second was called, “The Management of the War.  In a Second Letter to a Tory-Member,” and was dated November 30th, 1710.  The pamphlets are again referred to in the twenty-ninth number of “The Examiner,” where the writer states that on second thoughts he has decided to deal with them “in a discourse by itself.”  This he did.  See note on p. 184. [T.S.]]

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The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, D.D. — Volume 09 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.