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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Life and Death of John Of Barneveld, Volume II. 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%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .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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+
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+ </head>
+ <body>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life of John of Barneveld,
+1614-23, Volume II., 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: The Life of John of Barneveld, 1614-23, Volume II.
+
+Author: John Lothrop Motley
+
+Release Date: October 15, 2006 [EBook #4898]
+Last Updated: November 3, 2012
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOHN OF BARNEVELD, II. ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <h1>
+ THE LIFE AND DEATH of JOHN OF BARNEVELD, ADVOCATE OF HOLLAND
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ WITH A VIEW OF THE PRIMARY CAUSES AND MOVEMENTS OF THE THIRTY YEARS' WAR
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ VOLUME II. 1614-23
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By John Lothrop Motley, D.C.L., LL.D.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" border="3" cellpadding="4">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a
+ href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/4892/4892-h/4892-h.htm"><b>Volume
+ I.</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big><br /> <br /> <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001">
+ CHAPTER XI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1614-17 <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0002">
+ CHAPTER XII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1617 <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER XV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1618 <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1618-19
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER XX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1619-23
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XXII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XXIII. &nbsp;&nbsp;</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. 1614-17
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Advocate sounds the Alarm in Germany&mdash;His Instructions to
+ Langerac and his Forethought&mdash;The Prince&mdash;Palatine and his Forces
+ take Aachen, Mulheim, and other Towns&mdash;Supineness of the
+ Protestants&mdash;Increased Activity of Austria and the League&mdash;Barneveld
+ strives to obtain Help from England&mdash;Neuburg departs for Germany&mdash;
+ Barneveld the Prime Minister of Protestantism&mdash;Ernest Mansfield
+ takes service under Charles Emmanuel&mdash;Count John of Nassau goes to
+ Savoy&mdash;Slippery Conduct of King James in regard to the New Treaty
+ proposed&mdash;Barneveld's Influence greater in France than in England&mdash;
+ Sequestration feared&mdash;The Elector of Brandenburg cited to appear
+ before the Emperor at Prague&mdash;Murder of John van Wely&mdash;Uytenbogaert
+ incurs Maurice's Displeasure&mdash;Marriage of the King of France with
+ Anne of Austria&mdash;Conference between King James and Caron concerning
+ Piracy, Cloth Trade and Treaty of Xanten&mdash;Barneveld's Survey of the
+ Condition of Europe&mdash;His Efforts to avert the impending general War.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I have thus purposely sketched the leading features of a couple of
+ momentous, although not eventful, years&mdash;so far as the foreign policy
+ of the Republic is concerned&mdash;in order that the reader may better
+ understand the bearings and the value of the Advocate's actions and
+ writings at that period. This work aims at being a political study. I
+ would attempt to exemplify the influence of individual humours and
+ passions&mdash;some of them among the highest and others certainly the
+ basest that agitate humanity-upon the march of great events, upon general
+ historical results at certain epochs, and upon the destiny of eminent
+ personages. It may also be not uninteresting to venture a glance into the
+ internal structure and workings of a republican and federal system of
+ government, then for the first time reproduced almost spontaneously upon
+ an extended scale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the revelation of some of its defects, in spite of the faculty and
+ vitality struggling against them, may not be without value for our own
+ country and epoch. The system of Switzerland was too limited and homely,
+ that of Venice too purely oligarchical, to have much moral for us now, or
+ to render a study of their pathological phenomena especially instructive.
+ The lessons taught us by the history of the Netherland confederacy may
+ have more permanent meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, the character of a very considerable statesman at an
+ all-important epoch, and in a position of vast responsibility, is always
+ an historical possession of value to mankind. That of him who furnishes
+ the chief theme for these pages has been either overlooked and neglected
+ or perhaps misunderstood by posterity. History has not too many really
+ important and emblematic men on its records to dispense with the memory of
+ Barneveld, and the writer therefore makes no apology for dilating somewhat
+ fully upon his lifework by means of much of his entirely unpublished and
+ long forgotten utterances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate had ceaselessly been sounding the alarm in Germany. For the
+ Protestant Union, fascinated, as it were, by the threatening look of the
+ Catholic League, seemed relapsing into a drowse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe," he said to one of his agents in that country, "that the
+ Evangelical electors and princes and the other estates are not alive to
+ the danger. I am sure that it is not apprehended in Great Britain. France
+ is threatened with troubles. These are the means to subjugate the
+ religion, the laws and liberties of Germany. Without an army the troops
+ now on foot in Italy cannot be kept out of Germany. Yet we do not hear
+ that the Evangelicals are making provision of troops, money, or any other
+ necessaries. In this country we have about one hundred places occupied
+ with our troops, among whom are many who could destroy a whole army. But
+ the maintenance of these places prevents our being very strong in the
+ field, especially outside our frontiers. But if in all Germany there be
+ many places held by the Evangelicals which would disperse a great army is
+ very doubtful. Keep a watchful eye. Economy is a good thing, but the
+ protection of a country and its inhabitants must be laid to heart. Watch
+ well if against these Provinces, and against Bohemia, Austria, and other
+ as it is pretended rebellious states, these plans are not directed. Look
+ out for the movements of the Italian and Bavarian troops against Germany.
+ You see how they are nursing the troubles and misunderstandings in France,
+ and turning them to account."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He instructed the new ambassador in Paris to urge upon the French
+ government the absolute necessity of punctuality in furnishing the payment
+ of their contingent in the Netherlands according to convention. The States
+ of Holland themselves had advanced the money during three years' past, but
+ this anticipation was becoming very onerous. It was necessary to pay the
+ troops every month regularly, but the funds from Paris were always in
+ arrear. England contributed about one-half as much in subsidy, but these
+ moneys went in paying the garrisons of Brielle, Flushing, and Rammekens,
+ fortresses pledged to that crown. The Ambassador was shrewdly told not to
+ enlarge on the special employment of the English funds while holding up to
+ the Queen's government that she was not the only potentate who helped bear
+ burthens for the Provinces, and insisted on a continuation of this aid.
+ "Remember and let them remember," said the Advocate, "that the reforms
+ which they are pretending to make there by relieving the subjects of
+ contributions tends to enervate the royal authority and dignity both
+ within and without, to diminish its lustre and reputation, and in sum to
+ make the King unable to gratify and assist his subjects, friends, and
+ allies. Make them understand that the taxation in these Provinces is ten
+ times higher than there, and that My Lords the States hitherto by the
+ grace of God and good administration have contrived to maintain it in
+ order to be useful to themselves and their friends. Take great pains to
+ have it well understood that this is even more honourable and more
+ necessary for a king of France, especially in his minority, than for a
+ republic 'hoc turbato seculo.' We all see clearly how some potentates in
+ Europe are keeping at all time under one pretext or another strong forces
+ well armed on a war footing. It therefore behoves his Majesty to be
+ likewise provided with troops, and at least with a good exchequer and all
+ the requirements of war, as well for the security of his own state as for
+ the maintenance of the grandeur and laudable reputation left to him by the
+ deceased king."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Truly here was sound and substantial advice, never and nowhere more needed
+ than in France. It was given too with such good effect as to bear fruit
+ even upon stoniest ground, and it is a refreshing spectacle to see this
+ plain Advocate of a republic, so lately sprung into existence out of the
+ depths of oppression and rebellion, calmly summoning great kings as it
+ were before him and instructing them in those vital duties of government
+ in discharge of which the country he administered already furnished a
+ model. Had England and France each possessed a Barneveld at that epoch,
+ they might well have given in exchange for him a wilderness of Epernons
+ and Sillerys, Bouillons and Conde's; of Winwoods, Lakes, Carrs, and
+ Villierses. But Elizabeth with her counsellors was gone, and Henry was
+ gone, and Richelieu had not come; while in England James and his minions
+ were diligently opening an abyss between government and people which in
+ less than half a lifetime more should engulph the kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two months later he informed the States' ambassador of the communications
+ made by the Prince of Conde and the Dukes of Nevers and Bouillon to the
+ government at the Hague now that they had effected a kind of
+ reconciliation with the Queen. Langerac was especially instructed to do
+ his best to assist in bringing about cordial relations, if that were
+ possible, between the crown and the rebels, and meantime he was especially
+ directed to defend du Maurier against the calumnious accusations brought
+ against him, of which Aerssens had been the secret sower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will do your best to manage," he said, "that no special ambassador be
+ sent hither, and that M. du Maurier may remain with us, he being a very
+ intelligent and moderate person now well instructed as to the state of our
+ affairs, a professor of the Reformed religion, and having many other good
+ qualities serviceable to their Majesties and to us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will visit the Prince, and other princes and officers of the crown
+ who are coming to court again, and do all good offices as well for the
+ court as for M. du Maurier, in order that through evil plots and
+ slanderous reports no harm may come to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take great pains to find out all you can there as to the designs of the
+ King of Spain, the Archdukes, and the Emperor, in the affair of Julich.
+ You are also to let it be known that the change of religion on the part of
+ the Prince-Palatine of Neuburg will not change our good will and affection
+ for him, so far as his legal claims are concerned."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as it was possible for the States to retain their hold on both the
+ claimants, the Advocate, pursuant to his uniform policy of moderation, was
+ not disposed to help throw the Palatine into the hands of the Spanish
+ party. He was well aware, however, that Neuburg by his marriage and his
+ conversion was inevitably to become the instrument of the League and to be
+ made use of in the duchies at its pleasure, and that he especially would
+ be the first to submit with docility to the decree of the Emperor. The
+ right to issue such decree the States under guidance of Barneveld were
+ resolved to resist at all hazards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Work diligently, nevertheless," said he, "that they permit nothing there
+ directly or indirectly that may tend to the furtherance of the League, as
+ too prejudicial to us and to all our fellow religionists. Tell them too
+ that the late king, the King of Great Britain, the united electors and
+ princes of Germany, and ourselves, have always been resolutely opposed to
+ making the dispute about the succession in the duchies depend on the will
+ of the Emperor and his court. All our movements in the year 1610 against
+ the attempted sequestration under Leopold were to carry out that purpose.
+ Hold it for certain that our present proceedings for strengthening and
+ maintaining the city and fortress of Julich are considered serviceable and
+ indispensable by the British king and the German electors and princes. Use
+ your best efforts to induce the French government to pursue the same
+ policy&mdash;if it be not possible openly, then at least secretly. My
+ conviction is that, unless the Prince-Palatine is supported by, and his
+ whole designs founded upon, the general league against all our brethren of
+ the religion, affairs may be appeased."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Envoy was likewise instructed to do his best to further the
+ matrimonial alliance which had begun to be discussed between the Prince of
+ Wales and the second daughter of France. Had it been possible at that
+ moment to bring the insane dream of James for a Spanish alliance to
+ naught, the States would have breathed more freely. He was also to urge
+ payment of the money for the French regiments, always in arrears since
+ Henry's death and Sully's dismissal, and always supplied by the exchequer
+ of Holland. He was informed that the Republic had been sending some war
+ ships to the Levant, to watch the armada recently sent thither by Spain,
+ and other armed vessels into the Baltic, to pursue the corsairs with whom
+ every sea was infested. In one year alone he estimated the loss to Dutch
+ merchants by these pirates at 800,000 florins. "We have just captured two
+ of the rovers, but the rascally scum is increasing," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again alluding to the resistance to be made by the States to the Imperial
+ pretensions, he observed, "The Emperor is about sending us a herald in the
+ Julich matter, but we know how to stand up to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And notwithstanding the bare possibility which he had admitted, that the
+ Prince of Neuburg might not yet have wholly sold himself, body and soul,
+ to the Papists, he gave warning a day or two afterwards in France that all
+ should be prepared for the worst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Archdukes and the Prince of Neuburg appear to be taking the war
+ earnestly in hand," he said. "We believe that the Papistical League is
+ about to make a great effort against all the co-religionists. We are
+ watching closely their movements. Aachen is first threatened, and the
+ Elector-Palatine likewise. France surely, for reasons of state, cannot
+ permit that they should be attacked. She did, and helped us to do, too
+ much in the Julich campaign to suffer the Spaniards to make themselves
+ masters there now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been seen that the part played by France in the memorable campaign
+ of 1610 was that of admiring auxiliary to the States' forces; Marshal de
+ la Chatre having in all things admitted the superiority of their army and
+ the magnificent generalship of Prince Maurice. But the government of the
+ Dowager had been committed by that enterprise to carry out the life-long
+ policy of Henry, and to maintain his firm alliance with the Republic.
+ Whether any of the great king's acuteness and vigour in countermining and
+ shattering the plans of the House of Austria was left in the French court,
+ time was to show. Meantime Barneveld was crying himself hoarse with
+ warnings into the dull ears of England and France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few weeks later the Prince of Neuburg had thrown off the mask. Twelve
+ thousand foot and 1500 horse had been raised in great haste, so the
+ Advocate informed the French court, by Spain and the Archdukes, for the
+ use of that pretender. Five or six thousand Spaniards were coming by sea
+ to Flanders, and as many Italians were crossing the mountains, besides a
+ great number mustering for the same purpose in Germany and Lorraine.
+ Barneveld was constantly receiving most important intelligence of military
+ plans and movements from Prague, which he placed daily before the eyes of
+ governments wilfully blind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I ponder well at this crisis," he said to his friend Caron, "the
+ intelligence I received some months back from Ratisbon, out of the cabinet
+ of the Jesuits, that the design of the Catholic or Roman League is to
+ bring this year a great army into the field, in order to make Neuburg, who
+ was even then said to be of the Roman profession and League, master of
+ Julich and the duchies; to execute the Imperial decree against Aachen and
+ Mulheim, preventing any aid from being sent into Germany by these
+ Provinces, or by Great Britain, and placing the Archduke and Marquis
+ Spinola in command of the forces; to put another army on the frontiers of
+ Austria, in order to prevent any succour coming from Hungary, Bohemia,
+ Austria, Moravia, and Silesia into Germany; to keep all these disputed
+ territories in subjection and devotion to the Emperor, and to place the
+ general conduct of all these affairs in the hands of Archduke Leopold and
+ other princes of the House of Austria. A third army is to be brought into
+ the Upper Palatinate, under command of the Duke of Bavaria and others of
+ the League, destined to thoroughly carry out its designs against the
+ Elector-Palatine, and the other electors, princes, and estates belonging
+ to the religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This intelligence, plucked by Barneveld out of the cabinet of the Jesuits,
+ had been duly communicated by him months before to those whom it most
+ concerned, and as usual it seemed to deepen the lethargy of the destined
+ victims and their friends. Not only the whole Spanish campaign of the
+ present year had thus been duly mapped out by the Advocate, long before it
+ occurred, but this long buried and forgotten correspondence of the
+ statesman seems rather like a chronicle of transactions already past, so
+ closely did the actual record, which posterity came to know too well,
+ resemble that which he saw, and was destined only to see, in prophetic
+ vision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could this political seer have cast his horoscope of the Thirty Years' War
+ at this hour of its nativity for the instruction of such men as Walsingham
+ or Burleigh, Henry of Navarre or Sully, Richelieu or Gustavus Adolphus,
+ would the course of events have been modified? These very idlest of
+ questions are precisely those which inevitably occur as one ponders the
+ seeming barrenness of an epoch in reality so pregnant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One would think," said Barneveld, comparing what was then the future with
+ the real past, "that these plans in Prague against the Elector-Palatine
+ are too gross for belief; but when I reflect on the intense bitterness of
+ these people, when I remember what was done within living men's memory to
+ the good elector Hans Frederic of Saxony for exactly the same reasons, to
+ wit, hatred of our religion, and determination to establish Imperial
+ authority, I have great apprehension. I believe that the Roman League will
+ use the present occasion to carry out her great design; holding France
+ incapable of opposition to her, Germany in too great division, and
+ imagining to themselves that neither the King of Great Britain nor these
+ States are willing or able to offer effectual and forcible resistance. Yet
+ his Majesty of Great Britain ought to be able to imagine how greatly the
+ religious matter in general concerns himself and the electoral house of
+ the Palatine, as principal heads of the religion, and that these vast
+ designs should be resisted betimes, and with all possible means and might.
+ My Lords the States have good will, but not sufficient strength, to oppose
+ these great forces single-handed. One must not believe that without great
+ and prompt assistance in force from his Majesty and other fellow
+ religionists My Lords the States can undertake so vast an affair. Do your
+ uttermost duty there, in order that, ere it be too late, this matter be
+ taken to heart by his Majesty, and that his authority and credit be
+ earnestly used with other kings, electors, princes, and republics, that
+ they do likewise. The promptest energy, good will, and affection may be
+ reckoned on from us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas! it was easy for his Majesty to take to heart the matter of Conrad
+ Vorstius, to spend reams of diplomatic correspondence, to dictate whole
+ volumes for orations brimming over with theological wrath, for the
+ edification of the States-General, against that doctor of divinity. But
+ what were the special interests of his son-in-law, what the danger to all
+ the other Protestant electors and kings, princes and republics, what the
+ imperilled condition of the United Provinces, and, by necessary
+ consequence, the storm gathering over his own throne, what the whole fate
+ of Protestantism, from Friesland to Hungary, threatened by the insatiable,
+ all-devouring might of the double house of Austria, the ancient church,
+ and the Papistical League, what were hundred thousands of men marching
+ towards Bohemia, the Netherlands, and the duchies, with the drum beating
+ for mercenary recruits in half the villages of Spain, Italy, and Catholic
+ Germany, compared with the danger to Christendom from an Arminian
+ clergyman being appointed to the theological professorship at Leyden?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The world was in a blaze, kings and princes were arming, and all the time
+ that the monarch of the powerful, adventurous, and heroic people of Great
+ Britain could spare from slobbering over his minions, and wasting the
+ treasures of the realm to supply their insatiate greed, was devoted to
+ polemical divinity, in which he displayed his learning, indeed, but
+ changed his positions and contradicted himself day by day. The magnitude
+ of this wonderful sovereign's littleness oppresses the imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, should he listen to the adjurations of the States and his fellow
+ religionists, should he allow himself to be impressed by the eloquence of
+ Barneveld and take a manly and royal decision in the great emergency, it
+ would be indispensable for him to come before that odious body, the
+ Parliament of Great Britain, and ask for money. It would be perhaps
+ necessary for him to take them into his confidence, to degrade himself by
+ speaking to them of the national affairs. They might not be satisfied with
+ the honour of voting the supplies at his demand, but were capable of
+ asking questions as to their appropriation. On the whole it was more
+ king-like and statesman-like to remain quiet, and give advice. Of that,
+ although always a spendthrift, he had an inexhaustible supply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld had just hopes from the Commons of Great Britain, if the King
+ could be brought to appeal to Parliament. Once more he sounded the bugle
+ of alarm. "Day by day the Archdukes are making greater and greater
+ enrolments of riders and infantry in ever increasing mass," he cried, "and
+ therewith vast provision of artillery and all munitions of war. Within ten
+ or twelve days they will be before Julich in force. We are sending great
+ convoys to reinforce our army there. The Prince of Neuburg is enrolling
+ more and more troops every day. He will soon be master of Mulheim. If the
+ King of Great Britain will lay this matter earnestly to heart for the
+ preservation of the princes, electors, and estates of the religion, I
+ cannot doubt that Parliament would cooperate well with his Majesty, and
+ this occasion should be made use of to redress the whole state of
+ affairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not the Parliament nor the people of Great Britain that would be in
+ fault when the question arose of paying in money and in blood for the
+ defence of civil and religious liberty. But if James should venture openly
+ to oppose Spain, what would the Count of Gondemar say, and what would
+ become of the Infanta and the two millions of dowry?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not for want of some glimmering consciousness in the mind of James
+ of the impending dangers to Northern Europe and to Protestantism from the
+ insatiable ambition of Spain, and the unrelenting grasp of the Papacy upon
+ those portions of Christendom which were slipping from its control, that
+ his apathy to those perils was so marked. We have seen his leading motives
+ for inaction, and the world was long to feel its effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His Majesty firmly believes," wrote Secretary Winwood, "that the
+ Papistical League is brewing great and dangerous plots. To obviate them in
+ everything that may depend upon him, My Lords the States will find him
+ prompt. The source of all these entanglements comes from Spain. We do not
+ think that the Archduke will attack Julich this year, but rather fear for
+ Mulheim and Aix-la-Chapelle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Secretary of State, thus acknowledging the peril, chose to be
+ blind to its extent, while at the same time undervaluing the powers by
+ which it might be resisted. "To oppose the violence of the enemy," he
+ said, "if he does resort to violence, is entirely impossible. It would be
+ furious madness on our part to induce him to fall upon the
+ Elector-Palatine, for this would be attacking Great Britain and all her
+ friends and allies. Germany is a delicate morsel, but too much for the
+ throat of Spain to swallow all at once. Behold the evil which troubles the
+ conscience of the Papistical League. The Emperor and his brothers are all
+ on the brink of their sepulchre, and the Infants of Spain are too young to
+ succeed to the Empire. The Pope would more willingly permit its
+ dissolution than its falling into the hands of a prince not of his
+ profession. All that we have to do in this conjuncture is to attend the
+ best we can to our own affairs, and afterwards to strengthen the good
+ alliance existing among us, and not to let ourselves be separated by the
+ tricks and sleights of hand of our adversaries. The common cause can
+ reckon firmly upon the King of Great Britain, and will not find itself
+ deceived."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Excellent commonplaces, but not very safe ones. Unluckily for the allies,
+ to attend each to his own affairs when the enemy was upon them, and to
+ reckon firmly upon a king who thought it furious madness to resist the
+ enemy, was hardly the way to avert the danger. A fortnight later, the man
+ who thought it possible to resist, and time to resist, before the net was
+ over every head, replied to the Secretary by a picture of the Spaniards'
+ progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Since your letter," he said, "you have seen the course of Spinola with
+ the army of the King and the Archdukes. You have seen the Prince-Palatine
+ of Neuburg with his forces maintained by the Pope and other members of the
+ Papistical League. On the 29th of August they forced Aachen, where the
+ magistrates and those of the Reformed religion have been extremely
+ maltreated. Twelve hundred soldiers are lodged in the houses there of
+ those who profess our religion. Mulheim is taken and dismantled, and the
+ very houses about to be torn down. Duren, Castre, Grevenborg, Orsoy,
+ Duisburg, Ruhrort, and many other towns, obliged to receive Spanish
+ garrisons. On the 4th of September they invested Wesel. On the 6th it was
+ held certain that the cities of Cleve, Emmerich, Rees, and others in that
+ quarter, had consented to be occupied. The States have put one hundred and
+ thirty-five companies of foot (about 14,000 men) and 4000 horse and a good
+ train of artillery in the field, and sent out some ships of war. Prince
+ Maurice left the Hague on the 4th of September to assist Wesel, succour
+ the Prince of Brandenburg, and oppose the hostile proceedings of Spinola
+ and the Palatine of Neuburg . . . . Consider, I pray you, this state of
+ things, and think how much heed they have paid to the demands of the Kings
+ of Great Britain and France to abstain from hostilities. Be sure that
+ without our strong garrison in Julich they would have snapped up every
+ city in Julich, Cleve, and Berg. But they will now try to make use of
+ their slippery tricks, their progress having been arrested by our army.
+ The Prince of Neuburg is sending his chancellor here 'cum mediis
+ componendae pacis,' in appearance good and reasonable, in reality
+ deceptive . . . . If their Majesties, My Lords the States, and the princes
+ of the Union, do not take an energetic resolution for making head against
+ their designs, behold their League in full vigour and ours without soul.
+ Neither the strength nor the wealth of the States are sufficient of
+ themselves to withstand their ambitious and dangerous designs. We see the
+ possessory princes treated as enemies upon their own estates, and many
+ thousand souls of the Reformed religion cruelly oppressed by the
+ Papistical League. For myself I am confirmed in my apprehensions and
+ believe that neither our religion nor our Union can endure such
+ indignities. The enemy is making use of the minority in France and the
+ divisions among the princes of Germany to their great advantage . . . . I
+ believe that the singular wisdom of his Majesty will enable him to apply
+ promptly the suitable remedies, and that your Parliament will make no
+ difficulty in acquitting itself well in repairing those disorders."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The year dragged on to its close. The supineness of the Protestants
+ deepened in direct proportion to the feverish increase of activity on the
+ part of Austria and the League. The mockery of negotiation in which
+ nothing could be negotiated, the parade of conciliation when war of
+ extermination was intended, continued on the part of Spain and Austria.
+ Barneveld was doing his best to settle all minor differences between the
+ States and Great Britain, that these two bulwarks of Protestantism might
+ stand firmly together against the rising tide. He instructed the
+ Ambassador to exhaust every pacific means of arrangement in regard to the
+ Greenland fishery disputes, the dyed cloth question, and like causes of
+ ill feeling. He held it more than necessary, he said, that the inhabitants
+ of the two countries should now be on the very best terms with each other.
+ Above all, he implored the King through the Ambassador to summon
+ Parliament in order that the kingdom might be placed in position to face
+ the gathering danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am amazed and distressed," he said, "that the statesmen of England do
+ not comprehend the perils with which their fellow religionists are
+ everywhere threatened, especially in Germany and in these States. To
+ assist us with bare advice and sometimes with traducing our actions, while
+ leaving us to bear alone the burthens, costs, and dangers, is not
+ serviceable to us." Referring to the information and advice which he had
+ sent to England and to France fifteen months before, he now gave assurance
+ that the Prince of Neuburg and Spinola were now in such force, both foot
+ and cavalry, with all necessary munitions, as to hold these most important
+ territories as a perpetual "sedem bedli," out of which to attack Germany
+ at their pleasure and to cut off all possibility of aid from England and
+ the States. He informed the court of St. James that besides the forces of
+ the Emperor and the House of Austria, the Duke of Bavaria and Spanish
+ Italy, there were now several thousand horse and foot under the Bishop of
+ Wurzburg, 8000 or 9000 under the Bishop-Elector of Mayence, and strong
+ bodies of cavalry under Count Vaudemont in Lorraine, all mustering for the
+ war. The pretext seems merely to reduce Frankfurt to obedience, even as
+ Donauworth had previously been used as a colour for vast designs. The real
+ purpose was to bring the Elector-Palatine and the whole Protestant party
+ in Germany to submission. "His Majesty," said the Advocate, "has now a
+ very great and good subject upon which to convoke Parliament and ask for a
+ large grant. This would be doubtless consented to if Parliament receives
+ the assurance that the money thus accorded shall be applied to so
+ wholesome a purpose. You will do your best to further this great end. We
+ are waiting daily to hear if the Xanten negotiation is broken off or not.
+ I hope and I fear. Meantime we bear as heavy burthens as if we were
+ actually at war."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He added once more the warning, which it would seem superfluous to repeat
+ even to schoolboys in diplomacy, that this Xanten treaty, as proposed by
+ the enemy, was a mere trap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spinola and Neuburg, in case of the mutual disbanding, stood ready at an
+ instant's warning to re-enlist for the League not only all the troops that
+ the Catholic army should nominally discharge, but those which would be let
+ loose from the States' army and that of Brandenburg as well. They would
+ hold Rheinberg, Groll, Lingen, Oldenzaal, Wachtendonk, Maestricht, Aachen,
+ and Mulheim with a permanent force of more than 20,000 men. And they could
+ do all this in four days' time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A week or two later all his prophesies had been fulfilled. "The Prince of
+ Neuburg," he said, "and Marquis Spinola have made game of us most
+ impudently in the matter of the treaty. This is an indignity for us, their
+ Majesties, and the electors and princes. We regard it as intolerable. A
+ despatch came from Spain forbidding a further step in the negotiation
+ without express order from the King. The Prince and Spinola are gone to
+ Brussels, the ambassadors have returned to the Hague, the armies are
+ established in winter-quarters. The cavalry are ravaging the debateable
+ land and living upon the inhabitants at their discretion. M. de Refuge is
+ gone to complain to the Archdukes of the insult thus put upon his
+ sovereign. Sir Henry Wotton is still here. We have been plunged into an
+ immensity of extraordinary expense, and are amazed that at this very
+ moment England should demand money from us when we ought to be assisted by
+ a large subsidy by her. We hope that now at least his Majesty will take a
+ vigorous resolution and not suffer his grandeur and dignity to be
+ vilipended longer. If the Spaniard is successful in this step, he is ready
+ for greater ones, and will believe that mankind is ready to bear and
+ submit to everything. His Majesty is the first king of the religion. He
+ bears the title of Defender of the Faith. His religion, his only daughter,
+ his son-in-law, his grandson are all especially interested besides his own
+ dignity, besides the common weal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then adverted to the large subsidies from Queen Elizabeth many years
+ before, guaranteed, it was true, by the cautionary towns, and to the
+ gallant English regiments, sent by that great sovereign, which had been
+ fighting so long and so splendidly in the Netherlands for the common cause
+ of Protestantism and liberty. Yet England was far weaker then, for she had
+ always her northern frontier to defend against Scotland, ever ready to
+ strike her in the back. "But now his Majesty," said Barneveld, "is King of
+ England and Scotland both. His frontier is free. Ireland is at peace. He
+ possesses quietly twice as much as the Queen ever did. He is a king. Her
+ Majesty was a woman. The King has children and heirs. His nearest blood is
+ engaged in this issue. His grandeur and dignity have been wronged. Each
+ one of these considerations demands of itself a manly resolution. You will
+ do your best to further it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The almost ubiquitous power of Spain, gaining after its exhaustion new
+ life through the strongly developed organization of the League, and the
+ energy breathed into that mighty conspiracy against human liberty by the
+ infinite genius of the "cabinet of Jesuits," was not content with
+ overshadowing Germany, the Netherlands, and England, but was threatening
+ Savoy with 40,000 men, determined to bring Charles Emmanuel either to
+ perdition or submission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like England, France was spell-bound by the prospect of Spanish marriages,
+ which for her at least were not a chimera, and looked on composedly while
+ Savoy was on point of being sacrificed by the common invader of
+ independent nationality whether Protestant or Catholic. Nothing ever
+ showed more strikingly the force residing in singleness of purpose with
+ breadth and unity of design than all these primary movements of the great
+ war now beginning. The chances superficially considered were vastly in
+ favour of the Protestant cause. In the chief lands, under the sceptre of
+ the younger branch of Austria, the Protestants outnumbered the Catholics
+ by nearly ten to one. Bohemia, the Austrias, Moravia, Silesia, Hungary
+ were filled full of the spirit of Huss, of Luther, and even of Calvin. If
+ Spain was a unit, now that the Moors and Jews had been expelled, and the
+ heretics of Castille and Aragon burnt into submission, she had a most
+ lukewarm ally in Venice, whose policy was never controlled by the Church,
+ and a dangerous neighbour in the warlike, restless, and adventurous House
+ of Savoy, to whom geographical considerations were ever more vital than
+ religious scruples. A sincere alliance of France, the very flower of whose
+ nobility and people inclined to the Reformed religion, was impossible,
+ even if there had been fifty infantes to espouse fifty daughters of
+ France. Great Britain, the Netherlands, and the united princes of Germany
+ seemed a solid and serried phalanx of Protestantism, to break through
+ which should be hopeless. Yet at that moment, so pregnant with a monstrous
+ future, there was hardly a sound Protestant policy anywhere but in
+ Holland. How long would that policy remain sound and united? How long
+ would the Republic speak through the imperial voice of Barneveld? Time was
+ to show and to teach many lessons. The united princes of Germany were
+ walking, talking, quarrelling in their sleep; England and France
+ distracted and bedrugged, while Maximilian of Bavaria and Ferdinand of
+ Gratz, the cabinets of Madrid and the Vatican, were moving forward to
+ their aims slowly, steadily, relentlessly as Fate. And Spain was more
+ powerful than she had been since the Truce began. In five years she had
+ become much more capable of aggression. She had strengthened her positions
+ in the Mediterranean by the acquisition and enlargement of considerable
+ fortresses in Barbary and along a large sweep of the African coast, so as
+ to be almost supreme in Africa. It was necessary for the States, the only
+ power save Turkey that could face her in those waters, to maintain a
+ perpetual squadron of war ships there to defend their commerce against
+ attack from the Spaniard and from the corsairs, both Mahometan and
+ Christian, who infested every sea. Spain was redoubtable everywhere, and
+ the Turk, engaged in Persian campaigns, was offering no diversion against
+ Hungary and Vienna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Reasons of state worthy of his Majesty's consideration and wisdom," said
+ Barneveld, "forbid the King of Great Britain from permitting the Spaniard
+ to give the law in Italy. He is about to extort obedience and humiliation
+ from the Duke of Savoy, or else with 40,000 men to mortify and ruin him,
+ while entirely assuring himself of France by the double marriages. Then
+ comes the attack on these Provinces, on Protestant Germany, and all other
+ states and realms of the religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the turn of the year, affairs were growing darker and darker. The
+ League was rolling up its forces in all directions; its chiefs proposed
+ absurd conditions of pacification, while war was already raging, and yet
+ scarcely any government but that of the Netherlands paid heed to the
+ rising storm. James, fatuous as ever, listened to Gondemar, and wrote
+ admonitory letters to the Archduke. It was still gravely proposed by the
+ Catholic party that there should be mutual disbanding in the duchies, with
+ a guarantee from Marquis Spinola that there should be no more invasion of
+ those territories. But powers and pledges from the King of Spain were what
+ he needed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To suppose that the Republic and her allies would wait quietly, and not
+ lift a finger until blows were actually struck against the Protestant
+ electors or cities of Germany, was expecting too much ingenuousness on the
+ part of statesmen who had the interests of Protestantism at heart. What
+ they wanted was the signed, sealed, ratified treaty faithfully carried
+ out. Then if the King of Spain and the Archdukes were willing to contract
+ with the States never to make an attempt against the Holy German Empire,
+ but to leave everything to take its course according to the constitutions,
+ liberties, and traditions and laws of that empire, under guidance of its
+ electors, princes, estates, and cities, the United Provinces were ready,
+ under mediation of the two kings, their allies and friends, to join in
+ such an arrangement. Thus there might still be peace in Germany, and
+ religious equality as guaranteed by the "Majesty-Letter," and the
+ "Compromise" between the two great churches, Roman and Reformed, be
+ maintained. To bring about this result was the sincere endeavour of
+ Barneveld, hoping against hope. For he knew that all was hollowness and
+ sham on the part of the great enemy. Even as Walsingham almost alone had
+ suspected and denounced the delusive negotiations by which Spain continued
+ to deceive Elizabeth and her diplomatists until the Armada was upon her
+ coasts, and denounced them to ears that were deafened and souls that were
+ stupified by the frauds practised upon them, so did Barneveld, who had
+ witnessed all that stupendous trickery of a generation before, now utter
+ his cries of warning that Germany might escape in time from her impending
+ doom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing but deceit is lurking in the Spanish proposals," he said. "Every
+ man here wonders that the English government does not comprehend these
+ malversations. Truly the affair is not to be made straight by new
+ propositions, but by a vigorous resolution of his Majesty. It is in the
+ highest degree necessary to the salvation of Christendom, to the
+ conservation of his Majesty's dignity and greatness, to the service of the
+ princes and provinces, and of all Germany, nor can this vigorous
+ resolution be longer delayed without enormous disaster to the common weal
+ . . . . . I have the deepest affection for the cause of the Duke of Savoy,
+ but I cannot further it so long as I cannot tell what his Majesty
+ specifically is resolved to do, and what hope is held out from Venice,
+ Germany, and other quarters. Our taxes are prodigious, the ordinary and
+ extraordinary, and we have a Spanish army at our front door."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The armaments, already so great, had been enlarged during the last month
+ of the year. Vaudemont was at the head of a further force of 2000 cavalry
+ and 8000 foot, paid for by Spain and the Pope; 24,000 additional soldiers,
+ riders and infantry together, had been gathered by Maximilian of Bavaria
+ at the expense of the League. Even if the reports were exaggerated, the
+ Advocate thought it better to be too credulous than as apathetic as the
+ rest of the Protestants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We receive advices every day," he wrote to Caron, "that the Spaniards and
+ the Roman League are going forward with their design. They are trying to
+ amuse the British king and to gain time, in order to be able to deal the
+ heavier blows. Do all possible duty to procure a timely and vigorous
+ resolution there. To wait again until we are anticipated will be fatal to
+ the cause of the Evangelical electors and princes of Germany and
+ especially of his Electoral Highness of Brandenburg. We likewise should
+ almost certainly suffer irreparable damage, and should again bear our
+ cross, as men said last year in regard to Aachen, Wesel, and so many other
+ places. The Spaniard is sly, and has had a long time to contrive how he
+ can throw the net over the heads of all our religious allies. Remember all
+ the warnings sent from here last year, and how they were all tossed to the
+ winds, to the ruin of so many of our co-religionists. If it is now
+ intended over there to keep the Spaniards in check merely by speeches or
+ letters, it would be better to say so clearly to our friends. So long as
+ Parliament is not convoked in order to obtain consents and subsidies for
+ this most necessary purpose, so long I fail to believe that this great
+ common cause of Christendom, and especially of Germany, is taken to heart
+ by England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He adverted with respectfully subdued scorn to King James's proposition
+ that Spinola should give a guarantee. "I doubt if he accepts the
+ suggestion," said Barneveld, "unless as a notorious trick, and if he did,
+ what good would the promise of Spinola do us? We consider Spinola a great
+ commander having the purses and forces of the Spaniards and the Leaguers
+ in his control; but should they come into other hands, he would not be a
+ very considerable personage for us. And that may happen any day. They
+ don't seem in England to understand the difference between Prince Maurice
+ in his relations to our state and that of Marquis Spinola to his
+ superiors. Try to make them comprehend it. A promise from the Emperor,
+ King of Spain, and the princes of the League, such as his Majesty in his
+ wisdom has proposed to Spinola, would be most tranquillizing for all the
+ Protestant princes and estates of the Empire, especially for the Elector
+ and Electress Palatine, and for ourselves. In such a case no difficulty
+ would be made on our side."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After expressing his mind thus freely in regard to James and his policy,
+ he then gave the Ambassador a word of caution in characteristic fashion.
+ "Cogita," he said, "but beware of censuring his Majesty's projects. I do
+ not myself mean to censure them, nor are they publicly laughed at here,
+ but look closely at everything that comes from Brussels, and let me know
+ with diligence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And even as the Advocate was endeavouring with every effort of his skill
+ and reason to stir the sluggish James into vigorous resolution in behalf
+ of his own children, as well as of the great cause of Protestantism and
+ national liberty, so was he striving to bear up on his strenuous shoulders
+ the youthful king of France, and save him from the swollen tides of court
+ intrigue and Jesuitical influence fast sweeping him to destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had denounced the recent and paltry proposition made on the part of the
+ League, and originally suggested by James, as a most open and transparent
+ trap, into which none but the blind would thrust themselves. The Treaty of
+ Xanten, carried out as it had been signed and guaranteed by the great
+ Catholic powers, would have brought peace to Christendom. To accept in
+ place of such guarantee the pledge of a simple soldier, who to-morrow
+ might be nothing, was almost too ridiculous a proposal to be answered
+ gravely. Yet Barneveld through the machinations of the Catholic party was
+ denounced both at the English and French courts as an obstacle to peace,
+ when in reality his powerful mind and his immense industry were steadily
+ directed to the noblest possible end&mdash;to bring about a solemn
+ engagement on the part of Spain, the Emperor, and the princes of the
+ League, to attack none of the Protestant powers of Germany, especially the
+ Elector-Palatine, but to leave the laws, liberties, and privileges of the
+ States within the Empire in their original condition. And among those laws
+ were the great statutes of 1609 and 1610, the "Majesty-Letter" and the
+ "Compromise," granting full right of religious worship to the Protestants
+ of the Kingdom of Bohemia. If ever a policy deserved to be called truly
+ liberal and truly conservative, it was the policy thus steadily maintained
+ by Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adverting to the subterfuge by which the Catholic party had sought to set
+ aside the treaty of Xanten, he instructed Langerac, the States' ambassador
+ in Paris, and his own pupils to make it clear to the French government
+ that it was impossible that in such arrangements the Spanish armies would
+ not be back again in the duchies at a moment's notice. It could not be
+ imagined even that they were acting sincerely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If their upright intention," he said, "is that no actual, hostile,
+ violent attack shall be made upon the duchies, or upon any of the princes,
+ estates, or cities of the Holy Empire, as is required for the peace and
+ tranquillity of Christendom, and if all the powers interested therein will
+ come into a good and solid convention to that effect. My Lords the States
+ will gladly join in such undertaking and bind themselves as firmly as the
+ other powers. If no infraction of the laws and liberties of the Holy
+ Empire be attempted, there will be peace for Germany and its neighbours.
+ But the present extravagant proposition can only lead to chicane and
+ quarrels. To press such a measure is merely to inflict a disgrace upon us.
+ It is an attempt to prevent us from helping the Elector-Palatine and the
+ other Protestant princes of Germany and coreligionists everywhere against
+ hostile violence. For the Elector-Palatine can receive aid from us and
+ from Great Britain through the duchies only. It is plainly the object of
+ the enemy to seclude us from the Palatine and the rest of Protestant
+ Germany. It is very suspicious that the proposition of Prince Maurice,
+ supported by the two kings and the united princes of Germany, has been
+ rejected."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate knew well enough that the religious franchises granted by the
+ House of Habsburg at the very moment in which Spain signed her peace with
+ the Netherlands, and exactly as the mad duke of Cleve was expiring&mdash;with
+ a dozen princes, Catholic and Protestant, to dispute his inheritance&mdash;would
+ be valuable just so long as they could be maintained by the united forces
+ of Protestantism and of national independence and no longer. What had been
+ extorted from the Catholic powers by force would be retracted by force
+ whenever that force could be concentrated. It had been necessary for the
+ Republic to accept a twelve years' truce with Spain in default of a peace,
+ while the death of John of Cleve, and subsequently of Henry IV., had made
+ the acquisition of a permanent pacification between Catholicism and
+ Protestantism, between the League and the Union, more difficult than ever.
+ The so-called Thirty Years' War&mdash;rather to be called the concluding
+ portion of the Eighty Years' War&mdash;had opened in the debateable
+ duchies exactly at the moment when its forerunner, the forty years' war of
+ the Netherlands, had been temporarily and nominally suspended. Barneveld
+ was perpetually baffled in his efforts to obtain a favourable peace for
+ Protestant Europe, less by the open diplomacy and military force of the
+ avowed enemies of Protestantism than by the secret intrigues and
+ faintheartedness of its nominal friends. He was unwearied in his efforts
+ simultaneously to arouse the courts of England and France to the danger to
+ Europe from the overshadowing power of the House of Austria and the
+ League, and he had less difficulty in dealing with the Catholic Lewis and
+ his mother than with Protestant James. At the present moment his great
+ designs were not yet openly traversed by a strong Protestant party within
+ the very republic which he administered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look to it with earnestness and grave deliberation," he said to Langerac,
+ "that they do not pursue us there with vain importunity to accept
+ something so notoriously inadmissible and detrimental to the common weal.
+ We know that from the enemy's side every kind of unseemly trick is
+ employed, with the single object of bringing about misunderstanding
+ between us and the King of France. A prompt and vigorous resolution on the
+ part of his Majesty, to see the treaty which we made duly executed, would
+ be to help the cause. Otherwise, not. We cannot here believe that his
+ Majesty, in this first year of his majority, will submit to such a
+ notorious and flagrant affront, or that he will tolerate the oppression of
+ the Duke of Savoy. Such an affair in the beginning of his Majesty's reign
+ cannot but have very great and prejudicial consequences, nor can it be
+ left to linger on in uncertainty and delay. Let him be prompt in this. Let
+ him also take a most Christian&mdash;kingly, vigorous resolution against
+ the great affront put upon him in the failure to carry out the treaty.
+ Such a resolve on the part of the two kings would restore all things to
+ tranquillity and bring the Spaniard and his adherents 'in terminos
+ modestiae. But so long as France is keeping a suspicious eye upon England,
+ and England upon France, everything will run to combustion, detrimental to
+ their Majesties and to us, and ruinous to all the good inhabitants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the Treaty of Xanten faithfully executed he held as to an anchor in the
+ tempest until it was torn away, not by violence from without, but by
+ insidious mutiny within. At last the government of James proposed that the
+ pledges on leaving the territory should be made to the two allied kings as
+ mediators and umpires. This was better than the naked promises originally
+ suggested, but even in this there was neither heartiness nor sincerity.
+ Meantime the Prince of Neuburg, negotiations being broken off, departed
+ for Germany, a step which the Advocate considered ominous. Soon afterwards
+ that prince received a yearly pension of 24,000 crowns from Spain, and for
+ this stipend his claims on the sovereignty of the duchies were supposed to
+ be surrendered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If this be true," said Barneveld, "we have been served with covered
+ dishes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King of England wrote spirited and learned letters to the
+ Elector-Palatine, assuring him of his father-in-law's assistance in case
+ he should be attacked by the League. Sir Henry Wotton, then on special
+ mission at the Hague, showed these epistles to Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When I hear that Parliament has been assembled and has granted great
+ subsidies," was the Advocate's comment, "I shall believe that effects may
+ possibly follow from all these assurances."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was wearisome for the Advocate thus ever to be foiled; by the
+ pettinesses and jealousies of those occupying the highest earthly places,
+ in his efforts to stem the rising tide of Spanish and Catholic aggression,
+ and to avert the outbreak of a devastating war to which he saw Europe
+ doomed. It may be wearisome to read the record. Yet it is the chronicle of
+ Christendom during one of the most important and fateful epochs of modern
+ history. No man can thoroughly understand the complication and precession
+ of phenomena attending the disastrous dawn of the renewed war, on an even
+ more awful scale than the original conflict in the Netherlands, without
+ studying the correspondence of Barneveld. The history of Europe is there.
+ The fate of Christendom is there. The conflict of elements, the crash of
+ contending forms of religion and of nationalities, is pictured there in
+ vivid if homely colours. The Advocate, while acting only in the name of a
+ slender confederacy, was in truth, so long as he held his place, the prime
+ minister of European Protestantism. There was none other to rival him, few
+ to comprehend him, fewer still to sustain him. As Prince Maurice was at
+ that moment the great soldier of Protestantism without clearly scanning
+ the grandeur of the field in which he was a chief actor, or foreseeing the
+ vastness of its future, so the Advocate was its statesman and its prophet.
+ Could the two have worked together as harmoniously as they had done at an
+ earlier day, it would have been a blessing for the common weal of Europe.
+ But, alas! the evil genius of jealousy, which so often forbids cordial
+ relations between soldier and statesman, already stood shrouded in the
+ distance, darkly menacing the strenuous patriot, who was wearing his life
+ out in exertions for what he deemed the true cause of progress and
+ humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor can the fate of the man himself, his genuine character, and the
+ extraordinary personal events towards which he was slowly advancing, be
+ accurately unfolded without an attempt by means of his letters to lay bare
+ his inmost thoughts. Especially it will be seen at a later moment how much
+ value was attached to this secret correspondence with the ambassadors in
+ London and Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate trusted to the support of France, Papal and Medicean as the
+ court of the young king was, because the Protestant party throughout the
+ kingdom was too powerful, warlike, and numerous to be trifled with, and
+ because geographical considerations alone rendered a cordial alliance
+ between Spain and France very difficult. Notwithstanding the Spanish
+ marriages, which he opposed so long as opposition was possible, he knew
+ that so long as a statesman remained in the kingdom, or a bone for one
+ existed, the international policy of Henry, of Sully, and of Jeannin could
+ not be wholly abandoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He relied much on Villeroy, a political hack certainly, an ancient
+ Leaguer, and a Papist, but a man too cool, experienced, and wily to be
+ ignorant of the very hornbook of diplomacy, or open to the shallow
+ stratagems by which Spain found it so easy to purchase or to deceive. So
+ long as he had a voice in the council, it was certain that the Netherland
+ alliance would not be abandoned, nor the Duke of Savoy crushed. The old
+ secretary of state was not especially in favour at that moment, but
+ Barneveld could not doubt his permanent place in French affairs until some
+ man of real power should arise there. It was a dreary period of barrenness
+ and disintegration in that kingdom while France was mourning Henry and
+ waiting for Richelieu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dutch ambassador at Paris was instructed accordingly to maintain. good
+ relations with Villeroy, who in Barneveld's opinion had been a constant
+ and sincere friend to the Netherlands. "Don't forget to caress the old
+ gentleman you wot of," said the Advocate frequently, but suppressing his
+ name, "without troubling yourself with the reasons mentioned in your
+ letter. I am firmly convinced that he will overcome all difficulties.
+ Don't believe either that France will let the Duke of Savoy be ruined. It
+ is against every reason of State." Yet there were few to help Charles
+ Emmanuel in this Montferrat war, which was destined to drag feebly on,
+ with certain interludes of negotiations, for two years longer. The already
+ notorious condottiere Ernest Mansfeld, natural son of old prince Peter
+ Ernest, who played so long and so high a part in command of the Spanish
+ armies in the Netherlands, had, to be sure, taken service under the Duke.
+ Thenceforth he was to be a leader and a master in that wild business of
+ plunder, burning, blackmailing, and murder, which was opening upon Europe,
+ and was to afford occupation for many thousands of adventurers of high and
+ low degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mansfeld, reckless and profligate, had already changed his banner more
+ than once. Commanding a company under Leopold in the duchies, he had been
+ captured by the forces of the Union, and, after waiting in vain to be
+ ransomed by the Archduke, had gone secretly over to the enemy. Thus
+ recovering his liberty, he had enlisted a regiment under Leopold's name to
+ fight the Union, and had then, according to contract, transferred himself
+ and most of his adventurers to the flag of the Union. The military
+ operations fading away in the duchies without being succeeded by permanent
+ peace, the Count, as he was called, with no particular claim to such
+ title, had accepted a thousand florins a year as retainer from the Union
+ and had found occupation under Charles Emmanuel. Here the Spanish soldier
+ of a year or two before found much satisfaction and some profit in
+ fighting Spanish soldiers. He was destined to reappear in the Netherlands,
+ in France, in Bohemia, in many places where there were villages to be
+ burned, churches to be plundered, cities to be sacked, nuns and other
+ women to be outraged, dangerous political intrigues to be managed. A man
+ in the prime of his age, fair-haired, prematurely wrinkled, battered, and
+ hideous of visage, with a hare-lip and a humpback; slovenly of dress, and
+ always wearing an old grey hat without a band to it; audacious, cruel,
+ crafty, and licentious&mdash;such was Ernest Mansfeld, whom some of his
+ contemporaries spoke of as Ulysses Germanicus, others as the new Attila,
+ all as a scourge to the human race. The cockneys of Paris called him
+ "Machefer," and nurses long kept children quiet by threatening them with
+ that word. He was now enrolled on the Protestant side, although at the
+ moment serving Savoy against Spain in a question purely personal. His
+ armies, whether in Italy or in Germany, were a miscellaneous collection of
+ adventurers of high and low degree, of all religions, of all countries,
+ unfrocked priests and students, ruined nobles, bankrupt citizens, street
+ vagabonds&mdash;earliest type perhaps of the horrible military vermin
+ which were destined to feed so many years long on the unfortunate
+ dismembered carcass of Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many demands had been made upon the States for assistance to Savoy,&mdash;as
+ if they and they alone were to bear the brunt and pay the expense of all
+ the initiatory campaigns against Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are much importuned," said the Advocate, "to do something for the help
+ of Savoy . . . . We wish and we implore that France, Great Britain, the
+ German princes, the Venetians, and the Swiss would join us in some scheme
+ of effective assistance. But we have enough on our shoulders at this
+ moment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had hardly money enough in their exchequer, admirably ordered as it
+ was, for enterprises so far from home when great Spanish armies were
+ permanently encamped on their border.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Partly to humour King James and partly from love of adventure, Count John
+ of Nassau had gone to Savoy at the head of a small well disciplined body
+ of troops furnished by the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Make use of this piece of news," said Barneveld, communicating the fact
+ to Langerac, "opportunely and with discretion. Besides the wish to give
+ some contentment to the King of Great Britain, we consider it inconsistent
+ with good conscience and reasons of state to refuse help to a great prince
+ against oppression by those who mean to give the law to everybody;
+ especially as we have been so earnestly and frequently importuned to do
+ so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And still the Spaniards and the League kept their hold on the duchies,
+ while their forces, their munitions, their accumulation of funds waged
+ hourly. The war of chicane was even more deadly than an actual campaign,
+ for when there was no positive fighting the whole world seemed against the
+ Republic. And the chicane was colossal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We cannot understand," said Barneveld, "why M. de Prevaulx is coming here
+ on special mission. When a treaty is signed and sealed, it only remains to
+ execute it. The Archduke says he is himself not known in the treaty, and
+ that nothing can be demanded of him in relation to it. This he says in his
+ letters to the King of Great Britain. M. de Refuge knows best whether or
+ not Marquis Spinola, Ottavio Visconti, Chancellor Pecquius, and others,
+ were employed in the negotiation by the Archduke. We know very well here
+ that the whole business was conducted by them. The Archduke is willing to
+ give a clean and sincere promise not to re-occupy, and asks the same from
+ the States. If he were empowered by the Emperor, the King of Spain, and
+ the League, and acted in such quality, something might be done for the
+ tranquillity of Germany. But he promises for himself only, and Emperor,
+ King, or League, may send any general to do what they like to-morrow. What
+ is to prevent it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And so My Lords the States, the Elector of Brandenburg, and others
+ interested are cheated and made fools of. And we are as much troubled by
+ these tricks as by armed force. Yes, more; for we know that great
+ enterprises are preparing this year against Germany and ourselves, that
+ all Neuburg's troops have been disbanded and re-enlisted under the Spanish
+ commanders, and that forces are levying not only in Italy and Spain, but
+ in Germany, Lorraine, Luxemburg, and Upper Burgundy, and that Wesel has
+ been stuffed full of gunpowder and other munitions, and very strongly
+ fortified."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the States to agree to a treaty by which the disputed duchies should
+ be held jointly by the Princes of Neuburg and of Brandenburg, and the
+ territory be evacuated by all foreign troops; to look quietly on while
+ Neuburg converted himself to Catholicism, espoused the sister of
+ Maximilian of Bavaria, took a pension from Spain, resigned his claims in
+ favour of Spain, and transferred his army to Spain; and to expect that
+ Brandenburg and all interested in Brandenburg, that is to say, every
+ Protestant in Europe, should feel perfectly easy under such arrangement
+ and perfectly protected by the simple promise of a soldier of fortune
+ against Catholic aggression, was a fantastic folly hardly worthy of a
+ child. Yet the States were asked to accept this position, Brandenburg and
+ all Protestant Germany were asked to accept it, and Barneveld was howled
+ at by his allies as a marplot and mischief-maker, and denounced and
+ insulted by diplomatists daily, because he mercilessly tore away the
+ sophistries of the League and of the League's secret friend, James Stuart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King of Spain had more than 100,000 men under arms, and was enlisting
+ more soldiers everywhere and every day, had just deposited 4,000,000
+ crowns with his Antwerp bankers for a secret purpose, and all the time was
+ exuberant in his assurances of peace. One would have thought that there
+ had never been negotiations in Bourbourg, that the Spanish Armada had
+ never sailed from Coruna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are wise and prudent in France," said the Advocate, "but we are used
+ to Spanish proceedings, and from much disaster sustained are filled with
+ distrust. The King of England seems now to wish that the Archduke should
+ draw up a document according to his good pleasure, and that the States
+ should make an explanatory deed, which the King should sign also and ask
+ the King of France to do the same. But this is very hazardous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We do not mean to receive laws from the King of Spain, nor the Archduke .
