S^i5i\ The Fanagement of the War By Francis Hare ■" ■ V U "N^ '% THE Management OF THE xV IX. I N A LETTER T O A Tory -Member. ^7 -' — BelU geri placuit nuHos hAbifura triumphos, LONDON: Printed for ^. Baldwin, near the Oxford-Jrms in Warwick-Lane. 171 1. { [ I ] •■»— r- SIR. Nov.i:^^ 1 710. 7 AS little as I love Scandal, whatever fide it comes from, 1 have prevailed with my fclf, m Obedience to your Commands, to run over the Bundle you fenc me j and knowing ^youtobea Pcrfun of that Integrity and llo- " nour, as to have more regard to Truth than Party, I will without more Ceremony give ^ vou my Thoughts as you defire, upon fuch "Parts of them as relate to the Management of the War, which I hope you will (ind not to be the lefs true or juft for the I laftc they are writ in i for plain Truths need no Difguife ,• Fidti- ooon and Ornament are of no Advantage, but ^whcn they ferve a Caiife, that can't bear to tr be feen in its true Light. This I hope will be ^ Excufe enough, for the many Marks of Hafle Q and Negligence you will meet with in this "" long Letter. You won't cxped: I fliouldconfider each of thele Papers by themfelves, that would be gi- ving too much trouble to one, who, 1 know^ is too good a Judge to think them of fo much Confequencc ^ The Letter to the Examiner is 'JL ^: mere Declamation, and confider'd in that ^ View is a pretty (mart Performance, and you $ ipay read it to be entcrtain'd, but not to be inform'd j there is fome Fire and Imagination, B but ^Soti.;^;;^' but no Reafoning, Judgment or Experience, plain Marks of a young Writer, who may in tim« ripen into fomething confiderable, and come up to the Author of Arlus and Odolpbuf^. which ii the Fidion of a more able Writer, and has the Beauties of a tolerable Romance ; and to Ihew the Skill of the Author, is very happi- ly call'd a Secret Hifiory • which is a Cover for all the Lyes the Father of them can invent, fince that Name immediately forbids all ask- ing of Queftions^ for were the Proofs to be ; produc'd, where would be the Secret ? I can't fay, I was fo well plea^'d with Sir Thomas, which 1 found fo dull and tedious, *twas im- poflible to get thro' it, there is, by all I could fee, neither Decorum nor Argument, nor Life in it ; the Author fhews he wasfadly put to it for Matter, when he is forc'd, to make up his Invcdive, to take in the Compafs of iz Years, the fatal Period fome among us are fo angry with, that is iS more, than the prc- fent Change is concerned in \ for 'tis but • four Years at mofl, that his Principals pretend to think Cfor think they don't, as I fliall fhew you by and by) that the Management of Af- fairs has been wrong. In lhort,*cis aftupid un- natural Piece, and what made me more fick of it,I have been told,'ris as ungratefulas 'tisfenfe- lefs, writ by a Man, who owes his Bread to thofe, whom he has with fo much Venome drawn his Penagainft. I don*tknow whether you will agree with me, when I tell'you,! think the Letter from a Foreign Minifier the molt artful Performance of them all,- the reft feem to be the Works of under Agents, from Diredion? and Hints mark'd out for them j but this I take- ta [3 3 to "be the Work of the chief Opsrator himfelf ; whoj if he was not at leifure to write more largely, has in this fhort Piece fafficiently ihewn, what a Right he has to the Efteem the World have long had for him • there being in it fome quick and crafty Turns, and an af- fe<5ted Appearance of Fairnefs, with which he gilds over the blackeft Poifon of Malice and Invention. You'll fee I ufe that laft Word in the modern Senfe of it ; and in my Mind the whole Letter is well enough contriv'd, to an- fwer its Defign ,• which plainly is, to pleafe FriendSj take offEnemies, amufe and quiet all, who are not acquainted with Affairs, nor en- ter into Patties, but by the new Scheme might be apt to be alarm'd. Faults on both fides has, to my thinking, a good deal of plain common Senfe in it, which Experience has all along juftify'd, and I dare fay always will. And common Senfe at this time of Day, I take to be a great Commendation to ^ Paper, and that this Writer feldom loofes fight of, except where his Caufe obliges him to quit it ^ which it does in feveral places, but no where more than where he fpeaks of Credit, all which is as mean, as the late Ejfay upon that Subjecf^: ; and that I take to be the moft affeded uncom- mon myfterious Piece of Nonfenfe_, even this wonderful Year has produced. Taking thefe Papers together, there is one thing in them, for which I mightily admire the able Archite(5l, under whom they hive all been form'd; and that is the Difference of Spirit one fees in them, according to the feve- ral forts of Readers they are