him often suspected by his nearest friends, for some
months, in points of the highest importance, to a degree,
that they were ready to break with him, and only undeceived
by time and accident. His detractors, who charge
him with cunning, are but ill acquainted with his
character; for, in the sense they take the word, and
as it is usually understood, I know no man to whom
that mean talent could be with less justice applied,
as the conduct of affairs, while he hath been at the
helm, doth clearly demonstrate, very contrary to the
nature and principles of cunning, which is always
employed in serving little turns, proposing little
ends, and supplying daily exigencies by little shifts
and expedients. But to rescue a prince out of
the hands of insolent subjects, bent upon such designs
as must probably end in the ruin of the government;
to find out means for paying such exorbitant debts
as this nation hath been involved in, and reduce it
to a better management; to make a potent enemy offer
advantageous terms of peace, and deliver up the most
important fortress of his kingdom, as a security;[11]
and this against all the opposition, mutually raised
and inflamed by parties and allies; such performances
can only be called cunning by those whose want of
understanding, or of candour, puts them upon finding
ill names for great qualities of the mind, which themselves
do neither possess, nor can form any just conception
of. However, it must be allowed, that an obstinate
love of secrecy in this minister seems, at distance,
to have some resemblance of cunning; for he is not
only very retentive of secrets, but appears to be
so too, which I number amongst his defects. He
hath been blamed by his friends for refusing to discover
his intentions, even in those points where the wisest
man may have need of advice and assistance, and some
have censured him, upon that account, as if he were
jealous of power but he hath been heard to answer,
“That he seldom did otherwise, without cause
to repent”
[Footnote 11: This is surely a piece of Swift’s
partiality for Oxford; since it practically deprives
Bolingbroke of whatever credit was his for the Peace
of Utrecht, and that was not a little; certainly more
than may be given to Oxford. [T.S.]]
However, so undistinguished a caution cannot, in my
opinion, be justified, by which the owner loseth many
advantages, and whereof all men, who deserved to be
confided in, may with some reason complain. His
love of procrastination (wherein doubtless nature hath
her share) may probably be increased by the same means,
but this is an imputation laid upon many other great
ministers, who, like men under too heavy a load, let
fall that which is of the least consequence, and go
back to fetch it when their shoulders are free, for
time is often gained, as well as lost, by delay, which
at worst is a fault on the securer side.[12] Neither
probably is this minister answerable for half the clamour
raised against him upon that article: his endeavours