Selected quad for the lemma: state_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
state_n great_a province_n unite_a 1,718 5 9.9410 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A40415 A Free conference touching the present state of England both at home and abroad, in order to the designs of France 1668 (1668) Wing F2112; ESTC R201279 27,274 80

There are 6 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

A FREE CONFERENCE Touching The present STATE OF ENLAND Both at home and abroad In order to the DESIGNS of FRANCE LONDON Printed by E. T. for R. Royston Bookseller to the Kings most Excellent Majesty MDCLXVIII Whitehall the 21. Jan. 1667 8. Let this Discourse be Printed By the Appointment of the Right Honourable the Lord Arlington His MAJESTIE 'S Principal Secretary of State Joseph Williamson TO THE READER THIS Conference being imaginarily Scened and yet really performed out of the Treasure of a very great Minister of State 's Capacity it was thought fit to be published now and not b●fore because that respect ought to be pay'd to the Secret of his Majestie 's Affairs so as nothing should anticipate the King 's own labours to give the people satisfaction in his due time touching the tender care that He is graciously pleased to take of all his Subjects in point of Honour Safety Freedom Vnion and Commerce which nothing could more advance than the Conclusion of the Treaty newly made betwixt England and the States of the United Provinces which without flattery may be demonstrated to men of understanding to aim at nothing but the Good of his Subjects in general exempt from all manner of private Interest whatsoever Blessed be God then that it is so happily concluded and that we have a KING whom nothing can ever alienate from the true Interest of his Realms nor no corrupt Counsellour let him be thought to be never so powerful or crafty in order to his own Advantages prevent the Wisdom and the Integrity of such a Prince from prevailing above all the Artifices and Frands of those who would perswade the Nation were they competent Masters of their Art enough so to do that those Counsellours who are not interested can be less prudent or successful than such as did make it their business to appropriate all to themselves and nothing to their Master The French King is much commended for his Parts and Activity but let us see him out do the King of England in this particular of the Treaty both in courage and conduct and then I shall be apt to attribute his Grandeur as much to natural Abilities as extraordinary Fortune but not before A FREE CONFERENCE Touching The present State of ENGLAND Both at home and abroad In order to the Designs of FRANCE THE Adventure which happened unto me lately is of so extraordinary a nature and contains so many important Discoveries in relation to the publick Good in its Progress that I should prove defective towards my Countrey if I did not candidly publish all the Passages both touching the Occasion and the Effects of what followed from this Accident Know then that a Peer of the Realm of England and one whose Merit Quality and the Place which he holds in the Administration of the Affairs of the Kingdom are remarkable did invite sundry of his Lordship's best friends to a magnificent Feast and amongst the rest he had the kindness not to omit me out of the number where the excellence of the Chear which he made to his Guests after a most noble manner put the whole Company into such a refined humour of conversing together that the Entertainment was but one intire pleasing Debate how to express our compleat enjoying of each other I was not wanting with the uttermost of vigour and solace to uphold the Genius of this Conference But as the freest speakers do commonly come by the worst in discourse and are the soonest exposed to enterfiering lashes I found my self to be attacqued in so many places at once with the swiftness of other mens reasons and wits who held the opposite Arguments that although I were something heated yet there remained unto me presence of mind enough and success of Intervals to get insensibly out of the Press whil'st the Disorder and Confusion lasted which is usual at such Meetings into another Room I retired then pursuing the opportunity into a fair Gallery which surprised my eyes with the rich Ornaments wherewith it was furnished but not without trouble neither and a Curiosity beyond the Opticks of the place which increased there so as I was diverted from any farther consideration of the Furniture because the place seemed to lie too near the Enemy to dwell any longer upon those Objects Wherefore I went into another Chamber hard by which instantly filled me with new Apprehensions by the means of several large Looking-glasses hanging on the Walls which shewed me my own proper Figure at length on every side and from thence imprinted in my wounded Imagination as many Adversaries as there were angular Reflections out of each Mirrour that appeared to pursue me so furiously that I ran on violently with my head forwards in order to some Escape to the door of another Chamber adjoyning thereunto which opened with such resistence when I thrust