+ . . . The Spanish proceedings do not indicate peace but war. One must not
+ take it ill of us that we think these matters of grave importance to our
+ friends and ourselves. Affairs have changed very much in the last four
+ months. The murder of the first vizier of the Turkish emperor and his
+ designs against Persia leave the Spanish king and the Emperor free from
+ attack in that quarter, and their armaments are far greater than last year
+ . . . . I cannot understand why the treaty of Xanten, formerly so highly
+ applauded, should now be so much disapproved. . . . The King of Spain and
+ the Emperor with their party have a vast design to give the law to all
+ Christendom, to choose a Roman king according to their will, to reduce the
+ Evangelical electors, princes, and estates of Germany to obedience, to
+ subject all Italy, and, having accomplished this, to proceed to triumph
+ over us and our allies, and by necessary consequence over France and
+ England. They say they have established the Emperor's authority by means
+ of Aachen and Mulheim, will soon have driven us out of Julich, and have
+ thus arranged matters entirely to their heart's content. They can then, in
+ name of the Emperor, the League, the Prince of Neuburg, or any one else,
+ make themselves in eight days masters of the places which they are now
+ imaginarily to leave as well as of those which we are actually to
+ surrender, and by possession of which we could hold out a long time
+ against all their power."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those very places held by the States&mdash;Julich, Emmerich, and others&mdash;had
+ recently been fortified at much expense, under the superintendence of
+ Prince Maurice, and by advice of the Advocate. It would certainly be an
+ act of madness to surrender them on the terms proposed. These warnings and
+ forebodings of Barneveld sound in our ears like recorded history, yet they
+ were far earlier than the actual facts. And now to please the English
+ king, the States had listened to his suggestion that his name and that of
+ the King of France should be signed as mediators to a new arrangement
+ proposed in lieu of the Xanten treaty. James had suggested this, Lewis had
+ agreed to it. Yet before the ink had dried in James's pen, he was
+ proposing that the names of the mediating sovereigns should be omitted
+ from the document? And why? Because Gondemar was again whispering in his
+ ear. "They are renewing the negotiations in England," said the Advocate,
+ "about the alliance between the Prince of Wales and the second daughter of
+ Spain; and the King of Great Britain is seriously importuning us that the
+ Archdukes and My Lords the States should make their pledges
+ 'impersonaliter' and not to the kings." James was also willing that the
+ name of the Emperor should appear upon it. To prevent this, Barneveld
+ would have had himself burned at the stake. It would be an ignominious and
+ unconditional surrender of the whole cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Archduke will never be contented," said the Advocate, "unless his
+ Majesty of Great Britain takes a royal resolution to bring him to reason.
+ That he tries to lay the fault on us is pure malice. We have been ready
+ and are still ready to execute the treaty of Xanten. The Archduke is the
+ cause of the dispute concerning the act. We approved the formularies of
+ their Majesties, and have changed them three times to suit the King of
+ Great Britain. Our Provincial States have been notified in the matter, so
+ that we can no longer digest the Spanish impudence, and are amazed that
+ his Majesty can listen any more to the Spanish ministers. We fear that
+ those ministers are working through many hands, in order by one means or
+ another to excite quarrels between his Majesty, us, and the respective
+ inhabitants of the two countries . . . . . Take every precaution that no
+ attempt be made there to bring the name of the Emperor into the act. This
+ would be contrary to their Majesties' first resolution, very prejudicial
+ to the Elector of Brandenburg, to the duchies, and to ourselves. And it is
+ indispensable that the promise be made to the two kings as mediators, as
+ much for their reputation and dignity as for the interests of the Elector,
+ the territories, and ourselves. Otherwise too the Spaniards will triumph
+ over us as if they had driven us by force of arms into this promise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seat of war, at the opening of the apparently inevitable conflict
+ between the Catholic League and the Protestant Union, would be those
+ debateable duchies, those border provinces, the possession of which was of
+ such vital importance to each of the great contending parties, and the
+ populations of which, although much divided, were on the whole more
+ inclined to the League than to the Union. It was natural enough that the
+ Dutch statesman should chafe at the possibility of their being lost to the
+ Union through the adroitness of the Catholic managers and the supineness
+ of the great allies of the Republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three weeks later than these last utterances of the Advocate, he was given
+ to understand that King James was preparing to slide away from the
+ position which had been three times changed to make it suitable for him.
+ His indignation was hot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Henry Wotton," he said, "has communicated to me his last despatches
+ from Newmarket. I am in the highest degree amazed that after all our
+ efforts at accommodation, with so much sacrifice to the electors, the
+ provinces, and ourselves, they are trying to urge us there to consent that
+ the promise be not made to the Kings of France and Great Britain as
+ mediators, although the proposition came from the Spanish side. After we
+ had renounced, by desire of his Majesty, the right to refer the promise to
+ the Treaty of Xanten, it was judged by both kings to be needful and
+ substantial that the promise be made to their Majesties. To change this
+ now would be prejudicial to the kings, to the electors, the duchies, and
+ to our commonwealth; to do us a wrong and to leave us naked. France
+ maintains her position as becoming and necessary. That Great Britain
+ should swerve from it is not to be digested here. You will do your utmost
+ according to my previous instructions to prevent any pressure to this end.
+ You will also see that the name of the Emperor is mentioned neither in the
+ preamble nor the articles of the treaty. It would be contrary to all our
+ policy since 1610. You may be firmly convinced that malice is lurking
+ under the Emperor's name, and that he and the King of Spain and their
+ adherents, now as before, are attempting a sequestration. This is simply a
+ pretext to bring those principalities and provinces into the hands of the
+ Spaniards, for which they have been labouring these thirty years. We are
+ constantly cheated by these Spanish tricks. Their intention is to hold
+ Wesel and all the other places until the conclusion of the Italian affair,
+ and then to strike a great blow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly were never words more full of sound statesmanship, and of
+ prophecy too soon to be fulfilled, than these simple but pregnant
+ warnings. They awakened but little response from the English government
+ save cavils and teasing reminders that Wesel had been the cradle of German
+ Calvinism, the Rhenish Geneva, and that it was sinful to leave it longer
+ in the hands of Spain. As if the Advocate had not proved to demonstration
+ that to stock hands for a new deal at that moment was to give up the game
+ altogether.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His influence in France was always greater than in England, and this had
+ likewise been the case with William the Silent. And even now that the
+ Spanish matrimonial alliance was almost a settled matter at the French
+ court, while with the English king it was but a perpetual will-o'the-wisp
+ conducting to quagmires ineffable, the government at Paris sustained the
+ policy of the Advocate with tolerable fidelity, while it was constantly
+ and most capriciously traversed by James.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld sighed over these approaching nuptials, but did not yet despair.
+ "We hope that the Spanish-French marriages," he said, "may be broken up of
+ themselves; but we fear that if we should attempt to delay or prevent them
+ authoritatively, or in conjunction with others, the effort would have the
+ contrary effect."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this certainly he was doomed to disappointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had already notified the French court of the absolute necessity of the
+ great points to be insisted upon in the treaty, and there he found more
+ docility than in London or Newmarket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All summer he was occupied with this most important matter, uttering
+ Cassandra-like warnings into ears wilfully deaf. The States had gone as
+ far as possible in concession. To go farther would be to wreck the great
+ cause upon the very quicksands which he had so ceaselessly pointed out.
+ "We hope that nothing further will be asked of us, no scruples be felt as
+ to our good intentions," he said, "and that if Spain and the Archdukes are
+ not ready now to fulfil the treaty, their Majesties will know how to
+ resent this trifling with their authority and dignity, and how to set
+ matters to rights with their own hands in the duchies. A new treaty, still
+ less a sequestration, is not to be thought of for a moment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the month of August came and still the names of the mediating kings
+ were not on the treaty, and still the spectre of sequestration had not
+ been laid. On the contrary, the peace of Asti, huddled up between Spain
+ and Savoy, to be soon broken again, had caused new and painful
+ apprehensions of an attempt at sequestration, for it was established by
+ several articles in that treaty that all questions between Savoy and
+ Mantua should be referred to the Emperor's decision. This precedent was
+ sure to be followed in the duchies if not resisted by force, as it had
+ been so successfully resisted five years before by the armies of the
+ States associated with those of France. Moreover the first step at
+ sequestration had been actually taken. The Emperor had peremptorily
+ summoned the Elector of Brandenburg and all other parties interested to
+ appear before him on the 1st of August in Prague. There could be but one
+ object in this citation, to drive Brandenburg and the States out of the
+ duchies until the Imperial decision as to the legitimate sovereignty
+ should be given. Neuburg being already disposed of and his claims ceded to
+ the Emperor, what possibility was there in such circumstances of saving
+ one scrap of the territory from the clutch of the League? None certainly
+ if the Republic faltered in its determination, and yielded to the cowardly
+ advice of James. "To comply with the summons," said Barneveld, "and submit
+ to its consequences will be an irreparable injury to the electoral house
+ of Brandenburg, to the duchies, and to our co-religionists everywhere, and
+ a very great disgrace to both their Majesties and to us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He continued, through the ambassador in London, to hold up to the King, in
+ respectful but plain language, the shamelessness of his conduct in
+ dispensing the enemy from his pledge to the mediators, when the Republic
+ expressly, in deference to James, had given up the ampler guarantees of
+ the treaty. The arrangement had been solemnly made, and consented to by
+ all the provinces, acting in their separate and sovereign capacity. Such a
+ radical change, even if it were otherwise permissible, could not be made
+ without long debates, consultations, and votes by the several states. What
+ could be more fatal at such a crisis than this childish and causeless
+ delay. There could be no doubt in any statesman's eyes that the Spanish
+ party meant war and a preparatory hoodwinking. And it was even worse for
+ the government of the Republic to be outwitted in diplomacy than beaten in
+ the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Every man here," said the Advocate, "has more apprehension of fraud than
+ of force. According to the constitution of our state, to be overcome by
+ superior power must be endured, but to be overreached by trickery is a
+ reproach to the government."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The summer passed away. The States maintained their positions in the
+ duchies, notwithstanding the objurgations of James, and Barneveld remained
+ on his watch-tower observing every movement of the fast-approaching war,
+ and refusing at the price of the whole territory in dispute to rescue
+ Wesel and Aix-la-Chapelle from the grasp of the League.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Caron came to the Hague to have personal consultations with the
+ States-General, the Advocate, and Prince Maurice, and returned before the
+ close of the year. He had an audience of the King at the palace of
+ Whitehall early in November, and found him as immovable as ever in his
+ apathetic attitude in regard to the affairs of Germany. The murder of Sir
+ Thomas Overbury and the obscene scandals concerning the King's beloved
+ Carr and his notorious bride were then occupying the whole attention of
+ the monarch, so that he had not even time for theological lucubrations,
+ still less for affairs of state on which the peace of Christendom and the
+ fate of his own children were hanging.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ambassador found him sulky and dictatorial, but insisted on expressing
+ once more to him the apprehensions felt by the States-General in regard to
+ the trickery of the Spanish party in the matter of Cleve and Julich. He
+ assured his Majesty that they had no intention of maintaining the Treaty
+ of Xanten, and respectfully requested that the King would no longer urge
+ the States to surrender the places held by them. It was a matter of vital
+ importance to retain them, he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Henry Wotton told me," replied James, "that the States at his arrival
+ were assembled to deliberate on this matter, and he had no doubt that they
+ would take a resolution in conformity with my intention. Now I see very
+ well that you don't mean to give up the places. If I had known that
+ before, I should not have warned the Archduke so many times, which I did
+ at the desire of the States themselves. And now that the Archdukes are
+ ready to restore their cities, you insist on holding yours. That is the
+ dish you set before me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And upon this James swore a mighty oath, and beat himself upon the breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now and nevermore will I trouble myself about the States' affairs, come
+ what come will," he continued. "I have always been upright in my words and
+ my deeds, and I am not going to embark myself in a wicked war because the
+ States have plunged themselves into one so entirely unjust. Next summer
+ the Spaniard means to divide himself into two or three armies in order to
+ begin his enterprises in Germany."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Caron respectfully intimated that these enterprises would be most
+ conveniently carried on from the very advantageous positions which he
+ occupied in the duchies. "No," said the King, "he must restore them on the
+ same day on which you make your surrender, and he will hardly come back in
+ a hurry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quite the contrary," said the Ambassador, "they will be back again in a
+ twinkling, and before we have the slightest warning of their intention."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it signified not the least what Caron said. The King continued to
+ vociferate that the States had never had any intention of restoring the
+ cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mean to keep them for yourselves," he cried, "which is the greatest
+ injustice that could be perpetrated. You have no right to them, and they
+ belong to other people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ambassador reminded him that the Elector of Brandenburg was well
+ satisfied that they should be occupied by the States for his greater
+ security and until the dispute should be concluded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And that will never be," said James; "never, never. The States are
+ powerful enough to carry on the war all alone and against all the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so he went on, furiously reiterating the words with which he had begun
+ the conversation, "without accepting any reasons whatever in payment," as
+ poor Caron observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It makes me very sad," said the Ambassador, "to find your Majesty so
+ impatient and so resolved. If the names of the kings are to be omitted
+ from the document, the Treaty of Xanten should at least be modified
+ accordingly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing of the kind," said James; "I don't understand it so at all. I
+ speak plainly and without equivocation. It must be enough for the States
+ that I promise them, in case the enemy is cheating or is trying to play
+ any trick whatever, or is seeking to break the Treaty of Xanten in a
+ single point, to come to their assistance in person."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And again the warlike James swore a big oath and smote his breast,
+ affirming that he meant everything sincerely; that he cheated no one, but
+ always spoke his thoughts right on, clearly and uprightly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was certainly not a cheerful prospect for the States. Their chief ally
+ was determined that they should disarm, should strip themselves naked,
+ when the mightiest conspiracy against the religious freedom and
+ international independence of Europe ever imagined was perfecting itself
+ before their eyes, and when hostile armies, more numerous than ever before
+ known, were at their very door. To wait until the enemy was at their
+ throat, and then to rely upon a king who trembled at the sight of a drawn
+ sword, was hardly the highest statesmanship. Even if it had been the
+ chivalrous Henry instead of the pacific James that had held out the
+ promise of help, they would have been mad to follow such counsel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conversation lasted more than an hour. It was in vain that Caron
+ painted in dark colours the cruel deeds done by the Spaniards in Mulheim
+ and Aachen, and the proceedings of the Archbishop of Cologne in Rees. The
+ King was besotted, and no impression could be made upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At any rate," said the Envoy, "the arrangement cannot be concluded
+ without the King of France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What excuse is that?" said James. "Now that the King is entirely Spanish,
+ you are trying to excuse your delays by referring to him. You have
+ deferred rescuing the poor city of Wesel from the hands of the Spaniard
+ long enough. I am amazed to have heard never a word from you on that
+ subject since your departure. I had expressed my wish to you clearly
+ enough that you should inform the States of my intention to give them any
+ assurance they chose to demand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Caron was much disappointed at the humour of his Majesty. Coming freshly
+ as he did from the council of the States, and almost from the seat of war,
+ he had hoped to convince and content him. But the King was very angry with
+ the States for putting him so completely in the wrong. He had also been
+ much annoyed at their having failed to notify him of their military
+ demonstration in the Electorate of Cologne to avenge the cruelties
+ practised upon the Protestants there. He asked Caron if he was instructed
+ to give him information regarding it. Being answered in the negative, he
+ said he had thought himself of sufficient importance to the States and
+ enough in their confidence to be apprised of their military movements. It
+ was for this, he said, that his ambassador sat in their council. Caron
+ expressed the opinion that warlike enterprises of the kind should be kept
+ as secret as possible in order to be successful. This the King disputed,
+ and loudly declared his vexation at being left in ignorance of the matter.
+ The Ambassador excused himself as well as he could, on the ground that he
+ had been in Zealand when the troops were marching, but told the King his
+ impression that they had been sent to chastise the people of Cologne for
+ their cruelty in burning and utterly destroying the city of Mulheim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is none of your affair," said the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me, your Majesty," replied Caron, "they are our fellow
+ religionists, and some one at least ought to resent the cruelty practised
+ upon them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King admitted that the destruction of the city had been an unheard&mdash;of
+ cruelty, and then passed on to speak of the quarrel between the Duke and
+ City of Brunswick, and other matters. The interview ended, and the
+ Ambassador, very downhearted, went to confer with the Secretary of State
+ Sir Ralph Winwood, and Sir Henry Wotton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He assured these gentlemen that without fully consulting the French
+ government these radical changes in the negotiations would never be
+ consented to by the States. Winwood promised to confer at once with the
+ French ambassador, admitting it to be impossible for the King to take up
+ this matter alone. He would also talk with the Archduke's ambassador next
+ day noon at dinner, who was about leaving for Brussels, and "he would put
+ something into his hand that he might take home with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When he is fairly gone," said Caron, "it is to be hoped that the King's
+ head will no longer be so muddled about these things. I wish it with all
+ my heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a dismal prospect for the States. The one ally on whom they had a
+ right to depend, the ex-Calvinist and royal Defender of the Faith, in this
+ mortal combat of Protestantism with the League, was slipping out of their
+ grasp with distracting lubricity. On the other hand, the Most Christian
+ King, a boy of fourteen years, was still in the control of a mother heart
+ and soul with the League&mdash;so far as she had heart or soul&mdash;was
+ betrothed to the daughter of Spain, and saw his kingdom torn to pieces and
+ almost literally divided among themselves by rebellious princes, who made
+ use of the Spanish marriages as a pretext for unceasing civil war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen-Mother was at that moment at Bordeaux, and an emissary from the
+ princes was in London. James had sent to offer his mediation between them
+ and the Queen. He was fond of mediation. He considered it his special
+ mission in the world to mediate. He imagined himself as looked up to by
+ the nations as the great arbitrator of Christendom, and was wont to issue
+ his decrees as if binding in force and infallible by nature. He had
+ protested vigorously against the Spanish-French marriages, and declared
+ that the princes were justified in formalizing an opposition to them, at
+ least until affairs in France were restored to something like order. He
+ warned the Queen against throwing the kingdom "into the combustion of war
+ without necessity," and declared that, if she would trust to his guidance,
+ she might make use of him as if her affairs were his own. An indispensable
+ condition for much assistance, however, would be that the marriages should
+ be put off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As James was himself pursuing a Spanish marriage for his son as the chief
+ end and aim of his existence, there was something almost humorous in this
+ protest to the Queen-Dowager and in his encouragement of mutiny in France
+ in order to prevent a catastrophe there which he desired at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same agent of the princes, de Monbaran by name, was also privately
+ accredited by them to the States with instructions to borrow 200,000
+ crowns of them if he could. But so long as the policy of the Republic was
+ directed by Barneveld, it was not very probable that, while maintaining
+ friendly and even intimate relations with the legitimate government, she
+ would enter into negotiations with rebels against it, whether princes or
+ plebeians, and oblige them with loans. "He will call on me soon, no
+ doubt," said Caron, "but being so well instructed as to your Mightinesses
+ intentions in this matter, I hope I shall keep him away from you."
+ Monbaran was accordingly kept away, but a few weeks later another emissary
+ of Conde and Bouillon made his appearance at the Hague, de Valigny by
+ name. He asked for money and for soldiers to reinforce Bouillon's city of
+ Sedan, but he was refused an audience of the States-General. Even the
+ martial ardour of Maurice and his sympathy for his relatives were cooled
+ by this direct assault on his pocket. "The Prince," wrote the French
+ ambassador, du Maurier, "will not furnish him or his adherents a thousand
+ crowns, not if they had death between their teeth. Those who think it do
+ not know how he loves his money."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the very last days of the year (1615) Caron had another interview with
+ the King in which James was very benignant. He told the Ambassador that he
+ should wish the States to send him some special commissioners to make a
+ new treaty with him, and to treat of all unsettled affairs which were
+ daily arising between the inhabitants of the respective countries. He
+ wished to make a firmer union and accord between Great Britain and the
+ Netherlands. He was very desirous of this, "because," said he, "if we can
+ unite with and understand each other, we have under God no one what ever
+ to fear, however mighty they may be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Caron duly notified Barneveld of these enthusiastic expressions of his
+ Majesty. The Advocate too was most desirous of settling the troublesome
+ questions about the cloth trade, the piracies, and other matters, and was
+ in favour of the special commission. In regard to a new treaty of alliance
+ thus loosely and vaguely suggested, he was not so sanguine however. He had
+ too much difficulty in enforcing the interests of Protestantism in the
+ duchies against the infatuation of James in regard to Spain, and he was
+ too well aware of the Spanish marriage delusion, which was the key to the
+ King's whole policy, to put much faith in these casual outbursts of
+ eternal friendship with the States. He contented himself therefore with
+ cautioning Caron to pause before committing himself to any such projects.
+ He had frequently instructed him, however, to bring the disputed questions
+ to his Majesty's notice as often as possible with a view to amicable
+ arrangement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This preventive policy in regard to France was highly approved by
+ Barneveld, who was willing to share in the blame profusely heaped upon
+ such sincere patriots and devoted Protestants as Duplessis-Mornay and
+ others, who saw small advantage to the great cause from a mutiny against
+ established government, bad as it was, led by such intriguers as Conde and
+ Bouillon. Men who had recently been in the pay of Spain, and one of whom
+ had been cognizant of Biron's plot against the throne and life of Henry
+ IV., to whom sedition was native atmosphere and daily bread, were not
+ likely to establish a much more wholesome administration than that of Mary
+ de' Medici. Prince Maurice sympathized with his relatives by marriage, who
+ were leading the civil commotions in France and endeavouring to obtain
+ funds in the Netherlands. It is needless to say that Francis Aerssens was
+ deep in their intrigues, and feeding full the grudge which the Stadholder
+ already bore the Advocate for his policy on this occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate thought it best to wait until the young king should himself
+ rise in mutiny against his mother and her minions. Perhaps the downfall of
+ the Concini's and their dowager and the escape of Lewis from thraldom
+ might not be so distant as it seemed. Meantime this was the legal
+ government, bound to the States by treaties of friendship and alliance,
+ and it would be a poor return for the many favours and the constant aid
+ bestowed by Henry IV. on the Republic, and an imbecile mode of avenging
+ his murder to help throw his kingdom into bloodshed and confusion before
+ his son was able to act for himself. At the same time he did his best to
+ cultivate amicable relations with the princes, while scrupulously
+ abstaining from any sympathy with their movements. "If the Prince and the
+ other gentlemen come to court," he wrote to Langerac, "you will treat them
+ with all possible caresses so far as can be done without disrespect to the
+ government."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the British court was occupied with the foul details of the Overbury
+ murder and its consequences, a crime of a more commonplace nature, but
+ perhaps not entirely without influence on great political events, had
+ startled the citizens of the Hague. It was committed in the apartments of
+ the Stadholder and almost under his very eyes. A jeweller of Amsterdam,
+ one John van Wely, had come to the court of Maurice to lay before him a
+ choice collection of rare jewellery. In his caskets were rubies and
+ diamonds to the value of more than 100,000 florins, which would be the
+ equivalent of perhaps ten times as much to-day. In the Prince's absence
+ the merchant was received by a confidential groom of the chambers, John of
+ Paris by name, and by him, with the aid of a third John, a soldier of his
+ Excellency's guard, called Jean de la Vigne, murdered on the spot. The
+ deed was done in the Prince's private study. The unfortunate jeweller was
+ shot, and to make sure was strangled with the blue riband of the Order of
+ the Garter recently conferred upon Maurice, and which happened to be lying
+ conspicuously in the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ruffians had barely time to take possession of the booty, to thrust
+ the body behind the tapestry of the chamber, and to remove the more
+ startling evidences of the crime, when the Prince arrived. He supped soon
+ afterwards in the same room, the murdered jeweller still lying behind the
+ arras. In the night the valet and soldier carried the corpse away from the
+ room, down the stairs, and through the great courtyard, where, strange to
+ say, no sentinels were on duty, and threw it into an ashpit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A deed so bloody, audacious, and stupid was of course soon discovered and
+ the murderers arrested and executed. Nothing would remove the incident
+ from the catalogue of vulgar crimes, or even entitle it to a place in
+ history save a single circumstance. The celebrated divine John
+ Uytenbogaert, leader among the Arminians, devoted friend of Barneveld, and
+ up to that moment the favorite preacher of Maurice, stigmatized indeed, as
+ we have seen, by the orthodox as "Court Trumpeter," was requested by the
+ Prince to prepare the chief criminal for death. He did so, and from that
+ day forth the Stadholder ceased to be his friend, although regularly
+ listening to his preaching in the French chapel of the court for more than
+ a year longer. Some time afterwards the Advocate informed Uytenbogaert
+ that the Prince was very much embittered against him. "I knew it well,"
+ says the clergyman in his memoirs, "but not the reasons for it, nor do I
+ exactly comprehend them to this day. Truly I have some ideas relating to
+ certain things which I was obliged to do in discharge of my official duty,
+ but I will not insist upon them, nor will I reveal them to any man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were mysterious words, and the mystery is said to have been
+ explained; for it would seem that the eminent preacher was not so entirely
+ reticent among his confidential friends as before the public. Uytenbogaert&mdash;so
+ ran the tale&mdash;in the course of his conversation with the condemned
+ murderer, John of Paris, expressed a natural surprise that there should
+ have been no soldiers on guard in the court on the evening when the crime
+ was committed and the body subsequently removed. The valet informed him
+ that he had for a long time been empowered by the Prince to withdraw the
+ sentinels from that station, and that they had been instructed to obey his
+ orders&mdash;Maurice not caring that they should be witnesses to the
+ equivocal kind of female society that John of Paris was in the habit of
+ introducing of an evening to his master's apartments. The valet had made
+ use of this privilege on the night in question to rid himself of the
+ soldiers who would have been otherwise on guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The preacher felt it his duty to communicate these statements to the
+ Prince, and to make perhaps a somewhat severe comment upon them. Maurice
+ received the information sullenly, and, as soon as Uytenbogaert was gone,
+ fell into a violent passion, throwing his hat upon the floor, stamping
+ upon it, refusing to eat his supper, and allowing no one to speak to him.
+ Next day some courtiers asked the clergyman what in the world he had been
+ saying to the Stadholder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that time forth his former partiality for the divine, on whose
+ preaching he had been a regular attendant, was changed to hatred; a
+ sentiment which lent a lurid colour to subsequent events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attempts of the Spanish party by chicane or by force to get possession
+ of the coveted territories continued year after year, and were steadily
+ thwarted by the watchfulness of the States under guidance of Barneveld.
+ The martial stadholder was more than ever for open war, in which he was
+ opposed by the Advocate, whose object was to postpone and, if possible, to
+ avert altogether the dread catastrophe which he foresaw impending over
+ Europe. The Xanten arrangement seemed hopelessly thrown to the winds, nor
+ was it destined to be carried out; the whole question of sovereignty and
+ of mastership in those territories being swept subsequently into the
+ general whirlpool of the Thirty Years' War. So long as there was a
+ possibility of settlement upon that basis, the Advocate was in favour of
+ settlement, but to give up the guarantees and play into the hands of the
+ Catholic League was in his mind to make the Republic one of the
+ conspirators against the liberties of Christendom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Spain, the Emperor and the rest of them," said he, "make all three modes
+ of pacification&mdash;the treaty, the guarantee by the mediating kings,
+ the administration divided between the possessory princes&mdash;alike
+ impossible. They mean, under pretext of sequestration, to make themselves
+ absolute masters there. I have no doubt that Villeroy means sincerely, and
+ understands the matter, but meantime we sit by the fire and burn. If the
+ conflagration is neglected, all the world will throw the blame on us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the Spaniards continued to amuse the British king with assurances of
+ their frank desire to leave those fortresses and territories which they
+ really meant to hold till the crack of doom. And while Gondemar was making
+ these ingenuous assertions in London, his colleagues at Paris and at
+ Brussels distinctly and openly declared that there was no authority
+ whatever for them, that the Ambassador had received no such instructions,
+ and that there was no thought of giving up Wesel or any other of the
+ Protestant strongholds captured, whether in the duchies or out of them.
+ And Gondemar, still more to keep that monarch in subjection, had been
+ unusually flattering in regard to the Spanish marriage. "We are in great
+ alarm here," said the Advocate, "at the tidings that the projected
+ alliance of the Prince of Wales with the daughter of Spain is to be
+ renewed; from which nothing good for his Majesty's person, his kingdom,
+ nor for our state can be presaged. We live in hope that it will never be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the other marriage was made. Despite the protest of James, the
+ forebodings of Barneveld, and the mutiny of the princes, the youthful king
+ of France had espoused Anne of Austria early in the year 1616. The British
+ king did his best to keep on terms with France and Spain, and by no means
+ renounced his own hopes. At the same time, while fixed as ever in his
+ approbation of the policy pursued by the Emperor and the League, and as
+ deeply convinced of their artlessness in regard to the duchies, the
+ Protestant princes of Germany, and the Republic, he manifested more
+ cordiality than usual in his relations with the States. Minor questions
+ between the countries he was desirous of arranging&mdash;so far as matters
+ of state could be arranged by orations&mdash;and among the most pressing
+ of these affairs were the systematic piracy existing and encouraged in
+ English ports, to the great damage of all seafaring nations and to the
+ Hollanders most of all, and the quarrel about the exportation of undyed
+ cloths, which had almost caused a total cessation of the woollen trade
+ between the two countries. The English, to encourage their own artisans,
+ had forbidden the export of undyed cloths, and the Dutch had retorted by
+ prohibiting the import of dyed ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King had good sense enough to see the absurdity of this condition of
+ things, and it will be remembered that Barneveld had frequently urged upon
+ the Dutch ambassador to bring his Majesty's attention to these dangerous
+ disputes. Now that the recovery of the cautionary towns had been so
+ dexterously and amicably accomplished, and at so cheap a rate, it seemed a
+ propitious moment to proceed to a general extinction of what would now be
+ called "burning questions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James was desirous that new high commissioners might be sent from the
+ States to confer with himself and his ministers upon the subjects just
+ indicated, as well as upon the fishery questions as regarded both
+ Greenland and Scotland, and upon the general affairs of India.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was convinced, he said to Caron, that the sea had become more and more
+ unsafe and so full of freebooters that the like was never seen or heard of
+ before. It will be remembered that the Advocate had recently called his
+ attention to the fact that the Dutch merchants had lost in two months
+ 800,000 florins' worth of goods by English pirates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King now assured the Ambassador of his intention of equipping a fleet
+ out of hand and to send it forth as speedily as possible under command of
+ a distinguished nobleman, who would put his honour and credit in a
+ successful expedition, without any connivance or dissimulation whatever.
+ In order thoroughly to scour these pirates from the seas, he expressed the
+ hope that their Mightinesses the States would do the same either jointly
+ or separately as they thought most advisable. Caron bluntly replied that
+ the States had already ten or twelve war-ships at sea for this purpose,
+ but that unfortunately, instead of finding any help from the English in
+ this regard, they had always found the pirates favoured in his Majesty's
+ ports, especially in Ireland and Wales.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thus they have so increased in numbers," continued the Ambassador, "that
+ I quite believe what your Majesty says, that not a ship can pass with
+ safety over the seas. More over, your Majesty has been graciously pleased
+ to pardon several of these corsairs, in consequence of which they have
+ become so impudent as to swarm everywhere, even in the river Thames, where
+ they are perpetually pillaging honest merchantmen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I confess," said the King, "to having pardoned a certain Manning, but
+ this was for the sake of his old father, and I never did anything so
+ unwillingly in my life. But I swear that if it were the best nobleman in
+ England, I would never grant one of them a pardon again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Caron expressed his joy at hearing such good intentions on the part of his
+ Majesty, and assured him that the States-General would be equally
+ delighted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of the summer the Dutch ambassador had many opportunities of
+ seeing the King very confidentially, James having given him the use of the
+ royal park at Bayscot, so that during the royal visits to that place Caron
+ was lodged under his roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the whole, James had much regard and respect for Noel de Caron. He knew
+ him to be able, although he thought him tiresome. It is amusing to observe
+ the King and Ambassador in their utterances to confidential friends each
+ frequently making the charge of tediousness against the other. "Caron's
+ general education," said James on one occasion to Cecil, "cannot amend his
+ native German prolixity, for had I not interrupted him, it had been
+ tomorrow morning before I had begun to speak. God preserve me from hearing
+ a cause debated between Don Diego and him! . . . But in truth it is good
+ dealing with so wise and honest a man, although he be somewhat longsome."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Subsequently James came to Whitehall for a time, and then stopped at
+ Theobalds for a few days on his way to Newmarket, where he stayed until
+ Christmas. At Theobalds he sent again for the Ambassador, saying that at
+ Whitehall he was so broken down with affairs that it would be impossible
+ to live if he stayed there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He asked if the States were soon to send the commissioners, according to
+ his request, to confer in regard to the cloth-trade. Without interference
+ of the two governments, he said, the matter would never be settled. The
+ merchants of the two countries would never agree except under higher
+ authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have heard both parties," he said, "the new and the old companies, two
+ or three times in full council, and tried to bring them to an agreement,
+ but it won't do. I have heard that My Lords the States have been hearing
+ both sides, English and the Hollanders, over and over again, and that the
+ States have passed a provisional resolution, which however does not suit
+ us. Now it is not reasonable, as we are allies, that our merchants should
+ be obliged to send their cloths roundabout, not being allowed either to
+ sell them in the United Provinces or to pass them through your
+ territories. I wish I could talk with them myself, for I am certain, if
+ they would send some one here, we could make an agreement. It is not
+ necessary that one should take everything from them, or that one should
+ refuse everything to us. I am sure there are people of sense in your
+ assembly who will justify me in favouring my own people so far as I
+ reasonably can, and I know very well that My Lords the States must stand
+ up for their own citizens. If we have been driving this matter to an
+ extreme and see that we are ruining each other, we must take it up again
+ in other fashion, for Yesterday is the preceptor of To-morrow. Let the
+ commissioners come as soon as possible. I know they have complaints to
+ make, and I have my complaints also. Therefore we must listen to each
+ other, for I protest before God that I consider the community of your
+ state with mine to be so entire that, if one goes to perdition, the other
+ must quickly follow it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus spoke James, like a wise and thoughtful sovereign interested in the
+ welfare of his subjects and allies, with enlightened ideas for the time
+ upon public economy. It is difficult, in the man conversing thus amicably
+ and sensibly with the Dutch ambassador, to realise the shrill pedant
+ shrieking against Vorstius, the crapulous comrade of Carrs and Steenies,
+ the fawning solicitor of Spanish marriages, the "pepperer" and hangman of
+ Puritans, the butt and dupe of Gondemar and Spinola.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I protest," he said further, "that I seek nothing in your state but all
+ possible friendship and good fellowship. My own subjects complain
+ sometimes that your people follow too closely on their heels, and confess
+ that your industry goes far above their own. If this be so, it is a lean
+ kind of reproach; for the English should rather study to follow you.
+ Nevertheless, when industry is directed by malice, each may easily be
+ attempting to snap an advantage from the other. I have sometimes
+ complained of many other things in which my subjects suffered great
+ injustice from you, but all that is excusable. I will willingly listen to
+ your people and grant them to be in the right when they are so. But I will
+ never allow them to be in the right when they mistrust me. If I had been
+ like many other princes, I should never have let the advantage of the
+ cautionary towns slip out of my fingers, but rather by means of them
+ attempted to get even a stronger hold on your country. I have had plenty
+ of warnings from great statesmen in France, Germany, and other nations
+ that I ought to give them up nevermore. Yet you know how frankly and
+ sincerely I acquitted myself in that matter without ever making
+ pretensions upon your state than the pretensions I still make to your
+ friendship and co-operation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James, after this allusion to an important transaction to be explained in
+ the next chapter, then made an observation or two on a subject which was
+ rapidly overtopping all others in importance to the States, and his
+ expressions were singularly at variance with his last utterances in that
+ regard. "I tell you," he said, "that you have no right to mistrust me in
+ anything, not even in the matter of religion. I grieve indeed to hear that
+ your religious troubles continue. You know that in the beginning I
+ occupied myself with this affair, but fearing that my course might be
+ misunderstood, and that it might be supposed that I was seeking to
+ exercise authority in your republic, I gave it up, and I will never
+ interfere with the matter again, but will ever pray God that he may give
+ you a happy issue out of these troubles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas! if the King had always kept himself on that height of amiable
+ neutrality, if he had been able to govern himself in the future by these
+ simplest principles of reason and justice, there might have been perhaps a
+ happier issue from the troubles than time was like to reveal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once more James referred to the crisis pending in German affairs, and as
+ usual spoke of the Clove and Julich question as if it were a simple matter
+ to be settled by a few strokes of the pen and a pennyworth of sealing-wax,
+ instead of being the opening act in a vast tragedy, of which neither he,
+ nor Carom nor Barneveld, nor Prince Maurice, nor the youthful king of
+ France, nor Philip, nor Matthias, nor any of the men now foremost in the
+ conduct of affairs, was destined to see the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King informed Caron that he had just received most satisfactory
+ assurances from the Spanish ambassador in his last audience at Whitehall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has announced to me on the part of the King his master with great
+ compliments that his Majesty seeks to please me and satisfy me in
+ everything that I could possibly desire of him," said James, rolling over
+ with satisfaction these unctuous phrases as if they really had any meaning
+ whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His Majesty says further," added the King, "that as he has been at
+ various times admonished by me, and is daily admonished by other princes,
+ that he ought to execute the treaty of Xanten by surrendering the city of
+ Wesel and all other places occupied by Spinola, he now declares himself
+ ready to carry out that treaty in every point. He will accordingly
+ instruct the Archduke to do this, provided the Margrave of Brandenburg and
+ the States will do the same in regard to their captured places. As he
+ understands however that the States have been fortifying Julich even as he
+ might fortify Wesel, he would be glad that no innovation be made before
+ the end of the coming month of March. When this term shall have expired,
+ he will no longer be bound by these offers, but will proceed to fortify
+ Wesel and the other places, and to hold them as he best may for himself.
+ Respect for me has alone induced his Majesty to make this resolution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have already seen that the Spanish ambassador in Paris was at this very
+ time loudly declaring that his colleague in London had no commission
+ whatever to make these propositions. Nor when they were in the slightest
+ degree analysed, did they appear after all to be much better than threats.
+ Not a word was said of guarantees. The names of the two kings were not
+ mentioned. It was nothing but Albert and Spinola then as always, and a
+ recommendation that Brandenburg and the States and all the Protestant
+ princes of Germany should trust to the candour of the Catholic League.
+ Caron pointed out to the King that in these proposals there were no
+ guarantees nor even promises that the fortresses would not be reoccupied
+ at convenience of the Spaniards. He engaged however to report the whole
+ statement to his masters. A few weeks afterwards the Advocate replied in
+ his usual vein, reminding the King through the Ambassador that the
+ Republic feared fraud on the part of the League much more than force. He
+ also laid stress on the affairs of Italy, considering the fate of Savoy
+ and the conflicts in which Venice was engaged as components of a general
+ scheme. The States had been much solicited, as we have seen, to render
+ assistance to the Duke of Savoy, the temporary peace of Asti being already
+ broken, and Barneveld had been unceasing in his efforts to arouse France
+ as well as England to the danger to themselves and to all Christendom
+ should Savoy be crushed. We shall have occasion to see the prominent part
+ reserved to Savoy in the fast opening debate in Germany. Meantime the
+ States had sent one Count of Nassau with a couple of companies to Charles
+ Emmanuel, while another (Ernest) had just gone to Venice at the head of
+ more than three thousand adventurers. With so many powerful armies at
+ their throats, as Barneveld had more than once observed, it was not easy
+ for them to despatch large forces to the other end of Europe, but he
+ justly reminded his allies that the States were now rendering more
+ effective help to the common cause by holding great Spanish armies in
+ check on their own frontier than if they assumed a more aggressive line in
+ the south. The Advocate, like every statesman worthy of the name, was
+ accustomed to sweep the whole horizon in his consideration of public
+ policy, and it will be observed that he always regarded various and
+ apparently distinct and isolated movements in different parts of Europe as
+ parts of one great whole. It is easy enough for us, centuries after the
+ record has been made up, to observe the gradual and, as it were,
+ harmonious manner in which the great Catholic conspiracy against the
+ liberties of Europe was unfolded in an ever widening sphere. But to the
+ eyes of contemporaries all was then misty and chaotic, and it required the
+ keen vision of a sage and a prophet to discern the awful shape which the
+ future might assume. Absorbed in the contemplation of these portentous
+ phenomena, it was not unnatural that the Advocate should attach less
+ significance to perturbations nearer home. Devoted as was his life to save
+ the great European cause of Protestantism, in which he considered
+ political and religious liberty bound up, from the absolute extinction
+ with which it was menaced, he neglected too much the furious hatreds
+ growing up among Protestants within the narrow limits of his own province.
+ He was destined one day to be rudely awakened. Meantime he was occupied
+ with organizing a general defence of Italy, Germany, France, and England,
+ as well as the Netherlands, against the designs of Spain and the League.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We wish to know," he said in answer to the affectionate messages and fine
+ promises of the King of Spain to James as reported by Caron, "what his
+ Majesty of Great Britain has done, is doing, and is resolved to do for the
+ Duke of Savoy and the Republic of Venice. If they ask you what we are
+ doing, answer that we with our forces and vigour are keeping off from the
+ throats of Savoy and Venice 2000 riders and 10,000 infantry, with which
+ forces, let alone their experience, more would be accomplished than with
+ four times the number of new troops brought to the field in Italy. This is
+ our succour, a great one and a very costly one, for the expense of
+ maintaining our armies to hold the enemy in check here is very great."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He alluded with his usual respectful and quiet scorn to the arrangements
+ by which James so wilfully allowed himself to be deceived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If the Spaniard really leaves the duchies," he said, "it is a grave
+ matter to decide whether on the one side he is not resolved by that means
+ to win more over us and the Elector of Brandenburg in the debateable land
+ in a few days than he could gain by force in many years, or on the other
+ whether by it he does not intend despatching 1200 or 1500 cavalry and 5000
+ or 6000 foot, all his most experienced soldiers, from the Netherlands to
+ Italy, in order to give the law at his pleasure to the Duke of Savoy and
+ the Republic of Venice, reserving his attack upon Germany and ourselves to
+ the last. The Spaniards, standing under a monarchical government, can in
+ one hour resolve to seize to-morrow all that they and we may abandon
+ to-day. And they can carry such a resolution into effect at once. Our form
+ of government does not permit this, so that our republic must be conserved
+ by distrust and good garrisons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus during this long period of half hostilities Barneveld, while
+ sincerely seeking to preserve the peace in Europe, was determined, if
+ possible, that the Republic should maintain the strongest defensive
+ position when the war which he foreboded should actually begin. Maurice
+ and the war party had blamed him for the obstacles which he interposed to
+ the outbreak of hostilities, while the British court, as we have seen, was
+ perpetually urging him to abate from his demands and abandon both the well
+ strengthened fortresses in the duchies and that strong citadel of distrust
+ which in his often repeated language he was determined never to surrender.
+ Spinola and the military party of Spain, while preaching peace, had been
+ in truth most anxious for fighting. "The only honour I desire henceforth,"
+ said that great commander, "is to give battle to Prince Maurice." The
+ generals were more anxious than the governments to make use of the
+ splendid armies arrayed against each other in such proximity that, the
+ signal for conflict not having been given, it was not uncommon for the
+ soldiers of the respective camps to aid each other in unloading munition
+ waggons, exchanging provisions and other articles of necessity, and
+ performing other small acts of mutual service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But heavy thunder clouds hanging over the earth so long and so closely
+ might burst into explosion at any moment. Had it not been for the
+ distracted condition of France, the infatuation of the English king, and
+ the astounding inertness of the princes of the German Union, great
+ advantages might have been gained by the Protestant party before the storm
+ should break. But, as the French ambassador at the Hague well observed,
+ "the great Protestant Union of Germany sat with folded arms while Hannibal
+ was at their gate, the princes of which it was composed amusing themselves
+ with staring at each other. It was verifying," he continued, bitterly,
+ "the saying of the Duke of Alva, 'Germany is an old dog which still can
+ bark, but has lost its teeth to bite with.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To such imbecility had that noble and gifted people&mdash;which had never
+ been organized into a nation since it crushed the Roman empire and
+ established a new civilization on its ruins, and was to wait centuries
+ longer until it should reconstruct itself into a whole&mdash;been reduced
+ by subdivision, disintegration, the perpetual dissolvent of religious
+ dispute, and the selfish policy of infinitesimal dynasties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ James still presses for the Payment of the Dutch Republic's Debt to
+ him&mdash;A Compromise effected, with Restitution of the Cautionary
+ Towns&mdash;Treaty of Loudun&mdash;James's Dream of a Spanish Marriage
+ revives&mdash;James visits Scotland&mdash;The States-General agree to furnish
+ Money and Troops in fulfilment of the Treaty of 1609&mdash;Death of
+ Concini&mdash;Villeroy returns to Power.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Besides matters of predestination there were other subjects political and
+ personal which increased the King's jealousy and hatred. The debt of the
+ Republic to the British crown, secured by mortgage of the important
+ sea-ports and fortified towns of Flushing, Brielle, Rammekens, and other
+ strong places, still existed. The possession of those places by England
+ was a constant danger and irritation to the States. It was an axe
+ perpetually held over their heads. It threatened their sovereignty, their
+ very existence. On more than one occasion, in foreign courts, the
+ representatives of the Netherlands had been exposed to the taunt that the
+ Republic was after all not an independent power, but a British province.
+ The gibe had always been repelled in a manner becoming the envoys of a
+ proud commonwealth; yet it was sufficiently galling that English garrisons
+ should continue to hold Dutch towns; one of them among the most valuable
+ seaports of the Republic,&mdash;the other the very cradle of its
+ independence, the seizure of which in Alva's days had always been reckoned
+ a splendid achievement. Moreover, by the fifth article of the treaty of
+ peace between James and Philip III., although the King had declared
+ himself bound by the treaties made by Elizabeth to deliver up the
+ cautionary towns to no one but the United States, he promised Spain to
+ allow those States a reasonable time to make peace with the Archdukes on
+ satisfactory conditions. Should they refuse to do so, he held himself
+ bound by no obligations to them, and would deal with the cities as he
+ thought proper, and as the Archdukes themselves might deem just.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King had always been furious at "the huge sum of money to be advanced,
+ nay, given, to the States," as he phrased it. "It is so far out of all
+ square," he had said, "as on my conscience I cannot think that ever they
+ craved it 'animo obtinendi,' but only by that objection to discourage me
+ from any thought of getting any repayment of my debts from them when they
+ shall be in peace. . . . Should I ruin myself for maintaining them? Should
+ I bestow as much on them as cometh to the value of my whole yearly rent?"
+ He had proceeded to say very plainly that, if the States did not make
+ great speed to pay him all his debt so soon as peace was established, he
+ should treat their pretence at independence with contempt, and propose
+ dividing their territory between himself and the King of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If they be so weak as they cannot subsist either in peace or war," he
+ said, "without I ruin myself for upholding them, in that case surely
+ 'minus malunv est eligendum,' the nearest harm is first to be eschewed, a
+ man will leap out of a burning ship and drown himself in the sea; and it
+ is doubtless a farther off harm for me to suffer them to fall again in the
+ hands of Spain, and let God provide for the danger that may with time fall
+ upon me or my posterity than presently to starve myself and mine with
+ putting the meat in their mouth. Nay, rather if they be so weak as they
+ can neither sustain themselves in peace nor war, let them leave this
+ vainglorious thirsting for the title of a free state (which no people are
+ worthy or able to enjoy that cannot stand by themselves like
+ substantives), and 'dividantur inter nos;' I mean, let their countries be
+ divided between France and me, otherwise the King of Spain shall be sure
+ to consume us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the eyes with which James had always regarded the great
+ commonwealth of which he affected to be the ally, while secretly aspiring
+ to be its sovereign, and such was his capacity to calculate political
+ forces and comprehend coming events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly the sword was hanging by a thread. The States had made no peace
+ either with the Archdukes or with Spain. They had made a truce, half the
+ term of which had already run by. At any moment the keys of their very
+ house-door might be placed in the hands of their arch enemy. Treacherous
+ and base as the deed would be, it might be defended by the letter of a
+ treaty in which the Republic had no part; and was there anything too
+ treacherous or too base to be dreaded from James Stuart?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the States owed the crown of England eight millions of florins,
+ equivalent to about L750,000. Where was this vast sum to be found? It was
+ clearly impossible for the States to beg or to borrow it, although they
+ were nearly as rich as any of the leading powers at that day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the merit of Barneveld, not only that he saw the chance for a good
+ bargain, but that he fully comprehended a great danger. Years long James
+ had pursued the phantom of a Spanish marriage for his son. To achieve this
+ mighty object, he had perverted the whole policy of the realm; he had
+ grovelled to those who despised him, had repaid attempts at wholesale
+ assassination with boundless sycophancy. It is difficult to imagine
+ anything more abject than the attitude of James towards Philip. Prince
+ Henry was dead, but Charles had now become Prince of Wales in his turn,
+ and there was a younger infanta whose hand was not yet disposed of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as the possible prize of a Most Catholic princess was dangling
+ before the eyes of the royal champion of Protestantism, so long there was
+ danger that the Netherlanders might wake up some fine morning and see the
+ flag of Spain waving over the walls of Flushing, Brielle, and Rammekens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the interest of Spain too that the envoys of James at the Hague
+ were perpetually goading Barneveld to cause the States' troops to be
+ withdrawn from the duchies and the illusory treaty of Xanten to be
+ executed. Instead of an eighth province added to the free Netherlands, the
+ result of such a procedure would have been to place that territory
+ enveloping them in the hands of the enemy; to strengthen and sharpen the
+ claws, as the Advocate had called them, by which Spain was seeking to
+ clutch and to destroy the Republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate steadily refused to countenance such policy in the duchies,
+ and he resolved on a sudden stroke to relieve the Commonwealth from the
+ incubus of the English mortgage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James was desperately pushed for money. His minions, as insatiable in
+ their demands on English wealth as the parasites who fed on the
+ Queen-Regent were exhaustive of the French exchequer, were greedier than
+ ever now that James, who feared to face a parliament disgusted with the
+ meanness of his policy and depravity of his life, could not be relied upon
+ to minister to their wants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate judiciously contrived that the proposal of a compromise
+ should come from the English government. Noel de Caron, the veteran
+ ambassador of the States in London, after receiving certain proposals,
+ offered, under instructions' from Barneveld, to pay L250,000 in full of
+ all demands. It was made to appear that the additional L250,000 was in
+ reality in advance of his instructions. The mouths of the minions watered
+ at the mention of so magnificent a sum of money in one lump.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bargain was struck. On the 11th June 1616, Sir Robert Sidney, who had
+ become Lord Lisle, gave over the city of Flushing to the States,
+ represented by the Seignior van Maldere, while Sir Horace Vere placed the
+ important town of Brielle in the hands of the Seignior van Mathenesse.
