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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ History of the United Netherlands, Volume I. by John Lothrop Motley
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
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+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
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+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
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+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of the United Netherlands, 1584-1586,
+Vol. I. Complete, by John Lothrop Motley
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: History of the United Netherlands, 1584-86, Vol. I. (of IV) Complete
+
+Author: John Lothrop Motley
+
+Release Date: October 15, 2006 [EBook #4847]
+Last Updated: November 3, 2012
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNITED NETHERLANDS, I. ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ HISTORY OF THE UNITED NETHERLANDS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ 1584-1586<br /><br /> Volume I., Complete
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ From the Death of William the Silent to the Twelve Year's Truce
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By John Lothrop Motley
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" border="3" cellpadding="4">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a
+ href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/7552/7552-h/7552-h.htm"><b>IMAGES
+ and QUOTES</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE. </a><br /> <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2H_4_0002"> <b>THE UNITED NETHERLANDS</b> </a><br /><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1584-1585 <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1585, Part 1,
+ Alexander Farnese, The Duke Of Parma <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0006">
+ CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1585, Part 2, Alexander Farnese, The Duke of
+ Parma <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER V. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1585,
+ Part 3, Alexander Farnese, The Duke of Parma <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1585, Part 1 <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER VI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1585, Part 2 <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1585-1586, Part 1
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER VII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1586,
+ Part 2 <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER VIII. &nbsp;&nbsp;</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1586
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The indulgence with which the History of the Rise of the Dutch Republic
+ was received has encouraged me to prosecute my task with renewed industry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A single word seems necessary to explain the somewhat increased
+ proportions which the present work has assumed over the original design.
+ The intimate connection which was formed between the Kingdom of England
+ and the Republic of Holland, immediately after the death of William the
+ Silent, rendered the history and the fate of the two commonwealths for a
+ season almost identical. The years of anxiety and suspense during which
+ the great Spanish project for subjugating England and reconquering the
+ Netherlands, by the same invasion, was slowly matured, were of deepest
+ import for the future destiny of those two countries, and for the cause of
+ national liberty. The deep-laid conspiracy of Spain and Rome against human
+ rights deserves to be patiently examined, for it is one of the great
+ lessons of history. The crisis was long and doubtful, and the health&mdash;perhaps
+ the existence&mdash;of England and Holland, and, with them, of a great
+ part of Christendom, was on the issue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ History has few so fruitful examples of the dangers which come from
+ superstition and despotism, and the blessings which flow from the
+ maintenance of religious and political freedom, as those afforded by the
+ struggle between England and Holland on the one side, and Spain and Rome
+ on the other, during the epoch which I have attempted to describe. It is
+ for this reason that I have thought it necessary to reveal, as minutely as
+ possible, the secret details of this conspiracy of king and priest against
+ the people, and to show how it was baffled at last by the strong
+ self-helping energy of two free nations combined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The period occupied by these two volumes is therefore a short one, when
+ counted by years, for it begins in 1584 and ends with the commencement of
+ 1590. When estimated by the significance of events and their results for
+ future ages, it will perhaps be deemed worthy of the close examination
+ which it has received. With the year 1588 the crisis was past; England was
+ safe, and the new Dutch commonwealth was thoroughly organized. It is my
+ design, in two additional volumes, which, with the two now published, will
+ complete the present work, to carry the history of the Republic down to
+ the Synod of Dort. After this epoch the Thirty Years' War broke out in
+ Germany; and it is my wish, at a future day, to retrace the history of
+ that eventful struggle, and to combine with it the civil and military
+ events in Holland, down to the epoch when the Thirty Years' War and the
+ Eighty Years' War of the Netherlands were both brought to a close by the
+ Peace of Westphalia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The materials for the volumes now offered to the public were so abundant
+ that it was almost impossible to condense them into smaller compass
+ without doing injustice to the subject. It was desirable to throw full
+ light on these prominent points of the history, while the law of
+ historical perspective will allow long stretches of shadow in the
+ succeeding portions, in which less important objects may be more slightly
+ indicated. That I may not be thought capable of abusing the reader's
+ confidence by inventing conversations, speeches, or letters, I would take
+ this opportunity of stating&mdash;although I have repeated the remark in
+ the foot-notes&mdash;that no personage in these pages is made to write or
+ speak any words save those which, on the best historical evidence, he is
+ known to have written or spoken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A brief allusion to my sources of information will not seem superfluous: I
+ have carefully studied all the leading contemporary chronicles and
+ pamphlets of Holland, Flanders, Spain, France, Germany, and England; but,
+ as the authorities are always indicated in the notes, it is unnecessary to
+ give a list of them here. But by far my most valuable materials are
+ entirely unpublished ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The archives of England are especially rich for the history of the
+ sixteenth century; and it will be seen, in the course of the narrative,
+ how largely I have drawn from those mines of historical wealth, the State
+ Paper Office and the MS. department of the British Museum. Although both
+ these great national depositories are in admirable order, it is to be
+ regretted that they are not all embraced in one collection, as much
+ trouble might then be spared to the historical student, who is now obliged
+ to pass frequently from the one place to the other, in order to, find
+ different portions of the same correspondence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the royal archives of Holland I have obtained many most important,
+ entirely unpublished documents, by the aid of which I have endeavoured to
+ verify, to illustrate, or sometimes to correct, the recitals of the elder
+ national chroniclers; and I have derived the greatest profit from the
+ invaluable series of Archives and Correspondence of the Orange-Nassau
+ Family, given to the world by M. Groen van Prinsterer. I desire to renew
+ to that distinguished gentleman, and to that eminent scholar M. Bakhuyzen
+ van den Brink, the expression of my gratitude for their constant kindness
+ and advice during my residence at the Hague. Nothing can exceed the
+ courtesy which has been extended to me in Holland, and I am deeply
+ grateful for the indulgence with which my efforts to illustrate the
+ history of the country have been received where that history is best
+ known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have also been much aided by the study of a portion of the Archives of
+ Simancas, the originals of which are in the Archives de l'Empire in Paris,
+ and which were most liberally laid before me through the kindness of M. le
+ Comte de La Borde.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have, further; enjoyed an inestimable advantage in the perusal of the
+ whole correspondence between Philip II., his ministers, and governors,
+ relating to the affairs of the Netherlands, from the epoch at which this
+ work commences down to that monarch's death. Copies of this correspondence
+ have been carefully made from the originals at Simancas by order of the
+ Belgian Government, under the superintendence of the eminent archivist M.
+ Gachard, who has already published a synopsis or abridgment of a portion
+ of it in a French translation. The translation and abridgment of so large
+ a mass of papers, however, must necessarily occupy many years, and it may
+ be long, therefore, before the whole of the correspondence&mdash;and
+ particularly that portion of it relating to the epoch occupied by these
+ volumes sees the light. It was, therefore, of the greatest importance for
+ me to see the documents themselves unabridged and untranslated. This
+ privilege has been accorded me, and I desire to express my thanks to his
+ Excellency M. van de Weyer, the distinguished representative of Belgium at
+ the English Court, to whose friendly offices I am mainly indebted for the
+ satisfaction of my wishes in this respect. A letter from him to his
+ Excellency M. Rogier, Minister of the Interior in Belgium&mdash;who
+ likewise took the most courteous interest in promoting my views&mdash;obtained
+ for me the permission thoroughly to study this correspondence; and I
+ passed several months in Brussels, occupied with reading the whole of it
+ from the year 1584 to the end of the reign of Philip II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was thus saved a long visit to the Archives of Simancas, for it would be
+ impossible conscientiously to write the history of the epoch without a
+ thorough examination of the correspondence of the King and his ministers.
+ I venture to hope, therefore&mdash;whatever judgment may be passed upon my
+ own labours&mdash;that this work may be thought to possess an intrinsic
+ value; for the various materials of which it is composed are original, and&mdash;so
+ far as I am aware&mdash;have not been made use of by any historical
+ writer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I would take this opportunity to repeat my thanks to M. Gachard, Archivist
+ of the kingdom of Belgium, for the uniform courtesy and kindness which I
+ have received at his-hands, and to bear my testimony to the skill and
+ critical accuracy with which he has illustrated so many passages of
+ Belgian and Spanish history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 31, HERTFORD-STREET, MAY-FAIR, November 11th 1860.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE UNITED NETHERLANDS.
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ From the Death of William the Silent to the Twelve Year's Truce&mdash;1609
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Murder of Orange&mdash;Extension of Protestantism&mdash;Vast Power of Spain&mdash;
+ Religious Origin of the Revolt&mdash;Disposal of the Sovereignty&mdash;Courage
+ of the Estates of Holland&mdash;Children of William the Silent&mdash;
+ Provisional Council of State&mdash;Firm attitude of Holland and Zeeland&mdash;
+ Weakness of Flanders&mdash;Fall of Ghent&mdash;Adroitness of Alexander
+ Farnese.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ WILLIAM THE SILENT, Prince of Orange, had been murdered on the 10th of
+ July, 1584. It is difficult to imagine a more universal disaster than the
+ one thus brought about by the hand of a single obscure fanatic. For nearly
+ twenty years the character of the Prince had been expanding steadily as
+ the difficulties of his situation increased. Habit, necessity, and the
+ natural gifts of the man, had combined to invest him at last with an
+ authority which seemed more than human. There was such general confidence
+ in his sagacity, courage, and purity, that the nation had come to think
+ with his brain and to act with his hand. It was natural that, for an
+ instant, there should be a feeling as of absolute and helpless paralysis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever his technical attributes in the polity of the Netherlands&mdash;and
+ it would be difficult to define them with perfect accuracy&mdash;there is
+ no doubt that he stood there, the head of a commonwealth, in an attitude
+ such as had been maintained by but few of the kings, or chiefs, or high
+ priests of history. Assassination, a regular and almost indispensable
+ portion of the working machinery of Philip's government, had produced, in
+ this instance, after repeated disappointments, the result at last which
+ had been so anxiously desired. The ban of the Pope and the offered gold of
+ the King had accomplished a victory greater than any yet achieved by the
+ armies of Spain, brilliant as had been their triumphs on the blood-stained
+ soil of the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had that "exceeding proud, neat, and spruce" Doctor of Laws, William
+ Parry, who had been busying himself at about the same time with his
+ memorable project against the Queen of England, proved as successful as
+ Balthazar Gerard, the fate of Christendom would have been still darker.
+ Fortunately, that member of Parliament had made the discovery in time&mdash;not
+ for himself, but for Elizabeth&mdash;that the "Lord was better pleased
+ with adverbs than nouns;" the well-known result being that the traitor was
+ hanged and the Sovereign saved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet such was the condition of Europe at that day. A small, dull, elderly,
+ imperfectly-educated, patient, plodding invalid, with white hair and
+ protruding under jaw, and dreary visage, was sitting day after day; seldom
+ speaking, never smiling, seven or eight hours out of every twenty-four, at
+ a writing table covered with heaps of interminable despatches, in a
+ cabinet far away beyond the seas and mountains, in the very heart of
+ Spain. A clerk or two, noiselessly opening and shutting the door, from
+ time to time, fetching fresh bundles of letters and taking away others&mdash;all
+ written and composed by secretaries or high functionaries&mdash;and all to
+ be scrawled over in the margin by the diligent old man in a big
+ schoolboy's hand and style&mdash;if ever schoolboy, even in the sixteenth
+ century, could write so illegibly or express himself so awkwardly;
+ couriers in the court-yard arriving from or departing for the uttermost
+ parts of earth-Asia, Africa America, Europe-to fetch and carry these
+ interminable epistles which contained the irresponsible commands of this
+ one individual, and were freighted with the doom and destiny of countless
+ millions of the world's inhabitants&mdash;such was the system of
+ government against which the Netherlands had protested and revolted. It
+ was a system under which their fields had been made desolate, their cities
+ burned and pillaged, their men hanged, burned, drowned, or hacked to
+ pieces; their women subjected to every outrage; and to put an end to which
+ they had been devoting their treasure and their blood for nearly the
+ length of one generation. It was a system, too, which, among other
+ results, had just brought about the death of the foremost statesman of
+ Europe, and had nearly effected simultaneously the murder of the most
+ eminent sovereign in the world. The industrious Philip, safe and tranquil
+ in the depths of the Escorial, saying his prayers three times a day with
+ exemplary regularity, had just sent three bullets through the body of
+ William the Silent at his dining-room door in Delft. "Had it only been
+ done two years earlier," observed the patient old man, "much trouble might
+ have been spared me; but 'tis better late than never." Sir Edward
+ Stafford, English envoy in Paris, wrote to his government&mdash;so soon as
+ the news of the murder reached him&mdash;that, according to his
+ information out of the Spanish minister's own house, "the same practice
+ that had been executed upon the Prince of Orange, there were practisers
+ more than two or three about to execute upon her Majesty, and that within
+ two months." Without vouching for the absolute accuracy of this
+ intelligence, he implored the Queen to be more upon her guard than ever.
+ "For there is no doubt," said the envoy, "that she is a chief mark to
+ shoot at; and seeing that there were men cunning enough to inchant a man
+ and to encourage him to kill the Prince of Orange, in the midst of
+ Holland, and that there was a knave found desperate enough to do it, we
+ must think hereafter that anything may be done. Therefore God preserve her
+ Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Invisible as the Grand Lama of Thibet, clothed with power as extensive and
+ absolute as had ever been wielded by the most imperial Caesar, Philip the
+ Prudent, as he grew older and feebler in mind and body seemed to become
+ more gluttonous of work, more ambitious to extend his sceptre over lands
+ which he had never seen or dreamed of seeing, more fixed in his
+ determination to annihilate that monster Protestantism, which it had been
+ the business of his life to combat, more eager to put to death every human
+ creature, whether anointed monarch or humble artizan, that defended heresy
+ or opposed his progress to universal empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this enormous power, this fabulous labour, had, been wielded or
+ performed with a beneficent intention; if the man who seriously regarded
+ himself as the owner of a third of the globe, with the inhabitants
+ thereof, had attempted to deal with these extensive estates inherited from
+ his ancestors with the honest intention of a thrifty landlord, an
+ intelligent slave-owner, it would have yet been possible for a little
+ longer to smile at the delusion, and endure the practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was another old man, who lived in another palace in another
+ remote land, who, in his capacity of representative of Saint Peter,
+ claimed to dispose of all the kingdoms of the earth&mdash;and had been
+ willing to bestow them upon the man who would go down and worship him.
+ Philip stood enfeoffed, by divine decree, of all America, the East Indies,
+ the whole Spanish Peninsula, the better portion of Italy, the seventeen
+ Netherlands, and many other possessions far and near; and he contemplated
+ annexing to this extensive property the kingdoms of France, of England,
+ and Ireland. The Holy League, maintained by the sword of Guise, the pope's
+ ban, Spanish ducats, Italian condottieri, and German mercenaries, was to
+ exterminate heresy and establish the Spanish dominion in France. The same
+ machinery, aided by the pistol or poniard of the assassin, was to
+ substitute for English protestantism and England's queen the Roman
+ Catholic religion and a foreign sovereign. "The holy league," said
+ Duplessis-Mornay, one of the noblest characters of the age, "has destined
+ us all to the name sacrifice. The ambition of the Spaniard, which has
+ overleaped so many lands and seas, thinks nothing inaccessible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Netherland revolt had therefore assumed world-wide proportions. Had it
+ been merely the rebellion of provinces against a sovereign, the importance
+ of the struggle would have been more local and temporary. But the period
+ was one in which the geographical land-marks of countries were almost
+ removed. The dividing-line ran through every state, city, and almost every
+ family. There was a country which believed in the absolute power of the
+ church to dictate the relations between man and his Maker, and to utterly
+ exterminate all who disputed that position. There was another country
+ which protested against that doctrine, and claimed, theoretically or
+ practically, a liberty of conscience. The territory of these countries was
+ mapped out by no visible lines, but the inhabitants of each, whether
+ resident in France, Germany, England, or Flanders, recognised a
+ relationship which took its root in deeper differences than those of race
+ or language. It was not entirely a question of doctrine or dogma. A large
+ portion of the world had become tired of the antiquated delusion of a
+ papal supremacy over every land, and had recorded its determination, once
+ for all, to have done with it. The transition to freedom of conscience
+ became a necessary step, sooner or later to be taken. To establish the
+ principle of toleration for all religions was an inevitable consequence of
+ the Dutch revolt; although thus far, perhaps only one conspicuous man in
+ advance of his age had boldly announced that doctrine and had died in its
+ defence. But a great true thought never dies&mdash;though long buried in
+ the earth&mdash;and the day was to come, after long years, when the seed
+ was to ripen into a harvest of civil and religious emancipation, and when
+ the very word toleration was to sound like an insult and an absurdity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A vast responsibility rested upon the head of a monarch, placed as Philip
+ II. found himself, at this great dividing point in modern history. To
+ judge him, or any man in such a position, simply from his own point of
+ view, is weak and illogical. History judges the man according to its point
+ of view. It condemns or applauds the point of view itself. The point of
+ view of a malefactor is not to excuse robbery and murder. Nor is the
+ spirit of the age to be pleaded in defence of the evil-doer at a time when
+ mortals were divided into almost equal troops. The age of Philip II. was
+ also the age of William of Orange and his four brethren, of Sainte
+ Aldegonde, of Olden-Barneveldt, of Duplessis-Mornay, La Noue, Coligny, of
+ Luther, Melancthon, and Calvin, Walsingham, Sidney, Raleigh, Queen
+ Elizabeth, of Michael Montaigne, and William Shakspeare. It was not an age
+ of blindness, but of glorious light. If the man whom the Maker of the
+ Universe had permitted to be born to such boundless functions, chose to
+ put out his own eyes that he might grope along his great pathway of duty
+ in perpetual darkness, by his deeds he must be judged. The King perhaps
+ firmly believed that the heretics of the Netherlands, of France, or of
+ England, could escape eternal perdition only by being extirpated from the
+ earth by fire and sword, and therefore; perhaps, felt it his duty to
+ devote his life to their extermination. But he believed, still more
+ firmly, that his own political authority, throughout his dominions, and
+ his road to almost universal empire, lay over the bodies of those
+ heretics. Three centuries have nearly past since this memorable epoch; and
+ the world knows the fate of the states which accepted the dogma which it
+ was Philip's life-work to enforce, and of those who protested against the
+ system. The Spanish and Italian Peninsulas have had a different history
+ from that which records the career of France, Prussia, the Dutch
+ Commonwealth, the British Empire, the Transatlantic Republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the contest between those Seven meagre Provinces upon the sand-banks
+ of the North Sea, and&mdash;the great Spanish Empire, seemed at the moment
+ with which we are now occupied a sufficiently desperate one. Throw a
+ glance upon the map of Europe. Look at the broad magnificent Spanish
+ Peninsula, stretching across eight degrees of latitude and ten of
+ longitude, commanding the Atlantic and the Mediterranean, with a genial
+ climate, warmed in winter by the vast furnace of Africa, and protected
+ from the scorching heats of summer by shady mountain and forest, and
+ temperate breezes from either ocean. A generous southern territory,
+ flowing with wine and oil, and all the richest gifts of a bountiful
+ nature-splendid cities&mdash;the new and daily expanding Madrid, rich in
+ the trophies of the most artistic period of the modern world&mdash;Cadiz,
+ as populous at that day as London, seated by the straits where the ancient
+ and modern systems of traffic were blending like the mingling of the two
+ oceans&mdash;Granada, the ancient wealthy seat of the fallen Moors&mdash;Toledo,
+ Valladolid, and Lisbon, chief city of the recently-conquered kingdom of
+ Portugal, counting, with its suburbs, a larger population than any city,
+ excepting Paris, in Europe, the mother of distant colonies, and the
+ capital of the rapidly-developing traffic with both the Indies&mdash;these
+ were some of the treasures of Spain herself. But she possessed Sicily
+ also, the better portion of Italy, and important dependencies in Africa,
+ while the famous maritime discoveries of the age had all enured to her
+ aggrandizement. The world seemed suddenly to have expanded its wings from
+ East to West, only to bear the fortunate Spanish Empire to the most dizzy
+ heights of wealth and power. The most accomplished generals, the most
+ disciplined and daring infantry the world has ever known, the
+ best-equipped and most extensive navy, royal and mercantile, of the age,
+ were at the absolute command of the sovereign. Such was Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turn now to the north-western corner of Europe. A morsel of territory,
+ attached by a slight sand-hook to the continent, and half-submerged by the
+ stormy waters of the German Ocean&mdash;this was Holland. A rude climate,
+ with long, dark, rigorous, winters, and brief summers, a territory, the
+ mere wash of three great rivers, which had fertilized happier portions of
+ Europe only to desolate and overwhelm this less-favoured land, a soil so
+ ungrateful, that if the whole of its four hundred thousand acres of arable
+ land had been sowed with grain, it could not feed the labourers alone, and
+ a population largely estimated at one million of souls&mdash;these were
+ the characteristics of the Province which already had begun to give its
+ name to the new commonwealth. The isles of Zeeland&mdash;entangled in the
+ coils of deep slow-moving rivers, or combating the ocean without&mdash;and
+ the ancient episcopate of Utrecht, formed the only other Provinces that
+ had quite shaken off the foreign yoke. In Friesland, the important city of
+ Groningen was still held for the King, while Bois-le-Duc, Zutphen, besides
+ other places in Gelderland and North Brabant, also in possession of the
+ royalists, made the position of those provinces precarious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The limit of the Spanish or "obedient" Provinces, on the one hand, and of
+ the United Provinces on the other, cannot, therefore, be briefly and
+ distinctly stated. The memorable treason&mdash;or, as it was called, the
+ "reconciliation" of the Walloon Provinces in the year 1583-4&mdash;had
+ placed the Provinces of Hainault, Arthois, Douay, with the flourishing
+ cities Arran, Valenciennes, Lille, Tournay, and others&mdash;all Celtic
+ Flanders, in short-in the grasp of Spain. Cambray was still held by the
+ French governor, Seigneur de Balagny, who had taken advantage of the Duke
+ of Anjou's treachery to the States, to establish himself in an
+ unrecognized but practical petty sovereignty, in defiance both of France
+ and Spain; while East Flanders and South Brabant still remained a disputed
+ territory, and the immediate field of contest. With these limitations, it
+ may be assumed, for general purposes, that the territory of the United
+ States was that of the modern Kingdom of the Netherlands, while the
+ obedient Provinces occupied what is now the territory of Belgium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, then, were the combatants in the great eighty years' war for civil
+ and religious liberty; sixteen of which had now passed away. On the one
+ side, one of the most powerful and, populous world-empires of history,
+ then in the zenith of its prosperity; on the other hand, a slender group
+ of cities, governed by merchants and artisans, and planted precariously
+ upon a meagre, unstable soil. A million and a half of souls against the
+ autocrat of a third part of the known world. The contest seemed as
+ desperate as the cause was certainly sacred; but it had ceased to be a
+ local contest. For the history which is to occupy us in these volumes is
+ not exclusively the history of Holland. It is the story of the great
+ combat between despotism, sacerdotal and regal, and the spirit of rational
+ human liberty. The tragedy opened in the Netherlands, and its main scenes
+ were long enacted there; but as the ambition of Spain expanded, and as the
+ resistance to the principle which she represented became more general,
+ other nations were, of necessity, involved in the struggle. There came to
+ be one country, the citizens of which were the Leaguers; and another
+ country, whose inhabitants were Protestants. And in this lay the
+ distinction between freedom and absolutism. The religious question
+ swallowed all the others. There was never a period in the early history of
+ the Dutch revolt when the Provinces would not have returned to their
+ obedience, could they have been assured of enjoying liberty of conscience
+ or religious peace; nor was there ever a single moment in Philip II.'s
+ life in which he wavered in his fixed determination never to listen to
+ such a claim. The quarrel was in its nature irreconcilable and eternal as
+ the warfare between wrong and right; and the establishment of a
+ comparative civil liberty in Europe and America was the result of the
+ religious war of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The struggle
+ lasted eighty years, but the prize was worth the contest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The object of the war between the Netherlands and Spain was not,
+ therefore, primarily, a rebellion against established authority for the
+ maintenance of civil rights. To preserve these rights was secondary. The
+ first cause was religion. The Provinces had been fighting for years
+ against the Inquisition. Had they not taken arms, the Inquisition would
+ have been established in the Netherlands, and very probably in England,
+ and England might have become in its turn a Province of the Spanish
+ Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The death of William the Silent produced a sudden change in the political
+ arrangements of the liberated Netherlands. During the year 1583, the
+ United Provinces had elected Francis, Duke of Anjou, to be Duke of Brabant
+ and sovereign of the whole country, under certain constitutional
+ provisions enumerated in articles of solemn compact. That compact had been
+ grossly violated. The Duke had made a treacherous attempt to possess
+ himself of absolute power and to seize several important cities. He had
+ been signally defeated in Antwerp, and obliged to leave the country,
+ covered with ignominy. The States had then consulted William of Orange as
+ to the course to be taken in the emergency. The Prince had told them that
+ their choice was triple. They might reconcile themselves with Spain, and
+ abandon the contest for religious liberty which they had so long been
+ waging; they might reconcile themselves with Anjou, notwithstanding that
+ he had so utterly forfeited all claims to their consideration; or they
+ might fight the matter out with Spain single-handed. The last course was,
+ in his opinion, the most eligible one, and he was ready to sacrifice his
+ life to its furtherance. It was, however, indispensable, should that
+ policy be adopted, that much larger supplies should be voted than had
+ hitherto been raised, and, in general, that a much more extensive and
+ elevated spirit of patriotism should manifest itself than had hitherto
+ been displayed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was, on the whole, decided to make a second arrangement with the Duke
+ of Anjou, Queen Elizabeth warmly urging that course. At the same time,
+ however, that articles of agreement were drawn up for the installation of
+ Anjou as sovereign of the United Provinces, the Prince had himself
+ consented to accept the title of Count of Holland, under an ample
+ constitutional charter, dictated by his own lips. Neither Anjou nor Orange
+ lived to be inaugurated into the offices thus bestowed upon them. The Duke
+ died at Chateau-Thierry on the 10th June, and the Prince was assassinated
+ a month later at Delft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What now was the political position of the United Provinces at this
+ juncture? The sovereignty which had been held by the Estates, ready to be
+ conferred respectively upon Anjou and Orange, remained in the hands of the
+ Estates. There was no opposition to this theory. No more enlarged view of
+ the social compact had yet been taken. The people, as such, claimed no
+ sovereignty. Had any champion claimed it for them they would hardly have
+ understood him. The nation dealt with facts. After abjuring Philip in 1581&mdash;an
+ act which had been accomplished by the Estates&mdash;the same Estates in
+ general assembly had exercised sovereign power, and had twice disposed of
+ that sovereign power by electing a hereditary ruler. Their right and their
+ power to do this had been disputed by none, save by the deposed monarch in
+ Spain. Having the sovereignty to dispose of, it seemed logical that the
+ Estates might keep it, if so inclined. They did keep it, but only in
+ trust. While Orange lived, he might often have been elected sovereign of
+ all the Provinces, could he have been induced to consent. After his death,
+ the Estates retained, ex necessitate, the sovereignty; and it will soon be
+ related what they intended to do with it. One thing is very certain, that
+ neither Orange, while he lived, nor the Estates, after his death, were
+ actuated in their policy by personal ambition. It will be seen that the
+ first object of the Estates was to dispossess themselves of the
+ sovereignty which had again fallen into their hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What were the Estates? Without, at the present moment, any farther
+ inquiries into that constitutional system which had been long
+ consolidating itself, and was destined to exist upon a firmer basis for
+ centuries longer, it will be sufficient to observe, that the great
+ characteristic of the Netherland government was the municipality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each Province contained a large number of cities, which were governed by a
+ board of magistrates, varying in number from twenty to forty. This
+ college, called the Vroedschap (Assembly of Sages), consisted of the most
+ notable citizens, and was a self-electing body&mdash;a close corporation&mdash;the
+ members being appointed for life, from the citizens at large. Whenever
+ vacancies occurred from death or loss of citizenship, the college chose
+ new members&mdash;sometimes immediately, sometimes by means of a double or
+ triple selection of names, the choice of one from among which was offered
+ to the stadtholder of the province. This functionary was appointed by the
+ Count, as he was called, whether Duke of Bavaria or of Burgundy, Emperor,
+ or King. After the abjuration of Philip, the governors were appointed by
+ the Estates of each Province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sage-Men chose annually a board of senators, or schepens, whose
+ functions were mainly judicial; and there were generally two, and
+ sometimes three, burgomasters, appointed in the same way. This was the
+ popular branch of the Estates. But, besides this body of representatives,
+ were the nobles, men of ancient lineage and large possessions, who had
+ exercised, according to the general feudal law of Europe, high, low, and
+ intermediate jurisdiction upon their estates, and had long been recognized
+ as an integral part of the body politic, having the right to appear,
+ through delegates of their order, in the provincial and in the general
+ assemblies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Regarded as a machine for bringing the most decided political capacities
+ into the administration of public affairs, and for organising the most
+ practical opposition to the system of religious tyranny, the Netherland
+ constitution was a healthy, and, for the age, an enlightened one. The
+ officeholders, it is obvious, were not greedy for the spoils of office;
+ for it was, unfortunately, often the case that their necessary expenses in
+ the service of the state were not defrayed. The people raised enormous
+ contributions for carrying on the war; but they could not afford to be
+ extremely generous to their faithful servants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus constituted was the commonwealth upon the death of William the
+ Silent. The gloom produced by that event was tragical. Never in human
+ history was a more poignant and universal sorrow for the death of any
+ individual. The despair was, for a brief season, absolute; but it was soon
+ succeeded by more lofty sentiments. It seemed, after they had laid their
+ hero in the tomb, as though his spirit still hovered above the nation
+ which he had loved so well, and was inspiring it with a portion of his own
+ energy and wisdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even on the very day of the murder, the Estates of Holland, then sitting
+ at Delft, passed a resolution "to maintain the good cause, with God's
+ help, to the uttermost, without sparing gold or blood." This decree was
+ communicated to Admiral de Warmont, to Count Hohenlo, to William Lewis of
+ Nassau, and to other commanders by land and sea. At the same time, the
+ sixteen members&mdash;for no greater number happened to be present at the
+ session&mdash;addressed letters to their absent colleagues, informing them
+ of the calamity which had befallen them, summoning them at once to
+ conference, and urging an immediate convocation of the Estates of all the
+ Provinces in General Assembly. They also addressed strong letters of
+ encouragement, mingled with manly condolence, upon the common affliction,
+ to prominent military and naval commanders and civil functionaries,
+ begging them to "bear themselves manfully and valiantly, without faltering
+ in the least on account of the great misfortune which had occurred, or
+ allowing themselves to be seduced by any one from the union of the
+ States." Among these sixteen were Van Zuylen, Van Nyvelt, the Seigneur de
+ Warmont, the Advocate of Holland, Paul Buys, Joost de Menin, and John van
+ Olden-Barneveldt. A noble example was thus set at once to their fellow
+ citizens by these their representatives&mdash;a manful step taken forward
+ in the path where Orange had so long been leading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next movement, after the last solemn obsequies had been rendered to
+ the Prince was to provide for the immediate wants of his family. For the
+ man who had gone into the revolt with almost royal revenues, left his
+ estate so embarrassed that his carpets, tapestries, household linen&mdash;nay,
+ even his silver spoons, and the very clothes of his wardrobe were disposed
+ of at auction for the benefit of his creditors. He left eleven children&mdash;a
+ son and daughter by the first wife, a son and daughter by Anna of Saxony,
+ six daughters by Charlotte of Bourbon, and an infant, Frederic Henry, born
+ six months before his death. The eldest son, Philip William, had been a
+ captive in Spain for seventeen years, having been kidnapped from school,
+ in Leyden, in the year 1567. He had already become so thoroughly
+ Hispaniolized under the masterly treatment of the King and the Jesuits,
+ that even his face had lost all resemblance to the type of his heroic
+ family, and had acquired a sinister, gloomy, forbidding expression, most
+ painful to contemplate. All of good that he had retained was a reverence
+ for his father's name&mdash;a sentiment which he had manifested to an
+ extravagant extent on a memorable occasion in Madrid, by throwing out of
+ window, and killing on the spot a Spanish officer who had dared to mention
+ the great Prince with insult.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next son was Maurice, then seventeen years of age, a handsome youth,
+ with dark blue eyes, well-chiselled features, and full red lips, who had
+ already manifested a courage and concentration of character beyond his
+ years. The son of William the Silent, the grandson of Maurice of Saxony,
+ whom he resembled in visage and character, he was summoned by every drop
+ of blood in his veins to do life-long battle with the spirit of Spanish
+ absolutism, and he was already girding himself for his life's work. He
+ assumed at once for his device a fallen oak, with a young sapling
+ springing from its root. His motto, "Tandem fit surculus arbor," "the twig
+ shall yet become a tree"&mdash;was to be nobly justified by his career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remaining son, then a six months' child, was also destined to high
+ fortunes, and to win an enduring name in his country's history. For the
+ present he remained with his mother, the noble Louisa de Coligny, who had
+ thus seen, at long intervals, her father and two husbands fall victims to
+ the Spanish policy; for it is as certain that Philip knew beforehand, and
+ testified his approbation of, the massacre of St. Bartholomew, as that he
+ was the murderer of Orange.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Estates of Holland implored the widowed Princess to remain in their
+ territory, settling a liberal allowance upon herself and her child, and
+ she fixed her residence at Leyden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But her position was most melancholy. Married in youth to the Seigneur de
+ Teligny, a young noble of distinguished qualities, she had soon become
+ both a widow and an orphan in the dread night of St. Bartholomew. She had
+ made her own escape to Switzerland; and ten years afterwards she had
+ united herself in marriage with the Prince of Orange. At the age of
+ thirty-two, she now found herself desolate and wretched in a foreign land,
+ where she had never felt thoroughly at home. The widow and children of
+ William the Silent were almost without the necessaries of life. "I hardly
+ know," wrote the Princess to her brother-in-law, Count John, "how the
+ children and I are to maintain ourselves according to the honour of the
+ house. May God provide for us in his bounty, and certainly we have much
+ need of it." Accustomed to the more luxurious civilisation of France, she
+ had been amused rather than annoyed, when, on her first arrival in Holland
+ for her nuptials, she found herself making the journey from Rotterdam to
+ Delft in an open cart without springs, instead of the well-balanced
+ coaches to which she had been used, arriving, as might have been expected,
+ "much bruised and shaken." Such had become the primitive simplicity of
+ William the Silent's household. But on his death, in embarrassed
+ circumstances, it was still more straightened. She had no cause either to
+ love Leyden, for, after the assassination of her husband, a brutal
+ preacher, Hakkius by name, had seized that opportunity for denouncing the
+ French marriage, and the sumptuous christening of the infant in January,
+ as the deeds which had provoked the wrath of God and righteous
+ chastisement. To remain there in her widowhood, with that six months'
+ child, "sole pledge of her dead lord, her consolation and only pleasure,"
+ as she pathetically expressed herself, was sufficiently painful, and she
+ had been inclined to fix her residence in Flushing, in the edifice which
+ had belonged to her husband, as Marquis of Vere. She had been persuaded,
+ however, to remain in Holland, although "complaining, at first, somewhat
+ of the unkindness of the people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A small well-formed woman, with delicate features, exquisite complexion,
+ and very beautiful dark eyes, that seemed in after-years, as they looked
+ from beneath her coif, to be dim with unshed tears; with remarkable powers
+ of mind, angelic sweetness of disposition, a winning manner, and a gentle
+ voice, Louisa de Coligny became soon dear to the rough Hollanders, and was
+ ever a disinterested and valuable monitress both to her own child and to
+ his elder brother Maurice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very soon afterwards the States General established a State Council, as a
+ provisional executive board, for the term of three months, for the
+ Provinces of Holland, Zeeland, Utrecht, Friesland, and such parts of
+ Flanders and Brabant as still remained in the Union. At the head of this
+ body was placed young Maurice, who accepted the responsible position,
+ after three days' deliberation. The young man had been completing his
+ education, with a liberal allowance from Holland and Zeeland, at the
+ University of Leyden; and such had been their tender care for the child of
+ so many hopes, that the Estates had given particular and solemn warning,
+ by resolution, to his governor during the previous summer, on no account
+ to allow him to approach the sea-shore, lest he should be kidnapped by the
+ Prince of Parma, who had then some war-vessels cruising on the coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The salary of Maurice was now fixed at thirty thousand florins a year,
+ while each of the councillors was allowed fifteen hundred annually, out of
+ which stipend he was to support at least one servant; without making any
+ claim for travelling or other incidental expenses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Council consisted of three members from Brabant, two from Flanders,
+ four from Holland, three from Zeeland, two from Utrecht, one from Mechlin,
+ and three from Friesland&mdash;eighteen in all. They were empowered and
+ enjoined to levy troops by land and sea, and to appoint naval and military
+ officers; to establish courts of admiralty, to expend the moneys voted by
+ the States, to maintain the ancient privileges of the country, and to see
+ that all troops in service of the Provinces made oath of fidelity to the
+ Union. Diplomatic relations, questions of peace and war, the treaty-making
+ power, were not entrusted to the Council, without the knowledge and
+ consent of the States General, which body was to be convoked twice a year
+ by the State Council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the Provinces in the hour of danger and darkness were true to
+ themselves, and were far from giving way to a despondency which under the
+ circumstances would not have been unnatural.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the waves of bitterness were rolling far and wide around them. A
+ medal, struck in Holland at this period, represented a dismasted hulk
+ reeling through the tempest. The motto, "incertum quo fate ferent" (who
+ knows whither fate is sweeping her?) expressed most vividly the ship
+ wrecked condition of the country. Alexander of Parma, the most
+ accomplished general and one of the most adroit statesmen of the age, was
+ swift to take advantage of the calamity which had now befallen the
+ rebellious Provinces. Had he been better provided with men and money, the
+ cause of the States might have seemed hopeless. He addressed many letters
+ to the States General, to the magistracies of various cities, and to
+ individuals, affecting to consider that with the death of Orange had died
+ all authority, as well as all motive for continuing the contest with
+ Spain. He offered easy terms of reconciliation with the discarded monarch&mdash;always
+ reserving, however, as a matter of course, the religious question&mdash;for
+ it was as well known to the States as to Parma that there was no hope of
+ Philip making concessions upon that important point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Holland and Zeeland the Prince's blandishments were of no avail. His
+ letters received in various towns of those Provinces, offered, said one
+ who saw them, "almost every thing they would have or demand, even till
+ they should repent." But the bait was not taken. Individuals and
+ municipalities were alike stanch, remembering well that faith was not to
+ be kept with heretics. The example was followed by the Estates of other
+ Provinces, and all sent in to the General Assembly, soon in session at
+ Delft, "their absolute and irrevocable authority to their deputies to
+ stand to that which they, the said States General, should dispose of as to
+ their persons, goods and country; a resolution and agreement which never
+ concurred before among them, to this day, in what age or government
+ soever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was decreed that no motion of agreement "with the tyrant of Spain"
+ should be entertained either publicly or privately, "under pain to be
+ reputed ill patriots." It was also enacted in the city of Dort that any
+ man that brought letter or message from the enemy to any private person
+ "should be forthwith hanged." This was expeditious and business-like. The
+ same city likewise took the lead in recording its determination by public
+ act, and proclaiming it by sound of trumpet, "to live and die in the cause
+ now undertaken."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Flanders and Brabant the spirit was less noble. Those Provinces were
+ nearly lost already. Bruges seconded Parma's efforts to induce its
+ sister-city Ghent to imitate its own baseness in surrendering without a
+ struggle; and that powerful, turbulent, but most anarchical little
+ commonwealth was but too ready to listen to the voice of the tempter. "The
+ ducats of Spain, Madam, are trotting about in such fashion," wrote envoy
+ Des Pruneaux to Catherine de Medici, "that they have vanquished a great
+ quantity of courages. Your Majesties, too, must employ money if you wish
+ to advance one step." No man knew better than Parma how to employ such
+ golden rhetoric to win back a wavering rebel to his loyalty, but he was
+ not always provided with a sufficient store of those practical arguments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was, moreover, not strong in the field, although he was far superior to
+ the States at this contingency. He had, besides his garrisons, something
+ above 18,000 men. The Provinces had hardly 3000 foot and 2500 horse, and
+ these were mostly lying in the neighbourhood of Zutphen. Alexander was
+ threatening at the same time Ghent, Dendermonde, Mechlin, Brussels, and
+ Antwerp. These five powerful cities lie in a narrow circle, at distances
+ varying from six miles to thirty, and are, as it were, strung together
+ upon the Scheldt, by which river, or its tributary, the Senne, they are
+ all threaded. It would have been impossible for Parma, with 100,000 men at
+ his back, to undertake a regular and simultaneous siege of these important
+ places. His purpose was to isolate them from each other and from the rest
+ of the country, by obtaining the control of the great river, and so to
+ reduce them by famine. The scheme was a masterly one, but even the
+ consummate ability of Farnese would have proved inadequate to the
+ undertaking, had not the preliminary assassination of Orange made the task
+ comparatively easy. Treason, faint-heartedness, jealousy, were the fatal
+ allies that the Governor-General had reckoned upon, and with reason, in
+ the council-rooms of these cities. The terms he offered were liberal.
+ Pardon, permission for soldiers to retreat with technical honour, liberty
+ to choose between apostacy to the reformed religion or exile, with a
+ period of two years granted to the conscientious for the winding up of
+ their affairs; these were the conditions, which seemed flattering, now
+ that the well-known voice which had so often silenced the Flemish
+ palterers and intriguers was for ever hushed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the 17th August (1584) Dendermonde surrendered, and no lives were
+ taken save those of two preachers, one of whom was hanged, while the other
+ was drowned. Upon the 7th September Vilvoorde capitulated, by which event
+ the water-communication between Brussels and Antwerp was cut off. Ghent,
+ now thoroughly disheartened, treated with Parma likewise; and upon the
+ 17th September made its reconciliation with the King. The surrender of so
+ strong and important a place was as disastrous to the cause of the
+ patriots as it was disgraceful to the citizens themselves. It was,
+ however, the result of an intrigue which had been long spinning, although
+ the thread had been abruptly, and, as it was hoped, conclusively, severed
+ several months before. During the early part of the year, after the
+ reconciliation of Bruges with the King&mdash;an event brought about by the
+ duplicity and adroitness of Prince Chimay&mdash;the same machinery had
+ been diligently and almost successfully employed to produce a like result
+ in Ghent. Champagny, brother of the famous Cardinal Granvelle, had been
+ under arrest for six years in that city. His imprisonment was not a strict
+ one however; and he avenged himself for what he considered very unjust
+ treatment at the hands of the patriots, by completely abandoning a cause
+ which he had once begun to favour. A man of singular ability, courage, and
+ energy, distinguished both for military and diplomatic services, he was a
+ formidable enemy to the party from which he was now for ever estranged. As
+ early as April of this year, secret emissaries of Parma, dealing with
+ Champagny in his nominal prison, and with the disaffected burghers at
+ large, had been on the point of effecting an arrangement with the royal
+ governor. The negotiation had been suddenly brought to a close by the
+ discovery of a flagrant attempt by Imbue, one of the secret adherents of
+ the King, to sell the city of Dendermonde, of which he was governor, to
+ Parma. For this crime he had been brought to Ghent for trial, and then
+ publicly beheaded. The incident came in aid of the eloquence of Orange,
+ who, up to the latest moment of his life, had been most urgent in his
+ appeals to the patriotic hearts of Ghent, not to abandon the great cause
+ of the union and of liberty. William the Silent knew full well, that after
+ the withdrawal of the great keystone-city of Ghent, the chasm between the
+ Celtic-Catholic and the Flemish-Calvinist Netherlands could hardly be
+ bridged again. Orange was now dead. The negotiations with France, too, on
+ which those of the Ghenters who still held true to the national cause had
+ fastened their hopes, had previously been brought to a stand-still by the
+ death of Anjou; and Champagny, notwithstanding the disaster to Imbize,
+ became more active than ever. A private agent, whom the municipal
+ government had despatched to the French court for assistance, was not more
+ successful than his character and course of conduct would have seemed to
+ warrant; for during his residence in Paris, he had been always drunk, and
+ generally abusive. This was not good diplomacy, particularly on the part
+ of an agent from a weak municipality to a haughty and most undecided
+ government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They found at this court," wrote Stafford to Walsingham, "great fault
+ with his manner of dealing that was sent from Gaunt. He was scarce sober
+ from one end of the week to the other, and stood so much on his tiptoes to
+ have present answer within three days, or else that they of Gaunt could
+ tell where to bestow themselves. They sent him away after keeping him
+ three weeks, and he went off in great dudgeon, swearing by yea and nay
+ that he will make report thereafter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, they of Ghent did bestow themselves very soon thereafter upon
+ the King of Spain. The terms were considered liberal, but there was, of
+ course, no thought of conceding the great object for which the patriots
+ were contending&mdash;religious liberty. The municipal privileges&mdash;such
+ as they might prove to be worth under the interpretation of a royal
+ governor and beneath the guns of a citadel filled with Spanish troops&mdash;were
+ to be guaranteed; those of the inhabitants who did not choose to go to
+ mass were allowed two years to wind up their affairs before going into
+ perpetual exile, provided they behaved themselves "without scandal;" while
+ on the other hand, the King's authority as Count of Flanders was to be
+ fully recognised, and all the dispossessed monks and abbots to be restored
+ to their property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, Champagny was rewarded for his exertions by being released
+ from prison and receiving the appointment of governor of the city: and,
+ after a very brief interval, about one-half of the population, the most
+ enterprising of its merchants and manufacturers, the most industrious of
+ its artizans, emigrated to Holland and Zeeland. The noble city of Ghent&mdash;then
+ as large as Paris, thoroughly surrounded with moats, and fortified with
+ bulwarks, ravelins, and counterscarps, constructed of earth, during the
+ previous two years, at great expense, and provided with bread and meat,
+ powder and shot, enough to last a year&mdash;was ignominiously
+ surrendered. The population, already a very reduced and slender one for
+ the great extent of the place and its former importance, had been
+ estimated at 70,000. The number of houses was 35,000, so that as the
+ inhabitants were soon farther reduced to one-half, there remained but one
+ individual to each house. On the other hand, the twenty-five monasteries
+ and convents in the town were repeopled&mdash;with how much advantage as a
+ set-off to the thousands of spinners and weavers who had wandered away,
+ and who in the flourishing days of Ghent had sent gangs of workmen through
+ the streets "whose tramp was like that of an army"&mdash;may be
+ sufficiently estimated by the result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fall of Brussels was deferred till March, and that of Mechlin (19th
+ July, 1585) and of Antwerp (19th August, 1585), till Midsummer of the
+ following year; but, the surrender of Ghent (10th March 1585) foreshadowed
+ the fate of Flanders and Brabant. Ostend and Sluys, however, were still in
+ the hands of the patriots, and with them the control of the whole Flemish
+ coast. The command of the sea was destined to remain for centuries with
+ the new republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince of Parma, thus encouraged by the great success of his
+ intrigues, was determined to achieve still greater triumphs with his arms,
+ and steadily proceeded with his large design of closing the Scheldt&mdash;and
+ bringing about the fall of Antwerp. The details of that siege-one of the
+ most brilliant military operations of the age and one of the most
+ memorable in its results&mdash;will be given, as a connected whole, in a
+ subsequent series of chapters. For the present, it will be better for the
+ reader who wishes a clear view of European politics at this epoch, and of
+ the position of the Netherlands, to give his attention to the web of
+ diplomatic negotiation and court-intrigue which had been slowly spreading
+ over the leading states of Christendom, and in which the fate of the world
+ was involved. If diplomatic adroitness consists mainly in the power to
+ deceive, never were more adroit diplomatists than those of the sixteenth
+ century. It would, however, be absurd to deny them a various range of
+ abilities; and the history of no other age can show more subtle,
+ comprehensive, indefatigable&mdash;but, it must also be added, often
+ unscrupulous&mdash;intellects engaged in the great game of politics in
+ which the highest interests of millions were the stakes, than were those
+ of several leading minds in England, France, Germany, and Spain. With such
+ statesmen the burgher-diplomatists of the new-born commonwealth had to
+ measure themselves; and the result was to show whether or not they could
+ hold their own in the cabinet as on the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the present, however, the new state was unconscious of its latent
+ importance, The new-risen republic remained for a season nebulous, and
+ ready to unsphere itself so soon as the relative attraction of other great
+ powers should determine its absorption. By the death of Anjou and of
+ Orange the United Netherlands had became a sovereign state, an independent
+ republic; but they stood with that sovereignty in their hands, offering it
+ alternately, not to the highest bidder, but to the power that would be
+ willing to accept their allegiance, on the sole condition of assisting
+ them in the maintenance of their religious freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Relations of the Republic to France&mdash;Queen's Severity towards
+ Catholics and Calvinists&mdash;Relative Positions of England and France&mdash;
+ Timidity of Germany&mdash;Apathy of Protestant Germany&mdash;Indignation of
+ the Netherlanders&mdash;Henry III. of France&mdash;The King and his Minions&mdash;
+ Henry of Guise&mdash;Henry of Navarre&mdash;Power of France&mdash;Embassy of the
+ States to France&mdash;Ignominious position of the Envoys&mdash;Views of the
+ French Huguenots&mdash;Efforts to procure Annexation&mdash;Success of Des
+ Pruneaux.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Prince of Orange had always favoured a French policy. He had ever felt
+ a stronger reliance upon the support of France than upon that of any other
+ power. This was not unreasonable, and so long as he lived, the tendency of
+ the Netherlands had been in that direction. It had never been the wish of
+ England to acquire the sovereignty of the Provinces. In France on the
+ contrary, the Queen Dowager, Catharine de' Medici had always coveted that
+ sovereignty for her darling Francis of Alencon; and the design had been
+ favoured, so far as any policy could be favoured, by the impotent monarch
+ who occupied the French throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The religion of the United Netherlands was Calvinistic. There were also
+ many Anabaptists in the country. The Queen of England hated Anabaptists,
+ Calvinists, and other sectarians, and banished them from her realms on
+ pain of imprisonment and confiscation of property. As firmly opposed as
+ was her father to the supremacy of the Bishop of Rome, she felt much of
+ the paternal reluctance to accept the spirit of the Reformation. Henry
+ Tudor hanged the men who believed in the Pope, and burnt alive those who
+ disbelieved in transubstantiation, auricular confession, and the other
+ 'Six Articles.' His daughter, whatever her secret religious convictions,
+ was stanch in her resistance to Rome, and too enlightened a monarch not to
+ see wherein the greatness and glory of England were to be found; but she
+ had no thought of tolerating liberty of conscience. All opposed to the
+ Church of England, whether Papists or Puritans, were denounced as
+ heretics, and as such imprisoned or banished. "To allow churches with
+ contrary rites and ceremonies," said Elizabeth, "were nothing else but to
+ sow religion out of religion, to distract good men's minds, to cherish
+ factious men's humours, to disturb religion and commonwealth, and mingle
+ divine and human things; which were a thing in deed evil, in example worst
+ of all; to our own subjects hurtful, and to themselves&mdash;to whom it is
+ granted, neither greatly commodious, nor yet at all safe."&mdash;[Camden]
+ The words were addressed, it is true, to Papists, but there is very little
+ doubt that Anabaptists or any other heretics would have received a similar
+ reply, had they, too, ventured to demand the right of public worship. It
+ may even be said that the Romanists in the earlier days of Elizabeth's
+ reign fared better than the Calvinists. The Queen neither banished nor
+ imprisoned the Catholics. She did not enter their houses to disturb their
+ private religious ceremonies, or to inquire into their consciences. This
+ was milder treatment than the burning alive, burying alive, hanging, and
+ drowning, which had been dealt out to the English and the Netherland
+ heretics by Philip and by Mary, but it was not the spirit which William
+ the Silent had been wont to manifest in his measures towards Anabaptists
+ and Papists alike. Moreover, the Prince could hardly forget that of the
+ nine thousand four hundred Catholic ecclesiastics who held benefices at
+ the death of Queen Mary, all had renounced the Pope on the accession of
+ Queen Elizabeth, and acknowledged her as the head of the church, saving
+ only one hundred and eighty-nine individuals. In the hearts of the nine
+ thousand two hundred and eleven others, it might be thought perhaps that
+ some tenderness for the religion from which they had so suddenly been
+ converted, might linger, while it could hardly be hoped that they would
+ seek to inculcate in the minds of their flocks or of their sovereign any
+ connivance with the doctrines of Geneva.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, at a later period, the plotting of Catholics, suborned by the Pope
+ and Philip, against the throne and person of the Queen, made more rigorous
+ measures necessary; when it was thought indispensable to execute as
+ traitors those Roman seedlings&mdash;seminary priests and their disciples&mdash;who
+ went about preaching to the Queen's subjects the duty of carrying out the
+ bull by which the Bishop of Rome had deposed and excommunicated their
+ sovereign, and that "it was a meritorious act to kill such princes as were
+ excommunicate," even then, the men who preached and practised treason and
+ murder experienced no severer treatment than that which other "heretics"
+ had met with at the Queen's hands. Jesuits and Popish priests were, by Act
+ of Parliament, ordered to depart the realm within forty days. Those who
+ should afterwards return to the kingdom were to be held guilty of high
+ treason. Students in the foreign seminaries were commanded to return
+ within six months and recant, or be held guilty of high treason. Parents
+ and guardians supplying money to such students abroad were to incur the
+ penalty of a preamunire&mdash;perpetual exile, namely, with loss of all
+ their goods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many seminary priests and others were annually executed in England under
+ these laws, throughout the Queen's reign, but nominally at least they were
+ hanged not as Papists, but as traitors; not because they taught
+ transubstantiation, ecclesiastical celibacy, auricular confession, or even
+ Papal supremacy, but because they taught treason and murder&mdash;because
+ they preached the necessity of killing the Queen. It was not so easy,
+ however, to defend or even comprehend the banishment and imprisonment of
+ those who without conspiring against the Queen's life or throne, desired
+ to see the Church of England reformed according to the Church of Geneva.
+ Yet there is no doubt that many sectaries experienced much inhuman
+ treatment for such delinquency, both in the early and the later years of
+ Elizabeth's reign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was another consideration, which had its due weight in this balance,
+ and that was the respective succession to the throne in the two kingdoms
+ of France and England. Mary Stuart, the Catholic, the niece of the Guises,
+ emblem and exponent of all that was most Roman in Europe, the sworn friend
+ of Philip, the mortal foe to all heresy, was the legitimate successor to
+ Elizabeth. Although that sovereign had ever refused to recognize that
+ claim; holding that to confirm Mary in the succession was to "lay her own
+ winding sheet before her eyes, yea, to make her, own grave, while she
+ liveth and looketh on;" and although the unfortunate claimant of two
+ thrones was a prisoner in her enemy's hands, yet, so long as she lived,
+ there was little security for Protestantism, even in Elizabeth's lifetime,
+ and less still in case of her sudden death. On the other hand, not only
+ were the various politico-religious forces of France kept in equilibrium
+ by their action upon each other&mdash;so that it was reasonable to believe
+ that the House of Valois, however Catholic itself, would be always
+ compelled by the fast-expanding strength of French Calvinism, to observe
+ faithfully a compact to tolerate the Netherland churches&mdash;but, upon
+ the death of Henry III. the crown would be legitimately placed upon the
+ head of the great champion and chief of the Huguenots, Henry of Navarre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not unnatural, therefore, that the Prince of Orange, a Calvinist
+ himself, should expect more sympathy with the Netherland reformers in
+ France than in England. A large proportion of the population of that
+ kingdom, including an influential part of the nobility, was of the
+ Huguenot persuasion, and the religious peace, established by royal edict,
+ had endured so long, that the reformers of France and the Netherlands had
+ begun to believe in the royal clemency, and to confide in the royal word.
+ Orange did not live to see the actual formation of the Holy League, and
+ could only guess at its secrets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, it should be remembered that France at that day was a more
+ formidable state than England, a more dangerous enemy, and, as it was
+ believed, a more efficient protector. The England of the period, glorious
+ as it was for its own and all future ages, was, not the great British
+ Empire of to-day. On the contrary, it was what would now be considered,
+ statistically speaking, a rather petty power. The England of Elizabeth,
+ Walsingham, Burghley, Drake, and Raleigh, of Spenser and Shakspeare,
+ hardly numbered a larger population than now dwells in its capital and
+ immediate suburbs. It had neither standing army nor considerable royal
+ navy. It was full of conspirators, daring and unscrupulous, loyal to none
+ save to Mary of Scotland, Philip of Spain, and the Pope of Rome, and
+ untiring in their efforts to bring about a general rebellion. With Ireland
+ at its side, nominally a subject province, but in a state of chronic
+ insurrection&mdash;a perpetual hot-bed for Spanish conspiracy and
+ stratagem; with Scotland at its back, a foreign country, with half its
+ population exasperated enemies of England, and the rest but doubtful
+ friends, and with the legitimate sovereign of that country, "the daughter
+ of debate, who discord still did sow,"&mdash;[Sonnet by Queen Elizabeth.]&mdash;a
+ prisoner in Elizabeth's hands, the central point around which treason was
+ constantly crystallizing itself, it was not strange that with the known
+ views of the Queen on the subject of the reformed Dutch religion, England
+ should seem less desirable as a protector for the Netherlands than the
+ neighbouring kingdom of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elizabeth was a great sovereign, whose genius Orange always appreciated,
+ in a comparatively feeble realm. Henry of Valois was the contemptible
+ monarch of a powerful state, and might be led by others to produce
+ incalculable mischief or considerable good. Notwithstanding the massacre
+ of St. Bartholomew, therefore, and the more recent "French fury" of
+ Antwerp, Orange had been willing to countenance fresh negociations with
+ France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elizabeth, too, it should never be forgotten, was, if not over generous,
+ at least consistent and loyal in her policy towards the Provinces. She was
+ not precisely jealous of France, as has been unjustly intimated on
+ distinguished authority, for she strongly advocated the renewed offer of
+ the sovereignty to Anjou, after his memorable expulsion from the
+ Provinces. At that period, moreover, not only her own love-coquetries with
+ Anjou were over, but he was endeavouring with all his might, though in
+ secret, to make a match with the younger Infanta of Spain. Elizabeth
+ furthered the negociation with France, both publicly and privately. It
+ will soon be narrated how those negociations prospered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If then England were out of the question, where, except in France, should
+ the Netherlanders, not deeming themselves capable of standing alone, seek
+ for protection and support?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have seen the extensive and almost ubiquitous power of Spain. Where she
+ did not command as sovereign, she was almost equally formidable as an
+ ally. The Emperor of Germany was the nephew and the brother-in-law of
+ Philip, and a strict Catholic besides. Little aid was to be expected from
+ him or the lands under his control for the cause of the Netherland revolt.
+ Rudolph hated his brother-in-law, but lived in mortal fear of him. He was
+ also in perpetual dread of the Grand Turk. That formidable potentate, not
+ then the "sick man" whose precarious condition and territorial inheritance
+ cause so much anxiety in modern days, was, it is true, sufficiently
+ occupied for the moment in Persia, and had been sustaining there a series
+ of sanguinary defeats. He was all the more anxious to remain upon good
+ terms with Philip, and had recently sent him a complimentary embassy,
+ together with some rather choice presents, among which were "four lions,
+ twelve unicorns, and two horses coloured white, black, and blue."
+ Notwithstanding these pacific manifestations towards the West, however,
+ and in spite of the truce with the German Empire which the Turk had just
+ renewed for nine years,&mdash;Rudolph and his servants still trembled at
+ every report from the East.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is much deceived," wrote Busbecq, Rudolph's ambassador in Paris, "who
+ doubts that the Turk has sought any thing by this long Persian war, but to
+ protect his back, and prepare the way, after subduing that enemy, to the
+ extermination of all Christendom, and that he will then, with all his
+ might, wage an unequal warfare with us, in which the existence of the
+ Empire will be at stake."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The envoy expressed, at the same period, however, still greater awe of
+ Spain. "It is to no one," he wrote, "endowed with good judgment, in the
+ least obscure, that the Spanish nation, greedy of empire, will never be
+ quiet, even with their great power, but will seek for the dominion of the
+ rest of Christendom. How much remains beyond what they have already
+ acquired? Afterwards, there will soon be no liberty, no dignity, for other
+ princes and republics. That single nation will be arbiter of all things,
+ than which nothing can be more miserable, nothing more degrading. It
+ cannot be doubted that all kings, princes, and states, whose safety or
+ dignity is dear to them, would willingly associate in arms to extinguish
+ the common conflagration. The death of the Catholic king would seem the
+ great opportunity 'miscendis rebus'."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately neither Busbecq's master nor any other king or prince
+ manifested any of this commendable alacrity to "take up arms against the
+ conflagration." Germany was in a shiver at every breeze from East or
+ West-trembling alike before Philip and Amurath. The Papists were making
+ rapid progress, the land being undermined by the steady and stealthy
+ encroachments of the Jesuits. Lord Burghley sent many copies of his
+ pamphlet, in Latin, French, and Italian, against the Seminaries, to
+ Gebhard Truchsess; and the deposed archbishop made himself busy in
+ translating that wholesome production into German, and in dispersing it
+ "all Germany over." The work, setting duly forth "that the executions of
+ priests in England were not for religion but for treason," was
+ "marvellously liked" in the Netherlands. "In uttering the truth," said
+ Herle, "'tis likely to do great good;" and he added, that Duke Augustus of
+ Saxony "did now see so far into the sect of Jesuits, and to their inward
+ mischiefs, as to become their open enemy, and to make friends against them
+ in the Empire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The love of Truchsess for Agnes Mansfeld had created disaster not only for
+ himself but for Germany. The whole electorate of Cologne had become the
+ constant seat of partisan warfare, and the resort of organised bands of
+ brigands. Villages were burned and rifled, highways infested, cities
+ threatened, and the whole country subjected to perpetual black mail
+ (brandschatzung)&mdash;fire-insurance levied by the incendiaries in person&mdash;by
+ the supporters of the rival bishops. Truchsess had fled to Delft, where he
+ had been countenanced and supported by Orange. Two cities still held for
+ him, Rheinberg and Neuss. On the other hand, his rival, Ernest of Bavaria;
+ supported by Philip II., and the occasional guest of Alexander of Parma,
+ had not yet succeeded in establishing a strong foothold in the territory.
+ Two pauper archbishops, without men or means of their own, were thus
+ pushed forward and back, like puppets, by the contending highwaymen on
+ either side; while robbery and murder, under the name of Protestantism or
+ Catholicism, were for a time the only motive or result of the contest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus along the Rhine, as well as the Maas and the Scheldt, the fires of
+ civil war were ever burning. Deeper within the heart of Germany, there was
+ more tranquillity; but it was the tranquillity rather of paralysis than of
+ health. A fearful account was slowly accumulating, which was evidently to
+ be settled only by one of the most horrible wars which history has ever
+ recorded. Meantime there was apathy where there should have been
+ enthusiasm; parsimony and cowardice where generous and combined effort
+ were more necessary than ever; sloth without security. The Protestant
+ princes, growing fat and contented on the spoils of the church, lent but a
+ deaf ear to the moans of Truchsess, forgetting that their neighbour's
+ blazing roof was likely soon to fire their own. "They understand better,
+ 'proximus sum egomet mild'," wrote Lord Willoughby from Kronenburg, "than
+ they have learned, 'humani nihid a me alienum puto'. These German princes
+ continue still in their lethargy, careless of the state of others, and
+ dreaming of their ubiquity, and some of them, it is thought, inclining to
+ be Spanish or Popish more of late than heretofore."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beggared archbishop, more forlorn than ever since the death of his
+ great patron, cried woe from his resting-place in Delft, upon Protestant
+ Germany. His tones seemed almost prophetic of the thirty years' wrath to
+ blaze forth in the next generation. "Courage is wanting to the people
+ throughout Germany," he wrote to William Lewis of Nassau. "We are becoming
+ the laughing-stock of the nations. Make sheep of yourselves, and the wolf
+ will eat you. We shall find our destruction in our immoderate desire for
+ peace. Spain is making a Papistical league in Germany. Therefore is
+ Assonleville despatched thither, and that's the reason why our trash of
+ priests are so insolent in the empire. 'Tis astonishing how they are
+ triumphing on all sides. God will smite them. Thou dear God! What are our
+ evangelists about in Germany? Asleep on both ears. 'Dormiunt in utramque
+ aurem'. I doubt they will be suddenly enough awakened one day, and the cry
+ will be, 'Who'd have thought it?' Then they will be for getting oil for
+ the lamp, for shutting the stable-door when the steed is stolen," and so
+ on, with a string of homely proverbs worthy of Sancho Panza, or landgrave
+ William of Hesse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth, one of the most painful features is the general aspect of
+ affairs was the coldness of the German Protestants towards the
+ Netherlands. The enmity between Lutherans and Calvinists was almost as
+ fatal as that between Protestants and Papists. There was even a talk, at a
+ little later period, of excluding those of the "reformed" church from the
+ benefits of the peace of Passau. The princes had got the Augsburg
+ confession and the abbey-lands into the bargain; the peasants had got the
+ Augsburg confession without the abbey-lands, and were to believe exactly
+ what their masters believed. This was the German-Lutheran
+ sixteenth-century idea of religious freedom. Neither prince nor peasant
+ stirred in behalf of the struggling Christians in the United Provinces,
+ battling, year after year, knee-deep in blood, amid blazing cities and
+ inundated fields, breast to breast with the yellow jerkined pikemen of
+ Spain and Italy, with the axe and the faggot and the rack of the Holy
+ Inquisition distinctly visible behind them. Such were the realities which
+ occupied the Netherlanders in those days, not watery beams of theological
+ moonshine, fantastical catechism-making, intermingled with scenes of riot
+ and wantonness, which drove old John of Nassau half frantic; with
+ banquetting and guzzling, drinking and devouring, with unchristian
+ flaunting and wastefulness of apparel, with extravagant and wanton
+ dancing, and other lewd abominations; all which, the firm old reformer
+ prophesied, would lead to the destruction of Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the mass, slow moving but apparently irresistible, of Spanish and
+ papistical absolutism was gradually closing over Christendom. The
+ Netherlands were the wedge by which alone the solid bulk could be riven
+ asunder. It was the cause of German, of French, of English liberty, for
+ which the Provinces were contending. It was not surprising that they were
+ bitter, getting nothing in their hour of distress from the land of Luther
+ but dogmas and Augsburg catechisms instead of money and gunpowder, and
+ seeing German reiters galloping daily to reinforce the army of Parma in
+ exchange for Spanish ducats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brave old La Noue, with the iron arm, noblest of Frenchmen and Huguenots&mdash;who
+ had just spent five years in Spanish bondage, writing military discourses
+ in a reeking dungeon, filled with toads and vermin, after fighting the
+ battle of liberty for a life-time, and with his brave son already in the
+ Netherlands emulating his father's valour on the same field&mdash;denounced
+ at a little later day, the lukewarmness of Protestant Germany with
+ whimsical vehemence:&mdash;"I am astounded," he cried, "that these princes
+ are not ashamed of themselves; doing nothing while they see the oppressed
+ cut to pieces at their gates. When will God grant me grace to place me
+ among those who are doing their duty, and afar from those who do nothing,
+ and who ought to know that the cause is a common one. If I am ever caught
+ dancing the German cotillon, or playing the German flute, or eating pike
+ with German sauce, I hope it may be flung in my teeth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great league of the Pope and Philip was steadily consolidating itself,
+ and there were but gloomy prospects for the counter-league in Germany.
+ There was no hope but in England and France. For the reasons already
+ indicated, the Prince of Orange, taking counsel with the Estates, had
+ resolved to try the French policy once more. The balance of power in
+ Europe, which no man in Christendom so well understood as he, was to be
+ established by maintaining (he thought) the equilibrium between France and
+ Spain. In the antagonism of those two great realms lay the only hope for
+ Dutch or European liberty. Notwithstanding the treason of Anjou,
+ therefore, it had been decided to renew negociations with that Prince. On
+ the death of the Duke, the envoys of the States were accordingly
+ instructed to make the offer to King Henry III. which had been intended
+ for his brother. That proposition was the sovereignty of all the
+ Netherlands, save Holland and Zeeland, under a constitution maintaining
+ the reformed religion and the ancient laws and privileges of the
+ respective provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the death of Francis of Anjou had brought about a considerable change
+ in French policy. It was now more sharply defined than ever, a
+ right-angled triangle of almost mathematical precision. The three Henrys
+ and their partizans divided the realm into three hostile camps&mdash;threatening
+ each other in simulated peace since the treaty of Fleig (1580), which had
+ put an end to the "lover's war" of the preceding year,&mdash;Henry of
+ Valois, Henry of Guise, and Henry of Navarre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry III., last of the Valois line, was now thirty-three years of age.
+ Less than king, less even than man, he was one of those unfortunate
+ personages who seem as if born to make the idea of royalty ridiculous, and
+ to test the capacity of mankind to eat and drink humiliation as if it were
+ wholesome food. It proved how deeply engraved in men's minds of that
+ century was the necessity of kingship, when the hardy Netherlanders, who
+ had abjured one tyrant, and had been fighting a generation long rather
+ than return to him, were now willing to accept the sovereignty of a thing
+ like Henry of Valois.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had not been born without natural gifts, such as Heaven rarely denies
+ to prince or peasant; but the courage which he once possessed had been
+ exhausted on the field of Moncontour, his manhood had been left behind him
+ at Venice, and such wit as Heaven had endowed him withal was now expended
+ in darting viperous epigrams at court-ladies whom he was only capable of
+ dishonouring by calumny, and whose charms he burned to outrival in the
+ estimation of his minions. For the monarch of France was not unfrequently
+ pleased to attire himself like a woman and a harlot. With silken flounces,
+ jewelled stomacher, and painted face, with pearls of great price adorning
+ his bared neck and breast, and satin-slippered feet, of whose delicate
+ shape and size he was justly vain, it was his delight to pass his days and
+ nights in a ceaseless round of gorgeous festivals, tourneys, processions;
+ masquerades, banquets, and balls, the cost of which glittering frivolities
+ caused the popular burthen and the popular execration to grow, from day to
+ day, more intolerable and more audible. Surrounded by a gang of "minions,"
+ the most debauched and the most desperate of France, whose bedizened
+ dresses exhaled perfumes throughout Paris, and whose sanguinary encounters
+ dyed every street in blood, Henry lived a life of what he called pleasure,
+ careless of what might come after, for he was the last of his race. The
+ fortunes of his minions rose higher and higher, as their crimes rendered
+ them more and more estimable in the eyes of a King who took a woman's
+ pride in the valour of such champions to his weakness, and more odious to
+ a people whose miserable homes were made even more miserable, that the
+ coffers of a few court-favourites might be filled: Now sauntering,
+ full-dressed, in the public promenades, with ghastly little death's heads
+ strung upon his sumptuous garments, and fragments of human bones dangling
+ among his orders of knighthood&mdash;playing at cup and ball as he walked,
+ and followed by a few select courtiers who gravely pursued the same
+ exciting occupation&mdash;now presiding like a queen of beauty at a
+ tournament to assign the prize of valour, and now, by the advice of his
+ mother, going about the streets in robes of penitence, telling his beads
+ as he went, that the populace might be edified by his piety, and solemnly
+ offering up prayers in the churches that the blessing of an heir might be
+ vouchsafed to him,&mdash;Henry of Valois seemed straining every nerve in
+ order to bring himself and his great office into contempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As orthodox as he was profligate, he hated the Huguenots, who sought his
+ protection and who could have saved his throne, as cordially as he loved
+ the Jesuits, who passed their lives in secret plottings against his
+ authority and his person, or in fierce denunciations from the Paris
+ pulpits against his manifold crimes. Next to an exquisite and sanguinary
+ fop, he dearly loved a monk. The presence of a friar, he said, exerted as
+ agreeable an effect upon his mind as the most delicate and gentle tickling
+ could produce upon his body; and he was destined to have a fuller dose of
+ that charming presence than he coveted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His party&mdash;for he was but the nominal chief of a faction, 'tanquam
+ unus ex nobis'&mdash;was the party in possession&mdash;the office-holders'
+ party; the spoilsmen, whose purpose was to rob the exchequer and to enrich
+ themselves. His minions&mdash;for the favourites were called by no other
+ name&mdash;were even more hated, because less despised than the King.
+ Attired in cloth of gold&mdash;for silk and satin were grown too coarse a
+ material for them&mdash;with their little velvet porringer-caps stuck on
+ the sides of their heads, with their long hair stiff with pomatum, and
+ their heads set inside a well-starched ruff a foot wide, "like St. John's
+ head in a charger," as a splenetic contemporary observed, with a nimbus of
+ musk and violet-powder enveloping them as they passed before vulgar
+ mortals, these rapacious and insolent courtiers were the impersonation of
+ extortion and oppression to the Parisian populace. They were supposed, not
+ unjustly, to pass their lives in dancing, blasphemy, dueling, dicing, and
+ intrigue, in following the King about like hounds, fawning at his feet,
+ and showing their teeth to all besides; and for virtues such as these they
+ were rewarded by the highest offices in church, camp, and state, while new
+ taxes and imposts were invented almost daily to feed their avarice and
+ supply their extravagance. France, doomed to feel the beak and talons of
+ these harpies in its entrails, impoverished by a government that robbed
+ her at home while it humiliated her abroad, struggled vainly in its
+ misery, and was now on the verge of another series of internecine combats&mdash;civil
+ war seeming the only alternative to a voluptuous and licentious peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We all stood here at gaze," wrote ambassador Stafford to Walsingham,
+ "looking for some great matter to come of this sudden journey to Lyons;
+ but, as far as men can find, 'parturient montes', for there hath been
+ nothing but dancing and banquetting from one house to another, bravery in
+ apparel, glittering like the sun." He, mentioned that the Duke of
+ Epernon's horse, taking fright at a red cloak, had backed over a
+ precipice, breaking his own neck, while his master's shoulder merely was
+ put out of joint. At the same time the Duke of Joyeuse, coming over Mount
+ Cenis, on his return from Savoy, had broken his wrist. The people, he
+ said, would rather they had both broken their necks "than any other joint,
+ the King having racked the nation for their sakes, as he hath-done."
+ Stafford expressed much compassion for the French in the plight in which
+ they found themselves. "Unhappy people!" he cried, "to have such a King,
+ who seeketh nothing but to impoverish them to enrich a couple, and who
+ careth not what cometh after his death, so that he may rove on while he
+ liveth, and careth neither for doing his own estate good nor his
+ neighbour's state harm." Sir Edward added, however, in a philosophizing
+ vein, worthy of Corporal Nym, that, "seeing we cannot be so happy as to
+ have a King to concur with us to do us any good, yet we are happy to have
+ one that his humour serveth him not to concur with others to do us harm;
+ and 'tis a wisdom for us to follow these humours, that we may keep him
+ still in that humour, and from hearkening to others that may egg him on to
+ worse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a dark hour for France, and rarely has a great nation been reduced
+ to a lower level by a feeble and abandoned government than she was at that
+ moment under the distaff of Henry III. Society was corrupted to its core.
+ "There is no more truth, no more justice, no more mercy," moaned President
+ L'Etoile. "To slander, to lie, to rob, to wench, to steal; all things are
+ permitted save to do right and to speak the truth." Impiety the most
+ cynical, debauchery the most unveiled, public and unpunished homicides,
+ private murders by what was called magic, by poison, by hired assassins,
+ crimes natural, unnatural, and preternatural, were the common
+ characteristics of the time. All posts and charges were venal. Great
+ offices of justice were sold to the highest bidder, and that which was
+ thus purchased by wholesale was retailed in the same fashion. Unhappy the
+ pauper client who dreamed of justice at the hands of law. The great
+ ecclesiastical benefices were equally matter of merchandise, and married
+ men, women, unborn children, enjoyed revenues as dignitaries of the
+ church. Infants came into the world, it was said, like the mitre-fish,
+ stamped with the emblems of place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Twas impossible," said L'Etoile, "to find a crab so tortuous and
+ backsliding as the government."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the aspect of the first of the three factions in France. Such was
+ the Henry at its head, the representative of royalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry with the Scar, Duke of Guise, the well-known chief of the house of
+ Lorraine, was the chief of the extreme papistical party. He was now
+ thirty-four years of age, tall, stately, with a dark, martial face and
+ dangerous eyes, which Antonio Moro loved to paint; a physiognomy made
+ still more expressive by the arquebus-shot which had damaged his left
+ cheek at the fight near Chateau-Thierry and gained him his name of
+ Balafre. Although one of the most turbulent and restless plotters of that
+ plotting age, he was yet thought more slow and heavy in character than
+ subtle, Teutonic rather than Italian. He was the idol of the Parisian
+ burghers. The grocers, the market-men, the members of the arquebus and
+ crossbow clubs, all doated on him. The fishwomen worshipped him as a god.
+ He was the defender of the good old religion under which Paris and the
+ other cities of France had thriven, the uncompromising opponent of the
+ new-fangled doctrines which western clothiers, and dyers, and
+ tapestry-workers, had adopted, and which the nobles of the
+ mountain-country, the penniless chevaliers of Bearn and Gascony and
+ Guienne, were ceaselessly taking the field and plunging France into misery
+ and bloodshed to support. But for the Balafre and Madam League&mdash;as
+ the great Spanish Catholic conspiracy against the liberties of France, and
+ of England, and of all Europe, was affectionately termed by the Paris
+ populace&mdash;honest Catholics would fare no better in France than they
+ did in England, where, as it was well known, they were every day subjected
+ to fearful tortures: The shopwindows were filled with coloured engravings,
+ representing, in exaggerated fashion, the sufferings of the English
+ Catholics under bloody Elizabeth, or Jezebel, as she was called; and as
+ the gaping burghers stopped to ponder over these works of art, there were
+ ever present, as if by accident, some persons of superior information who
+ would condescendingly explain the various pictures, pointing out with a
+ long stick the phenomena most worthy of notice. These caricatures proving
+ highly successful, and being suppressed by order of government, they were
+ repeated upon canvas on a larger scale, in still more conspicuous
+ situations, as if in contempt of the royal authority, which sullied itself
+ by compromise with Calvinism! The pulpits, meanwhile, thundered
+ denunciations on the one hand against the weak and wicked King, who
+ worshipped idols, and who sacrificed the dearly-earned pittance of his
+ subjects to feed the insolent pomp of his pampered favourites; and on the
+ other, upon the arch-heretic, the arch-apostate, the Bearnese Huguenot,
+ who, after the death of the reigning monarch, would have the effrontery to
+ claim his throne, and to introduce into France the persecutions and the
+ horrors under which unhappy England was already groaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scarce-concealed instigator of these assaults upon the royal and upon
+ the Huguenot faction was, of course, the Duke of Guise,&mdash;the man
+ whose most signal achievement had been the Massacre of St. Bartholomew&mdash;all
+ the preliminary details of that transaction having been arranged by his
+ skill. So long as Charles IX. was living, the Balafre had created the
+ confusion which was his element, by entertaining and fomenting the
+ perpetual intrigues of Anjou and Alencon against their brother; while the
+ altercations between them and the Queen Mother and the furious madman who
+ then sat upon the throne, had been the cause of sufficient disorder and
+ calamity for France. On the death of Charles IX. Guise had sought the
+ intimacy of Henry of Navarre, that by his means he might frustrate the
+ hopes of Alencon for the succession. During the early period of the
+ Bearnese's residence at the French court the two had been inseparable,
+ living together, going to the same festivals, tournaments, and
+ masquerades, and even sleeping in the same bed. "My master," was ever
+ Guise's address to Henry; "my gossip," the young King of Navarre's reply.
+ But the crafty Bearnese had made use of the intimacy only to read the
+ secrets of the Balafre's heart; and on Navarre's flight from the court,
+ and his return to Huguenotism, Guise knew that he had been played upon by
+ a subtler spirit than his own. The simulated affection was now changed
+ into undisguised hatred. Moreover, by the death of Alencon, Navarre now
+ stood next the throne, and Guise's plots became still more extensive and
+ more open as his own ambition to usurp the crown on the death of the
+ childless Henry III. became more fervid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, by artfully inflaming the populace of Paris, and through his
+ organized bands of confederates&mdash;that of all the large towns of
+ France, against the Huguenots and their chief, by appeals to the religious
+ sentiment; and at the same time by stimulating the disgust and indignation
+ of the tax-payers everywhere at the imposts and heavy burthens which the
+ boundless extravagance of the court engendered, Guise paved the way for
+ the advancement of the great League which he represented. The other two
+ political divisions were ingeniously represented as mere insolent
+ factions, while his own was the true national and patriotic party, by
+ which alone the ancient religion and the cherished institutions of France
+ could be preserved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the great chief of this national patriotic party was not Henry of
+ Guise, but the industrious old man who sat writing despatches in the
+ depths of the Escorial. Spanish counsels, Spanish promises, Spanish ducats&mdash;these
+ were the real machinery by which the plots of Guise against the peace of
+ France and of Europe were supported. Madam League was simply Philip II.
+ Nothing was written, officially or unofficially, to the French government
+ by the Spanish court that was not at the same time communicated to "Mucio"&mdash;as
+ the Duke of Guise was denominated in the secret correspondence of Philip,
+ and Mucio was in Philip's pay, his confidential agent, spy, and
+ confederate, long before the actual existence of the League was generally
+ suspected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen-Mother, Catharine de' Medici, played into the Duke's hands.
+ Throughout the whole period of her widowhood, having been accustomed to
+ govern her sons, she had, in a certain sense, been used to govern the
+ kingdom. By sowing dissensions among her own children, by inflaming party
+ against party, by watching with care the oscillations of France&mdash;so
+ than none of the great divisions should obtain preponderance&mdash;by
+ alternately caressing and massacring the Huguenots, by cajoling or
+ confronting Philip, by keeping, as she boasted, a spy in every family that
+ possessed the annual income of two thousand livres, by making herself the
+ head of an organized system of harlotry, by which the soldiers and
+ politicians of France were inveigled, their secrets faithfully revealed to
+ her by her well-disciplined maids of honour, by surrounding her
+ unfortunate sons with temptation from earliest youth, and plunging them by
+ cold calculation into deepest debauchery, that their enervated faculties
+ might be ever forced to rely in political affairs on the maternal counsel,
+ and to abandon the administration to the maternal will; such were the arts
+ by which Catharine had maintained her influence, and a great country been
+ governed for a generation&mdash;Machiavellian state-craft blended with the
+ more simple wiles of a procuress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now that Alencon was dead, and Henry III. hopeless of issue, it was her
+ determination that the children of her daughter, the Duchess of Lorraine,
+ should succeed to the throne. The matter was discussed as if the throne
+ were already vacant, and Guise and the Queen-Mother, if they agreed in
+ nothing else, were both cordial in their detestation of Henry of Navarre.
+ The Duke affected to support the schemes in favour of his relatives, the
+ Princes of Lorraine, while he secretly informed the Spanish court that
+ this policy was only a pretence. He was not likely, he said, to advance
+ the interests of the younger branch of a house of which he was himself the
+ chief, nor were their backs equal to the burthen. It was necessary to
+ amuse the old queen, but he was profoundly of opinion that the only
+ sovereign for France, upon the death of Henry, was Philip II. himself.
+ This was the Duke's plan of arriving, by means of Spanish assistance, at
+ the throne of France; and such was Henry le Balafre, chief of the League.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the other Henry, the Huguenot, the Bearnese, Henry of Bourbon, Henry
+ of Navarre, the chieftain of the Gascon chivalry, the king errant, the
+ hope and the darling of the oppressed Protestants in every land&mdash;of
+ him it is scarce needful to say a single word. At his very name a figure
+ seems to leap forth from the mist of three centuries, instinct with ruddy
+ vigorous life. Such was the intense vitality of the Bearnese prince, that
+ even now he seems more thoroughly alive and recognizable than half the
+ actual personages who are fretting their hour upon the stage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We see, at once, a man of moderate stature, light, sinewy, and strong; a
+ face browned with continual exposure; small, mirthful, yet commanding blue
+ eyes, glittering from beneath an arching brow, and prominent cheekbones; a
+ long hawk's nose, almost resting upon a salient chin, a pendent moustache,
+ and a thick, brown, curly beard, prematurely grizzled; we see the mien of
+ frank authority and magnificent good humour, we hear the ready sallies of
+ the shrewd Gascon mother-wit, we feel the electricity which flashes out of
+ him, and sets all hearts around him on fire, when the trumpet sounds to
+ battle. The headlong desperate charge, the snow-white plume waving where
+ the fire is hottest, the large capacity for enjoyment of the man, rioting
+ without affectation in the 'certaminis gaudia', the insane gallop, after
+ the combat, to lay its trophies at the feet of the Cynthia of the minute,
+ and thus to forfeit its fruits; all are as familiar to us as if the seven
+ distinct wars, the hundred pitched battles, the two hundred sieges; in
+ which the Bearnese was personally present, had been occurrences of our own
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He at least was both king and man, if the monarch who occupied the throne
+ was neither. He was the man to prove, too, for the instruction of the
+ patient letter-writer of the Escorial, that the crown of France was to be
+ won with foot in stirrup and carbine in hand, rather than to be caught by
+ the weaving and casting of the most intricate nets of diplomatic intrigue,
+ though thoroughly weighted with Mexican gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King of Navarre was now thirty-one years old; for the three Henrys
+ were nearly of the same age. The first indications of his existence had
+ been recognized amid the cannon and trumpets of a camp in Picardy, and his
+ mother had sung a gay Bearnese song as he was coming into the world at
+ Pau. Thus, said his grandfather, Henry of Navarre, thou shalt not bear to
+ us a morose and sulky child. The good king, without a kingdom, taking the
+ child, as soon as born, in the lapel of his dressing-gown, had brushed his
+ infant lips with a clove of garlic, and moistened them with a drop of
+ generous Gascon wine. Thus, said the grandfather again, shall the boy be
+ both merry and bold. There was something mythologically prophetic in the
+ incidents of his birth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The best part of Navarre had been long since appropriated by Ferdinand of
+ Aragon. In France there reigned a young and warlike sovereign with four
+ healthy boys. But the new-born infant had inherited the lilies of France
+ from St. Louis, and a later ancestor had added to the escutcheon the motto
+ "Espoir." His grandfather believed that the boy was born to revenge upon
+ Spain the wrongs of the House of Albret, and Henry's nature seemed ever
+ pervaded with Robert of Clermont's device.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same sensible grandfather, having different views on the subject of
+ education from those manifested by Catherine de Medici towards her
+ children, had the boy taught to run about bare-headed and bare-footed,
+ like a peasant, among the mountains and rocks of Bearn, till he became as
+ rugged as a young bear, and as nimble as a kid. Black bread, and beef, and
+ garlic, were his simple fare; and he was taught by his mother and his
+ grandfather to hate lies and liars, and to read the Bible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he was fifteen, the third religious war broke out. Both his father
+ and grandfather were dead. His mother, who had openly professed the
+ reformed faith, since the death of her husband, who hated it, brought her
+ boy to the camp at Rochelle, where he was received as the chief of the
+ Huguenots. His culture was not extensive. He had learned to speak the
+ truth, to ride, to shoot, to do with little sleep and less food. He could
+ also construe a little Latin, and had read a few military treatises; but
+ the mighty hours of an eventful life were now to take him by the hand, and
+ to teach him much good and much evil, as they bore him onward. He now saw
+ military treatises expounded practically by professors, like his uncle
+ Condo, and Admiral Coligny, and Lewis Nassau, in such lecture-rooms as
+ Laudun, and Jarnac, and Montcontour, and never was apter scholar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peace of Arnay-le-Duc succeeded, and then the fatal Bartholomew
+ marriage with the Messalina of Valois. The faith taught in the mountains
+ of Bearn was no buckler against the demand of "the mass or death,"
+ thundered at his breast by the lunatic Charles, as he pointed to thousands
+ of massacred Huguenots. Henry yielded to such conclusive arguments, and
+ became a Catholic. Four years of court imprisonment succeeded, and the
+ young King of Navarre, though proof to the artifices of his gossip Guise,
+ was not adamant to the temptations spread for him by Catherine de' Medici.
+ In the harem entertained for him in the Louvre many pitfalls entrapped
+ him; and he became a stock-performer in the state comedies and tragedies
+ of that plotting age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A silken web of palace-politics, palace-diplomacy, palace revolutions,
+ enveloped him. Schemes and counter-schemes, stratagems and conspiracies,
+ assassinations and poisonings; all the state-machinery which worked so
+ exquisitely in fair ladies' chambers, to spread havoc and desolation over
+ a kingdom, were displayed before his eyes. Now campaigning with one royal
+ brother against Huguenots, now fighting with another on their side, now
+ solicited by the Queen-Mother to attempt the life of her son, now implored
+ by Henry III. to assassinate his brother, the Bearnese, as fresh
+ antagonisms, affinities; combinations, were developed, detected,
+ neutralized almost daily, became rapidly an adept in Medicean
+ state-chemistry. Charles IX. in his grave, Henry III. on the throne,
+ Alencon in the Huguenot camp&mdash;Henry at last made his escape. The
+ brief war and peace of Monsieur succeeded, and the King of Navarre
+ formally abjured the Catholic creed. The parties were now sharply defined.
+ Guise mounted upon the League, Henry astride upon the Reformation, were
+ prepared to do battle to the death. The temporary "war of the amorous" was
+ followed by the peace of Fleix.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four years of peace again; four fat years of wantonness and riot preceding
+ fourteen hungry famine-stricken years of bloodiest civil war. The
+ voluptuousness and infamy of the Louvre were almost paralleled in vice, if
+ not in splendour, by the miniature court at Pau. Henry's Spartan
+ grandfather would scarce have approved the courses of the youth, whose
+ education he had commenced on so simple a scale. For Margaret of Valois,
+ hating her husband, and living in most undisguised and promiscuous
+ infidelity to him, had profited by her mother's lessons. A seraglio of
+ maids of honour ministered to Henry's pleasures, and were carefully
+ instructed that the peace and war of the kingdom were playthings in their
+ hands. While at Paris royalty was hopelessly sinking in a poisonous marsh,
+ there was danger that even the hardy nature of the Bearnese would be
+ mortally enervated by the atmosphere in which he lived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unhappy Henry III., baited by the Guises, worried by Alencon and his
+ mother, implored the King of Navarre to return to Paris and the Catholic
+ faith. M. de Segur, chief of Navarre's council, who had been won over
+ during a visit to the capital, where he had made the discovery that "Henry
+ III. was an angel, and his ministers devils," came back to Pau, urging his
+ master's acceptance of the royal invitation. Henry wavered. Bold
+ D'Aubigne, stanchest of Huguenots, and of his friends, next day privately
+ showed Segur a palace-window opening on a very steep precipice over the
+ Bayae, and cheerfully assured him that he should be flung from it did he
+ not instantly reverse his proceedings, and give his master different
+ advice. If I am not able to do the deed myself, said D'Aubigne, here are a
+ dozen more to help me. The chief of the council cast a glance behind him,
+ saw a number of grim Puritan soldiers, with their hats plucked down upon
+ their brows, looking very serious; so made his bow, and quite changed his
+ line of conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At about the same time, Philip II. confidentially offered Henry of Navarre
+ four hundred thousand crowns in hand, and twelve hundred thousand yearly,
+ if he would consent to make war upon Henry III. Mucio, or the Duke of
+ Guise, being still in Philip's pay, the combination of Leaguers and
+ Huguenots against the unfortunate Valois would, it was thought, be a good
+ triangular contest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Henry&mdash;no longer the unsophisticated youth who had been used to
+ run barefoot among the cliffs of Coarasse&mdash;was grown too crafty a
+ politician to be entangled by Spanish or Medicean wiles. The Duke of Anjou
+ was now dead. Of all the princes who had stood between him and the throne,
+ there was none remaining save the helpless, childless, superannuated
+ youth, who was its present occupant. The King of Navarre was legitimate
+ heir to the crown of France. "Espoir" was now in letters of light upon his
+ shield, but he knew that his path to greatness led through manifold
+ dangers, and that it was only at the head of his Huguenot chivalry that he
+ could cut his way. He was the leader of the nobles of Gascony, and
+ Dauphins, and Guienne, in their mountain fastnesses, of the weavers, cutlers,
+ and artizans, in their thriving manufacturing and trading towns. It was
+ not Spanish gold, but carbines and cutlasses, bows and bills, which could
+ bring him to the throne of his ancestors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus he stood the chieftain of that great austere party of Huguenots,
+ the men who went on, their knees before the battle, beating their breasts
+ with their iron gauntlets, and singing in full chorus a psalm of David,
+ before smiting the Philistines hip and thigh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their chieftain, scarcely their representative&mdash;fit to lead his
+ Puritans on the battle-field, was hardly a model for them elsewhere. Yet,
+ though profligate in one respect, he was temperate in every other. In
+ food, wine, and sleep, he was always moderate. Subtle and crafty in
+ self-defence, he retained something of his old love of truth, of his
+ hatred for liars. Hardly generous perhaps, he was a friend of justice,
+ while economy in a wandering King, like himself, was a necessary virtue,
+ of which France one day was to feel the beneficent action. Reckless and
+ headlong in appearance, he was in truth the most careful of men. On the
+ religious question, most cautious of all, he always left the door open
+ behind him, disclaimed all bigotry of opinion, and earnestly implored the
+ Papists to seek, not his destruction, but his instruction. Yet prudent as
+ he was by nature in every other regard, he was all his life the slave of
+ one woman or another, and it was by good luck rather than by sagacity that
+ he did not repeatedly forfeit the fruits of his courage and conduct, in
+ obedience to his master-passion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Always open to conviction on the subject of his faith, he repudiated the
+ appellation of heretic. A creed, he said, was not to be changed like a
+ shirt, but only on due deliberation, and under special advice. In his
+ secret heart he probably regarded the two religions as his chargers, and
+ was ready to mount alternately the one or the other, as each seemed the
+ more likely to bear him safely in the battle. The Bearnese was no Puritan,
+ but he was most true to himself and to his own advancement. His highest
+ principle of action was to reach his goal, and to that principle he was
+ ever loyal. Feeling, too, that it was the interest of France that he
+ should succeed, he was even inspired&mdash;compared with others on the
+ stage&mdash;by an almost lofty patriotism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amiable by nature and by habit, he had preserved the most unimpaired
+ good-humour throughout the horrible years which succeeded St. Bartholomew,
+ during which he carried his life in his hand, and learned not to wear his
+ heart upon his sleeve. Without gratitude, without resentment, without
+ fear, without remorse, entirely arbitrary, yet with the capacity to use
+ all men's judgments; without convictions, save in regard to his dynastic
+ interests, he possessed all the qualities, necessary to success. He knew
+ how to use his enemies. He knew how to use his friends, to abuse them, and
+ to throw them away. He refused to assassinate Francis Alencon at the
+ bidding of Henry III., but he attempted to procure the murder of the
+ truest of his own friends, one of the noblest characters of the age&mdash;whose
+ breast showed twelve scars received in his services&mdash;Agrippa
+ D'Aubigne, because the honest soldier had refused to become his pimp&mdash;a
+ service the King had implored upon his knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beneath the mask of perpetual careless good-humour, lurked the keenest
+ eye, a subtle, restless, widely combining brain, and an iron will. Native
+ sagacity had been tempered into consummate elasticity by the fiery
+ atmosphere in which feebler natures had been dissolved. His wit was as
+ flashing and as quickly unsheathed as his sword. Desperate, apparently
+ reckless temerity on the battle-field was deliberately indulged in, that
+ the world might be brought to recognise a hero and chieftain in a King.
+ The do-nothings of the Merovingian line had been succeeded by the Pepins;
+ to the effete Carlovingians had come a Capet; to the impotent Valois
+ should come a worthier descendant of St. Louis. This was shrewd Gascon
+ calculation, aided by constitutional fearlessness. When despatch-writing,
+ invisible Philips, stargazing Rudolphs, and petticoated Henrys, sat upon
+ the thrones of Europe, it was wholesome to show the world that there was a
+ King left who could move about in the bustle and business of the age, and
+ could charge as well as most soldiers at the head of his cavalry; that
+ there was one more sovereign fit to reign over men, besides the glorious
+ Virgin who governed England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus courageous, crafty, far-seeing, consistent, untiring, imperturbable,
+ he was born to command, and had a right to reign. He had need of the
+ throne, and the throne had still more need of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This then was the third Henry, representative of the third side of the
+ triangle, the reformers of the kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And before this bubbling cauldron of France, where intrigues, foreign and
+ domestic, conflicting ambitions, stratagems, and hopes, were whirling in
+ never-ceasing tumult, was it strange if the plain Netherland envoys should
+ stand somewhat aghast?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet it was necessary that they should ponder well the aspect of affairs;
+ for all their hopes, the very existence of themselves and of their
+ religion, depended upon the organization which should come of this chaos.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be remembered, however, that those statesmen&mdash;even the wisest
+ or the best-informed of them&mdash;could not take so correct a view of
+ France and its politics as it is possible for us, after the lapse of three
+ centuries, to do. The interior leagues, subterranean schemes, conflicting
+ factions, could only be guessed at; nor could the immediate future be
+ predicted, even by such far-seeing politicians as William of Orange; at a
+ distance, or Henry of Navarre, upon the spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was obvious to the Netherlanders that France, although torn by faction,
+ was a great and powerful realm. There had now been, with the brief
+ exception of the lovers' war in 1580, a religious peace of eight years'
+ duration. The Huguenots had enjoyed tranquil exercise of their worship
+ during that period, and they expressed perfect confidence in the good
+ faith of the King. That the cities were inordinately taxed to supply the
+ luxury of the court could hardly be unknown to the Netherlanders.
+ Nevertheless they knew that the kingdom was the richest and most populous
+ of Christendom, after that of Spain. Its capital, already called by
+ contemporaries the "compendium of the world," was described by travellers
+ as "stupendous in extent and miraculous for its numbers." It was even said
+ to contain eight hundred thousand souls; and although, its actual
+ population did not probably exceed three hundred and twenty thousand, yet
+ this was more than double the number of London's inhabitants, and thrice
+ as many as Antwerp could then boast, now that a great proportion of its
+ foreign denizens had been scared away. Paris was at least by one hundred
+ thousand more populous than any city of Europe, except perhaps the remote
+ and barbarous Moscow, while the secondary cities of France, Rouen in the
+ north, Lyons in the centre, and Marseilles in the south, almost equalled
+ in size, business, wealth, and numbers, the capitals of other countries.
+ In the whole kingdom were probably ten or twelve millions of inhabitants,
+ nearly as many as in Spain, without her colonies, and perhaps three times
+ the number that dwelt in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a military point of view, too, the alliance of France was most valuable
+ to the contiguous Netherlands. A few regiments of French troops, under the
+ command of one of their experienced Marshals, could block up the Spaniards
+ in the Walloon Provinces, effectually stop their operations against Ghent,
+ Antwerp, and the other great cities of Flanders and Brabant, and, with the
+ combined action of the United Provinces on the north, so surround and
+ cripple the forces of Parma, as to reduce the power of Philip, after a few
+ vigorous and well-concerted blows, to an absolute nullity in, the Low
+ Countries. As this result was of as vital importance to the real interests
+ of France and of Europe, whether Protestant or Catholic, as it was to the
+ Provinces, and as the French government had privately manifested a strong
+ desire to oppose the progress of Spain towards universal empire, it was
+ not surprising that the States General, not feeling capable of standing
+ alone, should make their application to France. This they had done with
+ the knowledge and concurrence of the English government. What lay upon the
+ surface the Netherland statesmen saw and pondered well. What lurked
+ beneath, they surmised as shrewdly as they could, but it was impossible,
+ with plummet and fathom-line ever in hand, to sound the way with perfect
+ accuracy, where the quicksands were ever shifting, and the depth or
+ shallowness of the course perpetually varying. It was not easy to discover
+ the intentions of a government which did not know its own intentions, and
+ whose changing policy was controlled by so many hidden currents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, as already indicated, the envoys and those whom they represented
+ had not the same means of arriving at a result as are granted to us.
+ Thanks to the liberality of many modern governments of Europe, the
+ archives where the state-secrets of the buried centuries have so long
+ mouldered, are now open to the student of history. To him who has patience
+ and industry many mysteries are thus revealed, which no political sagacity
+ or critical acumen could have divined. He leans over the shoulder of
+ Philip the Second at his writing-table, as the King spells patiently out,
+ with cipher-key in hand, the most concealed hieroglyphics of Parma or
+ Guise or Mendoza. He reads the secret thoughts of "Fabius,"&mdash;[The
+ name usually assigned to Philip himself in the Paris-Simancas
+ Correspondence.]&mdash;as that cunctative Roman scrawls his marginal
+ apostilles on each despatch; he pries into all the stratagems of Camillus,
+ Hortensius, Mucius, Julius, Tullius, and the rest of those ancient heroes
+ who lent their names to the diplomatic masqueraders of the 16th century;
+ he enters the cabinet of the deeply-pondering Burghley, and takes from the
+ most private drawer the memoranda which record that minister's unutterable
+ doubtings; he pulls from the dressing-gown folds of the stealthy,
+ softly-gliding Walsingham the last secret which he has picked from the
+ Emperor's pigeon-holes, or the Pope's pocket, and which, not Hatton, nor
+ Buckhurst, nor Leicester, nor the Lord Treasurer, is to see; nobody but
+ Elizabeth herself; he sits invisible at the most secret councils of the
+ Nassaus and Barneveldt and Buys, or pores with Farnese over coming
+ victories, and vast schemes of universal conquest; he reads the latest bit
+ of scandal, the minutest characteristic of king or minister, chronicled by
+ the gossiping Venetians for the edification of the Forty; and, after all
+ this prying and eavesdropping, having seen the cross-purposes, the
+ bribings, the windings, the fencings in the dark, he is not surprised, if
+ those who were systematically deceived did not always arrive at correct
+ conclusions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Noel de Caron, Seigneur de Schoneval, had been agent of the States at the
+ French court at the time of the death of the Duke of Anjou. Upon the
+ occurrence of that event, La Mouillerie and Asseliers were deputed by the
+ Provinces to King Henry III., in order to offer him the sovereignty, which
+ they had intended to confer upon his brother. Meantime that brother, just
+ before his death, and with the privity of Henry, had been negotiating for
+ a marriage with the younger daughter of Philip II.&mdash;an arrangement
+ somewhat incompatible with his contemporaneous scheme to assume the
+ sovereignty of Philip's revolted Provinces. An attempt had been made at
+ the same time to conciliate the Duke of Savoy, and invite him to the
+ French court; but the Duc de Joyeuse, then on his return from Turin, was
+ bringing the news, not only that the match with Anjou was not favored&mdash;which,
+ as Anjou was dead, was of no great consequence&mdash;but that the Duke of
+ Savoy was himself to espouse the Infanta, and was therefore compelled to
+ decline the invitation to Paris, for fear of offending his father-in-law.
+ Other matters were in progress, to be afterwards indicated, very much
+ interfering with the negotiations of the Netherland envoys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When La Mouillerie and Asseliers arrived at Rouen, on their road from
+ Dieppe to Paris, they received a peremptory order from the Queen-Mother to
+ proceed no farther. This prohibition was brought by an unofficial
+ personage, and was delivered, not to them, but to Des Pruneaux, French
+ envoy to the States General, who had accompanied the envoys to France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After three weeks' time, during which they "kept themselves continually
+ concealed in Rouen," there arrived in that city a young nephew of
+ Secretary Brulart, who brought letters empowering him to hear what they
+ had in charge for the King. The envoys, not much flattered by such
+ cavalier treatment on the part of him to, whom they were offering a crown,
+ determined to digest the affront as they best might, and, to save time,
+ opened the whole business to this subordinate stripling. He received from
+ them accordingly an ample memoir to be laid before his Majesty, and
+ departed by the post the same night. Then they waited ten days longer,
+ concealed as if they had been thieves or spies, rather than the
+ representatives of a friendly power, on a more than friendly errand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, on the 24th July 1854, after the deputies had been thus shut up a
+ whole month, Secretary Brulart himself arrived from Fontainebleau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stated that the King sent his royal thanks to the States for the offer
+ which they had made him, and to the deputies in particular for taking the
+ trouble of so long a journey; but that he did not find his realm in
+ condition to undertake a foreign war so inopportunely. In every other
+ regard, his Majesty offered the States "all possible favours and
+ pleasures."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly, after having been thus kept in prison for a month, the
+ ambassadors had small cause to be contented with this very cold
+ communication. To be forbidden the royal presence, and to be turned out of
+ the country without even an official and accredited answer to a
+ communication in which they had offered the sovereignty of their
+ fatherland, was not flattering to their dignity. "We little thought," said
+ they to Brulart, after a brief consultation among themselves, "to receive
+ such a reply as this. It displeases us infinitely that his Majesty will
+ not do us the honour to grant us an audience. We must take the liberty of
+ saying, that 'tis treating the States, our masters, with too much
+ contempt. Who ever heard before of refusing audience to public personages?
+ Kings often grant audience to mere letter-carriers. Even the King of Spain
+ never refused a hearing to the deputies from the Netherlands when they
+ came to Spain to complain of his own government. The States General have
+ sent envoys to many other kinds and princes, and they have instantly
+ granted audience in every case. His Majesty, too, has been very
+ ill-informed of the contracts which we formerly made with the Duke of
+ Anjou, and therefore a personal interview is the more necessary." As the
+ envoys were obstinate on the point of Paris, Brulart said "that the King,
+ although he should himself be at Lyons, would not prevent any one from
+ going to the capital on his own private affairs; but would unquestionably
+ take it very ill if, they should visit that city in a public manner, and
+ as deputies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Des Pruneaux professed himself "very grievous at this result, and desirous
+ of a hundred deaths in consequence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They stated that they should be ready within a month to bring an army of
+ 3,000 horse and 13,000 foot into the field for the relief of Ghent,
+ besides their military operations against Zutphen; and that the enemy had
+ recently been ignominiously defeated in his attack upon Fort Lille, and
+ had lost 2,000 of his best soldiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here were encouraging facts; and it certainly was worth the while of the
+ French sovereign to pause a moment before rejecting without a hearing, the
+ offer of such powerful and conveniently-situated provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Des Pruneaux, a man of probity and earnestness, but perhaps of
+ insufficient ability to deal with such grave matters as now fell almost
+ entirely upon his shoulders, soon afterwards obtained audience of the
+ King. Being most sincerely in favour of the annexation of the Netherlands
+ to France, and feeling that now or never was the opportunity of bringing
+ it about, he persuaded the King to send him back to the Provinces, in
+ order to continue the negotiation directly with the States General. The
+ timidity and procrastination of the court could be overcome no further.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two Dutch envoys, who had stolen secretly to Paris, were indulged in a
+ most barren and unmeaning interview with the Queen-Mother. Before their
+ departure from France, however, they had the advantage of much
+ conversation with leading members of the royal council, of the parliaments
+ of Paris and Rouen, and also with various persons professing the reformed
+ religion. They endeavoured thus to inform themselves, as well as they
+ could, why the King made so much difficulty in accepting their
+ propositions, and whether, and by what means, his Majesty could be induced
+ to make war in their behalf upon the King of Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were informed that, should Holland and Zeeland unite with the rest of
+ the Netherlands, the King "without any doubt would undertake the cause
+ most earnestly." His councillors, also&mdash;even those who had been most
+ active in dissuading his Majesty from such a policy&mdash;would then be
+ unanimous in supporting the annexation of the Provinces and the war with
+ Spain. In such a contingency, with the potent assistance of Holland and
+ Zeeland, the King would have little difficulty, within a very short time,
+ in chasing every single Spaniard out of the Netherlands. To further this
+ end, many leading personages in France avowed to the envoys their
+ determination "to venture their lives and their fortunes, and to use all
+ the influence which they possessed at court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same persons expressed their conviction that the King, once satisfied
+ by the Provinces as to conditions and reasons, would cheerfully go into
+ the war, without being deterred by any apprehension as to the power of
+ Spain. It was, however, fitting that each Province should chaffer as
+ little as possible about details, but should give his Majesty every
+ reasonable advantage. They should remember that they were dealing with "a
+ great, powerful monarch, who was putting his realm in jeopardy, and not
+ with a Duke of Anjou, who had every thing to gain and nothing to lose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the Huguenots, with whom the envoys conversed, were excessively
+ sanguine. Could the King be once brought they said, to promise the
+ Netherlands his protection, there was not the least fear but that he would
+ keep his word. He would use all the means within his power; "yea, he would
+ take the crown from his head," rather than turn back. Although reluctant
+ to commence a war with so powerful a sovereign, having once promised his
+ help, he would keep his pledge to the utmost, "for he was a King of his
+ word," and had never broken and would never break his faith with those of
+ the reformed religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus spoke the leading Huguenots of France, in confidential communication
+ with the Netherland envoys, not many months before the famous edict of
+ extermination, published at Nemours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment the reformers were full of confidence; not foreseeing the
+ long procession of battles and sieges which was soon to sweep through the
+ land. Notwithstanding the urgency of the Papists for their extirpation,
+ they extolled loudly the liberty of religious worship which Calvinists, as
+ well as Catholics, were enjoying in France, and pointed to the fact that
+ the adherents of both religions were well received at court, and that they
+ shared equally in offices of trust and dignity throughout the kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Netherland envoys themselves bore testimony to the undisturbed
+ tranquillity and harmony in which the professors of both religions were
+ living and worshipping side by side "without reproach or quarrel" in all
+ the great cities which they had visited. They expressed the conviction
+ that the same toleration would be extended to all the Provinces when under
+ French dominion; and, so far as their ancient constitutions and privileges
+ were concerned, they were assured that the King of France would respect
+ and maintain them with as much fidelity as the States could possibly
+ desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Des Pruneaux, accompanied by the two States' envoys, departed forthwith
+ for the Netherlands. On the 24th August, 1584 he delivered a discourse
+ before the States General, in which he disclosed, in very general terms,
+ the expectations of Henry III., and intimated very clearly that the
+ different Provinces were to lose no time in making an unconditional offer
+ to that monarch. With regard to Holland and Zeeland he observed that he
+ was provided with a special commission to those Estates. It was not long
+ before one Province after the other came to the conclusion to offer the
+ sovereignty to the King without written conditions, but with a general
+ understanding that their religious freedom and their ancient constitutions
+ were to be sacredly respected. Meantime, Des Pruneaux made his appearance
+ in Holland and Zeeland, and declared the King's intentions of espousing
+ the cause of the States, and of accepting the sovereignty of all the
+ Provinces. He distinctly observed, however, that it was as sovereign, not
+ as protector, that his Majesty must be recognised in Holland and Zeeland,
+ as well as in the rest of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this grave question there was much debate and much difference of
+ opinion. Holland and Zeeland had never contemplated the possibility of
+ accepting any foreign sovereignty, and the opponents of the present scheme
+ were loud and angry, but very reasonable in their remarks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French, they said, were no respecters of privileges nor of persons.
+ The Duke of Anjou had deceived William of Orange and betrayed the
+ Provinces. Could they hope to see farther than that wisest and most
+ experienced prince? Had not the stout hearts of the Antwerp burghers
+ proved a stronger defence to Brabant liberties than the "joyous entry" on
+ the dread day of the "French fury," it would have fared ill then and for
+ ever with the cause of freedom and religion in the Netherlands. The King
+ of France was a Papist, a Jesuit. He was incapable of keeping his pledges.
+ Should they make the arrangement now proposed and confer the sovereignty
+ upon him, he would forthwith make peace with Spain, and transfer the
+ Provinces back to that crown in exchange for the duchy of Milan, which
+ France had ever coveted. The Netherlands, after a quarter of a century of
+ fighting in defence of their hearths and altars, would find themselves
+ handed over again, bound and fettered, to the tender mercies of the
+ Spanish Inquisition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Kings of France and of Spain always acted in concert, for religion was
+ the most potent of bonds. Witness the sacrifice of thousands of French
+ soldiers to Alva by their own sovereign at Mons, witness the fate of
+ Genlis, witness the bloody night of St. Bartholomew, witness the Antwerp
+ fury. Men cited and relied upon the advice of William of Orange as to this
+ negotiation with France. But Orange never dreamed of going so far as now
+ proposed. He was ever careful to keep the Provinces of Holland and Zeeland
+ safe from every foreign master. That spot was to be holy ground. Not out
+ of personal ambition. God forbid that they, should accuse his memory of
+ any such impurity, but because he wished one safe refuge for the spirit of
+ freedom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many years long they had held out by land and sea against the Spaniards,
+ and should they now, because this Des Pruneaux shrugged his shoulders, be
+ so alarmed as to open the door to the same Spaniard wearing the disguise
+ of a Frenchman?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Maurice also made a brief representation to the States' Assembly of
+ Holland, in which, without distinctly opposing the negotiation with
+ France, he warned them not to proceed too hastily with so grave a matter.
