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A58380 Reflections upon the conduct of the King of Great Britain in the late wars Contained in a letter from a subject of one of the confederated princes, to a friend in Holland. Done into English. 1682 (1682) Wing R727; ESTC R222084 6,129 4

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them the rest being uncapable to defend them were in a great consternation The Most Christian King did not fail to take advantage of this juncture and having made them Propositions of a General Peace which he caus'd to be Printed they easily disposed themselves to accept them and to perswade their Allies to do the like They sent for that purpose to the Duke of Villa Hermosa who opposed it a long time but the Parliament in England seeing by the disposition of the Hollanders that it would be almost impossible to prevent the Peace and not being willing to leave the King armed turned all their thoughts from War and took the resolution to speak no more of Money until they had obtained their demands in affairs of Religion that Duke did likewise then accept of the Peace seeing there was no timely succour to be expected from England This Sir I take to be the true Draught of things from whence we are to judge if the King of England is the only cause of the Greatness of France We may certainly say the Jealousies that arose betwixt him and his Parliaments are the true occasion of them It was to be wish'd both for Him and Us that either one Party or other had yielded sooner I am not well enough acquainted with the Maximes of their Country to decide positively which ought to have done it The King not only thought his Prerogatives were usurped upon but seem'd to have just apprehensions of engaging in a War which it would be in the Power of his People to put an end to by shutting their Purses If they had furnished him with the Sum of 600000 Pounds when he demanded it he might either have engaged himself in a War or been in a posture of making Peace as he thought convenient but those Gentlemen apprehended to put Arms into the Hands of His Majesty for fear that he should make use of 'em to render himself absolute However since they found it necessary to do it afterwards had it not been better they had done it in time To speak the Truth methinks that Great Body though compos'd of so many Wise Heads did not sufficiently foresee what might happen or those Gentlemen did secretly aim at Peace while they openly declared for War and they hoped the heat and resolution which they shew'd for the latter would produce the former without striking a blow and such an one too as they desired We must however say that they shewed a great deal of Wisdom in not continuing inflexibly bent to the last to hazard rather the Ruine of Europe than to confide an Army in the King The consideration they had for the Publick Good has likewise appear'd in that they made no difficulty of paying that Army though the King kept it on foot much longer than they ordered for the obliging the French to restore the Towns of the Spanish Netherlands before the restitution of the Swedes The King likewise on his side had manifestly made appear the little ground there was to suspect him of a design to render Himself Absolute since having that Army so long at his Disposal he made not the least use of it to that purpose Methinks then that His Subjects may be in repose on that side and would to God for our Interests that the future Parliaments may be in the same disposition as was that we speak of of yielding rather to His Majesty than suffer France to draw the fatal advantages from their Dissention which in all likelihood it will endeavour to do I am c. London Printed for H. R. 1682.