+ According to the terms of the bargain, the English garrisons were
+ converted into two regiments, respectively to be commanded by Lord Lisle's
+ son, now Sir Robert Sidney, and by Sir Horace Vere, and were to serve the
+ States. Lisle, who had been in the Netherlands since the days of his uncle
+ Leicester and his brother Sir Philip Sidney, now took his final departure
+ for England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus this ancient burthen had been taken off the Republic by the masterly
+ policy of the Advocate. A great source of dread for foreign complication
+ was closed for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French-Spanish marriages had been made. Henry IV. had not been
+ murdered in vain. Conde and his confederates had issued their manifesto. A
+ crisis came to the States, for Maurice, always inclined to take part for
+ the princes, and urged on by Aerssens, who was inspired by a deadly hatred
+ for the French government ever since they had insisted on his dismissal
+ from his post, and who fed the Stadholder's growing jealousy of the
+ Advocate to the full, was at times almost ready for joining in the
+ conflict. It was most difficult for the States-General, led by Barneveld,
+ to maintain relations of amity with a government controlled by Spain,
+ governed by the Concini's, and wafted to and fro by every wind that blew.
+ Still it was the government, and the States might soon be called upon, in
+ virtue of their treaties with Henry, confirmed by Mary de' Medici, not
+ only to prevent the daily desertion of officers and soldiers of the French
+ regiments to the rebellious party, but to send the regiments themselves to
+ the assistance of the King and Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There could be no doubt that the alliance of the French Huguenots at
+ Grenoble with the princes made the position of the States very critical.
+ Bouillon was loud in his demands upon Maurice and the States for money and
+ reinforcements, but the Prince fortunately understood the character of the
+ Duke and of Conde, and comprehended the nature of French politics too
+ clearly to be led into extremities by passion or by pique. He said loudly
+ to any one that chose to listen:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is not necessary to ruin the son in order to avenge the death of the
+ father. That should be left to the son, who alone has legitimate authority
+ to do it." Nothing could be more sensible, and the remark almost indicated
+ a belief on the Prince's part in Mary's complicity in the murder of her
+ husband. Duplessis-Mornay was in despair, and, like all true patriots and
+ men of earnest character, felt it almost an impossibility to choose
+ between the two ignoble parties contending for the possession of France,
+ and both secretly encouraged by France's deadly enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Treaty of Loudun followed, a treaty which, said du Maurier, had about
+ as many negotiators as there were individuals interested in the
+ arrangements. The rebels were forgiven, Conde sold himself out for a
+ million and a half livres and the presidency of the council, came to
+ court, and paraded himself in greater pomp and appearance of power than
+ ever. Four months afterwards he was arrested and imprisoned. He submitted
+ like a lamb, and offered to betray his confederates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ King James, faithful to his self-imposed part of mediator-general, which
+ he thought so well became him, had been busy in bringing about this
+ pacification, and had considered it eminently successful. He was now angry
+ at this unexpected result. He admitted that Conde had indulged in certain
+ follies and extravagancies, but these in his opinion all came out of the
+ quiver of the Spaniard, "who was the head of the whole intrigue." He
+ determined to recall Lord Hayes from Madrid and even Sir Thomas Edmonds
+ from Paris, so great was his indignation. But his wrath was likely to cool
+ under the soothing communications of Gondemar, and the rumour of the
+ marriage of the second infanta with the Prince of Wales soon afterwards
+ started into new life. "We hope," wrote Barneveld, "that the alliance of
+ his Highness the Prince of Wales with the daughter of the Spanish king
+ will make no further progress, as it will place us in the deepest
+ embarrassment and pain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the reports had been so rife at the English court in regard to this
+ dangerous scheme that Caron had stoutly gone to the King and asked him
+ what he was to think about it. "The King told me," said the Ambassador,
+ "that there was nothing at all in it, nor any appearance that anything
+ ever would come of it. It was true, he said, that on the overtures made to
+ him by the Spanish ambassador he had ordered his minister in Spain to
+ listen to what they had to say, and not to bear himself as if the
+ overtures would be rejected."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The coyness thus affected by James could hardly impose on so astute a
+ diplomatist as Noel de Caron, and the effect produced upon the policy of
+ one of the Republic's chief allies by the Spanish marriages naturally made
+ her statesmen shudder at the prospect of their other powerful friend
+ coming thus under the malign influence of Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He assured me, however," said the Envoy, "that the Spaniard is not
+ sincere in the matter, and that he has himself become so far alienated
+ from the scheme that we may sleep quietly upon it." And James appeared at
+ that moment so vexed at the turn affairs were taking in France, so wounded
+ in his self-love, and so bewildered by the ubiquitous nature of nets and
+ pitfalls spreading over Europe by Spain, that he really seemed waking from
+ his delusion. Even Caron was staggered? "In all his talk he appears so far
+ estranged from the Spaniard," said he, "that it would seem impossible that
+ he should consider this marriage as good for his state. I have also had
+ other advices on the subject which in the highest degree comfort me. Now
+ your Mightinesses may think whatever you like about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mood of the King was not likely to last long in so comfortable a
+ state. Meantime he took the part of Conde and the other princes, justified
+ their proceedings to the special envoy sent over by Mary de' Medici, and
+ wished the States to join with him in appealing to that Queen to let the
+ affair, for his sake, pass over once more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now I will tell your Mightinesses," said Caron, reverting once more
+ to the dreaded marriage which occupies so conspicuous a place in the
+ strangely mingled and party-coloured tissue of the history of those days,
+ "what the King has again been telling me about the alliance between his
+ son and the Infanta. He hears from Carleton that you are in very great
+ alarm lest this event may take place. He understands that the special
+ French envoy at the Hague, M. de la None, has been representing to you
+ that the King of Great Britain is following after and begging for the
+ daughter of Spain for his son. He says it is untrue. But it is true that
+ he has been sought and solicited thereto, and that in consequence there
+ have been talks and propositions and rejoinders, but nothing of any
+ moment. As he had already told me not to be alarmed until he should
+ himself give me cause for it, he expressed his amazement that I had not
+ informed your Mightinesses accordingly. He assured me again that he should
+ not proceed further in the business without communicating it to his good
+ friends and neighbours, that he considered My Lords the States as his best
+ friends and allies, who ought therefore to conceive no jealousy in the
+ matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This certainly was cold comfort. Caron knew well enough, not a clerk in
+ his office but knew well enough, that James had been pursuing this prize
+ for years. For the King to represent himself as persecuted by Spain to
+ give his son to the Infanta was about as ridiculous as it would have been
+ to pretend that Emperor Matthias was persuading him to let his son-in-law
+ accept the crown of Bohemia. It was admitted that negotiations for the
+ marriage were going on, and the assertion that the Spanish court was more
+ eager for it than the English government was not especially calculated to
+ allay the necessary alarm of the States at such a disaster. Nor was it
+ much more tranquillizing for them to be assured, not that the marriage was
+ off, but that, when it was settled, they, as the King's good friends and
+ neighbours, should have early information of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I told him," said the Ambassador, "that undoubtedly this matter was of
+ the highest 'importance to your Mightinesses, for it was not good for us
+ to sit between two kingdoms both so nearly allied with the Spanish
+ monarch, considering the pretensions he still maintained to sovereignty
+ over us. Although his Majesty might not now be willing to treat to our
+ prejudice, yet the affair itself in the sequence of time must of necessity
+ injure our commonwealth. We hoped therefore that it would never come to
+ pass."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Caron added that Ambassador Digby was just going to Spain on extraordinary
+ mission in regard to this affair, and that eight or ten gentlemen of the
+ council had been deputed to confer with his Majesty about it. He was still
+ inclined to believe that the whole negotiation would blow over, the King
+ continuing to exhort him not to be alarmed, and assuring him that there
+ were many occasions moving princes to treat of great affairs although
+ often without any effective issue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment too the King was in a state of vehement wrath with the
+ Spanish Netherlands on account of a stinging libel against himself, "an
+ infamous and wonderfully scandalous pamphlet," as he termed it, called
+ 'Corona Regis', recently published at Louvain. He had sent Sir John Bennet
+ as special ambassador to the Archdukes to demand from them justice and
+ condign and public chastisement on the author of the work&mdash;a rector
+ Putianus as he believed, successor of Justus Lipsius in his professorship
+ at Louvain&mdash;and upon the printer, one Flaminius. Delays and excuses
+ having followed instead of the punishment originally demanded, James had
+ now instructed his special envoy in case of further delay or evasion to
+ repudiate all further friendship or intercourse with the Archduke, to
+ ratify the recall of his minister-resident Trumbull, and in effect to
+ announce formal hostilities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The King takes the thing wonderfully to heart," said Caron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James in effect hated to be made ridiculous, and we shall have occasion to
+ see how important a part other publications which he deemed detrimental to
+ the divinity of his person were to play in these affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime it was characteristic of this sovereign that&mdash;while ready to
+ talk of war with Philip's brother-in-law for a pamphlet, while seeking the
+ hand of Philip's daughter for his son&mdash;he was determined at the very
+ moment when the world was on fire to take himself, the heaven-born
+ extinguisher of all political conflagrations, away from affairs and to
+ seek the solace of along holiday in Scotland. His counsellors persistently
+ and vehemently implored him to defer that journey until the following year
+ at least, all the neighbouring nations being now in a state of war and
+ civil commotion. But it was in vain. He refused to listen to them for a
+ moment, and started for Scotland before the middle of March.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conde, who had kept France in a turmoil, had sought aid alternately from
+ the Calvinists at Grenoble and the Jesuits in Rome, from Spain and from
+ the Netherlands, from the Pope and from Maurice of Nassau, had thus been
+ caged at last. But there was little gained. There was one troublesome but
+ incompetent rebel the less, but there was no king in the land. He who
+ doubts the influence of the individual upon the fate of a country and upon
+ his times through long passages of history may explain the difference
+ between France of 1609, with a martial king aided by great statesmen at
+ its head, with an exchequer overflowing with revenue hoarded for a great
+ cause&mdash;and that cause an attempt at least to pacificate Christendom
+ and avert a universal and almost infinite conflict now already opening&mdash;and
+ the France of 1617, with its treasures already squandered among ignoble
+ and ruffianly favourites, with every office in state, church, court, and
+ magistracy sold to the highest bidder, with a queen governed by an Italian
+ adventurer who was governed by Spain, and with a little king who had but
+ lately expressed triumph at his confirmation because now he should no
+ longer be whipped, and who was just married to a daughter of the
+ hereditary and inevitable foe of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To contemplate this dreary interlude in the history of a powerful state is
+ to shiver at the depths of inanity and crime to which mankind can at once
+ descend. What need to pursue the barren, vulgar, and often repeated
+ chronicle? France pulled at by scarcely concealed strings and made to
+ perform fantastic tricks according as its various puppets were swerved
+ this way or that by supple bands at Madrid and Rome is not a refreshing
+ spectacle. The States-General at last, after an agitated discussion,
+ agreed in fulfilment of the treaty of 1609 to send 4000 men, 2000 being
+ French, to help the King against the princes still in rebellion. But the
+ contest was a most bitter one, and the Advocate had a difficult part to
+ play between a government and a rebellion, each more despicable than the
+ other. Still Louis XIII. and his mother were the legitimate government
+ even if ruled by Concini. The words of the treaty made with Henry IV. were
+ plain, and the ambassadors of his son had summoned the States to fulfil
+ it. But many impediments were placed in the path of obvious duty by the
+ party led by Francis Aerssens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know very well," said the Advocate to ex-Burgomaster Hooft of
+ Amsterdam, father of the great historian, sending him confidentially a
+ copy of the proposals made by the French ambassadors, "that many in this
+ country are striving hard to make us refuse to the King the aid demanded,
+ notwithstanding that we are bound to do it by the pledges given not only
+ by the States-General but by each province in particular. By this no one
+ will profit but the Spaniard, who unquestionably will offer much, aye,
+ very much, to bring about dissensions between France and us, from which I
+ foresee great damage, inconvenience, and difficulties for the whole
+ commonwealth and for Holland especially. This province has already
+ advanced 1,000,000 florins to the general government on the money still
+ due from France, which will all be lost in case the subsidy should be
+ withheld, besides other evils which cannot be trusted to the pen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the same day on which it had been decided at the Hague to send the
+ troops, a captain of guards came to the aid of the poor little king and
+ shot Concini dead one fine spring morning on the bridge of the Louvre. "By
+ order of the King," said Vitry. His body was burned before the statue of
+ Henry IV. by the people delirious with joy. "L'hanno ammazzato" was
+ shouted to his wife, Eleanora Galigai, the supposed sorceress. They were
+ the words in which Concini had communicated to the Queen the murder of her
+ husband seven years before. Eleanora, too, was burned after having been
+ beheaded. Thus the Marshal d'Ancre and wife ceased to reign in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The officers of the French regiments at the Hague danced for joy on the
+ Vyverberg when the news arrived there. The States were relieved from an
+ immense embarrassment, and the Advocate was rewarded for having pursued
+ what was after all the only practicable policy. "Do your best," said he to
+ Langerac, "to accommodate differences so far as consistent with the
+ conservation of the King's authority. We hope the princes will submit
+ themselves now that the 'lapis offensionis,' according to their pretence,
+ is got rid of. We received a letter from them to-day sealed with the
+ King's arms, with the circumscription 'Periclitante Regno, Regis vita et
+ Regia familia."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shooting of Concini seemed almost to convert the little king into a
+ hero. Everyone in the Netherlands, without distinction of party, was
+ delighted with the achievement. "I cannot represent to the King," wrote du
+ Maurier to Villeroy, "one thousandth part of the joy of all these people
+ who are exalting him to heaven for having delivered the earth from this
+ miserable burthen. I can't tell you in what execration this public pest
+ was held. His Majesty has not less won the hearts of this state than if he
+ had gained a great victory over the Spaniards. You would not believe it,
+ and yet it is true, that never were the name and reputation of the late
+ king in greater reverence than those of our reigning king at this moment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Truly here was glory cheaply earned. The fame of Henry the Great, after a
+ long career of brilliant deeds of arms, high statesmanship, and twenty
+ years of bountiful friendship for the States, was already equalled by that
+ of Louis XIII., who had tremblingly acquiesced in the summary execution of
+ an odious adventurer&mdash;his own possible father&mdash;and who never had
+ done anything else but feed his canary birds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Villeroy himself, the Ambassador wrote that he could not find
+ portraits enough of him to furnish those who were asking for them since
+ his return to power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld had been right in so often instructing Langerac to "caress the
+ old gentleman."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ And give advice. Of that, although always a spendthrift
+ Casual outbursts of eternal friendship
+ Changed his positions and contradicted himself day by day
+ Conciliation when war of extermination was intended
+ Considered it his special mission in the world to mediate
+ Denoungced as an obstacle to peace
+ France was mourning Henry and waiting for Richelieu
+ Hardly a sound Protestant policy anywhere but in Holland
+ History has not too many really important and emblematic men
+ I hope and I fear
+ King who thought it furious madness to resist the enemy
+ Mockery of negotiation in which nothing could be negotiated
+ More apprehension of fraud than of force
+ Opening an abyss between government and people
+ Successful in this step, he is ready for greater ones
+ That he tries to lay the fault on us is pure malice
+ The magnitude of this wonderful sovereign's littleness
+ This wonderful sovereign's littleness oppresses the imagination
+ Wise and honest a man, although he be somewhat longsome
+ Yesterday is the preceptor of To-morrow
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. 1617
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ferdinand of Gratz crowned King of Bohemia&mdash;His Enmity to
+ Protestants&mdash;Slawata and Martinitz thrown from the Windows of the
+ Hradschin&mdash;Real Beginning of the Thirty Years' War&mdash;The Elector-
+ Palatine's Intrigues in Opposition to the House of Austria&mdash;He
+ supports the Duke of Savoy&mdash;The Emperor Matthias visits Dresden&mdash;
+ Jubilee for the Hundredth Anniversary of the Reformation.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When the forlorn emperor Rudolph had signed the permission for his brother
+ Matthias to take the last crown but one from his head, he bit the pen in a
+ paroxysm of helpless rage. Then rushing to the window of his apartment, he
+ looked down on one of the most stately prospects that the palaces of the
+ earth can offer. From the long monotonous architectural lines of the
+ Hradschin, imposing from its massiveness and its imperial situation, and
+ with the dome and minarets of the cathedral clustering behind them, the
+ eye swept across the fertile valley, through which the rapid, yellow
+ Moldau courses, to the opposite line of cliffs crested with the half
+ imaginary fortress-palaces of the Wyscherad. There, in the mythical
+ legendary past of Bohemia had dwelt the shadowy Libuscha, daughter of
+ Krok, wife of King Premysl, foundress of Prague, who, when wearied of her
+ lovers, was accustomed to toss them from those heights into the river.
+ Between these picturesque precipices lay the two Pragues, twin-born and
+ quarrelsome, fighting each other for centuries, and growing up side by
+ side into a double, bellicose, stormy, and most splendid city, bristling
+ with steeples and spires, and united by the ancient many-statued bridge
+ with its blackened mediaeval entrance towers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not to enjoy the prospect that the aged, discrowned, solitary
+ emperor, almost as dim a figure among sovereigns as the mystic Libuscha
+ herself, was gazing from the window upon the imperial city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ungrateful Prague," he cried, "through me thou hast become thus
+ magnificent, and now thou hast turned upon and driven away thy benefactor.
+ May the vengeance of God descend upon thee; may my curse come upon thee
+ and upon all Bohemia."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ History has failed to record the special benefits of the Emperor through
+ which the city had derived its magnificence and deserved this malediction.
+ But surely if ever an old man's curse was destined to be literally
+ fulfilled, it seemed to be this solemn imprecation of Rudolph. Meantime
+ the coronation of Matthias had gone on with pomp and popular gratulations,
+ while Rudolph had withdrawn into his apartments to pass the little that
+ was left to him of life in solitude and in a state of hopeless pique with
+ Matthias, with the rest of his brethren, with all the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now that five years had passed since his death, Matthias, who had
+ usurped so much power prematurely, found himself almost in the same
+ condition as that to which he had reduced Rudolph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferdinand of Styria, his cousin, trod closely upon his heels. He was the
+ presumptive successor to all his crowns, had not approved of the movements
+ of Matthias in the lifetime of his brother, and hated the Vienna
+ Protestant baker's son, Cardinal Clesel, by whom all those movements had
+ been directed. Professor Taubmann, of Wittenberg, ponderously quibbling on
+ the name of that prelate, had said that he was of "one hundred and fifty
+ ass power." Whether that was a fair measure of his capacity may be
+ doubted, but it certainly was not destined to be sufficient to elude the
+ vengeance of Ferdinand, and Ferdinand would soon have him in his power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Matthias, weary of ambitious intrigue, infirm of purpose, and shattered in
+ health, had withdrawn from affairs to devote himself to his gout and to
+ his fair young wife, Archduchess Anna of Tyrol, whom at the age of
+ fifty-four he had espoused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 29th June 1617, Ferdinand of Gratz was crowned King of Bohemia. The
+ event was a shock and a menace to the Protestant cause all over the world.
+ The sombre figure of the Archduke had for years appeared in the
+ background, foreshadowing as it were the wrath to come, while throughout
+ Bohemia and the neighbouring countries of Moravia, Silesia, and the
+ Austrias, the cause of Protestantism had been making such rapid progress.
+ The Emperor Maximilian II. had left five stalwart sons, so that there had
+ seemed little probability that the younger line, the sons of his brother,
+ would succeed. But all the five were childless, and now the son of
+ Archduke Charles, who had died in 1590, had become the natural heir after
+ the death of Matthias to the immense family honours&mdash;his cousins
+ Maximilian and Albert having resigned their claims in his favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferdinand, twelve years old at his father's death, had been placed under
+ the care of his maternal uncle, Duke William of Bavaria. By him the boy
+ was placed at the high school of Ingolstadt, to be brought up by the
+ Jesuits, in company with Duke William's own son Maximilian, five years his
+ senior. Between these youths, besides the tie of cousinship, there grew up
+ the most intimate union founded on perfect sympathy in religion and
+ politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Ferdinand entered upon the government of his paternal estates of
+ Styria, Carinthia, and Carniola, he found that the new religion, at which
+ the Jesuits had taught him to shudder as at a curse and a crime, had been
+ widely spreading. His father had fought against heresy with all his might,
+ and had died disappointed and broken-hearted at its progress. His uncle of
+ Bavaria, in letters to his son and nephew, had stamped into their minds
+ with the enthusiasm of perfect conviction that all happiness and blessing
+ for governments depended on the restoration and maintenance of the unity
+ of the Catholic faith. All the evils in times past and present resulting
+ from religious differences had been held up to the two youths by the
+ Jesuits in the most glaring colours. The first duty of a prince, they had
+ inculcated, was to extirpate all false religions, to give the opponents of
+ the true church no quarter, and to think no sacrifice too great by which
+ the salvation of human society, brought almost to perdition by the new
+ doctrines, could be effected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never had Jesuits an apter scholar than Ferdinand. After leaving school,
+ he made a pilgrimage to Loretto to make his vows to the Virgin Mary of
+ extirpation of heresy, and went to Rome to obtain the blessing of Pope
+ Clement VIII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, returning to the government of his inheritance, he seized that
+ terrible two-edged weapon of which the Protestants of Germany had taught
+ him the use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Cujus regio ejus religio;" to the prince the choice of religion, to the
+ subject conformity with the prince, as if that formula of shallow and
+ selfish princelings, that insult to the dignity of mankind, were the grand
+ result of a movement which was to go on centuries after they had all been
+ forgotten in their tombs. For the time however it was a valid and
+ mischievous maxim. In Saxony Catholics and Calvinists were proscribed; in
+ Heidelberg Catholics and Lutherans. Why should either Calvinists or
+ Lutherans be tolerated in Styria? Why, indeed? No logic could be more
+ inexorable, and the pupil of the Ingolstadt Jesuits hesitated not an
+ instant to carry out their teaching with the very instrument forged for
+ him by the Reformation. Gallows were erected in the streets of all his
+ cities, but there was no hanging. The sight of them proved enough to
+ extort obedience to his edict, that every man, woman, and child not
+ belonging to the ancient church should leave his dominions. They were
+ driven out in hordes in broad daylight from Gratz and other cities. Rather
+ reign over a wilderness than over heretics was the device of the Archduke,
+ in imitation of his great relative, Philip II. of Spain. In short space of
+ time his duchies were as empty of Protestants as the Palatinate of
+ Lutherans, or Saxony of Calvinists, or both of Papists. Even the
+ churchyards were rifled of dead Lutherans and Utraquists, their carcasses
+ thrown where they could no longer pollute the true believers mouldering by
+ their side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not strange that the coronation as King of Bohemia of a man of such
+ decided purposes&mdash;a country numbering ten Protestants to one Catholic&mdash;should
+ cause a thrill and a flutter. Could it be doubted that the great elemental
+ conflict so steadily prophesied by Barneveld and instinctively dreaded by
+ all capable of feeling the signs of the time would now begin? It had
+ begun. Of what avail would be Majesty-Letters and Compromises extorted by
+ force from trembling or indolent emperors, now that a man who knew his own
+ mind, and felt it to be a crime not to extirpate all religions but the one
+ orthodox religion, had mounted the throne? It is true that he had sworn at
+ his coronation to maintain the laws of Bohemia, and that the
+ Majesty-Letter and the Compromise were part of the laws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when were doctors ever wanting to prove the unlawfulness of law which
+ interferes with the purposes of a despot and the convictions of the bigot?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Novus rex, nova lex," muttered the Catholics, lifting up their heads and
+ hearts once more out of the oppression and insults which they had
+ unquestionably suffered at the hands of the triumphant Reformers. "There
+ are many empty poppy-heads now flaunting high that shall be snipped off,"
+ said others. "That accursed German Count Thurn and his fellows, whom the
+ devil has sent from hell to Bohemia for his own purposes, shall be
+ disposed of now," was the general cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was plain that heresy could no longer be maintained except by the
+ sword. That which had been extorted by force would be plucked back by
+ force. The succession of Ferdinand was in brief a warshout to be echoed by
+ all the Catholics of Europe. Before the end of the year the Protestant
+ churches of Brunnau were sealed up. Those at Klostergrab were demolished
+ in three days by command of the Archbishop of Prague. These dumb walls
+ preached in their destruction more stirring sermons than perhaps would
+ ever have been heard within them had they stood. This tearing in pieces of
+ the Imperial patent granting liberty of Protestant worship, this summary
+ execution done upon senseless bricks and mortar, was an act of defiance to
+ the Reformed religion everywhere. Protestantism was struck in the face,
+ spat upon, defied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The effect was instantaneous. Thurn and the other defenders of the
+ Protestant faith were as prompt in action as the Catholics had been in
+ words. A few months passed away. The Emperor was in Vienna, but his ten
+ stadholders were in Prague. The fateful 23rd of May 1618 arrived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slawata, a Bohemian Protestant, who had converted himself to the Roman
+ Church in order to marry a rich widow, and who converted his peasants by
+ hunting them to mass with his hounds, and Martinitz, the two stadholders
+ who at Ferdinand's coronation had endeavoured to prevent him from
+ including the Majesty-Letter among the privileges he was swearing to
+ support, and who were considered the real authors of the royal letters
+ revoking all religious rights of Protestants, were the most obnoxious of
+ all. They were hurled from the council-chamber window of the Hradschin.
+ The unfortunate secretary Fabricius was tossed out after them.
+ Twenty-eight ells deep they fell, and all escaped unhurt by the fall;
+ Fabricius being subsequently ennobled by a grateful emperor with the
+ well-won title of Baron Summerset.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Thirty Years' War, which in reality had been going on for several
+ years already, is dated from that day. A provisional government was
+ established in Prague by the Estates under Protestant guidance, a college
+ of thirty directors managing affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Window-Tumble, as the event has always been called in history, excited
+ a sensation in Europe. Especially the young king of France, whose
+ political position should bring him rather into alliance with the rebels
+ than the Emperor, was disgusted and appalled. He was used to rebellion.
+ Since he was ten years old there had been a rebellion against himself
+ every year. There was rebellion now. But his ministers had never been
+ thrown out of window. Perhaps one might take some day to tossing out kings
+ as well. He disapproved the process entirely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the great conflict of Christendom, so long impending, seemed at last
+ to have broken forth in full fury on a comparatively insignificant
+ incident. Thus reasoned the superficial public, as if the throwing out of
+ window of twenty stadholders could have created a general war in Europe
+ had not the causes of war lain deep and deadly in the whole framework of
+ society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The succession of Ferdinand to the throne of the holy Wenzel, in which his
+ election to the German Imperial crown was meant to be involved, was a
+ matter which concerned almost every household in Christendom. Liberty of
+ religion, civil franchise, political charters, contract between government
+ and subject, right to think, speak, or act, these were the human rights
+ everywhere in peril. A compromise between the two religious parties had
+ existed for half a dozen years in Germany, a feeble compromise by which
+ men had hardly been kept from each others' throats. That compromise had
+ now been thrown to the winds. The vast conspiracy of Spain, Rome, the
+ House of Austria, against human liberty had found a chief in the docile,
+ gloomy pupil of the Jesuits now enthroned in Bohemia, and soon perhaps to
+ wield the sceptre of the Holy Roman Empire. There was no state in Europe
+ that had not cause to put hand on sword-hilt. "Distrust and good
+ garrisons," in the prophetic words of Barneveld, would now be the
+ necessary resource for all intending to hold what had been gained through
+ long years of toil, martyrdom, and hard fighting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The succession of Ferdinand excited especial dismay and indignation in the
+ Palatinate. The young elector had looked upon the prize as his own. The
+ marked advance of Protestant sentiment throughout the kingdom and its
+ neighbour provinces had seemed to render the succession of an extreme
+ Papist impossible. When Frederic had sued for and won the hand of the fair
+ Elizabeth, daughter of the King of Great Britain, it was understood that
+ the alliance would be more brilliant for her than it seemed. James with
+ his usual vanity spoke of his son-in-law as a future king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a golden dream for the Elector and for the general cause of the
+ Reformed religion. Heidelberg enthroned in the ancient capital of the
+ Wenzels, Maximilians, and Rudolphs, the Catechism and Confession enrolled
+ among the great statutes of the land, this was progress far beyond flimsy
+ Majesty-Letters and Compromises, made only to be torn to pieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the dim vista of futurity and in ecstatic vision no doubt even the
+ Imperial crown might seem suspended over the Palatine's head. But this
+ would be merely a midsummer's dream. Events did not whirl so rapidly as
+ they might learn to do centuries later, and&mdash;the time for a
+ Protestant to grasp at the crown of Germany could then hardly be imagined
+ as ripening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what the Calvinist branch of the House of Wittelsbach had indeed long
+ been pursuing was to interrupt the succession of the House of Austria to
+ the German throne. That a Catholic prince must for the immediate future
+ continue to occupy it was conceded even by Frederic, but the electoral
+ votes might surely be now so manipulated as to prevent a slave of Spain
+ and a tool of the Jesuits from wielding any longer the sceptre of
+ Charlemagne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand the purpose of the House of Austria was to do away with
+ the elective principle and the prescriptive rights of the Estates in
+ Bohemia first, and afterwards perhaps to send the Golden Bull itself to
+ the limbo of wornout constitutional devices. At present however their
+ object was to secure their hereditary sovereignty in Prague first, and
+ then to make sure of the next Imperial election at Frankfurt. Time
+ afterwards might fight still more in their favour, and fix them in
+ hereditary possession of the German throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Elector-Palatine had lost no time. His counsellors even before the
+ coronation of Ferdinand at Prague had done their best to excite alarm
+ throughout Germany at the document by which Archdukes Maximilian and
+ Albert had resigned all their hereditary claims in favour of Ferdinand and
+ his male children. Should there be no such issue, the King of Spain
+ claimed the succession for his own sons as great-grandchildren of Emperor
+ Maximilian, considering himself nearer in the line than the Styrian
+ branch, but being willing to waive his own rights in favour of so ardent a
+ Catholic as Ferdinand. There was even a secret negotiation going on a long
+ time between the new king of Bohemia and Philip to arrange for the
+ precedence of the Spanish males over the Styrian females to the hereditary
+ Austrian states, and to cede the province of Alsace to Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not wonderful that Protestant Germany should be alarmed. After a
+ century of Protestantism, that Spain should by any possibility come to be
+ enthroned again over Germany was enough to raise both Luther and Calvin
+ from their graves. It was certainly enough to set the lively young
+ palatine in motion. So soon as the election of Frederic was proclaimed, he
+ had taken up the business in person. Fond of amusement, young, married to
+ a beautiful bride of the royal house of England, he had hitherto left
+ politics to his counsellors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding himself frustrated in his ambition by the election of another to
+ the seat he had fondly deemed his own, he resolved to unseat him if he
+ could, and, at any rate, to prevent the ulterior consequences of his
+ elevation. He made a pilgrimage to Sedan, to confer with that
+ irrepressible intriguer and Huguenot chieftain, the Duc de Bouillon. He
+ felt sure of the countenance of the States-General, and, of course, of his
+ near relative the great stadholder. He was resolved to invite the Duke of
+ Lorraine to head the anti-Austrian party, and to stand for the kingship of
+ the Romans and the Empire in opposition to Ferdinand. An emissary sent to
+ Nancy came back with a discouraging reply. The Duke not only flatly
+ refused the candidacy, but warned the Palatine that if it really came to a
+ struggle he could reckon on small support anywhere, not even from those
+ who now seemed warmest for the scheme. Then Frederic resolved to try his
+ cousin, the great Maximilian of Bavaria, to whom all Catholics looked with
+ veneration and whom all German Protestants respected. Had the two branches
+ of the illustrious house of Wittelsbach been combined in one purpose, the
+ opposition to the House of Austria might indeed have been formidable. But
+ what were ties of blood compared to the iron bands of religious love and
+ hatred? How could Maximilian, sternest of Papists, and Frederick V.,
+ flightiest of Calvinists, act harmoniously in an Imperial election?
+ Moreover, Maximilian was united by ties of youthful and tender friendship
+ as well as by kindred and perfect religious sympathy to his other cousin,
+ King Ferdinand himself. The case seemed hopeless, but the Elector went to
+ Munich, and held conferences with his cousin. Not willing to take No for
+ an answer so long as it was veiled under evasive or ornamental
+ phraseology, he continued to negotiate with Maximilian through his envoys
+ Camerarius and Secretary Neu, who held long debates with the Duke's chief
+ councillor, Doctor Jocher. Camerarius assured Jocher that his master was
+ the Hercules to untie the Gordian knot, and the lion of the tribe of
+ Judah. How either the lion of Judah or Hercules were to untie the knot
+ which was popularly supposed to have been cut by the sword of Alexander
+ did not appear, but Maximilian at any rate was moved neither by entreaties
+ nor tropes. Being entirely averse from entering himself for the German
+ crown, he grew weary at last of the importunity with which the scheme was
+ urged. So he wrote a short billet to his councillor, to be shown to
+ Secretary Neu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear Jocher," he said, "I am convinced one must let these people
+ understand the matter in a little plainer German. I am once for all
+ determined not to let myself into any misunderstanding or even
+ amplifications with the House of Austria in regard to the succession. I
+ think also that it would rather be harmful than useful to my house to take
+ upon myself so heavy a burthen as the German crown."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time the German was plain enough and produced its effect. Maximilian
+ was too able a statesman and too conscientious a friend to wish to
+ exchange his own proud position as chief of the League, acknowledged head
+ of the great Catholic party, for the slippery, comfortless, and unmeaning
+ throne of the Holy Empire, which he considered Ferdinand's right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chiefs of the anti-Austrian party, especially the Prince of Anhalt and
+ the Margrave of Anspach, in unison with the Heidelberg cabinet, were
+ forced to look for another candidate. Accordingly the Margrave and the
+ Elector-Palatine solemnly agreed that it was indispensable to choose an
+ emperor who should not be of the House of Austria nor a slave of Spain. It
+ was, to be sure, not possible to think of a Protestant prince. Bavaria
+ would not oppose Austria, would also allow too much influence to the
+ Jesuits. So there remained no one but the Duke of Savoy. He was a prince
+ of the Empire. He was of German descent, of Saxon race, a great general,
+ father of his soldiers, who would protect Europe against a Turkish
+ invasion better than the bastions of Vienna could do. He would be
+ agreeable to the Catholics, while the Protestants could live under him
+ without anxiety because the Jesuits would be powerless with him. It would
+ be a master-stroke if the princes would unite upon him. The King of France
+ would necessarily be pleased with it, the King of Great Britain delighted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the model candidate had been found. The Duke of Savoy having just
+ finished for a second time his chronic war with Spain, in which the United
+ Provinces, notwithstanding the heavy drain on their resources, had allowed
+ him 50,000 florins a month besides the soldiers under Count Ernest of
+ Nassau, had sent Mansfeld with 4000 men to aid the revolted estates in
+ Bohemia. Geographically, hereditarily, necessarily the deadly enemy of the
+ House of Austria, he listened favourably to the overtures made to him by
+ the princes of the Union, expressed undying hatred for the Imperial race,
+ and thought the Bohemian revolt a priceless occasion for expelling them
+ from power. He was informed by the first envoy sent to him, Christopher
+ van Dohna, that the object of the great movement now contemplated was to
+ raise him to the Imperial throne at the next election, to assist the
+ Bohemian estates, to secure the crown of Bohemia for the Elector-Palatine,
+ to protect the Protestants of Germany, and to break down the overweening
+ power of the Austrian house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke displayed no eagerness for the crown of Germany, while approving
+ the election of Frederic, but expressed entire sympathy with the
+ enterprise. It was indispensable however to form a general federation in
+ Europe of England, the Netherlands, Venice, together with Protestant
+ Germany and himself, before undertaking so mighty a task. While the
+ negotiations were going on, both Anspach and Anhalt were in great spirits.
+ The Margrave cried out exultingly, "In a short time the means will be in
+ our hands for turning the world upside down." He urged the Prince of
+ Anhalt to be expeditious in his decisions and actions. "He who wishes to
+ trade," he said, "must come to market early."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was some disappointment at Heidelberg when the first news from Turin
+ arrived, the materials for this vast scheme for an overwhelming and
+ universal European war not seeming to be at their disposition. By and by
+ the Duke's plans seem to deepen and broaden. He told Mansfeld, who,
+ accompanied by Secretary Neu, was glad at a pause in his fighting and
+ brandschatzing in Bohemia to be employed on diplomatic business, that on
+ the whole he should require the crown of Bohemia for himself. He also
+ proposed to accept the Imperial crown, and as for Frederic, he would leave
+ him the crown of Hungary, and would recommend him to round himself out by
+ adding to his hereditary dominions the province of Alsace, besides Upper
+ Austria and other territories in convenient proximity to the Palatinate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Venice, it had been hoped, would aid in the great scheme and might in her
+ turn round herself out with Friuli and Istria and other tempting
+ possessions of Ferdinand, in reward for the men and money she was expected
+ to furnish. That republic had however just concluded a war with Ferdinand,
+ caused mainly by the depredations of the piratical Uscoques, in which, as
+ we have seen, she had received the assistance of 4000 Hollanders under
+ command of Count John of Nassau. The Venetians had achieved many
+ successes, had taken the city of Gortz, and almost reduced the city of
+ Gradiska. A certain colonel Albert Waldstein however, of whom more might
+ one day be heard in the history of the war now begun, had beaten the
+ Venetians and opened a pathway through their ranks for succour to the
+ beleaguered city. Soon afterwards peace was made on an undertaking that
+ the Uscoques should be driven from their haunts, their castles dismantled,
+ and their ships destroyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Venice declined an engagement to begin a fresh war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She hated Ferdinand and Matthias and the whole Imperial brood, but, as old
+ Barbarigo declared in the Senate, the Republic could not afford to set her
+ house on fire in order to give Austria the inconvenience of the smoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, although the Elector-Palatine had magnanimously agreed to use
+ his influence in Bohemia in favour of Charles Emmanuel, the Duke seems at
+ last to have declined proposing himself for that throne. He knew, he said,
+ that King James wished that station for his son-in-law. The Imperial crown
+ belonged to no one as yet after the death of Matthias, and was open
+ therefore to his competition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anhalt demanded of Savoy 15,000 men for the maintenance of the good cause,
+ asserting that "it would be better to have the Turk or the devil himself
+ on the German throne than leave it to Ferdinand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The triumvirate ruling at Prague-Thurn, Ruppa, and Hohenlohe&mdash;were
+ anxious for a decision from Frederic. That simple-hearted and ingenuous
+ young elector had long been troubled both with fears lest after all he
+ might lose the crown of Bohemia and with qualms of conscience as to the
+ propriety of taking it even if he could get it. He wrestled much in prayer
+ and devout meditation whether as anointed prince himself he were justified
+ in meddling with the anointment of other princes. Ferdinand had been
+ accepted, proclaimed, crowned. He artlessly sent to Prague to consult the
+ Estates whether they possessed the right to rebel, to set aside the
+ reigning dynasty, and to choose a new king. At the same time, with an eye
+ to business, he stipulated that on account of the great expense and
+ trouble devolving upon him the crown must be made hereditary in his
+ family. The impression made upon the grim Thurn and his colleagues by the
+ simplicity of these questions may be imagined. The splendour and width of
+ the Savoyard's conceptions fascinated the leaders of the Union. It seemed
+ to Anspach and Anhalt that it was as well that Frederic should reign in
+ Hungary as in Bohemia, and the Elector was docile. All had relied however
+ on the powerful assistance of the great defender of the Protestant faith,
+ the father-in-law of the Elector, the King of Great Britain. But James had
+ nothing but cold water and Virgilian quotations for his son's ardour. He
+ was more under the influence of Gondemar than ever before, more eagerly
+ hankering for the Infanta, more completely the slave of Spain. He pledged
+ himself to that government that if the Protestants in Bohemia continued
+ rebellious, he would do his best to frustrate their designs, and would
+ induce his son-in-law to have no further connection with them. And Spain
+ delighted his heart not by immediately sending over the Infanta, but by
+ proposing that he should mediate between the contending parties. It would
+ be difficult to imagine a greater farce. All central Europe was now in
+ arms. The deepest and gravest questions about which men can fight: the
+ right to worship God according to their conscience and to maintain civil
+ franchises which have been earned by the people with the blood and
+ treasure of centuries, were now to be solved by the sword, and the pupil
+ of Buchanan and the friend of Buckingham was to step between hundreds of
+ thousands of men in arms with a classical oration. But James was very
+ proud of the proposal and accepted it with alacrity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know, my dear son," he wrote to Frederic, "that we are the only king
+ in Europe that is sought for by friend and foe for his mediation. It would
+ be for this our lofty part very unbecoming if we were capable of favouring
+ one of the parties. Your suggestion that we might secretly support the
+ Bohemians we must totally reject, as it is not our way to do anything that
+ we would not willingly confess to the whole world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to do James justice, he had never fed Frederic with false hopes, never
+ given a penny for his great enterprise, nor promised him a penny. He had
+ contented himself with suggesting from time to time that he might borrow
+ money of the States-General. His daughter Elizabeth must take care of
+ herself, else what would become of her brother's marriage to the daughter
+ of Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now it was war to the knife, in which it was impossible that Holland,
+ as well as all the other great powers should not soon be involved. It was
+ disheartening to the cause of freedom and progress, not only that the
+ great kingdom on which the world, had learned to rely in all movements
+ upward and onward should be neutralized by the sycophancy of its monarch
+ to the general oppressor, but that the great republic which so long had
+ taken the lead in maintaining the liberties of Europe should now be torn
+ by religious discord within itself, and be turning against the great
+ statesman who had so wisely guided her councils and so accurately foretold
+ the catastrophe which was now upon the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the Emperor Matthias, not less forlorn than through his intrigues
+ and rebellions his brother Rudolph had been made, passed his days in
+ almost as utter retirement as if he had formally abdicated. Ferdinand
+ treated him as if in his dotage. His fair young wife too had died of hard
+ eating in the beginning of the winter to his inexpressible grief, so that
+ there was nothing left to solace him now but the Rudolphian Museum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had made but one public appearance since the coronation of Ferdinand in
+ Prague. Attended by his brother Maximilian, by King Ferdinand, and by
+ Cardinal Khlesl, he had towards the end of the year 1617 paid a visit to
+ the Elector John George at Dresden. The Imperial party had been received
+ with much enthusiasm by the great leader of Lutheranism. The Cardinal had
+ seriously objected to accompanying the Emperor on this occasion. Since the
+ Reformation no cardinal had been seen at the court of Saxony. He cared not
+ personally for the pomps and glories of his rank, but still as prince of
+ the Church he had settled right of precedence over electors. To waive it
+ would be disrespectful to the Pope, to claim it would lead to squabbles.
+ But Ferdinand had need of his skill to secure the vote of Saxony at the
+ next Imperial election. The Cardinal was afraid of Ferdinand with good
+ reason, and complied. By an agreeable fiction he was received at court not
+ as cardinal but as minister, and accommodated with an humble place at
+ table. Many looking on with astonishment thought he would have preferred
+ to dine by himself in retirement. But this was not the bitterest of the
+ mortifications that the pastor and guide of Matthias was to suffer at the
+ hands of Ferdinand before his career should be closed. The visit at
+ Dresden was successful, however. John George, being a claimant, as we have
+ seen, for the Duchies of Cleve and Julich, had need of the Emperor. The
+ King had need of John George's vote. There was a series of splendid balls,
+ hunting parties, carousings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Emperor was an invalid, the King was abstemious, but the Elector was a
+ mighty drinker. It was not his custom nor that of his councillors to go to
+ bed. They were usually carried there. But it was the wish of Ferdinand to
+ be conciliatory, and he bore himself as well as he could at the banquet.
+ The Elector was also a mighty hunter. Neither of his Imperial guests cared
+ for field sports, but they looked out contentedly from the window of a
+ hunting-lodge, before which for their entertainment the Elector and his
+ courtiers slaughtered eight bears, ten stags, ten pigs, and eleven
+ badgers, besides a goodly number of other game; John George shooting also
+ three martens from a pole erected for that purpose in the courtyard. It
+ seemed proper for him thus to exhibit a specimen of the skill for which he
+ was justly famed. The Elector before his life closed, so says the
+ chronicle, had killed 28,000 wild boars, 208 bears, 3543 wolves, 200
+ badgers, 18,967 foxes, besides stags and roedeer in still greater number,
+ making a grand total of 113,629 beasts. The leader of the Lutheran party
+ of Germany had not lived in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the great chiefs of Catholicism and of Protestantism amicably
+ disported themselves in the last days of the year, while their respective
+ forces were marshalling for mortal combat all over Christendom. The
+ Elector certainly loved neither Matthias nor Ferdinand, but he hated the
+ Palatine. The chief of the German Calvinists disputed that Protestant
+ hegemony which John George claimed by right. Indeed the immense advantage
+ enjoyed by the Catholics at the outbreak of the religious war from the
+ mutual animosities between the two great divisions of the Reformed Church
+ was already terribly manifest. What an additional power would it derive
+ from the increased weakness of the foe, should there be still other and
+ deeper and more deadly schisms within one great division itself!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Calvinists and Lutherans," cried the Jesuit Scioppius, "are so
+ furiously attacking each other with calumnies and cursings and are
+ persecuting each other to such extent as to give good hope that the
+ devilish weight and burthen of them will go to perdition and shame of
+ itself, and the heretics all do bloody execution upon each other.
+ Certainly if ever a golden time existed for exterminating the heretics, it
+ is the present time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Imperial party took their leave of Dresden, believing themselves to
+ have secured the electoral vote of Saxony; the Elector hoping for
+ protection to his interests in the duchies through that sequestration to
+ which Barneveld had opposed such vigorous resistance. There had been much
+ slavish cringing before these Catholic potentates by the courtiers of
+ Dresden, somewhat amazing to the ruder churls of Saxony, the common
+ people, who really believed in the religion which their prince had
+ selected for them and himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And to complete the glaring contrast, Ferdinand and Matthias had scarcely
+ turned their backs before tremendous fulminations upon the ancient church
+ came from the Elector and from all the doctors of theology in Saxony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the jubilee of the hundredth anniversary of the Reformation was
+ celebrated all over Germany in the autumn of this very year, and nearly at
+ the exact moment of all this dancing, and fuddling, and pig shooting at
+ Dresden in honour of emperors and cardinals. And Pope Paul V. had likewise
+ ordained a jubilee for true believers at almost the same time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Elector did not mince matters in his proclamation from any regard to
+ the feelings of his late guests. He called on all Protestants to rejoice,
+ "because the light of the Holy Gospel had now shone brightly in the
+ electoral dominions for a hundred years, the Omnipotent keeping it burning
+ notwithstanding the raging and roaring of the hellish enemy and all his
+ scaly servants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctors of divinity were still more emphatic in their phraseology.
+ They called on all professors and teachers of the true Evangelical
+ churches, not only in Germany but throughout Christendom, to keep the
+ great jubilee. They did this in terms not calculated certainly to smother
+ the flames of religious and party hatred, even if it had been possible at
+ that moment to suppress the fire. "The great God of Heaven," they said,
+ "had caused the undertaking of His holy instrument Mr. Doctor Martin
+ Luther to prosper. Through His unspeakable mercy he has driven away the
+ Papal darkness and caused the sun of righteousness once more to beam upon
+ the world. The old idolatries, blasphemies, errors, and horrors of the
+ benighted Popedom have been exterminated in many kingdoms and countries.
+ Innumerable sheep of the Lord Christ have been fed on the wholesome
+ pasture of the Divine Word in spite of those monstrous, tearing, ravenous
+ wolves, the Pope and his followers. The enemy of God and man, the ancient
+ serpent, may hiss and rage. Yes, the Roman antichrist in his frantic
+ blusterings may bite off his own tongue, may fulminate all kinds of evils,
+ bans, excommunications, wars, desolations, and burnings, as long and as
+ much as he likes. But if we take refuge with the Lord God, what can this
+ inane, worn-out man and water-bubble do to us?" With more in the same
+ taste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pope's bull for the Catholic jubilee was far more decorous and lofty
+ in tone, for it bewailed the general sin in Christendom, and called on all
+ believers to flee from the wrath about to descend upon the earth, in terms
+ that were almost prophetic. He ordered all to pray that the Lord might
+ lift up His Church, protect it from the wiles of the enemy, extirpate
+ heresies, grant peace and true unity among Christian princes, and
+ mercifully avert disasters already coming near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if the language of Paul V. was measured and decent, the swarm of
+ Jesuit pamphleteers that forthwith began to buzz and to sting all over
+ Christendom were sufficiently venomous. Scioppius, in his Alarm Trumpet to
+ the Holy War, and a hundred others declared that all heresies and heretics
+ were now to be extirpated, the one true church to be united and
+ re-established, and that the only road to such a consummation was a path
+ of blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lutheran preachers, on the other hand, obedient to the summons from
+ Dresden, vied with each other in every town and village in heaping
+ denunciations, foul names, and odious imputations on the Catholics; while
+ the Calvinists, not to be behindhand with their fellow Reformers,
+ celebrated the jubilee, especially at Heidelberg, by excluding Papists
+ from hope of salvation, and bewailing the fate of all churches sighing
+ under the yoke of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And not only were the Papists and the Reformers exchanging these blasts
+ and counterblasts of hatred, not less deadly in their effects than the
+ artillery of many armies, but as if to make a thorough exhibition of human
+ fatuity when drunk with religious passion, the Lutherans were making
+ fierce paper and pulpit war upon the Calvinists. Especially Hoe, court
+ preacher of John George, ceaselessly hurled savage libels against them. In
+ the name of the theological faculty of Wittenberg, he addressed a
+ "truehearted warning to all Lutheran Christians in Bohemia, Moravia,
+ Silesia, and other provinces, to beware of the erroneous Calvinistic
+ religion." He wrote a letter to Count Schlick, foremost leader in the
+ Bohemian movement, asking whether "the unquiet Calvinist spirit, should it
+ gain ascendency, would be any more endurable than the Papists. Oh what
+ woe, what infinite woe," he cried, "for those noble countries if they
+ should all be thrust into the jaws of Calvinism!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did not preacher Hoe's master aspire to the crown of Bohemia himself? Was
+ he not furious at the start which Heidelberg had got of him in the race
+ for that golden prize? Was he not mad with jealousy of the Palatine, of
+ the Palatine's religion, and of the Palatine's claim to "hegemony" in
+ Germany?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus embittered and bloodthirsty towards each other were the two great
+ sections of the Reformed religion on the first centennial jubilee of the
+ Reformation. Such was the divided front which the anti-Catholic party
+ presented at the outbreak of the war with Catholicism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferdinand, on the other hand, was at the head of a comparatively united
+ party. He could hardly hope for more than benevolent neutrality from the
+ French government, which, in spite of the Spanish marriages, dared not
+ wholly desert the Netherlands and throw itself into the hands of Spain;
+ but Spanish diplomacy had enslaved the British king, and converted what
+ should have been an active and most powerful enemy into an efficient if
+ concealed ally. The Spanish and archiducal armies were enveloping the
+ Dutch republic, from whence the most powerful support could be expected
+ for the Protestant cause. Had it not been for the steadiness of Barneveld,
+ Spain would have been at that moment established in full panoply over the
+ whole surface of those inestimable positions, the disputed duchies. Venice
+ was lukewarm, if not frigid; and Savoy, although deeply pledged by passion
+ and interest to the downfall of the House of Austria, was too dangerously
+ situated herself, too distant, too poor, and too Catholic to be very
+ formidable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferdinand was safe from the Turkish side. A twenty years' peace, renewable
+ by agreement, between the Holy Empire and the Sultan had been negotiated
+ by those two sons of bakers, Cardinal Khlesl and the Vizier
+ Etmekdschifade. It was destined to endure through all the horrors of the
+ great war, a stronger protection to Vienna than all the fortifications
+ which the engineering art could invent. He was safe too from Poland, King
+ Sigmund being not only a devoted Catholic but doubly his brother-in-law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spain, therefore, the Spanish Netherlands, the Pope, and the German League
+ headed by Maximilian of Bavaria, the ablest prince on the continent of
+ Europe, presented a square, magnificent phalanx on which Ferdinand might
+ rely. The States-General, on the other hand, were a most dangerous foe.
