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A48743 The management of the present war against France consider'd in a letter to a noble lord by a person of quality. Littleton, Edward, b. 1626. 1690 (1690) Wing L2579; ESTC R18766 20,522 32

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Only the Distances upon the Rhine are greater For Coblentz is near thirty miles distant from Bon and more then thirty from Mentz whereas from Oxford to Maidenhead is but twenty five and to Crekelade but twenty I HAVE DONE at last with the Difficulties that might have attended the Invasion of France by the Confederates and am come to the Inconveniences they might have lain under while their Forces were engaged in this Invasion The chief of which Inconveniences are these two First the Incursions which they must suffer from the French Garrisons upon the Rhine Secondly the loss of the Trade and Navigation of that River As to the first I confess the Incursion of those Garrisons is a great and sore Inconvenience And what Remedy do I propose against it Why the same Remedy that the Hungarians used against Newhausell Agria and Caniza while they were Turkish Garrisons and in their full strength and Vigour The same that the Flemmings did use against Mastricht when the French held it and do now use against Lisle and Tournay And the same that the French used against Cambray and Landrecy while they were in the Spaniards hands The same also that the Germans have used these many years against Brisach and for some years against Strasburg and Hunningen In a word the Remedy which all People make use of against Frontier Garrisons And that is that the Countries near them submit to Contribution For there is no other Remedy in the case there is no Medium between Contribution and Destruction 'T is natural for Garrisons to command the Countries about them And he that would hinder them from it would put a force upon Nature he may as well endeavour to keep Fire from burning Or 't is like the checking of a Fever which doth but enrage it and make it more violent A Garrison is a Disease which will have its course and there is no way to prevent or avoid it but by curing the Disease that is by taking the Place This therefore ought to be endeavour'd if the thing may be done with ease and convenience And for this reason the attacquing of Rhinberg and Keiserwert cannot be dislik'd because these Places were easily reduced But if the Work be of great difficulty it seems the wisest course rather to aim at an Equivalent that is to endeavour to get something else as good or better upon the Enemy And in the mean time we must be content to be under Contribution But the Contributions which these Garrisons exact will perhaps be unreasonable and excessive I answer that it is not for their profit to be too hard upon People thereby to drive them from their dwellings and make a desolation But the sure remedy for this Evil is the course mention'd just now that is to get some Places in the Enemies Country For then if They use Our People basely We can use Theirs as bad which thing will bring them to reason if any thing will But what if it shall appear that a powerful Invasion of France would be the readiest way to reduce these Places upon the Rhine If you ask how this should be the answer is By obliging the Enemy to quit them We have seen the time when this Lewis the Great hath upon the like occasion quitted very important Places on the same River● It was when the last great Confederacy was formed against him At which time he took his last leave of Wesel and Burick together with Rees Emerik Schenksoonce and Nimegen all standing upon this River of Rhine to say nothing of the Towns in Holland In a word he disgorged all his Conquests in these parts Mastricht and Grave excepted And this he was forced to do that he might draw his Forces more close to resist the terrible Storm that threaten'd him If therefore he threw up so many good Places then only for fear of an Invasion how much more must he have done so now had he been actually Invaded He must have laid aside the thoughts of keeping rampant Garrisons upon the Rhine when Paris it self had been in danger with his dear Palace of Versailles the Domus aurea of the French Nero. THUS I HAVE answer'd the Inconvenience first objected namely the Mischiefs which might have been done by the French Garrisons upon the Rhine But before I proceed to the second I have something more to say in particular about Mentz and Bon and something about Mentz only That which I say of Mentz and Bon is this that it had been no hard matter wholly to hinder their Incursions on the German side of the Rhine I do still confess as I have said before that ordinarily there is no hindering of Garrisons save only by a close Blockade from commanding the Countries about them Or if the thing be possible so great Forces are required to do it as will devour the Countries in stead of defending them But the Case of Mentz and Bon is extraordinary They both do stand upon the Western or French side of the Rhine and on the other side the River Mentz hath the Suburb of Cassel and Bon hath the Fort of Bueil But