THE LETTER Sent by the States-General of the United Provinces Of the Low Countreys TO HIS MAJESTY, By their Trumpeter: Together with His Majesties Answer To the said Letter.

Translated out of French into English.

Published by His Majesties special Command.

DIEV ET MON DROIT

HONI SOIT QVI MAL Y PENSE

LONDON, Printed by the Assigns of John Bill and Christopher Barker, Printers to the Kings most Excellent Majesty, 1673.

A LETTER Sent by the STATES-GENERAL OF THE ƲNITED PROVINCES TO THE KING of GREAT BRITAIN.

SIRE,

AS we have never desired any thing more then to merit the good Will of Your Majesty, and to cultivate a Friendship which had been heretofore Hereditary between Your Majesties Kingdom and this Republick; so, we were beyond measure troubled when we saw Your Majesty exasperated against us, and that by the Artifices of evil minded per­sons Your Subjects and Ours have been overwhelmed with those miseries which are inseparable from War, [Page] [...] [Page 3] [...] [Page 4] and brought to shed that bloud which hath been al­wayes dear to either side. The sad experience we had thereof on both parts in the preceding War, had given us cause to believe at the same time, that af­ter we were re-united, the Peace would be a blessing which was no more to be ravished from us. And we were the rather perswaded of it, because the New Alliances we were entred into, seemed able to make our Union eternal: But seeing Divine Providence, for the chastisement of the two Nations, hath permitted that things should not continue long in that happy estate, we no sooner perceived a Mis­understanding arise, but we thought our selves obliged to use all imaginable endeavours to stop the progress of it, and to omit nothing that might contribute to the preventing so great an evil as that of a Rupture. In order to which, being certainly informed that Your Majesty was offended at a Medall, which we had not suffered to be sold, but that we thought it very innocent, we immediately suppressed it, and caused the very Stamps to be broken for fear there might be some made secretly; And to give Your Majesty more essential proofs of the esteem we had of Your Friendship, we yielded to Your Majesty whatever You were pleased to demand of us in behalf of the inhabitants of Surinam, how prejudicial soe­ver the thing were to us, and whatsoever reason we otherwise had not to consent to it. At the same time we sent the Sieur Van Beuningen to Your Majesty for removing, if it were possible, the sinister impressions which some laboured to [Page 5] possess Your Majesty with, and for perfecting a Regulation proposed by Your Majesties Ambassa­dor between Your East-India Company and Ours. Since that, although the little success which the said Sieur Van Beuningens Negotiation had had, gave us but too great cause to fear that we should not succeed better for the future; yet we no sooner un­derstood that there were some who would perswade Your Majesty as well against all likelihood of truth, as truth it self, That we treated under­hand with France to the prejudice of Your Ma­jesties interests, but we gave order without delay to our Ambassador with Your Majesty, to declare to Your Majesty in our name, That to shew the falshood of those reports which were spread abroad to our disadvantage, and to give Your Majesty essential and unquestionable marks of the sincerity of our intentions, we were ready to enter into such an Alliance with You as You should think fit, how strict soever it should be, and to go far beyond any thing we had hitherto done, for securing the Peace of Europe. Then followed the affair of the Flagg, wherein we think our conduct hath been with all imaginable respect towards Your Majesties Person: And although the Answer we gave to Your Ambassadors Memorial be such as we shall always be ready to submit to the judgment of all Europe, Yet upon complaint that it was obscure and insufficient, we sent an Ambassador Extraor­dinary to Your Majesty, and gave power to him, as also to our Ordinary Ambassador, to clear what should be thought obscure, and to adde what should [Page 6] be necessary: But instead of entring into regular Conferences with them, and letting them know what was defective in our Answer, they were neglect­ed, and no Conference granted them upon the point which might have ended all our differences, till an hour after Your Majesties Declaration of War had been read and approved in Your Council.