+ With a centennial hatred of Spain, splendidly disciplined armies and
+ foremost navy of the world, with an admirable financial system and vast
+ commercial resources, with a great stadholder, first captain of the age,
+ thirsting for war, and allied in blood as well as religion to the
+ standard-bearer of the Bohemian revolt; with councils directed by the
+ wisest and most experienced of living statesman, and with the very life
+ blood of her being derived from the fountain of civil and religious
+ liberty, the great Republic of the United Netherlands&mdash;her Truce with
+ the hereditary foe just expiring was, if indeed united, strong enough at
+ the head of the Protestant forces of Europe to dictate to a world in arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas! was it united?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As regarded internal affairs of most pressing interest, the electoral vote
+ at the next election at Frankfurt had been calculated as being likely to
+ yield a majority of one for the opposition candidate, should the Savoyard
+ or any other opposition candidate be found. But the calculation was a
+ close one and might easily be fallacious. Supposing the Palatine elected
+ King of Bohemia by the rebellious estates, as was probable, he could of
+ course give the vote of that electorate and his own against Ferdinand, and
+ the vote of Brandenburg at that time seemed safe. But Ferdinand by his
+ visit to Dresden had secured the vote of Saxony, while of the three
+ ecclesiastical electors, Cologne and Mayence were sure for him. Thus it
+ would be three and three, and the seventh and decisive vote would be that
+ of the Elector-Bishop of Treves. The sanguine Frederic thought that with
+ French influence and a round sum of money this ecclesiastic might be got
+ to vote for the opposition candidate. The ingenious combination was not
+ destined to be successful, and as there has been no intention in the
+ present volume to do more than slightly indicate the most prominent
+ movements and mainsprings of the great struggle so far as Germany is
+ concerned, without entering into detail, it may be as well to remind the
+ reader that it proved wonderfully wrong. Matthias died on the 20th March,
+ 1619, the election of a new emperor took place at Frankfurt On the 28th of
+ the following August, and not only did Saxony and all three ecclesiastical
+ electors vote for Ferdinand, but Brandenburg likewise, as well as the
+ Elector-Palatine himself, while Ferdinand, personally present in the
+ assembly as Elector of Bohemia, might according to the Golden Bull have
+ given the seventh vote for himself had he chosen to do so. Thus the
+ election was unanimous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange to say, as the electors proceeded through the crowd from the hall
+ of election to accompany the new emperor to the church where he was to
+ receive the popular acclaim, the news reached them from Prague that the
+ Elector-Palatine had been elected King of Bohemia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus Frederic, by voting for Ferdinand, had made himself voluntarily a
+ rebel should he accept the crown now offered him. Had the news arrived
+ sooner, a different result and even a different history might have been
+ possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld connected with the East India Company, but opposed to the West
+ India Company&mdash;Carleton comes from Venice inimical to Barneveld&mdash;Maurice
+ openly the Chieftain of the Contra-Remonstrants&mdash;Tumults about the
+ Churches&mdash;"Orange or Spain" the Cry of Prince Maurice and his Party&mdash;They
+ take possession of the Cloister Church&mdash;"The Sharp Resolve"&mdash;Carleton's
+ Orations before the States-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ King James never forgave Barneveld for drawing from him those famous
+ letters to the States in which he was made to approve the Five Points and
+ to admit the possibility of salvation under them. These epistles had
+ brought much ridicule upon James, who was not amused by finding his
+ theological discussions a laughing-stock. He was still more incensed by
+ the biting criticisms made upon the cheap surrender of the cautionary
+ towns, and he hated more than ever the statesman who, as he believed, had
+ twice outwitted him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, Maurice, inspired by his brother-in-law the Duke of
+ Bouillon and by the infuriated Francis Aerssens, abhorred Barneveld's
+ French policy, which was freely denounced by the French Calvinists and by
+ the whole orthodox church. In Holland he was still warmly sustained except
+ in the Contra-Remonstrant Amsterdam and a few other cities of less
+ importance. But there were perhaps deeper reasons for the Advocate's
+ unpopularity in the great commercial metropolis than theological pretexts.
+ Barneveld's name and interests were identified with the great East India
+ Company, which was now powerful and prosperous beyond anything ever dreamt
+ of before in the annals of commerce. That trading company had already
+ founded an empire in the East. Fifty ships of war, fortresses guarded by
+ 4000 pieces of artillery and 10,000 soldiers and sailors, obeyed the
+ orders of a dozen private gentlemen at home seated in a back parlour
+ around a green table. The profits of each trading voyage were enormous,
+ and the shareholders were growing rich beyond their wildest imaginings. To
+ no individual so much as to Holland's Advocate was this unexampled success
+ to be ascribed. The vast prosperity of the East India Company had inspired
+ others with the ambition to found a similar enterprise in the West. But to
+ the West India Company then projected and especially favoured in
+ Amsterdam, Barneveld was firmly opposed. He considered it as bound up with
+ the spirit of military adventure and conquest, and as likely to bring on
+ prematurely and unwisely a renewed conflict with Spain. The same reasons
+ which had caused him to urge the Truce now influenced his position in
+ regard to the West India Company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the clouds were gathering every day more darkly over the head of the
+ Advocate. The powerful mercantile interest in the great seat of traffic in
+ the Republic, the personal animosity of the Stadholder, the execrations of
+ the orthodox party in France, England, and all the Netherlands, the anger
+ of the French princes and all those of the old Huguenot party who had been
+ foolish enough to act with the princes in their purely selfish schemes
+ against the government, and the overflowing hatred of King James, whose
+ darling schemes of Spanish marriages and a Spanish alliance had been
+ foiled by the Advocate's masterly policy in France and in the duchies, and
+ whose resentment at having been so completely worsted and disarmed in the
+ predestination matter and in the redemption of the great mortgage had
+ deepened into as terrible wrath as outraged bigotry and vanity could
+ engender; all these elements made up a stormy atmosphere in which the
+ strongest heart might have quailed. But Barneveld did not quail. Doubtless
+ he loved power, and the more danger he found on every side the less
+ inclined he was to succumb. But he honestly believed that the safety and
+ prosperity of the country he had so long and faithfully served were
+ identified with the policy which he was pursuing. Arrogant, overbearing,
+ self-concentrated, accustomed to lead senates and to guide the councils
+ and share the secrets of kings, familiar with and almost an actor in every
+ event in the political history not only of his own country but of every
+ important state in Christendom during nearly two generations of mankind,
+ of unmatched industry, full of years and experience, yet feeling within
+ him the youthful strength of a thousand intellects compared to most of
+ those by which he was calumniated, confronted, and harassed; he accepted
+ the great fight which was forced upon him. Irascible, courageous, austere,
+ contemptuous, he looked around and saw the Republic whose cradle he had
+ rocked grown to be one of the most powerful and prosperous among the
+ states of the world, and could with difficulty imagine that in this
+ supreme hour of her strength and her felicity she was ready to turn and
+ rend the man whom she was bound by every tie of duty to cherish and to
+ revere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Dudley Carleton, the new English ambassador to the States, had arrived
+ during the past year red-hot from Venice. There he had perhaps not learned
+ especially to love the new republic which had arisen among the northern
+ lagunes, and whose admission among the nations had been at last accorded
+ by the proud Queen of the Adriatic, notwithstanding the objections and the
+ intrigues both of French and English representatives. He had come charged
+ to the brim with the political spite of James against the Advocate, and
+ provided too with more than seven vials of theological wrath. Such was the
+ King's revenge for Barneveld's recent successes. The supporters in the
+ Netherlands of the civil authority over the Church were moreover to be
+ instructed by the political head of the English Church that such
+ supremacy, although highly proper for a king, was "thoroughly unsuitable
+ for a many-headed republic." So much for church government. As for
+ doctrine, Arminianism and Vorstianism were to be blasted with one
+ thunderstroke from the British throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In Holland," said James to his envoy, "there have been violent and sharp
+ contestations amongst the towns in the cause of religion . . . . . If they
+ shall be unhappily revived during your time, you shall not forget that you
+ are the minister of that master whom God hath made the sole protector of
+ His religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was to be no misunderstanding in future as to the dogmas which the
+ royal pope of Great Britain meant to prescribe to his Netherland subjects.
+ Three years before, at the dictation of the Advocate, he had informed the
+ States that he was convinced of their ability to settle the deplorable
+ dissensions as to religion according to their wisdom and the power which
+ belonged to them over churches and church servants. He had informed them
+ of his having learned by experience that such questions could hardly be
+ decided by the wranglings of theological professors, and that it was
+ better to settle them by public authority and to forbid their being
+ brought into the pulpit or among common people. He had recommended mutual
+ toleration of religious difference until otherwise ordained by the public
+ civil authority, and had declared that neither of the two opinions in
+ regard to predestination was in his opinion far from the truth or
+ inconsistent with Christian faith or the salvation of souls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was no wonder that these utterances were quite after the Advocate's
+ heart, as James had faithfully copied them from the Advocate's draft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now in the exercise of his infallibility the King issued other
+ decrees. His minister was instructed to support the extreme views of the
+ orthodox both as to government and dogma, and to urge the National Synod,
+ as it were, at push of pike. "Besides the assistance," said he to
+ Carleton, "which we would have you give to the true professors of the
+ Gospel in your discourse and conferences, you may let fall how hateful the
+ maintenance of these erroneous opinions is to the majesty of God, how
+ displeasing unto us their dearest friends, and how disgraceful to the
+ honour and government of that state."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And faithfully did the Ambassador act up to his instructions. Most
+ sympathetically did he embody the hatred of the King. An able,
+ experienced, highly accomplished diplomatist and scholar, ready with
+ tongue and pen, caustic, censorious, prejudiced, and partial, he was soon
+ foremost among the foes of the Advocate in the little court of the Hague,
+ and prepared at any moment to flourish the political and theological goad
+ when his master gave the word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing in diplomatic history is more eccentric than the long sermons upon
+ abstruse points of divinity and ecclesiastical history which the English
+ ambassador delivered from time to time before the States-General in
+ accordance with elaborate instructions drawn up by his sovereign with his
+ own hand. Rarely has a king been more tedious, and he bestowed all his
+ tediousness upon My Lords the States-General. Nothing could be more dismal
+ than these discourses, except perhaps the contemporaneous and interminable
+ orations of Grotius to the states of Holland, to the magistrates of
+ Amsterdam, to the states of Utrecht; yet Carleton was a man of the world,
+ a good debater, a ready writer, while Hugo Grotius was one of the great
+ lights of that age and which shone for all time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the diplomatic controversies of history, rarely refreshing at best,
+ few have been more drouthy than those once famous disquisitions, and they
+ shall be left to shrivel into the nothingness of the past, so far as is
+ consistent with the absolute necessities of this narrative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The contest to which the Advocate was called had become mainly a personal
+ and a political one, although the weapons with which it was fought were
+ taken from ecclesiastical arsenals. It was now an unequal contest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the great captain of the country and of his time, the son of William
+ the Silent, the martial stadholder, in the fulness of his fame and vigour
+ of his years, had now openly taken his place as the chieftain of the
+ Contra-Remonstrants. The conflict between the civil and the military
+ element for supremacy in a free commonwealth has never been more vividly
+ typified than in this death-grapple between Maurice and Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The aged but still vigorous statesman, ripe with half a century of
+ political lore, and the high-born, brilliant, and scientific soldier, with
+ the laurels of Turnhout and Nieuwpoort and of a hundred famous sieges upon
+ his helmet, reformer of military science, and no mean proficient in the
+ art of politics and government, were the representatives and leaders of
+ the two great parties into which the Commonwealth had now unhappily
+ divided itself. But all history shows that the brilliant soldier of a
+ republic is apt to have the advantage, in a struggle for popular affection
+ and popular applause, over the statesman, however consummate. The general
+ imagination is more excited by the triumphs of the field than by those of
+ the tribune, and the man who has passed many years of life in commanding
+ multitudes with necessarily despotic sway is often supposed to have gained
+ in the process the attributes likely to render him most valuable as chief
+ citizen of a flee commonwealth. Yet national enthusiasm is so universally
+ excited by splendid military service as to forbid a doubt that the
+ sentiment is rooted deeply in our nature, while both in antiquity and in
+ modern times there are noble although rare examples of the successful
+ soldier converting himself into a valuable and exemplary magistrate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the rivalry of Maurice and Barneveld however for the national affection
+ the chances were singularly against the Advocate. The great battles and
+ sieges of the Prince had been on a world's theatre, had enchained the
+ attention of Christendom, and on their issue had frequently depended, or
+ seemed to depend, the very existence of the nation. The labours of the
+ statesman, on the contrary, had been comparatively secret. His noble
+ orations and arguments had been spoken with closed doors to assemblies of
+ colleagues&mdash;rather envoys than senators&mdash;were never printed or
+ even reported, and could be judged of only by their effects; while his
+ vast labours in directing both the internal administration and especially
+ the foreign affairs of the Commonwealth had been by their very nature as
+ secret as they were perpetual and enormous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, there was little of what we now understand as the democratic
+ sentiment in the Netherlands. There was deep and sturdy attachment to
+ ancient traditions, privileges, special constitutions extorted from a
+ power acknowledged to be superior to the people. When partly to save those
+ chartered rights, and partly to overthrow the horrible ecclesiastical
+ tyranny of the sixteenth century, the people had accomplished a successful
+ revolt, they never dreamt of popular sovereignty, but allowed the
+ municipal corporations, by which their local affairs had been for
+ centuries transacted, to unite in offering to foreign princes, one after
+ another, the crown which they had torn from the head of the Spanish king.
+ When none was found to accept the dangerous honour, they had acquiesced in
+ the practical sovereignty of the States; but whether the States-General or
+ the States-Provincial were the supreme authority had certainly not been
+ definitely and categorically settled. So long as the States of Holland,
+ led by the Advocate, had controlled in great matters the political action
+ of the States-General, while the Stadholder stood without a rival at the
+ head of their military affairs, and so long as there were no fierce
+ disputes as to government and dogma within the bosom of the Reformed
+ Church, the questions which were now inflaming the whole population had
+ been allowed to slumber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The termination of the war and the rise of Arminianism were almost
+ contemporaneous. The Stadholder, who so unwillingly had seen the
+ occupation in which he had won so much glory taken from him by the Truce,
+ might perhaps find less congenial but sufficiently engrossing business as
+ champion of the Church and of the Union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new church&mdash;not freedom of worship for different denominations of
+ Christians, but supremacy of the Church of Heidelberg and Geneva&mdash;seemed
+ likely to be the result of the overthrow of the ancient church. It is the
+ essence of the Catholic Church to claim supremacy over and immunity from
+ the civil authority, and to this claim for the Reformed Church, by which
+ that of Rome had been supplanted, Barneveld was strenuously opposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Stadholder was backed, therefore, by the Church in its purity, by the
+ majority of the humbler classes&mdash;who found in membership of the
+ oligarchy of Heaven a substitute for those democratic aspirations on earth
+ which were effectually suppressed between the two millstones of burgher
+ aristocracy and military discipline&mdash;and by the States-General, a
+ majority of which were Contra-Remonstrant in their faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the sword is usually an overmatch for the long robe in political
+ struggles, the cassock has often proved superior to both combined. But in
+ the case now occupying our attention the cassock was in alliance with the
+ sword. Clearly the contest was becoming a desperate one for the statesman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And while the controversy between the chiefs waged hotter and hotter, the
+ tumults around the churches on Sundays in every town and village grew more
+ and more furious, ending generally in open fights with knives, bludgeons,
+ and brickbats; preachers and magistrates being often too glad to escape
+ with a whole skin. One can hardly be ingenuous enough to consider all this
+ dirking, battering, and fisticuffing as the legitimate and healthy outcome
+ of a difference as to the knotty point whether all men might or might not
+ be saved by repentance and faith in Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Greens and Blues of the Byzantine circus had not been more typical of
+ fierce party warfare in the Lower Empire than the greens and blues of
+ predestination in the rising commonwealth, according to the real or
+ imagined epigram of Prince Maurice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your divisions in religion," wrote Secretary Lake to Carleton, "have, I
+ doubt not, a deeper root than is discerned by every one, and I doubt not
+ that the Prince Maurice's carriage doth make a jealousy of affecting a
+ party under the pretence of supporting one side, and that the States fear
+ his ends and aims, knowing his power with the men of war; and that
+ howsoever all be shadowed under the name of religion there is on either
+ part a civil end, of the one seeking a step of higher authority, of the
+ other a preservation of liberty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in addition to other advantages the Contra-Remonstrants had now got a
+ good cry&mdash;an inestimable privilege in party contests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are two factions in the land," said Maurice, "that of Orange and
+ that of Spain, and the two chiefs of the Spanish faction are those
+ political and priestly Arminians, Uytenbogaert and Oldenbarneveld."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Orange and Spain! the one name associated with all that was most venerated
+ and beloved throughout the country, for William the Silent since his death
+ was almost a god; the other ineradicably entwined at that moment with,
+ everything execrated throughout the land. The Prince of Orange's claim to
+ be head of the Orange faction could hardly be disputed, but it was a
+ master stroke of political malice to fix the stigma of Spanish
+ partisanship on the Advocate. If the venerable patriot who had been
+ fighting Spain, sometimes on the battle-field and always in the council,
+ ever since he came to man's estate, could be imagined even in a dream
+ capable of being bought with Spanish gold to betray his country, who in
+ the ranks of the Remonstrant party could be safe from such accusations?
+ Each party accused the other of designs for altering or subverting the
+ government. Maurice was suspected of what were called Leicestrian
+ projects, "Leycestrana consilia"&mdash;for the Earl's plots to gain
+ possession of Leyden and Utrecht had never been forgotten&mdash;while the
+ Prince and those who acted with him asserted distinctly that it was the
+ purpose of Barneveld to pave the way for restoring the Spanish sovereignty
+ and the Popish religion so soon as the Truce had reached its end?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spain and Orange. Nothing for a faction fight could be neater. Moreover
+ the two words rhyme in Netherlandish, which is the case in no other
+ language, "Spanje-Oranje." The sword was drawn and the banner unfurled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "Mud Beggars" of the Hague, tired of tramping to Ryswyk of a Sunday to
+ listen to Henry Rosaeus, determined on a private conventicle in the
+ capital. The first barn selected was sealed up by the authorities, but
+ Epoch Much, book-keeper of Prince Maurice, then lent them his house. The
+ Prince declared that sooner than they should want a place of assembling he
+ would give them his own. But he meant that they should have a public
+ church to themselves, and that very soon. King James thoroughly approved
+ of all these proceedings. At that very instant such of his own subjects as
+ had seceded from the Established Church to hold conventicles in barns and
+ breweries and backshops in London were hunted by him with bishops'
+ pursuivants and other beagles like vilest criminals, thrown into prison to
+ rot, or suffered to escape from their Fatherland into the trans-Atlantic
+ wilderness, there to battle with wild beasts and savages, and to die
+ without knowing themselves the fathers of a more powerful United States
+ than the Dutch Republic, where they were fain to seek in passing a
+ temporary shelter. He none the less instructed his envoy at the Hague to
+ preach the selfsame doctrines for which the New England Puritans were
+ persecuted, and importunately and dictatorially to plead the cause of
+ those Hollanders who, like Bradford and Robinson, Winthrop and Cotton,
+ maintained the independence of the Church over the State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Logic is rarely the quality on which kings pride themselves, and
+ Puritanism in the Netherlands, although under temporary disadvantage at
+ the Hague, was evidently the party destined to triumph throughout the
+ country. James could safely sympathize therefore in Holland with what he
+ most loathed in England, and could at the same time feed fat the grudge he
+ owed the Advocate. The calculations of Barneveld as to the respective
+ political forces of the Commonwealth seem to have been to a certain extent
+ defective.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He allowed probably too much weight to the Catholic party as a motive
+ power at that moment, and he was anxious both from that consideration and
+ from his honest natural instinct for general toleration; his own broad and
+ unbigoted views in religious matters, not to force that party into a
+ rebellious attitude dangerous to the state. We have seen how nearly a
+ mutiny in the important city of Utrecht, set on foot by certain Romanist
+ conspirators in the years immediately succeeding the Truce, had subverted
+ the government, had excited much anxiety amongst the firmest allies of the
+ Republic, and had been suppressed only by the decision of the Advocate and
+ a show of military force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had informed Carleton not long after his arrival that in the United
+ Provinces, and in Holland in particular, were many sects and religions of
+ which, according to his expression, "the healthiest and the richest part
+ were the Papists, while the Protestants did not make up one-third part of
+ the inhabitants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly, if these statistics were correct or nearly correct, there could
+ be nothing more stupid from a purely political point of view than to
+ exasperate so influential a portion of the community to madness and
+ rebellion by refusing them all rights of public worship. Yet because the
+ Advocate had uniformly recommended indulgence, he had incurred more odium
+ at home than from any other cause. Of course he was a Papist in disguise,
+ ready to sell his country to Spain, because he was willing that more than
+ half the population of the country should be allowed to worship God
+ according to their conscience. Surely it would be wrong to judge the
+ condition of things at that epoch by the lights of to-day, and perhaps in
+ the Netherlands there had before been no conspicuous personage, save
+ William the Silent alone, who had risen to the height of toleration on
+ which the Advocate essayed to stand. Other leading politicians considered
+ that the national liberties could be preserved only by retaining the
+ Catholics in complete subjection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At any rate the Advocate was profoundly convinced of the necessity of
+ maintaining harmony and mutual toleration among the Protestants
+ themselves, who, as he said, made up but one-third of the whole people. In
+ conversing with the English ambassador he divided them into "Puritans and
+ double Puritans," as they would be called, he said, in England. If these
+ should be at variance with each other, he argued, the Papists would be the
+ strongest of all. "To prevent this inconvenience," he said, "the States
+ were endeavouring to settle some certain form of government in the Church;
+ which being composed of divers persecuted churches such as in the
+ beginning of the wars had their refuge here, that which during the wars
+ could not be so well done they now thought seasonable for a time of truce;
+ and therefore would show their authority in preventing the schism of the
+ Church which would follow the separation of those they call Remonstrants
+ and Contra-Remonstrants."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There being no word so offensive to Carleton's sovereign as the word
+ Puritan, the Ambassador did his best to persuade the Advocate that a
+ Puritan in Holland was a very different thing from a Puritan in England.
+ In England he was a noxious vermin, to be hunted with dogs. In the
+ Netherlands he was the governing power. But his arguments were vapourous
+ enough and made little impression on Barneveld. "He would no ways yield,"
+ said Sir Dudley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the Contra-Remonstrants of the Hague, not finding sufficient
+ accommodation in Enoch Much's house, clamoured loudly for the use of a
+ church. It was answered by the city magistrates that two of their
+ persuasion, La Motte and La Faille, preached regularly in the Great
+ Church, and that Rosaeus had been silenced only because he refused to hold
+ communion with Uytenbogaert. Maurice insisted that a separate church
+ should be assigned them. "But this is open schism," said Uytenbogaert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the year there was a meeting of the Holland delegation to the
+ States-General, of the state council, and of the magistracy of the Hague,
+ of deputies from the tribunals, and of all the nobles resident in the
+ capital. They sent for Maurice and asked his opinion as to the alarming
+ situation of affairs. He called for the register-books of the States of
+ Holland, and turning back to the pages on which was recorded his accession
+ to the stadholderate soon after his father's murder, ordered the oath then
+ exchanged between himself and the States to be read aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That oath bound them mutually to support the Reformed religion till the
+ last drop of blood in their veins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That oath I mean to keep," said the Stadholder, "so long as I live."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one disputed the obligation of all parties to maintain the Reformed
+ religion. But the question was whether the Five Points were inconsistent
+ with the Reformed religion. The contrary was clamorously maintained by
+ most of those present: In the year 1586 this difference in dogma had not
+ arisen, and as the large majority of the people at the Hague, including
+ nearly all those of rank and substance, were of the Remonstrant
+ persuasion, they naturally found it not agreeable to be sent out of the
+ church by a small minority. But Maurice chose to settle the question very
+ summarily. His father had been raised to power by the strict Calvinists,
+ and he meant to stand by those who had always sustained William the
+ Silent. "For this religion my father lost his life, and this religion will
+ I defend," said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You hold then," said Barneveld, "that the Almighty has created one child
+ for damnation and another for salvation, and you wish this doctrine to be
+ publicly preached."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you ever hear any one preach that?" replied the Prince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If they don't preach it, it is their inmost conviction," said the other.
+ And he proceeded to prove his position by copious citations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And suppose our ministers do preach this doctrine, is there anything
+ strange in it, any reason why they should not do so?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate expressed his amazement and horror at the idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But does not God know from all eternity who is to be saved and who to be
+ damned; and does He create men for any other end than that to which He
+ from eternity knows they will come?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so they enclosed themselves in the eternal circle out of which it was
+ not probable that either the soldier or the statesman would soon find an
+ issue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am no theologian," said Barneveld at last, breaking off the discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Neither am I," said the Stadholder. "So let the parsons come together.
+ Let the Synod assemble and decide the question. Thus we shall get out of
+ all this."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day a deputation of the secessionists waited by appointment on Prince
+ Maurice. They found him in the ancient mediaeval hall of the sovereign
+ counts of Holland, and seated on their old chair of state. He recommended
+ them to use caution and moderation for the present, and to go next Sunday
+ once more to Ryswyk. Afterwards he pledged himself that they should have a
+ church at the Hague, and, if necessary, the Great Church itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Great Church, although a very considerable Catholic cathedral
+ before the Reformation, was not big enough now to hold both Henry Rosaeus
+ and John Uytenbogaert. Those two eloquent, learned, and most pugnacious
+ divines were the respective champions in the pulpit of the opposing
+ parties, as were the Advocate and the Stadholder in the council. And there
+ was as bitter personal rivalry between the two as between the soldier and
+ statesman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The factions begin to divide themselves," said Carleton, "betwixt his
+ Excellency and Monsieur Barneveld as heads who join to this present
+ difference their ancient quarrels. And the schism rests actually between
+ Uytenbogaert and Rosaeus, whose private emulation and envy (both being
+ much applauded and followed) doth no good towards the public
+ pacification." Uytenbogaert repeatedly offered, however, to resign his
+ functions and to leave the Hague. "He was always ready to play the Jonah,"
+ he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A temporary arrangement was made soon afterwards by which Rosaeus and his
+ congregation should have the use of what was called the Gasthuis Kerk,
+ then appropriated to the English embassy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carleton of course gave his consent most willingly. The Prince declared
+ that the States of Holland and the city magistracy had personally
+ affronted him by the obstacles they had interposed to the public worship
+ of the Contra-Remonstrants. With their cause he had now thoroughly
+ identified himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hostility between the representatives of the civil and military
+ authority waxed fiercer every hour. The tumults were more terrible than
+ ever. Plainly there was no room in the Commonwealth for the Advocate and
+ the Stadholder. Some impartial persons believed that there would be no
+ peace until both were got rid of. "There are many words among this
+ free-spoken people," said Carleton, "that to end these differences they
+ must follow the example of France in Marshal d'Ancre's case, and take off
+ the heads of both chiefs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But these decided persons were in a small minority. Meantime the States of
+ Holland met in full assembly; sixty delegates being present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was proposed to invite his Excellency to take part in the
+ deliberations. A committee which had waited upon him the day before had
+ reported him as in favour of moderate rather than harsh measures in the
+ church affair, while maintaining his plighted word to the seceders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld stoutly opposed the motion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What need had the sovereign states of Holland of advice from a
+ stadholder, from their servant, their functionary?" he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the majority for once thought otherwise. The Prince was invited to
+ come. The deliberations were moderate but inconclusive. He appeared again
+ at an adjourned meeting when the councils were not so harmonious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld, Grotius, and other eloquent speakers endeavoured to point out
+ that the refusal of the seceders to hold communion with the Remonstrant
+ preachers and to insist on a separation was fast driving the state to
+ perdition. They warmly recommended mutual toleration and harmony. Grotius
+ exhausted learning and rhetoric to prove that the Five Points were not
+ inconsistent with salvation nor with the constitution of the United
+ Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Stadholder grew impatient at last and clapped his hand on his rapier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No need here," he said, "of flowery orations and learned arguments. With
+ this good sword I will defend the religion which my father planted in
+ these Provinces, and I should like to see the man who is going to prevent
+ me!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words had an heroic ring in the ears of such as are ever ready to
+ applaud brute force, especially when wielded by a prince. The argumentum
+ ad ensem, however, was the last plea that William the Silent would have
+ been likely to employ on such an occasion, nor would it have been easy to
+ prove that the Reformed religion had been "planted" by one who had drawn
+ the sword against the foreign tyrant, and had made vast sacrifices for his
+ country's independence years before abjuring communion with the Roman
+ Catholic Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When swords are handled by the executive in presence of civil assemblies
+ there is usually but one issue to be expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, three whales had recently been stranded at Scheveningen, one of
+ them more than sixty feet long, and men wagged their beards gravely as
+ they spoke of the event, deeming it a certain presage of civil commotions.
+ It was remembered that at the outbreak of the great war two whales had
+ been washed ashore in the Scheldt. Although some free-thinking people were
+ inclined to ascribe the phenomenon to a prevalence of strong westerly
+ gales, while others found proof in it of a superabundance of those
+ creatures in the Polar seas, which should rather give encouragement to the
+ Dutch and Zealand fisheries, it is probable that quite as dark forebodings
+ of coming disaster were caused by this accident as by the trumpet-like
+ defiance which the Stadholder had just delivered to the States of Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the seceding congregation of the Hague had become wearied of the
+ English or Gasthuis Church, and another and larger one had been promised
+ them. This was an ancient convent on one of the principal streets of the
+ town, now used as a cannon-foundry. The Prince personally superintended
+ the preparations for getting ready this place of worship, which was
+ thenceforth called the Cloister Church. But delays were, as the
+ Contra-Remonstrants believed, purposely interposed, so that it was nearly
+ Midsummer before there were any signs of the church being fit for use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They hastened accordingly to carry it, as it were, by assault. Not wishing
+ peaceably to accept as a boon from the civil authority what they claimed
+ as an indefeasible right, they suddenly took possession one Sunday night
+ of the Cloister Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in a state of utter confusion&mdash;part monastery, part foundry,
+ part conventicle. There were few seats, no altar, no communion-table,
+ hardly any sacramental furniture, but a pulpit was extemporized. Rosaeus
+ preached in triumph to an enthusiastic congregation, and three children
+ were baptized with the significant names of William, Maurice, and Henry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the following Monday there was a striking scene on the Voorhout. This
+ most beautiful street of a beautiful city was a broad avenue, shaded by a
+ quadruple row of limetrees, reaching out into the thick forest of secular
+ oaks and beeches&mdash;swarming with fallow-deer and alive with the notes
+ of singing birds&mdash;by which the Hague, almost from time immemorial,
+ has been embowered. The ancient cloisterhouse and church now reconverted
+ to religious uses&mdash;was a plain, rather insipid structure of red brick
+ picked out with white stone, presenting three symmetrical gables to the
+ street, with a slender belfry and spire rising in the rear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly adjoining it on the north-western side was the elegant and
+ commodious mansion of Barneveld, purchased by him from the representatives
+ of the Arenberg family, surrounded by shrubberies and flower-gardens; not
+ a palace, but a dignified and becoming abode for the first citizen of a
+ powerful republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On that midsummer's morning it might well seem that, in rescuing the old
+ cloister from the military purposes to which it had for years been
+ devoted, men had given an even more belligerent aspect to the scene than
+ if it had been left as a foundry. The miscellaneous pieces of artillery
+ and other fire-arms lying about, with piles of cannon-ball which there had
+ not been time to remove, were hardly less belligerent and threatening of
+ aspect than the stern faces of the crowd occupied in thoroughly preparing
+ the house for its solemn destination. It was determined that there should
+ be accommodation on the next Sunday for all who came to the service. An
+ army of carpenters, joiners, glaziers, and other workmen-assisted by a mob
+ of citizens of all ranks and ages, men and women, gentle and simple were
+ busily engaged in bringing planks and benches; working with plane, adze,
+ hammer and saw, trowel and shovel, to complete the work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the next Sunday the Prince attended public worship for the last time at
+ the Great Church under the ministration of Uytenbogaert. He was infuriated
+ with the sermon, in which the bold Remonstrant bitterly inveighed against
+ the proposition for a National Synod. To oppose that measure publicly in
+ the very face of the Stadholder, who now considered himself as the Synod
+ personified, seemed to him flat blasphemy. Coming out of the church with
+ his step-mother, the widowed Louise de Coligny, Princess of Orange, he
+ denounced the man in unmeasured terms. "He is the enemy of God," said
+ Maurice. At least from that time forth, and indeed for a year before,
+ Maurice was the enemy of the preacher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the following Sunday, July 23, Maurice went in solemn state to the
+ divine service at the Cloister Church now thoroughly organized. He was
+ accompanied by his cousin, the famous Count William Lewis of Nassau,
+ Stadholder of Friesland, who had never concealed his warm sympathy with
+ the Contra-Remonstrants, and by all the chief officers of his household
+ and members of his staff. It was an imposing demonstration and meant for
+ one. As the martial stadholder at the head of his brilliant cavalcade rode
+ forth across the drawbridge from the Inner Court of the old moated palace&mdash;where
+ the ancient sovereign Dirks and Florences of Holland had so long ruled
+ their stout little principality&mdash;along the shady and stately
+ Kneuterdyk and so through the Voorhout, an immense crowd thronged around
+ his path and accompanied him to the church. It was as if the great soldier
+ were marching to siege or battle-field where fresher glories than those of
+ Sluys or Geertruidenberg were awaiting him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The train passed by Barneveld's house and entered the cloister. More than
+ four thousand persons were present at the service or crowded around the
+ doors vainly attempting to gain admission into the overflowing aisles;
+ while the Great Church was left comparatively empty, a few hundred only
+ worshipping there. The Cloister Church was thenceforth called the Prince's
+ Church, and a great revolution was beginning even in the Hague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate was wroth as he saw the procession graced by the two
+ stadholders and their military attendants. He knew that he was now to bow
+ his head to the Church thus championed by the chief personage and
+ captain-general of the state, to renounce his dreams of religious
+ toleration, to sink from his post of supreme civic ruler, or to accept an
+ unequal struggle in which he might utterly succumb. But his iron nature
+ would break sooner than bend. In the first transports of his indignation
+ he is said to have vowed vengeance against the immediate instruments by
+ which the Cloister Church had, as he conceived, been surreptitiously and
+ feloniously seized. He meant to strike a blow which should startle the
+ whole population of the Hague, send a thrill of horror through the
+ country, and teach men to beware how they trifled with the sovereign
+ states of Holland, whose authority had so long been undisputed, and with
+ him their chief functionary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He resolved&mdash;so ran the tale of the preacher Trigland, who told it to
+ Prince Maurice, and has preserved it in his chronicle&mdash;to cause to be
+ seized at midnight from their beds four men whom he considered the
+ ringleaders in this mutiny, to have them taken to the place of execution
+ on the square in the midst of the city, to have their heads cut off at
+ once by warrant from the chief tribunal without any previous warning, and
+ then to summon all the citizens at dawn of day, by ringing of bells and
+ firing of cannon, to gaze on the ghastly spectacle, and teach them to what
+ fate this pestilential schism and revolt against authority had brought its
+ humble tools. The victims were to be Enoch Much, the Prince's book-keeper,
+ and three others, an attorney, an engraver, and an apothecary, all of
+ course of the Contra-Remonstrant persuasion. It was necessary, said the
+ Advocate, to make once for all an example, and show that there was a
+ government in the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had reckoned on a ready adhesion to this measure and a sentence from
+ the tribunal through the influence of his son-in-law, the Seignior van
+ Veenhuyzen, who was president of the chief court. His attempt was foiled
+ however by the stern opposition of two Zealand members of the court, who
+ managed to bring up from a bed of sickness, where he had long been lying,
+ a Holland councillor whom they knew to be likewise opposed to the fierce
+ measure, and thus defeated it by a majority of one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such is the story as told by contemporaries and repeated from that day to
+ this. It is hardly necessary to say that Barneveld calmly denied having
+ conceived or even heard of the scheme. That men could go about looking
+ each other in the face and rehearsing such gibberish would seem
+ sufficiently dispiriting did we not know to what depths of credulity men
+ in all ages can sink when possessed by the demon of party malice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If it had been narrated on the Exchange at Amsterdam or Flushing during
+ that portentous midsummer that Barneveld had not only beheaded but roasted
+ alive, and fed the dogs and cats upon the attorney, the apothecary, and
+ the engraver, there would have been citizens in plenty to devour the news
+ with avidity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But although the Advocate had never imagined such extravagances as these,
+ it is certain that he had now resolved upon very bold measures, and that
+ too without an instant's delay. He suspected the Prince of aiming at
+ sovereignty not only over Holland but over all the provinces and to be
+ using the Synod as a principal part of his machinery. The gauntlet was
+ thrown down by the Stadholder, and the Advocate lifted it at once. The
+ issue of the struggle would depend upon the political colour of the town
+ magistracies. Barneveld instinctively felt that Maurice, being now
+ resolved that the Synod should be held, would lose no time in making a
+ revolution in all the towns through the power he held or could plausibly
+ usurp. Such a course would, in his opinion, lead directly to an
+ unconstitutional and violent subversion of the sovereign rights of each
+ province, to the advantage of the central government. A religious creed
+ would be forced upon Holland and perhaps upon two other provinces which
+ was repugnant to a considerable majority of the people. And this would be
+ done by a majority vote of the States-General, on a matter over which, by
+ the 13th Article of the fundamental compact&mdash;the Union of Utrecht&mdash;the
+ States-General had no control, each province having reserved the
+ disposition of religious affairs to itself. For let it never be forgotten
+ that the Union of the Netherlands was a compact, a treaty, an agreement
+ between sovereign states. There was no pretence that it was an
+ incorporation, that the people had laid down a constitution, an organic
+ law. The people were never consulted, did not exist, had not for political
+ purposes been invented. It was the great primal defect of their
+ institutions, but the Netherlanders would have been centuries before their
+ age had they been able to remedy that defect. Yet the Netherlanders would
+ have been much behind even that age of bigotry had they admitted the
+ possibility in a free commonwealth, of that most sacred and important of
+ all subjects that concern humanity, religious creed&mdash;the relation of
+ man to his Maker&mdash;to be regulated by the party vote of a political
+ board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with no thought of treason in his heart or his head therefore that
+ the Advocate now resolved that the States of Holland and the cities of
+ which that college was composed should protect their liberties and
+ privileges, the sum of which in his opinion made up the sovereignty of the
+ province he served, and that they should protect them, if necessary, by
+ force. Force was apprehended. It should be met by force. To be forewarned
+ was to be forearmed. Barneveld forewarned the States of Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 4th August 1617, he proposed to that assembly a resolution which
+ was destined to become famous. A majority accepted it after brief debate.
+ It was to this effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States having seen what had befallen in many cities, and especially in
+ the Hague, against the order, liberties, and laws of the land, and having
+ in vain attempted to bring into harmony with the States certain cities
+ which refused to co-operate with the majority, had at last resolved to
+ refuse the National Synod, as conflicting with the sovereignty and laws of
+ Holland. They had thought good to set forth in public print their views as
+ to religious worship, and to take measures to prevent all deeds of
+ violence against persons and property. To this end the regents of cities
+ were authorized in case of need, until otherwise ordained, to enrol
+ men-at-arms for their security and prevention of violence. Furthermore,
+ every one that might complain of what the regents of cities by strength of
+ this resolution might do was ordered to have recourse to no one else than
+ the States of Holland, as no account would be made of anything that might
+ be done or undertaken by the tribunals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, it was resolved to send a deputation to Prince Maurice, the
+ Princess-Widow, and Prince Henry, requesting them to aid in carrying out
+ this resolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the deed was done. The sword was drawn. It was drawn in self-defence
+ and in deliberate answer to the Stadholder's defiance when he rapped his
+ sword hilt in face of the assembly, but still it was drawn. The States of
+ Holland were declared sovereign and supreme. The National Synod was
+ peremptorily rejected. Any decision of the supreme courts of the Union in
+ regard to the subject of this resolution was nullified in advance.
+ Thenceforth this measure of the 4th August was called the "Sharp Resolve."
+ It might prove perhaps to be double-edged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a stroke of grim sarcasm on the part of the Advocate thus solemnly
+ to invite the Stadholder's aid in carrying out a law which was aimed
+ directly at his head; to request his help for those who meant to defeat
+ with the armed hand that National Synod which he had pledged himself to
+ bring about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question now arose what sort of men-at-arms it would be well for the
+ city governments to enlist. The officers of the regular garrisons had
+ received distinct orders from Prince Maurice as their military superior to
+ refuse any summons to act in matters proceeding from the religious
+ question. The Prince, who had chief authority over all the regular troops,
+ had given notice that he would permit nothing to be done against "those of
+ the Reformed religion," by which he meant the Contra-Remonstrants and them
+ only.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some cities there were no garrisons, but only train-bands. But the
+ train bands (Schutters) could not be relied on to carry out the Sharp
+ Resolve, for they were almost to a man Contra-Remonstrants. It was
+ therefore determined to enlist what were called "Waartgelders;" soldiers,
+ inhabitants of the place, who held themselves ready to serve in time of
+ need in consideration of a certain wage; mercenaries in short.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This resolution was followed as a matter of course by a solemn protest
+ from Amsterdam and the five cities who acted with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the same day Maurice was duly notified of the passage of the law. His
+ wrath was great. High words passed between him and the deputies. It could
+ hardly have been otherwise expected. Next-day he came before the Assembly
+ to express his sentiments, to complain of the rudeness with which the
+ resolution of 4th August had been communicated to him, and to demand
+ further explanations. Forthwith the Advocate proceeded to set forth the
+ intentions of the States, and demanded that the Prince should assist the
+ magistrates in carrying out the policy decided upon. Reinier Pauw,
+ burgomaster of Amsterdam, fiercely interrupted the oration of Barneveld,
+ saying that although these might be his views, they were not to be held by
+ his Excellency as the opinions of all. The Advocate, angry at the
+ interruption, answered him sternly, and a violent altercation, not unmixed
+ with personalities, arose. Maurice, who kept his temper admirably on this
+ occasion, interfered between the two and had much difficulty in quieting
+ the dispute. He then observed that when he took the oath as stadholder
+ these unfortunate differences had not arisen, but all had been good
+ friends together. This was perfectly true, but he could have added that
+ they might all continue good friends unless the plan of imposing a
+ religious creed upon the minority by a clerical decision were persisted
+ in. He concluded that for love of one of the two great parties he would
+ not violate the oath he had taken to maintain the Reformed religion to the
+ last drop of his blood. Still, with the same 'petitio principii' that the
+ Reformed religion and the dogmas of the Contra-Remonstrants were one and
+ the same thing, he assured the Assembly that the authority of the
+ magistrates would be sustained by him so long as it did not lead to the
+ subversion of religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clearly the time for argument had passed. As Dudley Carleton observed, men
+ had been disputing 'pro aris' long enough. They would soon be fighting
+ 'pro focis.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In pursuance of the policy laid down by the Sharp Resolution, the States
+ proceeded to assure themselves of the various cities of the province by
+ means of Waartgelders. They sent to the important seaport of Brielle and
+ demanded a new oath from the garrison. It was intimated that the Prince
+ would be soon coming there in person to make himself master of the place,
+ and advice was given to the magistrates to be beforehand with him. These
+ statements angered Maurice, and angered him the more because they happened
+ to be true. It was also charged that he was pursuing his Leicestrian
+ designs and meant to make himself, by such steps, sovereign of the
+ country. The name of Leicester being a byword of reproach ever since that
+ baffled noble had a generation before left the Provinces in disgrace, it
+ was a matter of course that such comparisons were excessively
+ exasperating. It was fresh enough too in men's memory that the Earl in his
+ Netherland career had affected sympathy with the strictest denomination of
+ religious reformers, and that the profligate worldling and arrogant
+ self-seeker had used the mask of religion to cover flagitious ends. As it
+ had indeed been the object of the party at the head of which the Advocate
+ had all his life acted to raise the youthful Maurice to the stadholderate
+ expressly to foil the plots of Leicester, it could hardly fail to be
+ unpalatable to Maurice to be now accused of acting the part of Leicester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He inveighed bitterly on the subject before the state council: The state
+ council, in a body, followed him to a meeting of the States-General. Here
+ the Stadholder made a vehement speech and demanded that the States of
+ Holland should rescind the "Sharp Resolution," and should desist from the
+ new oaths required from the soldiery. Barneveld, firm as a rock, met these
+ bitter denunciations. Speaking in the name of Holland, he repelled the
+ idea that the sovereign States of that province were responsible to the
+ state council or to the States-General either. He regretted, as all
+ regretted, the calumnies uttered against the Prince, but in times of such
+ intense excitement every conspicuous man was the mark of calumny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Stadholder warmly repudiated Leicestrian designs, and declared that he
+ had been always influenced by a desire to serve his country and maintain
+ the Reformed religion. If he had made mistakes, he desired to be permitted
+ to improve in the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus having spoken, the soldier retired from the Assembly with the state
+ council at his heels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate lost no time in directing the military occupation of the
+ principal towns of Holland, such as Leyden, Gouda, Rotterdam, Schoonhoven,
+ Hoorn, and other cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Leyden especially, where a strong Orange party was with difficulty kept
+ in obedience by the Remonstrant magistracy, it was found necessary to
+ erect a stockade about the town-hall and to plant caltrops and other
+ obstructions in the squares and streets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The broad space in front; of the beautiful medieval seat of the municipal
+ government, once so sacred for the sublime and pathetic scenes enacted
+ there during the famous siege and in the magistracy of Peter van der
+ Werff, was accordingly enclosed by a solid palisade of oaken planks,
+ strengthened by rows of iron bars with barbed prongs: The entrenchment was
+ called by the populace the Arminian Fort, and the iron spear heads were
+ baptized Barneveld's teeth. Cannon were planted at intervals along the
+ works, and a company or two of the Waartgelders, armed from head to foot,
+ with snaphances on their shoulders, stood ever ready to issue forth to
+ quell any disturbances. Occasionally a life or two was lost of citizen or
+ soldier, and many doughty blows were interchanged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a melancholy spectacle. No commonwealth could be more fortunate
+ than this republic in possessing two such great leading minds. No two men
+ could be more patriotic than both Stadholder and Advocate. No two men
+ could be prouder, more overbearing, less conciliatory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know Mons. Barneveld well," said Sir Ralph Winwood, "and know that he
+ hath great powers and abilities, and malice itself must confess that man
+ never hath done more faithful and powerful service to his country than he.
+ But 'finis coronat opus' and 'il di lodi lacera; oportet imperatorem
+ stantem mori.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cities of Holland were now thoroughly "waartgeldered," and Barneveld
+ having sufficiently shown his "teeth" in that province departed for change
+ of air to Utrecht. His failing health was assigned as the pretext for the
+ visit, although the atmosphere of that city has never been considered
+ especially salubrious in the dog-days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the Stadholder remained quiet, but biding his time. He did not
+ choose to provoke a premature conflict in the strongholds of the Arminians
+ as he called them, but with a true military instinct preferred making sure
+ of the ports. Amsterdam, Enkhuyzen, Flushing, being without any effort of
+ his own within his control, he quietly slipped down the river Meuse on the
+ night of the 29th September, accompanied by his brother Frederic Henrys
+ and before six o'clock next morning had introduced a couple of companies
+ of trustworthy troops into Brielle, had summoned the magistrates before
+ him, and compelled them to desist from all further intention of levying
+ mercenaries. Thus all the fortresses which Barneveld had so recently and
+ in such masterly fashion rescued from the grasp of England were now
+ quietly reposing in the hands of the Stadholder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maurice thought it not worth his while for the present to quell the mutiny&mdash;as
+ he considered it the legal and constitutional defence of vested right&mdash;as
+ great jurists like Barneveld and Hugo Grotius accounted the movement&mdash;at
+ its "fountain head Leyden or its chief stream Utrecht;" to use the
+ expression of Carleton. There had already been bloodshed in Leyden, a
+ burgher or two having been shot and a soldier stoned to death in the
+ streets, but the Stadholder deemed it unwise to precipitate matters.
+ Feeling himself, with his surpassing military knowledge and with a large
+ majority of the nation at his back, so completely master of the situation,
+ he preferred waiting on events. And there is no doubt that he was proving
+ himself a consummate politician and a perfect master of fence. "He is much
+ beloved and followed both of soldiers and people," said the English
+ ambassador, "he is a man 'innoxiae popularitatis' so as this jealousy
+ cannot well be fastened upon him; and in this cause of religion he stirred
+ not until within these few months he saw he must declare himself or suffer
+ the better party to be overborne."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief tribunal-high council so called-of the country soon gave
+ evidence that the "Sharp Resolution" had judged rightly in reckoning on
+ its hostility and in nullifying its decisions in advance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They decided by a majority vote that the Resolution ought not to be
+ obeyed, but set aside. Amsterdam, and the three or four cities usually
+ acting with her, refused to enlist troops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rombout Hoogerbeets, a member of the tribunal, informed Prince Maurice
+ that he "would no longer be present on a bench where men disputed the
+ authority of the States of Holland, which he held to be the supreme
+ sovereignty over him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was plain speaking; a distinct enunciation of what the States' right
+ party deemed to be constitutional law.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what said Maurice in reply?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I, too, recognize the States of Holland as sovereign; but we might at
+ least listen to each other occasionally."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hoogerbeets, however, deeming that listening had been carried far enough,
+ decided to leave the tribunal altogether, and to resume the post which he
+ had formerly occupied as Pensionary or chief magistrate of Leyden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he was soon to find himself in the thick of the conflict. Meantime
+ the States-General, in full assembly, on 11th November 1617, voted that
+ the National Synod should be held in the course of the following year. The
+ measure was carried by a strict party vote and by a majority of one. The
+ representatives of each province voting as one, there were four in favour
+ of to three against the Synod. The minority, consisting of Holland,
+ Utrecht, and Overyssel, protested against the vote as an outrageous
+ invasion of the rights of each province, as an act of flagrant tyranny and
+ usurpation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minority in the States of Holland, the five cities often named,
+ protested against the protest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The defective part of the Netherland constitutions could not be better
+ illustrated. The minority of the States of Holland refused to be bound by
+ a majority of the provincial assembly. The minority of the States-General
+ refused to be bound by the majority of the united assembly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was reducing politics to an absurdity and making all government
+ impossible. It is however quite certain that in the municipal governments
+ a majority had always governed, and that a majority vote in the provincial
+ assemblies had always prevailed. The present innovation was to govern the
+ States-General by a majority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet viewed by the light of experience and of common sense, it would be
+ difficult to conceive of a more preposterous proceeding than thus to cram
+ a religious creed down the throats of half the population of a country by
+ the vote of a political assembly. But it was the seventeenth and not the
+ nineteenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, if there were any meaning in words, the 13th Article of Union,
+ reserving especially the disposition over religious matters to each
+ province, had been wisely intended to prevent the possibility of such
+ tyranny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the letters of invitation to the separate states and to others were
+ drawing up in the general assembly, the representatives of the three
+ states left the chamber. A solitary individual from Holland remained
+ however, a burgomaster of Amsterdam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uytenbogaert, conversing with Barneveld directly afterwards, advised him
+ to accept the vote. Yielding to the decision of the majority, it would be
+ possible, so thought the clergyman, for the great statesman so to handle
+ matters as to mould the Synod to his will, even as he had so long
+ controlled the States-Provincial and the States-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you are willing to give away the rights of the land," said the
+ Advocate very sharply, "I am not."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably the priest's tactics might have proved more adroit than the stony
+ opposition on which Barneveld was resolved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was with the aged statesman a matter of principle, not of policy.
