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Letters on England [17]

By Root 1630 0
their

commerce, whence arose the grandeur of the State. Trade raised by

insensible degrees the naval power, which gives the English a

superiority over the seas, and they now are masters of very near two

hundred ships of war. Posterity will very probably be surprised to

hear that an island whose only produce is a little lead, tin,

fuller's-earth, and coarse wool, should become so powerful by its

commerce, as to be able to send, in 1723, three fleets at the same

time to three different and far distanced parts of the globe. One

before Gibraltar, conquered and still possessed by the English; a

second to Portobello, to dispossess the King of Spain of the

treasures of the West Indies; and a third into the Baltic, to

prevent the Northern Powers from coming to an engagement.



At the time when Louis XIV. made all Italy tremble, and that his

armies, which had already possessed themselves of Savoy and

Piedmont, were upon the point of taking Turin; Prince Eugene was

obliged to march from the middle of Germany in order to succour

Savoy. Having no money, without which cities cannot be either taken

or defended, he addressed himself to some English merchants. These,

at an hour and half's warning, lent him five millions, whereby he

was enabled to deliver Turin, and to beat the French; after which he

wrote the following short letter to the persons who had disbursed

him the above-mentioned sums: "Gentlemen, I have received your

money, and flatter myself that I have laid it out to your

satisfaction." Such a circumstance as this raises a just pride in

an English merchant, and makes him presume (not without some reason)

to compare himself to a Roman citizen; and, indeed, a peer's brother

does not think traffic beneath him. When the Lord Townshend was

Minister of State, a brother of his was content to be a City

merchant; and at the time that the Earl of Oxford governed Great

Britain, a younger brother was no more than a factor in Aleppo,

where he chose to live, and where he died. This custom, which

begins, however, to be laid aside, appears monstrous to Germans,

vainly puffed up with their extraction. These think it morally

impossible that the son of an English peer should be no more than a

rich and powerful citizen, for all are princes in Germany. There

have been thirty highnesses of the same name, all whose patrimony

consisted only in their escutcheons and their pride.



In France the title of marquis is given gratis to any one who will

accept of it; and whosoever arrives at Paris from the midst of the

most remote provinces with money in his purse, and a name

terminating in ac or ille, may strut about, and cry, "Such a man as

I! A man of my rank and figure!" and may look down upon a trader

with sovereign contempt; whilst the trader on the other side, by

thus often hearing his profession treated so disdainfully, is fool

enough to blush at it. However, I need not say which is most useful

to a nation; a lord, powdered in the tip of the mode, who knows

exactly at what o'clock the king rises and goes to bed, and who

gives himself airs of grandeur and state, at the same time that he

is acting the slave in the ante-chamber of a prime minister; or a

merchant, who enriches his country, despatches orders from his

counting-house to Surat and Grand Cairo, and contributes to the

well-being of the world.







LETTER XI.--ON INOCULATION







It is inadvertently affirmed in the Christian countries of Europe

that the English are fools and madmen. Fools, because they give

their children the small-pox to prevent their catching it; and

madmen, because they wantonly communicate a certain and dreadful

distemper to their children, merely to prevent an uncertain evil.

The English, on the other side, call the rest of the Europeans

cowardly and unnatural. Cowardly, because they are afraid of

putting their children to a little pain; unnatural, because they
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