against it as if it had been forced with a Petard And thus falling in the attempt I was so stunned that it was a good while after before I could come to my self again But at last having partly recovered my spirits I was surprised with a fresh astonishment as much amazing me as the former had done that I repeated For when I began to open my eyes half way finding that till then they had been altogether unuseful to me I attributed the disorder to want of Sight often feeling in regard of the darkness of the Room to try whether they were still in my head or not Yet perceiving betwixt discerning and doubting that all I essayed of this kind was to no purpose after having deplored the bitterness of an imaginary loss I groped on more and more in the dark until I chanced to come to an Alcone where feeling with my hands I took fast hold upon the Alcone and grasped the pillar of a Bed which had I not lightt upon I must have fallen the second time For thrusting hard against one of the Posts the Counter-stroak of the Wood threw me all along into the middle of a Couch where I remained stretched forth like a Coarse without any motion in the same posture of a precipitate Swoon And then it was that the vapours of my body which were disturbed by the first mistake confusedly did stir through all the parts in the agitated fluctuancy of a sterm though by degrees growing to be undeceived Sleep which appeaseth all the Mutinies in humane creatures did naturally and more agreeably seise upon my Faculties and compose the Tempest with perfect tranquillity of Mind and animal Operations as if I had never been so discomposed 'T is impossible to tell you how long I continued in the state of this Interregnum betwixt life and death nor what care the Company took to learn what was become of me but in vain blaming me for having left them or rather the War begun using all sorts of means to find where I was and bring me back to the Combate I shall only tell you by the way that about Sun-set
us against themselves As if France that is our hereditary Enemy and hath so often tried what we are able to do against the Enlarging of their Empire who have graven deep in their hearts the injury of the Title which to their shame England carries in all publick Treaties and her Trophees in reference to that Crown this very France which hath no greater desire than to take the Dominion of the Sea from us and the precedency in Commerce will help us as you believe to conquer the Indies in which one third part of his Realm is interessed and of which they do suck away all the Marrow with the semination of their Baubles by the ill husbandry of the Spaniards She who just now comes from Joyning with our Enemies against us after she had first contrived how to broach the Quarrel between England and the States of the Vnited Provinces under divers false motions who snatched the Victory out of our hands when we were morally certain of beating the Dutch who reduced the Bishop of Munster to a necessity of separating from us in this War after that he had received our Assistence in large sums of Money debauched Denmark from our party hindred the Swedes to arme in our favour and contrived the whole Fabrick of that Affront which we received in the River of Thames Can you after all these demonstrations of the Rancour which they bear in their hearts against England be so uningenuous as to believe that the French will make a Bridge for us on the other side of the Sea as sincerely intending by this means to make us participate of their conquests with them or ever to unite in a sound Amity with our Interests For God's sake then disabuse your self as soon as you can out of this gross Errour if it be so that it hath got the least Fixation in your mind since you cannot cordially reason thus or have the least hope of such an Incongruity in the Reason of State of other Nations without conceiving at the same time that the French have lost both their wits and Judgement of which yet there is no great reason why we should think as they have handled us in the matter of Negotiations of late for therein I am sure that we do find them to have more than common sense France indeed will be glad to have us for the Instruments of their Ambition but never for Companions of their Glorie or Rivals to their Greatness The French do I confess seek to make use of us to pull the Chesnut out of the Fire to save the burning of their fingers but when that is done the French will not endure that we should eat any bit of the Kernel And the work which they do now make for us both at home and abroad is so incompatible with our Interest and Designs as well as their own that their professions towards us at this time cannot possibly be sincere except they be grown so kind on a sudden as to overthrow all their Fundamental Laws and in favour of England change the the whole face of their Designs which they have hitherto bin forming upon Europe They pretend that the Low-Countreys are entirely fallen to them by the right of Devolution which France hath forged to belong to its self Then are all those Provinces by consequence united to the French Crown nor can their King divide or alienate any part of