+ His character and his personal pride, the dignity of opinion and office,
+ his respect for constitutional law, were all at stake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shallow observers considered the struggle now taking place as a personal
+ one. Lovers of personal government chose to look upon the Advocate's party
+ as a faction inspired with an envious resolve to clip the wings of the
+ Stadholder, who was at last flying above their heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There could be no doubt of the bitter animosity between the two men. There
+ could be no doubt that jealousy was playing the part which that master
+ passion will ever play in all the affairs of life. But there could be no
+ doubt either that a difference of principle as wide as the world separated
+ the two antagonists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even so keen an observer as Dudley Carleton, while admitting the man's
+ intellectual power and unequalled services, could see nothing in the
+ Advocate's present course but prejudice, obstinacy, and the insanity of
+ pride. "He doth no whit spare himself in pains nor faint in his
+ resolution," said the Envoy, "wherein notwithstanding he will in all
+ appearance succumb ere afore long, having the disadvantages of a weak
+ body, a weak party, and a weak cause." But Carleton hated Barneveld, and
+ considered it the chief object of his mission to destroy him, if he could.
+ In so doing he would best carry out the wishes of his sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King of Britain had addressed a somewhat equivocal letter to the
+ States-General on the subject of religion in the spring of 1617. It
+ certainly was far from being as satisfactory as, the epistles of 1613
+ prepared under the Advocate's instructions, had been, while the exuberant
+ commentary upon the royal text, delivered in full assembly by his
+ ambassador soon after the reception of the letter, was more than usually
+ didactic, offensive, and ignorant. Sir Dudley never omitted an opportunity
+ of imparting instruction to the States-General as to the nature of their
+ constitution and the essential dogmas on which their Church was founded.
+ It is true that the great lawyers and the great theologians of the country
+ were apt to hold very different opinions from his upon those important
+ subjects, but this was so much the worse for the lawyers and theologians,
+ as time perhaps might prove.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King in this last missive had proceeded to unsay the advice which he
+ had formerly bestowed upon the States, by complaining that his earlier
+ letters had been misinterpreted. They had been made use of, he said, to
+ authorize the very error against which they had been directed. They had
+ been held to intend the very contrary of what they did mean. He felt
+ himself bound in conscience therefore, finding these differences ready to
+ be "hatched into schisms," to warn the States once more against pests so
+ pernicious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the royal language was somewhat vague so far as enunciation of
+ doctrine, a point on which he had once confessed himself fallible, was
+ concerned, there was nothing vague in his recommendation of a National
+ Synod. To this the opposition of Barneveld was determined not upon
+ religious but upon constitutional grounds. The confederacy did not
+ constitute a nation, and therefore there could not be a national synod nor
+ a national religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carleton came before the States-General soon afterwards with a prepared
+ oration, wearisome as a fast-day sermon after the third turn of the
+ hour-glass, pragmatical as a schoolmaster's harangue to fractious little
+ boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He divided his lecture into two heads&mdash;the peace of the Church, and
+ the peace of the Provinces&mdash;starting with the first. "A Jove
+ principium," he said, "I will begin with that which is both beginning and
+ end. It is the truth of God's word and its maintenance that is the bond of
+ our common cause. Reasons of state invite us as friends and neighbours by
+ the preservation of our lives and property, but the interest of religion
+ binds us as Christians and brethren to the mutual defence of the liberty
+ of our consciences."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then proceeded to point out the only means by which liberty of
+ conscience could be preserved. It was by suppressing all forms of religion
+ but one, and by silencing all religious discussion. Peter Titelman and
+ Philip II. could not have devised a more pithy formula. All that was
+ wanting was the axe and faggot to reduce uniformity to practice. Then
+ liberty of conscience would be complete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One must distinguish," said the Ambassador, "between just liberty and
+ unbridled license, and conclude that there is but one truth single and
+ unique. Those who go about turning their brains into limbecks for
+ distilling new notions in religious matters only distract the union of the
+ Church which makes profession of this unique truth. If it be permitted to
+ one man to publish the writings and fantasies of a sick spirit and for
+ another moved by Christian zeal to reduce this wanderer 'ad sanam mentem;'
+ why then 'patet locus adversus utrumque,' and the common enemy (the Devil)
+ slips into the fortress." He then proceeded to illustrate this theory on
+ liberty of conscience by allusions to Conrad Vorstius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This infamous sectary had in fact reached such a pitch of audacity, said
+ the Ambassador, as not only to inveigh against the eternal power of God
+ but to indulge in irony against the honour of his Majesty King James.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in what way had he scandalized the government of the Republic? He had
+ dared to say that within its borders there was religious toleration. He
+ had distinctly averred that in the United Provinces heretics were not
+ punished with death or with corporal chastisement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He declares openly," said Carleton, "that contra haereticos etiam vere
+ dictos (ne dum falso et calumniose sic traductos) there is neither
+ sentence of death nor other corporal punishment, so that in order to
+ attract to himself a great following of birds of the name feather he
+ publishes to all the world that here in this country one can live and die
+ a heretic, unpunished, without being arrested and without danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to suppress this reproach upon the Republic at which the
+ Ambassador stood aghast, and to prevent the Vorstian doctrines of
+ religious toleration and impunity of heresy from spreading among "the
+ common people, so subject by their natures to embrace new opinions," he
+ advised of course that "the serpent be sent back to the nest where he was
+ born before the venom had spread through the whole body of the Republic."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A week afterwards a long reply was delivered on part of the States-General
+ to the Ambassador's oration. It is needless to say that it was the work of
+ the Advocate, and that it was in conformity with the opinions so often
+ exhibited in the letters to Caron and others of which the reader has seen
+ many samples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That religious matters were under the control of the civil government, and
+ that supreme civil authority belonged to each one of the seven sovereign
+ provinces, each recognizing no superior within its own sphere, were maxims
+ of state always enforced in the Netherlands and on which the whole
+ religious controversy turned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The States-General have always cherished the true Christian Apostolic
+ religion," they said, "and wished it to be taught under the authority and
+ protection of the legal government of these Provinces in all purity, and
+ in conformity with the Holy Scriptures, to the good people of these
+ Provinces. And My Lords the States and magistrates of the respective
+ provinces, each within their own limits, desire the same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had therefore given express orders to the preachers "to keep the
+ peace by mutual and benign toleration of the different opinions on the one
+ side and the other at least until with full knowledge of the subject the
+ States might otherwise ordain. They had been the more moved to this
+ because his Majesty having carefully examined the opinions of the learned
+ hereon each side had found both consistent with Christian belief and the
+ salvation of souls."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was certainly not the highest expression of religious toleration for
+ the civil authority to forbid the clergymen of the country from discussing
+ in their pulpits the knottiest and most mysterious points of the schoolmen
+ lest the "common people" should be puzzled. Nevertheless, where the close
+ union of Church and State and the necessity of one church were deemed
+ matters of course, it was much to secure subordination of the priesthood
+ to the magistracy, while to enjoin on preachers abstention from a single
+ exciting cause of quarrel, on the ground that there was more than one path
+ to salvation, and that mutual toleration was better than mutual
+ persecution, was; in that age, a stride towards religious equality. It was
+ at least an advance on Carleton's dogma, that there was but one unique and
+ solitary truth, and that to declare heretics not punishable with death was
+ an insult to the government of the Republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States-General answered the Ambassador's plea, made in the name of his
+ master, for immediate and unguaranteed evacuation of the debatable land by
+ the arguments already so often stated in the Advocate's instructions to
+ Caron. They had been put to great trouble and expense already in their
+ campaigning and subsequent fortification of important places in the
+ duchies. They had seen the bitter spirit manifested by the Spaniards in
+ the demolition of the churches and houses of Mulheim and other places.
+ "While the affair remained in its present terms of utter uncertainty their
+ Mightinesses," said the States-General, "find it most objectionable to
+ forsake the places which they have been fortifying and to leave the
+ duchies and all their fellow-religionists, besides the rights of the
+ possessory princes a prey to those who have been hankering for the
+ territories for long years, and who would unquestionably be able to make
+ themselves absolute masters of all within a very few days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few months later Carleton came before the States-General again and
+ delivered another elaborate oration, duly furnished to him by the King,
+ upon the necessity of the National Synod, the comparative merits of
+ Arminianism and Contra-Remonstrantism, together with a full exposition of
+ the constitutions of the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It might be supposed that Barneveld and Grotius and Hoogerbeets knew
+ something of the law and history of their country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But James knew much better, and so his envoy endeavoured to convince his
+ audience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He received on the spot a temperate but conclusive reply from the
+ delegates of Holland. They informed him that the war with Spain&mdash;the
+ cause of the Utrecht Union&mdash;was not begun about religion but on
+ account of the violation of liberties, chartered rights and privileges,
+ not the least of which rights was that of each province to regulate
+ religious matters within its borders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later a more vehement reply was published anonymously in the
+ shape of a pamphlet called 'The Balance,' which much angered the
+ Ambassador and goaded his master almost to frenzy. It was deemed so
+ blasphemous, so insulting to the Majesty of England, so entirely
+ seditious, that James, not satisfied with inditing a rejoinder, insisted
+ through Carleton that a reward should be offered by the States for the
+ detection of the author, in order that he might be condignly punished.
+ This was done by a majority vote, 1000 florins being offered for the
+ discovery of the author and 600 for that of the printer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Naturally the step was opposed in the States-General; two deputies in
+ particular making themselves conspicuous. One of them was an audacious old
+ gentleman named Brinius of Gelderland, "much corrupted with Arminianism,"
+ so Carleton informed his sovereign. He appears to have inherited his
+ audacity through his pedigree, descending, as it was ludicrously enough
+ asserted he did, from a chief of the Caninefates, the ancient inhabitants
+ of Gelderland, called Brinio. And Brinio the Caninefat had been as famous
+ for his stolid audacity as for his illustrious birth; "Erat in
+ Caninefatibus stolidae audaciae Brinio claritate natalium insigni."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The patronizing manner in which the Ambassador alluded to the other member
+ of the States-General who opposed the decree was still more diverting. It
+ was "Grotius, the Pensioner of Rotterdam, a young petulant brain, not
+ unknown to your Majesty," said Carleton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two centuries and a half have rolled away, and there are few majesties,
+ few nations, and few individuals to whom the name of that petulant youth
+ is unknown; but how many are familiar with the achievements of the able
+ representative of King James?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing came of the measure, however, and the offer of course helped the
+ circulation of the pamphlet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is amusing to see the ferocity thus exhibited by the royal pamphleteer
+ against a rival; especially when one can find no crime in 'The Balance'
+ save a stinging and well-merited criticism of a very stupid oration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gillis van Ledenberg was generally supposed to be the author of it.
+ Carleton inclined, however, to suspect Grotius, "because," said he,
+ "having always before been a stranger to my house, he has made me the day
+ before the publication thereof a complimentary visit, although it was
+ Sunday and church time; whereby the Italian proverb, 'Chi ti caresse piu
+ che suole,' &amp;c.,' is added to other likelihoods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was subsequently understood however that the pamphlet was written by a
+ Remonstrant preacher of Utrecht, named Jacobus Taurinus; one of those who
+ had been doomed to death by the mutinous government in that city seven
+ years before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now sufficiently obvious that either the governments in the three
+ opposition provinces must be changed or that the National Synod must be
+ imposed by a strict majority vote in the teeth of the constitution and of
+ vigorous and eloquent protests drawn up by the best lawyers in the
+ country. The Advocate and Grotius recommended a provincial synod first
+ and, should that not succeed in adjusting the differences of church
+ government, then the convocation of a general or oecumenical synod. They
+ resisted the National Synod because, in their view, the Provinces were not
+ a nation. A league of seven sovereign and independent Mates was all that
+ legally existed in the Netherlands. It was accordingly determined that the
+ governments should be changed, and the Stadholder set himself to prepare
+ the way for a thorough and, if possible, a bloodless revolution. He
+ departed on the 27th November for a tour through the chief cities, and
+ before leaving the Hague addressed an earnest circular letter to the
+ various municipalities of Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A more truly dignified, reasonable, right royal letter, from the
+ Stadholder's point of view, could not have been indited. The Imperial "we"
+ breathing like a morning breeze through the whole of it blew away all
+ legal and historical mistiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the clouds returned again nevertheless. Unfortunately for Maurice it
+ could not be argued by the pen, however it might be proved by the sword,
+ that the Netherlands constituted a nation, and that a convocation of
+ doctors of divinity summoned by a body of envoys had the right to dictate
+ a creed to seven republics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All parties were agreed on one point. There must be unity of divine
+ worship. The territory of the Netherlands was not big enough to hold two
+ systems of religion, two forms of Christianity, two sects of
+ Protestantism. It was big enough to hold seven independent and sovereign
+ states, but would be split into fragments&mdash;resolved into chaos&mdash;should
+ there be more than one Church or if once a schism were permitted in that
+ Church. Grotius was as much convinced of this as Gomarus. And yet the 13th
+ Article of the Union stared them all in the face, forbidding the hideous
+ assumptions now made by the general government. Perhaps no man living
+ fully felt its import save Barneveld alone. For groping however dimly and
+ hesitatingly towards the idea of religious liberty, of general toleration,
+ he was denounced as a Papist, an atheist, a traitor, a miscreant, by the
+ fanatics for the sacerdotal and personal power. Yet it was a pity that he
+ could never contemplate the possibility of his country's throwing off the
+ swaddling clothes of provincialism which had wrapped its infancy.
+ Doubtless history, law, tradition, and usage pointed to the independent
+ sovereignty of each province. Yet the period of the Truce was precisely
+ the time when a more generous constitution, a national incorporation might
+ have been constructed to take the place of the loose confederacy by which
+ the gigantic war had been fought out. After all, foreign powers had no
+ connection with the States, and knew only the Union with which and with
+ which alone they made treaties, and the reality of sovereignty in each
+ province was as ridiculous as in theory it was impregnable. But Barneveld,
+ under the modest title of Advocate of one province, had been in reality
+ president and prime minister of the whole commonwealth. He had himself
+ been the union and the sovereignty. It was not wonderful that so imperious
+ a nature objected to transfer its powers to the Church, to the
+ States-General, or to Maurice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, when nationality assumed the unlovely form of rigid religious
+ uniformity; when Union meant an exclusive self-governed Church enthroned
+ above the State, responsible to no civic authority and no human law, the
+ boldest patriot might shiver at emerging from provincialism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Commonwealth bent on Self-destruction&mdash;Evils of a Confederate
+ System of Government&mdash;Rem Bischop's House sacked&mdash;Aerssens'
+ unceasing Efforts against Barneveld&mdash;The Advocate's Interview with
+ Maurice&mdash;The States of Utrecht raise the Troops&mdash;The Advocate at
+ Utrecht&mdash;Barneveld urges mutual Toleration&mdash;Barneveld accused of
+ being Partisan of Spain&mdash;Carleton takes his Departure.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is not cheerful after widely contemplating the aspect of Christendom in
+ the year of supreme preparation to examine with the minuteness absolutely
+ necessary the narrow theatre to which the political affairs of the great
+ republic had been reduced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That powerful commonwealth, to which the great party of the Reformation
+ naturally looked for guidance in the coming conflict, seemed bent on
+ self-destruction. The microcosm of the Netherlands now represented, alas!
+ the war of elements going on without on a world-wide scale. As the
+ Calvinists and Lutherans of Germany were hotly attacking each other even
+ in sight of the embattled front of Spain and the League, so the Gomarites
+ and the Arminians by their mutual rancour were tearing the political power
+ of the Dutch Republic to shreds and preventing her from assuming a great
+ part in the crisis. The consummate soldier, the unrivalled statesman, each
+ superior in his sphere to any contemporary rival, each supplementing the
+ other, and making up together, could they have been harmonized, a double
+ head such as no political organism then existing could boast, were now in
+ hopeless antagonism to each other. A mass of hatred had been accumulated
+ against the Advocate with which he found it daily more and more difficult
+ to struggle. The imperious, rugged, and suspicious nature of the
+ Stadholder had been steadily wrought upon by the almost devilish acts of
+ Francis Aerssens until he had come to look upon his father's most faithful
+ adherent, his own early preceptor in statesmanship and political
+ supporter, as an antagonist, a conspirator, and a tyrant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soldier whose unrivalled ability, experience, and courage in the field
+ should have placed him at the very head of the great European army of
+ defence against the general crusade upon Protestantism, so constantly
+ foretold by Barneveld, was now to be engaged in making bloodless but
+ mischievous warfare against an imaginary conspiracy and a patriot foe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate, keeping steadily in view the great principles by which his
+ political life had been guided, the supremacy of the civil authority in
+ any properly organized commonwealth over the sacerdotal and military,
+ found himself gradually forced into mortal combat with both. To the
+ individual sovereignty of each province he held with the tenacity of a
+ lawyer and historian. In that he found the only clue through the labyrinth
+ which ecclesiastical and political affairs presented. So close was the
+ tangle, so confused the medley, that without this slender guide all hope
+ of legal issue seemed lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt the difficulty of the doctrine of individual sovereignty was
+ great, some of the provinces being such slender morsels of territory, with
+ resources so trivial, as to make the name of sovereignty ludicrous. Yet
+ there could be as little doubt that no other theory was tenable. If so
+ powerful a mind as that of the Advocate was inclined to strain the theory
+ to its extreme limits, it was because in the overshadowing superiority of
+ the one province Holland had been found the practical remedy for the
+ imbecility otherwise sure to result from such provincial and meagre
+ federalism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, to obtain Union by stretching all the ancient historical
+ privileges and liberties of the separate provinces upon the Procrustean
+ bed of a single dogma, to look for nationality only in common subjection
+ to an infallible priesthood, to accept a Catechism as the palladium upon
+ which the safety of the State was to depend for all time, and beyond which
+ there was to be no further message from Heaven&mdash;such was not healthy
+ constitutionalism in the eyes of a great statesman. No doubt that without
+ the fervent spirit of Calvinism it would have been difficult to wage war
+ with such immortal hate as the Netherlands had waged it, no doubt the
+ spirit of republican and even democratic liberty lay hidden within that
+ rigid husk, but it was dishonour to the martyrs who had died by thousands
+ at the stake and on the battle field for the rights of conscience if the
+ only result of their mighty warfare against wrong had been to substitute a
+ new dogma for an old one, to stifle for ever the right of free enquiry,
+ theological criticism, and the hope of further light from on high, and to
+ proclaim it a libel on the Republic that within its borders all heretics,
+ whether Arminian or Papist, were safe from the death penalty or even from
+ bodily punishment. A theological union instead of a national one and
+ obtained too at the sacrifice of written law and immemorial tradition, a
+ congress in which clerical deputations from all the provinces and from
+ foreign nations should prescribe to all Netherlanders an immutable creed
+ and a shadowy constitution, were not the true remedies for the evils of
+ confederacy, nor, if they had been, was the time an appropriate one for
+ their application.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was far too early in the world's history to hope for such
+ redistribution of powers and such a modification of the social compact as
+ would place in separate spheres the Church and the State, double the
+ sanctions and the consolations of religion by removing it from the
+ pollutions of political warfare, and give freedom to individual conscience
+ by securing it from the interference of government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is melancholy to see the Republic thus perversely occupying its
+ energies. It is melancholy to see the great soldier becoming gradually
+ more ardent for battle with Barneveld and Uytenbogaert than with Spinola
+ and Bucquoy, against whom he had won so many imperishable laurels. It is
+ still sadder to see the man who had been selected by Henry IV. as the one
+ statesman of Europe to whom he could confide his great projects for the
+ pacification of Christendom, and on whom he could depend for counsel and
+ support in schemes which, however fantastic in some of their details, had
+ for their object to prevent the very European war of religion against
+ which Barneveld had been struggling, now reduced to defend himself against
+ suspicion hourly darkening and hatred growing daily more insane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eagle glance and restless wing, which had swept the whole political
+ atmosphere, now caged within the stifling limits of theological casuistry
+ and personal rivalry were afflicting to contemplate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evils resulting from a confederate system of government, from a league
+ of petty sovereignties which dared not become a nation, were as woefully
+ exemplified in the United Provinces as they were destined to be more than
+ a century and a half later, and in another hemisphere, before that most
+ fortunate and sagacious of written political instruments, the American
+ Constitution of 1787, came to remedy the weakness of the old articles of
+ Union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the Netherlands were a confederacy, not a nation. Their general
+ government was but a committee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It could ask of, but not command, the separate provinces. It had no
+ dealings with nor power over the inhabitants of the country; it could say
+ "Thou shalt" neither to state nor citizen; it could consult only with
+ corporations&mdash;fictitious and many-headed personages&mdash;itself
+ incorporate. There was no first magistrate, no supreme court, no
+ commander-in-chief, no exclusive mint nor power of credit, no national
+ taxation, no central house of representation and legislation, no senate.
+ Unfortunately it had one church, and out of this single matrix of
+ centralism was born more discord than had been produced by all the
+ centrifugal forces of provincialism combined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been working substitutes found, as we well know, for the
+ deficiencies of this constitution, but the Advocate felt himself bound to
+ obey and enforce obedience to the laws and privileges of his country so
+ long as they remained without authorized change. His country was the
+ Province of Holland, to which his allegiance was due and whose servant he
+ was. That there was but one church paid and sanctioned by law, he
+ admitted, but his efforts were directed to prevent discord within that
+ church, by counselling moderation, conciliation, mutual forbearance, and
+ abstention from irritating discussion of dogmas deemed by many thinkers
+ and better theologians than himself not essential to salvation. In this he
+ was much behind his age or before it. He certainly was not with the
+ majority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, while the election of Ferdinand had given the signal of war all
+ over Christendom, while from the demolished churches in Bohemia the tocsin
+ was still sounding, whose vibrations were destined to be heard a
+ generation long through the world, there was less sympathy felt with the
+ call within the territory of the great republic of Protestantism than
+ would have seemed imaginable a few short years before. The capture of the
+ Cloister Church at the Hague in the summer of 1617 seemed to minds excited
+ by personal rivalries and minute theological controversy a more momentous
+ event than the destruction of the churches in the Klostergrab in the
+ following December. The triumph of Gomarism in a single Dutch city
+ inspired more enthusiasm for the moment than the deadly buffet to European
+ Protestantism could inspire dismay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church had been carried and occupied, as it were, by force, as if an
+ enemy's citadel. It seemed necessary to associate the idea of practical
+ warfare with a movement which might have been a pacific clerical success.
+ Barneveld and those who acted with him, while deploring the intolerance
+ out of which the schism had now grown to maturity, had still hoped for
+ possible accommodation of the quarrel. They dreaded popular tumults
+ leading to oppression of the magistracy by the mob or the soldiery and
+ ending in civil war. But what was wanted by the extreme partisans on
+ either side was not accommodation but victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Religious differences are causing much trouble and discontents in many
+ cities," he said. "At Amsterdam there were in the past week two
+ assemblages of boys and rabble which did not disperse without violence,
+ crime, and robbery. The brother of Professor Episcopius (Rem Bischop) was
+ damaged to the amount of several thousands. We are still hoping that some
+ better means of accommodation may be found."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The calmness with which the Advocate spoke of these exciting and painful
+ events is remarkable. It was exactly a week before the date of his letter
+ that this riot had taken place at Amsterdam; very significant in its
+ nature and nearly tragical in its results. There were no Remonstrant
+ preachers left in the city, and the people of that persuasion were
+ excluded from the Communion service. On Sunday morning, 17th February
+ (1617), a furious mob set upon the house of Rem Bischop, a highly
+ respectable and wealthy citizen, brother of the Remonstrant professor
+ Episcopius, of Leyden. The house, an elegant mansion in one of the
+ principal streets, was besieged and after an hour's resistance carried by
+ storm. The pretext of the assault was that Arminian preaching was going on
+ within its walls, which was not the fact. The mistress of the house, half
+ clad, attempted to make her escape by the rear of the building, was
+ pursued by the rabble with sticks and stones, and shrieks of "Kill the
+ Arminian harlot, strike her dead," until she fortunately found refuge in
+ the house of a neighbouring carpenter. There the hunted creature fell
+ insensible on the ground, the master of the house refusing to give her up,
+ though the maddened mob surged around it, swearing that if the "Arminian
+ harlot"&mdash;as respectable a matron as lived in the city&mdash;were not
+ delivered over to them, they would tear the house to pieces. The hope of
+ plunder and of killing Rem Bischop himself drew them at last back to his
+ mansion. It was thoroughly sacked; every portable article of value, linen,
+ plate, money, furniture, was carried off, the pictures and objects of art
+ destroyed, the house gutted from top to bottom. A thousand spectators were
+ looking on placidly at the work of destruction as they returned from
+ church, many of them with Bible and Psalm-book in their hands. The master
+ effected his escape over the roof into an adjoining building. One of the
+ ringleaders, a carpenter by trade, was arrested carrying an armful of
+ valuable plunder. He was asked by the magistrate why he had entered the
+ house. "Out of good zeal," he replied; "to help beat and kill the
+ Arminians who were holding conventicle there." He was further asked why he
+ hated the Arminians so much. "Are we to suffer such folk here," he
+ replied, "who preach the vile doctrine that God has created one man for
+ damnation and another for salvation?"&mdash;thus ascribing the doctrine of
+ the church of which he supposed himself a member to the Arminians whom he
+ had been plundering and wished to kill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rem Bischop received no compensation for the damage and danger; the
+ general cry in the town being that the money he was receiving from
+ Barneveld and the King of Spain would make him good even if not a stone of
+ the house had been left standing. On the following Thursday two elders of
+ the church council waited upon and informed him that he must in future
+ abstain from the Communion service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may well be supposed that the virtual head of the government liked not
+ the triumph of mob law, in the name of religion, over the civil authority.
+ The Advocate was neither democrat nor demagogue. A lawyer, a magistrate,
+ and a noble, he had but little sympathy with the humbler classes, which he
+ was far too much in the habit of designating as rabble and populace. Yet
+ his anger was less against them than against the priests, the foreigners,
+ the military and diplomatic mischief-makers, by whom they were set upon to
+ dangerous demonstrations. The old patrician scorned the arts by which
+ highborn demagogues in that as in every age affect adulation for inferiors
+ whom they despise. It was his instinct to protect, and guide the people,
+ in whom he recognized no chartered nor inherent right to govern. It was
+ his resolve, so long as breath was in him, to prevent them from destroying
+ life and property and subverting the government under the leadership of an
+ inflamed priesthood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was with this intention, as we have just seen, and in order to avoid
+ bloodshed, anarchy, and civil war in the streets of every town and
+ village, that a decisive but in the Advocate's opinion a perfectly legal
+ step had been taken by the States of Holland. It had become necessary to
+ empower the magistracies of towns to defend themselves by enrolled troops
+ against mob violence and against an enforced synod considered by great
+ lawyers as unconstitutional.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aerssens resided in Zealand, and the efforts of that ex-ambassador were
+ unceasing to excite popular animosity against the man he hated and to
+ trouble the political waters in which no man knew better than he how to
+ cast the net.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The States of Zealand," said the Advocate to the ambassador in London,
+ "have a deputation here about the religious differences, urging the
+ holding of a National Synod according to the King's letters, to which some
+ other provinces and some of the cities of Holland incline. The questions
+ have not yet been defined by a common synod, so that a national one could
+ make no definition, while the particular synods and clerical personages
+ are so filled with prejudices and so bound by mutual engagements of long
+ date as to make one fear an unfruitful issue. We are occupied upon this
+ point in our assembly of Holland to devise some compromise and to discover
+ by what means these difficulties may be brought into a state of
+ tranquillity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be observed that in all these most private and confidential
+ utterances of the Advocate a tone of extreme moderation, an anxious wish
+ to save the Provinces from dissensions, dangers, and bloodshed, is
+ distinctly visible. Never is he betrayed into vindictive, ambitious, or
+ self-seeking expressions, while sometimes, although rarely, despondent in
+ mind. Nor was his opposition to a general synod absolute. He was probably
+ persuaded however, as we have just seen, that it should of necessity be
+ preceded by provincial ones, both in due regard to the laws of the land
+ and to the true definition of the points to be submitted to its decision.
+ He had small hope of a successful result from it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The British king gave him infinite distress. As towards France so towards
+ England the Advocate kept steadily before him the necessity of deferring
+ to powerful sovereigns whose friendship was necessary to the republic he
+ served, however misguided, perverse, or incompetent those monarchs might
+ be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had always hoped," he said, "that his Majesty would have adhered to his
+ original written advice, that such questions as these ought to be quietly
+ settled by authority of law and not by ecclesiastical persons, and I still
+ hope that his Majesty's intention is really to that effect, although he
+ speaks of synods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A month later he felt even more encouraged. "The last letter of his
+ Majesty concerning our religious questions," he said, "has given rise to
+ various constructions, but the best advised, who have peace and unity at
+ heart, understand the King's intention to be to conserve the state of
+ these Provinces and the religion in its purity. My hope is that his
+ Majesty's good opinion will be followed and adopted according to the most
+ appropriate methods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can it be believed that the statesman whose upright patriotism,
+ moderation, and nobleness of purpose thus breathed through every word
+ spoken by him in public or whispered to friends was already held up by a
+ herd of ravening slanderers to obloquy as a traitor and a tyrant?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was growing old and had suffered much from illness during this eventful
+ summer, but his anxiety for the Commonwealth, caused by these distressing
+ and superfluous squabbles, were wearing into him more deeply than years or
+ disease could do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Owing to my weakness and old age I can't go up-stairs as well as I used,"
+ he said,&mdash;[Barneveld to Caron 31 July and 21 Aug. 1617. (H. Arch.
+ MS.)]&mdash;"and these religious dissensions cause me sometimes such
+ disturbance of mind as will ere long become intolerable, because of my
+ indisposition and because of the cry of my heart at the course people are
+ pursuing here. I reflect that at the time of Duke Casimir and the Prince
+ of Chimay exactly such a course was held in Flanders and in Lord
+ Leicester's time in the city of Utrecht, as is best known to yourself. My
+ hope is fixed on the Lord God Almighty, and that He will make those well
+ ashamed who are laying anything to heart save his honour and glory and the
+ welfare of our country with maintenance of its freedom and laws. I mean
+ unchangeably to live and die for them . . . . Believe firmly that all
+ representations to the contrary are vile calumnies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before leaving for Vianen in the middle of August of this year (1617) the
+ Advocate had an interview with the Prince. There had been no open rupture
+ between them, and Barneveld was most anxious to avoid a quarrel with one
+ to whose interests and honour he had always been devoted. He did not cling
+ to power nor office. On the contrary, he had repeatedly importuned the
+ States to accept his resignation, hoping that perhaps these unhappy
+ dissensions might be quieted by his removal from the scene. He now told
+ the Prince that the misunderstanding between them arising from these
+ religious disputes was so painful to his heart that he would make and had
+ made every possible effort towards conciliation and amicable settlement of
+ the controversy. He saw no means now, he said, of bringing about unity,
+ unless his Excellency were willing to make some proposition for
+ arrangement. This he earnestly implored the Prince to do, assuring him of
+ his sincere and upright affection for him and his wish to support such
+ measures to the best of his ability and to do everything for the
+ furtherance of his reputation and necessary authority. He was so desirous
+ of this result, he said, that he would propose now as he did at the time
+ of the Truce negotiations to lay down all his offices, leaving his
+ Excellency to guide the whole course of affairs according to his best
+ judgment. He had already taken a resolution, if no means of accommodation
+ were possible, to retire to his Gunterstein estate and there remain till
+ the next meeting of the assembly; when he would ask leave to retire for at
+ least a year; in order to occupy himself with a revision and collation of
+ the charters, laws, and other state papers of the country which were in
+ his keeping, and which it was needful to bring into an orderly condition.
+ Meantime some scheme might be found for arranging the religious
+ differences, more effective than any he had been able to devise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His appeal seems to have glanced powerlessly upon the iron reticence of
+ Maurice, and the Advocate took his departure disheartened. Later in the
+ autumn, so warm a remonstrance was made to him by the leading nobles and
+ deputies of Holland against his contemplated withdrawal from his post that
+ it seemed a dereliction of duty on his part to retire. He remained to
+ battle with the storm and to see "with anguish of heart," as he expressed
+ it, the course religious affairs were taking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States of Utrecht on the 26th August resolved that on account of the
+ gathering of large masses of troops in the countries immediately adjoining
+ their borders, especially in the Episcopate of Cologne, by aid of Spanish
+ money, it was expedient for them to enlist a protective force of six
+ companies of regular soldiers in order to save the city from sudden and
+ overwhelming attack by foreign troops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even if the danger from without were magnified in this preamble, which is
+ by no means certain, there seemed to be no doubt on the subject in the
+ minds of the magistrates. They believed that they had the right to protect
+ and that they were bound to protect their ancient city from sudden
+ assault, whether by Spanish soldiers or by organized mobs attempting, as
+ had been done in Rotterdam, Oudewater, and other towns, to overawe the
+ civil authority in the interest of the Contra-Remonstrants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six nobles of Utrecht were accordingly commissioned to raise the troops. A
+ week later they had been enlisted, sworn to obey in all things the States
+ of Utrecht, and to take orders from no one else. Three days later the
+ States of Utrecht addressed a letter to their Mightinesses the
+ States-General and to his Excellency the Prince, notifying them that for
+ the reasons stated in the resolution cited the six companies had been
+ levied. There seemed in these proceedings to be no thought of mutiny or
+ rebellion, the province considering itself as acting within its
+ unquestionable rights as a sovereign state and without any exaggeration of
+ the imperious circumstances of the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor did the States-General and the Stadholder at that moment affect to
+ dispute the rights of Utrecht, nor raise a doubt as to the legality of the
+ proceedings. The committee sent thither by the States-General, the Prince,
+ and the council of state in their written answer to the letter of the
+ Utrecht government declared the reasons given for the enrolment of the six
+ companies to be insufficient and the measure itself highly dangerous. They
+ complained, but in very courteous language, that the soldiers had been
+ levied without giving the least notice thereof to the general government,
+ without asking its advice, or waiting for any communication from it, and
+ they reminded the States of Utrecht that they might always rely upon the
+ States-General and his Excellency, who were still ready, as they had been
+ seven years before (1610), to protect them against every enemy and any
+ danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conflict between a single province of the confederacy and the
+ authority of the general government had thus been brought to a direct
+ issue; to the test of arms. For, notwithstanding the preamble to the
+ resolution of the Utrecht Assembly just cited, there could be little
+ question that the resolve itself was a natural corollary of the famous
+ "Sharp Resolution," passed by the States of Holland three weeks before.
+ Utrecht was in arms to prevent, among other things at least, the forcing
+ upon them by a majority of the States-General of the National Synod to
+ which they were opposed, the seizure of churches by the
+ Contra-Remonstrants, and the destruction of life and property by inflamed
+ mobs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no doubt that Barneveld deeply deplored the issue, but that he
+ felt himself bound to accept it. The innate absurdity of a constitutional
+ system under which each of the seven members was sovereign and independent
+ and the head was at the mercy of the members could not be more flagrantly
+ illustrated. In the bloody battles which seemed impending in the streets
+ of Utrecht and in all the principal cities of the Netherlands between the
+ soldiers of sovereign states and soldiers of a general government which
+ was not sovereign, the letter of the law and the records of history were
+ unquestionably on the aide of the provincial and against the general
+ authority. Yet to nullify the authority of the States-General by force of
+ arms at this supreme moment was to stultify all government whatever. It
+ was an awful dilemma, and it is difficult here fully to sympathize with
+ the Advocate, for he it was who inspired, without dictating, the course of
+ the Utrecht proceedings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With him patriotism seemed at this moment to dwindle into provincialism,
+ the statesman to shrink into the lawyer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly there was no guilt in the proceedings. There was no crime in the
+ heart of the Advocate. He had exhausted himself with appeals in favour of
+ moderation, conciliation, compromise. He had worked night and day with all
+ the energy of a pure soul and a great mind to assuage religious hatreds
+ and avert civil dissensions. He was overpowered. He had frequently desired
+ to be released from all his functions, but as dangers thickened over the
+ Provinces, he felt it his duty so long as he remained at his post to abide
+ by the law as the only anchor in the storm. Not rising in his mind to the
+ height of a national idea, and especially averse from it when embodied in
+ the repulsive form of religious uniformity, he did not shrink from a
+ contest which he had not provoked, but had done his utmost to avert. But
+ even then he did not anticipate civil war. The enrolling of the
+ Waartgelders was an armed protest, a symbol of legal conviction rather
+ than a serious effort to resist the general government. And this is the
+ chief justification of his course from a political point of view. It was
+ ridiculous to suppose that with a few hundred soldiers hastily enlisted&mdash;and
+ there were less than 1800 Waartgelders levied throughout the Provinces and
+ under the orders of civil magistrates&mdash;a serious contest was intended
+ against a splendidly disciplined army of veteran troops, commanded by the
+ first general of the age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a legal point of view Barneveld considered his position impregnable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The controversy is curious, especially for Americans, and for all who are
+ interested in the analysis of federal institutions and of republican
+ principles, whether aristocratic or democratic. The States of Utrecht
+ replied in decorous but firm language to the committee of the
+ States-General that they had raised the six companies in accordance with
+ their sovereign right so to do, and that they were resolved to maintain
+ them. They could not wait as they had been obliged to do in the time of
+ the Earl of Leicester and more recently in 1610 until they had been
+ surprised and overwhelmed by the enemy before the States-General and his
+ Excellency the Prince could come to their rescue. They could not suffer
+ all the evils of tumults, conspiracies, and foreign invasion, without
+ defending themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Making use, they said, of the right of sovereignty which in their province
+ belonged to them alone, they thought it better to prevent in time and by
+ convenient means such fire and mischief than to look on while it kindled
+ and spread into a conflagration, and to go about imploring aid from their
+ fellow confederates who, God better it, had enough in these times to do at
+ home. This would only be to bring them as well as this province into
+ trouble, disquiet, and expense. "My Lords the States of Utrecht have
+ conserved and continually exercised this right of sovereignty in its
+ entireness ever since renouncing the King of Spain. Every contract,
+ ordinance, and instruction of the States-General has been in conformity
+ with it, and the States of Utrecht are convinced that the States of not
+ one of their confederate provinces would yield an atom of its
+ sovereignty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They reminded the general government that by the 1st article of the
+ "Closer Union" of Utrecht, on which that assembly was founded, it was
+ bound to support the States of the respective provinces and strengthen
+ them with counsel, treasure, and blood if their respective rights, more
+ especially their individual sovereignty, the most precious of all, should
+ be assailed. To refrain from so doing would be to violate a solemn
+ contract. They further reminded the council of state that by its
+ institution the States-Provincial had not abdicated their respective
+ sovereignties, but had reserved it in all matters not specifically
+ mentioned in the original instruction by which it was created.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days afterwards Arnold van Randwyck and three other commissioners were
+ instructed by the general government to confer with the States of Utrecht,
+ to tell them that their reply was deemed unsatisfactory, that their
+ reasons for levying soldiers in times when all good people should be
+ seeking to restore harmony and mitigate dissension were insufficient, and
+ to request them to disband those levies without prejudice in so doing to
+ the laws and liberties of the province and city of Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was perhaps an opening for a compromise, the instruction being not
+ without ingenuity, and the word sovereignty in regard either to the
+ general government or the separate provinces being carefully omitted. Soon
+ afterwards, too, the States-General went many steps farther in the path of
+ concession, for they made another appeal to the government of Utrecht to
+ disband the Waartgelders on the ground of expediency, and in so doing
+ almost expressly admitted the doctrine of provincial sovereignty. It is
+ important in regard to subsequent events to observe this virtual
+ admission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Honours lay especial stress upon the right of sovereignty as
+ belonging to you alone in your province," they said, "and dispute
+ therefore at great length upon the power and authority of the Generality,
+ of his Excellency, and of the state council. But you will please to
+ consider that there is here no question of this, as our commissioners had
+ no instructions to bring this into dispute in the least, and most
+ certainly have not done so. We have only in effect questioned whether that
+ which one has an undoubted right to do can at all times be appropriately
+ and becomingly done, whether it was fitting that your Honours, contrary to
+ custom, should undertake these new levies upon a special oath and
+ commission, and effectively complete the measure without giving the
+ slightest notice thereof to the Generality."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may fairly be said that the question in debate was entirely conceded in
+ this remarkable paper, which was addressed by the States-General, the
+ Prince-Stadholder, and the council of state to the government of Utrecht.
+ It should be observed, too, that while distinctly repudiating the
+ intention of disputing the sovereignty of that province, they carefully
+ abstain from using the word in relation to themselves, speaking only of
+ the might and authority of the Generality, the Prince, and the council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was now a pause in the public discussion. The soldiers were not
+ disbanded, as the States of Utrecht were less occupied with establishing
+ the soundness of their theory than with securing its practical results.
+ They knew very well, and the Advocate knew very well, that the intention
+ to force a national synod by a majority vote of the Assembly of the
+ States-General existed more strongly than ever, and they meant to resist
+ it to the last. The attempt was in their opinion an audacious violation of
+ the fundamental pact on which the Confederacy was founded. Its success
+ would be to establish the sacerdotal power in triumph over the civil
+ authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this period the Advocate was resident in Utrecht. For change of
+ air, ostensibly at least, he had absented himself from the seat of
+ government, and was during several weeks under the hands of his old friend
+ and physician Dr. Saul. He was strictly advised to abstain altogether from
+ political business, but he might as well have attempted to abstain from
+ food and drink. Gillis van Ledenberg, secretary of the States of Utrecht,
+ visited him frequently. The proposition to enlist the Waartgelders had
+ been originally made in the Assembly by its president, and warmly seconded
+ by van Ledenberg, who doubtless conferred afterwards with Barneveld in
+ person, but informally and at his lodgings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was almost inevitable that this should be the case, nor did the
+ Advocate make much mystery as to the course of action which he deemed
+ indispensable at this period. Believing it possible that some sudden and
+ desperate attempt might be made by evil disposed people, he agreed with
+ the States of Utrecht in the propriety of taking measures of precaution.
+ They were resolved not to look quietly on while soldiers and rabble under
+ guidance perhaps of violent Contra-Remonstrant preachers took possession
+ of the churches and even of the city itself, as had already been done in
+ several towns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief practical object of enlisting the six companies was that the
+ city might be armed against popular tumults, and they feared that the
+ ordinary military force might be withdrawn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Captain Hartvelt, in his own name and that of the other officers of
+ those companies, said that they were all resolved never to use their
+ weapons against the Stadholder or the States-General, he was answered that
+ they would never be required to do so. They, however, made oath to serve
+ against those who should seek to trouble the peace of the Province of
+ Utrecht in ecclesiastical or political matters, and further against all
+ enemies of the common country. At the same time it was deemed expedient to
+ guard against a surprise of any kind and to keep watch and ward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot quite believe in the French companies," said the Advocate in a
+ private billet to Ledenberg. "It would be extremely well that not only
+ good watch should be kept at the city gates, but also that one might from
+ above and below the river Lek be assuredly advised from the nearest cities
+ if any soldiers are coming up or down, and that the same might be done in
+ regard to Amersfoort." At the bottom of this letter, which was destined to
+ become historical and will be afterwards referred to, the Advocate wrote,
+ as he not unfrequently did, upon his private notes, "When read, burn, and
+ send me back the two enclosed letters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter lies in the Archives unburned to this day, but, harmless as it
+ looked, it was to serve as a nail in more than one coffin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In his confidential letters to trusted friends he complained of "great
+ physical debility growing out of heavy sorrow," and described himself as
+ entering upon his seventy-first year and no longer fit for hard political
+ labour. The sincere grief, profound love of country, and desire that some
+ remedy might be found for impending disaster, is stamped upon all his
+ utterances whether official or secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The troubles growing out of the religious differences," he said, "are
+ running into all sorts of extremities. It is feared that an attempt will
+ be made against the laws of the land through extraordinary ways, and by
+ popular tumults to take from the supreme authority of the respective
+ provinces the right to govern clerical persons and regulate clerical
+ disputes, and to place it at the disposition of ecclesiastics and of a
+ National Synod.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is thought too that the soldiers will be forbidden to assist the civil
+ supreme power and the government of cities in defending themselves from
+ acts of violence which under pretext of religion will be attempted against
+ the law and the commands of the magistrates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This seems to conflict with the common law of the respective provinces,
+ each of which from all times had right of sovereignty and supreme
+ authority within its territory and specifically reserved it in all
+ treaties and especially in that of the Nearer Union . . . . The provinces
+ have always regulated clerical matters each for itself. The Province of
+ Utrecht, which under the pretext of religion is now most troubled, made
+ stipulations to this effect, when it took his Excellency for governor,
+ even more stringent than any others. As for Holland, she never imagined
+ that one could ever raise a question on the subject . . . . All good men
+ ought to do their best to prevent the enemies to the welfare of these
+ Provinces from making profit out of our troubles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole matter he regarded as a struggle between the clergy and the
+ civil power for mastery over the state, as an attempt to subject
+ provincial autonomy to the central government purely in the interest of
+ the priesthood of a particular sect. The remedy he fondly hoped for was
+ moderation and union within the Church itself. He could never imagine the
+ necessity for this ferocious animosity not only between Christians but
+ between two branches of the Reformed Church. He could never be made to
+ believe that the Five Points of the Remonstrance had dug an abyss too deep
+ and wide ever to be bridged between brethren lately of one faith as of one
+ fatherland. He was unceasing in his prayers and appeals for "mutual
+ toleration on the subject of predestination." Perhaps the bitterness,
+ almost amounting to frenzy, with which abstruse points of casuistry were
+ then debated, and which converted differences of opinion upon metaphysical
+ divinity into deadly hatred and thirst for blood, is already obsolete or
+ on the road to become so. If so, then was Barneveld in advance of his age,
+ and it would have been better for the peace of the world and the progress
+ of Christianity if more of his contemporaries had placed themselves on his
+ level.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was no theologian, but he believed himself to be a Christian, and he
+ certainly was a thoughtful and a humble one. He had not the arrogance to
+ pierce behind the veil and assume to read the inscrutable thoughts of the
+ Omnipotent. It was a cruel fate that his humility upon subjects which he
+ believed to be beyond the scope of human reason should have been tortured
+ by his enemies into a crime, and that because he hoped for religious
+ toleration he should be accused of treason to the Commonwealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Believe and cause others to believe," he said, "that I am and with the
+ grace of God hope to continue an upright patriot as I have proved myself
+ to be in these last forty-two years spent in the public service. In the
+ matter of differential religious points I remain of the opinions which I
+ have held for more than fifty years, and in which I hope to live and die,
+ to wit, that a good Christian man ought to believe that he is predestined
+ to eternal salvation through God's grace, giving for reasons that he
+ through God's grace has a firm belief that his salvation is founded purely
+ on God's grace and the expiation of our sins through our Saviour Jesus
+ Christ, and that if he should fall into any sins his firm trust is that
+ God will not let him perish in them, but mercifully turn him to
+ repentance, so that he may continue in the same belief to the last."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These expressions were contained in a letter to Caron with the intention
+ doubtless that they should be communicated to the King of Great Britain,
+ and it is a curious illustration of the spirit of the age, this picture of
+ the leading statesman of a great republic unfolding his religious
+ convictions for private inspection by the monarch of an allied nation.
+ More than anything else it exemplifies the close commixture of theology,
+ politics, and diplomacy in that age, and especially in those two
+ countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Formerly, as we have seen, the King considered a too curious fathoming of
+ divine mysteries as highly reprehensible, particularly for the common
+ people. Although he knew more about them than any one else, he avowed that
+ even his knowledge in this respect was not perfect. It was matter of deep
+ regret with the Advocate that his Majesty had not held to his former
+ positions, and that he had disowned his original letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe my sentiments thus expressed," he said, "to be in accordance
+ with Scripture, and I have always held to them without teasing my brains
+ with the precise decrees of reprobation, foreknowledge, or the like, as
+ matters above my comprehension. I have always counselled Christian
+ moderation. The States of Holland have followed the spirit of his
+ Majesty's letters, but our antagonists have rejected them and with
+ seditious talk, sermons, and the spreading of infamous libels have brought
+ matters to their present condition. There have been excesses on the other
+ side as well."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then made a slight, somewhat shadowy allusion to schemes known to be
+ afloat for conferring the sovereignty upon Maurice. We have seen that at
+ former periods he had entertained this subject and discussed it privately
+ with those who were not only friendly but devoted to the Stadholder, and
+ that he had arrived at the conclusion that it would not be for the
+ interest of the Prince to encourage the project. Above all he was sternly
+ opposed to the idea of attempting to compass it by secret intrigue. Should
+ such an arrangement be publicly discussed and legally completed, it would
+ not meet with his unconditional opposition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Lord God knows," he said, "whether underneath all these movements
+ does not lie the design of the year 1600, well known to you. As for me,
+ believe that I am and by God's grace hope to remain, what I always was, an
+ upright patriot, a defender of the true Christian religion, of the public
+ authority, and of all the power that has been and in future may be legally
+ conferred upon his Excellency. Believe that all things said, written, or
+ spread to the contrary are falsehoods and calumnies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was still in Utrecht, but about to leave for the Hague, with health
+ somewhat improved and in better spirits in regard to public matters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Although I have entered my seventy-first year," he said, "I trust still
+ to be of some service to the Commonwealth and to my friends . . . . Don't
+ consider an arrangement of our affairs desperate. I hope for better
+ things."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after his return he was waited upon one Sunday evening, late in
+ October&mdash;being obliged to keep his house on account of continued
+ indisposition&mdash;by a certain solicitor named Nordlingen and informed
+ that the Prince was about to make a sudden visit to Leyden at four o'clock
+ next morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld knew that the burgomasters and regents were holding a great
+ banquet that night, and that many of them would probably have been
+ indulging in potations too deep to leave them fit for serious business.
+ The agitation of people's minds at that moment made the visit seem rather
+ a critical one, as there would probably be a mob collected to see the
+ Stadholder, and he was anxious both in the interest of the Prince and the
+ regents and of both religious denominations that no painful incidents
+ should occur if it was in his power to prevent them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was aware that his son-in-law, Cornelis van der Myle, had been invited
+ to the banquet, and that he was wont to carry his wine discreetly. He
+ therefore requested Nordlingen to proceed to Leyden that night and seek an
+ interview with van der Myle without delay. By thus communicating the
+ intelligence of the expected visit to one who, he felt sure, would do his
+ best to provide for a respectful and suitable reception of the Prince,
+ notwithstanding the exhilarated condition in which the magistrates would
+ probably find themselves, the Advocate hoped to prevent any riot or
+ tumultuous demonstration of any kind. At least he would act conformably to
+ his duty and keep his conscience clear should disasters ensue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later in the night he learned that Maurice was going not to Leyden but to
+ Delft, and he accordingly despatched a special messenger to arrive before
+ dawn at Leyden in order to inform van der Myle of this change in the
+ Prince's movements. Nothing seemed simpler or more judicious than these
+ precautions on the part of Barneveld. They could not fail, however, to be
+ tortured into sedition, conspiracy, and treason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the end of the year a meeting of the nobles and knights of Holland
+ under the leadership of Barneveld was held to discuss the famous Sharp
+ Resolution of 4th August and the letters and arguments advanced against it
+ by the Stadholder and the council of state. It was unanimously resolved by
+ this body, in which they were subsequently followed by a large majority of
+ the States of Holland, to maintain that resolution and its consequences
+ and to oppose the National Synod. They further resolved that a legal
+ provincial synod should be convoked by the States of Holland and under
+ their authority and supervision. The object of such synod should be to
+ devise "some means of accommodation, mutual toleration, and Christian
+ settlement of differences in regard to the Five Points in question."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In case such compromise should unfortunately not be arranged, then it was
+ resolved to invite to the assembly two or three persons from France, as
+ many from England, from Germany, and from Switzerland, to aid in the
+ consultations. Should a method of reconciliation and mutual toleration
+ still remain undiscovered, then, in consideration that the whole Christian
+ world was interested in composing these dissensions, it was proposed that
+ a "synodal assembly of all Christendom," a Protestant oecumenical council,
+ should in some solemn manner be convoked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These resolutions and propositions were all brought forward by the
+ Advocate, and the draughts of them in his handwriting remain. They are the
+ unimpeachable evidences of his earnest desire to put an end to these
+ unhappy disputes and disorders in the only way which he considered
+ constitutional.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the close of the year the States of Holland, in accordance with the
+ foregoing advice of the nobles, passed a resolution, the minutes of which
+ were drawn up by the hand of the Advocate, and in which they persisted in
+ their opposition to the National Synod. They declared by a large majority
+ of votes that the Assembly of the States-General without the unanimous
+ consent of the Provincial States were not competent according to the Union
+ of Utrecht&mdash;the fundamental law of the General Assembly&mdash;to
+ regulate religious affairs, but that this right belonged to the separate
+ provinces, each within its own domain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They further resolved that as they were bound by solemn oath to maintain
+ the laws and liberties of Holland, they could not surrender this right to
+ the Generality, nor allow it to be usurped by any one, but in order to
+ settle the question of the Five Points, the only cause known to them of
+ the present disturbances, they were content under: their own authority to
+ convoke a provincial synod within three months, at their own cost, and to
+ invite the respective provinces, as many of them as thought good, to send
+ to this meeting a certain number of pious and learned theologians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult to see why the course thus unanimously proposed by the
+ nobles of Holland, under guidance of Barneveld, and subsequently by a
+ majority of the States of that province, would not have been as expedient
+ as it was legal. But we are less concerned with that point now than with
+ the illustrations afforded by these long buried documents of the
+ patriotism and sagacity of a man than whom no human creature was ever more
+ foully slandered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be constantly borne in mind that he regarded this religious
+ controversy purely from a political, legal, and constitutional&mdash;and
+ not from a theological-point of view. He believed that grave danger to the
+ Fatherland was lurking under this attempt, by the general government, to
+ usurp the power of dictating the religious creed of all the provinces.
