登陆注册
15387300000015

第15章

Louisbourg And Boston

For thirty years England and France now remained at peace, and England had many reasons for desiring peace to continue.Anne, the last of the Stuart rulers, died in 1714.The new King, George I, Elector of Hanover, was a German and a German unchangeable, for he was already fifty four, with little knowledge of England and none of the English, and with an undying love for the dear despotic ways easily followed in a small German principality.He and his successor George II were thinking eternally of German rather than of English problems, and with German interests chiefly regarded it was well that England should make a friend of France.It was well, too, that under a new dynasty, with its title disputed, England should not encourage France to continue the friendly policy of Louis XIV towards James, the deposed Stuart Pretender.England had just made a new, determined, and arrogant enemy by forcing upon Spain the deep humiliation of ceding Gibraltar, which had been taken in 1704 by Admiral Rooke with allied forces.The proudest monarchy in Europe was compelled to see a spot of its own sacred territory held permanently by a rival nation.Gibraltar Spain was determined to recover.Its loss drove her into the arms of the enemies of England and remains to this day a grievance which on occasion Spanish politicians know well how to make useful.

Great Britain was now under the direction of a leader whose policy was peace.A nation is happy when a born statesman with a truly liberal mind and a genuine love of his country comes to the front in its affairs.Such a man was Sir Robert Walpole.He was a Whig squire, a plain country gentleman, with enough of culture to love good pictures and the ancient classics, but delighting chiefly in sports and agriculture, hard drinking and politics.

When only twenty-seven he was already a leader among the Whigs;at thirty-two he was Secretary for War; and before he was forty he had become Prime Minister, a post which he really created and was the first Englishman to hold.Friendship with France marked a new phase of British policy.Walpole's baffled enemies said that he was bribed by France.His shrewd insight kept France lukewarm in its support of the Stuart rising in 1715, which he punished with great severity.But it was as a master of finance that he was strongest.While continental nations were wasting men and money Walpole gloried in saving English lives and English gold.

He found new and fruitful modes of taxation, but when urged to tax the colonies he preferred, as he said, to leave that to a bolder man.It is a pity that anyone was ever found bold enough to do it.

Walpole's policy endured for a quarter of a century.He abandoned it only after a bitter struggle in which he was attacked as sacrificing the national honor for the sake of peace.Spain was an easy mark for those who wished to arouse the warlike spirit.

She still persecuted and burned heretics, a great cause of offense.in Protestant Britain, and she was rigorous in excluding foreigners from trading with her colonies.To be the one exception in this policy of exclusion was the privilege enjoyed by Britain.When the fortunes of Spain were low in 1713, she had been forced not merely to cede Gibraltar but also to give to the British the monopoly of supplying the Spanish colonies with negro slaves and the right to send one ship a year to trade at Porto Bello in South America.It seems a sufficiently ignoble bargain for a great nation to exact: the monopoly of carrying and selling cargoes of black men and the right to send a single ship yearly to a Spanish colony.We can hardly imagine grave diplomats of our day haggling over such terms.But the eighteenth century was not the twentieth.From the treaty the British expected amazing results.The South Sea Company was formed to carry on a vast trade with South America.One ship a year could, of course, carry little, but the ships laden with negroes could smuggle into the colonies merchandise and the one trading ship could be and was reloaded fraudulently from lighters so that its cargo was multiplied manyfold.Out of the belief in huge profits from this trade with its exaggerated visions of profit grew in 1720 the famous South Sea Bubble which inaugurated a period of frantic speculation in England.Worthless shares in companies formed for trade in the South Seas sold at a thousand per cent of their face value.It is a form of madness to which human greed is ever liable.Walpole's financial insight condemned from the first the wild outburst, and his common sense during the crisis helped to stem the tide of disaster.The South Sea Bubble burst partly because Spain stood sternly on her own rights and punished British smugglers.During many years the tension between the two nations grew.No doubt Spanish officials were harsh.Tales were repeated in England of their brutalities to British sailors who fell into their hands.In 1739 the story of a certain Captain Jenkins that his ear had been cut off by Spanish captors and thrown in his face with an insulting message to his government brought matters to a climax.Events in other parts of Europe soon made the war general.When, in 1740, the young King of Prussia, Frederick II, came to the throne, his first act was to march an army into Silesia.To this province he had, he said, in the male line, a better claim than that of the woman, Maria Theresa, who had just inherited the Austrian crown.Frederick conquered Silesia and held it.In 1744 he was allied with Spain and France, while Britain allied herself with Austria, and thus Britain and France were again at war.