+ He reminded them how far they had gone in the presentation of the
+ sovereignty to his late father, and requested them, in their dealings with
+ France, not to forget his interests and those of his family. He reminded
+ them of the position of that family, overladen with debt contracted in
+ their service alone. He concluded by offering most affectionately his
+ service in any way in which he, young and inexperienced as he knew himself
+ to be, might be thought useful; as he was long since resolved to devote
+ his life to the welfare of his country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These passionate appeals were answered with equal vehemence by those who
+ had made up their minds to try the chances of the French sovereignty. Des
+ Pruneaux, meanwhile, was travelling from province to province, and from
+ city to city, using the arguments which have already been sufficiently
+ indicated, and urging a speedy compliance with the French King's
+ propositions. At the same time, in accordance with his instructions, he
+ was very cautious to confine himself to generalities, and to avoid
+ hampering his royal master with the restrictions which had proved so
+ irksome to the Duke of Anjou.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The States General demanded a copy of my speech," he wrote the day after
+ that harangue had been delivered, "but I only gave them a brief outline;
+ extending myself [25th August, 1584] as little as I possibly could,
+ according to the intention and command of your Majesty. When I got here, I
+ found them without hope of our assistance, and terribly agitated by the
+ partizans of Spain. There was some danger of their going over in a panic
+ to the enemy. They are now much changed again, and the Spanish partizans
+ are beginning to lose their tongues. I invite them, if they intend to
+ address your Majesty, to proceed as they ought towards a veritably grand
+ monarch, without hunting up any of their old quibbles, or reservations of
+ provinces, or any thing else which could inspire suspicion. I have sent
+ into Gelderland and Friesland, for I find I must stay here in Holland and
+ Zeeland myself. These two provinces are the gates and ramparts through
+ which we must enter. 'Tis, in my opinion, what could be called superb, to
+ command all the sea, thus subject to the crown of France. And France, too,
+ with assistance of this country, will command the land as well. They are
+ much astonished here, however, that I communicate nothing of the intention
+ of your Majesty. They say that if your Majesty does not accept this offer
+ of their country, your Majesty puts the rope around their necks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French envoy was more and more struck with the brilliancy of the prize
+ offered to his master. "If the King gets these Provinces," said he to
+ Catharine, "'t will be the most splendid inheritance which Prince has ever
+ conquered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a very few weeks the assiduity of the envoy and of the French party was
+ successful. All the other provinces had very soon repeated the offer which
+ they had previously made through Asseliers and La Mouillerie. By the
+ beginning of October the opposition of Holland was vanquished. The estates
+ of that Province&mdash;three cities excepted, however&mdash;determined "to
+ request England and France to assume a joint protectorate over the
+ Netherlands. In case the King of France should refuse this proposition,
+ they were then ready to receive him as prince and master, with knowledge
+ and consent of the Queen of England, and on such conditions as the United
+ States should approve."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediately afterwards, the General Assembly of all the States determined
+ to offer the sovereignty to King Henry "on conditions to be afterwards
+ settled."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Des Pruneaux, thus triumphant, received a gold chain of the value of two
+ thousand florins, and departed before the end of October for France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The departure of the solemn embassy to that country, for the purpose of
+ offering the sovereignty to the King, was delayed till the beginning of
+ January. Meantime it is necessary to cast a glance at the position of
+ England in relation to these important transactions.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Diplomatic adroitness consists mainly in the power to deceive
+ Enmity between Lutherans and Calvinists
+ Find our destruction in our immoderate desire for peace
+ German-Lutheran sixteenth-century idea of religious freedom
+ Intentions of a government which did not know its own intentions
+ Lord was better pleased with adverbs than nouns
+ Make sheep of yourselves, and the wolf will eat you
+ Necessity of kingship
+ Neighbour's blazing roof was likely soon to fire their own
+ Nor is the spirit of the age to be pleaded in defence
+ Pauper client who dreamed of justice at the hands of law
+ Seem as if born to make the idea of royalty ridiculous
+ Shutting the stable-door when the steed is stolen
+ String of homely proverbs worthy of Sancho Panza
+ The very word toleration was to sound like an insult
+ There was apathy where there should have been enthusiasm
+ Tranquillity rather of paralysis than of health
+ Write so illegibly or express himself so awkwardly
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. 1584-1585
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Policy of England&mdash;Schemes of the Pretender of Portugal&mdash;Hesitation
+ of the French Court&mdash;Secret Wishes of France&mdash;Contradictory Views as
+ to the Opinions of Netherlanders&mdash;Their Love for England and
+ Elizabeth&mdash;Prominent Statesmen of the Provinces&mdash;Roger Williams the
+ Welshman Views of Walsingham, Burghley, and the Queen&mdash;An Embassy to
+ Holland decided upon&mdash;Davison at the Hague&mdash;Cautious and Secret
+ Measures of Burghley&mdash;Consequent Dissatisfaction of Walsingham&mdash;
+ English and Dutch Suspicion of France&mdash;Increasing Affection of
+ Holland for England.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The policy of England towards the Provinces had been somewhat hesitating,
+ but it had not been disloyal. It was almost inevitable that there should
+ be timidity in the councils of Elizabeth, when so grave a question as that
+ of confronting the vast power of Spain was forcing itself day by day more
+ distinctly upon the consideration of herself and her statesmen. It was
+ very clear, now that Orange was dead, that some new and decided step would
+ be taken. Elizabeth was in favour of combined action by the French and
+ English governments, in behalf of the Netherlands&mdash;a joint
+ protectorate of the Provinces, until such time as adequate concessions on
+ the religious question could be obtained from Spain. She was unwilling to
+ plunge into the peril and expense of a war with the strongest power in the
+ world. She disliked the necessity under which she should be placed of
+ making repeated applications to her parliament, and of thus fostering the
+ political importance of the Commons; she was reluctant to encourage
+ rebellious subjects in another land, however just the cause of their
+ revolt. She felt herself vulnerable in Ireland and on the Scottish border.
+ Nevertheless, the Spanish power was becoming so preponderant, that if the
+ Netherlands were conquered, she could never feel a moment's security
+ within her own territory. If the Provinces were annexed to France, on the
+ other hand, she could not contemplate with complacency the increased power
+ thus placed in the hands of the treacherous and jesuitical house of
+ Valois.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The path of the Queen was thickly strewed with peril: her advisers were
+ shrewd, far-seeing, patriotic, but some of them were perhaps over
+ cautious. The time had, however, arrived when the danger was to be faced,
+ if the whole balance of power in Europe were not to come to an end, and
+ weak states, like England and the Netherlands, to submit to the tyranny of
+ an overwhelming absolutism. The instinct of the English sovereign, of
+ English statesmen, of the English nation, taught them that the cause of
+ the Netherlands was their own. Nevertheless, they were inclined to look on
+ yet a little longer, although the part of spectator had become an
+ impossible one. The policy of the English government was not treacherous,
+ although it was timid. That of the French court was both the one and the
+ other, and it would have been better both for England and the Provinces,
+ had they more justly appreciated the character of Catharine de' Medici and
+ her son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first covert negotiations between Henry and the States had caused much
+ anxiety among the foreign envoys in France. Don Bernardino de Mendoza, who
+ had recently returned from Spain after his compulsory retreat from his
+ post of English ambassador, was now established in Paris, as
+ representative of Philip. He succeeded Tasais&mdash;a Netherlander by
+ birth, and one of the ablest diplomatists in the Spanish service&mdash;and
+ his house soon became the focus of intrigue against the government to
+ which he was accredited&mdash;the very head-quarters of the League. His
+ salary was large, his way of living magnificent, his insolence
+ intolerable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tassis is gone to the Netherlands," wrote envoy Busbecq to the Emperor,
+ "and thence is to proceed to Spain. Don Bernardino has arrived in his
+ place. If it be the duty of a good ambassador to expend largely, it would
+ be difficult to find a better one than he; for they say 'tis his intention
+ to spend sixteen thousand dollars yearly in his embassy. I would that all
+ things were in correspondence; and that he were not in other respects so
+ inferior to Tassis."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is, however, very certain that Mendoza was not only a brave soldier,
+ but a man of very considerable capacity in civil affairs, although his
+ inordinate arrogance interfered most seriously with his skill as a
+ negotiator. He was, of course, watching with much fierceness the progress
+ of these underhand proceedings between the French court and the rebellious
+ subjects of his master, and using threats and expostulations in great
+ profusion. "Mucio," too, the great stipendiary of Philip, was becoming
+ daily more dangerous, and the adherents of the League were multiplying
+ with great celerity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pretender of Portugal, Don Antonio, prior of Crato, was also in Paris;
+ and it was the policy of both the French and the English governments to
+ protect his person, and to make use of him as a rod over the head of
+ Philip. Having escaped, after the most severe sufferings, in the mountains
+ of Spain, where he had been tracked like a wild beast, with a price of
+ thirty thousand crowns placed upon his head, he was now most anxious to
+ stir the governments of Europe into espousing his cause, and into
+ attacking Spain through the recently acquired kingdom of Portugal.
+ Meantime, he was very desirous of some active employment, to keep himself
+ from starving, and conceived the notion, that it would be an excellent
+ thing for the Netherlands and himself, were he to make good to them the
+ loss of William the Silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don Antonio," wrote Stafford, "made a motion to me yesterday, to move her
+ Majesty, that now upon the Prince of Orange's death, as it is a necessary
+ thing for them to have a governor and head, and him to be at her Majesty's
+ devotion, if her Majesty would be at the means to work it for him, she
+ should be assured nobody should be more faithfully tied in devotion to her
+ than he. Truly you would pity the poor man's case, who is almost next door
+ to starving in effect."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A starving condition being, however, not the only requisite in a governor
+ and head to replace the Prince of Orange, nothing came of this motion. Don
+ Antonio remained in Paris, in a pitiable plight, and very much environed
+ by dangers; for the Duke of Guise and his brother had undertaken to
+ deliver him into the hands of Philip the Second, or those of his
+ ministers, before the feast of St. John of the coming year. Fifty thousand
+ dollars were to be the reward of this piece of work, combined with other
+ services; "and the sooner they set about it the better," said Philip,
+ writing a few months later, "for the longer they delay it, the less easy
+ will they find it."'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The money was never earned, however, and meantime Don Antonio made himself
+ as useful as he could, in picking up information for Sir Edward Stafford
+ and the other opponents of Spanish policy in Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English envoy was much embarrassed by the position of affairs. He felt
+ sure that the French monarch would never dare to enter the lists against
+ the king of Spain, yet he was accurately informed of the secret
+ negotiations with the Netherlands, while in the dark as to the ultimate
+ intentions of his own government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was never set to school so much," he wrote to Walsingham (27th July,
+ 1584), "as I have been to decipher the cause of the deputies of the Low
+ Countries coming hither, the offers that they made the King here, and the
+ King's manner of dealing with them!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He expressed great jealousy at the mystery which enveloped the whole
+ transaction; and much annoyance with Noel de Caron, who "kept very secret,
+ and was angry at the motion," when he endeavoured to discover the business
+ in which they were engaged. Yet he had the magnanimity to request
+ Walsingham not to mention the fact to the Queen, lest she should be
+ thereby prejudiced against the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For my part," said he, "I would be glad in any thing to further them,
+ rather than to hinder them&mdash;though they do not deserve it&mdash;yet
+ for the good the helping them at this time may bring ourselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, the deputies went away from France, and the King went to Lyons,
+ where he had hoped to meet both the Duke of Savoy and the King of Navarre.
+ But Joyeuse, who had been received at Chambery with "great triumphs and
+ tourneys," brought back only a broken wrist, without bringing the Duke of
+ Savoy; that potentate sending word that the "King of Spain had done him
+ the honour to give him his daughter, and that it was not fit for him to do
+ any thing that might bring jealousy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry of Navarre also, as we have seen, declined the invitation sent him,
+ M. de Segur not feeling disposed for the sudden flight out of window
+ suggested by Agrippa D' Aubigne; so that, on the whole, the King and his
+ mother, with all the court, returned from Lyons in marvellous ill humour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King storms greatly," said Stafford, "and is in a great dump." It was
+ less practicable than ever to discover the intentions of the government;
+ for although it was now very certain that active exertions were making by
+ Des Pruneaux in the Provinces, it was not believed by the most sagacious
+ that a serious resolution against Spain had been taken in France. There
+ was even a talk of a double matrimonial alliance, at that very moment,
+ between the two courts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is for certain here said," wrote Stafford, "that the King of Spain
+ doth presently marry the dowager of France, and 'tis thought that if the
+ King of Spain marry, he will not live a year. Whensoever the marriage be,"
+ added the envoy, "I would to God the effect were true, for if it be not by
+ some such handy work of God, I am afraid things will not go so well as I
+ could wish."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a lull on the surface of affairs, and it was not easy to sound
+ the depths of unseen combinations and intrigues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was also considerable delay in the appointment and the arrival of
+ the new deputies from the Netherlands; and Stafford was as doubtful as
+ ever as to the intentions of his own government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They look daily here for the States," he wrote to Walsingham (29th Dec.
+ 1584), "and I pray that I may hear from you as soon as you may, what
+ course I shall take when they be here, either hot or cold or lukewarm in
+ the matter, and in what sort I shall behave myself. Some badly affected
+ have gone about to put into the King's head, that they never meant to
+ offer the sovereignty, which, though the King be not thoroughly persuaded
+ of, yet so much is won by this means that the King hearkeneth to see the
+ end, and then to believe as he seeth cause, and in the meantime to speak
+ no more of any such matter than if it had never been moved."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While his Majesty was thus hearkening in order to see more, according to
+ Sir Edward's somewhat Hibernian mode of expressing himself, and keeping
+ silent that he might see the better, it was more difficult than ever for
+ the envoy to know what course to pursue. Some persons went so far as to
+ suggest that the whole negotiation was a mere phantasmagoria devised by
+ Queen Elizabeth&mdash;her purpose being to breed a quarrel between Henry
+ and Philip for her own benefit; and "then, seeing them together by the
+ ears, as her accustomed manner was, to let them go alone, and sit still to
+ look on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King did not appear to be much affected by these insinuations against
+ Elizabeth; but the doubt and the delay were very harassing. "I would to
+ God," wrote the English envoy, "that if the States mean to do anything
+ here with the King, and if her. Majesty and the council think it fit, they
+ would delay no time, but go roundly either to an agreement or to a breach
+ with the King. Otherwise, as the matter now sleepeth, so it will die, for
+ the King must be taken in his humour when he begins to nibble at any bait,
+ for else he will come away, and never bite a full bite while he liveth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no doubt that the bait, at which Henry nibbled with much avidity,
+ was the maritime part of the Netherlands. Holland and Zeeland in the
+ possession of either England or Spain, was a perpetual inconvenience to
+ France. The King, or rather the Queen-Mother and her advisers&mdash;for
+ Henry himself hardly indulged in any profound reflections on
+ state-affairs,&mdash;desired and had made a sine qua non of those
+ Provinces. It had been the French policy, from the beginning, to delay
+ matters, in order to make the States feel the peril of their position to
+ the full.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King, differing and temporising," wrote Herle to the Queen, "would
+ have them fall into that necessity and danger, as that they should offer
+ unto him simply the possession of all their estates. Otherwise, they were
+ to see, as in a glass, their evident and hasty ruin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even before the death of Orange, Henry had been determined, if possible,
+ to obtain possession of the island of Walcheren, which controlled the
+ whole country. "To give him that," said Herle, "would be to turn the hot
+ end of the poker towards themselves, and put the cold part in the King's
+ hand. He had accordingly made a secret offer to William of Orange, through
+ the Princess, of two millions of livres in ready money, or, if he
+ preferred it, one hundred thousand livres yearly of perpetual inheritance,
+ if he would secure to him the island of Walcheren. In that case he
+ promised to declare war upon the King of Spain, to confirm to the States
+ their privileges, and to guarantee to the Prince the earldoms of Holland
+ and Zeeland, with all his other lands and titles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is superfluous to say that such offers were only regarded by the Prince
+ as an affront. It was, however, so necessary, in his opinion; to maintain
+ the cause of the reformed churches in France, and to keep up the
+ antagonism between that country and Spain, that the French policy was not
+ abandoned, although the court was always held in suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But on the death of William, there was a strong reaction against France
+ and in favour of England. Paul Buys, one of the ablest statesmen of the
+ Netherlands, Advocate of Holland, and a confidential friend of William the
+ Silent up to the time of his death, now became the leader of the English
+ party, and employed his most strenuous efforts against the French
+ treaty-having "seen the scope of that court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the other leading personages, there was a strong
+ inclination in favour of Queen Elizabeth, whose commanding character
+ inspired great respect. At the same time warmer sentiments of adhesion
+ seem to have been expressed towards the French court, by the same
+ individuals, than the mere language of compliment justified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, the widowed Princess of Orange was described by Des Pruneaux to his
+ sovereign, as "very desolate, but nevertheless doing all in her power to
+ advance his interests; the Count Maurice, of gentle hopes, as also most
+ desirous of remaining his Majesty's humble servant, while Elector
+ Truchsess was said to be employing himself, in the same cause, with very
+ great affection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A French statesman resident in the Provinces, whose name has not been
+ preserved, but who was evidently on intimate terms with many eminent
+ Netherlanders, declared that Maurice, "who had a mind entirely French,
+ deplored infinitely the misfortunes of France, and regretted that all the
+ Provinces could not be annexed to so fair a kingdom. I do assure you," he
+ added, "that he is in no wise English."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of Count Hohenlo, general-in-chief of the States' army under Prince
+ Maurice, and afterwards his brother-in-law, the same gentleman spoke with
+ even greater confidence. "Count d'Oloc," said he (for by that ridiculous
+ transformation of his name the German general was known to French and
+ English), "with whom I have passed three weeks on board the fleet of the
+ States, is now wholly French, and does not love the English at all. The
+ very first time I saw him, he protested twice or thrice, in presence of
+ members of the States General and of the State Council, that if he had no
+ Frenchmen he could never carry on the war. He made more account," he said,
+ "of two thousand French than of six thousand others, English, or Germans."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet all these distinguished persons&mdash;the widowed Princess of Orange,
+ Count Maurice, ex-elector Truchsess, Count Holenlo&mdash;were described to
+ Queen Elizabeth by her confidential agent, then employed in the Provinces,
+ as entirely at that sovereign's devotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Count Maurice holds nothing of the French, nor esteems them," said Herle,
+ "but humbly desired me to signify unto your Majesty that he had in his
+ mind and determination faithfully vowed his service to your Majesty, which
+ should be continued in his actions with all duty, and sealed with his
+ blood; for he knew how much his father and the cause were beholden ever to
+ your Highness's goodness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princess, together with her sister-in-law Countess Schwartzenburg, and
+ the young daughters of the late Prince were described on the same occasion
+ "as recommending their service unto her Majesty with a most tender
+ affection, as to a lady of all ladies." "Especially," said Herle, "did the
+ two Princesses in most humble and wise sort, express a certain fervent
+ devotion towards your Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elector Truchsess was spoken of as "a prince well qualified and greatly
+ devoted to her Majesty; who, after many grave and sincere words had of her
+ Majesty's virtue, calling her 'la fille unique de Dieu, and le bien
+ heureuse Princesse', desired of God that he might do her service as she
+ merited."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, finally, Count Hollock&mdash;who seemed to "be reformed in sundry
+ things, if it hold" (a delicate allusion to the Count's propensity for
+ strong potations), was said "to desire humbly to be known for one that
+ would obey the commandment of her Majesty more than of any earthly prince
+ living besides."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There can be no doubt that there was a strong party in favour of an appeal
+ to England rather than to France. The Netherlanders were too shrewd a
+ people not to recognize the difference between the king of a great realm,
+ who painted his face and wore satin petticoats, and the woman who
+ entertained ambassadors, each in his own language, on gravest affairs of
+ state, who matched in her wit and wisdom the deepest or the most sparkling
+ intellects of her council, who made extemporaneous Latin orations to her
+ universities, and who rode on horseback among her generals along the lines
+ of her troops in battle-array, and yet was only the unmarried queen of a
+ petty and turbulent state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The reverend respect that is borne to your Majesty throughout these
+ countries is great," said William Herle. They would have thrown themselves
+ into her arms, heart and soul, had they been cordially extended at that
+ moment of their distress; but she was coy, hesitating, and, for reasons
+ already sufficiently indicated, although not so conclusive as they seemed,
+ disposed to temporize and to await the issue of the negotiations between
+ the Provinces and France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Holland and Zeeland especially, there was an enthusiastic feeling in
+ favour of the English alliance. "They recommend themselves," said Herleo
+ "throughout the country in their consultations and assemblies, as also in
+ their common and private speeches, to the Queen of England's only favour
+ and goodness, whom they call their saviour, and the Princess of greatest
+ perfection in wisdom and sincerity that ever governed. Notwithstanding
+ their treaty now on foot by their deputies with France, they are not more
+ disposed to be governed by the French than to be tyrannized over by the
+ Spaniard; concluding it to be alike; and even 'commutare non sortem sed
+ servitutem'."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul Buys was indefatigable in his exertions against the treaty with
+ France, and in stimulating the enthusiasm for England and Elizabeth. He
+ expressed sincere and unaffected devotion to the Queen on all occasions,
+ and promised that no negotiations should take place, however secret and
+ confidential, that were not laid before her Majesty. "He has the chief
+ administration among the States," said Herle, "and to his credit and
+ dexterity they attribute the despatch of most things. He showed unto me
+ the state of the enemy throughout the provinces, and of the negotiation in
+ France, whereof he had no opinion at all of success, nor any will of his
+ own part but to please the Prince of Orange in his life-time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be seen in the sequel whether or not the views of this experienced
+ and able statesman were lucid and comprehensive. It will also be seen
+ whether his strenuous exertions in favour of the English alliance were
+ rewarded as bountifully as they deserved, by those most indebted to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime he was busily employed in making the English government
+ acquainted with the capacity, disposition, and general plans of the
+ Netherlanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They have certain other things in consultation amongst the States to
+ determine of," wrote Herle, "which they were sworn not to reveal to any,
+ but Buys protested that nothing should pass but to your liking and surety,
+ and the same to be altered and disposed as should seem good to your
+ Highness's own authority; affirming to me sincerely that Holland and
+ Zeeland, with the rest of the provinces, for the estimation they had of
+ your high virtue and temperancy, would yield themselves absolutely to your
+ Majesty and crown for ever, or to none other (their liberties only
+ reserved), whereof you should have immediate possession, without
+ reservation of place or privilege."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The important point of the capability of the Provinces to defend
+ themselves, about which Elizabeth was most anxious to be informed, was
+ also fully elucidated by the Advocate. "The means should be such,
+ proceeding from the Provinces," said he, "as your Majesty might defend
+ your interest therein with facility against the whole world." He then
+ indicated a plan, which had been proposed by the States of Brabant to the
+ States General, according to which they were to keep on foot an army of
+ 15,000 foot and 5000 horse, with which they should be able, "to expulse
+ the enemy and to reconquer their towns and country lost, within three
+ months." Of this army they hoped to induce the Queen to furnish 5000
+ English footmen and 500 horse, to be paid monthly by a treasurer of her
+ own; and for the assistance thus to be furnished they proposed to give
+ Ostend and Sluys as pledge of payment. According to this scheme the
+ elector palatine, John Casimir, had promised to furnish, equip, and pay
+ 2000 cavalry, taking the town of Maestricht and the country of Limburg,
+ when freed from the enemy, in pawn for his disbursements; while Antwerp
+ and Brabant had agreed to supply 300,000 crowns in ready money for
+ immediate use. Many powerful politicians opposed this policy, however, and
+ urged reliance upon France, "so that this course seemed to be lame in many
+ parts."&mdash;[Letter of Herle].
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Agents had already been sent both to England and France, to procure, if
+ possible, a levy of troops for immediate necessity. The attempt was
+ unsuccessful in France, but the Dutch community of the reformed religion
+ in London subscribed nine thousand and five florins. This sum, with other
+ contributions, proved sufficient to set Morgan's regiment on foot, which
+ soon after began to arrive in the Netherlands by companies. "But if it
+ were all here at once," said Stephen Le Sieur, "'t would be but a
+ breakfast for the enemy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The agent for the matter in England was De Griyse, formerly bailiff of
+ Bruges; and although tolerably successful in his mission, he was not
+ thought competent for so important a post, nor officially authorised for
+ the undertaking. While procuring this assistance in English troops he had
+ been very urgent with the Queen to further the negotiations between the
+ States and France; and Paul Buys was offended with him as a mischief-maker
+ and an intriguer. He complained of him as having "thrust himself in, to
+ deal and intermeddle in the affairs of the Low Countries unavowed," and
+ desired that he might be closely looked after.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the Advocate, the next most important statesman in the provinces
+ was, perhaps, Meetkerk, President of the High Court of Flanders, a man of
+ much learning, sincerity, and earnestness of character; having had great
+ experience in the diplomatic service of the country on many important
+ occasions. "He stands second in reputation here," said Herle, "and both
+ Buys and he have one special care in all practises that are discovered, to
+ examine how near anything may concern your person or kingdom, whereof they
+ will advertise as matter shall fall out in importance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John van Olden-Barneveldt, afterwards so conspicuous in the history of the
+ country, was rather inclined, at this period, to favour the French party;
+ a policy which was strenuously furthered by Villiers and by Sainte
+ Aldegonde.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the information furnished to the English government, as to the
+ state of feeling and resources of the Netherlands, by Buys, Meetkerk, and
+ William Herle, Walsingham relied much upon the experienced eye and the
+ keen biting humour of Roger Williams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A frank open-hearted Welshman, with no fortune but his sword, but as true
+ as its steel, he had done the States much important service in the
+ hard-fighting days of Grand Commander Requesens and of Don John of
+ Austria. With a shrewd Welsh head under his iron morion, and a stout Welsh
+ heart under his tawny doublet, he had gained little but hard knocks and a
+ dozen wounds in his campaigning, and had but recently been ransomed,
+ rather grudgingly by his government, from a Spanish prison in Brabant. He
+ was suffering in health from its effects, but was still more distressed in
+ mind, from his sagacious reading of the signs of the times. Fearing that
+ England was growing lukewarm, and the Provinces desperate, he was
+ beginning to find himself out of work, and was already casting about him
+ for other employment. Poor, honest, and proud, he had repeatedly declined
+ to enter the Spanish service. Bribes, such as at a little later period
+ were sufficient to sully conspicuous reputations and noble names, among
+ his countrymen in better circumstances than his own, had been freely but
+ unsuccessfully offered him. To serve under any but the English or States'
+ flag in the Provinces he scorned; and he thought the opportunity fast
+ slipping away there for taking the Papistical party in Europe handsomely
+ by the beard. He had done much manful work in the Netherlands, and was
+ destined to do much more; but he was now discontented, and thought himself
+ slighted. In more remote regions of the world, the thrifty soldier thought
+ that there might be as good harvesting for his sword as in the
+ thrice-trampled stubble of Flanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would refuse no hazard that is possible to be done in the Queen's
+ service," he said to Walsingham; "but I do persuade myself she makes no
+ account of me. Had it not been for the duty that nature bound me towards
+ her and my country, I needed not to have been in that case that I am in.
+ Perhaps I could have fingered more pistoles than Mr. Newell, the late
+ Latiner, and had better usage and pension of the Spaniards than he. Some
+ can tell that I refused large offers, in the misery of Alost, of the
+ Prince of Parma. Last of all, Verdugo offered me very fair, being in
+ Loccum, to quit the States' service, and accept theirs, without treachery
+ or betraying of place or man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not feeling inclined to teach Latin in Spain, like the late Mr. Newell, or
+ to violate oaths and surrender fortresses, like brave soldiers of fortune
+ whose deeds will be afterwards chronicled, he was disposed to cultivate
+ the "acquaintance of divers Pollacks," from which he had received
+ invitations. "Find I nothing there," said he, "Duke Matthias has promised
+ me courtesy if I would serve in Hungary. If not, I will offer service to
+ one of the Turk's bashaws against the Persians."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately, work was found for the trusty Welshman in the old fields. His
+ brave honest face often reappeared; his sharp sensible tongue uttered much
+ sage counsel; and his ready sword did various solid service, in leaguer,
+ battle-field, and martial debate, in Flanders, Holland, Spain, and France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the present, he was casting his keen glances upon the negotiations in
+ progress, and cavilling at the general policy which seemed predominant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He believed that the object of the French was to trifle with the States,
+ to protract interminably their negotiations, to prevent the English
+ government from getting any hold upon the Provinces, and then to leave
+ them to their fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He advised Walsingham to advance men and money, upon the security of Sluys
+ and Ostend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I dare venture my life," said he, with much energy, "that were Norris,
+ Bingham, Yorke, or Carlisle, in those ports, he would keep them during the
+ Spanish King's life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the true way to attack Spain&mdash;a method soon afterwards to be
+ carried into such brilliant effect by the naval heroes of England and the
+ Netherlands&mdash;the long-sighted Welshman now indicated; a combined
+ attack, namely, by sea upon the colonial possessions of Philip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I dare be bound," said he, "if you join with Treslong, the States
+ Admiral, and send off, both, three-score sail into his Indies, we will
+ force him to retire from conquering further, and to be contented to let
+ other princes live as well as he."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In particular, Williams urged rapid action, and there is little doubt,
+ that had the counsels of prompt, quick-witted, ready-handed soldiers like
+ himself, and those who thought with him, been taken; had the stealthy but
+ quick-darting policy of Walsingham prevailed over the solemn and stately
+ but somewhat ponderous proceedings of Burghley, both Ghent and Antwerp
+ might have been saved, the trifling and treacherous diplomacy of Catharine
+ de' Medici neutralized, and an altogether more fortunate aspect given at
+ once to the state of Protestant affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you mean to do anything," said he, "it is more than time now. If you
+ will send some man of credit about it, will it please your honour, I will
+ go with him, because I know the humour of the people, and am acquainted
+ with a number of the best. I shall be able to show him a number of their
+ dealings, as well with the French as in other affairs, and perhaps will
+ find means to send messengers to Ghent, and to other places, better than
+ the States; for the message of one soldier is better than twenty boors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was ultimately decided&mdash;as will soon be related&mdash;to send a
+ man of credit to the Provinces. Meantime, the policy of England continued
+ to be expectant and dilatory, and Advocate Buys, after having in vain
+ attempted to conquer the French influence, and bring about the annexation
+ of the Provinces to England, threw down his office in disgust, and retired
+ for a time from the contest. He even contemplated for a moment taking
+ service in Denmark, but renounced the notion of abandoning his country,
+ and he will accordingly be found, at a later period, conspicuous in public
+ affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deliberations in the English councils were grave and anxious, for it
+ became daily more obvious that the Netherland question was the hinge upon
+ which the whole fate of Christendom was slowly turning. To allow the
+ provinces to fall back again into the grasp of Philip, was to offer
+ England herself as a last sacrifice to the Spanish Inquisition. This was
+ felt by all the statesmen in the land; but some of them, more than the
+ rest, had a vivid perception of the danger, and of the necessity of
+ dealing with it at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the prophetic eye of Walsingham, the mists of the future at times were
+ lifted; and the countless sails of the invincible Armada, wafting defiance
+ and destruction to England, became dimly visible. He felt that the great
+ Netherland bulwark of Protestantism and liberty was to be defended at all
+ hazards, and that the death-grapple could not long be deferred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley, deeply pondering, but less determined, was still disposed to
+ look on and to temporize.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen, far-seeing and anxious, but somewhat hesitating, still clung to
+ the idea of a joint protectorate. She knew that the reestablishment of
+ Spanish authority in the Low Countries would be fatal to England, but she
+ was not yet prepared to throw down the gauntlet to Philip. She felt that
+ the proposed annexation of the Provinces to France would be almost as
+ formidable; yet she could not resolve, frankly and fearlessly, to assume,
+ the burthen of their protection. Under the inspiration of Burghley, she
+ was therefore willing to encourage the Netherlanders underhand; preventing
+ them at every hazard from slackening in their determined hostility to
+ Spain; discountenancing, without absolutely forbidding, their proposed
+ absorption by France; intimating, without promising, an ultimate and
+ effectual assistance from herself. Meantime, with something of feline and
+ feminine duplicity, by which the sex of the great sovereign would so often
+ manifest itself in the most momentous affairs, she would watch and wait,
+ teasing the Provinces, dallying with the danger, not quite prepared as yet
+ to abandon the prize to Henry or Philip, or to seize it herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation was rapidly tending to become an impossible one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Late in October a grave conference was held council, "upon the question
+ whether her Majesty should presently relieve the States of the Low
+ Countries."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was shown, upon one side, that the "perils to the Queen and to the
+ realm were great, if the King of Spain should recover Holland and Zeeland,
+ as he had the other countries, for lack of succour in seasonable time,
+ either by the French King or the Queen's Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other side, the great difficulties in the way of effectual
+ assistance by England, were "fully remembered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But in the end, and upon comparison made," said Lord Burghley, summing
+ up, "betwixt the perils on the one part, and the difficulties on the
+ other," it was concluded that the Queen would be obliged to succumb to the
+ power of Spain, and the liberties of England be hopelessly lost, if Philip
+ were then allowed to carry out his designs, and if the Provinces should be
+ left without succour at his mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A "wise person" was accordingly to be sent into Holland; first, to
+ ascertain whether the Provinces had come to an actual agreement with the
+ King of France, and, if such should prove to be the case, to enquire
+ whether that sovereign had pledged himself to declare war upon Philip. In
+ this event, the wise person was to express her Majesty's satisfaction that
+ the Provinces were thus to be "relieved from the tyranny of the King of
+ Spain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, if it should appear that no such conclusive
+ arrangements had been made, and that the Provinces were likely to fall
+ again victims to the "Spanish tyranny," her Majesty would then "strain
+ herself as far as, with preservation of her own estate, she might, to
+ succour them at this time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The agent was then to ascertain "what conditions the Provinces would
+ require" upon the matter of succour, and, if the terms seemed reasonable,
+ he would assure them that "they should not be left to the cruelties of the
+ Spaniards."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And further, the wise person, "being pressed to answer, might by
+ conference of speeches and persuasions provoke them to offer to the Queen
+ the ports of Flushing and Middelburg and the Brill, wherein she meant not
+ to claim any property, but to hold them as gages for her expenses, and for
+ performances of their covenants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was also to make minute inquiries as to the pecuniary resources of the
+ Provinces, the monthly sums which they would be able to contribute, the
+ number of troops and of ships of war that they would pledge themselves to
+ maintain. These investigations were very important, because the Queen,
+ although very well disposed to succour them, "so nevertheless she was to
+ consider how her power might be extended, without ruin or manifest peril
+ to her own estate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was also resolved, in the same conference, that a preliminary step of
+ great urgency was to "procure a good peace with the King of Scots."
+ Whatever the expense of bringing about such a pacification might be, it
+ was certain that a "great deal more would be expended in defending the
+ realm against Scotland," while England was engaged in hostilities with
+ Spain. Otherwise, it was argued that her Majesty would be "so impeached by
+ Scotland in favour of the King of Spain, that her action against that King
+ would be greatly weakened."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other measures necessary to be taken in view of the Spanish war were also
+ discussed. The ex-elector of Cologne, "a man of great account in Germany,"
+ was to be assisted with money to make head against his rival supported by
+ the troops of Philip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Duke Casimir of the Palatinate was to be solicited to make a diversion in
+ Gelderland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King of France was to be reminded of his treaty with England for
+ mutual assistance in case of the invasion by a foreign power of either
+ realm, and to be informed "not only of the intentions of the Spaniards to
+ invade England, upon their conquest of the Netherlands, but of their
+ actual invasion of Ireland."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was "to be devised how the King of Navarre and Don Antonio of Portugal,
+ for their respective titles, might be induced to offend and occupy the
+ King of Spain, whereby to diminish his forces bent upon the Low
+ Countries."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was also decided that Parliament should be immediately summoned, in
+ which, besides the request of a subsidy, many other necessary, provisions
+ should be made for her Majesty's safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The conclusions of the whole," said Lord Burghley, with much earnestness,
+ "was this. Although her Majesty should hereby enter into a war presently,
+ yet were she better to do it now, while she may make the same out of her
+ realm, having the help of the people of Holland, and before the King of
+ Spain shall have consummated his conquests in those countries, whereby he
+ shall be so provoked with pride, solicited by the Pope, and tempted by the
+ Queen's own subjects, and shall be so strong by sea, and so free from all
+ other actions and quarrels,&mdash;yea, shall be so formidable to all the
+ rest of Christendom, as that her Majesty shall no wise be able, with her
+ own power, nor with aid of any other, neither by sea nor land, to
+ withstand his attempts, but shall be forced to give place to his
+ insatiable malice, which is most terrible to be thought of, but miserable
+ to suffer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus did the Lord Treasurer wisely, eloquently, and well, describe the
+ danger by which England was environed. Through the shield of Holland the
+ spear was aimed full at the heart of England. But was it a moment to
+ linger? Was that buckler to be suffered to fall to the ground, or to be
+ raised only upon the arm of a doubtful and treacherous friend? Was it an
+ hour when the protection of Protestantism and of European liberty against
+ Spain was to be entrusted to the hand of a feeble and priest-ridden
+ Valois? Was it wise to indulge any longer in doubtings and dreamings, and
+ in yet a little more folding of the arms to sleep, while that insatiable
+ malice, so terrible to be thought of, so miserable to feel, was bowing
+ hourly more formidable, and approaching nearer and nearer?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in December, William Davison, gentleman-in-ordinary of her Majesty's
+ household, arrived at the Hague; a man painstaking, earnest, and zealous,
+ but who was fated, on more than one great occasion, to be made a
+ scape-goat for the delinquencies of greater personages than himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had audience of the States General on the 8th December. He then
+ informed that body that the Queen had heard, with, sorrowful heart, of the
+ great misfortunes which the United Provinces had sustained since the death
+ of the Prince of Orange; the many cities which they had lost, and the
+ disastrous aspect of the common cause. Moved by the affection which she
+ had always borne the country, and anxious for its preservation, she had
+ ordered her ambassador Stafford to request the King of France to
+ undertake, jointly with herself, the defence of the provinces against the
+ king of Spain. Not till very lately, however, had that envoy succeeded in
+ obtaining an audience, and he had then received "a very cold answer." It
+ being obvious to her Majesty, therefore, that the French government
+ intended to protract these matters indefinitely, Davison informed the
+ States that she had commissioned him to offer them "all possible
+ assistance, to enquire into the state of the country, and to investigate
+ the proper means of making that assistance most useful." He accordingly
+ requested the appointment of a committee to confer with him upon the
+ subject; and declared that the Queen did not desire to make herself
+ mistress of the Provinces, but only to be informed how she best could aid
+ their cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A committee was accordingly appointed, and a long series of somewhat
+ concealed negotiations was commenced. As the deputies were upon the eve of
+ their departure for France, to offer the sovereignty of the Provinces to
+ Henry, these proceedings were necessarily confused, dilatory, and at tines
+ contradictory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the arrival of the deputies in France, the cunctative policy
+ inspired by the Lord Treasurer was continued by England. The delusion of a
+ joint protectorate was still clung to by the Queen, although the conduct
+ of France was becoming very ambiguous, and suspicion growing darker as to
+ the ultimate and secret purport of the negotiations in progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The anxiety and jealousy of Elizabeth were becoming keener than ever. If
+ the offers to the King were unlimited; he would accept them, and would
+ thus become as dangerous as Philip. If they were unsatisfactory, he would
+ turn his back upon the Provinces, and leave them a prey to Philip. Still
+ she would not yet renounce the hope of bringing the French King over to an
+ ingenuous course of action. It was thought, too, that something might be
+ done with the great malcontent nobles of Flanders, whose defection from
+ the national cause had been so disastrous, but who had been much
+ influenced in their course, it was thought, by their jealousy of William
+ the Silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now that the Prince was dead, it was thought probable that the Arschots,
+ and Havres, Chimays, and Lalaings, might arouse themselves to more
+ patriotic views than they had manifested when they espoused the cause of
+ Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be desirable to excite their jealousy of French influence, and,
+ at the same time, to inspire throughout the popular mind the fear of
+ another tyranny almost as absolute as that of Spain. "And if it be
+ objected," said Burghley, "that except they shall admit the French King to
+ the absolute dominion, he will not aid them, and they, for lack of
+ succour, be forced to yield to the Spaniard, it may be answered that
+ rather than they should be wholly subjected to the French, or overcome by
+ the Spaniard, her Majesty would yield unto them as much as, with
+ preservation of her estate, and defence of her own country, might be
+ demanded."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The real object kept in view by the Queen's government was, in short, to
+ obtain for the Provinces and for the general cause of liberty the greatest
+ possible amount of assistance from Henry, and to allow him to acquire in
+ return the least possible amount of power. The end proposed was a
+ reasonable one, but the means employed savoured too much of intrigue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be easily made probable to the States," said the Lord Treasurer,
+ "that the government of the French is likely to prove as cumbersome and
+ perilous as that of the Spaniards; and likewise it may probably be doubted
+ how the French will keep touch and covenants with them, when any
+ opportunity shall be offered to break them; so that her Majesty thinketh
+ no good can be looked for to those countries by yielding this large
+ authority to the French. If they shall continue their title by this grant
+ to be absolute lords, there is no end, for a long time, to be expected of
+ this war; and, contrariwise, if they break off, there is an end of any
+ good composition with the King of Spain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shivering and shrinking, but still wading in deeper and deeper, inch by
+ inch, the cautious minister was fast finding himself too far advanced to
+ retreat. He was rarely decided, however, and never lucid; and least of all
+ in emergencies, when decision and lucidity would have been more valuable
+ than any other qualities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deeply doubting, painfully balancing, he at times drove the unfortunate
+ Davison almost distraught. Puzzled himself and still more puzzling to
+ others, he rarely permitted the Netherlanders, or even his own agents, to
+ perceive his drift. It was fair enough, perhaps, to circumvent the French
+ government by its own arts, but the Netherlanders meanwhile were in danger
+ of sinking into despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thus," wrote the Lord Treasurer to the envoy, "I have discoursed to you
+ of these uncertainties and difficulties, things not unknown to yourself,
+ but now being imparted to you by her Majesty's commandment, you are, by
+ your wisdom, to consider with whom to deal for the stay of this French
+ course, and yet, so to use it (as near as you may) that they of the French
+ faction there be not able to charge you therewith, by-advertising into
+ France. For it hath already appeared, by some speeches past between our
+ ambassador there and Des Pruneaux, that you are had in some jealousy as a
+ hinderer of this French course, and at work for her Majesty to have some
+ entrance and partage in that country. Nevertheless our ambassador; by his
+ answer, hath satisfied them to think the contrary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They must have been easily satisfied, if they knew as much of the dealings
+ of her Majesty's government as the reader already knows. To inspire doubt
+ of the French, to insinuate the probability of their not "keeping touch
+ and covenant," to represent their rule as "cumbersome and perilous," was
+ wholesome conduct enough towards the Netherlanders&mdash;and still more
+ so, had it been accompanied with frank offers of assistance&mdash;but it
+ was certainly somewhat to "hinder the courses of the French."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in truth all parties were engaged for a season in a round game of
+ deception, in which nobody was deceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham was impatient, almost indignant at this puerility. "Your
+ doings, no doubt of it," he wrote to Davison, "are observed by the French
+ faction, and therefore you cannot proceed so closely but it will be
+ espied. Howsoever it be, seeing direction groweth from hence, we cannot
+ but blame ourselves, if the effects thereof do not fall out to our
+ liking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That sagacious statesman was too well informed, and too much accustomed to
+ penetrate the designs of his antagonists, to expect anything from the
+ present intrigues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To loiter thus, when mortal blows should be struck, was to give the
+ Spanish government exactly that of which it was always most gluttonous&mdash;time;
+ and the Netherlanders had none of it to spare. "With time and myself,
+ there are two of us," was Philip II.'s favourite observation; and the
+ Prince of Parma was at this moment sorely perplexed by the parsimony and
+ the hesitations of his own government, by which his large, swift and most
+ creative genius was so often hampered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the Spanish soldiers, deep in the trenches, went with bare legs and
+ empty stomachs in January; and the Dutchmen, among their broken dykes,
+ were up to their ears in mud and water; and German mercenaries, in the
+ obedient Provinces, were burning the peasants' houses in order to sell the
+ iron to buy food withal; while grave-visaged statesmen, in comfortable
+ cabinets, wagged their long white beards at each other from a distance,
+ and exchanged grimaces and protocols which nobody heeded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham was weary of this solemn trifling. "I conclude," said he to
+ Davison, "that her Majesty&mdash;with reverence be it spoken&mdash;is ill
+ advised, to direct you in a course that is like to work so great peril. I
+ know you will do your best endeavour to keep all things upright, and yet
+ it is hard&mdash;the disease being now come to this state, or, as the
+ physicians term it, crisis&mdash;to carry yourself in such sort, but that
+ it will, I fear, breed a dangerous alteration in the cause."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He denounced with impatience, almost with indignation, the insincerity and
+ injustice of these intolerable hesitations. "Sorry am I," said he, "to see
+ the course that is taken in this weighty cause, for we will neither help
+ those poor countries ourselves, nor yet suffer others to do it. I am not
+ ignorant that in time to come the annexing of these countries to the crown
+ of France may prove prejudicial to England, but if France refuse to deal
+ with them, and the rather for that we shall minister some cause of
+ impediment by a kind of dealing underhand, then shall they be forced to
+ return into the hands of Spain, which is like to breed such a present
+ peril towards her Majesty's self, as never a wise man that seeth it, and
+ loveth her, but lamenteth it from the bottom of his heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham had made up his mind that it was England, not France, that
+ should take up the cause of the Provinces, and defend them at every
+ hazard. He had been overruled, and the Queen's government had decided to
+ watch the course of the French negotiation, doing what it could,
+ underhand, to prevent that negotiation from being successful. The
+ Secretary did not approve of this disingenuous course. At the same time he
+ had no faith in the good intentions of the French court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could wish," said he, "that the French King were carried with that
+ honourable mind into the defence of these countries that her Majesty is,
+ but France has not been used to do things for God's sake; neither do they
+ mean to use our advice or assistance in making of the bargain. For they
+ still hold a jealous conceit that when Spain and they are together by the
+ ears, we will seek underhand to work our own peace." Walsingham,
+ therefore, earnestly deprecated the attitude provisionally maintained by
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, early in January, (Jan. 3, 1585) the deputation from the
+ Provinces had arrived in France. The progress of their 1585 negotiation
+ will soon be related, but, before its result was known, a general
+ dissatisfaction had already manifested itself in the Netherlands. The
+ factitious enthusiasm which had been created in favour of France, as well
+ as the prejudice against England, began to die out. It became probable in
+ the opinion of those most accustomed to read the signs of the times, that
+ the French court was acting in connivance with Philip, and that the
+ negotiation was only intended to amuse the Netherlanders, to circumvent
+ the English, and to gain time both for France and Spain. It was not
+ believed that the character of Henry or the policy of his mother was
+ likely to the cause of any substantial aid to the cause of civil liberty
+ or Protestant principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They look for no better fruit from the commission to France," wrote
+ Davison, who surveyed the general state of affairs with much keenness and
+ breadth of vision, "than a dallying entertainment of the time, neither
+ leaving them utterly hopeless, nor at full liberty to seek for relief
+ elsewhere, especially in England, or else some pleasing motion of peace,
+ wherein the French King will offer his mediation with Spain. Meantime the
+ people, wearied with the troubles, charges, and hazard of the war, shall
+ be rocked asleep, the provision for their defence neglected, some
+ Provinces nearest the danger seduced, the rest by their defection
+ astonished, and the enemy by their decay and confusions, strengthened.
+ This is the scope whereto the doings of the French King, not without
+ intelligence with the Spanish sovereign, doth aim, whatever is pretended."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a wide conviction that the French King was dealing falsely with
+ the Provinces. It seemed certain that he must be inspired by intense
+ jealousy of England, and that he was unlikely, for the sake of those whose
+ "religion, popular liberty, and rebellion against their sovereign," he
+ could not but disapprove, to allow Queen Elizabeth to steal a march upon
+ him, and "make her own market with Spain to his cost and disadvantage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, it was suspected&mdash;whether justly or not will be presently
+ shown&mdash;that Henry III. "was seeking to blear the eyes of the world,
+ as his brother Charles did before the Massacre of St. Bartholomew." As the
+ letters received from the Dutch envoys in France became less and less
+ encouraging, and as the Queen was informed by her ambassador in Paris of
+ the tergiversations in Paris, she became the more anxious lest the States
+ should be driven to despair. She therefore wrote to Davison, instructing
+ him "to nourish in them underhand some hope&mdash;as a thing proceeding
+ from himself&mdash;that though France should reject them, yet she would
+ not abandon them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was directed to find out, by circuitous means, what towns they would
+ offer to her as security for any advances she might be induced to make,
+ and to ascertain the amount of monthly contributions towards the support
+ of the war that they were still capable of furnishing. She was beginning
+ to look with dismay at the expatriation of wealthy merchants and
+ manufacturers going so rapidly forward, now that Ghent had fallen and
+ Brussels and Antwerp were in such imminent peril. She feared that, while
+ so much valuable time had been thrown away, the Provinces had become too
+ much impoverished to do their own part in their own defence; and she was
+ seriously alarmed at rumours which had become prevalent of a popular
+ disposition towards treating for a peace at any price with Spain. It soon
+ became evident that these rumours were utterly without foundation, but the
+ other reasons for Elizabeth's anxiety were sufficiently valid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole, the feeling in favour of England was rapidly gaining ground.
+ In Holland especially there was general indignation against the French
+ party. The letters of the deputies occasioned "murmur and mislike" of most
+ persons, who noted them to contain "more ample report of ceremonies and
+ compliments than solid argument of comfort."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Edward Stafford, who looked with great penetration into the heart of
+ the mysterious proceedings at Paris, assured his government that no better
+ result was to be looked for, "after long dalliance and entertainment, than
+ either a flat refusal or such a masked embracing of their cause, as would
+ rather tend to the increasing of their miseries and confusion than relief
+ for their declining estate." While "reposing upon a broken reed," they
+ were, he thought, "neglecting other means more expedient for their
+ necessities."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was already the universal opinion in Holland. Men now remembered,
+ with bitterness, the treachery of the Duke of Anjou, which they had been
+ striving so hard to forget, but which less than two years ago had nearly
+ proved fatal to the cause of liberty in the Provinces. A committee of the
+ States had an interview with the Queen's envoy at the Hague; implored her
+ Majesty through him not to abandon their cause; expressed unlimited regret
+ for the course which had been pursued, and avowed a determination "to
+ pluck their heads out of the collar," so soon as the opportunity should
+ offer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They stated, moreover, that they had been directed by the assembly to lay
+ before him the instructions for the envoys to France, and the articles
+ proposed for the acceptance of the King. The envoy knew his business
+ better than not to have secretly provided himself with copies of these
+ documents, which he had already laid before his own government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He affected, however, to feel hurt that he had been thus kept in ignorance
+ of papers which he really knew by heart. "After some pretended quarrel,"
+ said he, "for their not acquainting me therewith sooner, I did accept
+ them, as if I had before neither seen nor heard of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This then was the aspect of affairs in the provinces during the absence of
+ the deputies in France. It is now necessary to shift the scene to that
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reception of the Dutch Envoys at the Louvre&mdash;Ignominious Result of
+ the Embassy&mdash;Secret Influences at work&mdash;Bargaining between the
+ French and Spanish Courts&mdash;Claims of Catharine de' Medici upon
+ Portugal&mdash;Letters of Henry and Catharine&mdash;Secret Proposal by France
+ to invade England&mdash;States' Mission to Henry of Navarre&mdash;Subsidies
+ of Philip to Guise&mdash;Treaty of Joinville&mdash;Philip's Share in the
+ League denied by Parma&mdash;Philip in reality its Chief&mdash;Manifesto of
+ the League&mdash;Attitude of Henry III. and of Navarre&mdash;The League
+ demands a Royal Decree&mdash;Designs of France and Spain against England
+ &mdash;Secret Interview of Mendoza and Villeroy&mdash;Complaints of English
+ Persecution&mdash;Edict of Nemours&mdash;Excommunication of Navarre and his
+ Reply.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The King, notwithstanding his apparent reluctance, had, in Sir Edward
+ Stafford's language, "nibbled at the bait." He had, however, not been
+ secured at the first attempt, and now a second effort was to be made,
+ under what were supposed to be most favourable circumstances. In
+ accordance with his own instructions, his envoy, Des Pruneaux, had been
+ busily employed in the States, arranging the terms of a treaty which
+ should be entirely satisfactory. It had been laid down as an indispensable
+ condition that Holland and Zeeland should unite in the offer of
+ sovereignty, and, after the expenditure of much eloquence, diplomacy, and
+ money, Holland and Zeeland had given their consent. The court had been for
+ some time anxious and impatient for the arrival of the deputies. Early in
+ December, Des Pruneaux wrote from Paris to Count Maurice, urging with some
+ asperity, the necessity of immediate action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I left you," he said, "I thought that performance would follow
+ promises. I have been a little ashamed, as the time passed by, to hear
+ nothing of the deputies, nor of any excuse on the subject. It would seem
+ as though God had bandaged the eyes of those who have so much cause to
+ know their own adversity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the States his language was still more insolent. "Excuse me,
+ Gentlemen," he said, "if I tell you that I blush at hearing nothing from
+ you. I shall have the shame and you the damage. I regret much the capture
+ of De Teligny, and other losses which are occasioned by your delays and
+ want of resolution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus did the French court, which a few months before had imprisoned, and
+ then almost ignominiously dismissed the envoys who came to offer the
+ sovereignty of the Provinces, now rebuke the governments which had ever
+ since been strenuously engaged in removing all obstacles to the entire
+ fulfillment of the King's demands. The States were just despatching a
+ solemn embassy to renew that offer, with hardly any limitation as to
+ terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The envoys arrived on January 3rd, 1585, at Boulogne, after a stormy
+ voyage from Brielle. Yet it seems incredible to relate, that, after all
+ the ignominy heaped upon the last, there was nothing but solemn trifling
+ in reserve for the present legation; although the object of both embassies
+ was to offer a crown. The deputies were, however, not kept in prison, upon
+ this occasion, nor treated like thieves or spies. They were admirably
+ lodged, with plenty of cooks and lacqueys to minister to them; they fared
+ sumptuously every day, at Henry's expense, and, after they had been six
+ weeks in the kingdom, they at last succeeded in obtaining their first
+ audience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 13th February the King sent five "very splendid, richly-gilded,
+ court-coach-waggons" to bring the envoys to the palace. At one o'clock
+ they arrived at the Louvre, and were ushered through four magnificent
+ antechambers into the royal cabinet. The apartments through which they
+ passed swarmed with the foremost nobles, court-functionaries, and ladies
+ of France, in blazing gala costume, who all greeted the envoys with
+ demonstrations of extreme respect: The halls and corridors were lined with
+ archers, halbardiers, Swiss guards, and grooms "besmeared with gold," and
+ it was thought that all this rustle of fine feathers would be somewhat
+ startling to the barbarous republicans, fresh from the fens of Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry received them in his cabinet, where he was accompanied only by the
+ Duke of Joyeuse&mdash;his foremost and bravest "minion"&mdash;by the Count
+ of Bouscaige, M. de Valette, and the Count of Chateau Vieux.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most Christian King was neatly dressed, in white satin doublet and
+ hose, and well-starched ruff, with a short cloak on his shoulders, a
+ little velvet cap on the side of his head, his long locks duly perfumed
+ and curled, his sword at his side, and a little basket, full of puppies,
+ suspended from his neck by a broad ribbon. He held himself stiff and
+ motionless, although his face smiled a good-humoured welcome to the
+ ambassadors; and he moved neither foot, hand, nor head, as they advanced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chancellor Leoninus, the most experienced, eloquent, and tedious of men,
+ now made an interminable oration, fertile in rhetoric and barren in facts;
+ and the King made a short and benignant reply, according to the hallowed
+ formula in such cases provided. And then there was a presentation to the
+ Queen, and to the Queen-Mother, when Leoninus was more prolix than before,
+ and Catharine even more affectionate than her son; and there were
+ consultations with Chiverny and Villeroy, and Brulart and Pruneaux, and
+ great banquets at the royal expense, and bales of protocols, and drafts of
+ articles, and conditions and programmes and apostilles by the hundred
+ weight, and at last articles of annexation were presented by the envoys,
+ and Pruneaux looked at and pronounced them "too raw and imperative," and
+ the envoys took them home again, and dressed them and cooked them till
+ there was no substance left in them; for whereas the envoys originally
+ offered the crown of their country to France, on condition that no
+ religion but the reformed religion should be tolerated there, no
+ appointments made but by the States, and no security offered for advances
+ to be made by the Christian King, save the hearts and oaths of his new
+ subjects&mdash;so they now ended by proposing the sovereignty
+ unconditionally, almost abjectly; and, after the expiration of nearly
+ three months, even these terms were absolutely refused, and the deputies
+ were graciously permitted to go home as they came. The annexation and
+ sovereignty were definitely declined. Henry regretted and sighed,
+ Catharine de' Medici wept&mdash;for tears were ever at her command&mdash;Chancellor
+ Chiverny and Secretary Brulart wept likewise, and Pruneaux was overcome
+ with emotion at the parting interview of the ambassadors with the court,
+ in which they were allowed a last opportunity for expressing what was
+ called their gratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then, on the lath March, M. d'Oignon came to them, and presented, on
+ the part of the King, to each of the envoys a gold chain weighing
+ twenty-one ounces and two grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Des Pruneaux, too&mdash;Des Pruneaux who had spent the previous summer in
+ the Netherlands, who had travelled from province to province, from city to
+ city, at the King's command, offering boundless assistance, if they would
+ unanimously offer their sovereignty; who had vanquished by his importunity
+ the resistance of the stern Hollanders, the last of all the Netherlanders
+ to yield to the royal blandishments&mdash;Des Pruneaux, who had "blushed"&mdash;Des
+ Pruneaux who had wept&mdash;now thought proper to assume an airy tone,
+ half encouragement, half condolence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Man proposes, gentlemen," said he "but God disposes. We are frequently
+ called on to observe that things have a great variety of times and terms.
+ Many a man is refused by a woman twice, who succeeds the third time," and
+ so on, with which wholesome apothegms Des Pruneaux faded away then and for
+ ever from the page of Netherland history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few days afterwards the envoys took shipping at Dieppe, and arrived
+ early in April at the Hague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus terminated the negotiation of the States with France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been a scene of elaborate trifling on the King's part from
+ beginning to end. Yet the few grains of wheat which have thus been
+ extracted from the mountains of diplomatic chaff so long mouldering in
+ national storehouses, contain, however dry and tasteless, still something
+ for human nourishment. It is something to comprehend the ineffable
+ meanness of the hands which then could hold the destiny of mighty empires.
+ Here had been offered a magnificent prize to France; a great extent of
+ frontier in the quarter where expansion was most desirable, a protective
+ network of towns and fortresses on the side most vulnerable, flourishing,
+ cities on the sea-coast where the marine traffic was most lucrative, the
+ sovereignty of a large population, the most bustling, enterprising, and
+ hardy in Europe&mdash;a nation destined in a few short years to become the
+ first naval and commercial power in the world&mdash;all this was laid at
+ the feet of Henry Valois and Catharine de' Medici, and rejected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The envoys, with their predecessors, had wasted eight months of most
+ precious time; they had heard and made orations, they had read and written
+ protocols, they had witnessed banquets, masquerades, and revels of
+ stupendous frivolity, in honour of the English Garter, brought solemnly to
+ the Valois by Lord Derby, accompanied by one hundred gentlemen
+ "marvellously, sumptuously, and richly accoutred," during that dreadful
+ winter when the inhabitants of Brussels, Antwerp, Mechlin&mdash;to save
+ which splendid cities and to annex them to France, was a main object of
+ the solemn embassy from the Netherlands&mdash;were eating rats, and cats,
+ and dogs, and the weeds from the pavements, and the grass from the
+ churchyards; and were finding themselves more closely pressed than ever by
+ the relentless genius of Farnese; and in exchange for all these losses and
+ all this humiliation, the ambassadors now returned to their constituents,
+ bringing an account of Chiverny's magnificent banquets and long orations,
+ of the smiles of Henry III., the tears of Catharine de' Medici, the
+ regrets of M. des Pruneaux, besides sixteen gold chains, each weighing
+ twenty-one ounces and two grains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is worth while to go for a moment behind the scene; We have seen the
+ actors, with mask and cothurn and tinsel crown, playing their well-conned
+ parts upon the stage. Let us hear them threaten, and whimper, and chaffer
+ among themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon as it was intimated that Henry III. was about to grant the
+ Netherland, envoys an audience, the wrath of ambassador Mendoza was
+ kindled. That magniloquent Spaniard instantly claimed an interview with
+ the King, before whom, according to the statement of his colleagues, doing
+ their best to pry into these secrets, he blustered and bounced, and was
+ more fantastical in his insolence than even Spanish envoy had ever been
+ before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He went presently to court," so Walsingham was informed by Stafford, "and
+ dealt very passionately with the King and Queen-Mother to deny them
+ audience, who being greatly offended with his presumptuous and malapert
+ manner of proceeding, the King did in choler and with some sharp speeches,
+ let him plainly understand that he was an absolute king, bound to yield
+ account of his doings to no man, and that it was lawful for him to give
+ access to any man within his own realm. The Queen-Mother answered him
+ likewise very roundly, whereupon he departed for the time, very much
+ discontented."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brave words, on both sides, if they had ever been spoken, or if there had
+ been any action corresponding to their spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, in truth, from the beginning, Henry and his mother saw in the
+ Netherland embassy only the means of turning a dishonest penny. Since the
+ disastrous retreat of Anjou from the Provinces, the city of Cambray had
+ remained in the hands of the Seigneur de Balagny, placed there by the
+ duke. The citadel, garrisoned by French troops, it was not the intention
+ of Catharine de' Medici to restore to Philip, and a truce on the subject
+ had been arranged provisionally for a year. Philip, taking Parma's advice
+ to prevent the French court, if possible, from "fomenting the Netherland
+ rebellion," had authorized the Prince to conclude that truce, as if done
+ on his own responsibility, and not by royal order. Meantime, Balagny was
+ gradually swelling into a petty potentate, on his own account, making
+ himself very troublesome to the Prince of Parma, and requiring a great
+ deal of watching. Cambray was however apparently acquired for France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, besides this acquisition, there was another way of earning something
+ solid, by turning this Netherland matter handsomely to account. Philip II.
+ had recently conquered Portugal. Among the many pretensions to that crown,
+ those of Catherine de' Medici had been put forward, but had been little
+ heeded. The claim went back more than three hundred years, and to
+ establish its validity would have been to convert the peaceable possession
+ of a long line of sovereigns into usurpation. To ascend to Alphonso III.
+ was like fetching, as it was said, a claim from Evander's grandmother.
+ Nevertheless, ever since Philip had been upon the Portuguese throne,
+ Catherine had been watching the opportunity, not of unseating that
+ sovereign, but of converting her claim into money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Netherland embassy seemed to offer the coveted opportunity. There was,
+ therefore, quite as much warmth at the outset, on the part of Mendoza, in
+ that first interview after the arrival of the deputies, as had been
+ represented. There was however less dignity and more cunning on the part
+ of Henry and Catherine than was at all suspected. Even before that
+ conference the King had been impatiently expecting overtures from the
+ Spanish envoy, and had been disappointed. "He told me," said Henry, "that
+ he would make proposals so soon as Tassis should be gone, but he has done
+ nothing yet. He said to Gondi that all he meant was to get the truce of
+ Cambray accomplished. I hope, however, that my brother, the King of Spain,
+ will do what is right in regard to madam my mother's pretensions. 'Tis
+ likely that he will be now incited thereto, seeing that the deputies of
+ all the Netherland provinces are at present in my kingdom, to offer me
+ carte blanche. I shall hear what they have to say, and do exactly what the
+ good of my own affairs shall seem to require. The Queen of England, too,
+ has been very pressing and urgent with me for several months on this
+ subject. I shall hear, too, what she has to say, and I presume, if the
+ King of Spain will now disclose himself, and do promptly what he ought,
+ that we may set Christendom at rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry then instructed his ambassador in Spain to keep his eyes wide open,
+ in order to penetrate the schemes of Philip, and to this end ordered him
+ an increase of salary by a third, that he might follow that monarch on his
+ journey to Arragon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Mendoza had audience of his Majesty. "He made a very pressing
+ remonstrance," said the King, "concerning the arrival of these deputies,
+ urging me to send them back at once; denouncing them as disobedient rebels
+ and heretics. I replied that my kingdom was free, and that I should hear
+ from them all that they had to say, because I could not abandon madam my
+ mother in her pretensions, not only for the filial obedience which I owe
+ her, but because I am her only heir. Mendoza replied that he should go and
+ make the same remonstrance to the Queen-Mother, which he accordingly did,
+ and she will herself write you what passed between them. If they do not
+ act up to their duty down there I know how to take my revenge upon them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the King's own statement&mdash;his veriest words&mdash;and he was
+ surely best aware of what occurred between himself and Mendoza, under
+ their four eyes only. The ambassador is not represented as extremely
+ insolent, but only pressing; and certainly there is little left of the
+ fine periods on Henry's part about listening to the cry of the oppressed,
+ or preventing the rays of his ancestors' diadem from growing pale, with
+ which contemporary chronicles are filled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was not one word of the advancement and glory of the French nation;
+ not a hint of the fame to be acquired by a magnificent expansion of
+ territory, still less of the duty to deal generously or even honestly with
+ an oppressed people, who in good faith were seeking an asylum in exchange
+ for offered sovereignty, not a syllable upon liberty of conscience, of
+ religious or civil rights; nothing but a petty and exclusive care for the
+ interests of his mother's pocket, and of his own as his mother's heir.
+ This farthing-candle was alone to guide the steps of "the high and mighty
+ King," whose reputation was perpetually represented as so precious to him
+ in all the conferences between his ministers and the Netherland deputies.
+ Was it possible for those envoys to imagine the almost invisible meanness
+ of such childish tricks?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen-Mother was still more explicit and unblushing throughout the
+ whole affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The ambassador of Spain," she said, "has made the most beautiful
+ remonstrances he could think of about these deputies from the Netherlands.
+ All his talk, however, cannot persuade me to anything else save to
+ increase my desire to have reparation for the wrong that has been done me
+ in regard to my claims upon Portugal, which I am determined to pursue by
+ every means within my power. Nevertheless I have told Don Bernardino that
+ I should always be ready to embrace any course likely to bring about a
+ peaceful conclusion. He then entered into a discussion of my rights,
+ which, he said, were not thought in Spain to be founded in justice. But
+ when I explained to him the principal points (of which I possess all the
+ pieces of evidence and justification), he hardly knew what to say, save
+ that he was astounded that I had remained so long without speaking of my
+ claims. In reply, I told him ingenuously the truth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The truth which the ingenuous Catharine thus revealed was, in brief, that
+ all her predecessors had been minors, women, and persons in situations not
+ to make their rights valid. Finding herself more highly placed, she had
+ advanced her claims, which had been so fully recognized in Portugal, that
+ she had been received as Infanta of the kingdom. All pretensions to the
+ throne being now through women only, hers were the best of any. At all
+ this Don Bernardino expressed profound astonishment, and promised to send
+ a full account to his master of "the infinite words" which had passed
+ between them at this interview!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I desire," said Catharine, "that the Lord King of Spain should open his
+ mind frankly and promptly upon the recompense which he is willing to make
+ me for Portugal, in order that things may pass rather with gentleness than
+ otherwise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was expecting a great deal to look for frankness and promptness from
+ the Lord King of Spain, but the Queen-Mother considered that the
+ Netherland envoys had put a whip into her hand. She was also determined to
+ bring Philip up to the point, without showing her own game. "I will never
+ say," said Catharine&mdash;ingenuous no longer&mdash;"I will never say how
+ much I ask, but, on the contrary, I shall wait for him to make the offer.
+ I expect it to be reasonable, because he has seen fit to seize and occupy
+ that which I declare to be my property."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the explanation of all the languor and trifling of the French
+ court in the Netherland negotiation. A deep, constant, unseen current was
+ running counter to all the movement which appeared upon the surface. The
+ tergiversations of the Spanish cabinet in the Portugal matter were the
+ cause of the shufflings of the French ministers on the subject of the
+ Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know well," said Henry a few days later, "that the people down there,
+ and their ambassador here, are leading us on with words, as far as they
+ can, with regard to the recompense of madam my mother for her claims upon
+ Portugal. But they had better remember (and I think they will), that out
+ of the offers which these sixteen deputies of the Netherlands are bringing
+ me&mdash;and I believe it to be carte blanche&mdash;I shall be able to pay
+ myself. 'Twill be better to come promptly to a good bargain and a brief
+ conclusion, than to spin the matter out longer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don Bernardino," said the Queen-Mother on the same day, "has been keeping
+ us up to this hour in hopes of a good offer, but 'tis to be feared, for
+ the good of Christendom, that 'twill be too late. The deputies are come,
+ bringing carte blanche. Nevertheless, if the King of Spain is willing to
+ be reasonable, and that instantly, it will be well, and it would seem as
+ if God had been pleased to place this means in our hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the conferences had been fairly got under way between the French
+ government and the envoys, the demands upon Philip for a good bargain and
+ a handsome offer became still more pressing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have given audience to the deputies from the Provinces," wrote Henry,
+ "and the Queen-Mother has done the same. Chancellor Chiverny, Villequier,
+ Bellievre, and Brulart, will now confer with them from day today. I now
+ tell you that it will be well, before things go any farther, for the King
+ of Spain to come to reason about the pretensions of madam mother. This
+ will be a means of establishing the repose of Christendom. I shall be very
+ willing to concur in such an arrangement, if I saw any approximation to it
+ on the part of the King or his ministers. But I fear they will delay too
+ long, and so you had better tell them. Push them to the point as much as
+ possible, without letting them suspect that I have been writing about it,
+ for that would make them rather draw back than come forward."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time, during this alternate threatening and coaxing between
+ the French and the Spanish court, and in the midst of all the solemn and
+ tedious protocolling of the ministry and the Dutch envoys, there was a
+ most sincere and affectionate intercourse maintained between Henry III.
+ and the Prince of Parma. The Spanish Governor-General was assured that
+ nothing but the warmest regard was entertained for him and his master on
+ the part of the French court. Parma had replied, however, that so many
+ French troops had in times past crossed the frontier to assist the rebels,
+ that he hardly knew what to think. He expressed the hope, now that the
+ Duke of Anjou was dead, that his Christian Majesty would not countenance
+ the rebellion, but manifest his good-will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How can your Highness doubt it," said Malpierre, Henry's envoy, "for his
+ Majesty has given proof enough of his good will, having prevented all
+ enterprises in this regard, and preferred to have his own subjects cut
+ into pieces rather than that they should carry out their designs. Had his
+ Majesty been willing merely to connive at these undertakings, 'tis
+ probable that the affairs of your highness would not have succeeded so
+ well as they have done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to England, also, the conduct of Henry and his mother in these
+ negotiations was marked by the same unfathomable duplicity. There was an
+ appearance of cordiality on the surface; but there was deep plotting, and
+ bargaining, and even deadly hostility lurking below. We have seen the
+ efforts which Elizabeth's government had been making to counteract the
+ policy which offered the sovereignty of the provinces to the French
+ monarch. At the same time there was at least a loyal disposition upon the
+ Queen's part to assist the Netherlands, in concurrence with Henry. The
+ demeanour of Burghley and his colleagues was frankness itself, compared
+ with the secret schemings of the Valois; for at least peace and good-will
+ between the "triumvirate" of France, England and the Netherlands, was
+ intended, as the true means of resisting the predominant influence of
+ Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet very soon after the solemn reception by Henry of the garter brought by
+ Lord Derby, and in the midst of the negotiations between the French court
+ and the United Provinces, the French king was not only attempting to
+ barter the sovereignty offered him by the Netherlanders against a handsome
+ recompense for the Portugal claim, but he was actually proposing to the
+ King of Spain to join with him in an invasion of England! Even Philip
+ himself must have admired and respected such a complication of villany on
+ the part of his most Christian brother. He was, however, not disposed to
+ put any confidence in his schemes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With regard to the attempt against England," wrote Philip to Mendoza,
+ "you must keep your eyes open&mdash;you must look at the danger of letting
+ them, before they have got rid of their rivals and reduced their heretics,
+ go out of their own house and kingdom, and thus of being made fools of
+ when they think of coming back again. Let them first exterminate the
+ heretics of France, and then we will look after those of England; because
+ 'tis more important to finish those who are near than those afar off.
+ Perhaps the Queen-Mother proposes this invasion in order to proceed more
+ feebly with matters in her own kingdom; and thus Mucio (Duke of Guise) and
+ his friends will not have so safe a game, and must take heed lest they be
+ deceived."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it is obvious that Henry and Catharine intended, on the whole, to
+ deceive the English and the Netherlanders, and to get as good a bargain
+ and as safe a friendship from Philip as could be manufactured out of the
+ materials placed in the French King's hands by the United Provinces.
+ Elizabeth honestly wished well to the States, but allowed Burghley and
+ those who acted with him to flatter themselves with the chimera that Henry
+ could be induced to protect the Netherlands without assuming the
+ sovereignty of that commonwealth. The Provinces were fighting for their
+ existence, unconscious of their latent strength, and willing to trust to
+ France or to England, if they could only save themselves from being
+ swallowed by Spain. As for Spain itself, that country was more practised
+ in duplicity even than the government of the Medici-Valois, and was of
+ course more than a match at the game of deception for the franker
+ politicians of England and Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King of Navarre had meanwhile been looking on at a distance. Too keen
+ an observer, too subtle a reasoner to doubt the secret source of the
+ movements then agitating France to its centre, he was yet unable to
+ foresee the turn that all these intrigues were about to take. He could
+ hardly doubt that Spain was playing a dark and desperate game with the
+ unfortunate Henry III.; for, as we have seen, he had himself not long
+ before received a secret and liberal offer from Philip II., if he would
+ agree to make war upon the King. But the Bearnese was not the man to play
+ into the hands of Spain, nor could he imagine the possibility of the
+ Valois or even of his mother taking so suicidal a course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the Netherland deputies had received their final dismissal from the
+ King, they sent Calvart, who had been secretary to their embassy, on a
+ secret mission to Henry of Navarre, then resident at Chartres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The envoy communicated to the Huguenot chief the meagre result of the long
+ negotiation with the French court. Henry bade him be of good cheer, and
+ assured him of his best wishes for their cause. He expressed the opinion
+ that the King of France would now either attempt to overcome the Guise
+ faction by gentle means, or at once make war upon them. The Bishop of Acqs
+ had strongly recommended the French monarch to send the King of Navarre,
+ with a strong force, to the assistance of the Netherlands, urging the
+ point with much fervid eloquence and solid argument. Henry for a moment
+ had seemed impressed, but such a vigorous proceeding was of course
+ entirely beyond his strength, and he had sunk back into his effeminate
+ languor so soon as the bold bishop's back was turned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bearnese had naturally conceived but little hope that such a scheme
+ would be carried into effect; but he assured Calvart, that nothing could
+ give him greater delight than to mount and ride in such a cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Notwithstanding," said the Bearnese, "that the villanous intentions of
+ the Guises are becoming plainer and plainer, and that they are obviously
+ supplied with Spanish dollars, I shall send a special envoy to the most
+ Christian King, and, although 'tis somewhat late, implore him to throw his
+ weight into the scale, in order to redeem your country from its misery.
+ Meantime be of good heart, and defend as you have done your hearths, your
+ liberty, and the honour of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He advised the States unhesitatingly to continue their confidence in the
+ French King, and to keep him informed of their plans and movements;
+ expressing the opinion that these very intrigues of the Guise party would
+ soon justify or even force Henry III. openly to assist the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far, at that very moment, was so sharp a politician as the Bearnese
+ from suspecting the secret schemes of Henry of Valois. Calvart urged the
+ King of Navarre to assist the States at that moment with some slight
+ subsidy. Antwerp was in such imminent danger as to fill the hearts of all
+ true patriots with dismay; and a timely succour, even if a slender one,
+ might be of inestimable value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry expressed profound regret that his own means were so limited, and
+ his own position so dangerous, as to make it difficult for him to manifest
+ in broad daylight the full affection which he bore the Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To my sorrow," said he, "your proposition is made in the midst of such
+ dark and stormy weather, that those who have clearest sight are unable to
+ see to what issue these troubles of France are tending."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, with much generosity and manliness, he promised Calvart to
+ send two thousand soldiers, at his own charges, to the Provinces without
+ delay; and authorised that envoy to consult with his agent at the court of
+ the French King, in order to obtain the royal permission for the troops to
+ cross the frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crownless and almost houseless King had thus, at a single interview,
+ and in exchange for nothing but good wishes, granted what the most
+ Christian monarch of France had refused, after months of negotiation, and
+ with sovereignty as the purchase-money. The envoy, well pleased, sped as
+ swiftly as possible to Paris; but, as may easily be imagined, Henry of
+ Valois forbade the movement contemplated by Henry of Navarre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His Majesty," said Villeroy, secretary of state, "sees no occasion, in so
+ weighty a business, thus suddenly to change his mind; the less so, because
+ he hopes to be able ere long to smooth over these troubles which have
+ begun in France. Should the King either openly or secretly assist the
+ Netherlands or allow them to be assisted, 'twould be a reason for all the
+ Catholics now sustaining his Majesty's party to go over to the Guise
+ faction. The Provinces must remain firm, and make no pacification with the
+ enemy. Meantime the Queen of England is the only one to whom God has given
+ means to afford you succour. One of these days, when the proper time
+ comes, his Majesty will assist her in affording you relief."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calvart, after this conference with the King of Navarre, and subsequently
+ with the government, entertained a lingering hope that the French King
+ meant to assist the Provinces. "I know well who is the author of these
+ troubles," said the unhappy monarch, who never once mentioned the name of
+ Guise in all those conferences, "but, if God grant me life, I will give
+ him as good as he sends, and make him rue his conduct."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were not aware after how many strange vacillations Henry was one day
+ to wreak this threatened vengeance. As for Navarre, he remained upon the
+ watch, good humoured as ever, more merry and hopeful as the tempest grew
+ blacker; manifesting the most frank and friendly sentiments towards the
+ Provinces, and writing to Queen Elizabeth in the chivalrous style so dear
+ to the heart of that sovereign, that he desired nothing better than to be
+ her "servant and captain-general against the common enemy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, indeed, the French King was not so well informed as he imagined
+ himself to be of the authorship of these troubles. Mucio, upon whose head
+ he thus threatened vengeance, was but the instrument. The concealed hand
+ that was directing all these odious intrigues, and lighting these flames
+ of civil war which were so long to make France a scene of desolation, was
+ that of the industrious letter-writer in the Escorial. That which Henry of
+ Navarre shrewdly suspected, when he talked of the Spanish dollars in the
+ Balafre's pocket, that which was dimly visible to the Bishop of Acqs when
+ he told Henry III. that the "Tagus had emptied itself into the Seine and
+ Loire, and that the gold of Mexico was flowing into the royal cabinet,"
+ was much more certain than they supposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip, in truth, was neglecting his own most pressing interests that he
+ might direct all his energies towards entertaining civil war in France.
+ That France should remain internally at peace was contrary to all his
+ plans. He had therefore long kept Guise and his brother, the Cardinal de
+ Lorraine, in his pay, and he had been spending large sums of money to
+ bribe many of the most considerable functionaries in the kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most important enterprises in the Netherlands were allowed to
+ languish, that these subterranean operations of the "prudent" monarch of
+ Spain should be pushed forward. The most brilliant and original genius
+ that Philip had the good fortune to have at his disposal, the genius of
+ Alexander Farnese, was cramped and irritated almost to madness, by the
+ fetters imposed upon it, by the sluggish yet obstinate nature of him it
+ was bound to obey. Farnese was at that moment engaged in a most arduous
+ military undertaking, that famous siege of Antwerp, the details of which
+ will be related in future chapters, yet he was never furnished with men or
+ money enough to ensure success to a much more ordinary operation. His
+ complaints, subdued but intense, fell almost unheeded on his master's ear.
+ He had not "ten dollars at his command," his cavalry horses were all dead
+ of hunger or had been eaten by their riders, who were starving to death
+ themselves, his army had dwindled to a "handful," yet he still held on to
+ his purpose, in spite of famine, the desperate efforts of indefatigable
+ enemies, and all the perils and privations of a deadly winter. He, too,
+ was kept for a long time in profound ignorance of Philip's designs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, while the Spanish soldiers were starving in Flanders, Philip's
+ dollars were employed by Mucio and his adherents in enlisting troops in
+ Switzerland and Germany, in order to carry on the civil war in France. The
+ French king was held systematically up to ridicule or detestation in every
+ village-pulpit in his own kingdom, while the sister of Mucio, the Duchess
+ of Montpensier, carried the scissors at her girdle, with which she
+ threatened to provide Henry with a third crown, in addition to those of
+ France and Poland, which he had disgraced&mdash;the coronal tonsure of a
+ monk. The convent should be, it was intimated, the eventual fate of the
+ modern Childeric, but meantime it was more important than ever to
+ supersede the ultimate pretensions of Henry of Navarre. To prevent that
+ heretic of heretics, who was not to be bought with Spanish gold, from ever
+ reigning, was the first object of Philip and Mucio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, on the last day of the year 1584, a secret treaty had been
+ signed at Joinville between Henry of Guise and his brother the Duc de
+ Mayenne, holding the proxies of their brother the Cardinal and those of
+ their uncles, Aumale and Elbeuf, on the one part, and John Baptist Tassis
+ and Commander Moreo, on the other, as representatives of Philip. This
+ transaction, sufficiently well known now to the most superficial student
+ of history, was a profound mystery then, so far as regarded the action of
+ the Spanish king. It was not a secret, however, that the papistical party
+ did not intend that the Bearnese prince should ever come to the throne,
+ and the matter of the succession was discussed, precisely as if the throne
+ had been vacant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was decided that Charles, paternal uncle to Henry of Navarre, commonly
+ called the Cardinal Bourbon, should be considered successor to the crown,
+ in place of Henry, whose claim was forfeited by heresy. Moreover, a great
+ deal of superfluous money and learning was expended in ordering some
+ elaborate legal arguments to be prepared by venal jurisconsults, proving
+ not only that the uncle ought to succeed before the nephew, but that
+ neither the one nor the other had any claim to succeed at all. The pea
+ having thus been employed to do the work which the sword alone could
+ accomplish, the poor old Cardinal was now formally established by the
+ Guise faction as presumptive heir to the crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man of straw, a superannuated court-dangler, a credulous trifler, but an
+ earnest Papist as his brother Antony had been, sixty-six years old, and
+ feeble beyond his years, who, his life long, had never achieved one manly
+ action, and had now one foot in the grave; this was the puppet placed in
+ the saddle to run a tilt against the Bearnese, the man with foot ever in
+ the stirrup, with sword rarely in its sheath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The contracting parties at Joinville agreed that the Cardinal should
+ succeed on the death of the reigning king, and that no heretic should ever
+ ascend the throne, or hold the meanest office in the kingdom. They agreed
+ further that all heretics should be "exterminated" without distinction
+ throughout France and the Netherlands. In order to procure the necessary
+ reforms among the clergy, the council of Trent was to be fully carried
+ into effect. Philip pledged himself to furnish at least fifty thousand
+ crowns monthly, for the advancement of this Holy League, as it was
+ denominated, and as much more as should prove necessary. The sums advanced
+ were to be repaid by the Cardinal on his succeeding to the throne. All the
+ great officers of the crown, lords and gentlemen, cities, chapters, and
+ universities, all Catholics, in short, in the kingdom, were deemed to be
+ included in the league. If any foreign Catholic prince desired to enter
+ the union, he should be admitted with the consent of both parties. Neither
+ his Catholic majesty nor the confederated princes should treat with the
+ most Christian King, either directly or indirectly. The compact was to
+ remain strictly secret&mdash;one copy of it being sent to Philip, while
+ the other was to be retained by Cardinal Bourbon and his fellow leaguers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now&mdash;in accordance with this program&mdash;Philip proceeded
+ stealthily and industriously to further the schemes of Mucio, to the
+ exclusion of more urgent business. Noiseless and secret himself, and
+ delighting in clothing so much as to glide, as it were, throughout Europe,
+ wrapped in the mantle of invisibility, he was perpetually provoked by the
+ noise, the bombast, and the bustle, which his less prudent confederates
+ permitted themselves. While Philip for a long time hesitated to confide
+ the secret of the League to Parma, whom it most imported to understand
+ these schemes of his master, the confederates were openly boasting of the
+ assistance which they were to derive from Parma's cooperation. Even when
+ the Prince had at last been informed as to the state of affairs, he
+ stoutly denied the facts of which the leaguers made their vaunt; thus
+ giving to Mucio and his friends a lesson in dissimulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Things have now arrived at a point," wrote Philip to Tassis, 15th March,
+ 1585, "that this matter of the League cannot and ought not to be concealed
+ from those who have a right to know it. Therefore you must speak clearly
+ to the Prince of Parma, informing him of the whole scheme, and enjoining
+ the utmost secrecy. You must concert with him as to the best means of
+ rendering aid to this cause, after having apprised him of the points which
+ regarded him, and also that of the security of Cardinal de Bourbon, in
+ case of necessity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince was anything but pleased, in the midst of his anxiety and his
+ almost superhuman labour in the Antwerp siege, to be distracted,
+ impoverished, and weakened, in order to carry out these schemes against
+ France; but he kept the secret manfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Malpierre, the French envoy in Brussels&mdash;for there was the closest
+ diplomatic communication between Henry III. and Philip, while each was
+ tampering with the rebellious subjects of the other&mdash;to Malpierre
+ Parma flatly contradicted all complicity on the part of the Spanish King
+ or himself with the Holy League, of which he knew Philip to be the
+ originator and the chief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I complain to the Prince of Parma," said the envoy, "of the companies
+ going from Flanders to assist the League, he will make me no other reply
+ than that which the President has done&mdash;that there is nothing at all
+ in it&mdash;until they are fairly arrived in France. The President
+ (Richardot) said that if the Catholic King belonged to the League, as they
+ insinuate, his Majesty would declare the fact openly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And a few days later, the Prince himself averred, as Malpierre had
+ anticipated, that "as to any intention on the part of himself or his
+ Catholic Majesty, to send succour to the League, according to the boast of
+ these gentlemen, he had never thought of such a thing, nor had received
+ any order on the subject from his master. If the King intended to do
+ anything of the kind, he would do it openly. He protested that he had
+ never seen anything, or known anything of the League."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was a man who knew how to keep a secret, and who had no scruples in
+ the matter of dissimulation, however enraged he might be at seeing men and
+ money diverted from his own masterly combinations in order to carry out
+ these schemes of his master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mucio, on the contrary, was imprudent and inclined to boast. His contempt
+ for Henry III, made him blind to the dangers to be apprehended from Henry
+ of Navarre. He did little, but talked a great deal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip was very anxious that the work should be done both secretly and
+ thoroughly. "Let the business be finished before Saint John's day," said
+ he to Tassis, when sending fifty thousand dollars for the use of the
+ brothers Guise. "Tell Iniquez to warn them not to be sluggish. Let them
+ not begin in a lukewarm manner, but promise them plenty of assistance from
+ me, if they conduct themselves properly. Let them beware of wavering, or
+ of falling into plans of conciliation. If they do their duty, I will do
+ mine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Guise faction moved slowly despite of Philip's secret promptings.
+ The truth is, that the means proposed by the Spanish monarch were
+ ludicrously inadequate to his plans, and it was idle to suppose that the
+ world was to be turned upside down for his benefit, at the very low price
+ which he was prepared to pay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing less than to exterminate all the heretics in Christendom, to place
+ himself on the thrones of France and of England, and to extinguish the
+ last spark of rebellion in the Netherlands, was his secret thought, and
+ yet it was very difficult to get fifty thousand dollars from him from
+ month to month. Procrastinating and indolent himself, he was for ever
+ rebuking the torpid movements of the Guises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let Mucio set his game well at the outset," said he; "let him lay the axe
+ to the root of the tree, for to be wasting time fruitlessly is sharpening
+ the knife for himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was almost prophetic. When after so much talking and tampering, there
+ began to be recrimination among the leaguers, Philip was very angry with
+ his subordinate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here is Mucio," said he, "trying to throw the blame of all the
+ difficulties, which have arisen, upon us. Not hastening, not keeping his
+ secret, letting the execution of the enterprise grow cold, and lending an
+ ear to suggestions about peace, without being sure of its conclusion, he
+ has turned his followers into cowards, discredited his cause, and given
+ the King of France opportunity to strengthen his force and improve his
+ party. These are all very palpable things. I am willing to continue my
+ friendship for them, but not, if, while they accept it, they permit
+ themselves to complain, instead of manifesting gratitude."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole, however, the affairs of the League seemed prosperous. There
+ was doubtless too much display among the confederates, but there was a
+ growing uneasiness among the royalists. Cardinal Bourbon, discarding his
+ ecclesiastical robes and scarlet stockings, paraded himself daily in
+ public, clothed in military costume, with all the airs of royalty. Many
+ persons thought him mad. On the other hand, Epergnon, the haughty
+ minion-in-chief, who governed Henry III., and insulted all the world, was
+ becoming almost polite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The progress of the League," said Busbecq, "is teaching the Duc d'
+ Epergnon manners. 'Tis a youth of such insolence, that without uncovering
+ he would talk with men of royal descent, while they were bareheaded. 'Tis
+ a common jest now that he has found out where his hat is."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, for a long time, a network of secret political combinations had been
+ stretching itself over Christendom. There were great movements of troops
+ throughout Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, slowly concentrating
+ themselves upon France; yet, on the whole, the great mass of the
+ populations, the men and women who were to pay, to fight, to starve, to be
+ trampled upon, to be outraged, to be plundered, to be burned out of houses
+ and home, to bleed, and to die, were merely ignorant, gaping spectators.
+ That there was something very grave in prospect was obvious, but exactly
+ what was impending they knew no more than the generation yet unborn. Very
+ noiselessly had the patient manager who sat in the Escorial been making
+ preparations for that European tragedy in which most of the actors had
+ such fatal parts assigned them, and of which few of the spectators of its
+ opening scenes were doomed to witness the conclusion. A shifting and
+ glancing of lights, a vision of vanishing feet, a trampling and bustling
+ of unseen crowds, movements of concealed machinery, a few incoherent
+ words, much noise and confusion vague and incomprehensible, till at last
+ the tinkling of a small bell, and a glimpse of the modest manager stealing
+ away as the curtain was rising&mdash;such was the spectacle presented at
+ Midsummer 1585.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in truth the opening picture was effective. Sixteen black-robed,
+ long-bearded Netherland envoys stalking away, discomfited and indignant
+ upon one side; Catharine de' Medici on the other, regarding them with a
+ sneer, painfully contorted into a pathetic smile; Henry the King, robed in
+ a sack of penitence, trembling and hesitating, leaning on the arm of
+ Epergnon, but quailing even under the protection of that mighty swordsman;
+ Mucio, careering, truncheon in hand, in full panoply, upon his war-horse,
+ waving forward a mingled mass of German lanzknechts, Swiss musketeers, and
+ Lorraine pikemen; the redoubtable Don Bernardino de Mendoza, in front,
+ frowning and ferocious, with his drawn sword in his hand; Elizabeth of
+ England, in the back ground, with the white-bearded Burghley and the
+ monastic Walsingham, all surveying the scene with eyes of deepest meaning;
+ and, somewhat aside, but in full view, silent, calm, and imperturbably
+ good-humoured, the bold Bearnese, standing with a mischievous but
+ prophetic smile glittering through his blue eyes and curly beard&mdash;thus
+ grouped were the personages of the drama in the introductory scenes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The course of public events which succeeded the departure of the
+ Netherland deputies is sufficiently well known. The secret negotiations
+ and intrigues, however, by which those external facts were preceded or
+ accompanied rest mainly in dusty archives, and it was therefore necessary
+ to dwell somewhat at length upon them in the preceding pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The treaty of Joinville was signed on the last day of the year 1584.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have seen the real nature of the interview of Ambassador Mendoza with
+ Henry III. and his mother, which took place early in January, 1585.
+ Immediately after that conference, Don Bernardino betook himself to the
+ Duke of Guise, and lost no time in stimulating his confederate to prompt
+ but secret action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Netherland envoys had their last audience on the 18th March, and their
+ departure and disappointment was the signal for the general exhibition and
+ explosion. The great civil war began, and the man who refused to annex the
+ Netherlands to the French kingdom soon ceased to be regarded as a king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 31st March, the heir presumptive, just manufactured by the Guises,
+ sent forth his manifesto. Cardinal Bourbon, by this document, declared
+ that for twenty-four years past no proper measures had been taken to
+ extirpate the heresy by which France was infested. There was no natural
+ heir to the King. Those who claimed to succeed at his death had deprived
+ themselves, by heresy, of their rights. Should they gain their ends, the
+ ancient religion would be abolished throughout the kingdom, as it had been
+ in England, and Catholics be subjected to the same frightful tortures
+ which they were experiencing there. New men, admitted to the confidence of
+ the crown, clothed with the highest honours, and laden with enormous
+ emoluments, had excluded the ancient and honoured functionaries of the
+ state, who had been obliged to sell out their offices to these upstart
+ successors. These new favourites had seized the finances of the kingdom,
+ all of which were now collected into the private coffers of the King, and
+ shared by him with his courtiers. The people were groaning under new taxes
+ invented every day, yet they knew nothing of the distribution of the
+ public treasure, while the King himself was so impoverished as to be
+ unable to discharge his daily debts. Meantime these new advisers of the
+ crown had renewed to the Protestants of the kingdom the religious
+ privileges of which they had so justly been deprived, yet the religious
+ peace which had followed had not brought with it the promised diminution
+ of the popular burthens. Never had the nation been so heavily taxed or
+ reduced to such profound misery. For these reasons, he, Cardinal Bourbon,
+ with other princes of the blood, peers, gentlemen, cities, and
+ universities, had solemnly bound themselves by oath to extirpate heresy
+ down to the last root, and to save the people from the dreadful load under
+ which they were languishing. It was for this that they had taken up arms,
+ and till that purpose was accomplished they would never lay them down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The paper concluded with the hope that his Majesty would not take these
+ warlike demonstrations amiss; and a copy of the document was placed in the
+ royal hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was very obvious to the most superficial observer, that the manifesto
+ was directed almost as much against the reigning sovereign as against
+ Henry of Navarre. The adherents of the Guise faction, and especially
+ certain theologians in their employ, had taken very bold grounds upon the
+ relations between king and subjects, and had made the public very familiar
+ with their doctrines. It was a duty, they said, "to depose a prince who
+ did not discharge his duty. Authority ill regulated was robbery, and it
+ was as absurd to call him a king who knew not how to govern, as it was to
+ take a blind man for a guide, or to believe that a statue could influence
+ the movements of living men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet to the faction, inspired by such rebellious sentiments, and which was
+ thundering in his face such tremendous denunciations, the unhappy Henry
+ could not find a single royal or manly word of reply. He threw himself on
+ his knees, when, if ever, he should have assumed an attitude of command.
+ He answered the insolence of the men, who were parading their contempt for
+ his authority, by humble excuses, and supplications for pardon. He threw
+ his crown in the dust before their feet, as if such humility would induce
+ them to place it again upon his head. He abandoned the minions who had
+ been his pride, his joy, and his defence, and deprecated, with an abject
+ whimper, all responsibility for the unmeasured ambition and the insatiable
+ rapacity of a few private individuals. He conjured the party-leaders, who
+ had hurled defiance in his face, to lay down their arms, and promised that
+ they should find in his wisdom and bounty more than all the advantages
+ which they were seeking to obtain by war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry of Navarre answered in a different strain. The gauntlet had at last
+ been thrown down to him, and he came forward to take it up; not insolently
+ nor carelessly, but with the cold courtesy of a Christian knight and
+ valiant gentleman. He denied the charge of heresy. He avowed detestation
+ of all doctrines contrary to the Word of God, to the decrees of the
+ Fathers of the Church, or condemned by the Councils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The errors and abuses which had from time to time crept into the church,
+ had long demanded, in the opinion of all pious persons, some measures of
+ reform. After many bloody wars, no better remedy had been discovered to
+ arrest the cause of these dire religious troubles, whether in France or
+ Germany, than to permit all men to obey the dictates of their own
+ conscience. The Protestants had thus obtained in France many edicts by
+ which the peace of the kingdom had been secured. He could not himself be
+ denounced as a heretic, for he had always held himself ready to receive
+ instruction, and to be set right where he had erred. To call him
+ "relapsed" was an outrage. Were it true, he were indeed unworthy of the
+ crown, but the world knew that his change at the Massacre of St.
+ Bartholomew had been made under duresse, and that he had returned to the
+ reformed faith when he had recovered his liberty. Religious toleration had
+ been the object of his life. In what the tyranny of the popes and the
+ violence of the Spaniards had left him of his kingdom of Navarre,
+ Catholics and Protestants enjoyed a perfect religious liberty. No man had
+ the right, therefore, to denounce him as an enemy of the church, or a
+ disturber of the public repose, for he had ever been willing to accept all
+ propositions of peace which left the rights of conscience protected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a Frenchman, a prince of France, a living member of the kingdom;
+ feeling with its pains, and bleeding with its wounds. They who denounced
+ him were alien to France, factitious portions of her body, feeling no
+ suffering, even should she be consuming with living fire. The Leaguers
+ were the friends and the servants of the Spaniards, while he had been born
+ the enemy, and with too good reason, of the whole Spanish race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let the name of Papist and of Huguenot," he said, "be heard no more among
+ us. Those terms were buried in the edict of peace. Let us speak only of
+ Frenchmen and of Spaniards. It is the counter-league which we must all
+ unite to form, the natural union of the head with all its members."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, to save the shedding of so much innocent blood, to spare all the
+ countless miseries of civil war, he implored the royal permission to
+ terminate this quarrel in person, by single combat with the Duke of Guise,
+ one to one, two to two, or in as large a number as might be desired, and
+ upon any spot within or without the kingdom that should be assigned. "The
+ Duke of Guise," said Henry of Navarre, "cannot but accept my challenge as
+ an honour, coming as it does from a prince infinitely his superior in
+ rank; and thus, may God defend the right."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This paper, drawn up by the illustrious Duplessis-Mornay, who was to have
+ been the second of the King of Navarre in the proposed duel, was signed 10
+ June 1585.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unfortunate Henry III., not so dull as to doubt that the true object
+ of the Guise party was to reduce him to insignificance, and to open their
+ own way to the throne, was too impotent of purpose to follow the dictates
+ which his wisest counsellors urged and his own reason approved. His choice
+ had lain between open hostility with his Spanish enemy and a more terrible
+ combat with that implacable foe wearing the mask of friendship. He had
+ refused to annex to his crown the rich and powerful Netherlands, from
+ dread of a foreign war; and he was now about to accept for himself and
+ kingdom all the horrors of a civil contest, in which his avowed antagonist
+ was the first captain of the age, and his nominal allies the stipendiaries
+ of Philip II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Villeroy, his prime minister, and Catharine de' Medici, his mother, had
+ both devoted him to disgrace and ruin. The deputies from the Netherlands
+ had been dismissed, and now, notwithstanding the festivities and exuberant
+ demonstrations of friendship with which the Earl of Derby's splendid
+ embassy had been greeted, it became necessary to bind Henry hand and foot
+ to the conspirators, who had sworn the destruction of that Queen, as well
+ as his own, and the extirpation of heresy and heretics in every realm of
+ Christendom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 9th June the league demanded a royal decree, forbidding the
+ practice of all religion but the Roman Catholic, on pain of death. In vain
+ had the clear-sighted Bishop of Acqs uttered his eloquent warnings.
+ Despite such timely counsels, which he was capable at once of appreciating
+ and of neglecting, Henry followed slavishly the advice of those whom he
+ knew in his heart to be his foes, and authorised the great conspiracy
+ against Elizabeth, against Protestantism, and against himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 5th June Villeroy had expressed a wish for a very secret interview
+ with Mendoza, on the subject of the invasion of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It needed not this overture," said that magniloquent Spaniard, "to
+ engender in a person of my talents, and with the heart of a Mendoza, venom
+ enough for vengeance. I could not more desire than I did already to assist
+ in so holy a work; nor could I aspire to greater honour than would be
+ gained in uniting those crowns (of France and Spain) in strict friendship,
+ for the purpose of extirpating heresy throughout Europe, and of chastising
+ the Queen of England&mdash;whose abominations I am never likely to forget,
+ having had them so long before my eyes&mdash;and of satisfying my just
+ resentment for the injuries she has inflicted on myself. It was on this
+ subject," continued the ambassador, "that Monsieur de Villeroy wished a
+ secret interview with me, pledging himself&mdash;if your Majesty would
+ deign to unite yourself with this King, and to aid him with your forces&mdash;to
+ a successful result."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mendoza accordingly expressed a willingness to meet the ingenuous
+ Secretary of State&mdash;who had so recently been assisting at the
+ banquets and rejoicings with Lord Derby and his companions, which had so
+ much enlivened the French capital&mdash;and assured him that his most
+ Catholic Majesty would be only too glad to draw closer the bonds of
+ friendship with the most Christian King, for the service of God and the
+ glory of his Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day the envoy and the Secretary of State met, very secretly, in
+ the house of the Signor Gondi. Villeroy commenced his harangue by an
+ allusion to the current opinion, that Mendoza had arrived in France with a
+ torch in his hand, to light the fires of civil war in that kingdom, as he
+ had recently done in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not believe," replied Mendoza, "that discreet and prudent persons in
+ France attribute my actions to any such motives. As for the ignorant
+ people of the kingdom, they do not appal me, although they evidently
+ imagine that I have imbibed, during my residence in England, something of
+ the spirit of the enchanter Merlin, that, by signs and cabalistic words
+ alone, I am thought capable of producing such commotions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this preliminary flourish the envoy proceeded to complain bitterly
+ of the most Christian King and his mother, who, after the propositions
+ which they had made him, when on his way to Spain, had, since his return,
+ become so very cold and dry towards him. And on this theme he enlarged for
+ some time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Villeroy replied, by complaining, in his turn, about the dealings of the
+ most Catholic King, with the leaguers and the rebels of France; and
+ Mendoza rejoined by an intimation that harping upon past grievances and
+ suspicions was hardly the way to bring about harmony in present matters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Struck with the justice of this remark, the French Secretary of State
+ entered at once upon business. He made a very long speech upon the tyranny
+ which "that Englishwoman" was anew inflicting upon the Catholics in her
+ kingdom, upon the offences which she had committed against the King of
+ Spain, and against the King of France and his brothers, and upon the
+ aliment which she had been yielding to the civil war in the Netherlands
+ and in France for so many years. He then said that if Mendoza would
+ declare with sincerity, and "without any of the duplicity of a minister"&mdash;that
+ Philip would league himself with Henry for the purpose of invading
+ England, in order to reduce the three kingdoms to the Catholic faith, and
+ to place their crowns on the head of the Queen of Scotland, to whom they
+ of right belonged; then that the King, his master, was most ready to join
+ in so holy an enterprise. He begged Mendoza to say with what number of
+ troops the invasion could be made; whether Philip could send any from
+ Flanders or from Spain; how many it would be well to send from France, and
+ under what chieftain; in what manner it would be best to communicate with
+ his most Catholic Majesty; whether it were desirable to despatch a secret
+ envoy to him, and of what quality such agent ought to be. He also observed
+ that the most Christian King could not himself speak to Mendoza on the
+ subject before having communicated the matter to the Queen-Mother, but
+ expressed a wish that a special carrier might be forthwith despatched to
+ Spain; for he might be sure that, on an affair of such weight, he would
+ not have permitted himself to reveal the secret wishes of his master,
+ except by his commands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mendoza replied, by enlarging with much enthusiasm on the facility with
+ which England could be conquered by the combined power of France and
+ Spain. If it were not a very difficult matter before&mdash;even with the
+ jealousy between the two crowns&mdash;how much less so, now that they
+ could join their fleets and armies; now that the arming by the one prince
+ would not inspire the other with suspicion; now that they would be certain
+ of finding safe harbour in each other's kingdoms, in case of unfavourable
+ weather and head-winds, and that they could arrange from what ports to
+ sail, in what direction, and under what commanders. He disapproved,
+ however, of sending a special messenger to Spain, on the ground of wishing
+ to keep the matter entirely secret, but in reality&mdash;as he informed
+ Philip&mdash;because he chose to keep the management in his own hands;
+ because he could always let slip Mucio upon them, in case they should play
+ him false; because he feared that the leaking out of the secret might
+ discourage the Leaguers, and because he felt that the bolder and more
+ lively were the Cardinal of Bourbon and his confederates, the stronger was
+ the party of the King, his master, and the more intimidated and dispirited
+ would be the mind and the forces of the most Christian King. "And this is
+ precisely the point," said the diplomatist, "at which a minister of your
+ Majesty should aim at this season."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the civil war in France&mdash;an indispensable part of Philip's
+ policy&mdash;was to be maintained at all hazards; and although the
+ ambassador was of opinion that the most Christian King was sincere in his
+ proposition to invade England, it would never do to allow any interval of
+ tranquillity to the wretched subjects of that Christian King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot doubt," said Mendoza, "that the making of this proposal to me
+ with so much warmth was the especial persuasion of God, who, hearing the
+ groans of the Catholics of England, so cruelly afflicted, wished to force
+ the French King and his minister to feel, in the necessity which surrounds
+ them, that the offending Him, by impeding the grandeur of your Majesty,
+ would be their total ruin, and that their only salvation is to unite in
+ sincerity and truth with your Majesty for the destruction of the
+ heretics."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore, although judging from the nature of the French&mdash;he might
+ imagine that they were attempting to put him to sleep, Mendoza, on the
+ whole, expressed a conviction that the King was in earnest, having arrived
+ at the conclusion that he could only get rid of the Guise faction by
+ sending them over to England. "Seeing that he cannot possibly eradicate
+ the war from his kingdom," said the envoy, "because of the boldness with
+ which the Leaguers maintain it, with the strong assistance of your
+ Majesty, he has determined to embrace with much fervour, and without any
+ deception at all, the enterprise against England, as the only remedy to
+ quiet his own dominions. The subjugation of those three kingdoms, in order
+ to restore them to their rightful owner, is a purpose so holy, just, and
+ worthy of your Majesty, and one which you have had so constantly in view,
+ that it is superfluous for me to enlarge upon the subject. Your Majesty
+ knows that its effects will be the tranquillity and preservation of all
+ your realms. The reasons for making the attempt, even without the aid of
+ France, become demonstrations now that she is unanimously in favour of the
+ scheme. The most Christian King is resolutely bent&mdash;so far as I can
+ comprehend the intrigues of Villeroy&mdash;to carry out this project on
+ the foundation of a treaty with the Guise party. It will not take much
+ time, therefore, to put down the heretics here; nor will it consume much
+ more to conquer England with the armies of two such powerful Princes. The
+ power of that island is of little moment, there being no disciplined
+ forces to oppose us, even if they were all unanimous in its defence; how
+ much less then, with so many Catholics to assist the invaders, seeing them
+ so powerful. If your Majesty, on account of your Netherlands, is not
+ afraid of putting arms into the hands of the Guise family in France, there
+ need be less objection to sending one of that house into England,
+ particularly as you will send forces of your own into that kingdom, by the
+ reduction of which the affairs of Flanders will be secured. To effect the
+ pacification of the Netherlands the sooner, it would be desirable to
+ conquer England as early as October."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having thus sufficiently enlarged upon the sincerity of the French King
+ and his prime minister, in their dark projects against a friendly power,
+ and upon the ease with which that friendly power could be subjected, the
+ ambassador begged for a reply from his royal master without delay. He
+ would be careful, meantime, to keep the civil war alive in France&mdash;thus
+ verifying the poetical portrait of himself, the truth of which he had just
+ been so indignantly and rhetorically denying&mdash;but it was desirable
+ that the French should believe that this civil war was not Philip's sole
+ object. He concluded by drawing his master's attention to the sufferings
+ of the English Catholics. "I cannot refrain," he said, "from placing
+ before your eyes the terrible persecutions which the Catholics are
+ suffering in England; the blood of the martyrs flowing in so many kinds of
+ torments; the groans of the prisoners, of the widows and orphans; the
+ general oppression and servitude, which is the greatest ever endured by a
+ people of God, under any tyrant whatever. Your Majesty, into whose hands
+ God is now pleased to place the means, so long desired, of extirpating and
+ totally destroying the heresies of our time, can alone liberate them from
+ their bondage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The picture of these kings, prime ministers, and ambassadors, thus
+ plotting treason, stratagem, and massacre, is a dark and dreary one. The
+ description of English sufferings for conscience' sake, under the
+ Protestant Elizabeth, is even more painful; for it had unfortunately too
+ much, of truth, although as wilfully darkened and exaggerated as could be
+ done by religious hatred and Spanish bombast. The Queen was surrounded by
+ legions of deadly enemies. Spain, the Pope, the League, were united in one
+ perpetual conspiracy against her; and they relied on the cooperation of
+ those subjects of hers whom her own cruelty was converting into traitors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We read with a shudder these gloomy secrets of conspiracy and wholesale
+ murder, which make up the diplomatic history of the sixteenth century, and
+ we cease to wonder that a woman, feeling herself so continually the mark
+ at which all the tyrants and assassins of Europe were aiming&mdash;although
+ not possessing perhaps the evidences of her peril so completely as they
+ have been revealed to us&mdash;should come to consider every English
+ Papist as a traitor and an assassin. It was unfortunate that she was not
+ able to rise beyond the vile instincts of the age, and by a magnanimous
+ and sublime toleration, to convert her secret enemies into loyal subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now Henry of Valois was to choose between league and counter-league,
+ between Henry of Guise and Henry of Navarre, between France and Spain. The
+ whole chivalry of Gascony and Guienne, the vast swarm of industrious and
+ hardy Huguenot artisans, the Netherland rebels, the great English Queen,
+ stood ready to support the cause of French nationality, and of all
+ nationalities, against a threatening world-empire, of religious liberty
+ against sacerdotal absolutism, and the crown of a King, whose only merit
+ had hitherto been to acquiesce in a religious toleration dictated to him
+ by others, against those who derided his authority and insulted his
+ person. The bold knight-errant of Christendom, the champion to the
+ utterance against Spain, stood there with lance in rest, and the King
+ scarcely hesitated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The League, gliding so long unheeded, now reared its crest in the very
+ palace of France, and full in the monarch's face. With a single shudder
+ the victim fell into its coils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The choice was made. On the 18th of July (1585) the edict of Nemours was
+ published, revoking all previous edicts by which religious peace had been
+ secured. Death and confiscation of property were now proclaimed as the
+ penalty of practising any religious rites save those of the Roman Catholic
+ Church. Six months were allowed to the Nonconformists to put their affairs
+ in order, after which they were to make public profession of the Catholic
+ religion, with regular attendance upon its ceremonies, or else go into
+ perpetual exile. To remain in France without abjuring heresy was
+ thenceforth a mortal crime, to be expiated upon the gallows. As a matter
+ of course, all Huguenots were instantaneously incapacitated from public
+ office, the mixed chambers of justice were abolished, and the cautionary
+ towns were to be restored. On the other hand, the Guise faction were to
+ receive certain cities into their possession, as pledges that this
+ sanguinary edict should be fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus did Henry III. abjectly kiss the hand which smote him. His mother,
+ having since the death of Anjou no further interest in affecting to favour
+ the Huguenots, had arranged the basis of this treaty with the Spanish
+ party. And now the unfortunate King had gone solemnly down to the
+ Parliament of Paris, to be present at the registration of the edict. The
+ counsellors and presidents were all assembled, and as they sat there in
+ their crimson robes, they seemed, to the excited imagination of those who
+ loved their country, like embodiments of the impending and most sanguinary
+ tragedy. As the monarch left the parliament-house a faint cry of 'God save
+ the King' was heard in the street. Henry hung his head, for it was long
+ since that cry had met his ears, and he knew that it was a false and
+ languid demonstration which had been paid for by the Leaguers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus was the compact signed&mdash;an unequal compact. Madam League was
+ on horseback, armed in proof, said a contemporary; the King was on foot,
+ and dressed in a shirt of penitence. The alliance was not an auspicious
+ one. Not peace, but a firebrand&mdash;'facem, non pacem'&mdash;had the
+ King held forth to his subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the news came to Henry of Navarre that the King had really
+ promulgated this fatal edict, he remained for a time, with amazement and
+ sorrow, leaning heavily upon a table, with his face in his right hand.
