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MEMOIRS OF Count TARIFF, &c.

Omnibus in terris, quae ſunt à Gadibus uſque
Auroram, & Gangem pauci Dignoſcere poſſunt
Vera bona, atque illis multûm diverſa, remotâ
Erroris Nebulâ
Juv. Sat. 10.

LONDON: Printed for John Morphem, near Stationers-Hall. 1713. Price 1 s.

MEMOIRS OF Count TARIFF, &c.

[3]

COUNT Tariff, whoſe Hiſtory we are now to write, is a Perſon who has been ſo much miſrepreſented among us, and painted in ſuch monſtrous Shapes, that 'tis but a piece of Juſtice to a Stranger to reſcue his Character from the Mob, and to ſearch what may be found in ancient Hiſtory concerning him.

So far as we have ſearch'd into Antiquity, we find him lineally deſcended from the ancient Line of the Tariffs, a Family of ſuch Quality as well as Antiquity in France, that they trace their Genealogy as high as any Hiſtory can be [4] found; and they appear equal in Birth to Commerce it ſelf, whoſe Antiquity no Body doubts of.

The preſent Count Tariff, the chief of his Family, is a Perſon, who, as well for his proper Merit as his high Birth as aforeſaid, has been eſteemed and reſpected all over Europe; and for the great Intereſt he has in his Country, has been ſought unto by moſt of the Nations in Europe, upon many occaſions.

He always appear'd to be a Patron of Trade, as what he eſteem'd was exceedingly conducive to the general Good of Mankind: As this was his eſpecial Aim, ſo he did not ſo much apply himſelf to this or that particular Branch or part of Trade, but endeavour'd upon all occaſions to ſhew himſelf a Friend to univerſal Commerce; as it reſpected the Improvement and general Advantage of the World, and from this Rule he conſtantly employ'd the Influence he had on Affairs, which was not ſmall to the Regulation and good Government of Trade in his own Country.

He took on him the general Management of Commerce on the 18th of September, 1664. which being the firſt time of his publick Appearance in the World, [5] we ſhall not enquire into any part of his Conduct before that time.

He had no ſooner ſettled and made publick his Rules of Commerce; but all the Trading part of the World were made ſenſible of the Advantage they receiv'd thereby, and conſequently began to entertain a true and very great Opinion of his Worth, and very quickly courted his Friendſhip: This Nation eſpecially made great Advantage of his Correſpondence, for he was a particular Friend to the Engliſh Trade, and encourag'd it upon all Occaſions: It is true, he acted upon open Meaſures of Correſpondence, and was a Friend to univerſal Trade, as above: He abhorr'd Prohibitions, Reſtrictions and Excluſion of Nations in Trade; but if he had any Peculiar, if he treated any one Nation with Diſtinction more than another, it was England; which was all the Reaſon that has yet been aſſign'd, why ſome People in the Kingdom have treated him with ſuch Rudeneſs and Diſreſpect ever ſince: But however, they have uſed him, it is moſt certain England felt the ſenſible Advantage of his Acquaintance, and correſponded with him to their great Profit, as well as Satisfaction for ſeveral Years, receiving every Year [6] great Sums of Money from him, and by his means.

He was particularly a very great Friend to the Engliſh Manufacture: He always appear'd at Court in a Suit of Engliſh Broad Cloth, and cloth'd all his Servants in the ſame; and tho' his Liveries were plain, they were handſomer and richer than any in that Country.

It happen'd however, after ſome time, Diviſions prevailing there as well as in other Courts, that he began to be in leſs Repute with ſome People than before, yet he ſtill went on as well as Circumſtances would admit, in his own way, (viz.) of encouraging Trade; he receiv'd all the Equipages of his Servants and Furniture of his Houſes from England: Notwithſtanding the fine Brocades and rich Silks which are made in France, he cloathed his Counteſs, and the young Ladies his Daughters, and their Attendants in rich Eaſt-India Silks, fine Muſlins, &c. bought in England, and brought from the Indies by the Engliſh Eaſt-India Company.

Upon building his fine Country-Seat of TARIFF-CASTLE, in France, all the fine Locks and Keys, and ſeveral other parts of the Furniture came from [7] England; the Roof was cover'd with Lead to diſtinguiſh his Reſpect for the Engliſh Commerce, and all the Veſſels and Utenſils of his Family, which it was proper to have ſo, were of Engliſh Pewter.

This particular Conduct of the Count, with reſpect to the Engliſh Trade, gave ſome Umbrage in France; and whether it were by the Artifice of ſome of his Neighbours, who always envy'd and rivall'd the Engliſh; or whether it was meerly the Inclination of the People there to ſet up Manufactures of their own, Authors are not agreed about it; but it procured Count Tariff many Enemies at home, as is before obſerv'd; nay, even his own Tenants and Neighbours complain'd that he favour'd Foreigners and foreign Manufactures, alledging that his Coaches were lined with Engliſh CLOTH, his Rooms hang'd with Engliſh STUFFS, that all his Servants ſmoaked TOBACCO, and other Circumſtances falling in with this at the ſame time, the Count was oblig'd to alter his Meaſures, and firſt declined ſome part of the Engliſh Trade by ſeveral publick Acts, as particularly on the 18th of April, 1665. the 20th of December, 1687. and at laſt he was obliged wholly to renounce it on the 7th [8] of September, 1701. Upon theſe Diſturbances Count Tariff being neceſſitated, as aboveſaid, to lay aſide all Correſpondence with his Engliſh Friends; they, on the other hand, acted the weakeſt part that ever was known among Trading Men and Merchants; for however he had been their Friend, and however abſur'd, it was on their ſide to forbid the Exportation of their own Manufactures; yet they took that ſimple Step, and without reſpect to Count Tariff, or the Injury they did to their own Workmen in the Countries, and their Families, truly, they cut off their own Trade, and would not ſuffer any more Broad-Cloth, or Serges, Stuffs, Bays, Kerſies, Dozens, or any Woollen Manufactures, or other Goods, to be ſent to Count Tariff; by which piece of Wiſdom they loſt their Country, the Exportation of above Six hundred thouſand Pounds a Year, in Goods of their own Growth or Manufactures; beſides thoſe of the Growth and Produce of their Plantations and other Countries.

Count Tariff being treated thus by his Engliſh Friends, it was not to be wondred if Mynheer Coopmanſchap, an old Carrier, and a cunning, tricking, circumventing, [9] ſharping Dutch Broker, fell in with him: This Coopmanſchap was a great Dealer in the Manufactures and Produce of other Countries, but had very few or none at all of his own: He drove indeed a great Trade to moſt parts of the World: It was he who made that famous Voyage to Japan, where when he was asked by the Emperour, whether he was a Chriſtian or not, he anſwer'd, he was a a HOLLANDER: He had been all over the Eaſt-Indies, and particularly was Governour at Amboyna upon a certain Butcherly occaſion, which Authors ſay is nothing to the purpoſe now, becauſe it was a great while ago: He has driven a great Trade ever ſince by Interloping into the Trade of other Nations, but is eſpecially remarkable for keeping his Word no longer than he finds it for his Gain, and then complaining that others DO SO: It was not many Years before this, that he was in Partnerſhip with a great German Merchant, one Mynheer Leopoldus of Vienna; in which they had agreed not to lay down their Trade but by mutual Conſent, and particularly old Coopmanſchap bound himſelf, not to contract any Partnerſhip without the Conſent of Leopoldus, and without taking him in; [10] but he broke his Word, and left old Leopoldus in the Lurch before the Voyage was half finiſh'd; which is mention'd for their Service, who pretend to ſay he was injured lately that may himſelf.

Count Tariff was not ignorant of the Subtilty and Knavery of this Tricking Dutchman, for he had heard his Character, and had dealt with him before; but his Circumſtances requiring him to ſettle a Correſpondence ſome where, and having been ill uſed where he inclined to ſettle, he found it for his Advantage to engage with Mynheer; and accordingly Articles of Partnerſhip were ſign'd between them on the 7th of December, 1699.

It was no ſmall Surprize to the reſt of the Trading Nations of Europe that Count Tariff had ſettled with Mynheer; and tho' it had been better for them all, that he had continu'd to Trade with the whole World on equal Terms, as before; yet when they found that could not be, they would all have been glad to have had him excluſively to themſelves; but old Coopmanſchap, according to Cuſtom, was too cunning for them all, and knowing the Worth of the Count, he ſupplanted all the World, and got him to himſelf.

[11] One of the principal Buſineſſes of Mynheer, after he had ſecur'd Count Tariff to himſelf, was to prevent his Trading with any Body elſe; and fain he would have had the Count have entered into ſome excluſive Terms with him, which at firſt he could not obtain, it being not included in their Articles; but it fell in afterwards upon the occaſion of ſome of his old Correſpondents prohibiting their Factors to ſend him any Woollen Manufactures, as aforeſaid.

No ſooner had old Coopmanſchap and the Count engaged, but the Dutchman began to inſult all Count Tariff's old Correſpondents, and put the Dice upon all that Traded with him before; for no Body could Trade with Count Tariff at all NOW, but they muſt pay TOLL to old Coopmanſchap, no Goods could be ſent to Count Tariff, but in old Coopmanſchap's Waggons and Ships, ſo that he became the general Carryer to all the Trade of that ſide of the World, and got ſomething by every thing that other People dealt in.

This made him ſo Inſolent, that if any Propoſals of Peace or Trade were made to him, his Anſwer was always, Count Tariff, Count Tariff, ick vil hab [12] Count Tariff, nothing muſt be done without Count Tariff.

At laſt Mynheer thinking he had effectually ſecured all the Trade of the World, and that he was able to keep every Body elſe out of it; truly he began to uſe Count Tariff himſelf very ſcurvily, and on ſeveral Occaſions abuſed him very groſly; inſomuch that the Count who eaſily ſaw himſelf maltreated, grew weary of him: He found that this Coopmanſchap was but a Jobber of other Peoples Trade, a meer Pedlar, a Waggoner, or Carrier for other Merchants; that all the Goods he (Count Tariff) bought of him, were brought to him at Second Hand, and that he might much better have them directly from the Makers and Manufacturers, and the Countries where they were produced: Wherefore he (Count Tariff.) reſolved at laſt, to put an end to it; and accordingly, he wrote him a very plain Letter, telling him what a cozening old Knave he had been, how rich he was grown by means of the Partnerſhip, and yet how baſely he had treated his Partner and in ſhort told him in ſo many Words at the end of his Letter, that he would have no more to do with him.

[13] It is not to be wondred if Mynheer was Thunder-ſtruck at this ſurprizing Letter; for by it, on a ſudden, he loſt all thoſe Advantages which had for ſome time raiſed up both his Purſe and his Pride; and which had enabled him to hold up his Head, and think himſelf equal with the richeſt Merchant in Europe. But from this Diſappointment he began to alter his Tone, and talk a little humbler than he was wont to do; mean time he omitted nothing to recover his former Intereſt in Count Tariff, and if poſſible, to retrieve the Partnerſhip; and to that purpoſe, he diſpatched two of his Factors to go to Count Tariff's Houſe, and to try if they could by any Offers, Submiſſions, and Promiſes, and on any Conditions whatſoever, retrieve this Blow; that he might preſerve his governing Influence on the Trade of Europe: But after ſeveral vain Attempts of this nature, he found that it was impracticable, and that Count Tariff was reſolved, for his ſake, that he would never more engage in a ſeparate Partnerſhip; but that he had reaſſumed his former generous Principle, (viz.) of encouraging univerſal Commerce, a thing that did not ſuit with Mynheer's Deſigns at all; who always [14] advanced himſelf by encroaching on other Mens Trade, rather than by carrying on any particular Trade of his own; as is evident by his Trade to the Eaſt-Indies, which he rifled a great Portugueſe Merchant of; his Herring Fiſhery, which he got by Encroachment on the Scots Merchants, and by his Trade to the Brazils and Surinam, which he ſtole from the Spaniards; and the like.

