The History of England, from the Accession of James the Second - Volume 4 by Thomas Babington Macaulay (superbooks4u .TXT) 📖
Download in Format:
- Author: Thomas Babington Macaulay
Book online «The History of England, from the Accession of James the Second - Volume 4 by Thomas Babington Macaulay (superbooks4u .TXT) 📖». Author Thomas Babington Macaulay
of May 26.
FN 269 London Gaz., May 26. 1692; Burchett's Memoirs of Transactions at Sea; Baden to the States General, May 24/June 3; Life of James, ii. 494; Russell's Letters in the Commons' Journals of Nov. 28. 1692; An Account of the Great Victory, 1692; Monthly Mercuries for June and July 1692; Paris Gazette, May 28/June 7; Van Almonde's despatch to the States General, dated May 24/June 3. 1692. The French official account will be found in the Monthly Mercury for July. A report drawn up by Foucault, Intendant of the province of Normandy, will be found in M. Capefigue's Louis XIV.
FN 270 An Account of the late Great Victory, 1692; Monthly Mercury for June; Baden to the States General, May 24/ June 3; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 271 London Gazette, June 2. 1692; Monthly Mercury; Baden to the States General, June 14/24. Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 272 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary; Monthly Mercury.
FN 273 London Gazette, June 9.; Baden to the States General, June 7/17
FN 274 Baden to the States General, June. 3/13
FN 275 Baden to the States General, May 24/June 3; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 276 An Account of the late Great Victory, 1692; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 277 Baden to the States General, June 7/17. 1692.
FN 278 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 279 I give one short sentence as a specimen: "O fie that ever it should be said that a clergyman have committed such durty actions!"
FN 280 Gutch, Collectanea Curiosa.
FN 281 My account of this plot is chiefly taken from Sprat's Relation of the late Wicked Contrivance of Stephen Blackhead and Robert Young, 1692. There are very few better narratives in the language.
FN 282 Baden to the States General, Feb. 14/24 1693.
FN 283 Postman, April 13. and 20. 1700; Postboy, April 18.; Flying Post, April 20.
FN 284 London Gazette, March 14. 1692.
FN 285 The Swedes came, it is true, but not till the campaign was over. London Gazette, Sept, 10 1691,
FN 286 William to Heinsius March 14/24. 1692.
FN 287 William to Heinsius, Feb. 2/12 1692.
FN 288 Ibid. Jan 12/22 1692.
FN 289 Ibid. Jan. 19/29. 1692.
FN 290 Burnet, ii. 82 83.; Correspondence of William and Heinsius, passim.
FN 291 Memoires de Torcy.
FN 292 William to Heinsius, Oct 28/Nov 8 1691.
FN 293 Ibid. Jan. 19/29. 1692.
FN 294 His letters to Heinsius are full of this subject.
FN 295 See the Letters from Rome among the Nairne Papers. Those in 1692 are from Lytcott; those in 1693 from Cardinal Howard; those in 1694 from Bishop Ellis; those in 1695 from Lord Perth. They all tell the same story.
FN 296 William's correspondence with Heinsius; London Gazette, Feb. 4. 1691. In a pasquinade published in 1693, and entitled "La Foire d'Ausbourg, Ballet Allegorique," the Elector of Saxony is introduced saying
"Moy, je diray naivement, Qu'une jartiere d'Angleterre Feroit tout Mon empressement; Et je ne vois rien sur la terre Ou je trouve plus d'agrement."
FN 297 William's correspondence with Heinsius. There is a curious account of Schoening in the Memoirs of Count Dohna.
FN 298 Burnet, ii. 84.
FN 299 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 300 Monthly Mercuries of January and April 1693; Burnet, ii. 84. In the Burnet MS. Hail. 6584, is a warm eulogy on the Elector of Bavaria. When the MS. was written he was allied with England against France. In the History, which was prepared for publication when he was allied with France against England, the eulogy is omitted.
FN 301 "Nec pluribus impar."
FN 302 Memoires de Saint Simon; Dangeau; Racine's Letters, and Narrative entitled Relation de ce qui s'est passe au Siege de Namur; Monthly Mercury, May 1692.