+ When he raised his head again&mdash;so he afterwards asserted&mdash;one
+ side of his moustachio had turned white.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Gregory XIII., who had always refused to sanction the League, was
+ dead, and Cardinal Peretti, under the name of Sixtus V., now reigned in
+ his place. Born of an illustrious house, as he said&mdash;for it was a
+ house without a roof&mdash;this monk of humble origin was of inordinate
+ ambition. Feigning a humility which was but the cloak to his pride, he was
+ in reality as grasping, self-seeking, and revengeful, as he seemed gentle
+ and devout. It was inevitable that a pontiff of this character should
+ seize the opportunity offered him to mimic Hildebrand, and to brandish on
+ high the thunderbolts of the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a flaming prelude concerning the omnipotence delegated by Almighty
+ God to St. Peter and his successors&mdash;an authority infinitely superior
+ to all earthly powers&mdash;the decrees of which were irresistible alike
+ by the highest and the meanest, and which hurled misguided princes from
+ their thrones into the abyss, like children of Beelzebub, the Pope
+ proceeded to fulminate his sentence of excommunication against those
+ children of wrath, Henry of Navarre and Henry of Conde. They were
+ denounced as heretics, relapsed, and enemies of God (28th Aug.1585). The
+ King was declared dispossessed of his principality of Bearne, and of what
+ remained to him of Navarre. He was stripped of all dignities, privileges,
+ and property, and especially proclaimed incapable of ever ascending the
+ throne of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bearnese replied by a clever political squib. A terse and spirited
+ paper found its way to Rome, and was soon affixed, to the statutes of
+ Pasquin and Marforio, and in other public places of that city, and even to
+ the gates of the papal palace. Without going beyond his own doors, his
+ Holiness had the opportunity of reading, to his profound amazement, that
+ Mr. Sixtus, calling himself Pope, had foully and maliciously lied in
+ calling the King of Navarre a heretic. This Henry offered to prove before
+ any free council legitimately chosen. If the Pope refused to submit to
+ such decision, he was himself no better than excommunicate and Antichrist,
+ and the King of Navarre thereby declared mortal and perpetual war upon
+ him. The ancient kings of France had known how to chastise the insolence
+ of former popes, and he hoped, when he ascended the throne, to take
+ vengeance on Mr. Sixtus for the insult thus offered to all the kings of
+ Christendom&mdash;and so on, in a vein which showed the Bearnese to be a
+ man rather amused than blasted by these papal fireworks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sixtus V., though imperious, was far from being dull. He knew how to
+ appreciate a man when he found one, and he rather admired the cheerful
+ attitude maintained by Navarre, as he tossed back the thunderbolts. He
+ often spoke afterwards of Henry with genuine admiration, and declared that
+ in all the world he knew but two persons fit to wear a crown&mdash;Henry
+ of Navarre and Elizabeth of England. "'Twas pity," he said, "that both
+ should be heretics."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus the fires of civil war had been lighted throughout Christendom,
+ and the monarch of France had thrown himself head foremost into the
+ flames.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Hibernian mode of expressing himself
+ His inordinate arrogance
+ His insolence intolerable
+ Humility which was but the cloak to his pride
+ Longer they delay it, the less easy will they find it
+ Oration, fertile in rhetoric and barren in facts
+ Round game of deception, in which nobody was deceived
+ Wasting time fruitlessly is sharpening the knife for himself
+ With something of feline and feminine duplicity
+ 'Twas pity, he said, that both should be heretics
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. 1585, Part 1, Alexander Farnese, The Duke Of Parma
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Position and Character of Farnese&mdash;Preparations for Antwerp Siege&mdash;
+ Its Characteristics&mdash;Foresight of William the Silent&mdash;Sainte
+ Aldegonde, the Burgomaster&mdash;Anarchy in Antwerp&mdash;Character of Sainte
+ Aldegonde&mdash;Admiral Treslong&mdash;Justinus de Nassau&mdash;Hohenlo&mdash;Opposition
+ to the Plan of Orange&mdash;Liefkenshoek&mdash;Head&mdash;Quarters of Parma at
+ Kalloo&mdash;Difficulty of supplying the City&mdash;Results of not piercing
+ the Dykes&mdash;Preliminaries of the Siege&mdash;Successes of the Spaniards&mdash;
+ Energy of Farnese with Sword and Pen&mdash;His Correspondence with the
+ Antwerpers&mdash;Progress of the Bridge&mdash;Impoverished Condition of Parma
+ &mdash;Patriots attempt Bois-le-Duc&mdash;Their Misconduct&mdash;Failure of the
+ Enterprise&mdash;The Scheldt Bridge completed&mdash;Description of the
+ Structure
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The negotiations between France and the Netherlands have been massed, in
+ order to present a connected and distinct view of the relative attitude of
+ the different countries of Europe. The conferences and diplomatic
+ protocolling had resulted in nothing positive; but it is very necessary
+ for the reader to understand the negative effects of all this
+ dissimulation and palace-politics upon the destiny of the new
+ commonwealth, and upon Christendom at large. The League had now achieved a
+ great triumph; the King of France had virtually abdicated, and it was now
+ requisite for the King of Navarre, the Netherlands, and Queen Elizabeth,
+ to draw more closely together than before, if the last hope of forming a
+ counter-league were not to be abandoned. The next step in political
+ combination was therefore a solemn embassy of the States-General to
+ England. Before detailing those negotiations, however, it is proper to
+ direct attention to the external public events which had been unrolling
+ themselves in the Provinces, contemporaneously with the secret history
+ which has been detailed in the preceding chapters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By presenting in their natural groupings various distinct occurrences,
+ rather than by detailing them in strict chronological order, a clearer
+ view of the whole picture will be furnished than could be done by
+ intermingling personages, transactions, and scenery, according to the
+ arbitrary command of Time alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Netherlands, by the death of Orange, had been left without a head. On
+ the other hand, the Spanish party had never been so fortunate in their
+ chief at any period since the destiny of the two nations had been blended
+ with each other. Alexander Farnese, Prince of Parma, was a general and a
+ politician, whose character had been steadily ripening since he came into
+ the command of the country. He was now thirty-seven years of age&mdash;with
+ the experience of a sexagenarian. No longer the impetuous, arbitrary,
+ hot-headed youth, whose intelligence and courage hardly atoned for his
+ insolent manner and stormy career, he had become pensive, modest, almost
+ gentle. His genius was rapid in conception, patient in combination,
+ fertile in expedients, adamantine in the endurance or suffering; for never
+ did a heroic general and a noble army of veterans manifest more military
+ virtue in the support of an infamous cause than did Parma and his handful
+ of Italians and Spaniards. That which they considered to be their duty
+ they performed. The work before them they did with all their might.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander had vanquished the rebellion in the Celtic provinces, by the
+ masterly diplomacy and liberal bribery which have been related in a former
+ work. Artois, Hainault, Douay, Orchies, with the rich cities of Lille,
+ Tournay, Valenciennes, Arras, and other important places, were now the
+ property of Philip. These unhappy and misguided lands, however, were
+ already reaping the reward of their treason. Beggared, trampled upon,
+ plundered, despised, they were at once the prey of the Spaniards, and the
+ cause that their sister-states, which still held out, were placed in more
+ desperate condition than ever. They were also, even in their abject
+ plight, made still more forlorn by the forays of Balagny, who continued in
+ command of Cambray. Catharine de' Medici claimed that city as her
+ property, by will of the Duke of Anjou. A strange title&mdash;founded upon
+ the treason and cowardice of her favourite son&mdash;but one which, for a
+ time, was made good by the possession maintained by Balagny. That usurper
+ meantime, with a shrewd eye to his own interests, pronounced the truce of
+ Cambray, which was soon afterwards arranged, from year to year, by
+ permission of Philip, as a "most excellent milch-cow;" and he continued to
+ fill his pails at the expense of the "reconciled" provinces, till they
+ were thoroughly exhausted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This large south-western section of the Netherlands being thus permanently
+ re-annexed to the Spanish crown, while Holland, Zeeland, and the other
+ provinces, already constituting the new Dutch republic, were more
+ obstinate in their hatred of Philip than ever, there remained the rich and
+ fertile territory of Flanders and Brabant as the great debateable land.
+ Here were the royal and political capital, Brussels, the commercial
+ capital, Antwerp, with Mechlin, Dendermonde, Vilvoorde, and other places
+ of inferior importance, all to be struggled for to the death. With the
+ subjection of this district the last bulwark between the new commonwealth
+ and the old empire would be overthrown, and Spain and Holland would then
+ meet face to face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there had ever been a time when every nerve in Protestant Christendom
+ should be strained to weld all those provinces together into one great
+ commonwealth, as a bulwark for European liberty, rather than to allow them
+ to be broken into stepping-stones, over which absolutism could stride
+ across France and Holland into England, that moment had arrived. Every
+ sacrifice should have been cheerfully made by all Netherlanders, the
+ uttermost possible subsidies and auxiliaries should have been furnished by
+ all the friends of civil and religious liberty in every land to save
+ Flanders and Brabant from their impending fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No man felt more keenly the importance of the business in which he was
+ engaged than Parma. He knew his work exactly, and he meant to execute it
+ thoroughly. Antwerp was the hinge on which the fate of the whole country,
+ perhaps of all Christendom, was to turn. "If we get Antwerp," said the
+ Spanish soldiers&mdash;so frequently that the expression passed into a
+ proverb&mdash;"you shall all go to mass with us; if you save Antwerp, we
+ will all go to conventicle with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander rose with the difficulty and responsibility of his situation.
+ His vivid, almost poetic intellect formed its schemes with perfect
+ distinctness. Every episode in his great and, as he himself termed it, his
+ "heroic enterprise," was traced out beforehand with the tranquil vision of
+ creative genius; and he was prepared to convert his conceptions into
+ reality, with the aid of an iron nature that never knew fatigue or fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the obstacles were many. Alexander's master sat in his cabinet with
+ his head full of Mucio, Don Antonio, and Queen Elizabeth; while Alexander
+ himself was left neglected, almost forgotten. His army was shrinking to a
+ nullity. The demands upon him were enormous, his finances delusive, almost
+ exhausted. To drain an ocean dry he had nothing but a sieve. What was his
+ position? He could bring into the field perhaps eight or ten thousand men
+ over and above the necessary garrisons. He had before him Brussels,
+ Antwerp, Mechlin, Ghent, Dendermonde, and other powerful places, which he
+ was to subjugate. Here was a problem not easy of solution. Given an army
+ of eight thousand, more or less, to reduce therewith in the least possible
+ time, half-a-dozen cities; each containing fifteen or twenty thousand men
+ able to bear arms. To besiege these places in form was obviously a mere
+ chimera. Assault, battery, and surprises&mdash;these were all out of the
+ question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet Alexander was never more truly heroic than in this position of vast
+ entanglement. Untiring, uncomplaining, thoughtful of others, prodigal of
+ himself, generous, modest, brave; with so much intellect and so much
+ devotion to what he considered his duty, he deserved to be a patriot and a
+ champion of the right, rather than an instrument of despotism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus he paused for a moment&mdash;with much work already accomplished,
+ but his hardest life-task before him; still in the noon of manhood, a fine
+ martial figure, standing, spear in hand, full in the sunlight, though all
+ the scene around him was wrapped in gloom&mdash;a noble, commanding shape,
+ entitled to the admiration which the energetic display of great powers,
+ however unscrupulous, must always command. A dark, meridional physiognomy,
+ a quick; alert, imposing head; jet black, close-clipped hair; a bold
+ eagle's face, with full, bright, restless eye; a man rarely reposing,
+ always ready, never alarmed; living in the saddle, with harness on his
+ back&mdash;such was the Prince of Parma; matured and mellowed, but still
+ unharmed by time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cities of Flanders and Brabant he determined to reduce by gaining
+ command of the Scheldt. The five principal ones Ghent, Dendermonde,
+ Mechlin, Brussels Antwerp, lie narrow circle, at distances from each other
+ varying from five miles to thirty, and are all strung together by the
+ great Netherland river or its tributaries. His plan was immensely
+ furthered by the success of Balthasar Gerard, an ally whom Alexander had
+ despised and distrusted, even while he employed him. The assassination of
+ Orange was better to Parma than forty thousand men. A crowd of allies
+ instantly started up for him, in the shape of treason, faintheartedness,
+ envy, jealousy, insubordination, within the walls of every beleaguered
+ city. Alexander knew well how to deal with those auxiliaries. Letters,
+ artfully concocted, full of conciliation and of promise, were circulated
+ in every council-room, in almost every house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The surrender of Ghent&mdash;brought about by the governor's eloquence,
+ aided by the golden arguments which he knew so well how to advance&mdash;had
+ by the middle of September (19th Sept. 1584), put him in possession of
+ West Flanders, with the important exception of the coast. Dendermonde
+ capitulated at a still earlier day; while the fall of Brussels, which held
+ out till many persons had been starved to death, was deferred till the
+ 10th March of the following year, and that of Mechlin till midsummer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The details of the military or political operations, by which the
+ reduction of most of these places were effected, possess but little
+ interest. The siege of Antwerp, however, was one of the most striking
+ events of the age; and although the change in military tactics and the
+ progress of science may have rendered this leaguer of less technical
+ importance than it possessed in the sixteenth century, yet the
+ illustration that it affords of the splendid abilities of Parma, of the
+ most cultivated mode of warfare in use at that period, and of the internal
+ politics by which the country was then regulated, make it necessary to
+ dwell upon the details of an episode which must ever possess enduring
+ interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is agreeable to reflect, too, that the fame of the general is not
+ polluted with the wholesale butchery, which has stained the reputation of
+ other Spanish commanders so indelibly. There was no killing for the mere
+ love of slaughter. With but few exceptions, there was no murder in cold
+ blood; and the many lives that were laid down upon those watery dykes were
+ sacrificed at least in bold, open combat; in a contest, the ruling spirits
+ of which were patriotism, or at least honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is instructive, too, to observe the diligence and accuracy with which
+ the best lights of the age were brought to bear upon the great problem
+ which Parma had undertaken to solve. All the science then at command was
+ applied both by the Prince and by his burgher antagonists to the
+ advancement of their ends. Hydrostatics, hydraulics, engineering,
+ navigation, gunnery, pyrotechnics, mining, geometry, were summoned as
+ broadly, vigorously, and intelligently to the destruction or preservation
+ of a trembling city, as they have ever been, in more commercial days, to
+ advance a financial or manufacturing purpose. Land converted into water,
+ and water into land, castles built upon the breast of rapid streams,
+ rivers turned from their beds and taught new courses; the distant ocean
+ driven across ancient bulwarks, mines dug below the sea, and canals made
+ to percolate obscene morasses&mdash;which the red hand of war, by the very
+ act, converted into blooming gardens&mdash;a mighty stream bridged and
+ mastered in the very teeth of winter, floating ice-bergs, ocean-tides, and
+ an alert and desperate foe, ever ready with fleets and armies and
+ batteries&mdash;such were the materials of which the great spectacle was
+ composed; a spectacle which enchained the attention of Europe for seven
+ months, and on the result of which, it was thought, depended the fate of
+ all the Netherlands, and perhaps of all Christendom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Antwerp, then the commercial centre of the Netherlands and of Europe,
+ stands upon the Scheldt. The river, flowing straight, broad, and full
+ along the verge of the city, subtends the arc into which the place
+ arranges itself as it falls back from the shore. Two thousand ships of the
+ largest capacity then known might easily find room in its ample harbours.
+ The stream, nearly half a mile in width, and sixty feet in depth, with a
+ tidal rise and fall of eleven feet, moves, for a few miles, in a broad and
+ steady current between the provinces of Brabant and Flanders. Then,
+ dividing itself into many ample estuaries, and gathering up the level
+ isles of Zeeland into its bosom, it seems to sweep out with them into the
+ northern ocean. Here, at the junction of the river and the sea, lay the
+ perpetual hope of Antwerp, for in all these creeks and currents swarmed
+ the fleets of the Zeelanders, that hardy and amphibious race, with which
+ few soldiers or mariners could successfully contend, on land or water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even from the beginning of the year 1584 Parma had been from time to time
+ threatening Antwerp. The victim instinctively felt that its enemy was
+ poising and hovering over head, although he still delayed to strike. Early
+ in the summer Sainte Aldegonde, Recorder Martini, and other official
+ personages, were at Delft, upon the occasion of the christening ceremonies
+ of Frederic Henry, youngest child of Orange. The Prince, at that moment,
+ was aware of the plans of Parma, and held a long conversation with his
+ friends upon the measures which he desired to see immediately undertaken.
+ Unmindful of his usual hospitality, he insisted that these gentlemen
+ should immediately leave for Antwerp. Alexander Farnese, he assured them,
+ had taken the firm determination to possess himself of that place, without
+ further delay. He had privately signified his purpose of laying the axe at
+ once to the root of the tree, believing that with the fall of the
+ commercial capital the infant confederacy of the United States would fall
+ likewise. In order to accomplish this object, he would forthwith attempt
+ to make himself master of the banks of the Scheldt, and would even throw a
+ bridge across the stream, if his plans were not instantly circumvented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William of Orange then briefly indicated his plan; adding that he had no
+ fears for the result; and assuring his friends, who expressed much anxiety
+ on the subject, that if Parma really did attempt the siege of Antwerp it
+ should be his ruin. The plan was perfectly simple. The city stood upon a
+ river. It was practicable, although extremely hazardous, for the enemy to
+ bridge that river, and by so doing ultimately to reduce the place. But the
+ ocean could not be bridged; and it was quite possible to convert Antwerp,
+ for a season, into an ocean-port. Standing alone upon an island, with the
+ sea flowing around it, and with full and free marine communication with
+ Zeeland and Holland, it might safely bid defiance to the land-forces, even
+ of so great a commander as Parma. To the furtherance of this great measure
+ of defence, it was necessary to destroy certain bulwarks, the chief of
+ (10th June, 1584) which was called the Blaw-garen Dyke; and Sainte
+ Aldegonde was therefore requested to return to the city, in order to cause
+ this task to be executed without delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could be more judicious than this advice. The low lands along the
+ Scheldt were protected against marine encroachments, and the river itself
+ was confined to its bed, by a magnificent system of dykes, which extended
+ along its edge towards the ocean, in parallel lines. Other barriers of a
+ similar nature ran in oblique directions, through the wide open pasture
+ lands, which they maintained in green fertility, against the
+ ever-threatening sea. The Blaw-garen, to which the prince mainly alluded,
+ was connected with the great dyke upon the right bank of the Scheldt.
+ Between this and the city, another bulwark called the Kowenstyn Dyke,
+ crossed the country at right angles to the river, and joined the other two
+ at a point, not very far from Lillo, where the States had a strong
+ fortress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country in this neighbourhood was low, spongy, full of creeks, small
+ meres, and the old bed of the Scheldt. Orange, therefore, made it very
+ clear, that by piercing the great dyke just described, such a vast body of
+ water would be made to pour over the land as to submerge the Kowenstyn
+ also, the only other obstacle in the passage of fleets from Zeeland to
+ Antwerp. The city would then be connected with the sea and its islands, by
+ so vast an expanse of navigable water, that any attempt on Parma's part to
+ cut off supplies and succour would be hopeless. Antwerp would laugh the
+ idea of famine to scorn; and although this immunity would be purchased by
+ the sacrifice of a large amount of agricultural territory the price so
+ paid was but a slender one, when the existence of the capital, and with it
+ perhaps of the whole confederacy was at stake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde and Martini suggested, that, as there would be some
+ opposition to the measure proposed, it might be as well to make a similar
+ attempt on the Flemish side, in preference, by breaking through the dykes
+ in the neighbourhood of Saftingen. Orange replied, by demonstrating that
+ the land in the region which he had indicated was of a character to ensure
+ success, while in the other direction there were certain very unfavourable
+ circumstances which rendered the issue doubtful. The result was destined
+ to prove the sagacity of the Prince, for it will be shown in the sequel,
+ that the Saftingen plan, afterwards really carried out, was rather
+ advantageous than detrimental to the enemy's projects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde, accordingly, yielded to the arguments and entreaties of
+ his friend, and repaired without delay to Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The advice of William the Silent&mdash;as will soon be related&mdash;was
+ not acted upon; and, within a few weeks after it had been given, he was in
+ his grave. Nowhere was his loss more severely felt than in Antwerp. It
+ seemed, said a contemporary, that with his death had died all authority.
+ The Prince was the only head which the many-membered body of that very
+ democratic city ever spontaneously obeyed. Antwerp was a small republic&mdash;in
+ time of peace intelligently and successfully administered&mdash;which in
+ the season of a great foreign war, amid plagues, tumults, famine, and
+ internal rebellion, required the firm hand and the clear brain of a single
+ chief. That brain and hand had been possessed by Orange alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before his death he had desired that Sainte Aldegonde should accept the
+ office of burgomaster of the city. Nominally, the position was not so
+ elevated as were many of the posts which that distinguished patriot had
+ filled. In reality, it was as responsible and arduous a place as could be
+ offered to any man's acceptance throughout the country. Sainte Aldegonde
+ consented, not without some reluctance. He felt that there was odium to be
+ incurred; he knew that much would be expected of him, and that his means
+ would be limited. His powers would be liable to a constant and various
+ restraint. His measures were sure to be the subject of perpetual cavil. If
+ the city were besieged, there were nearly one hundred thousand mouths to
+ feed, and nearly one hundred thousand tongues to dispute about furnishing
+ the food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the government of Antwerp had been degenerating from a well-organised
+ municipal republicanism into anarchy. The clashing of the various bodies
+ exercising power had become incessant and intolerable. The burgomaster was
+ charged with the chief executive authority, both for peace and war.
+ Nevertheless he had but a single vote in the board of magistrates, where a
+ majority decided. Moreover, he could not always attend the sessions,
+ because he was also member of the council of Brabant. Important measures
+ might therefore be decided by the magistracy, not only against his
+ judgment, but without his knowledge. Then there was a variety of boards or
+ colleges, all arrogating concurrent&mdash;which in truth was
+ conflicting-authority. There was the board of militia-colonels, which
+ claimed great powers. Here, too, the burgomaster was nominally the chief,
+ but he might be voted down by a majority, and of course was often absent.
+ Then there were sixteen captains who came into the colonels' sessions
+ whenever they liked, and had their word to say upon all subjects broached.
+ If they were refused a hearing, they were backed by eighty other captains,
+ who were ready at any moment to carry every disputed point before the
+ "broadcouncil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were a college of ward-masters, a college of select men, a college
+ of deacons, a college of ammunition, of fortification, of ship-building,
+ all claiming equal authority, and all wrangling among themselves; and
+ there was a college of "peace-makers," who wrangled more than all the rest
+ together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once a week there was a session of the board or general council. Dire was
+ the hissing and confusion, as the hydra heads of the multitudinous
+ government were laid together. Heads of colleges, presidents of chambers,
+ militia-chieftains; magistrates, ward-masters, deans of fishmongers, of
+ tailors, gardeners, butchers, all met together pell-mell; and there was no
+ predominant authority. This was not a convenient working machinery for a
+ city threatened with a siege by the first captain of the age. Moreover
+ there was a deficiency of regular troops: The burgher-militia were well
+ trained and courageous, but not distinguished for their docility. There
+ was also a regiment of English under Colonel Morgan, a soldier of great
+ experience, and much respected; but, as Stephen Le Sieur said, "this
+ force, unless seconded with more, was but a breakfast for the enemy."
+ Unfortunately, too, the insubordination, which was so ripe in the city,
+ seemed to affect these auxiliaries. A mutiny broke out among the English
+ troops. Many deserted to Parma, some escaped to England, and it was not
+ until Morgan had beheaded Captain Lee and Captain Powell, that discipline
+ could be restored.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And into this scene of wild and deafening confusion came Philip de Marnix,
+ Lord of Sainte Aldegonde.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were few more brilliant characters than he in all Christendom. He
+ was a man, of a most rare and versatile genius. Educated in Geneva at the
+ very feet of Calvin, he had drunk, like mother's milk, the strong and
+ bitter waters of the stern reformer's, creed; but he had in after life
+ attempted, although hardly with success, to lift himself to the height of
+ a general religious toleration. He had also been trained in the severe and
+ thorough literary culture which characterised that rigid school. He was a
+ scholar, ripe and rare; no holiday trifler in the gardens of learning. He
+ spoke and wrote Latin like his native tongue. He could compose poignant
+ Greek epigrams. He was so familiar with Hebrew, that he had rendered the
+ Psalms of David out of the original into flowing Flemish verse, for the
+ use of the reformed churches. That he possessed the modern tongues of
+ civilized Europe, Spanish, Italian, French, and German, was a matter of
+ course. He was a profound jurisconsult, capable of holding debate against
+ all competitors upon any point of theory or practice of law, civil,
+ municipal, international. He was a learned theologian, and had often
+ proved himself a match for the doctors, bishops, or rabbin of Europe, in
+ highest argument of dogma, creed, or tradition. He was a practised
+ diplomatist, constantly employed in delicate and difficult negotiations by
+ William the Silent, who ever admired his genius, cherished his friendship,
+ and relied upon his character. He was an eloquent orator, whose memorable
+ harangue, beyond all his other efforts, at the diet of Worms, had made the
+ German princes hang their heads with shame, when, taking a broad and
+ philosophical view of the Netherland matter, he had shown that it was the
+ great question of Europe; that Nether Germany was all Germany; that
+ Protestantism could not be unravelled into shreds; that there was but one
+ cause in Christendom&mdash;that of absolutism against national liberty,
+ Papacy against the reform; and that the seventeen Provinces were to be
+ assisted in building themselves into an eternal barrier against Spain, or
+ that the "burning mark of shame would be branded upon the forehead of
+ Germany;" that the war, in short, was to be met by her on the threshold;
+ or else that it would come to seek her at home&mdash;a prophecy which the
+ horrible Thirty Years' War was in after time most signally to verify.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a poet of vigour and originality, for he had accomplished what has
+ been achieved by few; he had composed a national hymn, whose strophes, as
+ soon as heard, struck a chord in every Netherland heart, and for three
+ centuries long have rung like a clarion wherever the Netherland tongue is
+ spoken. "Wilhelmus van Nassouwe," regarded simply as a literary
+ composition, has many of the qualities which an ode demands; an electrical
+ touch upon the sentiments, a throb of patriotism, sympathetic tenderness,
+ a dash of indignation, with rhythmical harmony and graceful expression;
+ and thus it has rung from millions of lips, from generation to generation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a soldier, courageous, untiring, prompt in action, useful in
+ council, and had distinguished himself in many a hard-fought field. Taken
+ prisoner in the sanguinary skirmish at Maaslandssluys, he had been
+ confined a year, and, for more than three months, had never laid his head,
+ as he declared, upon the pillow without commending his soul as for the
+ last time to his Maker, expecting daily the order for his immediate
+ execution, and escaping his doom only because William the Silent
+ proclaimed that the proudest head among the Spanish prisoners should fall
+ to avenge his death; so that he was ultimately exchanged against the
+ veteran Mondragon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the incipient stages of the revolt he had been foremost among the
+ patriots. He was supposed to be the author of the famous "Compromise of
+ the Nobles," that earliest and most conspicuous of the state-papers of the
+ republic, and of many other important political documents; and he had
+ contributed to general literature many works of European celebrity, of
+ which the 'Roman Bee-Hive' was the most universally known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scholar, theologian, diplomatist, swordsman, orator, poet, pamphleteer, he
+ had genius for all things, and was eminent in all. He was even famous for
+ his dancing, and had composed an intelligent and philosophical treatise
+ upon the value of that amusement, as an agent of civilisation, and as a
+ counteractor of the grosser pleasures of the table to which Upper and
+ Nether Germans were too much addicted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of ancient Savoyard extraction, and something of a southern nature, he had
+ been born in Brussels, and was national to the heart's core.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man of interesting, sympathetic presence; of a physiognomy where many of
+ the attaching and attractive qualities of his nature revealed themselves;
+ with crisp curling hair, surmounting a tall, expansive forehead&mdash;full
+ of benevolence, idealism, and quick perceptions; broad, brown, melancholy
+ eyes, overflowing with tenderness; a lean and haggard cheek, a rugged
+ Flemish nose; a thin flexible mouth; a slender moustache, and a peaked and
+ meagre beard; so appeared Sainte Aldegonde in the forty-seventh year of
+ his age, when he came to command in Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet after all&mdash;many-sided, accomplished, courageous, energetic, as he
+ was&mdash;it may be doubted whether he was the man for the hour or the
+ post. He was too impressionable; he had too much of the temperament of
+ genius. Without being fickle, he had, besides his versatility of
+ intellect, a character which had much facility in turning; not, indeed, in
+ the breeze of self-interest, but because he seemed placed in so high and
+ clear an atmosphere of thought that he was often acted upon and swayed by
+ subtle and invisible influences. At any rate his conduct was sometimes
+ inexplicable. He had been strangely fascinated by the ignoble Duke of
+ Anjou, and, in the sequel, it will be found that he was destined to
+ experience other magnetic or magical impulses, which were once thought
+ suspicious, and have remained mysterious even to the present day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was imaginative. He was capable of broad and boundless hopes. He was
+ sometimes prone to deep despair. His nature was exquisitely tempered; too
+ fine and polished a blade to be wielded among those hydra-heads by which
+ he was, now surrounded; and for which the stunning sledgehammer of
+ arbitrary force was sometimes necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was perhaps deficient in that gift, which no training and no culture
+ can bestow, and which comes from above alone by birth-right divine&mdash;that
+ which men willingly call master, authority; the effluence which came so
+ naturally from the tranquil eyes of William the Silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, Sainte Aldegonde was prepared to do his best, and all his
+ best was to be tasked to the utmost. His position was rendered still more
+ difficult by the unruly nature of some of his coordinates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the first day to the last," said one who lived in Antwerp during the
+ siege, "the mistakes committed in the city were incredible." It had long
+ been obvious that a siege was contemplated by Parma. A liberal sum of
+ money had been voted by the States-General, of which Holland and Zeeland
+ contributed a very large proportion (two hundred thousand florins); the
+ city itself voted another large subsidy, and an order was issued to
+ purchase at once and import into the city at least a year's supply of
+ every kind of provisions of life and munitions of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William de Blois, Lord of Treslong, Admiral of Holland and Zeeland, was
+ requested to carry out this order, and superintend the victualling of
+ Antwerp. But Treslong at once became troublesome. He was one of the old
+ "beggars of the sea," a leader in the wild band who had taken possession
+ of the Brill, in the teeth of Alva, and so laid the foundation of the
+ republic. An impetuous noble, of wealthy family, high connections, and
+ refractory temper&mdash;a daring sailor, ever ready for any rash
+ adventure, but possessed of a very moderate share of prudence or
+ administrative ability, he fell into loose and lawless courses on the
+ death of Orange, whose firm hand was needed to control him. The French
+ negotiation had excited his profound disgust, and knowing Sainte Aldegonde
+ to be heart and soul in favour of that alliance, he was in no haste
+ whatever to carry out his orders with regard to Antwerp. He had also an
+ insignificant quarrel with President Meetkerk. The Prince of Parma&mdash;ever
+ on the watch for such opportunities&mdash;was soon informed of the
+ Admiral's discontent, and had long been acquainted with his turbulent
+ character. Alexander at once began to inflame his jealousy and soothe his
+ vanity by letters and messengers, urging upon him the propriety of
+ reconciling himself with the King, and promising him large rewards and
+ magnificent employments in the royal service. Even the splendid insignia
+ of the Golden Fleece were dangled before his eyes. It is certain that the
+ bold Hollander was not seduced by these visions, but there is no doubt
+ that he listened to the voice of the tempter. He unquestionably neglected
+ his duty. Week after week he remained, at Ostend, sneering at the French
+ and quaffing huge draughts in honour of Queen Elizabeth. At last, after
+ much time had elapsed, he agreed to victual Antwerp if he could be
+ furnished with thirty krom-stevens,&mdash;a peculiar kind of vessel, not
+ to be found in Zeeland. The krom-stevens were sent to him from Holland.
+ Then, hearing that his negligence had been censured by the States-General,
+ he became more obstinate than ever, and went up and down proclaiming that
+ if people made themselves disagreeable to him he would do that which
+ should make all the women and children in the Netherlands shriek and
+ tremble. What this nameless horror was to be he never divulged, but
+ meantime he went down to Middelburg, and swore that not a boat-load of
+ corn should go up to Antwerp until two members of the magistracy, whom he
+ considered unpleasant, had been dismissed from their office. Wearied with
+ all this bluster, and imbued with grave suspicion as to his motives, the
+ States at last rose upon their High Admiral and threw him into prison. He
+ was accused of many high crimes and misdemeanours, and, it was thought,
+ would be tried for his life. He was suspected and even openly accused of
+ having been tampered with by Spain, but there was at any rate a deficiency
+ of proof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Treslong is apprehended," wrote Davison to Burghley, "and, is charged to
+ have been the cause that the fleet passed not up to Antwerp. He is
+ suspected to have otherwise forgotten himself, but whether justly or not
+ will appear by his trial. Meantime he is kept in the common prison of
+ Middelburg, a treatment which it is thought they would not offer him if
+ they had not somewhat of importance against him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was subsequently released at the intercession of Queen Elizabeth, and
+ passed some time in England. He was afterwards put upon trial, but no
+ accuser appearing to sustain the charges against him, he was eventually
+ released. He never received a command in the navy again, but the very rich
+ sinecures of Grand Falconer and Chief Forester of Holland were bestowed
+ upon him, and he appears to have ended his days in peace and plenty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was succeeded in the post of Admiral of Holland and Zeeland by Justinus
+ de Nassau, natural son of William the Silent, a young man of much promise
+ but of little experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Count Hohenlo, too, lieutenant for young Maurice, and virtual
+ commander-in-chief of the States' forces, was apt to give much trouble. A
+ German noble, of ancient descent and princely rank; brave to temerity,
+ making a jest of danger; and riding into a foray as if to a merry-making;
+ often furiously intoxicated, and always turbulent and uncertain; a
+ handsome, dissipated cavalier, with long curls floating over his
+ shoulders, an imposing aristocratic face, and a graceful, athletic figure,
+ he needed some cool brain and steady hand to guide him&mdash;valuable as
+ he was to fulfil any daring project but was hardly willing to accept the
+ authority of a burgomaster. While the young Maurice yet needed tutelage,
+ while "the sapling was growing into the tree," Hohenlo was a dangerous
+ chieftain and a most disorderly lieutenant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such municipal machinery and such coadjutors had Sainte Aldegonde to
+ deal, while, meantime, the delusive French negociation was dragging its
+ slow length along, and while Parma was noiselessly and patiently
+ proceeding with his preparations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burgomaster&mdash;for Sainte Aldegonde, in whom vulgar ambition was
+ not a foible, had refused the dignity and title of Margrave of Antwerp,
+ which had been tendered him&mdash;had neglected no effort towards carrying
+ into effect the advice of Orange, given almost with his latest breath. The
+ manner in which that advice was received furnished a striking illustration
+ of the defective machinery which has been pourtrayed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon his return from Delft, Sainte Aldegonde had summoned a meeting of the
+ magistracy of Antwerp. He laid before the board the information
+ communicated by Orange as to Parma's intentions. He also explained the
+ scheme proposed for their frustration, and urged the measures indicated
+ with so much earnestness that his fellow-magistrates were convinced. The
+ order was passed for piercing the Blauw-garen Dyke, and Sainte Aldegonde,
+ with some engineers, was requested to view the locality, and to take order
+ for the immediate fulfilment of the plan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately there were many other boards in session besides that of the
+ Schepens, many other motives at work besides those of patriotism. The
+ guild of butchers held a meeting, so soon as the plan suggested was known,
+ and resolved with all their strength to oppose its execution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The butchers were indeed furious. Twelve thousand oxen grazed annually
+ upon the pastures which were about to be submerged, and it was represented
+ as unreasonable that all this good flesh and blood should be sacrificed.
+ At a meeting of the magistrates on the following day, sixteen butchers,
+ delegates from their guild, made their appearance, hoarse with
+ indignation. They represented the vast damage which would be inflicted
+ upon the estates of many private individuals by the proposed inundation,
+ by this sudden conversion of teeming meadows, fertile farms, thriving
+ homesteads, prolific orchards, into sandy desolation. Above all they
+ depicted, in glowing colours and with natural pathos, the vast destruction
+ of beef which was imminent, and they urged&mdash;with some show of reason&mdash;that
+ if Parma were really about to reduce Antwerp by famine, his scheme
+ certainly would not be obstructed by the premature annihilation of these
+ wholesome supplies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the Scheldt could be, closed in any manner was, however, they said, a
+ preposterous conception. That it could be bridged was the dream of a
+ lunatic. Even if it were possible to construct a bridge, and probable that
+ the Zeelanders and Antwerpers would look on with folded arms while the
+ work proceeded, the fabric, when completed, would be at the mercy of the
+ ice-floods of the winter and the enormous power of the ocean-tides. The
+ Prince of Orange himself, on a former occasion, when Antwerp was Spanish,
+ had attempted to close the river with rafts, sunken piles, and other
+ obstructions, but the whole had been swept away, like a dam of bulrushes,
+ by the first descent of the ice-blocks of winter. It was witless to
+ believe that Parma contemplated any such measure, and utterly monstrous to
+ believe in its success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far the butchers. Soon afterwards came sixteen colonels of militia,
+ as representatives of their branch of the multiform government. These
+ personages, attended by many officers of inferior degree, sustained the
+ position of the butchers with many voluble and vehement arguments. Not the
+ least convincing of their conclusions was the assurance that it would be
+ idle for the authorities to attempt the destruction of the dyke, seeing
+ that the municipal soldiery itself would prevent the measure by main
+ force, at all hazards, and without regard to their own or others' lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The violence of this opposition, and the fear of a serious internecine
+ conflict at so critical a juncture, proved fatal to the project. Much
+ precious time was lost, and when at last the inhabitants of the city awoke
+ from their delusion, it was to find that repentance, as usual, had come
+ many hours too late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Parma had been acting while his antagonists had been wrangling. He was
+ hampered in his means, but he was assisted by what now seems the
+ incredible supineness of the Netherlanders. Even Sainte Aldegonde did not
+ believe in the possibility of erecting the bridge; not a man in Antwerp
+ seemed to believe it. "The preparations," said one who lived in the city,
+ "went on before our very noses, and every one was ridiculing the Spanish
+ commander's folly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very great error was, moreover, committed in abandoning Herenthals to
+ the enemy. The city of Antwerp governed Brabant, and it would have been
+ far better for the authorities of the commercial capital to succour this
+ small but important city, and, by so doing, to protract for a long time
+ their own defence. Mondragon saw and rejoiced over the mistake. "Now 'tis
+ easy to see that the Prince of Orange is dead," said the veteran, as he
+ took possession, in the Icing's name, of the forsaken Herenthals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the summer, Parma's operations had been, of necessity, desultory.
+ He had sprinkled forts up and down the Scheldt, and had gradually been
+ gaining control of the navigation upon that river. Thus Ghent and
+ Dendermonde, Vilvoorde, Brussels, and Antwerp, had each been isolated, and
+ all prevented from rendering mutual assistance. Below Antwerp, however,
+ was to be the scene of the great struggle. Here, within nine miles of the
+ city, were two forts belonging to the States, on opposite sides of the
+ stream, Lille, and Liefkenshoek. It was important for the Spanish
+ commander to gain possession of both; before commencing his contemplated
+ bridge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately for the States, the fortifications of Liefkenshoek, on the
+ Flemish side of the river, had not been entirely completed. Eight hundred
+ men lay within it, under Colonel John Pettin of Arras, an old patriotic
+ officer of much experience. Parma, after reconnoitring the place in
+ person, despatched the famous Viscount of Ghent&mdash;now called Marquis
+ of Roubaix and Richebourg&mdash;to carry it by assault. The Marquis sent
+ one hundred men from his Walloon legion, under two officers, in whom he
+ had confidence, to attempt a surprise, with orders, if not successful, to
+ return without delay. They were successful. The one hundred gained
+ entrance into the fort at a point where the defences had not been put into
+ sufficient repair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were immediately followed by Richebourg, at the head of his regiment.
+ The day was a fatal one. It was the 10th July, 1584 and William of Orange
+ was falling at Delft by the hand of Balthazar Gerard. Liefkenshoek was
+ carried at a blow. Of the eight hundred patriots in the place, scarcely a
+ man escaped. Four hundred were put to the sword, the others were hunted
+ into the river, when nearly all were drowned. Of the royalists a single
+ man was killed, and two or three more were wounded. "Our Lord was
+ pleased," wrote Parma piously to Philip, that we "should cut the throats
+ of four hundred of them in a single instant, and that a great many more
+ should be killed upon the dykes; so that I believe very few to have
+ escaped with life. We lost one man, besides two or three wounded." A few
+ were taken prisoners, and among them was the commander John Pettin. He was
+ at once brought before Richebourg, who was standing in the presence of the
+ Prince of Parma. The Marquis drew his sword, walked calmly up to the
+ captured Colonel, and ran him through the body. Pettin fell dead upon the
+ spot. The Prince was displeased. "Too much choler, Marquis, too much
+ choler,"&mdash;said he reprovingly. "Troppa colera, Signor Marchese, a
+ questa." But Richebourg knew better. He had, while still Viscount of
+ Ghent, carried on a year previously a parallel intrigue with the royalists
+ and the patriots. The Prince of Parma had bid highest for his services,
+ and had, accordingly, found him a most effectual instrument in completing
+ the reduction of the Walloon Provinces. The Prince was not aware, however,
+ that his brave but venal ally had, at the very same moment, been secretly
+ treating with William of Orange; and as it so happened that Colonel Pettin
+ had been the agent in the unsuccessful negotiation, it was possible that
+ his duplicity would now be exposed. The Marquis had, therefore, been
+ prompt to place his old confederate in the condition wherein men tell no
+ tales, and if contemporary chronicles did not bely him, it was not the
+ first time that he had been guilty of such cold-blooded murder. The choler
+ had not been superfluous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fortress of Lille was garrisoned by the Antwerp volunteers, called the
+ "Young Bachelors." Teligny, the brave son of the illustrious "Iron-armed"
+ La None, commanded in chief: and he had, besides the militia, a company of
+ French under Captain Gascoigne, and four hundred Scotchmen under Colonel
+ Morgan&mdash;perhaps two thousand men in all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mondragon, hero of the famous submarine expeditions of Philipsland and
+ Zierickzee, was ordered by Parma to take the place at every hazard. With
+ five thousand men&mdash;a large proportion of the Spanish effective force
+ at that moment&mdash;the veteran placed himself before the fort, taking
+ possession, of the beautiful country-house and farm of Lille, where he
+ planted his batteries, and commenced a regular cannonade. The place was
+ stronger than Liefkenshoek, however, and Teligny thoroughly comprehended
+ the importance of maintaining it for the States. Mondragon dug mines, and
+ Teligny countermined. The Spanish daily cannonade was cheerfully responded
+ to by the besieged, and by the time Mondragon had shot away fifty thousand
+ pounds of powder, he found that he had made no impression upon the
+ fortress, while the number of his troops had been diminishing with great
+ rapidity. Mondragon was not so impetuous as he had been on many former
+ occasions. He never ventured an assault. At last Teligny made a sortie at
+ the head of a considerable force. A warm action succeeded, at the
+ conclusion of which, without a decided advantage on either side, the
+ sluice-gate in the fortress was opened, and the torrent of the Scheldt,
+ swollen by a high tide, was suddenly poured upon the Spaniards. Assailed
+ at once by the fire from the Lillo batteries, and by the waters of the
+ river, they were forced to a rapid retreat. This they effected with great
+ loss, but with signal courage; struggling breast high in the waves, and
+ bearing off their field-pieces in their arms in the very face of the
+ enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three weeks long Mondragon had been before Fort Lille, and two thousand of
+ his soldiers had been slain in the trenches. The attempt was now
+ abandoned. Parma directed permanent batteries to be established at
+ Lillo-house, at Oordam, and at other places along the river, and proceeded
+ quietly with his carefully-matured plan for closing the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His own camp was in the neighbourhood of the villages of Beveren, Kalloo,
+ and Borght. Of the ten thousand foot and seventeen hundred horse, which
+ composed at the moment his whole army, about one-half lay with him, while
+ the remainder were with Count Peter Ernest Mansfield, in the neighbourhood
+ of Stabroek. Thus the Prince occupied a position on the left bank of the
+ Scheldt, nearly opposite Antwerp, while Mansfield was stationed upon the
+ right bank, and ten miles farther down the river. From a point in the
+ neighbourhood of Kalloo, Alexander intended to throw a fortified bridge to
+ the opposite shore. When completed, all traffic up the river from Zeeland
+ would be cut off; and as the country on the land-side; abut Antwerp, had
+ been now reduced, the city would be effectually isolated. If the Prince
+ could hold his bridge until famine should break the resistance of the
+ burghers, Antwerp would fall into his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His head-quarters were at Kalloo, and this obscure spot soon underwent a
+ strange transformation. A drowsy placid little village&mdash;with a modest
+ parish spire peeping above a clump of poplars, and with half a dozen
+ cottages, with storks nests on their roofs, sprinkled here and there among
+ pastures and orchards&mdash;suddenly saw itself changed as it were into a
+ thriving bustling town; for, saving the white tents which dotted the green
+ turf in every direction, the aspect of the scene was, for a time, almost
+ pacific. It was as if, some great manufacturing enterprise had been set on
+ foot, and the world had suddenly awoke to the hidden capabilities of the
+ situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great dockyard and arsenal suddenly revealed themselves&mdash;rising
+ like an exhalation&mdash;where ship-builders, armourers, blacksmiths,
+ joiners, carpenters, caulkers, gravers, were hard at work all day long.
+ The din and hum of what seemed a peaceful industry were unceasing. From
+ Kalloo, Parma dug a canal twelve miles long to a place called Steeken,
+ hundreds of pioneers being kept constantly at work with pick and spade
+ till it was completed. Through this artificial channel&mdash;so soon as
+ Ghent and Dendermonde had fallen&mdash;came floats of timber, fleets of
+ boats laden with provisions of life and munitions of death,
+ building-materials, and every other requisite for the great undertaking,
+ all to be disembarked at Kalloo. The object was a temporary and
+ destructive one, but it remains a monument of the great general's energy
+ and a useful public improvement. The amelioration of the fenny and barren
+ soil, called the Waesland, is dated from that epoch; and the spot in
+ Europe which is the most prolific, and which nourishes the largest
+ proportion of inhabitants to the square mile, is precisely the long dreary
+ swamp which the Prince thus drained for military purposes, and converted
+ into a garden. Drusus and Corbulo, in the days of the Roman Empire, had
+ done the same good service for their barbarian foes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Kalloo itself, all the shipwrights, cutlers, masons, brass-founders,
+ rope-makers, anchor-forgers, sailors, boatmen, of Flanders and Brabant,
+ with a herd of bakers, brewers, and butchers, were congregated by express
+ order of Parma. In the little church itself the main workshop was
+ established, and all day long, week after week, month after month, the
+ sound of saw and hammer, adze and plane, the rattle of machinery, the cry
+ of sentinels, the cheers of mariners, resounded, where but lately had been
+ heard nothing save the drowsy homily and the devout hymn of rustic
+ worship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless the summer and autumn wore on, and still the bridge was
+ hardly commenced. The navigation of the river&mdash;although impeded and
+ rendered dangerous by the forts which Parma held along the banks&mdash;was
+ still open; and, so long as the price of corn in Antwerp remained three or
+ four times as high as the sum for which it could be purchased in Holland
+ and Zeeland, there were plenty of daredevil skippers ready to bring
+ cargoes. Fleets of fly-boats, convoyed by armed vessels, were perpetually
+ running the gauntlet. Sharp actions on shore between the forts of the
+ patriots and those of Parma, which were all intermingled promiscuously
+ along the banks, and amphibious and most bloody encounters on ship-board,
+ dyke, and in the stream itself, between the wild Zeelanders and the fierce
+ pikemen of Italy and Spain, were of repeated occurrence. Many a lagging
+ craft fell into the enemy's hands, when, as a matter of course, the men,
+ women, and children, on board, were horribly mutilated by the Spaniards,
+ and were then sent drifting in their boat with the tide&mdash;their arms,
+ legs, and ears lopped off up to the city, in order that&mdash;the
+ dangerous nature of this provision-trade might be fully illustrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet that traffic still went on. It would have continued until Antwerp had
+ been victualled for more than a year, had not the city authorities, in the
+ plentitude of their wisdom, thought proper to issue orders for its
+ regulation. On the 25th October (1584) a census was taken, when the number
+ of persons inside the walls was found to be ninety thousand. For this
+ population it was estimated that 300,000 veertell, or about 900,000
+ bushels of corn, would be required annually. The grain was coming in very
+ fast, notwithstanding the perilous nature of the trade; for wheat could be
+ bought in Holland for fifty florins the last, or about fifteen pence
+ sterling the bushel, while it was worth five or six florins the veertel,
+ or about four shillings the bushel, in Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The magistrates now committed a folly more stupendous than it seemed
+ possible for human creatures, under such circumstances, to compass. They
+ established a maximum upon corn. The skippers who had run their cargoes
+ through the gauntlet, all the way from Flushing to Antwerp, found on their
+ arrival, that, instead of being rewarded, according to the natural laws of
+ demand and supply, they were required to exchange their wheat, rye,
+ butter, and beef, against the exact sum which the Board of Schepens
+ thought proper to consider a reasonable remuneration. Moreover, in order
+ to prevent the accumulation of provisions in private magazines, it was
+ enacted, that all consumers of grain should be compelled to make their
+ purchases directly from the ships. These two measures were almost as fatal
+ as the preservation of the Blaw-garen Dyke, in the interest of the
+ butchers. Winter and famine were staring the city in the face, and the
+ maximum now stood sentinel against the gate, to prevent the admission of
+ food. The traffic ceased without a struggle. Parma himself could not have
+ better arranged the blockade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime a vast and almost general inundation had taken place. The aspect
+ of the country for many miles around was strange and desolate. The sluices
+ had been opened in the neighbourhood of Saftingen, on, the Flemish side,
+ so that all the way from Hulst the waters were out, and flowed nearly to
+ the gates of Antwerp. A wide and shallow sea rolled over the fertile
+ plains, while church-steeples, the tops of lofty trees, and here and there
+ the turrets of a castle, scarcely lifted themselves above the black
+ waters; the peasants' houses, the granges, whole rural villages, having
+ entirely disappeared. The high grounds of Doel, of Kalloo, and Beveren,
+ where Alexander was established, remained out of reach of the flood. Far
+ below, on the opposite side of the river, other sluices had been opened,
+ and the sea had burst over the wide, level plain. The villages of
+ Wilmerdonk, Orderen, Ekeren, were changed to islands in the ocean, while
+ all the other hamlets, for miles around, were utterly submerged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, however, the Blaw-garen Dyke and its companion the Kowenstyn
+ remained obstinately above the waters, forming a present and more fatal
+ obstruction to the communication between Antwerp and Zeeland than would be
+ furnished even by the threatened and secretly-advancing bridge across the
+ Scheldt. Had Orange's prudent advice been taken, the city had been safe.
+ Over the prostrate dykes, whose destruction he had so warmly urged, the
+ ocean would have rolled quite to the gates of Antwerp, and it would have
+ been as easy to bridge the North Sea as to control the free navigation of
+ the patriots over so wide a surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it was too late, the butchers, and colonels, and captains, became
+ penitent enough. An order was passed, by acclamation, in November, to do
+ what Orange had recommended in June. It was decreed that the Blaw-garen
+ and the Kowenstyn should be pierced. Alas, the hour had long gone by.
+ Alexander of Parma was not the man to undertake the construction of a
+ bridge across the river, at a vast expense, and at the same time to permit
+ the destruction of the already existing barrier. There had been a time for
+ such a deed. The Seigneur de Kowenstyn, who had a castle and manor on and
+ near the dyke which bore his name, had repeatedly urged upon the Antwerp
+ magistracy the propriety of piercing this bulwark, even after their
+ refusal to destroy the outer barrier. Sainte Aldegonde, who vehemently
+ urged the measure, protested that his hair had stood on end, when he
+ found, after repeated entreaty, that the project was rejected. The
+ Seigneur de Kowenstyn, disgusted and indignant, forswore his patriotism,
+ and went over to Parma. The dyke fell into the hands of the enemy. And now
+ from Stabroek, where old Mansfeid lay with his army, all the way across
+ the flooded country, ran the great bulwark, strengthened with new
+ palisade-work and block-houses, bristling with Spanish cannon, pike, and
+ arquebus, even to the bank of the Scheldt, in the immediate vicinity of
+ Fort Lille. At the angle of its junction with the main dyke of the river's
+ bank, a strong fortress called Holy Cross (Santa Cruz) had been
+ constructed. That fortress and the whole line of the Kowenstyn were held
+ in the iron grip of Mondragon. To wrench it from him would be no child's
+ play. Five new strong redoubts upon the dyke, and five or six thousand
+ Spaniards established there, made the enterprise more formidable than it
+ would have been in June. It had been better to sacrifice the twelve
+ thousand oxen. Twelve thousand Hollanders might now be slaughtered, and
+ still the dyke remain above the waves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was the key to the fate of Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the opening of the Saftingen Sluice had done Parma's
+ work for him. Even there, too, Orange had been prophetic. Kalloo was high
+ and dry, but Alexander had experienced some difficulty in bringing a fleet
+ of thirty vessels, laden with cannon and other valuable materials, from
+ Ghent along the Scheldt, into his encampment, because it was necessary for
+ them, before reaching their destination, to pass in front of Antwerp. The
+ inundation, together with a rupture in the Dyke of Borght, furnished him
+ with a watery road; over which his fleet completely avoided the city, and
+ came in triumph to Kalloo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde, much provoked by this masterly movement on the part of
+ Parma, had followed the little squadron closely with some armed vessels
+ from the city. A sharp action had succeeded, in which the burgomaster, not
+ being properly sustained by the Zeeland ships on which he relied, had been
+ defeated. Admiral Jacob Jacobzoon behaved with so little spirit on the
+ occasion that he acquired with the Antwerp populace the name of "Run-away
+ Jacob," "Koppen gaet loppen;" and Sainte Aldegonde declared, that, but for
+ his cowardice, the fleet of Parma would have fallen into their hands. The
+ burgomaster himself narrowly escaped becoming a prisoner, and owed his
+ safety only to the swiftness of his barge, which was called the "Flying
+ Devil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The patriots, in order to counteract similar enterprises in future, now
+ erected a sconce, which they called Fort Teligny; upon the ruptured dyke
+ of Borght, directly in front of the Borght blockhouse, belonging to the
+ Spaniards, and just opposite Fort Hoboken. Here, in this narrow passage,
+ close under the walls of Antwerp, where friends and foes were brought
+ closely, face to face, was the scene of many a sanguinary skirmish, from
+ the commencement of the siege until its close.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still the bridge was believed to be a mere fable, a chimaera. Parma, men
+ said, had become a lunatic from pride. It was as easy to make the
+ Netherlands submit to the yoke of the Inquisition as to put a bridle on
+ the Scheldt. Its depth; breadth, the ice-floods of a northern winter, the
+ neighbourhood of the Zeeland fleets, the activity of the Antwerp
+ authorities, all were pledges that the attempt would be signally
+ frustrated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And they should have been pledges&mdash;more than enough. Unfortunately,
+ however, there was dissension within, and no chieftain in the field, no
+ sage in the council, of sufficient authority to sustain the whole burthen
+ of the war, and to direct all the energies of the commonwealth. Orange was
+ dead. His son, one day to become the most illustrious military commander
+ in Europe, was a boy of seventeen, nominally captain-general, but in
+ reality but a youthful apprentice to his art. Hohenlo was wild, wilful,
+ and obstinate. Young William Lewis Nassau, already a soldier of marked
+ abilities, was fully occupied in Friesland, where he was stadholder, and
+ where he had quite enough to do in making head against the Spanish
+ governor and general, the veteran Verdugo: Military operations against
+ Zutphen distracted the attention of the States, which should have been
+ fixed upon Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Admiral Treslong, as we have seen, was refractory, the cause of great
+ delinquency on the part of the fleets, and of infinite disaster to the
+ commonwealth. More than all, the French negotiation was betraying the
+ States into indolence and hesitation; and creating a schism between the
+ leading politicians of the country. Several thousand French troops, under
+ Monsieur d'Allaynes, were daily expected, but never arrived; and thus,
+ while English and French partisans were plotting and counter-plotting,
+ while a delusive diplomacy was usurping the place of lansquenettes and
+ gun-boats&mdash;the only possible agents at that moment to preserve
+ Antwerp&mdash;the bridge of Parma was slowly advancing. Before the winter
+ had closed in, the preparatory palisades had been finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between Kalloo and Ordam, upon the opposite side, a sandbar had been
+ discovered in the river's bed, which diminished the depth of the stream,
+ and rendered the pile-driving comparatively easy. The breadth of the
+ Scheldt at this passage was twenty-four hundred feet; its depth, sixty
+ feet. Upon the Flemish side, near Kalloo, a strong fort was erected,
+ called Saint Mary, in honour of the blessed Virgin, to whom the whole
+ siege of Antwerp had been dedicated from the beginning. On the opposite
+ bank was a similar fort, flamed Philip, for the King. From each of these
+ two points, thus fortified, a framework of heavy timber, supported upon
+ huge piles, had been carried so far into the stream on either side that
+ the distance between the ends had at last been reduced to thirteen hundred
+ feet. The breadth of the roadway&mdash;formed of strong sleepers firmly
+ bound together&mdash;was twelve feet, along which block-houses of great
+ thickness were placed to defend the whole against assault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far the work had been comparatively easy. To bridge the remaining
+ open portion of the river, however, where its current was deepest and
+ strongest, and where the action of tide, tempest, and icebergs, would be
+ most formidable, seemed a desperate undertaking; for as the enterprise
+ advanced, this narrow open space became the scene of daily amphibious
+ encounters between the soldiers and sailors of Parma and the forces of the
+ States. Unfortunately for the patriots, it was only skirmishing. Had a
+ strong, concerted attack, in large force, from Holland and Zeeland below
+ and from the city above, been agreed upon, there was hardly a period,
+ until very late in the winter, when it might not have had the best chances
+ of success. With a vigorous commander against him, Parma, weak in men, and
+ at his wits' end for money, might, in a few hours, have seen the labour of
+ several months hopelessly annihilated. On the other hand, the Prince was
+ ably seconded by his lieutenant, Marquis Richebourg, to whom had been
+ delegated the immediate superintendence of the bridge-building in its
+ minutest details. He was never idle. Audacious, indefatigable, ubiquitous,
+ he at least atoned by energy and brilliant courage for his famous treason
+ of the preceding year, while his striking and now rapidly approaching doom
+ upon the very scene of his present labours, made him appear to have been
+ building a magnificent though fleeting monument to his own memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde, shut up in Antwerp, and hampered by dissension within
+ and obstinate jealousy without the walls, did all in his power to
+ frustrate the enemy's enterprise and animate the patriots. Through the
+ whole of the autumn and early winter, he had urged the States of Holland
+ and Zeeland to make use of the long winter nights, when moonless and
+ stormy, to attempt the destruction of Parma's undertaking, but the fatal
+ influences already indicated were more efficient against Antwerp than even
+ the genius of Farnese; and nothing came of the burgomaster's entreaties
+ save desultory skirmishing and unsuccessful enterprises. An especial
+ misfortune happened in one of these midnight undertakings. Teligny
+ ventured forth in a row-barge, with scarcely any companions, to notify the
+ Zeelanders of a contemplated movement, in which their co-operation was
+ desired. It was proposed that the Antwerp troops should make a fictitious
+ demonstration upon Fort Ordam, while at the same moment the States' troops
+ from Fort Lillo should make an assault upon the forts on Kowenstyn Dyke;
+ and in this important enterprise the Zeeland vessels were requested to
+ assist. But the brave Teligny nearly forfeited his life by his rashness,
+ and his services were, for a long time, lost to the cause of liberty. It
+ had been better to send a less valuable officer upon such hazardous yet
+ subordinate service. The drip of his oars was heard in the darkness. He
+ was pursued by a number of armed barges, attacked, wounded severely in the
+ shoulder, and captured. He threw his letters overboard, but they were
+ fished out of the water, carried to Parma, and deciphered, so that the
+ projected attack upon the Kowenstyn was discovered, and, of necessity,
+ deferred. As for Teligny, he was taken, as a most valuable prize, into the
+ enemy's camp, and was soon afterwards thrust into prison at Tournay, where
+ he remained six years&mdash;one year longer than the period which his
+ illustrious father had been obliged to consume in the infamous dungeon at
+ Mons. Few disasters could have been more keenly felt by the States than
+ the loss of this brilliant and devoted French chieftain, who, young as he
+ was, had already become very dear to the republic; and Sainte Aldegonde
+ was severely blamed for sending so eminent a personage on that dangerous
+ expedition, and for sending him, too, with an insufficient convoy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still Alexander felt uncertain as to the result. He was determined to
+ secure Antwerp, but he yet thought it possible to secure it by
+ negotiation. The enigmatical policy maintained by France perplexed him;
+ for it did not seem possible that so much apparent solemnity and
+ earnestness were destined to lead to an impotent and infamous conclusion.
+ He was left, too, for a long time in ignorance of his own master's secret
+ schemes, he was at liberty to guess, and to guess only, as to the projects
+ of the league, he was without adequate means to carry out to a certain
+ triumph his magnificent enterprise, and he was in constant alarm lest he
+ should be suddenly assailed by an overwhelming French force. Had a man sat
+ upon the throne of Henry III., at that moment, Parma's bridge-making and
+ dyke-fortifying skilful as they were&mdash;would have been all in vain.
+ Meantime, in uncertainty as to the great issue, but resolved to hold
+ firmly to his purpose, he made repeated conciliatory offers to the States
+ with one hand, while he steadily prosecuted his aggressive schemes with
+ the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma had become really gentle, almost affectionate, towards the
+ Netherlanders. He had not the disposition of an Alva to smite and to
+ blast, to exterminate the rebels and heretics with fire and sword, with
+ the axe, the rack, and the gallows. Provided they would renounce the great
+ object of the contest, he seemed really desirous that they should escape
+ further chastisement; but to admit the worship of God according to the
+ reformed creed, was with him an inconceivable idea. To do so was both
+ unrighteous and impolitic. He had been brought up to believe that mankind
+ could be saved from eternal perdition only by believing in the
+ infallibility of the Bishop of Rome; that the only keys to eternal
+ paradise were in the hands of St. Peter's representative. Moreover, he
+ instinctively felt that within this religious liberty which the
+ Netherlanders claimed was hidden the germ of civil liberty; and though no
+ bigger than a grain of mustard-seed, it was necessary to destroy it at
+ once; for of course the idea of civil liberty could not enter the brain of
+ the brilliant general of Philip II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 13th of November he addressed a letter to the magistracy and
+ broad-council of Antwerp. He asserted that the instigators of the
+ rebellion were not seeking to further the common weal, but their own
+ private ends. Especially had this been the ruling motive with the prince
+ of Orange and the Duke of Anjou, both of whom God had removed from the
+ world, in order to manifest to the States their own weakness, and the
+ omnipotence of Philip, whose prosperity the Lord was constantly
+ increasing. It was now more than time for the authorities of the country
+ to have regard for themselves, and for the miseries of the poor people.
+ The affection Which he had always felt for the Provinces from which he had
+ himself sprung and the favours which he had received from them in his
+ youth, had often moved him to propose measures, which, before God and his
+ conscience, he believed adequate to the restoration of peace. But his
+ letters had been concealed or falsely interpreted by the late Prince of
+ Orange, who had sought nothing but to spread desolation over the land, and
+ to shed the blood of the innocent. He now wrote once more, and for the
+ last time, in all fervour and earnestness, to implore them to take
+ compassion on their own wives and children and forlorn fatherland, to turn
+ their eyes backward on the peace and prosperity which they had formerly
+ enjoyed when obedient to his Majesty, and to cast a glance around them
+ upon the miseries which were so universal since the rebellion. He exhorted
+ them to close their ears to the insidious tongues of those who were
+ leading them into delusion as to the benevolence and paternal sweetness of
+ their natural lord and master, which were even now so boundless that he
+ did not hesitate once more to offer them his entire forgiveness. If they
+ chose to negotiate, they would find everything granted that with right and
+ reason could be proposed. The Prince concluded by declaring that he made
+ these advances not from any doubt as to the successful issue of the
+ military operations in which he was engaged, but simply out of paternal
+ anxiety for the happiness of the Provinces. Did they remain obstinate,
+ their ultimate conditions would be rendered still more severe, and
+ themselves, not he, would be responsible for the misery and the bloodshed
+ to ensue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten days afterwards, the magistrates, thus addressed&mdash;after
+ communication with the broad-council&mdash;answered Parma's. 23rd Nov.,
+ letter manfully, copiously, and with the customary but superfluous
+ historical sketch. They begged leave to entertain a doubt as to the
+ paternal sweetness of a king who had dealt so long in racks and gibbets.
+ With Parma's own mother, as they told the Prince, the Netherlanders had
+ once made a treaty, by which the right to worship God according to their
+ consciences had been secured; yet for maintaining that treaty they had
+ been devoted to indiscriminate destruction, and their land made desolate
+ with fire and sword. Men had been massacred by thousands, who had never
+ been heard in their own defence, and who had never been accused of any
+ crime, "save that they had assembled together in the name of God, to pray
+ to Him through their only mediator and advocate Jesus Christ, according to
+ His command."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The axis of the revolt was the religious question; and it was impossible
+ to hope anything from a monarch who was himself a slave of the
+ Inquisition, and who had less independence of action than that enjoyed by
+ Jews and Turks, according to the express permission of the Pope. Therefore
+ they informed Parma that they had done with Philip for ever, and that in
+ consequence of the extraordinary wisdom, justice, and moderation, of the
+ French King, they had offered him the sovereignty of their land, and had
+ implored his protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They paid a tribute to the character of Farnese, who after gaining
+ infinite glory in arms, had manifested so much gentleness and disposition
+ to conciliate. They doubted not that he would, if he possessed the power,
+ have guided the royal councils to better and more generous results, and
+ protested that they would not have delayed to throw themselves into his
+ arms, had they been assured that he was authorized to admit that which
+ alone could form the basis of a successful negotiation&mdash;religious
+ freedom. They would in such case have been willing to close with him,
+ without talking about other conditions than such as his Highness in his
+ discretion and sweetness might think reasonable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, as they observed in conclusion, they were precluded, by their
+ present relations with France, from entering into any other negotiation;
+ nor could they listen to any such proposals without deserving to be
+ stigmatized as the most lewd, blasphemous, and thankless mortals, that
+ ever cumbered the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being under equal obligations both to the Union and to France, they
+ announced that Parma's overtures would be laid before the French
+ government and the assembly of the States-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A day was to come, perhaps, when it would hardly seem lewdness and
+ blasphemy for the Netherlanders to doubt the extraordinary justice and
+ wisdom of the French King. Meantime, it cannot be denied that they were at
+ least loyal to their own engagements, and long-suffering where they had
+ trusted and given their hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma replied by another letter, dated December 3rd. He assured the
+ citizens that Henry III. was far too discreet, and much too good a friend
+ to Philip II., to countenance this rebellion. If he were to take up their
+ quarrel, however, the King of Spain had a thousand means of foiling all
+ his attempts. As to the religious question&mdash;which they affirmed to be
+ the sole cause of the war&mdash;he was not inclined to waste words upon
+ that subject; nevertheless, so far as he in his simplicity could
+ understand the true nature of a Christian, he could not believe that it
+ comported with the doctrines of Jesus, whom they called their only
+ mediator, nor with the dictates of conscience, to take up arms against
+ their lawful king, nor to burn, rob, plunder, pierce dykes, overwhelm
+ their fatherland, and reduce all things to misery and chaos, in the name
+ of religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus moralizing and dogmatizing, the Prince concluded his letter, and so
+ the correspondence terminated. This last despatch was communicated at once
+ both to the States-General and to the French government, and remained
+ unanswered. Soon afterwards the Netherlands and England, France and Spain,
+ were engaged in that vast game of delusion which has been described in the
+ preceding chapters. Meantime both Antwerp and Parma remained among the
+ deluded, and were left to fight out their battle on their own resources.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having found it impossible to subdue Antwerp by his rhetoric, Alexander
+ proceeded with his bridge. It is impossible not to admire the steadiness
+ and ingenuity with which the Prince persisted in his plans, the courage
+ with which he bore up against the parsimony and neglect of his sovereign,
+ the compassionate tenderness which he manifested for his patient little
+ army. So much intellectual energy commands enthusiasm, while the
+ supineness on the other side sometimes excites indignation. There is even
+ a danger of being entrapped into sympathy with tyranny, when the cause of
+ tyranny is maintained by genius; and of being surprised into indifference
+ for human liberty, when the sacred interests of liberty are endangered by
+ self-interest, perverseness, and folly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even Sainte Aldegonde did not believe that the bridge could be completed.
+ His fears were that the city would be ruined rather by the cessation of
+ its commerce than by want of daily food. Already, after the capture of
+ Liefkenshoek and the death of Orange, the panic among commercial people
+ had been so intense that seventy or eighty merchants, representing the
+ most wealthy mercantile firms in Antwerp, made their escape from the
+ place, as if it had been smitten with pestilence, or were already in the
+ hands of Parma. All such refugees were ordered to return on peril of
+ forfeiting their property. Few came back, however, for they had found
+ means of converting and transferring their funds to other more secure
+ places, despite the threatened confiscation. It was insinuated that
+ Holland and Zeeland were indifferent to the fate of Antwerp, because in
+ the sequel the commercial cities of those Provinces succeeded to the vast
+ traffic and the boundless wealth which had been forfeited by the
+ Brabantine capital. The charge was an unjust one. At the very commencement
+ of the siege the States of Holland voted two hundred thousand florins for
+ its relief; and, moreover, these wealthy refugees were positively denied
+ admittance into the territory of the United States, and were thus forced
+ to settle in Germany or England. This cessation of traffic was that which
+ principally excited the anxiety of Aldegonde. He could not bring himself
+ to believe in the possibility of a blockade, by an army of eight or ten
+ thousand men, of a great and wealthy city, where at least twenty thousand
+ citizens were capable of bearing arms. Had he thoroughly understood the
+ deprivations under which Alexander was labouring, perhaps he would have
+ been even more confident as to the result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With regard to the affair of the river Scheldt," wrote Parma to Philip,
+ "I should like to send your Majesty a drawing of the whole scheme; for the
+ work is too vast to be explained by letters. The more I examine it, the
+ more astonished I am that it should have been conducted to this point; so
+ many forts, dykes, canals, new inventions, machinery, and engines, have
+ been necessarily required."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then proceeded to enlighten the King&mdash;as he never failed to do in
+ all his letters&mdash;as to his own impoverished, almost helpless
+ condition. Money, money, men! This was his constant cry. All would be in
+ vain, he said, if he were thus neglected. "'Tis necessary," said he, "for
+ your Majesty fully to comprehend, that henceforth the enterprise is your
+ own. I have done my work faithfully thus far; it is now for your Majesty
+ to take it thoroughly to heart; and embrace it with the warmth with which
+ an affair involving so much of your own interests deserves to be
+ embraced."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He avowed that without full confidence in his sovereign's sympathy he
+ would never have conceived the project. "I confess that the enterprise is
+ great," he said, "and that by many it will be considered rash. Certainly I
+ should not have undertaken it, had I not felt certain of your Majesty's
+ full support."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he was already in danger of being forced to abandon the whole scheme&mdash;although
+ so nearly carried into effect&mdash;for want of funds. "The million
+ promised," he wrote, "has arrived in bits and morsels, and with so many
+ ceremonies, that I haven't ten crowns at my disposal. How I am to maintain
+ even this handful of soldiers&mdash;for the army is diminished to such a
+ mere handful that it would astonish your Majesty&mdash;I am unable to
+ imagine. It would move you to witness their condition. They have suffered
+ as much as is humanly possible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the troops, indeed, were deserting, and making their escape,
+ beggared and desperate, into France, where, with natural injustice, they
+ denounced their General, whose whole heart was occupied with their
+ miseries, for the delinquency of his master, whose mind was full of other
+ schemes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There past this way many Spanish soldiers," wrote Stafford from Paris,
+ "so poor and naked as I ever saw any. There have been within this
+ fortnight two hundred at a time in this town, who report the extremity of
+ want of victuals in their camp, and that they have been twenty-four months
+ without pay. They exclaim greatly upon the Prince of Parma. Mendoza seeks
+ to convey them away, and to get money for them by all means he can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stafford urged upon his government the propriety of being at least as
+ negligent as Philip had showed himself to be of the Spaniards. By
+ prohibiting supplies to the besieging army, England might contribute,
+ negatively, if not otherwise, to the relief of Antwerp. "There is no
+ place," he wrote to Walsingham, "whence the Spaniards are so thoroughly
+ victualled as from us. English boats go by sixteen and seventeen into
+ Dunkirk, well laden with provisions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was certainly not in accordance with the interests nor the benevolent
+ professions of the English ministers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These supplies were not to be regularly depended upon however. They were
+ likewise not to be had without paying a heavy price for them, and the
+ Prince had no money in his coffer. He lived from hand to mouth, and was
+ obliged to borrow from every private individual who had anything to lend.
+ Merchants, nobles, official personages, were all obliged to assist in
+ eking out the scanty pittance allowed by the sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The million is all gone," wrote Parma to his master; "some to Verdugo in
+ Friesland; some to repay the advances of Marquis Richebourg and other
+ gentlemen. There is not a farthing for the garrisons. I can't go on a
+ month longer, and, if not supplied, I shall be obliged to abandon the
+ work. I have not money enough to pay my sailors, joiners, carpenters, and
+ other mechanics, from week to week, and they will all leave me in the
+ lurch, if I leave them unpaid. I have no resource but to rely on your
+ Majesty. Otherwise the enterprise must wholly fail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In case it did fail, the Prince wiped his hands of the responsibility. He
+ certainly had the right to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the main sources of supply was the city of Hertogenbosch, or
+ Bois-le-Duc. It was one of the four chief cities of Brabant, and still
+ held for the King, although many towns in its immediate neighbourhood had
+ espoused the cause of the republic. The States had long been anxious to
+ effect a diversion for the relief of Antwerp, by making an attack on
+ Bois-le-Duc. Could they carry the place, Parma would be almost inevitably
+ compelled to abandon the siege in which he was at present engaged, and he
+ could moreover spare no troops for its defence. Bois-le-Duc was a
+ populous, wealthy, thriving town, situate on the Deeze, two leagues above
+ its confluence with the Meuse, and about twelve leagues from Antwerp. It
+ derived its name of `Duke's Wood' from a magnificent park and forest, once
+ the favourite resort and residence of the old Dukes of Brabant, of which
+ some beautiful vestiges still remained. It was a handsome well-built city,
+ with two thousand houses of the better class, besides more humble
+ tenements. Its citizens were celebrated for their courage and belligerent
+ skill, both on foot and on horseback. They were said to retain more of the
+ antique Belgic ferocity which Caesar had celebrated than that which had
+ descended to most of their kinsmen. The place was, moreover, the seat of
+ many prosperous manufactures. Its clothiers sent the products of their
+ looms over all Christendom, and its linen and cutlery were equally
+ renowned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be a most fortunate blow in the cause of freedom to secure so,
+ thriving and conspicuous a town, situated thus in the heart of what seemed
+ the natural territory of the United States; and, by so doing, to render
+ nugatory the mighty preparations of Parma against Antwerp. Moreover, it
+ was known that there was no Spanish or other garrison within its walls, so
+ that there was no opposition to be feared, except from the warlike nature
+ of the citizens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Count Hohenlo was entrusted, early in January, with this important
+ enterprise. He accordingly collected a force of four thousand infantry,
+ together with two hundred mounted lancers; having previously reconnoitered
+ the ground. He relied very much, for the success of the undertaking, on
+ Captain Kleerhagen, a Brussels nobleman, whose wife was a native of
+ Bois-le-Duc, and who was thoroughly familiar with the locality. One dark
+ winter's night, Kleerhagen, with fifty picked soldiers, advanced to the
+ Antwerp gate of Bois-le-Duc, while Hohenlo, with his whole force, lay in
+ ambuscade as near as possible to the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between the drawbridge and the portcullis were two small guard-houses,
+ which, very carelessly, had been left empty. Kleerhagen, with his fifty
+ followers, successfully climbed into these lurking-places, where they
+ quietly ensconced themselves for the night. At eight o'clock of the
+ following morning (20th January) the guards of the gate drew up the
+ portcullis, and reconnoitered. At the same instant, the ambushed fifty
+ sprang from their concealment, put them to the sword, and made themselves
+ masters of the gate. None of the night-watch escaped with life, save one
+ poor old invalided citizen, whose business had been to draw up the
+ portcullis, and who was severely wounded, and left for dead. The fifty
+ immediately summoned all of Rohenlo's ambuscade that were within hearing,
+ and then, without waiting for them, entered the town pell-mell in the best
+ of spirits, and shouting victory! victory! till they were hoarse. A single
+ corporal, with two men, was left to guard the entrance. Meantime, the old
+ wounded gate-opener, bleeding and crippled, crept into a dark corner, and
+ laid himself down, unnoticed, to die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon afterwards Hohenlo galloped into the town, clad in complete armour,
+ his long curls floating in the wind, with about two hundred troopers
+ clattering behind him, closely followed by five hundred pike-men on foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very brutally, foolishly, and characteristically, he had promised his
+ followers the sacking of the city so soon as it should be taken. They
+ accordingly set about the sacking, before it was taken. Hardly had the
+ five or six hundred effected their entrance, than throwing off all
+ control, they dispersed through the principal streets, and began bursting
+ open the doors of the most opulent households. The cries of "victory!"
+ "gained city!" "down with the Spaniards!" resounded on all sides. Many of
+ the citizens, panic-struck, fled from their homes, which they thus
+ abandoned to pillage, while, meantime, the loud shouts of the assailants
+ reached the ears of the sergeant and his two companies who had been left
+ in charge of the gate. Fearing that they should be cheated of their
+ rightful share in the plunder, they at once abandoned their post, and set
+ forth after their comrades, as fast as their legs could carry them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it so chanced&mdash;although there was no garrison in the town&mdash;that
+ forty Burgundian and Italian lancers, with about thirty foot-soldiers, had
+ come in the day before to escort a train of merchandise. The Seigneur de
+ Haultepenne, governor of Breda, a famous royalist commander&mdash;son of
+ old Count Berlaymont, who first gave the name of "beggars" to the
+ patriots-had accompanied them in the expedition. The little troop were
+ already about to mount their horses to depart, when they became aware of
+ the sudden tumult. Elmont, governor of the city, had also flown to the
+ rescue, and had endeavoured to rally the burghers. Not unmindful of their
+ ancient warlike fame, they had obeyed his entreaties. Elmont, with a
+ strong party of armed citizens, joined himself to Haultepenne's little
+ band of lancers. They fired a few shots at straggling parties of
+ plunderers, and pursued others up some narrow streets. They were but an
+ handful in comparison with the number of the patriots, who had gained
+ entrance to the city. They were, however, compact, united, and resolute.
+ The assailants were scattered, disorderly, and bent only upon plunder.
+ When attacked by an armed and regular band, they were amazed. They had
+ been told that there was no garrison; and behold a choice phalanx of
+ Spanish lancers, led on by one of the most famous of Philip's Netherland
+ chieftains. They thought themselves betrayed by Kleerhagen, entrapped into
+ a deliberately arranged ambush. There was a panic. The soldiers, dispersed
+ and doubtful, could not be rallied. Hohenlo, seeing that nothing was to be
+ done with his five hundred, galloped furiously out of the gate, to bring
+ in the rest of his troops who had remained outside the walls. The prize of
+ the wealthy city of Bois-le-Duc was too tempting to be lightly abandoned;
+ but he had much better have thought of making himself master of it himself
+ before he should present it as a prey to his followers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During his absence the panic spread. The States' troops, bewildered,
+ astonished, vigorously assaulted, turned their backs upon their enemies,
+ and fled helter-skelter towards the gates, through which they had first
+ gained admittance. But unfortunately for them, so soon as the corporal had
+ left his position, the wounded old gate-opener, in a dying condition, had
+ crawled forth on his hands and knees from a dark hole in the tower, cut,
+ with a pocket-knife, the ropes of the portcullis, and then given up the
+ ghost. Most effective was that blow struck by a dead man's hand. Down came
+ the portcullis. The flying plunderers were entrapped. Close behind them
+ came the excited burghers&mdash;their antique Belgic ferocity now fully
+ aroused&mdash;firing away with carbine and matchlock, dealing about them
+ with bludgeon and cutlass, and led merrily on by Haultepenne and Elmont
+ armed in proof, at the head of their squadron of lancers. The unfortunate
+ patriots had risen very early in the morning only to shear the wolf. Some
+ were cut to pieces in the streets; others climbed the walls, and threw
+ themselves head foremost into the moat. Many were drowned, and but a very
+ few effected their escape. Justinus de Nassau sprang over the parapet, and
+ succeeded in swimming the ditch. Kleerhagen, driven into the Holy Cross
+ tower, ascended to its roof, leaped, all accoutred as he was, into the
+ river, and with the assistance of a Scotch soldier, came safe to land.
+ Ferdinand Truchsess, brother of the ex-elector of Cologne, was killed.
+ Four or five hundred of the assailants&mdash;nearly all who had entered
+ the city&mdash;were slain, and about fifty of the burghers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hohenlo soon came back, with Colonel Ysselstein, and two thousand fresh
+ troops. But their noses, says a contemporary, grew a hundred feet long
+ with surprise when they saw the gate shut in their faces. It might have
+ occurred to the Count, when he rushed out of the town for reinforcements,
+ that it would be as well to replace the guard, which&mdash;as he must have
+ seen&mdash;had abandoned their post.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cursing his folly, he returned, mavellously discomfited, and deservedly
+ censured, to Gertruydenberg. And thus had a most important enterprise;
+ which had nearly been splendidly successful, ended in disaster and
+ disgrace. To the recklessness of the general, to the cupidity which he had
+ himself awakened in his followers, was the failure alone to be attributed.
+ Had he taken possession of the city with a firm grasp at the head of his
+ four thousand men, nothing could have resisted him; Haultepenne, and his
+ insignificant force, would have been dead, or his prisoners; the basis of
+ Parma's magnificent operations would have been withdrawn; Antwerp would
+ have been saved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Infinite gratitude," wrote Parma to Philip, "should be rendered to the
+ Lord. Great thanks are also due to Haultepenne. Had the rebels succeeded
+ in their enterprise against Bolduc, I should have been compelled to
+ abandon the siege of Antwerp. The town; by its strength and situation, is
+ of infinite importance for the reduction both of that place and of
+ Brussels, and the rebels in possession of Bolduc would have cut off my
+ supplies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince recommended Haultepenne most warmly to the King as deserving of
+ a rich "merced." The true hero of the day, however&mdash;at least the
+ chief agent in the victory was the poor, crushed, nameless victim who had
+ cut the ropes of the portcullis at the Antwerp gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hohenlo was deeply stung by the disgrace which he had incurred. For a time
+ he sought oblivion in hard drinking; but&mdash;brave and energetic, though
+ reckless&mdash;he soon became desirous of retrieving his reputation by
+ more successful enterprises. There was no lack of work, and assuredly his
+ hands were rarely idle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hollach (Hohenlo) is gone from hence on Friday last," wrote Davison to
+ Walsingham, "he will do what he may to recover his reputation lost in the
+ attempt, of Bois-le-Duc; which, for the grief and trouble he hath
+ conceived thereof, hath for the time greatly altered him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the turbulent Scheldt, lashed by the storms of winter, was
+ becoming a more formidable enemy to Parma's great enterprise than the
+ military demonstrations of his enemies, or the famine which was making
+ such havoc, with his little army. The ocean-tides were rolling huge
+ ice-blocks up and down, which beat against his palisade with the noise of
+ thunder, and seemed to threaten its immediate destruction. But the work
+ stood firm. The piles supporting the piers, which had been thrust out from
+ each bank into the stream, had been driven fifty feet into the river's
+ bed, and did their duty well. But in the space between, twelve hundred and
+ forty feet in width, the current was too deep for pile-driving and a
+ permanent bridge was to be established upon boats. And that bridge was to
+ be laid across the icy and tempestuous flood, in the depth of winter, in
+ the teeth of a watchful enemy, with the probability of an immediate
+ invasion from France, where the rebel envoys were known to be negotiating
+ on express invitation of the King&mdash;by half-naked, half-starving
+ soldiers and sailors, unpaid for years, and for the sake of a master who
+ seemed to have forgotten their existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank God," wrote Alexander, "the palisade stands firm in spite of the
+ ice. Now with the favour of the Lord, we shall soon get the fruit we have
+ been hoping, if your Majesty is not wanting in that to which your
+ grandeur, your great Christianity, your own interests, oblige you. In
+ truth 'tis a great and heroic work, worthy the great power of your
+ Majesty." "For my own part," he continued, "I have done what depended upon
+ me. From your own royal hand must emanate the rest;&mdash;men, namely,
+ sufficient to maintain the posts, and money enough to support them there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He expressed himself in the strongest language concerning the danger to
+ the royal cause from the weak and gradually sinking condition of the army.
+ Even without the French intrigues with the rebels, concerning which, in
+ his ignorance of the exact state of affairs, he expressed much anxiety, it
+ would be impossible, he said, to save the royal cause without men and
+ money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have spared myself," said the Prince, "neither day nor night. Let not
+ your Majesty impute the blame to me if we fail. Verdugo also is uttering a
+ perpetual cry out of Friesland for men&mdash;men and money."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, notwithstanding all these obstacles, the bridge was finished at last.
+ On the 25th February, (1585) the day sacred to Saint Matthew, and of
+ fortunate augury to the Emperor Charles, father of Philip and grandfather
+ of Alexander, the Scheldt was closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As already stated, from Fort Saint Mary on the Kalloo side, and from Fort
+ Philip, not far from Ordain on the Brabant shore of the Scheldt, strong
+ structures, supported upon piers, had been projected, reaching,
+ respectively, five hundred feet into the stream. These two opposite ends
+ were now connected by a permanent bridge of boats. There were thirty-two
+ of these barges, each of them sixty-two feet in length and twelve in
+ breadth, the spaces between each couple being twenty-two feet wide, and
+ all being bound together, stem, stern, and midships, by quadruple hawsers
+ and chains. Each boat was anchored at stem and stern with loose cables.
+ Strong timbers, with cross rafters, were placed upon the boats, upon which
+ heavy frame-work the planked pathway was laid down. A thick parapet of
+ closely-fitting beams was erected along both the outer edges of the whole
+ fabric. Thus a continuous and well-fortified bridge, two thousand four
+ hundred feet in length, was stretched at last from shore to shore. Each of
+ the thirty-two boats on which the central portion of the structure
+ reposed, was a small fortress provided with two heavy pieces of artillery,
+ pointing, the one up, the other down the stream, and manned by thirty-two
+ soldiers and four sailors, defended by a breastwork formed of gabions of
+ great thickness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The forts of Saint Philip and St. Mary, at either end of the bridge, had
+ each ten great guns, and both were filled with soldiers. In front of each
+ fort, moreover, was stationed a fleet of twenty armed vessels, carrying
+ heavy pieces of artillery; ten anchored at the angle towards Antwerp, and
+ as many looking down the river. One hundred and seventy great guns,
+ including the armaments of the boats under the bridge of the armada and
+ the forts, protected the whole structure, pointing up and down the stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, besides these batteries, an additional precaution had been taken. On
+ each side, above and below the bridge, at a moderate distance&mdash;a bow
+ shot&mdash;was anchored a heavy, raft floating upon empty barrels. Each
+ raft was composed of heavy timbers, bound together in bunches of three,
+ the spaces between being connected by ships' masts and lighter spar-work,
+ and with a tooth-like projection along the whole outer edge, formed of
+ strong rafters, pointed and armed with sharp prongs and hooks of iron.
+ Thus a serried phalanx, as it were, of spears stood ever on guard to
+ protect the precious inner structure. Vessels coming from Zeeland or
+ Antwerp, and the floating ice-masses, which were almost as formidable,
+ were obliged to make their first attack upon these dangerous outer
+ defences. Each raft; floating in the middle of the stream, extended twelve
+ hundred, and fifty-two feet across, thus protecting the whole of the
+ bridge of boats and a portion of that resting upon piles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the famous bridge of Parma. The magnificent undertaking has been
+ advantageously compared with the celebrated Rhine-bridge of Julius Caesar.
+ When it is remembered; however; that the Roman work was performed in
+ summer, across a river only half as broad as the Scheldt, free from the
+ disturbing, action of the tides; and flowing through an unresisting
+ country; while the whole character of the structure; intended only to,
+ serve for the single passage of an army, was far inferior to the massive
+ solidity of Parma's bridge; it seems not unreasonable to assign the
+ superiority to the general who had surmounted all the obstacles of a
+ northern winter, vehement ebb and flow from the sea, and enterprising and
+ desperate enemies at every point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the citizens, at last, looked upon the completed fabric, converted
+ from the "dream," which they had pronounced it to be, into a terrible
+ reality; when they saw the shining array of Spanish and Italian legions
+ marching and counter-marching upon their new road; and trampling, as it
+ were; the turbulent river beneath their feet; when they witnessed the
+ solemn military spectacle with which the Governor-General celebrated his
+ success, amid peals of cannon and shouts of triumph from his army, they
+ bitterly bewailed their own folly. Yet even then they could hardly believe
+ that the work had been accomplished by human agency, but they loudly
+ protested that invisible demons had been summoned to plan and perfect this
+ fatal and preter-human work. They were wrong. There had been but one demon&mdash;one
+ clear, lofty intelligence, inspiring a steady and untiring hand. The demon
+ was the intellect of Alexander Farnese; but it had been assisted in its
+ labour by the hundred devils of envy, covetousness, jealousy, selfishness,
+ distrust, and discord, that had housed, not, in his camp, but in the ranks
+ of those who were contending for their hearths and altars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus had the Prince arrived at success in spite of every obstacle. He
+ took a just pride in the achievement, yet he knew by how many dangers he
+ was still surrounded, and he felt hurt at his sovereign's neglect. "The
+ enterprise at Antwerp," he wrote to Philip on the day the bridge was
+ completed, "is so great and heroic that to celebrate it would require me
+ to speak more at large than I like, to do, for fear of being tedious to
+ your Majesty. What I will say, is that the labours and difficulties have
+ been every day so, great, that if your Majesty knew them, you would
+ estimate, what we have done more highly than-you do; and not forget us so
+ utterly, leaving us to die of hunger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He considered the fabric in itself almost impregnable, provided he were
+ furnished with the means to maintain what he had so painfully constructed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The whole is in such condition," said he, "that in opinion of all
+ competent military judges it would stand though all Holland and Zeeland
+ should come to destroy our palisades. Their attacks must be made at
+ immense danger, and disadvantage, so severely can we play upon them with
+ our artillery and musketry. Every boat is, garnished with the most dainty
+ captains and soldiers, so that if the enemy should attempt to assail us
+ now, they would come back with broken heads."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet in the midst of his apparent triumph he had, at times, almost despair
+ in his heart. He felt really at the last gasp. His troops had dwindled to
+ the mere shadow of an army, and they were forced to live almost upon air.
+ The cavalry had nearly vanished. The garrisons in the different cities
+ were starving. The burghers had no food for the soldiers nor for
+ themselves. "As for the rest of the troops," said Alexander, "they are
+ stationed where they have nothing to subsist upon, save salt water and the
+ dykes, and if the Lord does not grant a miracle, succour, even if sent by
+ your Majesty, will arrive too late." He assured his master, that he could
+ not go on more than five or six days longer, that he had been feeding his
+ soldiers for a long time from hand to mouth, and that it would soon be
+ impossible for him to keep his troops together. If he did not disband them
+ they would run away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His pictures were most dismal, his supplications for money very moving but
+ he never alluded to himself. All his anxiety, all his tenderness, were for
+ his soldiers. "They must have food," he said: "'Tis impossible to sustain
+ them any longer by driblets, as I have done for a long time. Yet how can I
+ do it without money? And I have none at all, nor do I see where to get a
+ single florin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But these revelations were made only to his master's most secret ear. His
+ letters, deciphered after three centuries, alone make manifest the almost
+ desperate condition in which the apparently triumphant general was placed,
+ and the facility with which his antagonists, had they been well guided and
+ faithful to themselves, might have driven him into the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to those adversaries he maintained an attitude of serene and smiling
+ triumph. A spy, sent from the city to obtain intelligence for the anxious
+ burghers, had gained admission into his lines, was captured and brought
+ before the Prince. He expected, of course, to be immediately hanged. On
+ the contrary, Alexander gave orders that he should be conducted over every
+ part of the encampment. The forts, the palisades, the bridge, were all to
+ be carefully exhibited and explained to him as if he had been a friendly
+ visitor entitled to every information. He was requested to count the
+ pieces of artillery in the forts, on the bridge, in the armada. After
+ thoroughly studying the scene he was then dismissed with a safe-conduct to
+ the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Go back to those who sent you," said the Prince. "Convey to them the
+ information in quest of which you came. Apprize them of every thing which
+ you have inspected, counted, heard explained. Tell them further, that the
+ siege will never be abandoned, and that this bridge will be my sepulcher
+ or my pathway into Antwerp."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now the aspect of the scene was indeed portentous. The chimera had
+ become a very visible bristling reality. There stood the bridge which the
+ citizens had ridiculed while it was growing before their faces. There
+ scowled the Kowenstyn&mdash;black with cannon, covered all over with
+ fortresses which the butchers had so sedulously preserved. From Parma's
+ camp at Beveren and Kalloo a great fortified road led across the river and
+ along the fatal dyke all the way to the entrenchments at Stabroek, where
+ Mansfeld's army lay. Grim Mondragon held the "holy cross" and the whole
+ Kowenstyn in his own iron grasp. A chain of forts, built and occupied by
+ the contending hosts of the patriots and the Spaniards, were closely
+ packed together along both banks of the Scheldt, nine miles long from
+ Antwerp to Lillo, and interchanged perpetual cannonades. The country all
+ around, once fertile as a garden, had been changed into a wild and wintry
+ sea where swarms of gun-boats and other armed vessels manoeuvred and
+ contended with each other over submerged villages and orchards, and among
+ half-drowned turrets and steeples. Yet there rose the great bulwark&mdash;whose
+ early destruction would have made all this desolation a blessing&mdash;unbroken
+ and obstinate; a perpetual obstacle to communication between Antwerp and
+ Zeeland. The very spirit of the murdered Prince of Orange seemed to rise
+ sadly and reproachfully out of the waste of waters, as if to rebuke the
+ men who had been so deaf to his solemn warnings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brussels, too, wearied and worn, its heart sick with hope deferred, now
+ fell into despair as the futile result of the French negotiation became
+ apparent. The stately and opulent city had long been in a most abject
+ condition. Many of its inhabitants attempted to escape from the horrors of
+ starving by flying from its walls. Of the fugitives, the men were either
+ scourged back by the Spaniards into the city, or hanged up along the
+ road-side. The women were treated, leniently, even playfully, for it was
+ thought an excellent jest to cut off the petticoats of the unfortunate
+ starving creatures up to their knees, and then command them to go back and
+ starve at home with their friends and fellow-citizens. A great many
+ persons literally died of hunger. Matrons with large families poisoned
+ their children and themselves to avoid the more terrible death by
+ starving. At last, when Vilvoorde was taken, when the baseness of the
+ French King was thoroughly understood, when Parma's bridge was completed
+ and the Scheldt bridled, Brussels capitulated on as favourable terms as
+ could well have been expected.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ College of "peace-makers," who wrangled more than all
+ Military virtue in the support of an infamous cause
+ Not distinguished for their docility
+ Repentance, as usual, had come many hours too late
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. 1585, Part 2., Alexander Farnese, The Duke of Parma
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Position of Alexander and his Army&mdash;La Motte attempts in vain
+ Ostend&mdash;Patriots gain Liefkenshoek&mdash;Projects of Gianibelli&mdash;Alarm on
+ the Bridge&mdash;The Fire Ships&mdash;The Explosion&mdash;Its Results&mdash;Death of the
+ Viscount of Ghent&mdash;Perpetual Anxiety of Farnese&mdash;Impoverished State
+ of the Spaniards&mdash;Intended Attack of the Kowenstyn&mdash;Second Attack of
+ the Kowenstyn&mdash;A Landing effected&mdash;A sharp Combat&mdash;The Dyke pierced
+ &mdash;Rally of the Spaniards&mdash;Parma comes to the Rescue&mdash;Fierce Struggle
+ on the Dyke&mdash;The Spaniards successful&mdash;Premature Triumph at Antwerp
+ &mdash;Defeat of the Patriots&mdash;The Ship War's End&mdash;Despair of the Citizens
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding these triumphs, Parma was much inconvenienced by not
+ possessing the sea-coast of Flanders. Ostend was a perpetual
+ stumbling-block to him. He therefore assented, with pleasure to a
+ proposition made by La Motte, one of the most experienced and courageous
+ of the Walloon royalist, commanders, to attempt the place by surprise. And
+ La Motte; at the first blow; was more than half successful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the night of the 29th March, (1585) with two thousand foot and twelve
+ hundred cavalry, he carried the whole of the old port of Ostend. Leaving a
+ Walloon officer, in whom he had confidence, to guard the position already
+ gained, he went back in person for reinforcements. During his advance, the
+ same ill luck attended his enterprise which had blasted Hohenlo's
+ achievement at Bois-le-Duc. The soldiers he left behind him deserted their
+ posts for the sake of rifling the town. The officer in command, instead of
+ keeping them to their duty, joined in the chase. The citizens roused
+ themselves, attacked their invaders, killed many of them, and put the rest
+ to flight. When La Motte returned; he found the panic general. His whole
+ force, including the fresh soldiers just brought to the rescue, were
+ beside themselves with fear. He killed several with his own hand, but the
+ troops were not to be rallied. His quick triumph was changed into an
+ absolute defeat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma, furious at the ignominious result of a plan from which so much had
+ been expected, ordered the Walloon captain, from whose delinquency so much
+ disaster had resulted, to be forthwith hanged. "Such villainy," said he,
+ "must never go unpunished."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was impossible for the Prince to send a second expedition to attempt
+ the reduction of Ostend, for the patriots were at last arousing themselves
+ to the necessity of exertion. It was very obvious&mdash;now that the
+ bridge had been built, and the Kowenstyn fortified&mdash;that one or the
+ other was to be destroyed, or Antwerp abandoned to its fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The patriots had been sleeping, as it were, all the winter, hugging the
+ delusive dream of French sovereignty and French assistance. No language
+ can exaggerate the deadly effects from the slow poison of that
+ negotiation. At any rate, the negotiation was now concluded. The dream was
+ dispelled. Antwerp must now fall, or a decisive blow must be struck by the
+ patriots themselves, and a telling blow had been secretly and maturely
+ meditated. Certain preparatory steps were however necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fort of Liefkenshoek, "darling's corner," was a most important post.
+ The patriots had never ceased to regret that precious possession, lost, as
+ we have seen, in so tragical a manner on the very day of Orange's death.
+ Fort Lillo, exactly opposite, on the Brabant shore of the Scheldt, had
+ always been securely held by them; and was their strongest position. Were
+ both places in their power, the navigation of the river, at least as far
+ as the bridge, would be comparatively secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sudden dash was made upon Liefkenshoek. A number of armed vessels sailed
+ up from Zeeland, under command of Justinus de Nassau. They were assisted
+ from Fort Lillo by a detachment headed by Count Hohenlo. These two
+ officers were desirous of retrieving the reputation which they had lost at
+ Bois-le-Duc. They were successful, and the "darling" fort was carried at a
+ blow. After a brief cannonade, the patriots made a breach, effected a
+ landing, and sprang over the ramparts. The Walloons and Spaniards fled in
+ dismay; many of them were killed in the fort, and along the dykes; others
+ were hurled into the Scheldt. The victors followed up their success by
+ reducing, with equal impetuosity, the fort of Saint Anthony, situate in
+ the neighbourhood farther down the river. They thus gained entire command
+ of all the high ground, which remained in that quarter above the
+ inundation, and was called the Doel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dyke, on which Liefkenshoek stood, led up the river towards Kalloo,
+ distant less than a league. There were Parma's head-quarters and the
+ famous bridge. But at Fort Saint Mary; where the Flemish head of that
+ bridge rested, the dyke was broken. Upon that broken end the commanders of
+ the expedition against Liefkenshoek were ordered to throw up an
+ entrenchment, without loss of a moment, so soon as they should have gained
+ the fortresses which they were ordered first to assault. Sainte Aldegonde
+ had given urgent written directions to this effect. From a redoubt
+ situated thus, in the very face of Saint Mary's, that position, the
+ palisade-work, the whole bridge, might be battered with all the artillery
+ that could be brought from Zeeland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Parma was beforehand with them. Notwithstanding his rage and
+ mortification that Spanish soldiers should have ignominiously lost the
+ important fortress which Richebourg had conquered so brilliantly nine
+ months before, he was not the man to spend time in unavailing regrets. His
+ quick eye instantly, detected the flaw which might soon be fatal. In the
+ very same night of the loss of Liefkenshoek, he sent as strong a party as
+ could be spared, with plenty of sappers and miners, in flat-bottomed boats
+ across from Kalloo. As the morning dawned, an improvised fortress, with
+ the Spanish flag waving above its bulwarks, stood on the broken end of the
+ dyke. That done, he ordered one of the two captains who had commanded in
+ Liefkenshoek and Saint Anthony to be beheaded on the same dyke. The other
+ was dismissed with ignominy. Ostend was, of course, given up; "but it was
+ not a small matter," said Parma, "to fortify ourselves that very night
+ upon the ruptured place, and so prevent the rebels from doing it, which
+ would have been very mal-a-propos."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, the rebels had achieved a considerable success; and now or
+ never the telling blow, long meditated, was to be struck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There lived in Antwerp a subtle Mantuan, Gianibelli by name, who had
+ married and been long settled in the city. He had made himself busy with
+ various schemes for victualling the place. He had especially urged upon
+ the authorities, at an early period of the siege, the propriety of making
+ large purchases of corn and storing it in magazines at a time when
+ famine-price had by no means been reached. But the leading men had then
+ their heads full of a great ship, or floating castle, which they were
+ building, and which they had pompously named the 'War's End,' 'Fin de la
+ Guerre.' We shall hear something of this phenomenon at a later period.
+ Meanwhile, Gianibelli, who knew something of shipbuilding, as he did of
+ most other useful matters, ridiculed the design, which was likely to cost,
+ in itself before completion, as much money as would keep the city in bread
+ for a third of a year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gianibelli was no patriot. He was purely a man of science and of great
+ acquirements, who was looked upon by the ignorant populace alternately as
+ a dreamer and a wizard. He was as indifferent to the cause of freedom as
+ of despotism, but he had a great love for chemistry. He was also a
+ profound mechanician, second to no man of his age in theoretic and
+ practical engineering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had gone from Italy to Spain that he might offer his services to
+ Philip, and give him the benefit of many original and ingenious
+ inventions. Forced to dance attendance, day after day, among sneering
+ courtiers and insolent placemen, and to submit to the criticism of
+ practical sages and philosophers of routine, while, he was constantly
+ denied an opportunity of explaining his projects, the quick-tempered
+ Italian had gone away at last, indignant. He had then vowed revenge upon
+ the dulness by which his genius had been slighted, and had sworn that the
+ next time the Spaniards heard the name of the man whom they had dared to
+ deride, they should hear it with tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He now laid before the senate of Antwerp a plan for some vessels likely to
+ prove more effective than the gigantic 'War's End,' which he had
+ prophesied would prove a failure. With these he pledged himself to destroy
+ the bridge. He demanded three ships which he had selected from the city
+ fleet; the 'Orange,' the 'Post,' and the 'Golden Lion,' measuring,
+ respectively, one hundred and fifty, three hundred and fifty, and five
+ hundred tons. Besides these, he wished sixty flat-bottomed scows, which he
+ proposed to send down the river, partially submerged, disposed in the
+ shape of a half moon, with innumerable anchors and grapnel's thrusting
+ themselves out of the water at every point. This machine was intended to
+ operate against the raft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ignorance and incredulity did their work, as usual, and Gianbelli's
+ request was refused. As a quarter-measure, nevertheless, he was allowed to
+ take two smaller vessels of seventy and eighty tons. The Italian was
+ disgusted with parsimony upon so momentous an occasion, but he at the same
+ time determined, even with these slender materials, to give an exhibition
+ of his power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not all his the glory, however, of the ingenious project. Associated with
+ him were two skilful artizans of Antwerp; a clockmaker named Bory, and a
+ mechanician named Timmerman&mdash;but Gianibelli was the chief and
+ superintendent of the whole daring enterprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave to his two ships the cheerful names of the 'Fortune' and the
+ 'Hope,' and set himself energetically to justify their titles by their
+ efficiency. They were to be marine volcanos, which, drifting down the
+ river with tide, were to deal destruction where the Spaniards themselves
+ most secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the hold of each vessel, along the whole length, was laid down a solid
+ flooring of brick and mortar, one foot thick and five feet wide. Upon this
+ was built a chamber of marble mason-work, forty feet long, three and a
+ half feet broad, as many high, and with side-walks [walls? D.W.] five feet
+ in thickness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the crater. It was filled with seven thousand of gunpowder, of a
+ kind superior to anything known, and prepared by Gianibelli himself. It
+ was covered with a roof, six feet in thickness, formed of blue tombstones,
+ placed edgewise. Over this crater, rose a hollow cone, or pyramid, made of
+ heavy marble slabs, and filled with mill-stones, cannon balls, blocks of
+ marble, chain-shot, iron hooks, plough-coulters, and every dangerous
+ missile that could be imagined. The spaces between the mine and the sides
+ of each ship were likewise filled with paving stones, iron-bound stakes,
+ harpoons, and other projectiles. The whole fabric was then covered by a
+ smooth light flooring of planks and brick-work, upon which was a pile of
+ wood: This was to be lighted at the proper time, in order that the two
+ vessels might present the appearance of simple fire-ships, intended only
+ to excite a conflagration of the bridge. On the 'Fortune' a slow match,
+ very carefully prepared, communicated with the submerged mine, which was
+ to explode at a nicely-calculated moment. The eruption of the other
+ floating volcano was to be regulated by an ingenious piece of clock-work,
+ by which, at the appointed time, fire, struck from a flint, was to inflame
+ the hidden mass of gunpowder below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In addition to these two infernal machines, or "hell-burners," as they
+ were called, a fleet of thirty-two smaller vessels was prepared. Covered
+ with tar, turpentine, rosin, and filled with inflammable and combustible
+ materials, these barks were to be sent from Antwerp down the river in
+ detachments of eight every half hour with the ebb tide. The object was to
+ clear the way, if possible, of the raft, and to occupy the attention of
+ the Spaniards, until the 'Fortune' and the `Hope' should come down upon
+ the bridge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The 5th April, (1885) being the day following that on which the successful
+ assault upon Liefkenshoek and Saint Anthony had taken place, was fixed for
+ the descent of the fire-ships. So soon as it should be dark, the
+ thirty-two lesser burning-vessels, under the direction of Admiral Jacob
+ Jacobzoon, were to be sent forth from the neighborhood of the 'Boor's
+ Sconce'&mdash;a fort close to the city walls&mdash;in accordance with the
+ Italian's plan. "Run-a-way Jacob," however, or "Koppen Loppen," had earned
+ no new laurels which could throw into the shade that opprobrious
+ appellation. He was not one of Holland's naval heroes, but, on the whole,
+ a very incompetent officer; exactly the man to damage the best concerted
+ scheme which the genius of others could invent. Accordingly, Koppen-Loppen
+ began with a grave mistake. Instead of allowing the precursory fire-ships
+ to drift down the stream, at the regular intervals agreed upon, he
+ despatched them all rapidly, and helter skelter, one after another, as
+ fast as they could be set forth on their career. Not long afterwards, he
+ sent the two "hellburners," the 'Fortune' and the 'Hope,' directly in
+ their wake. Thus the whole fiery fleet had set forth, almost at once, upon
+ its fatal voyage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was known to Parma that preparations for an attack were making at
+ Antwerp, but as to the nature of the danger he was necessarily in the
+ dark. He was anticipating an invasion by a fleet from the city in
+ combination with a squadron of Zeelanders coming up from below. So soon as
+ the first vessels, therefore, with their trains not yet lighted, were
+ discovered bearing down from the city, he was confirmed in his conjecture.
+ His drama and trumpets instantly called to arms, and the whole body of his
+ troops was mustered upon the bridge; the palisades, and in the nearest
+ forts. Thus the preparations to avoid or to contend with the danger, were
+ leading the Spaniards into the very jaws of destruction. Alexander, after
+ crossing and recrossing the river, giving minute directions for repelling
+ the expected assault, finally stationed himself in the block-house at the
+ point of junction, on the Flemish aide, between the palisade and the
+ bridge of boats. He was surrounded by a group of superior officers, among
+ whom Richebourg, Billy, Gaetano, Cessis, and the Englishman Sir Rowland
+ Yorke, were conspicuous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a dark, mild evening of early spring. As the fleet of vessels
+ dropped slowly down the river, they suddenly became luminous, each ship
+ flaming out of the darkness, a phantom of living fire. The very waves of
+ the Scheldt seemed glowing with the conflagration, while its banks were
+ lighted up with a preternatural glare. It was a wild, pompous, theatrical
+ spectacle. The array of soldiers on both aides the river, along the dykes
+ and upon the bridge, with banners waving, and spear and cuirass glancing
+ in the lurid light; the demon fleet, guided by no human hand, wrapped in
+ flames, and flitting through the darkness, with irregular movement; but
+ portentous aspect, at the caprice of wind and tide; the death-like silence
+ of expectation, which had succeeded the sound of trumpet and the shouts of
+ the soldiers; and the weird glow which had supplanted the darkness-all
+ combined with the sense of imminent and mysterious danger to excite and
+ oppress the imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently, the Spaniards, as they gazed from the bridge, began to take
+ heart again. One after another, many of the lesser vessels drifted blindly
+ against the raft, where they entangled themselves among the hooks and
+ gigantic spearheads, and burned slowly out without causing any extensive
+ conflagration. Others grounded on the banks of the river, before reaching
+ their destination. Some sank in the stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Last of all came the two infernal ships, swaying unsteadily with the
+ current; the pilots of course, as they neared the bridge, having
+ noiselessly effected their escape in the skiffs. The slight fire upon the
+ deck scarcely illuminated the dark phantom-like hulls. Both were carried
+ by the current clear of the raft, which, by a great error of judgment, as
+ it now appeared, on the part of the builders, had only been made to
+ protect the floating portion of the bridge. The 'Fortune' came first,
+ staggering inside the raft, and then lurching clumsily against the dyke,
+ and grounding near Kalloo, without touching the bridge. There was a
+ moment's pause of expectation. At last the slow match upon the deck burned
+ out, and there was a faint and partial explosion, by which little or no
+ damage was produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma instantly called for volunteers to board the mysterious vessel. The
+ desperate expedition was headed by the bold Roland York, a Londoner, of
+ whom one day there was more to be heard in Netherland history. The party
+ sprang into the deserted and now harmless volcano, extinguishing the
+ slight fires that were smouldering on the deck, and thrusting spears and
+ long poles into the hidden recesses of the hold. There was, however,
+ little time to pursue these perilous investigations, and the party soon
+ made their escape to the bridge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The troops of Parma, crowding on the palisade, and looking over the
+ parapets, now began to greet the exhibition with peals of derisive
+ laughter. It was but child's play, they thought, to threaten a Spanish
+ army, and a general like Alexander Farnese, with such paltry fire-works as
+ these. Nevertheless all eyes were anxiously fixed upon the remaining
+ fire-ship, or "hell-burner," the 'Hope,' which had now drifted very near
+ the place of its destination. Tearing her way between the raft and the
+ shore, she struck heavily against the bridge on the Kalloo side, close to
+ the block-house at the commencement of the floating portion of the bridge.
+ A thin wreath of smoke was seen curling over a slight and smouldering fire
+ upon her deck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marquis Richebourg, standing on the bridge, laughed loudly at the
+ apparently impotent conclusion of the whole adventure. It was his last
+ laugh on earth. A number of soldiers, at Parma's summons, instantly sprang
+ on board this second mysterious vessel, and occupied themselves, as the
+ party on board the 'Fortune' had done, in extinguishing, the flames, and
+ in endeavoring to ascertain the nature of the machine. Richebourg boldly
+ directed from the bridge their hazardous experiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same moment a certain ensign De Vega, who stood near the Prince of
+ Parma, close to the block-house, approached him with vehement entreaties
+ that he should retire. Alexander refused to stir from the spot, being
+ anxious to learn the result of these investigations. Vega, moved by some
+ instinctive and irresistible apprehension, fell upon his knees, and
+ plucking the General earnestly by the cloak, implored him with such
+ passionate words and gestures to leave the place, that the Prince
+ reluctantly yielded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not a moment too soon. The clockwork had been better adjusted than
+ the slow match in the 'Fortune.' Scarcely had Alexander reached the
+ entrance of Saint Mary's Fort, at the end of the bridge, when a horrible
+ explosion was heard. The 'Hope' disappeared, together with the men who had
+ boarded her, and the block-house, against which she had struck, with all
+ its garrison, while a large portion of the bridge, with all the troops
+ stationed upon it, had vanished into air. It was the work of a single
+ instant. The Scheldt yawned to its lowest depth, and then cast its waters
+ across the dykes, deep into the forts, and far over the land. The earth
+ shook as with the throb of a volcano. A wild glare lighted up the scene
+ for one moment, and was then succeeded by pitchy darkness. Houses were
+ toppled down miles away, and not a living thing, even in remote places,
+ could keep its feet. The air was filled with a rain of plough-shares,
+ grave-stones, and marble balls, intermixed with the heads, limbs, and
+ bodies, of what had been human beings. Slabs of granite, vomited by the
+ flaming ship, were found afterwards at a league's distance, and buried
+ deep in the earth. A thousand soldiers were destroyed in a second of time;
+ many of them being torn to shreds, beyond even the semblance of humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richebourg disappeared, and was not found until several days later, when
+ his body was discovered; doubled around an iron chain, which hung from one
+ of the bridge-boats in the centre of the river. The veteran Robles,
+ Seigneur de Billy, a Portuguese officer of eminent service and high
+ military rank, was also destroyed. Months afterwards, his body was
+ discovered adhering to the timber-work of the bridge, upon the ultimate
+ removal of that structure, and was only recognized by a peculiar gold
+ chain which he habitually wore. Parma himself was thrown to the ground,
+ stunned by a blow on the shoulder from a flying stake. The page, who was
+ behind him, carrying his helmet, fell dead without a wound, killed by the
+ concussion of the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several strange and less tragical incidents occurred. The Viscomte de
+ Bruxelles was blown out of a boat on the Flemish side, and descended safe
+ and, sound into another in the centre of the stream. Captain Tucci, clad
+ in complete armour, was whirled out of a fort, shot perpendicularly into
+ the air, and then fell back into the river. Being of a cool temperament, a
+ good swimmer, and very pious, he skilfully divested himself of cuirass and
+ helmet, recommended himself to the Blessed Virgin, and swam safely ashore.