REFLECTIONS UPON THE CONDUCT OF THE King of Great Britain In the late WARS Contained in a LETTER from a Subject of One of the Confederated Princes to a Friend in HOLLAND Done into English SIR SInce in renewing the Correspondence between us which has so long a time been interrupted you are fall'n upon the subject of the Affairs of Europe and particularly touching the share that the King of Great Britain has had therein for some late years which has given you occasion to take some freedom in making reflections upon the Conduct of that Prince I do not doubt but you now reciprocally expect my Sentiments upon this Matter which by consequence I will give you with the same liberty but also with all the impartiality that an honest Man can have in judging of the actions of others and much more of those of Great Princes You may easily imagine I know nothing of the Articles of that Treaty of Alliance you speak of between the said King and Spain and I must confess to you that the Author of the Reflections upon that Treaty seems to have found a fine matter for the exercising of his Pen. But as amongst all the sportings of his Wit the severest Remark he makes seems to me to be in the Paragraph where he blames that King for not having endeavoured to put a stop to the course of the Victories of France when it lay in his Power and for having contributed more than any Other to the Greatness of France it does likewise concern us Allies for the measures we are to take to judge soberly If this imputation can be justly charged upon that Prince it is then very true that to take the thing in general 't is difficult not to lay the blame at His Door for not having taken the part of the Allies before the Peace and that this seems to justifie Our Resentments against Him However to give them so much the more ground if they are just let us consider what time in the course of Affairs could be assigned to Him for the entring into War and to decide that question in general it seems it ought to have been either when the Interest of His Nation or His own Honour or the Necessity of the Allies began to exact it Now as for the Interest of His Nation and principally of His Great City of London methinks that King could not have chosen a better Policy than after being got out of the War wherein He had left His Neighbours engaged to keep His People as long as He could in Peace and in a state of enjoying alone the Commerce of Europe and advantage which We know was envied them with anguish by you Hollanders and which made you so impatient to engage England in a War as well as your selves even before the Honour of that King obliged Him to it or He was pressed to it by the Necessity of the Allies As for the Honour of His Majesty what could He desire more glorious than to see Himself the Sole Mediatour and when He pleas'd the Arbitrator of the Affairs of Europe to receive the Differences and Addresses of all other Pinces and in short to have it in His Power to re-establish a sure and Honourable Peace when He thought convenient either by His own sole Authority or by joining His own Forces to it when it should be necessary to employ them for that purpose this Case of Necessity being the sole one which could change the Considerations of the Honour of His Majesty and the Interest of His Nation We 've now to examine at what time it began when it was pressing and how far we may impute to the Prince we speak of the having failed in what all these Considerations together Counselled Him to do We shall easily agree that while Our Forces were sufficient not only to defend us but even to attempt upon France it would not have been handsome for us to have propos'd to that King to have engaged Himself contrary to the Interest of His Nation Now it is manifest that during the three first Campaigns at least after the Peace between His Majesty and Holland We were in that posture which may be easily made appear by looking back upon the events of those Campaigns Certain it is that at and after the Battel of Seneffe in the Year 1674 the Forces of France were worsted and continued in the weakest condition the Prince of Conde was obliged to retire beyond the Sambre and the Army of the Confederates was then in a posture of laying Siege to Oudenarde and though the Prince of Conde made an effort to come suddenly to its relief he would in all probability have been repulsed if the Count de Souches General of the Imperial Army would have come up in time according to the Advice of the Prince of Orange of which His Highness made great Complaints to the Emperour and several of the Principal Officers of the Army refused to serve any longer under this Count which obliged the Emperor to to take away his Commission The Armies of the Allies were likewise much the stronger upon the Rhine that same Campagne the Elector of Brandenbourg took his Winter Quarters in Alsatia from whence Monsieur de Turenne was obliged to retire and go to Paris and though by an admirable Diligence and Conduct he returned the same Winter and constrained the Forces of the Elector to repass the Rhine which he likewise passed himself in order to the Campagne of 1675. This however having been his last and fatal Year General Montecuculi repulsed and pursused his Army diminished by above half to the other side of the said River and laid Siege to Saverne and though when the Prince of Conde who was sent to save the Ruines of that Army and give reparation to the Affairs of France approached him he raised the Siege yet indeed it was only to triumph over that Prince and to drive him before him as far as he pleased after which when it seemed he might have made some good use of his advantage he attempted nothing farther before their going into Winter-Quarters On the other side the total rout of the Marshal de Crequi by the Forces of the Dukes of Lunenburg and the recovery thereupon of the City of Treves out of the hands of the French had reduced their Affairs into that condition that His Most Christian Majesty found not a more present remedy than to have recourse to His Arricreban which was likewise beaten by the Duke of Lorrain the Elector of Brandenbourg having besides so gloriously freed his Country from the Swedes and the Duke of Lunenburg and Bishop of Munster having stript them of all they possessed in the Dutchy of Bremen except the City of Staden Denmark having likewise taken part in the War whereby the Sweeds remained altogether unable to defend themselves and much less to assist France the Forces of the Allies began to be formidable to it and found themselves capable in the Campaign of