+ Especially he deplored the evil influence exerted by the King of England
+ since his abandonment of the principles announced in his famous letter to
+ the States in the year 1613. All that the Advocate struggled for was
+ moderation and mutual toleration within the Reformed Church. He felt that
+ a wider scheme of forbearance was impracticable. If a dream of general
+ religious equality had ever floated before him or before any one in that
+ age, he would have felt it to be a dream which would be a reality nowhere
+ until centuries should have passed away. Yet that moderation, patience,
+ tolerance, and respect for written law paved the road to that wider and
+ loftier region can scarcely be doubted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carleton, subservient to every changing theological whim of his master,
+ was as vehement and as insolent now in enforcing the intolerant views of
+ James as he had previously been in supporting the counsels to tolerance
+ contained in the original letters of that monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ambassador was often at the Advocate's bed-side during his illness
+ that summer, enforcing, instructing, denouncing, contradicting. He was
+ never weary of fulfilling his duties of tuition, but the patient
+ Barneveld; haughty and overbearing as he was often described to be, rarely
+ used a harsh or vindictive word regarding him in his letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The ambassador of France," he said, "has been heard before the Assembly
+ of the States-General, and has made warm appeals in favour of union and
+ mutual toleration as his Majesty of Great Britain so wisely did in his
+ letters of 1613 . . . . If his Majesty could only be induced to write
+ fresh letters in similar tone, I should venture to hope better fruits from
+ them than from this attempt to thrust a national synod upon our necks,
+ which many of us hold to be contrary to law, reason, and the Act of
+ Union."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as it was possible to hope that the action of the States of
+ Holland would prevent such a catastrophe, he worked hard to direct them in
+ what he deemed the right course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our political and religious differences," he said, "stand between hope
+ and fear."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hope was in the acceptance of the Provincial Synod&mdash;the fear lest
+ the National Synod should be carried by a minority of the cities of
+ Holland combining with a majority of the other Provincial States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This would be in violation," he said, "of the so-called Religious Peace,
+ the Act of Union, the treaty with the Duke of Anjou, the negotiations of
+ the States of Utrecht, and with Prince Maurice in 1590 with cognizance of
+ the States-General and those of Holland for, the governorship of that
+ province, the custom of the Generality for the last thirty years according
+ to which religious matters have always been left to the disposition of the
+ States of each province . . . . Carleton is strenuously urging this course
+ in his Majesty's name, and I fear that in the present state of our humours
+ great troubles will be the result."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The expulsion by an armed mob, in the past year, of a Remonstrant preacher
+ at Oudewater, the overpowering of the magistracy and the forcing on of
+ illegal elections in that and other cities, had given him and all earnest
+ patriots grave cause for apprehension. They were dreading, said Barneveld,
+ a course of crimes similar to those which under the Earl of Leicester's
+ government had afflicted Leyden and Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Efforts are incessant to make the Remonstrants hateful," he said to
+ Caron, "but go forward resolutely and firmly in the conviction that our
+ friends here are as animated in their opposition to the Spanish dominion
+ now and by God's grace will so remain as they have ever proved themselves
+ to be, not only by words, but works. I fear that Mr. Carleton gives too
+ much belief to the enviers of our peace and tranquillity under pretext of
+ religion, but it is more from ignorance than malice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who have followed the course of the Advocate's correspondence,
+ conversation, and actions, as thus far detailed, can judge of the gigantic
+ nature of the calumny by which he was now assailed. That this man, into
+ every fibre of whose nature was woven undying hostility to Spain, as the
+ great foe to national independence and religious liberty throughout the
+ continent of Europe, whose every effort, as we have seen, during all these
+ years of nominal peace had been to organize a system of general European
+ defence against the war now actually begun upon Protestantism, should be
+ accused of being a partisan of Spain, a creature of Spain, a pensioner of
+ Spain, was enough to make honest men pray that the earth might be
+ swallowed up. If such idiotic calumnies could be believed, what patriot in
+ the world could not be doubted? Yet they were believed. Barneveld was
+ bought by Spanish gold. He had received whole boxes full of Spanish
+ pistoles, straight from Brussels! For his part in the truce negotiations
+ he had received 120,000 ducats in one lump.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was plain," said the greatest man in the country to another great man,
+ "that Barneveld and his party are on the road to Spain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then it were well to have proof of it," said the great man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not yet time," was the reply. "We must flatten out a few of them first."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Maurice had told the Princess-Dowager the winter before (8th
+ December 1616) that those dissensions would never be decided except by use
+ of weapons; and he now mentioned to her that he had received information
+ from Brussels, which he in part believed, that the Advocate was a
+ stipendiary of Spain. Yet he had once said, to the same Princess Louise,
+ of this stipendiary that "the services which the Advocate had rendered to
+ the House of Nassau were so great that all the members of that house might
+ well look upon him not as their friend but their father." Councillor van
+ Maldere, President of the States of Zealand, and a confidential friend of
+ Maurice, was going about the Hague saying that "one must string up seven
+ or eight Remonstrants on the gallows; then there might be some
+ improvement."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Arminius and Uytenbogaert, people had long told each other and
+ firmly believed it, and were amazed when any incredulity was expressed in
+ regard to it, that they were in regular and intimate correspondence with
+ the Jesuits, that they had received large sums from Rome, and that both
+ had been promised cardinals' hats. That Barneveld and his friend
+ Uytenbogaert were regular pensioners of Spain admitted of no dispute
+ whatever. "It was as true as the Holy Evangel." The ludicrous chatter had
+ been passed over with absolute disdain by the persons attacked, but
+ calumny is often a stronger and more lasting power than disdain. It proved
+ to be in these cases.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have the plague mark on your flesh, oh pope, oh pensioner," said one
+ libeller. "There are letters safely preserved to make your process for
+ you. Look out for your head. Many have sworn your death, for it is more
+ than time that you were out of the world. We shall prove, oh great bribed
+ one, that you had the 120,000 little ducats." The preacher Uytenbogaert
+ was also said to have had 80,000 ducats for his share. "Go to Brussels,"
+ said the pamphleteer; "it all stands clearly written out on the register
+ with the names and surnames of all you great bribe-takers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were choice morsels from the lampoon of the notary Danckaerts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are tortured more and more with religious differences," wrote
+ Barneveld; "with acts of popular violence growing out of them the more
+ continuously as they remain unpunished, and with ever increasing
+ jealousies and suspicions. The factious libels become daily more numerous
+ and more impudent, and no man comes undamaged from the field. I, as a
+ reward for all my troubles, labours, and sorrows, have three double
+ portions of them. I hope however to overcome all by God's grace and to
+ defend my actions with all honourable men so long as right and reason have
+ place in the world, as to which many begin to doubt. If his Majesty had
+ been pleased to stick to the letters of 1613, we should never have got
+ into these difficulties . . . . It were better in my opinion that Carleton
+ should be instructed to negotiate in the spirit of those epistles rather
+ than to torment us with the National Synod, which will do more harm than
+ good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible not to notice the simplicity and patience with which the
+ Advocate, in the discharge of his duty as minister of foreign affairs,
+ kept the leading envoys of the Republic privately informed of events which
+ were becoming day by day more dangerous to the public interests and his
+ own safety. If ever a perfectly quiet conscience was revealed in the
+ correspondence of a statesman, it was to be found in these letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calmly writing to thank Caron for some very satisfactory English beer
+ which the Ambassador had been sending him from London, he proceeded to
+ speak again of the religious dissensions and their consequences. He sent
+ him the letter and remonstrance which he had felt himself obliged to make,
+ and which he had been urged by his ever warm and constant friend the widow
+ of William the Silent to make on the subject of "the seditious libels,
+ full of lies and calumnies got up by conspiracy against him." These
+ letters were never published, however, until years after he had been in
+ his grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know that you are displeased with the injustice done me," he said, "but
+ I see no improvement. People are determined to force through the National
+ Synod. The two last ones did much harm. This will do ten times more, so
+ intensely embittered are men's tempers against each other." Again he
+ deplored the King's departure from his letters of 1613, by adherence to
+ which almost all the troubles would have been spared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is curious too to observe the contrast between public opinion in Great
+ Britain, including its government, in regard to the constitution of the
+ United Provinces at that period of domestic dissensions and incipient
+ civil war and the general impressions manifested in the same nation two
+ centuries and a half later, on the outbreak of the slavery rebellion, as
+ to the constitution of the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States in arms against the general government on the other side of the
+ Atlantic were strangely but not disingenuously assumed to be sovereign and
+ independent, and many statesmen and a leading portion of the public
+ justified them in their attempt to shake off the central government as if
+ it were but a board of agency established by treaty and terminable at
+ pleasure of any one of among sovereigns and terminable at pleasure of any
+ one of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet even a superficial glance at the written constitution of the Republic
+ showed that its main object was to convert what had been a confederacy
+ into an Incorporation; and that the very essence of its renewed political
+ existence was an organic law laid down by a whole people in their
+ primitive capacity in place of a league banding together a group of
+ independent little corporations. The chief attributes of sovereignty&mdash;the
+ rights of war and peace, of coinage, of holding armies and navies, of
+ issuing bills of credit, of foreign relations, of regulating and taxing
+ foreign commerce&mdash;having been taken from the separate States by the
+ united people thereof and bestowed upon a government provided with a
+ single executive head, with a supreme tribunal, with a popular house of
+ representatives and a senate, and with power to deal directly with the
+ life and property of every individual in the land, it was strange indeed
+ that the feudal, and in America utterly unmeaning, word Sovereign should
+ have been thought an appropriate term for the different States which had
+ fused themselves three-quarters of a century before into a Union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When it is remembered too that the only dissolvent of this Union was the
+ intention to perpetuate human slavery, the logic seemed somewhat perverse
+ by which the separate sovereignty of the States was deduced from the
+ constitution of 1787.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the Union of Utrecht of 1579 was a league of petty
+ sovereignties; a compact less binding and more fragile than the Articles
+ of Union made almost exactly two hundred years later in America, and the
+ worthlessness of which, after the strain of war was over, had been
+ demonstrated in the dreary years immediately following the peace of 1783.
+ One after another certain Netherland provinces had abjured their
+ allegiance to Spain, some of them afterwards relapsing under it, some
+ having been conquered by the others, while one of them, Holland, had for a
+ long time borne the greater part of the expense and burthen of the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Holland," said the Advocate, "has brought almost all the provinces to
+ their liberty. To receive laws from them or from their clerical people now
+ is what our State cannot endure. It is against her laws and customs, in
+ the enjoyment of which the other provinces and his Excellency as Governor
+ of Holland are bound to protect us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as the preservation of chattel slavery in the one case seemed a
+ legitimate ground for destroying a government which had as definite an
+ existence as any government known to mankind, so the resolve to impose a
+ single religious creed upon many millions of individuals was held by the
+ King and government of Great Britain to be a substantial reason for
+ imagining a central sovereignty which had never existed at all. This was
+ still more surprising as the right to dispose of ecclesiastical affairs
+ and persons had been expressly reserved by the separate provinces in
+ perfectly plain language in the Treaty of Union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If the King were better informed," said Barneveld, "of our system and
+ laws, we should have better hope than now. But one supposes through
+ notorious error in foreign countries that the sovereignty stands with the
+ States-General which is not the case, except in things which by the
+ Articles of Closer Union have been made common to all the provinces, while
+ in other matters, as religion, justice, and polity, the sovereignty
+ remains with each province, which foreigners seem unable to comprehend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in June, Carleton took his departure for England on leave of
+ absence. He received a present from the States of 3000 florins, and went
+ over in very ill-humour with Barneveld. "Mr. Ambassador is much offended
+ and prejudiced," said the Advocate, "but I know that he will religiously
+ carry out the orders of his Majesty. I trust that his Majesty can admit
+ different sentiments on predestination and its consequences, and that in a
+ kingdom where the supreme civil authority defends religion the system of
+ the Puritans will have no foothold."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly James could not be accused of allowing the system of the
+ Puritans much foothold in England, but he had made the ingenious discovery
+ that Puritanism in Holland was a very different thing from Puritanism in
+ the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Acts of violence which under pretext of religion
+ Adulation for inferiors whom they despise
+ Calumny is often a stronger and more lasting power than disdain
+ Created one child for damnation and another for salvation
+ Depths of credulity men in all ages can sink
+ Devote himself to his gout and to his fair young wife
+ Furious mob set upon the house of Rem Bischop
+ Highborn demagogues in that as in every age affect adulation
+ In this he was much behind his age or before it
+ Logic is rarely the quality on which kings pride themselves
+ Necessity of deferring to powerful sovereigns
+ Not his custom nor that of his councillors to go to bed
+ Partisans wanted not accommodation but victory
+ Puritanism in Holland was a very different thing from England
+ Seemed bent on self-destruction
+ Stand between hope and fear
+ The evils resulting from a confederate system of government
+ To stifle for ever the right of free enquiry
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. 1618
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Maurice revolutionizes the Provinces&mdash;Danckaert's libellous Pamphlet
+ &mdash;Barneveld's Appeal to the Prince&mdash;Barneveld's Remonstrance to the
+ States&mdash;The Stadholder at Amsterdam&mdash;The Treaty of Truce nearly
+ expired&mdash;King of Spain and Archduke Albert&mdash;Scheme for recovering
+ the Provinces&mdash;Secret Plot to make Maurice Sovereign.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Early in the year (1618) Maurice set himself about revolutionizing the
+ provinces on which he could not yet thoroughly rely. The town of Nymegen
+ since its recovery from the Spaniards near the close of the preceding
+ century had held its municipal government, as it were, at the option of
+ the Prince. During the war he had been, by the terms of surrender,
+ empowered to appoint and to change its magistracy at will. No change had
+ occurred for many years, but as the government had of late fallen into the
+ hands of the Barneveldians, and as Maurice considered the Truce to be a
+ continuance of the war, he appeared suddenly, in the city at the head of a
+ body of troops and surrounded by his lifeguard. Summoning the whole board
+ of magistrates into the townhouse, he gave them all notice to quit,
+ disbanding them like a company of mutinous soldiery, and immediately
+ afterwards appointed a fresh list of functionaries in their stead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This done, he proceeded to Arnhem, where the States of Gelderland were in
+ session, appeared before that body, and made a brief announcement of the
+ revolution which he had so succinctly effected in the most considerable
+ town of their province. The Assembly, which seems, like many other
+ assemblies at precisely this epoch, to have had an extraordinary capacity
+ for yielding to gentle violence, made but little resistance to the extreme
+ measures now undertaken by the Stadholder, and not only highly applauded
+ the subjugation of Nymegen, but listened with sympathy to his arguments
+ against the Waartgelders and in favour of the Synod.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having accomplished so much by a very brief visit to Gelderland, the
+ Prince proceeded, to Overyssel, and had as little difficulty in bringing
+ over the wavering minds of that province into orthodoxy and obedience.
+ Thus there remained but two provinces out of seven that were still
+ "waartgeldered" and refused to be "synodized."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was rebellion against rebellion. Maurice and his adherents accused the
+ States' right party of mutiny against himself and the States-General. The
+ States' right party accused the Contra-Remonstrants in the cities of
+ mutiny against the lawful sovereignty of each province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The oath of the soldiery, since the foundation of the Republic, had been
+ to maintain obedience and fidelity to the States-General, the Stadholder,
+ and the province in which they were garrisoned, and at whose expense they
+ were paid. It was impossible to harmonize such conflicting duties and
+ doctrines. Theory had done its best and its worst. The time was fast
+ approaching, as it always must approach, when fact with its violent besom
+ would brush away the fine-spun cobwebs which had been so long undisturbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will grind the Advocate and all his party into fine meal," said the
+ Prince on one occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A clever caricature of the time represented a pair of scales hung up in a
+ great hall. In the one was a heap of parchments, gold chains, and
+ magisterial robes; the whole bundle being marked the "holy right of each
+ city." In the other lay a big square, solid, ironclasped volume, marked
+ "Institutes of Calvin." Each scale was respectively watched by Gomarus and
+ by Arminius. The judges, gowned, furred, and ruffed, were looking
+ decorously on, when suddenly the Stadholder, in full military attire, was
+ seen rushing into the apartment and flinging his sword into the scale with
+ the Institutes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The civic and legal trumpery was of course made to kick the beam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maurice had organized his campaign this year against the Advocate and his
+ party as deliberately as he had ever arranged the details of a series of
+ battles and sieges against the Spaniard. And he was proving himself as
+ consummate master in political strife as in the great science of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He no longer made any secret of his conviction that Barneveld was a
+ traitor to his country, bought with Spanish gold. There was not the
+ slightest proof for these suspicions, but he asserted them roundly. "The
+ Advocate is travelling straight to Spain," he said to Count Cuylenborg.
+ "But we will see who has got the longest purse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as if it had been a part of the campaign, a prearranged diversion to
+ the more direct and general assault on the entrenchments of the States'
+ right party, a horrible personal onslaught was now made from many quarters
+ upon the Advocate. It was an age of pamphleteering, of venomous, virulent,
+ unscrupulous libels. And never even in that age had there been anything to
+ equal the savage attacks upon this great statesman. It moves the gall of
+ an honest man, even after the lapse of two centuries and a half, to turn
+ over those long forgotten pages and mark the depths to which political and
+ theological party spirit could descend. That human creatures can
+ assimilate themselves so closely to the reptile, and to the subtle devil
+ within the reptile, when a party end is to be gained is enough to make the
+ very name of man a term of reproach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Day by day appeared pamphlets, each one more poisonous than its
+ predecessor. There was hardly a crime that was not laid at the door of
+ Barneveld and all his kindred. The man who had borne a matchlock in early
+ youth against the foreign tyrant in days when unsuccessful rebellion meant
+ martyrdom and torture; who had successfully guided the councils of the
+ infant commonwealth at a period when most of his accusers were in their
+ cradles, and when mistake was ruin to the republic; he on whose strong arm
+ the father of his country had leaned for support; the man who had
+ organized a political system out of chaos; who had laid down the internal
+ laws, negotiated the great indispensable alliances, directed the
+ complicated foreign policy, established the system of national defence,
+ presided over the successful financial administration of a state
+ struggling out of mutiny into national existence; who had rocked the
+ Republic in its cradle and ever borne her in his heart; who had made her
+ name beloved at home and honoured and dreaded abroad; who had been the
+ first, when the great Taciturn had at last fallen a victim to the
+ murderous tyrant of Spain, to place the youthful Maurice in his father's
+ place, and to inspire the whole country with sublime courage to persist
+ rather than falter in purpose after so deadly a blow; who was as truly the
+ founder of the Republic as William had been the author of its
+ independence,&mdash;was now denounced as a traitor, a pope, a tyrant, a
+ venal hucksterer of his country's liberties. His family name, which had
+ long been an ancient and knightly one, was defiled and its nobility
+ disputed; his father and mother, sons and daughters, sisters and brothers,
+ accused of every imaginable and unimaginable crime, of murder, incest,
+ robbery, bastardy, fraud, forgery, blasphemy. He had received waggon-loads
+ of Spanish pistoles; he had been paid 120,000 ducats by Spain for
+ negotiating the Truce; he was in secret treaty with Archduke Albert to
+ bring 18,000 Spanish mercenaries across the border to defeat the
+ machinations of Prince Maurice, destroy his life, or drive him from the
+ country; all these foul and bitter charges and a thousand similar ones
+ were rained almost daily upon that grey head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day the loose sheets of a more than commonly libellous pamphlet were
+ picked up in the streets of the Hague and placed in the Advocate's hands.
+ It was the work of the drunken notary Danckaerts already mentioned, then
+ resident in Amsterdam, and among the papers thus found was a list of
+ wealthy merchants of that city who had contributed to the expense of its
+ publication. The opposition of Barneveld to the West India Corporation
+ could never be forgiven. The Advocate was notified in this production that
+ he was soon to be summoned to answer for his crimes. The country was weary
+ of him, he was told, and his life was forfeited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stung at last beyond endurance by the persistent malice of his enemies, he
+ came before the States of Holland for redress. Upon his remonstrance the
+ author of this vile libel was summoned to answer before the upper tribunal
+ at the Hague for his crime. The city of Amsterdam covered him with the
+ shield 'de non evocando,' which had so often in cases of less consequence
+ proved of no protective value, and the notary was never punished, but on
+ the contrary after a brief lapse of time rewarded as for a meritorious
+ action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, the States of Holland, by formal act, took the name and honour
+ of Barneveld under their immediate protection as a treasure belonging
+ specially to themselves. Heavy penalties were denounced upon the authors
+ and printers of these libellous attacks, and large rewards offered for
+ their detection. Nothing came, however, of such measures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 24th April the Advocate addressed a frank, dignified, and
+ conciliatory letter to the Prince. The rapid progress of calumny against
+ him had at last alarmed even his steadfast soul, and he thought it best to
+ make a last appeal to the justice and to the clear intellect of William
+ the Silent's son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gracious Prince," he said, "I observe to my greatest sorrow an entire
+ estrangement of your Excellency from me, and I fear lest what was said six
+ months since by certain clerical persons and afterwards by some
+ politicians concerning your dissatisfaction with me, which until now I
+ have not been able to believe, must be true. I declare nevertheless with a
+ sincere heart to have never willingly given cause for any such feeling;
+ having always been your very faithful servant and with God's help hoping
+ as such to die. Ten years ago during the negotiations for the Truce I
+ clearly observed the beginning of this estrangement, but your Excellency
+ will be graciously pleased to remember that I declared to you at that time
+ my upright and sincere intention in these negotiations to promote the
+ service of the country and the interests of your Excellency, and that I
+ nevertheless offered at the time not only to resign all my functions but
+ to leave the country rather than remain in office and in the country to
+ the dissatisfaction of your Excellency."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then rapidly reviewed the causes which had produced the alienation of
+ which he complained and the melancholy divisions caused by the want of
+ mutual religious toleration in the Provinces; spoke of his efforts to
+ foster a spirit of conciliation on the dread subject of predestination,
+ and referred to the letter of the King of Great Britain deprecating
+ discussion and schism on this subject, and urging that those favourable to
+ the views of the Remonstrants ought not to be persecuted. Referring to the
+ intimate relations which Uytenbogaert had so long enjoyed with the Prince,
+ the Advocate alluded to the difficulty he had in believing that his
+ Excellency intended to act in opposition to the efforts of the States of
+ Holland in the cause of mutual toleration, to the manifest detriment of
+ the country and of many of its best and truest patriots and the greater
+ number of the magistrates in all the cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He reminded the Prince that all attempts to accommodate these fearful
+ quarrels had been frustrated, and that on his departure the previous year
+ to Utrecht on account of his health he had again offered to resign all his
+ offices and to leave Holland altogether rather than find himself in
+ perpetual opposition to his Excellency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I begged you in such case," he said, "to lend your hand to the procuring
+ for me an honourable discharge from My Lords the States, but your
+ Excellency declared that you could in no wise approve such a step and gave
+ me hope that some means of accommodating the dissensions would yet be
+ proposed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I went then to Vianen, being much indisposed; thence I repaired to
+ Utrecht to consult my old friend Doctor Saulo Saul, in whose hands I
+ remained six weeks, not being able, as I hoped, to pass my seventieth
+ birthday on the 24th September last in my birthplace, the city of
+ Amersfoort. All this time I heard not one single word or proposal of
+ accommodation. On the contrary it was determined that by a majority vote,
+ a thing never heard of before, it was intended against the solemn resolves
+ of the States of Holland, of Utrecht, and of Overyssel to bring these
+ religious differences before the Assembly of My Lords the States-General,
+ a proceeding directly in the teeth of the Act of Union and other treaties,
+ and before a Synod which people called National, and that meantime every
+ effort was making to discredit all those who stood up for the laws of
+ these Provinces and to make them odious and despicable in the eyes of the
+ common people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Especially it was I that was thus made the object of hatred and contempt
+ in their eyes. Hundreds of lies and calumnies, circulated in the form of
+ libels, seditious pamphlets, and lampoons, compelled me to return from
+ Utrecht to the Hague. Since that time I have repeatedly offered my
+ services to your Excellency for the promotion of mutual accommodation and
+ reconciliation of differences, but without success."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then alluded to the publication with which the country was ringing,
+ 'The Necessary and Living Discourse of a Spanish Counsellor', and which
+ was attributed to his former confidential friend, now become his deadliest
+ foe, ex-Ambassador Francis Aerssens, and warned the Prince that if he
+ chose, which God forbid, to follow the advice of that seditious libel,
+ nothing but ruin to the beloved Fatherland and its lovers, to the princely
+ house of Orange-Nassau and to the Christian religion could be the issue.
+ "The Spanish government could desire no better counsel," he said, "than
+ this which these fellows give you; to encourage distrust and estrangement
+ between your Excellency and the nobles, the cities, and the magistrates of
+ the land and to propose high and haughty imaginings which are easy enough
+ to write, but most difficult to practise, and which can only enure to the
+ advantage of Spain. Therefore most respectfully I beg your Excellency not
+ to believe these fellows, but to reject their counsels . . . . Among them
+ are many malignant hypocrites and ambitious men who are seeking their own
+ profit in these changes of government&mdash;many utterly ragged and
+ beggarly fellows and many infamous traitors coming from the provinces
+ which have remained under the dominion of the Spaniard, and who are filled
+ with revenge, envy, and jealousy at the greater prosperity and bloom of
+ these independent States than they find at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I fear," he said in conclusion, "that I have troubled your Excellency too
+ long, but to the fulfilment of my duty and discharge of my conscience I
+ could not be more brief. It saddens me deeply that in recompense for my
+ long and manifold services I am attacked by so many calumnious, lying,
+ seditious, and fraudulent libels, and that these indecencies find their
+ pretext and their food in the evil disposition of your Excellency towards
+ me. And although for one-and-thirty years long I have been able to live
+ down such things with silence, well-doing, and truth, still do I now find
+ myself compelled in this my advanced old age and infirmity to make some
+ utterances in defence of myself and those belonging to me, however much
+ against my heart and inclinations."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He ended by enclosing a copy of the solemn state paper which he was about
+ to lay before the States of Holland in defence of his honour, and
+ subscribed himself the lifelong and faithful servant of the Prince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Remonstrance to the States contained a summary review of the political
+ events of his life, which was indeed nothing more nor less than the
+ history of his country and almost of Europe itself during that period,
+ broadly and vividly sketched with the hand of a master. It was published
+ at once and strengthened the affection of his friends and the wrath of his
+ enemies. It is not necessary to our purpose to reproduce or even analyse
+ the document, the main facts and opinions contained in it being already
+ familiar to the reader. The frankness however with which, in reply to the
+ charges so profusely brought against him of having grown rich by
+ extortion, treason, and corruption, of having gorged himself with plunder
+ at home and bribery from the enemy, of being the great pensioner of Europe
+ and the Marshal d'Ancre of the Netherlands&mdash;he alluded to the exact
+ condition of his private affairs and the growth and sources of his
+ revenue, giving, as it were, a kind of schedule of his property, has in it
+ something half humorous, half touching in its simplicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He set forth the very slender salaries attached to his high offices of
+ Advocate of Holland, Keeper of the Seals, and other functions. He answered
+ the charge that he always had at his disposition 120,000 florins to bribe
+ foreign agents withal by saying that his whole allowance for extraordinary
+ expenses and trouble in maintaining his diplomatic and internal
+ correspondence was exactly 500 florins yearly. He alluded to the slanders
+ circulated as to his wealth and its sources by those who envied him for
+ his position and hated him for his services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I beg you to believe, My Lords," he continued, "that my property is
+ neither so great nor so small as some people represent it to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In the year '75 I married my wife," he said. "I was pleased with her
+ person. I was likewise pleased with the dowry which was promptly paid over
+ to me, with firm expectation of increase and betterment . . . . I ac
+ knowledge that forty-three years ago my wife and myself had got together
+ so much of real and personal property that we could live honourably upon
+ it. I had at that time as good pay and practice as any advocate in the
+ courts which brought me in a good 4000 florins a year; there being but
+ eight advocates practising at the time, of whom I was certainly not the
+ one least employed. In the beginning of the year '77 I came into the
+ service of the city of Rotterdam as 'Pensionary. Upon my salary from that
+ town I was enabled to support my family, having then but two children. Now
+ I can clearly prove that between the years 1577 and 1616 inclusive I have
+ inherited in my own right or that of my wife, from our relatives, for
+ ourselves and our children by lawful succession, more than 400 Holland
+ morgens of land (about 800 acres), more than 2000 florins yearly of
+ redeemable rents, a good house in the city of Delft, some houses in the
+ open country, and several thousand florins in ready money. I have likewise
+ reclaimed in the course of the past forty years out of the water and
+ swamps by dyking more than an equal number of acres to those inherited,
+ and have bought and sold property during the same period to the value of
+ 800,000 florins; having sometimes bought 100,000 florins' worth and sold
+ 60,000 of it for 160,000, and so on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was evident that the thrifty Advocate during his long life had
+ understood how to turn over his money, and it was not necessary to imagine
+ "waggon-loads of Spanish pistoles" and bribes on a gigantic scale from the
+ hereditary enemy in order to account for a reasonable opulence on his
+ part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have had nothing to do with trade," he continued, "it having been the
+ custom of my ancestors to risk no money except where the plough goes. In
+ the great East India Company however, which with four years of hard work,
+ public and private, I have helped establish, in order to inflict damage on
+ the Spaniards and Portuguese, I have adventured somewhat more than 5000
+ florins . . . . Now even if my condition be reasonably good, I think no
+ one has reason to envy me. Nevertheless I have said it in your Lordships'
+ Assembly, and I repeat it solemnly on this occasion, that I have pondered
+ the state of my affairs during my recent illness and found that in order
+ to leave my children unencumbered estates I must sell property to the
+ value of 60,000 or 70,000 florins. This I would rather do than leave the
+ charge to my children. That I should have got thus behindhand through bad
+ management, I beg your Highnesses not to believe. But I have inherited,
+ with the succession of four persons whose only heir I was and with that of
+ others to whom I was co-heir, many burthens as well. I have bought
+ property with encumbrances, and I have dyked and bettered several estates
+ with borrowed money. Now should it please your Lordships to institute a
+ census and valuation of the property of your subjects, I for one should be
+ very well pleased. For I know full well that those who in the estimates of
+ capital in the year 1599 rated themselves at 50,000 or 60,000 florins now
+ may boast of having twice as much property as I have. Yet in that year out
+ of patriotism I placed myself on the list of those liable for the very
+ highest contributions, being assessed on a property of 200,000 florins."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate alluded with haughty contempt to the notorious lies
+ circulated by his libellers in regard to his lineage, as if the vast
+ services and unquestioned abilities of such a statesman would not have
+ illustrated the obscurest origin. But as he happened to be of ancient and
+ honourable descent, he chose to vindicate his position in that regard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was born in the city of Amersfoort," he said, "by the father's side an
+ Oldenbarneveld; an old and noble race, from generation to generation
+ steadfast and true; who have been duly summoned for many hundred years to
+ the assembly of the nobles of their province as they are to this day. By
+ my mother's side I am sprung from the ancient and knightly family of
+ Amersfoort, which for three or four hundred years has been known as
+ foremost among the nobles of Utrecht in all state affairs and as landed
+ proprietors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is only for the sake of opening these domestic and private lights upon
+ an historical character whose life was so pre-eminently and almost
+ exclusively a public one that we have drawn some attention to this stately
+ defence made by the Advocate of his birth, life, and services to the
+ State. The public portions of the state paper belong exclusively to
+ history, and have already been sufficiently detailed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter to Prince Maurice was delivered into his hands by Cornelis van
+ der Myle, son-in-law of Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No reply to it was ever sent, but several days afterwards the Stadholder
+ called from his open window to van der Myle, who happened to be passing
+ by. He then informed him that he neither admitted the premises nor the
+ conclusion of the Advocate's letter, saying that many things set down in
+ it were false. He furthermore told him a story of a certain old man who,
+ having in his youth invented many things and told them often for truth,
+ believed them when he came to old age to be actually true and was ever
+ ready to stake his salvation upon them. Whereupon he shut the window and
+ left van der Myle to make such application of the parable as he thought
+ proper, vouchsafing no further answer to Barneveld's communication.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dudley Carleton related the anecdote to his government with much glee, but
+ it may be doubted whether this bold way of giving the lie to a venerable
+ statesman through his son-in-law would have been accounted as triumphant
+ argumentation anywhere out of a barrack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the Remonstrance to the States of Holland, although most
+ respectfully received in that assembly except by the five opposition
+ cities, its immediate effect on the public was to bring down a fresh "snow
+ storm"&mdash;to use the expression of a contemporary&mdash;of pamphlets,
+ libels, caricatures, and broadsheets upon the head of the Advocate. In
+ every bookseller's and print shop window in all the cities of the country,
+ the fallen statesman was represented in all possible ludicrous,
+ contemptible, and hateful shapes, while hags and blind beggars about the
+ streets screeched filthy and cursing ballads against him, even at his very
+ doors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The effect of energetic, uncompromising calumny has rarely been more
+ strikingly illustrated than in the case of this statesman. Blackened daily
+ all over by a thousand trowels, the purest and noblest character must have
+ been defiled, and it is no wonder that the incrustation upon the
+ Advocate's fame should have lasted for two centuries and a half. It may
+ perhaps endure for as many more: Not even the vile Marshal d'Ancre, who
+ had so recently perished, was more the mark of obloquy in a country which
+ he had dishonoured, flouted, and picked to the bone than was Barneveld in
+ a commonwealth which he had almost created and had served faithfully from
+ youth to old age. It was even the fashion to compare him with Concini in
+ order to heighten the wrath of the public, as if any parallel between the
+ ignoble, foreign paramour of a stupid and sensual queen, and the great
+ statesman, patriot, and jurist of whom civilization will be always proud,
+ could ever enter any but an idiot's brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the Stadholder, who had so successfully handled the Assembly of
+ Gelderland and Overyssel, now sailed across the Zuiderzee from Kampen to
+ Amsterdam. On his approach to the stately northern Venice, standing full
+ of life and commercial bustle upon its vast submerged forest of Norwegian
+ pines, he was met by a fleet of yachts and escorted through the water
+ gates of the into the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here an immense assemblage of vessels of every class, from the humble
+ gondola to the bulky East Indianian and the first-rate ship of war, gaily
+ bannered with the Orange colours and thronged from deck to topmast by
+ enthusiastic multitudes, was waiting to receive their beloved stadholder.
+ A deafening cannonade saluted him on his approach. The Prince was escorted
+ to the Square or Dam, where on a high scaffolding covered with blue velvet
+ in front of the stately mediaeval town-hall the burgomasters and board of
+ magistrates in their robes of office were waiting to receive him. The
+ strains of that most inspiriting and suggestive of national melodies, the
+ 'Wilhelmus van Nassouwen,' rang through the air, and when they were
+ silent, the chief magistrate poured forth a very eloquent and tedious
+ oration, and concluded by presenting him with a large orange in solid
+ gold; Maurice having succeeded to the principality a few months before on
+ the death of his half-brother Philip William.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "Blooming in Love," as one of the Chambers of "Rhetoric" in which the
+ hard-handed but half-artistic mechanics and shopkeepers of the Netherlands
+ loved to disport themselves was called, then exhibited upon an opposite
+ scaffold a magnificent representation of Jupiter astride upon an eagle and
+ banding down to the Stadholder as if from the clouds that same
+ principality. Nothing could be neater or more mythological.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince and his escort, sitting in the windows of the town-hall, the
+ square beneath being covered with 3000 or 4000 burgher militia in full
+ uniform, with orange plumes in their hats and orange scarves on their
+ breasts, saw still other sights. A gorgeous procession set forth by the
+ "Netherlandish Academy," another chamber of rhetoric, and filled with
+ those emblematic impersonations so dear to the hearts of Netherlanders,
+ had been sweeping through all the canals and along the splendid quays of
+ the city. The Maid of Holland, twenty feet high, led the van, followed by
+ the counterfeit presentment of each of her six sisters. An orange tree
+ full of flowers and fruit was conspicuous in one barge, while in another,
+ strangely and lugubriously enough, lay the murdered William the Silent in
+ the arms of his wife and surrounded by his weeping sons and daughters all
+ attired in white satin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the evening the Netherland Academy, to improve the general hilarity,
+ and as if believing exhibitions of murder the most appropriate means of
+ welcoming the Prince, invited him to a scenic representation of the
+ assassination of Count Florence V. of Holland by Gerrit van Velsen and
+ other nobles. There seemed no especial reason for the selection, unless
+ perhaps the local one; one of the perpetrators of this crime against an
+ ancient predecessor of William the Silent in the sovereignty of Holland
+ having been a former lord proprietor of Amsterdam and the adjacent
+ territories, Gysbrecht van Amatel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maurice returned to the Hague. Five of the seven provinces were entirely
+ his own. Utrecht too was already wavering, while there could be no doubt
+ of the warm allegiance to himself of the important commercial metropolis
+ of Holland, the only province in which Barneveld's influence was still
+ paramount.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Owing to the watchfulness and distrust of Barneveld, which had never
+ faltered, Spain had not secured the entire control of the disputed
+ duchies, but she had at least secured the head of a venerated saint. "The
+ bargain is completed for the head of the glorious Saint Lawrence, which
+ you know I so much desire," wrote Philip triumphantly to the Archduke
+ Albert. He had, however, not got it for nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Abbot of Glamart in Julich, then in possession of that treasure, had
+ stipulated before delivering it that if at any time the heretics or other
+ enemies should destroy the monastery his Majesty would establish them in
+ Spanish Flanders and give them the same revenues as they now enjoyed in
+ Julich. Count Herman van den Berg was to give a guarantee to that effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the long controversy in the duchies having tacitly come to a
+ standstill upon the basis of 'uti possidetis,' the Spanish government had
+ leisure in the midst of their preparation for the general crusade upon
+ European heresy to observe and enjoy the internal religious dissensions in
+ their revolted provinces. Although they had concluded the convention with
+ them as with countries over which they had no pretensions, they had never
+ at heart allowed more virtue to the conjunction "as," which really
+ contained the essence of the treaty, than grammatically belonged to it.
+ Spain still chose to regard the independence of the Seven Provinces as a
+ pleasant fiction to be dispelled when, the truce having expired by its own
+ limitation, she should resume, as she fully meant to do, her sovereignty
+ over all the seventeen Netherlands, the United as well as the obedient.
+ Thus at any rate the question of state rights or central sovereignty would
+ be settled by a very summary process. The Spanish ambassador was wroth, as
+ may well be supposed, when the agent of the rebel provinces received in
+ London the rank, title, and recognition of ambassador. Gondemar at least
+ refused to acknowledge Noel de Caron as his diplomatic equal or even as
+ his colleague, and was vehement in his protestations on the subject. But
+ James, much as he dreaded the Spanish envoy and fawned upon his master,
+ was not besotted enough to comply with these demands at the expense of his
+ most powerful ally, the Republic of the Netherlands. The Spanish king
+ however declared his ambassador's proceedings to be in exact accordance
+ with his instructions. He was sorry, he said, if the affair had caused
+ discontent to the King of Great Britain; he intended in all respects to
+ maintain the Treaty of Truce of which his Majesty had been one of the
+ guarantors, but as that treaty had but a few more years to run, after
+ which he should be reinstated in his former right of sovereignty over all
+ the Netherlands, he entirely justified the conduct of Count Gondemar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It may well be conceived that, as the years passed by, as the period of
+ the Truce grew nearer and the religious disputes became every day more
+ envenomed, the government at Madrid should look on the tumultuous scene
+ with saturnine satisfaction. There was little doubt now, they thought,
+ that the Provinces, sick of their rebellion and that fancied independence
+ which had led them into a whirlpool of political and religious misery, and
+ convinced of their incompetence to govern themselves, would be only too
+ happy to seek the forgiving arms of their lawful sovereign. Above all they
+ must have learned that their great heresy had carried its chastisement
+ with it, that within something they called a Reformed Church other
+ heresies had been developed which demanded condign punishment at the hands
+ of that new Church, and that there could be neither rest for them in this
+ world nor salvation in the next except by returning to the bosom of their
+ ancient mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now was the time, so it was thought, to throw forward a strong force of
+ Jesuits as skirmishers into the Provinces by whom the way would be opened
+ for the reconquest of the whole territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By the advices coming to us continually from thence," wrote the King of
+ Spain to Archduke Albert, "we understand that the disquiets and
+ differences continue in Holland on matters relating to their sects, and
+ that from this has resulted the conversion of many to the Catholic
+ religion. So it has been taken into consideration whether it would not be
+ expedient that some fathers of the company of Jesuits be sent secretly
+ from Rome to Holland, who should negotiate concerning the conversion of
+ that people. Before taking a resolution, I have thought best to give an
+ account of this matter to your Highness. I should be glad if you would
+ inform me what priests are going to Holland, what fruits they yield, and
+ what can be done for the continuance of their labours. Please to advise me
+ very particularly together with any suggestions that may occur to you in
+ this matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Archduke, who was nearer the scene, was not so sure that the old
+ religion was making such progress as his royal nephew or those who spoke
+ in his name believed. At any rate, if it were not rapidly gaining ground,
+ it would be neither for want of discord among the Protestants nor for lack
+ of Jesuits to profit by it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not understand," said he in reply, "nor is it generally considered
+ certain that from the differences and disturbances that the Hollanders are
+ having among themselves there has resulted the conversion of any of them
+ to our blessed Catholic faith, because their disputes are of certain
+ points concerning which there are different opinions within their sect.
+ There has always been a goodly number of priests here, the greater part of
+ whom belong to the Company. They are very diligent and fervent, and the
+ Catholics derive much comfort from them. To send more of them would do
+ more harm than good. It might be found out, and then they would perhaps be
+ driven out of Holland or even chastised. So it seems better to leave
+ things as they are for the present."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spanish government was not discouraged however, but was pricking up
+ its ears anew at strange communications it was receiving from the very
+ bosom of the council of state in the Netherlands. This body, as will be
+ remembered, had been much opposed to Barneveld and to the policy pursued
+ under his leadership by the States of Holland. Some of its members were
+ secretly Catholic and still more secretly disposed to effect a revolution
+ in the government, the object of which should be to fuse the United
+ Provinces with the obedient Netherlands in a single independent monarchy
+ to be placed under the sceptre of the son of Philip III.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A paper containing the outlines of this scheme had been sent to Spain, and
+ the King at once forwarded it in cipher to the Archduke at Brussels for
+ his opinion and co-operation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will see," he said, "the plan which a certain person zealous for the
+ public good has proposed for reducing the Netherlanders to my obedience. .
+ . . . You will please advise with Count Frederic van den Berg and let me
+ know with much particularity and profound secrecy what is thought, what is
+ occurring, and the form in which this matter ought to be negotiated, and
+ the proper way to make it march."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unquestionably the paper was of grave importance. It informed the King of
+ Spain that some principal personages in the United Netherlands, members of
+ the council of state, were of opinion that if his Majesty or Archduke
+ Albert should propose peace, it could be accomplished at that moment more
+ easily than ever before. They had arrived at the conviction that no
+ assistance was to be obtained from the King of France, who was too much
+ weakened by tumults and sedition at home, while nothing good could be
+ expected from the King of England. The greater part of the Province of
+ Gelderland, they said, with all Friesland, Utrecht, Groningen, and
+ Overyssel were inclined to a permanent peace. Being all of them frontier
+ provinces, they were constantly exposed to the brunt of hostilities.
+ Besides this, the war expenses alone would now be more than 3,000,000
+ florins a year. Thus the people were kept perpetually harassed, and
+ although evil-intentioned persons approved these burthens under the
+ pretence that such heavy taxation served to free them from the tyranny of
+ Spain, those of sense and quality reproved them and knew the contrary to
+ be true. "Many here know," continued these traitors in the heart of the
+ state council, "how good it would be for the people of the Netherlands to
+ have a prince, and those having this desire being on the frontier are
+ determined to accept the son of your Majesty for their ruler." The
+ conditions of the proposed arrangement were to be that the Prince with his
+ successors who were thus to possess all the Netherlands were to be
+ independent sovereigns not subject in any way to the crown of Spain, and
+ that the great governments and dignities of the country were to remain in
+ the hands then holding them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last condition was obviously inserted in the plan for the special
+ benefit of Prince Maurice and Count Lewis, although there is not an atom
+ of evidence that they had ever heard of the intrigue or doubt that, if
+ they had, they would have signally chastised its guilty authors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was further stated that the Catholics having in each town a church and
+ free exercise of their religion would soon be in a great majority. Thus
+ the political and religious counter-revolution would be triumphantly
+ accomplished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was proposed that the management of the business should be entrusted to
+ some gentleman of the country possessing property there who "under pretext
+ of the public good should make people comprehend what a great thing it
+ would be if they could obtain this favour from the Spanish King, thus
+ extricating themselves from so many calamities and miseries, and obtaining
+ free traffic and a prince of their own." It would be necessary for the
+ King and Archduke to write many letters and promise great rewards to
+ persons who might otherwise embarrass the good work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plot was an ingenious one. There seemed in the opinion of these
+ conspirators in the state council but one great obstacle to its success.
+ It should be kept absolutely concealed from the States of Holland. The
+ great stipendiary of Spain, John of Barneveld, whose coffers were filled
+ with Spanish pistoles, whose name and surname might be read by all men in
+ the account-books at Brussels heading the register of mighty bribe-takers,
+ the man who was howled at in a thousand lampoons as a traitor ever ready
+ to sell his country, whom even Prince Maurice "partly believed" to be the
+ pensionary of Philip, must not hear a whisper of this scheme to restore
+ the Republic to Spanish control and place it under the sceptre of a
+ Spanish prince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States of Holland at that moment and so long as he was a member of the
+ body were Barneveld and Barneveld only; thinking his thoughts, speaking
+ with his tongue, writing with his pen. Of this neither friend nor foe ever
+ expressed a doubt. Indeed it was one of the staple accusations against
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet this paper in which the Spanish king in confidential cipher and
+ profound secrecy communicated to Archduke Albert his hopes and his schemes
+ for recovering the revolted provinces as a kingdom for his son contained
+ these words of caution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The States of Holland and Zealand will be opposed to the plan," it said.
+ "If the treaty come to the knowledge of the States and Council of Holland
+ before it has been acted upon by the five frontier provinces the whole
+ plan will be demolished."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the opinion entertained by Philip himself of the man who was
+ supposed to be his stipendiary. I am not aware that this paper has ever
+ been alluded to in any document or treatise private or public from the day
+ of its date to this hour. It certainly has never been published, but it
+ lies deciphered in the Archives of the Kingdom at Brussels, and is alone
+ sufficient to put to shame the slanderers of the Advocate's loyalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet let it be remembered that in this very summer exactly at the moment
+ when these intrigues were going on between the King of Spain and the class
+ of men most opposed to Barneveld, the accusations against his fidelity
+ were loudest and rifest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the Stadholder had so suddenly slipped down to Brielle in order to
+ secure that important stronghold for the Contra-Remonstrant party, reports
+ had been carefully strewn among the people that the Advocate was about to
+ deliver that place and other fortresses to Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brielle, Flushing, Rammekens, the very cautionary towns and keys to the
+ country which he had so recently and in such masterly manner delivered
+ from the grasp of the hereditary ally he was now about to surrender to the
+ ancient enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spaniards were already on the sea, it was said. Had it not been for
+ his Excellency's watchfulness and promptitude, they would already under
+ guidance of Barneveld and his crew have mastered the city of Brielle.
+ Flushing too through Barneveld's advice and connivance was open at a
+ particular point, in order that the Spaniards, who had their eye upon it,
+ might conveniently enter and take possession of the place. The air was
+ full of wild rumours to this effect, and already the humbler classes who
+ sided with the Stadholder saw in him the saviour of the country from the
+ treason of the Advocate and the renewed tyranny of Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince made no such pretence, but simply took possession of the
+ fortress in order to be beforehand with the Waartgelders. The
+ Contra-Remonstrants in Brielle had desired that "men should see who had
+ the hardest fists," and it would certainly have been difficult to find
+ harder ones than those of the hero of Nieuwpoort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the Jesuits coming in so skilfully to triumph over the warring
+ sects of Calvinists, there were other engineers on whom the Spanish
+ government relied to effect the reconquest of the Netherlands. Especially
+ it was an object to wreak vengeance on Holland, that head and front of the
+ revolt, both for its persistence in rebellion and for the immense
+ prosperity and progress by which that rebellion had been rewarded. Holland
+ had grown fat and strong, while the obedient Netherlands were withered to
+ the marrow of their bones. But there was a practical person then resident
+ in Spain to whom the Netherlands were well known, to whom indeed
+ everything was well known, who had laid before the King a magnificent
+ scheme for destroying the commerce and with it the very existence of
+ Holland to the great advantage of the Spanish finances and of the Spanish
+ Netherlands. Philip of course laid it before the Archduke as usual, that
+ he might ponder it well and afterwards, if approved, direct its execution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The practical person set forth in an elaborate memoir that the Hollanders
+ were making rapid progress in commerce, arts, and manufactures, while the
+ obedient provinces were sinking as swiftly into decay. The Spanish
+ Netherlands were almost entirely shut off from the sea, the rivers Scheldt
+ and Meuse being hardly navigable for them on account of the control of
+ those waters by Holland. The Dutch were attracting to their dominions all
+ artisans, navigators, and traders. Despising all other nations and giving
+ them the law, they had ruined the obedient provinces. Ostend, Nieuwpoort,
+ Dunkerk were wasting away, and ought to be restored.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have profoundly studied forty years long the subjects of commerce and
+ navigation," said the practical person, "and I have succeeded in
+ penetrating the secrets and acquiring, as it were, universal knowledge&mdash;let
+ me not be suspected of boasting&mdash;of the whole discovered world and of
+ the ocean. I have been assisted by study of the best works of geography
+ and history, by my own labours, and by those of my late father, a man of
+ illustrious genius and heroical conceptions and very zealous in the
+ Catholic faith."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The modest and practical son of an illustrious but anonymous father, then
+ coming to the point, said it would be the easiest thing in the world to
+ direct the course of the Scheldt into an entirely new channel through
+ Spanish Flanders to the sea. Thus the Dutch ports and forts which had been
+ constructed with such magnificence and at such vast expense would be left
+ high and dry; the Spaniards would build new ones in Flanders, and thus
+ control the whole navigation and deprive the Hollanders of that empire of
+ the sea which they now so proudly arrogated. This scheme was much simpler
+ to carry out than the vulgar might suppose, and, when accomplished, it
+ would destroy the commerce, navigation, and fisheries of the Hollanders,
+ throwing it all into the hands of the Archdukes. This would cause such
+ ruin, poverty, and tumults everywhere that all would be changed. The
+ Republic of the United States would annihilate itself and fall to pieces;
+ the religious dissensions, the war of one sect with another, and the
+ jealousy of the House of Nassau, suspected of plans hostile to popular
+ liberties, finishing the work of destruction. "Then the Republic," said
+ the man of universal science, warming at sight of the picture he was
+ painting, "laden with debt and steeped in poverty, will fall to the ground
+ of its own weight, and thus debilitated will crawl humbly to place itself
+ in the paternal hands of the illustrious house of Austria."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be better, he thought, to set about the work, before the
+ expiration of the Truce. At any rate, the preparation for it, or the mere
+ threat of it, would ensure a renewal of that treaty on juster terms. It
+ was most important too to begin at once the construction of a port on the
+ coast of Flanders, looking to the north.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a position, he said, without naming it, in which whole navies
+ could ride in safety, secure from all tempests, beyond the reach of the
+ Hollanders, open at all times to traffic to and from England, France,
+ Spain, Norway, Sweden, Russia&mdash;a perfectly free commerce, beyond the
+ reach of any rights or duties claimed or levied by the insolent republic.
+ In this port would assemble all the navigators of the country, and it
+ would become in time of war a terror to the Hollanders, English, and all
+ northern peoples. In order to attract, protect, and preserve these
+ navigators and this commerce, many great public edifices must be built,
+ together with splendid streets of houses and impregnable fortifications.