them If this be true to our advantage though he would never so fain but that it must be subject still to return again to their Tribunal they have annulled the Renunciation of the Infanta of Spain and thereby have formed a Right to the succession of that Monarchy i● case the young King should come to fail of a Successour So that the most-Christian King can give us no share in the dismembring of Spain without doing prejudice to a Right which he pretends to be acquired unalienably to his Crown and whereof he himself may not otherwise dispose Next let us view the Materials which we are to have to build this new Edifice with Either we must undertake this War at our own Charge or at the Expence of France If it be undertaken at the Cost of France we must be their Hirelings at best as the Tartars be to the Ottomans and cannot move one step beyond What and How they 'l have us act France on these terms will always hold the Bridle in our teeth and the Cavesson upon our noses to make us stop turn and wind in the middle of the Courses just as they please From the very first moment that we shall grow burthensome unto them they have but to withdraw their Supplies to make us fall headlong to the Ground and then the Share which we pretend in their Conquests doth purely and arbitrarily depend on their discretion But if we shall undertake to carry on this Design out of our own proper Purse who shall furnish us with the Means of doing it Do you believe that the Parliament and the People will give away their Substance to act against the true Interests of the Realm and that they 'l Bleed to quench the ambitious Thirst of the French or destroy Spain from whence all the abundance of our Commerce is derived and which even at this Instant grants unto us such notable Advantages by a Treaty which is solemnly ratified The part which France doth offer us in the Conquests of Ostend and Neuport is a vast Liberality indeed but still of other folks Goods It would become them far better to restore back Dunkirk to England which they cheated us of by Surprize or the Town of Callis which they have dismembred from our ancient Dominion They take from us what is our own already and present us with nothing but what is not in their power to give because they cannot bestow either the Title or the Possession of what they do offer in this Kind upon us which if we will have we must gain it by the point of the Sword And this Train which they do shew us is of the same nature with that sort of Temptations with which the Devil tempted our Saviour from the top of the Pinnacle But do not you discover that this is a subtile Artifice to imbroil us again in a new War with the States of the Vnited Provinces who have the Interest to defend these two places as much as if either Amsterdam or Flushing were so designed upon And without an absolute Naval Victory we can never hope to conquer them and such a Conquest at Sea too as shall put the Hollanders out of all manner of possibility to afford any Succours in this Case This is a very hard bone which France doth cast in for us to gnaw whil'st they eat all the Marrow out of it In fine when the Arms of France joyned to our Forces shall have put us in possession of these two Places yet they 'l be totally unuseful to England when France is possessed of all
taken for persons deluded in this Negotiation and France only gather all the fruit of the Couzenage of which the Shame of having been so grosly cheated can only remain to us when the whole World discerns that the desire of Prey hath prevailed with England above the Faith of those solemn Treaties which we have made with the Crown of Spain and thus shall we obtain no other Advantage by having made such a false step than to have facilitated the means for France to unite all the Low Countreys to that Crown without striking one Blow to the eternal and irreparable damage of the Crown of England For who can assure us that from the same instant when we do declare unto France our intention to unite with them the French instead of uniting their Party with England will not rather prevail the sooner in their Pretensions with Spain to make the Spaniards because of this Apprehension disposed to accord to whatsoever France shall demand which is as the old Proverb says to keep the Mule at our Cost and hold the stirrup unto the French or play a ridiculous part in making use only of Scare-crows and give a false Alarm to favour the Designs of others Next who shall secure us that after Spain hath yielded because of this Apprehension the Low Countreys to the disposition of France That the Spaniards and the French shall not then streightly unite together to be revenged of us and bring us down The affinity of Bloud Religion and the hopes which the most Christian King may found to himself upon the Succession to this Monarchy if the Renunciation of the Queen once comes to be annulled are strong Links that may very well unite them together and the Principle of the Division which is at present betwixt them having no other foundation but reciprocal Jealousie touching the Equality of their Power this Emulation will expire as soon as ever that France doth see Spain in a