force of Europe, prosecuting a vigorous war, we may
justly hope that the remnant and wreck of this system
cannot long oppose an effectual resistance. But,
supposing the confederacy of Europe prematurely dissolved:
supposing our armies disbanded, our fleets laid up
in our harbours, our exertions relaxed, and our means
of precaution and defence relinquished; do we believe
that the revolutionary power, with this rest and breathing-time
given it to recover from the pressure under which it
is now sinking, possessing still the means of calling
suddenly and violently into action whatever is the
remaining physical force of France, under the guidance
of military despotism; do we believe that this power,
the terror of which is now beginning to vanish, will
not again prove formidable to Europe? Can we
forget that, in the ten years in which that power
has subsisted, it has brought more misery on surrounding
nations, and produced more acts of aggression, cruelty,
perfidy, and enormous ambition, than can be traced
in the history of France for the centuries which have
elapsed since the foundation of its monarchy, including
all the wars which, in the course of that period, have
been waged by any of those sovereigns whose projects
of aggrandizement, and violations of treaty, afford
a constant theme of general reproach against the ancient
government of France? And with these considerations
before us, can we hesitate whether we have the best
prospect of permanent peace, the best security for
the independence and safety of Europe, from the restoration
of the lawful government, or from the continuance
of revolutionary power in the hands of Buonaparte?
In compromise and treaty with such a power, placed
in such hands as now exercise it, and retaining the
same means of annoyance which it now possesses, I
see little hope of permanent security. I see no
possibility at this moment of concluding such a peace
as would justify that liberal intercourse which is
the essence of real amity; no chance of terminating
the expenses or the anxieties of war, or of restoring
to us any of the advantages of established tranquillity;
and as a sincere lover of peace, I cannot be content
with its nominal attainment; I must be desirous of
pursuing that system which promises to attain, in
the end, the permanent enjoyment of its solid and
substantial blessings for this country, and for Europe.
As a sincere lover of peace, I will not sacrifice
it by grasping at the shadow, when the reality is
not substantially within my reach—Cur
igitur pacem nolo? Quid infida est, quia periculosa,
quia esse non potest.
If, Sir, in all that I have now offered to the House,
I have succeeded in establishing the proposition that
the system of the French revolution has been such
as to afford to foreign Powers no adequate ground
for security in negotiation, and that the change which
has recently taken place has not yet afforded that
security; if I have laid before you a just statement
of the nature and extent of the danger with which
we have been threatened; it would remain only shortly
to consider, whether there is anything in the circumstances
of the present moment to induce us to accept a security
confessedly inadequate against a danger of such a
description.