FN 303 Memoires de Saint Simon; Racine to Boileau , May 21. 1692.
FN 304 Monthly Mercury for June; William to Heinsius May 26/ June 5 1692.
FN 305 William to Heinsius, May 26/June 5 1692.
FN 306 Monthly Mercuries of June and July 1692; London Gazettes of June; Gazette de Paris; Memoires de Saint Simon; Journal de Dangeau; William to Heinsius, May 30/June 9 June 2/12 June 11/21; Vernon's Letters to Colt, printed in Tindal's History; Racine's Narrative, and Letters to Boileau of June 15. and 24.
FN 307 Memoires de Saint Simon.
FN 308 London Gazette, May 30. 1692; Memoires de Saint Simon; Journal de Dangeau; Boyer's History of William III.
FN 309 Memoires de Saint Simon; Voltaire, Siecle de Louis XIV. Voltaire speaks with a contempt which is probably just of the account of this affair in the Causes Celebres. See also the Letters of Madame de Sevigne during the months of January and February 1680. In several English lampoons Luxemburg is nicknamed Aesop, from his deformity, and called a wizard, in allusion to his dealings with La Voisin. In one Jacobite allegory he is the necromancer Grandorsio. In Narcissus Luttrell's Diary for June 1692 he is called a conjuror. I have seen two or three English caricatures of Luxemburg's figure.
FN 310 Memoires de Saint Simon; Memoires de Villars; Racine to Boileau, May 21. 1692.
FN 311 Narcissus Luttrell, April 28. 1692.
FN 312 London Gazette Aug. 4. 8. 11. 1692; Gazette de Paris, Aug. 9. 16.; Voltaire, Siecle de Louis XIV.; Burnet, ii. 97; Memoires de Berwick; Dykvelt's Letter to the States General dated August 4. 1692. See also the very interesting debate which took place in the House of Commons on Nov. 21. 1692. An English translation of Luxemburg's very elaborate and artful despatch will be found in the Monthly Mercury for September 1692. The original has recently been printed in the new edition of Dangeau. Lewis pronounced it the best despatch that he had ever seen. The editor of the Monthly Mercury maintains that it was manufactured at Paris. "To think otherwise," he says, "is mere folly; as if Luxemburg could be at so much leisure to write such a long letter, more like a pedant than a general, or rather the monitor of a school, giving an account to his master how the rest of the boys behaved themselves." In the Monthly Mercury will be found also the French official list of killed and wounded. Of all the accounts of the battle that which seems to me the best is in the Memoirs of Feuquieres. It is illustrated by a map. Feuquieres divides his praise and blame very fairly between the generals. The traditions of the English mess tables have been preserved by Sterne, who was brought up at the knees of old soldiers of William. "'There was Cutts's' continued the Corporal, clapping the forefinger of his right hand upon the thumb of his left, and counting round his hand; 'there was Cutts's, Mackay's Angus's, Graham's and Leven's, all cut to pieces; and so had the English Lifeguards too, had it not been for some regiments on the right, who marched up boldly to their relief, and received the enemy's fire in their faces before any one of their own platoons discharged a musket. They'll go to heaven for it,' added Trim."
FN 313 Voltaire, Siecle de Louis XIV.
FN 314 Langhorne, the chief lay agent of the Jesuits in England, always, as he owned to Tillotson, selected tools on this principle. Burnet, i. 230.
FN 315 I have taken the history of Grandval's plot chiefly from Grandval's own confession. I have not mentioned Madame de Maintenon, because Grandval, in his confession, did not mention her. The accusation brought against her rests solely on the authority of Dumont. See also a True Account of the horrid Conspiracy against the Life of His most Sacred Majesty William III. 1692; Reflections upon the late horrid Conspiracy contrived by some of the French Court to murder His Majesty in Flanders 1692: Burnet, ii. 92.; Vernon's letters from the camp to Colt, published by Tindal; the London Gazette, Aug, 11. The Paris Gazette contains not one word on the subject,-a most significant silence.