Bueil was a thing of no●… being easily taken at the first Bombarding of the Town and before the Siege was form'd or so much as resolved on And Cassel was quitted by the French after they had laboured upon it all Winter a sign of their great weakness and want of Men at that time I say then that if the Confederates had well fortified and enlarged these Places and put strong Garrisons in them they had thereby secured all the Countries on the German side By this means they had pinn'd up Mentz and Bon to their own side of the Rhine For the truth is evident of what hath been said in my Observations That a Town which lies upon a great River and hath no passage over it is half block't up Having done with Mentz and Bon conjunctly let us now consider Mentz by it self This Place by what hath been done to get it may seem to be of so great importance that nothing else might compare with it But yet we shall find that to say nothing now of the general design of Invasion which gave way to this Siege other Places in particular as the City of Treves for instan●… had been full as good and might have been had much easier When the Imperial Army was pass'd the Rhine at Coblentz these two Cities lay equally fair for them They might have marched forty miles forward to Treves or forty miles sideward or rather backward to Mentz but to measure more exactly they had something above forty miles to Treves and to Mentz something less The first Question then will be supposing these Places to be equally weak or equally strong and capacious which of them is better in respect of the Situation the one standing upon the utmost Frontier and the other forty miles within the Enemies Country for all those Countries to the West of Rhine were now become French
not say it But we may safely presume that he would have been for falling in upon the French in the same manner as he fell in upon the Turks And he might well hope to have the like Success and to make the like Impression with a Power seven times as great In the time of the third Carthaginian War when the War was carried on heavily by others and Scipio had laid about him though in an inferiour Command Cato was pleased to say That Scipio only was a Man and the rest were Shadows So we may say now that the Prince of Baden hath done great things and the rest have done nothing in comparison of what they might have done If the Confederates had engaged themselves before Mentz only it had been tolerable For they might nevertheless have had one mastering overbearing Army which might have done great Matters though it would have been much better if they had had two since each would have found their work easier the Enemy being distracted and confounded But their attacquing of Bon at the same time quite disabled them and compleated the Mischief The Mischief of these two Sieges consisted partly in the Advantages which thereby they lost and partly in the Disadvantages or Evils they fell under By these Sieges they lost the grand Advantage of carrying the War into the Enemies Country which contains in it many Advantages In this way they might have maintain'd their Armies at the Enemies Charge which is no small matter though they could have done nothing else and though they could have master'd no Places of importance But many such Places must have fallen into their hands if they had broke into the Country with an overwhelming Power For it had been impossible in such a case that all Places should be well provided for defence and it had been their own great fault if they had not fallen upon those that were worst provided When they had once got past the Frontier it must be a good Place that could have held out a Week against so great Force Few Places within a Country are compleatly fortified and those that were best fortified would have been an easie prey unless they had been likewise well manned and thus to Man all Places had been infinite Moreover they might have seized several weaker Places but of commodious Situations which if by the example of the Prince of Baden they had taken the pains to fortify would have been Places of importance These things might have been done by the Confederates in regard their Forces were so much superiour But where the Forces of each side are equal or near an equality as it was between the Dutch and Spaniards for many years in this case he that will be the Assailant if his Enemy be cautious hath a hard Chapter since he must get ground by Inches and must always be doing difficult things which is now excusable because it is necessary there being no easy things to be done For if in this case he should run into the Country and leave the strong Frontier Places behind him the Enemy would hamper him as a Spider doth a Fly whereas if he had a mighty overbearing Force the Enemy could do no more harm to him then a Spider can to a Hornet But since he hath it not he must be content to attacque the Frontier Places and to clear as he goes And if he can get one or two of those Places in a Summer it is a fortunate Campagne As it hath been already intimated where there is an overbearing Force the way to make short work is to break into the Country