Military Memoirs of Capt. George Carleton eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 290 pages of information about Military Memoirs of Capt. George Carleton.

Military Memoirs of Capt. George Carleton eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 290 pages of information about Military Memoirs of Capt. George Carleton.

Under this Sort of uncertain Settlement I remain’d with the Patience of a Jew, though not with Judaical Absurdity, a faithful Adherer to my Expectation.  Nor did the Consequence fail of answering, a War was apparent, and soon after proclaim’d.  Thus waiting for an Opportunity, which I flatter’d my self would soon present, the little Diversions of Dublin, and the moderate Conversation of that People, were not of Temptation enough to make my Stay in England look like a Burden.

But though the War was proclaim’d, and Preparations accordingly made for it, the Expectations from all receiv’d a sudden Damp, by the as sudden Death of King William.  That Prince, who had stared Death in the Face in many Sieges and Battles, met with his Fate in the Midst of his Diversions, who seiz’d his Prize in an Hour, to human Thought, the least adapted to it.  He was a Hunting (his customary Diversion) when, by an unhappy Trip of his Horse, he fell to the Ground; and in the Fall displac’d his Collar-bone.  The News of it immediately alarm’d the Court, and all around; and the sad Effects of it soon after gave all Europe the like Alarm. France only, who had not disdain’d to seek it sooner by ungenerous Means, receiv’d new Hope, from what gave others Motives for Despair.  He flatter’d himself, that that long liv’d Obstacle to his Ambition thus remov’d, his Successor would never fall into those Measures, which he had wisely concerted for the Liberties of Europe; but he, as well as others of his Adherents, was gloriously deceiv’d; that God-like Queen, with a Heart entirely English, prosecuted her royal Predecessor’s Counsels; and to remove all the very Faces of Jealousy, immediately on her Accession dispatch’d to every Court of the great Confederacy, Persons adequate to the Importance of the Message, to give Assurances thereof.

This gave new Spirit to a Cause, that at first seem’d to languish in its Founder, as it struck its great Opposers with a no less mortifying Terror; And well did the great Successes of her Arms answer the Prayers and Efforts of that royal Soul of the Confederacies; together with the Wishes of all, that, like her, had the Good, as well as the Honour of their Country at Heart, in which the Liberties of Europe were included.  The first Campaign gave a noble Earnest of the Future. Bon, Keyserwaert, Venlo, and Ruremond, were sound Forerunners only of Donawert, Hochstet, and Blenheim.  Such a March of English Forces to the Support of the tottering Empire, as it gloriously manifested the ancient Genius of a warlike People; so was it happily celebrated with a Success answerable to the Glory of the Undertaking, which concluded in Statues and princely Donatives to an English Subject, from the then only Emperor in Europe.  A small Tribute, it’s true, for ransom’d Nations and captiv’d Armies, which justly enough inverted the Exclamations of a Roman Emperor to the French Monarch, who deprecated his Legions lost pretty near the same Spot; but to a much superior Number, and on a much less glorious Occasion.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Military Memoirs of Capt. George Carleton from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.