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THE

SCOTS MAGAZINE.

MDCCLXXXII

M D C C L X X X II,

VOLUME XLIV.

Ne quid falfi dicere audeat, ne quid veri non audeat.

EDINBURGH:

Printed by MURRAY and .COCHRAN,

40-30

1-25

THE

SCOTS MAGAZINE.

JANUARY,

1782.

CONTENT S.

ANNUAL REGISTER 1780. Retrospective || Memoirs of the late Lord HAWKE 7.
view of affairs in 1779. State of the bel-AMERICA. Letter to Lord Stirling, giving
ligerent powers in Germany I. Pacific
views of the Emprefs-Queen, feconded by
Ruffia and France 3. Treaty of peace
concinded 4. Differences between Ruffia
and the Porte ib. New convention con-
cluded 7.

PARLIAMENT. Mr Fox's motion for an inquiry into the conduct of the First Lord of the Admiralty 9. Speeches of Capt. J. Luttrell and Lord Mulgrave 11. Papers moved for 12. Inquiry poftponed ih. entered upon ib. . Speeches, of Mr Fox 12. Lord Mulgrave 16. Lord Howe 19. Mr Webb 20. Division ib. Substance of ADMIRALTY-PAPERS laid before the House of Commons 20. ANECDOTE, from a Philadelphia newspaper

26.

New Books. Falconer on the influence of climate 36. Religion 40. Hiftory, Law, Politics ib. Medicine 42. Miscel• laneous 44. Plays and Poetry ib.

an account of an expedition in Canada 27. Troops fent to the fouthern colonies 28. Maj. Craig leaves Wilmington ib. Proclamation by Gen. Leflie ib. Counter proclamations are iffued by the American generals ib. Accounts of the taking of St Eustatius 29. Convey arrives at Barbadoes 31. State of French fleet at Martinico 32. Adm. Hood arrives in the Weft Indies from America ib.

Fabricius on the AMERICAN WAR. Let ter V. 32.

Fictitious penitential LETTER to M. Arnaud 34. Answer 35

POETRY. Prologue and Epilogue to the Miniature Picture 44. Ode to the Sun

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ANNUAL REGISTER for 1780. [Published in the end of January 1782] HISTORY. Retrospective view of affairs in 1779. HE little effect produced by the contention of the greatest leaders, and of the greatest armies in the world, during the campaign of 1778, în Bohemia, if not entirely fufficient to produce an actual defire of peace on both fides, could not, however, fail to induce a kind of languor and wearisomeness, and in fome confiderable degree to wear away that quick relish, and keen appetite for war, which great and untried force and talents, acting under the fanguine hopes of yet unfoiled VOL. XLIV.

ambition, are so eminently calculated to excite.

We have heretofore fhewn, that this was not so much a war of choice, as of prudence, forefight, and political neceffity, on the fide of the King of Pruffia. He made no claims; he had no imme diate object of enlarging his dominions in view; nor if he had, was the present state of public affairs in any degree favourable to fuch a defign. Neither his time of life, his great experience in war, nor the full knowledge he had of the power and ability of his adverfary, were at all calculated to excite a fpirit of enterprise. On the contrary, the defire of fettling, improving, and confolidating with his ancient people and dominions, the new fubjects and acquifitions he had gained

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on the fide of Poland, together with that still stronger wish, of transmitting a peace able poffeffion, and undiminished force, to his fucceffor, were objects which tended powerfully to difpofe him to the prefervation, fo far as it could be properly and wifely done, of the public tranquillity.

But no motives, however cogent, could juftify to him, in a political view, the admitting of any confiderable addition of ftrength and dominion to the power of the house of Auftria; more efpecially, when this addition was to eftablish a precedent of innovation and difmemberment, which might in time be equally extended to all the other states that compofe the Germanic body. Upon the whole, it would almost seem, as if fortune, who had fo often wonderfully befriended that hero, and whofe apparent defertions of him in cafes of great danger, (which were no lefs confpicuous than her favours), always tended ultimately to the increase of his fame, was now anxious to affix a new stamp to the renown of her old favourite; and of clofing his great military actions by a war, in which he was to appear, rather as the generous protector of the rights and liberties of the Germanic body at large, than as acting at all under the influence of any partial policy.

On the other fide, the paft compaign had afforded a full conviction to the Emperor (a prince prepared for war beyond almoft any other, by the fine ftate of his armies, and the refources of his own indefatigable and refolute fpirit) of the immenfe difficulty of making any fucceffful impreffion upon fuch an adversary as the King of Pruffia. With fo vaft a force, and affifted by such confummate commanders, he could only act upon the defenfive; and could not prevent his own dominions from being rendered the thea tre, and being confequently subjected to all the calamities of war, It was true indeed, and no fmall matter of boaft in such a conteft, that he had suffered nei ther defeat nor difgrace; that the enemy had been obliged to abandon Bohemia, notwithstanding their utmost endeavours to establish a secure footing there during the winter; and likewife, that the loffes on both fides were pretty equally balan, ced. But then it was obvious, that the feafon was the immediate caufe which compelled the enemy to retreat from Bohemia; however, the good difpofitions made by the Emperor, which equal

ly baffled all the efforts made by the King of Pruffia for gaining his favourite point of a general action, and defeated his views of obtaining any sure hold in the country, tended more remotely to that effect. Such a view of the circumstances of the campaign, could afford no great encouragement to an obftinate perfeverance in the conteft. A defenfive war, however ably conducted, or however abounding with negative fuccefs, could by no means, whether in point of honour or effect, antwer the purposes for which it was undertaken; and the profpects of changing its nature were confined indeed.