But Mynheer, who never uſed to give a Game over while he had any Cards left in his hand to play, when he found he could not get Count Tariff to himſelf; his next Concern was to take care that the Count ſhould not engage with any body elſe; and particularly, he was ſenſible it would be a very great Loſs to him if any Engliſh Merchants ſhould embark with him: It ſeems he had had ſome private Intimation, that Count Tariff was about making a new Partnerſhip with one Mr. Traffick, an eminent Merchant and Alderman of London. This Mr. Traffick traded, it ſeems, in Company with one Harry Woolpack, a famous Clothier in the Weſt; and together, they two manag'd the whole Trade of the Woollen Manufacturers on that ſide of the World.

[15] It was a mortal Blow to Mynheer, to think that Count Tariff ſhould engage with theſe People, and it put him into a cold Sweat immediately; for theſe were the very Men that he had bubbled for ſo many Years paſt; for having kept Count Tariff under his Thumb, he got all the Trade into his own Hand, made thoſe Engliſh Merchants glad to ſell their Woollen Manufactures to him, ſome finiſh'd, ſome unfiniſh'd, as he pleaſed to take them, and at what Price he pleaſed to give for them; ſo that they only furniſh'd Count Tariff at ſecond-hand, and old Coopmanſchap got the Profit.

All the while he did thus he wheedled Mr. Alderman Traffick and Harry Woolpack with fine Stories of his being their only Friend; of his taking off ſuch vaſt Quantities of their Manufactures more than other Nations; nay ſometimes he would ſay more than all the Nations of the World; and, that no body could do this but he; whereas the Truth was, that all this while he was only the Middleman, or Broker, between both; for Count Tariff was really the Man who procured moſt of the Trade, and made the great Conſumption of the Woollen Manufactures by encouraging the wearing [16] thereof, as aforeſaid, among his Tenants and Servants: and this ſubtle Dutchman had only been a Pick-pocket on both Sides. As ſoon as Mr. Traffick and Harry Wo [...]lpack, and their other Partners, came to underſtand this, it gave them a moſt contemptible Opinion of old Coopman ſchap, and made them reflect with great Regret on thoſe Councils which had led them into ſuch a Nooſe, and cauſed them to be ſo dup'd, and made Fools of, by this old Dutch Man for ſo many Years, to the Ruin of their Trade, and the enriching of him and his Hangers on: When their Eyes were thus opened, and they ſaw clearly how they had been play'd upon and cozen'd, they entertained with great Readineſs the Propoſals of a new Partnerſhip with Count Tariff, which the Count, by his Agents, had offered them about that time.

Upon this, the Treaty of Partnerſhip between Alderman Traffick and the Count, having gone on with great Sincerity and Application on both ſides, it was concluded and ſigned between Arbitrators employed by both Parties on the 31ſt of March 1712. tho' this was not brought to paſs without a mighty Oppoſition of old C [...]opmanſchap and his Friends.

[17] It was thought at firſt, that the Treaty having been thus finiſhed, and all Parties being thus agreed, there could not have been any room for a Miſcarriage after that; and it was not doubted but Meſſieurs Traffick and Company would have driven a gallant Trade the next Year with Count Tariff; but it proved quite otherwiſe, by the Subtilty and indefatigable Cunning and Diligence of that old Fox Coopmanſchap; the Particulars of whoſe Intrigues make the next part of our Story.

Old Coopmanſchap having been alarmed, as is ſaid already, by the Report of a Treaty being ſet on foot between Count Tariff on one hand, and the ſaid Mr. Alderman Traffick of London, and his Partners in the Country, on the other hand; he found there was no time to be loſt; for theſe, as aforeſaid, were the greateſt Dealers in the Britiſh Woollen Manufactures that were in the World; and the very ſame Men who he had bought all the Woollen Goods of, which he had ſupplied Count Tariff with, during their late Partnerſhip; he knew alſo if the Count ſell in with them, he ſhould not only be circumvented and become uſeleſs in the Trade, but that all his Cunning [18] and Knavery would be expoſed on either Hand; That firſt Count Tariff would ſee how he had made him pay thro' the Noſe for every thing which he had bought, and that he could buy cheaper of Alderman Traffick and Company; and not only ſo, but the Alderman and his Partners would diſcover alſo, how when he had beaten down the Price, and brought them to ſell their Goods ſo monſtrous cheap, that their poor Workmen could hardly get Bread by their Labour, he ſold thoſe Goods at the ſame time for a great Price to Count Tariff; and ſo he had gotten the Profit of all the Trade to himſelf.

He was conſcious that when both Sides came thus to ſee into his Knavery, they would equally reſent his former Correſpondence with them, and never have any thing to do with him in that reſpect again; that by this means he ſhould loſe his Cullies, and be quite ſtript of the Advantage he had always made by them.

Upon this and many other Miſchiefs which he foreſaw would follow, he reſolved to go over for England, and by all means poſſible, endeavour to prevent the Partners making their new Treaty of Partnerſhip EFFECTUAL.

[19] He was encouraged to make this Attempt by a ſecret Correſpondence, which he always held in that Country with a certain CLUB or Society of Men, who having certain private wicked Projects of their own to carry on by his Aſſiſtance, were declared Enemies to Count Tariff for his ſake; and by conſequence would be ſure, right or wrong, to oppoſe the new Partnerſhip Count Tariff was making with their Fellow-Citizens, however it might be to the prejudice of their Country or of themſelves; Envy and Revenge being the moſt Self-denying Vices in the World. Theſe People pretended indeed to be very great Friends to Alderman Traffick and Henry Woollpack his Partner, yet they had given ſeveral ſufficient Teſtimonies of their being willing to Sacrifice them both for the Intereſt of old Coopmanſchap; and even to ſell them and their Country too into Slavery to him, to work in his Raſp-houſe in Amſterdam, rather than not oblige him to be their Friend in thoſe other Projects which they were carrying on, as aforeſaid.

Having ſuch an Intereſt there, he made the beſt of his way for England, and had the good Luck to come there before the Articles of Copartnerſhip, which [20] the Arbitrators on both Sides had made between Count Tariff and his new Partners, were arrived.

As ſoon as he was come to London, he gave notice to his truſty Friend Sir Politick Falſhood, who was generally Chairman of that Society, that he Purpoſed to be at the Club the next Day, who accordingly intimated the ſame to the whole Party, in order to have a full Aſſembly.

Being come to the Club, and having ſaluted the Members, he ſtood up and made a Speech to them to the following Purpoſe.

Here follows an Account of the Speech which Mynheer VAN COOPMANSCHAP made at his firſt Appearance in the Club.

FIrſt, He gave them thanks for the great Services they had done him upon all Occaſions in time paſt, and the great Obligations which they had laid upon him; for That, not regarding their Country, their Liberty, their preſent Advantages, or their Poſterity, they had, with a ſteady and unſhaken Zeal, always preferred his Intereſt to THEIR OWN.

[21] He acknowledged, that in a former Partnerſhip, wherein they had been engaged with him, they never inſiſted upon his paying in the Proportions of STOCK agreed upon between them; But had very kindly carried on their own Part, and moſt of his too, tho' at the ſame time they were fain to run themſelves into heavy Debts, more than ever they were like to have paid, beſides ſeveral other Inconveniencies to do it; and alſo altho' the greateſt part of the Profit of the Partnerſhip fell to HIS SHARE; all which, he told them, added to the Generoſity of their Treatment of him, and which therefore obliged him to this grateful Remembrance thereof.

He owned, and therewith he made them a Grimace, that they had been very Friendly to him, in not examining his Accounts relating to the ſaid Partnerſhip, but had paſſed them upon his Credit, which he (being utterly unable to make a fair Account) was very much obliged to them for.

He could not forget, he ſaid, how frankly they had furniſhed the greateſt part of the Ships employed in their Partnerſhip, even without charging him for his ſhare of the Freight, whereby he [22] had been at leiſure to carry on the North-Seas-Trade, which was quite out of the Partnerſhip, at their Expence; and which had encouraged him to charge even thoſe Ships alſo which were employed in the ſaid ſeparate Trade to the North-Seas, as if employed in the ſaid Partnerſhip, to his unſpeakable Advantage; for which he ſaid he was infinitely obliged to them.

That whereas they had been equally concerned for ſeveral Years paſt, in carrying on an Undertaking for the French PHILOSOPHERS STONE, which as it had been both hazardous and expenſive, ſo it had been owned to be, as ſuch Projects generally are, very unlikely to ſucceed, eſpecially to the height that ſome propoſed; he told them he thought himſelf obliged to confeſs, that they had generouſly ſupplied more Workmen for the ſaid Undertaking than they were bound to furniſh by their Agreement, and yet had not made him pay toward the extraordinary Charge of it. It is true ſaid he, you once propoſed to me, that in Conſideration thereof, I ſhould break my Partnerſhip with Count Ta [...], and have no more to do with him; [...], upon my repreſenting to [23] you faithfully how much it would be to my Prejudice tho' to your Advantage, you were ſo kind as not to inſiſt upon it; which I acknowledge, ſaid he, and made them a Dutch Bow, was a great Inſtance of Self-denial in you, and diſintereſted Friendſhip to me.

But he told them he had yet greater things than thoſe to thank them for, and particularly, that bold Step they took on his Account, and which few Partners but they would have ventur'd at, (viz.) That when ſeveral of his principal Correſpondents in England were in danger of being turned out of their Shops and Employments by their LANDLADY, the Club had appeared ſo much intereſted in their Behalf, as to depute ſome of their RUDEST Members to Her, to tell her very reſpectfully, that ſhe ought not to do ſo; that ſhe ought to have conſulted them in the Management of her Servants and Family; that if ſhe ventur'd to do it, ſhe would entirely loſe their Favour, and did not ſtick to threaten her, tho' ſhe was their own Landlady too, that in ſuch caſe they would ſhew their Reſentment, and would neither give her or her Tenants, or her Workmen, Credit for one Farthing of [24] Mony, nor ſuffer any body elſe to do it, nay nor pay her their Rent neither, if they could help it; which Threatning, tho' it did not ſucceed according to Expectation, yet was ſuch an extraordinary Step in his Favour, as he could not but think himſelf very much obliged to them for it.

He told them farther, that he was particularly obliged to thank them for another Inſtance of their Zeal for his Intereſt, (viz.) that when ſome Britiſh Merchants came over to a Place called Ʋtrecht, a City in his Country, in order to recover a certain Branch of Trade out of his Hands which he had circumvented them of before, the Society had endeavoured to expoſe and ruin thoſe Merchants, loudly declaring in all their Societies, as well Grecian as Engliſh, that it was neither juſt nor honeſt to take any thing away from Mynheer Van Coopmanſchap, or to get any thing for Alderman Traffick and Company, without letting him have an equal Share of it, or, in ſhort, to diſoblige him in any reſpect whatſoever: So that they juſtified him highly in the Practice of what every one knew was his Principle, viz. That what every one elſe got ſhould [25] be part of it his, and what he himſelf got ſhould be all his own.

He thank'd them, he ſaid, that in their late famous Voyage or Adventure to Terra (Gertrudenburg) Incognita, in which they had been alſo Partners, yet the Club had generouſly left the Management of the whole Voyage to him, owning themſelves not fit to be truſted in Affairs (tho' their own) of ſo nice a nature; by which, had not his unhappy native Avarice prompted him to graſp the Shadow and let ſlip the Subſtance, he might have made a very good Voyage for himſelf, at the Expence of all the reſt of his Partners; but as he had no body to blame for the Miſcarriage but himſelf, ſo he thank'd them for their Good-will, whatever Loſs he ſuſtain'd by the Voyage.

It was true, he ſaid, that another Miſcarriage of his had been the Effect of their Advice to him, (viz.) when they perſwaded him to adhere to the Executors of old Leopoldus, and preferr his German-Partnerſhip to all other Engagements; which piece of Council overthrew the whole Voyage; for as on the one hand he ſlip'd a good Opportunity, and refuſed an advantageous Offer [26] of another Partnerſhip, which he inclined to embark in; and which, had he cloſed with it, would have prevented the diſmal Events that followed: So, on the other hand, he not only was diſappointed in all his chimerical Hopes of that Voyage, but had all his Veſſels plundered, his Goods and Merchandizes taken away, and moſt of his Agents and Servants were knock'd on the Head, and thrown over-board, or carried into Slavery; which forced him, at laſt, ſhamefully to quit the ſaid German Partnerſhip, and to loſe all thoſe Advantages that had been offered him at firſt, as aforeſaid; however, he ſaid, as he believed the Society did it for the beſt, and had only acted by him as they did for themſelves, and according to their kown Politicks, (viz.) Never to know when they are well, ſo he could not blame them in the leaſt.