+ It should be a walled and stately city, and its name should be
+ Philipopolis. If these simple projects, so easy of execution, pleased his
+ Majesty, the practical person was ready to explain them in all their
+ details.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Majesty was enchanted with the glowing picture, but before quite
+ deciding on carrying the scheme into execution thought it best to consult
+ the Archduke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reply of Albert has not been preserved. It was probably not
+ enthusiastic, and the man who without boasting had declared himself to
+ know everything was never commissioned to convert his schemes into
+ realities. That magnificent walled city, Philipopolis, with its gorgeous
+ streets and bristling fortresses, remained unbuilt, the Scheldt has
+ placidly flowed through its old channel to the sea from that day to this,
+ and the Republic remained in possession of the unexampled foreign trade
+ with which rebellion had enriched it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These various intrigues and projects show plainly enough however the
+ encouragement given to the enemies of the United Provinces and of
+ Protestantism everywhere by these disastrous internal dissensions. But
+ yesterday and the Republic led by Barneveld in council and Maurice of
+ Nassau in the field stood at the head of the great army of resistance to
+ the general crusade organized by Spain and Rome against all unbelievers.
+ And now that the war was absolutely beginning in Bohemia, the Republic was
+ falling upon its own sword instead of smiting with it the universal foe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not the King of Spain alone that cast longing eyes on the fair
+ territory of that commonwealth which the unparalleled tyranny of his
+ father had driven to renounce his sceptre. Both in the Netherlands and
+ France, among the extreme orthodox party, there were secret schemes, to
+ which Maurice was not privy, to raise Maurice to the sovereignty of the
+ Provinces. Other conspirators with a wider scope and more treasonable
+ design were disposed to surrender their country to the dominion of France,
+ stipulating of course large rewards and offices for themselves and the
+ vice-royalty of what should then be the French Netherlands to Maurice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The schemes were wild enough perhaps, but their very existence, which is
+ undoubted, is another proof, if more proof were wanted, of the lamentable
+ tendency, in times of civil and religious dissension, of political passion
+ to burn out the very first principles of patriotism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is also important, on account of the direct influence exerted by these
+ intrigues upon subsequent events of the gravest character, to throw a beam
+ of light on matters which were thought to have been shrouded for ever in
+ impenetrable darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Langerac, the States' Ambassador in Paris, was the very reverse of his
+ predecessor, the wily, unscrupulous, and accomplished Francis Aerssens.
+ The envoys of the Republic were rarely dull, but Langerac was a simpleton.
+ They were renowned for political experience, skill, familiarity with
+ foreign languages, knowledge of literature, history, and public law; but
+ he was ignorant, spoke French very imperfectly, at a court where not a
+ human being could address him in his own tongue, had never been employed
+ in diplomacy or in high office of any kind, and could carry but small
+ personal weight at a post where of all others the representative of the
+ great republic should have commanded deference both for his own qualities
+ and for the majesty of his government. At a period when France was left
+ without a master or a guide the Dutch ambassador, under a becoming show of
+ profound respect, might really have governed the country so far as
+ regarded at least the all important relations which bound the two nations
+ together. But Langerac was a mere picker-up of trifles, a newsmonger who
+ wrote a despatch to-day with information which a despatch was written on
+ the morrow to contradict, while in itself conveying additional
+ intelligence absolutely certain to be falsified soon afterwards. The
+ Emperor of Germany had gone mad; Prince Maurice had been assassinated in
+ the Hague, a fact which his correspondents, the States-General, might be
+ supposed already to know, if it were one; there had been a revolution in
+ the royal bed-chamber; the Spanish cook of the young queen had arrived
+ from Madrid; the Duke of Nevers was behaving very oddly at Vienna; such
+ communications, and others equally startling, were the staple of his
+ correspondence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still he was honest enough, very mild, perfectly docile to Barneveld,
+ dependent upon his guidance, and fervently attached to that statesman so
+ long as his wheel was going up the hill. Moreover, his industry in
+ obtaining information and his passion for imparting it made it probable
+ that nothing very momentous would be neglected should it be laid before
+ him, but that his masters, and especially the Advocate, would be enabled
+ to judge for themselves as to the attention due to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "With this you will be apprised of some very high and weighty matters," he
+ wrote privately and in cipher to Barneveld, "which you will make use of
+ according to your great wisdom and forethought for the country's service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He requested that the matter might also be confided to M. van der Myle,
+ that he might assist his father-in-law, so overburdened with business, in
+ the task of deciphering the communication. He then stated that he had been
+ "very earnestly informed three days before by M. du Agean"&mdash;member of
+ the privy council of France&mdash;"that it had recently come to the King's
+ ears, and his Majesty knew it to be authentic, that there was a secret and
+ very dangerous conspiracy in Holland of persons belonging to the Reformed
+ religion in which others were also mixed. This party held very earnest and
+ very secret correspondence with the factious portion of the
+ Contra-Remonstrants both in the Netherlands and France, seeking under
+ pretext of the religious dissensions or by means of them to confer the
+ sovereignty upon Prince Maurice by general consent of the
+ Contra-Remonstrants. Their object was also to strengthen and augment the
+ force of the same religious party in France, to which end the Duc de
+ Bouillon and M. de Chatillon were very earnestly co-operating. Langerac
+ had already been informed by Chatillon that the Contra-Remonstrants had
+ determined to make a public declaration against the Remonstrants, and come
+ to an open separation from them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Others propose however," said the Ambassador, "that the King himself
+ should use the occasion to seize the sovereignty of the United Provinces
+ for himself and to appoint Prince Maurice viceroy, giving him in marriage
+ Madame Henriette of France." The object of this movement would be to
+ frustrate the plots of the Contra-Remonstrants, who were known to be
+ passionately hostile to the King and to France, and who had been
+ constantly traversing the negotiations of M. du Maurier. There was a
+ disposition to send a special and solemn embassy to the States, but it was
+ feared that the British king would at once do the same, to the immense
+ disadvantage of the Remonstrants. "M. de Barneveld," said the envoy, "is
+ deeply sympathized with here and commiserated. The Chancellor has
+ repeatedly requested me to present to you his very sincere and very hearty
+ respects, exhorting you to continue in your manly steadfastness and
+ courage." He also assured the Advocate that the French ambassador, M. du
+ Maurier, enjoyed the entire confidence of his government, and of the
+ principal members of the council, and that the King, although
+ contemplating, as we have seen, the seizure of the sovereignty of the
+ country, was most amicably disposed towards it, and so soon as the peace
+ of Savoy was settled "had something very good for it in his mind." Whether
+ the something very good was this very design to deprive it of
+ independence, the Ambassador did not state. He however recommended the use
+ of sundry small presents at the French court&mdash;especially to Madame de
+ Luynes, wife of the new favourite of Lewis since the death of Concini, in
+ which he had aided, now rising rapidly to consideration, and to Madame du
+ Agean&mdash;and asked to be supplied with funds accordingly. By these
+ means he thought it probable that at least the payment to the States of
+ the long arrears of the French subsidy might be secured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three weeks later, returning to the subject, the Ambassador reported
+ another conversation with M. du Agean. That politician assured him, "with
+ high protestations," as a perfectly certain fact that a Frenchman duly
+ qualified had arrived in Paris from Holland who had been in communication
+ not only with him but with several of the most confidential members of the
+ privy council of France. This duly qualified gentleman had been secretly
+ commissioned to say that in opinion of the conspirators already indicated
+ the occasion was exactly offered by these religious dissensions in the
+ Netherlands for bringing the whole country under the obedience of the
+ King. This would be done with perfect ease if he would only be willing to
+ favour a little the one party, that of the Contra-Remonstrants, and
+ promise his Excellency "perfect and perpetual authority in the government
+ with other compensations."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proposition, said du Agean, had been rejected by the privy councillors
+ with a declaration that they would not mix themselves up with any
+ factions, nor assist any party, but that they would gladly work with the
+ government for the accommodation of these difficulties and differences in
+ the Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I send you all this nakedly," concluded Langerac, "exactly as it has been
+ communicated to me, having always answered according to my duty and with a
+ view by negotiating with these persons to discover the intentions as well
+ of one side as the other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate was not profoundly impressed by these revelations. He was too
+ experienced a statesman to doubt that in times when civil and religious
+ passion was running high there was never lack of fishers in troubled
+ waters, and that if a body of conspirators could secure a handsome
+ compensation by selling their country to a foreign prince, they would
+ always be ready to do it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But although believed by Maurice to be himself a stipendiary of Spain, he
+ was above suspecting the Prince of any share in the low and stupid
+ intrigue which du Agean had imagined or disclosed. That the Stadholder was
+ ambitious of greater power, he hardly doubted, but that he was seeking to
+ acquire it by such corrupt and circuitous means, he did not dream. He
+ confidentially communicated the plot as in duty bound to some members of
+ the States, and had the Prince been accused in any conversation or
+ statement of being privy to the scheme, he would have thought himself
+ bound to mention it to him. The story came to the ears of Maurice however,
+ and helped to feed his wrath against the Advocate, as if he were
+ responsible for a plot, if plot it were, which had been concocted by his
+ own deadliest enemies. The Prince wrote a letter alluding to this
+ communication of Langerac and giving much alarm to that functionary. He
+ thought his despatches must have been intercepted and proposed in future
+ to write always by special courier. Barneveld thought that unnecessary
+ except when there were more important matters than those appeared to him
+ to be and requiring more haste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The letter of his Excellency," said he to the Ambassador, "is caused in
+ my opinion by the fact that some of the deputies to this assembly to whom
+ I secretly imparted your letter or its substance did not rightly
+ comprehend or report it. You did not say that his Excellency had any such
+ design or project, but that it had been said that the Contra-Remonstrants
+ were entertaining such a scheme. I would have shown the letter to him
+ myself, but I thought it not fair, for good reasons, to make M. du Agean
+ known as the informant. I do not think it amiss for you to write yourself
+ to his Excellency and tell him what is said, but whether it would be
+ proper to give up the name of your author, I think doubtful. At all events
+ one must consult about it. We live in a strange world, and one knows not
+ whom to trust."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He instructed the Ambassador to enquire into the foundation of these
+ statements of du Agean and send advices by every occasion of this affair
+ and others of equal interest. He was however much more occupied with
+ securing the goodwill of the French government, which he no more suspected
+ of tampering in these schemes against the independence of the Republic
+ than he did Maurice himself. He relied and he had reason to rely on their
+ steady good offices in the cause of moderation and reconciliation. "We are
+ not yet brought to the necessary and much desired unity," he said, "but we
+ do not despair, hoping that his Majesty's efforts through M. du Maurier,
+ both privately and publicly, will do much good. Be assured that they are
+ very agreeable to all rightly disposed people . . . . My trust is that God
+ the Lord will give us a happy issue and save this country from perdition."
+ He approved of the presents to the two ladies as suggested by Langerac if
+ by so doing the payment of the arrearages could be furthered. He was still
+ hopeful and confident in the justice of his cause and the purity of his
+ conscience. "Aerssens is crowing like a cock," he said, "but the truth
+ will surely prevail."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A Deputation from Utrecht to Maurice&mdash;The Fair at Utrecht&mdash;Maurice
+ and the States' Deputies at Utrecht&mdash;Ogle refuses to act in
+ Opposition to the States&mdash;The Stadholder disbands the Waartgelders&mdash;
+ The Prince appoints forty Magistrates&mdash;The States formally disband
+ the Waartgelders.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The eventful midsummer had arrived. The lime-tree blossoms were fragrant
+ in the leafy bowers overshadowing the beautiful little rural capital of
+ the Commonwealth. The anniversary of the Nieuwpoort victory, July 2, had
+ come and gone, and the Stadholder was known to be resolved that his
+ political campaign this year should be as victorious as that memorable
+ military one of eighteen years before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the dog-days should begin to rage, the fierce heats of theological
+ and political passion were to wax daily more and more intense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The party at Utrecht in favour of a compromise and in awe of the
+ Stadholder sent a deputation to the Hague with the express but secret
+ purpose of conferring with Maurice. They were eight in number, three of
+ whom, including Gillis van Ledenberg, lodged at the house of Daniel
+ Tressel, first clerk of the States-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The leaders of the Barneveld party, aware of the purport of this mission
+ and determined to frustrate it, contrived a meeting between the Utrecht
+ commissioners and Grotius, Hoogerbeets, de Haan, and de Lange at Tressel's
+ house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grotius was spokesman. Maurice had accused the States of Holland of mutiny
+ and rebellion, and the distinguished Pensionary of Rotterdam now retorted
+ the charges of mutiny, disobedience, and mischief-making upon those who,
+ under the mask of religion, were attempting to violate the sovereignty of
+ the States, the privileges and laws of the province, the authority of the
+ magistrates, and to subject them to the power of others. To prevent such a
+ catastrophe many cities had enlisted Waartgelders. By this means they had
+ held such mutineers to their duty, as had been seen at Leyden, Haarlem,
+ and other places. The States of Utrecht had secured themselves in the same
+ way. But the mischiefmakers and the ill-disposed had been seeking
+ everywhere to counteract these wholesome measures and to bring about a
+ general disbanding of these troops. This it was necessary to resist with
+ spirit. It was the very foundation of the provinces' sovereignty, to
+ maintain which the public means must be employed. It was in vain to drive
+ the foe out of the country if one could not remain in safety within one's
+ own doors. They had heard with sorrow that Utrecht was thinking of
+ cashiering its troops, and the speaker proceeded therefore to urge with
+ all the eloquence he was master of the necessity of pausing before taking
+ so fatal a step.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deputies of Utrecht answered by pleading the great pecuniary burthen
+ which the maintenance of the mercenaries imposed upon that province, and
+ complained that there was no one to come to their assistance, exposed as
+ they were to a sudden and overwhelming attack from many quarters. The
+ States-General had not only written but sent commissioners to Utrecht
+ insisting on the disbandment. They could plainly see the displeasure of
+ the Prince. It was a very different affair in Holland, but the States of
+ Utrecht found it necessary of two evils to choose the least.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had therefore instructed their commissioners to request the Prince to
+ remove the foreign garrison from their capital and to send the old
+ companies of native militia in their place, to be in the pay of the
+ episcopate. In this case the States would agree to disband the new levies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grotius in reply again warned the commissioners against communicating with
+ Maurice according to their instructions, intimated that the native militia
+ on which they were proposing to rely might have been debauched, and he
+ held out hopes that perhaps the States of Utrecht might derive some relief
+ from certain financial measures now contemplated in Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Utrechters resolved to wait at least several days before opening the
+ subject of their mission to the Prince. Meantime Ledenberg made a rough
+ draft of a report of what had occurred between them and Grotius and his
+ colleagues which it was resolved to lay secretly before the States of
+ Utrecht. The Hollanders hoped that they had at last persuaded the
+ commissioners to maintain the Waartgelders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States of Holland now passed a solemn resolution to the effect that
+ these new levies had been made to secure municipal order and maintain the
+ laws from subversion by civil tumults. If this object could be obtained by
+ other means, if the Stadholder were willing to remove garrisons of foreign
+ mercenaries on whom there could be no reliance, and supply their place
+ with native troops both in Holland and Utrecht, an arrangement could be
+ made for disbanding the Waartgelders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld, at the head of thirty deputies from the nobles and cities,
+ waited upon Maurice and verbally communicated to him this resolution. He
+ made a cold and unsatisfactory reply, although it seems to have been
+ understood that by according twenty companies of native troops he might
+ have contented both Holland and Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ledenberg and his colleagues took their departure from the Hague without
+ communicating their message to Maurice. Soon afterwards the States-General
+ appointed a commission to Utrecht with the Stadholder at the head of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States of Holland appointed another with Grotius as its chairman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 25th July Grotius and Pensionary Hoogerbeets with two colleagues
+ arrived in Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gillis van Ledenberg was there to receive them. A tall, handsome,
+ bald-headed, well-featured, mild, gentlemanlike man was this secretary of
+ the Utrecht assembly, and certainly not aware, while passing to and fro on
+ such half diplomatic missions between two sovereign assemblies, that he
+ was committing high-treason. He might well imagine however, should Maurice
+ discover that it was he who had prevented the commissioners from
+ conferring with him as instructed, that it would go hard with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ledenberg forthwith introduced Grotius and his committee to the Assembly
+ at Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While these great personages were thus holding solemn and secret council,
+ another and still greater personage came upon the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Stadholder with the deputation from the States-General arrived at
+ Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidently the threads of this political drama were converging to a
+ catastrophe, and it might prove a tragical one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime all looked merry enough in the old episcopal city. There were few
+ towns in Lower or in Upper Germany more elegant and imposing than Utrecht.
+ Situate on the slender and feeble channel of the ancient Rhine as it
+ falters languidly to the sea, surrounded by trim gardens and orchards, and
+ embowered in groves of beeches and limetrees, with busy canals fringed
+ with poplars, lined with solid quays, and crossed by innumerable bridges;
+ with the stately brick tower of St. Martin's rising to a daring height
+ above one of the most magnificent Gothic cathedrals in the Netherlands;
+ this seat of the Anglo-Saxon Willebrord, who eight hundred years before
+ had preached Christianity to the Frisians, and had founded that long line
+ of hard-fighting, indomitable bishops, obstinately contesting for
+ centuries the possession of the swamps and pastures about them with
+ counts, kings, and emperors, was still worthy of its history and its
+ position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was here too that sixty-one years before the famous Articles of Union
+ were signed. By that fundamental treaty of the Confederacy, the Provinces
+ agreed to remain eternally united as if they were but one province, to
+ make no war nor peace save by unanimous consent, while on lesser matters a
+ majority should rule; to admit both Catholics and Protestants to the Union
+ provided they obeyed its Articles and conducted themselves as good
+ patriots, and expressly declared that no province or city should interfere
+ with another in the matter of divine worship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this memorable compact, so enduring a landmark in the history of
+ human freedom, and distinguished by such breadth of view for the times
+ both in religion and politics, the city had gained the title of cradle of
+ liberty: 'Cunabula libertatis'.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was it still to deserve the name? At that particular moment the mass of
+ the population was comparatively indifferent to the terrible questions
+ pending. It was the kermis or annual fair, and all the world was keeping
+ holiday in Utrecht. The pedlars and itinerant merchants from all the
+ cities and provinces had brought their wares jewellery and crockery,
+ ribbons and laces, ploughs and harrows, carriages and horses, cows and
+ sheep, cheeses and butter firkins, doublets and petticoats, guns and
+ pistols, everything that could serve the city and country-side for months
+ to come&mdash;and displayed them in temporary booths or on the ground, in
+ every street and along every canal. The town was one vast bazaar. The
+ peasant-women from the country, with their gold and silver tiaras and the
+ year's rent of a comfortable farm in their earrings and necklaces, and the
+ sturdy Frisian peasants, many of whom had borne their matchlocks in the
+ great wars which had lasted through their own and their fathers' lifetime,
+ trudged through the city, enjoying the blessings of peace. Bands of music
+ and merry-go-rounds in all the open places and squares; open-air bakeries
+ of pancakes and waffles; theatrical exhibitions, raree-shows, jugglers,
+ and mountebanks at every corner&mdash;all these phenomena which had been
+ at every kermis for centuries, and were to repeat themselves for centuries
+ afterwards, now enlivened the atmosphere of the grey, episcopal city.
+ Pasted against the walls of public edifices were the most recent placards
+ and counter-placards of the States-General and the States of Utrecht on
+ the great subject of religious schisms and popular tumults. In the
+ shop-windows and on the bookstalls of Contra-Remonstrant tradesmen, now
+ becoming more and more defiant as the last allies of Holland, the States
+ of Utrecht, were gradually losing courage, were seen the freshest ballads
+ and caricatures against the Advocate. Here an engraving represented him
+ seated at table with Grotius, Hoogerbeets, and others, discussing the
+ National Synod, while a flap of the picture being lifted put the head of
+ the Duke of Alva on the legs of Barneveld, his companions being
+ transformed in similar manner into Spanish priests and cardinals assembled
+ at the terrible Council of Blood-with rows of Protestant martyrs burning
+ and hanging in the distance. Another print showed Prince Maurice and the
+ States-General shaking the leading statesmen of the Commonwealth in a
+ mighty sieve through which came tumbling head foremost to perdition the
+ hated Advocate and his abettors. Another showed the Arminians as a row of
+ crest-fallen cocks rained upon by the wrath of the Stadholder&mdash;Arminians
+ by a detestable pun being converted into "Arme haenen" or "Poor cocks."
+ One represented the Pope and King of Spain blowing thousands of ducats out
+ of a golden bellows into the lap of the Advocate, who was holding up his
+ official robes to receive them, or whole carriage-loads of Arminians
+ starting off bag and baggage on the road to Rome, with Lucifer in the
+ perspective waiting to give them a warm welcome in his own dominions; and
+ so on, and so on. Moving through the throng, with iron calque on their
+ heads and halberd in hand, were groups of Waartgelders scowling fiercely
+ at many popular demonstrations such as they had been enlisted to suppress,
+ but while off duty concealing outward symptoms of wrath which in many
+ instances perhaps would have been far from genuine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For although these mercenaries knew that the States of Holland, who were
+ responsible for the pay of the regular troops then in Utrecht, authorized
+ them to obey no orders save from the local authorities, yet it was
+ becoming a grave question for the Waartgelders whether their own wages
+ were perfectly safe, a circumstance which made them susceptible to the
+ atmosphere of Contra-Remonstrantism which was steadily enwrapping the
+ whole country. A still graver question was whether such resistance as they
+ could offer to the renowned Stadholder, whose name was magic to every
+ soldier's heart not only in his own land but throughout Christendom, would
+ not be like parrying a lance's thrust with a bulrush. In truth the senior
+ captain of the Waartgelders, Harteveld by name, had privately informed the
+ leaders of the Barneveld party in Utrecht that he would not draw his sword
+ against Prince Maurice and the States-General. "Who asks you to do so?"
+ said some of the deputies, while Ledenberg on the other hand flatly
+ accused him of cowardice. For this affront the Captain had vowed revenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in the midst of this scene of jollity and confusion, that midsummer
+ night, entered the stern Stadholder with his fellow commissioners; the
+ feeble plans for shutting the gates upon him not having been carried into
+ effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You hardly expected such a guest at your fair," said he to the
+ magistrates, with a grim smile on his face as who should say, "And what do
+ you think of me now I have came?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the secret conference of Grotius and colleagues with the States
+ of Utrecht proceeded. As a provisional measure, Sir John Ogle, commander
+ of the forces paid by Holland, had been warned as to where his obedience
+ was due. It had likewise been intimated that the guard should be doubled
+ at the Amersfoort gate, and a watch set on the river Lek above and below
+ the city in order to prevent fresh troops of the States-General from being
+ introduced by surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These precautions had been suggested a year before, as we have seen, in a
+ private autograph letter from Barneveld to Secretary Ledenberg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir John Ogle had flatly refused to act in opposition to the Stadholder
+ and the States-General, whom he recognized as his lawful superiors and
+ masters, and he warned Ledenberg and his companions as to the perilous
+ nature of the course which they were pursuing. Great was the indignation
+ of the Utrechters and the Holland commissioners in consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grotius in his speech enlarged on the possibility of violence being used
+ by the Stadholder, while some of the members of the Assembly likewise
+ thought it likely that he would smite the gates open by force. Grotius,
+ when reproved afterwards for such strong language towards Prince Maurice,
+ said that true Hollanders were no courtiers, but were wont to call
+ everything by its right name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stated in strong language the regret felt by Holland that a majority of
+ the States of Utrecht had determined to disband the Waartgelders which had
+ been constitutionally enlisted according to the right of each province
+ under the 1st Article of the Union of Utrecht to protect itself and its
+ laws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day there were conferences between Maurice and the States of Utrecht
+ and between him and the Holland deputies. The Stadholder calmly demanded
+ the disbandment and the Synod. The Hollanders spoke of securing first the
+ persons and rights of the magistracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The magistrates are to be protected," said Maurice, "but we must first
+ know how they are going to govern. People have tried to introduce five
+ false points into the Divine worship. People have tried to turn me out of
+ the stadholdership and to drive me from the country. But I have taken my
+ measures. I know well what I am about. I have got five provinces on my
+ side, and six cities of Holland will send deputies to Utrecht to sustain
+ me here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hollanders protested that there was no design whatever, so far as they
+ knew, against his princely dignity or person. All were ready to recognize
+ his rank and services by every means in their power. But it was desirable
+ by conciliation and compromise, not by stern decree, to arrange these
+ religious and political differences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Stadholder replied by again insisting on the Synod. "As for the
+ Waartgelders," he continued, "they are worse than Spanish fortresses. They
+ must away."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a little further conversation in this vein the Prince grew more
+ excited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Everything is the fault of the Advocate," he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If Barneveld were dead," replied Grotius, "all the rest of us would still
+ deem ourselves bound to maintain the laws. People seem to despise Holland
+ and to wish to subject it to the other provinces."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the contrary," cried the Prince, "it is the Advocate who wishes to
+ make Holland the States-General."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maurice was tired of argument. There had been much ale-house talk some
+ three months before by a certain blusterous gentleman called van Ostrum
+ about the necessity of keeping the Stadholder in check. "If the Prince
+ should undertake," said this pot-valiant hero, "to attack any of the
+ cities of Utrecht or Holland with the hard hand, it is settled to station
+ 8000 or 10,000 soldiers in convenient places. Then we shall say to the
+ Prince, if you don't leave us alone, we shall make an arrangement with the
+ Archduke of Austria and resume obedience to him. We can make such a treaty
+ with him as will give us religious freedom and save us from tyranny of any
+ kind. I don't say this for myself, but have heard it on good authority
+ from very eminent persons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This talk had floated through the air to the Stadholder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What evidence could be more conclusive of a deep design on the part of
+ Barneveld to sell the Republic to the Archduke and drive Maurice into
+ exile? Had not Esquire van Ostrum solemnly declared it at a tavern table?
+ And although he had mentioned no names, could the "eminent personages"
+ thus cited at second hand be anybody but the Advocate?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three nights after his last conference with the Hollanders, Maurice
+ quietly ordered a force of regular troops in Utrecht to be under arms at
+ half past three o'clock next morning. About 1000 infantry, including
+ companies of Ernest of Nassau's command at Arnhem and of Brederode's from
+ Vianen, besides a portion of the regular garrison of the place, had
+ accordingly been assembled without beat of drum, before half past three in
+ the morning, and were now drawn up on the market-place or Neu. At break of
+ day the Prince himself appeared on horseback surrounded by his staff on
+ the Neu or Neude, a large, long, irregular square into which the seven or
+ eight principal streets and thoroughfares of the town emptied themselves.
+ It was adorned by public buildings and other handsome edifices, and the
+ tall steeple of St. Martin's with its beautiful open-work spire, lighted
+ with the first rays of the midsummer sun, looked tranquilly down upon the
+ scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each of the entrances to the square had been securely guarded by Maurice's
+ orders, and cannon planted to command all the streets. A single company of
+ the famous Waartgelders was stationed in the Neu or near it. The Prince
+ rode calmly towards them and ordered them to lay down their arms. They
+ obeyed without a murmur. He then sent through the city to summon all the
+ other companies of Waartgelders to the Neu. This was done with perfect
+ promptness, and in a short space of time the whole body of mercenaries,
+ nearly 1000 in number, had laid down their arms at the feet of the Prince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The snaphances and halberds being then neatly stacked in the square, the
+ Stadholder went home to his early breakfast. There was an end to those
+ mercenaries thenceforth and for ever. The faint and sickly resistance to
+ the authority of Maurice offered at Utrecht was attempted nowhere else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For days there had been vague but fearful expectations of a "blood bath,"
+ of street battles, rioting, and plunder. Yet the Stadholder with the
+ consummate art which characterized all his military manoeuvres had so
+ admirably carried out his measure that not a shot was fired, not a blow
+ given, not a single burgher disturbed in his peaceful slumbers. When the
+ population had taken off their nightcaps, they woke to find the awful
+ bugbear removed which had so long been appalling them. The Waartgelders
+ were numbered with the terrors of the past, and not a cat had mewed at
+ their disappearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charter-books, parchments, 13th Articles, Barneveld's teeth, Arminian
+ forts, flowery orations of Grotius, tavern talk of van Ostrum, city
+ immunities, States' rights, provincial laws, Waartgelders and all&mdash;the
+ martial Stadholder, with the orange plume in his hat and the sword of
+ Nieuwpoort on his thigh, strode through them as easily as through the
+ whirligigs and mountebanks, the wades and fritters, encumbering the
+ streets of Utrecht on the night of his arrival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secretary Ledenberg and other leading members of the States had escaped
+ the night before. Grotius and his colleagues also took a precipitate
+ departure. As they drove out of town in the twilight, they met the
+ deputies of the six opposition cities of Holland just arriving in their
+ coach from the Hague. Had they tarried an hour longer, they would have
+ found themselves safely in prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four days afterwards the Stadholder at the head of his body-guard appeared
+ at the town-house. His halberdmen tramped up the broad staircase,
+ heralding his arrival to the assembled magistracy. He announced his
+ intention of changing the whole board then and there. The process was
+ summary. The forty members were required to supply forty other names, and
+ the Prince added twenty more. From the hundred candidates thus furnished
+ the Prince appointed forty magistrates such as suited himself. It is
+ needless to say that but few of the old bench remained, and that those few
+ were devoted to the Synod, the States-General, and the Stadholder. He
+ furthermore announced that these new magistrates were to hold office for
+ life, whereas the board had previously been changed every year. The
+ cathedral church was at once assigned for the use of the
+ Contra-Remonstrants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This process was soon to be repeated throughout the two insubordinate
+ provinces Utrecht and Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince was accused of aiming at the sovereignty of the whole country,
+ and one of his grief's against the Advocate was that he had begged the
+ Princess-Widow, Louise de Coligny, to warn her son-in-law of the dangers
+ of such ambition. But so long as an individual, sword in hand, could
+ exercise such unlimited sway over the whole municipal, and provincial
+ organization of the Commonwealth, it mattered but little whether he was
+ called King or Kaiser, Doge or Stadholder. Sovereign he was for the time
+ being at least, while courteously acknowledging the States-General as his
+ sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Less than three weeks afterwards the States-General issued a decree
+ formally disbanding the Waartgelders; an almost superfluous edict, as they
+ had almost ceased to exist, and there were none to resist the measure.
+ Grotius recommended complete acquiescence. Barneveld's soul could no
+ longer animate with courage a whole people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The invitations which had already in the month of June been prepared for
+ the Synod to meet in the city of Dortor Dordtrecht-were now issued. The
+ States of Holland sent back the notification unopened, deeming it an
+ unwarrantable invasion of their rights that an assembly resisted by a
+ large majority of their body should be convoked in a city on their own
+ territory. But this was before the disbandment of the Waartgelders and the
+ general change of magistracies had been effected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Earnest consultations were now held as to the possibility of devising some
+ means of compromise; of providing that the decisions of the Synod should
+ not be considered binding until after having been ratified by the separate
+ states. In the opinion of Barneveld they were within a few hours' work of
+ a favourable result when their deliberations were interrupted by a
+ startling event.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Fruitless Interview between Barneveld and Maurice&mdash;The Advocate,
+ warned of his Danger, resolves to remain at the Hague&mdash;Arrest of
+ Barneveld, of Qrotius, and of Hoogerbeets&mdash;The States-General assume
+ the Responsibility in a "Billet"&mdash;The States of Holland protest&mdash;
+ The Advocate's Letter to his Family&mdash;Audience of Boississe&mdash;
+ Mischief-making of Aerssens&mdash;The French Ambassadors intercede for
+ Barneveld&mdash;The King of England opposes their Efforts&mdash;Langerac's
+ Treachery to the Advocate&mdash;Maurice continues his Changes in the
+ Magistracy throughout the Country&mdash;Vote of Thanks by the States of
+ Holland.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate, having done what he believed to be his duty, and exhausted
+ himself in efforts to defend ancient law and to procure moderation and
+ mutual toleration in religion, was disposed to acquiesce in the
+ inevitable. His letters giving official and private information of those
+ grave events were neither vindictive nor vehement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I send you the last declaration of My Lords of Holland," he said to
+ Caron, "in regard to the National Synod, with the counter-declaration of
+ Dordtrecht and the other five cities. Yesterday was begun the debate about
+ cashiering the enrolled soldiers called Waartgelders. To-day the late M.
+ van Kereburg was buried."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could be calmer than his tone. After the Waartgelders had been
+ disbanded, Utrecht revolutionized by main force, the National Synod
+ decided upon, and the process of changing the municipal magistracies
+ everywhere in the interest of Contra-Remonstrants begun, he continued to
+ urge moderation and respect for law. Even now, although discouraged, he
+ was not despondent, and was disposed to make the best even of the Synod.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wished at this supreme moment to have a personal interview with the
+ Prince in order to devise some means for calming the universal agitation
+ and effecting, if possible, a reconciliation among conflicting passions
+ and warring sects. He had stood at the side of Maurice and of Maurice's
+ great father in darker hours even than these. They had turned to him on
+ all trying and tragical occasions and had never found his courage wavering
+ or his judgment at fault. "Not a friend to the House of Nassau, but a
+ father," thus had Maurice with his own lips described the Advocate to the
+ widow of William the Silent. Incapable of an unpatriotic thought, animated
+ by sincere desire to avert evil and procure moderate action, Barneveld saw
+ no reason whatever why, despite all that had been said and done, he should
+ not once more hold council with the Prince. He had a conversation
+ accordingly with Count Lewis, who had always honoured the Advocate while
+ differing with him on the religious question. The Stadholder of Friesland,
+ one of the foremost men of his day in military and scientific affairs, in
+ administrative ability and philanthropic instincts, and, in a family
+ perhaps the most renowned in Europe for heroic qualities and achievements,
+ hardly second to any who had borne the name, was in favour of the proposed
+ interview, spoke immediately to Prince Maurice about it, but was not
+ hopeful as to its results. He knew his cousin well and felt that he was at
+ that moment resentful, perhaps implacably so, against the whole
+ Remonstrant party and especially against their great leader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Count Lewis was small of stature, but dignified, not to say pompous, in
+ demeanour. His style of writing to one of lower social rank than himself
+ was lofty, almost regal, and full of old world formality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Noble, severe, right worshipful, highly learned and discreet, special
+ good friend," he wrote to Barneveld; "we have spoken to his Excellency
+ concerning the expediency of what you requested of us this forenoon. We
+ find however that his Excellency is not to be moved to entertain any other
+ measure than the National Synod which he has himself proposed in person to
+ all the provinces, to the furtherance of which he has made so many
+ exertions, and which has already been announced by the States-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We will see by what opportunity his Excellency will appoint the
+ interview, and so far as lies in us you may rely on our good offices. We
+ could not answer sooner as the French ambassadors had audience of us this
+ forenoon and we were visiting his Excellency in the afternoon. Wishing
+ your worship good evening, we are your very good friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day Count William wrote again. "We have taken occasion," he said, "to
+ inform his Excellency that you were inclined to enter into communication
+ with him in regard to an accommodation of the religious difficulties and
+ to the cashiering of the Waartgelders. He answered that he could accept no
+ change in the matter of the National Synod, but nevertheless would be at
+ your disposal whenever your worship should be pleased to come to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days afterwards Barneveld made his appearance at the apartments of the
+ Stadholder. The two great men on whom the fabric of the Republic had so
+ long rested stood face to face once more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate, with long grey beard and stern blue eye, haggard with
+ illness and anxiety, tall but bent with age, leaning on his staff and
+ wrapped in black velvet cloak&mdash;an imposing magisterial figure; the
+ florid, plethoric Prince in brown doublet, big russet boots, narrow ruff,
+ and shabby felt hat with its string of diamonds, with hand clutched on
+ swordhilt, and eyes full of angry menace, the very type of the high-born,
+ imperious soldier&mdash;thus they surveyed each other as men, once
+ friends, between whom a gulf had opened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld sought to convince the Prince that in the proceedings at
+ Utrecht, founded as they were on strict adherence to the laws and
+ traditions of the Provinces, no disrespect had been intended to him, no
+ invasion of his constitutional rights, and that on his part his lifelong
+ devotion to the House of Nassau had suffered no change. He repeated his
+ usual incontrovertible arguments against the Synod, as illegal and
+ directly tending to subject the magistracy to the priesthood, a course of
+ things which eight-and-twenty years before had nearly brought destruction
+ on the country and led both the Prince and himself to captivity in a
+ foreign land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince sternly replied in very few words that the National Synod was a
+ settled matter, that he would never draw back from his position, and could
+ not do so without singular disservice to the country and to his own
+ disreputation. He expressed his displeasure at the particular oath exacted
+ from the Waartgelders. It diminished his lawful authority and the respect
+ due to him, and might be used per indirectum to the oppression of those of
+ the religion which he had sworn to maintain. His brow grew black when he
+ spoke of the proceedings at Utrecht, which he denounced as a conspiracy
+ against his own person and the constitution of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld used in vain the powers of argument by which he had guided kings
+ and republics, cabinets and assemblies, during so many years. His
+ eloquence fell powerless upon the iron taciturnity of the Stadholder.
+ Maurice had expressed his determination and had no other argument to
+ sustain it but his usual exasperating silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interview ended as hopelessly as Count Lewis William had anticipated,
+ and the Prince and the Advocate separated to meet no more on earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have doubtless heard already," wrote Barneveld to the ambassador in
+ London, "of all that has been passing here and in Utrecht. One must pray
+ to God that everything may prosper to his honour and the welfare of the
+ country. They are resolved to go through with the National Synod, the
+ government of Utrecht after the change made in it having consented with
+ the rest. I hope that his Majesty, according to your statement, will send
+ some good, learned, and peace-loving personages here, giving them
+ wholesome instructions to help bring our affairs into Christian unity,
+ accommodation, and love, by which his Majesty and these Provinces would be
+ best served."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Were these the words of a baffled conspirator and traitor? Were they
+ uttered to produce an effect upon public opinion and avert a merited
+ condemnation by all good men? There is not in them a syllable of reproach,
+ of anger, of despair. And let it be remembered that they were not written
+ for the public at all. They were never known to the public, hardly heard
+ of either by the Advocate's enemies or friends, save the one to whom they
+ were addressed and the monarch to whom that friend was accredited. They
+ were not contained in official despatches, but in private, confidential
+ outpourings to a trusted political and personal associate of many years.
+ From the day they were written until this hour they have never been
+ printed, and for centuries perhaps not read.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He proceeded to explain what he considered to be the law in the
+ Netherlands with regard to military allegiance. It is not probable that
+ there was in the country a more competent expounder of it; and defective
+ and even absurd as such a system was, it had carried the Provinces
+ successfully through a great war, and a better method for changing it
+ might have been found among so law-loving and conservative a people as the
+ Netherlanders than brute force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Information has apparently been sent to England," he said, "that My Lords
+ of Holland through their commissioners in Utrecht dictated to the soldiery
+ standing at their charges something that was unreasonable. The truth is
+ that the States of Holland, as many of them as were assembled,
+ understanding that great haste was made to send his Excellency and some
+ deputies from the other provinces to Utrecht, while the members of the
+ Utrecht assembly were gone to report these difficulties to their
+ constituents and get fresh instructions from them, wishing that the return
+ of those members should be waited for and that the Assembly of Holland
+ might also be complete&mdash;a request which was refused&mdash;sent a
+ committee to Utrecht, as the matter brooked no delay, to give information
+ to the States of that province of what was passing here and to offer their
+ good offices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They sent letters also to his Excellency to move him to reasonable
+ accommodation without taking extreme measures in opposition to those
+ resolutions of the States of Utrecht which his Excellency had promised to
+ conform with and to cause to be maintained by all officers and soldiers.
+ Should his Excellency make difficulty in this, the commissioners were
+ instructed to declare to him that they were ordered to warn the colonels
+ and captains standing in the payment of Holland, by letter and word of
+ mouth, that they were bound by oath to obey the States of Holland as their
+ paymasters and likewise to carry out the orders of the provincial and
+ municipal magistrates in the places where they were employed. The soldiery
+ was not to act or permit anything to be done against those resolutions,
+ but help to carry them out, his Excellency himself and the troops paid by
+ the States of Holland being indisputably bound by oath and duty so to do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doubtless a more convenient arrangement from a military point of view
+ might be imagined than a system of quotas by which each province in a
+ confederacy claimed allegiance and exacted obedience from the troops paid
+ by itself in what was after all a general army. Still this was the logical
+ and inevitable result of State rights pushed to the extreme and indeed had
+ been the indisputable theory and practice in the Netherlands ever since
+ their revolt from Spain. To pretend that the proceedings and the oath were
+ new because they were embarrassing was absurd. It was only because the
+ dominant party saw the extreme inconvenience of the system, now that it
+ was turned against itself, that individuals contemptuous of law and
+ ignorant of history denounced it as a novelty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the strong and beneficent principle that lay at the bottom of the
+ Advocate's conduct was his unflagging resolve to maintain the civil
+ authority over the military in time of peace. What liberal or healthy
+ government would be possible otherwise? Exactly as he opposed the
+ subjection of the magistracy by the priesthood or the mob, so he now
+ defended it against the power of the sword. There was no justification
+ whatever for a claim on the part of Maurice to exact obedience from all
+ the armies of the Republic, especially in time of peace. He was himself by
+ oath sworn to obey the States of Holland, of Utrecht, and of the three
+ other provinces of which he was governor. He was not commander-in-chief.
+ In two of the seven provinces he had no functions whatever, military or
+ civil. They had another governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the exposition of the law, as it stood, by the Advocate and his claim
+ that both troops and Stadholder should be held to their oaths was
+ accounted a crime. He had invented a new oath&mdash;it was said&mdash;and
+ sought to diminish the power of the Prince. These were charges, unjust as
+ they were, which might one day be used with deadly effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We live in a world where everything is interpreted to the worst," he
+ said. "My physical weakness continues and is increased by this affliction.
+ I place my trust in God the Lord and in my upright and conscientious
+ determination to serve the country, his Excellency, and the religion in
+ which through God's grace I hope to continue to the end."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 28th August of a warm afternoon, Barneveld was seated on a
+ porcelain seat in an arbor in his garden. Councillor Berkhout, accompanied
+ by a friend, called to see him, and after a brief conversation gave him
+ solemn warning that danger was impending, that there was even a rumour of
+ an intention to arrest him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate answered gravely, "Yes, there are wicked men about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently he lifted his hat courteously and said, "I thank you, gentlemen,
+ for the warning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems scarcely to have occurred to him that he had been engaged in
+ anything beyond a constitutional party struggle in which he had defended
+ what in his view was the side of law and order. He never dreamt of seeking
+ safety in flight. Some weeks before, he had been warmly advised to do as
+ both he and Maurice had done in former times in order to escape the
+ stratagems of Leicester, to take refuge in some strong city devoted to his
+ interests rather than remain at the Hague. But he had declined the
+ counsel. "I will await the issue of this business," he said, "in the
+ Hague, where my home is, and where I have faithfully served my masters. I
+ had rather for the sake of the Fatherland suffer what God chooses to send
+ me for having served well than that through me and on my account any city
+ should fall into trouble and difficulties."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning, Wednesday, at seven o'clock, Uytenbogaert paid him a visit.
+ He wished to consult him concerning a certain statement in regard to the
+ Synod which he desired him to lay before the States of Holland. The
+ preacher did not find his friend busily occupied at his desk, as usual,
+ with writing and other work. The Advocate had pushed his chair away from
+ the table encumbered with books and papers, and sat with his back leaning
+ against it, lost in thought. His stern, stoical face was like that of a
+ lion at bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uytenbogaert tried to arouse him from his gloom, consoling him by
+ reflections on the innumerable instances, in all countries and ages, of
+ patriotic statesmen who for faithful service had reaped nothing but
+ ingratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon afterwards he took his leave, feeling a presentiment of evil within
+ him which it was impossible for him to shake off as he pressed Barneveld's
+ hand at parting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two hours later, the Advocate went in his coach to the session of the
+ States of Holland. The place of the Assembly as well as that of the
+ States-General was within what was called the Binnenhof or Inner Court;
+ the large quadrangle enclosing the ancient hall once the residence of the
+ sovereign Counts of Holland. The apartments of the Stadholder composed the
+ south-western portion of the large series of buildings surrounding this
+ court. Passing by these lodgings on his way to the Assembly, he was
+ accosted by a chamberlain of the Prince and informed that his Highness
+ desired to speak with him. He followed him towards the room where such
+ interviews were usually held, but in the antechamber was met by Lieutenant
+ Nythof, of the Prince's bodyguard. This officer told him that he had been
+ ordered to arrest him in the name of the States-General. The Advocate
+ demanded an interview with the Prince. It was absolutely refused. Physical
+ resistance on the part of a man of seventy-two, stooping with age and
+ leaning on a staff, to military force, of which Nythof was the
+ representative, was impossible. Barneveld put a cheerful face on the
+ matter, and was even inclined to converse. He was at once carried off a
+ prisoner and locked up in a room belonging to Maurice's apartments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon afterwards, Grotius on his way to the States-General was invited in
+ precisely the same manner to go to the Prince, with whom, as he was
+ informed, the Advocate was at that moment conferring. As soon as he had
+ ascended the stairs however, he was arrested by Captain van der Meulen in
+ the name of the States-General, and taken to a chamber in the same
+ apartments, where he was guarded by two halberdmen. In the evening he was
+ removed to another chamber where the window shutters were barred, and
+ where he remained three days and nights. He was much cast down and silent.
+ Pensionary Hoogerbeets was made prisoner in precisely the same manner.
+ Thus the three statesmen&mdash;culprits as they were considered by their
+ enemies&mdash;were secured without noise or disturbance, each without
+ knowing the fate that had befallen the other. Nothing could have been more
+ neatly done. In the same quiet way orders were sent to secure Secretary
+ Ledenberg, who had returned to Utrecht, and who now after a short
+ confinement in that city was brought to the Hague and imprisoned in the
+ Hof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the very moment of the Advocate's arrest his son-in-law van der Myle
+ happened to be paying a visit to Sir Dudley Carleton, who had arrived very
+ late the night before from England. It was some hours before he or any
+ other member of the family learned what had befallen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ambassador reported to his sovereign that the deed was highly
+ applauded by the well disposed as the only means left for the security of
+ the state. "The Arminians," he said, "condemn it as violent and
+ insufferable in a free republic."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Impartial persons, he thought, considered it a superfluous proceeding now
+ that the Synod had been voted and the Waartgelders disbanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was writing his despatch, the Stadholder came to call upon him,
+ attended by his cousin Count Lewis William. The crowd of citizens
+ following at a little distance, excited by the news with which the city
+ was now ringing, mingled with Maurice's gentlemen and bodyguards and
+ surged up almost into the Ambassador's doors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carleton informed his guests, in the course of conversation, as to the
+ general opinion of indifferent judges of these events. Maurice replied
+ that he had disbanded the Waartgelders, but it had now become necessary to
+ deal with their colonel and the chief captains, meaning thereby Barneveld
+ and the two other prisoners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news of this arrest was soon carried to the house of Barneveld, and
+ filled his aged wife, his son, and sons-in-law with grief and indignation.
+ His eldest son William, commonly called the Seignior van Groeneveld,
+ accompanied by his two brothers-in-law, Veenhuyzen, President of the Upper
+ Council, and van der Myle, obtained an interview with the Stadholder that
+ same afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They earnestly requested that the Advocate, in consideration of his
+ advanced age, might on giving proper bail be kept prisoner in his own
+ house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince received them at first with courtesy. "It is the work of the
+ States-General," he said, "no harm shall come to your father any more than
+ to myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Veenhuyzen sought to excuse the opposition which the Advocate had made to
+ the Cloister Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The word was scarcely out of his mouth when the Prince fiercely
+ interrupted him&mdash;"Any man who says a word against the Cloister
+ Church," he cried in a rage, "his feet shall not carry him from this
+ place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interview gave them on the whole but little satisfaction. Very soon
+ afterwards two gentlemen, Asperen and Schagen, belonging to the Chamber of
+ Nobles, and great adherents of Barneveld, who had procured their enrolment
+ in that branch, forced their way into the Stadholder's apartments and
+ penetrated to the door of the room where the Advocate was imprisoned.
+ According to Carleton they were filled with wine as well as rage, and made
+ a great disturbance, loudly demanding their patron's liberation. Maurice
+ came out of his own cabinet on hearing the noise in the corridor, and
+ ordered them to be disarmed and placed under arrest. In the evening
+ however they were released.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon afterwards van der Myle fled to Paris, where he endeavoured to make
+ influence with the government in favour of the Advocate. His departure
+ without leave, being, as he was, a member of the Chamber of Nobles and of
+ the council of state, was accounted a great offence. Uytenbogaert also
+ made his escape, as did Taurinus, author of The Balance, van Moersbergen
+ of Utrecht, and many others more or less implicated in these commotions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was profound silence in the States of Holland when the arrest of
+ Barneveld was announced. The majority sat like men distraught. At last
+ Matenesse said, "You have taken from us our head, our tongue, and our
+ hand, henceforth we can only sit still and look on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States-General now took the responsibility of the arrest, which eight
+ individuals calling themselves the States-General had authorized by secret
+ resolution the day before (28th August). On the 29th accordingly, the
+ following "Billet," as it was entitled, was read to the Assembly and
+ ordered to be printed and circulated among the community. It was without
+ date or signature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whereas in the course of the changes within the city of Utrecht and in
+ other places brought about by the high and mighty Lords the States-General
+ of the United Netherlands, through his Excellency and their Lordships'
+ committee to him adjoined, sundry things have been discovered of which
+ previously there had been great suspicion, tending to the great prejudice
+ of the Provinces in general and of each province in particular, not
+ without apparent danger to the state of the country, and that thereby not
+ only the city of Utrecht, but various other cities of the United Provinces
+ would have fallen into a blood bath; and whereas the chief ringleaders in
+ these things are considered to be John van Barneveld, Advocate of Holland,
+ Rombout Hoogerbeets, and Hugo Grotius, whereof hereafter shall declaration
+ and announcement be made, therefore their High Mightinesses, in order to
+ prevent these and similar inconveniences, to place the country in
+ security, and to bring the good burghers of all the cities into friendly
+ unity again, have resolved to arrest those three persons, in order that
+ out of their imprisonment they may be held to answer duly for their
+ actions and offences."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deputies of Holland in the States-General protested on the same day
+ against the arrest, declaring themselves extraordinarily amazed at such
+ proceedings, without their knowledge, with usurpation of their
+ jurisdiction, and that they should refer to their principals for
+ instructions in the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They reported accordingly at once to the States of Holland in session in
+ the same building. Soon afterwards however a committee of five from the
+ States-General appeared before the Assembly to justify the proceeding. On
+ their departure there arose a great debate, the six cities of course
+ taking part with Maurice and the general government. It was finally
+ resolved by the majority to send a committee to the Stadholder to
+ remonstrate with, and by the six opposition cities another committee to
+ congratulate him, on his recent performances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His answer was to this effect:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What had happened was not by his order, but had been done by the
+ States-General, who must be supposed not to have acted without good cause.
+ Touching the laws and jurisdiction of Holland he would not himself
+ dispute, but the States of Holland would know how to settle that matter
+ with the States-General."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day it was resolved in the Holland assembly to let the affair remain
+ as it was for the time being. Rapid changes were soon to be expected in
+ that body, hitherto so staunch for the cause of municipal laws and State
+ rights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Barneveld sat closely guarded in the apartments of the
+ Stadholder, while the country and very soon all Europe were ringing with
+ the news of his downfall, imprisonment, and disgrace. The news was a
+ thunder-bolt to the lovers of religious liberty, a ray of dazzling
+ sunlight after a storm to the orthodox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The showers of pamphlets, villanous lampoons, and libels began afresh. The
+ relatives of the fallen statesman could not appear in the streets without
+ being exposed to insult, and without hearing scurrilous and obscene verses
+ against their father and themselves, in which neither sex nor age was
+ spared, howled in their ears by all the ballad-mongers and broadsheet
+ vendors of the town. The unsigned publication of the States-General, with
+ its dark allusions to horrible discoveries and promised revelations which
+ were never made, but which reduced themselves at last to the gibberish of
+ a pot-house bully, the ingenious libels, the powerfully concocted and
+ poisonous calumnies, caricatures, and lampoons, had done their work.