FN 316 London Gazette, Oct. 20. 24. 1692.
FN 317 See his report in Burchett.
FN 318 London Gazette, July 28. 1692. See the resolutions of the Council of War in Burchett. In a letter to Nottingham, dated July 10, Russell says, "Six weeks will near conclude what we call summer." Lords Journals, Dec. 19. 1692.
FN 319 Monthly Mercury, Aug. and Sept. 1692.
FN 320 Evelyn's Diary, July 25. 1692; Burnet, ii. 94, 95., and Lord Dartmouth's Note. The history of the quarrel between Russell and Nottingham will be best learned from the Parliamentary Journals and Debates of the Session of 1692/3.
FN 321 Commons' Journals, Nov. 19. 1692; Burnet, ii. 95.; Grey's Debates, Nov. 21. 1692; Paris Gazettes of August and September; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Sept.
FN 322 See Bart's Letters of Nobility, and the Paris Gazettes of the autumn of 1692.
FN 323 Memoires de Du Guay Trouin.
FN 324 London Gazette, Aug. 11. 1692; Evelyn's Diary, Aug. 10.; Monthly Mercury for September; A Full Account of the late dreadful Earthquake at Port Royal in Jamaica, licensed Sept. 9. 1692.
FN 325 Evelyn's Diary, June 25. Oct. 1. 1690; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, June 1692, May 1693; Monthly Mercury, April, May, and June 1693; Tom Brown's Description of a Country Life, 1692.
FN 326 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Nov. 1692.
FN 327 See, for example, the London Gazette of Jan. 12. 1692
FN 328 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Dec. 1692.
FN 329 Ibid. Jan. 1693.
FN 330 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, July 1692.
FN 331 Evelyn's Diary, Nov. 20. 1692: Narcissus Luttrell's Diary; London Gazette, Nov. 24.; Hop to the Greffier of the States General, Nov. 18/28
FN 332 London Gazette, Dec. 19. 1692.
FN 333 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Dec. 1692.
FN 334 Ibid. Nov. 1692.
FN 335 Ibid. August 1692.
FN 336 Hop to the Greffier of the States General, Dec 23/Jan 2 1693. The Dutch despatches of this year are filled with stories of robberies.
FN 337 Hop to the Greffier of the States General, Dec 23/Jan 2 1693; Historical Records of the Queen's Bays, published by authority; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Nov. 15.
FN 338 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Dee. 22.
FN 339 Ibid. Dec. 1692; Hop, Jan. 3/13 Hop calls Whitney, "den befaamsten roover in Engelandt."
FN 340 London Gazette January 2. 1692/3.
FN 341 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Jan. 1692/3.
FN 342 Ibid. Dec. 1692.
FN 343 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, January and February; Hop Jan 31/Feb 10 and Feb 3/13 1693; Letter to Secretary Trenchard, 1694; New Court Contrivances or more Sham Plots still, 1693.
FN 344 Lords' and Commons' Journals, Nov. 4., Jan. 1692.
FN 345 Commons' Journals, Nov. 10 1692.
FN 346 See the Lords' Journals from Nov. 7. to Nov. 18. 1692; Burnet, ii. 102. Tindall's account of these proceedings was taken from letters addressed by Warre, Under Secretary of State, to Colt, envoy at Hanover. Letter to Mr. Secretary Trenchard, 1694.
FN 347 Lords' Journals, Dec. 7.; Tindal, from the Colt Papers; Burnet, ii. 105.
FN 348 Grey's Debates, Nov. 21. and 23. 1692.
FN 349 Grey's Debates, Nov. 21. 1692; Colt Papers in Tindal.
FN 350 Tindal, Colt Papers; Commons' Journals, Jan. 11. 1693.
FN 351 Colt Papers in Tindal; Lords' Journals from Dec. 6. to Dec. 19. 1692; inclusive,
FN 352 As to the proceedings of this day in the House of Commons, see the Journals, Dec. 20, and the letter of Robert Wilmot, M.P. for Derby, to his colleague Anchitel Grey, in Grey's Debates.