He acknowledged, that their general Conduct had been always with an Eye to his Intereſt and Grandeur, which they had given him ſo many Teſtimonies of that it was very much to his Satisfiction, and which he had ſo far depended upon, as had made him talk in a different Tone from what he uſed [27] to do, to ſeveral of his other Partners; for that he knew they were always ready to back him in and approve of all the Meaſures he took for advancing his own Trade: and that they were always, willing to ſink their own Stocks, and throw away their own Eſtates, rather than he ſhould be a Sufferer.

He told them alſo, that he thankfully remembred how they had given him timely notice, when they deſigned to ruin the Publick Credit, if it had been in their Power, that he might have ſufficient time to draw out his Mony; whereas had their Deſign ſucceeded, he might, without ſuch notice, have been a very great Loſer.

It was true, he ſaid, he had obſerved that altho' they had informed him that their Landlady was a Bankrupt, and her Credit broke, and perſwaded him not to lend her Mony; yet, as ſoon as ſhe had offered them a ſmall Advantage in the Loan, they all run in privately, and lent their own Mony, leaving him out: But as this was nothing but what he taught them, and as he would have done by them if it had been in his Power, he was not at all diſobliged by it, knowing they would make him amends for it many other ways.

[28] He told them, he was in a particular manner obliged to them in other Affairs of their Partnerſhip, eſpecially for drawing up proper Memorials for him upon certain Occaſions, in which they were ſo zealou, for his Intereſt, and ſo willing to make him popular, that they had frequently ventur'd to Print them before they had been delivered; and if at any time his ſecret Management had been diſcovered, and the People began to entertain a mean Opinion of his Honeſty, they always had employed their whole Set of Pamphleteers to vindicate him, who had covered the fouleſt of his Actions with the moſt popular Lyes they could invent; of which they were very fruitful, and by an infinite number of Abuſes, Invectives, and Libels, even againſt their Landlady herself, and all her Family, and Servants, they had diverted the Rage of the People, and impos'd upon them in ſuch a manner, that his Character, which was much in Danger by ſome Miſtakes he had fallen into, ſtood very right again with the People; and as he had maintained a kind of Correſpondence, from the Teeth outward only, with their Landlady, which however he [29] was alwas ready to break off when their Intereſt ſhould require it, he had thereby he hop'd kept himſelf in a Condition to requite the Favours he had received from them.

That for his part, he ſaid, tho' he ſhould not boaſt of his Merit, yet he hoped he had not been wanting on all Occaſions to ſhew his reſpect to them, and to lay all the Obligations upon them which it was in his Power to do. That upon all Occaſions he had ſupported them in their private Deſigns and Contrivances againſt their Landlady and her Adherents, Family, and Servants; that he had acquieſced in all the Memorials they had drawn up for him, and been as well ſatisfied with them when they were drawn up at the farther End of Piccadilly, as when they were done at Amſterdam, which alſo had ſaved him a great deal of Trouble; and tho' in one of thoſe Memorials they had committed a fatal Miſtake, in acknowledging the Fact which it was intended to deny, (viz.) about his having not ſupplyed the Quota of Ships to the Partnerſhip which he had agreed to furniſh, yet he was very well ſatisfied with the Invention they found out to cover it, whether it were Truth of Fact or no.

[30] He modeſtly put them in mind of his great Concern for them in another Affair, wherein he had made himſelf Arbitrator for the Succeſſion of their Trade in the next Age; and preſerving a Partnerſhip, which it was agreed ſhould be entered into, after a certain Engagement was expired, with ſome Merchants of Brunſwick; which tho' they all knew there was not the leaſt need of, that it was in it ſelf nothing at all, that Contract being effectually ſecured by the Circumſtances and nature of the thing; yet as it was of uſe to them otherways, and ſerved to make the Reputation of the Club ſwell among ſome People, ſo he had done it to ſerve them; at the ſame time taking ſuch effectual Care to preſerve their Trade in Flanders, by ſecuring it all into his own Hands, that he hoped it was to their exceeding great Satisfaction: He put them in mind how for their ſakes he had continued his Partnerſhip with the Executors of old Leopolaus Merchant of Vienna, altho' Count Tariff had made him very great Offers to break the ſame; and altho' he had met with very great Loſſes in carrying it on, and altho' one Merchant Eugene, who was Factor [31] for the ſaid Partnerſhip, had impoſed upon him, and outſtood his Market, having been outwitted by Count Tariff's Factors, and ſo had ſpoiled the whole Voyage, as he had juſt now told them.

He aſſured them in the next place, that as he had ſerved them with all his uſual Sincerity in theſe and many other occaſions; ſo he was ſtill ready to aſſiſt and ſtand by them in their private Concerns, and to renew the Partnerſhip they had carried on ſo long, and which they had ſo ſucceſsfully been engaged in, for as many Years as they ſhould think fit; that eſpecially he was ready to ſupport them and aſſiſt them in any Meaſures which they ſhould think proper againſt their Landlady, whether to expoſe, ridicule, and affront her Perſon and the Management of her Family and Houſhold, or to oppoſe any of her Deſigns, however laudable and uſeful for the good of her Tenants; (at which words the Aſſembly, in token of Gratitude, and accepting the Offer, ſtood all up) and Mynheer making another Dutch Bow went on—

He told them, that he was ſtill very ready to ſettle Matters of Trade for this part of the World, if they would but ſtick faſt to their old Maxims of leaving [32] it all to him, and being willing that his Intereſt ſhould be ſecured firſt and then their own brought in as ſubſervient; and finally, he profeſt himſelf ready to require their Kindneſs at all times, if he might but enjoy the Benefit of their Trade, excluſive of themſelves, as he had d [...]ne.

He then came to the main Point: He told them, that he underſtood there was a private Clandeſtine Negociation on foot between Merchant Traffick of London, and his Partner Henry Woolpack of the Weſt, for a Partnerſhip with Count Tariff of France, the Articles whereof, if they came to be made Effectual, would be very prejudicial to his Affairs, and that therefore he deſired their utmoſt Aſſiſtance againſt is: He told them, that this Count Tariff was always Partner with him, and had left him without warning, that it would diſable him from driving his Trade, and conſequently from buying ſo many Woollen Manufactures [...] as he uſed to do becauſe Count Tariff would take them here himſelf, and, in ſ [...]rt he told them that if they had any Reſpect for him, or expected any of his Aſſiſtance in their other ſecret Affair [...], which he had always [33] been their Friend in, they muſt ſtand his Friend at this time, and prevent the Articles of this Partnerſhip from being MADE EFFECTUAL.

Then he fell to railing at Count Tariff, told them he was a Frenchman and a Papiſt, and a tricking falſe Fellow that never kept his word with any Body, that he was a Bankrupt, and not able to make good what he had promiſed, that he would crowd them with his own Goods, ſuch as Wine, Brandy, Silk, Linnen, Paper, &c. but would take little or nothing of them in return, only give them large Promiſes and good Words, with which he would feed them till the Partnerſhip was ſettled and made effectual, and then he would laugh at them; and with much more of this kind he ended his Speech.

Mynheer Coopmanſchap having thus finiſhed his Speech and ſat down, Sir Pol the Chairman ſeeing the Club in an unuſual Agitation, and mightily incenſed againſt Count Tariff, and alſo againſt Alderman Traffick and his Partners, called for a Bottle of Neat-Port, for they always drink Port at that Club, and beginning a Health, which for their Reputations ſake, as they pretend to be [34] Chriſtians, is not fit to be named; the unnatural Pleaſure of that Infamous practice took them a little off of their Fury. Indeed Authors do not ſay it cooled the Ferment they were in, but it turned it another way, tho' by a worſe Inflamation, and having twice Curſed the Landlady, and five times her Servants, Sir Pol ſtood up, and addreſſing himſelf to Mynheer, he ſpoke in the Name of the whole Society, by way of Anſwer to his Speech, to the purpoſe following.

'FIrſt, He told him they were very glad the Endeavours of the Club had been of Service to him, that they had faithfully purſued his Intereſt at all times, without reſpect to any Obligation they were under to the contrary, either to their Landlady, or otherwiſe; and that it was very much to their Satisfaction that he was ſenſible thereof.

They condoled with him, he ſaid, in all his Misfortunes; particularly that which he had mentioned to them, viz. of having the Britiſh Merchants get the better of him in all his projects of Trade, eſpecially that with the Spaniſh Merchant D [...] Philippo, and his Factor Seignior [...], which he could not but be ſenſible [35] they had done their Endeavour to prevent; however it might be againſt the Honour and the Intereſt of their Country.'

'He told him, the Club was very ſorry they had been any way inſtrumental to the loſs of that Voyage of his, where his Ships were taken, his Goods plundered, and his Men thrown overboard, or carryed into Slavery; but that the Advice they gave him for adhering to his German Partnerſhip, was chiefly founded on the Aſſurances, which he had ſent them word were given him, that Merchant Eugene, who was Factor for Mynheer Leopoldus, would carry on that Trade ſucceſsfully, without any farther help, or any Auxiliary Stock; and that they never ſuſpected that thoſe Promiſes of Merchant Eugene had been all but meer Gaſconades, and that he was not able to perform them, for that the ſaid Eugene was always eſteemed an expert Merchant, and one who being bred to Buſineſs, always kept right Accounts, and might be depended upon in Adventures of the niceſt Nature; that therefore the Miſcarriage ought to be placed to Merchant Eugene's Account, and not to theirs, who had adviſed him for the beſt.'

[36]' He told him, the Society were ſorry he had been obliged to quit his German Partnerſhip in ſuch a manner as he did; but they were glad for his ſake, that he had at laſt put an end to it, being afraid his German Partner would ruin himſelf, by following the precipitant Meaſures of his ſaid Factor Merchant Eugene, eſpecially in carrying on that Trade, which was too hazardous and expenſive for his Strength of Stock; and that it was rumoured already upon Change, that his Bills had been proteſted in divers parts of Europe, ſo that it was feared we ſhould quickly hear there was a Commiſſion of Bankrupt taken out againſt him, and that he would make a Compoſition with his Creditors.'

'He told him, tho' the Society had been diſappointed in every thing they had undertaken for him, and were at this time but in mean Circumſtances; their Character declining, their Reputation very low, and moſt of their valuable Men gone off from them to the Intereſt of their Landlady, having by her Advice joined in a new Partnerſhip with Merchant Moderation, an old and known Enemy to the whole Society, yet as their Spirit (Malice) was not in [37] the leaſt abated, and that they had yet Members enough left to make a great Effort (Noiſe) in his Favour, ſo he might depend upon their utmoſt Aſſiſtance in every thing whatſoever that he deſired; in return whereof, they hoped Mynheer would continue to be their conſtant Friend and Correſpondent in the ſame manner as he had done before; adding, that they had one farther Requeſt to make to him, (viz.) That whereas they might probably find it needful ſometimes, in carrying on his Intrigues, or their own; to make themſelves obnoxious to the Law, and which was likely to be very frequent, to fly from Juſtice, run away from Bail, and ſuch like, he would engage to receive their Criminals, and make them Burgeſſes in his Cities and free Denizens, Naturalizing them among the Servants of his Family, as would be moſt ſuitable to them, and to him alſo, whether they were felonious-Bankrupts, Murtherers of Nobility, Duellers, Scots Libellers, Traytors, or what kind of Offenders ſoever.'

'That as to the new Treaty of Partnerſhip with Count Tariff, he told him there was no doubt but the Club would [38] eſpouſe his Cauſe, right or wrong, againſt that Frenchman and all his Attempts; that the name of French would make it exceeding Popular, and they would preſently ſpread it over the whole Nation, that he was a Pick-pocket, a Conjurer, and dealt with the Devil, and they doubted not to have him Mobb'd if he came hither.'

