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of the French King and the Duke of Anjou, and how of our greatest Allies, the Emperor of Germany and the States- General. In the mean while the French King has withdrawn his troops from Spain, and has put it out of his power to refiore that monarchy to us, was he reduced low enough really to defire to do it. The Duke of Anjou has had leisure to take off those whom he fufpected, to confirm his friends, to regulate his revenues, to increase and form his troops, and above all, to rouse that spirit in the Spanish nation, which a fucceffion of lazy and indolent Princes had lulled afleep. From hence it appears probable enough, that if the war continue much longer on the prefent foot, inftead of regaining Spain, we fhall find the Duke of Anjou in a condition to pay the Debt of gratitude, and support the grandfather in his declining years; by whofe arms, in the days of his infancy, he was upheld. What expreffions of tenderness, duty and fubmiffion! The Panegyric on the Duke of Anjou, is by much the beft written. part of this whole Letter; the Apology for the French King, is indeed the fame which the Poft-boy has often made, but worded with greater deference and respect to that great Prince. are many ftrokes of the Author's good-will to our confederates, the Dutch and the Emperor, in feveral parts of this notable Epistle; I fhall only quote one of them, alluding to the concern which the Bank, the States-General, and the Emperor, expreffed for the Miniftry by their humble applications to Her Majefty in these words.

There

Not daunted yet, they refolve to try a new expe dient, and the interest of Europe is to be reprefented as infeparable from that of the Minifiers.

Haud

Haud dubitant equidem implorare quod ufquam eft;
Flectere fi nequeunt Superos, Acheronta movebunt.

The members of the Bank, the Dutch, and the Court of Vienna, are called in as confederates to the Miniftry. This, in the mildeft English it will bear, runs thus. They are refolved to look for help whereever they can find it; if they cannot have it from heaven, they will go to hell for it; That is, to the members of the Bank, the Dutch, and the Court of Vienna. The French King, the Pope, and the Devil, have been often joined together by a well-meaning Englishman; but I am very much furprised to fee the Bank, the Dutch, and the Court of Vienna, in fuch company. We may ftill fee the Gentleman's principles in the accounts which he gives of his own country; fpeaking of the G---1, the quondam T---r and the F---to, which every one knows comprehends the Whigs, in their utmoft extent; he adds, in oppofition to them, For the Queen and the whole body of the British Nation,

Nos Numerus fumus.

In English,

We are Cyphers.

How properly the Tories may be called the whole body of the British nation, I leave to any one's judging: and wonder how an author can be fo difrefpectful to Her Majefty, as to feparate Her in fo faucy a manner from that part of her people, who according to the Examiner himself, have en.

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groffed the riches of the nation; and all this to join her, with fo much impudence, under the common denomination of We, that is, WE Queen and Tories are cyphers. Nos numerus fumus is a fcrap of Latin more impudent than Cardinal Woolfey's Ego

Rex meus. We find the fame particle WÈ, ufed with great emphafis and fignificancy in the eighth page of this Letter; But, nothing decifive, nothing which had the appearance of earnest, has been fo much as attempted, except that wife expedition to Thoulon, which WE fuffered to be defeated before it began. Whoever did, God forgive them: there were indeed several stories of discoveries made, by letters and meffengers that were fent to France.

Having done with the Author's party and principles, we fhall now confider his performance, under the three heads of Wit, Language, and Argument. The first lafh of his Satire falls upon the Cenfor of Great-Britain, who, fays he, refembles the famous Cenfor of Rome, in nothing but espousing the caufe of the vanquished. Our Letter-writer here alludes to that known verfe in Lucan,

Victrix caufa Diis placuit, fed victa Catoni.

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The Gods efpoufed the cause of the conquerors, but Cato efpoufed the Caufe of the vanquished. misfortune is, that this verfe was not written of Cato the Cenfor, but of Cato of Utica. How Mr. Bickerstaff, who has written in favour of a party that is not vanquifhed, resembles the younger Cato, who was not a Roman Cenfor, I do not well conceive, unless it be in ftruggling for the liberty of his country. To fay therefore, that the Cenfor of Great Britain refembles that famous Cenfor of

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Rome in nothing but espousing the caufe of the vanquifhed; is just the fame as if one fhould fay, in regard to the many obfcure truths and fecret hiftories that are brought to light in this Letter, that the Author of these new revelations, resembles the ancient Author of the Revelations in nothing but venturing his head. Befides that there would be no ground for fuch a refemblance, would not a man be laughed at by every common Reader, fhould he thus miftake one St. John for another, and apply that to St. John the Evangelift which relates to St. John the Baptift, who died many years before him?

Another fmart touch of the Author we meet with in the fifth page, where, without any preparation, he breaks out all on a sudden into a vein of poetry; and inftead of writing a letter to the Examiner, gives advice to a painter in thefe ftrong lines Paint, Sir, with that force which you are mafter of, the prefent state of the war abroad; and expofe to the public view thofe principles upon which, of late, it has been carried on, fo different from thofe upon which it was originally entered into. Collect fome few of the indignities which have been this year offered to Her Majefty, and of those unnatural Struggles which have betrayed the weakness of a hattered conftitution. By the way, a man may be faid to paint a battle, or if you please, a war; but I do not see how it is poffible to paint the prefent ftate of a war. So a man may be faid to defcribe or to collect accounts of indignities and unnatural struggles; but to collect the things themfelves, is a figure which this Gentleman has introduced into our English profe. Well, but what will be the use of this picture of a ftate.

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of the war? and this collection of indignities and ftruggles? It feems the chief defign of them is to make a dead man blush, as we may fee in those inimitable lines which immediately follow: And when this is done, D--n fhall blufh in his grave among the dead, W---le among the living, and even Vol---e fhall feel fome remorse. Was there ever any thing, I will not fay fo ftiff and fo unnatural, but fo brutal and fo filly! this is downright hacking and hewing in Satire. But we fee a masterpiece of this kind of writing in the twelfth page; where without any refpect to a Dutchefs of Great-Britain, a Princefs of the Empire, and one who was a bofom-friend of her Royal Miftrefs, he calls a great lady an infolent woman, the worst of her fex, a fury, an executioner of divine vengeance, a plague; and applies to her a line which Virgil writ originally upon Alecto. One would think this foul-mouthed writer must have received fome particular injuries, either from this great Lady or from her husband; and these the world fhall be soon acquainted with, by a book which is now in the prefs, entitled, An Effay towards proving that gratitude is no virtue. This Author is full of Satire, and is fo angry with every one that is pleafed with the Duke of Marlborough's victories, that he goes out of his way to abufe one of the Queen's finging-men, who it feems did his best to celebrate a thanksgiving day in an Anthem; as you may fee in that paffage : Towns have been taken and battles have been won; the mob has buzza'd round bonfires, the Stentor of the chapel has ftrained his throat in the gallery, and the Stentor of S---m has deafned his audience from the pulpit. Thus you fee how like a true fon of

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