Condition to be no longer able to dispute the sovereign Arbitrage of Christendom with them and the Cause of their hatred being taken away all the Effects thereof will cease likewise And then the common Interests of both will unite them in a Bond which is inseparable any more from whence our Ruine must infallibly arise because the Substance and Surety of England solely depends upon the Emulation of these two Powers as the Temperament of a humane Body consists in the opposition of the Elementary Qualities But what shall we say of the States of the Vnited Provinces Can we reasonably believe that they 'l remain without Motion or that they 'l not awaken at the noise only of this Negotiation which we shall carry on with France to the Destruction of Spain Since 't is evident they have no other course to take than to prevent us but by joyning themselves with France before we have finished this Treaty or else to bind their Interests fast with the Spanish Crown and the Empire on the first occasion And then are we excluded from all our Pretensions and all the hopes of our vast Conquests which we have fancied unto our selves And in the next place also shall we be replunged into a long and dangerous War from whence we came but just now as it were to escape with so much difficulty and damage France hath yet proposed nothing unto us directly touching the Ports of Ostend and Neuport to be given to the English and 't is apparent as to England by sundry authentick Documents that the French have no mind to treat seriously with us on this Point unless that they do find us disposed to unite with Spain and the States of the Vnited Provinces for the common Defence Whereas 't is no less certain that the French have expresly made the very same Propositions and more advantagious ones unto the said States by soliciting them to re-combine with France in order to their old Design of dividing the Low Countreys mutually between each other to the entire Exclusion both of us and the Spaniards being fully agreed as to this particular at the beginning of the War past Whereby 't is clearly to be foreseen that France considers us no farther than as the worst of their Prospects and that the French will alwayes be ready to buy dearer the Amity of the States of the United Provinces than ours Would it not then be a great imprudence in us to serve them as Instruments on such disgraceful and disadvantagious Terms to contribute towards the engaging of the Hollanders to their Party It being out of doubt that the Jealousie which we should so give them of our Negotiation with France would be a powerful incitement to the States to put them upon being before-hand with us in this Treaty and cut the Grass after this manner under our Feet But admit all this should cease I do not see what Measures we can take at this time with France nor what Assurances or Precautions the French may give us in a Treaty so as to shelter England from the Danger of that known Maxim of theirs which is In all Confederations to be bound by no other Rule but their Interest meerly I avow that the Rupture of the Pyrenean Treaty frights me and the remembrance of their Proceeding held with us heretofore throughout all the Course of our late War with Holland hath made me so incredulous that they must shew me many Miracles and evident ones too before I shall be converted to have the least good opinion of the Sincerity of their Faith and Dealing That which you have alledged touching the Support which the Royal House of England may particularly hope for from the Amity of France is both a delicate and a dangerous Stone to stir The Glory and the Safety of our KING doth only consist in the Love of his People and a streight union betwixt His MAJESTY and his present Parliament since He hath no other sound Interest to rely upon but that of the Kingdom having need of no other Arms or Assistence The hearty Affections of his Subjects and his own Royal Vertues will be as so many Gittadels erected to maintain his Authority and any other project is contrary both to his Genius and his admirable Prudence For all those who shall dare to inspire any other thoughts into His MAJESTY will infallibly undergo the weight of his displeasure as Enemies to his Fame and Quiet But at the Bottom of all what help can he rationally expect from France should he come to need it which God defend after their unworthy abandoning of the King his Father in his greatest Distress and of the King which now is likewise when the Wheel of Fortune ran against them even to the Exstirpation of the Royal Line had not He by whom Kings reign wonderfully restored them to the Throne of their Ancestors It was that shameful Treaty which the French ratified with those Usurpers then that sacrificed CHARLES the First to the Ambition of the Tyrant Oliver Cromwel who had