'He told him, that as to Alderman Traffick, he knew he was an eminent Dealer, and underſtood Trade, and perhaps he might be ſteady as to his old Notions of the Liberty of Trade; but as for honeſt Woolpack he knew him well enough, that he was a well-meaning Country-Fellow, but very Paſſionate, and Ignorant, and he did not queſtion but the Club would find means to Impoſe upon his Judgment, by telling him a hundred Stories and Shams of this Frenchman Count Tariff; and if they did but once make him believe that Count Tariff would take off none of his Manufactures, he would go ſtark Mad, and break off the new Partnerſhip at once, or quarrel with Alderman Traffick his Partner, and refuſe to go on with the Trade; concluding upon the whole, in the Name of the Society, [39] that he might depend upon it, they were all Mynheers hearty Friends more than their own.'

The Chairman having ended his Speech, a Tool of his who ſat at his Elbow, lately turned Malecontent becauſe he was left out of a certain Commiſſion, made a motion to the Club, that they ſhould declare their Aſſent to all that Sir Pol had ſaid, which was done, the following Minute being extracted out of the Journal of the Club.

Reſolved, Nemine Contradicente,

That the Thanks of the Club be given to Sir Pol Falſhood the Chairman, for his excellent Speech to Mynheer van Coopmanſchap.

Sir Pol having gone thus far, proceeded then to put the grand Queſtion, which was alſo carried, as follows.

Reſolved, Nemine Contradicente,

That this Club will ſtand by, aſſiſt, and ſupport Mynheer van Coopmanſchap, their old and conſtant Partner, Confederate and Ally, with all their Art and Skill, not only againſt Count Tariff and Alderman Traffick, but againſt all the Harry Woolpacks in England, and againſt all other Oppoſers whatſoever, Landlady and all.

[40] This Vote being paſt, Sir Pol ſtood up and made another Speech, and directed himſelf then to the Club, Mynheer being withdrawn, in which he ſpoke with a great deal of Heat, and with all that Senſe and Paſſion he uſed to ſpeak with elſewhere.

'He told them, that having heard what had been ſaid by Mynheer van Coopmanſchap, and what return had been made to him, he expected no other, but that they would Reſolve to aſſiſt and ſtand by him, &c. as they had done; and that now having thus entered upon the thing, the next and immediate Step was, that they ſhould conſider of Ways and Means, to put in execution what they had Reſolved on; that no time was to be loſt; that they expected every Poſt to hear that Count Tariff was come over, and that the Articles of Partnerſhip between him and Alderman Traffick, &c. would preſently be Ratifyed, and a Law paſs to make them EFFECTUAL, and that then all was loſt, and their faſt Friend Coopmanſchap would be ruined.'

'Then he run out in the praiſe of Mynheer, how neceſſary it was to them to Support him, how they could never hope to carry on their ſecret Deſigns [41] againſt the Landlady, if they loſt Mynheer, and that all their Trade (juggling) which they had carried on ſo long with Mynheer van Coopmanſchap would be ſpoiled, if they did not prevent it juſt now.'

'Then he fell foul upon Count Tariff, you have heard his Character, ſaid he, from Mynheer van Coopmanſchap's own Mouth, what a Tricking, Cozening, Bankrupt Fellow he is, and what a Trade we are like to have with him, if this Partnerſhip ſhould proceed; and therefore, continued Sir Pol, my good Friends, I would not have you be deceived by thoſe who talk of your having a great Trade with him; It is all a Cheat: How ſhould he want any of your Manufactures when he can make them all himſelf by his own Tenants and Servants whom he has lately ſet up, and given great Encouragement to them out of his own Eſtate? and as to the defect of Wooll, which they pretend to ſay will prevent this, that is effectually Anſwered by the News which came to me by the laſt Poſt, and which I thought fit to communicate to you, that it may by your Diligence and Correſpondence in the Country, be ſpread about among the Woollen Manufacturers and Clothiers of Britain, (viz.) [42] That this Count Tariff has found out a new Invention not only to ſupply his own Tenants and Servants with good Woollen Manufactures, but that in a little time he would be able to ſupply the whole World with Woollen Manufactures, even Britain and all; for that by this new Invention, they could make FINE Manufactures of COARSE Wooll, and he was told of another new Project ſetting up juſt now among them of making all the Engliſh Manufactures in France without any Wooll AT ALL, which, if they ſhould bring to Perfection, as he feared they would, the Engliſh Trade would be quite ruined, and the French Tenants of Count Tariff would Underſell them at all the Markets in Europe, ſo that he doubted not but the Club would be convinced that it was their own Intereſt as well as his, to prevent Count Tariff entering into any Meaſures here.'

The Club were mightily affected with this part of Sir Pol's Speech, and the Noiſe interrupted him for ſome time; they appeared in a great Conſternation, as well they might, at the mention of ſuch a Project being ſet on foot in France, for making Broad-Cloth, Sarges, &c. WITHOUT [43] WOOLL, and a wiſe Senator of the Club wrs obſerved to ſhake his Head, and with a deep Sigh to ſend forth this Ejaculation, LAURD! ſaid he, What will become of poor England! This will ruin us all with a Witneſs! What! The French Manufactures without Wooll! good lack! This is the effect of making Peace with the French! This is a French Popiſh Project indeed! I'll warrant the New Miniſtry have a Hand in it! We ſhall be all undone! alas! poor England.

There was a general Murmur thro the whole Society on this ſurprizing Information, inſomuch that the Houſe ſeemed in ſome Commotion, and Sir Pol could not yet proceed; but the wiſe Expreſſions which on that Occaſion dropt from ſundry Members of the Society being yet reſerved in Whiſpers only; Hiſtory has made mention of no more than what is hinted above, which Silence has been a ſenſible loſs to Poſterity, who are thereby deprived of the many weighty Sentences dropt on that Occaſion.

After ſome time, the Club being a little recovered, Sir Pol reaſſumed his former Diſcourſe, and went on to lay down his Meaſures, which, as he ſaid, he would have them take to proſecute this Deſign, [44] and the Ways and Means thereof, as aforeſaid: And Firſt,

'He told them he had been with Alderman Traffick, and it is true, ſays he, I found him inflexible, he talked loudly of the vaſt Advantages of the Partnerſhip with Count Tariff, the great Quantities of Engliſh Manufactures he was formerly accuſtomed to take off, and would now again take off of our Hands; but ſaid Sir Pol, I will confute them all by one piece of Conduct of mine, for ſince Alderman Traffick cannot be brought over, we muſt overpower him, and run him down by our Numbers and Noiſe; for this end, ſays he, it is abſolutely neceſſary to ſeparate Harry Woolpack from him, that is, to ſow ſuch Jealouſies and Miſunderſtandings between the Country Manufacturers and the Merchants, that they may not join together in this Partnerſhip; and therefore, continues he, I deſign in the next place, to attack my old Acquaintance Harry Woolpack, and I doubt not, with a little help, to make this Affair ſo popular, that I will make Harry aſhamed to ſhow his Face in the Country, if he does not break off this Partnerſhip with Tariff.'

[45]' To this purpoſe, ſays he, we muſt in the firſt place, ſet to work all our Agents to expoſe, beſpatter, villify, blacken, and defame Count Tariff, and that not only here in the Town, which we can do by the Aſſiſtance of our Friends at North's, and at the Amſterdam Coffee-Houſes, not forgetting our learned Stateſmen at the Grecian; but alſo in all the Cloathing and Manufacturing Towns and Countries throughout England; for this Work, ſays he, turning to two Blackwell-Hall-Factors, who ſat next him, here's my Friend Joſiah White-Cloth and Phil. Medley, Men of Intereſt in the Country, ſhall write our Minds to Harry Wool-pack; and if they ſhould not be able to prevail, there's old Joſhua Double-dozen, the Yorkſhire Man, ſhall threaten him with his Mob out of the North; and there is no doubt but Harry Woollpack will come up to Town, and tell Alderman Traffick to his Face, that he will have nothing to do with Count Tariff.'

Sir Poll received ſeveral Humms, and other Teſtimonies of Applauſe, from the Club, as he went on with this; by which they ſignified their full Approbation of [46] every thing he ſaid to them; which encouraged him to proceed as follows.

'He told them, the breaking of Harry Wooll-pack from his Engagements with Alderman Traffick, was, tho' in it ſelf a Trifle, of very great Conſequence to many other of their Deſigns, as well as this of Count Tariff; for it would immediately affect all the People of Britain; it would alarm all the Manufacturers, and make them believe their Trade was to be loſt and undone, and that they ſhould be ruined; it will make, ſays he, all the Clothing Towns write up to their Repreſentatives, and perſwade them that all is at ſtake, and that they'll CHOOSE them NO MORE, if they do not take care about it in Parliament: nay, ſays Sir Poll in ſome Extacy, it is not to be imagined how far we may run this Thought; I queſtion not, ſrys he, but we ſhall make it a DOCTOR SACHEVERELL to us, and perhaps may make as good uſe of it for our purpoſe, as was made by other People of that Affair of Dr. Sacheverell's, which it is evident was improved to a quite contrary purpoſe to what it was deſigned for; and as the former part ſaid he will be eaſily managed by [47] our Aſſiſtants at the places before named, ſo we can never want a Detachment of Bullies from Jenny Man's and St. James's Coffee-houſe, to aſſiſt in the latter, and make a Tumult for us if there be occaſion.'

'Our Buſineſs then, continued he, is to raiſe Harry Wool pack's Paſſions, for he is naturally a hot-headed Fellow, and as furious and inconſiderate as my ſelf when he is moved; and when we have ſcrew'd him up to a pitch, he'll make ſuch a Noiſe, no body elſe ſhall be heard all over the Kingdom but he: beſides, he has a prodigious Intereſt in the Country; as well Landed-men and Trading-men, as Monied-men, they are all of his ſide; and if once he raiſes his Voice, he can call a ſtrange multitude about him: There's Sergius Perpetuanus the Spaniard of Exeter, is always at his Elbow, with an hundred thouſand Devonſhire-men, and as many from Tauntondean; There's Joſhua Double-dozen and Tom Kerſie out of the North, from Hallifax and Leeds; they were famous for their Numbers in Qu. Elizabeth's time: Then there's Goad Cotton Eſq and Flanel ap Plane the Welch-man; they are all at his Beck, and are able to raiſe [48] all North-Wales, Shropſhire, and Lancaſhire for him; beſides Henry Stroudwater of Cirenceſter, Sir Iſaac Re-Bay of Colcheſter, Jack All-Stuff of Norwich, Benjamin Drugget of Newberry, and ſeveral others, who are all ſuch Dependants upon this Wooll-pack, that if he does but hold up his Finger, they are at his Beck; ſo that, in ſhort, the Sum of this Matter is to perſwade Harry Wooll-pack to break this Bargain, and to fright him with the Apprehenſions of loſing all his Trade. Let us get but this done then, ſays he, and we need not value Old Traffick; for if he inſiſts upon it never ſo much, if Wool-pack does not come in, it can never go on, or be made EFFECTUAL.'

'It follows next, ſays Sir Pol, that we conſider of the Methods to bring this to paſs; and the only way to do this, as I ſaid before, is to beſpatter Count Tariff, and heap up all the Scandal we can upon him, by which we ſhall make him frightful and odious to Wooll-pack and his Friends; and if he ſhould venture after this to come over hither, to get the Articles of his new Partnerſhip made EFFECTUAL, we'll bring Harry Wooll-pack in, as Plaintiff, get him Indicted [49] for a Cheat, and a Pick-pocket, and have him Tried for his Life.

This Speech was too full of Gall, Party-Rage, and particular Malice, not to ſuit well and be very acceptable to the whole Aſſembly; for Temper and Moderation was long ago hiſs'd out of the Club, as an Enemy to the Being and Nature of their Conſtitution; like a Coward, who is Troop'd out of a Camp by Beat of Drum, as a Perſon of no manner of uſe in the Army.