+ Another young officer of Parma's body-guard, Francois de Liege by name,
+ standing on the Kalloo end of the bridge, rose like a feather into the
+ clouds, and, flying quite across the river, alighted on the opposite bank
+ with no further harm than a contused shoulder. He imagined himself (he
+ said afterwards) to have been changed into a cannon-ball, as he rushed
+ through the pitchy atmosphere, propelled by a blast of irresistible fury.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [The chief authorities used in the foregoing account of this famous
+ enterprise are those already cited on a previous page, viz.: the MS.
+ Letters of the Prince of Parma in the Archives of Simancas; Bor, ii.
+ 596, 597; Strada, H. 334 seq.; Meteren, xii. 223; Hoofd Vervolgh,
+ 91; Baudartii Polemographia, ii. 24-27; Bentivoglio, etc., I have
+ not thought it necessary to cite them step by step; for all the
+ accounts, with some inevitable and unimportant discrepancies, agree
+ with each other. The most copious details are to be found in Strada
+ and in Bor.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It had been agreed that Admiral Jacobzoon should, immediately after the
+ explosion of the fire-ships, send an eight-oared barge to ascertain the
+ amount of damage. If a breach had been effected, and a passage up to the
+ city opened, he was to fire a rocket. At this signal, the fleet stationed
+ at Lillo, carrying a heavy armament, laden with provisions enough to
+ relieve Antwerp from all anxiety, and ready to sail on the instant, was at
+ once to force its way up the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deed was done. A breach, two hundred feet in width was made. Had the
+ most skilful pilot in Zeeland held the helm of the 'Hope,' with a choice
+ crew obedient to his orders, he could not have guided her more carefully
+ than she had been directed by wind and tide. Avoiding the raft which lay
+ in her way, she had, as it were, with the intelligence of a living
+ creature, fulfilled the wishes of the daring genius that had created her;
+ and laid herself alongside the bridge, exactly at the most telling point.
+ She had then destroyed herself, precisely at the right moment. All the
+ effects, and more than all, that had been predicted by the Mantuan wizard
+ had come to pass. The famous bridge was cleft through and through, and a
+ thousand picked men&mdash;Parma's very "daintiest"&mdash;were blown out of
+ existence. The Governor-General himself was lying stark and stiff upon the
+ bridge which he said should be his triumphal monument or his tomb. His
+ most distinguished officers were dead, and all the survivors were dumb and
+ blind with astonishment at the unheard of, convulsion. The passage was
+ open for the fleet, and the fleet, lay below with sails spread, and oars
+ in the rowlocks, only waiting for the signal to bear up at once to the
+ scene of action, to smite out of existence all that remained of the
+ splendid structure, and to carry relief and triumph into Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not a soul slept in the city. The explosion had shook its walls, and
+ thousands of people thronged the streets, their hearts beating high with
+ expectation. It was a moment of exquisite triumph. The 'Hope,' word of
+ happy augury, had not been relied upon in vain, and Parma's seven months
+ of patient labour had been annihilated in a moment. Sainte Aldegonde and
+ Gianibelli stood in the 'Boors' Sconce' on the edge of the river. They had
+ felt and heard the explosion, and they were now straining their eyes
+ through the darkness to mark the flight of the welcome rocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That rocket never rose. And it is enough, even after the lapse of three
+ centuries, to cause a pang in every heart that beats for human liberty to
+ think of the bitter disappointment which crushed these great and
+ legitimate hopes. The cause lay in the incompetency and cowardice of the
+ man who had been so unfortunately entrusted with a share in a noble
+ enterprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Admiral Jacobzoon, paralyzed by the explosion, which announced his own
+ triumph, sent off the barge, but did not wait for its return. The boatmen,
+ too, appalled by the sights and sounds which they had witnessed, and by
+ the murky darkness which encompassed them, did not venture near the scene
+ of action, but, after rowing for a short interval hither and thither, came
+ back with the lying report that nothing had been accomplished, and that
+ the bridge remained unbroken. Sainte Aldegonde and Gianibelli were beside
+ themselves with rage, as they surmised the imbecility of the Admiral, and
+ devoted him in their hearts to the gallows, which he certainly deserved.
+ The wrath of the keen Italian may be conceived, now that his ingenious and
+ entirely successful scheme was thus rendered fruitless by the blunders of
+ the incompetent Fleming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other side, there was a man whom no danger could appall. Alexander
+ had been thought dead, and the dismay among his followers was universal.
+ He was known to have been standing an instant before the explosion on the
+ very block-house where the 'Hope' had struck. After the first terrible
+ moments had passed, his soldiers found their general lying, as if in a
+ trance, on the threshold of St. Mary's Fort, his drawn sword in his hand,
+ with Cessis embracing his knees, and Gaetano extended at his side, stunned
+ with a blow upon the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Recovering from his swoon, Parma was the first to spring to his feet.
+ Sword in hand, he rushed at once upon the bridge to mark the extent of the
+ disaster. The admirable structure, the result of so much patient and
+ intelligent energy, was fearfully shattered; the bridge, the river, and
+ the shore, strewed with the mangled bodies of his soldiers. He expected,
+ as a matter of certainty, that the fleet from below would instantly force
+ its passage, destroy, the remainder of his troops-stunned as they were
+ with the sudden catastrophe complete the demolition of the bridge, and
+ then make its way to Antwerp, with ample reinforcements and supplies. And
+ Alexander saw that the expedition would be successful. Momently expecting
+ the attack, he maintained his courage and semblance of cheerfulness, with
+ despair in his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His winter's work seemed annihilated, and it was probable that he should
+ be obliged to raise the siege. Nevertheless, he passed in person from rank
+ to rank, from post to post, seeing that the wounded were provided for,
+ encouraging those that remained unhurt, and endeavouring to infuse a
+ portion of his own courage into the survivors of his panic-stricken army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was he entirely unsuccessful, as the night wore on and the expected
+ assault was still delayed. Without further loss of time, he employed his
+ men to collect the drifting boats, timber, and spar-work, and to make a
+ hasty and temporary restoration&mdash;in semblance at least&mdash;of the
+ ruined portion of his bridge. And thus he employed himself steadily all
+ the night, although expecting every instant to hear the first broadside of
+ the Zeeland cannon. When morning broke, and it became obvious that the
+ patriots were unable or unwilling to follow up their own success, the
+ Governor-General felt as secure as ever. He at once set about the thorough
+ repairs of his great work, and&mdash;before he could be again molested&mdash;had
+ made good the damage which it had sustained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not till three days afterwards that the truth was known in Antwerp.
+ Hohenlo then sent down a messenger, who swam, under the bridge,
+ ascertained the exact state of affairs, and returned, when it was too
+ late, with the first intelligence of the triumph which had been won and
+ lost. The disappointment and mortification were almost intolerable. And
+ thus had. Run-a-way Jacob, 'Koppen Loppen,' blasted the hopes of so many
+ wiser and braver spirits than his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loss to Parma and to the royalist cause in Marquis Richebourg, was
+ very great. The death of De Billy, who was a faithful, experienced, and
+ courageous general, was also much lamented. "The misfortune from their
+ death," said Parma, "is not to be exaggerated. Each was ever ready to do
+ his duty in your Majesty's service, and to save me much fatigue in all my
+ various affairs. Nevertheless," continued the Prince, with great piety,
+ "we give the Lord thanks for all, and take as a favour everything which
+ comes from His hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander had indeed reason to deplore the loss of Robert de Melun,
+ Viscount of Ghent, Marquis of Roubaix and Richebourg. He was a most
+ valuable officer. His wealth was great. It had been recently largely
+ increased by the confiscation of his elder brother's estates for his
+ benefit, a measure which at Parma's intercession had been accorded by the
+ King. That brother was the patriotic Prince of Espinoy, whom we have
+ recently seen heading the legation of the States to France. And Richebourg
+ was grateful to Alexander, for besides these fraternal spoils, he had
+ received two marquisates through his great patron, in addition to the
+ highest military offices. Insolent, overbearing, truculent to all the
+ world, to Parma he was ever docile, affectionate, watchful, obsequious. A
+ man who knew not fatigue, nor fear, nor remorse, nor natural affection,
+ who could patiently superintend all the details of a great military work,
+ or manage a vast political intrigue by alternations of browbeating and
+ bribery, or lead a forlorn hope, or murder a prisoner in cold blood, or
+ leap into the blazing crater of what seemed a marine volcano, the Marquis
+ of Richebourg had ever made himself most actively and unscrupulously
+ useful to his master. Especially had he rendered invaluable services in
+ the reduction, of the Walloon Provinces, and in the bridging of the
+ Scheldt, the two crowning triumphs of Alexander's life. He had now passed
+ from the scene where he had played so energetic and dazzling a part, and
+ lay doubled round an iron cable beneath the current of the restless river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in this eventful night, Parma, as always, had been true to himself and
+ to his sovereign. "We expected," said he, "that the rebels would instantly
+ attack us on all sides after the explosion. But all remained so astonished
+ by the unheard-of accident, that very few understood what was going on. It
+ seemed better that I&mdash;notwithstanding the risk of letting myself be
+ seen&mdash;should encourage the people not to run away. I did so, and
+ remedied matters a little but not so much as that&mdash;if the enemy had
+ then attacked us&mdash;we should not have been in the very greatest risk
+ and peril. I did not fail to do what I am obliged to do, and always hope
+ to do; but I say no more of what passed, or what was done by myself,
+ because it does not become me to speak of these things."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding this discomfiture, the patriots kept up heart, and were
+ incessantly making demonstrations against Parma's works. Their proceedings
+ against the bridge, although energetic enough to keep the Spanish
+ commander in a state of perpetual anxiety, were never so efficient however
+ as on the memorable occasion when the Mantuan engineer and the Dutch
+ watchmaker had exhausted all their ingenuity. Nevertheless, the rebel
+ barks swarmed all over the submerged territory, now threatening this post,
+ and now that, and effecting their retreat at pleasure; for nearly the
+ whole of Parma's little armada was stationed at the two extremities of his
+ bridge. Many fire-ships were sent down from time to time, but Alexander
+ had organized a systematic patrol of a few sentry-boats, armed with
+ scythes and hooks, which rowed up and down in front of the rafts, and
+ protected them against invasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some little effect was occasionally produced, but there was on the whole
+ more anxiety excited than damage actually inflicted. The perturbation of
+ spirit among the Spaniards when any of these 'demon fine-ships,' as they
+ called them, appeared bearing down upon their bridge, was excessive. It
+ could not be forgotten, that the `Hope' had sent into space a thousand of
+ the best soldiers of the little army within one moment of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such rapid proceedings had naturally left an uneasy impression on the
+ minds of the survivors. The fatigue of watching was enormous. Hardly an
+ officer or soldier among the besieging forces knew what it was to sleep.
+ There was a perpetual exchanging of signals and beacon-fires and rockets
+ among the patriots&mdash;not a day or night, when a concerted attack by
+ the Antwerpers from above, and the Hollanders from below, with gun-boats
+ and fire-ships, and floating mines, and other devil's enginry, was not
+ expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are always upon the alert," wrote Parma, "with arms in our hands.
+ Every one must mount guard, myself as well as the rest, almost every
+ night, and the better part of every day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was quite aware that something was ever in preparation; and the
+ nameless, almost sickening apprehension which existed among his
+ stout-hearted veterans, was a proof that the Mantuan's genius&mdash;notwithstanding
+ the disappointment as to the great result&mdash;had not been exercised
+ entirely in vain. The image of the Antwerp devil-ships imprinted itself
+ indelibly upon the Spanish mind, as of something preternatural, with which
+ human valour could only contend at a disadvantage; and a day was not very
+ far distant&mdash;one of the memorable days of the world's history, big
+ with the fate of England, Spain, Holland, and all Christendom&mdash;when
+ the sight of a half-dozen blazing vessels, and the cry of "the Antwerp
+ fireships," was to decide the issue of a most momentous enterprise. The
+ blow struck by the obscure Italian against Antwerp bridge, although
+ ineffective then, was to be most sensibly felt after a few years had
+ passed, upon a wider field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the uneasiness and the watchfulness in the besieging army were
+ very exhausting. "They are never idle in the city," wrote Parma. "They are
+ perpetually proving their obstinacy and pertinacity by their industrious
+ genius and the machines which they devise. Every day we are expecting some
+ new invention. On our side we endeavour to counteract their efforts by
+ every human means in our power. Nevertheless, I confess that our merely
+ human intellect is not competent to penetrate the designs of their
+ diabolical genius. Certainly, most wonderful and extraordinary things have
+ been exhibited, such as the oldest soldiers here have never before
+ witnessed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, Alexander saw himself growing weaker and weaker. His force had
+ dwindled to a mere phantom of an army. His soldiers, ill-fed,
+ half-clothed, unpaid, were fearfully overworked. He was obliged to
+ concentrate all the troops at his disposal around Antwerp. Diversions
+ against Ostend, operations in Friesland and Gelderland, although most
+ desirable, had thus been rendered quite impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have recalled my cavalry and infantry from Ostend," he wrote, "and Don
+ Juan de Manrique has fortunately arrived in Stabroek with a thousand good
+ German folk. The commissary-general of the cavalry has come in, too, with
+ a good lot of the troops that had been encamped in the open country.
+ Nevertheless, we remain wretchedly weak&mdash;quite insufficient to
+ attempt what ought to be done. If the enemy were more in force, or if the
+ French wished to make trouble, your Majesty would see how important it had
+ been to provide in time against such contingencies. And although our
+ neighbours, crestfallen, and rushing upon their own destruction, leave us
+ in quiet, we are not without plenty of work. It would be of inestimable
+ advantage to make diversions in Gelderland and Friesland, because, in that
+ case, the Hollanders, seeing the enemy so near their own borders, would be
+ obliged to withdraw their assistance from Antwerp. 'Tis pity to see how
+ few Spaniards your Majesty has left, and how diminished is our army. Now,
+ also, is the time to expect sickness, and this affair of Antwerp is
+ obviously stretching out into large proportions. Unless soon reinforced,
+ we must inevitably go to destruction. I implore your Majesty to ponder the
+ matter well, and not to defer the remedy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Majesty was sure to ponder the matter well, if that had been all.
+ Philip was good at pondering; but it was equally certain that the remedy
+ would be deferred. Meantime Alexander and his starving but heroic little
+ army were left to fight their battles as they could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His complaints were incessant, most reasonable, but unavailing. With all
+ the forces he could muster, by withdrawing from the neighbourhood of
+ Ghent, Brussels, Vilvoorde, and from all the garrisons, every man that
+ could be spared, he had not strength enough to guard his own posts. To
+ attempt to win back the important forts recently captured by the rebels on
+ the Doel, was quite out of the question. The pictures he painted of his
+ army were indeed most dismal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spaniards were so reduced by sickness that it was pitiful to see them.
+ The Italians were not in much better condition, nor the Germans. "As for
+ the Walloons," said he, "they are deserting, as they always do. In truth,
+ one of my principal dangers is that the French civil wars are now tempting
+ my soldiers across the frontier; the country there is so much richer, and
+ offers so much more for the plundering."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the few weeks which immediately followed them famous descent of the
+ 'Hope' and the 'Fortune,' there had accordingly been made a variety of
+ less elaborate, but apparently mischievous, efforts against the bridge. On
+ the whole, however, the object was rather to deceive and amuse the
+ royalists, by keeping their attention fixed in that quarter, while a great
+ attack was, in reality, preparing against the Kowenstyn. That strong
+ barrier, as repeatedly stated, was even a more formidable obstacle than
+ the bridge to the communication between the beleagured city and their
+ allies upon the outside. Its capture and demolition, even at this late
+ period, would open the navigation to all the fleets of Zeeland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the undertaking of the 5th of April all had been accomplished that
+ human ingenuity could devise; yet the triumph had been snatched away even
+ at the very moment when it was complete. A determined and vigorous effort
+ was soon to be made upon the Kowenstyn, in the very face of Parma; for it
+ now seemed obvious that the true crisis was to come upon that fatal dyke.
+ The great bulwark was three miles long. It reached from Stabroek in
+ Brabant, near which village Mansfeld's troops were encamped, across the
+ inundated country, up to the line of the Scheldt. Thence, along the
+ river-dyke, and across the bridge to Kalloo and Beveren, where Parma's
+ forces lay, was a continuous fortified road some three leagues in length;
+ so that the two divisions of the besieging army, lying four leagues apart,
+ were all connected by this important line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could the Kowenstyn be pierced, the water, now divided by that great
+ bulwark into two vast lakes, would flow together in one continuous sea.
+ Moreover the Scheldt, it was thought, would, in that case, return to its
+ own cannel through Brabant, deserting its present bed, and thus leaving
+ the famous bridge high and dry. A wide sheet of navigable water would then
+ roll between Antwerp and the Zeeland coasts, and Parma's bridge, the
+ result of seven months' labour, would become as useless as a child's
+ broken toy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander had thoroughly comprehended the necessity of maintaining the
+ Kowenstyn. All that it was possible to do with the meagre forces at his
+ disposal, he had done. He had fringed both its margins, along its whole
+ length, with a breastwork of closely-driven stakes. He had strengthened
+ the whole body of the dyke with timber-work and piles. Upon its river-end,
+ just at the junction with the great Scheldt dyke, a strong fortress,
+ called the Holy Cross, had been constructed, which was under the special
+ command of Mondragon. Besides this, three other forts had been built, at
+ intervals of about a mile, upon the dyke. The one nearest to Mondragon was
+ placed at the Kowenstyn manor-house, and was called Saint James. This was
+ entrusted to Camillo Bourbon del Monte, an Italian officer, who boasted
+ the blood royal of France in his veins, and was disposed on all occasions
+ to vindicate that proud pedigree by his deeds. The next fort was Saint
+ George's, sometimes called the Black Sconce. It had been built by La
+ Motte, but it was now in command of the Spanish officer, Benites. The
+ third was entitled the Fort of the Palisades, because it had been
+ necessary to support it by a stockade-work in the water, there being
+ absolutely not earth enough to hold the structure. It was placed in the
+ charge of Captain Gamboa. These little castles had been created, as it
+ were, out of water and upon water, and under a hot fire from the enemy's
+ forts and fleets, which gave the pioneers no repose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Twas very hard work," said Parma, "our soldiers are so exposed during
+ their labour, the rebels playing upon them perpetually from their
+ musket-proof vessels. They fill the submerged land with their boats,
+ skimming everywhere as they like, while we have none at all. We have been
+ obliged to build these three forts with neither material nor space; making
+ land enough for the foundation by bringing thither bundles of hurdles and
+ of earth. The fatigue and anxiety are incredible. Not a man can sleep at
+ night; not an officer nor soldier but is perpetually mounting guard. But
+ they are animated to their hard work by seeing that I share in it, like
+ one of themselves. We have now got the dyke into good order, so far as to
+ be able to give them a warm reception, whenever they choose to come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quite at the farther or land end of the Kowenstyn, was another fort,
+ called the Stabroek, which commanded and raked the whole dyke, and was in
+ the neighbourhood of Mansfeld's head-quarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Placed as were these little citadels upon a slender, and&mdash;at brief
+ distance&mdash;invisible thread of land, with the dark waters rolling
+ around them far and near, they presented an insubstantial dream-like
+ aspect, seeming rather like castles floating between air and ocean than
+ actual fortifications&mdash;a deceptive mirage rather than reality. There
+ was nothing imaginary, however, in the work which they were to perform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A series of attacks, some serious, others fictitious, had been made, from
+ time to time, upon both bridge and dyke; but Alexander was unable to
+ inspire his soldiers with his own watchfulness. Upon the 7th of May a more
+ determined attempt was made upon the Kowenstyn, by the fleet from Lillo.
+ Hohenlo and Colonel Ysselstein conducted the enterprise. The sentinels at
+ the point selected&mdash;having recently been so often threatened by an
+ enemy, who most frequently made a rapid retreat, as to have grown weary
+ and indifferent-were surprised, at dawn of day, and put to the sword. "If
+ the truth must be told," said Parma, "the sentries were sound asleep."
+ Five hundred Zeelanders, with a strong party of sappers and miners, fairly
+ established themselves upon the dyke, between St. George's and Fort
+ Palisade. The attack, although spirited at its commencement, was doomed to
+ be unsuccessful. A co-operation, agreed upon by the fleet from Antwerp,
+ failed through a misunderstanding. Sainte Aldegonde had stationed certain
+ members of the munition-chamber in the cathedral tower, with orders to
+ discharge three rockets, when they should perceive a beacon-fire which he
+ should light in Fort Tholouse. The watchmen mistook an accidental
+ camp-fire in the neighbourhood for the preconcerted signal, and sent up
+ the rockets. Hohenlo understanding, accordingly, that the expedition was
+ on the point of starting from Antwerp, hastened to perform his portion of
+ the work, and sailed up from Lillo. He did his duty faithfully and well,
+ and established himself upon the dyke, but found himself alone and without
+ sufficient force to maintain his position. The Antwerp fleet never sailed.
+ It was even whispered that the delinquency was rather intended than
+ accidental; the Antwerpers being supposed desirous to ascertain the result
+ of Hohenlo's attempt before coming forth to share his fate. Such was the
+ opinion expressed by Farnese in his letters to Philip, but it seems
+ probable that he was mistaken. Whatever the cause, however, the fact of
+ the Zeelanders' discomfiture was certain. The St. George battery and that
+ of the Palisade were opened at once upon them, the balls came plunging
+ among the sappers and miners before they had time to throw up many
+ spade-fulls of earth, and the whole party were soon dead or driven from
+ the dyke. The survivors effected their retreat as they best could, leaving
+ four of their ships behind them and three or four hundred men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Forty rebels lay dead on the dyke," said Parma, "and one hundred and
+ fifty more, at least, were drowned. The enemy confess a much larger loss
+ than the number I state, but I am not a friend of giving details larger
+ than my ascertained facts; nor do I know how many were killed in the
+ boats."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This enterprise was but a prelude, however, to the great undertaking which
+ had now been thoroughly matured. Upon the 26th May, another and most
+ determined attack was to be made upon the Kowenstyn, by the Antwerpers and
+ Hollanders acting in concert. This time, it was to be hoped, there would
+ be no misconception of signals. "It was a determination," said Parma, "so
+ daring and desperate that there was no substantial reason why we should
+ believe they would carry it out; but they were at last solemnly resolved
+ to die or to effect their purpose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two hundred ships in all had been got ready, part of them under Hohenlo
+ and Justinus de Nassau, to sail up from Zeeland; the others to advance
+ from Antwerp under Sainte Aldegonde. Their destination was the Kowenstyn
+ Dyke. Some of the vessels were laden with provisions, others with gabions,
+ hurdles, branches, sacks of sand and of wool, and with other materials for
+ the rapid throwing up of fortifications.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was two o'clock, half an hour before the chill dawn of a May morning,
+ Sunday, the 26th of the month. The pale sight of a waning moon was faintly
+ perceptible in the sky. Suddenly the sentinels upon the Kowenstyn&mdash;this
+ time not asleep&mdash;descried, as they looked towards Lillo, four fiery
+ apparitions gliding towards them across the waves. The alarm was given,
+ and soon afterwards the Spaniards began to muster, somewhat reluctantly,
+ upon the dyke, filled as they always were with the mysterious dread which
+ those demon-vessels never failed to inspire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fire-ships floated slowly nearer, and at last struck heavily against
+ the stockade-work. There, covered with tar, pitch, rosin, and gunpowder,
+ they flamed, flared, and exploded, during a brief period, with much
+ vigour, and then burned harmlessly out. One of the objects for which they
+ had been sent&mdash;to set fire to the palisade&mdash;was not
+ accomplished. The other was gained; for the enemy, expecting another
+ volcanic shower of tombstones and plough-coulters, and remembering the
+ recent fate of their comrades on the bridge, had retired shuddering into
+ the forts. Meantime, in the glare of these vast torches, a great swarm of
+ gunboats and other vessels, skimming across the leaden-coloured waters,
+ was seen gradually approaching the dyke. It was the fleet of Hohenlo and
+ Justinus de Nassau, who had been sailing and rowing since ten o'clock of
+ the preceding night. The burning ships lighted them on their way, while it
+ had scared the Spaniards from their posts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boats ran ashore in the mile-long space between forts St. George and
+ the Palisade, and a party of Zeelanders, Admiral Haultain, governor of
+ Walcheren, at their head, sprang upon the dyke. Meantime, however, the
+ royalists, finding that the fire-ships had come to so innocent an end, had
+ rallied and emerged from their forts. Haultain and his Zeelanders, by the
+ time they had fairly mounted the dyke, found themselves in the iron
+ embrace of several hundred Spaniards. After a brief fierce struggle, face
+ to face, and at push of pike, the patriots reeled backward down the bank,
+ and took refuge in their boats. Admiral Haultain slipped as he left the
+ shore, missed a rope's end which was thrown to him, fell into the water,
+ and, borne down by the weight of his armour, was drowned. The enemy,
+ pursuing them, sprang to the waist in the ooze on the edge of the dyke,
+ and continued the contest. The boats opened a hot fire, and there was a
+ severe skirmish for many minutes, with no certain result. It was, however,
+ beginning to go hard with the Zeelanders, when, just at the critical
+ moment, a cheer from the other side of the dyke was heard, and the Antwerp
+ fleet was seen coming swiftly to the rescue. The Spaniards, taken between
+ the two bands of assailants, were at a disadvantage, and it was impossible
+ to prevent the landing of these fresh antagonists. The Antwerpers sprang
+ ashore. Among the foremost was Sainte Aldegonde, poet, orator, hymn-book
+ maker, burgomaster, lawyer, polemical divine&mdash;now armed to the teeth
+ and cheering on his men, in the very thickest of the fight. The diversion
+ was successful, and Sainte Aldegonde gallantly drove the Spaniards quite
+ off the field. The whole combined force from Antwerp and Zeeland now
+ effected their landing. Three thousand men occupied all the space between
+ Fort George and the Palisade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With Sainte Aldegonde came the unlucky Koppen Loppen, and all that could
+ be spared of the English and Scotch troops in Antwerp, under Balfour and
+ Morgan. With Hohenlo and Justinus de Nassau came Reinier Kant, who had
+ just succeeded Paul Buys as Advocate of Holland. Besides these came two
+ other men, side by side, perhaps in the same boat, of whom the world was
+ like to hear much, from that time forward, and whose names are to be most
+ solemnly linked together, so long as Netherland history shall endure; one,
+ a fair-faced flaxen-haired boy of eighteen, the other a square-visaged,
+ heavy-browed man of forty&mdash;Prince Maurice and John of
+ Olden-Barneveldt. The statesman had been foremost to urge the claim of
+ William the Silent's son upon the stadholderate of Holland and Zeeland,
+ and had been, as it were, the youth's political guardian. He had himself
+ borne arms more than once before, having shouldered his matchlock under
+ Batenburg, and marched on that officer's spirited but disastrous
+ expedition for the relief of Haarlem. But this was the life of those Dutch
+ rebels. Quill-driving, law-expounding, speech-making, diplomatic missions,
+ were intermingled with very practical business in besieged towns or open
+ fields, with Italian musketeers and Spanish pikemen. And here, too, young
+ Maurice was taking his first solid lesson in the art of which he was one
+ day to be so distinguished a professor. It was a sharp beginning. Upon
+ this ribband of earth, scarce six paces in breadth, with miles of deep
+ water on both sides&mdash;a position recently fortified by the first
+ general of the age, and held by the famous infantry of Spain and Italy&mdash;there
+ was likely to be no prentice-work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To assault such a position was in truth, as Alexander had declared it to
+ be, a most daring and desperate resolution on the part of the States.
+ "Soldiers, citizens, and all," said Parma, "they are obstinate as dogs to
+ try their fortune."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With wool-sacks, sand-bags, hurdles, planks, and other materials brought
+ with them, the patriots now rapidly entrenched themselves in the position
+ so brilliantly gained; while, without deferring for an instant the great
+ purpose which they had come to effect, the sappers and miners fastened
+ upon the ironbound soil of the dyke, tearing it with pick, mattock, and
+ shovel, digging, delving, and throwing up the earth around them, busy as
+ human beavers, instinctively engaged in a most congenial task.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the beavers did not toil unmolested. The large and determined force of
+ Antwerpers and English, Hollanders and Zeelanders, guarded the
+ fortifications as they were rapidly rising, and the pioneers as they were
+ so manfully delving; but the enemy was not idle. From Fort Saint James,
+ next beyond Saint George, Camillo del Monte led a strong party to the
+ rescue. There was a tremendous action, foot to foot, breast to breast,
+ with pike and pistol, sword and dagger. Never since the beginning of the
+ war had there been harder fighting than now upon that narrow isthmus.
+ "'Twas an affair of most brave obstinacy on both sides," said Parma, who
+ rarely used strong language. "Soldiers, citizens, and all&mdash;they were
+ like mad bulldogs." Hollanders, Italians, Scotchmen, Spaniards,
+ Englishmen, fell thick and fast. The contest was about the entrenchments
+ before they were completed, and especially around the sappers and miners,
+ in whose picks and shovels lay the whole fate of Antwerp. Many of the
+ dyke-breakers were digging their own graves, and rolled, one after
+ another, into the breach which they were so obstinately creating. Upon
+ that slender thread of land the hopes of many thousands were hanging. To
+ tear it asunder, to roll the ocean-waves up to Antwerp, and thus to snatch
+ the great city triumphantly from the grasp of Philip&mdash;to accomplish
+ this, the three thousand had come forth that May morning. To prevent it,
+ to hold firmly that great treasure entrusted to them, was the
+ determination of the Spaniards. And so, closely pent and packed,
+ discharging their carbines into each other's faces, rolling, coiled
+ together, down the slimy sides of the dyke into the black waters,
+ struggling to and fro, while the cannon from the rebel fleet and from the
+ royal forts mingled their roar with the sharp crack of the musketry,
+ Catholics and patriots contended for an hour, while still, through all the
+ confusion and uproar, the miners dug and delved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the patriots were victorious. They made good their entrenchments,
+ drove the Spaniards, after much slaughter, back to the fort of Saint
+ George on the one side, and of the Palisade on the other, and cleared the
+ whole space between the two points. The centre of the dyke was theirs; the
+ great Kowenstyn, the only key by which the gates of Antwerp could be
+ unlocked, was in the deliverers' hands. They pursued their victory, and
+ attacked the Palisade Fort. Gamboa, its commandant, was severely wounded;
+ many other officers dead or dying; the outworks were in the hands of the
+ Hollanders; the slender piles on which the fortress rested in the water
+ were rudely shaken; the victory was almost complete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now there was a tremendous cheer of triumph. The beavers had done
+ their work, the barrier was bitten through and through, the salt water
+ rushed like a river through the ruptured dyke. A few moments later, and a
+ Zeeland barge, freighted with provisions, floated triumphantly into the
+ waters beyond, now no longer an inland sea. The deed was done&mdash;the
+ victory achieved. Nothing more was necessary than to secure it, to tear
+ the fatal barrier to fragments, to bury it, for its whole length, beneath
+ the waves. Then, after the isthmus had been utterly submerged, when the
+ Scheldt was rolled back into its ancient bed, when Parma's famous bridge
+ had become useless, when the maritime communication between Antwerp and
+ Holland had been thoroughly established, the Spaniards would have nothing
+ left for it but to drown like rats in their entrenchments or to abandon
+ the siege in despair. All this was in the hands of the patriots. The
+ Kowenstyn was theirs. The Spaniards were driven from the field, the
+ batteries of their forts silenced. For a long period the rebels were
+ unmolested, and felt themselves secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We remained thus some three hours," says Captain James, an English
+ officer who fought in the action, and described it in rough, soldierly
+ fashion to Walsingham the same day, "thinking all things to be secure."
+ Yet in the very supreme moment of victory, the leaders, both of the
+ Hollanders and of the Antwerpers, proved themselves incompetent to their
+ position. With deep regret it must be admitted, that not only the reckless
+ Hohenlo, but the all-accomplished Sainte Aldegonde, committed the gravest
+ error. In the hour of danger, both had comported themselves with perfect
+ courage and conduct. In the instant of triumph, they gave way to puerile
+ exultation. With a celerity as censurable as it seems incredible, both
+ these commanders sprang into the first barge which had thus floated across
+ the dyke, in order that they might, in person, carry the news of the
+ victory to Antwerp, and set all the bells ringing and the bonfires
+ blazing. They took with them Ferrante Spinola, a mortally-wounded Italian
+ officer of rank, as a trophy of their battle, and a boatload of beef and
+ flour, as an earnest of the approaching relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the conquerors were thus gone to enjoy their triumph, the conquered,
+ though perplexed and silenced, were not yet disposed to accept their
+ defeat. They were even ignorant that they were conquered. They had been
+ forced to abandon the field, and the patriots had entrenched themselves
+ upon the dyke, but neither Fort Saint George nor the Palisade had been
+ carried, although the latter was in imminent danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Count Peter Ernest Mansfeld&mdash;a grizzled veteran, who had passed
+ his childhood, youth, manhood, and old age, under fire&mdash;commanded at
+ the land-end of the dyke, in the fortress of Stabroek, in which
+ neighbourhood his whole division was stationed. Seeing how the day was
+ going, he called a council of war. The patriots had gained a large section
+ of the dyke. So much was certain. Could they succeed in utterly
+ demolishing that bulwark in the course of the day? If so, how were they to
+ be dislodged before their work was perfected? It was difficult to assault
+ their position. Three thousand Hollanders, Antwerpers, Englishmen&mdash;"mad
+ bulldogs all," as Parma called them&mdash;showing their teeth very
+ mischievously, with one hundred and sixty Zeeland vessels throwing in
+ their broadsides from both margins of the dyke, were a formidable company
+ to face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh for one half hour of Alexander in the field!" sighed one of the
+ Spanish officers in council. But Alexander was more than four leagues
+ away, and it was doubtful whether he even knew of the fatal occurrence.
+ Yet how to send him a messenger. Who could reach him through that valley
+ of death? Would it not be better to wait till nightfall? Under the cover
+ of darkness something might be attempted, which in the daylight would be
+ hopeless. There was much anxiety, and much difference of opinion had been
+ expressed, when Camillo Capizucca, colonel of the Italian Legion, obtained
+ a hearing. A man bold in words as in deeds, he vehemently denounced the
+ pusillanimity which would wait either for Parma or for nightfall. "What
+ difference will it make," he asked, "whether we defer our action until
+ either darkness or the General arrives? In each case we give the enemy
+ time enough to destroy the dyke, and thoroughly to relieve the city. That
+ done, what good can be accomplished by our arms? Then our disheartened
+ soldiers will either shrink from a fruitless combat or march to certain
+ death." Having thus, very warmly but very sagaciously, defined the
+ position in which all were placed, he proceeded to declare that he
+ claimed, neither for himself nor for his legion, any superiority over the
+ rest of the army. He knew not that the Italians were more to be relied
+ upon than others in the time of danger, but this he did know, that no man
+ in the world was so devoted as he was to the Prince of Parma. To show that
+ devotion by waiting with folded arms behind a wall until the Prince should
+ arrive to extricate his followers, was not in his constitution. He claimed
+ the right to lead his Italians against the enemy at once&mdash;in the
+ front rank, if others chose to follow; alone, if the rest preferred to
+ wait till a better leader should arrive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words of the Italian colonel sent a thrill through all who heard him.
+ Next in command under Capizucca was his camp-marshal, an officer who bore
+ the illustrious name of Piccolomini&mdash;father of the Duke Ottavio, of
+ whom so much was to be heard at a later day throughout the fell scenes of
+ that portion of the eighty years' tragedy now enacting, which was to be
+ called the Thirty Years' War of Germany. The camp-marshal warmly seconded
+ the proposition of his colonel. Mansfeld, pleased with such enthusiasm
+ among his officers, yielded to their wishes, which were, in truth, his
+ own. Six companies of the Italian Legion were in his encampment while the
+ remainder were stationed, far away, upon the bridge, under command of his
+ son, Count Charles. Early in the morning, before the passage across the
+ dyke had been closed the veteran condottiere, pricking his ears as he
+ snuffed the battle from afar, had contrived to send a message to his son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Charles, my boy," were his words, "to-day we must either beat them or
+ burst."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Peter Ernest felt that the long-expected, long-deferred assault was to
+ be made that morning in full force, and that it was necessary for the
+ royalists, on both bridge and dyke, to hold their own. Piccolomini now
+ drew up three hundred of his Italians, picked veterans all, and led them
+ in marching order to Mansfeld. That general at the same moment, received
+ another small but unexpected reinforcement. A portion of the Spanish
+ Legion, which had long been that of Pedro Pacchi, lay at the extreme verge
+ of the Stabroek encampment, several miles away. Aroused by the distant
+ cannonading, and suspecting what had occurred, Don Juan d'Aquila, the
+ colonel in command, marched without a moment's delay to Mansfeld's
+ head-quarters, at the head of all the force he could muster&mdash;about
+ two hundred strong. With him came Cardona, Gonzales de Castro, Toralva,
+ and other distinguished officers. As they arrived, Capizucca was just
+ setting forth for the field. There arose a dispute for precedence between
+ the Italians and the Spaniards. Capizucca had first demanded the privilege
+ of leading what seemed a forlorn hope, and was unwilling to yield his
+ claim to the new comer. On the other hand, the Spaniards were not disposed
+ to follow where they felt entitled to lead. The quarrel was growing warm,
+ when Aquila, seizing his Italian rival by the hand, protested that it was
+ not a moment for friends to wrangle for precedence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Shoulder to shoulder," said he, "let us go into this business, and let
+ our blows rather fall on our enemies' heads than upon each other's." This
+ terminated the altercation. The Italians and Spaniards&mdash;in battle
+ array as they were&mdash;all dropped on their knees, offered a brief
+ prayer to the Holy Virgin, and then, in the best possible spirits, set
+ forth along the dyke. Next to fort Stabroek&mdash;whence they issued&mdash;was
+ the Palisade Fort, nearly a mile removed, which the patriots had nearly
+ carried, and between which and St. George, another mile farther on, their
+ whole force was established.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The troops under Capizucca and Aquila soon reached the Palisade, and
+ attacked the besiegers, while the garrison, cheered by the unexpected
+ relief, made a vigorous sortie. There was a brief sharp contest, in which
+ many were killed on both sides; but at last the patriots fell back upon
+ their own entrenchments, and the fort was saved. Its name was instantly
+ changed to Fort Victory, and the royalists then prepared to charge the
+ fortified camp of the rebels, in the centre of which the dyke-cutting
+ operations were still in progress. At the same moment, from the opposite
+ end of the bulwark, a cry was heard along the whole line of the dyke. From
+ Fort Holy Cross, at the Scheldt end, the welcome intelligence was suddenly
+ communicated&mdash;as if by a magnetic impulse&mdash;that Alexander was in
+ the field!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was true. Having been up half the night, as usual, keeping watch along
+ his bridge, where he was ever expecting a fatal attack, he had retired for
+ a few hours' rest in his camp at Beveren. Aroused at day-break by the roar
+ of the cannon, he had hastily thrown on his armour, mounted his horse,
+ and, at the head of two hundred pikemen, set forth for the scene of
+ action. Detained on the bridge by a detachment of the Antwerp fleet, which
+ had been ordered to make a diversion in that quarter, he had, after
+ beating off their vessels with his boat-artillery, and charging Count
+ Charles Mansfeld to heed well the brief injunction of old Peter Ernest,
+ made all the haste he could to the Kowenstyn. Arriving at Fort Holy Cross,
+ he learned from Mondragon how the day was going. Three thousand rebels, he
+ learned, were established on the dyke, Fort Palisade was tottering, a
+ fleet from both sides was cannonading the Spanish entrenchments, the salt
+ water was flowing across the breach already made. His seven months' work,
+ it seemed, had come to nought. The navigation was already open from the
+ sea to Antwerp, the Lowenstyn was in the rebels' hands. But Alexander was
+ not prone to premature despair. "I arrived," said he to Philip in a letter
+ written on the same evening, "at the very nick of time." A less hopeful
+ person might have thought that he had arrived several hours too late.
+ Having brought with him every man that could be spared from Beveren and
+ from the bridge, he now ordered Camillo del Monte to transport some
+ additional pieces of artillery from Holy Cross and from Saint James to
+ Fort Saint Georg. At the same time a sharp cannonade was to be maintained
+ upon the rebel fleet from all the forts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mondragon, with a hundred musketeers and pikemen, was sent forward
+ likewise as expeditiously as possible to Saint George. No one could be
+ more alert. The battered veteran, hero of some of the most remarkable
+ military adventures that history has ever recorded,' fought his way on
+ foot, in the midst of the fray, like a young ensign who had his first
+ laurels to win. And, in truth, the day was not one for cunning manoeuvres,
+ directed, at a distance, by a skillful tactician. It was a brisk close
+ contest, hand to hand and eye to eye&mdash;a Homeric encounter, in which
+ the chieftains were to prove a right to command by their personal prowess.
+ Alexander, descending suddenly&mdash;dramatically, as it were&mdash;when
+ the battle seemed lost&mdash;like a deity from the clouds-was to justify,
+ by the strength of his arm, the enthusiasm which his name always awakened.
+ Having, at a glance, taken in the whole situation, he made his brief
+ arrangements, going from rank to rank, and disposing his troops in the
+ most effective manner. He said but few words, but his voice had always a
+ telling effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The man who refuses, this day, to follow me," he said, "has never had
+ regard to his own honour, nor has God's cause or the King's ever been dear
+ to his heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His disheartened Spaniards and Italians&mdash;roused as by a magic trumpet&mdash;eagerly
+ demanded to be led against the rebels. And now from each end of the dyke,
+ the royalists were advancing toward the central position occupied by the
+ patriots. While Capizucca and Aquila were occupied at Fort Victory, Parma
+ was steadily cutting his way from Holy Cross to Saint George. On foot,
+ armed with sword and shield, and in coat of mail, and marching at the head
+ of his men along the dyke, surrounded by Bevilacqua, Bentivoglio,
+ Manriquez, Sforza, and other officers of historic name and distinguished
+ courage, now upon the summit of the causeway, now on its shelving banks,
+ now breast-high in the waters, through which lay the perilous path,
+ contending at every inch with the scattered bands of the patriots, who
+ slowly retired to their entrenched camp, and with the Antwerp and Zeeland
+ vessels, whose balls tore through the royalist ranks, the General at last
+ reached Saint George. On the preservation of that post depended the whole
+ fortune of the day, for Parma had already received the welcome
+ intelligence that the Palisade&mdash;now Fort Victory&mdash;had been
+ regained. He instantly ordered an outer breast-work of wool-sacks and
+ sand-bags to be thrown up in front of Saint George, and planted a battery
+ to play point-blank at the enemy's entrenchments. Here the final issue was
+ to be made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The patriots and Spaniards were thus all enclosed in the mile-long space
+ between St. George and the Palisade. Upon that narrow strip of earth,
+ scarce six paces in width, more than five thousand men met in mortal
+ combat&mdash;a narrow arena for so many gladiators, hemmed in on both
+ sides by the sea. The patriots had, with solemn ceremony, before starting
+ upon their enterprise, vowed to destroy the dyke and relieve Antwerp, or
+ to perish in the attempt. They were true to their vow. Not the ancient
+ Batavians or Nervii had ever manifested more tenacity against the Roman
+ legions than did their descendants against the far-famed Spanish infantry
+ upon this fatal day. The fight on the Kowenstyn was to be long remembered
+ in the military annals of Spain and Holland. Never, since the curtain
+ first rose upon the great Netherland tragedy, had there been a fiercer
+ encounter. Flinching was impossible. There was scant room for the play of
+ pike and dagger, and, close packed as were the combatants, the dead could
+ hardly fall to the ground. It was a mile-long series of separate mortal
+ duels, and the oozy dyke was soon slippery with blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From both sides, under Capizucca and Aquila on the one band, and under
+ Alexander on the other, the entrenchments of the patriots were at last
+ assaulted, and as the royalists fell thick and fast beneath the
+ breast-work which they were storming, their comrades clambered upon their
+ bodies, and attempted, from such vantage-ground, to effect an entrance.
+ Three times the invaders were beaten back with heavy loss, and after each
+ repulse the attack was renewed with fresh vigour, while within the
+ entrenchments the pioneers still plied the pick and shovel, undismayed by
+ the uproar around them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fourth assault, vigorously made, was cheerfully repelled by the
+ Antwerpers and Hollanders, clustering behind their breast-works, and
+ looking steadily into their enemies' eyes. Captain Heraugiere&mdash;of
+ whom more was to be heard one day&mdash;had led two hundred men into
+ action, and now found himself at the head of only thirteen. The loss had
+ been as severe among many other patriot companies, as well as in the
+ Spanish ranks, and again the pikemen of Spain and Italy faltered before
+ the iron visages and cordial blows of the Hollanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This work had lasted a good hour and a half, when at last, on the fifth
+ assault, a wild and mysterious apparition renewed the enthusiasm of the
+ Spaniards. The figure of the dead commander of the old Spanish Legion, Don
+ Pedro Pacchi, who had fallen a few months before at the siege of
+ Dendermonde was seen charging in front of his regiment, clad in his
+ well-known armour, and using the gestures which had been habitual with him
+ in life. No satisfactory explanation was ever made of this singular
+ delusion, but it was general throughout the ranks, and in that
+ superstitious age was as effective as truth. The wavering Spaniards
+ rallied once more under the guidance of their phantom leader, and again
+ charged the breast-work of the patriots. Toralva, mounting upon the back
+ of one of his soldiers, was first to vault into the entrenchments. At the
+ next instant he lay desperately wounded on the ground, but was close
+ followed by Capizucca, sustained by a determined band. The entrenchment
+ was carried, but the furious conflict still continued. At nearly the same
+ moment, however, several of the patriot vessels were observed to cast off
+ their moorings, and to be drifting away from the dyke. A large number of
+ the rest had been disabled by the hot fire, which by Alexander's judicious
+ orders had been directed upon the fleet. The ebbing tide left no choice to
+ the commander of the others but to retreat or to remain and fall into the
+ enemy's hands, should he gain the day. Had they risked the dangerous
+ alternative, it might have ensured the triumph of the whole enterprise,
+ while their actual decision proved most disastrous in the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have conquered," cried Alexander, stretching his arm towards the
+ receding waters. "The sea deserts the impious heretics. Strike from them
+ now their last hope, and cut off their retreat to the departing ships."
+ The Spaniards were not slow to perceive their advantage, while the courage
+ of the patriots at last began to ebb with the tide. The day was lost. In
+ the hour of transitory triumph the leaders of the expedition had turned
+ their backs on their followers, and now, after so much heroism had been
+ exhibited, fortune too had averted her face. The grim resistance changed
+ to desperate panic, and a mad chase began along the blood-stained dyke.
+ Some were slain with spear and bullet, others were hunted into the sea,
+ many were smothered in the ooze along the edge of the embankment. The
+ fugitives, making their way to the retreating vessels, were pursued by the
+ Spaniards, who swam after them, with their swords in their teeth, and
+ engaged them in mortal combat in the midst of the waves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And so we cut all their throats," said Parma, "the rebels on every side
+ remaining at our mercy, and I having no doubt that my soldiers would
+ avenge the loss of their friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English and the Scotch, under Balfour and Morgan, were the very last
+ to abandon the position which they had held so manfully seven hours long.
+ Honest Captain James, who fought to the last, and described the action the
+ same night in the fewest possible words, was of opinion that the fleet had
+ moved away only to obtain a better position. "They put off to have more
+ room to play on the enemy," said he; "but the Hollanders and Zeelanders,
+ seeing the enemy come on so hotly, and thinking our galleys would leave
+ them, abandoned their string. The Scots, seeing them to retire, left their
+ string. The enemy pursued very hotly; the Englishmen stood to repulse, and
+ are put most to the sword. In this shameful retreat there were slain or
+ drowned to the number of two thousand." The blunt Englishman was justly
+ indignant that an enterprise, so nearly successful, had been ruined by the
+ desertion of its chiefs. "We had cut the dyke in three places," said he;
+ "but left it most shamefully for want of commandment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Koppen Loppen&mdash;whose blunders on former occasions had caused so
+ much disaster&mdash;was now fortunate enough to expiate them by a
+ soldier's death. Admiral Haultain had, as we have seen, been drowned at
+ the commencement of the action. Justinus de Nassau, at its close, was more
+ successful in his retreat to the ships. He, too, sprang into the water
+ when the overthrow was absolute; but, alighting in some shallows, was able
+ to conceal himself among weeds and waterlilies till he had divested
+ himself of his armour, when he made his escape by swimming to a boat,
+ which conveyed him to Lillo. Roelke van Deest, an officer of some note,
+ was so horribly wounded in the face, that he was obliged to wear a mask
+ for the remainder of his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma, overjoyed at his victory, embraced Capizucca before the whole army,
+ with warm expressions of admiration for his conduct. Both the Italian
+ colonel and his Spanish rival Aquila were earnestly recommended to Philip
+ for reward and promotion. The wounded Toralva was carried to Alexander's
+ own quarters, and placed in Alexander's own bed, where he remained till
+ his recovery, and was then presented&mdash;a distinction which he much
+ valued&mdash;with the armour which the Prince had worn on the day of the
+ battle. Parma himself, so soon as the action was concluded, went with his
+ chief officers straight from the field to the little village-church of
+ Stabroek, where he fell upon his knees and offered up fervent thanks for
+ his victory. He next set about repairing the ruptured dyke, damaged in
+ many places but not hopelessly ruined, and for this purpose the bodies of
+ the rebels, among other materials, were cast by hundreds into the ditches
+ which their own hands had dug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus ended the eight hours' fight on the Kowenstyn. "The feast lasted from
+ seven to eight hours," said Parma, "with the most brave obstinacy on both
+ sides that has been seen for many a long day." A thousand royalists were
+ killed and twice as many patriots, and the issue of the conflict was most
+ uncertain up to the very last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our loss is greater than I wish it was," wrote Alexander to Philip: "It
+ was a very close thing, and I have never been more anxious in my life as
+ to the result for your Majesty's service. The whole fate of the battle was
+ hanging all the time by a thread." More than ever were reinforcements
+ necessary, and it was only by a miracle that the victory had at last been
+ gained with such slender resources. "'Tis a large, long, laborious,
+ expensive, and most perilous war," said Parma, when urging the claims of
+ Capizucca and Aquila, "for we have to fight every minute; and there are no
+ castles and other rewards, so that if soldiers are not to have promotion,
+ they will lose their spirit." Thirty-two of the rebel vessels grounded,
+ and fell into the hands of the Spaniards, who took from them many
+ excellent pieces of artillery. The result was most conclusive and most
+ disheartening for the patriots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime&mdash;as we have seen&mdash;Hohenlo and Sainte Aldegonde had
+ reached Antwerp in breathless haste to announce their triumph. They had
+ been met on the quay by groups of excited citizens, who eagerly questioned
+ the two generals arriving thus covered with laurels from the field of
+ battle, and drank with delight all the details of the victory. The poor
+ dying Spinola was exhibited in triumph, the boat-load of breadstuffs
+ received with satisfaction, and vast preparations were made to receive, on
+ wharves and in storehouses, the plentiful supplies about to arrive.
+ Beacons and bonfires were lighted, the bells from all the steeples rang
+ their merriest peals, cannon thundered in triumph not only in Antwerp
+ itself, but subsequently at Amsterdam and other more distant cities. In
+ due time a magnificent banquet was spread in the town-house to greet the
+ conquering Hohenlo. Immense gratification was expressed by those of the
+ reformed religion; dire threats were uttered against the Catholics. Some
+ were for hanging them all out of hand, others for throwing them into the
+ Scheldt; the most moderate proposed packing them all out of town so soon
+ as the siege should be raised&mdash;an event which could not now be
+ delayed many days longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hohenlo, placed on high at the head of the banquet-table, assumed the very
+ god of war. Beside and near him sat the loveliest dames of Antwerp,
+ rewarding his bravery with their brightest smiles. The Count drained huge
+ goblets to their health, to the success of the patriots, and to the
+ confusion of the royalists, while, as he still drank and feasted, the
+ trumpet, kettle-drum, and cymbal, and merry peal of bell without, did
+ honour to his triumph. So gay and gallant was the victor, that he
+ announced another banquet on the following day, still further to celebrate
+ the happy release of Antwerp, and invited the fair ladies around him again
+ to grace the board. It is recorded that the gentlewoman next him responded
+ with a sigh, that, if her presentiments were just, the morrow would
+ scarcely be so joyful as the present day had been, and that she doubted
+ whether the triumph were not premature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hardly had she spoken when sinister sounds were heard in the streets. The
+ first few stragglers, survivors of the deadly fight, had arrived with the
+ fatal news that all was lost, the dyke regained, the Spaniards victorious,
+ the whole band of patriots cut to pieces. A few frightfully-wounded and
+ dying sufferers were brought into the banqueting-hall. Hohenlo sprang from
+ the feast&mdash;interrupted in so ghastly a manner&mdash;pursued by shouts
+ and hisses. Howls of execration, saluted him in the streets, and he was
+ obliged to conceal himself for a time, to escape the fury of the populace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, Parma was, not unnaturally, overjoyed at the successful
+ issue to the combat, and expressed himself on the subject in language of
+ (for him) unusual exultation. "To-day, Sunday, 26th of June," said he, in
+ a letter to Philip, despatched by special courier on the very same night,
+ "the Lord has been pleased to grant to your Majesty a great and most
+ signal victory. In this conjuncture of so great importance it may be
+ easily conceived that the best results that can be desired will be
+ obtained if your Majesty is now ready to do what is needful. I
+ congratulate your Majesty very many times on this occasion, and I desire
+ to render infinite thanks to Divine Providence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He afterwards proceeded, in a rapid and hurried manner, to give his
+ Majesty the outlines of the battle, mentioning, with great encomium,
+ Capizucca and Aquila, Mondragon and Vasto, with many other officers, and
+ recommending them for reward and promotion; praising, in short, heartily
+ and earnestly, all who had contributed to the victory, except himself, to
+ whose personal exertions it was chiefly due. "As for good odd Mansfeld,"
+ said he, "he bore himself like the man he is, and he deserves that your
+ Majesty should send him a particular mark of your royal approbation,
+ writing to him yourself pleasantly in Spanish, which is that which will be
+ most highly esteemed by him." Alexander hinted also that Philip would do
+ well to bestow upon Mansfeld the countship of Biart, as a reward for his
+ long years of faithful service!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This action on the Kowenstyn terminated the effective resistance of
+ Antwerp. A few days before, the monster-vessel, in the construction of
+ which so much time and money had been consumed, had at last been set
+ afloat. She had been called the War's End, and, so far as Antwerp was
+ concerned, the fates that presided over her birth seemed to have been
+ paltering in a double sense when the ominous name was conferred. She was
+ larger than anything previously known in naval architecture; she had four
+ masts and three helms. Her bulwarks were ten feet thick; her tops were
+ musket-proof. She had twenty guns of largest size, besides many other
+ pieces of artillery of lesser calibre, the lower tier of which was almost
+ at the water's level. She was to carry one thousand men, and she was so
+ supported on corks and barrels as to be sure to float under any
+ circumstances. Thus she was a great swimming fortress which could not be
+ sunk, and was impervious to shot. Unluckily, however, in spite of her four
+ masts and three helms, she would neither sail nor steer, and she proved
+ but a great, unmanageable and very ridiculous tub, fully justifying all
+ the sarcasms that had been launched upon her during the period of her
+ construction, which had been almost as long as the siege itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spaniards called her the Bugaboo&mdash;a monster to scare children
+ withal. The patriots christened her the Elephant, the Antwerp Folly, the
+ Lost Penny, with many similar appellations. A small army might have been
+ maintained for a month, they said, on the money she had cost, or the whole
+ city kept in bread for three months. At last, late in May, a few days
+ before the battle of the Kowenstyn, she set forth from Antwerp, across the
+ submerged land, upon her expedition to sweep all the Spanish forts out of
+ existence, and to bring the war to its end. She came to her own end very
+ briefly, for, after drifting helplessly about for an hour, she stuck fast
+ in the sand in the neighbourhood of Ordam, while the crew and soldiers
+ made their escape, and came back to the city to share in the ridicule
+ which, from first to last, had attached itself to the monster-ship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days after the Kowenstyn affair, Alexander sent an expedition under
+ Count Charles Mansfeld to take possession of the great Bugaboo. The boat,
+ in which were Count Charles, Count Aremberg, his brother de Barbancon, and
+ other noble volunteers, met with an accident: a keg of gun powder
+ accidentally exploding, blowing Aremberg into the water, whence he escaped
+ unharmed by swimming, and frightfully damaging Mansfeld in the face. This
+ indirect mischief&mdash;the only injury ever inflicted by the War's End
+ upon the enemy&mdash;did not prevent the rest of the party in the boats
+ from taking possession of the ship, and bringing her in triumph to the
+ Prince of Parma. After being thoroughly examined and heartily laughed at
+ by the Spaniards, she was broken up&mdash;her cannon, munitions, and other
+ valuable materials, being taken from her&mdash;and then there was an end
+ of the War's End.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This useless expenditure-against the judgment and entreaties of many
+ leading personages&mdash;was but a type of the difficulties with which
+ Sainte Aldegonde had been obliged to contend from the first day of the
+ siege to the last. Every one in the city had felt himself called on to
+ express an opinion as to the proper measures for defence. Diversity of
+ humours, popular license, anarchy, did not constitute the best government
+ for a city beleagured by Alexander Farnese. We have seen the deadly injury
+ inflicted upon the cause at the outset by the brutality of the butchers,
+ and the manful struggle which Sainte Aldegonde had maintained against
+ their cupidity and that of their friends. He had dealt with the thousand
+ difficulties which rose up around him from day to day, but his best
+ intentions were perpetually misconstrued, his most strenuous exertions
+ steadily foiled. It was a city where there was much love of money, and
+ where commerce&mdash;always timid by nature, particularly when controlled
+ by alien residents&mdash;was often the cause of almost abject cowardice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From time to time there had been threatening demonstrations made against
+ the burgomaster, who, by protracting the resistance of Antwerp, was
+ bringing about the absolute destruction of a worldwide trade, and the
+ downfall of the most opulent capital in Christendom. There were also many
+ popular riots&mdash;very easily inflamed by the Catholic portion of the
+ inhabitants&mdash;for bread. "Bread, bread, or peace!" was hoarsely
+ shouted by ill-looking mischievous crowds, that dogged the steps and
+ besieged the doors of Sainte Aldegonde; but the burgomaster had done his
+ best by eloquence of tongue and personal courage, both against mobs and
+ against the enemy, to inspire the mass of his fellow-citizens with his own
+ generous spirit. He had relied for a long time on the negotiation with
+ France, and it would be difficult to exaggerate the disastrous effects
+ produced by the treachery of the Valois court. The historian Le Petit, a
+ resident of Antwerp at the time of the siege, had been despatched on
+ secret mission to Paris, and had communicated to the States' deputies
+ Sainte Aldegonde's earnest adjurations that they should obtain, if
+ possible, before it should be too late, an auxiliary force and a pecuniary
+ subsidy. An immediate assistance, even if slight, might be sufficient to
+ prevent Antwerp and its sister cities from falling into the hands of the
+ enemy. On that messenger's return, the burgomaster, much encouraged by his
+ report, had made many eloquent speeches in the senate, and for a long time
+ sustained the sinking spirits of the citizens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The irritating termination to the triumph actually achieved against the
+ bridge, and the tragical result to the great enterprise against the
+ Kowenstyn, had now thoroughly broken the heart of Antwerp. For the last
+ catastrophe Sainte Aldegonde himself was highly censurable, although the
+ chief portion of the blame rested on the head of Hohenlo. Nevertheless the
+ States of Holland were yet true to the cause of the Union and of liberty.
+ Notwithstanding their heavy expenditures, and their own loss of men, they
+ urged warmly and earnestly the continuance of the resistance, and
+ promised, within at latest three months' time, to raise an army of twelve
+ thousand foot and seven thousand horse, with which they pledged themselves
+ to relieve the city, or to perish in the endeavour. At the same time, the
+ legation, which had been sent to England to offer the sovereignty to Queen
+ Elizabeth, sent encouraging despatches to Antwerp, assuring the
+ authorities that arrangements for an auxiliary force had been effected;
+ while Elizabeth herself wrote earnestly upon the subject with her own
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am informed," said that Princess, "that through the closing of the
+ Scheldt you are likely to enter into a treaty with the Prince of Parma,
+ the issue of which is very much to be doubted, so far as the maintenance
+ of your privileges is concerned. Remembering the warm friendship which has
+ ever existed between this crown and the house of Burgundy, in the realms
+ of which you are an important member, and considering that my subjects
+ engaged in commerce have always met with more privilege and comity in the
+ Netherlands than in any other country, I have resolved to send you at
+ once, assistance, comfort, and aid. The details of the plan will be stated
+ by your envoys; but be assured that by me you will never be forsaken or
+ neglected."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The negotiations with Queen Elizabeth&mdash;most important for the
+ Netherlands, for England, and for the destinies of Europe&mdash;which
+ succeeded the futile diplomatic transactions with France, will be laid
+ before the reader in a subsequent chapter. It is proper that they should
+ be massed by themselves, so that the eye can comprehend at a single glance
+ their whole progress and aspect, as revealed both by public and official,
+ and by secret and hitherto unpublished records. Meantime, so far as
+ regards Antwerp, those negotiations had been too deliberately conducted
+ for the hasty and impatient temper of the citizens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spirit of the commercial metropolis, long flagging, seemed at last
+ broken. Despair was taking possession of all hearts. The common people did
+ nothing but complain, the magistrates did nothing but wrangle. In the
+ broad council the debates and dissensions were discouraging and endless.
+ Six of the eight militia-colonels were for holding out at all hazards,
+ while a majority of the eighty captains were for capitulation. The
+ populace was tumultuous and threatening, demanding peace and bread at any
+ price. Holland sent promises in abundance, and Holland was sincere; but
+ there had been much disappointment, and there was now infinite bitterness.
+ It seemed obvious that a crisis was fast approaching, and&mdash;unless
+ immediate aid should come from Holland or from England&mdash;that a
+ surrender was inevitable. La None, after five years' imprisonment, had at
+ last been exchanged against Count Philip Egmont. That noble, chief of an
+ ancient house, cousin of the Queen of France, was mortified at being
+ ransomed against a simple Huguenot gentleman&mdash;even though that
+ gentleman was the illustrious "iron-armed" La Noue&mdash;but he preferred
+ to sacrifice his dignity for the sake of his liberty. He was still more
+ annoyed that one hundred thousand crowns as security were exacted from La
+ Noue&mdash;for which the King of Navarre became bondsman&mdash;that he
+ would never again bear arms in the Netherlands except in obedience to the
+ French monarch, while no such pledges were required of himself. La None
+ visited the Prince of Parma at Antwerp, to take leave, and was received
+ with the courtesy due to his high character and great distinction.
+ Alexander took pleasure in showing him all his fortifications, and
+ explaining to him the whole system of the siege, and La Noue was filled
+ with honest amazement. He declared afterwards that the works were superb
+ and impregnable; and that if he had been on the outside at the head of
+ twelve thousand troops, he should have felt obliged to renounce the idea
+ of relieving the city. "Antwerp cannot escape you," confessed the veteran
+ Huguenot, "but must soon fall into your hands. And when you enter, I would
+ counsel you to hang up your sword at its gate, and let its capture be the
+ crowning trophy in your list of victories."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are right," answered Parma, "and many of my friends have given me the
+ same advice; but how am I to retire, engaged as I am for life in the
+ service of my King?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the opinion of La None, a man whose love for the reformed
+ religion and for civil liberty can be as little doubted as his competency
+ to form an opinion upon great military subjects. As little could he be
+ suspected just coming as he did from an infamous prison, whence he had
+ been at one time invited by Philip II. to emerge, on condition of allowing
+ his eyes to be put out&mdash;of any partiality for that monarch or his
+ representative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, although the States of Holland and the English government were
+ earnestly desirous of relieving the city, and were encouraging the
+ patriots with well-founded promises, the Zeeland authorities were
+ lukewarm. The officers of the Zeeland navy, from which so much was
+ expected, were at last discouraged. They drew up, signed, and delivered to
+ Admiral Justinus de Nassau, a formal opinion to the effect that the
+ Scheldt had now so many dry and dangerous places, and that the tranquil
+ summer-nights&mdash;so different from those long, stormy ones of winter&mdash;were
+ so short as to allow of no attempt by water likely to be successful to
+ relieve the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here certainly was much to discourage, and Sainte Aldegonde was at length
+ discouraged. He felt that the last hope of saving Antwerp was gone, and
+ with it all possibility of maintaining the existence of a United
+ Netherland commonwealth. The Walloon Provinces were lost already; Ghent,
+ Brussels, Mechlin, had also capitulated, and, with the fall of Antwerp,
+ Flanders and Brabant must fall. There would be no barrier left even to
+ save Holland itself. Despair entered the heart of the burgomaster, and he
+ listened too soon to its treacherous voice. Yet while he thought a free
+ national state no longer a possibility, he imagined it practicable to
+ secure religious liberty by negotiation with Philip II. He abandoned with
+ a sigh one of the two great objects for which he had struggled side by
+ side with Orange for twenty years, but he thought it possible to secure
+ the other. His purpose was now to obtain a favourable capitulation for
+ Antwerp, and at the same time to bring about the submission of Holland,
+ Zeeland, and the other United Provinces, to the King of Spain. Here
+ certainly was a great change of face on the part of one so conspicuous,
+ and hitherto so consistent, in the ranks of Netherland patriots, and it is
+ therefore necessary, in order thoroughly to estimate both the man and the
+ crisis, to follow carefully his steps through the secret path of
+ negotiation into which he now entered, and in which the Antwerp drama was
+ to find its conclusion. In these transactions, the chief actors are, on
+ the one side, the Prince of Parma, as representative of absolutism and the
+ Papacy; on the other, Sainte Aldegonde, who had passed his life as the
+ champion of the Reformation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt the pressure upon the burgomaster was very great. Tumults were of
+ daily occurrence. Crowds of rioters beset his door with cries of
+ denunciations and demands for bread. A large and turbulent mob upon one
+ occasion took possession of the horse-market, and treated him with
+ personal indignity and violence, when he undertook to disperse them. On
+ the other hand, Parma had been holding out hopes of pardon with more
+ reasonable conditions than could well be expected, and had, with a good
+ deal of art, taken advantage of several trivial circumstances to inspire
+ the burghers with confidence in his good-will. Thus, an infirm old lady in
+ the city happened to imagine herself so dependent upon asses milk as to
+ have sent her purveyor out of the city, at the peril of his life, to
+ procure a supply from the neighbourhood. The young man was captured,
+ brought to Alexander, from whose hands he very naturally expected the
+ punishment of a spy. The prince, however, presented him, not only with his
+ liberty, but with a she-ass; and loaded the animal with partridges and
+ capons, as a present for the invalid. The magistrates, hearing of the
+ incident, and not choosing to be outdone in courtesy, sent back a
+ waggon-load of old wine and remarkable confectionary as an offering to
+ Alexander, and with this interchange of dainties led the way to the
+ amenities of diplomacy.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Courage and semblance of cheerfulness, with despair in his heart
+ Demanding peace and bread at any price
+ Not a friend of giving details larger than my ascertained facts
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. 1585, Part 3, Alexander Farnese, The Duke of Parma
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Sainte Aldegonde discouraged&mdash;His Critical Position&mdash;His
+ Negotiations with the Enemy&mdash;Correspondence with Richardot&mdash;
+ Commotion in the City&mdash;Interview of Marnix with Parma&mdash;Suspicious
+ Conduct of Marnix&mdash;Deputation to the Prince&mdash;Oration of Marnix&mdash;
+ Private Views of Parma&mdash;Capitulation of Antwerp&mdash;Mistakes of Marnix
+ &mdash;Philip on the Religious Question&mdash;Triumphal Entrance of Alexander&mdash;
+ Rebuilding of the Citadel&mdash;Gratification of Philip&mdash;Note on Sainte
+ Aldegonde
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde's position had become a painful one. The net had been
+ drawn closely about the city. The bridge seemed impregnable, the great
+ Kowenstyn was irrecoverably in the hands of the enemy, and now all the
+ lesser forts in the immediate vicinity of Antwerp-Borght, Hoboken,
+ Cantecroix, Stralen, Berghen, and the rest&mdash;had likewise fallen into
+ his grasp. An account of grain, taken on the 1st of June, gave an average
+ of a pound a-head for a month long, or half a pound for two months. This
+ was not the famine-point, according to the standard which had once been
+ established in Leyden; but the courage of the burghers had been rapidly
+ oozing away, under the pressure of their recent disappointments. It seemed
+ obvious to the burgomaster, that the time for yielding had arrived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had maintained the city," he said, "for a long period, without any
+ excessive tumult or great effusion of blood&mdash;a city where there was
+ such a multitude of inhabitants, mostly merchants or artisans deprived of
+ all their traffic, stripped of their manufactures, destitute of all
+ commodities and means of living. I had done this in the midst of a great
+ diversity of humours and opinions, a vast popular license, a confused
+ anarchy, among a great number of commanders, most of them inexperienced in
+ war; with very little authority of my own, with slender forces of ships,
+ soldiers, and sailors; with alight appearance of support from king or
+ prince without, or of military garrison within; and under all these
+ circumstances I exerted myself to do my uttermost duty in preserving the
+ city, both in regard to its internal government, and by force of arms by
+ land and sea, without sparing myself in any labour or peril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know very well that there are many persons, who, finding themselves
+ quite at their ease, and far away from the hard blows that are passing,
+ are pleased to exhibit their wisdom by sitting in judgment upon others,
+ founding their decision only upon the results. But I demand to be judged
+ by equity and reason, when passion has been set aside. I claim that my
+ honour shall be protected against my calumniators; for all should remember
+ that I am not the first man, nor shall I be the last, that has been blamed
+ unjustly. All persons employed in public affairs are subject to such
+ hazards, but I submit myself to Him who knows all hearts, and who governs
+ all. I take Him to witness that in the affair of Antwerp, as in all my
+ other actions since my earliest youth, I have most sincerely sought His
+ glory and the welfare of His poor people, without regard to my own private
+ interests."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For it is not alone the fate of Antwerp that is here to be recorded. The
+ fame of Sainte Aldegonde was now seriously compromised. The character of a
+ great man must always be closely scanned and scrutinised; protected, if
+ needful, against calumny, but always unflinchingly held up to the light.
+ Names illustrious by genius and virtue are History's most precious
+ treasures, faithfully to be guarded by her, jealously to be watched; but
+ it is always a misfortune when her eyes are deceived by a glitter which is
+ not genuine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde was a man of unquestionable genius. His character had
+ ever been beyond the reproach of self-seeking or ignoble ambition. He had
+ multiplied himself into a thousand forms to serve the cause of the United
+ Netherland States, and the services so rendered had been brilliant and
+ frequent. A great change in his conduct and policy was now approaching,
+ and it is therefore the more necessary to examine closely at this epoch
+ his attitude and his character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in June, Richardot, president of the council of Artois, addressed a
+ letter to Sainte Aldegonde, by command of Alexander of Parma, suggesting a
+ secret interview between the burgomaster and the Prince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 8th of June, Sainte Aldegonde replied, in favourable terms, as to
+ the interview; but observed, that, as he was an official personage, it was
+ necessary for him to communicate the project to the magistracy of the
+ city. He expressed likewise the hope that Parma would embrace the present
+ opportunity for making a general treaty with all the Provinces. A special
+ accord with Antwerp, leaving out Holland and Zeeland, would, he said, lead
+ to the utter desolation of that city, and to the destruction of its
+ commerce and manufactures, while the occasion now presented itself to the
+ Prince of "winning praise and immortal glory by bringing back all the
+ country to a voluntary and prompt obedience to his Majesty." He proposed,
+ that, instead of his coming alone, there should be a number of deputies
+ sent from Antwerp to confer with Alexander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 11th June, Richardot replied by expressing, his own regrets and
+ those of the Prince, that the interview could not have been with the
+ burgomaster alone, but acknowledging the weight of his reasons, and
+ acquiescing in the proposition to send a larger deputation. Three days
+ afterwards, Sainte Aldegonde, on private consultation with some
+ confidential personages, changed his ground; announced his preference for
+ a private interview, under four eyes, with Parma; and requested that a
+ passport might be sent. The passport was accordingly forwarded the same
+ day, with an expression of Alexander's gratification, and with the offer,
+ on the part of Richardot, to come himself to Antwerp as hostage during the
+ absence of the burgomaster in Parma's camp at Beveren.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde was accordingly about to start on the following day (16th
+ of June), but meantime the affair had got wind. A secret interview, thus
+ projected, was regarded by the citizens as extremely suspicious. There was
+ much bitter insinuation against the burgomaster&mdash;many violent
+ demonstrations. "Aldegonde, they say, is going to see Parma," said one of
+ the burghers, "which gives much dissatisfaction, because, 'tis feared that
+ he will make a treaty according to the appetite and pleasure of his
+ Highness, having been gained over to the royal cause by money. He says
+ that it would be a misfortune to send a large number of burghers. Last
+ Sunday (16th June) there was a meeting of the broad council. The preachers
+ came into the assembly and so animated the citizens by demonstrations of
+ their religion, that all rushed from the council-house, crying with loud
+ voices that they did not desire peace but war."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This desire was a healthy and a reasonable one; but, unfortunately, the
+ Antwerpers had not always been so vigorous or so united in their
+ resistance to Parma. At present, however, they were very furious, so soon
+ as the secret purpose of Sainte Aldegonde became generally known. The
+ proposed capitulation, which great mobs had been for weeks long savagely
+ demanding at the hands of the burgomaster, was now ascribed to the
+ burgomaster's unblushing corruption. He had obviously, they thought, been
+ purchased by Spanish ducats to do what he had hitherto been so steadily
+ refusing. A certain Van Werne had gone from Antwerp into Holland a few
+ days before upon his own private affairs, with a safe-conduct from Parma.
+ Sainte Aldegonde had not communicated to him the project then on foot, but
+ he had permitted him to seek a secret interview with Count Mansfeld. If
+ that were granted, Van Werne was to hint that in case the Provinces could
+ promise themselves a religious peace it would be possible, in the opinion
+ of Sainte Aldegonde, to induce Holland and Zealand and all the rest of the
+ United Provinces, to return to their obedience. Van Werne, on his return
+ to Antwerp, divulged these secret negotiations, and so put a stop to
+ Sainte Aldegonde's scheme of going alone to Parma. "This has given a bad
+ suspicion to the people," wrote the burgomaster to Richardot, "so much so
+ that I fear to have trouble. The broad council has been in session, but I
+ don't know what has taken place there, and I do not dare to ask."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde's motive, as avowed by himself, for seeking a private
+ interview, was because he had received no answer to the main point in his
+ first letter, as to the proposition for a general accord. In order
+ therefore to make the deliberations more rapid, he had been disposed to
+ discuss that preliminary question in secret. "But now," said he to
+ Richardot, "as the affair had been too much divulged, as well by diverse
+ reports and writings sown about, very inopportunely, as by the arrival of
+ M. Van Werne, I have not found it practicable to set out upon my road,
+ without communication with the members of the government. This has been
+ done, however, not in the way of consultation, but as the announcement of
+ a thing already resolved upon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He proceeded to state, that great difficulties had arisen, exactly as he
+ had foreseen. The magistrates would not hear of a general accord, and it
+ was therefore necessary that a delay should be interposed before it would
+ be possible for him to come. He begged Richardot to persuade Alexander,
+ that he was not trifling with him. "It is not," said he, "from lightness,
+ or any other passion, that I am retarding this affair. I will do all in my
+ power to obtain leave to make a journey to the camp of his Highness, at
+ whatever price it may cost and I hope before long to arrive at my object.
+ If I fail, it must be ascribed to the humours of the people; for my
+ anxiety to restore all the Provinces to obedience to his Majesty is
+ extreme."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richardot, in reply, the next day, expressed regret, without astonishment,
+ on the part of Alexander and himself, at the intelligence thus received.
+ People had such difference of humour, he said, and all men were not
+ equally capable of reason. Nevertheless the citizens were warned not to
+ misconstrue Parma's gentleness, because he was determined to die, with his
+ whole army, rather than not take Antwerp. "As for the King," said
+ Richardot, "he will lay down all his crowns sooner than abandon this
+ enterprise." Van Werne was represented as free from blame, and sincerely
+ desirous of peace. Richardot had only stated to him, in general terms,
+ that letters had been received from Sainte Aldegonde, expressing an
+ opinion in favour of peace. As for the royalists, they were quite innocent
+ of the reports and writings that had so inopportunely been circulated in
+ the city. It was desirable, however, that the negotiation should not too
+ long be deferred, for otherwise Antwerp might perish, before a general
+ accord with Holland and Zeeland could be made. He begged Sainte Aldegonde
+ to banish all anxiety as to Parma's sentiments towards himself or the
+ community. "Put yourself, Sir, quite at your ease," said he. "His Highness
+ is in no respects dissatisfied with you, nor prone to conceive any
+ indignation against this poor people." He assured the burgomaster that he
+ was not suspected of lightness, nor of a wish to delay matters, but he
+ expressed solicitude with regard to the threatening demonstrations which
+ had been made against him in Antwerp. "For," said he, "popular governments
+ are full of a thousand hazards, and it would be infinitely painful to me,
+ if you should come to harm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it would appear that it was Sainte Aldegonde who was chiefly anxious
+ to effect the reconciliation of Holland and Zeeland with the King. The
+ initiative of this project to include all the United Provinces in one
+ scheme with the reduction of Antwerp came originally from him, and was
+ opposed, at the outset, by the magistrates of that city, by the Prince of
+ Parma and his councillors, and, by the States of Holland and Zeeland. The
+ demonstrations on the part of the preachers, the municipal authorities,
+ and the burghers, against Sainte Aldegonde and his plan for a secret
+ interview, so soon as it was divulged, made it impossible to carry that
+ project into effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aldegonde, who governs Antwerp," wrote Parma to Philip, "was
+ endeavouring, eight days ago, to bring about some kind of negotiation for
+ an accord. He manifested a desire to come hither for the sake of a
+ personal interview with me, which I permitted. It was to have taken place
+ last Sunday, 16th of this month, but by reason of a certain popular
+ tumult, which arose out of these circumstances, it has been necessary to
+ defer the meeting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was much disappointment felt by the royalist at this unsatisfactory
+ result. "These bravadoes and impertinent demonstrations on the part of
+ some of your people," wrote Richardot, ten days later, "will be the
+ destruction of the whole country, and will convert the Prince's gentleness
+ into anger. 'Tis these good and zealous patriots, trusting to a little
+ favourable breeze that blew for a few days past, who have been the cause
+ of all this disturbance, and who are ruining their miserable country&mdash;miserable,
+ I say, for having produced such abortions as themselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding what had passed, however, Richardot intimated that
+ Alexander was still ready to negotiate. "And if you, Sir," he concluded,
+ in his letter to Aldegonde, "concerning whom many of our friends have at
+ present a sinister opinion, as if your object was to circumvent us, are
+ willing to proceed roundly and frankly, as I myself firmly believe that
+ you will do, we may yet hope for a favourable issue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the burgomaster was already the object of suspicion to both parties.
+ The Antwerpers denounced him as having been purchased by Spanish gold; the
+ royalists accused him of intending to overreach the King. It was not
+ probable therefore that all were correct in their conjectures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last it was arranged that deputies should be appointed by the broad
+ council to commence a negotiation with Parma. Sainte Aldegonde informed
+ Richardot, that he would (5th July, 1585) accompany them, if his affairs
+ should permit. He protested his sincerity and frankness throughout the
+ whole affair. "They try to calumniate me," he said, "as much on one side
+ as on the other, but I will overcome by my innocence all the malice of my
+ slanderers. If his Highness should be pleased to grant us some liberty for
+ our religion, I dare to promise such faithful service as will give very
+ great satisfaction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four days later, Sainte Aldegonde himself, together with M. de Duffel, M.
+ de Schoonhoven, and Adrian Hesselt, came to Parma's camp at Beveren, as
+ deputies on the part of the Antwerp authorities. They were courteously
+ received by the Prince, and remained three days as his guests. During the
+ period of this visit, the terms of a capitulation were thoroughly
+ discussed, between Alexander and his councillors upon one part, and the
+ four deputies on the other. The envoys endeavoured, with all the arguments
+ at their command, to obtain the consent of the Prince to three preliminary
+ points which they laid down as indispensable. Religious liberty must be
+ granted, the citadel must not be reconstructed, a foreign garrison must
+ not be admitted; they said. As it was the firm intention of the King,
+ however, not to make the slightest concession on any one of these points,
+ the discussion was not a very profitable one. Besides the public
+ interviews at which all the negotiators were present, there was a private
+ conference between Parma and Sainte Aldegonde which lasted more than four
+ hours, in which each did his best to enforce his opinions upon the other.
+ The burgomaster endeavoured to persuade the Prince with all the eloquence
+ for which he was so renowned, that the hearts not of the Antwerpers only,
+ but of the Hollanders and Zeelanders, were easily to be won at that
+ moment. Give them religious liberty, and attempt to govern them by
+ gentleness rather than by Spanish garrisons, and the road was plain to a
+ complete reconciliation of all the Provinces with his Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander, who knew his master to be inexorable upon these three points,
+ was courteous but peremptory in his statements. He recommended that the
+ rebels should take into consideration their own declining strength, the
+ inexhaustible resources of the King, the impossibility of obtaining
+ succour from France, and the perplexing dilatoriness of England, rather
+ than waste their time in idle expectations of a change in the Spanish
+ policy. He also intimated, obliquely but very plainly, to Sainte
+ Aldegonde, that his own fortune would be made, and that he had everything
+ to hope from his Majesty's bounty, if he were now willing to make himself
+ useful in carrying into effect the royal plans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince urged these views with so much eloquence, that he seemed, in
+ his own words, to have been directly inspired by the Lord for this special
+ occasion! Sainte Aldegonde, too, was signally impressed by Alexander's
+ language, and thoroughly fascinated-magnetized, as it were&mdash;by his
+ character. He subsequently declared, that he had often conversed
+ familiarly with many eloquent personages, but that he had never known a
+ man more powerful or persuasive than the Prince of Parma. He could
+ honestly say of him&mdash;as Hasdrubal had said of Scipio&mdash;that
+ Farnese was even more admirable when seen face to face, than he had seemed
+ when one only heard of his glorious achievements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The burgomaster and three deputies," wrote Parma to Philip, "were here
+ until the 12th July. We discussed (30th July, 1585) the points and form of
+ a capitulation, and they have gone back thoroughly satisfied. Sainte
+ Aldegonde especially was much pleased with the long interview which he had
+ with me, alone, and which lasted more than three hours. I told him, as
+ well as my weakness and suffering from the tertian fever permitted, all
+ that God inspired me to say on our behalf."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, if Sainte Aldegonde and his colleagues went away thoroughly
+ satisfied, they had reason, soon after their return, to become thoroughly
+ dejected. The magistrates and burghers would not listen to a proposition
+ to abandon the three points, however strongly urged to do so by arguments
+ drawn from the necessity of the situation, and by representations of
+ Parma's benignity. As for the burgomaster, he became the target for
+ calumny, so soon as his three hours' private interview became known; and
+ the citizens loudly declared that his head ought to be cut off, and sent
+ in a bag, as a present, to Philip, in order that the traitor might meet
+ the sovereign with whom he sought a reconciliation, face to face, as soon
+ as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deputies, immediately after their return, made their report to the
+ magistrates, as likewise to the colonels and captains, and to the deans of
+ guilds. Next day, although it was Sunday, there was a session of the broad
+ council, and Sainte Aldegonde made a long address, in which&mdash;as he
+ stated in a letter to Richardot&mdash;he related everything that had
+ passed in his private conversation with Alexander. An answer was promised
+ to Parma on the following Tuesday, but the burgomaster spoke very
+ discouragingly as to the probability of an accord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The joy with which our return was greeted," he said, "was followed by a
+ general disappointment and sadness, so soon as the result was known. The
+ want of a religious toleration, as well as the refusal to concede on the
+ other two points, has not a little altered the hearts of all, even of the
+ Catholics. A citadel and a garrison are considered ruin and desolation to
+ a great commercial city. I have done what I can to urge the acceptance of
+ such conditions as the Prince is willing to give, and have spoken in
+ general terms of his benign intentions. The citizens still desire peace.
+ Had his Highness been willing to take both religions under his protection,
+ he might have won all hearts, and very soon all the other Provinces would
+ have returned to their obedience, while the clemency and magnanimity of
+ his Majesty would thus have been rendered admirable throughout the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The power to form an accurate conception as to the nature of Philip and of
+ other personages with whom he was dealing, and as to the general signs of
+ his times, seems to have been wanting in the character of the gifted
+ Aldegonde. He had been dazzled by the personal presence of Parma, and he
+ now spoke of Philip II., as if his tyranny over the Netherlands&mdash;which
+ for twenty years had been one horrible and uniform whole&mdash;were the
+ accidental result of circumstances, not the necessary expression of his
+ individual character, and might be easily changed at will&mdash;as if
+ Nero, at a moment's warning, might transform himself into Trajan. It is
+ true that the innermost soul of the Spanish king could by no possibility
+ be displayed to any contemporary, as it reveals itself, after three
+ centuries, to those who study the record of his most secret thoughts; but,
+ at any rate, it would seem that his career had been sufficiently
+ consistent, to manifest the amount of "clemency and magnanimity" which he
+ might be expected to exercise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Had his Majesty," wrote Sainte Aldegonde, "been willing, since the year
+ sixty-six, to pursue a course of toleration, the memory of his reign would
+ have been sacred to all posterity, with an immortal praise of sapience,
+ benignity, and sovereign felicity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This might be true, but nevertheless a tolerating Philip, in the year
+ 1585, ought to have seemed to Sainte Aldegonde an impossible idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The emperors," continued the burgomaster, "who immediately succeeded
+ Tiberius were the cause of the wisdom which displayed itself in the good
+ Trajan&mdash;also a Spaniard&mdash;and in Antoninus, Verus, and the rest:
+ If you think that this city, by the banishment of a certain number of
+ persons, will be content to abandon the profession of the reformed faith,
+ you are much mistaken. You will see, with time, that the exile of this
+ religion will be accompanied by a depopulation and a sorrowful ruin and
+ desolation of this flourishing city. But this will be as it pleases God.
+ Meantime I shall not fail to make all possible exertions to induce the
+ citizens to consent to a reconciliation with his Majesty. The broad
+ council will soon give their answer, and then we shall send a deputation.
+ We shall invite Holland and Zeeland to join with us, but there is little
+ hope of their consent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly there was little hope of their consent. Sainte Aldegonde was now
+ occupied in bringing about the capitulation of Antwerp, without any
+ provision for religious liberty&mdash;a concession which Parma had most
+ distinctly refused&mdash;and it was not probable that Holland and Zeeland,
+ after twenty years of hard fighting, and with an immediate prospect of
+ assistance from England&mdash;could now be induced to resign the great
+ object of the contest without further struggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not until a month had elapsed that the authorities of Antwerp sent
+ their propositions to the Prince of Parma. On the 12th August, however,
+ Sainte Aldegonde, accompanied by the same three gentlemen who had been
+ employed on the first mission, and by seventeen others besides, proceeded
+ with safe-conduct to the camp at Beveren. Here they were received with
+ great urbanity, and hospitably entertained by Alexander, who received
+ their formal draft of articles for a capitulation, and referred it to be
+ reported upon to Richardot, Pamel, and Vanden Burgh. Meantime there were
+ many long speeches and several conferences, sometimes between all the
+ twenty-one envoys and the Prince together; on other occasions, more secret
+ ones, at which only Aldegonde and one or two of his colleagues were
+ present. It had been obvious, from the date of the first interview, in the
+ preceding month, that the negotiation would be of no avail until the
+ government of Antwerp was prepared to abandon all the conditions which
+ they had originally announced as indispensable. Alexander had not much
+ disposition and no authority whatever to make concessions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So far as I can understand," Parma had written on the 30th July, "they
+ are very far from a conclusion. They have most exorbitant ideas, talking
+ of some kind of liberty of conscience, besides refusing on any account to
+ accept of garrisons, and having many reasons to allege on such subjects."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The discussions, therefore, after the deputies had at last arrived, though
+ courteously conducted, could scarcely be satisfactory to both parties.
+ "The articles were thoroughly deliberated upon," wrote Alexander, "by all
+ the deputies, nor did I fail to have private conferences with Aldegonde,
+ that most skilful and practised lawyer and politician, as well as with two
+ or three of the others. I did all in my power to bring them to a thorough
+ recognition of their errors, and to produce a confidence in his Majesty's
+ clemency, in order that they might concede what was needful for the
+ interests of the Catholic religion and the security of the city. They
+ heard all I had to say without exasperating themselves, and without
+ interposing any strong objections, except in the matter of religion, and,
+ still more, in the matter of the citadel and the garrison. Aldegonde took
+ much pains to persuade me that it would be ruinous for a great, opulent,
+ commercial city to submit to a foreign military force. Even if compelled
+ by necessity to submit now, the inhabitants would soon be compelled by the
+ same necessity to abandon the place entirely, and to leave in ruins one of
+ the most splendid and powerful cities in the world, and in this opinion
+ Catholics and heretics unanimously concurred. The deputies protested, with
+ one accord, that so pernicious and abominable a thing as a citadel and
+ garrison could not even be proposed to their constituents. I answered,
+ that, so long as the rebellion of Holland and Zeeland lasted, it would be
+ necessary for your Majesty to make sure of Antwerp, by one or the other of
+ those means, but promised that the city should be relieved of the
+ incumbrance so soon as those islands should be reduced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sainte Aldegonde was not discouraged by this statement, but in the hope
+ of convincing others, or with the wish of showing that he had tried his
+ best, desired that I would hear him before the council of state. I granted
+ the request, and Sainte Aldegonde then made another long and very elegant
+ oration, intended to divert me from my resolution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be confessed&mdash;if the reports, which have come down to us of
+ that long and elegant oration be correct&mdash;that the enthusiasm of the
+ burgomaster for Alexander was rapidly degenerating into idolatry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are not here, O invincible Prince," he said, "that we may excuse, by
+ an anxious legation, the long defence which we have made of our homes. Who
+ could have feared any danger to the most powerful city in the Netherlands
+ from so moderate a besieging force? You would yourself have rather wished
+ for, than approved of, a greater facility on our part, for the brave
+ cannot love the timid. We knew the number of your troops, we had
+ discovered the famine in your camp, we were aware of the paucity of your
+ ships, we had heard of the quarrels in your army, we were expecting daily
+ to hear of a general mutiny among your soldiers. Were we to believe that
+ with ten or eleven thousand men you would be able to block up the city by
+ land and water, to reduce the open country of Brabant, to cut off all aid
+ as well from the neighbouring towns as from the powerful provinces of
+ Holland and Zeeland, to oppose, without a navy, the whole strength of our
+ fleets, directed against the dyke? Truly, if you had been at the head of
+ fifty thousand soldiers, and every soldier had possessed one hundred
+ hands, it would have seemed impossible for you to meet so many emergencies
+ in so many places, and under so many distractions. What you have done we
+ now believe possible to do, only because we see that it has been done. You
+ have subjugated the Scheldt, and forced it to bear its bridge,
+ notwithstanding the strength of its current, the fury of the ocean-tides,
+ the tremendous power of the icebergs, the perpetual conflicts with our
+ fleets. We destroyed your bridge, with great slaughter of your troops.
+ Rendered more courageous by that slaughter, you restored that mighty work.
+ We assaulted the great dyke, pierced it through and through, and opened a
+ path for our ships. You drove us off when victors, repaired the ruined
+ bulwark, and again closed to us the avenue of relief. What machine was
+ there that we did not employ? what miracles of fire did we not invent?
+ what fleets and floating citadels did we not put in motion? All that
+ genius, audacity, and art, could teach us we have executed, calling to our
+ assistance water, earth, heaven, and hell itself. Yet with all these
+ efforts, with all this enginry, we have not only failed to drive you from
+ our walls, but we have seen you gaining victories over other cities at the
+ same time. You have done a thing, O Prince, than which there is nothing
+ greater either in ancient or modern story. It has often occurred, while a
+ general was besieging one city that he lost another situate farther off.
+ But you, while besieging Antwerp, have reduced simultaneously Dendermonde,
+ Ghent, Nymegen, Brussels, and Mechlin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this, and much more, with florid rhetoric, the burgomaster pronounced
+ in honour of Farnese, and the eulogy was entirely deserved. It was hardly
+ becoming, however, for such lips, at such a moment, to sound the praise of
+ him whose victory had just decided the downfall of religious liberty, and
+ of the national independence of the Netherlands. His colleagues certainly
+ must have winced, as they listened to commendations so lavishly bestowed
+ upon the representative of Philip, and it is not surprising that Sainte
+ Aldegonde's growing unpopularity should, from that hour, have rapidly
+ increased. To abandon the whole object of the siege, when resistance
+ seemed hopeless, was perhaps pardonable, but to offer such lip-homage to
+ the conqueror was surely transgressing the bounds of decorum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His conclusion, too, might to Alexander seem as insolent as the whole
+ tenor of his address had been humble; for, after pronouncing this solemn
+ eulogy upon the conqueror, he calmly proposed that the prize of the
+ contest should be transferred to the conquered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So long as liberty of religion, and immunity from citadel and garrison
+ can be relied upon," he said, "so long will Antwerp remain the most
+ splendid and flourishing city in Christendom; but desolation will ensue if
+ the contrary policy is to prevail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was very certain that liberty of religion, as well as immunity from
+ citadel and garrison, were quite out of the question. Philip and Parma had
+ long been inexorably resolved upon all the three points.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After the burgomaster had finished his oration," wrote Alexander to his
+ sovereign, "I discussed the matter with him in private, very distinctly
+ and minutely."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The religious point was soon given up, Sainte Aldegonde finding it waste
+ of breath to say anything more about freedom of conscience. A suggestion
+ was however made on the subject of the garrison, which the prince
+ accepted, because it contained a condition which it would be easy to
+ evade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aldegonde proposed," said Parma, "that a garrison might be admissible if
+ I made my entrance into the city merely with infantry and cavalry of
+ nations which were acceptable&mdash;Walloons, namely, and Germans&mdash;and
+ in no greater numbers than sufficient for a body-guard. I accepted,
+ because, in substance, this would amount to a garrison, and because, also,
+ after the magistrates shall have been changed, I shall have no difficulty
+ in making myself master of the people, continuing the garrison, and
+ rebuilding the citadel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince proceeded to give his reasons why he was willing to accept the
+ capitulation on what he considered so favourable terms to the besieged.
+ Autumn was approaching. Already the fury of the storms had driven vessels
+ clean over the dykes; the rebels in Holland and Zeeland were preparing
+ their fleets&mdash;augmented by many new ships of war and fire-machines&mdash;for
+ another desperate attack upon the Palisades, in which there was great
+ possibility of their succeeding; an auxiliary force from England was soon
+ expected; so that, in view of all these circumstances, he had resolved to
+ throw himself at his Majesty's feet and implore his clemency. "If this
+ people of Antwerp, as the head, is gained," said he, "there will be
+ tranquillity in all the members."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These reasons were certainly conclusive; nor is it easy to believe, that,
+ under the circumstances thus succinctly stated by Alexander, it would have
+ been impossible for the patriots to hold out until the promised succour
+ from Holland and from England should arrive. In point of fact, the bridge
+ could not have stood the winter which actually ensued; for it was the
+ repeatedly expressed opinion of the Spanish officers in Antwerp, that the
+ icebergs which then filled the Scheldt must inevitably have shattered
+ twenty bridges to fragments, had there been so many. It certainly was
+ superfluous for the Prince to make excuses to Philip for accepting the
+ proposed capitulation. All the prizes of victory had been thoroughly
+ secured, unless pillage, massacre, and rape, which had been the regular
+ accompaniments of Alva's victories, were to be reckoned among the
+ indispensable trophies of a Spanish triumph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, the dearth in the city had been well concealed from the
+ enemy; for, three days after the surrender, not a loaf of bread was to be
+ had for any money in all Antwerp, and Alexander declared that he would
+ never have granted such easy conditions had he been aware of the real
+ condition of affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The articles of capitulation agreed upon between Parma and the deputies
+ were brought before the broad council on the 9th August. There was much
+ opposition to them, as many magistrates and other influential personages
+ entertained sanguine expectations from the English negotiation, and were
+ beginning to rely with confidence upon the promises of Queen Elizabeth.
+ The debate was waxing warm, when some of the councillors, looking out of
+ window of the great hall, perceived that a violent mob had collected in
+ the streets. Furious cries for bread were uttered, and some meagre-looking
+ individuals were thrust forward to indicate the famine which was
+ prevailing, and the necessity of concluding the treaty without further
+ delay. Thus the municipal government was perpetually exposed to democratic
+ violence, excited by diametrically opposite influences. Sometimes the
+ burgomaster was denounced for having sold himself and his country to the
+ Spaniards, and was assailed with execrations for being willing to conclude
+ a sudden and disgraceful peace. At other moments he was accused of forging
+ letters containing promises of succour from the Queen of England and from
+ the authorities of Holland, in order to protract the lingering tortures of
+ the war. Upon this occasion the peace-mob carried its point. The
+ councillors, looking out of window, rushed into the hall with direful
+ accounts of the popular ferocity; the magistrates and colonels who had
+ been warmest in opposition suddenly changed their tone, and the whole body
+ of the broad council accepted the articles of capitulation by a unanimous
+ vote.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The window was instantly thrown open, and the decision publicly announced.
+ The populace, wild with delight, rushed through the streets, tearing down
+ the arms of the Duke of Anjou, which had remained above the public
+ edifices since the period of that personage's temporary residence in the
+ Netherlands, and substituting, with wonderful celerity, the escutcheon of
+ Philip the Second. Thus suddenly could an Antwerp mob pass from democratic
+ insolence to intense loyalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The articles, on the whole, were as liberal as could have been expected.
+ The only hope for Antwerp and for a great commonwealth of all the
+ Netherlands was in holding out, even to the last gasp, until England and
+ Holland, now united, had time to relieve the city. This was,
+ unquestionably, possible. Had Antwerp possessed the spirit of Leyden, had
+ William of Orange been alive, that Spanish escutcheon, now raised with
+ such indecent haste, might have never been seen again on the outside wall
+ of any Netherland edifice. Belgium would have become at once a constituent
+ portion of a great independent national realm, instead of languishing
+ until our own century, the dependency of a distant and a foreign
+ metropolis. Nevertheless, as the Antwerpers were not disposed to make
+ themselves martyrs, it was something that they escaped the nameless
+ horrors which had often alighted upon cities subjected to an enraged
+ soldiery. It redounds to the eternal honour of Alexander Farnese&mdash;when
+ the fate of Naarden and Haarlem and Maestricht, in the days of Alva, and
+ of Antwerp itself in the horrible "Spanish fury," is remembered&mdash;that
+ there were no scenes of violence and outrage in the populous and wealthy
+ city, which was at length at his mercy after having defied him so long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Civil and religious liberty were trampled in the dust, commerce and
+ manufactures were destroyed, the most valuable portion of the citizens
+ sent into hopeless exile, but the remaining inhabitants were not butchered
+ in cold blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The treaty was signed on the 17th August. Antwerp was to return to its
+ obedience. There was to be an entire amnesty and oblivion for the past,
+ without a single exception. Royalist absentees were to be reinstated in
+ their possessions. Monasteries, churches, and the King's domains were to
+ be restored to their former proprietors. The inhabitants of the city were
+ to practise nothing but the Catholic religion. Those who refused to
+ conform were allowed to remain two years for the purpose of winding up
+ their affairs and selling out their property, provided that during that
+ period they lived "without scandal towards the ancient religion"&mdash;a
+ very vague and unsatisfactory condition. All prisoners were to be released
+ excepting Teligny. Four hundred thousand florins were to be paid by the
+ authorities as a fine. The patriot garrison was to leave the city with
+ arms and baggage and all the honours of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This capitulation gave more satisfaction to the hungry portion of the
+ Antwerpers than to the patriot party of the Netherlands. Sainte Aldegonde
+ was vehemently and unsparingly denounced as a venal traitor. It is
+ certain, whatever his motives, that his attitude had completely changed.
+ For it was not Antwerp alone that he had reconciled or was endeavouring to
+ reconcile with the King of Spain, but Holland and Zeeland as well, and all
+ the other independent Provinces. The ancient champion of the patriot army,
+ the earliest signer of the 'Compromise,' the bosom friend of William the
+ Silent, the author of the 'Wilhelmus' national song, now avowed his
+ conviction, in a published defence of his conduct against the calumnious
+ attacks upon it, "that it was impossible, with a clear conscience, for
+ subjects, under any circumstances, to take up arms against Philip, their
+ king." Certainly if he had always entertained that opinion he must have
+ suffered many pangs of remorse during his twenty years of active and
+ illustrious rebellion. He now made himself secretly active in promoting
+ the schemes of Parma and in counteracting the negotiation with England. He
+ flattered himself, with an infatuation which it is difficult to
+ comprehend, that it would be possible to obtain religious liberty for the
+ revolting Provinces, although he had consented to its sacrifice in
+ Antwerp. It is true that he had not the privilege of reading Philip's
+ secret letters to Parma, but what was there in the character of the King&mdash;what
+ intimation had ever been given by the Governor-General&mdash;to induce a
+ belief in even the possibility of such a concession?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever Sainte Aldegonde's opinions, it is certain that Philip had no
+ intention of changing his own policy. He at first suspected the
+ burgomaster of a wish to protract the negotiations for a perfidious
+ purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Necessity has forced Antwerp," he wrote on the 17th of August&mdash;the
+ very day on which the capitulation was actually signed&mdash;"to enter
+ into negotiation. I understand the artifice of Aldegonde in seeking to
+ prolong and make difficult the whole affair, under pretext of treating for
+ the reduction of Holland and Zeeland at the same time. It was therefore
+ very adroit in you to defeat this joint scheme at once, and urge the
+ Antwerp matter by itself, at the same time not shutting the door on the
+ others. With the prudence and dexterity with which this business has thus
+ far been managed I am thoroughly satisfied."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King also expressed his gratification at hearing from Parma that the
+ demand for religious liberty in the Netherlands would soon be abandoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In spite of the vehemence," he said, "which they manifest in the
+ religious matter, desiring some kind of liberty, they will in the end, as
+ you say they will, content themselves with what the other cities, which
+ have returned to obedience, have obtained. This must be done in all cases
+ without flinching, and without permitting any modification."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What "had been obtained" by Brussels, Mechlin, Ghent, was well known. The
+ heretics had obtained the choice of renouncing their religion or of going
+ into perpetual exile, and this was to be the case "without flinching" in
+ Holland and Zeeland, if those provinces chose to return to obedience. Yet
+ Sainte Aldegonde deluded himself with the thought of a religious peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another and very important letter of the same date Philip laid down his
+ policy very distinctly. The Prince of Parma, by no means such a bigot as
+ his master, had hinted at the possibility of tolerating the reformed
+ religion in the places recovered from the rebels, sub silentio, for a
+ period not defined, and long enough for the heretics to awake from their
+ errors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have got an expression of opinion, I see," wrote the King to
+ Alexander, "of some grave men of wisdom and conscience, that the
+ limitation of time, during which the heretics may live without scandal,
+ may be left undefined; but I feel very keenly the danger of such a
+ proposition. With regard to Holland and Zeeland, or any other provinces or
+ towns, the first step must be for them to receive and maintain alone the
+ exercise of the Catholic religion, and to subject themselves to the Roman
+ church, without tolerating the exercise of any other religion, in city,
+ village, farm-house, or building thereto destined in the fields, or in any
+ place whatsoever; and in this regulation there is to be no flaw, no
+ change, no concession by convention or otherwise of a religious peace, or
+ anything of the sort. They are all to embrace the Roman Catholic religion,
+ and the exercise of that is alone to be permitted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This certainly was distinct enough, and nothing had been ever said in
+ public to induce a belief in any modification of the principles on which
+ Philip had uniformly acted. That monarch considered himself born to
+ suppress heresy, and he had certainly been carrying out this work during
+ his whole lifetime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was willing, however, as Alexander had intimated in his
+ negotiations with Antwerp, and previously in the capitulation of Brussels,
+ Ghent, and other places, that there should be an absence of investigation
+ into the private chambers of the heretics, during the period allotted them
+ for choosing between the Papacy and exile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be permitted," said Philip, "to abstain from inquiring as to what
+ the heretics are doing within their own doors, in a private way, without
+ scandal, or any public exhibition of their rites during a fixed time. But
+ this connivance, and the abstaining from executing the heretics, or from
+ chastising them, even although they may be living very circumspectly, is
+ to be expressed in very vague terms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being most anxious to provide against a second crop of heretics to succeed
+ the first, which he was determined to uproot, he took pains to enjoin with
+ his own hand upon Parma the necessity of putting in Catholic schoolmasters
+ and mistresses to the exclusion of reformed teachers into all the
+ seminaries of the recovered Provinces, in order that all the boys and
+ girls might grow up in thorough orthodoxy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet this was the man from whom Sainte Aldegonde imagined the possibility
+ of obtaining a religious peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten days after the capitulation, Parma made his triumphal entrance into
+ Antwerp; but, according to his agreement, he spared the citizens the
+ presence of the Spanish and Italian soldiers, the military procession
+ being composed of the Germans and Walloons. Escorted by his body-guard,
+ and surrounded by a knot of magnates and veterans, among whom the Duke of
+ Arschot, the Prince of Chimay, the Counts Mansfeld, Egmont, and Aremberg,
+ were conspicuous, Alexander proceeded towards the captured city. He was
+ met at the Keyser Gate by a triumphal chariot of gorgeous workmanship, in
+ which sat the fair nymph Antwerpia, magnificently bedizened, and
+ accompanied by a group of beautiful maidens. Antwerpia welcomed the
+ conqueror with a kiss, recited a poem in his honour, and bestowed upon him
+ the keys of the city, one of which was in gold. This the Prince
+ immediately fastened to the chain around his neck, from which was
+ suspended the lamb of the golden fleece, with which order he had just
+ been, amid great pomp and ceremony, invested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the public square called the Mere, the Genoese merchants had erected
+ two rostral columns, each surmounted by a colossal image, representing
+ respectively Alexander of Macedon and Alexander of Parma. Before the house
+ of Portugal was an enormous phoenix, expanding her wings quite across the
+ street; while, in other parts of the town, the procession was met by ships
+ of war, elephants, dromedaries, whales, dragons, and other triumphal
+ phenomena. In the market-place were seven statues in copper, personifying
+ the seven planets, together with an eighth representing Bacchus; and
+ perhaps there were good mythological reasons why the god of wine, together
+ with so large a portion of our solar system, should be done in copper by
+ Jacob Jongeling, to honour the triumph of Alexander, although the key to
+ the enigma has been lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cathedral had been thoroughly fumigated with frankincense, and
+ besprinkled with holy water, to purify the sacred precincts from their
+ recent pollution by the reformed rites; and the Protestant pulpits which
+ had been placed there, had been soundly beaten with rods, and then burned
+ to ashes. The procession entered within its walls, where a magnificent Te
+ Deum was performed, and then, after much cannon-firing, bell-ringing,
+ torch-light exhibition, and other pyrotechnics, the Prince made his way at
+ last to the palace provided for him. The glittering display, by which the
+ royalists celebrated their triumph, lasted three days' long, the city
+ being thronged from all the country round with eager and frivolous
+ spectators, who were never wearied with examining the wonders of the
+ bridge and the forts, and with gazing at the tragic memorials which still
+ remained of the fight on the Kowenstyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this interval, the Spanish and Italian soldiery, not willing to be
+ outdone in demonstrations of respect to their chief, nor defrauded of
+ their rightful claim to a holiday amused themselves with preparing a
+ demonstration of a novel character. The bridge, which, as it was well
+ known, was to be destroyed within a very few days, was adorned with
+ triumphal arches, and decked with trees and flowering plants; its roadway
+ was strewed with branches; and the palisades, parapets, and forts, were
+ garnished with wreaths, emblems, and poetical inscriptions in honour of
+ the Prince. The soldiers themselves, attired in verdurous garments of
+ foliage and flower-work, their swart faces adorned with roses and lilies,
+ paraded the bridge and the dyke in fantastic procession with clash of
+ cymbal and flourish of trumpet, dancing, singing, and discharging their
+ carbines, in all the delirium of triumph. Nor was a suitable termination
+ to the festival wanting, for Alexander, pleased with the genial character
+ of these demonstrations, repaired himself to the bridge, where he was
+ received with shouts of rapture by his army, thus whimsically converted
+ into a horde of fauns and satyrs. Afterwards, a magnificent banquet was
+ served to the soldiers upon the bridge. The whole extent of its surface,
+ from the Flemish to the Brabant shore&mdash;the scene so lately of deadly
+ combat, and of the midnight havoc caused by infernal enginery&mdash;was
+ changed, as if by the stroke of a wand, into a picture of sylvan and
+ Arcadian merry-making, and spread with tables laden with delicate viands.
+ Here sat that host of war&mdash;bronzed figures, banqueting at their ease,
+ their heads crowned with flowers, while the highest magnates of the army,
+ humouring them in their masquerade, served them with dainties, and filled
+ their goblets with wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After these festivities had been concluded, Parma set himself to practical
+ business. There had been a great opposition, during the discussion of the
+ articles of capitulation to the reconstruction of the famous citadel. That
+ fortress had been always considered, not as a defence of the place against
+ a foreign enemy, but as an instrument to curb the burghers themselves
+ beneath a hostile power. The city magistrates, however, as well as the
+ dean and chief officers in all the guilds and fraternities, were at once
+ changed by Parma&mdash;Catholics being uniformly substituted for heretics.
+ In consequence, it was not difficult to bring about a change of opinion in
+ the broad council. It is true that neither Papists nor Calvinists regarded
+ with much satisfaction the prospect of military violence being substituted
+ for civic rule, but in the first effusion of loyalty, and in the triumph
+ of the ancient religion, they forgot the absolute ruin to which their own
+ action was now condemning their city. Champagny, who had once covered
+ himself with glory by his heroic though unsuccessful efforts to save
+ Antwerp from the dreadful "Spanish fury" which had descended from that
+ very citadel, was now appointed governor of the town, and devoted himself
+ to the reconstruction of the hated fortress. "Champagny has particularly
+ aided me," wrote Parma, "with his rhetoric and clever management, and has
+ brought the broad council itself to propose that the citadel should be
+ rebuilt. It will therefore be done, as by the burghers themselves, without
+ your Majesty or myself appearing to desire it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was, in truth, a triumph of "rhetoric and clever management," nor
+ could a city well abase itself more completely, kneeling thus cheerfully
+ at its conqueror's feet, and requesting permission to put the yoke upon
+ its own neck. "The erection of the castle has thus been determined upon,"
+ said Parma, "and I am supposed to know nothing of the resolution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later he observed that they, were "working away most furiously at
+ the citadel, and that within a month it would be stronger than it ever had
+ been before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The building went on, indeed, with astonishing celerity, the fortress
+ rising out of its ruins almost as rapidly, under the hands of the
+ royalists, as it had been demolished, but a few years before, by the
+ patriots. The old foundations still remained, and blocks of houses, which
+ had been constructed out of its ruins, were thrown down that the materials
+ might be again employed in its restoration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The citizens, impoverished and wretched, humbly demanded that the expense
+ of building the citadel might be in part defrayed by the four hundred
+ thousand florins in which they had been mulcted by the capitulation. "I
+ don't marvel at this," said Parma, "for certainly the poor city is most
+ forlorn and poverty-stricken, the heretics having all left it." It was not
+ long before it was very satisfactorily established, that the presence of
+ those same heretics and liberty of conscience for all men, were
+ indispensable conditions for the prosperity of the great capital. Its
+ downfall was instantaneous. The merchants and industrious artisans all
+ wandered away from the place which had been the seat of a world-wide
+ traffic. Civilisation and commerce departed, and in their stead were the
+ citadel and the Jesuits. By express command of Philip, that order,
+ banished so recently, was reinstated in Antwerp, as well as throughout the
+ obedient provinces; and all the schools and colleges were placed under its
+ especial care. No children could be thenceforth instructed except by the
+ lips of those fathers. Here was a curb more efficacious even than the
+ citadel. That fortress was at first garrisoned with Walloons and Germans.
+ "I have not yet induced the citizens," said Parma, "to accept a Spanish
+ garrison, nor am I surprised; so many of them remembering past events
+ (alluding to the 'Spanish fury,' but not mentioning it by name), and
+ observing the frequent mutinies at the present time. Before long, I
+ expect, however, to make the Spaniards as acceptable and agreeable as the
+ inhabitants of the country themselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may easily be supposed that Philip was pleased with the triumphs that
+ had thus been achieved. He was even grateful, or affected to be grateful,
+ to him who had achieved them. He awarded great praise to Alexander for his
+ exertions, on the memorable occasions of the attack upon the bridge, and
+ the battle of the Kowenstyn; but censured him affectionately for so rashly
+ exposing his life. "I have no words," he said, "to render the thanks which
+ are merited for all that you have been doing. I recommend you earnestly
+ however to have a care for the security of your person, for that is of
+ more consequence than all the rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the news of the reduction of the city, he again expressed
+ gratification, but in rather cold language. "From such obstinate people,"
+ said he, "not more could be extracted than has been extracted; therefore
+ the capitulation is satisfactory." What more he wished to extract it would
+ be difficult to say, for certainly the marrow had been extracted from the
+ bones, and the dead city was thenceforth left to moulder under the blight
+ of a foreign garrison and an army of Jesuits. "Perhaps religious affairs
+ will improve before long," said Philip. They did improve very soon, as he
+ understood the meaning of improvement. A solitude of religion soon brought
+ with it a solitude in every other regard, and Antwerp became a desert, as
+ Sainte Aldegonde had foretold would be the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King had been by no means so calm, however, when the intelligence of
+ the capitulation first reached him at Madrid. On the contrary, his oldest
+ courtiers had never seen him exhibit such marks of hilarity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he first heard of the glorious victory at Lepanto, his countenance
+ had remained impassive, and he had continued in the chapel at the
+ devotional exercises which the messenger from Don John had interrupted.