snatched the Scepter from the right Owners and Proprietors thereof Nay to such a degree was the Inhospitability of France grown at that time though his Father were thus execrably Murthered before the eyes of the French our King 's own Cozen-german refused him a Retreat that might be secure for his own Person Therefore 't is fit that the English should be disabused once for all by being better informed since France is so far from being assisting or useful unto us upon this Conjuncture that in truth they do seek only to increase our Divisions and Troubles For 't is both their Interest and Maxim so to do which Conduct hath been exactly and hereditarily observed in their Counsels for many Ages together and newly in the last Civil War here since all the Baits which they do present unto us are but so many Apples of Discord which the French Emissaries cast up and down among us purposely to embroil us with our Neighbours or else with one another Next let us consider at present whether we shall find our Accompt better with Spain 'T is evident that solid Reason of State doth totally incline us to leave that other way and you cannot but all acknowledge this to be our true Fundamental Maxim whereby we may keep the Balance in aequilibrio and that our Safety doth most consist in such an aequilibrium why then should we swerve from thence out of vain hopes or quit the Body for the Shadow The Interest of Commerce no way invites us to take part with France and this Truth is so notorious to all the people of England that there is no Eloquence able to perswade them contrary to their own Experience therein The Cause is just and favorable A young * The KING of SPAIN Pupil unworthily oppressed a Peace so solemnly and picusly established as lightly violated by a Process of Cavils and Legerdemain by a Proceeding thereupon full of Surprisals and Violence as well as Pretensions unjustly revived after an Authentick * Vide The Buckler of State and Justice Article 4. Renunciation are so many voices which speak to the Root of our Consciences to call us to that which we owe to Justice Pity good Neighbourhood the Publick Cause of Christendom and our Selves For in this matter is concerned no less than the Case of Royal Successions which France will needs have submitted to the Customs of ordinary Citizens and the Conservation of that Bulwark which is common to all these parts of Europe against this Torrent which threatens the whole Vicinity with a great Inundation and the assuring the Tranquillity of the Christian Republick against an unquiet Nation that will never desist from disturbing of it until their Insolence shall be abated The Foundation then being so solid because we shall in this Opposition have to treat with a Nation that makes profession of Honour and Generosity which hath never yet been accused to be guilty of having violated any publick Treaty and that would rather * The remarkable Integrity of Spain hazzard the loss of their Monarchy than their Reputation the Advantage is both secure and considerable whereas on the account of France we shall appear but as little Accessories and the French will carry us on as the First Motion only according to the rapidness of their Progress by applying us meerly in the course of their Game to their own Ends and thus shall we become the Ministers of their Ambition and be made use of like a pair of Stairs on which they do mean to tread in order to their obtaining the Vniversal Monarchy In fine their Interests if that we are still predestinated to be thus grosly deluded must be the Rule of ours and our future Conduct too and Operations But in taking part with Spain we shall be the Arbitrators of Peace and War and enabled to give the whole weight unto the Resolutions of each Party Then will France consider us with terrour and the apprehension of what our Arms may do and Spain by the addition of our Succours If we do desire Conquests we cannot hope for more lawful ones nor easier Victories than to re-unite by this means our ancient Dominion in France which have formerly been dismembred from the Crown of England But if we shall limit our Designs to the sole establishment of a Peace we may find the Accompt both of Glory and Safety likewise therein since it appears by authentick Letters of Monsieur de Lionn's writing that France is resolved to be content with Reason as soon as ever they do see England fixed to joyn with Spain and the States of the Vnited Provinces So that 't is in our choice whether to make an advantagious War or procure an honest Peace at the first appearance of our preparations in Arms. Whereas on the contrary 't is evident by the Interception of the aforesaid Dispatches that they will despise all manner of Offices and Mediations that are not Armed but rather pursue vigourously their Course whither Fortune shall drive it on so long as they do meet with no powerful Obstacles in the way Therefore because you seem to believe that Spain is reduced to so low a Condition that our Relief would be altogether unuseful to them and serve for nothing but to bring down the Vengeance of France exasperated upon us for God's sake cure your self of this Pannick fear as soon as you can 'T is France endeavours to erect a formidable Power if she finds no Opposition in the approaches thereunto and Spain probably must sink under the burthen unless that Crown be succoured though it is as true also that the Mischief is easily to be prevented if Remedies be applied thereunto in due time and before that the Inconvenience root it self too