However numerous or cogent the caufes and motives we have afligned, or others of a fimilar nature, might have been on either fide, for the discontinuance of an unprofitable war, they would have been found unable to fubdue the ftrong paffions by which they were opposed, if another, of greater power than the whole taken together, had not, happily for Germany, and perhaps for no small part of the rest of Europe, fupervened in reftoring the public tranquillity. The late illuftrious Maria Theresa, along with her other eminent virtues and great qualities, poffeffed at all times, however counteracted by the operation of a high and powerful ambition, a mind ftrongly impreffed with an awful fenfe of religion. This disposition, which naturally increafed with years, was farther ftrengthened by the melancholy arifing from the early lofs of a husband whom fhe tenderly loved; and was latterly finally confirmed, by the happy fettlement of her nu merous offspring, which freeing the mind from care and folicitude, tended equally to wean it from the affairs of the world.

The event of the late ftruggle with the King of Pruffia, notwithstanding the im menfe affiftance the then received, and which she could not hope now to receive, muft have added great force to these motives. She could not wish to end her life in the midst of such a war. It was ac cordingly much against the inclination of that great Princefs, that the prefent war was undertaken; and fhe is faid to have fubmitted with the greateft reluc tance, to the opinion of her council, and the defire of the Emperor, on that point. For although that Prince could only derive his means of action through the power of his mother; yet it would have been matter of exceeding difficulty to her, directly to thwart the opinion and inclina ...tions

tions of a fon, who was in the highest degrer defervedly dear to her, who was to be her fole and immediate fucceffor, and who scarcely stood higher in her affction than in her efteem. It was probably this reluctance to the war, on the fe of the Emprefs-Queen, which prodiced those various appearances of Buctuation in the councils, or of irrefolution and indecifion in the conduct, of the court of Vienna, of which we have formerly taken notice. [vol. 42.]

The ineffectiveness of the campaign, the equal fortune of the war, and the ceffation of action occafioned by the winter, ferved, all together, to produce a fate of temper and difpofition, which was far more favourable to the pacific views and wishes of the Emprefs, than that which had hitherto prevailed. She perceived, and feized the opportunity; and immediately applying her powerful influence to remove the obstacles which Bood in the way of an accommodation on the one fide, had foon the fatisfaction of difcovering that her views were well fecanded, by the temperate difpolition which prevailed on the other,

It is, however, to be observed, that the mediation of the court of Versailles, and the powerful interpofition of the court of Peterburg, contributed effentially to further the work of peace. France was bound, by the treaty of 1756, to affift the court of Vienna with a confiderable body of forces, in case of a war in Germany; and the had been called upon early in the prefent conteft to fulfil that engagement. The court of Versailles was likewife difposed to wish well to the houfe of Austria from private motives; as well as to cultivate and cement the new friendship and alliance from public. But France being likewife a guarantee of the treaty of Weftphalia, her old engagements militated totally with her new in the prefent inftance; the being thereby bound to refift all fuch infractions and invafions of the rights of the Germanic, body, as thofe which he was now called upon by the court of Vienna to fupport. She must therefore, in any fituation in which he was not difpofed to become an abfolute party in the conteft, with to be relieved from this dilemma. But her war with England, and her views with respect to America, operated more forcibly upon her conduct on this occafion, than any German treaties or connections. In the contemplation and purfuit of thefe

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grand and capital objects, the neceflity of keeping her force whole, her attention undivided, and of reftoring peace upon · the continent, were all equally obvious, and were all mutually dependent. No wisdom could foresee, or venture to prefcribe, what unexpected connections and alliances might fpring up, and what new collifions of interefts might take place, under a further progrefs of the war. France could not recollect the ruin brought upon her in the late war, without thuddering at the thoughts of Germany. It is not then to be wondered, that he was equally fincere and zealous in her endeavours to restore tranquillity on the continent.

The court of Petersburg had from the beginning fhewn and expreffed the strongeft difapprobation of the conduct, and paid no favourable attention to the claims, of that of Vienna; and had ear ly avowed a full intention of effectually fupporting the rights of the Germanic body; at the fame time that preparations were actually made for the march of a large body of Ruffian troops. Her powerful interpofition, through the medium of her minifter Prince Repnin, had no fmall effect in facilitating the negotia tions for peace.

Under fuch circumftances, and the offices of fuch mediators, little doubt was to be entertained of the event. Whether it proceeded from a view of giving weight to their claims in the expected treaty, or from any jealousy in point of arms or honour, which might have lain behind from the preceding compaign, however it was, the Austrians attacked with extraordinary vigour, and with no fmall degree of fuccefs, feveral of the Pruffian pofts on the fide of Silefia and the county of Glatz, foon after the commencement of the year. The liveliness of thefe infults did not induce the King to any eagerness of retaliation. Points of honour of that nature weighed but little with him. He forefaw that an accommodation would take place; and he knew that no advantages which could now be gained would teil in the account upon that fettlement; whilft a number of brave men would be idly lost without object or equivalent. An armistice on all fides was, however, published on the 10th of March 1779, before the feafon could have admitted the doing of any thing effential, if fuch had even been the intention.

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