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me in; not to speak of handling them when come! Bewilderment of these two once completed; Marechal de Saxe made 〃a beautiful march upon Maestricht; 〃 and; April 15th; opened trenches; a very Vesuvius of artillery; before that place; Royal Highness gazing into it; in a doleful manner; from the adjacent steeple…tops。 Royal Highness; valor's self; has to admit: 〃Such an outlook; not half of us got together! The 60;000 Austrians are but 30;000; the In fact; you will have to make Peace; what else?〃 'His Letters; in Coxe's Pelham (〃March 29th…April 2d; 1748〃); i。 405…410。' Nothing else; as has been evident to practical Official People (especially to frugal Pelham; Chesterfield and other leading heads) for these two months last past。
In a word; those 35;000 Russians are still far away under the horizon; when thoughts of a new Congress; 〃Congress of Aix…la… Chapelle;〃 are busying the public mind: 〃Mere moonshine again?〃 〃Something real this time?〃And on and from March 17th (Lord Sandwich first on the ground; and Robinson from Vienna coming to help); the actual Congress begins assembling there。 April 24th; the Congress gets actually to business; very intent on doing it; at least the three main parties; France; England; Holland; are supremely so。 Who; finding; for five diligent days; nothing but haggle and objection on the part of the others; did by themselves meet under cloud of night; 〃night of April 29th…30th;〃 andbring the Preliminaries to perfection。 And have them signed before daybreak; which is; in effect; signing; or at least fixing as certain; the Treaty itself; so that Armistice can ensue straightway; and the War essentially end。
A fixed thing; the Purseholders having signed。 On the safe rear of which; your recipient Subsidiary Parties can argue and protest (as the Empress…Queen and her Kaunitz vehemently did; to great lengths); and gradually come in and finish。 Which; in the course of the next six months; they all did; Empress…Queen and Excellency Kaunitz not excepted。 And so; October 18th; 1748; all details being; in the interim; either got settled; or got flung into corners as unsettleable (mostly the latter);Treaty itself was signed by everybody; and there was 〃Peace of Aix…la…Chapelle。〃 Upon which; except to remark transiently how inconclusive a conclusion it was; mere end of war because your powder is run out; mere truce till you gather breath and gunpowder again; we will spend no word in this place。 'Complete details in ADELUNG; vi。 225…409: 〃October; 1747;〃 Ligonier returning; and first rumor of new Congress (226); 〃17th March; 1748;〃 Sandwich come (323); 〃April 29th…30th;〃 meet under cloud of night (326); Kaunitz protesting (339): 〃2d August;〃 Russians to halt and turn (397); 〃are over into the Oberpfalz; magazines ahead at Nurnberg;〃 in September; get to Bohmen again; and winter there: 〃18th October; 1748;〃 Treaty finished (398; 409); Treaty itself given (IB。; Beylage; 44)。 See Gentleman's Magazine; and OLD NEWSPAPERS of 1748; Coxe's Pelham; ii。 7…41; i。 366…416。'
〃The Treaty of Aix…la…Chapelle was done in a hurry and a huddle; greatly to Maria Theresa's disgust。 'Why not go on with your expenditures; ye Sea…Powers? Can money and life be spent better? I have yet conquered next to nothing for the Cause of Liberty and myself!' But the Sea…Powers were tired of it; the Dutch especially; who had been hoisted with such difficulty; tended strongly; New Stadtholder notwithstanding; to plump down again into stable equilibrium on the broad…bottom principle。 Huddle up the matter; end it; well if you can; any way end it。 The Treaty contained many Articles; now become forgettable to mankind。 There is only One Article; and the Want of One; which shall concern us in this place。 The One Article is: guarantee by all the European Powers to Friedrich's Treaty of Dresden。 Punctually got as bargained for; French especially willing; Britannic Majesty perhaps a little languid; but his Ministers positive on the point; so that Friedrioh's Envoy had not much difficulty at Aix。 And now; Friedrich's Ownership of Silesia recognized by all the Powers to be final and unquestionable; surely nothing more is wanted? Nothing; except keeping of this solemn stipulation by all the Powers。 How it was kept by some of them; in what sense some of them are keeping it even now; we shall see by and by。
〃The Want of an Article was; on the part of England; concerning JENKINS'S EAR。 There is not the least conclusion arrived at on that important Spanish…English Question; blind beginning of all these conflagrations; and which; in its meaning to the somnambulant Nation; is so immense。 No notice taken of it; huddled together; some hasty shovelful or two of diplomatic ashes cast on it; 'As good as extinct; you see!' Left smoking; when all the rest is quenched。 Considerable feeling there was; on this point; in the heart of the poor somnambulant English Nation; much dumb or semi… articulate growling on such a Peace…Treaty: 'We have arrived nowhere; then; by all this fighting; and squandering; and perilous stumbling among the chimney…pots? Spain (on its own showing) owed us 95;000 pounds。 Spain's debt to Hanover; yes; you take care of that; some old sixpenny matter; which nobody ever heard of before: and of Spain's huge debt to England you drop no hint; of the 95;000 pounds; clear money; due by Spain; or of one's liberty to navigate the High Seas; none!' 'PROTEST OF ENGLISH MERCHANTS AGAINST; &c。 (〃May; 1748〃) given in ADELUNG; vi。 353…358。' A Peace the reverse of applauded in England; though the wiser Somnambulants; much more Pitt and Friends; who are broad awake on these German points; may well be thankful to see such a War end on any terms。〃
Well; surely this old admitted 95;000 pounds should have been paid! And; to a moral certainty; Robinson and Sandwich must have made demand of it from the Spaniard。 But there is no getting old Debts in; especially from that quarter。 〃King Friedrich 'let me interrupt; for a moment; with this poor composite Note' is trying in Spain even now;ever since 1746; when Termagant's Husband died; and a new King came;for payment of old debt: Two old Debts; quite tolerably just both of them。 King Friedrich keeps trying till 1749; three years in all: and; in the end; gets nothing whatever。 Nothing;except some Merino Rams in the interim;〃 gift from the new King of Spain; I can suppose; which proved extremely useful in our Wool Industries; 〃and; from the same polite Ferdinand VI。; a Porcelain Vase filled with Spanish Snuff。〃 That was all!
King Friedrich; let me note farther; is getting decidedly deep into snuff; holds by SPANIOL (a dry yellow pungency; analogous to Lundy… foot or Irish…Blackguard; known to snuffy readers); always by Spaniol; we say; and more especially 〃the kind used by her Majesty of Spain;〃 the now Dowager Termagant: 'Orders this kind; from his Ambassador in Paris; 〃30th September; 1743:〃 the earliest extant trace of his snuffing habits (Preuss; i。 409)。NOTE FARTHER (if interesting): 〃The Termagant still lasted as Dowager; consuming SPANIOL at least; for near twenty years (died 11th July; 1766); the new King; Ferdinand VI。; was her STEPson; not her so