the design upon Toulon failed in the year 1706, only
from the secret view of the House of Austria upon
Naples: which made the Court of Vienna, notwithstanding
the representations of the other allies to the contrary,
send to Naples the 12,000 men that would have done
the business at Toulon. In this last war too,
the same causes had the same effects: the Queen
of Hungary in secret thought of nothing but recovering
of Silesia, and what she had lost in Italy; and, therefore,
never sent half that quota which she promised, and
we paid for, into Flanders; but left that country
to the maritime powers to defend as they could.
The King of Sardinia’s real object was Savona
and all the Riviera di Ponente; for which reason he
concurred so lamely in the invasion of Provence, where
the Queen of Hungary, likewise, did not send one-third
of the force stipulated, engrossed as she was by her
oblique views upon the plunder of Genoa, and the recovery
of Naples. Insomuch that the expedition into
Provence, which would have distressed France to the
greatest degree, and have caused a great detachment
from their army in Flanders, failed shamefully, for
want of every one thing necessary for its success.
Suppose, therefore, any four or five powers who, all
together, shall be equal, or even a little superior,
in riches and strength to that one power against which
they are united; the advantage will still be greatly
on the side of that single power, because it is but
one. The power and riches of Charles V. were,
in themselves, certainly superior to those of Frances
I., and yet, upon the whole, he was not an overmatch
for him. Charles V.’s dominions, great
as they were, were scattered and remote from each
other; their constitutions different; wherever he did
not reside, disturbances arose; whereas the compactness
of France made up the difference in the strength.
This obvious reflection convinced me of the absurdity
of the treaty of Hanover, in 1725, between France and
England, to which the Dutch afterward acceded; for
it was made upon the apprehensions, either real or
pretended, that the marriage of Don Carlos with the
eldest archduchess, now Queen of Hungary, was settled
in the treaty of Vienna, of the same year, between
Spain and the late Emperor Charles VI., which marriage,
those consummate politicians said would revive in
Europe the exorbitant power of Charles V. I am sure,
I heartily wish it had; as, in that case, there had
been, what there certainly is not now, one power in
Europe to counterbalance that of France; and then
the maritime powers would, in reality, have held the
balance of Europe in their hands. Even supposing
that the Austrian power would then have been an overmatch
for that of France (which, by the way, is not clear),
the weight of the maritime powers, then thrown into
the scale of France, would infallibly have made the
balance at least even. In which case too, the
moderate efforts of the maritime powers on the side
of France would have been sufficient; whereas now,
they are obliged to exhaust and beggar themselves;
and that too ineffectually, in hopes to support the
shattered; beggared, and insufficient House of Austria.