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letter of his, addressed to your royal father, the fate which made you a king forbade your having a friend.' I deny his proposition as a general maxim. I am confident that your royal highness possesses qualities to win and secure to you the attachment and devotion of private friendship, in spite of your being a sovereign."* He felt for the situation in which the regent must find himself, with masters, who had exhibited such a disposition. to have all, even before they could call themselves servants. On a similar attempt, the year before, he had let loose the following lines, in imitation of Rochester's to Charles :—

ADDRESS TO THE PRINCE.

In all humility we crave,

Our Regent may become our slave;
And being so, we trust that he

Will thank us for our loyalty.

Then, if he'll help us to pull down

His father's dignity and crown,

We'll make him, in some time to come,
The greatest prince in Christendom.

The demand of the household was so obviously in the spirit of political extortion, that all the prince's immediate friends were indignant against it. "You shall never part with one of them," was the chivalric declaration of the Mar

Moore.

quess of Hastings. Sheridan took an equally characteristic way, and which, by its very form, he clearly intended to cover the whole transaction with ridicule. The household, as a matter of etiquette, had offered their resignations; and Sheridan, armed with this intelligence, went out to take his daily walk in St. James's-street. Some rumour of it had transpired, and Mr. Tierney, then high in the Whig councils, stopped him, and asked whether the news were true. "What

will you bet that it is?" said Sheridan," for I will bet any man five hundred guineas that it is not.” The conversation was carried without delay to the party. The hook was completely swallowed. The treaty was broken off, and when the eyes of those noble persons were at last opened; they found that they had been repulsed by an imaginary obstacle, and outwitted by a wager, and even a fictitious wager!

Their next intelligence was of a more solid kind. The Earl of Liverpool stated in the house of lords, that the prince regent had appointed him first lord of the treasury.'

* 8th of June, 1812.

CHAPTER XVI.

THE BRITISH EMPIRE.

AFTER ten years of solitude and mental privation, the good king, George the Third, was called from the world.* His last hours were without pain, and, fortunately, without a return of that understanding which could have shewn him only the long state of suffering in which he had lain. His death excited universal sympathy, and the day on which his honoured remains were committed to the grave, was observed with unfeigned reverence and sorrow throughout his empire.

The prince regent was now summoned to his inheritance, and George the Fourth was enthroned King of England, the noblest dominion. that the sun looks upon !

The immense magnitude of the Roman empire might well have justified the Roman pride. It covered a million and a half of square miles of the finest portion of the globe. Stretching three thousand miles, from the Atlantic to the Euphrates; and two thousand miles, from the northern borders of Dacia to the tropic of Cancer; it was the seat of all the choicest fertility, beauty,

29th January, 1820.

and wealth, of the world. Imagination sinks under the idea of this prodigious power in the hands of a single nation, and that nation in the hands of a single man.

It might be difficult, on human grounds, to discover the ultimate causes of this mighty donative of supremacy to an Italian peninsula. But in the government of the Great Disposer of events, nothing is done without a reason, and that the wisest reason. The reduction of so vast a portion of the earth under one sceptre was among the providential means of extending Christianity. The easier intercourse, the similarity of law, the more complete security of life and property, the general pacification of nations, which, under separate authority, would have filled the earth with blood, all the results of melting down the scattered diadems of Europe and Asia into one; palpably corresponded with the purpose of propagating the last and greatest revelation.

This purpose of the Roman empire accounts for its sudden breaking up, and the absence of all probability that it will ever have a successor. When Christianity was once firmly fixed, the use of this superb accumulation of power was at an end. None like itself shall follow it, because its use cannot return. Society has been, for the wisest purposes, reduced into fragments; and the peaceful rivalry of nations in arts and civilisation is to accomplish that illustrious progress, which,

under the pressure of a vast, uniform dominion, must have been looked for in vain.

But another paramount dominion was yet to be created, of a totally different nature; less compact, yet not less permanent; less directly wearing the shape of authority, yet perhaps still more irresistible; and in extent throwing the power of Rome out of all comparison-the British empire. Its sceptre is Influence.-The old policy brought force into the field against force; it tore down the opposing kingdoms by main strength; it chained to the ground the neck of the barbarian, whom it had first discomfited by the sword. This was the rude discipline of times, when the sternness of savage human nature was to be tamed only by the dexterous and resolute sternness of civilisation. But a nobler and more softened state of our being has followed, and for it a more lofty and humane discipline has been providentially given.

England is now the actual governor of the earth; if true dominion is to be found in being the common source of appeal in all the injuries and conflicts of rival nations, the common succour against the calamities of nature, the great ally which every power threatened with war labours first to secure or to appease, the centre on which is suspended the peace of nations, the defender of the wronged, and, highest praise of all, the acknowledged origin and example to which every

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