deep All the Advantage which France hath gained in this last Campaign is no more than an effect of their Address and the over-grown Credulity of Spain rather than of their Valour and Power All the Places which they have conquered in Flanders are but great Countrey-Towns where the People being ever the strongest he that is Master of the Field carries always the Keys of them at his Girdle to enter when he pleases and the winning of one Battel recovers them back again France hath constantly yielded in every thing where she hath found a real Resistence without gaining any thing beyond what the fright of an incommodated Multitude hath holpen them to acquire by such a Surprizing Invasion Spain hath yet great resorts to recur unto provided only they can gain time and the means of making them meet together and thus recover their Spirits We know that she hath made Contracts for considerable sums of Mony and that the Spaniards are now about to put themselves in a way to be able shortly to withstand the strongest Shocks of this War and by the litle Diversion of the Forces of France which we may make without any prejudice to England we can certainly put Spain into a Condition of attaquing
Glory or hope to get any fruit by so unprofitable a Counsel wherein our Souldiers will never learn the Discipline of War or extract any Utility from such Prizes as being uncapable after this manner to share in the Booty or in the Victories and Treaties of Accommodation according to their several events Whereas by taking part either with Spain or France the Charge would be much less because he whom we aid would largely contribute towards it and the Prizes gotten at Sea might help to discharge the Expence both of the Naval and the Land-Forces And thus would our Souldiers be exercised and our Nation make a noise again abroad and regain the Reputation which we have of late but too ignominiously lost in the World For when our men shall be trained up daily in strict Discipline beyond Seas we shall by this means establish a Seminary of good and able fighting men at the Cost of others which will be the firm Pillars of the Party and render us considerable in the eyes of all our Neighbours Besides this Course may be a vent so to discharge the Realm of ill humours a great company of Idle persons which now being without Employment are a burthen to the Publick and who one day are capable too of disturbing the domestick Tranquillity of the State whereas on the contrary what Success soever this War shall have we shall alwayes find our Accompt in the end of an Accommodation whereof being thus prepared we cannot fail of having the principal Benefit and part All these Considerations then seem unto me to be so convincing that they do oblige me absolutely to condemn the Opinion of Neutrality as inconsistent with our Glory Safety and Fundamental Reasons of State by concluding positively that we ought to lend an ear to those Propositions which shall be made unto us from all Parties and embrace those which shall be found to be most agreeable and convenient to the Interest of the Kingdom And in the interim to be the more considered by both these great Parties and better assured against all manner of Attempts my Advice is That without any longer loss of time a strong Fleet should be presently got ready and that as many dayes as we have to spare before the next Campagne since now every hour is precious that is not well spent as to this purpose may be employed to render us hence forwards necessary unto them whose Cause we shall resolve to embrace and as formidable to those against whom we intend to declare so that on both sides we may be the Commanders of the whole affairs and give it respite or motion by the sole Rule of the Interests of England After that he had spoken thus I did observe by the Countenance of the other two persons that had not yet spoken that this Discourse did not displease them wherefore without any farther reflexion one of them briskly began to speak to this effect Your Reasons said he are so convincing that I do not only render my consent unto them without any Reply but mean to make use of them to serve as the Basis and Foundation of that Edifice which I have a long time meditated upon in order to the fundamental Maxims of State of this Nation Therefore without more ceremony or delay I see that we must act and take one of the two Parties For any other Counsel would be dangerous and destructive by exposing of us to a thousand Inconveniencies which all the humane Prudence imaginable cannot be capable of preventing or avoiding in process of time I remain also agreed with you that in the choice of which Party we are to take we ought not to consider more than just what our own Interest properly is which is the Rule of that Conduct of Monarchis that as the Soul and the Spirit vivifying the whole Figure before us gives it motion in the Body of the State It rests then to form the Consequences upon these Principles and decide which of the two Parties is the most convenient France offers Roses unto us Spain nothing but Thorns The first presents us with a Scheme of Conquests without Dangers the last with a prospect of Dangers