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Some Reasons to Prove . . . In a Letter to a Whig-Lord

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2021

Bertrand A. Goldgar
Affiliation:
Lawrence University, Wisconsin
Ian Gadd
Affiliation:
Bath Spa University
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Summary

A LETTER TO A WHIG-LORD

MY LORD,

The Dispute between your Lordship and Me, hath, I think, no manner of Relation to what, in the common Style of these Times, are called Principles; wherein both Parties seem well enough to agree, if we will but allow their Professions. I can truly affirm, That none of the reasonable sober Whigs I have conversed with, did ever avow any Opinion concerning Religion or Government, which I was not willing to subscribe; so that, according to my Judgment, those Terms of Distinction ought to be dropped, and others introduced in their stead, to denominate Men, as they are inclined to Peace or War, to the Last, or the Present Ministry: For whoever thoroughly considers the matter, will find these to be the only Differences that divide the Nation at present. I am apt to think your Lordship would readily allow this, if you were not aware of the Consiquence I intend to draw: For it is plain that the making Peace andWar, as well as the Choice of Ministers, is wholly in the Crown; and therefore the Dispute at present lies altogether between those who would support, and those who would violate the Royal Prerogative. This Decision may seem perhaps too sudden and severe, but I do not see how it can be contested. Give me leave to ask your Lordship, whether you are not resolved to oppose the present Ministry to the utmost? and whether it was not chiefly with this design, that upon the opening of the present Session, you gave your Vote against any Peace, till Spain and the West-Indies were recovered from the Bourbon Family? I am confident your Lordship then believed, what several of your House and Party have acknowledged, that the Recovery of Spain was grown impracticable by several Incidents, as well as by our utter Inability to continue theWar upon the former foot. But you reasoned right, that such aVote, in such a Juncture, was the most probable way of ruining the present Ministry. For as Her M——y would certainly lay much weight upon a Vote of either House, so it was judged that her Ministers would hardly venture to act directly against it; the natural Consequence of which must be, a Dissolution of the Parliament, and a return of all your Friends into a full Possession of Power.

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Chapter
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English Political Writings 1711–1714
'The Conduct of the Allies' and Other Works
, pp. 163 - 180
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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