<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE issue SYSTEM "spectator.dtd">
<?xml-stylesheet href="spectator.xsl" type="text/xsl"?>
<?cocoon-process type="xslt"?>
<issue>
<title>The Spectator</title>
<header>
  <number>no. 180</number>
  <date>1711-09-26</date>
  <author>Richard Steele</author>
  <quotation>-----Delirant Reges, plectuntur Achivi.-----Hor.</quotation>
  <translation>Hor. I Ep. ii. 14.</translation>
  <translation>The monarch's folly makes the people rue.--P.</translation>
  </header>
<text>
<paragraph>THE following Letter<footnote name="(1)" url="../september_footnotes/footnote180.xml"></footnote> has so
much Weight and good Sense, that I cannot forbear inserting it,
tho' it relates to an hardened Sinner, whom I have very little
Hopes of reforming, viz. <italic>Lewis</italic> XIV. Of <italic>France.</italic></paragraph>
<paragraph><italic>Mr.</italic> SPECTATOR,</paragraph>
<paragraph>Amidst the Variety of Subjects of which you have treated, I could
wish it had fallen in your way to expose the Vanity of Conquests.
This Thought would naturally lead one to the <italic>French</italic> King, who has
been generally esteemed the greatest Conqueror of our Age, 'till
her Majesty's Armies had torn from him so many of his Countries,
and deprived him of the Fruit of all his former Victories. For my
own Part, if I were to draw his Picture, I should be for taking him
no lower than to the Peace of <italic>Reswick,</italic><footnote name="(2)" url="../september_footnotes/footnote180.xml"></footnote> just at the End of his
Triumphs, and before his Reverse of Fortune: and even then I should
not forbear thinking his Ambition had been vain and unprofitable to
himself and his People.</paragraph>
<paragraph>As for himself, it is certain he can have
gained nothing by his Conquests, if they have rendered him Master
of more Subjects, more Riches, or greater Power. What I shall be
able to offer upon these Heads, I resolve to submit to your
Consideration.</paragraph>
<paragraph>To begin then with his Increase of Subjects. From
the Time he Came of Age, and has been a Manager for himself, all
the People he had acquired were such only as he had reduced by his
wars, and were left in his Possession by the Peace; he had
conquered not above one third part of <italic>Flanders,</italic> and consequently no
more than one third Part of the Inhabitants of that Province.</paragraph>
<paragraph>About 100 Years ago the Houses in that Country were all Numbered, and by
a just Computation the Inhabitants of all Sorts could not then
exceed 750000 Souls. And If any Man will consider the Desolation by
almost perpetual Wars, the numerous Armies that have lived almost
ever since at Discretion upon the People, and how much of their
Commerce has removed for more Security to other Places, he will
have little Reason to imagine that their Numbers have since
increased; and therefore with one third Part of that Province that
Prince can have gained no more than one third Part of the
Inhabitants, or 250000 new Subjects, even tho' it should be
supposed they were all contented to live still in their native
Country, and transfer their Allegiance to a new Master.</paragraph>
<paragraph>The Fertility of this Province, its convenient Situation for Trade and
Commerce, its Capacity for furnishing Employment and Subsistence to
great Numbers, and the vast Armies that have been maintained here,
make it credible that the remaining two Thirds of <italic>Flanders</italic> are
equal to all his other Conquests; and consequently by all he cannot
have gained more than 750000 new Subjects, Men, Women and Children,
especially if a Deduction shall be made of such as have retired
from the Conqueror to live under their old Masters.</paragraph>
<paragraph>It is Time now to set his Loss against his Profit, and to shew for the new
Subjects he had acquired, how many old ones he had lost in the
Acquisition: I think that in his Wars he has seldom brought less
into the Field in all Places than 200000 fighting Men, besides what
have been left in Garrisons; and I think the common Computation is,
that if an Army, at the latter End of a Campaign, without Sieges or
Battle, scarce Four Fifths can be mustered of those that came into
the Field at the Beginning of the Year. His Wars at several Times
till the last Peace have held about 20 Years; and if 40000 yearly
lost, or a fifth Part of his Armies, are to be multiplied by 20, he
cannot have lost less than 800000 of his old Subjects, all
able-body'd Men; a greater Number than the new Subjects he had
acquired.</paragraph>
<paragraph>But this Loss is not all: Providence seems to have
equally divided the whole Mass of Mankind into different Sexes,
that every Woman may have her Husband, and that both may equally
contribute to the Continuance of the Species. It follows then, that
for all the Men that have been lost, as many Women must have lived
single, and it were but Charity to believe they have not done all
the Service they were capable of doing in their Generation. In so
long a Course of Years a great part of them must have died, and all
the rest must go off at last without leaving any Representatives
behind. By this Account he must have lost not only 800000 Subjects,
but double that Number, and all the Increase that Was reasonably to
be expected from it.</paragraph>
<paragraph>It is said in the last War there was a Famine
in his Kingdom, which swept away two Millions of his People. This
is hardly credible: If the loss was only of one fifth Part of that
Sum, it was very great. But 'tis no wonder there should be Famine,
where so much of the People's Substance is taken away for the
King's Use, that they have not sufficient left to provide against
Accidents: where so many of the Men are taken from the Plough to
serve the King in his Wars, and a great part of the Tillage is left
to the weaker Hands of so many Women and Children. Whatever was the
Loss, it must undoubtedly be placed to the Account of his Ambition.</paragraph>
<paragraph>And so must also the Destruction or Banishment of 3 or 400000 of
his reformed Subjects; he could have no other Reasons for valuing
those Lives so very cheap, but only to recommend himself to the
Bigotry of the <italic>Spanish</italic> Nation.</paragraph>
<paragraph>How should there be Industry in a
Country where all Property is precarious? What Subject will sow his
Land that his Prince may reap the whole Harvest? Parsimony and
Frugality must be Strangers to such a People; for will any Man save
today what he has Reason to fear will be taken from him tomorrow?
