Complete Project Gutenberg Earl of Chesterfield Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,032 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Earl of Chesterfield Works.

Complete Project Gutenberg Earl of Chesterfield Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,032 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Earl of Chesterfield Works.

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’?

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Complete Project Gutenberg Earl of Chesterfield Works from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.