be invited to court; your majesty must condescend
to speak to him in the most favourable and distinguished
manner; you must make him believe that he is the only
person upon whose opinion you can rely, and to whom
your people look up for useful measures.
As he has already several times refused to take
the lead in the administration, unless it was
totally modelled to his fancy, your majesty should
close in with his advice, and give him leave to
arrange the administration as he pleases, and
put whom he chooses into office (there can be
no danger in that as you can dismiss him when
you think fit); and when he has got thus far (to which
his extreme self-love and the high opinion he
entertains of his own importance, will easily
conduce), it will be necessary that your majesty
should seem to have a great regard for his health;
signifying to him that your affairs will be ruined
if he should die; that you want to have him constantly
near you, to have his sage advice; and that therefore,
as he is much disordered in body, and something
infirm, it will be necessary for his preservation
for him to quit the House of Commons, where malevolent
tempers will be continually fretting him, and where,
indeed, his presence will be needless, as no step
will be taken but according to his advice; and
that he will let you give him a distinguishing
mark of your approbation, by creating him a peer.
This he may be brought to, for, if I know anything
of mankind, he has a love of honour and money;
and, notwithstanding his great haughtiness and
seeming contempt for honour, he may be won if
it be done with dexterity. For, as the poet Fenton
says, ‘Flattery is an oil that softens the
thoughtless fool.’
“If your majesty can once bring him to accept of a coronet, all will be over with him; the changing multitude will cease to have any confidence in him; and when you see that, your majesty may turn your back to him, dismiss him from his post, turn out his meddling partizans, and restore things to quiet; the bee will have lost his sting, and become an idle drone whose buzzing nobody heeds.
“Your majesty will pardon me for the freedom with which I have given my sentiments and advice; which I should not have done, had not your majesty commanded it, and had I not been certain that your peace is much disturbed by the contrivance of that turbulent man. I shall only add that I will dispose several whom I know to wish him well to solicit for his establishment in power, that you may seem to yield to their entreaties, and the finesse be less liable to be discovered.
“I hope to have the
honour to attend your majesty {305} in a few
days; which I will do privately,
that my public presence may
give him no umbrage.
(Signed) ROBERT WALPOLE
“(Dated) 24. January, 1741.”
As it seems incredible that Walpole could have written such a letter; and the editor does not say where it is taken from, or where the original is, I beg to ask any of your readers whether they have ever seen the letter elsewhere, or attributed by any other writer to Walpole? The editor adds, “accordingly, the scheme took place very soon after, and Mr. Pulteney was in 1742 dignified with the titles before mentioned, i.e. Earl of Bath, &c.”