And where is the Encouragement for marrying? Will any Man think of
raising Children, without any Assurance of Cloathing for their
Backs, or so much as Food for their Bellies? And thus by his fatal
Ambition he must have lessened the Number of his Subjects not only
by Slaughter and Destruction, but by preventing their very Births,
he has done as much as was possible towards destroying Posterity
itself.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Is this then the great, the invincible <italic>Lewis?</italic> This the
immortal Man, the <italic>tout-puissant,</italic> or the Almighty, as his Flatterers
have called him? Is this the Man that is so celebrated for his
Conquests? For every Subject he has acquired, has he not lost three
that were his Inheritance? Are not his Troops fewer, and those
neither so well fed, or cloathed, or paid, as they were formerly,
tho' he has now so much greater Cause to exert himself? And what
can be the Reason of all this, but that his Revenue is a great deal
less, his Subjects are either poorer, or not so many to be
plundered by constant Taxes for his Use?</paragraph>
<paragraph>It is well for him he had
found out a Way to steal a Kingdom; if he had gone on conquering as
he did before, his Ruin had been long since finished. This brings
to my Mind a saying of King <italic>Pyrrhus,</italic> after he had a second time
beat the <italic>Romans</italic> in a pitched Battle, and was complimented by his
Generals; <italic>Yes,</italic> says he, <italic>such another Victory and I am quite undone.</italic>
And since I have mentioned <italic>Pyrrhus,</italic> I will end with a very good,
though known Story of this ambitious mad Man. When he had shewn the
utmost Fondness for his Expedition against the <italic>Romans, Cyneas</italic> his
chief Minister asked him what he proposed to himself by this War?
Why, says <italic>Pyrrhus,</italic> to conquer the <italic>Romans,</italic> and reduce all <italic>Italy</italic> to
my Obedience. What then? says <italic>Cyneas.</italic> To pass over into <italic>Sicily,</italic>
says <italic>Pyrrhus,</italic> and then all the <italic>Sicilians</italic> must be our Subjects. And
what does your Majesty intend next? Why truly, says the King, to
conquer <italic>Carthage,</italic> and make myself Master of all Africa, And what,
Sir, says the Minister is to be the End of all your Expeditions ?
Why then, says the King, for the rest of our Lives we'll sit down
to good Wine. How, Sir, replied <italic>Cyneas,</italic> to better than we have now
before us? Have we not already as much as we can drink?<footnote name="(3)" url="../september_footnotes/footnote180.xml"></footnote></paragraph>
<paragraph>Riot and Excess are not the becoming Characters of Princes: but if
<italic>Pyrrhus</italic> and <italic>Lewis</italic> had debauched like <italic>Vitellius,</italic> they had been less
hurtful to their People.</paragraph>
<paragraph><italic>Your humble Servant,</italic></paragraph>
<paragraph>PHILARITHMUS.</paragraph>
<paragraph>T.</paragraph>

<paragraph>1. The letter is, with other contributions not now traceable to him,
by Henry Martyn, son of Edward Martyn, Esq., of Melksham, Wilts. He
was bred to the bar, but his health did not suffer him to practise.
He has been identified with the Cottilus of No.143 of the
Spectator. In 1713 Henry Martyn opposed the ratification of the
Treaty of Commerce made with France at the Peace of Utrecht in a
Paper called 'The British Merchant, or Commerce Preserved,' which
was a reply to Defoe's 'Mercator, or Commerce Retrieved.' Martyn's
paper is said to have been a principal cause of the rejection of
the Treaty, and to have procured him the post of Inspector-General
of Imports and Exports. He died at Blackheath, March 25, 1721,
leaving one son, who became Secretary to the Commissioners of
Excise. As an intimate friend of Steele's, it has been thought that
Henry Martyn suggested a trait or two in the Sir Andrew Freeport of
the Spectator's Club.</paragraph>
<paragraph>2. Sept. 20, 1696.</paragraph>
<paragraph>3. These anecdotes are from Plutarch's Life of Pyrrhus.</paragraph>
</text>
</issue>