In America both sides had long seen that the war was inevitable.

同类推荐
  • 慈湖诗传

    慈湖诗传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 清季申报台湾纪事辑录

    清季申报台湾纪事辑录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 靖海纪事

    靖海纪事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 识小录

    识小录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Essays and Tales

    Essays and Tales

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 七杀楼

    七杀楼

    江湖,一把剑,一个人,一杯酒,一颗心,刀光剑影,血洗残阳。心中有一个天下,便是一世的江湖。七杀楼,执武林之耳,杀伐独断,一枚诛杀令,澄清武林之事,自洛水大战之后,邪教被迫与七杀楼定下城下之盟,使九十多年来的中原武林未起波澜。可是树欲静而风不止,一场猎杀,又将这平衡已久的江湖卷进了一场腥风血雨!江湖,从此又成了江湖!
  • 萌学园十星传奇第二部困境之战

    萌学园十星传奇第二部困境之战

    萌学园十星传奇第二部困境之战萌学园十星传奇第二部困境之战萌学园十星传萌学园十星传奇第二部困境之战奇第二部困境之战萌学园十星传奇第二部困境之战萌学园十星传奇第二部困境之战萌学园十星萌学园十星传奇第二部困境之战传奇第二部困境之战
  • 余生痕禾

    余生痕禾

    奈何人与人之间有太多的错过,一旦陷入,便是万劫不复
  • 神剑尘缘

    神剑尘缘

    一个探索者,一支队伍,探索出现意外落下悬崖。一个自称奴仆的男人,给了一把剑和一篇功法。这两样却成为他纵横异世的财富。一个女子,一段恋情,会引起神秘雪月风花。
  • 军婚如令:上校难搞法定妻

    军婚如令:上校难搞法定妻

    【本文免费】她,是后宫众多嫔妃之一,是皇帝深爱之人。也是这份深爱,她的家人满门抄斩,她未成形的孩子夭折,她也在这深似海的后宫中香消玉殒。重生现代,她带着前世的记忆,即使再幸福也夹杂着缕缕伤痛。再遇前世的爱,她已为人妻。面对旧爱,她恨,她痛,她在怨什么?只怪执念太深。慢慢地,她去忘却,适应现爱,他的柔情,他的爱意,修复着她伤痕累累的心。“诀,你是我最大的幸福。”
  • 极武纪

    极武纪

    武周王朝大能者去世后,群雄并起,天下大乱。只有一些忠义之士仍在苦苦支撑。地球人楚彦穿越到此,得到上古超级武功,与群雄争霸,与诸魔斗争,拯九州于水火。看九州儿女是如何演绎这一段瑰丽的传奇!
  • 绝世天王星

    绝世天王星

    带着系统穿越到平行空间。从小做起,一步一个脚印,成就无上传奇生涯。
  • 诛仙铸魔

    诛仙铸魔

    九天之上,有神有仙,一位身世神秘的少年,注定不凡,一部神秘的功法究竟来源何方!
  • 图腾传说

    图腾传说

    龙战玄黄凌九天,八部杀决傲峥嵘!一个奇怪的梦,打开了一个真实的世界,图腾的路上,将会引发何种恩怨?这里有天誓.浩世穹宇玄雷劲,怒雷焚业斩,醒掌天下王者风,战云.贯日式,太昊.转生轮……这里有鲲吞北冥,鹏搏九万,龙马踏江山;鱼跃龙门,日月转轮,沧溟号昆仑……这里有开天孔雀,始祖玄鸟,金翅大鹏,日月神象,混天神猿……面对诸多绝世妖孽,面对无尽洪荒凶兽,龙天,一颗命运下的尘埃,如今手握九十九幅龙山神纹,他要如何创招才能一败诸雄,登顶九天?
  • 成就你一生的细节

    成就你一生的细节

    做事注重细节才能成功,导致人生的失败大都在细微处。该书讲述了细节决定成败。成功的人总是不放过每一个细微之处,越是细节他们越是做得更完美,因为他们懂得,越是不为大多数人重视的细节越是超越别人的关键所在。