Being then ſufficiently prepared by this Plan of their Proceedings, laid down by Sir Poll, they fell to work immediately, and firſt they voted that Count Tariff was a Frenchman, and therefore let the Gain of the Partnerſhip be what it would, we had better be without him. This was voted with ſuch a Clamour in the Club, that nothing could be heard for a great while but the repeated Cry of No French Man! no French Wine! no French Trade! no Brandy! ſell no Manufactures to a French-man! and the like.

'The laſt Word ſtartled a certain Warehouſe-man in the Club, whoſe Intereſt could not tell how to lye like the reſt, Hold there a little, ſays he, ſell no Manufactures to a French-man! Hang it, [50] ſays he, I can't go that Length neither, for I ſold one of Count Tariff's Friends a thouſand Pounds worth of Druggets and Serges but laſt Week: That won't do ſays he; and ſo taking the Opportunity of the Hurry, he ſneak'd out of the Club.'

But the Vote paſſed, as above, with too much Noiſe for any thing of Reaſon or Argument to be heard. This was no ſooner over, but another Wiſe-man ſtands up, (whether he was a Salter or a Grocer, Authors are not agreed about it.) But addreſſing himſelf to the Chair, ‘'Sir Pol, ſays he. I underſtand this Count Tariff is a French-man, then to be ſure he is a Jacobite, and will bring in the Pretender upon us; ergo, all they who are for Count Tariff are Jacobites. I deſire it may be put to the Queſtion; which was done thus:'’

RESOLVED, That it is the Opinion of this Society, that all thoſe who are for Trading with a French-man are JACOBITES: Upon which the Houſe divided, Yeas 116, No's 11.

So it was carried by a great Majority; But that not being ſatisfactory to the Citizen who propoſed it, who was for thorough Work, he moved again, and ſaid, it was a [51] Diſhonour to the Club, that ſuch a ſignificant Vote as that ſhould not have paſſed Nemine contradicente; and therefore the 11 No's ought to be Expelled the Houſe, which was accordingly done.

The 11 Members who were voted expell'd, deſired to explain themſelves; but a Scots Pamphleteer, ſince fled from Juſtice, ſtood up, and ſaid, the Tories condemned a Peer to loſe his Head, in his Country, for offering an Explanation to a publick Act: and he was ſure thoſe 11 Members were Tories in Diſguiſe; for ſure none but a Tory would Trade with a Frenchman; and therefore he was for farther Proſecution againſt them: Ʋpon which the 11 withdrew, for fear of ſome of his Juſtice.

The next Queſtion was, What Religion Count Tariff was of? This produced a hideous Cry, of a Papiſh, a Papiſh, a Papiſh! no Trade with a Papiſh! no Trade with a Papiſh! and ſuch as that: and this rung round the Club-Room, like a Vote in the Common-Hall when a Sheriff is put up from the Huſtings, which is uſually a Quarter of an Hour a ſounding.

After many Debates of this nature, it was reſolved, That the Votes of the Club ſhould be made publick, and be ſent down [52] into the Weſt to their honoured Friend Henry Wooll-pack, Eſq and, that he be admoniſhed by his truſty Correſpondent Joſiah White-cloth, and Phil. Medley, that as it is reſolved in the Committee, that it cannot be ſafe for England that he ſhould trade with Count Tariff, who is a French-man, a Jacobite, and a Papiſt; ſo that this is the Advice of the whole Club to him, and that he ſhould take care not to be wheedled into it by Alderman Traffick, for that altho' the ſaid Traffick was an experienc'd Merchant, and generally ſpeaking, an honeſt Man; yet he was lately turned about, and was on the wrong Side; that it was to be feared he was inclined to the Pretender, and therefore he ſhould have a care of him; for if he was drawn in to join in the Partnerſhip, he was undone.

Nor did they ſtop here; but they order'd that the Character of Count Tariff ſhould be defamed, and beſpattered as much as poſſible by their Scots Pamphleteer aforeſaid, as long as he durſt ſtay for fear of the Pillory; and by their Lying Poſts, their daily Libels, circular Letters, and ſcurrilous Prints of every kind, for which they had their Authors and Printers of the Society always in Pay: and they gave them [53] a general Order, not to ſtick at any thing, ſo it would but blacken Count Tariff and Alderman Traffick; nor to ſtick at any Perſon that ſpake in their behalf, tho' it were the Landlady herſelf; agreeing alſo, that they would carry on the ſame Deſign themſelves in all their Converſation, and at all the Committees of their Society held at the uſual Places, to wit, the Grecian, Jenny Man's, St. James's, and thoſe in the City, viz. North's, the Amſterdam, Hamlin's, &c. and that this ſhould be carried on univerſally, without Reſpect of Perſons as aforeſaid; but eſpecially upon their Landlady, who they reported to be ſick and dying, and openly acknowledged they wiſh'd it was ſo, till the Brewer in Thames-ſtreet was taken up for it, which terrified the disbanded Officer aforeſaid, and others his Neighbours, and made them more careful of their Tongues.

In the mean time Alderman Traffick, whoſe Genius was turned for Trade, and who underſtood it better than Sir Pol, or any of them, being convinc'd that the Partnerſhip with Count Tariff was well-grounded, and that it was calculated for the general Good, not of himſelf only, but of his Partner Harry Wooll-pack, and all his Dependants, he reſolved to regard [54] none of them, but to go on ſteadily in his Deſign of making the Partnerſhip EFFECTUAL.

But the Alderman knowing what ſort of People he had to do with and what he was to expect from them afterwards; that he might leave them without Excuſe, reſolved to have their own Teſtimonials to what he was doing; and therefore long before he concluded the Treaty for this Partnerſhip by his Agents abroad, he ſ [...]nt Letters down into the Country, not only to Harry Wooll-pack himſelf, but to all his [...]f [...]rementioned Friends and Dealers, ſuch as Joshua Double-dozen of Leeds. Tom [...] Perpetuanus of Exet [...], Sir Iſaac [...] of Colcheſter, Goad Cotton Eſq and Flannel ap Plane. Clothiers of North-Wales; and to many more, which it would be too long to name here ſignifying his Intention of entering into Partnerſhip with Count Tariff, and asking their Opinion of the ſame, whether they thought it might be for the Publick Advantage or no; particularly and expreſly deſiring them, if they had any Objections to make, or any thing to propoſe for their own Advantage in the ſaid Trade and Partnerſhip with Count Tariff, that they would ſend up their ſaid Requeſts and Objections [55] before the Partnerſhip was concluded, and particularly their Opinions as to the Trade it ſelf, after it ſhould be agreed, whether it was for the Publick Advantage or no.

In Anſwer to this, Harry Wooll-pack in particular, and all the reſt alſo, however they have been miſguided ſince, ſent up long Memorials and Repreſentations, expreſſing their full Satisfaction in the ſaid Partnerſhip, and propoſing ſuch and ſuch Alterations and Additions as they thought neceſſary to be provided againſt, altered or added; upon doing whereof, they all gave it under their hands, that the ſaid Partnerſhip would be very advantageous to them, and that a Trade with Count Tariff had been before, and would be again, with ſuch Regulations, a very beneficial Trade to them and all their Neighbours: Which Memorials and Repreſentations, under their Hands, are yet to be produced to their Faces, when occaſion requires.

As Alderman Traffick was thus confirmed in his Opinion of the Goodneſs of his Deſign, not only by his own Judgment, but by the ſaid Memorials and Repreſentations of Harry Woollpack, and all his Friends, he gave Count Tariff an Invitation [56] to come over to England, in order to have the Partnerſhip conſummated, and the Articles MADE EFFECTUAL, who accordingly arrived here the 31ſt Day of March laſt, being the ſame Day that Sir Pol laid the Plan in the Club for his Deſtruction, as aforeſaid.

No ſooner was the Count arrived, but the Club began to put their Meaſures, which they had reſolved on, in Execution: And FIRST, In order to make the Affair of the ſaid Partnerſhip a Party-Cauſe, they railed at him as a Jacobite, and cauſed a Report to be ſpread all over the Kingdom, that he had brought the Pretender with him, and particularly they took care to make Harry Woollpack really believe it; which was the firſt beginning of the Breach on that Side.

The poor Count, who never knew what Whig and Tory meant, and was of no Party, but for the Univerſal Good of Mankind, was ſurprized to hear them call him a Jacobite, and askt, What Trade that was? ‘'He told them, he never concerned himſelf with Government, it was his Buſineſs always to ſubmit to the legal Eſtabliſhment of the Country he was in, to pay Cuſtoms and Duties chearfully, and not only to augment the Revenues [57] of the Princes who Reigned, but to aſſiſt and enable their People to pay chearfully and willingly whatever the Laws obliged them to; that it was his conſtant Cuſtom to acknowledge the Power, but never concerned himſelf about the Perſons Reigning, much leſs about thoſe who ſhould or ſhould not ſucceed; and that for being a Jacobite, he knew nothing of it.'’

But let the Count ſay what he would, it was to no purpoſe, Sir Pol and his Club had Voted it, and the Cry was gone out into the Country, that Count Tariff was come over with the French Ambaſſador, and had brought over the Pretender, nay, and that he was actually lodged in Somerſet-houſe: The Deſign of this was to have the Count Mobb'd and torn to pieces in the Street; or elſe, which would anſwer Mynheer Coopmanſchap's end better, that he ſhould be terrified with the Apprehenſions of it, and ſhould be obliged to retire with him to Holland.

But they were diſappointed in the firſt part of their Project, for the Count having given Alderman Traffick full Satisfaction, that he was a Person wholly concerned in Matters of Trade, and in them only; and that he deſired to have no [58] other Buſineſ, here; the Alderman protected him from the Mob, and from the fury of Sir Pol, and alſo cleared up his Character, as to Jacobitiſm, well enough.

The Party then finding themſelves unable to hurt the Count this way, apply themſelves to their OTHER METHOD, (viz.) To attack his Character, as to Trade; and here indeed they met with better Succeſs, tho' it was by the help of the moſt ſcandalous Methods, and the unjuſt Practices in the World, as will appear in the ſequel of our Hiſtory.

To enter into the better Deſcription of theſe things, we muſt go back to the Club, and to Sir Pol their Director: Sir Pol, who is naturally Cholerick, and abominably revengeful, having been heated with the Diſappointment he had received, as above, and not being able to get the Count Mobb'd for a Jacobite, and for bringing over the Pretender; he called a Club on a Saturday Night late, and coming into the Aſſembly in a great Paſſion, told them, the Alderman had baſely entertained Count Tariff, by Authority; and that he believed that even the LANDLADY her ſelf was a Jacobite; and he did not queſtion but the Pretender might have been found hid under Count Tariff's Cloak, [59] or was pack'd up in his Equipage, if the Officers might have ſearched him; whereas Alderman Traffick had forbidden them to Affront him; but that he had been even both with the Alderman and the Landlady too for that, and had taken Care they ſhould be both Expoſed for it over the whole Nation; and upon this he called for the Scots Pampleeter who pulled out two Printed Ballads, which, he ſaid, would do their Buſineſs; one was The Merchant Alamode; the other The Ambaſſadreſſes Speech, which he gave about to the whole Club, and ordered Copies to be diſtributed to Harry Woollpack and his Friends, by the Printer to the Society.

It was true, that thoſe Wicked Meaſures of Sir Pol and his Fraternity, did a little ſtagger Harry Woollpack and his Friends, ſo that they began to decline the Partnerſhip which Alderman Traffick had made, and ſent up Letters and Addreſſes to the Alderman, not to go on with it; and made ſome Clamours againſt making it EFFECTUAL, as ſhall be ſhewn in its place; which Proceedings occaſioned ſome delay in the Matter at firſt, but their Eyes were ſoon opened, and they were all convinced of their Miſtake at laſt; and [60] tho' 'tis true it was too late to retrieve the firſt Damages of the thing, yet it taught them to know Sir Pol a little better than they did before, and to have a care of him accordingly; which tended, in the end, to the Effectual ſettling the Affair. But to return to Sir Pol and the Club.