All this, SIRE, doth sufficiently evidence, with what application and zeal we have laboured to satisfie your Majesty, and to extinguish in its birth a Fire which is ready to consume all Christen­dom. And as we have not entred into this War but from an indispensable necessity of defending and protecting our Subjects, we have ever since the Rupture, as much as we were able, sought Your Majesties Friendship, and never given over the making overtures of Peace. Upon which account we sent our Deputies Extraordinary to Your Majesty in the moneth of June of the year last past, who were confined to Hampton Court, without having any Audience given them, or be­ing heard what they had to say on our part. A Minister from the Elector of Brandenburgh passed also into England upon the same subject, and charged himself, at our request, with the re­presenting to Your Majesty the ardent desire we had to see Your Majesty entertain other senti­ments, and our disposition to do any thing in our power to acquire again the honour of Your Ma­jesties good Correspondence. Since that, upon the Proposition made by the Mediators of a general Truce, for as much as according to our judgment [Page 7] we could not consent to it without hazarding the Safety of our State; yet, to evidence to Your Majesty how great a desire we had to give You all possible marks of our Respect, and to the end to procure to Your Subjects all the advan­tages which they could have received from a ge­neral Truce, we offered one by Sea to Your Ma­jesty for the term of a year, or a longer time, if Your Majesty thought it convenient; judging, that in the condition things were then in, we could not give a greater proof of the ardent passion we had to smooth the way to a happy Reconcilia­tion, then by putting all Your Majesties Subjects into a condition of tasting the sweetness of Peace, while ours should suffer all the incommodities of War. The Ministers of the King of Spain have represented from time to time the same things to Your Majesty, and have often repeated their in­stances to incline Your Majesty to Peace; But be­sides all these advances, and the steps we have made in publick, we have made use of other means which we judged more efficacious: And His High­ness the Prince of Orange, as well of his own inclination, as at the request we have several times reiterated to him, hath used all imagina­ble ways of regaining the honour of Your Maje­sties friendship for us, and representing to You the advantage and glory Your Majesty might acquire, by re-establishing the Quiet of Christen­dom, and giving us a Peace which we had so often and so ardently desired. But albeit vve had all reason to hope, that the instances of a [Page 8] Prince who hath the honour to be so nearly related to Your Majesty, and whose personal merit is so well known, would at last prevail over those who are ill-affected to us; and that besides we could hardly be­lieve, that after His Highnesses interests and ours were become common and were no longer separate in any thing, Your Majesty would retain Your former sentiments, and go about to involve in our ruine one of the most Illustrious Princes of Your bloud; we have nevertheless with great sorrow seen that all these rea­sons have been alike weak, and that Your Majesty hath not been induced by any motive to abate any thing of Your first rigour. So that when we expect­ed a favourable Answer to our Overtures, it hath been declared to us at Cologne, that no Peace was to be hoped, unless there were accorded not onely to Your Majesty and the Most Christian King, but also to the Elector of Cologne and the Bishop of Munster, such Conditions as never were demanded of a Free People, and which can so little be proposed as Articles of Peace, that they can onely be the con­sequences of an Absolute Conquest, the subversion of the Reformed Religion, of which Your Majesty and the Kings Your most Illustrious Predecessors have been the strongest Support and Defenders, and which carried with them at once the utter ruine not onely of us, but also of the Low-Countries belonging to the King of Spain.

This hath obliged us on our side, after we had re­solved upon a necessary defence, to press our Friends to enter into a stricker Alliance with us; And it hath pleased God so to bless our endeavours, [Page 9] and the means we have used in order thereunto, that the most August House of Austria hath declared in our favour, and the most Serene King of Spain in particular hath concluded with us a League Offensive and Defensive, in pursuance whereof he hath already declared War against the King of France. Things being thus, SIRE, Your Majesty will easily be­lieve that the consequences must be greater, but before the evil be past remedy we thought fit to make one final essay, and to assure Your Majesty that whatso­ever change hath hapned in Europe, our deference and respect for Your Majesty is still the same; and that how considerable and how potent soever our Allies are, we are not the less disposed to give Your Majesty all the satisfaction which You can reasonably pretend; And we have this happiness, that our Allies are of the same mind with us herein; we presume there­fore to hope that Your Majesty will not refuse at our request and their intercession, what we have not been hitherto able to obtain; And that You will not augment the desolation which is already but too universal.