without Profit The one invites us to be their Companions of assured Victories of which they have already beaten the way the other doth solicite us and implore our Aid only to help them out of the mire without any other Benefit than as the old Proverb sayes There 's your labour for your pains at the price of our Blood and Lives If we shall engage in the Assistence of Spain in succouring them we run a Risco of being lost our selves without yet being able to re-establish them But by joyning with France we shall partake of the Spoils with them which we can never by force be able to take out of their hands since the Progress of France is now arrived at such a point of Effect that all our Powers combined together are not sufficient to stop it and then both our Resistences and Succours will serve but to ruine the Spaniards the sooner and bring the Vengeance of the French upon our own heads And if Spain comes to sink under the weight of the War all the Burthen of that Fall centers upon England alone In fine 't is agitated therefore singly as to this particular Whether we will needs chuse to embark in a Vessel so driven with storms or in a Ship which sails at ease with full Sails seconded with the favourable Gales of Fortune But in case all these material Objections cannot divert us from engaging in the ill Fortune of the Spaniards let us see on what Terms at least we can assist them usefully If we shall send Troups into the Low Countreys to their Aid 't is in effect to overwhelm them by the very weight and charge of those Succours and sacrifice so many of our own Subjects to Famine and misery as we do thus send Souldiers unto them because they have neither Countrey enough left to Lodge them in when they come thither nor the Means to Entertain them after once they are there If we succour them meerly by Sea that kind of help will not hinder France from taking of their Towns in the mean time one by one and so though we should a little incommodate France we shall not ease Flanders at all and such an Assistence will in conclusion prove none because 't is an Application of the Plaister too remotely and on the wrong side of the Wound If then the Loss of the Low Countreys be inevitable let us do what we can were it not much better that we should have our share in the Parcels of so great a Shipwrack than to suffer France to ingross them all to themselves since upposing that we do divide Booties with the French on this occasion the Places which by this means must necessarily fall into our hands will be so many new Bulwarks to England which may shelter us for the future against their
the French as well as of defending it self and so shall we reduce France into a necessity of demanding peace Spain is not unprovided of Friends nor Allies The Emperour doth already make a great step in favour of the Circle of Burgundie by taking of it intirely under his protection as a Member of his Body The States of the Vnited-Provinces are not asleep neither as to their own proper Interests upon this Conjuncture and after having tried in vain the sweeter waies of appeasing the Tempest they will not abandon themselves on so pressing an Occasion being that they do see well enough their Safetie depends absolutely upon their Resolution We know that they desire a sincere Alliance with us and that they would make all the progresses necessary towards it could they but discern in us any real disposition not to reject the Offer Sweden which is weary to serve but as an Instrument to the Interests of France to the prejudice of their own Affairs will nodoubt also follow our Motions and the most part whom rather Fear than Love doth tie unto the Motions of France will questionless take off the Mask as soon as ever they shall see a considerable Power on foot to Protect them France is a Body replete with ill humours which will easily degenerate into an universal Corruption when the French are never so little shaken The Jealousie alone which our Fleet will give them must needs oblige them to employ the better part of their Troops to furnish their Maritime Coasts and consequently render them the weaker every-where else Besides it is plain that in this last Campaign in which they thought to swallow all up at a bit they made all the Force that they were able and yet were not able notwithstanding to bring into the Field above Fourty thousand men after having drawn out of their Garrisons and the Provision of their Towns all the Strength almost that they had there whereby their Frontiers were left naked Judge then to what point they 'l be reduced when they 'l be put both to furnish their Places on all sides and divide their Troups too in Alsatia Italy the County of * or Catalonia Rossillon and Flanders and that in all these Countries they 'l meet with Enemies to fight against as well as a multitude of Male-contents at home no less formidable within the Center of their own proper Bowels For thus they can build no longer upon the strength of their Army which is destroyed very near already by Labour Sickness Diseases and want of Pay Wherefore they must begin anew and with fresh charges raise more men because the ill usage which their Troups