The Club received his laſt Harangue with great Satisfaction, and were more eſpecially diverted with the Ballads; for any thing that affronted their Landlady was always agreeable to the Club: But their Mirth was almoſt ſpoiled by an unlucky Motion, made by one of their own Body, tho' Innocently, for he was as much a well-wiſher to Sir Pol and to his Country's diſorder, as any of them, but was not let into the whole Secrets of Management, and did not know that the Work was to be done Per fas aut Ne fas: This grave Citizen was a Warehouſeman by Occupation, and therefore mightily concerned for the Woollen Manufacture, tho' Hiſtory has not recorded his Name: This Man ſtanding up in his place, told the Chairman that he approved very well of what Sir Pol had propoſed, as to defaming and blackning Count Tariff and his Adherents, to [...] Harry Woolpack and his Friends [61] againſt the propoſed Partnerſhip, and to raiſe the Mob upon Count Tariff; only, ſays he, ‘'I think it would be neceſſary to get a certain eminent old Citizen, whom I was formerly acquainted with, on our Side, in all we do of this Nature; one, ſays he, you have all heard of, for he fined for Alderman in the time of Sir William Turner, was well acquainted with the French Trade; and might be a match for old Alderman Traffick, or any of them, and this is old Merchant FACT; for, continues he, the Reputation of this old Gentleman is ſuch, that no Body will queſtion what we ſay, if he is on our Side; and on the other hand, if Count Tariff ſhould get him from us, it will put us to a very great Nonplus.'’

Upon this Motion Sir Pol ſtood up, and firſt looking about to ſee if the Door was ſhut, and none of the Drawers in the Room, ‘'GENTLEMEN, ſays he, what Deputy …….. has propoſed is very good, and would be to the Purpoſe, and I have been trying ſome time to get this old Gentleman on our Side; but I muſt tell you in Confidence, that he is gone out of the way, and I fear is gone over to the Enemy, or at leaſt [62] has withdrawn himſelf; whereupon, having ſeriouſly bethought my ſelf, I have found out two Expedients in order to ſupply his Place.'’

'1. Says he, I own 'tis abſolutely neceſſary to make Harry Woolpack and his People believe that Merchant FACT is really on our Side; and therefore I have reſolved to take that part upon my ſelf, and ſet up a Counterfeit Merchant FACT in his room, which I will ſhow to the Mob, as I find occaſion: nay, rather than fail, ſays Sir Pol, I'll counterfeit Merchant FACT my ſelf; indeed I muſt be concealed from thoſe People's View who are well acquainted with his Countenance, or with his Mind; but as to Harry Woollpack he will take any thing we ſay to him upon Truſt; and we have nothing to do, as to him, but to ſay we have got Merchant FACT on our Side, and he will preſently cry out of all that Count Tariff and his Friends can ſay, that it is all Lyes, and therefore, if you pleaſe, leave this to my Management; it is but putting a good Face to it: I make no queſtion, but we ſhall carry it as well, as if we had Merchant FACT along with us, for Noiſe and Falſhood, at this time of [63] Day, will with good Management go as far as Fact and Truth can do.'

'2. To carry on this Diſguiſe with the greater certainty of Succeſs, continues he, I have found out an excellent Aſſiſtant, and one that ſtood a faſt Friend to me, in former Days, when the Citizens our Anceſtors had juſt ſuch another Game to play upon King Charles II.

This Aſſiſtant, ſays he, has miſled the City theſe thirty Years with ſuch Dexterity and ſuch admirable Succeſs, that no Body has diſcovered or detected him yet, having thirteen or fourteen Hands of the principal Merchants of London, to a Certificate of his Integrity in the Year 1674; theſe he drew in at that time, without any enquiry, to Vouch for him, taking all he ſaid upon Truſt: And that I may hold you in ſuſpence no longer, this is the famous SCHEME OF TRADE brought up with old Whiſton, the Devil's Broker, and as accurate a Lvar as ever his Maſter was.'

The Aſſembly received this Propoſal of Sir Pol's with a general Approbation, and recommended to him the neceſſary Diſpatch: In the mean time, Count Tariff began to appear abroad again, and Alderman Traffick declared that he had entered [64] into Partnerſhip with him, and that he had reſolved to apply to the Landlady to have the Articles of the ſaid Partnerſhip MADE EFFECTUAL by Law.

Now was Sir Pol to play his Game, or never, for Alderman Traffick puſhed on his Deſign to a Hearing, before ſuch Judges as the LANDLADY had directed it to be laid before; wherefore, in the Firſt place, Sir Pol attacks him with publick Defamation, as was agreed before, and ſpread a thouſand Clandeſtine Stories about of his Behaviour; as that he was Clandeſtinely run away from his Partners abroad, that he had broke his word there, and never kept his Articles with any Body; ſo that there was no depending upon any thing he ſaid; that he was a Bankrupt, and had not paid his Debts, and therefore it was not ſafe to enter into any Treaty of Partnerſhip with him; that he pretended to come hither for Trade, and to buy a great many Woollen Manufactures, but that his Deſign was of another kind; that he was no Friend to Trade at all, but a meer Papiſh, and a Jacobite, and had a Deſign to bring in the Pretender; that he intended not to buy any of our Manufactures, and was ſo far from [65] wanting Woollen Manufactures at home, that he was the Inventor and Encourager of that new Invention among his own Tenants, of making fine Goods of coarſe Wooll, as aboveſaid; and of making ſundry Woollen Manufactures without any Wooll AT ALL; in which he had made a very conſiderable Progreſs; now tho' among Merchants, this way of Defaming a Man, is very Barbarous and Infamous alſo, yet Count Tariff bore it without any Concern, and went on with his Buſineſs.

Sir Pol, and his Party, then finding this would not do neither, and that Count Tariff's Reputation was ſo clear, that if they did not find out ſome other way to Ruin him, he would not carry his Point; they reſolved to ſpring their laſt Mine, and blow him up at once; to this purpoſe OLD SCHEME, the Fellow mentioned before; who, as above, had lived ſeveral Years by Cheating, and Counterfeiting Names, making falſe Accounts, forming Abſtracts of the Cuſtom-Houſe Books, and the like, is brought out to act his part upon Count Tariff, to get him Indicted for a Cheat, and ſo they reſolved to bring him to a Tryal. This old Knight of the Poſt having his Leſſon given [66] him, alledged, that the Count came hither to ſell his Goods for ready Mony, and carry it away in Specie, contrary to the Act of Parliament in that Caſe made and provided; that he had Contracted to turn OWLER, and carry away our Wooll Ʋnmanufactured into France; that all the Accounts given by Alderman Traffick of the large Commiſſions the Count had brought from France, for buying Engliſh Woollen Manufactures, was a meer Cheat; that he had 25 Ships already upon the Coaſt loaden with Wine and Brandy, which muſt be all paid for in Mony, the Bills being drawn already, and accepted; that he was in a Plot to introduce the French Wines to be the common Draught, inſtead of neat-Port, contrary to the Inclination of our Soveraign Lord the People; and to poiſon us all with French Brandy; our own Malt Spirits being known to be much wholſomer.

Theſe, and many other heinous Crimes, being laid to Count Tariff's Charge by this ſuborner old SCHEME, they puſhed on the Proceſs, and got Count TARIFF arraigned for a Cheat, in the Name, and at the Suit of Henry Woollpack and Company; tho' without their actual Conſent too.

[67] The Count, who knew his own Innocence, did not queſtion but in ſuch a Religious Nation as this was fam'd to be, he ſhould have Juſtice done him; and therefore tho' he might have pleaded to the Juriſdiction of the Court, as having entered into a Partnerſhip, which thoſe who contracted it with him, were undoubtedly impowered by their own Natural Right to engage in; and that without giving an Account to any Body; and tho' alſo he might have pleaded the Law of Nations for Protection; yet waving all theſe things, he frankly offered himſelf to the Court, and deſired to be brought to Tryal, which accordingly was done.

Upon his Tryal, the uſual Forms having paſſed, and the Charge being read, the firſt thing that gave the Court ſome Diverſion, was the detecting Sir Pol; for he had Diſguiſed himſelf, and appeared in Court under the Name of MERCHANT FACT; but as he was perſonating the old Man, and endeavouring alſo to ſpeak as if he had loſt his Teeth, that he might conceal the Heſitations which want of Truth obliged him frequently to make; by great Misfortune, all on a ſudden his FALSE BEARD fell [68] off, this made him be more ſtrictly obſerved, and ſome Perſons in Court, who formerly had ſome Acquaintance with the real Merchant FACT, ſpoke openly, and offered to prove that this was not the Man; upon which all the honeſt People that ſtood by, hiſſed at him moſt intolerably; and if ever he could have Bluſhed in his Life, it was thought it would have been at this time.

Tho' he found himſelf thus detected, yet wanting no Aſſurance, he turned it off with a ready ſhift, that indeed he was not Merchant FACT of London, but he was Goodman FACT of Glouceſterſhire, and he hoped, he ſaid, that if he was a true FACT, the Difference of City-Fact or Country-FACT would not be much.

The Court allowed that in his favour, and then put him to the proof of what he had ſaid, for which he appealed all along to his FACT-OR old Scheme.

The whole Charge being read, and all Sir Pol and his Voucher old Scheme had to ſay, being heard with the utmoſt patience by the Court; Count Tariff was allowed to ſpeak for himſelf.

He ſpoke with great Modeſty of himſelf: He ſaid, ‘'That he was no Cheat, [...] and had no Evil Deſign; that he had [69] always been a Friend to the Britiſh Commerce, and that he had been ſuſpected in his own Country on that Account; that he came to reſide here for the Benefit of Great-Britain; that he could have had very advantageous Conditions, if he would have joined with Mynheer van Coopmanſchap, and never have come here at all; and that he could ſtill be very well received, if he would engage with him, inſtead of the Engliſh Merchants; that he was ſo far from being in Debt abroad, that on the contrary, Mynheer van Coopmanſchap owed him twenty Millions of Guilders, and he was ready to prove it by his Books; but that he feared very much he ſhould never get his Money.'’

‘'He told them, that conſidering how well it was known, that he came hither with no other Intent but purely to do the Nation Service, and that the Dutch might not run away with their Trade; he was ſurprized that he ſhould meet with ſuch Treatment: That he expected better Uſage; that he had been promiſed he ſhould be Amicably received when he came hither, and that by ſome who he ſaw appeared very warm againſt him now, and who he [70] took for Men of more Honour.'’ This Reflected upon Harry Woollpack and his Friends who indeed began to be aſhamed of Sir Pol, and to ſneak away one by one.

He went on to Complain, ‘'That the Witneſſes who appeared againſt him were ſcandalous Fellows; that Merchant Fact was perſonated indeed, but it was a Counterfeit; for Merchant FACT was his old Acquaintance and Correſpondent, and he knew him very well; he was a middle ſized FAIR Gentleman, of an honeſt Countenance, and a calm compoſed Temper: But as to that tall, black, paſſionate, hangman look'd Fellow, who called himſelf Merchant FACT, he was not in the leaſt like him; and he much wondered, he ſaid, that any Court of Juſtice ſhould admit counterfeit FACTS for true, eſpecially after they were ſo openly Detected.'’

'Then, a to OLD SCHEME, he ſaid, he was an Upſtart that indeed he had not heard of before, but upon hearing his Evidence, he would undertake to prove upon the ſpot, that he was guilty of Lying and Counterfeiting, and that he had practiſed thoſe things ever [71] ſince the Year 1674. and he deſired he might call his Witneſſes to this.'

The Court was very much moved at this Diſcourſe, and readily gave the Count leave to call his Witneſſes, which made every Body believe that he would carry his Cauſe, and indeed Sir Pol's Friends began to deſpair for him; for the Count in the firſt place produced a whole Cart-load of Books, Draughts, Accounts, and other Papers from the Cuſtom-houſe, with the proper Officers attending, to Vouch their being Authentick, and the Commiſſioners Hands to them; upon Examining whereof, it appeared that OLD SCHEME had really drawn falſe Accounts, counterfeited the Names who he had pretended had atteſted them, and that none of all the Accounts he had produced, agreed with the Originals in the Cuſtom-houſe Books; from whence he pretended he had copied them.