Gustavus Adolphus judg'd it and found it easier to conquer Bavaria then to take Ingolstat if the Grand Visier seven years ago could have let alone Vienna his subduing the rest of Austria had been inevitable Nor could the Frontier Places he left behind him as Raab Vesprin and Serinswar have been any hindrance And some think that the High-born Elector who lately took Belgrade with so much Gallantry might in less time and with much less difficulty have over-run and subdued both Servia and Bulgaria and have chased Yeghen Bassa over Mount Haemus In like manner it may be here affirm'd That the Confederates in all humane Probability might have made great Conquests in France while they lay toyling before Mentz and Bon. Let me smite him to the Earth at once said Abishai to David I will not smite him a second time Even so there was now an Opportunity to smite the French Monarch to the ground he might have been laid so low as never to rise more We might very probably have seen an end of the War in one Summer It hath been said before that the French were but weak in the Field this year and a powerful Invasion would have made them yet weaker This last may seem a Paradox but we have a clear Experient of it in the former War of the Confederates In one of those Campagnes the Prince of Conde commanded about fifty thousand men in Flanders where he was confronted by an Army of Dutch and Spaniards of near the same number But after some time the later were joyn'd by a matter of twenty thousand Germans Whereupon the Prince was forced to send ten thousand of his Men to renforce several Garrisons which were now by the Increase of the Enemies Force in greater danger The like would have befallen the Marshal of Humieres this last year if the Duke of Brandenburg after the taking of Keiserwert had marched up to Prince Waldeck with whom the Marshal had been tugging for some time their Forces being near equal Whereas now on the contrary when Humieres found that the Duke was engaged before Bon he drew great Numbers out of his Garrisons to renforce his Army And by this means he became strong enough to carry the War into Flanders where he kept his Army all the latter end of the year obliging the Spaniards and the Dutch to draw thither likewise I might also shew by another late Experiment That the actual Invasion and breaking in of an over-powering Enemy doth weaken the Army of the Defendants by putting them upon so strong a Guard of so many Places When the Grand Visier above-mentioned marched against Austria the Duke of Lorrain opposed him with Forces much Inferior and he kept him off a while by the help of Raab River But when the Visier had broke through that Impediment and was got into the Country the Duke was forced to divide his Army thereby to Man some Garrisons and they were but few that were most important So that his Force in the Field was vanish'd and gone Thus we see that even in these matters Whosoever hath to him shall be given and he shall have more abundance but whosoever hath not from him shall be taken away even that he hath I THINK I have made it appear that the Confederates have lost great Advantages by engaging upon hard Sieges on the Rhine when they should have invaded
To this Question I give this Answer that if the Places be equal in themselves their Situation makes no inequality For the one commands as much ground as the other and to command the Countries is the chief End of Garrisons We may well suppose that each of these Places with a Garrison of ten thousand Men will command forty miles round But that which Mentz Cemmands is some of it on the one side the Rhine and some on the other that which Treves commands is wholly on the one side the having of Mentz doth partly ease and cleer Germany and partly annoy the French Quarters the having of Treves clears nothing and annoyes twice as much So that upon the whole matter and putting one thing against another the Situation makes no inequality if the Places were equal in themselves But there is a Consideration from which one of these Places may justly be esteemed better then the other though of themselves they were equal and that is the present posture of the War and the strength or weakness of the Warring Parties For if the Germans were weaker and upon the defensive Mentz were more convenient for them because by having it they might better defend themselves But since they were now clearly the stronger and upon the Invading hand Treves was more convenient because it would more advance their Conquests And as I have said in my Observations They that are the stronger should make it their business to push on and need not fear but should rather covet to featter the War Which Observations I cite in regard the Arguments there used in another like occasion may be applied to this Hitherto we have disputed whether Mentz or Treves had been better to the Germans and more desirable supposing them to be of equal Goodness in themselves But the matter in fact was clean otherwise for Mentz was very strong and well furnisht whereas Treves was laid open and quitted but then Mentz was held by a great Garrison of the Enemies So that if