+ Only when the news of the Massacre of St. Bartholomew first reached him,
+ had he displayed an amount of cheerfulness equal to that which he
+ manifested at the fall of Antwerp. "Never," said Granvelle, "had the King
+ been so radiant with joy as when he held in his hand the despatches which
+ announced the capitulation." The letters were brought to him after he had
+ retired to rest, but his delight was so great that he could not remain in
+ his bed. Rushing from his chamber, so soon as he had read them, to that of
+ his dearly-beloved daughter, Clara Isabella, he knocked loudly at the
+ door, and screaming through the keyhole the three words, "Antwerp is
+ ours," returned precipitately again to his own apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the general opinion in Spain, that the capture of this city had
+ terminated the resistance of the Netherlands. Holland and Zeeland would,
+ it was thought, accept with very little hesitation the terms which Parma
+ had been offering, through the agency of Sainte Aldegonde; and, with the
+ reduction of those two provinces, the Spanish dominion over the whole
+ country would of course become absolute. Secretary Idiaquez observed, on
+ drawing up instructions for Carlo Coloma, a Spanish financier then
+ departing on special mission for the Provinces, that he would soon come
+ back to Spain, for the Prince of Parma was just putting an end to the
+ whole Belgic war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time was to show whether Holland and Zeeland were as malleable as Antwerp,
+ and whether there would not be a battle or two more to fight before that
+ Belgic war would come to its end. Meantime Antwerp was securely fettered,
+ while the spirit of commerce&mdash;to which its unexampled prosperity had
+ been due&mdash;now took its flight to the lands where civil and religious
+ liberty had found a home.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ =====================================
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ NOTE on MARNIX DE SAINTE ALDEGONDE.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As every illustration of the career and character of this eminent
+ personage excites constant interest in the Netherlands, I have here thrown
+ together, in the form of an Appendix, many important and entirely
+ unpublished details, drawn mainly from the Archives of Simancas, and from
+ the State Paper Office and British Museum in London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ex-burgomaster seemed determined to counteract the policy of those
+ Netherlanders who wished to offer the sovereignty of the Provinces to the
+ English Queen. He had been earnestly in favour of annexation to France,
+ for his sympathies and feelings were eminently French. He had never been a
+ friend to England, and he was soon aware that a strong feeling of
+ indignation&mdash;whether just or unjust&mdash;existed against him both in
+ that country and in the Netherlands, on account of the surrender of
+ Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have had large conference with Villiers," wrote Sir John Norris to
+ Walsingham, "he condemneth Ste. Aldegonde's doings, but will impute it to
+ fear and not to malice. Ste. Aldegonde, notwithstanding that he was
+ forbidden to come to Holland, and laid for at the fleet, yet stole
+ secretly to Dort, where they say he is staid, but I doubt he will be heard
+ speak, and then assuredly he will do great hurt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was most certainly Sainte Aldegonde's determination, so soon as the
+ capitulation of Antwerp had been resolved upon, to do his utmost to
+ restore all the independent Provinces to their ancient allegiance. Rather
+ Spanish than English was his settled resolution. Liberty of religion, if
+ possible&mdash;that was his cherished wish&mdash;but still more ardently,
+ perhaps, did he desire to prevent the country from falling into the hands
+ of Elizabeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Prince of Parma hath conceived such an assured hope of the fidelity
+ of Aldegonde," wrote one of Walsingham's agents, Richard Tomson, "in
+ reducing the Provinces, yet enemies, into a perfect subjection, that the
+ Spaniards are so well persuaded of the man as if he had never been against
+ them. They say, about the middle of this month, he departed for Zeeland
+ and Holland, to prosecute the effect of his promises, and I am the more
+ induced to believe that he is become altogether Spanish, for that the
+ common bruit goeth that he hastened the surrendering of the town of
+ Antwerp, after he had intelligence of the coming of the English succours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was naturally much indignation felt in the independent Provinces,
+ against all who had been thought instrumental in bringing about the
+ reduction of the great cities of Flanders. Famars, governor of Mechlin,
+ Van den Tympel, governor of Brussels, Martini, who had been active in
+ effecting the capitulation of Antwerp, were all arrested in Holland. "From
+ all that I can hear," said Parma, "it is likely that they will be very
+ severely handled, which is the reason why Ste. Aldegonde, although he sent
+ his wife and children to Holland, has not ventured thither himself: It
+ appears that they threaten him there, but he means now to go, under
+ pretext of demanding to justify himself from the imputations against him.
+ Although he tells me freely that, without some amplification of the
+ concessions hitherto made on the point of religion, he hopes for no good
+ result, yet I trust that he will do good offices in the meantime, in spite
+ of the difficulties which obstruct his efforts. On my part, every exertion
+ will be made, and not without hope of some fruit, if not before, at least
+ after, these people have become as tired of the English as they were of
+ the French."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of this mutual ill-feeling between the English and the burgomaster, there
+ can be no doubt whatever. The Queen's government was fully aware of his
+ efforts to counteract its negotiation with the Netherlands, and to bring
+ about their reconciliation with Spain. When the Earl of Leicester&mdash;as
+ will soon be related&mdash;arrived in the Provinces, he was not long in
+ comprehending his attitude and his influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wrote somewhat of Sir Aldegonde in putting his case," wrote Leicester,
+ "but this is certain, I have the copy of his very letters sent hither to
+ practise the peace not two days before I came, and this day one hath told
+ me that loves him well, that he hates our countrymen unrecoverably. I am
+ sorry for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the Queen was very indignant with the man whom she
+ looked upon as the paid agent of Spain. She considered him a renegade, the
+ more dangerous because his previous services had been so illustrious. "Her
+ Majesty's mislike towards Ste. Aldegonde continueth," wrote Walsingham to
+ Leicester, "and she taketh offence that he was not restrained of his
+ liberty by your Lordship's order." It is unquestionable that the
+ exburgomaster intended to do his best towards effecting the reconciliation
+ of all the Provinces with Spain; and it is equally certain that the King
+ had offered to pay him well, if he proved successful in his endeavours.
+ There is no proof, however, and no probability that Sainte Aldegonde ever
+ accepted or ever intended to accept the proffered bribe. On the contrary,
+ his whole recorded career ought to disprove the supposition. Yet it is
+ painful, to find him, at this crisis, assiduous in his attempts to undo
+ the great work of his own life, and still more distressing to find that
+ great rewards were distinctly offered to him for such service. Immense
+ promises had been frequently made no doubt to William the Silent; nor
+ could any public man, in such times, be so pure that an attempt to tamper
+ with him might not be made: but when the personage, thus solicited, was
+ evidently acting in the interests of the tempters, it is not surprising
+ that he should become the object of grave suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It does not seem to me bad," wrote Philip to Parma, "this negotiation
+ which you have commenced with Ste. Aldegonde, in order to gain him, and
+ thus to employ his services in bringing about a reduction of the islands
+ (Holland and Zeeland). In exchange for this work, any thing which you
+ think proper to offer to him as a reward, will be capital well invested;
+ but it must not be given until the job is done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the job was hard to do, and Sainte Aldegonde cared nothing for the
+ offered bribe. He was, however, most strangely confident of being able to
+ overcome, on the one hand, the opposition of Holland and Zeeland to the
+ hated authority of Spain, and, on the other, the intense abhorrence
+ entertained by Philip to liberty of conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the capitulation, he applied for a passport to visit those two
+ Provinces. Permission to come was refused him. Honest men from Antwerp, he
+ was informed, would be always welcome, but there was no room for him.
+ There was, however&mdash;or Parma persuaded himself that there was&mdash;a
+ considerable party in those countries in favour of reconciliation with
+ Spain. If the ex-burgomaster could gain a hearing, it was thought probable
+ that his eloquence would prove very effective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have been making efforts to bring about negotiations with Holland and
+ Zeeland," wrote Alexander to Philip. "Gelderland and Overyssel likewise
+ show signs of good disposition, but I have not soldiers enough to animate
+ the good and terrify the bad. As for Holland and Zeeland, there is a
+ strong inclination on the part of the people to a reconciliation, if some
+ concession could be made on the religious question, but the governors
+ oppose it, because they are perverse, and are relying on assistance from
+ England. Could this religious concession be made, an arrangement could,
+ without doubt, be accomplished, and more quickly than people think.
+ Nevertheless, in such a delicate matter, I am obliged to await your
+ Majesty's exact instructions and ultimatum."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then proceeded to define exactly the position and intentions of the
+ burgomaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The government of Holland and Zeeland," he said, "have refused a passport
+ to Ste. Aldegonde, and express dissatisfaction with him for having
+ surrendered Antwerp so soon. They know that he has much credit with the
+ people and with the ministers of the sects, and they are in much fear of
+ him because he is inclined for peace, which is against their interests.
+ They are, therefore, endeavouring to counteract my negotiations with him.
+ These have been, thus far, only in general terms. I have sought to induce
+ him to perform the offices required, without giving him reason to expect
+ any concession as to the exercise of religion. He persuades himself that,
+ in the end, there will be some satisfaction obtained upon this point, and,
+ under this impression he considers the peace as good as concluded, there
+ remaining no doubt as to other matters. He has sent his wife to Zeeland,
+ and is himself going to Germany, where, as he says, he will do all the
+ good service that he can. He hopes that very shortly the Provinces will
+ not only invite, but implore him to come to them; in which case, he
+ promises me to perform miracles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander then proceeded to pay a distinct tribute to Sainte Aldegonde's
+ motives; and, when it is remembered that the statement thus made is
+ contained in a secret despatch, in cipher, to the King, it may be assumed
+ to convey the sincere opinion of the man most qualified to judge correctly
+ as to this calumniated person's character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ste. Aldegonde offers me wonders," he said, "and I have promised him that
+ he shall be recompensed very largely; yet, although he is poor, I do not
+ find him influenced by mercenary or selfish considerations, but only very
+ set in opinions regarding his religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince had however no doubt of Sainte Aldegonde's sincerity, for
+ sincerity was a leading characteristic of the man. His word, once given,
+ was sacred, and he had given his word to do his best towards effecting a
+ reconciliation of the Provinces with Spain, and frustrating the efforts of
+ England. "Through the agency of Ste. Aldegonde and that of others" wrote
+ Parma, "I shall watch, day and night, to bring about a reduction of
+ Holland and Zeeland, if humanly possible. I am quite persuaded that they
+ will soon be sick of the English, who are now arriving, broken down,
+ without arms or money, and obviously incapable of holding out very long.
+ Doubtless, however, this English alliance, and the determination of the
+ Queen to do her utmost against us, complicates matters, and assists the
+ government of Holland and Zeeland in opposing the inclinations of their
+ people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing ever came of these intended negotiations. The miracles were never
+ wrought, and even had Sainte Aldegonde been as venal as he was suspected
+ of being&mdash;which we have thus proof positive that he was not&mdash;he
+ never could have obtained the recompense, which, according to Philip's
+ thrifty policy, was not to be paid until it had been earned. Sainte
+ Aldegonde's hands were clean. It is pity that we cannot render the same
+ tribute to his political consistency of character. It is also certain that
+ he remained&mdash;not without reason&mdash;for a long time under a cloud.
+ He became the object of unbounded and reckless calumny. Antwerp had
+ fallen, and the necessary consequence of its reduction was the complete
+ and permanent prostration of its commerce and manufactures. These were
+ transferred to the new, free, national, independent, and prosperous
+ commonwealth that had risen in the "islands" which Parma and Sainte
+ Aldegonde had vainly hoped to restore to their ancient servitude. In a
+ very few years after the subjugation of Antwerp, it appeared by
+ statistical documents that nearly all the manufactures of linen, coarse
+ and fine cloths, serges, fustians, tapestry, gold-embroidery, arms-work,
+ silks, and velvets, had been transplanted to the towns of Holland and
+ Zeeland, which were flourishing and thriving, while the Flemish and
+ Brabantine cities had become mere dens of thieves and beggars. It was in
+ the mistaken hope of averting this catastrophe&mdash;as melancholy as it
+ was inevitable and in despair of seeing all the Netherlands united, unless
+ united in slavery, and in deep-rooted distrust of the designs and policy
+ of England, that this statesman, once so distinguished, had listened to
+ the insidious tongue of Parma. He had sought to effect a general
+ reconciliation with Spain, and the only result of his efforts was a blight
+ upon his own illustrious name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He published a defence of his conduct, and a detailed account of the
+ famous siege. His apology, at the time, was not considered conclusive, but
+ his narrative remains one of the clearest and most trustworthy sources for
+ the history of these important transactions. He was never brought to
+ trial, but he discovered, with bitterness, that he had committed a fatal
+ error, and that his political influence had passed away. He addressed
+ numerous private epistles to eminent persons, indignantly denying the
+ imputations against his character, and demanding an investigation. Among
+ other letters he observed in one to Count Hohenlo, that he was astonished
+ and grieved to find that all his faithful labours and sufferings in the
+ cause of his fatherland had been forgotten in an hour. In place of praise
+ and gratitude, he had reaped nothing but censure and calumny; because men
+ ever judged, not by the merits, but by the issue. That common people
+ should be so unjust, he said, was not to be wondered at, but of men like
+ Hohenlo be had hoped better things. He asserted that he had saved Antwerp
+ from another "Spanish fury," and from impending destruction&mdash;a city
+ in which there was not a single regular soldier, and in which his personal
+ authority was so slight that he was unable to count the number of his
+ masters. If a man had ever performed a service to his country, he claimed
+ to have done so in this capitulation. Nevertheless, he declared that he
+ was the same Philip Marnix, earnestly devoted to the service of God, the
+ true religion, and the fatherland; although he avowed himself weary of the
+ war, and of this perpetual offering of the Netherland sovereignty to
+ foreign potentates. He was now going, he said, to his estates in Zeeland;
+ there to turn farmer again; renouncing public affairs, in the
+ administration of which he had experienced so much ingratitude from his
+ countrymen. Count Maurice and the States of Holland and Zeeland wrote to
+ him, however, in very plain language, describing the public indignation as
+ so strong as to make it unsafe for him to visit the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Netherlands and England&mdash;so soon as they were united in policy&mdash;were,
+ not without reason, indignant with the man who had made such strenuous
+ efforts to prevent that union. The English were, in truth, deeply
+ offended. He had systematically opposed their schemes, and to his
+ prejudice against their country, and distrust of their intentions, they
+ attributed the fall of Antwerp. Envoy Davison, after his return to
+ Holland, on the conclusion of the English treaty, at once expressed his
+ suspicions of the ex-burgomaster, and the great dangers to be apprehended
+ from his presence in the free States. "Here is some working underhand,"
+ said he to Walsingham, "to draw hither Sainte Aldegonde, under a pretext
+ of his justification, which&mdash;as it has hitherto been denied him&mdash;so
+ is the sequel suspected, if he should obtain it before they were well
+ settled here, betwixt her Majesty and them, considering the manifold
+ presumptions that the subject of his journey should be little profitable
+ or advantageous to the state of these poor countries, as tending, at the
+ best, to the propounding of some general reconcilement." It was certainly
+ not without substantial grounds that the English and Hollanders, after
+ concluding their articles of alliance, felt uneasy at the possibility of
+ finding their plans reversed by the intrigues of a man whom they knew to
+ be a mediator between Spain and her revolted Provinces, and whom they
+ suspected of being a venal agent of the Catholic King. It was given out
+ that Philip had been induced to promise liberty of religion, in case of
+ reconciliation. We have seen that Parma was at heart in favour of such a
+ course, and that he was very desirous of inducing Marnix to believe in the
+ possibility of obtaining such a boon, however certain the Prince had been
+ made by the King's secret letters, that such a belief was a delusion.
+ "Martini hath been examined," wrote Davison, "who confesseth both for
+ himself and others, to become hither by direction of the Prince of Parma
+ and intelligence of Sainte Aldegonde, from whom he was first addressed by
+ Villiers and afterwards to others for advice and assistance. That the
+ scope of this direction was to induce them here to hearken to a peace,
+ wherein the Prince of Parma promiseth them toleration of religion,
+ although he confesseth yet to have no absolute power in that behalf, but
+ hath written thereof to the King expressly, and holdeth himself assured
+ thereof by the first post, as I have likewise been advertised from Rowland
+ York, which if it had been propounded openly here before things had been
+ concluded with her Majesty, and order taken for her assurance, your honour
+ can judge what confusion it must of necessity have brought forth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, when Marnix had become convinced that the toleration would not
+ arrive "by the very next mail from Spain," and that, in truth, such a
+ blessing was not to be expected through the post-office at all, he felt an
+ inward consciousness of the mistake which he had committed. Too
+ credulously had he inclined his ear to the voice of Parma; too obstinately
+ had he steeled his heart against Elizabeth, and he was now the more
+ anxious to clear himself at least from the charges of corruption so
+ clamorously made against him by Holland and by England. Conscious of no
+ fault more censurable than credulity and prejudice, feeling that his long
+ fidelity to the reformed religion ought to be a defence for him against
+ his calumniators, he was desirous both to clear his own honour, and to do
+ at least a tardy justice to England. He felt confident that loyal natures,
+ like those of Davison and his colleagues at home, would recognize his own
+ loyalty. He trusted, not without cause, to English honour, and coming to
+ his manor-house of Zoubourg, near Flushing, he addressed a letter to the
+ ambassador of Elizabeth, in which the strong desire to vindicate his
+ aspersed integrity is quite manifest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am very joyous," said he, "that coming hither in order to justify
+ myself against the false and malignant imputations with which they charge
+ me, I have learned your arrival here on the part of her Majesty, as well
+ as the soon expected coming of the Earl of Leicester. I see, in truth,
+ that the Lord God is just, and never abandons his own. I have never spared
+ myself in the service of my country, and I would have sacrificed my life,
+ a thousand times, had it been possible, in her cause. Now, I am receiving
+ for all this a guerdon of blame and calumny, which is cast upon me in
+ order to cover up faults which have been committed by others in past days.
+ I hope, however, to come soon to give you welcome, and to speak more
+ particularly to you of all these things. Meantime demanding my
+ justification before these gentlemen, who ought to have known me better
+ than to have added faith to such villanous imputations, I will entreat you
+ that my definite justification, or condemnation, if I have merited it, may
+ be reserved till the arrival of Lord Leicester."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This certainly was not the language of a culprit, Nevertheless, his words
+ did not immediately make a deep impression on the hearts of those who
+ heard him. He had come secretly to his house at Zoubourg, having
+ previously published his memorable apology; and in accordance with the
+ wishes of the English government, he was immediately confined to his own
+ house. Confidence in the intention of a statesman, who had at least
+ committed such grave errors of judgment, and who had been so deeply
+ suspected of darker faults, was not likely very soon to revive. So far
+ from shrinking from an investigation which would have been dangerous, even
+ to his life, had the charges against his honour been founded in fact, he
+ boldly demanded to be confronted with his accusers, in order that he might
+ explain his conduct before all the world. "Sir, yesternight, at the
+ shutting of the gates," wrote Davison to Walsingham, transmitting the
+ little note from Marnix, which has just been cited&mdash;"I was advertised
+ that Ste. Aldegonde was not an hour before secretly landed at the head on
+ the other side the Rammekens, and come to his house at Zoubourg, having
+ prepared his way by an apology, newly published in his defence, whereof I
+ have as yet recovered one only copy, which herewith I send your honour.
+ This day, whilst I was at dinner, he sent his son unto me, with a few
+ lines, whereof I send you the copy, advertising me of his arrival (which
+ he knew I understood before), together with the desire he had to see me,
+ and speak with me, if the States, before whom he was to come to purge
+ himself of the crimes wherewith he stood, as he with, unjustly charged,
+ would vouchsafe him so much liberty. The same morning, the council of
+ Zeeland, taking knowledge of his arrival, sent unto him the pensioner of
+ Middelburgh and this town, to sound the causes of his coming, and to will
+ him, in their behalf, to keep his house, and to forbear all meddling by
+ word or writing, with any whatsoever, till they should further advise and
+ determine in his cause. In defence thereof, he fell into large and
+ particular discourse with the deputies, accusing his enemies of malice and
+ untruth, offering himself to any trial, and to abide what punishment the
+ laws should lay upon him, if he were found guilty of the crimes imputed to
+ him. Touching the cause of his coming, he pretended and protested that he
+ had no other end than his simple justification, preferring any hazard he
+ might incur thereby, to his honour and good fame." As to the great
+ question at issue, Marnix had at last become conscious that he had been a
+ victim to Spanish dissimulation, and that Alexander Fainese was in reality
+ quite powerless to make that concession of religious liberty, without
+ which a reconciliation between Holland and Philip was impossible.
+ "Whereas," said Davison, "it was supposed that Ste. Aldegonde had
+ commission from the Prince of Parma to make some offer of peace, he
+ assured them of the contrary as a thing which neither the Prince had any
+ power to yield unto with the surety of religion, or himself would, in
+ conscience, persuade without it; with a number of other particularities in
+ his excuse; amongst the rest, allowing and commending in his speech, the
+ course they had taken with her Majesty, as the only safe way of
+ deliverance for these afflicted countries&mdash;letting them understand
+ how much the news thereof&mdash;specially since the entry of our garrison
+ into this place (which before they would in no sort believe), hath
+ troubled the enemy, who doth what he may to suppress the bruit thereof,
+ and yet comforteth himself with the hope that between the factions and
+ partialities nourished by his industry, and musters among the towns,
+ especially in Holland and Zeeland (where he is persuaded to find some
+ pliable to a reconcilement) and the disorders and misgovernment of our
+ people, there will be yet occasion offered him to make his profit and
+ advantage. I find that the gentleman hath here many friends indifferently
+ persuaded of his innocency, notwithstanding the closing up of his apology
+ doth make but little for him. Howsoever it be, it falleth out the better
+ that the treaty with her Majesty is finished, and the cautionary towns
+ assured before his coming, which, if he be ill affected, will I hope
+ either reform his judgment or restrain his will. I will not forget to do
+ the best I can to sift and decipher him yet more narrowly and
+ particularly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, while the scales had at length fallen from the eyes of Marnix, it
+ was not strange that the confidence which he now began to entertain in the
+ policy of England, should not be met, at the outset, with a corresponding
+ sentiment on the part of the statesman by whom that policy was regulated.
+ "Howsoever Ste. Aldegonde would seem to purge himself," said Davison, "it
+ is suspected that his end is dangerous. I have done what I may to restrain
+ him, so nevertheless as it may not seem to come from me." And again&mdash;"Ste.
+ Aldegonde," he wrote, "contimieth still our neighbor at his house between
+ this and Middelburg; yet unmolested. He findeth many favourers, and, I
+ fear, doth no good offices. He desireth to be reserved till the coming of
+ my Lord of Leicester, before whom he pretends a desired trial."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This covert demeanour on the part of the ambassador was in accordance
+ with, the wishes of his government. It was thought necessary that Sainte
+ Aldegonde should be kept under arrest until the arrival of the Earl, but
+ deemed preferable that the restraint should proceed from the action of the
+ States rather than from the order of the Queen. Davison was fulfilling
+ orders in attempting, by underhand means, to deprive Marnix, for a time,
+ of his liberty. "Let him, I pray you, remain in good safety in any wise,"
+ wrote Leicester, who was uneasy at the thought of so influential, and, as
+ he thought, so ill-affected a person being at large, but at the same time
+ disposed to look dispassionately upon his past conduct, and to do justice,
+ according to the results of an investigation. "It is thought meet," wrote
+ Walsingham to Davison, "that you should do your best endeavour to procure
+ that Ste. Aldegonde may be restrained, which in mine opinion were fit to
+ be handled in such sort, as the restraint might rather proceed from
+ themselves than by your solicitation. And yet rather than he should remain
+ at liberty to practise underhand, whereof you seem to stand in great
+ doubt, it is thought meet that you should make yourself a partizan, to
+ seek by all the means that you may to have him restrained under the guard
+ of some well affected patriot until the Earl's coming, at what time his
+ cause may receive examination."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was, however, a result somewhat difficult to accomplish; for twenty
+ years of noble service in the cause of liberty had not been utterly in
+ vain, and there were many magnanimous spirits to sympathize with a great
+ man struggling thus in the meshes of calumny. That the man who challenged
+ rather than shunned investigation, should be thrown into prison, as if he
+ were a detected felon upon the point of absconding, seemed a heartless and
+ superfluous precaution. Yet Davison and others still feared the man whom
+ they felt obliged to regard as a baffled intriguer. "Touching the
+ restraint of Ste. Aldegonde," wrote Davison to Lord Burghley, "which I had
+ order from Mr. Secretary to procure underhand, I find the difficulty will
+ be great in regard of his many friends and favourers, preoccupied with
+ some opinion of his innocence, although I have travailled with divers of
+ them underhand, and am promised that some order shall be taken in that
+ behalf, which I think will be harder to execute as long as Count Maurice
+ is here. For Ste. Aldegonde's affection, I find continual matter to
+ suspect it inclined to a peace, and that as one notably prejudging our
+ scope and proceeding in this cause, doth lie in wait for an occasion to
+ set it forward, being, as it seems, fed with a hope of 'telle quelle
+ liberte de conscience,' which the Prince of Parma and others of his
+ council have, as he confesseth, earnestly solicited at the King's hands.
+ This appeareth, in truth, the only apt and easy way for them to prevail
+ both against religion and the liberty of these poor countries, having
+ thereby once recovered the authority which must necessarily follow a
+ peace, to renew and alter the magistrates of the particular towns, which,
+ being at their devotion, may turn, as we say, all upside down, and so in
+ an instant being under their servitude, if not wholly, at the least in a
+ great part of the country, leaving so much the less to do about the rest,
+ a thing confessed and looked for of all men of any judgment here, if the
+ drift of our peace-makers may take effect."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde had been cured of his suspicions of England, and at last
+ the purity of his own character shone through the mists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One winter's morning, two days after Christmas, 1585, Colonel Morgan, an
+ ingenuous Welshman, whom we have seen doing much hard fighting on
+ Kowenstyn Dyke, and at other places, and who now commanded the garrison at
+ Flushing, was taking a walk outside the gates, and inhaling the salt
+ breezes from the ocean. While thus engaged he met a gentleman coming
+ along, staff in hand, at a brisk pace towards the town, who soon proved to
+ be no other than the distinguished and deeply suspected Sainte Aldegonde.
+ The two got at once into conversation. "He began," said Morgan, "by
+ cunning insinuations, to wade into matters of state, and at the last fell
+ to touching the principal points, to wit, her Majesty's entrance into the
+ cause now in hand, which, quoth he, was an action of high importance,
+ considering how much it behoved her to go through the same, as well in
+ regard of the hope that thereby was given to the distressed people of
+ these parts, as also in consideration of that worthy personage whom she
+ hath here placed, whose estate and credit may not be suffered to quail,
+ but must be upholden as becometh the lieutenant of such a princess as her
+ Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The opportunity thus offered," continued honest Morgan, "and the way
+ opened by himself, I thought good to discourse with him to the full,
+ partly to see the end and drift of his induced talk, and consequently to
+ touch his quick in the suspected cause of Antwerp." And thus, word for
+ word, taken down faithfully the same day, proceeded the dialogue that
+ wintry morning, near three centuries ago. From that simple record&mdash;mouldering
+ unseen and unthought of for ages, beneath piles of official dust&mdash;the
+ forms of the illustrious Fleming and the bold Welsh colonel, seem to
+ start, for a brief moment, out of the three hundred years of sleep which
+ have succeeded their energetic existence upon earth. And so, with the
+ bleak winds of December whistling over the breakers of the North Sea, the
+ two discoursed together, as they paced along the coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morgan.&mdash;"I charge you with your want of confidence in her Majesty's
+ promised aid. 'Twas a thing of no small moment had it been embraced when
+ it was first most graciously offered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde.&mdash;"I left not her prince-like purpose unknown to the
+ States, who too coldly and carelessly passed over the benefit thereof,
+ until it was too late to put the same in practice. For my own part, I
+ acknowledge that indeed I thought some further advice would either alter
+ or at least detract from the accomplishment of her determination. I
+ thought this the rather because she had so long been wedded to peace, and
+ I supposed it impossible to divorce her from so sweet a spouse. But, set
+ it down that she were resolute, yet the sickness of Antwerp was so
+ dangerous, as it was to be doubted the patient would be dead before the
+ physician could come. I protest that the state of the town was much worse
+ than was known to any but myself and some few private persons. The want of
+ victuals was far greater than they durst bewray, fearing lest the common
+ people, perceiving the plague of famine to be at hand, would rather grow
+ desperate than patiently expect some happy event. For as they were many in
+ number, so were they wonderfully divided: some being Martinists, some
+ Papists, some neither the one nor the other, but generally given to be
+ factious, so that the horror at home was equal to the hazard abroad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morgan.&mdash;"But you forget the motion made by the martial men for
+ putting out of the town such as were simple artificers, with women and
+ children, mouths that consumed meat, but stood in no stead for defence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde.&mdash;"Alas, alas! would you have had me guilty of the
+ slaughter of so many innocents, whose lives were committed to my charge,
+ as well as the best? Or might I have answered my God when those massacred
+ creatures should have stood up against me, that the hope of Antwerp's
+ deliverance was purchased with the blood of so many simple souls? No, no.
+ I should have found my conscience such a hell and continual worm as the
+ gnawing thereof would have been more painful and bitter than the
+ possession of the whole world would have been pleasant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morgan continued to press the various points which had created suspicion
+ as to the character and motives of Marnix, and point by point Marnix
+ answered his antagonist, impressing him, armed as he had been in distrust,
+ with an irresistible conviction as to the loftiness of the nature which
+ had been so much calumniated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sainte Aldegonde (with vehemence).&mdash;"I do assure you, in conclusion,
+ that I have solemnly vowed service and duty to her Majesty, which I am
+ ready to perform where and when it may best like her to use the same. I
+ will add moreover that I have oftentimes determined to pass into England
+ to make my own purgation, yet fearing lest her Highness would mislike so
+ bold a resolution, I have checked that purpose with a resolution to tarry
+ the Lord's leisure, until some better opportunity might answer my desire.
+ For since I know not how I stand in her grace, unwilling I am to attempt
+ her presence without permission; but might it please her to command my
+ attendance, I should not only most joyfully accomplish the same, but also
+ satisfy her of and in all such matters as I stand charged with, and
+ afterwards spend life, land, and goods, to witness my duty towards her
+ Highness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Morgan.&mdash;"I tell you plainly, that if you are in heart the same man
+ that you seem outwardly to be, I doubt not but her Majesty might easily be
+ persuaded to conceive a gracious opinion of you. For mine own part, I will
+ surely advertise Sir Francis Walsingham of as much matter as this present
+ conference hath ministered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hereof," said the Colonel&mdash;when, according to his promise,
+ faithfully recording the conversation in all its details for Mr.
+ Secretary's benefit, "he seemed not only content but most glad. Therefore
+ I beseech your honour to vouchsafe some few lines herein, that I may
+ return him some part of your mind. I have already written thereof to Sir
+ Philip Sidney, lord governor of Flushing, with request that his Excellency
+ the Earl of Leicester may presently be made acquainted with the cause."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed the brave Welshman was thoroughly converted from his suspicions by
+ the earnest language and sympathetic presence of the fallen statesman.
+ This result of the conference was creditable to the ingenuous character of
+ both personages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thus did he," wrote Morgan to Sir Francis, "from point to point, answer
+ all objections from the first to the last, and that in such sound and
+ substantial manner, with a strong show of truth, as I think his very
+ enemies, having heard his tale, would be satisfied. And truly, Sir, as
+ heretofore I have thought hardly of him, being led by a superficial
+ judgment of things as they stood in outward appearance; so now, having
+ pierced deep, and weighed causes by a sounder and more deliberate
+ consideration, I find myself somewhat changed in conceit&mdash;not so much
+ carried away by the sweetness of his speech, as confirmed by the force of
+ his religious profession, wherein he remaineth constant, without wavering&mdash;an
+ argument of great strength to set him free from treacherous attempts; but
+ as I am herein least able and most unworthy to yield any censure, much
+ less to give advice, so I leave the man and the matter to your honour's
+ opinion. Only (your graver judgment reserved) thus I think, that it were
+ good either to employ him as a friend, or as an enemy to remove him
+ farther from us, being a man of such action as the world knoweth he is.
+ And to conclude," added Morgan, "this was the upshot between us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, he remained in this obscurity for a long period. When,
+ towards the close of the year 1585, the English government was established
+ in Holland, he was the object of constant suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here is Aldegonde," wrote Sir Philip Sidney to Lord Leicester from
+ Flushing, "a man greatly suspected, but by no man charged. He lives
+ restrained to his own house, and for aught I can find, deals with nothing,
+ only desiring to have his cause wholly referred to your Lordship, and
+ therefore, with the best heed I can to his proceedings, I will leave him
+ to his clearing or condemning, when your Lordship shall hear him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another letter, Sir Philip again spoke of Sainte Aldegonde as "one of
+ whom he kept a good opinion, and yet a suspicious eye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester himself was excessively anxious on the subject, deeply fearing
+ the designs of a man whom he deemed so mischievous, and being earnestly
+ desirous that he should not elude the chastisement which he seemed to
+ deserve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Touching Ste. Aldegonde," he wrote to Davison, "I grieve that he is at
+ his house without good guard. I do earnestly pray you to move such as have
+ power presently to commit a guard about him, for I know he is a dangerous
+ and a bold man, and presumes yet to carry all, for he hath made many
+ promises to the Prince of Parma. I would he were in Fort Rammekyns, or
+ else that Mr. Russell had charge of him, with a recommendation from me to
+ Russell to look well to him till I shall arrive. You must have been so
+ commanded in this from her Majesty, for she thinks he is in close and safe
+ guard. If he is not, look for a turn of all things, for he hath friends, I
+ know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But very soon after his arrival, the Earl, on examining into the matter,
+ saw fit to change his opinions and his language. Persuaded, in spite of
+ his previous convictions, even as the honest Welsh colonel had been, of
+ the upright character of the man, and feeling sure that a change had come
+ over the feelings of Marnix himself in regard to the English alliance,
+ Leicester at once interested himself in removing the prejudices
+ entertained towards him by the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now a few words for Ste. Aldegonde," said he in his earliest despatches
+ from Holland; "I will beseech her Majesty to stay her judgment till I
+ write next. If the man be as he now seemeth, it were pity to lose him, for
+ he is indeed marvellously friended. Her Majesty will think, I know, that I
+ am easily pacified or led in such a matter, but I trust so to deal as she
+ shall give me thanks. Once if he do offer service it is sure enough, for
+ he is esteemed that way above all the men in this country for his word, if
+ he give it. His worst enemies here procure me to win him, for sure, just
+ matter for his life there is none. He would fain come into England, so far
+ is he come already, and doth extol her Majesty for this work of hers to
+ heaven, and confesseth, till now an angel could not make him believe it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here certainly was a noble tribute paid unconsciously, as it were, to the
+ character of the maligned statesman. "Above all the men in the country for
+ his word, if he give it." What wonder that Orange had leaned upon him,
+ that Alexander had sought to gain him, and how much does it add to our
+ bitter regret that his prejudices against England should not have been
+ removed until too late for Antwerp and for his own usefulness. Had his
+ good angel really been present to make him believe in that "work of her
+ Majesty," when his ear was open to the seductions of Parma, the destiny of
+ Belgium and his own subsequent career might have been more fortunate than
+ they became.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen was slow to return from her prejudices. She believed&mdash;not
+ without reason&mdash;that the opposition of Ste. Aldegonde to her policy
+ had been disastrous to the cause both of England and the Netherlands; and
+ it had been her desire that he should be imprisoned, and tried for his
+ life. Her councillors came gradually to take a more favourable view of the
+ case, and to be moved by the pathetic attitude of the man who had once
+ been so conspicuous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did acquaint Sir Christopher Hatton," wrote Walsingham to Leicester,
+ "with the letter which Ste. Aldegonde wrote to your Lordship, which,
+ carrying a true picture of an afflicted mind, cannot but move an honest
+ heart, weighing the rare parts the gentleman is endowed withal, to pity
+ his distressed estate, and, to procure him relief and comfort, which Mr.
+ Vice-Chamberlain (Hatton) bath promised on his part to perform. I thought
+ good to send Ste. Aldegonde's letter unto the Lord Treasurer (Burghley),
+ who heretofore has carried a hard conceit of the gentleman, hoping that
+ the view of his letter will breed some remorse towards him. I have also
+ prayed his Lordship, if he see cause, to acquaint her Majesty with the
+ said letter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his high public career was closed. He lived down calumny; and put his
+ enemies to shame, but the fatal error which he had committed, in taking
+ the side of Spain rather than of England at so momentous a crisis, could
+ never be repaired. He regained the good opinion of the most virtuous and
+ eminent personages in Europe, but in the noon of life he voluntarily
+ withdrew from public affairs. The circumstances just detailed had made him
+ impossible as a political leader, and it was equally impossible for him to
+ play a secondary part. He occasionally consented to be employed in special
+ diplomatic missions, but the serious avocations of his life now became
+ theological and literary. He sought&mdash;in his own words&mdash;to
+ penetrate himself still more deeply than ever with the spirit of the
+ reformation, and to imbue the minds of the young with that deep love for
+ the reformed religion which had been the guiding thought of his own
+ career. He often spoke with a sigh of his compulsory exile from the field
+ where he had been so conspicuous all his lifetime; he bitterly lamented
+ the vanished dream of the great national union between Belgium and
+ Holland, which had flattered his youth and his manhood; and he sometimes
+ alluded with bitterness to the calumny which had crippled him of his
+ usefulness. He might have played a distinguished part in that powerful
+ commonwealth which was so steadily and splendidly arising out of the
+ lagunes of Zeeland and Holland, but destiny and calumny and his own error
+ had decided otherwise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the depth of my exile&mdash;" he said, "for I am resolved to retire,
+ I know not where, into Germany, perhaps into Sarmatia, I shall look from
+ afar upon the calamities of my country. That which to me is most mournful
+ is no longer to be able to assist my fatherland by my counsels and my
+ actions." He did not go into exile, but remained chiefly at his mansion of
+ Zoubourg, occupied with agriculture and with profound study. Many noble
+ works conspicuous in the literature of the epoch&mdash;were the results of
+ his learned leisure; and the name of Marnix of Sainte Aldegonde will be
+ always as dear to the lovers of science and letters as to the believers in
+ civil and religious liberty. At the request of the States of Holland he
+ undertook, in 1593, a translation of the Scriptures from the original, and
+ he was at the same time deeply engaged with a History of Christianity,
+ which he intended for his literary master-piece. The man whose sword had
+ done knightly service on many a battle-field for freedom, whose tongue had
+ controlled mobs and senates, courts and councils, whose subtle spirit had
+ metamorphosed itself into a thousand shapes to do battle with the genius
+ of tyranny, now quenched the feverish agitation of his youth and manhood
+ in Hebrew and classical lore. A grand and noble figure always: most
+ pathetic when thus redeeming by vigorous but solitary and melancholy hard
+ labor, the political error which had condemned him to retirement. To work,
+ ever to work, was the primary law of his nature. Repose in the other
+ world, "Repos ailleurs" was the device which he assumed in earliest youth,
+ and to which he was faithful all his days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great and good man whose life had been brim-full of noble deeds, and who
+ had been led astray from the path, not of virtue, but of sound policy, by
+ his own prejudices and by the fascination of an intellect even more
+ brilliant than his own, he at least enjoyed in his retirement whatever
+ good may come from hearty and genuine labor, and from the high regard
+ entertained for him by the noblest spirits among his contemporaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They tell me," said La Noue, "that the Seigneur de Ste. Aldegonde has
+ been suspected by the Hollanders and the English. I am deeply grieved, for
+ 'tis a personage worthy to be employed. I have always known him to be a
+ zealous friend of his religion and his country, and I will bear him this
+ testimony, that his hands and his heart are clean. Had it been otherwise,
+ I must have known it. His example has made me regret the less the promise
+ I was obliged to make, never to bear arms again in the Netherlands. For I
+ have thought that since this man, who has so much credit and authority
+ among your people, after having done his duty well, has not failed to be
+ calumniated and ejected from service, what would they have done with me,
+ who am a stranger, had I continued in their employment? The consul
+ Terentius Varro lost, by his fault, the battle of Canna; nevertheless,
+ when he returned to Rome, offering the remainder of his life in the cause
+ of his Republic reduced to extremity, he was not rejected, but well
+ received, because he hoped well for the country. It is not to be imputed
+ as blame to Ste. Aldegonde that he lost Antwerp, for he surrendered when
+ it could not be saved. What I now say is drawn from me by the compassion I
+ feel when persons of merit suffer without cause at the hands of their
+ fellow citizens. In these terrible tempests, as it is a duty rigorously to
+ punish the betrayers of their country, even so it is an obligation upon us
+ to honor good patriots, and to support them in venial errors, that we may
+ all encourage each other to do the right."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange too as it may now seem to us, a reconciliation of the Netherlands
+ with Philip was not thought an impossibility by other experienced and
+ sagacious patriots, besides Marnix. Even Olden-Barneveld, on taking office
+ as Holland's Advocate, at this period, made it a condition that his
+ service was to last only until the reunion of the Provinces with Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was another illustrious personage in a foreign land who ever
+ rendered homage to the character of the retired Netherland statesman. Amid
+ the desolation of France, Duplessis Mornay often solaced himself by
+ distant communion with that kindred and sympathizing spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Plunged in public annoyances," he wrote to Sainte Aldegonde, "I find no
+ consolation, except in conference with the good, and among the good I hold
+ you for one of the best. With such men I had rather sigh profoundly than
+ laugh heartily with others. In particular, Sir, do me the honor to love
+ me, and believe that I honor you singularly. Impart to me something from
+ your solitude, for I consider your deserts to be more fruitful and fertile
+ than our most cultivated habitations. As for me, think of me as of a man
+ drowning in the anxieties of the time, but desirous, if possible, of
+ swimming to solitude."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus solitary, yet thus befriended,&mdash;remote from public employment,
+ yet ever employed, doing his daily work with all his soul and strength,
+ Marnix passed the fifteen years yet remaining to him. Death surprised him
+ at last, at Leyden, in the year 1598, while steadily laboring upon his
+ Flemish translation of the Old Testament, and upon the great political,
+ theological, controversial, and satirical work on the differences of
+ religion, which remains the most stately, though unfinished, monument of
+ his literary genius. At the age of sixty he went at last to the repose
+ which he had denied to himself on earth. "Repos ailleurs."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Honor good patriots, and to support them in venial errors
+ Possible to do, only because we see that it has been done
+ Repose in the other world, "Repos ailleurs"
+ Soldiers enough to animate the good and terrify the bad
+ To work, ever to work, was the primary law of his nature
+ When persons of merit suffer without cause
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. 1585, Part 1.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Policy of England&mdash;Diplomatic Coquetry&mdash;Dutch Envoys in England&mdash;
+ Conference of Ortel and Walsingham&mdash;Interview with Leicester&mdash;
+ Private Audience of the Queen&mdash;Letters of the States&mdash;General&mdash;
+ Ill Effects of Gilpin's Despatch&mdash;Close Bargaining of the Queen and
+ States&mdash;Guarantees required by England&mdash;England's comparative
+ Weakness&mdash;The English characterised&mdash;Paul Hentzner&mdash;The Envoys in
+ London&mdash;Their Characters&mdash;Olden-Barneveldt described&mdash;Reception at
+ Greenwich&mdash;Speech of Menin&mdash;Reply of the Queen&mdash;Memorial of the
+ Envoys&mdash;Discussions with the Ministers&mdash;Second Speech of the Queen
+ &mdash;Third Speech of the Queen
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ England as we have seen&mdash;had carefully watched the negotiations
+ between France and the Netherlands. Although she had&mdash;upon the whole,
+ for that intriguing age&mdash;been loyal in her bearing towards both
+ parties, she was perhaps not entirely displeased with the result. As her
+ cherished triumvirate was out of the question, it was quite obvious that,
+ now or never, she must come forward to prevent the Provinces from falling
+ back into the hands of Spain. The future was plainly enough foreshadowed,
+ and it was already probable, in case of a prolonged resistance on the part
+ of Holland, that Philip would undertake the reduction of his rebellious
+ subjects by a preliminary conquest of England. It was therefore quite
+ certain that the expense and danger of assisting the Netherlands must
+ devolve upon herself, but, at the same time it was a consolation that her
+ powerful next-door neighbour was not to be made still more powerful by the
+ annexation to his own dominion of those important territories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, so soon as the deputies in France had received their definite
+ and somewhat ignominious repulse from Henry III. and his mother, the
+ English government lost no time in intimating to the States that they were
+ not to be left without an ally. Queen Elizabeth was however resolutely
+ averse from assuming that sovereignty which she was not unwilling to see
+ offered for her acceptance; and her accredited envoy at the Hague, besides
+ other more secret agents, were as busily employed in the spring of 1585&mdash;as
+ Des Pruneaux had been the previous winter on the part of France&mdash;to
+ bring about an application, by solemn embassy, for her assistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was, however, a difference of view, from the outset, between the
+ leading politicians of the Netherlands and the English Queen. The
+ Hollanders were extremely desirous of becoming her subjects; for the
+ United States, although they had already formed themselves into an
+ independent republic, were quite ignorant of their latent powers. The
+ leading personages of the country&mdash;those who were soon to become the
+ foremost statesmen of the new commonwealth&mdash;were already shrinking
+ from the anarchy which was deemed inseparable from a non-regal form of
+ government, and were seeking protection for and against the people under a
+ foreign sceptre. On the other hand, they were indisposed to mortgage large
+ and important fortified towns, such as Flushing, Brill, and others, for
+ the repayment of the subsidies which Elizabeth might be induced to
+ advance. They preferred to pay in sovereignty rather than in money. The
+ Queen, on the contrary, preferred money to sovereignty, and was not at all
+ inclined to sacrifice economy to ambition. Intending to drive a hard
+ bargain with the States, whose cause was her own, and whose demands for
+ aid she; had secretly prompted, she meant to grant a certain number of
+ soldiers for as brief a period as possible, serving at her expense, and to
+ take for such outlay a most ample security in the shape of cautionary
+ towns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Too intelligent a politician not to feel the absolute necessity of at last
+ coming into the field to help the Netherlanders to fight her own battle,
+ she was still willing, for a season longer, to wear the mask of coyness
+ and coquetry, which she thought most adapted to irritate the Netherlanders
+ into a full compliance with her wishes. Her advisers in the Provinces were
+ inclined to take the same view. It seemed obvious, after the failure in
+ France, that those countries must now become either English or Spanish;
+ yet Elizabeth, knowing the risk of their falling back, from desperation,
+ into the arms of her rival, allowed them to remain for a season on the
+ edge of destruction&mdash;which would probably have been her ruin also&mdash;in
+ the hope of bringing them to her feet on her own terms. There was
+ something of feminine art in this policy, and it was not without the
+ success which often attends such insincere manoeuvres. At the same time,
+ as the statesmen of the republic knew that it was the Queen's affair, when
+ so near a neighbour's roof was blazing, they entertained little doubt of
+ ultimately obtaining her alliance. It was pity&mdash;in so grave an
+ emergency&mdash;that a little frankness could not have been substituted
+ for a good deal of superfluous diplomacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gilpin, a highly intelligent agent of the English government in Zeeland,
+ kept Sir Francis Walsingham thoroughly informed of the sentiments
+ entertained by the people of that province towards England. Mixing
+ habitually with the most influential politicians, he was able to render
+ material assistance to the English council in the diplomatic game which
+ had been commenced, and on which a no less important stake than the crown
+ of England was to be hazarded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In conference," he said, "with particular persons that bear any rule or
+ credit, I find a great inclination towards her Majesty, joined
+ notwithstanding with a kind of coldness. They allege that matters of such
+ importance are to be maturely and thoroughly pondered, while some of them
+ harp upon the old string, as if her Majesty, for the security of her own
+ estate, was to have the more care of theirs here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was also very careful to insinuate the expediency of diplomatic
+ coquetry into the mind of a Princess who needed no such prompting. "The
+ less by outward appearance," said he, "this people shall perceive that her
+ Majesty can be contented to take the protection of them upon her, the
+ forwarder they will be to seek and send unto her, and the larger
+ conditions in treaty may be required. For if they see it to come from
+ herself, then do they persuade themselves that it is for the greater
+ security of our own country and her Highness to fear the King of Spain's
+ greatness. But if they become seekers unto her Majesty, and if they may,
+ by outward show, deem that she accounteth not of the said King's might,
+ but able and sufficient to defend her own realms, then verily I think they
+ may be brought to whatsoever points her Majesty may desire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly it was an age of intrigue, in which nothing seemed worth getting
+ at all unless it could be got by underhand means, and in which it was
+ thought impossible for two parties to a bargain to meet together except as
+ antagonists, who believed that one could not derive a profit from the
+ transaction unless the other had been overreached. This was neither good
+ morality nor sound diplomacy, and the result of such trifling was much
+ loss of time and great disaster. In accordance with this crafty system,
+ the agent expressed the opinion that it would "be good and requisite for
+ the English government somewhat to temporise," and to dally for a season
+ longer, in order to see what measures the States would take to defend
+ themselves, and how much ability and resources they would show for
+ belligerent purposes. If the Queen were too eager, the Provinces would
+ become jealous, "yielding, as it were, their power, and yet keeping the
+ rudder in their own hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time Gilpin was favourably impressed with the character both
+ of the country and the nation, soon to be placed in such important
+ relations with England. "This people," he said, "is such as by fair means
+ they will be won to yield and grant any reasonable motion or demand. What
+ these islands of Zeeland are her Majesty and all my lords of her council
+ do know. Yet for their government thus much I must write; that during
+ these troubles it never was better than now. They draw, in a manner, one
+ line, long and carefully in their resolution; but the same once taken and
+ promises made, they would perform them to the uttermost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such then was the character of the people, for no man was better enabled
+ to form an opinion on the subject than was Gilpin. Had it not been as
+ well, then, for Englishmen&mdash;who were themselves in that age, as in
+ every other, apt to "perform to the uttermost promises once taken and
+ made," and to respect those endowed with the same wholesome characteristic&mdash;to
+ strike hands at once in a cause which was so vital to both nations?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon as the definite refusal of Henry III, was known in England,
+ Leicester and Walsingham wrote at once to the Netherlands. The Earl
+ already saw shining through the distance a brilliant prize for his own
+ ambition, although he was too haughty, perhaps too magnanimous, but
+ certainly far too crafty, to suffer such sentiments as yet to pierce to
+ the surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Davison," he wrote, "you shall perceive by Mr. Secretary's letters
+ how the French have dealt with these people. They are well enough served;
+ but yet I think, if they will heartily and earnestly seek it, the Lord
+ hath appointed them a far better defence. But you must so use the matter
+ as that they must seek their own good, although we shall be partakers
+ thereof also. They may now, if they will effectually and liberally deal,
+ bring themselves to a better end than ever France would have brought
+ them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment there were two diplomatic agents from the States resident
+ in England&mdash;Jacques de Gryze; whom Paul Buys had formerly described
+ as having thrust himself head and shoulders into the matter without proper
+ authority, and Joachim Ortel, a most experienced and intelligent man,
+ speaking and writing English like a native, and thoroughly conversant with
+ English habits and character. So soon as the despatches from France
+ arrived, Walsingham, 18th March, 1585, sent for Ortel, and the two held a
+ long conference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham.&mdash;"We have just received letters from Lord Derby and Sir
+ Edward Stafford, dated the 13th March. They inform us that your deputies&mdash;contrary
+ to all expectation and to the great hopes that had been hold out to them&mdash;have
+ received, last Sunday, their definite answer from the King of France. He
+ tells them, that, considering the present condition of his kingdom, he is
+ unable to undertake the protection of the Netherlands; but says that if
+ they like, and if the Queen of England be willing to second his motion, he
+ is disposed to send a mission of mediation to Spain for the purpose of
+ begging the King to take the condition of the provinces to heart, and
+ bringing about some honourable composition, and so forth, and so forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Moreover the King of France has sent Monsieur de Bellievre to Lord Derby
+ and Mr. Stafford, and Bellievre has made those envoys a long oration. He
+ explained to them all about the original treaty between the States and
+ Monsieur, the King's brother, and what had taken place from that day to
+ this, concluding, after many allegations and divers reasons, that the King
+ could not trouble himself with the provinces at present; but hoped her
+ Majesty would make the best of it, and not be offended with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The ambassadors say further, that they have had an interview with your
+ deputies, who are excessively provoked at this most unexpected answer from
+ the King, and are making loud complaints, being all determined to take
+ themselves off as fast as possible. The ambassadors have recommended that
+ some of the number should come home by the way of England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ortel.&mdash;"It seems necessary to take active measures at once, and to
+ leave no duty undone in this matter. It will be advisable to confer, so
+ soon as may be, with some of the principal counsellors of her Majesty, and
+ recommend to them most earnestly the present condition of the provinces.
+ They know the affectionate confidence which the States entertain towards
+ England, and must now, remembering the sentiments of goodwill which they
+ have expressed towards the Netherlands, be willing to employ their efforts
+ with her Majesty in this emergency."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham (with much show of vexation).&mdash;"This conduct on the part
+ of the French court has been most pernicious. Your envoys have been
+ delayed, fed with idle hopes, and then disgracefully sent away, so that
+ the best part of the year has been consumed, and it will be most difficult
+ now, in a great hurry, to get together a sufficient force of horse and
+ foot folk, with other necessaries in abundance. On the contrary, the
+ enemy, who knew from the first what result was to be expected in France,
+ has been doing his best to be beforehand with you in the field: add,
+ moreover, that this French negotiation has given other princes a bad taste
+ in their mouths. This is the case with her Majesty. The Queen is, not
+ without reason, annoyed that the States have not only despised her
+ friendly and good-hearted offers, but have all along been endeavouring to
+ embark her in this war, for the defence of the Provinces, which would have
+ cost her several millions, without offering to her the slightest security.
+ On the contrary, others, enemies of the religion, who are not to be
+ depended upon&mdash;who had never deserved well of the States or assisted
+ them in their need, as she has done&mdash;have received this large offer
+ of sovereignty without any reserve whatever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ortel (not suffering himself to be disconcerted at this unjust and
+ somewhat insidious attack).&mdash;"That which has been transacted with
+ France was not done except with the express approbation and full
+ foreknowledge of her Majesty, so far back as the lifetime of his
+ Excellency (William of Orange), of high and laudable memory. Things had
+ already gone so far, and the Provinces had agreed so entirely together, as
+ to make it inexpedient to bring about a separation in policy. It was our
+ duty to hold together, and, once for all, thoroughly to understand what
+ the King of France, after such manifold presentations through Monsieur Des
+ Pruneaulx and others, and in various letters of his own, finally intended
+ to do. At the same time, notwithstanding these negotiations, we had always
+ an especial eye upon her Majesty. We felt a hopeful confidence that she
+ would never desert us, leaving us without aid or counsel, but would
+ consider that these affairs do not concern the Provinces alone or even
+ especially, but are just as deeply important to her and to all other
+ princes of the religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this dialogue, with much more conversation of a similar character,
+ the Secretary and the envoy set themselves frankly and manfully to work.
+ It was agreed between them that every effort should be made with the
+ leading members of the Council to induce the Queen "in this terrible
+ conjuncture, not to forsake the Provinces, but to extend good counsel and
+ prompt assistance to them in their present embarrassments."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was, however, so much business in Parliament just then, that it was
+ impossible to obtain immediately the desired interviews.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 20th, Ortel and De Gryze had another interview with Walsingham at
+ the Palace of Greenwich. The Secretary expressed the warmest and most
+ sincere affection for the Provinces, and advised that one of the two
+ envoys should set forth at once for home in order to declare to the
+ States, without loss of time, her Majesty's good inclination to assume the
+ protection of the land, together with the maintenance of the reformed
+ religion and the ancient privileges. Not that she was seeking her own
+ profit, or wished to obtain that sovereignty which had just been offered
+ to another of the contrary religion, but in order to make manifest her
+ affectionate solicitude to preserve the Protestant faith and to support
+ her old allies and neighbours. Nevertheless, as she could not assume this
+ protectorate without embarking in a dangerous war with the King of Spain,
+ in which she would not only be obliged to spend the blood of her subjects,
+ but also at least two millions of gold, there was the more reason that the
+ States should give her certain cities as security. Those cities would be
+ held by certain of her gentlemen, nominated thereto, of quality, credit,
+ and religion, at the head of good, true, and well-paid garrisons, who
+ should make oath never to surrender them to the King of Spain or to any
+ one else without consent of the States. The Provinces were also
+ reciprocally to bind themselves by oath to make no treaty with the King,
+ without the advice and approval of her Majesty. It was likewise thoroughly
+ to be understood that such cautionary towns should be restored to the
+ States so soon as payment should be made of all moneys advanced during the
+ war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day the envoys had an interview with the Earl of Leicester, whom they
+ found as amicably disposed towards their cause as Secretary Walsingham had
+ been. "Her Majesty," said the Earl, "is excessively indignant with the
+ King of France, that he should so long have abused the Provinces, and at
+ last have dismissed their deputies so contemptuously. Nevertheless," he
+ continued, "'tis all your own fault to have placed your hopes so entirely
+ upon him as to entirely forget other princes, and more especially her
+ Majesty. Notwithstanding all that has passed, however, I find her fully
+ determined to maintain the cause of the Provinces. For my own part, I am
+ ready to stake my life, estates, and reputation, upon this issue, and to
+ stand side by side with other gentlemen in persuading her Majesty to do
+ her utmost for the assistance of your country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He intimated however, as Walsingham had done, that the matter of
+ cautionary towns would prove an indispensable condition, and recommended
+ that one of the two envoys should proceed homeward at once, in order to
+ procure, as speedily as possible, the appointment of an embassy for that
+ purpose to her Majesty. "They must bring full powers," said the Earl, "to
+ give her the necessary guarantees, and make a formal demand for
+ protection; for it would be unbecoming, and against her reputation, to be
+ obliged to present herself, unsought by the other party."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In conclusion, after many strong expressions of good-will, Leicester
+ promised to meet them next day at court, where he would address the Queen
+ personally on the subject, and see that they spoke with her as well.
+ Meantime he sent one of his principal gentlemen to keep company with the
+ envoys, and make himself useful to them. This personage, being "of good
+ quality and a member of Parliament," gave them much useful information,
+ assuring them that there was a strong feeling in England in favour of the
+ Netherlands, and that the matter had been very vigorously taken up in the
+ national legislature. That assembly had been strongly encouraging her
+ Majesty boldly to assume the protectorate, and had manifested a
+ willingness to assist her with the needful. "And if," said he, "one
+ subsidy should not be enough, she shall have three, four, five, or six, or
+ as much as may be necessary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same day, the envoys had an interview with Lord Treasurer Burghley,
+ who held the same language as Walsingham and Leicester had done. "The
+ Queen, to his knowledge," he said, "was quite ready to assume the
+ protectorate; but it was necessary that it should be formally offered,
+ with the necessary guarantees, and that without further loss of time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 22nd March, according to agreement, Ortel and De Gryze went to the
+ court at Greenwich. While waiting there for the Queen, who had ridden out
+ into the country, they had more conversation with Walsingham, whom they
+ found even more energetically disposed in their favour than ever, and who
+ assured them that her Majesty was quite ready to assume the protectorate
+ so soon as offered. "Within a month," he said, "after the signing of a
+ treaty, the troops would be on the spot, under command of such a personage
+ of quality and religion as would be highly satisfactory." While they were
+ talking, the Queen rode into the court-yard, accompanied by the Earl of
+ Leicester and other gentlemen. Very soon afterwards the envoys were
+ summoned to her presence, and allowed to recommend the affairs of the
+ Provinces to her consideration. She lamented the situation of their
+ country, and in a few words expressed her inclination to render
+ assistance, provided the States would manifest full confidence in her.
+ They replied by offering to take instant measures to gratify all her
+ demands, so soon as those demands should be made known; and the Queen
+ finding herself surrounded by so many gentlemen and by a crowd of people,
+ appointed them accordingly to come to her private apartments the same
+ afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that interview none were present save Walsingham and Lord Chamberlain
+ Howard. The Queen showed herself "extraordinarily resolute" to take up the
+ affairs of the Provinces. "She had always been sure," she said, "that the
+ French negotiation would have no other issue than the one which they had
+ just seen. She was fully aware what a powerful enemy she was about to make&mdash;one
+ who could easily create mischief for her in Scotland and Ireland; but she
+ was nevertheless resolved, if the States chose to deal with her frankly
+ and generously, to take them under her protection. She assured the envoys
+ that if a deputation with full powers and reasonable conditions should be
+ immediately sent to her, she would not delay and dally with them, as had
+ been the case in France, but would despatch them back again at the
+ speediest, and would make her good inclination manifest by deeds as well
+ as words. As she was hazarding her treasure together with the blood and
+ repose of her subjects, she was not at liberty to do this except on
+ receipt of proper securities."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly De Gryze went to the Provinces, provided with complimentary
+ and affectionate letters from the Queen, while Ortel remained in England.
+ So far all was plain and above-board; and Walsingham, who, from the first,
+ had been warmly in favour of taking up the Netherland cause, was relieved
+ by being able to write in straightforward language. Stealthy and subtle,
+ where the object was to get within the guard of an enemy who menaced a
+ mortal blow, he was, both by nature and policy, disposed to deal frankly
+ with those he called his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monsieur de Gryze repaireth presently," he wrote to Davison, "to try if
+ he can induce the States to send their deputies hither, furnished with
+ more ample instructions than they had to treat with the French King,
+ considering that her Majesty carryeth another manner of princely
+ disposition than that sovereign. Meanwhile, for that she doubteth lest in
+ this hard estate of their affairs, and the distrust they have conceived to
+ be relieved from hence, they should from despair throw themselves into the
+ course of Spain, her pleasure therefore is&mdash;though by Burnham I sent
+ you directions to put them in comfort of relief, only as of yourself&mdash;that
+ you shall now, as it were, in her name, if you see cause sufficient,
+ assure some of the aptest instruments that you shall make choice of for
+ that purpose, that her Majesty, rather than that they should perish, will
+ be content to take them under her protection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He added that it was indispensable for the States, upon their part, to
+ offer "such sufficient cautions and assurances as she might in reason
+ demand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matters were so well managed that by the 22nd April the States-General
+ addressed a letter to the Queen, in which they notified her, that the
+ desired deputation was on the point of setting forth. "Recognizing," they
+ said, "that there is no prince or potentate to whom they are more obliged
+ than they are to your Majesty, we are about to request you very humbly to
+ accept the sovereignty of these Provinces, and the people of the same for
+ your very humble vassals and subjects." They added that, as the necessity
+ of the case was great, they hoped the Queen would send, so soon as might
+ be, a force of four or five thousand men for the purpose of relieving the
+ siege of Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A similar letter was despatched by the same courier to the Earl of
+ Leicester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 1st of May, Ortel had audience of the Queen, to deliver the letters
+ from the States-General. He found that despatches, very encouraging and
+ agreeable in their tenor, had also just arrived from Davison. The Queen
+ was in good humour. She took the letter from Ortel, read it attentively,
+ and paused a good while. Then she assured him that her good affection
+ towards the Provinces was not in the least changed, and that she thanked
+ the States for the confidence in her that they were manifesting. "It is
+ unnecessary," said the Queen, "for me to repeat over and over again
+ sentiments which I have so plainly declared. You are to assure the States
+ that they shall never be disappointed in the trust that they have reposed
+ in my good intentions. Let them deal with me sincerely, and without
+ holding open any back-door. Not that I am seeking the sovereignty of the
+ Provinces, for I wish only to maintain their privileges and ancient
+ liberties, and to defend them in this regard against all the world. Let
+ them ripely consider, then, with what fidelity I am espousing their cause,
+ and how, without fear of any one, I am arousing most powerful enemies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ortel had afterwards an interview with Leicester, in which the Earl
+ assured him that her Majesty had not in the least changed in her
+ sentiments towards the Provinces. "For myself," said he, "I am ready, if
+ her Majesty choose to make use of me, to go over there in person, and to
+ place life, property, and all the assistance I can gain from my friends,
+ upon the issue. Yea, with so good a heart, that I pray the Lord may be
+ good to me, only so far as I serve faithfully in this cause." He added a
+ warning that the deputies to be appointed should come with absolute
+ powers, in order that her Majesty's bountiful intentions might not be
+ retarded by their own fault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ortel then visited Walsingham at his house, Barn-Elms, where he was
+ confined by illness. Sir Francis assured the envoy that he would use every
+ effort, by letter to her Majesty and by verbal instructions to his
+ son-in-law, Sir Philip Sidney, to further the success of the negotiation,
+ and that he deeply regretted his enforced absence from the court on so
+ important an occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matters were proceeding most favourably, and the all-important point of
+ sending an auxiliary force of Englishmen to the relief of Antwerp&mdash;before
+ it should be too late, and in advance of the final conclusion of the
+ treaty between the countries-had been nearly conceded. Just at that
+ moment, however, "as ill-luck would have it," said Ortel, "came a letter
+ from Gilpin. I don't think he meant it in malice, but the effect was most
+ pernicious. He sent the information that a new attack was to be made by
+ the 10th May upon the Kowenstyn, that it was sure to be successful, and
+ that the siege of Antwerp was as good as raised. So Lord Burghley informed
+ me, in presence of Lord Leicester, that her Majesty was determined to
+ await the issue of this enterprise. It was quite too late to get troops in
+ readiness; to co-operate with the States' army, so soon as the 10th May,
+ and as Antwerp was so sure to be relieved, there was no pressing necessity
+ for haste. I uttered most bitter complaints to these lords and to other
+ counsellors of the Queen, that she should thus draw back, on account of a
+ letter from a single individual, without paying sufficient heed to the
+ despatches from the States-General, who certainly knew their own affairs
+ and their own necessities better than any one else could do, but her
+ Majesty sticks firm to her resolution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here were immense mistakes committed on all sides. The premature shooting
+ up of those three rockets from the cathedral-tower, on the unlucky 10th
+ May, had thus not only ruined the first assault against the Kowenstyn, but
+ also the second and the more promising adventure. Had the four thousand
+ bold Englishmen there enlisted, and who could have reached the Provinces
+ in time to cooperate in that great enterprise, have stood side by side
+ with the Hollanders, the Zeelanders, and the Antwerpers, upon that fatal
+ dyke, it is almost a certainty that Antwerp would have been relieved, and
+ the whole of Flanders and Brabant permanently annexed to the independent
+ commonwealth, which would have thus assumed at once most imposing
+ proportions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a great blunder of Sainte Aldegonde to station in the cathedral, on
+ so important an occasion, watchmen in whose judgment he could not
+ thoroughly rely. It was a blunder in Gilpin, intelligent as he generally
+ showed himself, to write in such sanguine style before the event. But it
+ was the greatest blunder of all for Queen Elizabeth to suspend her
+ cooperation at the very instant when, as the result showed, it was likely
+ to prove most successful. It was a chapter of blunders from first to last,
+ but the most fatal of all the errors was the one thus prompted by the
+ great Queen's most traitorous characteristic, her obstinate parsimony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now began a series of sharp chafferings on both sides, not very much
+ to the credit of either party. The kingdom of England, and the rebellious
+ Provinces of Spain, were drawn to each other by an irresistible law of
+ political attraction. Their absorption into each other seemed natural and
+ almost inevitable; and the weight of the strong Protestant organism, had
+ it been thus completed, might have balanced the great Catholic League
+ which was clustering about Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was unfortunate that the two governments of England and the Netherlands
+ should now assume the attitude of traders driving a hard bargain with each
+ other, rather than that of two important commonwealths, upon whose action,
+ at that momentous epoch, the weal and wo of Christendom was hanging. It is
+ quite true that the danger to England was great, but that danger in any
+ event was to be confronted&mdash;Philip was to be defied, and, by assuming
+ the cause of the Provinces to be her own, which it unquestionably was,
+ Elizabeth was taking the diadem from her head&mdash;as the King of Sweden
+ well observed&mdash;and adventuring it upon the doubtful chance of war.
+ Would it not have been better then&mdash;her mind being once made up&mdash;promptly
+ to accept all the benefits, as well as all the hazards, of the bold game
+ to which she was of necessity a party? But she could not yet believe in
+ the incredible meanness of Henry III. "I asked her Majesty" (3rd May,
+ 1585), said Ortel, "whether, in view of these vast preparations in France,
+ it did not behove her to be most circumspect and upon her guard. For, in
+ the opinion of many men, everything showed one great scheme already laid
+ down&mdash;a general conspiracy throughout Christendom against the
+ reformed religion. She answered me, that thus far she could not perceive
+ this to be the case; 'nor could she believe,' she said, 'that the King of
+ France could be so faint-hearted as to submit to such injuries from the
+ Guises.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time was very soon to show the nature of that unhappy monarch with regard
+ to injuries, and to prove to Elizabeth the error she had committed in
+ doubting his faint-heartedness. Meanwhile, time was passing, and the
+ Netherlands were shivering in the storm. They, needed the open sunshine
+ which her caution kept too long behind the clouds. For it was now enjoined
+ upon Walsingham to manifest a coldness upon the part of the English
+ government towards the States. Davison was to be allowed to return; "but,"
+ said Sir Francis, "her Majesty would not have you accompany the
+ commissioners who are coming from the Low Countries; but to come over,
+ either before them or after them, lest it be thought they come over by her
+ Majesty's procurement."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As if they were not coming over by her Majesty's most especial
+ procurement, and as if it would matter to Philip&mdash;the union once made
+ between England and Holland&mdash;whether the invitation to that union
+ came first from the one party or the other!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am retired for my health from the court to mine own house," said
+ Walsingham, "but I find those in whose judgment her Majesty reposeth
+ greatest trust so coldly affected unto the cause, as I have no great hope
+ of the matter; and yet, for that the hearts of princes are in the hands of
+ God, who both can will and dispose them at his pleasure, I would be loath
+ to hinder the repair of the commissioners."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here certainly, had the sun gone most suddenly into a cloud. Sir Francis
+ would be loath to advise the commissioners to stay at home, but he
+ obviously thought them coming on as bootless an errand as that which had
+ taken their colleagues so recently into France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cause of the trouble was Flushing. Hence the tears, and the coldness,
+ and the scoldings, on the part of the imperious and the economical Queen.
+ Flushing was the patrimony&mdash;a large portion of that which was left to
+ him&mdash;of Count Maurice. It was deeply mortgaged for the payment of the
+ debts of William the Silent, but his son Maurice, so long as the elder
+ brother Philip William remained a captive in Spain, wrote himself Marquis
+ of Flushing and Kampveer, and derived both revenue and importance from his
+ rights in that important town. The States of Zeeland, while desirous of a
+ political fusion of the two countries, were averse from the prospect of
+ converting, by exception, their commercial, capital into an English city,
+ the remainder of the Provinces remaining meanwhile upon their ancient
+ footing. The negociations on the subject caused a most ill-timed delay.
+ The States finding the English government cooling, affected to grow tepid
+ themselves. This was the true mercantile system, perhaps, for managing a
+ transaction most thriftily, but frankness and promptness would have been
+ more statesmanlike at such a juncture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry to understand," wrote Walsingham, "that the States are not yet
+ grown to a full resolution for the delivering of the town of Flushing into
+ her Majesty's hands. The Queen finding the people of that island so
+ wavering and inconstant, besides that they can hardly, after the so long
+ enjoying a popular liberty, bear a regal authority, would be loath to
+ embark herself into so dangerous a war without some sufficient caution
+ received from them. It is also greatly to be doubted, that if, by practice
+ and corruption, that town might be recovered by the Spaniards, it would
+ put all the rest of the country in peril. I find her Majesty, in case that
+ town may be gotten, fully resolved to receive them into her protection, so
+ as it may also be made probable unto her that the promised three hundred
+ thousand guilders the month will be duly paid."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A day or two after writing this letter, Walsingham sent one afternoon, in
+ a great hurry, for Ortel, and informed him very secretly, that, according
+ to information just received, the deputies from the States were coming
+ without sufficient authority in regard to this very matter. Thus all the
+ good intentions of the English government were likely to be frustrated,
+ and the Provinces to be reduced to direful extremity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What can we possibly advise her Majesty to do?" asked Walsingham, "since
+ you are not willing to put confidence in her intentions. You are trying to
+ bring her into a public war, in which she is to risk her treasure and the
+ blood of her subjects against the greatest potentates of the world, and
+ you hesitate meantime at giving her such security as is required for the
+ very defence of the Provinces themselves. The deputies are coming hither
+ to offer the sovereignty to her Majesty, as was recently done in France,
+ or, if that should not prove acceptable, they are to ask assistance in men
+ and money upon a mere 'taliter qualiter' guaranty. That's not the way. And
+ there are plenty of ill-disposed persons here to take advantage of this
+ position of affairs to ruin the interest of the Provinces now placed on so
+ good a footing. Moreover, in this perpetual sending of despatches back and
+ forth, much precious time is consumed; and this is exactly what our
+ enemies most desire."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In accordance with Walsingham's urgent suggestions, Ortel wrote at once to
+ his constituents, imploring them to remedy this matter. "Do not allow," he
+ said, "any, more time to be wasted. Let us not painfully, build a wall
+ only to knock our own heads against it, to the dismay of our friends and
+ the gratification of our enemies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at last arranged that an important blank should be left in the
+ articles to be brought by the deputies, upon which vacant place the names
+ of certain cautionary towns, afterwards to be agreed upon, were to be
+ inscribed by common consent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the English ministers were busy in preparing to receive the
+ commissioners, and to bring the Netherland matter handsomely before the
+ legislature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The integrity, the caution, the thrift, the hesitation, which
+ characterized Elizabeth's government, were well pourtrayed in the habitual
+ language of the Lord Treasurer, chief minister of a third-rate kingdom now
+ called on to play a first-rate part, thoroughly acquainted with the moral
+ and intellectual power of the nation whose policy he directed, and
+ prophetically conscious of the great destinies which were opening upon her
+ horizon. Lord Burghley could hardly be censured&mdash;least of all
+ ridiculed&mdash;for the patient and somewhat timid attributes of his
+ nature: The ineffable ponderings, which might now be ludicrous, on the
+ part of a minister of the British Empire, with two hundred millions of
+ subjects and near a hundred millions of revenue, were almost inevitable in
+ a man guiding a realm of four millions of people with half a million of
+ income.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was, on the whole, a strange negotiation, this between England and
+ Holland. A commonwealth had arisen, but was unconscious of the strength
+ which it was to find in the principle of states' union, and of religious
+ equality. It sought, on the contrary, to exchange its federal sovereignty
+ for provincial dependence, and to imitate, to a certain extent, the very
+ intolerance by which it had been driven into revolt. It was not unnatural
+ that the Netherlanders should hate the Roman Catholic religion, in the
+ name of which they had endured such infinite tortures, but it is,
+ nevertheless, painful to observe that they requested Queen Elizabeth, whom
+ they styled defender, not of "the faith" but of the "reformed religion,"
+ to exclude from the Provinces, in case she accepted the sovereignty, the
+ exercise of all religious rites except those belonging to the reformed
+ church. They, however, expressly provided against inquisition into
+ conscience. Private houses were to be sacred, the papists free within
+ their own walls, but the churches were to be closed to those of the
+ ancient faith. This was not so bad as to hang, burn, drown, and bury alive
+ nonconformists, as had been done by Philip and the holy inquisition in the
+ name of the church of Rome; nor is it very surprising that the horrible
+ past should have caused that church to be regarded with sentiments of such
+ deep-rooted hostility as to make the Hollanders shudder at the idea of its
+ re-establishment. Yet, no doubt, it was idle for either Holland or
+ England, at that day, to talk of a reconciliation with Rome. A step had
+ separated them, but it was a step from a precipice. No human power could
+ bridge the chasm. The steep contrast between the league and the
+ counter-league, between the systems of Philip and Mucio, and that of
+ Elizabeth and Olden-Barneveld, ran through the whole world of thought,
+ action, and life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But still the negociation between Holland and England was a strange one.
+ Holland wished to give herself entirely, and England feared to accept.
+ Elizabeth, in place of sovereignty, wanted mortgages; while Holland was
+ afraid to give a part, although offering the whole. There was no great
+ inequality between the two countries. Both were instinctively conscious,
+ perhaps, of standing on the edge of a vast expansion. Both felt that they
+ were about to stretch their wings suddenly for a flight over the whole
+ earth. Yet each was a very inferior power, in comparison with the great
+ empires of the past or those which then existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult, without a strong effort of the imagination, to reduce the
+ English empire to the slender proportions which belonged to her in the
+ days of Elizabeth. That epoch was full of light and life. The
+ constellations which have for centuries been shining in the English
+ firmament were then human creatures walking English earth. The captains,
+ statesmen, corsairs, merchant-adventurers, poets, dramatists, the great
+ Queen herself, the Cecils, Raleigh, Walsingham, Drake, Hawkins, Gilbert,
+ Howard, Willoughby, the Norrises, Essex, Leicester, Sidney, Spenser,
+ Shakspeare and the lesser but brilliant lights which surrounded him; such
+ were the men who lifted England upon an elevation to which she was not yet
+ entitled by her material grandeur. At last she had done with Rome, and her
+ expansion dated from that moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Holland and England, by the very condition of their existence, were sworn
+ foes to Philip. Elizabeth stood excommunicated of the Pope. There was
+ hardly a month in which intelligence was not sent by English agents out of
+ the Netherlands and France, that assassins, hired by Philip, were making
+ their way to England to attempt the life of the Queen. The Netherlanders
+ were rebels to the Spanish monarch, and they stood, one and all, under
+ death-sentence by Rome. The alliance was inevitable and wholesome.
+ Elizabeth was, however, consistently opposed to the acceptance of a new
+ sovereignty. England was a weak power. Ireland was at her side in a state
+ of chronic rebellion&mdash;a stepping-stone for Spain in its already
+ foreshadowed invasion. Scotland was at her back with a strong party of
+ Catholics, stipendiaries of Philip, encouraged by the Guises and
+ periodically inflamed to enthusiasm by the hope of rescuing Mary Stuart
+ from her imprisonment, bringing her rival's head to the block, and
+ elevating the long-suffering martyr upon the throne of all the British
+ Islands. And in the midst of England itself, conspiracies were weaving
+ every day. The mortal duel between the two queens was slowly approaching
+ its termination. In the fatal form of Mary was embodied everything most
+ perilous to England's glory and to England's Queen. Mary Stuart meant
+ absolutism at home, subjection to Rome and Spain abroad. The uncle Guises
+ were stipendiaries of Philip, Philip was the slave of the Pope. Mucio had
+ frightened the unlucky Henry III. into submission, and there was no health
+ nor hope in France. For England, Mary Stuart embodied the possible relapse
+ into sloth, dependence, barbarism. For Elizabeth, Mary Stuart embodied
+ sedition, conspiracy, rebellion, battle, murder, and sudden death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not to be wondered at that the Queen thus situated should be
+ cautious, when about throwing down the gauntlet to the greatest powers of
+ the earth. Yet the commissioners from the United States were now on their
+ way to England to propose the throwing of that gauntlet. What now was that
+ England?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Its population was, perhaps, not greater than the numbers which dwell
+ to-day within its capital and immediate suburbs. Its revenue was perhaps
+ equal to the sixtieth part of the annual interest on the present national
+ debt. Single, highly-favoured individuals, not only in England but in
+ other countries cis-and trans-Atlantic, enjoy incomes equal to more than
+ half the amount of Elizabeth's annual budget. London, then containing
+ perhaps one hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants, was hardly so imposing
+ a town as Antwerp, and was inferior in most material respects to Paris and
+ Lisbon. Forty-two hundred children were born every year within its
+ precincts, and the deaths were nearly as many. In plague years, which were
+ only too frequent, as many as twenty and even thirty thousand people had
+ been annually swept away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the present epoch there are seventeen hundred births every week, and
+ about one thousand deaths.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is instructive to throw a glance at the character of the English people
+ as it appeared to intelligent foreigners at that day; for the various
+ parts of the world were not then so closely blended, nor did national
+ colours and characteristics flow so liquidly into each other, as is the
+ case in these days of intimate juxta-position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The English are a very clever, handsome, and well-made people," says a
+ learned Antwerp historian and merchant, who had resided a long time in
+ London, "but, like all islanders, by nature weak and tender. They are
+ generally fair, particularly the women, who all&mdash;even to the peasant
+ women&mdash;protect their complexions from the sun with fans and veils, as
+ only the stately gentlewomen do in Germany and the Netherlands. As a
+ people they are stout-hearted, vehement, eager, cruel in war, zealous in
+ attack, little fearing: death; not revengeful, but fickle, presumptuous,
+ rash, boastful, deceitful, very suspicious, especially of strangers, whom
+ they despise. They are full of courteous and hypocritical gestures and
+ words, which they consider to imply good manners, civility, and wisdom.
+ They are well spoken, and very hospitable. They feed well, eating much
+ meat, which-owing to the rainy climate and the ranker character of the
+ grass&mdash;is not so firm and succulent as the meat of France and the
+ Netherlands. The people are not so laborious as the French and Hollanders,
+ preferring to lead an indolent life, like the Spaniards. The most
+ difficult and ingenious of the handicrafts are in the hands of foreigners,
+ as is the case with the lazy inhabitants of Spain. They feed many sheep,
+ with fine wool, from which, two hundred years ago, they learned to make
+ cloth. They keep many idle servants, and many wild animals for their
+ pleasure, instead of cultivating the sail. They have many ships, but they
+ do not even catch fish enough for their own consumption, but purchase of
+ their neighbours. They dress very elegantly. Their costume is light and
+ costly, but they are very changeable and capricious, altering their
+ fashions every year, both the men and the women. When they go away from
+ home, riding or travelling, they always wear their best clothes, contrary
+ to the habit of other nations. The English language is broken Dutch, mixed
+ with French and British terms and words, but with a lighter pronunciation.
+ They do not speak from the chest, like the Germans, but prattle only with
+ the tongue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here are few statistical facts, but certainly it is curious to see how
+ many national traits thus photographed by a contemporary, have quite
+ vanished, and have been exchanged for their very opposites. Certainly the
+ last physiological criticism of all would indicate as great a national
+ metamorphosis, during the last three centuries, as is offered by many
+ other of the writer's observations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With regard to the women," continues the same authority, "they are
+ entirely in the power of the men, except in matters of life and death, yet
+ they are not kept so closely and strictly as in Spain and elsewhere. They
+ are not locked up, but have free management of their household, like the
+ Netherlanders and their other neighbours. They are gay in their clothing,
+ taking well their ease, leaving house-work to the servant-maids, and are
+ fond of sitting, finely-dressed, before their doors to see the passers-by
+ and to be seen of them. In all banquets and dinner-parties they have the
+ most honour, sitting at the upper end of the board, and being served
+ first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Their time is spent in riding, lounging, card-playing, and making merry
+ with their gossips at child-bearings, christenings, churchings, and
+ buryings; and all this conduct the men wink at, because such are the
+ customs of the land. They much commend however the industry and careful
+ habits of the German and Netherland women, who do the work which in
+ England devolves upon the men. Hence, England is called the paradise of
+ married women, for the unmarried girls are kept much more strictly than
+ upon the continent. The women are, handsome, white, dressy, modest;
+ although they go freely about the streets without bonnet, hood, or veil;
+ but lately learned to cover their faces with a silken mask or vizard with
+ a plumage of feathers, for they change their fashions every year, to the
+ astonishment of many."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paul Hentzner, a tourist from Germany at precisely the same epoch, touches
+ with equal minuteness on English characteristics. It may be observed,
+ that, with some discrepancies, there is also much similarity, in the views
+ of the two critics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The English," says the whimsical Paul, are serious, like the Germans,
+ lovers of show, liking to be followed, wherever they go, by troops of
+ servants, who wear their master's arms, in silver, fastened to their left
+ sleeves, and are justly ridiculed for wearing tails hanging down their
+ backs. They excel in dancing and music, for they are active and lively,
+ although they are of thicker build than the Germans. They cut their hair
+ close on the forehead, letting it hang down on either side. They are good
+ sailors, and better pirates, cunning, treacherous, thievish. Three hundred
+ and upwards are hanged annually in London. Hawking is the favourite sport
+ of the nobility. The English are more polite in eating than the French,
+ devouring less bread, but more meat, which they roast in perfection. They
+ put a great deal of sugar in their drink. Their beds are covered with
+ tapestry, even those of farmers. They are powerful in the field,
+ successful against their enemies, impatient of anything like slavery,
+ vastly fond of great ear-filling noises, such as cannon-firing,
+ drum-beating, and bell-ringing; so that it is very common for a number of
+ them, when they have got a cup too much in their heads, to go up to some
+ belfry, and ring the bells for an hour together, for the sake of the
+ amusement. If they see a foreigner very well made or particularly
+ handsome, they will say "'tis pity he is not an Englishman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is also somewhat amusing, at the present day, to find a German
+ elaborately explaining to his countrymen the mysteries of tobacco-smoking,
+ as they appeared to his unsophisticated eyes in England. "At the theatres
+ and everywhere else," says the traveller, "the English are constantly
+ smoking tobacco in the following manner. They have pipes, made on purpose,
+ of clay. At the further end of these is a bowl. Into the bowl they put the
+ herb, and then setting fire to it, they draw the smoke into their mouths,
+ which they puff out again through their nostrils, like funnels," and so
+ on; conscientious explanations which a German tourist of our own times
+ might think it superfluous to offer to his compatriots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is also instructive to read that the light-fingered gentry of the
+ metropolis were nearly as adroit in their calling as they are at present,
+ after three additional centuries of development for their delicate craft;
+ for the learned Tobias Salander, the travelling companion of Paul
+ Hentzner, finding himself at a Lord Mayor's Show, was eased of his purse,
+ containing nine crowns, as skilfully as the feat could have been done by
+ the best pickpocket of the nineteenth century, much to that learned
+ person's discomfiture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Into such an England and among such English the Netherland envoys had now
+ been despatched on their most important errand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After twice putting back, through stress of weather, the commissioners,
+ early in July, arrived at London, and were "lodged and very worshipfully
+ appointed at charges of her Majesty in the Clothworkers' Hall in
+ Pynchon-lane, near Tower-street." About the Tower and its faubourgs the
+ buildings were stated to be as elegant as they were in the city itself,
+ although this was hardly very extravagant commendation. From this district
+ a single street led along the river's strand to Westminster, where were
+ the old and new palaces, the famous hall and abbey, the Parliament
+ chambers, and the bridge to Southwark, built of stone, with twenty arches,
+ sixty feet high, and with rows of shops and dwelling-houses on both its
+ sides. Thence, along the broad and beautiful river, were dotted here and
+ there many stately mansions and villas, residences of bishops and nobles,
+ extending farther and farther west as the city melted rapidly into the
+ country. London itself was a town lying high upon a hill&mdash;the hill of
+ Lud&mdash;and consisted of a coil of narrow, tortuous, unseemly streets,
+ each with a black, noisome rivulet running through its centre, and with
+ rows of three-storied, leaden-roofed houses, built of timber-work filled
+ in with lime, with many gables, and with the upper stories overhanging and
+ darkening the basements. There were one hundred and twenty-one churches,
+ small and large, the most conspicuous of which was the Cathedral. Old
+ Saint Paul's was not a very magnificent edifice&mdash;but it was an
+ extremely large one, for it was seven hundred and twenty feet long, one
+ hundred and thirty broad, and had a massive quadrangular tower, two
+ hundred and sixty feet high. Upon this tower had stood a timber-steeple,
+ rising, to a height of five hundred and thirty-four feet from the ground,
+ but it had been struck by lightning in the year 1561, and consumed to the
+ stone-work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen's favourite residence was Greenwich Palace, the place of her
+ birth, and to this mansion, on the 9th of July, the Netherland envoys were
+ conveyed, in royal barges, from the neighbourhood of Pynchon-lane, for
+ their first audience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deputation was a strong one. There was Falck of Zeeland, a man of
+ consummate adroitness, perhaps not of as satisfactory integrity; "a shrewd
+ fellow and a fine," as Lord Leicester soon afterwards characterised him.
+ There was Menin, pensionary of Dort, an eloquent and accomplished orator,
+ and employed on this occasion as chief spokesman of the legation&mdash;"a
+ deeper man, and, I think, an honester," said the same personage, adding,
+ with an eye to business, "and he is but poor, which you must consider, but
+ with great secrecy." There was Paul Buys, whom we have met with before;
+ keen, subtle, somewhat loose of life, very passionate, a most most
+ energetic and valuable friend to England, a determined foe to France, who
+ had resigned the important post of Holland's Advocate, when the mission
+ offering sovereignty to Henry III. had been resolved upon, and who had
+ since that period been most influential in procuring the present triumph
+ of the English policy. Through his exertions the Province of Holland had
+ been induced at an early moment to furnish the most ample instructions to
+ the commissioners for the satisfaction of Queen Elizabeth in the great
+ matter of the mortgages. "Judge if this Paul Buys has done his work well,"
+ said a French agent in the Netherlands, who, despite the infamous conduct
+ of his government towards the Provinces, was doing his best to frustrate
+ the subsequent negotiation with England, "and whether or no he has Holland
+ under his thumb." The same individual had conceived hopes from Falck of
+ Zeeland. That Province, in which lay the great bone of contention between
+ the Queen and the States&mdash;the important town of Flushing&mdash;was
+ much slower than Holland to agree to the English policy. It is to be
+ feared that Falck was not the most ingenuous and disinterested politician
+ that could be found even in an age not distinguished for frankness or
+ purity; for even while setting forth upon the mission to Elizabeth, he was
+ still clinging, or affecting to cling, to the wretched delusion of French
+ assistance. "I regret infinitely," said Falck to the French agent just
+ mentioned, "that I am employed in this affair, and that it is necessary in
+ our present straits to have recourse to England. There is&mdash;so to
+ speak&mdash;not a person in our Province that is inclined that way, all
+ recognizing very well that France is much more salutary for us, besides
+ that we all bear her a certain affection. Indeed, if I were assured that
+ the King still felt any goodwill towards us, I would so manage matters
+ that neither the Queen of England, nor any other prince whatever except
+ his most Christian-Majesty should take a bite at this country, at least at
+ this Province, and with that view, while waiting for news from France, I
+ will keep things in suspense, and spin them out as long as it is possible
+ to do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news from France happened soon to be very conclusive, and it then
+ became difficult even for Falek to believe&mdash;after intelligence
+ received of the accord between Henry III. and the Guises&mdash;that his
+ Christian Majesty, would be inclined for a bite at the Netherlands. This
+ duplicity on the part of so leading a personage furnishes a key to much of
+ the apparent dilatoriness on the part of the English government: It has
+ been seen that Elizabeth, up to the last moment, could not fairly
+ comprehend the ineffable meanness of the French monarch. She told Ortel
+ that she saw no reason to believe in that great Catholic conspiracy
+ against herself and against all Protestantism which was so soon to be made
+ public by the King's edict of July, promulgated at the very instant of the
+ arrival in England of the Netherland envoys. Then that dread fiat had gone
+ forth, the most determined favourer of the French alliance could no longer
+ admit its possibility, and Falck became the more open to that peculiar
+ line of argument which Leicester had suggested with regard to one of the
+ other deputies. "I will do my best," wrote Walsingham, "to procure that
+ Paul Buys and Falck shall receive underhand some reward."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides Menin, Falck, and Buys, were Noel de Caron, an experienced
+ diplomatist; the poet-soldier, Van der Does; heroic defender of Leyden; De
+ Gryze, Hersolte, Francis Maalzoon, and three legal Frisians of pith and
+ substance, Feitsma, Aisma, and Jongema; a dozen Dutchmen together&mdash;as
+ muscular champions as ever little republic sent forth to wrestle with all
+ comers in the slippery ring of diplomacy. For it was instinctively felt
+ that here were conclusions to be tried with a nation of deep, solid
+ thinkers, who were aware that a great crisis in the world's history had
+ occurred, and would put forth their most substantial men to deal with it:
+ Burghley and Walsingham, the great Queen herself, were no feather-weights
+ like the frivolous Henry III., and his minions. It was pity, however, that
+ the discussions about to ensue presented from the outset rather the aspect
+ of a hard hitting encounter of antagonists than that of a frank and
+ friendly congress between two great parties whose interests were
+ identical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the death of William the Silent, there was no one individual in the
+ Netherlands to impersonate the great struggle of the Provinces with Spain
+ and Rome, and to concentrate upon his own head a poetical, dramatic, and
+ yet most legitimate interest. The great purpose of the present history
+ must be found in its illustration of the creative power of civil and
+ religious freedom. Here was a little republic, just born into the world,
+ suddenly bereft of its tutelary saint, left to its own resources, yet
+ already instinct with healthy vigorous life, and playing its difficult
+ part among friends and enemies with audacity, self-reliance, and success.
+ To a certain extent its achievements were anonymous, but a great principle
+ manifested itself through a series of noble deeds. Statesmen, soldiers,
+ patriots, came forward on all sides to do the work which was to be done,
+ and those who were brought into closest contact with the commonwealth
+ acknowledged in strongest language the signal ability with which,
+ self-guided, she steered her course. Nevertheless, there was at this
+ moment one Netherlander, the chief of the present mission to England,
+ already the foremost statesman of his country, whose name will not soon be
+ effaced from the record of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. That
+ man was John of Olden-Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was now in his thirty-eighth year, having been born at Amersfoot on the
+ 14th of September, 1547. He bore an imposing name, for the
+ Olden-Barnevelds of Gelderland were a race of unquestionable and antique
+ nobility. His enemies, however, questioned his right to the descent which
+ he claimed. They did not dispute that the great grandfather, Class van
+ Olden-Barneveld, was of distinguished lineage and allied to many
+ illustrious houses, but they denied that Class was really the great
+ grandfather of John. John's father, Gerritt, they said, was a nameless
+ outcast, a felon, a murderer, who had escaped the punishment due to his
+ crimes, but had dragged out a miserable existence in the downs, burrowing
+ like a rabbit in the sand. They had also much to say in disparagement of
+ all John's connections. Not only was his father a murderer, but his wife,
+ whom he had married for money, was the child of a most horrible incest,
+ his sisters were prostitutes, his sons and brothers were debauchees and
+ drunkards, and, in short, never had a distinguished man a more
+ uncomfortable and discreditable family-circle than that which surrounded
+ Barneveld, if the report of his enemies was to be believed. Yet it is
+ agreeable to reflect that, with all the venom which they had such power of
+ secreting, these malignant tongues had been unable to destroy the
+ reputation of the man himself. John's character was honourable and
+ upright, his intellectual power not disputed even by those who at a later
+ period hated him the most bitterly. He had been a profound and
+ indefatigable student from his earliest youth. He had read law at Leyden,
+ in France, at Heidelberg. Here, in the head-quarters of German Calvinism,
+ his youthful mind had long pondered the dread themes of foreknowledge,
+ judgment absolute, free will, and predestination: To believe it worth the
+ while of a rational and intelligent Deity to create annually several
+ millions of thinking beings, who were to struggle for a brief period on
+ earth, and to consume in perpetual brimstone afterwards, while others were
+ predestined to endless enjoyment, seemed to him an indifferent exchange
+ for a faith in the purgatory and paradise of Rome. Perplexed in the
+ extreme, the youthful John bethought himself of an inscription over the
+ gateway of his famous but questionable great grandfather's house at
+ Amersfort&mdash;'nil scire tutissima fides.' He resolved thenceforth to
+ adopt a system of ignorance upon matters beyond the flaming walls of the
+ world; to do the work before him manfully and faithfully while he walked
+ the earth, and to trust that a benevolent Creator would devote neither him
+ nor any other man to eternal hellfire. For this most offensive doctrine he
+ was howled at by the strictly pious, while he earned still deeper
+ opprobrium by daring to advocate religious toleration: In face of the
+ endless horrors inflicted by the Spanish Inquisition upon his native land,
+ he had the hardihood&mdash;although a determined Protestant himself&mdash;to
+ claim for Roman Catholics the right to exercise their religion in the free
+ States on equal terms with those of the reformed faith. "Anyone," said his
+ enemies, "could smell what that meant who had not a wooden nose." In
+ brief, he was a liberal Christian, both in theory and practice, and he
+ nobly confronted in consequence the wrath of bigots on both sides. At a
+ later period the most zealous Calvinists called him Pope John, and the
+ opinions to which he was to owe such appellations had already been formed
+ in his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After completing his very thorough legal studies, he had practised as an
+ advocate in Holland and Zeeland. An early defender of civil and religious
+ freedom, he had been brought at an early day into contact with William the
+ Silent, who recognized his ability. He had borne a snap-hance on his
+ shoulder as a volunteer in the memorable attempt to relieve Haarlem, and
+ was one of the few survivors of that bloody night. He had stood outside
+ the walls of Leyden in company of the Prince of Orange when that
+ magnificent destruction of the dykes had taken place by which the city had
+ been saved from the fate impending over it. At a still more recent period
+ we have seen him landing from the gun-boats upon the Kowenstyn, on the
+ fatal 26th May. These military adventures were, however, but brief and
+ accidental episodes in his career, which was that of a statesman and
+ diplomatist. As pensionary of Rotterdam, he was constantly a member of the
+ General Assembly, and had already begun to guide the policy of the new
+ commonwealth. His experience was considerable, and he was now in the high
+ noon of his vigour and his usefulness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a man of noble and imposing presence, with thick hair pushed from a
+ broad forehead rising dome-like above a square and massive face; a strong
+ deeply-coloured physiognomy, with shaggy brow, a chill blue eye, not
+ winning but commanding, high cheek bones, a solid, somewhat scornful nose,
+ a firm mouth and chin, enveloped in a copious brown beard; the whole head
+ not unfitly framed in the stiff formal ruff of the period; and the tall
+ stately figure well draped in magisterial robes of velvet and sable&mdash;such
+ was John of Olden-Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Commissioners thus described arrived at Greenwich Stairs, and were at
+ once ushered into the palace, a residence which had been much enlarged and
+ decorated by Henry VIII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were received with stately ceremony. The presence-chamber was hung
+ with Gobelin tapestry, its floor strewn with rushes. Fifty-gentlemen
+ pensioners, with gilt battle-ages, and a throng of 'buffetiers', or
+ beef-eaters, in that quaint old-world garb which has survived so many
+ centuries, were in attendance, while the counsellors of the Queen, in
+ their robes of state, waited around the throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, in close skull-cap and dark flowing gown, was the subtle,
+ monastic-looking Walsingham, with long, grave, melancholy face and Spanish
+ eyes. There too, white staff in hand, was Lord High Treasurer Burghley,
+ then sixty-five years of age, with serene blue eye, large, smooth, pale,
+ scarce-wrinkled face and forehead; seeming, with his placid, symmetrical
+ features, and great velvet bonnet, under which such silver hairs as
+ remained were soberly tucked away, and with his long dark robes which
+ swept the ground, more like a dignified gentlewoman than a statesman, but
+ for the wintery beard which lay like a snow-drift on his ancient breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen was then in the fifty-third year of her age, and considered
+ herself in the full bloom of her beauty. Her, garments were of satin and
+ velvet, with fringes of pearl as big as beans. A small gold crown was upon
+ her head, and her red hair, throughout its multiplicity of curls, blazed
+ with diamonds and emeralds. Her forehead was tall, her face long, her
+ complexion fair, her eyes small, dark, and glittering, her nose high and
+ hooked, her lips thin, her teeth black, her bosom white and liberally
+ exposed. As she passed through the ante-chamber to the presence-hall,
+ supplicants presented petitions upon their knees. Wherever she glanced,
+ all prostrated themselves on the ground. The cry of "Long live Queen
+ Elizabeth" was spontaneous and perpetual; the reply; "I thank you, my good
+ people," was constant and cordial. She spoke to various foreigners in
+ their respective languages, being mistress, besides the Latin and Greek,
+ of French, Spanish, Italian, and German. As the Commissioners were
+ presented to her by Lord Buckhurst it was observed that she was
+ perpetually gloving and ungloving, as if to attract attention to her hand,
+ which was esteemed a wonder of beauty. She spoke French with purity and
+ elegance, but with a drawling, somewhat affected accent, saying "Paar maa
+ foi; paar le Dieeu vivaant," and so forth, in a style which was ridiculed
+ by Parisians, as she sometimes, to her extreme annoyance, discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joos de Menin, pensionary of Dort, in the name of all the envoys, made an
+ elaborate address. He expressed the gratitude which the States entertained
+ for her past kindness, and particularly for the good offices rendered by
+ Ambassador Davison after the death of the Prince of Orange, and for the
+ deep regret expressed by her Majesty for their disappointment in the hopes
+ they had founded upon France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Since the death of the Prince of Orange," he said, "the States have lost
+ many important cities, and now, for the preservation of their existence,
+ they have need of a prince and sovereign lord to defend them against the
+ tyranny and iniquitous oppression of the Spaniards and their adherents,
+ who are more and more determined utterly to destroy their country, and
+ reduce the poor people to a perpetual slavery worse than that of Indians,
+ under the insupportable and detestable yoke of the Spanish Inquisition. We
+ have felt a confidence that your Majesty will not choose to see us perish
+ at the hands of the enemy against whom we have been obliged to sustain
+ this long and cruel war. That war we have undertaken in order to preserve
+ for the poor people their liberty, laws, and franchises, together with the
+ exercise of the true Christian religion, of which your Majesty bears
+ rightfully the title of defender, and against which the enemy and his
+ allies have made so many leagues and devised so many ambushes and
+ stratagems, besides organizing every day so many plots against the life of
+ your Majesty and the safety of your realms&mdash;schemes which thus far
+ the good God has averted for the good of Christianity and the maintenance
+ of His churches. For these reasons, Madam, the States have taken a firm
+ resolution to have recourse to your Majesty, seeing that it is an ordinary
+ thing for all oppressed nations to apply in their calamity to neighbouring
+ princes, and especially to such as are endowed with piety, justice,
+ magnanimity, and other kingly virtues. For this reason we have been
+ deputed to offer to your Majesty the sovereignty over these Provinces,
+ under certain good and equitable conditions, having reference chiefly to
+ the maintenance of the reformed religion and of our ancient liberties and
+ customs. And although, in the course of these long and continued wars, the
+ enemy has obtained possession of many cities and strong places within our
+ couniry, nevertheless the Provinces of Holland, Zeeland, Utrecht, and
+ Friesland, are, thank God, still entire. And in those lands are many large
+ and stately cities, beautiful and deep rivers, admirable seaports, from
+ which your Majesty and your successors can derive much good fruit and
+ commodity, of which it is scarcely, necessary to make a long recital. This
+ point, however, beyond the rest, merits a special consideration; namely,
+ that the conjunction of those Provinces of Holland, Zeeland, Utrecht, and
+ Friesland, together with the cities of Sluys and Ostend, with the kingdoms
+ of your Majesty, carries with it the absolute empire of the great ocean,
+ and consequently an assurance of perpetual felicity for your subjects. We
+ therefore humbly entreat you to agree to our conditions, to accept the
+ sovereign seignory of these Provinces, and consequently to receive the
+ people of the same as your very humble and obedient subjects, under the
+ perpetual safeguard of your crown&mdash;a people certainly as faithful and
+ loving towards their princes and sovereign lords, to speak without
+ boasting, as any in all Christendom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So doing, Madam, you will preserve many beautiful churches which it has
+ pleased God to raise up in these lands, now much afflicted and shaken, and
+ you will deliver this country and people&mdash;before the iniquitous
+ invasion of the Spaniards, so rich and flourishing by the great Commodity
+ of the sea, their ports and rivers, their commerce and manufactures, for
+ all which they have such natural advantages&mdash;from ruin and perpetual
+ slavery of body and soul. This will be a truly excellent work, agreeable
+ to God, profitable to Christianity, worthy of immortal praise, and
+ comporting with the heroic virtues of your Majesty, and ensuring the
+ prosperity of your country and people. With this we present to your
+ Majesty our articles and conditions, and pray that the King of Kings may
+ preserve you from all your enemies and ever have you in His holy keeping."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen listened intently and very courteously to the delivery of this
+ address, and then made answer in French to this effect:&mdash;"Gentlemen,&mdash;Had
+ I a thousand tongues I should not be able to express my obligation to you
+ for the great and handsome offers which you have just made. I firmly
+ believe that this proceeds from the true zeal, devotion, and affection,
+ which you have always borne me, and I am certain that you have ever
+ preferred me to all the princes and potentates in the world. Even when you
+ selected the late Duke of Anjou, who was so dear to me, and to whose soul
+ I hope that God has been merciful, I know that you would sooner have
+ offered your country to me if I had desired that you should do so.
+ Certainly I esteem it a great thing that you wish to be governed by me,
+ and I feel so much obliged to you in consequence that I will never abandon
+ you, but, on the contrary, assist you till the last sigh of my life. I
+ know very well that your princes have treated you ill, and that the
+ Spaniards are endeavouring to ruin you entirely; but I will come to your
+ aid, and I will consider what I can do, consistently with my honour, in
+ regard to the articles which you have brought me. They shall be examined
+ by the members of my council, and I promise that I will not keep you three
+ or four months, for I know very well that your affairs require haste, and
+ that they will become ruinous if you are not assisted. It is not my custom
+ to procrastinate, and upon this occasion I shall not dally, as others have
+ done, but let you have my answer very soon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly, if the Provinces needed a king, which they had most
+ unequivocally declared to be the case, they might have wandered the whole
+ earth over, and, had it been possible, searched through the whole range of
+ history, before finding a monarch with a more kingly spirit than the great
+ Queen to whom they had at last had recourse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately, she was resolute in her refusal to accept the offered
+ sovereignty. The first interview terminated with this exchange of
+ addresses, and the deputies departed in their barges for their lodgings in
+ Pynchon-lane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next two days were past in perpetual conferences, generally at Lord
+ Burghley's house, between the envoys and the lords of the council, in
+ which the acceptance of the sovereignty was vehemently urged on the part
+ of the Netherlanders, and steadily declined in the name of her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Highness," said Burghley, "cannot be induced, by any writing or
+ harangue that you can make, to accept the principality or proprietorship
+ as sovereign, and it will therefore be labour lost for you to exhibit any
+ writing for the purpose of changing her intention. It will be better to
+ content yourselves with her Majesty's consent to assist you, and to take
+ you under her protection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, two days afterwards, a writing was exhibited, drawn up by
+ Menin, in which another elaborate effort was made to alter the Queen's
+ determination. This anxiety, on the part of men already the principal
+ personages in a republic, to merge the independent existence of their
+ commonwealth in another and a foreign political organism, proved, at any
+ rate; that they were influenced by patriotic motives alone. It is also
+ instructive to observe the intense language with which the necessity of a
+ central paramount sovereignty for all the Provinces, and the
+ inconveniences of the separate States' right principle were urged by a
+ deputation, at the head of which stood Olden-Barneveld. "Although it is
+ not becoming in us," said they, "to enquire into your Majesty's motives
+ for refusing the sovereignty of our country, nevertheless, we cannot help
+ observing that your consent would be most profitable, as well to your
+ Majesty, and your successors, as to the Provinces themselves. By your
+ acceptance of the sovereignty the two peoples would be, as it were, united
+ in one body. This would cause a fraternal benevolence between them, and a
+ single reverence, love, and obedience to your Majesty.&mdash;The two
+ peoples being thus under the government of the same sovereign prince, the
+ intrigues and practices which the enemy could attempt with persons under a
+ separate subjection, would of necessity surcease. Moreover, those
+ Provinces are all distinct duchies, counties, seignories, governed by
+ their own magistrates, laws, and ordinances; each by itself, without any
+ authority or command to be exercised by one Province over another. To this
+ end they have need of a supreme power and of one sovereign prince or
+ seignor, who may command all equally, having a constant regard to the
+ public weal&mdash;considered as a generality, and not with regard to the
+ profit of the one or the other individual Province&mdash;and, causing
+ promptly and universally to be executed such ordinances as may be made in
+ the matter of war or police, according to various emergencies. Each
+ Province, on the contrary, retaining its sovereignty over its own
+ inhabitants, obedience will not be so promptly and completely rendered to
+ the commands of the lieutenant-general of your Majesty, and many, a good
+ enterprise and opportunity, will be lost. Where there is not a single
+ authority it is always found that one party endeavours to usurp power over
+ another, or to escape doing his duty so thoroughly as the others. And this
+ has notoriously been the case in the matter of contributions, imposts, and
+ similar matters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus much, and more of similar argument, logically urged, made it
+ sufficiently evident that twenty years of revolt and of hard fighting
+ against one king, had not destroyed in the minds of the leading
+ Netherlanders their conviction of the necessity of kingship. If the new
+ commonwealth was likely to remain a republic, it was, at that moment at
+ any rate, because they could not find a king. Certainly they did their
+ best to annex themselves to England, and to become loyal subjects of
+ England's Elizabeth. But the Queen, besides other objections to the course
+ proposed by the Provinces, thought that she could do a better thing in the
+ way of mortgages. In this, perhaps, there was something of the penny-wise
+ policy, which sprang from one great defect in her character. At any rate
+ much mischief was done by the mercantile spirit which dictated the hard
+ chaffering on both sides the Channel at this important juncture; for
+ during this tedious flint-paring, Antwerp, which might have been saved,
+ was falling into the hands of Philip. It should never be forgotten,
+ however, that the Queen had no standing army, and but a small revenue. The
+ men to be sent from England to the Netherland wars were first to be levied
+ wherever it was possible to find them. In truth, many were pressed in the
+ various wards of London, furnished with red coats and matchlocks at the
+ expense of the citizens, and so despatched, helter-skelter, in small
+ squads as opportunity offered. General Sir John Norris was already
+ superintending these operations, by command of the Queen, before the
+ present formal negotiation with the States had begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Subsequently to the 11th July, on which day the second address had been
+ made to Elizabeth, the envoys had many conferences with Leicester,
+ Burghley, Walsingham, and other councillors, without making much progress.
+ There was perpetual wrangling about figures and securities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What terms will you pledge for the repayment of the monies to be
+ advanced?" asked Burghley and Walsingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But if her Majesty takes the sovereignty," answered the deputies, "there
+ will be no question of guarantees. The Queen will possess our whole land,
+ and there will be no need of any repayment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And we have told you over and over again," said the Lord Treasurer, "that
+ her Majesty will never think of accepting the sovereignty. She will assist
+ you in money and men, and must be repaid to the last farthing when the war
+ is over; and, until that period, must have solid pledges in the shape of a
+ town in each Province."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came interrogatories as to the amount of troops and funds to be
+ raised respectively by the Queen and the States for the common cause. The
+ Provinces wished her Majesty to pay one-third of the whole expense, while
+ her Majesty was reluctant to pay one-quarter. The States wished a
+ permanent force to be kept on foot in the Netherlands of thirteen thousand
+ infantry and two thousand cavalry for the field, and twenty-three thousand
+ for garrisons. The councillors thought the last item too much. Then there
+ were queries as to the expense of maintaining a force in the Provinces.
+ The envoys reckoned one pound sterling, or ten florins, a month for the
+ pay of each foot soldier, including officers; and for the cavalry, three
+ times as much. This seemed reasonable, and the answers to the inquiries
+ touching the expense of the war-vessels and sailors were equally
+ satisfactory. Nevertheless it was difficult to bring the Queen up to the
+ line to which the envoys had been limited by their instructions. Five
+ thousand foot and one thousand horse serving at the Queen's expense till
+ the war should be concluded, over and above the garrisons for such
+ cautionary towns as should be agreed upon; this was considered, by the
+ States, the minimum. The Queen held out for giving only four thousand foot
+ and four hundred horse, and for deducting the garrisons even from this
+ slender force. As guarantee for the expense thus to be incurred, she
+ required that Flushing and Brill should be placed in her hands. Moreover
+ the position of Antwerp complicated the negotiation. Elizabeth, fully
+ sensible of the importance of preserving that great capital, offered four
+ thousand soldiers to serve until that city should be relieved, requiring
+ repayment within three months after the object should have been
+ accomplished. As special guarantee for such repayment she required Sluys
+ and Ostend. This was sharp bargaining, but, at any rate, the envoys knew
+ that the Queen, though cavilling to the ninth-part of a hair, was no
+ trifler, and that she meant to perform whatever she should promise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was another exchange of speeches at the Palace of Nonesuch, on the
+ 5th August; and the position of affairs and the respective attitudes of
+ the Queen and envoys were plainly characterized by the language then
+ employed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After an exordium about the cruelty of the Spanish tyranny and the
+ enormous expense entailed by the war upon the Netherlands, Menin, who, as
+ usual, was the spokesman, alluded to the difficulty which the States at
+ last felt in maintaining themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Five thousand foot and one thousand horse," he said, "over and above the
+ maintenance of garrisons in the towns to be pledged as security to your
+ Majesty, seemed the very least amount of succour that would be probably
+ obtained from your royal bounty. Considering the great demonstrations of
+ affection and promises of support, made as well by your Majesty's own
+ letters as by the mouth of your ambassador Davison, and by our envoys De
+ Gryse and Ortel, who have all declared publicly that your Majesty would
+ never forsake us, the States sent us their deputies to this country in
+ full confidence that such reasonable demands as we had been authorized to
+ make would be satisfied."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The speaker then proceeded to declare that the offer made by the royal
+ councillors of four thousand foot and four hundred horse, to serve during
+ the war, together with a special force of four thousand for the relief of
+ Antwerp, to be paid for within three months after the siege should be
+ raised, against a concession of the cities of Flushing, Brill, Sluys, and
+ Ostend, did not come within the limitations of the States-General. They
+ therefore begged the Queen to enlarge her offer to the number of five
+ thousand foot and one thousand horse, or at least to allow the envoys to
+ conclude the treaty provisionally, and subject to approval of their
+ constituents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon as Menin had concluded his address, her Majesty instantly replied,
+ with much earnestness and fluency of language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gentlemen," she said, "I will answer you upon the first point, because it
+ touches my honour. You say that I promised you, both by letters and
+ through my agent Davison, and also by my own lips, to assist you and never
+ to abandon you, and that this had moved you to come to me at present. Very
+ well, masters, do you not think I am assisting you when I am sending you
+ four thousand foot and four hundred horse to serve during the war?
