which must not be left out of consideration, and about
which his servants might perhaps be better informed
than himself, the temper of their own country.
It was, the Chancellor wrote, their duty to tell His
Majesty that the recent elections had indicated the
public feeling in a manner which had not been expected,
but which could not be mistaken. The spirit which
had borne the nation up through nine years of exertions
and sacrifices seemed to be dead. The people
were sick of taxes; they hated the thought of war.
As it would, in such circumstances, be no easy matter
to form a coalition capable of resisting the pretensions
of France, it was most desirable that she should be
induced to withdraw those pretensions; and it was not
to be expected that she would withdraw them without
securing for herself a large compensation. The
principle of the Treaty of Loo, therefore, the English
Ministers cordially approved. But whether the
articles of that treaty were or were not too favourable
to the House of Bourbon, and whether the House of
Bourbon was likely faithfully to observe them, were
questions about which Somers delicately hinted that
he and his colleagues felt some misgivings. They
had their fears that Lewis might be playing false.
They had their fears also that, possessed of Sicily,
he would be master of the trade of the Levant; and
that, possessed of Guipuscoa, he would be able at
any moment to push an army into the heart of Castile.
But they had been reassured by the thought that their
Sovereign thoroughly understood this department of
politics, that he had fully considered all these things,
that he had neglected no precaution, and that the
concessions which he had made to France were the smallest
which could have averted the calamities impending
over Christendom. It was added that the service
which His Majesty had rendered to the House of Bavaria
gave him a right to ask for some return. Would
it be too much to expect, from the gratitude of the
prince who was soon to be a great king, some relaxation
of the rigorous system which excluded the English
trade from the Spanish colonies? Such a relaxation
would greatly endear His Majesty to his subjects.
With these suggestions the Chancellor sent off the powers which the King wanted. They were drawn up by Vernon with his own hand, and sealed in such a manner that no subordinate officer was let into the secret. Blanks were left, as the King had directed, for the names of two Commissioners. But Somers gently hinted that it would be proper to fill those blanks with the names of persons who were English by naturalisation, if not by birth, and who would therefore be responsible to Parliament.