the Germans will have Mentz it must first be taken if they will have Treves in the like condition it must first be fortified Here therefore ariseth another Question which of these two things was easier to be done the Taking of the one or the Fortifying of the other The World knows and the Confederates feel what the Taking of Mentz hath cost them It cost them the hard labour of a mighty Army for two Months wholly maintained the while at their own Charge and fed with Provisions from home It cost them a vast Quantity of Ammunition the Lives of many thousands of their best Men together with the Destruction of a good part of Germany which the French effected during that Siege Of which things and of some other Particulars I have spoken more largely before As for the Fortification of Treves the great Expence would have been the labour of Men. And the whole Army that besieged Mentz might in one Month have put them in such a Forwardness that ten thousand Men left in Garrison might have finish'd them in a few Months more and have defended the Place in the mean time against all the Force that France could then bring against them Also the very repairing of Mentz would have gone a great way in fortifying Treves 'T is true the Confederates must have put in great Guns and Ammunition But the Ammunition that was spent and the Guns that were spoil'd at Mentz would plentifully have furnisht Treves with Guns and Ammunition and all other Necessaries But Treves would have been incommoded by Montroyal which the Germans must have left behind them I answer Not so much as Montroyal would have been by Treves the stronger Garrison which the French must leave behind them to come to Montroyal Also we may remember how little Mastricht was incommoded while the French held it by Namur and other Places that lay between it and France or the same Mastricht by Ruremond and Venlo in former times while there was War between Spain and Holland BUT BESIDE the Incursions of the French Garrisons upon the Rhine there is another grand Inconvenience Objected which the Germans in case they had invaded France must in the mean time have undergone likewise and that is the want and loss of the Navigation of that River In answer to this I must confess that the Navigation of the Rhine is of mighty importance both to Holland and Germany by reason of the great Trade carried on between those Countries by that Conveyance But though it be highly beneficial yet it is not necessary and those Countries can live without it As they have done formerly for many a year at such times as the Spaniards being in War with Holland were possess'd of Rhinberg or Wesel or some other Places upon the Rhine I know there are some that will affirm that this Navigation was absolutely necessary at this time to the German Armies for supplying them with several things from Holland which could not be brought them other wayes But if these Armies had carried the War to the Mose which was their own up as far as Namur they would not have stood in much need of the Navigation of the Rhine But if the Rhine must be cleared a strong Invasion of France might have been the readiest way to do it It being highly probable as I have said before that the French would thereby have been forced to abandon their Places upon the Rhine the better to defend their own Country Moreover though the Navigation of this River were never so pretious a Commodity yet it might be bought too dear And surely the Confederates have had a hard bargain of it It coming at the price of those long and difficult Sieges which according to what hath been shewed already have brought so many and so great Evils upon them I confess the clearing of the Rhine to Collen which is almost the half of what hath been done was a good and easie bargain being effected by taking Rhinberg and Keiserwert in a short time and with little loss But that which was got by taking Mentz and Bon was too dear of all Conscience THUS I HAVE shewed my Reasons for Invading France and answer'd the Objections against it I should now descend to other Particulars relating to this War But these may be the Subject of another Letter this is too long already If I should go on though I have equal Candor for all the Illustrious Actors yet 't is like I may give my Opinion freely but sincerely that some Men have done better then others I confess for those that perform gallant Actions if I might have my Will I would make their Names shine So shall it be done to Him whom the King delighteth to Honour was said when Mordecai rid in pomp And they that have Pens though they be not Kings or Princes yet they can bestow good words upon those whom they delight to honour But I do not pretend to these things I am not one of those Writers who as Barclay expresses it Dividunt Mortalibus Famam To me it is sufficient that I have the Honour to be May it please your Lordship Your Lordships thrice humble and truly devoted Servant POSTSCRIPT I Beg leave of your Lordship to make a small Addition to what I have written There are some that will argue yet further for these difficult Sieges They will grant it to be very convenient that the Confederates