But that we may omit nothing that may dispose Your Majesty thereunto, we beseech You to reflect upon all that hath passed since the beginning of the War, and at the same time to consider that it is from a particular one become general. When Your Ma­jesty engaged in it we were the onely Enemies; At present a great part of Europe is no less interessed therein then we; And Your Majesty cannot continue a War, which hath already been so ruinous, without declaring it against those who are united with us, and without hazarding the Safety of all Christendom, if [Page 10] the Arms of the King of France should be victorious through the succours given by Your Majesty to him. And Your Majesty can no longer take it ill that we yield not what Your Majesty might demand of us for France, since by an indispensable necessity we can no longer do it but with the agreement of our Allies. So that as the General Treaty appears accom­panied with many difficulties, and that we foresee that it will be a means to continue this unhappy War, which we desire to put an end to speedily, especially with Your Majesty, we shall think our selves very happy if any of these considerations may make impres­sion upon Your Majesties mind, and dispose You to resume those sentiments which we have heretofore with joy observed in Your Majesty, and in which, upon the reconciliation we promise to our selves, we doubt not but Your Majesty will continue for ever. In the mean time we pray God,

SIRE, To crown Your Majesties Reign with felicity, and to bless Your Royal Person with health and long life.
Your MAJESTIES Most humble Servants, The States-General of the Ʋnited Provinces of the Low-Countreys. GASP. FAGEL.
By Command of the abovesaid,
H. FAGFL.

His Majesties ANSWER To the Letter sent from the STATES GENERAL OF THE UNITED PROVINCES Of the Low Countreys, by their Trumpeter.

HIgh and Mighty Lords, Al­though your Letter of the [...]/25 of October, considering the pre­sent conjuncture of affairs, the matter it contains, and the manner of sending it by a Trumpeter when your De­puties at Cologne were in frequent Conferences with Our Plenipotentiaries there, have more of the nature of a Manifest then a Letter, and that consequently you may not perhaps desire to have any Answer made to it; yet for the Vin­dication of Our Honour, as well as for the un­deceiving that part of the World which may [Page 12] be abused by it, We would not suffer it to re­main without a distinct Reply from point to point as they lie in your Paper (which We send you by the same hand that brought Us yours;) and the rather because it may so have fallen out, that by the great revolutions which have lately hapned in your affairs and the change of your Ministers, even your selves may have taken for truth what evil-minded persons have so mali­ciously suggested to you, thereby to seduce your own people as well as Ours.

There will need no great proofs to convince the World that many offensive Medalls, Inscri­ptions and Libels were these last years past di­spersed every where in your Provinces, to the derogation of Our Honour, and that of the whole English Nation, since the notoriety of them was so universal: but to this day neither We nor any body else knew you had disowned any part of them, until your aforesaid Letter told Us you had at the time they were com­plained of to your Ambassador here, caused the Stamps to be broken for fear new Impressions should be secretly made by them; neither do you yet tell Us that ever you inflicted the least Punishment upon the makers or dispersers of them.

As to the affair of Surinam; Could you make the World or Our People believe what in this Paper you affirm, your selves would have out­done your Medalls, and would be more inju­rious then they, fastning a Reproach upon Us [Page 13] which We have been as far from deserving, as you, We hope, will be from being believed in the accusation. You say, you agreed to whatso­ever We demanded in favour of Our Subjects remaining at Surinam. Did We not continu­ally press their Release from the time of Our Surrendring that place into your hands till the beginning of this present War, and is there not yet the greater part of them remaining there? Are they there detained your Slaves at Our desire? Did We send Our Ships thither onely for a colour, with intention to subject them to your Tyranny more entirely and with the great­er decency? and not to deliver them from it? Was not the Officer We sent thither, Major Banister, confined presently upon his arrival, and not suffer'd to speak with his Countrey-men, or acquaint them with the care We had of them? Did he not Protest against the Governor for having broken the Capitulation in Eighteen se­veral points? And will you say all this was done according to what We desired? Had you been so tender of the bloud of both Nations as in your Paper you pretend, you would not so long and with so much obstinacy have persist­ed in oppressing those Our Subjects whom you detain in that Colony. And it is manifest that if you could cast all the blame hereof upon Vs, [...] you have a mind to do it. All We can say therefore to this your assertion is, That you have indeed granted Vs in words all We ask­ed, but that We have never obtained any thing of you in deeds.