FN 353 Commons' Journals,
FN 269 London Gaz., May 26. 1692; Burchett's Memoirs of Transactions at Sea; Baden to the States General, May 24/June 3; Life of James, ii. 494; Russell's Letters in the Commons' Journals of Nov. 28. 1692; An Account of the Great Victory, 1692; Monthly Mercuries for June and July 1692; Paris Gazette, May 28/June 7; Van Almonde's despatch to the States General, dated May 24/June 3. 1692. The French official account will be found in the Monthly Mercury for July. A report drawn up by Foucault, Intendant of the province of Normandy, will be found in M. Capefigue's Louis XIV.
FN 270 An Account of the late Great Victory, 1692; Monthly Mercury for June; Baden to the States General, May 24/ June 3; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 271 London Gazette, June 2. 1692; Monthly Mercury; Baden to the States General, June 14/24. Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 272 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary; Monthly Mercury.
FN 273 London Gazette, June 9.; Baden to the States General, June 7/17
FN 274 Baden to the States General, June. 3/13
FN 275 Baden to the States General, May 24/June 3; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 276 An Account of the late Great Victory, 1692; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 277 Baden to the States General, June 7/17. 1692.
FN 278 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 279 I give one short sentence as a specimen: "O fie that ever it should be said that a clergyman have committed such durty actions!"
FN 280 Gutch, Collectanea Curiosa.
FN 281 My account of this plot is chiefly taken from Sprat's Relation of the late Wicked Contrivance of Stephen Blackhead and Robert Young, 1692. There are very few better narratives in the language.
FN 282 Baden to the States General, Feb. 14/24 1693.
FN 283 Postman, April 13. and 20. 1700; Postboy, April 18.; Flying Post, April 20.
FN 284 London Gazette, March 14. 1692.
FN 285 The Swedes came, it is true, but not till the campaign was over. London Gazette, Sept, 10 1691,
FN 286 William to Heinsius March 14/24. 1692.
FN 287 William to Heinsius, Feb. 2/12 1692.
FN 288 Ibid. Jan 12/22 1692.
FN 289 Ibid. Jan. 19/29. 1692.
FN 290 Burnet, ii. 82 83.; Correspondence of William and Heinsius, passim.
FN 291 Memoires de Torcy.
FN 292 William to Heinsius, Oct 28/Nov 8 1691.
FN 293 Ibid. Jan. 19/29. 1692.
FN 294 His letters to Heinsius are full of this subject.
FN 295 See the Letters from Rome among the Nairne Papers. Those in 1692 are from Lytcott; those in 1693 from Cardinal Howard; those in 1694 from Bishop Ellis; those in 1695 from Lord Perth. They all tell the same story.
FN 296 William's correspondence with Heinsius; London Gazette, Feb. 4. 1691. In a pasquinade published in 1693, and entitled "La Foire d'Ausbourg, Ballet Allegorique," the Elector of Saxony is introduced saying
"Moy, je diray naivement, Qu'une jartiere d'Angleterre Feroit tout Mon empressement; Et je ne vois rien sur la terre Ou je trouve plus d'agrement."
FN 297 William's correspondence with Heinsius. There is a curious account of Schoening in the Memoirs of Count Dohna.
FN 298 Burnet, ii. 84.
FN 299 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary.
FN 300 Monthly Mercuries of January and April 1693; Burnet, ii. 84. In the Burnet MS. Hail. 6584, is a warm eulogy on the Elector of Bavaria. When the MS. was written he was allied with England against France. In the History, which was prepared for publication when he was allied with France against England, the eulogy is omitted.
FN 301 "Nec pluribus impar."
FN 302 Memoires de Saint Simon; Dangeau; Racine's Letters, and Narrative entitled Relation de ce qui s'est passe au Siege de Namur; Monthly Mercury, May 1692.
FN 303 Memoires de Saint Simon; Racine to Boileau , May 21. 1692.
FN 304 Monthly Mercury for June; William to Heinsius May 26/ June 5 1692.