have received doth render them so barren of Souldiers that they are compelled to seek Recruits and as it were beg Supplies with vast sums of Money from other States And this Imaginary Fountain of Treasure of theirs which here is thought to be unexhaustible will be found to have a bottom when our Fleet doth disturb their Commerce the Credit which till then they may get with the Partisans by means of oppressing * Which is the same thing as our Banquer Farmers of the Customes the people with Tax upon Tax will fail The men of business and the Natives being pressed to unsupportable extremities will quickly either cast off the yoke or sink under the burthen and the weight of those Impositions Their incapacity to hold out any longer is well enough seen by the impossibility wherein they now find themselves to make good what they have promised the Portugueses whose Friendship hath been formerly so necessary unto them And if Spain as 't is hoped that it may do once shall take a resolution to be delivered of this intestine War with Portugal by some Accommodation the Spaniards will soon be in a condition of being useful to their Allies feared by their Enemies But if we do suffer the Designs of France to pass by undiscovered impunitively to permit them to conquerthe Low Countreys towards the total oppression of Spain then I cannot but avow that France thus will be most terrible unto us And in case at present we are afraid of drawing their Revenge on our heads then shall we have much juster cause to apprehend the future effects of their Ambition Wherefore at the Bottom of all these Reasons it seems to me that by the same Principle of apprehension which you have of the French we are obliged to oppose these Progresses of theirs which if not stopped would yet render them more redoubtable If so be that we do fear them in the Field having so many Friends that do tender their Alliance unto us our fear were much more justifiable if after the rejecting of all those Offers we alone were exposed to their mercy or that our moderation could exempt us from their out rages but on the contrary rather give the French better Conveniencies of putting these Violences in Execution should such an insipid Counsel prevail for they 'l never consider us farther than we do make our selves Considerable They have Printed Books of their Pretensions to England Experience teaches us even to this day that 't is enough with them to ground a War without giving them any other cause of Hostilitie That we have * Scotland and Irleand Kingdoms belonging to this Monarchy which may very well fit their Designs which is enough to invite the French to attaque them whil'st England is weak History likwise doth shew us how that all our Alliances with the house of Burgundie have still been glorious and useful and all those with France unfortunate prejudicial 'T is ever more dangerous to go out of the beaten Road to travel through By-lanes unknown and dark untried Paths You 'l easily agree with me that the Union of the Vnited Provinces with France is the thing of all others which we ought the most to apprehend as fatal to our Crown and therefore by consequence nothing can be more safe for England than to disunite them Heaven furnishes us now with an occasion of doing that which we shall never be able to recover again should it be neglected if we do suffer it to slip away we shall bring that Republick into a necessity of tying this fatal Knot with France stronglier than ever it was fastned before This Union therefore above all others must be the Object of our Care as it hath of late demonstratively been the cause of our misfortunes I conclude then upon solid Foundations without hesitating That in the first place we must necessarily take part in this War either with Spain or France and next that we must not engage blind-fold without taking right Measures with those who have the same Interest that England hath in the Case thirdly that we must knit our Party firmly together and get all the Advantages we can in this Treaty with Spain as well as all the Security possible with other States without yet exacting from Spain things which are intolerable unto them whom the loss of the Low-Countries for fear of being reduced by the Exorbitancy of our Demands may plunge into a necessity of according to whatever France shall require This Discourse being ended I observed by their Countenances that the two Persons who spake first applauded this Opinion and that the third man was much shaken They had some farther speech together but so softly that I cannot well collect the sense of it after which all the Company embraced and gave one another their hands with a reciprocal promise of secrecy as wel●●s an Union in the same Design And thus they separated each a several way with evidence of great satisfaction friendship And as soon as ever theywere gon I slipped back insensibly again into the former obscurity near the Bed without being seen by any of the Domesticks And thus whilst these particulars werefresh in memory I did set them down in Paper and all that I could remember of their Discourse only to satisfie my own Curiosity and the Cariousness of my Friends THE END