[Page 14] What followed, was the pretended Satisfacti­on you say you offered at all times to make Vs in relation to the Trade of Our Subjects in the East-Indies. It was solemnly promised by the Treaty of Breda, that things should be ad­justed by Commissioners to be sent hither by you when there should be more leisure for it. But you well know that Our Ambassador whom We sent after the said Treaty to reside with you, could obtain nothing in that matter by all his instances that could in any wise satisfie Our East-India Company. Nor did the Sieur Van Beuningen, who seemed to have come hither expresly upon that account, offer any more in all his Conferences with Our Commissioners upon that subject. It is true, the Ambassador Boreel produced here a full Power from you to treat and conclude an Offen­sive and Defensive League with Vs, but We could not accept the Proposition, because the conditions of it were not sufficiently equitable, and that instead of giving Vs satisfaction in Our complaints, he would never so much as admit of their being mentioned. On the contrary, his whole discourse tended to nothing else but to perswade Vs that the States General offered Vs this League as a mark of their Friendship and for Our security alone, seeming indifferent whether it were accepted or not; and mag­nifying continually the greatness of your For­ces by Land and Sea, as sufficient to defend you against the formidable power of France; and [Page 15] often threatning Vs, that you could make such a League whensoever you pleased with France, and even against Vs, if We accepted not what his Masters offered Vs. The sum of these two points is, That the Sieur Van Beuningen was pleased to discourse concerning the Satis­faction demanded by Vs in point of Trade in the East-Indies, but departed without offering any thing; and the Sieur Boreel offered Us a League Offensive and Defensive, without giving Vs Satisfaction for the past Injuries, or security against future; And all this to the end the Injuries We had complained of that till then were peculiarly your acts, might by a solemn Treaty be declar'd Our own.

The next matter of offence given Us was (as you well observe in your Letter) the affront committed against Our Flagg in the moneth of August 1671. Complaint was made thereof to your Ambassador residing here, and he as­sured Us he would procure Us a fair satisfacti­on thereupon: but three or four moneths time passing without the least notice being taken thereof by you, We held Our Self obliged to send Our Extraordinary Ambassador to de­mand Satisfaction of you in more earnest terms then We had done before; To which not re­ceiving any satisfactory Answer, he had order to return. Soon after he was followed by an Extraordinary Ambassador from you, who af­firmed that he had no Powers to make repara­tion for this affront, or any other of these things [Page 16] We had so often complained of, but to agree up­on terms of Regulation in the business of the Flagg for the future; yet saying withall, that of himself and without consulting you again he could not put any thing in writing concerning it. The arrival of the said Ambassador Extraordi­nary was about the time We were ready to make open Declaration of War against your State; which We could no longer delay, be­cause the Spring was coming on, and the said Ambassador persisted that his Instructions per­mitted him not to do any thing upon Our Demands; neither was he able to produce any thing to justifie his delay, but the offering Us to write to his Masters for larger Powers and Instructions.

The War following upon this, In the heat of it Three Deputies arrived here from you with­out any Passports from Us, or giving Us notice of their coming according to the Customs and U­sages of War. Whereupon We might well have confined them (as you say We did) but We con­tented Our Self with warning them to abstain from coming to lodge in this Our City, ap­pointing them instead thereof Lodgings in Our Palace of Hampton Court, with all other con­veniences suitable to their Character, and dis­sembling what We knew passed between them and persons they practised upon to cause tu­mults and disorders in Our City, or to disturb the progress of the War. Notwithstanding which, We forbore not to send to them some [Page 17] of the Principal persons of Our Council to con­ferre with them and hear their Proposals. To whom they made this onely Answer, and persisted therein to the time of their departure, that they had no Authority or Instructions to make any Propositions, but were content to hear­ken to those that should be made to them, and to transmit them to their Masters; hoping that while they amused Us with this appearance, the Deputies you had sent at the same time to the Most Christian King might have con­cluded a separate Treaty with him.

And can you flatter your selves with the opinion that the World should look upon this proceeding as a convincing proof of your ar­dent desires for Peace? Did ever Prince or State send an Ambassador with design to ob­tain that which the Ambassador was not em­powered either to conclude or sign, especially to a Prince with whom they had War? It is much more rational to believe what you did was to gain time, whilst you endeavoured to put in execution those threats in relation to France that the Sieur Boreel had before given Us.

The Minister of Brandenburgh never decla­red that he came hither to make Us any over­tures of Peace, or that he had any other Commission then to incline Us at the recom­mendation of His Master to hearken to those that should be made Us. He came hither at the time that the Ambassador Extraordinary of His most Serene Majesty the King of Sweden [Page 18] arrived, in order to the offering Us the Me­ [...]iation of their Master, which We readily embraced, as likewise a Proposition made by them to Us for a Suspension of Arms. But a little after when they proposed the same thing to you, you thought fit absolutely to reject the Suspension; and were so long bargaining upon the choice of a place for treating the Peace, that many moneths passed without producing any other effect then your gaining your point in naming the City of Cologne for the Con­gress: Which being agreed to, and Our Fleet ready to put to Sea, you sent Us word you would then accept a Cessation of Arms by Sea. To which We found Our Self obliged to make answer, That a Peace might be made in much less time then the terms of a Partial Suspension be agreed upon; although it ap­peared to Us a meer artifice, invented onely to charm the Common Peoples ears, and make Us consume unprofitably all Our pre­parations for equipping Our Fleet. In a word, when Our Merchants might really have received benefit by a Suspension, you abso­lutely refused it, and would then onely yield to it when you saw your Provinces like to suffer by the progress of the War.