should carry the War into the Enemies Country but all in good time it was fit they should clear the Rhine this year that they might with greater Force and Advantage invade France the next But how did they know what the next year would bring forth If there were nothing else a League of so many Parts is subject to many Mischances and is much easier broken then made They had now an Opportunity of Conquering France which was to be embraced with Readiness I had almost said with Greediness Such an Opportunity they must not think to meet with every day This next year I doubt they will not have it when they are not like to be so strong and the French much stronger If they have it it is to be wish'd that they would use it But if they are still for hard Sieges if they like that Sport there are Things yet left which will find them Play and as Mr. Bayes doth phrase it will rub their Gums To instance in a few there is Montroyal and there is Philipsburg with the other remaining Places upon the Rhine And why should not the Upper Rhine be clear'd as well as the Lower Also the City of Treves is now making fit for them But the Elector Palatine will think himself undone for want of Philipsburg and probably will use all his Interest which is very great to engage the rest upon it So the Duke of Saxony and the Landgrave carried it for the Siege of Mentz they would not be in danger of that Garrison though they were fair and far off So likewise the Dutch took a great deal of pains and were out a great deal of Money to get the Duke of Brandenburg to take Bon for the Archbishop of Collen The Dutch are not often mistaken but now I think they were For the Duke might have done both Himself and Them much better Service by joyning Prince Waldeck then by attacquing Bon. However we may see that little particular Interests whether true or fancied do too often bear down the general But away with these retailing Projects a vigorous and powerful Invasion would do all at once FINIS
THE MANAGEMENT OF THE Present War AGAINST FRANCE CONSIDER'D IN A LETTER TO A Noble Lord. By a Person of Quality LONDON Printed for R. Clavel C. Wilkinson and J. Hindmarsh and are to be sold by Randal Taylor near Stationers-Hall 1690. THE MANAGEMENT OF THE Present War against France CONSIDER'D YOU did me the great Favour My Noblest Lord to peruse my Observations upon the War of Hungary some time before they were Printed And You were pleased to give them your Approbation Wherein 't is like your Friendship and Candour might prevail much upon your Judgment Your Lordship doth at present dispense with my Continuation of that Work which indeed I have but faintly or rather have not promised and You demand my Opinion of that which more neerly concerns us namely the present War of the Confederates against the French King Without making Excuses to which I have too just a Title I humbly return this Answer that according to my weak apprehension of things the grand Error of the Hungarian War hath now been acted over again by the Confederates I think I have shewed plainly in those Observations that the Christians did greatly mistake in falling upon Buda thereby attacquing their Enemy in his Strength by which they exposed themselves to great Hazards and Losses brought infinite prejudice to their Affairs and retarded their Conquests which might otherwise have been swift and easy And the same may be said of the Sieges of Mentz and Bon which have caused so great an Expence of pretious Time and Bloud and Treasure At the beginning of the Campagne the Confederates were in a dreadful posture having such a Force in the Field as hath seldom been seen in Europe Their several Armies were reckoned to make up a hundred and seventy thousand Men and surely by the most moderate Computation they must be above a hundred and forty thousand There were above twenty thousand in the Duke of Bavaria's Army the Imperial Troops under the Duke of Lorrain were about the same number and those of Saxony Hesse and Lunenbourg could not be less than thirty thousand These were in the upper Parts of the Rhine and put together made up seventy thousand Men. Then in the lower Parts the Spanish Army with the Troops of Liege and Munster added to it was above twenty thousand and the whole Dutch Force with that of Brandenburg were neer upon fifty thousand So that the Total of these amounted to seventy thousand likewise Here now were two mighty Armies which if they had march'd forward would have made France to shake Yet it is confess'd that 't was very possible they might have made no great progress or impression if they had been opposed by an equal Force or any thing neer equal But the Matter was cleer otherwise For the French notwithstanding they had quitted so many Places beyond the Rhine could get but a small Force in the Field this year Their Generals in these Parts were Humieres and Duras Under Humieres there might by thirty thousand Men but we do not find that Duras though joyn'd by the flying Armies or Parties of Monclar Montal and Boufflers could ever make twenty It may here be demanded what became of their Men for even those that were drawn out of the Towns