This cauſed the Court very much to reſent the Uſage they had met with from the old Knave, and ſome Authors affirm, that it was moved he ſhould be expoſed, and his Accounts burnt by the Hangman; but the turn that afterwards happened to [72] theſe things, ſaved him from receiving his juſt Reward at that time.

This put Sir Pol's Party into a great Conſternation: But Sir Pol, who never was at a loſs, produced in the next place, a great Number of Petitions from Country and City, the firſt procured by the two Blackwell-Hall Factors, formerly mentioned: Theſe had ſent blank Petitions of their own drawing up, to Harry Woollpack's Friends all over England, telling the Country Clothiers by Letters, that if they did not Sign them they were undone; and their Trade would be all given away to France; the laſt was from the Weavers and Companies in London, procured by the ſame Sollicitation, and moſt of the ſaid laſt Petitions having the ſame Hands to them all.

Againſt theſe, Alderman Traffick, in behalf of Count Tariff, produced a Multitude of Repreſentations from all parts of England to himſelf, being the ſame formerly mentioned, entreating him to invite Count Tariff over hither, and to engage in Partnerſhip with him; expreſſing their great Satisfaction, and how advantageous it would be to the Nation, if he could be prevailed upon to become Partner with Harry Woolpack and himſelf, [73] as aforeſaid; repreſenting alſo what an advantageous Trade Great-Britain enjoyed formerly, when the old real Merchant FACT, and the Count correſponded together: And that which was moſt ſurprizing in this part of the Count's Defence was, that many of theſe Petitions and Repreſentations were from the very ſame Places, and Signed by the very ſame Hands which had Signed Sir Pol's Petitions, (viz.) from Harry Woollpack and his Friends, abovenamed; which was a clear Proof, that Party and Faction had procured the laſt, and Truth and Reaſon had procured the firſt.

Sir Pol finding that it thus went againſt him, and that he was in danger of loſing his Cauſe, had got one Card left to play, which indeed carried the whole Cauſe, and ruined all the Meaſures which Alderman Traffick had laid for making this Partnerſhip EFFECTUAL; and this was to bring a MOB and make a Tumult round about the Court; Theſe old Scheme had prepared for his Attendants, conſiſting of Harry Woollpack's Servants and Dependants, tho' their Maſter was withdrawn, as before, (viz.) Cloth-workers, Dyers, Packers, Calenders, Setters, Hotpreſſers, Blackwell-Hall FACT-ORS, with [74] their Apprentices. Porters, Carmen, and whatever Sir Pol and Scheme by their mighty Intereſt could get together. Theſe raiſed a Hubbub without the Court, crying out, no Count Tariff, no Tariff; ſend away Count Tariff! Let the Dutch or the Devil have Count Tariff, and Alderman Traffick too, we care not; no TARIFF, no TARIFF; likewiſe all the while the Court were conſidering of the Caſe, and preparing to give their Opinion, Sir Pol and old Scheme, who had now no other Game to play, and were at their Wits end, interrupted them with a hideous Noiſe and Clamour; crying no Tariff, no Tariff; nay, ſome it ſeems cryed, no Trade, no Tariff.

This, as Noiſe generally does in the like Caſes, was ſaid to have influenced many, whether it intimidated any or no, Hiſtory is ſilent as to that; but Sir Pol ſaw evidently, that it had turned the Scale very much on his Side: At length a certain Suffolk Gentleman then in Court, deſired leave to offer an Expedient to appeaſe the preſent Tumult, and ſatisfy all Parties; which having been granted, he began to ſpeak He acknowledged, ‘'That he had been as forward as any for the Count's coming over; he ſaid, that he was ſtill of the [75] Opinion, that Count Tariff was capable of laying a good Foundation for the Intereſt of Great-Britain, and that he abhorred the Tricks and Forgeries of Sir Pol, and his Sham-Evidence Old Scheme, as much as any one did; that he had given his Aſſiſtance in drawing the Partnerſhip now in Debate, and did think the Articles of it were a ſufficient Ground to eſtabliſh the Commerce of the Nation upon: But that, in regard the Noiſe was ſo great, and the Clamour without doors ſo loud, that neither the Count nor his Witneſſes could be heard; and that the Term being now expiring, the Court could not ſit long enough to determine a thing of ſo great Conſequence; he propoſed therefore that Perſons might be choſen on both ſides, and appointed to adjuſt ſuch Matters as were not fully ſettled, and to explain the ſeveral Meanings of both ſides; ſo that an entire Scheme of the Trade, which Count Tariff propoſed, might be framed, which might fully anſwer the good Intentions of the LANDLADY for the Good and Welfare of her Tenants: And that to this purpoſe, the Debate about confirming the Articles of the Partnerſhip with Count Tariff, and making the ſame EFFECTUAL, [76] might be delayed for the preſent, to be reaſſumed the firſt Cauſe next Michaelmas-Term, and then to be fully diſcuſſed, try'd and determined, by a Jury of Landed-Men, to be returned by all the High Sheriffs of Great-Britain; and that in the mean time Direction might be given, that the Court might be impoſed upon by no more Counterfeits, no more Goodman FACTS, but that the true Merchant FACT of London might be found out, and deſired to appear; to whom all due Reſpect, Honour and Regard, ſhould be ſhewn by the Court.'’

This, after ſome Debate, being put to the Queſtion, and carry'd by a Majority of nine Voices, the Cauſe was put off accordingly.

As ſoon as Mynheer Van Coopmanſchap, who lay all this while concealed at a certain Lawyer's Chamber in the Temple, had an Account of this Succeſs, he came down to the Club with great Joy, having firſt, by Advice of Sir Pol and other Members of his Acquaintance, ſent ſeveral Loads of Fagots to Baſinghall-ſtreet, Spittlefields, Ludgate-bill, and other convenient Places, to make Bonfires and pleaſe their Mob.

[77] Being come into the Club, ‘'he return'd them his hearty Thanks for the great Service they had done him, which he aſſured them he would endeavour to return, upon all occaſions; if they ſhould have any need of him, whether upon falling out with their LANDLADY, or in whatever Buſineſs, they ſhould require his Aſſiſtance.'’

He told them, ‘'He hop'd they would continue the ſame Care for his Affairs, againſt the next Term; and eſpecially, to provide good Advocates to plead for him: He likewiſe told them, he doubted not but he ſhould renew his Partnerſhip with Count Tariff the next Morning, for he was a Perſon that could not be out of Buſineſs:'’ And ſo making a very low Bow, he offered to take his Leave.

But Sir Pol making a Sign to him to ſtay, ſtood up, and ſpoke to him to the following Purpoſe.

He told him,

The Society was very glad they had been ſerviceable to him in this Affair; that they were well ſatisfied that he ſhould enter into the Partnerſhip with Count Tariff, as he deſired, tho' thereby he ſhould engroſs all the Trade to himſelf; that they would not fail to uſe their Intereſt, to [78] get him good Lawyers to plead for him againſt next Term; and particularly he told him, that they would uſe their Endeavours to get the High Sheriffs to return him a good Jury, who ſhould be as willing to give up the Trade of the Kingdom to him as the Club had been; which, he ſaid, required a great deal of Art and good Management on their part to bring to paſs.

He put him in mind however, That the Club had pawn'd their Credit with Harry Wool-pack and his Friends in the Country, and with all the Mob that they had gotten together to make a Noiſe for him: that he (Mynheer) and his Partners in Holland, would take off all their Woollen Manufactures and Fiſh; and, that they ſhould have no Loſs by their refuſing the Partnerſhip with Count Tariff: which if I had not done, ſays Sir Pol, and my good Friend here Mr. SCHEME, you had had no Appearance for you to day, and had certainly loſt your Point: And therefore Mynheer, ſaid Sir Pol we hope you will be as good as your Word, and keep up our Credit with the Country, without which we ſhall never be able to get you a good Jury choſen.

[79] Mynheer chang'd the Air of his Countenance upon this Propoſal, and told them coldly, he would do them what Service he could; but that as to the Fiſh-Trade, it was out of his way to buy any in Britain, he having Ships of his own with which he could catch them on our North-coaſts ſooner than we did our ſelves.

But as to our Woollen Manufactures, he ſaid he would take a pretty large Quantity of Gloceſterſhire-cloths and Exeter-ſerges; only he ſaid he muſt have the Cloths WHITE, and the Serges in the GREASE, becauſe the Dying, Dreſſing, &c. was to be done in Holland, that his own poor Servants might be employed.'

Having ſaid thus, he withdrew; and the next Morning having enter'd into a Parnerſhip with Count Tariff, for one Year certain, they went away together for Amſterdam, where, as we are informed, they drive a very great Trade; and Count Tariff, in particular, has already bought a very great Quantity of Eaſt-India Goods of him, with 20000 Hogſheads of Guelderland Tobacco, and other Goods in proportion.

[80] The Club being thus diſappointed, appeared very much dejected; and we hear that Harry Wooll-pack and his Friends are gone home into the Country, in a Fret, diſoblig'd and diſſatisfied; as they might very well be, their Manufactures being thrown back upon their hands by the Dutchman now his own Ends were ſerved.

Mynheer Van Coopmanſchap being gone, and Count Tariff alſo, the Chair-man thought fit to appoint, that the Committee ſhould meet every Evening to concert Meaſures for the carrying on the Intereſt of Mynheer, according to their Promiſe; and to oppoſe every one that in the leaſt countenanced the Partnerſhip with Alderman Traffick: And to the end that this might be done more effectually, Sir Pol propoſed, that they ſhould ſend for their Scots Pamphleteer, who had formerly done them very good Service in frequent publiſhing their Scandals, and who being lately fled from Juſtice, had been entertained in Coopmanſchap's Family abroad. This was no ſooner agreed to, but the Fugitive appeared in the Club, having been lurking about the Town for ſome time; and was ſet immediately to work to write Pamphlets in Favour of Mynheer Coopmanſchap.

[81] It cannot be expected we can collect all the ſcurrilous Invectives which Hiſtory has given an Account of, that were written upon this Occaſion, as well againſt Count Tariff, as againſt the LANDLADY her ſelf; the firſt were eſpecially directed to reconcile the People to the breaking off the Partnerſhip between Count Tariff and Alderman Traffick, and to inflame Harry Wooll-pack again; ſo that inſtead of being ſenſible of his Loſs, and the Injury done to his Trade, he ſhould like well to have all the Buſineſs go through old Coopmanſchap's Hands, and himſelf be a Jack-hold-my-ſtaff to the Dutch-man.

This was the more difficult for them to effect, becauſe Harry Wooll-pack had been ſo ill uſed by Mynheer, and had ſeen ſo much of his Knavery in the late Tryal; eſpecially when the pretended Merchant FACT's falſe Beard dropt off, and diſcover'd him to be no FACT, but meer Sir Pol Falſhood, diſguiſed in the Habit of the true Merchant FACT; that he was gone down in the Country diſguſted, and had openly ſaid, they were a Pack of Knaves; and, that he would never have any more to do with them; that they were in a Confederacy with Old Coopmanſchap, to enrich him at the Expence [82] of their Country, and to let him make a Monopoly of the Engliſh Trade.

Sir Pol was not ignorant, that it was abſolutely neceſſary, in order to prevent their preſent Deſign, that they ſhould bring over this Harry Wooll-pack again; and to this end, they were to ſet all their Engines at work to blow Duſt into his Eyes, that he ſhould not ſee too far into their Meaſures. The Methods they took for this, as is ſaid before, are too many to be inſerted in this place; but the Hiſtories of thoſe Times cannot fail to ſupply the Want. It may ſuffice to let the Reader know, that this was diligently endeavoured by charging Alderman Traffick with the Breach of a Partnerſhip he had been engaged in with Don Sebaſtian, a Portugueſe Merchant, and with threatning what a great Damage it would be to Harry Wooll-pack if Don Sebastian ſhould take the Pett, and refuſe to Trade with him and his Friends; altho' it was well known that Don Sebaſtian had no other Market for his own Goods, nor could he be ſupplied any other way with ſuch Goods as Harry Wooll-pack Traded in; and beſides all that, Don Sebaſtian was ſo Embarraſſed, with reference to a neighbouring Merchant, who demanded great Arrears from him, of an [83] old Contract that was between them, which amounted to more than the ſaid Don Sebaſtian was able to pay; that he was fain to make uſe of Alderman Traffick, and his Intereſt, to prevent a very great Suit at Law being commenc'd againſt him; and it was very improbable that he would do any thing ſo very affronting to Alderman Traffick as what theſe Men talked of, at the ſame time that he was ſo much obliged to him other ways.