intended to im- pofeon. One makes great Court to the To- B 2 rigs. rksj another is to gain the TVhigs, or divide them at leaft , others pretend mightily to Moderati- on^ to catch the Men that have Honefty and Temper^ and have not engag'd fiir in either Party,- others Teem chiefly defign'd to impofe on Foreigners^ and make them believe, all we have been doing thefe fix Monthj^ is only a perfonal Bufmels, that can have no Influence on the Publick ; that therefore the Allies, par- ticularly the Dutch, and the Houfe of Hanm- wr, fliould not be alarm'd to fee thofe Men difgracd, who, whatever other Faults they may have^ never lay under the Sufpicion of favouring Popery and France; but have been ever true to the Revolution : have always gone into Meafures for a vigorous Profecution of the War, and have ccnftantly been ftruggling to gain new Securities for the Defence of the Proteftanc Succeflion. The various Shapes of this Pofture-Mafl:er in Politicks, make this Bundle of Papers, mci- thinks, if you will pardon the Comparifon, not much unlike a Pedler's Rare-Show, in which there is a great Number of very diffe- rent Figures, ail in Motion at once ; which the gaping Spedators think there is forae ftrange Magick in, and that the Spring of Adionisin themfelves; when in Truth they are nothing but the Pedler's Engines, mov'd all by one and the fame fecret Hand, and ail contriv'd for the fi^me End, to delude and cheat the Multitude. And what is ftill more furprifing, this great Mafter himfelf has in his own Perfon afted, and that at the fame time, jril the different Parts, w hich his Tools in their Writings have but cppy'd from him. But [5] whatever various JPigures thefe Engines of his AfFeA to move in, and whatever different ways they take, they all make to the fame End , and agree in thofe Parts, of which you delire my Opinion, I mean in cenluring the Manage- ment of the War, and endeavouring to ruin the Reputation of thofe, who have been hitherto th^ chief Diredors of it. Upon which Head all they fay, may be reduc'd.to thefe four Points. '1:'''^/^'' --'■ • i/. That a good Peace might havfe been had at the end of the RamelUes Campaign. zdly. That the War in Spi??« has been fliame- fully nQgle<5i:ed, tho' the Recovery of that Kingdom was the chief thing we proposed by entring into the War. 5^//. That pulhing the War in Flanders was pUHiing it in the wrong Place, France being cover'don that fide with fo ftrong a Frontier. ^thly. That it is many ways apparent, that the Duke oi Marlborough has unnecelfarily pro- long'd the War for his own Interefl. Now if it can be (hewn, that thefe terrible Accufatlons are not only falfe in themfelves, but certainly known to be fo by the Authors of them, I leave it to you, to confider, what Regard ought to be had to fuchMen, or what Treatment they deferve, who have fo groily impofed upon the Nation, to the apparent Ha- zard of its Safety, and of lofing all the Fruits we might hope for, from a War, that has J>een hitherto conduced with fo much Glory and Succefs. To clear thefe great Points, we are defir'd, it feems, to go no farther back than the four laft Years at jqnioft \ in truth 'tis not much a- bove [6] bove three that there is any Difpute about : Till then^ all is allow'd to have gone well for certain Reafons, that held good, till about the time, that the French King difmifs'd Mon- lieur Cbamillard from the Finances, for no o- ther Reafon, that I have ever heard, but to ihew us what we ought to have done here at the fame time ; and 'twas not the Fault of thofe, who have play'd their Game better fince, that we did not. This was in February, 170^, all the Complaints we have heard of the Management of the War, are from the be- ginning of that Year, but without much Noile till thefe lafk fix Months. Since then we have been told, every thing relating to the War is wrong, and are fiU'd wich loud Clamours of Grievances, which before went abroad in gen- tle Whifpers only, or were not at all heard of. And Firft, They tell us, a Good Peace might (lave been had at the End of the Ramelliet Campaign. Now to decide this Queflion, we muft firft fettle what a Good Peace is ; and in order to that muft confider, what it was we went into the War for. No body wants to be told, that this was chiefly to obtain thefe two Ends, the Reftitution of the Sfanijh Monarchy to the Houfeof ^«/ri<2, and the procuring of a good Barrier againft France on the fide of the Ne- therlands. Without which two Points there can be no Security for Great-Britain, that their beft Trade will not be loft, and with it their Reli- gion and Government, and every thing that is dear to them ; for we ftiould every Minute be in danger of