+ Certainly, I think yes; and I say frankly that I have never been wanting
+ to my word. No man shall ever say, with truth, that the Queen of England
+ had at any time and ever so slightly failed in her promises, whether to
+ the mightiest monarch, to republics, to gentlemen, or even to private
+ persons of the humblest condition. Am I, then, in your opinion, forsaking
+ you when I send you English blood, which I love, and which is my own
+ blood, and which I am bound to defend? It seems to me, no. For my part I
+ tell you again that I will never forsake you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Sed de modo?' That is matter for agreement. You are aware, gentlemen,
+ that I have storms to fear from many quarters&mdash;from France, Scotland,
+ Ireland, and within my own kingdom. What would be said if I looked only on
+ one side, and if on that side I employed all my resources. No, I will give
+ my subjects no cause for murmuring. I know that my counsellors desire to
+ manage matters with prudence; 'sed aetatem habeo', and you are to believe,
+ that, of my own motion, I have resolved not to extend my offer of
+ assistance, at present, beyond the amount already stated. But I don't say
+ that at another time I may not be able to do more for you. For my
+ intention is never to abandon your cause, always to assist you, and never
+ more to suffer any foreign nation to have dominion over you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is true that you present me with two places in each of your Provinces.
+ I thank you for them infinitely, and certainly it is a great offer. But it
+ will be said instantly, the Queen of England wishes to embrace and devour
+ everything; while, on the contrary, I only wish to render you assistance.
+ I believe, in truth, that if other monarchs should have this offer, they
+ would not allow such an opportunity to escape. I do not let it slip
+ because of fears that I entertain for any prince whatever. For to think
+ that I am not aware&mdash;doing what I am doing&mdash;that I am embarking
+ in a war against the King of Spain, is a great mistake. I know very well
+ that the succour which I am affording you will offend him as much as if I
+ should do a great deal more. But what care I? Let him begin, I will answer
+ him. For my part, I say again, that never did fear enter my heart. We must
+ all die once. I know very well that many princes are my enemies, and are
+ seeking my ruin; and that where malice is joined with force, malice often
+ arrives at its ends. But I am not so feeble a princess that I have not the
+ means and the will to defend myself against them all. They are seeking to
+ take my life, but it troubles me not. He who is on high has defended me
+ until this hour, and will keep me still, for in Him do I trust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to the other point, you say that your powers are not extensive enough
+ to allow your acceptance of the offer I make you. Nevertheless, if I am
+ not mistaken, I have remarked in passing&mdash;for princes look very close
+ to words&mdash;that you would be content if I would give you money in
+ place of men, and that your powers speak only of demanding a certain
+ proportion of infantry and another of cavalry. I believe this would be, as
+ you say, an equivalent, 'secundum quod'. But I say this only because you
+ govern yourselves so precisely by the measure of your instructions.
+ Nevertheless I don't wish to contest these points with you. For very often
+ 'dum Romae disputatur Saguntum perit.' Nevertheless, it would be well for
+ you to decide; and, in any event, I do not think it good that you should
+ all take your departure, but that, on the contrary, you should leave some
+ of your number here. Otherwise it would at once be said that all was
+ broken off, and that I had chosen to nothing for you; and with this the
+ bad would comfort themselves, and the good would be much discouraged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Touching the last point of your demand&mdash;according to which you
+ desire a personage of quality&mdash;I know, gentlemen, that you do not
+ always agree very well among yourselves, and that it would be good for you
+ to have some one to effect such agreement. For this reason I have always
+ intended, so soon as we should have made our treaty, to send a lord of
+ name and authority to reside with you, to assist you in governing, and to
+ aid, with his advice, in the better direction of your affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Would to God that Antwerp were relieved! Certainly I should be very glad,
+ and very well content to lose all that I am now expending if that city
+ could be saved. I hope, nevertheless, if it can hold out six weeks longer,
+ that we shall see something good. Already the two thousand men of General
+ Norris have crossed, or are crossing, every day by companies. I will
+ hasten the rest as much as possible; and I assure you, gentlemen, that I
+ will spare no diligence. Nevertheless you may, if you choose, retire with
+ my council, and see if together you can come to some good conclusion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus spoke Elizabeth, like the wise, courageous, and very parsimonious
+ princess that she was. Alas, it was too true, that Saguntum was perishing
+ while the higgling went on at Rome. Had those two thousand under Sir John
+ Norris and the rest of the four thousand but gone a few weeks earlier, how
+ much happier might have been the result!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, it was thought in England that Antwerp would still hold out;
+ and, meantime, a treaty for its relief, in combination with another for
+ permanent assistance to the Provinces, was agreed upon between the envoys
+ and the lords of council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 12th August, Menin presented himself at Nonesuch at the head of his
+ colleagues, and, in a formal speech, announced the arrangement which had
+ thus been entered into, subject to the approval of the States. Again
+ Elizabeth, whose "tongue," in the homely phrase of the Netherlanders, "was
+ wonderfully well hung," replied with energy and ready eloquence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see, gentlemen," she said, "that I have opened the door; that I am
+ embarking once for all with you in a war against the King of Spain. Very
+ well, I am not anxious about the matter. I hope that God will aid us, and
+ that we shall strike a good blow in your cause. Nevertheless, I pray you,
+ with all my heart, and by the affection you bear me, to treat my soldiers
+ well; for they are my own Englishmen, whom I love as I do myself.
+ Certainly it would be a great cruelty, if you should treat them ill, since
+ they are about to hazard their lives so freely in your defence, and I am
+ sure that my request in this regard will be received by you as it
+ deserves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the next place, as you know that I am sending, as commander of these
+ English troops, an honest gentleman, who deserves most highly for his
+ experience in arms, so I am also informed that you have on your side a
+ gentleman of great valour. I pray you, therefore, that good care be taken
+ lest there be misunderstanding between these two, which might prevent them
+ from agreeing well together, when great exploits of war are to be taken in
+ hand. For if that should happen&mdash;which God forbid&mdash;my succour
+ would be rendered quite useless to you. I name Count Hohenlo, because him
+ alone have I heard mentioned. But I pray you to make the same
+ recommendation to all the colonels and gentlemen in your army; for I
+ should be infinitely sad, if misadventures should arise from such a cause,
+ for your interest and my honour are both at stake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the third place, I beg you, at your return, to make a favourable
+ report of me, and to thank the States, in my behalf, for their great
+ offers, which I esteem so highly as to be unable to express my thanks.
+ Tell them that I shall remember them for ever. I consider it a great
+ honour, that from the commencement, you have ever been so faithful to me,
+ and that with such great constancy you have preferred me to all other
+ princes, and have chosen me for your Queen. And chiefly do I thank the
+ gentlemen of Holland and Zeeland, who, as I have been informed, were the
+ first who so singularly loved me. And so on my own part I will have a
+ special care of them, and will do my best to uphold them by every possible
+ means, as I will do all the rest who have put their trust in me. But I
+ name Holland and Zeeland more especially, because they have been so
+ constant and faithful in their efforts to assist the rest in shaking off
+ the yoke of the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Finally, gentlemen, I beg you to assure the States that I do not decline
+ the sovereignty of your country from any dread of the King of Spain. For I
+ take God to witness that I fear him not; and I hope, with the blessing of
+ God, to make such demonstrations against him, that men shall say the Queen
+ of England does not fear the Spaniards."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elizabeth then smote herself upon the breast, and cried, with great
+ energy, "'Illa que virgo viri;' and is it not quite the same to you, even
+ if I do not assume the sovereignty, since I intend to protect you, and
+ since therefore the effects will be the same? It is true that the
+ sovereignty would serve to enhance my grandeur, but I am content to do
+ without it, if you, upon your own part, will only do your duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For myself, I promise you, in truth, that so long as I live, and even to
+ my last sigh, I will never forsake you. Go home and tell this boldly to
+ the States which sent you hither."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Menin then replied with fresh expressions of thanks and compliments, and
+ requested, in conclusion, that her Majesty would be pleased to send, as
+ soon as possible, a personage of quality to the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gentlemen," replied Elizabeth, "I intend to do this, so soon as our
+ treaty shall be ratified, for, in contrary case, the King of Spain, seeing
+ your government continue on its present footing, would do nothing but
+ laugh at us. Certainly I do not mean this year to provide him with so fine
+ a banquet."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Anarchy which was deemed inseparable from a non-regal form
+ Dismay of our friends and the gratification of our enemies
+ Her teeth black, her bosom white and liberally exposed (Eliz.)
+ Holland was afraid to give a part, although offering the whole
+ Resolved thenceforth to adopt a system of ignorance
+ Say "'tis pity he is not an Englishman"
+ Seeking protection for and against the people
+ Three hundred and upwards are hanged annually in London
+ We must all die once
+ Wrath of bigots on both sides
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. 1585, Part 2.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Sir John Norris sent to Holland&mdash;Parsimony of Elizabeth&mdash;Energy of
+ Davison&mdash;Protracted Negotiations&mdash;Friendly Sentiments of Count
+ Maurice&mdash;Letters from him and Louisa de Coligny&mdash;Davison vexed by
+ the Queen's Caprice&mdash;Dissatisfaction of Leicester&mdash;His vehement
+ Complaints&mdash;The Queen's Avarice&mdash;Perplexity of Davison&mdash;Manifesto
+ of Elizabeth&mdash;Sir Philip Sidney&mdash;His Arrival at Flushing.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The envoys were then dismissed, and soon afterwards a portion of the
+ deputation took their departure from the Netherlands with the proposed
+ treaty. It was however, as we know, quite too late for Saguntum. Two days
+ after the signing of the treaty, the remaining envoys were at the palace
+ of Nonesuch, in conference with the Earl of Leicester, when a gentleman
+ rushed suddenly into the apartment, exclaiming with great manifestations
+ of anger:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Antwerp has fallen! A treaty has been signed with the Prince of Parma.
+ Aldegonde is the author of it all. He is the culprit, who has betrayed
+ us;" with many more expressions of vehement denunciation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen was disappointed, but stood firm. She had been slow in taking
+ her resolution, but she was unflinching when her mind was made up. Instead
+ of retreating from her, position, now that it became doubly dangerous, she
+ advanced several steps nearer towards her allies. For it was obvious, if
+ more precious time should be lost, that Holland and Zeeland would share
+ the fate of Antwerp. Already the belief, that, with the loss of that city,
+ all had been lost, was spreading both in the Provinces and in England, and
+ Elizabeth felt that the time had indeed come to confront the danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the intrigues of the enemy in the independent Provinces were
+ rife. Blunt Roger Williams wrote in very plain language to Walsingham, a
+ very few days after the capitulation of Antwerp:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If her Majesty means to have Holland and Zeeland," said he, "she must
+ resolve presently. Aldegonde hath promised the enemy to bring them to
+ compound. Here arrived already his ministers which knew all his dealings
+ about Antwerp from first to last. Count Maurice is governed altogether by
+ Villiers, and Villiers was never worse for the English than at this hour.
+ To be short, the people say in general, they will accept a peace, unless
+ her Majesty do sovereign them presently. All the men of war will be at her
+ Highness' devotion, if they be in credit in time. What you do, it must be
+ done presently, for I do assure your honour there is large offers
+ presented unto them by the enemies. If her Majesty deals not roundly and
+ resolutely with them now, it will be too late two months hence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Majesty meant to deal roundly and resolutely. Her troops had already
+ gone in considerable numbers. She wrote encouraging letters with her own
+ hand to the States, imploring them not to falter now, even though the
+ great city had fallen. She had long since promised never to desert them,
+ and she was, if possible, more determined than ever to redeem her pledge.
+ She especially recommended to their consideration General Norris,
+ commander of the forces that had been despatched to the relief of Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A most accomplished officer, sprung of a house renowned for its romantic
+ valour, Sir John was the second of the six sons of Lord Norris of Rycot,
+ all soldiers of high reputation, "chickens of Mars," as an old writer
+ expressed himself. "Such a bunch of brethren for eminent achievement,"
+ said he, "was never seen. So great their states and stomachs that they
+ often jostled with others." Elizabeth called their mother, "her own crow;"
+ and the darkness of her hair and visage was thought not unbecoming to her
+ martial issue, by whom it had been inherited. Daughter of Lord Williams of
+ Tame, who had been keeper of the Tower in the time of Elizabeth's
+ imprisonment, she had been affectionate and serviceable to the Princess in
+ the hour of her distress, and had been rewarded with her favour in the
+ days of her grandeur. We shall often meet this crow-black Norris, and his
+ younger brother Sir Edward&mdash;the most daring soldiers of their time,
+ posters of sea and land&mdash;wherever the buffeting was closest, or
+ adventure the wildest on ship-board or shore, for they were men who
+ combined much of the knight-errantry of a vanishing age with the more
+ practical and expansive spirit of adventure that characterized the new
+ epoch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was he a stranger in the Netherlands. "The gentleman to whom we have
+ committed the government of the forces going to the relief of Antwerp,"
+ said Elizabeth, "has already given you such proofs of his affection by the
+ good services he has rendered you, that without recommendation on our
+ part, he should stand already recommended. Nevertheless, in respect for
+ his quality, the house from which he is descended, and the valour which he
+ has manifested in your own country, we desire to tell you that we hold him
+ dear, and that he deserves also to be dear to you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the fall of Antwerp was certain, the Queen sent Davison, who had been
+ for a brief period in England, back again to his post. "We have learned,"
+ she said in the letter which she sent by that envoy; "with very great
+ regret of the surrender of Antwerp. Fearing lest some apprehension should
+ take possession of the people's mind in consequence, and that some
+ dangerous change might ensue, we send you our faithful and well-beloved
+ Davison to represent to you how much we have your affairs at heart, and to
+ say that we are determined to forget nothing that may be necessary to your
+ preservation. Assure yourselves that we shall never fail to accomplish all
+ that he may promise you in our behalf."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, notwithstanding the gravity of the situation, the thorough discussion
+ that had taken place of the whole matter, and the enormous loss which had
+ resulted from the money-saving insanity upon both sides, even then the
+ busy devil of petty economy was not quite exorcised. Several precious
+ weeks were wasted in renewed chafferings. The Queen was willing that the
+ permanent force should now be raised to five thousand foot and one
+ thousand horse&mdash;the additional sixteen, hundred men being taken from
+ the Antwerp relieving-force&mdash;but she insisted that the garrisons for
+ the cautionary towns should be squeezed out of this general contingent.
+ The States, on the contrary, were determined to screw these garrisons out
+ of her grip, as an additional subsidy. Each party complained with reason
+ of the other's closeness. No doubt the states were shrewd bargainers, but
+ it would have been difficult for the sharpest Hollander that ever sent a
+ cargo of herrings to Cadiz, to force open Elizabeth's beautiful hand when
+ she chose to shut it close. Walsingham and Leicester were alternately
+ driven to despair by the covetousness of the one party or the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was still uncertain what "personage of quality" was to go to the
+ Netherlands in the Queen's name, to help govern the country. Leicester had
+ professed his readiness to risk his life, estates, and reputation, in the
+ cause, and the States particularly desired his appointment. "The name of
+ your Excellency is so very agreeable to this people," said they in a
+ letter to the Earl, "as to give promise of a brief and happy end to this
+ grievous and almost immortal war." The Queen was, or affected to be, still
+ undecided as to the appointment. While waiting week after week for the
+ ratifications of the treaty from Holland, affairs were looking gloomy at
+ home, and her Majesty was growing very uncertain in her temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see not her Majesty disposed to use the service of the Earl of
+ Leicester," wrote Walsingham. "I suppose the lot of government will light
+ on Lord Gray. I would to God the ability of his purse were answerable to
+ his sufficiency otherwise." This was certainly a most essential deficiency
+ on the part of Lord Gray, and it will soon be seen that the personage of
+ quality to be selected as chief in the arduous and honourable enterprise
+ now on foot, would be obliged to rely quite as much on that same ability
+ of purse as upon the sufficiency of his brain or arm. The Queen did not
+ mean to send her favourite forth to purchase anything but honour in the
+ Netherlands; and it was not the Provinces only that were likely to
+ struggle against her parsimony. Yet that parsimony sprang from a nobler
+ motive than the mere love of pelf. Dangers encompassed her on every side,
+ and while husbanding her own exchequer, she was saving her subjects'
+ resources. "Here we are but book-worms," said Walsingham, "yet from sundry
+ quarters we hear of great practices against this poor crown. The revolt in
+ Scotland is greatly feared, and that out of hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scotland, France, Spain, these were dangerous enemies and neighbours to a
+ maiden Queen, who had a rebellious Ireland to deal with on one side the
+ channel, and Alexander of Parma on the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Davison experienced great inconvenience and annoyance before the definite
+ arrangements could be made. There is no doubt that the Spanish party had
+ made great progress since the fall of Antwerp. Roger Williams was right in
+ advising the Queen to deal "roundly and resolutely" with the States, and
+ to "sovereign them presently."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had need of being sovereigned, for it must be confessed that the
+ self-government which prevailed at that moment was very like no
+ government. The death of Orange, the treachery of Henry III., the triumphs
+ of Parma, disastrous facts, treading rapidly upon each other, had produced
+ a not very unnatural effect. The peace-at-any-price party was struggling
+ hard for the ascendancy, and the Spanish partizans were doing their best
+ to hold up to suspicion the sharp practice of the English Queen. She was
+ even accused of underhand dealing with Spain, to the disadvantage of the
+ Provinces; so much had slander, anarchy, and despair, been able to effect.
+ The States were reluctant to sign those articles with Elizabeth which were
+ absolutely necessary to their salvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In how doubtful and uncertain terms I found things at my coming hither,"
+ wrote Davison to Burghley, "how thwarted and delayed since for a
+ resolution, and with what conditions, and for what reasons I have been
+ finally drawn to conclude with them as I have done, your Lordship may
+ perceive by that I have written to Mr. Secretary. The chief difficulty has
+ rested upon the point of entertaining the garrisons within the towns of
+ assurance, over and besides the five thousand footmen and one thousand
+ horse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, as Davison proceeded to observe, was considered a 'sine qua non' by
+ the States, so that, under the perilous circumstances in which both
+ countries were placed, he had felt it his duty to go forward as far as
+ possible to meet their demands. Davison always did his work veraciously,
+ thoroughly, and resolutely; and it was seldom that his advice, in all
+ matters pertaining to Netherland matters, did not prove the very best that
+ could be offered. No man knew better than he the interests and the temper
+ of both countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The imperious Elizabeth was not fond of being thwarted, least of all by
+ any thing savouring of the democratic principle, and already there was
+ much friction between the Tudor spirit of absolutism and the rough
+ "mechanical" nature with which it was to ally itself in the Netherlands.
+ The economical Elizabeth was not pleased at being overreached in a
+ bargain; and, at a moment when she thought herself doing a magnanimous
+ act, she was vexed at the cavilling with which her generosity was
+ received. "'Tis a manner of proceeding," said Walsingham, "not to be
+ allowed of, and may very well be termed mechanical, considering that her
+ Majesty seeketh no interest in that country&mdash;as Monsieur and the
+ French King did&mdash;but only their good and benefit, without regard had
+ of the expenses of her treasure and the hazard of her subjects' lives;
+ besides throwing herself into a present war for their sakes with the
+ greatest prince and potentate in Europe. But seeing the government of
+ those countries resteth in the hands of merchants and advocates&mdash;the
+ one regarding profit, the other standing upon vantage of quirks&mdash;there
+ is no better fruit to be looked to from them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet it was, after all, no quirk in those merchants and advocates to urge
+ that the Queen was not going to war with the great potentate for their
+ sakes alone. To Elizabeth's honour, she did thoroughly comprehend that the
+ war of the Netherlands was the war of England, of Protestantism, and of
+ European liberty, and that she could no longer, without courting her own
+ destruction, defer taking a part in active military operations. It was no
+ quirk, then, but solid reasoning, for the States to regard the subject in
+ the same light. Holland and England were embarked in one boat, and were to
+ sink or swim together. It was waste of time to wrangle so fiercely over
+ pounds and shillings, but the fault was not to be exclusively imputed to
+ the one side or the other. There were bitter recriminations, particularly
+ on the part of Elizabeth, for it was not safe to touch too closely either
+ the pride or the pocket of that frugal and despotic heroine. "The two
+ thousand pounds promised by the States to Norris upon the muster of the
+ two thousand volunteers," said Walsingham, "were not paid. Her Majesty is
+ not a little offended therewith, seeing how little care they have to yield
+ her satisfaction, which she imputeth to proceed rather from contempt, than
+ from necessity. If it should fall out, however, to be such as by them is
+ pretended, then doth she conceive her bargain to be very ill made, to join
+ her fortune with so weak and broken an estate." Already there were
+ indications that the innocent might be made to suffer for the
+ short-comings of the real culprits; nor would it be, the first time, or by
+ any means the last, for Davison to appear in the character of a
+ scape-goat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Surely, sir," continued Mr. Secretary, "it is a thing greatly to be
+ feared that the contributions they will yield will fall not more true in
+ paper than in payment; which if it should so happen, it would turn some to
+ blame, whereof you among others are to bear your part."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus the months of September and of October wore away, and the
+ ratifications of the treaty had not arrived from the Netherlands.
+ Elizabeth became furious, and those of the Netherland deputation who had
+ remained in England were at their wits' end to appease her choler. No news
+ arrived for many weeks. Those were not the days of steam and magnetic
+ telegraphs&mdash;inventions by which the nature of man and the aspect of
+ history seem altered&mdash;and the Queen had nothing for it but to fret,
+ and the envoys to concert with her ministers expedients to mitigate her
+ spleen. Towards the end of the month, the commissioners chartered a vessel
+ which they despatched for news to Holland. On his way across the sea the
+ captain was hailed on the 28th October by a boat, in which one Hans
+ Wyghans was leisurely proceeding to England with Netherland despatches
+ dated on the 5th of the same month. This was the freshest intelligence
+ that had yet been received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon as the envoys were put in possession of the documents, they
+ obtained an audience of the Queen. This was the last day of October.
+ Elizabeth read her letters, and listened to the apologies made by the
+ deputies for the delay with anything but a benignant countenance. Then,
+ with much vehemence of language, and manifestations of ill-temper, she
+ expressed her displeasure at the dilatoriness of the States. Having sent
+ so many troops, and so many gentlemen of quality, she had considered the
+ whole affair concluded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have been unhandsomely treated," she said, "and not as comports with a
+ prince of my quality. My inclination for your support&mdash;because you
+ show yourselves unworthy of so great benefits&mdash;will be entirely
+ destroyed, unless you deal with me and mine more worthily for the future
+ than you have done in the past. Through my great and especial affection
+ for your welfare, I had ordered the Earl of Leicester to proceed to the
+ Netherlands, and conduct your affairs; a man of such quality as all the
+ world knows, and one whom I love, as if he were my own brother. He was
+ getting himself ready in all diligence, putting himself in many perils
+ through the practices of the enemy, and if I should have reason to believe
+ that he would not be respected there according to his due, I should be
+ indeed offended. He and many others are not going thither to advance their
+ own affairs, to make themselves rich, or because they have not means
+ enough to live magnificently at home. They proceed to the Netherlands from
+ pure affection for your cause. This is the case, too, with many other of
+ my subjects, all dear to me, and of much worth. For I have sent a fine
+ heap of folk thither&mdash;in all, with those his Excellency is taking
+ with him, not under ten thousand soldiers of the English nation. This is
+ no small succour, and no little unbaring of this realm of mine, threatened
+ as it is with war from many quarters. Yet I am seeking no sovereignty, nor
+ anything else prejudicial to the freedom of your country. I wish only, in
+ your utmost need, to help you out of this lamentable war, to maintain for
+ you liberty of conscience, and to see that law and justice are preserved."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this, and more, with great eagerness of expression and gesture, was
+ urged by the Queen, much to the discomfiture of the envoys. In vain they
+ attempted to modify and to explain. Their faltering excuses were swept
+ rapidly away upon the current of royal wrath; until at last Elizabeth
+ stormed herself into exhaustion and comparative tranquillity. She then
+ dismissed them with an assurance that her goodwill towards the States was
+ not diminished, as would be found to be the case, did they not continue to
+ prove themselves unworthy of her favour that a permanent force of five
+ thousand foot and one thousand horse should serve in the Provinces at the
+ Queen's expense; and that the cities of Flushing and Brill should be
+ placed in her Majesty's hands until the entire reimbursement of the debt
+ thus incurred by the States. Elizabeth also&mdash;at last overcoming her
+ reluctance&mdash;agreed that the force necessary to garrison these towns
+ should form an additional contingent, instead of being deducted from the
+ general auxiliary force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Count Maurice of Nassau had been confirmed by the States of Holland and
+ Zeeland as permanent stadholder of those provinces. This measure excited
+ some suspicion on the part of Leicester, who, as it was now understood,
+ was the "personage of quality" to be sent to the Netherlands as
+ representative of the Queen's authority. "Touching the election of Count
+ Maurice," said the Earl, "I hope it will be no impairing of the authority
+ heretofore allotted to me, for if it will be, I shall tarry but awhile."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing, however, could be more frank or chivalrously devoted than the
+ language of Maurice to the Queen. "Madam, if I have ever had occasion," he
+ wrote, "to thank God for his benefits, I confess that it was when,
+ receiving in all humility the letters with which it pleased your Majesty
+ to honour me, I learned that the great disaster of my lord and father's
+ death had not diminished the debonaire affection and favour which it has
+ always pleased your Majesty to manifest to my father's house. It has been
+ likewise grateful to me to learn that your Majesty, surrounded by so many
+ great and important affairs, had been pleased to approve the command which
+ the States-General have conferred upon me. I am indeed grieved that my
+ actions cannot correspond with the ardent desire which I feel to serve
+ your Majesty and these Provinces, for which I hope that my extreme youth
+ will be accepted as an excuse. And although I find myself feeble enough
+ for the charge thus imposed upon me, yet God will assist my efforts to
+ supply by diligence and sincere intention the defect of the other
+ qualities requisite for my thorough discharge of my duty to the
+ contentment of your Majesty. To fulfil these obligations, which are
+ growing greater day by day, I trust to prove by my actions that I will
+ never spare either my labour or life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it was found that the important town of Flushing was required as part
+ of the guaranty to the Queen, Maurice, as hereditary seignor and
+ proprietor of the place&mdash;during the captivity of his elder brother in
+ Spain&mdash;signified his concurrence in the transfer, together with the
+ most friendly feelings towards the Earl of Leicester, and to Sir Philip
+ Sidney, appointed English governor of the town. He wrote to Davison, whom
+ he called "one of the best and most certain friends that the house of
+ Nassau possessed in England," begging that he would recommend the
+ interests of the family to the Queen, "whose favour could do more than
+ anything else in the world towards maintaining what remained of the
+ dignity of their house." After solemn deliberation with his step-mother,
+ Louisa de Coligny, and the other members of his family, he made a formal
+ announcement of adhesion on the part of the House of Nassau to the
+ arrangements concluded with the English government, and asked the
+ benediction of God upon the treaty. While renouncing, for the moment, any
+ compensation for his consent to the pledging of Flushing his "patrimonial
+ property, and a place of such great importance"&mdash;he expressed a
+ confidence that the long services of his father, as well as those which he
+ himself hoped to render, would meet in time with "condign recognition." He
+ requested the Earl of Leicester to consider the friendship which had
+ existed between himself and the late Prince of Orange, as an hereditary
+ affection to be continued to the children, and he entreated the Earl to do
+ him the honour in future to hold him as a son, and to extend to him
+ counsel and authority; declaring, on his part, that he should ever deem it
+ an honour to be allowed to call him father. And in order still more
+ strongly to confirm his friendship, he begged Sir Philip Sidney to
+ consider him as his brother, and as his companion in arms, promising upon
+ his own part the most faithful friendship. In the name of Louisa de
+ Coligny, and of his whole family, he also particularly recommended to the
+ Queen the interests of the eldest brother of the house, Philip William,
+ "who had been so long and so iniquitously detained captive in Spain," and
+ begged that, in case prisoners of war of high rank should fall into the
+ hands of the English commanders, they might be employed as a means of
+ effecting the liberation of that much-injured Prince. He likewise desired
+ the friendly offices of the Queen to protect the principality of Orange
+ against the possible designs of the French monarch, and intimated that
+ occasions might arise in which the confiscated estates of the family in
+ Burgundy might be recovered through the influence of the Swiss cantons,
+ particularly those of the Grisons and of Berne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, in conclusion, in case the Queen should please&mdash;as both Count
+ Maurice and the Princess of Orange desired with all their hearts&mdash;to
+ assume the sovereignty of these Provinces, she was especially entreated
+ graciously to observe those suggestions regarding the interests of the
+ House of Nassau, which had been made in the articles of the treaty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the path had been smoothed, mainly through the indefatigable energy
+ of Davison. Yet that envoy was not able to give satisfaction to his
+ imperious and somewhat whimsical mistress, whose zeal seemed to cool in
+ proportion to the readiness with which the obstacles to her wishes were
+ removed. Davison was, with reason, discontented. He had done more than any
+ other man either in England or the Provinces, to bring about a hearty
+ cooperation in the common cause, and to allay mutual heart-burnings and
+ suspicions. He had also, owing to the negligence of the English treasurer
+ for the Netherlands, and the niggardliness of Elizabeth, been placed in a
+ position, of great financial embarrassment. His situation was very
+ irksome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I mused at the sentence you sent me," he wrote, "for I know no cause her
+ Majesty hath to shrink at her charges hitherto. The treasure she hath yet
+ disbursed here is not above five or six thousand pounds, besides that
+ which I have been obliged to take up for the saving of her honour, and
+ necessity of her service, in danger otherwise of some notable disgrace. I
+ will not, for shame, say how I have been left here to myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The delay in the formal appointment of Leicester, and, more particularly,
+ of the governors for the cautionary towns, was the cause of great
+ confusion and anarchy in the transitional condition of the country. "The
+ burden I am driven to sustain," said Davison, "doth utterly weary me. If
+ Sir Philip Sidney were here, and if my Lord of Leicester follow not all
+ the sooner, I would use her Majesty's liberty to return home. If her
+ Majesty think me worthy the reputation of a poor, honest, and loyal
+ servant, I have that contents me. For the rest, I wish
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Vivere sine invidia, mollesque inglorius annos
+ Egigere, amicitias et mihi jungere pares.'"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There was something almost prophetic in the tone which this faithful
+ public servant&mdash;to whom, on more than one occasion, such hard measure
+ was to be dealt&mdash;habitually adopted in his private letters and
+ conversation. He did his work, but he had not his reward; and he was
+ already weary of place without power, and industry without recognition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For mine own particular," he said, "I will say with the poet,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Crede mihi, bene qui latuit bene vixit,
+ Et intra fortunam debet quisque manere suam.'"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For, notwithstanding the avidity with which Elizabeth had sought the
+ cautionary towns, and the fierceness with which she had censured the
+ tardiness of the States, she seemed now half inclined to drop the prize
+ which she had so much coveted, and to imitate the very languor which she
+ had so lately rebuked. "She hath what she desired," said Davison, "and
+ might yet have more, if this content her not. Howsoever you value the
+ places at home, they are esteemed here, by such as know them best, no
+ little increase to her Majesty's honour, surety, and greatness, if she be
+ as careful to keep them as happy in getting them. Of this, our cold
+ beginning doth already make me jealous."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sagacious and resolute Princess as she was, she showed something of
+ feminine caprice upon this grave occasion. Not Davison alone, but her most
+ confidential ministers and favourites at home, were perplexed and provoked
+ by her misplaced political coquetries. But while the alternation of her
+ hot and cold fits drove her most devoted courtiers out of patience, there
+ was one symptom that remained invariable throughout all her paroxysms, the
+ rigidity with which her hand was locked. Walsingham, stealthy enough when
+ an advantage was to be gained by subtlety, was manful and determined in
+ his dealings with his friends; and he had more than once been offended
+ with Elizabeth's want of frankness in these transactions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I find you grieved, and not without cause," he wrote to Davison, "in
+ respect to the over thwart proceedings as well there as here. The
+ disorders in those countries would be easily redressed if we could take a
+ thoroughly resolute course here&mdash;a matter that men may rather pray
+ for than hope for. It is very doubtful whether the action now in hand will
+ be accompanied by very hard success, unless they of the country there may
+ be drawn to bear the greatest part of the burden of the wars."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now the great favourite of all had received the appointment which he
+ coveted. The Earl of Leicester was to be Commander-in-Chief of her
+ Majesty's forces in the Netherlands, and representative of her authority
+ in those countries, whatever that office might prove to be. The nature of
+ his post was anomalous from the beginning. It was environed with
+ difficulties, not the least irritating of which proceeded from the
+ captious spirit of the Queen. The Earl was to proceed in great pomp to
+ Holland, but the pomp was to be prepared mainly at his own expense.
+ Besides the auxiliary forces that had been shipped during the latter
+ period of the year, Leicester was raising a force of lancers, from four to
+ eight hundred in number; but to pay for that levy he was forced to
+ mortgage his own property, while the Queen not only refused to advance
+ ready money, but declined endorsing his bills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be confessed that the Earl's courtship of Elizabeth was anything
+ at that moment but a gentle dalliance. In those thorny regions of finance
+ were no beds of asphodel or amaranthine bowers. There was no talk but of
+ troopers, saltpetre, and sulphur, of books of assurance, and bills of
+ exchange; and the aspect of Elizabeth, when the budget was under
+ discussion, must effectually have neutralized for the time any very tender
+ sentiment. The sharpness with which she clipped Leicester's authority,
+ when authority was indispensable to his dignity, and the heavy demands
+ upon his resources that were the result of her avarice, were obstacles
+ more than enough to the calm fruition of his triumphs. He had succeeded,
+ in appearance at least, in the great object of his ambition, this
+ appointment to the Netherlands; but the appointment was no sinecure, and
+ least of all a promising pecuniary speculation. Elizabeth had told the
+ envoys, with reason, that she was not sending forth that man&mdash;whom
+ she loved as a brother&mdash;in order that he might make himself rich. On
+ the contrary, the Earl seemed likely to make himself comparatively poor
+ before he got to the Provinces, while his political power, at the moment,
+ did not seem of more hopeful growth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester had been determined and consistent in this great enterprize from
+ the beginning. He felt intensely the importance of the crisis. He saw that
+ the time had come for swift and uncompromising action, and the impatience
+ with which he bore the fetters imposed upon him may be easily conceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The cause is such," he wrote to Walsingham, "that I had as lief be dead
+ as be in the case I shall be in if this restraint hold for taking the oath
+ there, or if some more authority be not granted than I see her Majesty
+ would I should have. I trust you all will hold hard for this, or else
+ banish me England withal. I have sent you the books to be signed by her
+ Majesty. I beseech you return them with all haste, for I get no money till
+ they be under seal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But her Majesty would not put them under her seal, much to the favourite's
+ discomfiture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your letter yieldeth but cold answer," he wrote, two days afterwards.
+ "Above all things yet that her Majesty doth stick at, I marvel most at her
+ refusal to sign my book of assurance; for there passeth nothing in the
+ earth against her profit by that act, nor any good to me but to satisfy
+ the creditors, who were more scrupulous than needs. I did complain to her
+ of those who did refuse to lend me money, and she was greatly offended
+ with them. But if her Majesty were to stay this, if I were half seas over,
+ I must of necessity come back again, for I may not go without money. I
+ beseech, if the matter be refused by her, bestow a post on me to Harwich.
+ I lie this night at Sir John Peters', and but for this doubt I had been
+ to-morrow at Harwich. I pray God make you all that be counsellors plain
+ and direct to the furtherance of all good service for her Majesty and the
+ realm; and if it be the will of God to plague us that go, and you that
+ tarry, for our sins, yet let us not be negligent to seek to please the
+ Lord."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl was not negligent at any rate in seeking to please the Queen, but
+ she was singularly hard to please. She had never been so uncertain in her
+ humours as at this important crisis. She knew, and had publicly stated as
+ much, that she was "embarking in a war with the greatest potentate in
+ Europe;" yet now that the voyage had fairly commenced, and the waves were
+ rolling around her, she seemed anxious to put back to the shore. For there
+ was even a whisper of peace-negotiations, than which nothing could have
+ been more ill-timed. "I perceive by your message," said Leicester to
+ Walsingham, "that your peace with Spain will go fast on, but this is not
+ the way." Unquestionably it was not the way, and the whisper was, for the
+ moment at least, suppressed. Meanwhile Leicester had reached Harwich, but
+ the post "bestowed on him," contained, as usual, but cold comfort. He was
+ resolved, however, to go manfully forward, and do the work before him,
+ until the enterprise should prove wholly impracticable. It is by the light
+ afforded by the secret never-published correspondence of the period with
+ which we are now occupied, that the true characteristics of Elizabeth, the
+ Earl of Leicester, and other prominent personages, must be scanned, and
+ the study is most important, for it was by those characteristics, in
+ combination with other human elements embodied in distant parts of
+ Christendom, that the destiny of the world was determined. In that age,
+ more than in our own perhaps, the influence of the individual was widely
+ and intensely felt. Historical chymistry is only rendered possible by a
+ detection of the subtle emanations, which it was supposed would for ever
+ elude analysis, but which survive in those secret, frequently ciphered
+ intercommunications. Philip II., William of Orange, Queen Elizabeth,
+ Alexander Farnese, Robert Dudley, never dreamed&mdash;when disclosing
+ their inmost thoughts to their trusted friends at momentous epochs&mdash;that
+ the day would come on earth when those secrets would be no longer hid from
+ the patient enquirer after truth. Well for those whose reputations before
+ the judgment-seat of history appear even comparatively pure, after
+ impartial comparison of their motives with their deeds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For mine own part, Mr. Secretary," wrote Leicester, "I am resolved to do
+ that which shall be fit for a poor man's honour, and honestly to obey her
+ Majesty's commandment. Let the rest fall out to others, it shall not
+ concern me. I mean to assemble myself to the camp, where my authority must
+ wholly lie, and will there do that which in good reason and duty I shall
+ be bound to do. I am sorry that her Majesty doth deal in this sort, and if
+ content to overthrow so willingly her own cause. If there can be means to
+ salve this sore, I will. If not,&mdash;I tell you what shall become of me,
+ as truly as God lives."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet it is remarkable, that, in spite of this dark intimation, the Earl,
+ after all, did not state what was to become of him if the sore was not
+ salved. He was, however, explicit enough as to the causes of his grief,
+ and very vehement in its manifestations. "Another matter which shall
+ concern me deeply," he said, "and all the subjects there, is now by you to
+ be carefully considered, which is&mdash;money. I find that the money is
+ already gone, and this now given to the treasurer will do no more than pay
+ to the end of the month. I beseech you look to it, for by the Lord! I will
+ bear no more so miserable burdens; for if I have no money to pay them, let
+ them come home, or what else. I will not starve them, nor stay them. There
+ was never gentleman nor general so sent out as I am; and if neither Queen
+ nor council care to help it, but leave men desperate, as I see men shall
+ be, that inconvenience will follow which I trust in the Lord I shall be
+ free of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then used language about himself, singularly resembling the phraseology
+ employed by Elizabeth concerning him, when she was scolding the Netherland
+ commissioners for the dilatoriness and parsimony of the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For mine own part," he said, "I have taken upon me this voyage, not as a
+ desperate nor forlorn man, but as one as well contented with his place and
+ calling at home as any subject was ever. My cause was not, nor is, any
+ other than the Lord's and the Queen's. If the Queen fail, yet must I trust
+ in the Lord, and on Him, I see, I am wholly to depend. I can say no more,
+ but pray to God that her Majesty never send General again as I am sent.
+ And yet I will do what I can for her and my country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl had raised a choice body of lancers to accompany him to the
+ Netherlands, but the expense of the levy had come mainly upon his own
+ purse. The Queen had advanced five thousand pounds, which was much less
+ than the requisite amount, while for the balance required, as well as for
+ other necessary expenses, she obstinately declined to furnish Leicester
+ with funds, even refusing him, at last, a temporary loan. She violently
+ accused him of cheating her, reclaimed money which he had wrung from her
+ on good security, and when he had repaid the sum, objected to give him a
+ discharge. As for receiving anything by way of salary, that was quite out
+ of the question. At that moment he would have been only too happy to be
+ reimbursed for what he was already out of pocket. Whether Elizabeth loved
+ Leicester as a brother, or better than a brother, may be a historical
+ question, but it is no question at all that she loved money better than
+ she did Leicester. Unhappy the man, whether foe or favourite, who had
+ pecuniary transactions with her Highness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry," said the Earl, "that her Majesty hath so hard a conceit of
+ me, that I should go about to cozen her, as though I had got a fee simple
+ from her, and had it not before, or that I had not had her full release
+ for payment of the money I borrowed. I pray God, any that did put such
+ scruple in her, have not deceived her more than I have done. I thank God I
+ have a clear conscience for deceiving her, and for money matters. I think
+ I may justly say I have been the only cause of more gain to her coffers
+ than all her chequer-men have been. But so is the hap of some, that all
+ they do is nothing, and others that do nothing, do all, and have all the
+ thanks. But I would this were all the grief I carry with me; but God is my
+ comfort, and on Him I cast all, for there is no surety in this world
+ beside. What hope of help can I have, finding her Majesty so strait with
+ myself as she is? I did trust that&mdash;the cause being hers and this
+ realm's&mdash;if I could have gotten no money of her merchants, she would
+ not have refused to have lent money on so easy prized land as mine, to
+ have been gainer and no loser by it. Her Majesty, I see, will make trial
+ of me how I love her, and what will discourage me from her service. But
+ resolved am I that no worldly respect shall draw me back from my faithful
+ discharge of my duty towards her, though she shall show to hate me, as it
+ goeth very near; for I find no love or favour at all. And I pray you to
+ remember that I have not had one penny of her Majesty towards all these
+ charges of mine&mdash;not one penny-and, by all truth, I have already laid
+ out above five thousand pounds. Her Majesty appointed eight thousand
+ pounds for the levy, which was after the rate of four hundred horse, and,
+ upon my fidelity, there is shipped, of horse of service, eight hundred, so
+ that there ought eight thousand more to have been paid me. No general that
+ ever went that was not paid to the uttermost of these things before he
+ went, but had cash for his provision, which her Majesty would not allow me&mdash;not
+ one groat. Well, let all this go, it is like I shall be the last shall
+ bear this, and some must suffer for the people. Good Mr. Secretary, let
+ her Majesty know this, for I deserve God-a-mercy, at the least."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, to do him justice, was thoroughly alive to the importance of
+ the Crisis. On political principle, at any rate, he was a firm supporter
+ of Protestantism, and even of Puritanism; a form of religion which
+ Elizabeth detested, and in which, with keen instinct, she detected a
+ mutinous element against the divine right of kings. The Earl was quite
+ convinced of the absolute necessity that England should take up the
+ Netherland matter most vigorously, on pain of being herself destroyed. All
+ the most sagacious counsellors of Elizabeth were day by day more and more
+ confirmed in this opinion, and were inclined heartily to support the new
+ Lieutenant-General. As for Leicester himself, while fully conscious of his
+ own merits, and of his firm intent to do his duty, he was also grateful to
+ those who were willing to befriend him in his arduous enterprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have received a letter from my Lord Willoughby," he said, "to my
+ seeming, as wise a letter as I have read a great while, and not unfit for
+ her Majesty's sight. I pray God open her eyes, that they may behold her
+ present estate indeed, and the wonderful means that God doth offer unto
+ her. If she lose these opportunities, who can look for other but dishonour
+ and destruction? My Lord Treasurer hath also written me a most hearty and
+ comfortable letter touching this voyage, not only in showing the
+ importance of it, both for her Majesty's own safety and the realm's, but
+ that the whole state of religion doth depend thereon, and therefore doth
+ faithfully promise his whole and best assistance for the supply of all
+ wants. I was not a little glad to receive such a letter from him at this
+ time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And from on board the 'Amity,' ready to set sail, he expressed his thanks
+ to Burghley, at finding him so "earnestly bent for the good supply and
+ maintenance of us poor men sent in her Majesty's service and our
+ country's."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Walsingham, earnestly a defender of the Netherland cause from the
+ beginning, he was wearied and disgusted with fighting against the Queen's
+ parsimony and caprice. "He is utterly discouraged," said Leicester to
+ Burghley, "to deal any more in these causes. I pray God your Lordship grow
+ not so too; for then all will to the ground; on my poor side especially."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to Sir Francis himself, he wrote, even as his vessel was casting off
+ her moorings:&mdash;"I am sorry, Mr. Secretary," he said, "to find you so
+ discouraged, and that her Majesty doth deem you so partial. And yet my
+ suits to her Majesty have not of late been so many nor great, while the
+ greatest, I am sure, are for her Majesty's own service. For my part, I
+ will discharge my duty as far as my poor ability and capacity shall serve,
+ and if I shall not have her gracious and princely support and supply, the
+ lack will be to us, for the present, but the shame and dishonour will be
+ hers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with these parting words the Earl committed himself to the December
+ seas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Davison had been meantime doing his best to prepare the way in the
+ Netherlands for the reception of the English administration. What man
+ could do, without money and without authority, he had done. The governors
+ for Flushing and the Brill, Sir Philip Sidney and Sir Thomas Cecil, eldest
+ son of Lord Burghley, had been appointed, but had not arrived. Their
+ coming was anxiously looked for, as during the interval the condition of
+ the garrisons was deplorable. The English treasurer&mdash;by some
+ unaccountable and unpardonable negligence, for which it is to be feared
+ the Queen was herself to blame&mdash;was not upon the spot, and Davison
+ was driven out of his wits to devise expedients to save the soldiers from
+ starving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Lordship has seen by my former letters," wrote the Ambassador to
+ Burghley from Flushing, "what shift I have been driven to for the relief
+ of this garrison here, left 'a l'abandon;' without which means they had
+ all fallen into wild and shameful disorder, to her Majesty's great
+ disgrace and overthrow of her service. I am compelled, unless I would see
+ the poor men famish, and her Majesty dishonoured, to try my poor credit
+ for them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General Sir John Norris was in the Betuwe, threatening Nvymegen, a town
+ which he found "not so flexible as he had hoped;" and, as he had but two
+ thousand men, while Alexander Farnese was thought to be marching upon him
+ with ten thousand, his position caused great anxiety. Meantime, his
+ brother, Sir Edward, a hot-headed and somewhat wilful young man, who
+ "thought that all was too little for him," was giving the sober Davison a
+ good deal of trouble. He had got himself into a quarrel, both with that
+ envoy and with Roger Williams, by claiming the right to control military
+ matters in Flushing until the arrival of Sidney. "If Sir Thomas and Sir
+ Philip," said Davison, "do not make choice of more discreet, staid, and
+ expert commanders than those thrust into these places by Mr. Norris, they
+ will do themselves a great deal of worry, and her Majesty a great deal of
+ hurt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As might naturally be expected, the lamentable condition of the English
+ soldiers, unpaid and starving&mdash;according to the report of the Queen's
+ envoy himself&mdash;exercised anything but a salutary influence upon the
+ minds of the Netherlanders and perpetually fed the hopes of the Spanish
+ partizans that a composition with Philip and Parma would yet take place.
+ On the other hand, the States had been far more liberal in raising funds
+ than the Queen had shown herself to be, and were somewhat indignant at
+ being perpetually taunted with parsimony by her agents. Davison was
+ offended by the injustice of Norris in this regard. "The complaints which
+ the General hath made of the States to her Majesty," said he, "are without
+ cause, and I think, when your Lordship shall examine it well, you will
+ find it no little sum they have already disbursed unto him for their part.
+ Wherein, nevertheless, if they had been looked into, they were somewhat
+ the more excusable, considering how ill our people at her Majesty's
+ entertainment were satisfied hitherto&mdash;a thing that doth much
+ prejudice her reputation, and hurt her service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, however, the die had been cast. The Queen, although rejecting the
+ proposed sovereignty of the Netherlands, had espoused their cause, by
+ solemn treaty of alliance, and thereby had thrown down the gauntlet to
+ Spain. She deemed it necessary, therefore, out of respect for the opinions
+ of mankind, to issue a manifesto of her motives to the world. The document
+ was published, simultaneously in Dutch, French, English, and Italian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this solemn state-paper she spoke of the responsibility of princes to
+ the Almighty, of the ancient friendship between England and the
+ Netherlands, of the cruelty and tyranny of the Spaniards, of their
+ violation of the liberties of the Provinces, of their hanging, beheading,
+ banishing without law and against justice, in the space of a few months,
+ so many of the highest nobles in the land. Although in the beginning of
+ the cruel persecution, the pretext had been the maintenance of the
+ Catholic religion, yet it was affirmed they had not failed to exercise
+ their barbarity upon Catholics also, and even upon ecclesiastics. Of the
+ principal persons put to death, no one, it was asserted, had been more
+ devoted to the ancient church than was the brave Count Egmont, who, for
+ his famous victories in the service of Spain, could never be forgotten in
+ veracious history any more than could be the cruelty of his execution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The land had been made desolate, continued the Queen, with fire, sword,
+ famine, and murder. These misfortunes had ever been bitterly deplored by
+ friendly nations, and none could more truly regret such sufferings than
+ did the English, the oldest allies, and familiar neighbours of the
+ Provinces, who had been as close to them in the olden time by community of
+ connexion and language, as man and wife. She declared that she had
+ frequently, by amicable embassies, warned her brother of Spain&mdash;speaking
+ to him like a good, dear sister and neighbour&mdash;that unless he
+ restrained the cruelty of his governors and their soldiers, he was sure to
+ force his Provinces into allegiance to some other power. She expressed the
+ danger in which she should be placed if the Spaniards succeeded in
+ establishing their absolute government in the Netherlands, from which
+ position their attacks upon England would be incessant. She spoke of the
+ enterprise favoured and set on foot by the Pope and by Spain, against the
+ kingdom of Ireland. She alluded to the dismissal of the Spanish envoy, Don
+ Bernardino de Mendoza, who had been treated by her with great regard for a
+ long time, but who had been afterwards discovered in league with certain
+ ill-disposed and seditious subjects of hers, and with publicly condemned
+ traitors. That envoy had arranged a plot according to which, as appeared
+ by his secret despatches, an invasion of England by a force of men, coming
+ partly from Spain, and partly from the Netherlands, might be successfully
+ managed, and he had even noted down the necessary number of ships and men,
+ with various other details. Some of the conspirators had fled, she
+ observed, and were now consorting with Mendoza, who, after his expulsion
+ from England, had been appointed ambassador in Paris; while some had been
+ arrested, and had confessed the plot. So soon as this envoy had been
+ discovered to be the chief of a rebellion and projected invasion, the
+ Queen had requested him, she said, to leave the kingdom within a
+ reasonable time, as one who was the object of deadly hatred to the English
+ people. She had then sent an agent to Spain, in order to explain the whole
+ transaction. That agent had not been allowed even to deliver despatches to
+ the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the French had sought, at a previous period, to establish their
+ authority in Scotland, even as the Spaniards had attempted to do in the
+ Netherlands, and through the enormous ambition of the House of Guise, to
+ undertake the invasion of her kingdom, she had frustrated their plots,
+ even as she meant to suppress these Spanish conspiracies. She spoke of the
+ Prince of Parma as more disposed by nature to mercy and humanity, than
+ preceding governors had been, but as unable to restrain the
+ blood-thirstiness of Spaniards, increased by long indulgence. She avowed,
+ in assuming the protection of the Netherlands, and in sending her troops
+ to those countries, but three objects: peace, founded upon the recognition
+ of religious freedom in the Provinces, restoration of their ancient
+ political liberties, and security for England. Never could there be
+ tranquillity, for her own realm until these neighbouring countries were
+ tranquil. These were her ends and aims, despite all that slanderous
+ tongues might invent. The world, she observed, was overflowing with
+ blasphemous libels, calumnies, scandalous pamphlets; for never had the
+ Devil been so busy in supplying evil tongues with venom against the
+ professors of the Christian religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She added that in a pamphlet, ascribed to the Archbishop of Milan, just
+ published, she had been accused of ingratitude to the King of Spain, and
+ of plots to take the life of Alexander Farnese. In answer to the first
+ charge, she willingly acknowledged her obligations to the King of Spain
+ during the reign of her sister. She pronounced it, however, an absolute
+ falsehood that he had ever saved her life, as if she had ever been
+ condemned to death. She likewise denied earnestly the charge regarding the
+ Prince of Parma. She protested herself incapable of such a crime, besides
+ declaring that he had never given her offence. On the contrary, he was a
+ man whom she had ever honoured for the rare qualities that she had noted
+ in him, and for which he had deservedly acquired a high reputation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, in brief analysis, was the memorable Declaration of Elizabeth in
+ favour of the Netherlands&mdash;a document which was a hardly disguised
+ proclamation of war against Philip. In no age of the world could an
+ unequivocal agreement to assist rebellious subjects, with men and money,
+ against their sovereign, be considered otherwise than as a hostile
+ demonstration. The King of Spain so regarded the movement, and forthwith
+ issued a decree, ordering the seizure of all English as well as all
+ Netherland vessels within his ports, together with the arrest of persons,
+ and confiscation of property.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Subsequently to the publication of the Queen's memorial, and before the
+ departure of the Earl of Leicester, Sir Philip Sidney, having received his
+ appointment, together with the rank of general of cavalry, arrived in the
+ Isle of Walcheren, as governor of Flushing, at the head of a portion of
+ the English contingent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible not to contemplate with affection so radiant a figure,
+ shining through the cold mists of that Zeeland winter, and that distant
+ and disastrous epoch. There is hardly a character in history upon which
+ the imagination can dwell with more unalloyed delight. Not in romantic
+ fiction was there ever created a more attractive incarnation of martial
+ valour, poetic genius, and purity of heart. If the mocking spirit of the
+ soldier of Lepanto could "smile chivalry away," the name alone of his
+ English contemporary is potent enough to conjure it back again, so long as
+ humanity is alive to the nobler impulses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot pass him over in silence," says a dusty chronicler, "that
+ glorious star, that lively pattern of virtue, and the lovely joy of all
+ the learned sort. It was God's will that he should be born into the world,
+ even to show unto our age a sample of ancient virtue." The descendant of
+ an ancient Norman race, and allied to many of the proudest nobles in
+ England, Sidney himself was but a commoner, a private individual, a
+ soldier of fortune. He was now in his thirty second year, and should have
+ been foremost among the states men of Elizabeth, had it not been,
+ according to Lord Bacon, a maxim of the Cecils, that "able men should be
+ by design and of purpose suppressed." Whatever of truth there may have
+ been in the bitter remark, it is certainly strange that a man so gifted as
+ Sidney&mdash;of whom his father-in-law Walsingham had declared, that
+ "although he had influence in all countries, and a hand upon all affairs,
+ his Philip did far overshoot him with his own bow"&mdash;should have
+ passed so much of his life in retirement, or in comparatively
+ insignificant employments. The Queen, as he himself observed, was most apt
+ to interpret everything to his disadvantage. Among those who knew him
+ well, there seems never to have been a dissenting voice. His father, Sir
+ Henry Sidney, lord-deputy of Ireland, and president of Wales, a states man
+ of accomplishments and experience, called him "lumen familiae suae," and
+ said of him, with pardonable pride, "that he had the most virtues which he
+ had ever found in any man; that he was the very formular that all
+ well-disposed young gentlemen do form their manners and life by."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The learned Hubert Languet, companion of Melancthon, tried friend of
+ William the Silent, was his fervent admirer and correspondent. The great
+ Prince of Orange held him in high esteem, and sent word to Queen
+ Elizabeth, that having himself been an actor in the most important affairs
+ of Europe, and acquainted with her foremost men, he could "pledge his
+ credit that her Majesty had one of the ripest and greatest councillors of
+ state in Sir Philip Sidney that lived in Europe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The incidents of his brief and brilliant life, up to his arrival upon the
+ fatal soil of the Netherlands, are too well known to need recalling.
+ Adorned with the best culture that, in a learned age, could be obtained in
+ the best seminaries of his native country, where, during childhood and
+ youth, he had been distinguished for a "lovely and familiar gravity beyond
+ his years," he rapidly acquired the admiration of his comrades and the
+ esteem of all his teachers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Travelling for three years, he made the acquaintance and gained the
+ personal regard of such opposite characters as Charles IX. of France,
+ Henry of Navarre, Don John of Austria, and William of Orange, and
+ perfected his accomplishments by residence and study, alternately, in
+ courts, camps, and learned universities. He was in Paris during the
+ memorable days of August, 1572, and narrowly escaped perishing in the St.
+ Bartholomew Massacre. On his return, he was, for a brief period, the idol
+ of the English court, which, it was said, "was maimed without his
+ company." At the age of twenty-one he was appointed special envoy to
+ Vienna, ostensibly for the purpose of congratulating the Emperor Rudolph
+ upon his accession, but in reality that he might take the opportunity of
+ sounding the secret purposes of the Protestant princes of Germany, in
+ regard to the great contest of the age. In this mission, young as he was,
+ he acquitted himself, not only to the satisfaction, but to the admiration
+ of Walsingham, certainly a master himself in that occult science, the
+ diplomacy of the sixteenth century. "There hath not been," said he, "any
+ gentleman, I am sure, that hath gone through so honourable a charge with
+ as great commendations as he."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the memorable marriage-project of Queen Elizabeth with Anjou seemed
+ about to take effect, he denounced the scheme in a most spirited and
+ candid letter, addressed to her Majesty; nor is it recorded that the Queen
+ was offended with his frankness. Indeed we are informed that "although he
+ found a sweet stream of sovereign humours in that well-tempered lady to
+ run against him, yet found he safety in herself against that selfness
+ which appeared to threaten him in her." Whatever this might mean,
+ translated out of euphuism into English, it is certain that his conduct
+ was regarded with small favour by the court-grandees, by whom "worth,
+ duty, and justice, were looked upon with no other eyes than Lamia's."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The difficulty of swimming against that sweet stream of sovereign humours
+ in the well-tempered Elizabeth, was aggravated by his quarrel, at this
+ period, with the magnificent Oxford. A dispute at a tennis-court, where
+ many courtiers and foreigners were looking on, proceeded rapidly from one
+ extremity to another. The Earl commanded Sir Philip to leave the place.
+ Sir Philip responded, that if he were of a mind that he should go, he
+ himself was of a mind that he should remain; adding that if he had
+ entreated, where he had no right to command, he might have done more than
+ "with the scourge of fury."&mdash;"This answer," says Fulke Greville, in a
+ style worthy of Don Adriano de Armado, "did, like a bellows, blowing up
+ the sparks of excess already kindled, make my lord scornfully call Sir
+ Philip by the name of puppy. In which progress of heat, as the tempest
+ grew more and more vehement within, so did their hearts breathe out their
+ perturbations in a more loud and shrill accent;" and so on; but the
+ impending duel was the next day forbidden by express command of her
+ Majesty. Sidney, not feeling the full force of the royal homily upon the
+ necessity of great deference from gentlemen to their superiors in rank, in
+ order to protect all orders from the insults of plebeians, soon afterwards
+ retired from the court. To his sylvan seclusion the world owes the
+ pastoral and chivalrous romance of the 'Arcadia' and to the pompous Earl,
+ in consequence, an emotion of gratitude. Nevertheless, it was in him to
+ do, rather than to write, and humanity seems defrauded, when forced to
+ accept the 'Arcadia,' the `Defence of Poesy,' and the 'Astrophel and
+ Stella,' in discharge of its claims upon so great and pure a soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding this disagreeable affair, and despite the memorable letter
+ against Anjou, Sir Philip suddenly flashes upon us again, as one of the
+ four challengers in a tournament to honour the Duke's presence in England.
+ A vision of him in blue gilded armour&mdash;with horses caparisoned in
+ cloth of gold, pearl-embroidered, attended by pages in cloth of silver,
+ Venetian hose, laced hats, and by gentlemen, yeomen, and trumpeters, in
+ yellow velvet cassocks, buskins, and feathers&mdash;as one of "the four
+ fostered children of virtuous desire" (to wit, Anjou) storming "the castle
+ of perfect Beauty" (to wit, Queen Elizabeth, aetatis 47) rises out of the
+ cloud-dusts of ancient chronicle for a moment, and then vanishes into air
+ again.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Having that day his hand, his horse, his lance,
+ Guided so well that they attained the prize
+ Both in the judgment of our English eyes,
+ But of some sent by that sweet enemy, France,"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ as he chivalrously sings, he soon afterwards felt inclined for wider
+ fields of honourable adventure. It was impossible that knight-errant so
+ true should not feel keenest sympathy with an oppressed people struggling
+ against such odds, as the Netherlanders were doing in their contest with
+ Spain. So soon as the treaty with England was arranged, it was his
+ ambition to take part in the dark and dangerous enterprise, and, being
+ son-in-law to Walsingham and nephew to Leicester, he had a right to
+ believe that his talents and character would, on this occasion, be
+ recognised. But, like his "very friend," Lord Willoughby, he was "not of
+ the genus Reptilia, and could neither creep nor crouch," and he failed, as
+ usual, to win his way to the Queen's favour. The governorship of Flushing
+ was denied him, and, stung to the heart by such neglect, he determined to
+ seek his fortune beyond the seas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Philip hath taken a very hard resolution," wrote Walsingham to
+ Davison, "to accompany Sir Francis Drake in this voyage, moved thereto for
+ that he saw her Majesty disposed to commit the charge of Flushing unto
+ some other; which he reputed would fall out greatly to his disgrace, to
+ see another preferred before him, both for birth and judgment inferior
+ unto him. The despair thereof and the disgrace that he doubted he should
+ receive have carried him into a different course."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen, however, relenting at last, interfered to frustrate his design.
+ Having thus balked his ambition in the Indian seas, she felt pledged to
+ offer him the employment which he had originally solicited, and she
+ accordingly conferred upon him the governorship of Flushing, with the rank
+ of general of horse, under the Earl of Leicester. In the latter part of
+ November, he cast anchor, in the midst of a violent storm, at Rammekins,
+ and thence came to the city of his government. Young, and looking even
+ younger than his years&mdash;"not only of an excellent wit, but extremely
+ beautiful of face"&mdash;with delicately chiselled Anglo-Norman features,
+ smooth fair cheek, a faint moustache, blue eyes, and a mass of
+ amber-coloured hair; such was the author of 'Arcadia' and the governor of
+ Flushing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus an Anglo-Norman representative of ancient race had come back to
+ the home of his ancestors. Scholar, poet, knight-errant, finished
+ gentleman, he aptly typified the result of seven centuries of civilization
+ upon the wild Danish pirate. For among those very quicksands of
+ storm-beaten Walachria that wondrous Normandy first came into existence
+ whose wings were to sweep over all the high places of Christendom. Out of
+ these creeks, lagunes, and almost inaccessible sandbanks, those bold
+ freebooters sailed forth on their forays against England, France, and
+ other adjacent countries, and here they brought and buried the booty of
+ many a wild adventure. Here, at a later day, Rollo the Dane had that
+ memorable dream of leprosy, the cure of which was the conversion of North
+ Gaul into Normandy, of Pagans into Christians, and the subsequent conquest
+ of every throne in Christendom from Ultima Thule to Byzantium. And now the
+ descendant of those early freebooters had come back to the spot, at a
+ moment when a wider and even more imperial swoop was to be made by their
+ modern representatives. For the sea-kings of the sixteenth century&mdash;the
+ Drakes, Hawkinses, Frobishers, Raleighs, Cavendishes&mdash;the De Moors,
+ Heemskerks, Barendts&mdash;all sprung of the old pirate-lineage, whether
+ called Englanders or Hollanders, and instinct with the same hereditary
+ love of adventure, were about to wrestle with ancient tyrannies, to
+ explore the most inaccessible regions, and to establish new commonwealths
+ in worlds undreamed of by their ancestors&mdash;to accomplish, in short,
+ more wondrous feats than had been attempted by the Knuts, and Rollos,
+ Rurics, Ropers, and Tancreds, of an earlier age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The place which Sidney was appointed to govern was one of great military
+ and commercial importance. Flushing was the key to the navigation of the
+ North Seas, ever since the disastrous storm of a century before, in which
+ a great trading city on the outermost verge of the island had been
+ swallowed bodily by the ocean. The Emperor had so thoroughly recognized
+ its value, as to make special mention of the necessity for its
+ preservation, in his private instructions to Philip, and now the Queen of
+ England had confided it to one who was competent to appreciate and to
+ defend the prize. "How great a jewel this place (Flushing) is to the crown
+ of England," wrote Sidney to his Uncle Leicester, "and to the Queen's
+ safety, I need not now write it to your lordship, who knows it so well.
+ Yet I must needs say, the better I know it, the more I find the
+ preciousness of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not enter into his government, however, with much pomp and
+ circumstance, but came afoot into Flushing in the midst of winter and foul
+ weather. "Driven to land at Rammekins," said he, "because the wind began
+ to rise in such sort as from thence our mariners durst not enter the town,
+ I came with as dirty a walk as ever poor governor entered his charge
+ withal." But he was cordially welcomed, nor did he arrive by any means too
+ soon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I find the people very glad of our coming," he said, "and promise myself
+ as much surety in keeping this town, as popular good-will, gotten by light
+ hopes, and by as slight conceits, may breed; for indeed the garrison is
+ far too weak to command by authority, which is pity . . . . I think,
+ truly, that if my coming had been longer delayed, some alteration would
+ have followed; for the truth is, this people is weary of war, and if they
+ do not see such a course taken as may be likely to defend them, they will
+ in a sudden give over the cause. . . . All will be lost if government be
+ not presently used."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He expressed much anxiety for the arrival of his uncle, with which
+ sentiments he assured the Earl that the Netherlanders fully sympathized.
+ "Your Lordship's coming," he said, "is as much longed for as Messias is of
+ the Jews. It is indeed most necessary that your Lordship make great speed
+ to reform both the Dutch and English abuses."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Able men should be by design and of purpose suppressed
+ He did his work, but he had not his reward
+ Matter that men may rather pray for than hope for
+ Not of the genus Reptilia, and could neither creep nor crouch
+ Others that do nothing, do all, and have all the thanks
+ Peace-at-any-price party
+ The busy devil of petty economy
+ Thought that all was too little for him
+ Weary of place without power
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. 1585-1586, Part 1.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Earl of Leicester&mdash;His Triumphal Entrance into Holland&mdash;English
+ Spies about him&mdash;Importance of Holland to England&mdash;Spanish Schemes
+ for invading England&mdash;Letter of the Grand Commander&mdash;Perilous
+ Position of England&mdash;True Nature of the Contest&mdash;wealth and Strength
+ of the Provinces&mdash;Power of the Dutch and English People&mdash;Affection
+ of the Hollanders for the Queen&mdash;Secret Purposes of Leicester&mdash;
+ Wretched condition of English Troops&mdash;The Nassaus and Hohenlo&mdash;The
+ Earl's Opinion of them&mdash;Clerk and Killigrew&mdash;Interview with the
+ States Government General offered to the Earl&mdash;Discussions on the
+ Subject&mdash;The Earl accepts the Office&mdash;His Ambition and Mistakes&mdash;His
+ Installation at the Hague&mdash;Intimations of the Queen's Displeasure&mdash;
+ Deprecatory Letters of Leicester&mdash;Davison's Mission to England&mdash;
+ Queen's Anger and Jealousy&mdash;Her angry Letters to the Earl and the
+ States&mdash;Arrival of Davison&mdash;Stormy Interview with the Queen&mdash;The
+ second one is calmer&mdash;Queen's Wrath somewhat mitigated&mdash;Mission of
+ Heneago to the States&mdash;Shirley sent to England by the Earl&mdash;His
+ Interview with Elizabeth
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At last the Earl of Leicester came. Embarking at Harwich, with a fleet of
+ fifty ships, and attended "by the flower and chief gallants of England"&mdash;the
+ Lords Sheffield, Willoughby, North, Burroughs, Sir Gervase Clifton, Sir
+ William Russell, Sir Robert Sidney, and others among the number&mdash;the
+ new lieutenant-general of the English forces in the Netherlands arrived on
+ the 19th December, 1585, at Flushing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His nephew, Sir Philip Sidney, and Count Maurice of Nassau, with a body of
+ troops and a great procession of civil functionaries; were in readiness to
+ receive him, and to escort him to the lodgings prepared for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, was then fifty-four years of age. There
+ are few personages in English history whose adventures, real or
+ fictitious, have been made more familiar to the world than his have been,
+ or whose individuality has been presented in more picturesque fashion, by
+ chronicle, tragedy, or romance. Born in the same day of the month and hour
+ of the day with the Queen, but two years before her birth, the supposed
+ synastry of their destinies might partly account, in that age of
+ astrological superstition, for the influence which he perpetually exerted.
+ They had, moreover, been fellow-prisoners together, in the commencement of
+ the reign of Mary, and it is possible that he may have been the medium
+ through which the indulgent expressions of Philip II. were conveyed to the
+ Princess Elizabeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His grandfather, John Dudley, that "caterpillar of the commonwealth," who
+ lost his head in the first year of Henry VIII. as a reward for the grist
+ which he brought to the mill of Henry VII.; his father, the mighty Duke of
+ Northumberland, who rose out of the wreck of an obscure and ruined family
+ to almost regal power, only to perish, like his predecessor, upon the
+ scaffold, had bequeathed him nothing save rapacity, ambition, and the
+ genius to succeed. But Elizabeth seemed to ascend the throne only to
+ bestow gifts upon her favourite. Baronies and earldoms, stars and garters,
+ manors and monopolies, castles and forests, church livings and college
+ chancellorships, advowsons and sinecures, emoluments and dignities, the
+ most copious and the most exalted, were conferred upon him in breathless
+ succession. Wine, oil, currants, velvets, ecclesiastical benefices,
+ university headships, licences to preach, to teach, to ride, to sail, to
+ pick and to steal, all brought "grist to his mill." His grandfather, "the
+ horse leach and shearer," never filled his coffers more rapidly than did
+ Lord Robert, the fortunate courtier. Of his early wedlock with the
+ ill-starred Amy Robsart, of his nuptial projects with the Queen, of his
+ subsequent marriages and mock-marriages with Douglas Sheffield and Lettice
+ of Essex, of his plottings, poisonings, imaginary or otherwise, of his
+ countless intrigues, amatory and political&mdash;of that luxuriant,
+ creeping, flaunting, all-pervading existence which struck its fibres into
+ the mould, and coiled itself through the whole fabric, of Elizabeth's life
+ and reign&mdash;of all this the world has long known too much to render a
+ repetition needful here. The inmost nature and the secret deeds of a man
+ placed so high by wealth and station, can be seen but darkly through the
+ glass of contemporary record. There was no tribunal to sit upon his guilt.
+ A grandee could be judged only when no longer a favourite, and the
+ infatuation of Elizabeth for Leicester terminated only with his life. He
+ stood now upon the soil of the Netherlands in the character of a
+ "Messiah," yet he has been charged with crimes sufficient to send twenty
+ humbler malefactors to the gibbet. "I think," said a most malignant
+ arraigner of the man, in a published pamphlet, "that the Earl of Leicester
+ hath more blood lying upon his head at this day, crying for vengeance,
+ than ever had private man before, were he never so wicked."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly the mass of misdemeanours and infamies hurled at the head of the
+ favourite by that "green-coated Jesuit," father Parsons, under the title
+ of 'Leycester's Commonwealth,' were never accepted as literal verities;
+ yet the value of the precept, to calumniate boldly, with the certainty
+ that much of the calumny would last for ever, was never better illustrated
+ than in the case of Robert Dudley. Besides the lesser delinquencies of
+ filling his purse by the sale of honours and dignities, by violent
+ ejectments from land, fraudulent titles, rapacious enclosures of commons,
+ by taking bribes for matters of justice, grace, and supplication to the
+ royal authority, he was accused of forging various letters to the Queen,
+ often to ruin his political adversaries, and of plottings to entrap them
+ into conspiracies, playing first the comrade and then the informer. The
+ list of his murders and attempts to murder was almost endless. "His
+ lordship hath a special fortune," saith the Jesuit, "that when he desireth
+ any woman's favour, whatsoever person standeth in his way hath the luck to
+ die quickly." He was said to have poisoned Alice Drayton, Lady Lennox,
+ Lord Sussex, Sir Nicholas Throgmorton, Lord Sheffield, whose widow he
+ married and then poisoned, Lord Essex, whose widow he also married, and
+ intended to poison, but who was said to have subsequently poisoned him&mdash;besides
+ murders or schemes for murder of various other individuals, both French
+ and English. "He was a rare artist in poison," said Sir Robert Naunton,
+ and certainly not Caesar Borgia, nor his father or sister, was more
+ accomplished in that difficult profession than was Dudley, if half the
+ charges against him could be believed. Fortunately for his fame, many of
+ them were proved to be false. Sir Henry Sidney, lord deputy of Ireland, at
+ the time of the death of Lord Essex, having caused a diligent inquiry to
+ be made into that dark affair, wrote to the council that it was usual for
+ the Earl to fall into a bloody flux when disturbed in his mind, and that
+ his body when opened showed no signs of poison. It is true that Sir Henry,
+ although an honourable man, was Leicester's brother-in-law, and that
+ perhaps an autopsy was not conducted at that day in Ireland on very
+ scientific principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His participation in the strange death of his first wife was a matter of
+ current belief among his contemporaries. "He is infamed by the death of
+ his wife," said Burghley, and the tale has since become so interwoven with
+ classic and legendary fiction, as well as with more authentic history,
+ that the phantom of the murdered Amy Robsart is sure to arise at every
+ mention of the Earl's name. Yet a coroner's inquest&mdash;as appears from
+ his own secret correspondence with his relative and agent at Cumnor&mdash;was
+ immediately and persistently demanded by Dudley. A jury was impaneled&mdash;every
+ man of them a stranger to him, and some of them enemies. Antony Forster,
+ Appleyard, and Arthur Robsart, brother-in-law and brother of the lady,
+ were present, according to Dudley's special request; "and if more of her
+ friends could have been sent," said he, "I would have sent them;" but with
+ all their minuteness of inquiry, "they could find," wrote Blount, "no
+ presumptions of evil," although he expressed a suspicion that "some of the
+ jurymen were sorry that they could not." That the unfortunate lady was
+ killed by a fall down stairs was all that could be made of it by a
+ coroner's inquest, rather hostile than otherwise, and urged to rigorous
+ investigation by the supposed culprit himself. Nevertheless, the calumny
+ has endured for three centuries, and is likely to survive as many more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever crimes Dudley may have committed in the course of his career,
+ there is no doubt whatever that he was the most abused man in Europe. He
+ had been deeply wounded by the Jesuit's artful publication, in which all
+ the misdeeds with which he was falsely or justly charged were drawn up in
+ awful array, in a form half colloquial, half judicial. "You had better
+ give some contentment to my Lord Leicester," wrote the French envoy from
+ London to his government, "on account of the bitter feelings excited in
+ him by these villainous books lately written against him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl himself ascribed these calumnies to the Jesuits, to the Guise
+ faction, and particularly to&mdash;the Queen of Scots. He was said, in
+ consequence, to have vowed an eternal hatred to that most unfortunate and
+ most intriguing Princess. "Leicester has lately told a friend," wrote
+ Charles Paget, "that he will persecute you to the uttermost, for that he
+ supposeth your Majesty to be privy to the setting forth of the book
+ against him." Nevertheless, calumniated or innocent he was at least
+ triumphant over calumny. Nothing could shake his hold upon Elizabeth's
+ affections. The Queen scorned but resented the malignant attacks upon the
+ reputation of her favourite. She declared "before God and in her
+ conscience, that she knew the libels against him to be most scandalous,
+ and such as none but an incarnate devil himself could dream to be true."
+ His power, founded not upon genius nor virtue, but upon woman's caprice,
+ shone serenely above the gulf where there had been so many shipwrecks. "I
+ am now passing into another world," said Sussex, upon his death-bed, to
+ his friends, "and I must leave you to your fortunes; but beware of the
+ gipsy, or he will be too hard for you. You know not the beast so well as I
+ do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "gipsy," as he had been called from his dark complexion, had been
+ renowned in youth for the beauty of his person, being "tall and singularly
+ well-featured, of a sweet aspect, but high foreheaded, which was of no
+ discommendation," according to Naunton. The Queen, who had the passion of
+ her father for tall and proper men, was easier won by externals, from her
+ youth even to the days of her dotage, than befitted so very sagacious a
+ personage. Chamberlains, squires of the body, carvers, cup-bearers,
+ gentlemen-ushers, porters, could obtain neither place nor favour at court,
+ unless distinguished for stature, strength, or extraordinary activity. To
+ lose a tooth had been known to cause the loss of a place, and the
+ excellent constitution of leg which helped Sir Christopher Hatton into the
+ chancellorship, was not more remarkable perhaps than the success of
+ similar endowments in other contemporaries. Leicester, although stately
+ and imposing, had passed his summer solstice. A big bulky man, with a long
+ red face, a bald head, a defiant somewhat sinister eye, a high nose, and a
+ little torrent of foam-white curly beard, he was still magnificent in
+ costume. Rustling in satin and feathers, with jewels in his ears, and his
+ velvet toque stuck as airily as ever upon the side of his head, he amazed
+ the honest Hollanders, who had been used to less gorgeous chieftains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Every body is wondering at the great magnificence and splendour of his
+ clothes," said the plain chronicler of Utrecht. For, not much more than a
+ year before, Fulke Greville had met at Delft a man whose external
+ adornments were simpler; a somewhat slip-shod personage, whom he thus
+ pourtrayed: "His uppermost garment was a gown," said the euphuistic Fulke,
+ "yet such as, I confidently affirm, a mean-born student of our Inns of
+ Court would not have been well disposed to walk the streets in. Unbuttoned
+ his doublet was, and of like precious matter and form to the other. His
+ waistcoat, which showed itself under it, not unlike the best sort of those
+ woollen knit ones which our ordinary barge-watermen row us in. His company
+ about him, the burgesses of that beerbrewing town. No external sign of
+ degree could have discovered the inequality of his worth or estate from
+ that multitude. Nevertheless, upon conversing with him, there was an
+ outward passage of inward greatness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of a certainty there must have been an outward passage of inward greatness
+ about him; for the individual in unbuttoned doublet and bargeman's
+ waistcoat, was no other than William the Silent. A different kind of
+ leader had now descended among those rebels, yet it would be a great
+ mistake to deny the capacity or vigorous intentions of the magnificent
+ Earl, who certainly was like to find himself in a more difficult and
+ responsible situation than any he had yet occupied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now began a triumphal progress through the land, with a series of
+ mighty banquets and festivities, in which no man could play a better part
+ than Leicester. From Flushing he came to Middelburg, where, upon Christmas
+ eve (according to the new reckoning), there was an entertainment, every
+ dish of which has been duly chronicled. Pigs served on their feet,
+ pheasants in their feathers, and baked swans with their necks thrust
+ through gigantic pie-crust; crystal castles of confectionery with silver
+ streams flowing at their base, and fair virgins leaning from the
+ battlements, looking for their new English champion, "wine in abundance,
+ variety of all sorts, and wonderful welcomes "&mdash;such was the bill of
+ fare. The next day the Lieutenant-General returned the compliment to the
+ magistrates of Middelburg with a tremendous feast. Then came an interlude
+ of unexpected famine; for as the Earl sailed with his suite in a fleet of
+ two hundred vessels for Dort&mdash;a voyage of not many hours' usual
+ duration&mdash;there descended a mighty frozen fog upon the waters, and
+ they lay five whole days and nights in their ships, almost starved with
+ hunger and cold&mdash;offering in vain a "pound of silver for a pound of
+ bread." Emerging at last from this dismal predicament, he landed at Dort,
+ and so went to Rotterdam and Delft, everywhere making his way through
+ lines of musketeers and civic functionaries, amid roaring cannon, pealing
+ bells, burning cressets, blazing tar-barrels, fiery winged dragons,
+ wreaths of flowers, and Latin orations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The farther he went the braver seemed the country, and the better beloved
+ his. Lordship. Nothing was left undone, in the language of ancient
+ chronicle, to fill the bellies and the heads of the whole company. At the
+ close of the year he came to the Hague, where the festivities were
+ unusually magnificent. A fleet of barges was sent to escort him. Peter,
+ James, and John, met him upon the shore, while the Saviour appeared
+ walking upon the waves, and ordered his disciples to cast their nets, and
+ to present the fish to his Excellency. Farther on, he was confronted by
+ Mars and Bellona, who recited Latin odes in his honour. Seven beautiful
+ damsels upon a stage, representing the United States, offered him golden
+ keys; seven others equally beautiful, embodying the seven sciences,
+ presented him with garlands, while an enthusiastic barber adorned his shop
+ with seven score of copper basins, with a wax-light in each, together with
+ a rose, and a Latin posy in praise of Queen Elizabeth. Then there were
+ tiltings in the water between champions mounted upon whales, and other
+ monsters of the deep-representatives of siege, famine, pestilence, and
+ murder&mdash;the whole interspersed with fireworks, poetry, charades, and
+ Matthias, nor Anjou, nor King Philip, nor the Emperor Charles, in their
+ triumphal progresses, had been received with more spontaneous or more
+ magnificent demonstrations. Never had the living pictures been more
+ startling, the allegories more incomprehensible, the banquets more
+ elaborate, the orations more tedious. Beside himself with rapture,
+ Leicester almost assumed the God. In Delft, a city which he described as
+ "another London almost for beauty and fairness," he is said so far to have
+ forgotten himself as to declare that his family had&mdash;in the person of
+ Lady Jane Grey, his father, and brother&mdash;been unjustly deprived of
+ the crown of England; an indiscretion which caused a shudder in all who
+ heard him. It was also very dangerous for the Lieutenant-General to exceed
+ the bounds of becoming modesty at that momentous epoch. His power, as we
+ shall soon have occasion to observe, was anomalous, and he was surrounded
+ by enemies. He was not only to grapple with a rapidly developing
+ opposition in the States, but he was surrounded with masked enemies, whom
+ he had brought with him from England. Every act and word of his were
+ liable to closest scrutiny, and likely to be turned against him. For it
+ was most characteristic of that intriguing age, that even the astute
+ Walsingham, who had an eye and an ear at every key-hole in Europe, was
+ himself under closest domestic inspection. There was one Poley, a trusted
+ servant of Lady Sidney, then living in the house of her father Walsingham,
+ during Sir Philip's absence, who was in close communication with Lord
+ Montjoy's brother, Blount, then high in favour of Queen Elizabeth&mdash;"whose
+ grandmother she might be for his age and hers"&mdash;and with another
+ brother Christopher Blount, at that moment in confidential attendance upon
+ Lord Leicester in Holland. Now Poley, and both the Blounts, were, in
+ reality, Papists, and in intimate correspondence with the agents of the
+ Queen of Scots, both at home and abroad, although "forced to fawn upon
+ Leicester, to see if they might thereby live quiet." They had a secret
+ "alphabet," or cipher, among them, and protested warmly, that they
+ "honoured the ground whereon Queen Mary trod better than Leicester with
+ all his generation; and that they felt bound to serve her who was the only
+ saint living on the earth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may be well understood then that the Earl's position was a slippery
+ one, and that great assumption might be unsafe. "He taketh the matter upon
+ him," wrote Morgan to the Queen of Scots, "as though he were an absolute
+ king; but he hath many personages about him of good place out of England,
+ the best number whereof desire nothing more than his confusion. Some of
+ them be gone with him to avoid the persecution for religion in England. My
+ poor advice and labour shall not be wanting to give Leicester all
+ dishonour, which will fall upon him in the end with shame enough; though
+ for the present he be very strong." Many of these personages of good
+ place, and enjoying "charge and credit" with the Earl had very serious
+ plans in their heads. Some of them meant "for the service of God, and the
+ advantage of the King of Spain, to further the delivery of some notable
+ towns in Holland and Zeeland to the said King and his ministers," and we
+ are like to hear of these individuals again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, the Earl of Leicester was at the Hague. Why was he there? What
+ was his work? Why had Elizabeth done such violence to her affection as to
+ part with her favourite-in-chief; and so far overcome her thrift, as to
+ furnish forth, rather meagrely to be sure, that little army of Englishmen?
+ Why had the flower of England's chivalry set foot upon that dark and
+ bloody ground where there seemed so much disaster to encounter, and so
+ little glory to reap? Why had England thrown herself so heroically into
+ the breach, just as the last bulwarks were falling which protected Holland
+ from the overwhelming onslaught of Spain? It was because Holland was the
+ threshold of England; because the two countries were one by danger and by
+ destiny; because the naval expedition from Spain against England was
+ already secretly preparing; because the deposed tyrant of Spain intended
+ the Provinces, when again subjugated, as a steppingstone to the conquest
+ of England; because the naval and military forces of Holland&mdash;her
+ numerous ships, her hardy mariners, her vast wealth, her commodious
+ sea-ports, close to the English coast&mdash;if made Spanish property would
+ render Philip invincible by sea and land; and because the downfall of
+ Holland and of Protestantism would be death to Elizabeth, and annihilation
+ to England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was little doubt on the subject in the minds of those engaged in
+ this expedition. All felt most keenly the importance of the game, in which
+ the Queen was staking her crown, and England its national existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pray God," said Wilford, an officer much in Walsingham's confidence,
+ "that I live not to see this enterprise quail, and with it the utter
+ subversion of religion throughout all Christendom. It may be I may be
+ judged to be afraid of my own shadow. God grant it be so. But if her
+ Majesty had not taken the helm in hand, and my Lord of Leicester sent
+ over, this country had been gone ere this. . . . This war doth defend
+ England. Who is he that will refuse to spend his life and living in it? If
+ her Majesty consume twenty thousand men in the cause, the experimented men
+ that will remain will double that strength to the realm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This same Wilford commanded a company in Ostend, and was employed by
+ Leicester in examining the defences of that important place. He often sent
+ information to the Secretary, "troubling him with the rude stile of a poor
+ soldier, being driven to scribble in haste." He reiterated, in more than
+ one letter, the opinion, that twenty thousand men consumed in the war
+ would be a saving in the end, and his own determination&mdash;although he
+ had intended retiring from the military profession&mdash;to spend not only
+ his life in the cause, but also the poor living that God had given him.
+ "Her Highness hath now entered into it," he said; "the fire is kindled;
+ whosoever suffers it to go out, it will grow dangerous to that side. The
+ whole state of religion is in question, and the realm of England also, if
+ this action quail. God grant we never live to see that doleful day. Her
+ Majesty hath such footing now in these parts, as I judge it impossible for
+ the King to weary her out, if every man will put to the work his helping
+ hand, whereby it may be lustily followed, and the war not suffered to
+ cool. The freehold of England will be worth but little, if this action
+ quail, and therefore I wish no subject to spare his purse towards it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spain moved slowly. Philip the Prudent was not sudden or rash, but his
+ whole life had proved, and was to prove, him inflexible in his purposes,
+ and patient in his attempts to carry them into effect, even when the
+ purposes had become chimerical, and the execution impossible. Before the
+ fall of Antwerp he had matured his scheme for the invasion of England, in
+ most of its details&mdash;a necessary part of which was of course the
+ reduction of Holland and Zeeland. "Surely no danger nor fear of any
+ attempt can grow to England," wrote Wilford, "so long as we can hold this
+ country good." But never was honest soldier more mistaken than he, when he
+ added:&mdash;"The Papists will make her Highness afraid of a great fleet
+ now preparing in Spain. We hear it also, but it is only a scare-crow to
+ cool the enterprise here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was no scare-crow. On the very day on which Wilford was thus writing to
+ Walsingham, Philip the Second was writing to Alexander Farnese. "The
+ English," he said, "with their troops having gained a footing in the
+ islands (Holland and Zeeland) give me much anxiety. The English Catholics
+ are imploring me with much importunity to relieve them from the
+ persecution they are suffering. When you sent me a plan, with the coasts,
+ soundings, quicksands, and ports of England, you said that the enterprise
+ of invading that country should be deferred till we had reduced the isles;
+ that, having them, we could much more conveniently attack England; or that
+ at least we should wait till we had got Antwerp. As the city is now taken,
+ I want your advice now about the invasion of England. To cut the root of
+ the evils constantly growing up there, both for God's service and mine, is
+ desirable. So many evils will thus be remedied, which would not be by only
+ warring with the islands. It would be an uncertain and expensive war to go
+ to sea for the purpose of chastising the insolent English corsairs,
+ however much they deserve chastisement. I charge you to be secret, to give
+ the matter your deepest attention, and to let me have your opinions at
+ once." Philip then added a postscript, in his own hand, concerning the
+ importance of acquiring a sea-port in Holland, as a basis of operations
+ against England. "Without a port," he said, "we can do nothing whatever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few weeks later, the Grand Commander of Castile, by Philip's orders, and
+ upon subsequent information received from the Prince of Parma, drew up an
+ elaborate scheme for the invasion of England, and for the government of
+ that country afterwards; a program according to which the King was to
+ shape his course for a long time to come. The plot was an excellent plot.
+ Nothing could be more artistic, more satisfactory to the prudent monarch;
+ but time was to show whether there might not be some difficulty in the way
+ of its satisfactory development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The enterprise," said the Commander, "ought certainly to be undertaken as
+ serving the cause of the Lord. From the Pope we must endeavour to extract
+ a promise of the largest aid we can get for the time when the enterprise
+ can be undertaken. We must not declare that time however, in order to keep
+ the thing a secret, and because perhaps thus more will be promised, under
+ the impression that it will never take effect. He added that the work
+ could not well be attempted before August or September of the following
+ year; the only fear of such delay being that the French could hardly be
+ kept during all that time in a state of revolt." For this was a uniform
+ portion of the great scheme. France was to be kept, at Philip's expense,
+ in a state of perpetual civil war; its every city and village to be the
+ scene of unceasing conflict and bloodshed&mdash;subjects in arms against
+ king, and family against family; and the Netherlands were to be ravaged
+ with fire and sword; all this in order that the path might be prepared for
+ Spanish soldiers into the homes of England. So much of misery to the whole
+ human race was it in the power of one painstaking elderly valetudinarian
+ to inflict, by never for an instant neglecting the business of his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Troops and vessels for the English invasion ought, in the Commander's
+ opinion, to be collected in Flanders, under colour of an enterprise
+ against Holland and Zeeland, while the armada to be assembled in Spain, of
+ galleons, galeazas, and galleys, should be ostensibly for an expedition to
+ the Indies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, after the conquest, came arrangements for the government of England.
+ Should Philip administer his new kingdom by a viceroy, or should he
+ appoint a king out of his own family? On the whole the chances for the
+ Prince of Parma seemed the best of any. "We must liberate the Queen of
+ Scotland," said the Grand Commander, "and marry her to some one or
+ another, both in order to put her out of love with her son, and to
+ conciliate her devoted adherents. Of course the husband should be one of
+ your Majesty's nephews, and none could be so appropriate as the Prince of
+ Parma, that great captain, whom his talents, and the part he has to bear
+ in the business, especially indicate for that honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then there was a difficulty about the possible issue of such a marriage.
+ The Farneses claimed Portugal; so that children sprung from the bloodroyal
+ of England blended with that of Parma, might choose to make those
+ pretensions valid. But the objection was promptly solved by the Commander:&mdash;"The
+ Queen of Scotland is sure to have no children," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That matter being adjusted, Parma's probable attitude as King of England
+ was examined. It was true his ambition might cause occasional uneasiness,
+ but then he might make himself still more unpleasant in the Netherlands.
+ "If your Majesty suspects him," said the Commander, "which, after all, is
+ unfair, seeing the way, in which he has been conducting himself&mdash;it
+ is to be remembered that in Flanders are similar circumstances and
+ opportunities, and that he is well armed, much beloved in the country, and
+ that the natives are of various humours. The English plan will furnish an
+ honourable departure for him out of the Provinces; and the principle of
+ loyal obligation will have much influence over so chivalrous a knight as
+ he, when he is once placed on the English throne. Moreover, as he will be
+ new there, he will have need of your Majesty's favour to maintain himself,
+ and there will accordingly be good correspondence with Holland and the
+ Islands. Thus your Majesty can put the Infanta and her husband into full
+ possession of all the Netherlands; having provided them with so excellent
+ a neighbour in England, and one so closely bound and allied to them. Then,
+ as he is to have no English children" (we have seen that the Commander had
+ settled that point) "he will be a very good mediator to arrange adoptions,
+ especially if you make good provision for his son Rainuccio in Italy. The
+ reasons in favour of this plan being so much stronger than those against
+ it, it would be well that your Majesty should write clearly to the Prince
+ of Parma, directing him to conduct the enterprise" (the English invasion),
+ "and to give him the first offer for this marriage (with Queen Mary) if he
+ likes the scheme. If not, he had better mention which of the Archdukes
+ should be substituted in his place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There happened to be no lack of archdukes at that period for anything
+ comfortable that might offer&mdash;such as a throne in England, Holland,
+ or France&mdash;and the Austrian House was not remarkable for refusing
+ convenient marriages; but the immediate future only could show whether
+ Alexander I. of the House of Farnese was to reign in England, or whether
+ the next king of that country was to be called Matthias, Maximilian, or
+ Ernest of Hapsburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the Grand Commander was of opinion that the invasion-project was
+ to be pushed forward as rapidly and as secretly as possible; because,
+ before any one of Philip's nephews could place himself upon the English
+ throne, it was first necessary to remove Elizabeth from that position.
+ Before disposing of the kingdom, the preliminary step of conquering it was
+ necessary. Afterwards it would be desirable, without wasting more time
+ than was requisite, to return with a large portion of the invading force
+ out of England, in order to complete the conquest of Holland. For after
+ all, England was to be subjugated only as a portion of one general scheme;
+ the main features of which were the reannexation of Holland and "the
+ islands," and the acquisition of unlimited control upon the seas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the invasion of England was no "scarecrow," as Wilford imagined, but
+ a scheme already thoroughly matured. If Holland and Zeeland should
+ meantime fall into the hands of Philip, it was no exaggeration on that
+ soldier's part to observe that the "freehold of England would be worth but
+ little."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To oppose this formidable array against the liberties of Europe stood
+ Elizabeth Tudor and the Dutch Republic. For the Queen, however arbitrary
+ her nature, fitly embodied much of the nobler elements in the expanding
+ English national character. She felt instinctively that her reliance in
+ the impending death-grapple was upon the popular principle, the national
+ sentiment, both in her own country and in Holland. That principle and that
+ sentiment were symbolized in the Netherland revolt; and England, although
+ under a somewhat despotic rule, was already fully pervaded with the
+ instinct of self-government. The people held the purse and the sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No tyranny could be permanently established so long as the sovereign was
+ obliged to come every year before Parliament to ask for subsidies; so long
+ as all the citizens and yeomen of England had weapons in their possession,
+ and were carefully trained to use them; so long, in short, as the militia
+ was the only army, and private adventurers or trading companies created
+ and controlled the only navy. War, colonization, conquest, traffic, formed
+ a joint business and a private speculation. If there were danger that
+ England, yielding to purely mercantile habits of thought and action, might
+ degenerate from the more martial standard to which she had been
+ accustomed, there might be virtue in that Netherland enterprise, which was
+ now to call forth all her energies. The Provinces would be a seminary for
+ English soldiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There can be no doubt of our driving the enemy out of the country through
+ famine and excessive charges," said the plain-spoken English soldier
+ already quoted, who came out with Leicester, "if every one of us will put
+ our minds to go forward without making a miserable gain by the wars. A man
+ may see, by this little progress journey, what this long peace hath
+ wrought in us. We are weary of the war before we come where it groweth,
+ such a danger hath this long peace brought us into. This is, and will be,
+ in my opinion, a most fit school and nursery to nourish soldiers to be
+ able to keep and defend our country hereafter, if men will follow it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilford was vehement in denouncing the mercantile tendencies of his
+ countrymen, and returned frequently to that point in his communications
+ with Walsingham and other statesmen. "God hath stirred up this action," he
+ repeated again, "to be a school to breed up soldiers to defend the freedom
+ of England, which through these long times of peace and quietness is
+ brought into a most dangerous estate, if it should be attempted. Our
+ delicacy is such that we are already weary, yet this journey is naught in
+ respect to the misery and hardship that soldiers must and do endure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was right in his estimate of the effect likely to be produced by the
+ war upon the military habits of Englishmen; for there can be no doubt that
+ the organization and discipline of English troops was in anything but a
+ satisfactory state at that period. There was certainly vast room for
+ improvement. Nevertheless he was wrong in his views of the leading
+ tendencies of his age. Holland and England, self-helping, self-moving,
+ were already inaugurating a new era in the history of the world. The
+ spirit of commercial maritime enterprise&mdash;then expanding rapidly into
+ large proportions&mdash;was to be matched against the religious and
+ knightly enthusiasm which had accomplished such wonders in an age that was
+ passing away. Spain still personified, and had ever personified, chivalry,
+ loyalty, piety; but its chivalry, loyalty, and piety, were now in a
+ corrupted condition. The form was hollow, and the sacred spark had fled.
+ In Holland and England intelligent enterprise had not yet degenerated into
+ mere greed for material prosperity. The love of danger, the thirst for
+ adventure, the thrilling sense of personal responsibility and human
+ dignity&mdash;not the base love for land and lucre&mdash;were the
+ governing sentiments which led those bold Dutch and English rovers to
+ circumnavigate the world in cockle-shells, and to beard the most potent
+ monarch on the earth, both at home and abroad, with a handful of
+ volunteers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This then was the contest, and this the machinery by which it was to be
+ maintained. A struggle for national independence, liberty of conscience,
+ freedom of the seas, against sacerdotal and world-absorbing tyranny; a
+ mortal combat of the splendid infantry of Spain and Italy, the
+ professional reiters of Germany, the floating castles of a world-empire,
+ with the militiamen and mercantile-marine of England and Holland united.
+ Holland had been engaged twenty years long in the conflict. England had
+ thus far escaped it; but there was no doubt, and could be none, that her
+ time had come. She must fight the battle of Protestantism on sea and
+ shore, shoulder to shoulder, with the Netherlanders, or await the
+ conqueror's foot on her own soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What now was the disposition and what the means of the Provinces to do
+ their part in the contest? If the twain as Holland wished, had become of
+ one flesh, would England have been the loser? Was it quite sure that
+ Elizabeth&mdash;had she even accepted the less compromising title which
+ she refused&mdash;would not have been quite as much the protected as the
+ "protectress?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is very certain that the English, on their arrival in the Provinces,
+ were singularly impressed by the opulent and stately appearance of the
+ country and its inhabitants. Notwithstanding the tremendous war which the
+ Hollanders had been waging against Spain for twenty years, their commerce
+ had continued to thrive, and their resources to increase. Leicester was in
+ a state of constant rapture at the magnificence which surrounded him, from
+ his first entrance into the country. Notwithstanding the admiration
+ expressed by the Hollanders for the individual sumptuousness of the
+ Lieutenant-General; his followers, on their part, were startled by the
+ general luxury of their new allies. "The realm is rich and full of men,"
+ said Wilford, "the sums men exceed in apparel would bear the brunt of this
+ war;" and again, "if the excess used in sumptuous apparel were only
+ abated, and that we could convert the same to these wars, it would stop a
+ great gap."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The favourable view taken by the English as to the resources and
+ inclination of the Netherland commonwealth was universal. "The general
+ wish and desire of these countrymen," wrote Sir Thomas Shirley, "is that
+ the amity begun between England and this nation may be everlasting, and
+ there is not any of our company of judgment but wish the same. For all
+ they that see the goodliness and stateliness of these towns, strengthened
+ both with fortification and natural situation, all able to defend
+ themselves with their own abilities, must needs think it too fair a prey
+ to be let pass, and a thing most worthy to be embraced."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, whose enthusiasm continued to increase as rapidly as the
+ Queen's zeal seemed to be cooling, was most anxious lest the short-comings
+ of his own Government should work irreparable evil. "I pray you, my lord,"
+ he wrote to Burghley, "forget not us poor exiles; if you do, God must and
+ will forget you. And great pity it were that so noble provinces and goodly
+ havens, with such infinite ships and mariners, should not be always as
+ they may now easily be, at the assured devotion of England. In my opinion
+ he can neither love Queen nor country that would not wish and further it
+ should be so. And seeing her Majesty is thus far entered into the cause,
+ and that these people comfort themselves in full hope of her favour, it
+ were a sin and a shame it should not be handled accordingly, both for
+ honour and surety."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir John Conway, who accompanied the Earl through the whole of his
+ "progress journey," was quite as much struck as he by the flourishing
+ aspect and English proclivities of the Provinces. "The countries which we
+ have passed," he said, "are fertile in their nature; the towns, cities,
+ buildings, of more state and beauty, to such as have travelled other
+ countries, than any they have ever seen. The people the most industrious
+ by all means to live that be in the world, and, no doubt, passing rich.
+ They outwardly show themselves of good heart, zeal, and loyalty, towards
+ the Queen our mistress. There is no doubt that the general number of them
+ had rather come under her Majesty's regiment, than to continue under the
+ States and burgomasters of their country. The impositions which they lay
+ in defence of their State is wonderful. If her Highness proceed in this
+ beginning, she may retain these parts hers, with their good love, and her
+ great glory and gain. I would she might as perfectly see the whole
+ country, towns, profits, and pleasures thereof, in a glass, as she may her
+ own face; I do then assure myself she would with careful consideration
+ receive them, and not allow of any man's reason to the contrary . . . .
+ The country is worthy any prince in the world, the people do reverence the
+ Queen, and in love of her do so believe that the Grace of Leicester is by
+ God and her sent among them for her good. And they believe in him for the
+ redemption of their bodies, as they do in God for their souls. I dare pawn
+ my soul, that if her Majesty will allow him the just and rightful mean to
+ manage this cause, that he will so handle the manner and matter as shall
+ highly both please and profit her Majesty, and increase her country, and
+ his own honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord North, who held a high command in the auxiliary force, spoke also
+ with great enthusiasm. "Had your Lordship seen," he wrote to Burghley,
+ "with what thankful hearts these countries receive all her Majesty's
+ subjects, what multitudes of people they be, what stately cities and
+ buildings they have, how notably fortified by art, how strong by nature,
+ flow fertile the whole country, and how wealthy it is, you would, I know,
+ praise the Lord that opened your lips to undertake this enterprise, the
+ continuance and good success whereof will eternise her Majesty, beautify
+ her crown, with the most shipping, with the most populous and wealthy
+ countries, that ever prince added to his kingdom, or that is or can be
+ found in Europe. I lack wit, good my Lord, to dilate this matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, better informed than some of those in his employment,
+ entertained strong suspicions concerning Philip's intentions with regard
+ to England; but he felt sure that the only way to laugh at a Spanish
+ invasion was to make Holland and England as nearly one as it was possible
+ to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No doubt that the King of Spain's preparations by sea be great," he,
+ said; "but I know that all that he and his friends can make are not able
+ to match with her Majesty's forces, if it please her to use the means that
+ God hath given her. But besides her own, if she need; I will undertake to
+ furnish her from hence, upon two months' warning, a navy for strong and
+ tall ships, with their furniture and mariners, that the King of Spain, and
+ all that he can make, shall not be able to encounter with them. I think
+ the bruit of his preparations is made the greater to terrify her Majesty
+ and this country people. But, thanked be God, her Majesty hath little
+ cause to fear him. And in this country they esteem no more of his power by
+ sea than I do of six fisher-boats off Rye."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus suggestive is it to peep occasionally behind the curtain. In the calm
+ cabinet of the Escorial, Philip and his comendador mayor are laying their
+ heads together, preparing the invasion of England; making arrangements for
+ King Alexander's coronation in that island, and&mdash;like sensible,
+ farsighted persons as they are&mdash;even settling the succession to the
+ throne after Alexander's death, instead of carelessly leaving such distant
+ details to chance, or subsequent consideration. On the other hand, plain
+ Dutch sea-captains, grim beggars of the sea, and the like, denizens of a
+ free commonwealth and of the boundless ocean-men who are at home on blue
+ water, and who have burned gunpowder against those prodigious slave-rowed
+ galleys of Spain&mdash;together with their new allies, the dauntless
+ mariners of England&mdash;who at this very moment are "singeing the King
+ of Spain's beard," as it had never been singed before&mdash;are not so
+ much awestruck with the famous preparations for invasion as was perhaps to
+ be expected. There may be a delay, after all, before Parma can be got
+ safely established in London, and Elizabeth in Orcus, and before the
+ blood-tribunal of the Inquisition can substitute its sway for that of the
+ "most noble, wise, and learned United States." Certainly, Philip the
+ Prudent would have been startled, difficult as he was to astonish, could
+ he have known that those rebel Hollanders of his made no more account of
+ his slowly-preparing invincible armada than of six fisher-boats off Rye.
+ Time alone could show where confidence had been best placed. Meantime it
+ was certain, that it well behoved Holland and England to hold hard
+ together, nor let "that enterprise quail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The famous expedition of Sir Francis Drake was the commencement of a
+ revelation. "That is the string," said Leicester, "that touches the King
+ indeed." It was soon to be made known to the world that the ocean was not
+ a Spanish Lake, nor both the Indies the private property of Philip. "While
+ the riches of the Indies continue," said Leicester, "he thinketh he will
+ be able to weary out all other princes; and I know, by good means, that he
+ more feareth this action of Sir Francis than he ever did anything that has
+ been attempted against him." With these continued assaults upon the golden
+ treasure-houses of Spain, and by a determined effort to maintain the still
+ more important stronghold which had been wrested from her in the
+ Netherlands, England might still be safe. "This country is so full of
+ ships and mariners," said Leicester, "so abundant in wealth, and in the
+ means to make money, that, had it but stood neutral, what an aid had her
+ Majesty been deprived of. But if it had been the enemy's also, I leave it
+ to your consideration what had been likely to ensue. These people do now
+ honour and love her Majesty in marvellous sort."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was but one feeling on this most important subject among the English
+ who went to the Netherlands. All held the same language. The question was
+ plainly presented to England whether she would secure to herself the great
+ bulwark of her defence, or place it in the hands of her mortal foe? How
+ could there be doubt or supineness on such a momentous subject? "Surely,
+ my Lord," wrote Richard Cavendish to Burghley, "if you saw the wealth, the
+ strength, the shipping, and abundance of mariners, whereof these countries
+ stand furnished, your heart would quake to think that so hateful an enemy
+ as Spain should again be furnished with such instruments; and the
+ Spaniards themselves do nothing doubt upon the hope of the consequence
+ hereof, to assure themselves of the certain ruin of her Majesty and the
+ whole estate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet at the very outset of Leicester's administration, there was a
+ whisper of peace-overtures to Spain, secretly made by Elizabeth in her own
+ behalf, and in that of the Provinces. We shall have soon occasion to
+ examine into the truth of these rumours, which, whether originating in
+ truth or falsehood, were most pernicious in their effects. The Hollanders
+ were determined never to return to slavery again, so long as they could
+ fire a shot in their own defence. They earnestly wished English
+ cooperation, but it was the cooperation of English matchlocks and English
+ cutlasses, not English protocols and apostilles. It was military, not
+ diplomatic machinery that they required. If they could make up their minds
+ to submit to Philip and the Inquisition again, Philip and the Holy office
+ were but too ready to receive the erring penitents to their embrace
+ without a go-between.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was war, not peace, therefore, that Holland meant by the English
+ alliance. It was war, not peace, that Philip intended. It was war, not
+ peace, that Elizabeth's most trusty counsellors knew to be inevitable.
+ There was also, as we have shown, no doubt whatever as to the good
+ disposition, and the great power of the republic to bear its share in the
+ common cause. The enthusiasm of the Hollanders was excessive. "There was
+ such a noise, both in Delft, Rotterdam, and Dort," said Leicester, "in
+ crying 'God save the Queen!' as if she had been in Cheapside." Her own
+ subjects could not be more loyal than were the citizens and yeomen of
+ Holland. "The members of the States dare not but be Queen Elizabeth's,"
+ continued the Earl, "for by the living God! if there should fall but the
+ least unkindness through their default, the people would kill them. All
+ sorts of people, from highest to lowest, assure themselves, now that they
+ have her Majesty's good countenance, to beat all the Spaniards out of
+ their country. Never was there people in such jollity as these be. I could
+ be content to lose a limb, could her Majesty see these countries and towns
+ as I have done." He was in truth excessively elated, and had already, in
+ imagination, vanquished Alexander Farnese, and eclipsed the fame of
+ William the Silent. "They will serve under me," he observed, "with a
+ better will than ever they served under the Prince of Orange. Yet they
+ loved him well, but they never hoped of the liberty of this country till
+ now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the English government had every reason to be satisfied with the
+ aspect of its affairs in the Netherlands. But the nature of the Earl's
+ authority was indefinite. The Queen had refused the sovereignty and the
+ protectorate. She had also distinctly and peremptorily forbidden Leicester
+ to assume any office or title that might seem at variance with such a
+ refusal on her part. Yet it is certain that, from the very first, he had
+ contemplated some slight disobedience to these prohibitions. "What
+ government is requisite"&mdash;wrote he in a secret memorandum of "things
+ most necessary to understand"&mdash;"to be appointed to him that shall be
+ their governor? First, that he have as much authority as the Prince of
+ Orange, or any other governor or captain-general, hath had heretofore."