they quitted would have made a good Army To this I answer that their Men were bestowed in those strong Places they held upon the Rhine to fill them with very strong Garrisons They plainly made this their Barrier against the mighty Force that threaten'd By the great Resistance these Garrisons were like to make in case they were attacqued they might well hope to keep their Enemies at the armes End and stave off the War from France And it may truly be affirm'd that the chief strength of the French Monarchy lay now in these Garrisons The French Garrisons upon the Rhine at the opening of the Campagne were these that follow Hunningen Brisach Strasburg with the dependencies Fort Louis Philipsburg Mentz Bon Keyserwert and Rhinberg And these took up the whole length of that River from Swisserland to Holland only the Germans had the great City of Collen between Keyserwert and Bon and Coblentz between Bon and Mentz But moreover beyond the Rhine or on the French side of it the Germans had all Flanders at their devotion with the Dutchy of Juliers and the Diocess of Liege This being the Condition of Affairs the great Question is Whether it were better for the Confederates to attacque these very strong Places upon the Rhine or to March straight into France And it seems very evident that the marching into France had been more advisable Let any man of reason consider what were the Sentiments of the French King when there was a mighty Force against him which he was no way able to withstand I say let it be consider'd which of these two things he most dreaded whether their Sitting down before some of his remote Garrisons or their falling with the whole weight of the sevenscore thousand Men into the Bowels of his Kingdom I think there is no doubt but that he most dreaded this later For in the former he had his Wish He saw his design succeeded and things fell out just as he would have them He had left those Garrisons there for that very End and Purpose He could not hope but that these Places would be taken at last for he never so much as attempted their Relief But his hopes were that his Enemies would spend their Time and their Strength upon them And I dare say he wishes with all his Soul that they would do the like next year The Miseries of a defensive War I mean where the Enemy is cleerly an Over-Match are beyond Expression David chose rather to submit to a Pestilence then to fly before the Enemy for three Months which is the Condition of those that are upon the defensive against Enemies much stronger then themselves And this must have been the Condition of France for the last whole Summer and the whole Winter too had the Confederates march'd forward The great and swift Conquerours in all Ages such as the Cimbrians of old and after them the Goths Vandals and Lombards never lay pelting at Frontier Garrisons but broke into the Countries overwhelming and seizing whole Countries And the Confederates might have done so now You 'll say the strength of modern Fortifications makes Conquests now more slow and difficult Not at all for Places were stronger in the old times then they are at present that is they were harder to be taken The Engines of Assailing being now so violent that there is no Fence against them No place is now impregnable says a Man of Skill unless it be inaccessible Rohan The Confederates were now cleerly Masters of the Field which is a glorious Condition To be Master of the Field is the Soldiers delight He that is cleerly Master of the Field if he understand his Business will not want any thing And he hath this
France I come now to shew what Evils or Disadvantages they have fallen under And surely the Evils are neither few nor small which the Confederates have suffered by these Sieges The first Evil I shall mention is their loss of Men. Which must needs be very great whatever Accounts we have had of it in such continued violent Attacques finding such stout Resistance And here we must observe That in Approaches and raising of Batteries and in Assaults and Sallies we usually compute the Losses by the number of Men that were slain out right not much regarding how many were wounded When perhaps a great part of these might dy afterward of their Wounds or be disabled from ever bearing Arms. Moreover we must bear in mind that there was not only great loss at the very Places besieged but by occasion of these Sieges the Enemy having his free Range the while many were cut off in other places To pass by lesser matters Duras in one of his Courses is said to have sent some thousands of the Bavarians into whose Quarters he had fallen Prisoners to Strasburg having killed great numbers likewise And it is confessed on all sides that eight hundred Germans some say they were twelve hundred being lodged in a small Town call'd Cochem the Marquess of Boufflers storm'd the Place and put them all to the Sword We do not know the reasons why they were thus exposed The second Evil of these hard Sieges was the infinite Expence of Ammunition Upon which I need not to enlarge the matter being plain and evident of it self Thirdly Whereas the Confederates might have carried the War into the Enemies