Queen’s Accession to the Throne, and the first
Year in which that Day was solemnly observed, (for,
by some Accident or other, it had been overlook’d
the Year before;) and every one will see, without
the date of it, that it was preached very early
in this Reign, since I was able only to promise and
presage its future Glories and Successes, from the
good Appearances of things, and the happy Turn our
Affairs began to take; and could not then count
up the Victories and Triumphs that, for seven Years
after, made it, in the Prophet’s Language, a
Name and a Praise among all the People of the Earth.
Never did seven such Years together pass over the
head of any English Monarch, nor cover it with so much
Honour: The Crown and Sceptre seemed to be the
Queen’s least Ornaments; those, other Princes
wore in common with her, and her great personal
Virtues were the same before and since; but such was
the Fame of her Administration of Affairs at home,
such was the Reputation of her Wisdom and Felicity
in chusing Ministers, and such was then esteemed
their Faithfulness and Zeal, their Diligence and great
Abilities in executing her Commands; to such a height
of military Glory did her great General and her
Armies carry the British Name abroad; such was the
Harmony and Concord betwixt her and her Allies, and
such was the Blessing of God upon all her Counsels
and Undertakings, that I am as sure as History can
make me, no Prince of ours was ever yet so prosperous
and successful, so beloved, esteemed, and honoured
by their Subjects and their Friends, nor near so formidable
to their Enemies. We were, as all the World imagined
then, just ent’ring on the ways that promised
to lead to such a Peace, as would have answered
all the Prayers of our religious Queen, the Care and
Vigilance of a most able Ministry, the Payments of
a willing and obedient People, as well as all the
glorious Toils and Hazards of the Soldiery; when
God, for our Sins, permitted the Spirit of Discord
to go forth, and, by troubling sore the Camp, the
City, and the Country, (and oh that it had altogether
spared the Places sacred to his Worship!) to spoil,
for a time, this beautiful and pleasing Prospect,
and give us, in its stead, I know not what—Our
Enemies will tell the rest with Pleasure. It
will become me better to pray to God to restore
us to the Power of obtaining such a Peace, as will
be to his Glory, the Safety, Honour, and the Welfare
of the Queen and her Dominions, and the general
Satisfaction of all her High and Mighty Allies.
May 2, 1712.
T.
[Footnote 1: Dr. William Fleetwood, Bishop of St. Asaph, had published Four Sermons.
1. On the death of Queen Mary, 1694. 2. On the death of the Duke of Gloucester, 1700. 3. On the death of King William, 1701. 4. On the Queen’s Accession to the Throne, in 1702, with a Preface. 8vo. London, 1712.