the troops near Rochfort? The Admiral said, with
great ease. To which the General replied, but
can you take us on board again? To which the
Admiral answered, that, like all naval operations,
will depend upon the wind. If so, said the General,
I’ll e’en go home again. A Council
of War was immediately called, where it was unanimously
resolved, that it was
advisable to return; accordingly
they are returned. As the expectations of the
whole nation had been raised to the highest pitch,
the universal disappointment and indignation have arisen
in proportion; and I question whether the ferment
of men’s minds was ever greater. Suspicions,
you may be sure, are various and endless, but the most
prevailing one is, that the tail of the Hanover neutrality,
like that of a comet, extended itself to Rochfort.
What encourages this suspicion is, that a French man
of war went unmolested through our whole fleet, as
it lay near Rochfort. Haddock’s whole story
is revived; Michel’s representations are combined
with other circumstances; and the whole together makes
up a mass of discontent, resentment, and even fury,
greater than perhaps was ever known in this country
before. These are the facts, draw your own conclusions
from them; for my part, I am lost in astonishment
and conjectures, and do not know where to fix.
My experience has shown me, that many things which
seem extremely probable are not true: and many
which seem highly improbable are true; so that I will
conclude this article, as Josephus does almost every
article of his history, with saying,
but of
this every man will believe
as he thinks proper. What
a disgraceful year will this be in the annals of this
country! May its good genius, if ever it appears
again, tear out those sheets, thus stained and blotted
by our ignominy!
Our domestic affairs are, as far as I know anything
of them, in the same situation as when I wrote to
you last; but they will begin to be in motion upon
the approach of the session, and upon the return of
the Duke, whose arrival is most impatiently expected
by the mob of London; though not to strew flowers
in his way.
I leave this place next Saturday, and London the Saturday
following, to be the next day at Bath. Adieu.
LETTER CCX
London, October 17, 1757.
My dear friend: Your last, of
the 30th past, was a very good letter; and I will
believe half of what you assure me, that you returned
to the Landgrave’s civilities. I cannot
possibly go farther than half, knowing that you are
not lavish of your words, especially in that species
of eloquence called the adulatory. Do not use
too much discretion in profiting of the Landgrave’s
naturalization of you; but go pretty often and feed
with him. Choose the company of your superiors,
whenever you can have it; that is the right and true
pride. The mistaken and silly pride is, to Primer
among inferiors.