FN 305 William to Heinsius, May 26/June 5 1692.
FN 306 Monthly Mercuries of June and July 1692; London Gazettes of June; Gazette de Paris; Memoires de Saint Simon; Journal de Dangeau; William to Heinsius, May 30/June 9 June 2/12 June 11/21; Vernon's Letters to Colt, printed in Tindal's History; Racine's Narrative, and Letters to Boileau of June 15. and 24.
FN 307 Memoires de Saint Simon.
FN 308 London Gazette, May 30. 1692; Memoires de Saint Simon; Journal de Dangeau; Boyer's History of William III.
FN 309 Memoires de Saint Simon; Voltaire, Siecle de Louis XIV. Voltaire speaks with a contempt which is probably just of the account of this affair in the Causes Celebres. See also the Letters of Madame de Sevigne during the months of January and February 1680. In several English lampoons Luxemburg is nicknamed Aesop, from his deformity, and called a wizard, in allusion to his dealings with La Voisin. In one Jacobite allegory he is the necromancer Grandorsio. In Narcissus Luttrell's Diary for June 1692 he is called a conjuror. I have seen two or three English caricatures of Luxemburg's figure.
FN 310 Memoires de Saint Simon; Memoires de Villars; Racine to Boileau, May 21. 1692.
FN 311 Narcissus Luttrell, April 28. 1692.
FN 312 London Gazette Aug. 4. 8. 11. 1692; Gazette de Paris, Aug. 9. 16.; Voltaire, Siecle de Louis XIV.; Burnet, ii. 97; Memoires de Berwick; Dykvelt's Letter to the States General dated August 4. 1692. See also the very interesting debate which took place in the House of Commons on Nov. 21. 1692. An English translation of Luxemburg's very elaborate and artful despatch will be found in the Monthly Mercury for September 1692. The original has recently been printed in the new edition of Dangeau. Lewis pronounced it the best despatch that he had ever seen. The editor of the Monthly Mercury maintains that it was manufactured at Paris. "To think otherwise," he says, "is mere folly; as if Luxemburg could be at so much leisure to write such a long letter, more like a pedant than a general, or rather the monitor of a school, giving an account to his master how the rest of the boys behaved themselves." In the Monthly Mercury will be found also the French official list of killed and wounded. Of all the accounts of the battle that which seems to me the best is in the Memoirs of Feuquieres. It is illustrated by a map. Feuquieres divides his praise and blame very fairly between the generals. The traditions of the English mess tables have been preserved by Sterne, who was brought up at the knees of old soldiers of William. "'There was Cutts's' continued the Corporal, clapping the forefinger of his right hand upon the thumb of his left, and counting round his hand; 'there was Cutts's, Mackay's Angus's, Graham's and Leven's, all cut to pieces; and so had the English Lifeguards too, had it not been for some regiments on the right, who marched up boldly to their relief, and received the enemy's fire in their faces before any one of their own platoons discharged a musket. They'll go to heaven for it,' added Trim."
FN 313 Voltaire, Siecle de Louis XIV.
FN 314 Langhorne, the chief lay agent of the Jesuits in England, always, as he owned to Tillotson, selected tools on this principle. Burnet, i. 230.
FN 315 I have taken the history of Grandval's plot chiefly from Grandval's own confession. I have not mentioned Madame de Maintenon, because Grandval, in his confession, did not mention her. The accusation brought against her rests solely on the authority of Dumont. See also a True Account of the horrid Conspiracy against the Life of His most Sacred Majesty William III. 1692; Reflections upon the late horrid Conspiracy contrived by some of the French Court to murder His Majesty in Flanders 1692: Burnet, ii. 92.; Vernon's letters from the camp to Colt, published by Tindal; the London Gazette, Aug, 11. The Paris Gazette contains not one word on the subject,-a most significant silence.
FN 316 London Gazette, Oct. 20. 24. 1692.
FN 317 See his report in Burchett.
FN 318 London Gazette, July 28. 1692. See the resolutions of the Council of War in Burchett. In a letter to Nottingham, dated July 10, Russell says, "Six weeks will near conclude what we call summer." Lords Journals, Dec. 19. 1692.