Country by engaging upon these Sieges they kept it in their own By which means they have been forced to maintain their Armies as it were upon the peny all at their own Charge and with their own Provisions Whereas if their Armies had marched into France they would have been there maintained And that not only during the Campagne but also after it It had been very hard fortune if they could not in France have found or made Winter Quarters But now as matters have been order'd they were forced when the Campagne was over to draw their Armies home and there keep them all Winter Fourthly It is owing to the Sieges of Mentz and Bon that a great part of Germany now lies in ruines The Germans themselves have been in effect the Authors of this Mischief They that would engage their whole Force in difficult Sieges and thereby give advantage to the Enemy to destroy whole Countries with Fire may justly be accounted the chief Incendiaries Had they marched into France they had been in a condition to retaliate and this had obliged the Enemy to fair War Whereas their not being in such a condition emboldened the French to execute those Barbarities But the French durst as well have eaten fire as made those Fires in Germany had the German Armies been then in France Moreover if the Germans had been in France no French Armies would have been in Germany all must have been drawn back to defend their own I shall not go about to compute the Damage which the French have done by these Devastations But by a part we may make some Guess at the whole In one Course beyond the Rhine the same that hath before been mention'd we are told that Duras burnt twenty thousand Houses And these being valued but at fifty pound a House one with another come to a Million of pounds which is a good deal more then Mentz and Bon are worth Fifthly Poor Flanders hath felt the dismal Effects of the long Sieges upon the Rhine For it hath last Summer been made the Seat of War which might have been carried into France had it not been for those Sieges All the beginning of the year Humieres lay encamped at Nivelle between Mons and Brussels And Prince Waldeck with the Dutch Army encamped likewise not far from him At last Waldeck advanced by exceeding slow Marches and Humieres retreated And now the Dutch talk'd of falling into the French Quarters but they never went above ten English Miles beyond Charleroy a Spanish Garrison upon the Frontier Then Humieres takes heart from the Germans being engaged before Bon and marches in again to the neighbourhood of Brussels whither he drew Prince Waldeck after him whom the Spanish Army now joyn'd And here they lay confronting each other all the latter end of the Campagne But Flanders groaned in the mean time under the burden of three Armies Such another Campagne would bring it very low Sixthly The other Confederates have also suffer'd much by the War going on thus heavily their mighty Force which with much ado they had got together and which seem'd sufficient to overturn Kingdoms and Empires having spent it self in the Taking of two Towns We see the Emperour knows not which way to turn himself between the French and the Turk The other German Princes with whom Money is scarce though they abound with Men must be hard put to it to maintain their old Troops all Winter and raise new ones against Spring The Dutch also must strain their utmost in setting out their Fleets and Armies Their Commerce is disturbed and their Charges are exceeding great and they find the burden of this lingring War doth press sore upon them And even in England we feel the Incommodities of the slow Work abroad The difficulties we meet with in reducing Ireland our Losses of Ships our great decay of Trade the Fall of our Rents and the heavy Taxes we ly under all must be imputed to the Sieges of Mentz and Bon and all might have been prevented by a powerful Invasion of France which had put the French out of condition to contest it with us Lastly By undertaking these Sieges and omitting better things the Confederates are forced to be all this Winter in a wretched defensive posture All that they aim at and employ their utmost Labour and Diligence upon is only to save their own and oppose the Insults of the Enemy Whose Country in the mean time is out of their reach and Themselves in no condition to requite them I HAVE laid before your Lordship the Reasons which induce me to believe that the Confederates had much better have fallen into France it self then ly toyling a whole Summer about two Out-Garrisons But there are some Objections which may seem very strong against the Invading Design and which therefore ought to be well answered And these arise either from the Difficulties that must attend the Invasion or from the Inconveniences that must follow upon it other ways The main Difficulty objected is the want of Victuals with which they could not easily be supplied from home when they were engaged far and deep in the Enemies Country But to this I answer that in all likelyhood they would not much need such Supplies having the Enemies Country at their Command And they that make this Objection would do well to give us