During an age when satirists could be sure of patronage and promotion, Montagu was promoted at once, and Prior, three years later, became secretary to the embassy at
the Hague. After four years, he was appointed a
Gentleman of the Bedchamber at court. The poet's knowledge of French was recognised by his being sent in the following year to Paris in attendance on the English ambassador. At this period Prior could say with good reason that "he had commonly business enough upon his hands, and was only a poet by accident." To verse, however, which had laid the foundation of his fortunes, he still occasionally trusted as a means of maintaining his position. His
occasional poems during this period include an elegy on
Queen Mary in 1695; a satirical version of
Boileau's
Ode sur le prise de Namur (1695); some lines on William's escape from assassination in 1696; and a brief piece called
The Secretary. After his return from France, Prior became under-
secretary of state and succeeded
John Locke as a commissioner of trade. In 1701 he sat in
Parliament for
East Grinstead. He had certainly been in William's confidence with regard to the
Partition Treaty; but when
Somers,
Orford and
Halifax were impeached for their share in it he voted on the
Tory side, and immediately on Anne's accession he allied himself with
Robert Harley and St John. Perhaps as a consequence of this; there is no mention of his name in connection with any public transaction for nine years. But when the
Tories came into power in 1710, Prior's diplomatic abilities were again called into action, and until the death of Anne he held a prominent place in all negotiations with the French court, sometimes as secret agent, sometimes in an equivocal position as ambassador's companion and sometimes as fully accredited but very unpunctually paid ambassador. His share in negotiating the
Treaty of Utrecht, of which he is said to have disapproved personally, led to its popular nickname of "Matt's Peace." Prior is also known as a contributor to
The Examiner newspaper. ==Imprisonment and poetry==