+ Now the Prince of Orange hath been stadholder of each of the United
+ Provinces, governor-general, commander-in-chief, count of Holland in
+ prospect, and sovereign, if he had so willed it. It would doubtless have
+ been most desirable for the country, in its confused condition, had there
+ been a person competent to wield, and willing to accept, the authority
+ once exercised by William I. But it was also certain that this was exactly
+ the authority which Elizabeth had forbidden Leicester to assume. Yet it is
+ difficult to understand what position the Queen intended that her
+ favourite should maintain, nor how he was to carry out her instructions,
+ while submitting to her prohibitions. He was directed to cause the
+ confused government of the Provinces to be redressed, and a better form of
+ polity to be established. He was ordered, in particular, to procure a
+ radical change in the constitution, by causing the deputies to the General
+ Assembly to be empowered to decide upon important matters, without, as had
+ always been the custom, making direct reference to the assemblies of the
+ separate Provinces. He was instructed to bring about, in some indefinite
+ way, a complete reform in financial matters, by compelling the
+ States-General to raise money by liberal taxation, according to the
+ "advice of her Majesty, delivered unto them by her lieutenant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And how was this radical change in the institutions of the Provinces to be
+ made by an English earl, whose only authority was that of
+ commander-in-chief over five thousand half-starved, unpaid,
+ utterly-forlorn English troops?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Netherland envoys in England, in their parting advice, most distinctly
+ urged him "to hale authority with the first, to declare himself chief head
+ and governor-general" of the whole country,&mdash;for it was a political
+ head that was wanted in order to restore unity of action&mdash;not an
+ additional general, where there were already generals in plenty. Sir John
+ Norris, valiant, courageous, experienced&mdash;even if not, as Walsingham
+ observed, a "religious soldier," nor learned in anything "but a kind of
+ licentious and corrupt government"&mdash;was not likely to require the
+ assistance of the new lieutenant-general in field operations nor could the
+ army be brought into a state of thorough discipline and efficiency by the
+ magic of Leicester's name. The rank and file of the English army&mdash;not
+ the commanders-needed strengthening. The soldiers required shoes and
+ stockings, bread and meat, and for these articles there were not the
+ necessary funds, nor would the title of Lieutenant-General supply the
+ deficiency. The little auxiliary force was, in truth, in a condition most
+ pitiable to behold: it was difficult to say whether the soldiers who had
+ been already for a considerable period in the Netherlands, or those who
+ had been recently levied in the purlieus of London, were in the most
+ unpromising plight. The beggarly state in which Elizabeth had been willing
+ that her troops should go forth to the wars was a sin and a disgrace. Well
+ might her Lieutenant-General say that her "poor subjects were no better
+ than abjects." There were few effective companies remaining of the old
+ force. "There is but a small number of the first bands left," said Sir
+ John Conway, "and those so pitiful and unable ever to serve again, as I
+ leave to speak further of theirs, to avoid grief to your heart. A
+ monstrous fault there hath been somewhere."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester took a manful and sagacious course at starting. Those who had no
+ stomach for the fight were ordered to depart. The chaplain gave them
+ sermons; the Lieutenant-General, on St. Stephen's day, made them a "pithy
+ and honourable" oration, and those who had the wish or the means to buy
+ themselves out of the adventure, were allowed to do so: for the Earl was
+ much disgusted with the raw material out of which he was expected to
+ manufacture serviceable troops. Swaggering ruffians from the disreputable
+ haunts of London, cockney apprentices, brokendown tapsters, discarded
+ serving men; the Bardolphs and Pistols, Mouldys, Warts, and the like&mdash;more
+ at home in tavern-brawls or in dark lanes than on the battle-field&mdash;were
+ not the men to be entrusted with the honour of England at a momentous
+ crisis. He spoke with grief and shame of the worthless character and
+ condition of the English youths sent over to the Netherlands. "Believe
+ me," said he, "you will all repent the cockney kind of bringing up at this
+ day of young men. They be gone hence with shame enough, and too many, that
+ I will warrant, will make as many frays with bludgeons and bucklers as any
+ in London shall do; but such shall never have credit with me again. Our
+ simplest men in show have been our best men, and your gallant blood and
+ ruffian men the worst of all others."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much winnowed, as it was, the small force might in time become more
+ effective; and the Earl spent freely of his own substance to supply the
+ wants of his followers, and to atone for the avarice of his sovereign. The
+ picture painted however by muster-master Digger of the plumed troops that
+ had thus come forth to maintain the honour of England and the cause of
+ liberty, was anything but imposing. None knew better than Digges their
+ squalid and slovenly condition, or was more anxious to effect a
+ reformation therein. "A very wise, stout fellow he is," said the Earl,
+ "and very careful to serve thoroughly her Majesty." Leicester relied much
+ upon his efforts. "There is good hope," said the muster-master, "that his
+ excellency will shortly establish such good order for the government and
+ training of our nation, that these weak, bad-furnished, ill-armed, and
+ worse-trained bands, thus rawly left unto him, shall within a few months
+ prove as well armed, trained, complete, gallant companies as shall be
+ found elsewhere in Europe." The damage they were likely to inflict upon
+ the enemy seemed very problematical, until they should have been improved
+ by some wholesome ball-practice. "They are so unskilful," said Digger,
+ "that if they should be carried to the field no better trained than yet
+ they are, they would prove much more dangerous to their own leaders and
+ companies than any ways serviceable on their enemies. The hard and
+ miserable estate of the soldiers generally, excepting officers, hath been
+ such, as by the confessions of the captains themselves, they have been
+ offered by many of their soldiers thirty and forty pounds a piece to be
+ dismissed and sent away; whereby I doubt not the flower of the pressed
+ English bands are gone, and the remnant supplied with such paddy persons
+ as commonly, in voluntary procurements, men are glad to accept."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even after the expiration of four months the condition of the paddy
+ persons continued most destitute. The English soldiers became mere
+ barefoot starving beggars in the streets, as had never been the case in
+ the worst of times, when the States were their paymasters. The little
+ money brought from the treasury by the Earl, and the large sums which he
+ had contributed out of his own pocket, had been spent in settling, and not
+ fully settling, old scores. "Let me entreat you," wrote Leicester to
+ Walsingham, "to be a mean to her Majesty, that the poor soldiers be not
+ beaten for my sake. There came no penny of treasure over since my coming
+ hither. That which then came was most part due before it came. There is
+ much still due. They cannot get a penny, their credit is spent, they
+ perish for want of victuals and clothing in great numbers. The whole are
+ ready to mutiny. They cannot be gotten out to service, because they cannot
+ discharge the debts they owe in the places where they are. I have let of
+ my own more than I may spare."&mdash;"There was no soldier yet able to buy
+ himself a pair of hose," said the Earl again, "and it is too, too great
+ shame to see how they go, and it kills their hearts to show themselves
+ among men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no one to dispute the Earl's claims. The Nassau family was
+ desperately poor, and its chief, young Maurice, although he had been
+ elected stadholder of Holland and Zeeland, had every disposition&mdash;as
+ Sir Philip upon his arrival in Flushing immediately informed his uncle&mdash;to
+ submit to the authority of the new governor. Louisa de Coligny, widow of
+ William the Silent, was most anxious for the English alliance, through
+ which alone she believed that the fallen fortunes of the family could be
+ raised. It was thus only, she thought, that the vengeance for which she
+ thirsted upon the murderers of her father and her husband could be
+ obtained. "We see now," she wrote to Walsingham, in a fiercer strain than
+ would seem to comport with so gentle a nature&mdash;deeply wronged as the
+ daughter of Coligny and the wife of Orange had been by Papists&mdash;"we
+ see now the effects of our God's promises. He knows when it pleases Him to
+ avenge the blood of His own; and I confess that I feel most keenly the joy
+ which is shared in by the whole Church of God. There is none that has
+ received more wrong from these murderers than I have done, and I esteem
+ myself happy in the midst of my miseries that God has permitted me to see
+ some vengeance. These beginnings make me hope that I shall see yet more,
+ which will be not less useful to the good, both in your country and in
+ these isles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no disguise as to the impoverished condition to which the Nassau
+ family had been reduced by the self-devotion of its chief. They were
+ obliged to ask alms of England, until the "sapling should become a tree."&mdash;"Since
+ it is the will of God," wrote the Princess to Davison, "I am not ashamed
+ to declare the necessity of our house, for it is in His cause that it has
+ fallen. I pray you, Sir, therefore to do me and these children the favour
+ to employ your thoughts in this regard." If there had been any strong
+ French proclivities on their part&mdash;as had been so warmly asserted&mdash;they
+ were likely to disappear. Villiers, who had been a confidential friend of
+ William the Silent, and a strong favourer of France, in vain endeavoured
+ to keep alive the ancient sentiments towards that country, although he was
+ thought to be really endeavouring to bring about a submission of the
+ Nassaus to Spain. "This Villiers," said Leicester, "is a most vile
+ traitorous knave, and doth abuse a young nobleman here extremely, the
+ Count Maurice. For all his religion, he is a more earnest persuader
+ secretly to have him yield to a reconciliation than Sainte Aldegonde was.
+ He shall not tarry ten days neither in Holland nor Zeeland. He is greatly
+ hated here of all sorts, and it shall go hard but I will win the young
+ Count."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Hohenlo, whatever his opinions might once have been regarding the
+ comparative merits of Frenchmen and Englishmen, he was now warmly in
+ favour of England, and expressed an intention of putting an end to the
+ Villiers' influence by simply drowning Villiers. The announcement of this
+ summary process towards the counsellor was not untinged with rudeness
+ towards the pupil. "The young Count," said Leicester, "by Villiers' means,
+ was not willing to have Flushing rendered, which the Count Hollock
+ perceiving, told the Count Maurice, in a great rage, that if he took any
+ course than that of the Queen of England, and swore by no beggars, he
+ would drown his priest in the haven before his face, and turn himself and
+ his mother-in-law out of their house there, and thereupon went with Mr.
+ Davison to the delivery of it." Certainly, if Hohenlo permitted himself
+ such startling demonstrations towards the son and widow of William the
+ Silent, it must have been after his habitual potations had been of the
+ deepest. Nevertheless it was satisfactory for the new chieftain to know
+ that the influence of so vehement a partisan was secured for England. The
+ Count's zeal deserved gratitude upon Leicester's part, and Leicester was
+ grateful. "This man must be cherished," said the Earl; "he is sound and
+ faithful, and hath indeed all the chief holds in his hands, and at his
+ commandment. Ye shall do well to procure him a letter of thanks, taking
+ knowledge in general of his good-will to her Majesty. He is a right Almayn
+ in manner and fashion, free of his purse and of his drink, yet do I wish
+ him her Majesty's pensioner before any prince in Germany, for he loves her
+ and is able to serve her, and doth desire to be known her servant. He hath
+ been laboured by his nearest kinsfolk and friends in Germany to have left
+ the States and to have the King of Spain's pension and very great reward;
+ but he would not. I trust her Majesty will accept of his offer to be her
+ servant during his life, being indeed a very noble soldier." The Earl was
+ indeed inclined to take so cheerful view of matters as to believe that he
+ should even effect a reform in the noble soldier's most unpleasant
+ characteristic. "Hollock is a wise gallant gentleman," he said, "and very
+ well esteemed. He hath only one fault, which is drinking; but good hope
+ that he will amend it. Some make me believe that I shall be able to do
+ much with him, and I mean to do my best, for I see no man that knows all
+ these countries, and the people of all sorts, like him, and this fault
+ overthrows all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, so long as Maurice continued under the tutelage of this
+ uproarious cavalier&mdash;who, at a later day, was to become his
+ brother-in-law-he was not likely to interfere with Leicester's authority.
+ The character of the young Count was developing slowly. More than his
+ father had ever done, he deserved the character of the taciturn. A quiet
+ keen observer of men and things, not demonstrative nor talkative, nor much
+ given to writing&mdash;a modest, calm, deeply-reflecting student of
+ military and mathematical science&mdash;he was not at that moment deeply
+ inspired by political ambition. He was perhaps more desirous of raising
+ the fallen fortunes of his house than of securing the independence of his
+ country. Even at that early age, however, his mind was not easy to read,
+ and his character was somewhat of a puzzle to those who studied it. "I see
+ him much discontented with the States," said Leicester; "he hath a sullen
+ deep wit. The young gentleman is yet to be won only to her Majesty, I
+ perceive, of his own inclination. The house is marvellous poor and little
+ regarded by the States, and if they get anything it is like to be by her
+ Majesty, which should be altogether, and she may easily, do for him to win
+ him sure. I will undertake it." Yet the Earl was ever anxious about some
+ of the influences which surrounded Maurice, for he thought him more easily
+ guided than he wished him to be by any others but himself. "He stands upon
+ making and marring," he said, "as he meets with good counsel." And at
+ another time he observed, "The young gentleman hath a solemn sly wit; but,
+ in troth, if any be to be doubted toward the King of Spain, it is he and
+ his counsellors, for they have been altogether, so far, French, and so far
+ in mislike with England as they cannot almost hide it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there was still another member of the house of Nassau who was already
+ an honour to his illustrious race. Count William Lewis, hardly more than a
+ boy in years, had already served many campaigns, and had been desperately
+ wounded in the cause for which so much of the heroic blood of his race had
+ been shed. Of the five Nassau brethren, his father Count John was the sole
+ survivor, and as devoted as ever to the cause of Netherland liberty. The
+ other four had already laid down their lives in its defence. And William
+ Lewis, was worthy to be the nephew of William and Lewis, Henry and
+ Adolphus, and the son of John. Not at all a beautiful or romantic hero in
+ appearance, but an odd-looking little man, with a round bullet-head,
+ close-clipped hair, a small, twinkling, sagacious eye, rugged, somewhat
+ puffy features screwed whimsically awry, with several prominent warts
+ dotting, without ornamenting, all that was visible of a face which was
+ buried up to the ears in a furzy thicket of yellow-brown beard, the tough
+ young stadholder of Friesland, in his iron corslet, and halting upon his
+ maimed leg, had come forth with other notable personages to the Hague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wished to do honour heartily and freely to Queen Elizabeth and her
+ representative. And Leicester was favourably impressed with his new
+ acquaintance. "Here is another little fellow," he said, "as little as may
+ be, but one of the gravest and wisest young men that ever I spake withal;
+ it is the Count Guilliam of Nassau. He governs Friesland; I would every
+ Province had such another."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, upon the great question which presented itself upon the very
+ threshold&mdash;the nature and extent of the authority to be exercised by
+ Leicester&mdash;the most influential Netherlanders were in favour of a
+ large and liberal interpretation of his powers. The envoys in England, the
+ Nassau family Hohenlo, the prominent members of the States, such as the
+ shrewd, plausible Menin, the "honest and painful" Falk, and the chancellor
+ of Gelderland&mdash;"that very great, wise, old man Leoninus," as
+ Leicester called him,&mdash;were all desirous that he should assume an
+ absolute governor-generalship over the whole country. This was a grave and
+ a delicate matter, and needed to be severely scanned, without delay. But
+ besides the natives, there were two Englishmen&mdash;together with
+ ambassador Davison&mdash;who were his official advisers. Bartholomew
+ Clerk, LL.D., and Sir Henry Killigrew had been appointed by the Queen to
+ be members of the council of the United States, according to the
+ provisions of the August treaty. The learned Bartholomew hardly seemed
+ equal to his responsible position among those long-headed Dutch
+ politicians. Philip Sidney&mdash;the only blemish in whose character was
+ an intolerable tendency to puns&mdash;observed that "Doctor Clerk was of
+ those clerks that are not always the wisest, and so my lord too late was
+ finding him." The Earl himself, who never undervalued the intellect of the
+ Netherlanders whom he came to govern, anticipated but small assistance
+ from the English civilian. "I find no great stuff in my little colleague,"
+ he said, "nothing that I looked for. It is a pity you have no more of his
+ profession, able men to serve. This man hath good will, and a pretty
+ scholar's wit; but he is too little for these big fellows, as heavy as her
+ Majesty thinks them to be. I would she had but one or two, such as the
+ worst of half a score be here." The other English statecounsellor seemed
+ more promising. "I have one here," said the Earl, "in whom I take no small
+ comfort; that is little Hal Killigrew. I assure you, my lord, he is a
+ notable servant, and more in him than ever I heretofore thought of him,
+ though I always knew him to be an honest man and an able."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But of all the men that stood by Leicester's side, the most faithful,
+ devoted, sagacious, experienced, and sincere of his counsellors, English
+ or Flemish, was envoy Davison. It is important to note exactly the opinion
+ that had been formed of him by those most competent to judge, before
+ events in which he was called on to play a prominent and responsible
+ though secondary part, had placed him in a somewhat false position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Davison," wrote Sidney, "is here very careful in her Majesty's
+ causes, and in your Lordship's. He takes great pains and goes to great
+ charges for it." The Earl himself was always vehement in his praise. "Mr.
+ Davison," said he at another time, "has dealt most painfully and
+ chargeably in her Majesty's service here, and you shall find him as
+ sufficiently able to deliver the whole state of this country as any man
+ that ever was in it, acquainted with all sorts here that are men of
+ dealing. Surely, my Lord, you shall do a good deed that he may be
+ remembered with her Majesty's gracious consideration, for his being here
+ has been very chargeable, having kept a very good countenance, and a very
+ good table, all his abode here, and of such credit with all the chief
+ sort, as I know no stranger in any place hath the like. As I am a suitor
+ to you to be his good friend to her Majesty, so I must heartily pray you,
+ good my Lord, to procure his coming hither shortly to me again, for I know
+ not almost how to do without him. I confess it is a wrong to the
+ gentleman, and I protest before God, if it were for mine own particular
+ respect, I would not require it for L5000. But your Lordship doth little
+ think how greatly I have to do, as also how needful for her Majesty's
+ service his being here will, be. Wherefore, good my Lord, if it may not
+ offend her Majesty, be a mean for this my request, for her own service'
+ sake wholly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the personages who surrounded the Earl on his arrival in the
+ Netherlands, and such their sentiments respecting the position that it was
+ desirable for him to assume. But there was one very important fact. He had
+ studiously concealed from Davison that the Queen had peremptorily and
+ distinctly forbidden his accepting the office of governor-general. It
+ seemed reasonable, if he came thither at all, that he should come in that
+ elevated capacity. The Staten wished it. The Earl ardently longed for it.
+ The ambassador, who knew more of Netherland politics and Netherland
+ humours than any man did, approved of it. The interests of both England
+ and Holland seemed to require it. No one but Leicester knew that her
+ Majesty had forbidden it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, no sooner had the bell-ringing, cannon-explosions, bonfires,
+ and charades, come to an end, and the Earl got fairly housed in the Hague,
+ than the States took the affair of government seriously in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 9th January, Chancellor Leoninus and Paul Buys waited upon Davison,
+ and requested a copy of the commission granted by the Queen to the Earl.
+ The copy was refused, but the commission was read; by which it appeared
+ that he had received absolute command over her Majesty's forces in the
+ Netherlands by land and sea, together with authority to send for all
+ gentlemen and other personages out of England that he might think useful
+ to him. On the 10th the States passed a resolution to offer him the
+ governor-generalship over all the Provinces. On the same day another
+ committee waited upon his "Excellency"&mdash;as the States chose to
+ denominate the Earl, much to the subsequent wrath of the Queen&mdash;and
+ made an appointment for the whole body to wait upon him the following
+ morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon that day accordingly&mdash;New Year's Day, by the English reckoning,
+ 11th January by the New Style&mdash;the deputies of all the States at an
+ early hour came to his lodgings, with much pomp, preceded by a herald and
+ trumpeters. Leicester, not expecting them quite so soon, was in his
+ dressing-room, getting ready for the solemn audience, when, somewhat to
+ his dismay, a flourish of trumpets announced the arrival of the whole body
+ in his principal hall of audience. Hastening his preparations as much as
+ possible, he descended to that apartment, and was instantly saluted by a
+ flourish of rhetoric still more formidable; for that "very great, and wise
+ old Leoninus," forthwith began an oration, which promised to be of
+ portentous length and serious meaning. The Earl was slightly flustered,
+ when, fortunately; some one whispered in his ear that they had come to
+ offer him the much-coveted prize of the stadholderate-general. Thereupon
+ he made bold to interrupt the flow of the chancellor's eloquence in its
+ first outpourings. "As this is a very private matter," said he, "it will
+ be better to treat of it in a more private place I pray you therefore to
+ come into my chamber, where these things may be more conveniently
+ discussed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You hear what my Lord says," cried Leoninus, turning to his companions;
+ "we are to withdraw into his chamber."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly they withdrew, accompanied by the Earl, and by five or six
+ select counsellors, among whom were Davison and Dr. Clerk. Then the
+ chancellor once more commenced his harangue, and went handsomely through
+ the usual forms of compliment, first to the Queen, and then to her
+ representative, concluding with an earnest request that the Earl&mdash;although
+ her Majesty had declined the sovereignty "would take the name and place of
+ absolute governor and general of all their forces and soldiers, with the
+ disposition of their whole revenues and taxes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon as the oration was concluded, Leicester; who did not speak French,
+ directed Davison to reply in that language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The envoy accordingly, in name of the Earl, expressed the deepest
+ gratitude for this mark of the affection and confidence of the
+ States-General towards the Queen. He assured them that the step thus taken
+ by them would be the cause of still more favour and affection on the part
+ of her Majesty, who would unquestionably, from day to day, augment the
+ succour that she was extending to the Provinces in order to relieve men
+ from their misery. For himself, the Earl protested that he could never
+ sufficiently recompense the States for the honour which had thus been
+ conferred upon him, even if he should live one hundred lives. Although he
+ felt himself quite unable to sustain the weight of so great an office, yet
+ he declared that they might repose with full confidence on his integrity
+ and good intentions. Nevertheless, as the authority thus offered to him
+ was very arduous, and as the subject required deep deliberation, he
+ requested that the proposition should be reduced to writing, and delivered
+ into his hands. He might then come to a conclusion thereupon, most
+ conducive to the glory of God and the welfare of the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three days afterwards, 14th January, the offer, drawn up formally in
+ writing, was presented to envoy Davison, according to the request of
+ Leicester. Three days latter, 17th January, his Excellency having
+ deliberated upon the proposition, requested a committee of conference. The
+ conference took place the same day, and there was some discussion upon
+ matters of detail, principally relating to the matter of contributions.
+ The Earl, according to the report of the committee, manifested no
+ repugnance to the acceptance of the office, provided these points could be
+ satisfactorily adjusted. He seemed, on the contrary, impatient, rather
+ than reluctant; for, on the day following the conference, he sent his
+ secretary Gilpin with a somewhat importunate message. "His Excellency was
+ surprised," said the secretary, "that the States were so long in coming to
+ a resolution on the matters suggested by him in relation to the offer of
+ the government-general; nor could his Excellency imagine the cause of the
+ delay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For, in truth, the delay was caused by an excessive, rather than a
+ deficient, appetite for power on the part of his Excellency. The States,
+ while conferring what they called the "absolute" government, by which it
+ afterwards appeared that they meant absolute, in regard to time, not to
+ function&mdash;were very properly desirous of retaining a wholesome
+ control over that government by means of the state-council. They wished
+ not only to establish such a council, as a check upon the authority of the
+ new governor, but to share with him at least in the appointment of the
+ members who were to compose the board. But the aristocratic Earl was
+ already restive under the thought of any restraint&mdash;most of all the
+ restraint of individuals belonging to what he considered the humbler
+ classes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cousin, my lord ambassador," said he to Davison, "among your sober
+ companions be it always remembered, I beseech you, that your cousin have
+ no other alliance but with gentle blood. By no means consent that he be
+ linked in faster bonds than their absolute grant may yield him a free and
+ honourable government, to be able to do such service as shall be meet for
+ an honest man to perform in such a calling, which of itself is very noble.
+ But yet it is not more to be embraced, if I were to be led in alliance by
+ such keepers as will sooner draw my nose from the right scent of the
+ chace, than to lead my feet in the true pace to pursue the game I desire
+ to reach. Consider, I pray you, therefore, what is to be done, and how
+ unfit it will be in respect of my poor self, and how unacceptable to her
+ Majesty, and how advantageous to enemies that will seek holes in my coat,
+ if I should take so great a name upon me, and so little power. They
+ challenge acceptation already, and I challenge their absolute grant and
+ offer to me, before they spoke of any instructions; for so it was when
+ Leoninus first spoke to me with them all on New Years Day, as you heard&mdash;offering
+ in his speech all manner of absolute authority. If it please them to
+ confirm this, without restraining instructions, I will willingly serve the
+ States, or else, with such advising instructions as the Dowager of Hungary
+ had."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was explicit enough, and Davison, who always acted for Leicester in
+ the negotiations with the States, could certainly have no doubt as to the
+ desires of the Earl, on the subject of "absolute" authority. He did
+ accordingly what he could to bring the States to his Excellency's way of
+ thinking; nor was he unsuccessful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 22nd January, a committee of conference was sent by the States to
+ Leyden, in which city Leicester was making a brief visit. They were
+ instructed to procure his consent, if possible, to the appointment, by the
+ States themselves, of a council consisting of members from each Province.
+ If they could not obtain this concession, they were directed to insist as
+ earnestly as possible upon their right to present a double. list of
+ candidates, from which he was to make nominations. And if the one and the
+ other proposition should be refused, the States were then to agree that
+ his Excellency should freely choose and appoint a council of state,
+ consisting of native residents from every Province, for the period of one
+ year. The committee was further authorised to arrange the commission for
+ the governor, in accordance with these points; and to draw up a set of
+ instructions for the state-council, to the satisfaction of his Excellency.
+ The committee was also empowered to conclude the matter at once, without
+ further reference to the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly a committee thus instructed was likely to be sufficiently
+ pliant. It had need to be, in order to bend to the humour of his
+ Excellency, which was already becoming imperious. The adulation which he
+ had received; the triumphal marches, the Latin orations, the flowers
+ strewn in his path, had produced their effect, and the Earl was almost
+ inclined to assume the airs of royalty. The committee waited upon him at
+ Leyden. He affected a reluctance to accept the "absolute" government, but
+ his coyness could not deceive such experienced statesmen as the "wise old
+ Leoliinus," or Menin, Maalzoon, Florin Thin, or Aitzma, who composed the
+ deputation. It was obvious enough to them that it was not a King Log that
+ had descended among them, but it was not a moment for complaining. The
+ governor elect insisted, of course, that the two Englishmen, according to
+ the treaty with her Majesty, should be members of, the council. He also,
+ at once, nominated Leoninus, Meetkerk, Brederode, Falck, and Paul Buys, to
+ the same office; thinking, no doubt, that these were five keepers&mdash;if
+ keepers he must have&mdash;who would not draw his nose off the scent, nor
+ prevent his reaching the game he hunted, whatever that game might be. It
+ was reserved for the future, however, to show, whether, the five were like
+ to hunt in company with him as harmoniously as he hoped. As to the other
+ counsellors, he expressed a willingness that candidates should be proposed
+ for him, as to whose qualifications he would make up his mind at leisure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This matter being satisfactorily adjusted-and certainly unless the game
+ pursued by the Earl was a crown royal, he ought to have been satisfied
+ with his success&mdash;the States received a letter from their committee
+ at Leyden, informing them that his Excellency, after some previous
+ protestations, had accepted the government (24th January, 1586).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was agreed that he should be inaugurated Governor-General of the United
+ Provinces of Gelderland and Zutphen, Flanders, Holland, Zeeland, Utrecht,
+ Friesland, and all others in confederacy with them. He was to have supreme
+ military command by land and sea. He was to exercise supreme authority in
+ matters civil and political, according to the customs prevalent in the
+ reign of the Emperor Charles V. All officers, political, civil, legal,
+ were to be appointed by him out of a double or triple nomination made by
+ the States of the Provinces in which vacancies might occur. The
+ States-General were to assemble whenever and wherever he should summon
+ them. They were also&mdash;as were the States of each separate Province&mdash;competent
+ to meet together by their own appointment. The Governor-General was to
+ receive an oath of fidelity from the States, and himself to swear the
+ maintenance of the ancient laws, customs, and privileges of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deed was done. In vain had an emissary of the French court been
+ exerting his utmost to prevent the consummation of this close alliance.
+ For the wretched government of Henry III., while abasing itself before
+ Philip II., and offering the fair cities and fertile plains of France as a
+ sacrifice to that insatiable ambition which wore the mask of religious
+ bigotry, was most anxious that Holland and England should not escape the
+ meshes by which it was itself enveloped. The agent at the Hague came
+ nominally upon some mercantile affairs, but in reality, according to
+ Leicester, "to impeach the States from binding themselves to her Majesty."
+ But he was informed that there was then no leisure for his affairs; "for
+ the States would attend to the service of the Queen of England, before all
+ princes in the world." The agent did not feel complimented by the coolness
+ of this reception; yet it was reasonable enough, certainly, that the
+ Hollanders should remember with bitterness the contumely, which they had
+ experienced the previous year in France. The emissary was; however, much
+ disgusted. "The fellow," said Leicester, "took it in such snuff, that he
+ came proudly to the States and offered his letters, saying; 'Now I trust
+ you have done all your sacrifices to the Queen of England, and may yield
+ me some leisure to read my masters letters.'"&mdash;"But they so shook
+ him, up," continued the Earl, "for naming her Majesty in scorn&mdash;as
+ they took it&mdash;that they hurled him his letters; and bid him content
+ himself;" and so on, much to the agent's discomfiture, who retired in
+ greater "snuff" than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So much for the French influence. And now Leicester had done exactly what
+ the most imperious woman in the world, whose favour was the breath of his
+ life, had expressly forbidden him to do. The step having been taken, the
+ prize so tempting to his ambition having been snatched, and the policy
+ which had governed the united action of the States and himself seeming so
+ sound, what ought he to have done in order to avert the tempest which he
+ must have foreseen? Surely a man who knew so much of woman's nature and of
+ Elizabeth's nature as he did, ought to have attempted to conciliate her
+ affections, after having so deeply wounded her pride. He knew his power.
+ Besides the graces of his person and manner&mdash;which few women, once
+ impressed by them, could ever forget&mdash;he possessed the most insidious
+ and flattering eloquence, and, in absence, his pen was as wily as his
+ tongue. For the Earl was imbued with the very genius of courtship. None
+ was better skilled than he in the phrases of rapturous devotion, which
+ were music to the ear both of the woman and the Queen; and he knew his
+ royal mistress too well not to be aware that the language of passionate
+ idolatry, however extravagant, had rarely fallen unheeded upon her soul.
+ It was strange therefore, that in this emergency, he should not at once
+ throw himself upon her compassion without any mediator. Yet, on the
+ contrary, he committed the monstrous error of entrusting his defence to
+ envoy Davison, whom he determined to despatch at once with instructions to
+ the Queen, and towards whom he committed the grave offence of concealing
+ from him her previous prohibitions. But how could the Earl fail to
+ perceive that it was the woman, not the Queen, whom he should have
+ implored for pardon; that it was Robert Dudley, not William Davison, who
+ ought to have sued upon his knees. This whole matter of the Netherland
+ sovereignty and the Leicester stadholderate, forms a strange psychological
+ study, which deserves and requires some minuteness of attention; for it
+ was by the characteristics of these eminent personages that the current
+ history was deeply stamped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly, under the peculiar circumstances of the case, the first letter
+ conveying intelligence so likely to pique the pride of Elizabeth, should
+ have been a letter from Leicester. On the contrary, it proved to be a dull
+ formal epistle from the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here again the assistance of the indispensable Davison was considered
+ necessary. On the 3rd February the ambassador&mdash;having announced his
+ intention of going to England, by command of his Excellency, so soon as
+ the Earl should have been inaugurated, for the purpose of explaining all
+ these important transactions to her Majesty&mdash;waited upon the States
+ with the request that they should prepare as speedily as might be their
+ letter to the Queen, with other necessary documents, to be entrusted to
+ his care. He also suggested that the draft or minute of their proposed
+ epistle should be submitted to him for advice&mdash;"because the humours
+ of her Majesty were best known to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the humours of her Majesty were best known to Leicester of all men in
+ the whole world, and it is inconceivable that he should have allowed so
+ many days and weeks to pass without taking these humours properly into
+ account. But the Earl's head was slightly turned by his sudden and
+ unexpected success. The game that he had been pursuing had fallen into his
+ grasp, almost at the very start, and it is not astonishing that he should
+ have been somewhat absorbed in the enjoyment of his victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three days later (6th February) the minute of a letter to Elizabeth, drawn
+ up by Menin, was submitted to the ambassador; eight days after that (14th
+ February) Mr. Davison took leave of the States, and set forth for the
+ Brill on his way to England; and three or four days later yet, he was
+ still in that sea-port, waiting for a favourable wind. Thus from the 11th
+ January, N.S., upon which day the first offer of the absolute government
+ had been made to Leicester, nearly forty days had elapsed, during which
+ long period the disobedient Earl had not sent one line, private or
+ official, to her Majesty on this most important subject. And when at last
+ the Queen was to receive information of her favourite's delinquency, it
+ was not to be in his well-known handwriting and accompanied by his
+ penitent tears and written caresses, but to be laid before her with all
+ the formality of parchment and sealingwax, in the stilted diplomatic
+ jargon of those "highly-mighty, very learned, wise, and very foreseeing
+ gentlemen, my lords the States-General." Nothing could have been managed
+ with less adroitness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, not heeding the storm gathering beyond the narrow seas, the new
+ governor was enjoying the full sunshine of power. On the 4th February the
+ ceremony of his inauguration took place, with great pomp and ceremony at
+ the Hague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beautiful, placid, village-capital of Holland wore much the same
+ aspect at that day as now. Clean, quiet, spacious streets, shaded with
+ rows of whispering poplars and umbrageous limes, broad sleepy canals&mdash;those
+ liquid highways alone; which glided in phantom silence the bustle, and
+ traffic, and countless cares of a stirring population&mdash;quaint
+ toppling houses, with tower and gable; ancient brick churches, with
+ slender spire and musical chimes; thatched cottages on the outskirts, with
+ stork-nests on the roofs&mdash;the whole without fortification save the
+ watery defences which enclosed it with long-drawn lines on every side;
+ such was the Count's park, or 's Graven Haage, in English called the
+ Hague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was embowered and almost buried out of sight by vast groves of oaks and
+ beeches. Ancient Badahuennan forests of sanguinary Druids, the "wild wood
+ without mercy" of Saxon savages, where, at a later period, sovereign Dirks
+ and Florences, in long succession of centuries, had ridden abroad with
+ lance in rest, or hawk on fist; or under whose boughs, in still nearer
+ days, the gentle Jacqueline had pondered and wept over her sorrows,
+ stretched out in every direction between the city and the neighbouring
+ sea. In the heart of the place stood the ancient palace of the counts,
+ built in the thirteenth century by William II. of Holland, King of the
+ Romans, with massive brick walls, cylindrical turrets, pointed gable and
+ rose-shaped windows, and with spacious coup-yard, enclosed by feudal moat,
+ drawbridge, and portcullis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the great banqueting-hall of the ancient palace, whose cedarn-roof of
+ magnificent timber-work, brought by crusading counts from the Holy Land,
+ had rung with the echoes of many a gigantic revel in the days of chivalry&mdash;an
+ apartment one hundred and fifty feet long and forty feet high&mdash;there
+ had been arranged an elevated platform, with a splendid chair of state for
+ the "absolute" governor, and with a great profusion of gilding and velvet
+ tapestry, hangings, gilt emblems, complimentary devices, lions, unicorns,
+ and other imposing appurtenances. Prince Maurice, and all the members of
+ his house, the States-General in full costume, and all the great
+ functionaries, civil and military, were assembled. There was an elaborate
+ harangue by orator Menin, in which it was proved; by copious citations
+ from Holy Writ and from ancient chronicle, that the Lord never forsakes
+ His own; so that now, when the Provinces were at their last gasp by the
+ death of Orange and the loss of Antwerp, the Queen of England and the Earl
+ of Leicester had suddenly descended, as if from Heaven; to their rescue.
+ Then the oaths of mutual fidelity were exchanged between the governor and
+ the States, and, in conclusion, Dr. Bartholomew Clerk ventured to measure
+ himself with the "big fellows," by pronouncing an oration which seemed to
+ command universal approbation. And thus the Earl was duly installed
+ Governor-General of the United States of the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But already the first mutterings of the storm were audible. A bird in the
+ air had whispered to the Queen that her favourite was inclined to
+ disobedience. "Some flying tale hath been told me here," wrote Leicester
+ to Walsingham, "that her Majesty should mislike my name of Excellency. But
+ if I had delighted, or would have received titles, I refused a title
+ higher than Excellency, as Mr. Davison, if you ask him, will tell you; and
+ that I, my own self, refused most earnestly that, and, if I might have
+ done it, this also." Certainly, if the Queen objected to this common form
+ of address, which had always been bestowed upon Leicester, as he himself
+ observed, ever since she had made him an earl, it might be supposed that
+ her wrath would mount high when she should hear of him as absolute
+ governor-general. It is also difficult to say what higher title he had
+ refused, for certainly the records show that he had refused nothing, in
+ the way of power and dignity, that it was possible for him to obtain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But very soon afterwards arrived authentic intelligence that the Queen had
+ been informed of the proposition made on New Year's-Day (O.S.), and that,
+ although she could not imagine the possibility of his accepting, she was
+ indignant that he had not peremptorily rejected the offer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to the proposal made to you," wrote Burghley, "by the mouth of
+ Leoninus, her Majesty hath been informed that you had thanked them in her
+ name, and alleged that there was no such thing in the contract, and that
+ therefore you could not accept nor knew how to answer the same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now this information was obviously far from correct, although it had been
+ furnished by the Earl himself to Burghley. We have seen that Leicester had
+ by no means rejected, but very gratefully entertained, the proposition as
+ soon as made. Nevertheless the Queen was dissatisfied, even without
+ suspecting that she had been directly disobeyed. "Her Majesty," continued
+ the Lord-Treasurer; "is much offended with this proceeding. She allows not
+ that you should give them thanks, but findeth it very strange that you did
+ not plainly declare to them that they did well know how often her Majesty
+ had refused to have any one for her take any such government there, and
+ that she had always so answered peremptorily. Therefore there might be
+ some suspicion conceived that by offering on their part, and refusal on
+ hers, some further mischief might be secretly hidden by some odd person's
+ device to the hurt of the cause. But in that your Lordship did not flatly
+ say to them that yourself did know her Majesty's mind therein, that she
+ never meant, in this sort, to take the absolute government, she is
+ offended considering, as she saith, that none knew her determination
+ therein better than yourself. For at your going hence, she did
+ peremptorily charge you not to accept any such title and office; and
+ therefore her straight commandment now is that you shall not accept the
+ same, for she will never assent thereto, nor avow you with any such
+ title."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Elizabeth was so wrathful, even while supposing that the offer had been
+ gratefully declined, what were likely to be her emotions when she should
+ be informed that it had been gratefully accepted. The Earl already began
+ to tremble at the probable consequences of his mal-adroitness. Grave was
+ the error he had committed in getting himself made governor-general
+ against orders; graver still, perhaps fatal, the blunder of not being
+ swift to confess his fault, and cry for pardon, before other tongues
+ should have time to aggravate his offence. Yet even now he shrank from
+ addressing the Queen in person, but hoped to conjure the rising storm by
+ means of the magic wand of the Lord-Treasurer. He implored his friend's
+ interposition to shield him in the emergency, and begged that at least her
+ Majesty and the lords of council would suspend their judgment until Mr.
+ Davison should deliver those messages and explanations with which, fully
+ freighted, he was about to set sail from the Brill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If my reasons seem to your wisdoms," said he, "other than such as might
+ well move a true and a faithful careful man to her Majesty to do as I have
+ done, I do desire, for my mistaking offence, to bear the burden of it; to
+ be disavowed with all displeasure and disgrace; a matter of as great
+ reproach and grief as ever can happen to any man." He begged that another
+ person might be sent as soon as possible in his place-protesting, however,
+ by his faith in Christ, that he had done only what he was bound to do by
+ his regard for her Majesty's service&mdash;and that when he set foot in
+ the country he had no more expected to be made Governor of the Netherlands
+ than to be made King of Spain. Certainly he had been paying dear for the
+ honour, if honour it was, and he had not intended on setting forth for the
+ Provinces to ruin himself, for the sake of an empty title. His motives&mdash;and
+ he was honest, when he so avowed them&mdash;were motives of state at least
+ as much as of self-advancement. "I have no cause," he said, "to have
+ played the fool thus far for myself; first, to have her Majesty's
+ displeasure, which no kingdom in the world could make me willingly
+ deserve; next, to undo myself in my later days; to consume all that should
+ have kept me all my life in one half year. But I must thank God for all,
+ and am most heartily grieved at her Majesty's heavy displeasure. I neither
+ desire to live, nor to see my country with it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And at this bitter thought, he began to sigh like furnace, and to shed the
+ big tears of penitence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For if I have not done her Majesty good service at this time," he said,
+ "I shall never hope to do her any, but will withdraw me into some
+ out-corner of the world, where I will languish out the rest of my few-too
+ many-days, praying ever for her Majesty's long and prosperous life, and
+ with this only comfort to live an exile, that this disgrace hath happened
+ for no other cause but for my mere regard for her Majesty's estate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having painted this dismal picture of the probable termination to his
+ career&mdash;not in the hope of melting Burghley but of touching the heart
+ of Elizabeth&mdash;he proceeded to argue the point in question with much
+ logic and sagacity. He had satisfied himself on his arrival in the
+ Provinces, that, if he did not take the governor-generalship some other
+ person would; and that it certainly was for the interest of her Majesty
+ that her devoted servant, rather than an indifferent person, should be
+ placed in that important position. He maintained that the Queen had
+ intimated, to him, in private, her willingness that he should accept the
+ office in question provided the proposition should come from the States
+ and not from her; he reasoned that the double nature of his functions&mdash;being
+ general and counsellor for her, as well as general and counsellor for the
+ Provinces&mdash;made his acceptance of the authority conferred on him
+ almost indispensable; that for him to be merely commander over five
+ thousand English troops, when an abler soldier than himself, Sir John
+ Norris, was at their head, was hardly worthy her Majesty's service or
+ himself, and that in reality the Queen had lost nothing, by his
+ appointment, but had gained much benefit and honour by thus having the
+ whole command of the Provinces, of their forces by land and sea, of their
+ towns and treasures, with knowledge of all their secrets of state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, relapsing into a vein of tender but reproachful melancholy, he
+ observed, that, if it had been any man but himself that had done as he had
+ done, he would have been thanked, not censured. "But such is now my
+ wretched case," he said, "as for my faithful, true, and loving heart to
+ her Majesty and my country, I have utterly undone myself. For favour, I
+ have disgrace; for reward, utter spoil and ruin. But if this taking upon
+ me the name of governor is so evil taken as it hath deserved dishonour,
+ discredit, disfavour, with all griefs that may be laid upon a man, I must
+ receive it as deserved of God and not of my Queen, whom I have reverenced
+ with all humility, and whom I have loved with all fidelity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the true way, no doubt, to reach the heart of Elizabeth, and
+ Leicester had always plenty of such shafts in his quiver. Unfortunately he
+ had delayed too long, and even now he dared not take a direct aim. He
+ feared to write to the Queen herself, thinking that his so doing, "while
+ she had such conceipts of him, would only trouble her," and he therefore
+ continued to employ the Lord-Treasurer and Mr. Secretary as his mediators.
+ Thus he committed error upon error.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, as if there had not been procrastination enough, Davison was
+ loitering at the Brill, detained by wind and weather. Two days after the
+ letter, just cited, had been despatched to Walsingham, Leicester sent an
+ impatient message to the envoy. "I am heartily sorry, with all my heart,"
+ he said, "to hear of your long stay at Brill, the wind serving so fair as
+ it hath done these two days. I would have laid any wager that you had been
+ in England ere this. I pray you make haste, lest our cause take too great
+ a prejudice there ere you come, although I cannot fear it, because it is
+ so good and honest. I pray you imagine in what care I dwell till I shall
+ hear from you, albeit some way very resolute."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it was obvious that he had no secret despair of his cause when it
+ should be thoroughly laid before the Queen. The wonder was that he had
+ added the offence of long silence to the sin of disobedience. Davison had
+ sailed, however, before the receipt of the Earl's letter. He had been
+ furnished with careful instructions upon the subject of his mission. He
+ was to show how eager the States had been to have Leicester for their
+ absolute governor&mdash;which was perfectly true&mdash;and how anxious the
+ Earl had been to decline the proffered honour&mdash;which was certainly
+ false, if contemporary record and the minutes of the States-General are to
+ be believed. He was to sketch the general confusion which had descended
+ upon the country, the quarrelling of politicians, and the discontent of
+ officers and soldiers, from out of all which chaos one of two results was
+ sure to arise: the erection of a single chieftain, or a reconciliation of
+ the Provinces with Spain. That it would be impossible for the Earl to
+ exercise the double functions with which he was charged&mdash;of general
+ of her Majesty's forces, and general and chief counsellor of the States&mdash;if
+ any other man than himself should be appointed governor; was obvious. It
+ was equally plain that the Provinces could only be kept at her Majesty's
+ disposition by choosing the course which, at their own suggestion, had
+ been adopted. The offer of the government by the States, and its
+ acceptance by the Earl, were the logical consequence of the step which the
+ Queen had already taken. It was thus only that England could retain her
+ hold upon the country, and even upon the cautionary towns. As to a
+ reconciliation of the Provinces with Spain&mdash;which would have been the
+ probable result of Leicester's rejection of the proposition made by the
+ Stateait was unnecessary to do more than allude to such a catastrophe. No
+ one but a madman could doubt that, in such an event, the subjugation of
+ England was almost certain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before the arrival of the ambassador, the Queen had been thoroughly
+ informed as to the whole extent of the Earl's delinquency. Dire was the
+ result. The wintry gales which had been lashing the North Sea, and
+ preventing the unfortunate Davison from setting forth on his disastrous
+ mission, were nothing to the tempest of royal wrath which had been shaking
+ the court-world to its centre. The Queen had been swearing most fearfully
+ ever since she read the news, which Leicester had not dared to communicate
+ directly, to herself. No one was allowed to speak a word in extenuation of
+ the favourite's offence. Burghley, who lifted up his voice somewhat feebly
+ to appease her wrath, was bid, with a curse, to hold his peace. So he took
+ to his bed-partly from prudence, partly from gout&mdash;and thus sheltered
+ himself for a season from the peltings of the storm. Walsingham, more
+ manful, stood to his post, but could not gain a hearing. It was the
+ culprit that should have spoken, and spoken in time. "Why, why did you not
+ write yourself?" was the plaintive cry of all the Earl's friends, from
+ highest to humblest. "But write to her now," they exclaimed, "at any rate;
+ and, above all, send her a present, a love-gift." "Lay out two or three
+ hundred crowns in some rare thing, for a token to her Majesty," said
+ Christopher Hatton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange that his colleagues and his rivals should have been obliged to
+ advise Leicester upon the proper course to pursue; that they&mdash;not
+ himself&mdash;should have been the first to perceive that it was the
+ enraged woman, even more than the offended sovereign, who was to be
+ propitiated and soothed. In truth, all the woman had been aroused in
+ Elizabeth's bosom. She was displeased that her favourite should derive
+ power and splendour from any source but her own bounty. She was furious
+ that his wife, whom she hated, was about to share in his honours. For the
+ mischievous tongues of court-ladies had been collecting or fabricating
+ many unpleasant rumours. A swarm of idle but piquant stories had been
+ buzzing about the Queen's ears, and stinging her into a frenzy of
+ jealousy. The Countess&mdash;it was said&mdash;was on the point of setting
+ forth for the Netherlands, to join the Earl, with a train of courtiers and
+ ladies, coaches and side-saddles, such as were never seen before&mdash;where
+ the two were about to establish themselves in conjugal felicity, as well
+ as almost royal state. What a prospect for the jealous and imperious
+ sovereign! "Coaches and side-saddles! She would show the upstarts that
+ there was one Queen, and that her name was Elizabeth, and that there was
+ no court but hers." And so she continued to storm and swear, and threaten
+ unutterable vengeance, till all her courtiers quaked in their shoes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas Dudley, however, warmly contradicted the report, declaring, of his
+ own knowledge, that the Countess had no wish to go to the Provinces, nor
+ the Earl any intention of receiving her there. This information was at
+ once conveyed to the Queen, "and," said Dudley, "it did greatly pacify her
+ stomach." His friends did what they could to maintain the governor's
+ cause; but Burghley, Walsingham, Hatton, and the rest of them, were all
+ "at their wits end," and were nearly distraught at the delay in Davison's
+ arrival. Meantime the Queen's stomach was not so much pacified but that
+ she was determined to humiliate the Earl with the least possible delay.
+ Having waited sufficiently long for his explanations, she now appointed
+ Sir Thomas Heneage as special commissioner to the States, without waiting
+ any longer. Her wrath vented itself at once in the preamble to the
+ instructions for this agent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whereas," she said, "we have been given to understand that the Earl of
+ Leicester hath in a very contemptuous sort&mdash;contrary to our express
+ commandment given unto him by ourself, accepted of an offer of a more
+ absolute government made by the States unto him, than was agreed on
+ between us and their commissioners&mdash;which kind of contemptible manner
+ of proceeding giveth the world just cause to think that there is not that
+ reverent respect carried towards us by our subjects as in duty
+ appertaineth; especially seeing so notorious a contempt committed by one
+ whom we have raised up and yielded in the eye of the world, even from the
+ beginning of our reign, as great portion of our favour as ever subject
+ enjoyed at any prince's hands; we therefore, holding nothing dearer than
+ our honour, and considering that no one thing could more touch our
+ reputation than to induce so open and public a faction of a prince, and
+ work a greater reproach than contempt at a subject's hand, without
+ reparation of our honour, have found it necessary to send you unto him, as
+ well to charge him with the said contempt, as also to execute such other
+ things as we think meet to be done, for the justifying of ourselves to the
+ world, as the repairing of the indignity cast upon us by his undutiful
+ manner of proceeding towards us. . . . And for that we find ourselves also
+ not well dealt withal by the States, in that they have pressed the said
+ Earl, without our assent or privity, to accept of a more absolute
+ government than was agreed on between us and their commissioners, we have
+ also thought meet that you shall charge them therewith, according to the
+ directions hereafter ensuing. And to the end there may be no delay used in
+ the execution of that which we think meet to be presently done, you shall
+ charge the said States, even as they tender the continuance of our
+ good-will towards them, to proceed to the speedy execution of our
+ request."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this trumpet-like preamble it may be supposed that the blast which
+ followed would be piercing and shrill. The instructions, in truth,
+ consisted in wild, scornful flourishes upon one theme. The word contempt
+ had occurred five times in the brief preamble. It was repeated in almost
+ every line of the instructions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You shall let the Earl" (our cousin no longer) "understand," said the
+ Queen, "how highly and justly we are offended with his acceptation of the
+ government, which we do repute to be a very great and strange contempt,
+ least looked for at our hands, being, as he is, a creature of our own."
+ His omission to acquaint her by letter with the causes moving him "so
+ contemptuously to break" her commandment, his delay in sending Davison "to
+ answer the said contempt," had much "aggravated the fault," although the
+ Queen protested herself unable to imagine any "excuse for so manifest a
+ contempt." The States were to be informed that she "held it strange" that
+ "this creature of her own" should have been pressed by them to "commit so
+ notorious a contempt" against her, both on account of this very exhibition
+ of contempt on Leicester's part, and because they thereby "shewed
+ themselves to have a very slender and weak conceit of her judgment, by
+ pressing a minister of hers to accept that which she had refused, as:
+ though her long experience in government had not taught her to discover
+ what was fit to do in matters of state." As the result of such a
+ proceeding would be to disgrace her in the eyes of mankind, by inducing an
+ opinion that her published solemn declaration on this great subject had
+ been intended to abuse the world, he was directed&mdash;in order to remove
+ the hard conceit justly to be taken by the world, "in consideration of the
+ said contempt,"&mdash;to make a public and open resignation of the
+ government in the place where he had accepted the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it had been made obvious to the unlucky "creature of her own," that
+ the Queen did not easily digest "contempt." Nevertheless these
+ instructions to Heneage were gentle, compared with the fierce billet which
+ she addressed directly to the Earl: It was brief, too, as the posy of a
+ ring; and thus it ran: "To my Lord of Leicester, from the Queen, by Sir
+ Thomas Heneage. How contemptuously we conceive ourself to have been used
+ by you, you shall by this bearer understand, whom we have expressly sent
+ unto you to charge you withal. We could never have imagined, had we not
+ seen it fall out in experience, that a man raised up by ourself, and
+ extraordinarily favoured by us above any other subject of this land, would
+ have, in so contemptible a sort, broken our commandment, in a cause that
+ so greatly toucheth us in honour; whereof, although you have showed
+ yourself to make but little account, in most undutiful a sort, you may not
+ therefore think that we have so little care of the reparation thereof as
+ we mind to pass so great a wrong in silence unredressed. And therefore our
+ express pleasure and commandment is, that&mdash;all delays and excuses
+ laid apart&mdash;you do presently, upon the duty of your allegiance, obey
+ and fulfil whatsoever the bearer hereof shall direct you to do in our
+ name. Whereof fail not, as you will answer the contrary at your uttermost
+ peril."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was no billing and cooing, certainly, but a terse, biting
+ phraseology, about which there could be no misconception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the same messenger the Queen also sent a formal letter to the
+ States-General; the epistle&mdash;'mutatis mutandis'&mdash;being also
+ addressed to the state-council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this document her Majesty expressed her great surprise that Leicester
+ should have accepted their offer of the absolute government, "both for
+ police and war," when she had so expressly rejected it herself. "To tell
+ the truth," she observed, "you seem to have treated us with very little
+ respect, and put a too manifest insult upon us, in presenting anew to one
+ of, our subjects the same proposition which we had already declined,
+ without at least waiting for our answer whether we should like it or no;
+ as if we had not sense enough to be able to decide upon what we ought to
+ accept or refuse." She proceeded to express her dissatisfaction with the
+ course pursued, because so repugnant to her published declaration, in
+ which she had stated to the world her intention of aiding the Provinces,
+ without meddling in the least with the sovereignty of the country. "The
+ contrary would now be believed," she said, "at least by those who take the
+ liberty of censuring, according to their pleasure, the actions of
+ princes." Thus her honour was at stake. She signified her will, therefore,
+ that, in order to convince the world of her sincerity, the authority
+ conferred should be revoked, and that "the Earl," whom she had decided to
+ recall very soon, should, during his brief residence there, only exercise
+ the power agreed upon by the original contract. She warmly reiterated her
+ intention, however, of observing inviolably the promise of assistance
+ which she had given to the States. "And if," she said, "any malicious or
+ turbulent spirits should endeavour, perchance, to persuade the people that
+ this our refusal proceeds from lack of affection or honest disposition to
+ assist you&mdash;instead of being founded only on respect for our honour,
+ which is dearer to us than life&mdash;we beg you, by every possible means,
+ to shut their mouths, and prevent their pernicious designs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, heavily laden with the royal wrath, Heneage was on the point of
+ leaving London for the Netherlands, on the very day upon which Davison
+ arrived, charged with deprecatory missives from that country. After his
+ long detention he had a short passage, crossing from the Brill to Margate
+ in a single night. Coming immediately to London, he sent to Walsingham to
+ inquire which way the wind was blowing at court, but received a somewhat
+ discouraging reply. "Your long detention by his Lordship," said the
+ Secretary, "has wounded the whole cause;" adding, that he thought her
+ Majesty would not speak with him. On the other hand, it seemed
+ indispensable for him to go to the court, because if the Queen should hear
+ of his arrival before he had presented himself, she was likely to be more
+ angry than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, the same afternoon, Davison waited upon Walsingham, and found him in a
+ state of despondency. "She takes his Lordship's acceptance of the
+ government most haynously," said Sir Francis, "and has resolved to send
+ Sir Thomas Heneage at once, with orders for him to resign the office. She
+ has been threatening you and Sir Philip Sidney, whom she considers the
+ chief actors and persuaders in the matter, according to information
+ received from some persons about my Lord of Leicester."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Davison protested himself amazed at the Secretary's discourse, and at once
+ took great pains to show the reasons by which all parties had been
+ influenced in the matter of the government. He declared roundly that if
+ the Queen should carry out her present intentions, the Earl would be most
+ unworthily disgraced, the cause utterly overthrown, the Queen's honour
+ perpetually stained, and that her kingdom would incur great disaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Directly after this brief conversation, Walsingham went up stairs to the
+ Queen, while Davison proceeded to the apartments of Sir Christopher
+ Hatton. Thence he was soon summoned to the royal presence, and found that
+ he had not been misinformed as to the temper of her Majesty. The Queen was
+ indeed in a passion, and began swearing at Davison so soon as he got into
+ the chamber; abusing Leicester for having accepted the offer of the
+ States, against her many times repeated commandment, and the ambassador
+ for not having opposed his course. The thing had been done, she said, in
+ contempt of her, as if her consent had been of no consequence, or as if
+ the matter in no way concerned her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon as she paused to take breath, the envoy modestly, but firmly,
+ appealed to her reason, that she would at any rate lend him a patient and
+ favourable ear, in which case he doubted not that she would form a more
+ favourable opinion of the case than she had hitherto done: He then entered
+ into a long discourse upon the state of the Netherlands before the arrival
+ of Leicester, the inclination in many quarters for a peace, the "despair
+ that any sound and good fruit would grow of her Majesty's cold beginning,"
+ the general unpopularity of the States' government, the "corruption,
+ partiality, and confusion," which were visible everywhere, the perilous
+ condition of the whole cause, and the absolute necessity of some immediate
+ reform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was necessary," said Davison, "that some one person of wisdom and
+ authority should take the helm. Among the Netherlanders none was qualified
+ for such a charge. Lord Maurice is a child, poor, and of but little
+ respect among them. Elector Truchsess, Count Hohenlo, Meurs, and the rest,
+ strangers and incapable of the burden. These considerations influenced the
+ States to the step which had been taken; without which all the rest of her
+ benevolence was to little purpose." Although the contract between the
+ commissioners and the Queen had not literally provided for such an
+ arrangement, yet it had always been contemplated by the States, who had
+ left themselves without a head until the arrival of the Earl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Under one pretext or another," continued the envoy, "my Lord of Leicester
+ had long delayed to satisfy them,"&mdash;(and in so stating he went
+ somewhat further in defence of his absent friend than the facts would
+ warrant), "for he neither flatly refused it, nor was willing to accept,
+ until your Majesty's pleasure should be known." Certainly the records show
+ no reservation of his acceptance until the Queen had been consulted; but
+ the defence by Davison of the offending Earl was so much the more
+ courageous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At length, wearied by their importunity, moved with their reasons, and
+ compelled by necessity, he thought it better to take the course he did,"
+ proceeded the diplomatist, "for otherwise he must have been an eye-witness
+ of the dismemberment of the whole country, which could not be kept
+ together but by a reposed hope in her Majesty's found favour, which had
+ been utterly despaired of by his refusal. He thought it better by
+ accepting to increase the honour, profit; and surety, of her Majesty, and
+ the good of the cause, than, by refusing, to utterly hazard the one, and
+ overthrow the other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To all this and more, well and warmly urged by Davison; the Queen listened
+ by fits and starts, often interrupting his discourse by violent abuse of
+ Leicester, accusing him of contempt for her, charging him with thinking
+ more of his own particular greatness than of her honour and service, and
+ then "digressing into old griefs," said the envoy, "too long and tedious
+ to write." She vehemently denounced Davison also for dereliction of duty
+ in not opposing the measure; but he manfully declared that he never deemed
+ so meanly of her Majesty or of his Lordship as to suppose that she would
+ send him, or that he would go to the Provinces, merely, "to take command
+ of the relics of Mr. Norris's worn and decayed troops." Such a change,
+ protested Davison, was utterly unworthy a person of the Earl's quality,
+ and utterly unsuited to the necessity of the time and state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Davison went farther in defence of Leicester. He had been present at
+ many of the conferences with the Netherland envoys during the preceding
+ summer in England, and he now told the Queen stoutly to her face that she
+ herself, or at any rate one of her chief counsellors, in her hearing and
+ his, had expressed her royal determination not to prevent the acceptance
+ of whatever authority the states might choose to confer, by any one whom
+ she might choose to send. She had declined to accept it in person, but she
+ had been willing that it should be wielded by her deputy; and this
+ remembrance of his had been confirmed by that of one of the commissioners
+ since their return. She had never&mdash;Davison maintained&mdash;sent him
+ one single line having any bearing on the subject. Under such
+ circumstances, "I might have been accused of madness,", said he, "to have
+ dissuaded an action in my poor opinion so necessary and expedient for your
+ Majesty's honour, surety, and greatness." If it were to do over again, he
+ avowed, and "were his opinion demanded, he could give no other advice than
+ that which he had given, having received no contrary, commandment from her
+ Highness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so ended the first evening's long and vehement debate, and Davison
+ departed, "leaving her," as he said, "much qualified, though in many
+ points unsatisfied." She had however, absolutely refused to receive a
+ letter from Leicester, with which he had been charged, but which, in her
+ opinion, had better have been written two months before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, it seemed, after all, that Heneage was to be despatched, "in
+ great heat," upon his mission. Davison accordingly requested an immediate
+ audience. So soon as admitted to the presence he burst into tears, and
+ implored the Queen to pause before she should inflict the contemplated
+ disgrace on one whom she had hitherto so highly esteemed, and, by so
+ doing, dishonour herself and imperil both countries. But the Queen was
+ more furious than ever that morning, returning at every pause in the
+ envoy's discourse to harp upon the one string&mdash;"How dared he come to
+ such a decision without at least imparting it to me?"&mdash;and so on, as
+ so many times before. And again Davison, with all the eloquence and with
+ every soothing art he had at command; essayed to pour oil upon the waves.
+ Nor was he entirely unsuccessful; for presently the Queen became so calm
+ again that he ventured once more to present the rejected letter of the
+ Earl. She broke the seal, and at sight of the well-known handwriting she
+ became still more gentle; and so soon as she had read the first of her
+ favourite's honied phrases she thrust the precious document into her
+ pocket, in order to read it afterwards, as Davison observed, at her
+ leisure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The opening thus successfully made, and the envoy having thus, "by many
+ insinuations," prepared her to lend him a "more patient and willing ear
+ than she had vouchsafed before," he again entered into a skilful and
+ impassioned argument to show the entire wisdom of the course pursued by
+ the Earl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is unnecessary to repeat the conversation. Since to say that no man
+ could have more eloquently and faithfully supported an absent friend under
+ difficulties than Davison now defended the Earl. The line of argument is
+ already familiar to the reader, and, in truth, the Queen had nothing to
+ reply, save to insist upon the governor's delinquency in maintaining so
+ long and inexplicable a silence. And&mdash;at this thought, in spite of
+ the envoy's eloquence, she went off again in a paroxysm of anger, abusing
+ the Earl, and deeply censuring Davison for his "peremptory and partial
+ dealing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had conceived a better opinion of you," she said, "and I had intended
+ more good to you than I now find you worthy of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I humbly thank your Highness," replied the ambassador, "but I take
+ yourself to witness that I have never affected or sought any such grace at
+ your hands. And if your Majesty persists in the dangerous course on which
+ you are now entering, I only pray your leave, in recompense for all my
+ travails, to retire myself home, where I may spend the rest of my life in
+ praying for you, whom Salvation itself is not able to save, if these
+ purposes are continued. Henceforth, Madam, he is to be deemed happiest who
+ is least interested in the public service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so ended the second day's debate. The next day the Lord-Treasurer,
+ who, according to Davison, employed himself diligently&mdash;as did also
+ Walsingham and Hatton&mdash;in dissuading the Queen from the violent
+ measures which she had resolved upon, effected so much of a change as to
+ procure the insertion of those qualifying clauses in Heneage's
+ instructions which had been previously disallowed. The open and public
+ disgrace of the Earl, which was to have been peremptorily demanded, was
+ now to be deferred, if such a measure seemed detrimental to the public
+ service. Her Majesty, however, protested herself as deeply offended as
+ ever, although she had consented to address a brief, somewhat mysterious,
+ but benignant letter of compliment to the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after this Davison retired for a few days from the court, having
+ previously written to the Earl that "the heat of her Majesty's offence to
+ his Lordship was abating every day somewhat, and that she was disposed
+ both to hear and to speak more temperately of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He implored him accordingly to a "more diligent entertaining of her by
+ wise letters and messages, wherein his slackness hitherto appeared to have
+ bred a great part of this unkindness." He observed also that the "traffic
+ of peace was still going on underhand; but whether to use it as a second
+ string to our bow, if the first should fail, or of any settled inclination
+ thereunto, he could not affirm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Sir Thomas Heneage was despatched on his mission to the Staten,
+ despite all the arguments and expostulations of Walsingham, Burghley,
+ Hatton, and Davison. All the Queen's counsellors were unequivocally in
+ favour of sustaining Leicester; and Heneage was not a little embarrassed
+ as to the proper method of conducting the affair. Everything, in truth,
+ was in a most confused condition. He hardly understood to what power he
+ was accredited. "Heneage writes even now unto me," said Walsingham to
+ Davison, "that he cannot yet receive any information who be the States,
+ which he thinketh will be a great maimer unto him in his negotiation. I
+ have told him that it is an assembly much like that of our burgesses that
+ represent the State, and that my Lord of Leicester may cause some of them
+ to meet together, unto whom he may deliver his letters and messages." Thus
+ the new envoy was to request the culprit to summon the very assembly by
+ which his downfall and disgrace were to be solemnized, as formally as had
+ been so recently his elevation to the height of power. The prospect was
+ not an agreeable one, and the less so because of his general want of
+ familiarity with the constitutional forms of the country he was about to
+ visit. Davison accordingly, at the request of Sir Francis, furnished
+ Heneage with much valuable information and advice upon the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus provided with information, forewarned of danger, furnished with a
+ double set of letters from the Queen to the States&mdash;the first
+ expressed in language of extreme exasperation, the others couched in
+ almost affectionate terms&mdash;and laden with messages brimfull of
+ wrathful denunciation from her Majesty to one who was notoriously her
+ Majesty's dearly-beloved, Sir Thomas Heneage set forth on his mission.
+ These were perilous times for the Davisons and the Heneages, when even
+ Leicesters and Burghleys were scarcely secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the fair weather at court could not be depended upon from one day
+ to another, and the clouds were perpetually returning after the rain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Since my second and third day's audience," said Davison, "the storms I
+ met with at my arrival have overblown and abated daily. On Saturday again
+ she fell into some new heat, which lasted not long. This day I was myself
+ at the court, and found her in reasonable good terms, though she will not
+ yet seem satisfied to me either with the matter or manner of your
+ proceeding, notwithstanding all the labour I have taken in that behalf.
+ Yet I find not her Majesty altogether so sharp as some men look, though
+ her favour has outwardly cooled in respect both of this action and of our
+ plain proceeding with her here in defence thereof."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor Countess&mdash;whose imaginary exodus, with the long procession
+ of coaches and side-saddles, had excited so much ire&mdash;found herself
+ in a most distressing position. "I have not seen my Lady these ten or
+ twelve days," said Davison. "To-morrow I hope to do my duty towards her. I
+ found her greatly troubled with tempestuous news she received from court,
+ but somewhat comforted when she understood how I had proceeded with her
+ Majesty . . . . But these passions overblown, I hope her Majesty will have
+ a gracious regard both towards myself and the cause."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the passions seemed not likely to blow over so soon as was desirable.
+ Leicester's brother the Earl of Warwick took a most gloomy view of the
+ whole transaction, and hoarser than the raven's was his boding tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, our mistress's extreme rage doth increase rather than diminish," he
+ wrote, "and she giveth out great threatening words against you. Therefore
+ make the best assurance you can for yourself, and trust not her oath, for
+ that her malice is great and unquenchable in the wisest of their opinions
+ here, and as for other friendships, as far as I can learn, it is as
+ doubtful as the other. Wherefore, my good brother, repose your whole trust
+ in God, and He will defend you in despite of all your enemies. And let
+ this be a great comfort to you, and so it is likewise to myself and all
+ your assured friends, and that is, that you were never so honoured and
+ loved in your life amongst all good people as you are at this day, only
+ for dealing so nobly and wisely in this action as you have done; so that,
+ whatsoever cometh of it, you have done your part. I praise God from my
+ heart for it. Once again, have great care of yourself, I mean for your
+ safety, and if she will needs revoke you, to the overthrowing of the
+ cause, if I were as you, if I could not be assured there, I would go to
+ the farthest part of Christendom rather than ever come into England again.
+ Take heed whom you trust, for that you have some false boys about you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the false boys were busy enough, and seemed likely to triumph in the
+ result of their schemes. For a glance into the secret correspondence of
+ Mary of Scotland has already revealed the Earl to us constantly surrounded
+ by men in masks. Many of those nearest his person, and of highest credit
+ out of England, were his deadly foes, sworn to compass his dishonour, his
+ confusion, and eventually his death, and in correspondence with his most
+ powerful adversaries at home and abroad. Certainly his path was slippery
+ and perilous along those icy summits of power, and he had need to look
+ well to his footsteps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Heneage had arrived in the Netherlands, Sir Thomas Shirley,
+ despatched by Leicester to England with a commission to procure supplies
+ for the famishing soldiers, and, if possible, to mitigate the Queen's
+ wrath, had, been admitted more than once to her Majesty's presence. He had
+ fought the Earl's battle as manfully as Davison had done, and, like that
+ envoy, had received nothing in exchange for his plausible arguments but
+ bitter words and big oaths. Eight days after his arrival he was introduced
+ by Hatton into the privy chamber, and at the moment of his entrance was
+ received with a volley of execrations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did expressly and peremptorily forbid his acceptance of the absolute
+ government, in the hearing of divers of my council," said the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shirley.&mdash;"The necessity of the case was imminent, your Highness. It
+ was his Lordship's intent to do all for your Majesty's service. Those
+ countries did expect him as a governor at his first landing, and the
+ States durst do no other than satisfy the people also with that opinion.
+ The people's mislike of their present government is such and so great as
+ that the name of States is grown odious amongst them. Therefore the
+ States, doubting the furious rage of the people, conferred the authority
+ upon his Lordship with incessant suit to him to receive it.
+ Notwithstanding this, however, he did deny it until he saw plainly both
+ confusion and ruin of that country if he should refuse. On the other hand,
+ when he had seen into their estates, his lordship found great profit and
+ commodity like to come unto your Majesty by your acceptance of it. Your
+ Highness may now have garrisons of English in as many towns as pleaseth
+ you, without any more charge than you are now at. Nor can any peace be
+ made with Spain at any time hereafter, but through you: and by you. Your
+ Majesty should remember, likewise, that if a man of another nation had
+ been chosen governor it might have wrought great danger. Moreover it would
+ have been an indignity that your lieutenant-general should of necessity be
+ under him that so should have been elected. Finally, this is a stop to any
+ other that may affect the place of government there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Queen (who has manifested many signs of impatience during this discourse).&mdash;"Your
+ speech is all in vain. His Lordship's proceeding is sufficient to make me
+ infamous to all princes, having protested the contrary, as I have done, in
+ a book which is translated into divers and sundry languages. His Lordship,
+ being my servant, a creature of my own, ought not, in duty towards me,
+ have entered into this course without my knowledge and good allowance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shirley.&mdash;"But the world hath conceived a high judgment of your
+ Majesty's great wisdom and providence; shown by your assailing the King of
+ Spain at one time both in the Low Countries and also by Sir Francis Drake.
+ I do assure myself that the same judgment which did first cause you to
+ take this in hand must continue a certain knowledge in your Majesty that
+ one of these actions must needs stand much better by the other. If Sir
+ Frances do prosper, then all is well. And though he should not prosper,
+ yet this hold that his Lordship hath taken for you on the Low Countries
+ must always assure an honourable peace at your Highness's pleasure. I
+ beseech your Majesty to remember that to the King of Spain the government
+ of his Lordship is no greater matter than if he were but your
+ lieutenant-general there; but the voyage of Sir Francis is of much greater
+ offence than all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Queen (interrupting).&mdash;"I can very well answer for Sir Francis.
+ Moreover, if need be, the gentleman careth not if I should disavow him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shirley.&mdash;"Even so standeth my Lord, if your disavowing of him may
+ also stand with your Highness's favour towards him. Nevertheless; should
+ this bruit of your mislike of his Lordship's authority there come unto the
+ ears of those people; being a nation both sudden and suspicious, and
+ having been heretofore used to stratagem&mdash;I fear it may work some
+ strange notion in them, considering that, at this time, there is an
+ increase of taxation raised upon them, the bestowing whereof perchance
+ they know not of. His Lordship's giving; up of the government may leave
+ them altogether without government, and in worse case than they were ever
+ in before. For now the authority of the States is dissolved, and his
+ Lordship's government is the only thing that holdeth them together. I do
+ beseech your Highness, then, to consider well of it, and if there be any
+ private cause for which you take grief against his Lordship, nevertheless,
+ to have regard unto the public cause, and to have a care of your own
+ safety, which in many wise men's opinions, standeth much upon the good
+ maintenance and upholding of this matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Queen.&mdash;"I believe nothing of, what you say concerning the dissolving
+ of the authority of the States. I know well enough that the States do
+ remain states still. I mean not to do harm to the cause, but only to
+ reform that which his Lordship hath done beyond his warrant from me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with this the Queen swept suddenly from the apartment. Sir Thomas, at
+ different stages of the conversation, had in vain besought her to accept a
+ letter from the Earl which had been entrusted to his care. She obstinately
+ refused to touch it. Shirley had even had recourse to stratagem: affecting
+ ignorance on many points concerning which the Queen desired information,
+ and suggesting that doubtless she would find those matters fully explained
+ in his Lordship's letter. The artifice was in vain, and the discussion
+ was, on the whole, unsatisfactory. Yet there is no doubt that the Queen
+ had had the worst of the argument, and she was far too sagacious a
+ politician not to feel the weight of that which had been urged so often in
+ defence of the course pursued. But it was with her partly a matter of
+ temper and offended pride, perhaps even of wounded affection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the following morning Shirley saw the Queen walking in the garden of
+ the palace, and made bold to accost her. Thinking, as he said, "to test
+ her affection to Lord Leicester by another means," the artful Sir Thomas
+ stepped up to her, and observed that his Lordship was seriously ill. "It
+ is feared," he said, "that the Earl is again attacked by the disease of
+ which Dr. Goodrowse did once cure him. Wherefore his Lordship is now a
+ humble suitor to your Highness that it would please you to spare
+ Goodrowse, and give him leave to go thither for some time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen was instantly touched.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly&mdash;with all my heart, with all my heart, he shall have him,"
+ she replied, "and sorry I am that his Lordship hath that need of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And indeed," returned sly Sir Thomas, "your Highness is a very gracious
+ prince, who are pleased not to suffer his Lordship to perish in health,
+ though otherwise you remain deeply offended with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know my mind," returned Elizabeth, now all the queen again, and
+ perhaps suspecting the trick; "I may not endure that any man should alter
+ my commission and the authority that I gave him, upon his own fancies and
+ without me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this she instantly summoned one of her gentlemen, in order to break
+ off the interview, fearing that Shirley was about to enter again upon a
+ discussion of the whole subject, and again to attempt the delivery of the
+ Earl's letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all this there was much of superannuated coquetry, no doubt, and much
+ of Tudor despotism, but there was also a strong infusion of artifice. For
+ it will soon be necessary to direct attention to certain secret
+ transactions of an important nature in which the Queen was engaged, and
+ which were even hidden from the all-seeing eye of Walsingham&mdash;although
+ shrewdly suspected both by that statesman and by Leicester&mdash;but which
+ were most influential in modifying her policy at that moment towards the
+ Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There could be no doubt, however, of the stanch and strenuous manner in
+ which the delinquent Earl was supported by his confidential messengers and
+ by some of his fellow-councillors. His true friends were urgent that the
+ great cause in which he was engaged should be forwarded sincerely and
+ without delay. Shirley had been sent for money; but to draw money from
+ Elizabeth was like coining her life-blood, drachma by drachma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Lordship is like to have but a poor supply of money at this time,"
+ said Sir Thomas. "To be plain with you, I fear she groweth weary of the
+ charge, and will hardly be brought to deal thoroughly in the action."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was also more explicit than he might have been&mdash;had he been better
+ informed as to the disposition of the chief personages of the court,
+ concerning whose temper the absent Earl was naturally anxious. Hatton was
+ most in favour at the moment, and it was through Hatton that the
+ communications upon Netherland matters passed; "for," said Shirley, "she
+ will hardly endure Mr. Secretary (Walsingham) to speak unto her therein."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And truly, my Lord," he continued, "as Mr. Secretary is a noble, good,
+ and true friend unto you, so doth Mr. Vice-Chamberlain show himself an
+ honourable, true, and faithful gentleman, and doth carefully and most like
+ a good friend for your Lordship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus very succinctly and graphically had the envoy painted the
+ situation to his principal. "Your Lordship now sees things just as they
+ stand," he moralized. "Your Lordship is exceeding wise. You know the Queen
+ and her nature best of any man. You know all men here. Your Lordship can
+ judge the sequel by this that you see: only this I must tell your
+ Lordship, I perceive that fears and doubts from thence are like to work
+ better effects here than comforts and assurance. I think it my part to
+ send your Lordship this as it is, rather than to be silent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with these rather ominous insinuations the envoy concluded for the
+ time his narrative.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Intolerable tendency to puns
+ New Years Day in England, 11th January by the New Style
+ Peace and quietness is brought into a most dangerous estate
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. 1586, Part 2
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Leicester's Letters to his Friends&mdash;Paltry Conduct of the Earl to
+ Davison&mdash;He excuses himself at Davison's Expense&mdash;His Letter to
+ Burghley&mdash;Effect of the Queen's Letters to the States&mdash;Suspicion and
+ Discontent in Holland&mdash;States excuse their Conduct to the Queen&mdash;
+ Leicester discredited in Holland&mdash;Evil Consequences to Holland and
+ England&mdash;Magic: Effect of a Letter from Leicester&mdash;The Queen
+ appeased&mdash;Her Letters to the States and the Earl&mdash;She permits the
+ granted Authority&mdash;&mdash;Unhappy Results of the Queen's Course&mdash;Her
+ variable Moods&mdash;She attempts to deceive Walsingham&mdash;Her Injustice to
+ Heneage&mdash;His Perplexity and Distress&mdash;Humiliating Position of
+ Leicester&mdash;His melancholy Letters to the Queen&mdash;He receives a little
+ Consolation&mdash;And writes more cheerfully&mdash;The Queen is more
+ benignant&mdash;The States less contented than the Earl&mdash;His Quarrels
+ with them begin.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ While these storms were blowing and "overblowing" in England, Leicester
+ remained greatly embarrassed and anxious in Holland. He had sown the wind
+ more extensively than he had dreamed of when accepting the government, and
+ he was now awaiting, with much trepidation, the usual harvest: And we have
+ seen that it was rapidly ripening. Meantime, the good which he had really
+ effected in the Provinces by the course he had taken was likely to be
+ neutralized by the sinister rumours as to his impending disgrace, while
+ the enemy was proportionally encouraged. "I understand credibly," he said,
+ "that the Prince of Parma feels himself in great jollity that her Majesty
+ doth rather mislike than allow of our doings here, which; if it be true,
+ let her be sure her own sweet self shall first smart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover; the English troops were, as we have seen, mere shoeless,
+ shivering, starving vagabonds. The Earl had generously advanced very large
+ sums of money from his own pocket to relieve their necessity. The States,
+ on the other hand, had voluntarily increased the monthly contribution of
+ 200,000 florins, to which their contract with Elizabeth obliged them, and
+ were more disposed than ever they had been since the death of Orange to
+ proceed vigorously and harmoniously against the common enemy of
+ Christendom. Under such circumstances it may well be imagined that there
+ was cause on Leicester's part for deep mortification at the tragical turn
+ which the Queen's temper seemed to be taking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know not," he said, "how her Majesty doth mean to dispose of me. It
+ hath grieved me more than I can express that for faithful and good service
+ she should so deeply conceive against me. God knows with what mind I have
+ served her Highness, and perhaps some others might have failed. Yet she is
+ neither tied one jot by covenant or promise by me in any way, nor at one
+ groat the more charges, but myself two or three thousand pounds sterling
+ more than now is like to be well spent. I will desire no partial speech in
+ my favour. If my doings be ill for her Majesty and the realm, let me feel
+ the smart of it. The cause is now well forward; let not her majesty suffer
+ it to quail. If you will have it proceed to good effect, send away Sir
+ William Pelham with all the haste you can. I mean not to complain, but
+ with so weighty a cause as this is, few men have been so weakly assisted.
+ Her Majesty hath far better choice for my place, and with any that may
+ succeed me let Sir William Pelham be first that may come. I speak from my
+ soul for her Majesty's service. I am for myself upon an hour's warning to
+ obey her good pleasure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far the Earl had maintained his dignity. He had yielded to the
+ solicitations of the States, and had thereby exceeded his commission, and
+ gratified his ambition, but he had in no wise forfeited his self-respect.
+ But&mdash;so soon as the first unquestionable intelligence of the passion
+ to which the Queen had given way at his misdoings reached him&mdash;he
+ began to whimper, The straightforward tone which Davison had adopted in
+ his interviews with Elizabeth, and the firmness with which he had defended
+ the cause of his absent friend, at a moment when he had plunged himself
+ into disgrace, was worthy of applause. He deserved at least a word of
+ honest thanks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ignoble however was the demeanor of the Earl towards the man&mdash;for
+ whom he had but recently been unable to invent eulogies sufficiently warm&mdash;so
+ soon as he conceived the possibility of sacrificing his friend as the
+ scape-goat for his own fault. An honest schoolboy would have scorned to
+ leave thus in the lurch a comrade who had been fighting his battles so
+ honestly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How earnest I was," he wrote to the lords of the council, 9th March,
+ 1586, "not only to acquaint her Majesty, but immediately upon the first
+ motion made by the States, to send Mr. Davison over to her with letters, I
+ doubt not but he will truly affirm for me; yea, and how far against my
+ will it was, notwithstanding any reasons delivered me, that he and others
+ persisted in, to have me accept first of this place. . . . The extremity
+ of the case, and my being persuaded that Mr. Davison might have better
+ satisfied her Majesty, than I perceive he can, caused, me-neither
+ arrogantly nor contemptuously, but even merely and faithfully&mdash;to do
+ her Majesty the best service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He acknowledged, certainly, that Davison had been influenced by honest
+ motives, although his importunities had been the real cause of the Earl's
+ neglect of his own obligations. But he protested that he had himself, only
+ erred through an excessive pliancy to the will of others. "My yielding was
+ my own fault," he admitted, "whatsoever his persuasions; but far from a
+ contemptuous heart, or else God pluck out both heart and bowels with utter
+ shame."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon as Sir Thomas Heneage had presented himself, and revealed the full
+ extent of the Queen's wrath, the Earl's disposition to cast the whole
+ crime on the shoulders of Davison became quite undisguised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank you for your letters," wrote Leicester to Walsingham, "though you
+ can send me no comfort. Her Majesty doth deal hardly to believe so ill of
+ me. It is true I faulted, but she doth not consider what commodities she
+ hath withal, and herself no way engaged for it, as Mr. Davison might have
+ better declared it, if it had pleased him. And I must thank him only for
+ my blame, and so he will confess to you, for, I protest before God, no
+ necessity here could have made me leave her Majesty unacquainted with the
+ cause before I would have accepted of it, but only his so earnest pressing
+ me with his faithfull assured promise to discharge me, however her Majesty
+ should take it. For you all see there she had no other cause to be
+ offended but this, and, by the Lord, he was the only cause; albeit it is
+ no sufficient allegation, being as I am . . . . . He had, I think, saved
+ all to have told her, as he promised me. But now it is laid upon me, God
+ send the cause to take no harm, my grief must be the less.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How far Mr. Heneage's commission shall deface me I know not. He is wary
+ to observe his commission, and I consent withal. I know the time will be
+ her Majesty will be sorry for it. In the meantime I am too, too weary of
+ the high dignity. I would that any that could serve her Majesty were
+ placed in it, and I to sit down with all my losses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In more manful strain he then alluded to the sufferings of his army.
+ "Whatsoever become of me," he said, "give me leave to speak for the poor
+ soldiers. If they be not better maintained, being in this strange country,
+ there will be neither good service done, nor be without great dishonour to
+ her Majesty. . . . Well, you see the wants, and it is one cause that will
+ glad me to be rid of this heavy high calling, and wish me at my poor
+ cottage again, if any I shall find. But let her Majesty pay them well, and
+ appoint such a man as Sir William Pelham to govern them, and she never wan
+ more honour than these men here will do, I am persuaded."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the Earl was warmly urged by all most conversant with Netherland
+ politics to assume the government was a fact admitted by all. That he
+ manifested rather eagerness than reluctance on the subject, and that his
+ only hesitation arose from the proposed restraints upon the power, not
+ from scruples about accepting the power, are facts upon record. There is
+ nothing save his own assertion to show any backwardness on his part to
+ snatch the coveted prize; and that assertion was flatly denied by Davison,
+ and was indeed refuted by every circumstance in the case. It is certain
+ that he had concealed from Davison the previous prohibitions of the Queen.
+ He could anticipate much better than could Davison, therefore, the
+ probable indignation of the Queen. It is strange then that he should have
+ shut his eyes to it so wilfully, and stranger still that he should have
+ relied on the envoy's eloquence instead of his own to mitigate that
+ emotion. Had he placed his defence simply upon its true basis, the
+ necessity of the case, and the impossibility of carrying out the Queen's
+ intentions in any other way, it would be difficult to censure him; but
+ that he should seek to screen himself by laying the whole blame on a
+ subordinate, was enough to make any honest man who heard him hang his
+ head. "I meant not to do it, but Davison told me to do it, please your
+ Majesty, and if there was naughtiness in it, he said he would make it all
+ right with your Majesty." Such, reduced to its simplest expression, was
+ the defence of the magnificent Earl of Leicester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as he had gone cringing and whining to his royal mistress, so it was
+ natural that he should be brutal and blustering to his friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By your means," said he, "I have fallen into her Majesty's deep
+ displeasure . . . . If you had delivered to her the truth of my dealing,
+ her Highness never could have conceived, as I perceive she doth . . . .
+ Nor doth her Majesty know how hardly I was drawn to accept this place
+ before I had acquainted her&mdash;as to which you promised you would not
+ only give her full satisfaction, but would, procure me great thanks. . . .
+ You did chiefly persuade me to take this charge upon me . . . . You can
+ remember how many treaties you and others had with the States, before I
+ agreed; for all yours and their persuasion to take it. . . . You gave me
+ assurance to satisfy her Majesty, but I see not that you have done
+ anything . . . . I did not hide from you the doubt I had of her Majesty's
+ ill taking it . . . . You chiefly brought me into it . . . . and it could
+ no way have been heavy to you, though you had told the uttermost of your
+ own doing, as you faithfully promised you would . . . . I did very
+ unwillingly come into the matter, doubting that to fall out which is come
+ to pass . . . . and it doth so fall out by your negligent carelessness,
+ whereof I many hundred times told you that you would both mar the goodness
+ of the matter, and breed me her Majesty's displeasure. . . . Thus fare you
+ well, and except your embassages have better success, I shall have no
+ cause to commend them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so was the unfortunate Davison ground into finest dust between the
+ upper and lower millstones of royal wrath and loyal subserviency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the other special envoy had made his appearance in the
+ Netherlands; the other go-between between the incensed Queen and the
+ backsliding favourite. It has already been made sufficiently obvious, by
+ the sketch given of his instructions, that his mission was a delicate one.
+ In obedience to those instructions, Heneage accordingly made his
+ appearance before the council, and, in Leicester's presence, delivered to
+ them the severe and biting reprimand which Elizabeth had chosen to inflict
+ upon the States and upon the governor. The envoy performed his ungracious
+ task as daintily, as he could, and after preliminary consultation with
+ Leicester; but the proud Earl was deeply mortified. "The fourteenth day of
+ this month of March," said he, "Sir Thomas Heneage delivered a very sharp
+ letter from her Majesty to the council of estate, besides his message&mdash;myself
+ being, present, for so was her Majesty's pleasure, as he said, and I do
+ think he did but as he was commanded. How great a grief it must be to an
+ honest heart and a true, faithful servant, before his own face, to a
+ company of very wise and grave counsellors, who had conceived a marvellous
+ opinion before of my credit with her Majesty, to be charged now with a
+ manifest and wilful contempt! Matter enough to have broken any man's
+ heart, that looked rather for thanks, as God doth know I did when I first
+ heard of Mr. Heneage's arrival&mdash;I must say to your Lordship, for
+ discharge of my duty, I can be no fit man to serve here&mdash;my disgrace
+ is too great&mdash;protesting to you that since that day I cannot find it
+ in my heart to come into that place, where, by my own sufferings torn, I
+ was made to be thought so lewd a person."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then comforted himself&mdash;as he had a right to do&mdash;with the
+ reflection that this disgrace inflicted was more than he deserved, and
+ that such would be the opinion of those by whom he was surrounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Albeit one thing," he said, "did greatly comfort me, that they all best
+ knew the wrong was great I had, and that her Majesty was very wrongfully
+ informed of the state of my cause. I doubt not but they can and will
+ discharge me, howsoever they shall satisfy her Majesty. And as I would
+ rather wish for death than justly to deserve her displeasure; so, good my
+ Lord, this disgrace not coming for any ill service to her, pray procure me
+ a speedy resolution, that I may go hide me and pray for her. My heart is
+ broken, though thus far I can quiet myself, that I know I have done her
+ Majesty as faithful and good service in these countries as ever she had
+ done her since she was Queen of England . . . . Under correction, my good
+ Lord, I have had Halifax law&mdash;to be condemned first and inquired upon
+ after. I pray God that no man find this measure that I have done, and
+ deserved no worse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He defended himself&mdash;as Davison had already defended him&mdash;upon
+ the necessities of the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I, a poor gentleman," he said, "who have wholly depended upon herself
+ alone&mdash;and now, being commanded to a service of the greatest
+ importance that ever her Majesty employed any servant in, and finding the
+ occasion so serving me, and the necessity of time such as would not permit
+ such delays, flatly seeing that if that opportunity were lost, the like
+ again for her service and the good of the realm was never, to be looked
+ for, presuming upon the favour of my prince, as many servants have done,
+ exceeding somewhat thereupon, rather than breaking any part of my
+ commission, taking upon me a place whereby I found these whole countries
+ could be held at her best devotion, without binding her Majesty to any
+ such matter as she had forbidden to the States before finding, I say, both
+ the time and opportunity to serve, and no lack but to trust to her
+ gracious acceptation, I now feel that how good, how honourable, how
+ profitable soever it be, it is turned to a worse part than if I had broken
+ all her commissions and commandments, to the greatest harm, and dishonour,
+ and danger, that may be imagined against her person, state, and dignity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He protested, not without a show of reason, that he was like to be worse
+ punished "for well-doing than any man that had committed a most heinous or
+ traitorous offence," and he maintained that if he had not accepted the
+ government, as he had done, "the whole State had been gone and wholly
+ lost." All this&mdash;as we have seen&mdash;had already been stoutly urged
+ by Davison, in the very face of the tempest, but with no result, except to
+ gain the enmity of both parties to the quarrel. The ungrateful Leicester
+ now expressed confidence that the second go-between would be more adroit
+ than the first had proved. "The causes why," said he, "Mr. Davison could
+ have told&mdash;no man better&mdash;but Mr. Heneage can now tell, who hath
+ sought to the uttermost the bottom of all things. I will stand to his
+ report, whether glory or vain desire of title caused me to step one foot
+ forward in the matter. My place was great enough and high enough before,
+ with much less trouble than by this, besides the great indignation of her
+ Majesty . . . . If I had overslipt the good occasion then in danger, I had
+ been worthy to be hanged, and to be taken for a most lewd servant to her
+ Majesty, and a dishonest wretch to my country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But diligently as Heneage had sought to the bottom of all things, he had
+ not gained the approbation of Sidney. Sir Philip thought that the new man
+ had only ill botched a piece of work that had been most awkwardly
+ contrived from the beginning. "Sir Thomas Heneage," said he, "hath with as
+ much honesty, in my opinion done as much hurt as any man this twelve-month
+ hath done with naughtiness. But I hope in God, when her Majesty finds the
+ truth of things, her graciousness will not utterly, overthrow a cause so
+ behooveful and costly unto her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He briefly warned the government that most disastrous effects were likely
+ to ensue, if the Earl should be publicly disgraced, and the recent action
+ of the States reversed. The penny-wise economy, too, of the Queen, was
+ rapidly proving a most ruinous extravagance. "I only cry for Flushing;"
+ said Sidney, "but, unless the monies be sent over, there will some
+ terrible accident follow, particularly to the cautionary towns, if her
+ Majesty mean to have them cautions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The effect produced by the first explosion of the Queen's wrath was indeed
+ one of universal suspicion and distrust. The greatest care had been taken,
+ however, that the affair should be delicately handled, for Heneage, while,
+ doing as much hurt by honesty as, others by naughtiness, had modified his
+ course as much as he dared in deference to the opinions of the Earl
+ himself, and that of his English counsellors. The great culprit himself,
+ assisted by his two lawyers, Clerk and Killigrew&mdash;had himself drawn
+ the bill of his own indictment. The letters of the Queen to the States, to
+ the council, and to the Earl himself, were, of necessity, delivered, but
+ the reprimand which Heneage had been instructed to fulminate was made as
+ harmless as possible. It was arranged that he should make a speech before
+ the council; but abstain from a protocol. The oration was duly pronounced,
+ and it was, of necessity, stinging. Otherwise the disobedience to the
+ Queen, would have been flagrant. But the pain inflicted was to disappear
+ with the first castigation. The humiliation was to be public and solemn,
+ but it was not to be placed on perpetual record.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We thought best," said Leicester, Heneage, Clerk, and Killigrew&mdash;"In
+ according to her Majesty's secret instructions&mdash;to take that course
+ which might least endanger the weak estate of the Provinces&mdash;that is
+ to say, to utter so much in words as we hoped might satisfy her excellent
+ Majesty's expectation, and yet leave them nothing in writing to confirm
+ that which was secretly spread in many places to the hindrance of the good
+ course of settling these affairs. Which speech, after Sir Thomas Heneage
+ had devised, and we both perused and allowed, he, by our consent and
+ advice, pronounced to the council of state. This we did think needful&mdash;especially
+ because every one of the council that was present at the reading of her
+ Majesty's first letters, was of the full mind, that if her Majesty should
+ again show the least mislike of the present government, or should not by
+ her next letters confirm it, they, were all undone&mdash;for that every
+ man would cast with himself which way to make his peace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus adroitly had the "poor gentleman, who could not find it in his heart
+ to come again into the place, where&mdash;by his own sufferings torn&mdash;he
+ was made to appear so lewd a person"&mdash;provided that there should
+ remain no trace of that lewdness and of his sovereign's displeasure, upon
+ the record of the States. It was not long, too, before the Earl was
+ enabled to surmount his mortification; but the end was not yet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The universal suspicion, consequent on these proceedings, grew most
+ painful. It pointed to one invariable quarter. It was believed by all that
+ the Queen was privately treating for peace, and that the transaction was
+ kept a secret not only from the States but from her own most trusted
+ counsellors also. It would be difficult to exaggerate the pernicious
+ effects of this suspicion. Whether it was a well-grounded one or not, will
+ be shown in a subsequent chapter, but there is no doubt that the vigour of
+ the enterprise was thus sapped at a most critical moment. The Provinces
+ had never been more heartily banded together since the fatal 10th of July,
+ 1584, than they were in the early spring of 1586. They were rapidly
+ organizing their own army, and, if the Queen had manifested more sympathy
+ with her own starving troops, the united Englishmen and Hollanders would
+ have been invincible even by Alexander Farnese.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, they had sent out nine war-vessels to cruise off the Cape Verd
+ Islands for the homeward-bound Spanish treasure fleet from America, with
+ orders, if they missed it, to proceed to the West Indies; so that, said
+ Leicester, "the King of Spain will have enough to do between these men and
+ Drake." All parties had united in conferring a generous amount of power
+ upon the Earl, who was, in truth, stadholder-general, under grant from the
+ States&mdash;and both Leicester and the Provinces themselves were eager
+ and earnest for the war. In war alone lay the salvation of England and
+ Holland. Peace was an impossibility. It seemed to the most experienced
+ statesmen of both countries even an absurdity. It may well be imagined,
+ therefore, that the idea of an underhand negotiation by Elizabeth would
+ cause a frenzy in the Netherlands. In Leicester's opinion, nothing short
+ of a general massacre of the English would be the probable consequence.
+ "No doubt," said he, "the very way it is to put us all to the sword here.
+ For mine own part it would be happiest for me, though I wish and trust to
+ lose my life in better sort."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Champagny, however, was giving out mysterious hints that the King of Spain
+ could have peace with England when he wished for it. Sir Thomas Cecil, son
+ of Lord Burghley, on whose countenance the States especially relied, was
+ returning on sick-leave from his government of the Brill, and this sudden
+ departure of so eminent a personage, joined with the public disavowal of
+ the recent transaction between Leicester and the Provinces, was producing
+ a general and most sickening apprehension as to the Queen's good faith.
+ The Earl did not fail to urge these matters most warmly on the
+ consideration of the English council, setting forth that the States were
+ stanch for the war, but that they would be beforehand with her if she
+ attempted by underhand means to compass a peace. "If these men once smell
+ any such matter," wrote Leicester to Burghley, "be you sure they will soon
+ come before you, to the utter overthrow of her Majesty and state for
+ ever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl was suspecting the "false boys," by whom he was surrounded,
+ although it was impossible for him to perceive, as we have been enabled to
+ do, the wide-spread and intricate meshes by which he was enveloped. "Your
+ Papists in England," said he, "have sent over word to some in this
+ company, that all that they ever hoped for is come to pass; that my Lord
+ of Leicester shall be called away in greatest indignation with her
+ Majesty, and to confirm this of Champagny, I have myself seen a letter
+ that her Majesty is in hand with a secret peace. God forbid! for if it be
+ so, her Majesty, her realm, and we, are all undone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The feeling in the Provinces was still sincerely loyal towards England.
+ "These men," said Leicester, "yet honour and most dearly love her Majesty,
+ and hardly, I know, will be brought to believe ill of her any way."
+ Nevertheless these rumours, to the discredit of her good faith, were doing
+ infinite harm; while the Earl, although keeping his eyes and ears wide
+ open, was anxious not to compromise himself any further with his
+ sovereign, by appearing himself to suspect her of duplicity. "Good, my
+ Lord," he besought Burghley, "do not let her Majesty know of this
+ concerning Champagny as coming from me, for she will think it is done for
+ my own cause, which, by the Lord God, it is not, but even on the necessity
+ of the case for her own safety, and the realm, and us all. Good my Lord,
+ as you will do any good in the matter, let not her Majesty understand any
+ piece of it to come from me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States-General, on the 25th March, N.S., addressed a respectful letter
+ to the Queen, in reply to her vehement chidings. They expressed their deep
+ regret that her Majesty should be so offended with the election of the
+ Earl of Leicester as absolute governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They confessed that she had just cause of displeasure, but hoped that when
+ she should be informed of the whole matter she would rest better satisfied
+ with their proceedings. They stated that the authority was the same which
+ had been previously bestowed upon governors-general; observing that by the
+ word "absolute," which had been used in designation of that authority,
+ nothing more had been intended than to give to the Earl full power to
+ execute his commission, while the sovereignty of the country was reserved
+ to the people. This commission, they said, could not be without danger
+ revoked. And therefore they most humbly besought her Majesty to approve
+ what had been done, and to remember its conformity with her own advice to
+ them, that a multitude of heads, whereby confusion in the government is
+ bred, should be avoided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, upon the same occasion, addressed a letter to Burghley and
+ Walsingham, expressing himself as became a crushed and contrite man, never
+ more to raise his drooping head again, but warmly and manfully urging upon
+ the attention of the English government&mdash;for the honour and interest
+ of the Queen herself&mdash;"the miserable state of the poor soldiers." The
+ necessity of immediate remittances in order to keep them from starving,
+ was most imperious. For himself, he was smothering his wretchedness until
+ he should learn her Majesty's final decision, as to what was to become of
+ him. "Meantime," said he, "I carry my grief inward, and will proceed till
+ her Majesty's full pleasure come with as little discouragement to the
+ cause as I can. I pray God her Majesty may do that may be best for
+ herself. For my own part my heart is broken, but not by the enemy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no doubt that the public disgrace thus inflicted upon the
+ broken-hearted governor, and the severe censure administered to the States
+ by the Queen were both ill-timed and undeserved. Whatever his
+ disingenuousness towards Davison, whatever his disobedience to Elizabeth,
+ however ambitious his own secret motives may, have been, there is no doubt
+ at all that thus far he had borne himself well in his great office.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard Cavendish&mdash;than whom few had better opportunities of judging&mdash;spoke
+ in strong language on the subject. "It is a thing almost incredible," said
+ he, "that the care and diligence of any, one man living could, in so small
+ time; have so much repaired so disjointed and loose an estate as my Lord
+ found this country, in. But lest he should swell in pride of that his good
+ success, your Lordship knoweth that God hath so tempered the cause with
+ the construction thereof, as may well hold him in good consideration of
+ human things." He alluded with bitterness&mdash;as did all men in the
+ Netherlands who were not open or disguised Papists&mdash;to the fatal
+ rumours concerning the peace-negotiation in connection with the recall of
+ Leicester. "There be here advertisements of most fearful instance," he
+ said, "namely, that Champagny doth not spare most liberally to bruit
+ abroad that he hath in his hands the conditions of peace offered by her
+ Majesty unto the King his master, and that it is in his power to conclude
+ at pleasure&mdash;which fearful and mischievous plot, if in time it be not
+ met withal by some notable encounter, it cannot but prove the root of
+ great ruin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "false boys" about Leicester were indefatigable in spreading these
+ rumours, and in taking advantage&mdash;with the assistance of the Papists
+ in the obedient Provinces and in England&mdash;of the disgraced condition
+ in which the Queen had placed the favourite. Most galling to the haughty
+ Earl&mdash;most damaging to the cause of England, Holland, and, liberty&mdash;were
+ the tales to his discredit, which circulated on the Bourse at Antwerp,
+ Middelburg, Amsterdam, and in all the other commercial centres. The most
+ influential bankers and merchants, were assured&mdash;by a thousand
+ chattering&mdash;but as it were invisible&mdash;tongues, that the Queen
+ had for a long time disliked Leicester; that he was a man of no account
+ among the statesmen of England; that he was a beggar and a bankrupt; that,
+ if he had waited two months longer, he would have made his appearance in
+ the Provinces with one man and one boy for his followers; that the Queen
+ had sent him thither to be rid of him; that she never intended him to have
+ more authority than Sir John Norris had; that she could not abide the
+ bestowing the title of Excellency upon him, and that she had not disguised
+ her fury at his elevation to the post of governor-general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All who attempted a refutation of these statements were asked, with a
+ sneer, whether her Majesty had ever written a line to him, or in
+ commendation of him, since his arrival. Minute inquiries were made by the
+ Dutch merchants of their commercial correspondents, both in their own
+ country and in England, as to Leicester's real condition and character. at
+ home. What was his rank, they asked, what his ability, what: his influence
+ at court? Why, if he were really of so high quality as had been reported,
+ was he thus neglected, and at last disgraced? Had he any landed property
+ in England? Had he really ever held any other office but that of master of
+ the horse? "And then," asked one particular busy body, who made himself
+ very unpleasant on the Amsterdam Exchange, "why has her Majesty forbidden
+ all noblemen and gentlemen from coming hither, as was the case at the
+ beginning? Is it because she is hearkening to a peace? And if it be so,
+ quoth he, we are well handled; for if her Majesty hath sent a disgraced
+ man to amuse us, while she is secretly working a peace for herself, when
+ we&mdash;on the contrary&mdash;had broken off all our negotiations, upon
+ confidence of her Majesty's goodness; such conduct will be remembered to
+ the end of the world, and the Hollanders will never abide the name of
+ England again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On such a bed of nettles there was small chance of repose for the
+ governor. Some of the rumours were even more stinging. So incomprehensible
+ did it seem that the proud sovereign of England should send over her
+ subjects to starve or beg in the streets of Flushing and Ostend, that it
+ was darkly intimated that Leicester had embezzled the funds, which, no
+ doubt, had been remitted for the poor soldiers. This was the most cruel
+ blow of all. The Earl had been put to enormous charges. His household at
+ the Hague cost him a thousand pounds a month. He had been paying and
+ furnishing five hundred and fifty men out of his own purse. He had also a
+ choice regiment of cavalry, numbering seven hundred and fifty horse; three
+ hundred and fifty of which number were over and above those allowed for by
+ the Queen, and were entirely at his expense. He was most liberal in making
+ presents of money to every gentleman in his employment. He had deeply
+ mortgaged his estates in order to provide for these heavy demands upon
+ him, and professed his willingness "to spend more, if he might have got
+ any more money for his land that was left;" and in the face of such
+ unquestionable facts&mdash;much to the credit certainly of his generosity&mdash;he
+ was accused of swindling a Queen whom neither Jew nor Gentile had ever yet
+ been sharp enough to swindle; while he was in reality plunging forward in
+ a course of reckless extravagance in order to obviate the fatal effects of
+ her penuriousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet these sinister reports were beginning to have a poisonous effect.
+ Already an alteration of mien was perceptible in the States-General. "Some
+ buzzing there is amongst them," said Leicester, "whatsoever it be. They
+ begin to deal very strangely within these few days." Moreover the industry
+ of the Poleys, Blunts, and Pagets, had turned these unfavourable
+ circumstances to such good account that a mutiny had been near breaking
+ out among the English troops. "And, before the Lord I speak it," said the
+ Earl, "I am sure some of these good towns had been gone ere this, but for
+ my money. As for the States, I warrant you, they see day at a little hole.
+ God doth know what a forward and a joyful country here was within a month.
+ God send her Majesty to recover it so again, and to take care of it, on
+ the condition she send me after Sir Francis Drake to the Indies, my
+ service here being no more acceptable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the aspect of affairs in the Provinces after the first explosion
+ of the Queen's anger had become known. Meanwhile the court-weather was
+ very changeable in England, being sometimes serene, sometimes cloudy,&mdash;always
+ treacherous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Vavasour, sent by the Earl with despatches to her Majesty and the
+ council, had met with a sufficiently benignant reception. She accepted the
+ letters, which, however, owing to a bad cold with a defluxion in the eyes,
+ she was unable at once to read; but she talked ambiguously with the
+ messenger. Yavasour took pains to show the immediate necessity of sending
+ supplies, so that the armies in the Netherlands might take the field at
+ the earliest possible moment. "And what," said she, "if a peace should
+ come in the mean time?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If your Majesty desireth a convenient peace," replied Vavasour, "to take
+ the field is the readiest way to obtain it; for as yet the King of Spain
+ hath had no reason to fear you. He is daily expecting that your own
+ slackness may give your Majesty an overthrow. Moreover, the Spaniards are
+ soldiers, and are not to be moved by-shadows."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Queen had no ears for these remonstrances, and no disposition to
+ open her coffers. A warrant for twenty-four thousand pounds had been
+ signed by her at the end of the month of March, and was about to be sent,
+ when Vavasour arrived; but it was not possible for him, although assisted
+ by the eloquence of Walsingham and Burghley, to obtain an enlargement of
+ the pittance. "The storms are overblown," said Walsingham, "but I fear
+ your Lordship shall receive very scarce measure from hence. You will not
+ believe how the sparing humour doth increase upon us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor were the storms so thoroughly overblown but that there were not daily
+ indications of returning foul weather. Accordingly&mdash;after a
+ conference with Vavasour&mdash;Burghley, and Walsingham had an interview
+ with the Queen, in which the Lord Treasurer used bold and strong language.
+ He protested to her that he was bound, both by his duty to himself and his
+ oath as her councillor, to declare that the course she was holding to Lord
+ Leicester was most dangerous to her own honour, interest and safety. If
+ she intended to continue in this line of conduct, he begged to resign his
+ office of Lord Treasurer; wishing; before God and man, to wash his bands
+ of the shame and peril which he saw could not be avoided. The Queen,
+ astonished at the audacity of Burghley's attitude and language, hardly
+ knew whether to chide him for his presumption or to listen to his
+ arguments. She did both. She taxed him with insolence in daring to address
+ her so roundly, and then finding he was speaking even in 'amaritudine
+ animae' and out of a clear conscience, she became calm again, and
+ intimated a disposition to qualify her anger against the absent Earl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day, to their sorrow, the two councillors found that the Queen had
+ again changed her mind&mdash;"as one that had been by some adverse counsel
+ seduced." She expressed the opinion that affairs would do well enough in
+ the Netherlands, even though Leicester were displaced. A conference
+ followed between Walsingham, Hatton, and Burghley, and then the three went
+ again to her Majesty. They assured her that if she did not take immediate
+ steps to satisfy the States and the people of the Provinces, she would
+ lose those countries and her own honour at the same time; and that then
+ they would prove a source of danger to her instead of protection and
+ glory. At this she was greatly troubled, and agreed to do anything they
+ might advise consistently with her honour. It was then agreed that
+ Leicester should be continued in the government which he had accepted
+ until the matter should be further considered, and letters to that effect
+ were at once written. Then came messenger from Sir Thomas Heneage,
+ bringing despatches from that envoy, and a second and most secret one from
+ the Earl himself. Burghley took the precious letter which the favourite
+ had addressed to his royal mistress, and had occasion to observe its
+ magical effect. Walsingham and the Lord Treasurer had been right in so
+ earnestly remonstrating with him on his previous silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She read your letter," said Burghley, "and, in very truth, I found her
+ princely heart touched with favourable interpretation of your actions;
+ affirming them to be only offensive to her, in that she was not made privy
+ to them; not now misliking that you had the authority."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, at fifty-three, was Elizabeth Tudor. A gentle whisper of idolatry
+ from the lips of the man she loved, and she was wax in his hands. Where
+ now were the vehement protestations of horror that her public declaration
+ of principles and motives had been set at nought? Where now were her
+ vociferous denunciations of the States, her shrill invectives against
+ Leicester, her big oaths, and all the 'hysterica passio,' which had sent
+ poor Lord Burghley to bed with the gout, and inspired the soul of
+ Walsingham with dismal forebodings? Her anger had dissolved into a shower
+ of tenderness, and if her parsimony still remained it was because that
+ could only vanish when she too should cease to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, for a moment, the grave diplomatic difference between the crown
+ of England and their high mightinesses the United States&mdash;upon the
+ solution of which the fate of Christendom was hanging&mdash;seemed to
+ shrink to the dimensions of a lovers' quarrel. Was it not strange that the
+ letter had been so long delayed?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Davison had exhausted argument in defence of the acceptance by the Earl of
+ the authority conferred by the States and had gained nothing by his
+ eloquence, save abuse from the Queen, and acrimonious censure from the
+ Earl. He had deeply offended both by pleading the cause of the erring
+ favourite, when the favourite should have spoken for himself. "Poor Mr.
+ Davison," said Walsingham, "doth take it very grievously that your
+ Lordship should conceive so hardly of him as you do. I find the conceit of
+ your Lordship's disfavour hath greatly dejected him. But at such time as
+ he arrived her Majesty was so incensed, as all the arguments and orators
+ in the world could not have wrought any satisfaction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now a little billet-doux had done what all the orators in the world
+ could not do. The arguments remained the same, but the Queen no longer
+ "misliked that Leicester should have the authority." It was natural that
+ the Lord Treasurer should express his satisfaction at this auspicious
+ result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did commend her princely nature," he said, "in allowing your good
+ intention, and excusing you of any spot of evil meaning; and I thought
+ good to hasten her resolution, which you must now take to come from a
+ favourable good mistress. You must strive with your nature to throw over
+ your shoulder that which is past."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Walter Raleigh, too, who had been "falsely and pestilently"
+ represented to the Earl as an enemy, rather than what he really was, a
+ most ardent favourer of the Netherland cause, wrote at once to
+ congratulate him on the change in her Majesty's demeanour. "The Queen is
+ in very good terms with you now," he said, "and, thanks be to God, well
+ pacified, and you are again her 'sweet Robin.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Walter wished to be himself the bearer of the comforting despatches to
+ Leicester, on the ground that he had been represented as an "ill
+ instrument against him," and in order that he might justify himself
+ against the charge, with his own lips. The Queen, however, while
+ professing to make use of Shirley as the messenger, bade Walsingham
+ declare to the Earl, upon her honour, that Raleigh had done good offices
+ for him, and that, in the time of her anger, he had been as earnest in his
+ defence as the best friend could be. It would have been&mdash;singular,
+ indeed, had it been otherwise. "Your Lordship," said Sir Walter, "doth
+ well understand my affection toward Spain, and how I have consumed the
+ best part of my fortune, hating the tyrannous prosperity of that state. It
+ were strange and monstrous that I should now become an enemy to my country
+ and conscience. All that I have desired at your Lordship's hands is that
+ you will evermore deal directly with me in all matters&mdash;of suspect
+ doubleness, and so ever esteem me as you shall find me deserving good or
+ bad. In the mean time, let no poetical scribe work your Lordship by any
+ device to doubt that I am a hollow or cold servant to the action."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now agreed that letters should be drawn, up authorizing Leicester
+ to continue in the office which he held, until the state-council should
+ devise some modification in his commission. As it seemed, however, very
+ improbable that the board would devise anything of the kind, Burghley
+ expressed the belief that the country was like to continue in the Earl's
+ government without any change whatever. The Lord Treasurer was also of
+ opinion that the Queen's letters to Leicester would convey as much comfort
+ as he had received discomfort; although he admitted that there was a great
+ difference: The former letters he knew had deeply wounded his heart, while
+ the new ones could not suddenly sink so low as the wound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The despatch to the States-General was benignant, elaborate, slightly
+ diffuse. The Queen's letter to 'sweet Robin' was caressing, but
+ argumentative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is always thought," said she, "in the opinion of the world, a hard
+ bargain when both parties are losers, and so doth fall out in the case
+ between us two. You, as we hear, are greatly grieved in respect of the
+ great displeasure you find we have conceived against you. We are no less
+ grieved that a subject of ours of that quality that you are, a creature of
+ our own, and one that hath always received an extraordinary portion of our
+ favour above all our subjects, even from the beginning of our reign,
+ should deal so carelessly, not to say contemptuously, as to give the world
+ just cause to think that we are had in contempt by him that ought most to
+ respect and reverence us, which, we do assure you, hath wrought as great
+ grief in us as anyone thing that ever happened unto us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are persuaded that you, that have so long known us, cannot think that
+ ever we could have been drawn to have taken so hard a course therein had
+ we not been provoked by an extraordinary cause. But for that your grieved
+ and wounded mind hath more need of comfort than reproof, who, we are
+ persuaded, though the act of contempt can no ways be excused, had no other
+ meaning and intent than to advance our service, we think meet to forbear
+ to dwell upon a matter wherein we ourselves do find so little comfort,
+ assuring you that whosoever professeth to love you best taketh not more
+ comfort of your well doing, or discomfort of your evil doing than
+ ourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this affectionate preface she proceeded to intimate her desire that
+ the Earl should take the matter as nearly as possible into his own hands.
+ It was her wish that he should retain the authority of absolute governor,
+ but&mdash;if it could be so arranged&mdash;that he should dispense with
+ the title, retaining only that of her lieutenant-general. It was not her
+ intention however, to create any confusion or trouble in the Provinces,
+ and she was therefore willing that the government should remain upon
+ precisely the same footing as that on which it then stood, until
+ circumstances should permit the change of title which she suggested. And
+ the whole matter was referred to the wisdom of Leicester, who was to
+ advise with Heneage and such others as he liked to consult, although it
+ was expressly stated that the present arrangement was to be considered a
+ provisional and not a final one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Until this soothing intelligence could arrive in the Netherlands the
+ suspicions concerning the underhand negotiations with Spain grew daily
+ more rife, and the discredit cast upon the Earl more embarrassing. The
+ private letters which passed between the Earl's enemies in Holland and in
+ England contained matter more damaging to himself and to the cause which
+ he had at heart than the more public reports of modern days can
+ disseminate, which, being patent to all, can be more easily contradicted.