having the Bigotry, Slavery and and Poverty of France forc'd upon us, by the exorbitant Power of that moft arbitrary Prince, if helhould be fufFer'd to ftrengthen himfetf with the Addition of that vaft Monarchy, who was before much too Great for his Neigh- bours ^ to fay nothing of the Safety of the Dutch, or the Liberty of Europe ; the laft of which moft of us, I fear, have little or no Senfeof ,* and for the Safety of the Dutch, fo fatal a Delufion has polTeft many of us, that one may every Day meet with Men, who are filly enough to wim againft it. Now the Spa^ nifl) Monarchy, the Reftitution of which is the firft Article of the Grand Alliance, is known by every body to confift, befides the Spanijh Netherlands, of thefe two great Parts, of Sfain and the Indies, and q{ Milan, Naples and Sicily, with Sardinia, and the adjacent Ifles. And a good Barrier againft France means at leaft a better than the Dutch had be- fore,- which by theExperienceof fifty Years has been found to be much too weak for fb large a Frontier ,• the Spaniflj Flanders and its Capital City Gand^ having in truth no Cover at all j and5rear'd true to themieU^es^ anc| ^ithful to their ilUies^ ■ ip rpje(9:ing fo pit^f^land infecure a •j?eace. And is not this a Reproach to us^ who fuf- •fer ourjelvesto be deluded by fuch vile Inipo* ■fters, who would pertwade us oat of our ^cfes, that Half the Sfanijh Monarchy is ,a^ good as the V/hoIe,and that Nothing is as goodi as Halif. for I have fliewnyouj that one Half only was pfFer'dj and that even that could not •be had. It mud fore, to all Thinking Men, be very (urprizing, that we only of all the Allies ihou'd complain that this ridiculous Offer of the French w^s rejeded, vvhen we of all or them have moft reafon to be pleas'd with it : There eiuft needs be fome Secret inic above the reach of common Senfe, that all of a fadden this fiiou'd be made a Capital Crime in our Mini- fters, their not doing Three Years ago that, which if they had done, we fnould all before now have thought theydefervd to lofe their Heads for. I believe you begin to be tir'd with this Ar- ticle, and would iDe content I ihould fay no more info plain a Cafe, after fuch a Difco- very^the Impudence of thefe State Mounte- banks, who would have perfwaded u , that we were dangeroully ill, vyhen we law and felt our felves to be very well j and that wp C 2 " were were all undone^ if we did not leave the skil- ful and able Hands we had long us'd with fo much Succefs, to try their bcrafted Medi- cines, when we were not in thfe leaft want of them. ISlo body, if you will believe them, have fuch univerfal Remedies for all the Evils of the State as they ; and under this popular Pretence of curing the Nation, they take all the Pains they can to poifon it ; of which I have already given you one Ex- ample ;; you ftiall have more in what follows. But before I difmifs this Subject, I muft Iseg leave to obferve ope thing farther, which is of too much moment to be paft over j and that is. That they who have done their Coun- try fo much Service in reje(5ting this Offer from the French, would have done it ftill much greater, could they have prevented any Re- gard being given to it. For tho' the refufing thefe Terms could do no harm, the hearkning to them I vvill fhew you did a great deal. The Inclination fomeJPeople of thefameCompler xion with the Author of the Secret Hiftoryj^ exprefs'd to come to a Treaty with the French upon the Terms offer'd, rais'd in the Imperial Court a great Jealoufy, that the Maritime Powers were tampering with France, and ma- king Terms for themfelves, to which the Inte- reft of the Houfe oiJuflria was to befacrific'd: This put that Court upon Meafures that had a fatal Influence on the next Campaign, and ioccafion'd the two moft unfortunate Events that have happened all this War, Firft, This feiifpicion made them begin and conclude a Treaty with the French for evacuating th6 ' ^ MiU- [15 ] Milamfe, wichout the Privity of England and Holland, who did not know one Word of the Matter. And what do you think was the Confequence of this ? Why^ it gave ih^Frencb an Opportunity of fending immediately intp Spain a great Body of good Veteran Troops j and 'tis to this Reinforcement fent the Duke of ^njou, that we owe the Lofs of the Bat- tle of Jlmanza, which prov'd fo fatal to our Affairs on that Side ; if thofe Troops had not joyn'd, we had been Superior to the Enemy, and that Battle had either not been fought, or it had been won, and Spain with it, confider- ing the ill Condition the Duke of Jnjou s Af- fairs were then in ; and the true Reafon we ventur'd that Battle, was to prevent the Jun- ftion, which we did not know, or at leaft did not