FN 319 Monthly Mercury, Aug. and Sept. 1692.
FN 320 Evelyn's Diary, July 25. 1692; Burnet, ii. 94, 95., and Lord Dartmouth's Note. The history of the quarrel between Russell and Nottingham will be best learned from the Parliamentary Journals and Debates of the Session of 1692/3.
FN 321 Commons' Journals, Nov. 19. 1692; Burnet, ii. 95.; Grey's Debates, Nov. 21. 1692; Paris Gazettes of August and September; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Sept.
FN 322 See Bart's Letters of Nobility, and the Paris Gazettes of the autumn of 1692.
FN 323 Memoires de Du Guay Trouin.
FN 324 London Gazette, Aug. 11. 1692; Evelyn's Diary, Aug. 10.; Monthly Mercury for September; A Full Account of the late dreadful Earthquake at Port Royal in Jamaica, licensed Sept. 9. 1692.
FN 325 Evelyn's Diary, June 25. Oct. 1. 1690; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, June 1692, May 1693; Monthly Mercury, April, May, and June 1693; Tom Brown's Description of a Country Life, 1692.
FN 326 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Nov. 1692.
FN 327 See, for example, the London Gazette of Jan. 12. 1692
FN 328 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Dec. 1692.
FN 329 Ibid. Jan. 1693.
FN 330 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, July 1692.
FN 331 Evelyn's Diary, Nov. 20. 1692: Narcissus Luttrell's Diary; London Gazette, Nov. 24.; Hop to the Greffier of the States General, Nov. 18/28
FN 332 London Gazette, Dec. 19. 1692.
FN 333 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Dec. 1692.
FN 334 Ibid. Nov. 1692.
FN 335 Ibid. August 1692.
FN 336 Hop to the Greffier of the States General, Dec 23/Jan 2 1693. The Dutch despatches of this year are filled with stories of robberies.
FN 337 Hop to the Greffier of the States General, Dec 23/Jan 2 1693; Historical Records of the Queen's Bays, published by authority; Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Nov. 15.
FN 338 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Dee. 22.
FN 339 Ibid. Dec. 1692; Hop, Jan. 3/13 Hop calls Whitney, "den befaamsten roover in Engelandt."
FN 340 London Gazette January 2. 1692/3.
FN 341 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, Jan. 1692/3.
FN 342 Ibid. Dec. 1692.
FN 343 Narcissus Luttrell's Diary, January and February; Hop Jan 31/Feb 10 and Feb 3/13 1693; Letter to Secretary Trenchard, 1694; New Court Contrivances or more Sham Plots still, 1693.
FN 344 Lords' and Commons' Journals, Nov. 4., Jan. 1692.
FN 345 Commons' Journals, Nov. 10 1692.
FN 346 See the Lords' Journals from Nov. 7. to Nov. 18. 1692; Burnet, ii. 102. Tindall's account of these proceedings was taken from letters addressed by Warre, Under Secretary of State, to Colt, envoy at Hanover. Letter to Mr. Secretary Trenchard, 1694.
FN 347 Lords' Journals, Dec. 7.; Tindal, from the Colt Papers; Burnet, ii. 105.
FN 348 Grey's Debates, Nov. 21. and 23. 1692.
FN 349 Grey's Debates, Nov. 21. 1692; Colt Papers in Tindal.
FN 350 Tindal, Colt Papers; Commons' Journals, Jan. 11. 1693.
FN 351 Colt Papers in Tindal; Lords' Journals from Dec. 6. to Dec. 19. 1692; inclusive,
FN 352 As to the proceedings of this day in the House of Commons, see the Journals, Dec. 20, and the letter of Robert Wilmot, M.P. for Derby, to his colleague Anchitel Grey, in Grey's Debates.
FN 353 Commons' Journals,
Free ebook «The History of England, from the Accession of James the Second - Volume 4 by Thomas Babington Macaulay (superbooks4u .TXT) 📖» - read online now
Similar e-books:
Comments (0)