+ Leicester incessantly warned his colleagues of her Majesty's council
+ against the malignant manufacturers of intelligence. "I pray you, my
+ Lords, as you are wise," said he, "beware of them all. You shall find them
+ here to be shrewd pick-thinks, and hardly worth the hearkening unto."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He complained bitterly of the disgrace that was heaped upon him, both
+ publicly and privately, and of the evil consequences which were sure to
+ follow from the course pursued. "Never was man so villanously handled by
+ letters out of England as I have been," said he, "not only advertising her
+ Majesty's great dislike with me before this my coming over, but that I was
+ an odious man in England, and so long as I tarried here that no help was
+ to be looked for, that her Majesty would send no more men or money, and
+ that I was used here but for a time till a peace were concluded between
+ her Majesty and the Prince of Parma. What the continuance of a man's
+ discredit thus will turn out is to be thought of, for better I were a
+ thousand times displaced than that her Majesty's great advantage of so
+ notable Provinces should be hindered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the peace-negotiations&mdash;which, however cunningly managed, could
+ not remain entirely concealed&mdash;the Earl declared them to be as idle
+ as they were disingenuous. "I will boldly pronounce that all the peace you
+ can make in the world, leaving these countries," said he to Burghley,
+ "will never prove other than a fair spring for a few days, to be all over
+ blasted with a hard storm after." Two days later her Majesty's comforting
+ letters arrived, and the Earl began to raise his drooping head. Heneage,
+ too, was much relieved, but he was, at the same time, not a little
+ perplexed. It was not so easy to undo all the mischief created by the
+ Queen's petulance. The "scorpion's sting"&mdash;as her Majesty expressed
+ herself&mdash;might be balsamed, but the poison had spread far beyond the
+ original wound.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The letters just brought in," wrote Heneage to Burghley, "have well
+ relieved a most noble and sufficient servant, but I fear they will not
+ restore the much-repaired wrecks of these far-decayed noble countries into
+ the same state I found them in. A loose, disordered, and unknit state
+ needs no shaking, but propping. A subtle and fearful kind of people&mdash;should
+ not be made more distrustful, but assured." He then expressed annoyance at
+ the fault already found with him, and surely if ever man had cause to
+ complain of reproof administered him, in quick succession; for not obeying
+ contradictory directions following upon each other as quickly, that man
+ was Sir Thomas Heneage. He had been, as he thought, over cautious in
+ administering the rebuke to the Earl's arrogance, which he had been
+ expressly sent over to administer but scarcely had he accomplished his
+ task, with as much delicacy as he could devise, when he found himself
+ censured;&mdash;not for dilatoriness, but for haste. "Fault I perceive,"
+ said he to Burghley, "is found in me, not by your Lordship, but by some
+ other, that I did not stay proceeding if I found the public cause might
+ take hurt. It is true I had good warrant for the manner, the place, and
+ the persons, but, for the matter none, for done it must be. Her Majesty's
+ offence must be declared. Yet if I did not all I possibly could to uphold
+ the cause, and to keep the tottering cause upon the wheels, I deserve no
+ thanks, but reproof."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly, when the blasts of royal rage are remembered, by which the
+ envoy had been, as it were, blown out of England into Holland, it is
+ astonishing to find his actions censured for undue precipitancy. But it
+ was not the first, nor was it likely to be the last time, for
+ comparatively subordinate agents in Elizabeth's government to be,
+ distressed by, contradictory commands, when the sovereign did not know or
+ did not chose to make known, her own mind on important occasions. "Well,
+ my Lord," said plaintive Sir Thomas, "wiser men may serve more pleasingly
+ and happily, but never shall any serve her Majesty more, faithfully and
+ heartily. And so I cannot be persuaded her Majesty thinketh; for from
+ herself I find nothing but most sweet and&mdash;gracious, favour, though
+ by others' censures I may gather otherwise of her judgment; which I
+ confess, doth cumber me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was destined to be cumbered more than once before these negotiations
+ should be concluded; but meantime; there was a brief gleam of sunshine.
+ The English friends of Leicester in the Netherlands were enchanted with
+ the sudden change in the Queen's humour; and to Lord Burghley, who was
+ not, in reality, the most stanch of the absent Earl's defenders, they
+ poured themselves out in profuse and somewhat superfluous gratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cavendish, in strains exultant, was sure that Burghley's children,
+ grand-children, and remotest posterity, would rejoice that their great
+ ancestor, in such a time of need had been "found and felt to be indeed a
+ 'pater patria,' a good-father to a happy land." And, although unwilling to
+ "stir up the old Adam" in his Lordship's soul, he yet took the liberty of
+ comparing the Lord Treasurer, in his old and declining years with Mary
+ Magdalen; assuring him, that for ever after; when the tale of the
+ preservation of the Church of God, of her Majesty; and of the Netherland
+ cause; which were all one, should be told; his name and well-doing would
+ be held in memory also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And truly there was much of honest and generous enthusiasm, even if
+ couched in language somewhat startling to the ears of a colder and more
+ material age; in the hearts of these noble volunteers. They were fighting
+ the cause of England, of the Netherland republic, and of human liberty;
+ with a valour worthy the best days of English' chivalry, against manifold
+ obstacles, and they were certainly; not too often cheered by the beams of
+ royal favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a pity that a dark cloud was so soon again to sweep over the scene:
+ For the temper of Elizabeth at this important juncture seemed as
+ capricious: as the April weather in which the scenes were enacting. We
+ have seen the genial warmth of her letters and messages to Leicester, to
+ Heneage,&mdash;to the States-General; on the first of the month.
+ Nevertheless it was hardly three weeks after they had been despatched when
+ Walsingham and Burghley found, her Majesty one morning a towering passion,
+ because, the Earl had not already laid down the government. The Lord
+ Treasurer ventured to remonstrate, but was bid to bold his tongue. Ever
+ variable and mutable as woman, Elizabeth was perplexing and baffling to
+ her counsellors, at this epoch, beyond all divination. The "sparing
+ humour" was increasing fearfully, and she thought it would be easier for
+ her to slip out of the whole expensive enterprise, provided Leicester were
+ merely her lieutenant-general, and not stadholder for the Provinces.
+ Moreover the secret negotiations for peace were producing a deleterious
+ effect upon her mind. Upon this subject, the Queen and Burghley,
+ notwithstanding his resemblance to Mary Magdalen, were better informed
+ than the Secretary, whom, however, it had been impossible wholly to
+ deceive. The man who could read secrets so far removed as the Vatican, was
+ not to be blinded to intrigues going on before his face. The Queen,
+ without revealing more than she could help, had been obliged to admit that
+ informal transactions were pending, but had authorised the Secretary to
+ assure the United States that no treaty would be made without their
+ knowledge and full concurrence. "She doth think," wrote Walsingham to
+ Leicester, "that you should, if you shall see no cause to the contrary,
+ acquaint the council of state there that certain overtures of peace are
+ daily made unto her, but that she meaneth not to proceed therein without
+ their good liking and privity, being persuaded that there can no peace be
+ made profitable or sure for her that shall not also stand with their
+ safety; and she doth acknowledge hers to be so linked with theirs as
+ nothing can fall out to their prejudice, but she must be partaker of their
+ harm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This communication was dated on the 21st April, exactly three weeks after
+ the Queen's letter to Heneage, in which she had spoken of the "malicious
+ bruits" concerning the pretended peace-negotiations; and the Secretary was
+ now confirming, by her order, what she had then stated under her own hand,
+ that she would "do nothing that might concern them without their own
+ knowledge and good liking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And surely nothing could be more reasonable. Even if the strict letter of
+ the August treaty between the Queen and the States did not provide against
+ any separate negotiations by the one party without the knowledge of the
+ other, there could be no doubt at all that its spirit absolutely forbade
+ the clandestine conclusion of a peace with Spain by England alone, or by
+ the Netherlands alone, and that such an arrangement would be disingenuous,
+ if not positively dishonourable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless it would almost seem that Elizabeth had been taking advantage
+ of the day when she was writing her letter to Heneage on the 1st of April.
+ Never was painstaking envoy more elaborately trifled with. On the 26th of
+ the month&mdash;and only five days after the communication by Walsingham
+ just noticed&mdash;the Queen was furious that any admission should have
+ been made to the States of their right to participate with her in
+ peace-negotiations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We find that Sir Thomas Heneage," said she to Leicester, "hath gone
+ further&mdash;in assuring the States that we would make no peace without
+ their privity and assent&mdash;than he had commission; for that our
+ direction was&mdash;if our meaning had been well set down, and not
+ mistaken by our Secretary&mdash;that they should have been only let
+ understand that in any treaty that might pass between us and Spain, they
+ might be well assured we would have no less care of their safety than of
+ our own." Secretary Walsingham was not likely to mistake her Majesty's
+ directions in this or any other important affair of state. Moreover, it so
+ happened that the Queen had, in her own letter to Heneage, made the same
+ statement which she now chose to disavow. She had often a convenient way
+ of making herself misunderstood, when she thought it desirable to shift
+ responsibility from her own shoulders upon those of others; but upon this
+ occasion she had been sufficiently explicit. Nevertheless, a scape-goat
+ was necessary, and unhappy the subordinate who happened to be within her
+ Majesty's reach when a vicarious sacrifice was to be made. Sir Francis
+ Walsingham was not a man to be brow-beaten or hood-winked, but Heneage was
+ doomed to absorb a fearful amount of royal wrath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What phlegmatical reasons soever were made you," wrote the Queen, who but
+ three weeks before had been so gentle and affectionate to her, ambassador,
+ "how happeneth it that you will not remember, that when a man hath faulted
+ and committed by abettors thereto, neither the one nor the other will
+ willingly make their own retreat. Jesus! what availeth wit, when it fails
+ the owner at greatest need? Do that you are bidden, and leave your
+ considerations for your own affairs. For in some things you had clear
+ commandment, which you did not, and in others none, and did. We princes be
+ wary enough of our bargains. Think you I will be bound by your own speech
+ to make no peace for mine own matters without their consent? It is enough
+ that I injure not their country nor themselves in making peace for them
+ without their consent. I am assured of your dutiful thoughts, but I am
+ utterly at squares with this childish dealing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blasted by this thunderbolt falling upon his head out of serenest sky, the
+ sad. Sir. Thomas remained, for a time, in a state of political
+ annihilation. 'Sweet Robin' meanwhile, though stunned, was unscathed&mdash;thanks
+ to the convenient conductor at his side. For, in Elizabeth's court,
+ mediocrity was not always golden, nor was it usually the loftiest
+ mountains that the lightnings smote. The Earl was deceived by his royal
+ mistress, kept in the dark as to important transactions, left to provide
+ for his famishing' soldiers as he best might; but the Queen at that
+ moment, though angry, was not disposed, to trample upon him. Now that his
+ heart was known to be broken, and his sole object in life to be retirement
+ to remote regions&mdash;India or elsewhere&mdash;there to languish out the
+ brief remainder of his days in prayers for Elizabeth's happiness,
+ Elizabeth was not inclined very bitterly to upbraid him. She had too
+ recently been employing herself in binding up his broken heart, and
+ pouring balm into the "scorpion's sting," to be willing so soon to deprive
+ him of those alleviations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her tone&mdash;was however no longer benignant, and her directions were
+ extremely peremptory. On the 1st of April she had congratulated Leicester,
+ Heneage, the States, and all the world, that her secret commands had been
+ staid, and that the ruin which would have followed, had, those decrees
+ been executed according to her first violent wish, was fortunately
+ averted. Heneage was even censured, not by herself, but by courtiers in
+ her confidence, and with her concurrence, for being over hasty in going
+ before the state-council, as he had done, with her messages and commands.
+ On the 26th of April she expressed astonishment that Heneage had dared to
+ be so dilatory, and that the title of governor had not been laid down by
+ Leicester "out of hand." She marvelled greatly, and found it very strange
+ that "ministers in matters of moment should presume to do things of their
+ own head without direction." She accordingly gave orders that there should
+ be no more dallying, but that the Earl should immediately hold a
+ conference with the state-council in order to arrange a modification in
+ his commission. It was her pleasure that he should retain all the
+ authority granted to him by the States, but as already intimated by her,
+ that he should abandon the title of "absolute governor," and retain only
+ that of her lieutenant-general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was it strange that Heneage, placed in so responsible a situation, and
+ with the fate of England, of Holland, and perhaps of all Christendom,
+ hanging in great measure upon this delicate negotiation, should be amazed
+ at such contradictory orders, and grieved by such inconsistent censures?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To tell you my griefs and my lacks," said he to Walsingham, "would little
+ please you or help me. Therefore I will say nothing, but think there was
+ never man in so great a service received so little comfort and so
+ contrarious directions. But 'Dominus est adjutor in tribulationibus.' If
+ it be possible, let me receive some certain direction, in following which
+ I shall not offend her Majesty, what good or hurt soever I do besides."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This certainly seemed a loyal and reasonable request, yet it was not one
+ likely to be granted. Sir Thomas, perplexed, puzzled, blindfolded, and
+ brow-beaten, always endeavoring to obey orders, when he could comprehend
+ them, and always hectored and lectured whether he obeyed them or not&mdash;ruined
+ in purse by the expenses, of a mission on which he had been sent without
+ adequate salary&mdash;appalled at the disaffection waging more formidable
+ every hour in Provinces which were recently so loyal to her Majesty, but
+ which were now pervaded by a suspicion that there was double-dealing upon
+ her part became quite sick of his life. He fell seriously ill, and was
+ disappointed, when, after a time, the physicians declared him
+ convalescent. For when when he rose from his sick-bed, it was only to
+ plunge once more, without a clue, into the labyrinth where he seemed to be
+ losing his reason. "It is not long," said he to Walsingham, "since I
+ looked to have written you no more letters, my extremity was so great. . .
+ But God's will is best, otherwise I could have liked better to have
+ cumbered the earth no longer, where I find myself contemned, and which I
+ find no reason to see will be the better in the wearing . . . It were
+ better for her Majesty's service that the directions which come were not
+ contrarious one to another, and that those you would have serve might know
+ what is meant, else they cannot but much deceive you, as well as displease
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Public opinion concerning the political morality of the English court was
+ not gratifying, nor was it rendered more favourable by these recent
+ transactions. "I fear," said Heneage, "that the world will judge what
+ Champagny wrote in one of his letters out of England (which I have lately
+ seen) to be over true. His words be these, 'Et de vray, c'est le plus
+ fascheux et le plus incertain negocier de ceste court, que je pense soit
+ au monde.'" And so "basting," as he said, "with a weak body and a willing
+ mind; to do, he feared, no good work," he set forth from Middelburgh to
+ rejoin Leicester at Arnheim, in order to obey, as well as he could, the
+ Queen's latest directions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before he could set to work there came more "contrarious" orders. The
+ last instructions, both to Leicester and himself, were that the Earl
+ should resign the post of governor absolute "out of hand," and the Queen
+ had been vehement in denouncing any delay on such an occasion. He was now
+ informed, that, after consulting with Leicester and with the
+ state-council, he was to return to England with the result of such
+ deliberations. It could afterwards be decided how the Earl could retain
+ all the authority of governor absolute, while bearing only the title of
+ the Queen's lieutenant general. "For her meaning is not," said Walsingham,
+ "that his Lord ship should presently give it over, for she foreseeth in
+ her princely judgment that his giving over the government upon a sudden,
+ and leaving those countries without a head or director, cannot but breed a
+ most dangerous alteration there." The secretary therefore stated the royal
+ wish at present to be that the "renunciation of the title" should be
+ delayed till Heneage could visit England, and subsequently return to
+ Holland with her Majesty's further directions. Even the astute Walsingham
+ was himself puzzled, however, while conveying these ambiguous orders; and
+ he confessed that he was doubtful whether he had rightly comprehended the
+ Queen's intentions. Burghley, however, was better at guessing riddles than
+ he was, and so Heneage was advised to rely chiefly upon Burghley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Heneage had now ceased to be interested in any enigmas that might be
+ propounded by the English court, nor could he find comfort, as Walsingham
+ had recommended he should do, in railing. "I wish I could follow your
+ counsel," he said, "but sure the uttering of my choler doth little ease my
+ grief or help my case."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rebuked, however, the inconsistency and the tergiversations of the
+ government with a good deal of dignity. "This certainly shall I tell her
+ Majesty," he said, "if I live to see her, that except a more constant
+ course be taken with this inconstant people, it is not the blaming of her
+ ministers will advance her Highness's service, or better the state of
+ things. And shall I tell you what they now say here of us&mdash;I fear not
+ without some cause&mdash;even as Lipsius wrote of the French, 'De Gallis
+ quidem enigmata veniunt, non veniunt, volunt, holunt, audent, timent,
+ omnia, ancipiti metu, suspensa et suspecta.' God grant better, and ever
+ keep you and help me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He announced to Burghley that he was about to attend a meeting of the
+ state-council the next day, for the purpose of a conference on these
+ matters at Arnheim, and that he would then set forth for England to report
+ proceedings to her Majesty. He supposed, on the whole, that this was what
+ was expected of him, but acknowledged it hopeless to fathom the royal
+ intentions. Yet if he went wrong, he was always, sure to make mischief,
+ and though innocent, to be held accountable for others' mistakes. "Every
+ prick I make," said he, "is made a gash; and to follow the words of my
+ directions from England is not enough, except I likewise see into your
+ minds. And surely mine eyesight is not so good. But I will pray to God for
+ his help herein. With all the wit I have, I will use all the care I can&mdash;first,
+ to satisfy her Majesty, as God knoweth I have ever most desired; then, not
+ to hurt this cause, but that I despair of." Leicester, as maybe supposed,
+ had been much discomfited and perplexed during the course of these
+ contradictory and perverse directions. There is no doubt whatever that his
+ position bad been made discreditable and almost ridiculous, while he was
+ really doing his best, and spending large sums out of his private fortune
+ to advance the true interests of the Queen. He had become a suspected man
+ in the Netherlands, having been, in the beginning of the year, almost
+ adored as a Messiah. He had submitted to the humiliation which had been
+ imposed upon him, of being himself the medium to convey to the council the
+ severe expressions of the Queen's displeasure at the joint action of the
+ States-General and himself. He had been comforted by the affectionate
+ expressions with which that explosion of feminine and royal wrath had been
+ succeeded. He was now again distressed by the peremptory command to do
+ what was a disgrace to him, and an irreparable detriment to the cause, yet
+ he was humble and submissive, and only begged to be allowed, as a remedy
+ for all his anguish, to return to the sunlight of Elizabeth's presence. He
+ felt that her course; if persisted in, would lead to the destruction of
+ the Netherland commonwealth, and eventually to the downfall of England;
+ and that the Provinces, believing themselves deceived by the Queen; were
+ ready to revolt against an authority to which, but a short time before,
+ they were so devotedly loyal Nevertheless, he only wished to know what his
+ sovereign's commands distinctly were, in order to set himself to their
+ fulfilment. He had come from the camp before Nymegen in order to attend
+ the conference with the state-council at Arnheim, and he would then be
+ ready and anxious to, despatch Heneage to England, to learn her Majesty's
+ final determination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He protested to the Queen that he had come upon this arduous and perilous
+ service only, because he, considered her throne in danger, and that this
+ was the only means of preserving it; that, in accepting the absolute
+ government, he had been free from all ambitious motives, but deeply
+ impressed with the idea that only by so doing could he conduct the
+ enterprise entrusted to him to the desired consummation; and he declared
+ with great fervour that no advancement to high office could compensate him
+ for this enforced absence from her. To be sent back even in disgrace would
+ still be a boon to him, for he should cease to be an exile from her sight.
+ He knew that his enemies had been busy in defaming him, while he had been
+ no longer there to defend himself, but his conscience acquitted him of any
+ thought which was not for her happiness and glory. "Yet grievous it is to
+ me," said he in, a tone of tender reproach, "that having left all&mdash;yea,
+ all that may be imagined&mdash;for you, you have left me for very little,
+ even to the uttermost of all hard fortune. For what have I, unhappy man,
+ to do here either with cause or country but for you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stated boldly that his services had not been ineffective, that the
+ enemy had never been in worse plight than now, that he had lost at least
+ five thousand men in divers overthrows, and that, on the other hand, the
+ people and towns of the Seven Provinces had been safely preserved. "Since
+ my arrival," he said, "God hath blessed the action which you have taken in
+ hand, and committed to the charge of me your poor unhappy servant. I have
+ good cause to say somewhat for myself, for that I think I have as few
+ friends to speak for me as any man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless&mdash;as he warmly protested&mdash;his only wish was to
+ return; for the country in which he had lost her favour, which was more
+ precious than life, had become odious to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most lowly office in her presence was more to be coveted than the
+ possession of unlimited power away from her. It was by these tender and
+ soft insinuations, as the Earl knew full well, that he was sure to obtain
+ what he really coveted&mdash;her sanction for retaining the absolute
+ government in the Provinces. And most artfully did he strike the key.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Most dear and gracious Lady," he cried, "my care and service here do
+ breed me nothing but grief and unhappiness. I have never had your
+ Majesty's good favour since I came into this charge&mdash;a matter that
+ from my first beholding your eyes hath been most dear unto me above all
+ earthly treasures. Never shall I love that place or like that soil which
+ shall cause the lack of it. Most gracious Lady, consider my long, true,
+ and faithful heart toward you. Let not this unfortunate place here bereave
+ me of that which, above all the world, I esteem there, which is your favor
+ and your presence. I see my service is not acceptable, but rather more and
+ more disliketh you. Here I can do your Majesty no service; there I can do
+ you some, at the least rub your horse's heels&mdash;a service which shall
+ be much more welcome to me than this, with all that these men may give me.
+ I do, humbly and from my heart, prostrate at your feet, beg this grace at
+ your sacred hands, that you will be pleased to let me return to my
+ home-service, with your favour, let the revocation be used in what sort
+ shall please and like you. But if ever spark of favour was in your Majesty
+ toward your old servant, let me obtain this my humble suit; protesting
+ before the Majesty of all Majesties, that there was no cause under Heaven
+ but his and yours, even for your own special and particular cause, I say,
+ could have made me take this absent journey from you in hand. If your
+ Majesty shall refuse me this, I shall think all grace clean gone from me,
+ and I know: my days will not be long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She must melt at this, thought 'sweet Robin' to himself; and meantime
+ accompanied by Heneage; he proceeded with the conferences in the
+ state-council-chamber touching the modification of the title and the
+ confirmation of his authority. This, so far as Walsingham could divine,
+ and Burghley fathom, was the present intention of the Queen. He averred
+ that he had ever sought most painfully to conform his conduct to her
+ instructions as fast as they were received, and that he should continue so
+ to do. On the whole it was decided by the conference to let matters stand
+ as, they were for a little longer, and until: after Heneage should have
+ time once more to go and come. "The same manner of proceeding that was is
+ now," said Leicester, "Your pleasure is declared to the council here as
+ you have willed it. How it will fall out again in your Majesty's
+ construction, the Lord knoweth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester might be forgiven for referring to higher powers, for any
+ possible interpretation of her Majesty's changing humour; but meantime;
+ while Sir. Thomas was getting ready, for his expedition to England, the
+ Earl's heart was somewhat gladdened by more gracious messages from the
+ Queen. The alternation of emotions would however prove too much for him,
+ he feared, and he was reluctant to open his heart to so unwonted a tenant
+ as joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But that my fear is such, most dear and gracious Lady," he said, "as my
+ unfortunate destiny will hardly permit; whilst I remain here; any
+ good-acceptation of so simple a service as, mine, I should, greatly
+ rejoice and comfort myself with the hope of your Majesty's most prayed-for
+ favour. But of late, being by your own sacred hand lifted even up into
+ Heaven with joy of your favour, I was bye and bye without any new desert
+ or offence at all, cast down and down: again into the depth of all grief.
+ God doth know, my dear and dread Sovereign, that after I first received
+ your resolute pleasure by Sir Thomas Heneage, I made neither stop nor stay
+ nor any excuse to be rid of this place, and to satisfy your command. . . .
+ So much I mislike this place and fortune of mine; as I desire nothing in
+ the world so much, as to be delivered, with your favours from all charge
+ here, fearing still some new cross of your displeasure to fall upon me,
+ trembling continually with the fear thereof, in such sort as till I may be
+ fully confirmed in my new regeneration of your wonted favour I cannot
+ receive that true comfort which doth appertain to so great a hope. Yet I
+ will not only acknowledge with all humbleness and dutiful thanks the
+ exceeding joy these last blessed lines brought to my long-wearied heart,
+ but will, with all true loyal affection, attend that further joy from your
+ sweet self which may utterly, extinguish all consuming fear away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Heneage&mdash;who likewise received a kind word or two after having
+ been so capriciously and petulantly dealt with was less extravagant in his
+ expressions of gratitude. "The Queen hath sent me a paper-plaister which
+ must please for a time," he said. "God Almighty bless her Majesty ever,
+ and best direct her." He was on the point of starting for England, the
+ bearer of the States' urgent entreaties that Leicester might retain the
+ government, and of despatches; announcing the recent success of the allies
+ before Grave. "God prospereth the action in these countries beyond all
+ expectation," he said, "which all amongst you will not be over glad of,
+ for somewhat I know." The intrigues of Grafigni, Champagny, and Bodman,
+ with Croft, Burghley, and the others were not so profound a secret as they
+ could wish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tone adopted by Leicester has been made manifest in his letters to the
+ Queen. He had held the same language of weariness and dissatisfaction in
+ his communications to his friends. He would not keep the office, he
+ avowed, if they should give him "all Holland and Zeeland, with all their
+ appurtenances," and he was ready to resign at any moment. He was not
+ "ceremonious for reputation," he said, but he gave warning that the
+ Netherlanders would grow desperate if they found her Majesty dealing
+ weakly or carelessly with them. As for himself he had already had enough
+ of government. "I am weary, Mr. Secretary," he plaintively exclaimed,
+ "indeed I am weary; but neither of pains nor travail. My ill hap that I
+ can please her Majesty no better hath quite discouraged me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had recently, however&mdash;as we have seen&mdash;received some
+ comfort, and he was still further encouraged, upon the eve of Heneage's
+ departure, by receiving another affectionate epistle from the Queen.
+ Amends seemed at last to be offered for her long and angry silence, and
+ the Earl was deeply grateful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If it hath not been, my most dear and gracious Lady," said he in reply,
+ "no small comfort to your poor old servant to receive but one line of your
+ blessed hand-writing in many months, for the relief of a most grieved,
+ wounded heart, how far more exceeding joy must it be, in the midst of all
+ sorrow, to receive from the same sacred hand so many comfortable lines as
+ my good friend Mr. George hath at once brought me. Pardon me, my sweet
+ Lady, if they cause me to forget myself. Only this I do say, with most
+ humble dutiful thanks, that the scope of all my service hath ever been to
+ content and please you; and if I may do that, then is all sacrifice,
+ either of life or whatsoever, well offered for you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The matter of the government absolute having been so fully discussed
+ during the preceding four months, and the last opinions of the
+ state-council having been so lucidly expounded in the despatches to be
+ carried by Heneage to England, the matter might be considered as
+ exhausted. Leicester contented himself, therefore, with once more calling
+ her Majesty's attention to the fact that if he had not himself accepted
+ the office thus conferred upon him by the States, it would have been
+ bestowed upon some other personage. It would hardly have comported with
+ her dignity, if Count Maurice of Nassau, or Count William, or Count
+ Moeurs, had been appointed governor absolute, for in that case the Earl,
+ as general of the auxiliary English force, would have been subject to the
+ authority of the chieftain thus selected. It was impossible, as the
+ state-council had very plainly shown, for Leicester to exercise supreme
+ authority, while merely holding the military office of her Majesty's
+ lieutenant-general. The authority of governor or stadholder could only be
+ derived from the supreme power of the country. If her Majesty had chosen
+ to accept the sovereignty, as the States had ever desired, the requisite
+ authority could then have been derived from her, as from the original
+ fountain. As she had resolutely refused that offer however, his authority
+ was necessarily to be drawn from the States-General, or else the Queen
+ must content herself with seeing him serve as an English military officer,
+ only subject to the orders of the supreme power, wherever that power might
+ reside. In short, Elizabeth's wish that her general might be clothed with
+ the privileges of her viceroy, while she declined herself to be the
+ sovereign, was illogical, and could not be complied with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very soon after inditing these last epistles to the Provinces, the Queen
+ became more reasonable on the subject; and an elaborate communication was
+ soon received by the state-council, in which the royal acquiescence was
+ signified to the latest propositions of the States. The various topics,
+ suggested in previous despatches from Leicester and from the council, were
+ reviewed, and the whole subject was suddenly placed in a somewhat
+ different light from that in which it seemed to have been previously
+ regarded by her Majesty. She alluded to the excuse, offered by the
+ state-council, which had been drawn from the necessity of the case, and
+ from their "great liking for her cousin of Leicester," although in
+ violation of the original contract. "As you acknowledge, however," she
+ said, "that therein you were justly to be blamed, and do crave pardon for
+ the same, we cannot, upon this acknowledgment of your fault, but remove
+ our former dislike."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless it would now seem that her "mistake" had proceeded, not from
+ the excess, but from the insufficiency of the powers conferred upon the
+ Earl, and she complained, accordingly, that they had given him shadow
+ rather than substance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Simultaneously with this royal communication, came a joint letter to
+ Leicester, from Burghley, Walsingham; and Hatton, depicting the long and
+ strenuous conflict which they had maintained in his behalf with the
+ rapidly varying inclinations of the Queen. They expressed a warm sympathy
+ with the difficulties of his position, and spoke in strong terms of the
+ necessity that the Netherlands and England should work heartily together.
+ For otherwise, they said, "the cause will fall, the enemy will rise, and
+ we must stagger." Notwithstanding the secret negotiations with the enemy,
+ which Leicester and Walsingham suspected, and which will be more fully
+ examined in a subsequent chapter, they held a language on that subject,
+ which in the Secretary's mouth at least was sincere. "Whatsoever speeches
+ be blown abroad of parleys of peace," they said, "all will be but smoke,
+ yea fire will follow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They excused themselves for their previous and enforced silence by the
+ fact that they had been unable to communicate any tidings but messages of
+ distress, but they now congratulated the Earl that her Majesty, as he
+ would see by her letter to the council, was firmly resolved, not only to
+ countenance his governorship, but to sustain him in the most thorough
+ manner. It would be therefore quite out of the question for them to listen
+ to his earnest propositions to be recalled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, the Lord Treasurer had already apprized Leicester that Heneage
+ had safely arrived in England, that he, had made his report to the Queen,
+ and that her Majesty was "very well contented with him and his mission."
+ It may be easily believed that the Earl would feel a sensation of relief,
+ if not of triumph, at this termination to the embarrassments under which
+ he had been labouring ever since, he listened to the oration of the wise
+ Leoninus upon New Years' Day. At last the Queen had formally acquiesced in
+ the action of the States, and in his acceptance of their offer. He now saw
+ himself undisputed "governor absolute," having been six months long a
+ suspected, discredited, almost disgraced man. It was natural that he
+ should express himself cheerfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My great comfort received, oh my most gracious Lady," he said, "by your
+ most favourable lines written by your own sacred hand, I did most humbly
+ acknowledge by my former letter; albeit I can no way make testimony of
+ enough of the great joy I took thereby. And seeing my wounded heart is by
+ this means almost made whole, I do pray unto God that either I may never
+ feel the like again from you, or not be suffered to live, rather than I
+ should fall again into those torments of your displeasure. Most gracious
+ Queen, I beseech you, therefore, make perfect that which you have begun.
+ Let not the common danger, nor any ill, incident to the place I serve you
+ in, be accompanied with greater troubles and fears indeed than all the
+ horrors of death can bring me. My strong hope doth now so assure me, as I
+ have almost won the battle against despair, and I do arm myself with as
+ many of those wonted comfortable conceits as may confirm my new revived
+ spirits, reposing myself evermore under the shadow of those blessed beams
+ that must yield the only nourishment to this disease."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But however nourishing the shade of those blessed beams might prove to
+ Leicester's disease, it was not so easy to bring about a very sunny
+ condition in the Provinces. It was easier for Elizabeth to mend the broken
+ heart of the governor than to repair the damage which had been caused to
+ the commonwealth by her caprice and her deceit. The dispute concerning the
+ government absolute had died away, but the authority of the Earl had got a
+ "crack in it" which never could be handsomely made whole. The States,
+ during the long period of Leicester's discredit&mdash;feeling more and
+ more doubtful as to the secret intentions of Elizabeth&mdash;disappointed
+ in the condition of the auxiliary troops and in the amount of supplies
+ furnished from England, and, above all, having had time to regret their
+ delegation of a power which they began to find agreeable to exercise with
+ their own hands, became indisposed to entrust the Earl with the
+ administration and full inspection of their resources. To the enthusiasm
+ which had greeted the first arrival of Elizabeth's representative had
+ succeeded a jealous, carping, suspicious sentiment. The two hundred
+ thousand florins monthly were paid, according to the original agreement,
+ but the four hundred thousand of extra service-money subsequently voted
+ were withheld, and withheld expressly on account of Heneage's original
+ mission to disgrace the governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The late return of Sir Thomas Heneage," said Lord North, "hath put such
+ busses in their heads, as they march forward with leaden heels and
+ doubtful hearts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth, through the discredit cast by the Queen upon the Earl in this
+ important affair, the supreme authority was forced back into the hands of
+ the States, at the very moment when they had most freely divested
+ themselves of power. After the Queen had become more reasonable, it was
+ too late to induce them to part, a second time, so freely with the
+ immediate control of their own affairs. Leicester had become, to a certain
+ extent, disgraced and disliked by the Estates. He thought himself, by the
+ necessity of the case, forced to appeal to the people against their legal
+ representatives, and thus the foundation of a nominally democratic party,
+ in opposition to the municipal one, was already laid. Nothing could be
+ more unfortunate at that juncture; for we shall, in future, find the Earl
+ in perpetual opposition to the most distinguished statesmen in the
+ Provinces; to the very men indeed who had been most influential in
+ offering the sovereignty to England, and in placing him in the position
+ which he had so much coveted. No sooner therefore had he been confirmed by
+ Elizabeth in that high office than his arrogance broke forth, and the
+ quarrels between himself and the representative body became incessant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I stand now in somewhat better terms than I did," said he; "I was not in
+ case till of late to deal roundly with them as I have now done. I have
+ established a chamber of finances, against some of their wills, whereby I
+ doubt not to procure great benefit to increase our ability for payments
+ hereafter. The people I find still best devoted to her Majesty, though of
+ late many lewd practices have been used to withdraw their good wills. But
+ it will not be; they still pray God that her Majesty may be their
+ sovereign. She should then see what a contribution they will all bring
+ forth. But to the States they will never return, which will breed some
+ great mischief, there is such mislike of the States universally. I would
+ your Lordship had seen the case I had lived in among them these four
+ months, especially after her Majesty's mislike was found. You would then
+ marvel to see how I have waded, as I have done, through no small
+ obstacles, without help, counsel, or assistance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the part which he felt at last called upon to enact was that of an
+ aristocratic demagogue, in perpetual conflict with the
+ burgher-representative body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is now necessary to lift a corner of the curtain, by which some
+ international&mdash;or rather interpalatial&mdash;intrigues were
+ concealed, as much as possible, even from the piercing eyes of Walsingham.
+ The Secretary was, however, quite aware&mdash;despite the pains taken to
+ deceive him&mdash;of the nature of the plots and of the somewhat ignoble
+ character of the actors concerned in them.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ A hard bargain when both parties are losers
+ Condemned first and inquired upon after
+ Disordered, and unknit state needs no shaking, but propping
+ Upper and lower millstones of royal wrath and loyal subserviency
+ Uttering of my choler doth little ease my grief or help my case
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. 1586
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Forlorn Condition of Flanders&mdash;Parma's secret Negotiations with the
+ Queen&mdash;Grafigni and Bodman&mdash;Their Dealings with English Counsellors
+ &mdash;Duplicity of Farnese&mdash;Secret Offers of the English Peace-Party&mdash;
+ Letters and Intrigues of De Loo&mdash;Drake's Victories and their Effect
+ &mdash;Parma's Perplexity and Anxiety&mdash;He is relieved by the News from
+ England&mdash;Queen's secret Letters to Parma&mdash;His Letters and
+ Instructions to Bodman&mdash;Bodman's secret Transactions at Greenwich&mdash;
+ Walsingham detects and exposes the Plot&mdash;The Intriguers baffled&mdash;
+ Queen's Letter to Parma and his to the King&mdash;Unlucky Results of the
+ Peace&mdash;Intrigues&mdash;Unhandsome Treatment of Leicester&mdash;Indignation of
+ the Earl and Walsingham&mdash;Secret Letter of Parma to Philip&mdash;Invasion
+ of England recommended&mdash;Details of the Project.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Alexander Farnese and his heroic little army had been left by their
+ sovereign in as destitute a condition as that in which Lord Leicester and
+ his unfortunate "paddy persons" had found themselves since their arrival
+ in the Netherlands. These mortal men were but the weapons to be used and
+ broken in the hands of the two great sovereigns, already pitted against
+ each other in mortal combat. That the distant invisible potentate, the
+ work of whose life was to do his best to destroy all European nationality,
+ all civil and religious freedom, should be careless of the instruments by
+ which his purpose was to be effected, was but natural. It is painful to
+ reflect that the great champion of liberty and of Protestantism was almost
+ equally indifferent to the welfare of the human creatures enlisted in her
+ cause. Spaniards and Italians, English and Irish, went half naked and half
+ starving through the whole inclement winter, and perished of pestilence in
+ droves, after confronting the less formidable dangers of battlefield and
+ leaguer. Manfully and sympathetically did the Earl of Leicester&mdash;while
+ whining in absurd hyperbole over the angry demeanour of his sovereign
+ towards himself-represent the imperative duty of an English government to
+ succour English troops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander Farnese was equally plain-spoken to a sovereign with whom
+ plain-speaking was a crime. In bold, almost scornful language, the Prince
+ represented to Philip the sufferings and destitution of the little band of
+ heroes, by whom that magnificent military enterprise, the conquest of
+ Antwerp, had just been effected. "God will be weary of working miracles
+ for us," he cried, "and nothing but miracles can save the troops from
+ starving." There was no question of paying them their wages, there was no
+ pretence at keeping them reasonably provided with lodging and clothing,
+ but he asserted the undeniable proposition that they "could not pass their
+ lives without eating," and he implored his sovereign to send at least
+ money enough to buy the soldiers shoes. To go foodless and barefoot
+ without complaining, on the frozen swamps of Flanders, in January, was
+ more than was to be expected from Spaniards and Italians. The country
+ itself was eaten bare. The obedient Provinces had reaped absolute ruin as
+ the reward of their obedience. Bruges, Ghent, and the other cities of
+ Brabant and Flanders, once so opulent and powerful, had become mere dens
+ of thieves and paupers. Agriculture, commerce, manufactures&mdash;all were
+ dead. The condition of Antwerp was most tragical. The city, which had been
+ so recently the commercial centre of the earth, was reduced to absolute
+ beggary. Its world-wide traffic was abruptly terminated, for the mouth of
+ its great river was controlled by Flushing, and Flushing was in the firm
+ grasp of Sir Philip Sidney, as governor for the English Queen. Merchants
+ and bankers, who had lately been possessed of enormous resources, were
+ stripped of all. Such of the industrial classes as could leave the place
+ had wandered away to Holland and England. There was no industry possible,
+ for there was no market for the products of industry. Antwerp was hemmed
+ in by the enemy on every side, surrounded by royal troops in a condition
+ of open mutiny, cut off from the ocean, deprived of daily bread, and yet
+ obliged to contribute out of its poverty to the maintenance of the Spanish
+ soldiers, who were there for its destruction. Its burghers, compelled to
+ furnish four hundred thousand florins, as the price of their capitulation,
+ and at least six hundred thousand more for the repairs of the dykes, the
+ destruction of which, too long deferred, had only spread desolation over
+ the country without saving the city, and over and above all forced to
+ rebuild, at their own expense, that fatal citadel, by which their liberty
+ and lives were to be perpetually endangered, might now regret at leisure
+ that they had not been as stedfast during their siege as had been the
+ heroic inhabitants of Leyden in their time of trial, twelve years before.
+ Obedient Antwerp was, in truth, most forlorn. But there was one
+ consolation for her and for Philip, one bright spot in the else universal
+ gloom. The ecclesiastics assured Parma, that, notwithstanding the
+ frightful diminution in the population of the city, they had confessed and
+ absolved more persons that Easter than they had ever done since the
+ commencement of the revolt. Great was Philip's joy in consequence. "You
+ cannot imagine my satisfaction," he wrote, "at the news you give me
+ concerning last Easter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a ruined country, starving and mutinous troops, a bankrupt exchequer,
+ and a desperate and pauper population, Alexander Farnese was not unwilling
+ to gain time by simulated negotiations for peace. It was strange, however,
+ that so sagacious a monarch as the Queen of England should suppose it for
+ her interest to grant at that moment the very delay which was deemed most
+ desirable by her antagonist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet it was not wounded affection alone, nor insulted pride, nor startled
+ parsimony, that had carried the fury of the Queen to such a height on the
+ occasion of Leicester's elevation to absolute government. It was still
+ more, because the step was thought likely to interfere with the progress
+ of those negotiations into which the Queen had allowed herself to be
+ drawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A certain Grafigni&mdash;a Genoese merchant residing much in London and in
+ Antwerp, a meddling, intrusive, and irresponsible kind of individual,
+ whose occupation was gone with the cessation of Flemish trade&mdash;had
+ recently made his appearance as a volunteer diplomatist. The principal
+ reason for accepting or rather for winking at his services, seemed to be
+ the possibility of disavowing him, on both sides, whenever it should be
+ thought advisable. He had a partner or colleague, too, named Bodman, who
+ seemed a not much more creditable negotiator than himself. The chief
+ director of the intrigue was, however, Champagny, brother of Cardinal
+ Granvelle, restored to the King's favour and disposed to atone by his
+ exuberant loyalty for his heroic patriotism on a former and most memorable
+ occasion. Andrea de Loo, another subordinate politician, was likewise
+ employed at various stages of the negotiation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will soon be perceived that the part enacted by Burghley, Hatton,
+ Croft, and other counsellors, and even by the Queen herself, was not a
+ model of ingenuousness towards the absent Leicester and the
+ States-General. The gentlemen sent at various times to and from the Earl
+ and her Majesty's government; Davison, Shirley, Vavasor, Heneage, and the
+ rest&mdash;had all expressed themselves in the strongest language
+ concerning the good faith and the friendliness of the Lord-Treasurer and
+ the Vice-Chamberlain, but they were not so well informed as they would
+ have been, had they seen the private letters of Parma to Philip II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham, although kept in the dark as much as it was possible,
+ discovered from time to time the mysterious practices of his political
+ antagonists, and warned the Queen of the danger and dishonour she was
+ bringing upon herself. Elizabeth, when thus boldly charged, equivocated
+ and stormed alternately. She authorized Walsingham to communicate the
+ secrets&mdash;which he had thus surprised&mdash;to the States-General, and
+ then denied having given any such orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth, Walsingham was only entrusted with such portions of the
+ negotiations as he had been able, by his own astuteness, to divine; and as
+ he was very much a friend to the Provinces and to Leicester, he never
+ failed to keep them instructed, to the best of his ability. It must be
+ confessed, however, that the shuffling and paltering among great men and
+ little men, at that period, forms a somewhat painful subject of
+ contemplation at the present day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grafigni having some merchandise to convey from Antwerp to London, went
+ early in the year to the Prince of Parma, at Brussels, in order to procure
+ a passport. They entered into some conversation upon the misery of the
+ country, and particularly concerning the troubles to which the unfortunate
+ merchants had been exposed. Alexander expressed much sympathy with the
+ commercial community, and a strong desire that the ancient friendship
+ between his master and the Queen of England might be restored. Grafigni
+ assured the Prince&mdash;as the result of his own observation in England&mdash;that
+ the Queen participated in those pacific sentiments: "You are going to
+ England," replied the Prince, "and you may say to the ministers of her
+ Majesty, that, after my allegiance to my King, I am most favourably and
+ affectionately inclined towards her. If it pleases them that I, as
+ Alexander Farnese, should attempt to bring about an accord, and if our
+ commissioners could be assured of a hearing in England, I would take care
+ that everything should be conducted with due regard to the honour and
+ reputation of her Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grafigni then asked for a written letter of credence. "That cannot be,"
+ replied Alexander; "but if you return to me I shall believe your report,
+ and then a proper person can be sent, with authority from the King to
+ treat with her Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grafigni proceeded to England, and had an interview with Lord Cobham. A
+ few days later that nobleman gave the merchant a general assurance that
+ the Queen had always felt a strong inclination to maintain firm friendship
+ with the House of Burgundy. Nevertheless, as he proceeded to state, the
+ bad policy of the King's ministers, and the enterprises against her
+ Majesty, had compelled her to provide for her own security and that of her
+ realm by remedies differing in spirit from that good inclination. Being
+ however a Christian princess, willing to leave vengeance to the Lord and
+ disposed to avoid bloodshed, she was ready to lend her ear to a
+ negotiation for peace, if it were likely to be a sincere and secure one.
+ Especially she was pleased that his Highness of Parma should act as
+ mediator of such a treaty, as she considered him a most just and
+ honourable prince in all his promises and actions. Her Majesty would
+ accordingly hold herself in readiness to receive the honourable
+ commissioners alluded to, feeling sure that every step taken by his
+ Highness would comport with her honour and safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At about the same time the other partner in this diplomatic enterprise,
+ William Bodman, communicated to Alexander, the result of his observations
+ in England. He stated that Lords Burghley, Buckhurst, and Cobham, Sir
+ Christopher Hatton, and Comptroller Croft, were secretly desirous of peace
+ with Spain and that they had seized the recent opportunity of her pique
+ against the Earl of Leicester to urge forward these underhand
+ negotiations. Some progress had been made; but as no accredited
+ commissioner arrived from the Prince of Parma, and as Leicester was
+ continually writing earnest letters against peace, the efforts of these
+ counsellors had slackened. Bodman found them all, on his arrival, anxious
+ as he said, "to get their necks out of the matter;" declaring everything
+ which had been done to be pure matter of accident, entirely without the
+ concurrence of the Queen, and each seeking to outrival the other in the
+ good graces of her Majesty. Grafigni informed Bodman, however, that Lord
+ Cobham was quite to be depended upon in the affair, and would deal with
+ him privately, while Lord Burghley would correspond with Andrea de Loo at
+ Antwerp. Moreover, the servant of Comptroller Croft would direct Bodman as
+ to his course, and would give him daily instructions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it so happened that this servant of Croft, Norris by name, was a
+ Papist, a man of bad character, and formerly a spy of the Duke of Anjou.
+ "If your Lordship or myself should use such instruments as this," wrote
+ Walsingham to Leicester, "I know we should bear no small reproach; but it
+ is the good hap of hollow and doubtful men to be best thought of." Bodman
+ thought the lords of the peace-faction and their adherents not
+ sufficiently strong to oppose the other party with success. He assured
+ Farnese that almost all the gentlemen and the common people of England
+ stood ready to risk their fortunes and to go in person to the field to
+ maintain the cause of the Queen and religious liberty; and that the chance
+ of peace was desperate unless something should turn the tide, such as, for
+ example, the defeat of Drake, or an invasion by Philip of Ireland or
+ Scotland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it so happened that Drake was just then engaged in a magnificent career
+ of victory, sweeping the Spanish Main and startling the nearest and the
+ most remote possessions of the King with English prowess, his defeat was
+ not one of the cards to be relied on by the peace-party in the somewhat
+ deceptive game which they had commenced. Yet, strange to say, they used,
+ or attempted to use, those splendid triumphs as if they had been
+ disasters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime there was an active but very secret correspondence between Lord
+ Cobham, Lord Burghley, Sir James Croft, and various subordinate personages
+ in England, on the one side, and Champagny, President Richardot, La Motte,
+ governor of Gravelines, Andrea de Loo, Grafigni, and other men in the
+ obedient Provinces, more or less in Alexander's confidence, on the other
+ side. Each party was desirous of forcing or wheedling the antagonist to
+ show his hand. "You were employed to take soundings off the English coast
+ in the Duke of Norfolk's time," said Cobham to La Motte: "you remember the
+ Duke's fate. Nevertheless, her Majesty hates war, and it only depends on
+ the King to have a firm and lasting peace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must tell Lord Cobham," said Richardot to La Motte, "that you are not
+ at liberty to go into a correspondence, until assured of the intentions of
+ Queen Elizabeth. Her Majesty ought to speak first, in order to make her
+ good-will manifest," and so on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The 'friend' can confer with you," said Richardot to Champagny; "but his
+ Highness is not to appear to know anything at all about it. The Queen must
+ signify her intentions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You answered Champagny correctly," said Burghley to De Loo, "as to what I
+ said last winter concerning her Majesty's wishes in regard to a
+ pacification. The Netherlands must be compelled to return to obedience to
+ the King; but their ancient privileges are to be maintained. You omitted,
+ however, to say a word about toleration, in the Provinces, of the reformed
+ religion. But I said then, as I say now, that this is a condition
+ indispensable to peace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a somewhat important omission on the part of De Loo, and gives
+ the measure of his conscientiousness or his capacity as a negotiator.
+ Certainly for the Lord-Treasurer of England to offer, on the part of her
+ Majesty, to bring about the reduction of her allies under the yoke which
+ they had thrown off without her assistance, and this without leave asked
+ of them, and with no provision for the great principle of religious
+ liberty, which was the cause of the revolt, was a most flagitious trifling
+ with the honour of Elizabeth and of England. Certainly the more this
+ mysterious correspondence is examined, the more conclusive is the
+ justification of the vague and instinctive jealousy felt by Leicester and
+ the States-General as to English diplomacy during the winter and spring of
+ 1586.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley summoned De Loo, accordingly, to recall to his memory all that
+ had been privately said to him on the necessity of protecting the reformed
+ religion in the Provinces. If a peace were to be perpetual, toleration was
+ indispensable, he observed, and her Majesty was said to desire this
+ condition most earnestly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lord-Treasurer also made the not unreasonable suggestion, that, in
+ case of a pacification, it would be necessary to provide that English
+ subjects&mdash;peaceful traders, mariners, and the like&mdash;should no
+ longer be shut up in the Inquisition prisons of Spain and Portugal, and
+ there starved to death, as, with great multitudes, had already been the
+ case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Alexander, while encouraging and directing all these underhand
+ measures, was carefully impressing upon his master that he was not, in the
+ least degree; bound by any such negotiations. "Queen Elizabeth," he
+ correctly observed to Philip, "is a woman: she is also by no means fond of
+ expense. The kingdom, accustomed to repose, is already weary of war
+ therefore, they are all pacifically inclined." "It has been intimated to
+ me," he said, "that if I would send a properly qualified person, who
+ should declare that your Majesty had not absolutely forbidden the coming
+ of Lord Leicester, such an agent would be well received, and perhaps the
+ Earl would be recalled." Alexander then proceeded, with the coolness
+ befitting a trusted governor of Philip II., to comment upon the course
+ which he was pursuing. He could at any time denounce the negotiations
+ which he was secretly prompting. Meantime immense advantages could be
+ obtained by the deception practised upon an enemy whose own object was to
+ deceive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deliberate treachery of the scheme was cynically enlarged upon, and
+ its possible results mathematically calculated:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip was to proceed with the invasion while Alexander was going on with
+ the negotiation. If, meanwhile, they could receive back Holland and
+ Zeeland from the hands of England, that would be an immense success. The
+ Prince intimated a doubt, however, as to so fortunate a result, because,
+ in dealing with heretics and persons of similar quality, nothing but
+ trickery was to be expected. The chief good to be hoped for was to "chill
+ the Queen in her plots, leagues, and alliances," and during the chill, to
+ carry forward their own great design. To slacken not a whit in their
+ preparations, to "put the Queen to sleep," and, above all, not to leave
+ the French for a moment unoccupied with internal dissensions and civil
+ war; such was the game of the King and the governor, as expounded between
+ themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President Richardot, at the same time, stated to Cardinal Granvelle that
+ the English desire for peace was considered certain at Brussels. Grafigni
+ had informed the Prince of Parma and his counsellors that the Queen was
+ most amicably disposed, and that there would be no trouble on the point of
+ religion, her Majesty not wishing to obtain more than she would herself be
+ willing to grant. "In this," said Richardot, "there is both hard and
+ soft;" for knowing that the Spanish game was deception, pure and simple,
+ the excellent President could not bring himself to suspect a possible
+ grain of good faith in the English intentions. Much anxiety was
+ perpetually felt in the French quarter, her Majesty's government being
+ supposed to be secretly preparing an invasion of the obedient Netherlands
+ across the French frontier, in combination, not with the Bearnese, but
+ with Henry III. So much in the dark were even the most astute politicians.
+ "I can't feel satisfied in this French matter," said the President: "we
+ mustn't tickle ourselves to make ourselves laugh." Moreover, there was no
+ self-deception nor self-tickling possible as to the unmitigated misery of
+ the obedient Netherlands. Famine was a more formidable foe than Frenchmen,
+ Hollanders, and Englishmen combined; so that Richardot avowed that the
+ "negotiation would be indeed holy," if it would restore Holland and
+ Zeeland to the King without fighting. The prospect seemed on the whole
+ rather dismal to loyal Netherlanders like the old leaguing, intriguing,
+ Hispamolized president of the privy council. "I confess," said he
+ plaintively, "that England needs chastisement; but I don't see how we are
+ to give it to her. Only let us secure Holland and Zeeland, and then we
+ shall always find a stick whenever we like to beat the dog."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Andrea de Loo had been bustling and buzzing about the ears of the
+ chief counsellors at the English court during all the early spring. Most
+ busily he had been endeavouring to efface the prevalent suspicion that
+ Philip and Alexander were only trifling by these informal negotiations. We
+ have just seen whether or not there was ground for that suspicion. De Loo,
+ being importunate, however&mdash;"as he usually was," according to his own
+ statement&mdash;obtained in Burghley's hand a confirmation, by order of
+ the Queen, of De Loo's&mdash;letter of the 26th December. The matter of
+ religion gave the worthy merchant much difficulty, and he begged Lord
+ Buckhurst, the Lord Treasurer, and many other counsellors, not to allow
+ this point of toleration to ruin the whole affair; "for," said he, "his
+ Majesty will never permit any exercise of the reformed religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last Buckhurst sent for him, and in presence of Comptroller Croft, gave
+ him information that he had brought the Queen to this conclusion: firstly,
+ that she would be satisfied with as great a proportion of religious
+ toleration for Holland, Zeeland, and the other United Provinces, as his
+ Majesty could concede with safety to his conscience and his honour;
+ secondly, that she required an act of amnesty; thirdly, that she claimed
+ reimbursement by Philip for the money advanced by her to the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly a more wonderful claim was never made than this&mdash;a demand
+ upon an absolute monarch for indemnity for expenses incurred in fomenting
+ a rebellion of his own subjects. The measure of toleration proposed for
+ the Provinces&mdash;the conscience, namely, of the greatest bigot ever
+ born into the world&mdash;was likely to prove as satisfactory as the claim
+ for damages propounded by the most parsimonious sovereign in Christendom.
+ It was, however, stipulated that the nonconformists of Holland and
+ Zeeland, who should be forced into exile, were to have their property
+ administered by papist trustees; and further, that the Spanish inquisition
+ was not to be established in the Netherlands. Philip could hardly demand
+ better terms than these last, after a career of victory. That they should
+ be offered now by Elizabeth was hardly compatible with good faith to the
+ States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On account of Lord Burghley's gout, it was suggested that the negotiators
+ had better meet in England, as it would be necessary for him to take the
+ lead in the matters and as he was but an indifferent traveller. Thus,
+ according to De Loo, the Queen was willing to hand over the United
+ Provinces to Philip, and to toss religious toleration to the winds, if she
+ could only get back the seventy thousand pounds&mdash;more or less&mdash;which
+ she had invested in an unpromising speculation. A few weeks later, and at
+ almost the very moment when Elizabeth had so suddenly overturned her last
+ vial of wrath upon the discomfited Heneage for having communicated&mdash;according
+ to her express command&mdash;the fact of the pending negotiations to the
+ Netherland States; at that very instant Parma was writing secretly, and in
+ cipher, to Philip. His communication&mdash;could Sir Thomas have read it&mdash;might
+ have partly explained her Majesty's rage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma had heard, he said, through Bodman, from Comptroller Croft, that the
+ Queen would willingly receive a proper envoy. It was very easy to see, he
+ observed, that the English counsellors were seeking every means of
+ entering into communication with Spain, and that they were doing so with
+ the participation of the Queen! Lord-Treasurer Burghley and Comptroller
+ Croft had expressed surprise that the Prince had not yet sent a secret
+ agent to her Majesty, under pretext of demanding explanations concerning
+ Lord Leicester's presence in the Provinces, but in reality to treat for
+ peace. Such an agent, it had been intimated, would be well received. The
+ Lord-Treasurer and the Comptroller would do all in their power to advance
+ the negotiation, so that, with their aid and with the pacific inclination
+ of the Queen, the measures proposed in favour of Leicester would be
+ suspended, and perhaps the Earl himself and all the English would be
+ recalled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen was further represented as taking great pains to excuse both the
+ expedition of Sir Francis Drake to the Indies, and the mission of
+ Leicester to the Provinces. She was said to throw the whole blame of these
+ enterprises upon Walsingham and other ill-intentioned personages, and to
+ avow that she now understood matters better; so that, if Parma would at
+ once send an envoy, peace would, without question, soon be made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma had expressed his gratification at these hopeful dispositions on the
+ part of Burghley and Croft, and held out hopes of sending an agent to
+ treat with them, if not directly with her Majesty. For some time past&mdash;according
+ to the Prince&mdash;the English government had not seemed to be honestly
+ seconding the Earl of Leicester, nor to correspond with his desires. "This
+ makes me think," he said, "that the counsellors before-mentioned, being
+ his rivals, are trying to trip him up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In such a caballing, prevaricating age, it is difficult to know which of
+ all the plotters and counterplotters engaged in these intrigues could
+ accomplish the greatest amount of what&mdash;for the sake of diluting in
+ nine syllables that which could be more forcibly expressed in one&mdash;was
+ then called diplomatic dissimulation. It is to be feared, notwithstanding
+ her frequent and vociferous denials, that the robes of the "imperial
+ votaress" were not so unsullied as could be wished. We know how loudly
+ Leicester had complained&mdash;we have seen how clearly Walsingham could
+ convict; but Elizabeth, though convicted, could always confute: for an
+ absolute sovereign, even without resorting to Philip's syllogisms of axe
+ and faggot, was apt in the sixteenth century to have the best of an
+ argument with private individuals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The secret statements of Parma-made, not for public effect, but for the
+ purpose of furnishing his master with the most accurate information he
+ could gather as to English policy&mdash;are certainly entitled to
+ consideration. They were doubtless founded upon the statements of
+ individuals rejoicing in no very elevated character; but those individuals
+ had no motive to deceive their patron. If they clashed with the vehement
+ declarations of very eminent personages, it must be admitted, on the other
+ hand, that they were singularly in accordance with the silent eloquence of
+ important and mysterious events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to Alexander Farnese&mdash;without deciding the question whether
+ Elizabeth and Burghley were deceiving Walsingham and Leicester, or only
+ trying to delude Philip and himself&mdash;he had no hesitation, of course,
+ on his part, in recommending to Philip the employment of unlimited
+ dissimulation. Nothing could be more ingenuous than the intercourse
+ between the King and his confidential advisers. It was perfectly
+ understood among them that they were always to deceive every one, upon
+ every occasion. Only let them be false, and it was impossible to be wholly
+ wrong; but grave mistakes might occur from occasional deviations into
+ sincerity. It was no question at all, therefore, that it was Parma's duty
+ to delude Elizabeth and Burghley. Alexander's course was plain. He
+ informed his master that he would keep these difficulties alive as much as
+ it was possible. In order to "put them all to sleep with regard to the
+ great enterprise of the invasion," he would send back Bodman to Burghley
+ and Croft, and thus keep this unofficial negotiation upon its legs. The
+ King was quite uncommitted, and could always disavow what had been done.
+ Meanwhile he was gaining, and his adversaries losing, much precious time.
+ "If by this course," said Parma, "we can induce the English to hand over
+ to us the places which they hold in Holland and Zeeland, that will be a
+ great triumph." Accordingly he urged the King not to slacken, in the
+ least, his preparations for invasion, and, above all, to have a care that
+ the French were kept entangled and embarrassed among themselves, which was
+ a most substantial point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Europe was ringing with the American successes of the bold
+ corsair Drake. San Domingo, Porto Rico, Santiago, Cartliagena, Florida,
+ were sacked and destroyed, and the supplies drawn so steadily from the
+ oppression of the Western World to maintain Spanish tyranny in Europe,
+ were for a time extinguished. Parma was appalled at these triumphs of the
+ Sea-King&mdash;"a fearful man to the King of Spain"&mdash;as Lord Burghley
+ well observed. The Spanish troops were starving in Flanders, all Flanders
+ itself was starving, and Philip, as usual, had sent but insignificant
+ remittances to save his perishing soldiers. Parma had already exhausted
+ his credit. Money was most difficult to obtain in such a forlorn country;
+ and now the few rich merchants and bankers of Antwerp that were left
+ looked very black at these crushing news from America. "They are drawing
+ their purse-strings very tight," said Alexander, "and will make no
+ accommodation. The most contemplative of them ponder much over this
+ success of Drake, and think that your Majesty will forget our matters here
+ altogether." For this reason he informed the King that it would be
+ advisable to drop all further negotiation with England for the time, as it
+ was hardly probable that, with such advantages gained by the Queen, she
+ would be inclined to proceed in the path which had been just secretly
+ opened. Moreover, the Prince was in a state of alarm as to the intentions
+ of France. Mendoza and Tassis had given him to understand that a very good
+ feeling prevailed between the court of Henry and of Elizabeth, and that
+ the French were likely to come to a pacification among themselves. In this
+ the Spanish envoys were hardly anticipating so great an effect as we have
+ seen that they had the right to do from their own indefatigable exertions;
+ for, thanks to their zeal, backed by the moderate subsidies furnished by
+ their master, the civil war in France already seemed likely to be as
+ enduring as that of the Netherlands. But Parma&mdash;still quite in the
+ dark as to French politics&mdash;was haunted by the vision of seventy
+ thousand foot and six thousand horses ready to be let slip upon him at
+ any, moment, out of a pacified and harmonious France; while he had nothing
+ but a few starving and crippled regiments to withstand such an invasion.
+ When all these events should have taken place, and France, in alliance
+ with England, should have formally declared war against Spain, Alexander
+ protested that he should have learned nothing new.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince was somewhat mistaken as to political affairs; but his doubts
+ concerning his neighbours, blended with the forlorn condition of himself
+ and army, about which there was no doubt at all, showed the exigencies of
+ his situation. In the midst of such embarrassments it is impossible not to
+ admire his heroism as a military chieftain, and his singular adroitness as
+ a diplomatist. He had painted for his sovereign a most faithful and
+ horrible portrait of the obedient Provinces. The soil was untilled; the
+ manufactories had all stopped; trade had ceased to exist. It was a pity
+ only to look upon the raggedness of his soldiers. No language could
+ describe the misery of the reconciled Provinces&mdash;Artois, Hainault,
+ Flanders. The condition of Bruges would melt the hardest heart; other
+ cities were no better; Antwerp was utterly ruined; its inhabitants were
+ all starving. The famine throughout the obedient Netherlands was such as
+ had not been known for a century. The whole country had been picked bare
+ by the troops, and the plough was not put into the ground. Deputations
+ were constantly with him from Bruges, Dendermonde, Bois-le-Duc, Brussels,
+ Antwerp, Nymegen, proving to him by the most palpable evidence that the
+ whole population of those cities had almost literally nothing to eat. He
+ had nothing, however, but exhortations to patience to feed them withal. He
+ was left without a groat even to save his soldiers from starving, and he
+ wildly and bitterly, day after day, implored his sovereign for aid. These
+ pictures are not the sketches of a historian striving for effect, but
+ literal transcripts from the most secret revelations of the Prince himself
+ to his sovereign. On the other hand, although Leicester's complaints of
+ the destitution of the English troops in the republic were almost as
+ bitter, yet the condition of the United Provinces was comparatively
+ healthy. Trade, external and internal, was increasing daily. Distant
+ commercial and military expeditions were fitted out, manufactures were
+ prosperous, and the war of independence was gradually becoming&mdash;strange
+ to say&mdash;a source of prosperity to the new commonwealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip&mdash;being now less alarmed than his nephew concerning French
+ affairs, and not feeling so keenly the misery of the obedient Provinces,
+ or the wants of the Spanish army&mdash;sent to Alexander six hundred
+ thousand ducats, by way of Genoa. In the letter submitted by his secretary
+ recording this remittance, the King made, however, a characteristic
+ marginal note:&mdash;"See if it will not be as well to tell him something
+ concerning the two hundred thousand ducats to be deducted for Mucio, for
+ fear of more mischief, if the Prince should expect the whole six hundred
+ thousand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly Mucio got the two hundred thousand. One-third of the meagre
+ supply destined for the relief of the King's starving and valiant little
+ army in the Netherlands was cut off to go into the pockets of the
+ intriguing Duke of Guise. "We must keep the French," said Philip, "in a
+ state of confusion at home, and feed their civil war. We must not allow
+ them to come to a general peace, which would be destruction for the
+ Catholics. I know you will put a good face on the matter; and, after all,
+ 'tis in the interest of the Netherlands. Moreover, the money shall be
+ immediately refunded."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander was more likely to make a wry face, notwithstanding his views of
+ the necessity of fomenting the rebellion against the House of Valois.
+ Certainly if a monarch intended to conquer such countries as France,
+ England, and Holland, without stirring from his easy chair in the
+ Escorial, it would have been at least as well&mdash;so Alexander thought&mdash;to
+ invest a little more capital in the speculation. No monarch ever dreamed
+ of arriving at universal empire with less personal fatigue or exposure, or
+ at a cheaper rate, than did Philip II. His only fatigue was at his
+ writing-table. But even here his merit was of a subordinate description.
+ He sat a great while at a time. He had a genius for sitting; but he now
+ wrote few letters himself. A dozen words or so, scrawled in hieroglyphics
+ at the top, bottom, or along the margin of the interminable despatches of
+ his secretaries, contained the suggestions, more or less luminous, which
+ arose in his mind concerning public affairs. But he held firmly to his
+ purpose: He had devoted his life to the extermination of Protestantism, to
+ the conquest of France and England, to the subjugation of Holland. These
+ were vast schemes. A King who should succeed in such enterprises, by his
+ personal courage and genius, at the head of his armies, or by consummate
+ diplomacy, or by a masterly system of finance-husbanding and concentrating
+ the resources of his almost boundless realms&mdash;might be in truth
+ commended for capacity. Hitherto however Philip's triumph had seemed
+ problematical; and perhaps something more would be necessary than letters
+ to Parma, and paltry remittances to Mucio, notwithstanding Alexander's
+ splendid but local victories in Flanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma, although in reality almost at bay, concealed his despair, and
+ accomplished wonders in the field. The military events during the spring
+ and summer of 1586 will be sketched in a subsequent chapter. For the
+ present it is necessary to combine into a complete whole the subterranean
+ negotiations between Brussels and England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much to his surprise and gratification, Parma found that the peace-party
+ were not inclined to change their views in consequence of the triumphs of
+ Drake. He soon informed the King that&mdash;according to Champagny and
+ Bodman&mdash;the Lord Treasurer, the Comptroller, Lord Cobham, and Sir
+ Christopher Hatton, were more pacific than they had ever been. These four
+ were represented by Grafigni as secretly in league against Leicester and
+ Walsingham, and very anxious to bring about a reconciliation between the
+ crowns of England and Spain. The merchant-diplomatist, according to his
+ own statement, was expressly sent by Queen Elizabeth to the prince of
+ Parma, although without letter of credence or signed instructions, but
+ with the full knowledge and approbation of the four counsellors just
+ mentioned. He assured Alexander that the Queen and the majority of her
+ council felt a strong desire for peace, and had manifested much repentance
+ for what had been done. They had explained their proceedings by the
+ necessity of self-defence. They had avowed&mdash;in case they should be
+ made sure of peace&mdash;that they should, not with reluctance and against
+ their will, but, on the contrary, with the utmost alacrity and at once,
+ surrender to the King of Spain the territory which they possessed in the
+ Netherlands, and especially the fortified towns in Holland and Zeeland;
+ for the English object had never been conquest. Parma had also been
+ informed of the Queen's strong desire that he should be employed as
+ negotiator, on account of her great confidence in his sincerity. They had
+ expressed much satisfaction on hearing that he was about to send an agent
+ to England, and had protested themselves rejoiced at Drake's triumphs,
+ only because of their hope that a peace with Spain would thus be rendered
+ the easier of accomplishment. They were much afraid, according to
+ Grafigni, of Philip's power, and dreaded a Spanish invasion of their
+ country, in conjunction with the Pope. They were now extremely anxious
+ that Parma&mdash;as he himself informed the King&mdash;should send an
+ agent of good capacity, in great secrecy, to England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Comptroller had said that he had pledged himself to such a result, and
+ if it failed, that they would probably cut off his head. The four
+ counsellors were excessively solicitous for the negotiation, and each of
+ them was expecting to gain favour by advancing it to the best of his
+ ability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma hinted at the possibility that all these professions were false, and
+ that the English were only intending to keep the King from the
+ contemplated invasion. At the same time he drew Philip's attention to the
+ fact that Burghley and his party had most evidently been doing everything
+ in their power to obstruct Leicester's progress in the Netherlands and to
+ keep back the reinforcements of troops and money which he so much
+ required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt these communications of Parma to the King were made upon the
+ faith of an agent not over-scrupulous, and of no elevated or recognised
+ rank in diplomacy. It must be borne in mind, however, that he had been
+ made use of by both parties; perhaps because it would be easy to throw
+ off, and discredit, him whenever such a step should be convenient; and
+ that, on the other hand, coming fresh from Burghley and the rest into the
+ presence of the keen-eyed Farnese, he would hardly invent for his employer
+ a budget of falsehoods. That man must have been a subtle negotiator who
+ could outwit such a statesman as Burghley&mdash;and the other counsellors
+ of Elizabeth, and a bold one who could dare to trifle on a momentous
+ occasion with Alexander of Parma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester thought Burghley very much his friend, and so thought Davison
+ and Heneage; and the Lord-Treasurer had, in truth, stood stoutly by the
+ Earl in the affair of the absolute governorship;&mdash;"a matter more
+ severe and cumbersome to him and others," said Burghley, "than any
+ whatsoever since he was a counsellor." But there is no doubt that these
+ negotiations were going forward all the spring and summer, that they were
+ most detrimental to Leicester's success, and that they were kept&mdash;so
+ far as it was possible&mdash;a profound secret from him, from Walsingham,
+ and from the States-General. Nothing was told them except what their own
+ astuteness had discovered beforehand; and the game of the counsellors&mdash;so
+ far as their attitude towards Leicester and Walsingham was concerned&mdash;seems
+ both disingenuous and impolitic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma, it was to be feared, was more than a match for the English
+ governor-general in the field; and it was certainly hopeless for poor old
+ Comptroller Croft, even though backed by the sagacious Burghley, to
+ accomplish so great an amount of dissimulation in a year as the Spanish
+ cabinet, without effort, could compass in a week. Nor were they attempting
+ to do so. It is probable that England was acting towards Philip in much
+ better faith than he deserved, or than Parma believed; but it is hardly to
+ be wondered at that Leicester should think himself injured by being kept
+ perpetually in the dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elizabeth was very impatient at not receiving direct letters from Parma,
+ and her anxiety on the subject explains much of her caprice during the
+ quarrel about the governor-generalship. Many persons in the Netherlands
+ thought those violent scenes a farce, and a farce that had been arranged
+ with Leicester beforehand. In this they were mistaken; for an examination
+ of the secret correspondence of the period reveals the motives&mdash;which
+ to contemporaries were hidden&mdash;of many strange transactions. The
+ Queen was, no doubt, extremely anxious, and with cause, at the tempest
+ slowly gathering over her head; but the more the dangers thickened, the
+ more was her own official language to those in high places befitting the
+ sovereign of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She expressed her surprise to Farnese that he had not written to her on
+ the subject of the Grafigni and Bodman affair. The first, she said, was
+ justified in all which he had narrated, save in his assertion that she had
+ sent him. The other had not obtained audience, because he had not come
+ provided with any credentials, direct or indirect. Having now understood
+ from Andrea de Loo and the Seigneur de Champagny that Parma had the power
+ to conclude a peace, which he seemed very much to desire, she observed
+ that it was not necessary for him to be so chary in explaining the basis
+ of the proposed negotiations. It was better to enter into a
+ straightforward path, than by ambiguous words to spin out to great length
+ matters which princes should at once conclude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not suppose," said the Queen, "that I am seeking what belongs to
+ others. God forbid. I seek only that which is mine own. But be sure that I
+ will take good heed of the sword which threatens me with destruction, nor
+ think that I am so craven-spirited as to endure a wrong, or to place
+ myself at the mercy of my enemy. Every week I see advertisements and
+ letters from Spain that this year shall witness the downfall of England;
+ for the Spaniards&mdash;like the hunter who divided, with great
+ liberality, among his friends the body and limbs of the wolf, before it
+ had been killed&mdash;have partitioned this kingdom and that of Ireland
+ before the conquest has been effected. But my royal heart is no whit
+ appalled by such threats. I trust, with the help of the Divine hand&mdash;which
+ has thus far miraculously preserved me&mdash;to smite all these braggart
+ powers into the dust, and to preserve my honour, and the kingdoms which He
+ has given me for my heritage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nevertheless, if you have authority to enter upon and to conclude this
+ negotiation, you will find my ears open to hear your propositions; and I
+ tell you further, if a peace is to be made, that I wish you to be the
+ mediator thereof. Such is the affection I bear you, notwithstanding that
+ some letters, written by your own hand, might easily have effaced such
+ sentiments from my mind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon afterwards, Bodman was again despatched to England, Grafigni being
+ already there. He was provided with unsigned instructions, according to
+ which he was to say that the Prince, having heard of the Queen's good
+ intentions, had despatched him and Grafigni to her court. They were to
+ listen to any suggestions made by the Queen to her ministers; but they
+ were to do nothing but listen. If the counsellors should enter into their
+ grievances against his Majesty, and ask for explanations, the agents were
+ to say that they had no authority or instructions to speak for so great
+ and Christian a monarch. Thus they were to cut the thread of any such
+ discourse, or any other observations not to the purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silence, in short, was recommended, first and last, as the one great
+ business of their mission; and it was unlucky that men whose talent for
+ taciturnity was thus signally relied upon should be somewhat remarkable
+ for loquacity. Grafigni was also the bearer of a letter from Alexander to
+ the Queen&mdash;of which Bodman received a copy&mdash;but it was strictly
+ enjoined upon them to keep the letter, their instructions, and the objects
+ of their journey, a secret from all the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter of the Prince consisted mainly of complimentary flourishes. He
+ had heard, he said, all that Agostino Grafigni had communicated, and he
+ now begged her Majesty to let him understand the course which it was
+ proper to take; assuring her of his gratitude for her good opinion
+ touching his sincerity, and his desire to save the effusion of blood, and
+ so on; concluding of course with expressions of most profound
+ consideration and devotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in July Bodman arrived in London. He found Grafigni in very low
+ spirits. He had been with Lord Cobham, and was much disappointed with his
+ reception, for Cobham&mdash;angry that Grafigni had brought no commission
+ from the King&mdash;had refused to receive Parma's letter to the Queen,
+ and had expressed annoyance that Bodman should be employed on this
+ mission, having heard that lie was very ill-tempered and passionate. The
+ same evening, he had been sent for by Lord Burghley&mdash;who had accepted
+ the letter for her Majesty without saying a word&mdash;and on the
+ following morning, he had been taken to task, by several counsellors, on
+ the ground that the Prince, in that communication, had stated that the
+ Queen had expressed a desire for peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has just been shown that there was no such intimation at all in the
+ letter; but as neither Grafigni nor Bodman had read the epistle itself,
+ but only the copy furnished them, they could merely say that such an
+ assertion; if made by the Prince, had been founded on no statement of
+ theirs. Bodman consoled his colleague, as well as he could, by assurances
+ that when the letter was fairly produced, their vindication would be
+ complete, and Grafigni, upon that point, was comforted. He was, however,
+ very doleful in general, and complained bitterly of Burghley and the other
+ English counsellors. He said that they had forced him, against his will,
+ to make this journey to Brussels, that they had offered him presents, that
+ they would leave him no rest in his own house, but had made him neglect
+ all his private business, and caused him a great loss of time and money,
+ in order that he might serve them. They had manifested the strongest
+ desire that Parma should open this communication, and had led him to
+ expect a very large recompense for his share in the transaction. "And
+ now," said Grafigni to his colleague, with great bitterness, "I find no
+ faith nor honour in them at all. They don't keep their word, and every one
+ of them is trying to slide out of the very business, in which each was,
+ but the other day, striving to outrival the other, in order that it might
+ be brought to a satisfactory conclusion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After exploding in this way to Bodman, he went back to Cobham, and
+ protested, with angry vehemence, that Parma had never written such a word
+ to the Queen, and that so it would prove, if the letter were produced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day, Bodman was sent for to Greenwich, where her Majesty was, as
+ usual, residing. A secret pavilion was indicated to him, where he was to
+ stay until sunset. When that time arrived, Lord Cobham's secretary came
+ with great mystery, and begged the emissary to follow him, but at a
+ considerable distance, towards the apartments of Lord Burghley in the
+ palace. Arriving there, they found the Lord Treasurer accompanied by
+ Cobham and Croft. Burghley instantly opened the interview by a defence of
+ the Queen's policy in sending troops to the Netherlands, and in espousing
+ their cause, and then the conversation proceeded to the immediate matter
+ in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bodman (after listening respectfully to the Lord-Treasurer's
+ observations).&mdash;"His Highness has, however, been extremely surprised
+ that my Lord Leicester should take an oath, as governor-general of the
+ King's Provinces. He is shocked likewise by the great demonstrations of
+ hostility on the part of her Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley.&mdash;"The oath was indispensable. The Queen was obliged to
+ tolerate the step on account of the great urgency of the States to have a
+ head. But her Majesty has commanded us to meet you on this occasion, in
+ order to hear what you have to communicate on the part of the Prince of
+ Parma."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bodman (after a profusion of complimentary phrases).&mdash;"I have no
+ commission to say anything. I am only instructed to listen to anything
+ that may be said to me, and that her Majesty may be pleased to command."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley.&mdash;"'Tis very discreet to begin thus. But time is pressing,
+ and it is necessary to be brief. We beg you therefore to communicate,
+ without further preface, that which you have been charged to say."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bodman.&mdash;"I can only repeat to your Lordship, that I have been
+ charged to say nothing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this Barmecide feast of diplomacy, to partake of which it seemed
+ hardly necessary that the guests should have previously attired themselves
+ in such garments of mystery, the parties separated for the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of their care, it would seem that the Argus-eyed Walsingham had
+ been able to see after sunset; for, the next evening&mdash;after Bodman
+ had been introduced with the same precautions to the same company, in the
+ same place&mdash;Burghley, before a word had been spoken, sent for Sir
+ Francis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bodman was profoundly astonished, for he had been expressly informed that
+ Walsingham was to know nothing of the transaction. The Secretary of State
+ could not so easily be outwitted, however, and he was soon seated at the
+ table, surveying the scene, with his grave melancholy eyes, which had
+ looked quite through the whole paltry intrigue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley.&mdash;"Her Majesty has commanded us to assemble together, in
+ order that, in my presence, it may be made clear that she did not commence
+ this negotiation. Let Grafigni be summoned."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grafigni immediately made his appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley.&mdash;"You will please to explain how you came to enter into
+ this business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grafigni.&mdash;"The first time I went to the States, it was on my private
+ affairs; I had no order from any one to treat with the Prince of Parma.
+ His Highness, having accidentally heard, however, that I resided in
+ England, expressed a wish to see me. I had an interview with the Prince. I
+ told him, out of my own head, that the Queen had a strong inclination to
+ hear propositions of peace, and that&mdash;as some of her counsellors were
+ of the same opinion&mdash;I believed that if his Highness should send a
+ negotiator, some good would be effected. The Prince replied that he felt
+ by no means sure of such a result; but that, if I should come back from
+ England, sent by the Queen or her council, he would then despatch a person
+ with a commission to treat of peace. This statement, together with other
+ matters that had passed between us, was afterwards drawn up in writing by
+ command of his Highness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley.&mdash;"Who bade you say, after your second return to Brussels,
+ that you came on the part of the Queen? For you well know that her Majesty
+ did not send you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grafigni.&mdash;"I never said so. I stated that my Lord Cobham had set
+ down in writing what I was to say to the Prince of Parma. It will never
+ appear that I represented the Queen as desiring peace. I said that her
+ Majesty would lend her ears to peace. Bodman knows this too; and he has a
+ copy of the letter of his Highness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham to Bodman.&mdash;"Have you the copy still?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bodman.&mdash;"Yes, Mr. Secretary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham.&mdash;"Please to produce it, in order that this matter may be
+ sifted to the bottom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bodman.&mdash;"I supplicate your Lorships to pardon me, but indeed that
+ cannot be. My instructions forbid my showing the letter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham (rising).&mdash;"I will forthwith go to her Majesty, and fetch
+ the original." A pause. Mr. Secretary returns in a few minutes, having
+ obtained the document, which the Queen, up to that time, had kept by her,
+ without showing it to any one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham (after reading the letter attentively, and aloud).&mdash;"There
+ is not such a word, as that her Majesty is desirous of peace, in the whole
+ paper."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley (taking the letter, and slowly construing it out of Italian into
+ English).&mdash;"It would seem that his Highness hath written this,
+ assuming that the Signor Grafigni came from the Queen, although he had
+ received his instructions from my Lord Cobham. It is plain, however, that
+ the negotiation was commenced accidentally."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Comptroller Croft (nervously, and with the air of a man fearful of getting
+ into trouble).&mdash;"You know very well, Mr. Bodman, that my servant came
+ to Dunkirk only to buy and truck away horses; and that you then, by
+ chance, entered into talk with him, about the best means of procuring a
+ peace between the two kingdoms. My servant told you of the good feeling
+ that prevailed in England. You promised to write on the subject to the
+ Prince, and I immediately informed the Lord-Treasurer of the whole
+ transaction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley.&mdash;"That is quite true."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Croft.&mdash;"My servant subsequently returned to the Provinces in order
+ to learn what the Prince might have said on the subject."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bodman (with immense politeness, but very decidedly).&mdash;"Pardon me,
+ Mr. Comptroller; but, in this matter, I must speak the truth, even if the
+ honour and life of my father were on the issue. I declare that your
+ servant Norris came to me, directly commissioned for that purpose by
+ yourself, and informed me from you, and upon your authority, that if I
+ would solicit the Prince of Parma to send a secret agent to England, a
+ peace would be at once negotiated. Your servant entreated me to go to his
+ Highness at Brussels. I refused, but agreed to consider the proposition.
+ After the lapse of several days, the servant returned to make further
+ enquiries. I told him that the Prince had come to no decision. Norris
+ continued to press the matter. I excused myself. He then solicited and
+ obtained from me a letter of introduction to De Loo, the secretary of his
+ Highness. Armed with this, he went to Brussels and had an interview&mdash;as
+ I found, four days later&mdash;with the Prince. In consequence of the
+ representations of Norris, those of Signor Grafigni, and those by way of
+ Antwerp, his Highness determined to send me to England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley to Croft.&mdash;"Did you order your servant to speak with Andrea
+ de Loo?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Croft.&mdash;"I cannot deny it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley.&mdash;"The fellow seems to have travelled a good way out of his
+ commission. His master sends him to buy horses, and he commences a
+ peace-negotiation between two kingdoms. It would be well he were
+ chastised. As regards the Antwerp matter, too, we have had many letters,
+ and I have, seen one from the Seigneur de Champagny, the same effect as
+ that of all the rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham.&mdash;"I see not to what end his Highness of Parma has sent
+ Mr. Bodman hither. The Prince avows that he hath no commission from
+ Spain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bodman.&mdash;"His Highness was anxious to know what was her Majesty's
+ pleasure. So soon as that should be known, the Prince could obtain ample
+ authority. He would never have proceeded so far without meaning a good
+ end."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham.&mdash;"Very like. I dare say that his Highness will obtain the
+ commission. Meantime, as Prince of Parma, he writes these letters, and
+ assists his sovereign perhaps more than he doth ourselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the interview terminated. A few days later, Bodman had another
+ conversation with Burghley and Cobham. Reluctantly, at their urgent
+ request, he set down in writing all that he had said concerning his
+ mission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lord Treasurer said that the Queen and her counsellors were "ready to
+ embrace peace when it was treated of sincerely." Meantime the Queen had
+ learned that the Prince had been sending letters to the cautionary towns
+ in Holland and Zeeland, stating that her Majesty was about to surrender
+ them to the King of Spain. These were tricks to make mischief, and were
+ very detrimental to the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bodman replied that these were merely the idle stories of quidnuncs; and
+ that the Prince and all his counsellors were dealing with the utmost
+ sincerity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burghley answered that he had intercepted the very letters, and had them
+ in his possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A week afterwards, Bodman saw Walsingham alone, and was informed by him
+ that the Queen had written an answer to Parma's letter, and that
+ negotiations for the future were to be carried on in the usual form, or
+ not at all. Walsingham, having thus got the better of his rivals, and
+ delved below their mines, dismissed the agent with brief courtesy.
+ Afterwards the discomfited Mr. Comptroller wished a private interview with
+ Bodman. Bodman refused to speak with him except in presence of Lord
+ Cobham. This Croft refused. In the same way Bodman contrived to get rid,
+ as he said, of Lord Burghley and Lord Cobham, declining to speak with
+ either of them alone. Soon afterwards he returned to the Provinces!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen's letter to Parma was somewhat caustic. It was obviously
+ composed through the inspiration of Walsingham rather than that of
+ Burghley. The letter, brought by a certain Grafigni and a certain Bodman,
+ she said, was a very strange one, and written under a delusion. It was a
+ very grave error, that, in her name, without her knowledge, contrary to
+ her disposition, and to the prejudice of her honour, such a person as this
+ Grafigni, or any one like him, should have the audacity to commence such a
+ business, as if she had, by messages to the Prince, sought a treaty with
+ his King, who had so often returned evil for her good. Grafigni, after
+ representing the contrary to his Highness, had now denied in presence of
+ her counsellors having received any commission from the Queen. She also
+ briefly gave the result of Bodman's interviews with Burghley and the
+ others, just narrated. That agent had intimated that Parma would procure
+ authority to treat for peace, if assured that the Queen would lend her ear
+ to any propositions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She replied by referring to her published declarations, as showing her
+ powerful motives for interfering in these affairs. It was her purpose to
+ save her own realm and to rescue her ancient neighbours from misery and
+ from slavery. To this end she should still direct her actions,
+ notwithstanding the sinister rumours which had been spread that she was
+ inclined to peace before providing for the security and liberty of her
+ allies. She was determined never to separate their cause from her own.
+ Propositions tending to the security of herself and of her neighbours
+ would always be favourably received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma, on his part, informed his master that there could be no doubt that
+ the Queen and the majority of her council abhorred the war, and that
+ already much had been gained by the fictitious negotiation. Lord-Treasurer
+ Burghley had been interposing endless delays and difficulties in the way
+ of every measure proposed for the relief of Lord Leicester, and the
+ assistance rendered him had been most lukewarm. Meantime the Prince had
+ been able, he said, to achieve much success in the field, and the English
+ had done nothing to prevent it. Since the return of Grafigni and Bodman,
+ however, it was obvious that the English government had disowned these
+ non-commissioned diplomatists. The whole negotiation and all the
+ negotiators were now discredited, but there was no doubt that there had
+ been a strong desire to treat, and great disappointment at the result.
+ Grafigni and Andrea de Loo had been publishing everywhere in Antwerp that
+ England would consider the peace as made, so soon as his Majesty should be
+ willing to accept any propositions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Majesty, meanwhile, sat in his cabinet, without the slightest
+ intention of making or accepting any propositions save those that were
+ impossible. He smiled benignantly at his nephew's dissimulation and at the
+ good results which it had already produced. He approved of gaining time,
+ he said, by fictitious negotiations and by the use of a mercantile agent;
+ for, no doubt, such a course would prevent the proper succours from being
+ sent to the Earl of Leicester. If the English would hand over to him the
+ cautionary towns held by them in Holland and Zeeland, promise no longer to
+ infest the seas, the Indies, and the Isles, with their corsairs, and
+ guarantee the complete obedience to their King and submission to the holy
+ Catholic Church of the rebellious Provinces, perhaps something might be
+ done with them; but, on the whole, he was inclined to think that they had
+ been influenced by knavish and deceitful motives from the beginning. He
+ enjoined it upon Parma, therefore, to proceed with equal knavery&mdash;taking
+ care, however, not to injure his reputation&mdash;and to enter into
+ negotiations wherever occasion might serve, in order to put the English
+ off their guard and to keep back the reinforcements so imperatively
+ required by Leicester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the reinforcements were indeed kept back. Had Burghley and Croft been
+ in the pay of Philip II. they could hardly have served him better than
+ they had been doing by the course pursued. Here then is the explanation of
+ the shortcomings of the English government towards Leicester and the
+ States during the memorable spring and summer of 1586. No money, no
+ soldiers, when most important operations in the field were required. The
+ first general of the age was to be opposed by a man who had certainly
+ never gained many laurels as a military chieftain, but who was brave and
+ confident, and who, had he been faithfully supported by the government
+ which sent him to the Netherlands, would have had his antagonist at a
+ great disadvantage. Alexander had scarcely eight thousand effective men.
+ Famine, pestilence, poverty, mutiny, beset and almost paralyzed him.
+ Language could not exaggerate the absolute destitution of the country.
+ Only miracles could save the King's cause, as Farnese repeatedly observed.
+ A sharp vigorous campaign, heartily carried on against him by Leicester
+ and Hohenlo, with plenty of troops and money at command, would have
+ brought the heroic champion of Catholicism to the ground. He was hemmed in
+ upon all sides; he was cut off from the sea; he stood as it were in a
+ narrowing circle, surrounded by increasing dangers. His own veterans,
+ maddened by misery, stung by their King's ingratitude, naked, starving,
+ ferocious, were turning against him. Mucio, like his evil genius, was
+ spiriting away his supplies just as they were reaching his hands; a
+ threatening tempest seemed rolling up from France; the whole population of
+ the Provinces which he had "reconciled"&mdash;a million of paupers&mdash;were
+ crying to him for bread; great commercial cities, suddenly blasted and
+ converted into dens of thieves and beggars, were cursing the royal author
+ of their ruin, and uttering wild threats against his vicegerent; there
+ seemed, in truth, nothing left for Alexander but to plunge headlong into
+ destruction, when, lo! Mr. Comptroller Croft, advancing out of the clouds,
+ like a propitious divinity, disguised in the garb of a foe&mdash;and the
+ scene was changed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The feeble old man, with his shufling, horse-trucking servant, ex-spy of
+ Monsieur, had accomplished more work for Philip and Alexander than many
+ regiments of Spaniards and Walloons could have done. The arm of Leicester
+ was paralyzed upon the very threshold of success. The picture of these
+ palace-intrigues has been presented with minute elaboration, because,
+ however petty and barren in appearance, they were in reality prolific of
+ grave results. A series of victories by Parma was substituted for the
+ possible triumphs of Elizabeth and the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dissimulation of the Spanish court was fathomless. The secret
+ correspondence of the times reveals to us that its only purpose was to
+ deceive the Queen and her counsellors, and to gain time to prepare the
+ grand invasion of England and subjugation of Holland&mdash;that double
+ purpose which Philip could only abandon with life. There was never a
+ thought, on his part, of honest negotiation. On the other hand, the Queen
+ was sincere; Burghley and Hatton and Cobham were sincere; Croft was
+ sincere, so far as Spain was concerned. At least they had been sincere. In
+ the private and doleful dialogues between Bodman and Grafigni which we
+ have just been overhearing, these intriguers spoke the truth, for they
+ could have no wish to deceive each other, and no fear of eaves-droppers
+ not to be born till centuries afterwards. These conversations have
+ revealed to us that the Lord Treasurer and three of his colleagues had
+ been secretly doing their best to cripple Leicester, to stop the supplies
+ for the Netherlands, and to patch up a hurried and unsatisfactory, if not
+ a disgraceful peace; and this, with the concurrence of her Majesty. After
+ their plots had been discovered by the vigilant Secretary of State, there
+ was a disposition to discredit the humbler instruments in the cabal.
+ Elizabeth was not desirous of peace. Far from it. She was qualmish at the
+ very suggestion. Dire was her wrath against Bodman, De Loo, Graafigni, and
+ the rest, at their misrepresentations on the subject. But she would "lend
+ her ear." And that royal ear was lent, and almost fatal was the
+ distillment poured into its porches. The pith and marrow of the great
+ Netherland enterprise was sapped by the slow poison of the ill-timed
+ negotiation. The fruit of Drake's splendid triumphs in America was
+ blighted by it. The stout heart of the vainglorious but courageous
+ Leicester was sickened by it, while, meantime, the maturing of the great
+ armada-scheme, by which the destruction of England was to be accomplished,
+ was furthered, through the unlimited procrastination so precious to the
+ heart of Philip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately the subtle Walsingham was there upon the watch to administer
+ the remedy before it was quite too late; and to him England and the
+ Netherlands were under lasting obligations. While Alexander and Philip
+ suspected a purpose on the part of the English government to deceive them,
+ they could not help observing that the Earl of Leicester was both deserted
+ and deceived. Yet it had been impossible for the peace-party in the
+ government wholly to conceal their designs, when such prating fellows as
+ Grafigni and De Loo were employed in what was intended to be a secret
+ negotiation. In vain did the friends of Leicester in the Netherlands
+ endeavour to account for the neglect with which he was treated, and for
+ the destitution of his army. Hopelessly did they attempt to counteract
+ those "advertisements of most fearful instance," as Richard Cavendish
+ expressed himself, which were circulating everywhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thanks to the babbling of the very men, whose chief instructions had been
+ to hold their tongues, and to listen with all their ears, the secret
+ negotiations between Parma and the English counsellors became the
+ town-talk at Antwerp, the Hague, Amsterdam, Brussels, London. It is true
+ that it was impossible to know what was actually said and done; but that
+ there was something doing concerning which Leicester was not to be
+ informed was certain. Grafigni, during one of his visits to the obedient
+ provinces, brought a brace of greyhounds and a couple of horses from
+ England, as a present to Alexander, and he perpetually went about,
+ bragging to every one of important negotiations which he was conducting,
+ and of his intimacy with great personages in both countries. Leicester, on
+ the other hand, was kept in the dark. To him Grafigni made no
+ communications, but he once sent him a dish of plums, "which," said the
+ Earl, with superfluous energy, "I will boldly say to you, by the living
+ God, is all that I have ever had since I came into these countries." When
+ it is remembered that Leicester had spent many thousand pounds in the
+ Netherland cause, that he had deeply mortgaged his property in order to
+ provide more funds, that he had never received a penny of salary from the
+ Queen, that his soldiers were "ragged and torn like rogues-pity to see
+ them," and were left without the means of supporting life; that he had
+ been neglected, deceived, humiliated, until he was forced to describe
+ himself as a "forlorn man set upon a forlorn hope," it must be conceded
+ that Grafigni's present of a dish of plums could hardly be sufficient to
+ make him very happy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From time to time he was enlightened by Sir Francis, who occasionally
+ forced his adversaries' hands, and who always faithfully informed the Earl
+ of everything he could discover. "We are so greedy of a peace, in respect
+ of the charges of the wars," he wrote in April, "as in the procuring
+ thereof we weigh neither honour nor safety. Somewhat here is a dealing
+ underhand, wherein there is great care taken that I should not be made
+ acquainted withal." But with all their great care, the conspirators, as it
+ has been seen, were sometimes outwitted by the Secretary, and, when put to
+ the blush, were forced to take him into half-confidence. "Your Lordship
+ may see," he wrote, after getting possession of Parma's letter to the
+ Queen, and unravelling Croft's intrigues, "what effects are wrought by
+ such weak ministers. They that have been the employers of them are ashamed
+ of the matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unutterable was the amazement, as we have seen, of Bodman and Grafigni
+ when they had suddenly found themselves confronted in Burghley's private
+ apartments in Greenwich Palace, whither they had been conducted so
+ mysteriously after dark from the secret pavilion&mdash;by the grave
+ Secretary of State, whom they had been so anxious to deceive; and great
+ was the embarrassment of Croft and Cobham, and even of the imperturbable
+ Burghley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus patiently did Walsingham pick his course, plummet in hand,
+ through the mists and along the quicksands, and faithfully did he hold out
+ signals to his comrade embarked on the same dangerous voyage. As for the
+ Earl himself, he was shocked at the short-sighted policy of his mistress,
+ mortified by the neglect to which he was exposed, disappointed in his
+ ambitious schemes. Vehemently and judiciously he insisted upon the
+ necessity of vigorous field operations throughout the spring and summer
+ thus frittered away in frivolous negotiations. He was for peace, if a
+ lasting and honourable peace could be procured; but he insisted that the
+ only road to such a result was through a "good sharp war." His troops were
+ mutinous for want of pay, so that he had been obliged to have a few of
+ them executed, although he protested that he would rather have "gone a
+ thousand miles a-foot" than have done so; and he was crippled by his
+ government at exactly the time when his great adversary's condition was
+ most forlorn. Was it strange that the proud Earl should be fretting his
+ heart away when such golden chances were eluding his grasp? He would
+ "creep upon the ground," he said, as far as his hands and knees would
+ carry him, to have a good peace for her Majesty, but his care was to have
+ a peace indeed, and not a show of it. It was the cue of Holland and
+ England to fight before they could expect to deal upon favourable terms
+ with their enemy. He was quick enough to see that his false colleagues at
+ home were playing into the enemy's hands. Victory was what was wanted;
+ victory the Earl pledged himself, if properly seconded, to obtain; and,
+ braggart though he was, it is by no means impossible that he might have
+ redeemed his pledge. "If her Majesty will use her advantage," he said,
+ "she shall bring the King, and especially this Prince of Parma, to seek
+ peace in other sort than by way of merchants." Of courage and confidence
+ the governor had no lack. Whether he was capable of outgeneralling
+ Alexander Farnese or no, will be better seen, perhaps, in subsequent
+ chapters; but there is no doubt that he was reasonable enough in thinking,
+ at that juncture, that a hard campaign rather than a "merchant's
+ brokerage" was required to obtain an honourable peace. Lofty, indeed, was
+ the scorn of the aristocratic Leicester that "merchants and pedlars should
+ be paltering in so weighty a cause," and daring to send him a dish of
+ plums when he was hoping half a dozen regiments from the Queen; and a
+ sorry business, in truth, the pedlars had made of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never had there been a more delusive diplomacy, and it was natural that
+ the lieutenant-general abroad and the statesman at home should be sad and
+ indignant, seeing England drifting to utter shipwreck while pursuing that
+ phantom of a pacific haven. Had Walsingham and himself tampered with the
+ enemy, as some counsellors he could name had done, Leicester asserted that
+ the gallows would be thought too good for them; and yet he hoped he might
+ be hanged if the whole Spanish faction in England could procure for the
+ Queen a peace fit for her to accept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly it was quite impossible for the Spanish-faction to bring about a
+ peace. No human power could bring it about. Even if England had been
+ willing and able to surrender Holland, bound hand and foot, to Philip,
+ even then she could only have obtained a hollow armistice. Philip had
+ sworn in his inmost soul the conquest of England and the dethronement of
+ Elizabeth. His heart was fixed. It was only by the subjugation of England
+ that he hoped to recover the Netherlands. England was to be his
+ stepping-stone to Holland. The invasion was slowly but steadily maturing,
+ and nothing could have diverted the King from his great purpose. In the
+ very midst of all these plots and counterplots, Bodmans and Grafignis,
+ English geldings and Irish greyhounds, dishes of plums and autograph
+ letters of her Majesty and his Highness, the Prince was deliberately
+ discussing all the details of the invasion, which, as it was then hoped,
+ would be ready by the autumn of the year 1586. Although he had sent a
+ special agent to Philip, who was to state by word of mouth that which it
+ was deemed unsafe to write, yet Alexander, perpetually urged by his
+ master, went at last more fully into particulars than he had ever ventured
+ to do before; and this too at the very moment when Elizabeth was most
+ seriously "lending her ear" to negotiation, and most vehemently expressing
+ her wrath at Sir Thomas Heneage for dealing candidly with the
+ States-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince observed that when, two or three years before, he had sent his
+ master an account of the coasts, anchoring-places, and harbours of
+ England, he had then expressed the opinion that the conquest of England
+ was an enterprise worthy of the grandeur and Christianity of his Majesty,
+ and not so difficult as to be considered altogether impossible. To make
+ himself absolutely master of the business, however, he had then thought
+ that the King should have no associates in the scheme, and should make no
+ account of the inhabitants of England. Since that time the project had
+ become more difficult of accomplishment, because it was now a stale and
+ common topic of conversation everywhere&mdash;in Italy, Germany, and
+ France&mdash;so that there could be little doubt that rumours on the
+ subject were daily reaching the ears of Queen Elizabeth and of every one
+ in her kingdom. Hence she had made a strict alliance with Sweden, Denmark,
+ the Protestant princes of Germany, and even with the Turks and the French.
+ Nevertheless, in spite of these obstacles, the King, placing his royal
+ hand to the work, might well accomplish the task; for the favour of the
+ Lord, whose cause it was, would be sure to give him success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being so Christian and Catholic a king, Philip naturally desired to extend
+ the area of the holy church, and to come to the relief of so many poor
+ innocent martyrs in England, crying aloud before the Lord for help.
+ Moreover Elizabeth had fomented rebellion in the King's Provinces for a
+ long time secretly, and now, since the fall of Antwerp, and just as
+ Holland and Zeeland were falling into his grasp, openly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, in secret and in public, she had done the very worst she could do;
+ and it was very clear that the Lord, for her sins; had deprived her of
+ understanding, in order that his Majesty might be the instrument of that
+ chastisement which she so fully deserved. A monarch of such great
+ prudence, valour, and talent as Philip, could now give all the world to
+ understand that those who dared to lose a just and decorous respect for
+ him, as this good lady had done, would receive such chastisement as royal
+ power guided by prudent counsel could inflict. Parma assured his
+ sovereign, that, if the conquest of England were effected, that of the
+ Netherlands would be finished with much facility and brevity; but that
+ otherwise, on account of the situation, strength and obstinacy of those
+ people, it would be a very long, perilous, and at best doubtful business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Three points," he said, "were most vital to the invasion of England&mdash;secrecy,
+ maintenance of the civil war in France, and judicious arrangement of
+ matters in the Provinces."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French, if unoccupied at home, would be sure to make the enterprise so
+ dangerous as to become almost impossible; for it might be laid down as a
+ general maxim that that nation, jealous of Philip's power, had always done
+ and would always do what it could to counteract his purposes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the Netherlands, it would be desirable to leave a good
+ number of troops in those countries&mdash;at least as many as were then
+ stationed there&mdash;besides the garrisons, and also to hold many German
+ and Swiss mercenaries in "wartgeld." It would be further desirable that
+ Alexander should take most of the personages of quality and sufficiency in
+ the Provinces over with him to England, in order that they should not make
+ mischief in his absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the point of secrecy, that was, in Parma's opinion, the
+ most important of all. All leagues must become more or less public,
+ particularly those contrived at or with Rome. Such being the case, the
+ Queen of England would be well aware of the Spanish projects, and, besides
+ her militia at home, would levy German infantry and cavalry, and provide
+ plenty of vessels, relying therein upon Holland and Zeeland, where ships
+ and sailors were in such abundance. Moreover, the English and the
+ Netherlanders knew the coasts, currents, tides, shallows, quicksands,
+ ports, better than did the pilots of any fleets that the King could send
+ thither. Thus, having his back assured, the enemy would meet them in front
+ at a disadvantage. Although, notwithstanding this inequality, the enemy
+ would be beaten, yet if the engagement should be warm, the Spaniards would
+ receive an amount of damage which could not fail to be inconvenient,
+ particularly as they would be obliged to land their troops, and to give
+ battle to those who would be watching their landing. Moreover the English
+ would be provided with cavalry, of which his Majesty's forces would have
+ very little, on account of the difficulty of its embarkation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The obedient Netherlands would be the proper place in which to organize
+ the whole expedition. There the regiments could be filled up, provisions
+ collected, the best way of effecting the passage ascertained, and the
+ force largely increased without exciting suspicion; but with regard to the
+ fleet, there were no ports there capacious enough for large vessels.
+ Antwerp had ceased to be a seaport; but a large number of flat-bottomed
+ barges, hoys, and other barks, more suitable for transporting soldiers,
+ could be assembled in Dunkirk, Gravelines, and Newport, which, with some
+ five-and-twenty larger vessels, would be sufficient to accompany the
+ fleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen, knowing that there were no large ships, nor ports to hold them
+ in the obedient Provinces, would be unauspicious, if no greater levies
+ seemed to be making than the exigencies of the Netherlands might
+ apparently require.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The flat-bottomed boats, drawing two or three feet of water, would be more
+ appropriate than ships of war drawing twenty feet. The passage across, in
+ favourable weather, might occupy from eight to twelve hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The number of troops for the invading force should be thirty thousand
+ infantry, besides five hundred light troopers, with saddles, bridles, and
+ lances, but without horses, because, in Alexander's opinion, it would be
+ easier to mount them in England. Of these thirty thousand there should be
+ six thousand Spaniards, six thousand Italians, six thousand Walloons, nine
+ thousand Germans, and three thousand Burgundians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much money would be required; at least three hundred thousand dollars the
+ month for the new force, besides the regular one hundred and fifty
+ thousand for the ordinary provision in the Netherlands; and this ordinary
+ provision would be more necessary than ever, because a mutiny breaking
+ forth in the time of the invasion would be destruction to the Spaniards
+ both in England and in the Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most appropriate part of the coast for a landing would, in Alexander's
+ opinion, be between Dover and Margate, because the Spaniards, having no
+ footing in Holland and Zeeland, were obliged to make their starting-point
+ in Flanders. The country about Dover was described by Parma as populous,
+ well-wooded, and much divided by hedges; advantageous for infantry, and
+ not requiring a larger amount of cavalry than the small force at his
+ disposal, while the people there were domestic in their habits, rich, and
+ therefore less warlike, less trained to arms, and more engrossed by their
+ occupations and their comfortable ways of life. Therefore, although some
+ encounters would take place, yet after the commanders of the invading
+ troops had given distinct and clear orders, it would be necessary to leave
+ the rest in the "hands of God who governs all things, and from whose
+ bounty and mercy it was to be hoped that He would favour a cause so
+ eminently holy, just, and His own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be necessary to make immediately for London, which city, not
+ being fortified, would be very easily taken. This point gained, the whole
+ framework of the business might be considered as well put together. If the
+ Queen should fly&mdash;as, being a woman, she probably would do&mdash;everything
+ would be left in such confusion, as, with the blessing of God, it might
+ soon be considered that the holy and heroic work had been accomplished:
+ Her Majesty, it was suggested, would probably make her escape in a boat
+ before she could be captured; but the conquest would be nevertheless
+ effected. Although, doubtless, some English troops might be got together
+ to return and try their fortune, yet it would be quite useless; for the
+ invaders would have already planted themselves upon the soil, and then, by
+ means of frequent excursions and forays hither and thither about the
+ island, all other places of importance would be gained, and the prosperous
+ and fortunate termination of the adventure assured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As, however, everything was to be provided for, so, in case the secret
+ could not be preserved, it would be necessary for Philip, under pretext of
+ defending himself against the English and French corsairs, to send a large
+ armada to sea, as doubtless the Queen would take the same measure. If the
+ King should prefer, however, notwithstanding Alexander's advice to the
+ contrary, to have confederates in the enterprise,&mdash;then, the matter
+ being public, it would be necessary to prepare a larger and stronger fleet
+ than any which Elizabeth, with the assistance of her French and Netherland
+ allies, could oppose to him. That fleet should be well provided with vast
+ stores of provisions, sufficient to enable the invading force,
+ independently of forage, to occupy three or four places in England at
+ once, as the enemy would be able to come from various towns and strong
+ places to attack them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the proper season for the expedition, it would be advisable to
+ select the month of October of the current year, because the English barns
+ would then be full of wheat and other forage, and the earth would have
+ been sown for the next year&mdash;points of such extreme importance, that
+ if the plan could not be executed at that time, it would be as well to
+ defer it until the following October.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince recommended that the negotiations with the League should be
+ kept spinning, without allowing them to come to a definite conclusion;
+ because there would be no lack of difficulties perpetually offering
+ themselves, and the more intricate and involved the policy of France, the
+ better it would be for the interests of Spain. Alexander expressed the
+ utmost confidence that his Majesty, with his powerful arm, would overcome
+ all obstacles in the path of his great project, and would show the world
+ that he "could do a little more than what was possible." He also assured
+ his master, in adding in this most extravagant language, of his personal
+ devotion, that it was unnecessary for him to offer his services in this
+ particular enterprise, because, ever since his birth, he had dedicated and
+ consecrated himself to execute his royal commands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He further advised that old Peter Ernest Mansfeld should be left
+ commander-in-chief of the forces in the Netherlands during his own absence
+ in England. "Mansfeld was an honourable cavalier," he said, "and a
+ faithful servant of the King;" and although somewhat ill-conditioned at
+ times, yet he had essential good qualities, and was the only general fit
+ to be trusted alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader, having thus been permitted to read the inmost thoughts of
+ Philip and Alexander, and to study their secret plans for conquering
+ England in October, while their frivolous yet mischievous negotiations
+ with the Queen had been going on from April to June, will be better able
+ than before to judge whether Leicester were right or no in doubting if a
+ good peace could be obtained by a "merchant's brokerage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now, after examining these pictures of inter-aulic politics and
+ back-stairs diplomacy, which represent so large and characteristic a
+ phasis of European history during the year 1586, we must throw a glance at
+ the external, more stirring, but not more significant public events which
+ were taking place during the same period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" border="3" cellpadding="4">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a
+ href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/4860/4860-h/4860-h.htm"><b>Volume
+ II.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</b></a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Could do a little more than what was possible
+ Elizabeth, though convicted, could always confute
+ He sat a great while at a time. He had a genius for sitting
+ Mistakes might occur from occasional deviations into sincerity
+ Nine syllables that which could be more forcibly expressed in on
+ They were always to deceive every one, upon every occasion
+ We mustn't tickle ourselves to make ourselves laugh
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS OF THE HISTORY OF THE UNITED NETHERLANDS
+ 1584-86, Complete
+
+ A hard bargain when both parties are losers
+ Able men should be by design and of purpose suppressed
+ Anarchy which was deemed inseparable from a non-regal form
+ College of "peace-makers," who wrangled more than all
+ Condemned first and inquired upon after
+ Could do a little more than what was possible
+ Courage and semblance of cheerfulness, with despair in his heart
+ Demanding peace and bread at any price
+ Diplomatic adroitness consists mainly in the power to deceive
+ Dismay of our friends and the gratification of our enemies
+ Disordered, and unknit state needs no shaking, but propping
+ Elizabeth, though convicted, could always confute
+ Enmity between Lutherans and Calvinists
+ Find our destruction in our immoderate desire for peace
+ German-Lutheran sixteenth-century idea of religious freedom
+ He sat a great while at a time. He had a genius for sitting
+ He did his work, but he had not his reward
+ Her teeth black, her bosom white and liberally exposed (Eliz.)
+ Hibernian mode of expressing himself
+ His inordinate arrogance
+ His insolence intolerable
+ Holland was afraid to give a part, although offering the whole
+ Honor good patriots, and to support them in venial errors
+ Humility which was but the cloak to his pride
+ Intentions of a government which did not know its own intentions
+ Intolerable tendency to puns
+ Longer they delay it, the less easy will they find it
+ Lord was better pleased with adverbs than nouns
+ Make sheep of yourselves, and the wolf will eat you
+ Matter that men may rather pray for than hope for
+ Military virtue in the support of an infamous cause
+ Mistakes might occur from occasional deviations into sincerity
+ Necessity of kingship
+ Neighbour's blazing roof was likely soon to fire their own
+ New Years Day in England, 11th January by the New Style
+ Nine syllables that which could be more forcibly expressed in on
+ Nor is the spirit of the age to be pleaded in defence
+ Not a friend of giving details larger than my ascertained facts
+ Not of the genus Reptilia, and could neither creep nor crouch
+ Not distinguished for their docility
+ Oration, fertile in rhetoric and barren in facts
+ Others that do nothing, do all, and have all the thanks
+ Pauper client who dreamed of justice at the hands of law
+ Peace and quietness is brought into a most dangerous estate
+ Peace-at-any-price party
+ Possible to do, only because we see that it has been done
+ Repentance, as usual, had come many hours too late
+ Repose in the other world, "Repos ailleurs"
+ Resolved thenceforth to adopt a system of ignorance
+ Round game of deception, in which nobody was deceived
+ Seeking protection for and against the people
+ Seem as if born to make the idea of royalty ridiculous
+ Shutting the stable-door when the steed is stolen
+ Soldiers enough to animate the good and terrify the bad
+ String of homely proverbs worthy of Sancho Panza
+ The very word toleration was to sound like an insult
+ The busy devil of petty economy
+ There was apathy where there should have been enthusiasm
+ They were always to deceive every one, upon every occasion
+ Thought that all was too little for him
+ Three hundred and upwards are hanged annually in London
+ Tis pity he is not an Englishman
+ To work, ever to work, was the primary law of his nature
+ Tranquillity rather of paralysis than of health
+ Twas pity, he said, that both should be heretics
+ Upper and lower millstones of royal wrath and loyal subserviency
+ Uttering of my choler doth little ease my grief or help my case
+ Wasting time fruitlessly is sharpening the knife for himself
+ We must all die once
+ We mustn't tickle ourselves to make ourselves laugh
+ Weary of place without power
+ When persons of merit suffer without cause
+ With something of feline and feminine duplicity
+ Wrath of bigots on both sides
+ Write so illegibly or express himself so awkwardly
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of History of the United Netherlands,
+1584-1586, Vol. I. Complete, by John Lothrop Motley
+
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+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </body>
+</html>