believe, was made at the Time we fought ; a Miftake, we may think, very eafjiy made in Spainy when 'tis known, we owe the Victory of Ramellies to the French making the very fame Miftake in Flanders, where they thought the Englijl} had not at that Time joyn'd the Con- federate Army, and reckon'd for certain that the Danes at leaft, neither had, nor could .' And this Perfwafion made them venture a-Bat- tle, which the French have fo much reafon to remember, without waiting for a eonfidera- ble Body of Troops, that were coming to them from the Rhine, the Head of which were adually at Namur, when Monfieur Vil- kroy began his March towards the Confede- rates. But to return, 'tis plain the Fre»c/> had not gain'd the Battle of Almanz^a without that Reinforcement from Italy, and even with it, thp' [ '4] tho' the Battle was fought m [Aprils ani^otjir Army was in a manner ruin'd by that Blow, all they did that Year, w^s only to take L^ri;. da. But that Reinforcement pou Id not have been fent^, had not the Secret Treafty for the Evacuation of the MiUnefi been made ,• and the Treaty had not been .ipadc^ had not the Jealoufy rais'd in the Imperial Court, by the Inclination of fome Peor ple^ exprefs*d to hearken;. -to -the Q^t of the French y made therqi refolve upon fecuring fpmething for tliemfelves. i^d the fatne Jealoufy put theifl upon 'taking another Step, no lefs prpjudicial to th§^ poair monCaufe*, a,i^that was the Expedition ^tp Nayks, which they could nptbe preyail'd with- to defer upon the repealed and raoft preffing Inftances th^t the Maritime Powers made t
6,that 'tis all one whethtr you
pvjll down ^ directly, or that which fupports
it. And 'tis the fame thing with S^ain • if chat
Kingdom be ever recover'd, it muft be, by
proper Applications to France. France ^ all the
World fees, is the Support of the Duke of
Anjou^ and if this Support be forc'd from him,
he will as furely tumble, as if you cou'd pull
him with your Hands from the Throne he has
ufurpM. Since therefore we can't reach him,
we Ihould fet our felves with all our iMight
to pull from him his Support, and ^hen
he mufi: tall on courfe : How near wc
have been fucceeding in this, you can'E
want to be told. And how it came not to
be quite done, your Frier ds know with-
out being told ^ and how much foever they
may like the Reafon of this, I'm perfwaded
they don't much like to hear of it. And if
S^ain be not gain'd this way, one may with-
out the Spirit of Prophecy foretel, it never will
be gain'd at all.
ReMnow again thefe admi'rd Pamphlets,
and when their general Declamations have a-
mus'd you, and you begin to think there is
fomething in them, then turn to this true
State of the Cafe^ and theMift they have call
before you will van'fh ; their Harangues will
leave no more Impreffion upon you, th^n the
famous Dodor's Speech does upon ihufe that
look into his Sermon. But inllc?d of thofe
Impreffions, I cinnot but think there will re-
main upon your Mind, as theie does on mine,
an utter Deieftation and Abhorrence of the
black Viilany and Malice fome Men have us'd
to
[38]
to ruin the Reputation of the ableft and moft
faithful Mlnifters, and to hazard every thing
that is dear to us as Englifh-tnen and Proteftants,
rather than not compafs their own deftrudlive
Ends.
I remember, I have often thought, upon the
late intended Invafion of the Pretender, that
itwason his part a very foolifh Enterprise ,• for
tho' ic might anfwer the Purpofes of France^
and force us to an ill Peace, it could hardly fail
to end in the Ruin of him and his Friends. And
I am of the fame Opinion with refped to our
Domeftick Invaders, if I may ufe that
Expreflion ; the Publick indeed may fuffer by
them, as much as France can wifh, but if ic
fhould have the good Fortune to efcape the
Danger, it is threatned wich^ the Attempt
that has been made upon it will, I am per-
fwaded, fooner or later bring inevitable Ruin
upon themfelves.
But we are both, I dare fay, fufficiently
tir'd for one time ; I fhall therefore take leave
of you for [the prefent, with AfTurances that
you Ihall, in a very while time, h«ar again
from,
SJR,
Tour tnoft faithful,
Humble Servant,
Poji-
[ 39 ]
Poftfcript.
Since thefe Papers were in the Prefs, the ill
News is come of a Battle loft in Spain af-
ter the Glorious Adions of jilmamra and Sara-
gojfa; Two Viftories fo great in themfelves,
and in the Confequence of them, that they
might have been decifive of the War, if the
Vortuguefe had join'd • which lam very forry
they did not, for the fake of the common
Caufe, and even of the young General him-
felf, to juftly applauded for his fearlefs Zeal
both in Fighting and Speaking for the Service
of his Country. But tho' thisunfortunate.