On the other hand, Don Sebaſtian ſaw that there was ſo much Neceſſity for what Alderman Traffick had done, with reſpect to ſome Particulars of their Partnerſhip, that he appeared very well ſatisfied therewith, and did not pretend to take any Step that look'd as if there was any Unkindneſs between them: So that all the Clamour on that ſide ceaſed, and Don Sebaſtian very freely offered to renew his Partnerſhip with Alderman Traffick upon Terms of Friendſhip, and good Correſpondence, and to Trade together as much as ever they did. On the other hand, Alderman Traffick eſpouſed the Intereſt of Don Sebaſtian ſo heartily and ſo effectually, being made Arbitrator between him and his Neighbour Don Philippo the Spaniſh Merchant, that he got that Breach [84] amicably made up, and a chargeable Suit at Law, which he was threatned with, effectually prevented.

This was ſuch a piece of Service to Don Sebaſtian, and he being a Perſon of great Honour and Gratitude, was made ſo ſenſible of it, that it prevented all manner of Miſunderſtanding between him and Alderman Traffick, to the great Mortification of Sir Pol and his Friends, who had made a mighty great Noiſe of this Buſineſs.

Being diſappointed in their Meaſures in this Particular, and not able to bring over Harry Wooll-pack, as they deſigned to do, to their Party; the next thing they went about was, to ſee what they were able to do as to getting a pack'd Jury againſt Count Tariff's Tryal came on.

Writing Pamphlets, and filling the Country with moſt abominable Untruths, Scandal, Slander, and falſe Rumours, to make the People uneaſy, this was their ſtated never-failing Method; but the main Point was, to bring the Character of Count Tariff into Contempt; to which nothing was wanting, that could poſſibly be done by Men who neither valued their own Reputation, or any Man's elſe; nay, even the LANDLADY her ſelf was in [85] a moſt unchriſtian manner inſulted by their Writers, and treated with the greateſt Indecency imaginable, although they knew her to be the beſt of Landladies, and though they enjoyed their Shops with the utmoſt Quiet under her, paying as little Rent as could be expected; and although ſhe had ſucceſsfully protected them againſt all thoſe who would have diſturbed them.

Whenever theſe Pamphleteers had printed any thing that treated their ſaid LANDLADY either diſreſpectfully or injuriouſly, or that inſulted her in the Government of her own Affairs; the Club induſtriouſly conveyed thoſe Prints throughout the whole Kingdom, and ſpread them among all her Tenants and Servants, in order to accuſtom and inure them to treat her in the ſame manner.

As to her immediate Servants, they were treated by theſe People in the moſt ſcandalous manner imaginable; and upon all Occaſions ſo ſcurrilouſly and injuriouſly uſed in their ordinary Buſineſs, and in the Diſcharge of their Duty to their Landlady and Miſtreſs, that it look'd not only as if theſe Men had a Right ſuperior even to their Landlady her ſelf, but that ſhe was not lawfully Lady of the Manour, [86] or were not rightful Poſſeſſor of the Tenements which ſhe had let to them.

This they thought was uſeful to awe and brow-beat thoſe good Country People whoſe proper Buſineſs it was to bring the Names of thoſe Gentlemen to the High Sheriffs, &c. who were to return the Jury by whom Count Tariff was to be tryed.

But this had a quite contrary Effect; for when the Country Tenants, eſpecially Harry Wooll-pack and his People, came to ſee how their good Landlady was ſerved, for whom they had an unſeigned Zeal and Affection; and upon what Account, and with what little Reaſon ſhe was ſo unmannerly and undutifully handled, it raiſed their Paſſions to the higheſt degree, and they reſolved to have nothing to do with Sir Pol and his Party.

This alſo had a good effect the other way; for, it diſcovered the Deſigns of Sir Pol and his CLUB, and it gave the People Warning againſt being farther impoſed upon; by which means there appears a general good Diſpoſition among them all, to chooſe ſuch a Jury as ſhall hear the Cauſe of Count Tariff with Impartiality, and that will not be bullied by Sir Politick Falſhood and his Falſe-beard, [87] or be put off from doing Juſtice by the Noiſe of his Rabble; ſo that there is no Queſtion but the Partnerſhip between Count Tariff and Alderman Traffick will be approved, and the Articles thereof, upon a fair and full hearing of the Cauſe, be made EFFECTUAL.

POSTSCRIPT.

[88]

SInce the aforeſaid Memoirs were written, we are given to underſtand, that there are divers Accounts come from abroad, of the great Joy which the rejecting Count Tariff in England, had occaſioned in France, eſpecially among the Manufacturers of Woollen Goods in the ſeveral Provinces of Languedoc, Pictou, Anjou, &c. where upon the firſt News of the Treaty of a Partnerſhip between Count Tariff; and Harry Woollpack, Alderman Traffick, and others in London, the People were under the greateſt Conſternation imaginable; knowing that if that Partnerſhip went on, and ſhould be made EFFECTUAL by Alderman Traffick's Landlady; and that Count Tariff had come off at his Tryal with that Applauſe which they heard was expected, their ſeveral Undertakings of Woollen Manufactures in thoſe Places would be ruined.

They had repreſented this before to Count Tariff himſelf, humbly Addreſſing [89] and Entreating him not to enter into Partnerſhip with Alderman Traffick, for that it would be to the ruin of his own Country if he did: They alſo applyed themſelves to their own Landlord, to try if he could be prevailed upon to prevent Count Tariff from entering into any Engagement which would be ſo fatal to all his Tenants.

But the Landlord's Circumſtances were at that time ſuch, that he could not conveniently interpoſe in the Matter; for Alderman Traffick's Landlady, and he, had newly ended a long and chargeable SUIT at LAW, and being made Friends, he was unwilling to Diſoblige her, tho' he complyed with Conditions, which at other Times he would not have done; nor had the Partnerſhip with Count Tariff ever been made upon ſuch advantageous Terms, if it had not been ſo.

Being thus repulſed by their Landlord, the poor Manufacturers had no recourſe but to Count Tariff, entreating him not to engage with Alderman Traffick, and repreſenting that it would be their utter ruin, if they did; that they ſhould never get any WOOLL to go on with their Manufactures, and without which it was impoſſible for them to carry on their [90] Trade: They knew, they ſaid, that Alderman Traffick, and his Partner Harry Woollpack, were utter Enemies to them and to their Employment, and would Effectually put a ſtop to their having any Wooll from Great-Britain or Ireland, without which they ſhould be all undone; whereas thoſe People who had managed the Trade in Great-Britain formerly, were very eaſie in that Affair, and at leaſt were ſlack in preventing the Exportation of their Wooll; ſo that they could get over whatever Quantity they had occaſion for.

They farther repreſented to him, that if he went on with this Partnerſhip, it would bring in ſuch a prodigious Quantity of Woollen Manufactures from England upon them; and that ſo much better than any they could make at home, that no one would buy their Goods made in France: As to the high Duties which they were informed he would take off, they repreſented, that the Engliſh Manufactures would not only be better than theirs, but would thereby be cheaper alſo; for that notwithſtanding their People worked as cheap, and fared as hard as any People in the World, yet they were but young, and unexperienced in the Trade, [91] and had not the Arts of doing every thing ſo at firſt hand, as the Engliſh: Nor had they Materials as the Engliſh had, but at very remote diſtances, and upon much dearer Terms than the Engliſh had; ſo that AS it had been impoſſible for them to ſet up their ſeveral Manufactures, if it had not been for Count Tariff's breaking off his former Partnerſhips in Britain, in the Years 1667, 1687, and 1701, by which the Markets were their own, and they were admitted to ſell at what Price they pleaſed; SO it would be impoſſible for them to go on with any Succeſs, if he ſhould renew his ſaid Buſineſs; and engage anew with the ſaid Traffick and Woollpack, who were ſworn Enemies to their Trade.

Theſe Repreſentations, however importunate, and made by vaſt Numbers of the ſaid Count's Tenants and Servants, yet could not prevail with the Count at all; eſpecially when Alderman Traffick's Landlady interpoſed her good Offices to have the Partnerſhip agreed on; ſo that as you have heard the Affair went on ſucceſsfully, and the Partnerſhip was concluded; only that it wanted ſome Ratifications to make the ſame EFFECTUAL among Harry Woollpack's Friends, and others, as has been ſhewn.

[92] The poor Manufacturers being thus repulſed, were driven even to Deſpair, and had no remedy but Prayers and Tears, for they are not ſuch noiſie Fellows as our Sir Pol and old Scheme brought along with them to the Parliament: They dare not come up with their Mob at their heels, and interrupt the Aſſembly and Parliaments of their Country, with their Clamours and Cries of no Tariff! no Tariff! no Engliſh Partnerſhip! and the like; but ſeeing the ſame like to go on, they ſat down with a profound Submiſſion to their Landlord, but at the ſame time crying univerſally to one another, that they were all undone, and their Trade ruined.

As their Grief was inexpreſſible at the proſpect of the opening of the Engliſh Commerce into France, ſo when they underſtood how things were like to go in England, they began to revive in their Hopes; and having their truſty Agents in the Club in ſelf, at London, by whom they had Intelligence every Poſt, how things went on, thoſe Agents did not fail to puſh forwards Sir Pol and the Club, to inſult Count Tariff as much as poſſible, and in order to this, they ſcattered about private Papers, ſignifying, that Count Tariff had little or [93] no Influence on the Woollen Manufactures in his own Country; that they were now come to that Perfection, that they valued no Engliſh Manufactures at all, but made them better at home; and were able not only to ſupply themſelves, but all the World, and even Britain it ſelf.

Theſe were the Men that put it into Sir Pol's Head, to impoſe a diſtracted Notion upon the Club, (viz.) That there was a Project ſet up in France to make Woollen Manufactures without WOOLL at all; and thus they help'd blow the Coals up in the Club againſt Count Tariff; when, at the ſame time, they in France were in the utmoſt Conſternation, for fear his Articles with Alderman Traffick ſhould be made EFFECTUAL.

But it is impoſſible to expreſs the Joy of the poor People, all over the aforeſaid Provinces, where the Woollen Manufactures are made, when their Agents in the Club wrote them the following Letter, which being written in French, we thought fit to Tranſlate for the benefit of the Publick.

[94]
Meſſieurs,

WE do our ſelves the Honour to acquaint you, that we are juſt now returned from the Aſſembly of Eſtates of this Country, where the Caſe of Count Tariff, and his new Partnerſhip, was brought to a Tryal; we have been aſſiſting in the Club of the City-Malecontents, and others, in raiſing an hideous outcry in the Streets and outer Courts of the Parliament, where we met with a great Number of their Canaille to ſay, no Tariff! no Tariff! which has had the deſired Succeſs; for the Court has refuſed to make the ſaid Partnerſhip EFFECTUAL; and have put off the Cauſe till the next Meeting: So, Meſſieurs, you are ſecure of enjoying your Manufactures for one whole Year longer; and that you may carry them on the more ſucceſsfully, we have, according to your Order, bought you a large parcel of fine Wooll, to be ready, as uſual, when your Boats ſhall come for it; which, with what we formerly Shipp'd off from Ireland, will be of great Service to you.

Your moſt Obedient Servants, &c.
[95]

P. S. The Club are very well ſatisfied, that you ſhould have what Wooll can be conveyed away; tho' Traffick and Woollpack had Propoſals ready for the preventing it, if their Partnerſhip had gone forward—

This News occaſioned ſuch a Univerſal Joy thro' all that Country, that nothing could exceed it, except the Extravancies of the Club and their Agents in Britain, tho' Hiſtory has not yet let us know how their Friends reconciled it to Reaſon, that both the French could rejoyce, and they alſo, upon the ſame Occaſion; perhaps Time may aſſiſt us to unfold the Myſtery.

FINIS.
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