Chap. VII.} 1774. July. |
The philosophers of the day, like the king, wished the happiness of the people, and public opinion required that they should be represented in the cabinet. Maurepas complied, and in July, 1774, the place of minister of the marine was conferred on Turgot, whose name was as yet little known at Paris, and whose artlessness made him even less dangerous as a rival than Vergennes. ‘I am told he never goes to mass,’ said the king, doubtingly, and yet consented to the appointment. In five weeks, Turgot so won upon his sovereign's good will, that he was transferred to the ministry of finance. This was the wish of all the philosophers; of D'Alembert, Condorcet, Bailly, La Harpe, Marmontel, Thomas, Condillac, Morellet, and Voltaire. Nor of them alone. ‘Turgot,’ said Malesherbes, ‘has the heart of L'Hopital, and the head of Bacon.’ His purity, moreover, gave him clearsightedness and distinctness of purpose. At a moment when everybody confessed that reform