The Ministers of Spain never offered Us any Conditions, nor performed any other office, then in general terms to incline Us to the thoughts of Peace, which We ever accepted kindly from them.

[Page 19] Neither did Our Nephew the Prince of Orange ever make Us any Overtures for Peace: We must needs avow, That the manner of your Comportment towards him till the year last past, was no very good Argument to per­swade Us, that your intentions of living in a good Correspondence with Us, were real and sincere: And although We were unwilling to shew Our resentment of his usage publiquely, lest We should give occasion to his Enemies to do him more harm; yet so soon as the good will of the People prevailing against the Lou­vestein Party, had Conferred upon him that Power and Authority in the Government which his Ancestors had so well merited, We applied Our self with more Zeal and Efficacy to make the Peace; being further incited there­unto by the unexpected Success of the Arms by Land of the most Christian King. We forth with sent Ambassadors Extraordinary to him, to be present at the Treaty; which the Louvestein Party would have managed to the Excluding of Us, if the Vertue and Generosi­ty of that Prince would have permitted him to admit it: But so soon as Our Ambassadors were seen upon the place, the Deputies with­drew themselves, and never after appeared; following that fundamental maxim you had laid from the beginning of this War, to di­vide Us by any kind of Artifices, thereof to make your own advantage.

As to your insinuation of Our intention to [Page 20] ruine Our Nephew the Prince of Orange, you know your selves sufficiently the inju­stice of that reproach. And whilst at Cologne you openly complain to the Mediators that We are too zealous in advancing His Inte­rests, you would have Our Subjects believe We are guilty of ill nature towards him. And the better to improve this abuse you adde, without giving or having any the least ground for it, that Our demands at Cologne tend to the subversion of the Protestant Religion, and the ruine of Our Nephews family. We cannot conclude Our remarks upon this Letter or Manifest framed by you with design to abuse your people and Ours, and involved in terms of respect for Our Person, and fair words a­bout a Peace, without adding what ought to be convincing to the most obstinate a­mongst you; At the same time you would perswade Us to break Our Word and Faith given to Our Allies, Not to Treat separately, you establish it for a Fundamental point, that you cannot break the word you have given yours, without wronging your honour; as if your honour ought always to be dear to you, but Ours of little or no value with Us.

In the mean time, you make the proceed­ings of your Deputies at Cologne to pass for the fairest and most ingenuous that may be, reproaching that of Our Plenipotentiaries as rude and insincere; saying, That notwith­standing all your endeavours, We would ne­ver [Page 21] yet abate of Our first rigour. Herein We appeal to the Mediators themselves, who will not be wanting to do Us justice in let­ting the World know, that Our said Pleni­potentiaries have retrenched at least one half of their first demands, whilst yours have continually excused themselves from giving an answer upon any one of them, except that of the Flagg, with which they seem inclined to gratifie Us for the future, but in terms very equivocal, and which shall not take notice of any right We ever had to it for the time past: And this is the onely thing you have shewn the least disposition to yield to Us during the whole course of this Ne­gotiation: And having made no further ad­vance in the overtures of Peace which you say you made Us by Our Nephew the Prince of Orange, the Ministers of Spain and Brandenburgh, and by those of the Media­tors themselves, you do not so much as men­tion one word of it in your said Letter; handling the matter of the Peace in gene­ral terms, to acquire to your selves the reputation of it, and not making Us one Proposition but that of dividing Us from Our Allies; an Action which you esteem too low for a Common-wealth, but suitable enough to a King.

If you have a desire to promote the Peace in good Earnest, instead of specious ex­pressions, send Powers without further de­lay [Page 22] to your Deputies at Cologne, to draw up Just and Equal Articles with Ours; and the World shall see how ready We shall be to Comply with them, and to re­sume those sentiments of Friendship and Esteem which the Kings Our Predecessors have always had for your State: And to ma­nifest to you that We are truly

Your good friend, CHARLES R.
FINIS.

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