+ People stared at each other in the streets with open mouths as they heard
+ how the Advocate had for years and years been the hireling of Spain, whose
+ government had bribed him largely to bring about the Truce and kill the
+ West India Company; how his pockets and his coffers were running over with
+ Spanish ducats; how his plot to sell the whole country to the ancient
+ tyrant, drive the Prince of Orange into exile, and bring every city of the
+ Netherlands into a "blood-bath," had, just in time, been discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the people believed it and hated the man they had so lately honoured,
+ and were ready to tear him to pieces in the streets. Men feared to defend
+ him lest they too should be accused of being stipendiaries of Spain. It
+ was a piteous spectacle; not for the venerable statesman sitting alone
+ there in his prison, but for the Republic in its lunacy, for human nature
+ in its meanness and shame. He whom Count Lewis, although opposed to his
+ politics, had so lately called one of the two columns on which the whole
+ fabric of the States reposed, Prince Maurice being the other, now lay
+ prostrate in the dust and reviled of all men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Many who had been promoted by him to high places," said a contemporary,
+ "and were wont to worship him as a god, in hope that he would lift them up
+ still higher, now deserted him, and ridiculed him, and joined the rest of
+ the world in heaping dirt upon him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the third day of his imprisonment the Advocate wrote this letter to his
+ family:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My very dear wife, children, children-in-law, and grandchildren,&mdash;I
+ know that you are sorrowful for the troubles which have come upon me, but
+ I beg you to seek consolation from God the Almighty and to comfort each
+ other. I know before the Lord God of having given no single lawful reason
+ for the misfortunes which have come upon me, and I will with patience
+ await from His Divine hand and from my lawful superiors a happy issue,
+ knowing well that you and my other well-wishers will with your prayers and
+ good offices do all that you can to that end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And so, very dear wife, children, children-in-law, and grandchildren, I
+ commend you to God's holy keeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have been thus far well and honourably treated and accommodated, for
+ which I thank his princely Excellency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From my chamber of arrest, last of August, anno 1618.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your dear husband, father, father-in-law, and grand father,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "JOHN OF BARNEVELD."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the margin was written:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From the first I have requested and have at last obtained materials for
+ writing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fortnight before the arrest, but while great troubles were known to be
+ impending, the French ambassador extraordinary, de Boississe, had audience
+ before the Assembly of the States-General. He entreated them to maintain
+ the cause of unity and peace as the foundation of their state; "that
+ state," he said, "which lifts its head so high that it equals or surpasses
+ the mightiest republics that ever existed, and which could not have risen
+ to such a height of honour and grandeur in so short a time, but through
+ harmony and union of all the provinces, through the valour of his
+ Excellency, and through your own wise counsels, both sustained by our
+ great king, whose aid is continued by his son."&mdash;"The King my
+ master," he continued, "knows not the cause of your disturbances. You have
+ not communicated them to him, but their most apparent cause is a
+ difference of opinion, born in the schools, thence brought before the
+ public, upon a point of theology. That point has long been deemed by many
+ to be so hard and so high that the best advice to give about it is to
+ follow what God's Word teaches touching God's secrets; to wit, that one
+ should use moderation and modesty therein and should not rashly press too
+ far into that which he wishes to be covered with the veil of reverence and
+ wonder. That is a wise ignorance to keep one's eyes from that which God
+ chooses to conceal. He calls us not to eternal life through subtle and
+ perplexing questions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And further exhorting them to conciliation and compromise, he enlarged on
+ the effect of their internal dissensions on their exterior relations.
+ "What joy, what rapture you are preparing for your neighbours by your
+ quarrels! How they will scorn you! How they will laugh! What a hope do you
+ give them of revenging themselves upon you without danger to themselves!
+ Let me implore you to baffle their malice, to turn their joy into
+ mourning, to unite yourselves to confound them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He spoke much more in the same vein, expressing wise and moderate
+ sentiments. He might as well have gone down to the neighbouring beach when
+ a south-west gale was blowing and talked of moderation to the waves of the
+ German Ocean. The tempest of passion and prejudice had risen in its might
+ and was sweeping all before it. Yet the speech, like other speeches and
+ intercessions made at this epoch by de Boississe and by the regular French
+ ambassador, du Maurier, was statesmanlike and reasonable. It is
+ superfluous to say that it was in unison with the opinions of Barneveld,
+ for Barneveld had probably furnished the text of the oration. Even as he
+ had a few years before supplied the letters which King James had signed
+ and subsequently had struggled so desperately to disavow, so now the
+ Advocate's imperious intellect had swayed the docile and amiable minds of
+ the royal envoys into complete sympathy with his policy. He usually
+ dictated their general instructions. But an end had come to such triumphs.
+ Dudley Carleton had returned from his leave of absence in England, where
+ he had found his sovereign hating the Advocate as doctors hate who have
+ been worsted in theological arguments and despots who have been baffled in
+ their imperious designs. Who shall measure the influence on the destiny of
+ this statesman caused by the French-Spanish marriages, the sermons of
+ James through the mouth of Carleton, and the mutual jealousy of France and
+ England?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Advocate was in prison, and the earth seemed to have closed over
+ him. Hardly a ripple of indignation was perceptible on the calm surface of
+ affairs, although in the States-General as in the States of Holland his
+ absence seemed to have reduced both bodies to paralysis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were the more easily handled by the prudent, skilful, and determined
+ Maurice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The arrest of the four gentlemen had been communicated to the kings of
+ France and Great Britain and the Elector-Palatine in an identical letter
+ from the States-General. It is noticeable that on this occasion the
+ central government spoke of giving orders to the Prince of Orange, over
+ whom they would seem to have had no legitimate authority, while on the
+ other hand he had expressed indignation on more than one occasion that the
+ respective states of the five provinces where he was governor and to whom
+ he had sworn obedience should presume to issue commands to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In France, where the Advocate was honoured and beloved, the intelligence
+ excited profound sorrow. A few weeks previously the government of that
+ country had, as we have seen, sent a special ambassador to the States, M.
+ de Boississe, to aid the resident envoy, du Maurier, in his efforts to
+ bring about a reconciliation of parties and a termination of the religious
+ feud. Their exertions were sincere and unceasing. They were as steadily
+ countermined by Francis Aerssens, for the aim of that diplomatist was to
+ bring about a state of bad feeling, even at cost of rupture, between the
+ Republic and France, because France was friendly to the man he most hated
+ and whose ruin he had sworn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the summer a bitter personal controversy had been going on,
+ sufficiently vulgar in tone, between Aerssens and another diplomatist,
+ Barneveld's son-in-law, Cornelis van der Myle. It related to the recall of
+ Aerssens from the French embassy of which enough has already been laid
+ before the reader. Van der Myle by the production of the secret letters of
+ the Queen-Dowager and her counsellors had proved beyond dispute that it
+ was at the express wish of the French government that the Ambassador had
+ retired, and that indeed they had distinctly refused to receive him,
+ should he return. Foul words resulting in propositions for a hostile
+ meeting on the frontier, which however came to nothing, were interchanged
+ and Aerssens in the course of his altercation with the son-inlaw had found
+ ample opportunity for venting his spleen upon his former patron the now
+ fallen statesman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four days after the arrest of Barneveld he brought the whole matter before
+ the States-General, and the intention with which he thus raked up the old
+ quarrel with France after the death of Henry, and his charges in regard to
+ the Spanish marriages, was as obvious as it was deliberate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French ambassadors were furious. Boississe had arrived not simply as
+ friend of the Advocate, but to assure the States of the strong desire
+ entertained by the French government to cultivate warmest relations with
+ them. It had been desired by the Contra-Remonstrant party that deputies
+ from the Protestant churches of France should participate in the Synod,
+ and the French king had been much assailed by the Catholic powers for
+ listening to those suggestions. The Papal nuncius, the Spanish ambassador,
+ the envoy of the Archduke, had made a great disturbance at court
+ concerning the mission of Boississe. They urged with earnestness that his
+ Majesty was acting against the sentiments of Spain, Rome, and the whole
+ Catholic Church, and that he ought not to assist with his counsel those
+ heretics who were quarrelling among themselves over points in their
+ heretical religion and wishing to destroy each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding this outcry the weather was smooth enough until the
+ proceedings of Aerssens came to stir up a tempest at the French court. A
+ special courier came from Boississe, a meeting of the whole council,
+ although it was Sunday, was instantly called, and the reply of the
+ States-General to the remonstrance of the Ambassador in the Aerssens
+ affair was pronounced to be so great an affront to the King that, but for
+ overpowering reasons, diplomatic intercourse would have at once been
+ suspended. "Now instead of friendship there is great anger here," said
+ Langerac. The king forbade under vigorous penalties the departure of any
+ French theologians to take part in the Synod, although the royal consent
+ had nearly been given. The government complained that no justice was done
+ in the Netherlands to the French nation, that leading personages there
+ openly expressed contempt for the French alliance, denouncing the country
+ as "Hispaniolized," and declaring that all the council were regularly
+ pensioned by Spain for the express purpose of keeping up the civil
+ dissensions in the United Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aerssens had publicly and officially declared that a majority of the
+ French council since the death of Henry had declared the crown in its
+ temporal as well as spiritual essence to be dependent on the Pope, and
+ that the Spanish marriages had been made under express condition of the
+ renunciation of the friendship and alliance of the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were among the first-fruits of the fall of Barneveld and the triumph
+ of Aerssens, for it was he in reality who had won the victory, and he had
+ gained it over both Stadholder and Advocate. Who was to profit by the
+ estrangement between the Republic and its powerful ally at a moment too
+ when that great kingdom was at last beginning to emerge from the darkness
+ and nothingness of many years, with the faint glimmering dawn of a new
+ great policy?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld, whose masterful statesmanship, following out the traditions of
+ William the Silent, had ever maintained through good and ill report
+ cordial and beneficent relations between the two countries, had always
+ comprehended, even as a great cardinal-minister was ere long to teach the
+ world, that the permanent identification of France with Spain and the
+ Roman League was unnatural and impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Barneveld sat in his solitary prison, knowing not what was
+ passing on that great stage where he had so long been the chief actor,
+ while small intriguers now attempted to control events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the intention of Aerssens to return to the embassy in Paris whence
+ he had been driven, in his own opinion, so unjustly. To render himself
+ indispensable, he had begun by making himself provisionally formidable to
+ the King's government. Later, there would be other deeds to do before the
+ prize was within his grasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the very moment when France was disposed to cultivate the most
+ earnest friendship with the Republic had been seized for fastening an
+ insult upon her. The Twelve Years' Truce with Spain was running to its
+ close, the relations between France and Spain were unusually cold, and her
+ friendship therefore more valuable than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand the British king was drawing closer his relations with
+ Spain, and his alliance was demonstrably of small account. The phantom of
+ the Spanish bride had become more real to his excited vision than ever, so
+ that early in the year, in order to please Gondemar, he had been willing
+ to offer an affront to the French ambassador.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince of Wales had given a splendid masquerade at court, to which the
+ envoy of his Most Catholic Majesty was bidden. Much to his amazement the
+ representative of the Most Christian King received no invitation,
+ notwithstanding that he had taken great pains to procure one. M. de la
+ Boderie was very angry, and went about complaining to the States'
+ ambassador and his other colleagues of the slight, and darkened the lives
+ of the court functionaries having charge of such matters with his
+ vengeance and despair. It was represented to him that he had himself been
+ asked to a festival the year before when Count Gondemar was left out. It
+ was hinted to him that the King had good reasons for what he did, as the
+ marriage with the daughter of Spain was now in train, and it was desirable
+ that the Spanish ambassador should be able to observe the Prince's
+ disposition and make a more correct report of it to his government. It was
+ in vain. M. de la Boderie refused to be comforted, and asserted that one
+ had no right to leave the French ambassador uninvited to any "festival or
+ triumph" at court. There was an endless disturbance. De la Boderie sent
+ his secretary off to Paris to complain to the King that his ambassador was
+ of no account in London, while much favour was heaped upon the Spaniard.
+ The Secretary returned with instructions from Lewis that the Ambassador
+ was to come home immediately, and he went off accordingly in dudgeon. "I
+ could see that he was in the highest degree indignant," said Caron, who
+ saw him before he left, "and I doubt not that his departure will increase
+ and keep up the former jealousy between the governments."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ill-humor created by this event lasted a long time, serving to
+ neutralize or at least perceptibly diminish the Spanish influence produced
+ in France by the Spanish marriages. In the autumn, Secretary de Puysieux
+ by command of the King ordered every Spaniard to leave the French court.
+ All the "Spanish ladies and gentlemen, great and small," who had
+ accompanied the Queen from Madrid were included in this expulsion with the
+ exception of four individuals, her Majesty's father confessor, physician,
+ apothecary, and cook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fair young queen was much vexed and shed bitter tears at this
+ calamity, which, as she spoke nothing but Spanish, left her isolated at
+ the court, but she was a little consoled by the promise that thenceforth
+ the King would share her couch. It had not yet occurred to him that he was
+ married.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French envoys at the Hague exhausted themselves in efforts, both
+ private and public, in favour of the prisoners, but it was a thankless
+ task. Now that the great man and his chief pupils and adherents were out
+ of sight, a war of shameless calumny was began upon him, such as has
+ scarcely a parallel in political history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was as if a whole tribe of noxious and obscene reptiles were swarming
+ out of the earth which had suddenly swallowed him. But it was not alone
+ the obscure or the anonymous who now triumphantly vilified him. Men in
+ high places who had partaken of his patronage, who had caressed him and
+ grovelled before him, who had grown great through his tuition and rich
+ through his bounty, now rejoiced in his ruin or hastened at least to save
+ themselves from being involved in it. Not a man of them all but fell away
+ from him like water. Even the great soldier forgot whose respectful but
+ powerful hand it was which, at the most tragical moment, had lifted him
+ from the high school at Leyden into the post of greatest power and
+ responsibility, and had guided his first faltering footsteps by the light
+ of his genius and experience. Francis Aerssens, master of the field, had
+ now become the political tutor of the mature Stadholder. Step by step we
+ have been studying the inmost thoughts of the Advocate as revealed in his
+ secret and confidential correspondence, and the reader has been enabled to
+ judge of the wantonness of the calumny which converted the determined
+ antagonist into the secret friend of Spain. Yet it had produced its effect
+ upon Maurice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He told the French ambassadors a month after the arrest that Barneveld had
+ been endeavouring, during and since the Truce negotiations, to bring back
+ the Provinces, especially Holland, if not under the dominion of, at least
+ under some kind of vassalage to Spain. Persons had been feeling the public
+ pulse as to the possibility of securing permanent peace by paying tribute
+ to Spain, and this secret plan of Barneveld had so alienated him from the
+ Prince as to cause him to attempt every possible means of diminishing or
+ destroying altogether his authority. He had spread through many cities
+ that Maurice wished to make himself master of the state by using the
+ religious dissensions to keep the people weakened and divided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is not a particle of evidence, and no attempt was ever made to
+ produce any, that the Advocate had such plan, but certainly, if ever, man
+ had made himself master of a state, that man was Maurice. He continued
+ however to place himself before the world as the servant of the
+ States-General, which he never was, either theoretically or in fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French ambassadors became every day more indignant and more
+ discouraged. It was obvious that Aerssens, their avowed enemy, was
+ controlling the public policy of the government. Not only was there no
+ satisfaction to be had for the offensive manner in which he had filled the
+ country with his ancient grievances and his nearly forgotten charges
+ against the Queen-Dowager and those who had assisted her in the regency,
+ but they were repulsed at every turn when by order of their sovereign they
+ attempted to use his good offices in favour of the man who had ever been
+ the steady friend of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Stadholder also professed friendship for that country, and referred to
+ Colonel-General Chatillon, who had for a long time commanded the French
+ regiments in the Netherlands, for confirmation of his uniform affection
+ for those troops and attachment to their sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He would do wonders, he said, if Lewis would declare war upon Spain by
+ land and sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such fruits are not ripe," said Boississe, "nor has your love for France
+ been very manifest in recent events."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Barneveld," replied the Prince, "has personally offended me, and has
+ boasted that he would drive me out of the country like Leicester. He is
+ accused of having wished to trouble the country in order to bring it back
+ under the yoke of Spain. Justice will decide. The States only are
+ sovereign to judge this question. You must address yourself to them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The States," replied the ambassadors, "will require to be aided by your
+ counsels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince made no reply and remained chill and "impregnable." The
+ ambassadors continued their intercessions in behalf of the prisoners both
+ by public address to the Assembly and by private appeals to the Stadholder
+ and his influential friends. In virtue of the intimate alliance and mutual
+ guarantees existing between their government and the Republic they claimed
+ the acceptance of their good offices. They insisted upon a regular trial
+ of the prisoners according to the laws of the land, that is to say, by the
+ high court of Holland, which alone had jurisdiction in the premises. If
+ they had been guilty of high-treason, they should be duly arraigned. In
+ the name of the signal services of Barneveld and of the constant
+ friendship of that great magistrate for France, the King demanded clemency
+ or proof of his crimes. His Majesty complained through his ambassadors of
+ the little respect shown for his counsels and for his friendship. "In
+ times past you found ever prompt and favourable action in your time of
+ need."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This discourse," said Maurice to Chatillon, "proceeds from evil
+ intention."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the prisoners had disappeared from human sight, and their enemies ran
+ riot in slandering them. Yet thus far no public charges had been made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing appears against them," said du Maurier, "and people are beginning
+ to open their mouths with incredible freedom. While waiting for the
+ condemnation of the prisoners, one is determined to dishonour them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French ambassadors were instructed to intercede to the last, but they
+ were steadily repulsed&mdash;while the King of Great Britain, anxious to
+ gain favour with Spain by aiding in the ruin of one whom he knew and Spain
+ knew to be her determined foe, did all he could through his ambassador to
+ frustrate their efforts and bring on a catastrophe. The States-General and
+ Maurice were now on as confidential terms with Carleton as they were cold
+ and repellent to Boississe and du Maurier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To recall to them the benefits of the King," said du Maurier, "is to beat
+ the air. And then Aerssens bewitches them, and they imagine that after
+ having played runaway horses his Majesty will be only too happy to receive
+ them back, caress them, and, in order to have their friendship, approve
+ everything they have been doing right or wrong."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aerssens had it all his own way, and the States-General had just paid him
+ 12,000 francs in cash on the ground that Langerac's salary was larger than
+ his had been when at the head of the same embassy many years before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His elevation into the body of nobles, which Maurice had just stocked with
+ five other of his partisans, was accounted an additional affront to
+ France, while on the other hand the Queen-Mother, having through Epernon's
+ assistance made her escape from Blois, where she had been kept in durance
+ since the death of Concini, now enumerated among other grievances for
+ which she was willing to take up arms against her son that the King's
+ government had favoured Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was strange that all the devotees of Spain&mdash;Mary de' Medici, and
+ Epernon, as well as James I. and his courtiers&mdash;should be thus
+ embittered against the man who had sold the Netherlands to Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the Prince told the French ambassadors that the "people of the
+ Provinces considered their persistent intercessions an invasion of their
+ sovereignty." Few would have anything to say to them. "No one listens to
+ us, no one replies to us," said du Maurier, "everyone visiting us is
+ observed, and it is conceived a reproach here to speak to the ambassadors
+ of France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly the days were changed since Henry IV. leaned on the arm of
+ Barneveld, and consulted with him, and with him only, among all the
+ statesmen of Europe on his great schemes for regenerating Christendom and
+ averting that general war which, now that the great king had been murdered
+ and the Advocate imprisoned, had already begun to ravage Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Van der Myle had gone to Paris to make such exertions as he could among
+ the leading members of the council in favour of his father-in-law.
+ Langerac, the States' ambassador there, who but yesterday had been turning
+ at every moment to the Advocate for light and warmth as to the sun, now
+ hastened to disavow all respect or regard for him. He scoffed at the
+ slender sympathy van der Myle was finding in the bleak political
+ atmosphere. He had done his best to find out what he had been negotiating
+ with the members of the council and was glad to say that it was so
+ inconsiderable as to be not worth reporting. He had not spoken with or
+ seen the King. Jeannin, his own and his father-in-law's principal and most
+ confidential friend, had only spoken with him half an hour and then
+ departed for Burgundy, although promising to confer with him
+ sympathetically on his return. "I am very displeased at his coming here,"
+ said Langerac, ". . . . but he has found little friendship or confidence,
+ and is full of woe and apprehension."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ambassador's labours were now confined to personally soliciting the
+ King's permission for deputations from the Reformed churches of France to
+ go to the Synod, now opened (13th November) at Dordtrecht, and to clearing
+ his own skirts with the Prince and States-General of any suspicion of
+ sympathy with Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first object he was unsuccessful, the King telling him at last
+ "with clear and significant words that this was impossible, on account of
+ his conscience, his respect for the Catholic religion, and many other
+ reasons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the second point he acted with great promptness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He received a summons in January 1619 from the States-General and the
+ Prince to send them all letters that he had ever received from Barneveld.
+ He crawled at once to Maurice on his knees, with the letters in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Most illustrious, high-born Prince, most gracious Lord," he said;
+ "obeying the commands which it has pleased the States and your princely
+ Grace to give me, I send back the letters of Advocate Barneveld. If your
+ princely Grace should find anything in them showing that the said Advocate
+ had any confidence in me, I most humbly beg your princely Grace to believe
+ that I never entertained any affection for, him, except only in respect to
+ and so far as he was in credit and good authority with the government, and
+ according to the upright zeal which I thought I could see in him for the
+ service of My high and puissant Lords the States-General and of your
+ princely Grace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Greater humbleness could be expected of no ambassador. Most nobly did the
+ devoted friend and pupil of the great statesman remember his duty to the
+ illustrious Prince and their High Mightinesses. Most promptly did he
+ abjure his patron now that he had fallen into the abyss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nor will it be found," he continued, "that I have had any sympathy or
+ communication with the said Advocate except alone in things concerning my
+ service. The great trust I had in him as the foremost and oldest
+ counsellor of the state, as the one who so confidentially instructed me on
+ my departure for France, and who had obtained for himself so great
+ authority that all the most important affairs of the country were
+ entrusted to him, was the cause that I simply and sincerely wrote to him
+ all that people were in the habit of saying at this court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I had known in the least or suspected that he was not what he ought to
+ be in the service of My Lords the States and of your princely Grace and
+ for the welfare and tranquillity of the land, I should have been well on
+ my guard against letting myself in the least into any kind of
+ communication with him whatever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader has seen how steadily and frankly the Advocate had kept
+ Langerac as well as Caron informed of passing events, and how little
+ concealment he made of his views in regard to the Synod, the Waartgelders,
+ and the respective authority of the States-General and States-Provincial.
+ Not only had Langerac no reason to suspect that Barneveld was not what he
+ ought to be, but he absolutely knew the contrary from that most
+ confidential correspondence with him which he was now so abjectly
+ repudiating. The Advocate, in a protracted constitutional controversy, had
+ made no secret of his views either officially or privately. Whether his
+ positions were tenable or flimsy, they had been openly taken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is more," proceeded the Ambassador, "had I thought that any account
+ ought to be made of what I wrote to him concerning the sovereignty of the
+ Provinces, I should for a certainty not have failed to advise your Grace
+ of it above all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then, after profuse and maudlin protestations of his most dutiful zeal
+ all the days of his life for "the service, honour, reputation, and
+ contentment of your princely Grace," observed that he had not thought it
+ necessary to give him notice of such idle and unfounded matters, as being
+ likely to give the Prince annoyance and displeasure. He had however always
+ kept within himself the resolution duly to notify him in case he found
+ that any belief was attached to the reports in Paris. "But the reports,"
+ he said, "were popular and calumnious inventions of which no man had ever
+ been willing or able to name to him the authors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ambassador's memory was treacherous, and he had doubtless neglected to
+ read over the minutes, if he had kept them, of his wonderful disclosures
+ on the subject of the sovereignty before thus exculpating himself. It will
+ be remembered that he had narrated the story of the plot for conferring
+ sovereignty upon Maurice not as a popular calumny flying about Paris with
+ no man to father it, but he had given it to Barneveld on the authority of
+ a privy councillor of France and of the King himself. "His Majesty knows
+ it to be authentic," he had said in his letter. That letter was a pompous
+ one, full of mystery and so secretly ciphered that he had desired that his
+ friend van der Myle, whom he was now deriding for his efforts in Paris to
+ save his father-inlaw from his fate, might assist the Advocate in
+ unravelling its contents. He had now discovered that it had been idle
+ gossip not worthy of a moment's attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reader will remember too that Barneveld, without attaching much
+ importance to the tale, had distinctly pointed out to Langerac that the
+ Prince himself was not implicated in the plot and had instructed the
+ Ambassador to communicate the story to Maurice. This advice had not been
+ taken, but he had kept the perilous stuff upon his breast. He now sought
+ to lay the blame, if it were possible to do so, upon the man to whom he
+ had communicated it and who had not believed it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The business of the States-General, led by the Advocate's enemies this
+ winter, was to accumulate all kind of tales, reports, and accusations to
+ his discredit on which to form something like a bill of indictment. They
+ had demanded all his private and confidential correspondence with Caron
+ and Langerae. The ambassador in Paris had been served, moreover, with a
+ string of nine interrogatories which he was ordered to answer on oath and
+ honour. This he did and appended the reply to his letter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nine questions had simply for their object to discover what Barneveld
+ had been secretly writing to the Ambassador concerning the Synod, the
+ enlisted troops, and the supposed projects of Maurice concerning the
+ sovereignty. Langerac was obliged to admit in his replies that nothing had
+ been written except the regular correspondence which he endorsed, and of
+ which the reader has been able to see the sum and substance in the copious
+ extracts which have been given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stated also that he had never received any secret instructions save the
+ marginal notes to the list of questions addressed by him, when about
+ leaving for Paris in 1614, to Barneveld. Most of these were of a trivial
+ and commonplace nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had however a direct bearing on the process to be instituted against
+ the Advocate, and the letter too which we have been examining will prove
+ to be of much importance. Certainly pains enough were taken to detect the
+ least trace of treason in a very loyal correspondence. Langerac concluded
+ by enclosing the Barneveld correspondence since the beginning of the year
+ 1614, protesting that not a single letter had been kept back or destroyed.
+ "Once more I recommend myself to mercy, if not to favour," he added, "as
+ the most faithful, most obedient, most zealous servant of their High
+ Mightinesses and your princely Grace, to whom I have devoted and
+ sacrificed my honour and life in most humble service; and am now and
+ forever the most humble, most obedient, most faithful servant of my most
+ serene, most illustrious, most highly born Prince, most gracious Lord and
+ princeliest Grace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The former adherent of plain Advocate Barneveld could hardly find
+ superlatives enough to bestow upon the man whose displeasure that prisoner
+ had incurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Directly after the arrest the Stadholder had resumed his tour through the
+ Provinces in order to change the governments. Sliding over any opposition
+ which recent events had rendered idle, his course in every city was nearly
+ the same. A regiment or two and a train of eighty or a hundred waggons
+ coming through the city-gate preceded by the Prince and his body-guard of
+ 300, a tramp of halberdmen up the great staircase of the town-hall, a
+ jingle of spurs in the assembly-room, and the whole board of magistrates
+ were summoned into the presence of the Stadholder. They were then informed
+ that the world had no further need of their services, and were allowed to
+ bow themselves out of the presence. A new list was then announced,
+ prepared beforehand by Maurice on the suggestion of those on whom he could
+ rely. A faint resistance was here and there attempted by magistrates and
+ burghers who could not forget in a moment the rights of self-government
+ and the code of laws which had been enjoyed for centuries. At Hoorn, for
+ instance, there was deep indignation among the citizens. An imprudent word
+ or two from the authorities might have brought about a "blood-bath."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burgomaster ventured indeed to expostulate. They requested the Prince
+ not to change the magistracy. "This is against our privileges," they said,
+ "which it is our duty to uphold. You will see what deep displeasure will
+ seize the burghers, and how much disturbance and tumult will follow. If
+ any faults have been committed by any member of the government, let him be
+ accused and let him answer for them. Let your Excellency not only dismiss
+ but punish such as cannot properly justify themselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his Excellency summoned them all to the town-house and as usual
+ deposed them all. A regiment was drawn up in half-moon on the square
+ beneath the windows. To the magistrates asking why they were deposed, he
+ briefly replied, "The quiet of the land requires it. It is necessary to
+ have unanimous resolutions in the States-General at the Hague. This cannot
+ be accomplished without these preliminary changes. I believe that you had
+ good intentions and have been faithful servants of the Fatherland. But
+ this time it must be so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the faithful servants of the Fatherland were dismissed into space.
+ Otherwise how could there be unanimous voting in parliament? It must be
+ regarded perhaps as fortunate that the force of character, undaunted
+ courage, and quiet decision of Maurice enabled him to effect this violent
+ series of revolutions with such masterly simplicity. It is questionable
+ whether the Stadholder's commission technically empowered him thus to
+ trample on municipal law; it is certain that, if it did, the boasted
+ liberties of the Netherlands were a dream; but it is equally true that, in
+ the circumstances then existing, a vulgar, cowardly, or incompetent
+ personage might have marked his pathway with massacres without restoring
+ tranquillity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes there was even a comic aspect to these strokes of state. The
+ lists of new magistrates being hurriedly furnished by the Prince's
+ adherents to supply the place of those evicted, it often happened that men
+ not quahified by property, residence, or other attributes were appointed
+ to the government, so that many became magistrates before they were
+ citizens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On being respectfully asked sometimes who such a magistrate might be whose
+ face and name were equally unknown to his colleagues and to the townsmen
+ in general; "Do I know the fellows?" he would say with a cheerful laugh.
+ And indeed they might have all been dead men, those new functionaries, for
+ aught he did know. And so on through Medemblik and Alkmaar, Brielle,
+ Delft, Monnikendam, and many other cities progressed the Prince, sowing
+ new municipalities broadcast as he passed along. At the Hague on his
+ return a vote of thanks to the Prince was passed by the nobles and most of
+ the cities for the trouble he had taken in this reforming process. But the
+ unanimous vote had not yet been secured, the strongholds of Arminianism,
+ as it was the fashion to call them, not being yet reduced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince, in reply to the vote of thanks, said that "in what he had done
+ and was going to do his intention sincerely and uprightly had been no
+ other than to promote the interests and tranquillity of the country,
+ without admixture of anything personal and without prejudice to the
+ general commonwealth or the laws and privileges of the cities." He desired
+ further that "note might be taken of this declaration as record of his
+ good and upright intentions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the sincerest and most upright intentions may be refracted by party
+ atmosphere from their aim, and the purest gold from the mint elude the
+ direct grasp through the clearest fluid in existence. At any rate it would
+ have been difficult to convince the host of deposed magistrates hurled
+ from office, although recognized as faithful servants of the Fatherland,
+ that such violent removal had taken place without detriment to the laws
+ and privileges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the Stadholder went to the few cities where some of the leaven still
+ lingered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He arrived at Leyden on the 22nd October, "accompanied by a great suite of
+ colonels, ritmeesters, and captains," having sent on his body-guard to the
+ town strengthened by other troops. He was received by the magistrates at
+ the "Prince's Court" with great reverence and entertained by them in the
+ evening at a magnificent banquet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning he summoned the whole forty of them to the town-house,
+ disbanded them all, and appointed new ones in their stead; some of the old
+ members however who could be relied upon being admitted to the
+ revolutionized board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The populace, mainly of the Stadholder's party, made themselves merry over
+ the discomfited "Arminians". They hung wisps of straw as derisive wreaths
+ of triumph over the dismantled palisade lately encircling the town-hall,
+ disposed of the famous "Oldenbarneveld's teeth" at auction in the public
+ square, and chased many a poor cock and hen, with their feathers
+ completely plucked from their bodies, about the street, crying "Arme
+ haenen, arme haenen"&mdash;Arminians or poor fowls&mdash;according to the
+ practical witticism much esteemed at that period. Certainly the
+ unfortunate Barneveldians or Arminians, or however the Remonstrants might
+ be designated, had been sufficiently stripped of their plumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince, after having made proclamation from the town-house enjoining
+ "modesty upon the mob" and a general abstention from "perverseness and
+ petulance," went his way to Haarlem, where he dismissed the magistrates
+ and appointed new ones, and then proceeded to Rotterdam, to Gouda, and to
+ Amsterdam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed scarcely necessary to carry, out the process in the commercial
+ capital, the abode of Peter Plancius, the seat of the West India Company,
+ the head-quarters of all most opposed to the Advocate, most devoted to the
+ Stadholder. But although the majority of the city government was an
+ overwhelming one, there was still a respectable minority who, it was
+ thought possible, might under a change of circumstances effect much
+ mischief and even grow into a majority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince therefore summoned the board before him according to his usual
+ style of proceeding and dismissed them all. They submitted without a word
+ of remonstrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ex-Burgomaster Hooft, a man of seventy-two-father of the illustrious
+ Pieter Corneliszoon Hooft, one of the greatest historians of the
+ Netherlands or of any country, then a man of thirty-seven-shocked at the
+ humiliating silence, asked his colleagues if they had none of them a word
+ to say in defence of their laws and privileges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They answered with one accord "No."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old man, a personal friend of Barneveld and born the same year, then
+ got on his feet and addressed the Stadholder. He spoke manfully and well,
+ characterizing the summary deposition of the magistracy as illegal and
+ unnecessary, recalling to the memory of those who heard him that he had
+ been thirty-six years long a member of the government and always a warm
+ friend of the House of Nassau, and respectfully submitting that the small
+ minority in the municipal government, while differing from their
+ colleagues and from the greater number of the States-General, had limited
+ their opposition to strictly constitutional means, never resorting to acts
+ of violence or to secret conspiracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could be more truly respectable than the appearance of this
+ ancient magistrate, in long black robe with fur edgings, high ruff around
+ his thin, pointed face, and decent skull-cap covering his bald old head,
+ quavering forth to unsympathetic ears a temperate and unanswerable defence
+ of things which in all ages the noblest minds have deemed most valuable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His harangue was not very long. Maurice's reply was very short.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Grandpapa," he said, "it must be so this time. Necessity and the service
+ of the country require it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that he dismissed the thirty-six magistrates and next day appointed a
+ new board, who were duly sworn to fidelity to the States-General. Of
+ course a large proportion of the old members were renominated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely had the echo of the Prince's footsteps ceased to resound through
+ the country as he tramped from one city to another, moulding each to his
+ will, when the States of Holland, now thoroughly reorganized, passed a
+ solemn vote of thanks to him for all that he had done. The six cities of
+ the minority had now become the majority, and there was unanimity at the
+ Hague. The Seven Provinces, States-General and States-Provincial, were as
+ one, and the Synod was secured. Whether the prize was worth the sacrifices
+ which it had cost and was still to cost might at least be considered
+ doubtful.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Affection of his friends and the wrath of his enemies
+ Depths theological party spirit could descend
+ Extraordinary capacity for yielding to gentle violence
+ Human nature in its meanness and shame
+ It had not yet occurred to him that he was married
+ Make the very name of man a term of reproach
+ Never lack of fishers in troubled waters
+ Opposed the subjection of the magistracy by the priesthood
+ Pot-valiant hero
+ Resolve to maintain the civil authority over the military
+ Tempest of passion and prejudice
+ The effect of energetic, uncompromising calumny
+ Yes, there are wicked men about
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. 1618-19
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Rancour between the Politico-Religious Parties&mdash;Spanish Intrigues
+ Inconsistency of James&mdash;Brewster and Robinson's Congregation at
+ Leyden&mdash;They decide to leave for America&mdash;Robinson's Farewell Sermon
+ and Prayer at Parting.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ During this dark and mournful winter the internal dissensions and, as a
+ matter of course, the foreign intrigues had become more dangerous than
+ ever. While the man who for a whole generation had guided the policy of
+ the Republic and had been its virtual chief magistrate lay hidden from all
+ men's sight, the troubles which he had sought to avert were not diminished
+ by his removal from the scene. The extreme or Gomarist party which had
+ taken a pride in secret conventicles where they were in a minority,
+ determined, as they said, to separate Christ from Belial and, meditating
+ the triumph which they had at last secured, now drove the Arminians from
+ the great churches. Very soon it was impossible for these heretics to
+ enjoy the rights of public worship anywhere. But they were not dismayed.
+ The canons of Dordtrecht had not yet been fulminated. They avowed
+ themselves ready to sacrifice worldly goods and life itself in defence of
+ the Five Points. In Rotterdam, notwithstanding a garrison of fifteen
+ companies, more than a thousand Remonstrants assembled on Christmas-day in
+ the Exchange for want of a more appropriate place of meeting and sang the
+ 112th Psalm in mighty chorus. A clergyman of their persuasion accidentally
+ passing through the street was forcibly laid hands upon and obliged to
+ preach to them, which he did with great unction. The magistracy, where now
+ the Contra-Remonstrants had the control, forbade, under severe penalties,
+ a repetition of such scenes. It was impossible not to be reminded of the
+ days half a century before, when the early Reformers had met in the open
+ fields or among the dunes, armed to the teeth, and with outlying pickets
+ to warn the congregation of the approach of Red Rod and the functionaries
+ of the Holy Inquisition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Schoonhoven the authorities attempted one Sunday by main force to
+ induct a Contra-Remonstrant into the pulpit from which a Remonstrant had
+ just been expelled. The women of the place turned out with their distaffs
+ and beat them from the field. The garrison was called out, and there was a
+ pitched battle in the streets between soldiers, police officers, and
+ women, not much to the edification certainly of the Sabbath-loving
+ community on either side, the victory remaining with the ladies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short it would be impossible to exaggerate the rancour felt between the
+ different politico-religious parties. All heed for the great war now
+ raging in the outside world between the hostile elements of Catholicism
+ and Protestantism, embattled over an enormous space, was lost in the din
+ of conflict among the respective supporters of conditional and
+ unconditional damnation within the pale of the Reformed Church. The
+ earthquake shaking Europe rolled unheeded, as it was of old said to have
+ done at Cannae, amid the fierce shock of mortal foes in that narrow field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The respect for authority which had so long been the distinguishing
+ characteristic of the Netherlanders seemed to have disappeared. It was
+ difficult&mdash;now that the time-honoured laws and privileges in defence
+ of which, and of liberty of worship included in them, the Provinces had
+ made war forty years long had been trampled upon by military force&mdash;for
+ those not warmed by the fire of Gomarus to feel their ancient respect for
+ the magistracy. The magistracy at that moment seemed to mean the sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spanish government was inevitably encouraged by the spectacle thus
+ presented. We have seen the strong hopes entertained by the council at
+ Madrid, two years before the crisis now existing had occurred. We have
+ witnessed the eagerness with which the King indulged the dream of
+ recovering the sovereignty which his father had lost, and the vast schemes
+ which he nourished towards that purpose, founded on the internal divisions
+ which were reducing the Republic to impotence. Subsequent events had
+ naturally made him more sanguine than ever. There was now a web of
+ intrigue stretching through the Provinces to bring them all back under the
+ sceptre of Spain. The imprisonment of the great stipendiary, the great
+ conspirator, the man who had sold himself and was on the point of selling
+ his country, had not terminated those plots. Where was the supposed centre
+ of that intrigue? In the council of state of the Netherlands, ever
+ fiercely opposed to Barneveld and stuffed full of his mortal enemies.
+ Whose name was most familiar on the lips of the Spanish partisans engaged
+ in these secret schemes? That of Adrian Manmaker, President of the
+ Council, representative of Prince Maurice as first noble of Zealand in the
+ States-General, chairman of the committee sent by that body to Utrecht to
+ frustrate the designs of the Advocate, and one of the twenty-four
+ commissioners soon to be appointed to sit in judgment upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tale seems too monstrous for belief, nor is it to be admitted with
+ certainty, that Manmaker and the other councillors implicated had actually
+ given their adhesion to the plot, because the Spanish emissaries in their
+ correspondence with the King assured him of the fact. But if such a
+ foundation for suspicion could have been found against Barneveld and his
+ friends, the world would not have heard the last of it from that hour to
+ this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is superfluous to say that the Prince was entirely foreign to these
+ plans. He had never been mentioned as privy to the little arrangements of
+ Councillor du Agean and others, although he was to benefit by them. In the
+ Spanish schemes he seems to have been considered as an impediment,
+ although indirectly they might tend to advance him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have managed now, I hope, that his Majesty will be recognized as
+ sovereign of the country," wrote the confidential agent of the King of
+ Spain in the Netherlands, Emmanuel Sueyro, to the government of Madrid.
+ "The English will oppose it with all their strength. But they can do
+ nothing except by making Count Maurice sovereign of Holland and duke of
+ Julich and Cleve. Maurice will also contrive to make himself master of
+ Wesel, so it is necessary for the Archduke to be beforehand with him and
+ make sure of the place. It is also needful that his Majesty should induce
+ the French government to talk with the Netherlanders and convince them
+ that it is time to prolong the Truce."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was soon afterwards accomplished. The French minister at Brussels
+ informed Archduke Albert that du Maurier had been instructed to propose
+ the prolongation, and that he had been conferring with the Prince of
+ Orange and the States-General on the subject. At first the Prince had
+ expressed disinclination, but at the last interview both he and the States
+ had shown a desire for it, and the French King had requested from the
+ Archduke a declaration whether the Spanish government would be willing to
+ treat for it. In such case Lewis would offer himself as mediator and do
+ his best to bring about a successful result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not the intention of the conspirators in the Netherlands that
+ the Truce should be prolonged. On the contrary the negotiation for it was
+ merely to furnish the occasion for fully developing their plot. "The
+ States and especially those of Zealand will reply that they no longer wish
+ the Truce," continued Sueyro, "and that they would prefer war to such a
+ truce. They desire to put ships on the coast of Flanders, to which the
+ Hollanders are opposed because it would be disagreeable to the French. So
+ the Zealanders will be the first to say that the Netherlanders must come
+ back to his Majesty. This their President Hanmaker has sworn. The States
+ of Overyssel will likewise give their hand to this because they say they
+ will be the first to feel the shock of the war. Thus we shall very easily
+ carry out our design, and as we shall concede to the Zealanders their
+ demands in regard to the navigation they at least will place themselves
+ under the dominion of his Majesty as will be the case with Friesland as
+ well as Overyssel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be observed that in this secret arrangement for selling the
+ Republic to its ancient master it was precisely the Provinces and the
+ politicians most steadily opposed to Barneveld that took the lead.
+ Zealand, Friesland, Overyssel were in the plot, but not a word was said of
+ Utrecht. As for Holland itself, hopes were founded on the places where
+ hatred to the Advocate was fiercest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Between ourselves," continued the agent, "we are ten here in the
+ government of Holland to support the plan, but we must not discover
+ ourselves for fear of suffering what has happened to Barneveld."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He added that the time for action had not yet come, and that if movements
+ were made before the Synod had finished its labours, "The Gomarists would
+ say that they were all sold." He implored the government at Madrid to keep
+ the whole matter for the present profoundly secret because "Prince Maurice
+ and the Gomarists had the forces of the country at their disposition." In
+ case the plot was sprung too suddenly therefore, he feared that with the
+ assistance of England Maurice might, at the head of the Gomarists and the
+ army, make himself sovereign of Holland and Duke of Cleve, while he and
+ the rest of the Spanish partisans might be in prison with Barneveld for
+ trying to accomplish what Barneveld had been trying to prevent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The opinions and utterances of such a man as James I. would be of little
+ worth to our history had he not happened to occupy the place he did. But
+ he was a leading actor in the mournful drama which filled up the whole
+ period of the Twelve Years' Truce. His words had a direct influence on
+ great events. He was a man of unquestionable erudition, of powers of mind
+ above the average, while the absolute deformity of his moral constitution
+ made him incapable of thinking, feeling, or acting rightly on any vital
+ subject, by any accident or on any occasion. If there were one thing that
+ he thoroughly hated in the world, it was the Reformed religion. If in his
+ thought there were one term of reproach more loathsome than another to be
+ applied to a human creature, it was the word Puritan. In the word was
+ subversion of all established authority in Church and State&mdash;revolution,
+ republicanism, anarchy. "There are degrees in Heaven," he was wont to say,
+ "there are degrees in Hell, there must be degrees on earth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He forbade the Calvinist Churches of Scotland to hold their customary
+ Synod in 1610, passionately reviling them and their belief, and declaring
+ "their aim to be nothing else than to deprive kings and princes of their
+ sovereignty, and to reduce the whole world to a popular form of government
+ where everybody would be master."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Prince of Neuburg embraced Catholicism, thus complicating matters
+ in the duchies and strengthening the hand of Spain and the Emperor in the
+ debateable land, he seized the occasion to assure the agent of the
+ Archduke in London, Councillor Boissetot, of his warm Catholic sympathies.
+ "They say that I am the greatest heretic in the world!" he exclaimed; "but
+ I will never deny that the true religion is that of Rome even if
+ corrupted." He expressed his belief in the real presence, and his surprise
+ that the Roman Catholics did not take the chalice for the blood of Christ.
+ The English bishops, he averred, drew their consecration through the
+ bishops in Mary Tudor's time from the Pope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Philip II., and Ferdinand II. echoing the sentiments of his illustrious
+ uncle, had both sworn they would rather reign in a wilderness than
+ tolerate a single heretic in their dominions, so James had said "he would
+ rather be a hermit in a forest than a king over such people as the pack of
+ Puritans were who overruled the lower house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the Netherlanders he had an especial hatred, both as rebels and
+ Puritans. Soon after coming to the English throne he declared that their
+ revolt, which had been going on all his lifetime and of which he never
+ expected to see the end, had begun by petition for matters of religion.
+ "His mother and he from their cradles," he said, "had been haunted with a
+ Puritan devil, which he feared would not leave him to his grave. And he
+ would hazard his crown but he would suppress those malicious spirits." It
+ seemed a strange caprice of Destiny that assigned to this hater of
+ Netherlanders, of Puritans, and of the Reformed religion, the decision of
+ disputed points between Puritans and anti-Puritans in the Reformed Church
+ of the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed stranger that his opinions should be hotly on the side of the
+ Puritans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld, who often used the expression in later years, as we have seen
+ in his correspondence, was opposed to the Dutch Puritans because they had
+ more than once attempted subversion of the government on pretext of
+ religion, especially at the memorable epoch of Leicester's government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The business of stirring up these religious conspiracies against the
+ magistracy he was apt to call "Flanderizing," in allusion to those
+ disastrous days and to the origin of the ringleaders in those tumults. But
+ his main object, as we have seen, was to effect compromises and restore
+ good feeling between members of the one church, reserving the right of
+ disposing over religious matters to the government of the respective
+ provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But James had remedied his audacious inconsistency by discovering that
+ Puritanism in England and in the Netherlands resembled each other no more
+ than certain letters transposed into totally different words meant one and
+ the same thing. The anagrammatic argument had been neatly put by Sir
+ Dudley Carleton, convincing no man. Puritanism in England "denied the
+ right of human invention or imposition in religious matters." Puritanism
+ in the Netherlands denied the right of the legal government to impose its
+ authority in religious matters. This was the great matter of debate in the
+ Provinces. In England the argument had been settled very summarily against
+ the Puritans by sheriffs' officers, bishops' pursuivants, and county
+ jails.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the political tendencies, so too the religious creed and observances of
+ the English Puritans were identical with that of the Contra-Remonstrants,
+ whom King James had helped to their great triumph. This was not very
+ difficult to prove. It so happened that there were some English Puritans
+ living at that moment in Leyden. They formed an independent society by
+ themselves, which they called a Congregational Church, and in which were
+ some three hundred communicants. The length of their residence there was
+ almost exactly coeval with the Twelve Years' Truce. They knew before
+ leaving England that many relics of the Roman ceremonial, with which they
+ were dissatisfied, and for the discontinuance of which they had in vain
+ petitioned the crown&mdash;the ring, the sign of the cross, white
+ surplices, and the like&mdash;besides the whole hierarchical system, had
+ been disused in the Reformed Churches of France, Switzerland, and the
+ United Provinces, where the forms of worship in their view had been
+ brought more nearly to the early apostolic model. They admitted for truth
+ the doctrinal articles of the Dutch Reformed Churches. They had not come
+ to the Netherlands without cause. At an early period of King James's reign
+ this congregation of seceders from the establishment had been wont to hold
+ meetings at Scrooby in Nottinghamshire, once a manor of the Archbishop of
+ York, but then the residence of one William Brewster. This was a gentleman
+ of some fortune, educated at Cambridge, a good scholar, who in Queen
+ Elizabeth's time had been in the service of William Davison when Secretary
+ of State. He seemed to have been a confidential private secretary of that
+ excellent and unlucky statesman, who found him so discreet and faithful as
+ to deserve employment before all others in matters of trust and secrecy.
+ He was esteemed by Davison "rather as a son than a servant," and he repaid
+ his confidence by doing him many faithful offices in the time of his
+ troubles. He had however long since retired from connection with public
+ affairs, living a retired life, devoted to study, meditation, and
+ practical exertion to promote the cause of religion, and in acts of
+ benevolence sometimes beyond his means.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pastor of the Scrooby Church, one John Robinson, a graduate of
+ Cambridge, who had been a benefited clergyman in Norfolk, was a man of
+ learning, eloquence, and lofty intellect. But what were such good gifts in
+ the possession of rebels, seceders, and Puritans? It is needless to say
+ that Brewster and Robinson were baited, persecuted, watched day and night,
+ some of the congregation often clapped into prison, others into the
+ stocks, deprived of the means of livelihood, outlawed, famished, banned.
+ Plainly their country was no place for them. After a few years of such
+ work they resolved to establish themselves in Holland, where at least they
+ hoped to find refuge and toleration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it proved as difficult for them to quit the country as to remain in
+ it. Watched and hunted like gangs of coiners, forgers, or other felons
+ attempting to flee from justice, set upon by troopers armed with "bills
+ and guns and other weapons," seized when about to embark, pillaged and
+ stripped by catchpoles, exhibited as a show to grinning country folk, the
+ women and children dealt with like drunken tramps, led before magistrates,
+ committed to jail; Mr. Brewster and six other of the principal ones being
+ kept in prison and bound over to the assizes; they were only able after
+ attempts lasting through two years' time to effect their escape to
+ Amsterdam. After remaining there a year they had removed to Leyden, which
+ they thought "a fair and beautiful city, and of a sweet situation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They settled in Leyden in the very year in which Arminius was buried
+ beneath the pavement of St. Peter's Church in that town. It was the year
+ too in which the Truce was signed. They were a singularly tranquil and
+ brotherly community. Their pastor, who was endowed with remarkable
+ gentleness and tact in dealing with his congregation, settled amicably all
+ their occasional disputes. The authorities of the place held them up as a
+ model. To a Walloon congregation in which there were many troublesome and
+ litigious members they said: "These English have lived among us ten years,
+ and yet we never had any suit or accusation against any of them, but your
+ quarrels are continual."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although many of them were poor, finding it difficult to earn their living
+ in a foreign land among people speaking a strange tongue, and with manners
+ and habits differing from their own, and where they were obliged to learn
+ new trades, having most of them come out of an agricultural population,
+ yet they enjoyed a singular reputation for probity. Bakers and butchers
+ and the like willingly gave credit to the poorest of these English, and
+ sought their custom if known to be of the congregation. Mr. Brewster, who
+ had been reduced almost to poverty by his charities and munificent aid to
+ his struggling brethren, earned his living by giving lessons in English,
+ having first composed a grammar according to the Latin model for the use
+ of his pupils. He also set up a printing establishment, publishing many
+ controversial works prohibited in England, a proceeding which roused the
+ wrath of Carleton, impelling him to do his best to have him thrown into
+ prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not the first time that this plain, mechanical, devout Englishman,
+ now past middle age, had visited the Netherlands. More than twenty-five
+ years before he had accompanied William Davison on his famous embassy to
+ the States, as private secretary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the keys of Flushing, one of the cautionary towns, were committed to
+ the Ambassador, he confided them to the care of Brewster, who slept with
+ them under his pillow. The gold chain which Davison received as a present
+ from the provincial government on leaving the country was likewise placed
+ in his keeping, with orders to wear it around his neck until they should
+ appear before the Queen. To a youth of ease and affluence, familiar with
+ ambassadors and statesmen and not unknown at courts, had succeeded a
+ mature age of obscurity, deep study, and poverty. No human creature would
+ have heard of him had his career ended with his official life. Two
+ centuries and a half have passed away and the name of the outlawed Puritan
+ of Scrooby and Leyden is still familiar to millions of the English race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All these Englishmen were not poor. Many of them occupied houses of fair
+ value, and were admitted to the freedom of the city. The pastor with three
+ of his congregation lived in a comfortable mansion, which they had
+ purchased for the considerable sum of 8000 florins, and on the garden of
+ which they subsequently erected twenty-one lesser tenements for the use of
+ the poorer brethren.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Robinson was himself chosen a member of the famous university and
+ admitted to its privileges. During his long residence in Leyden, besides
+ the daily care of his congregation, spiritual and temporal, he wrote many
+ learned works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the little community, which grew gradually larger by emigration from
+ England, passed many years of tranquillity. Their footsteps were not
+ dogged by constables and pursuivants, they were not dragged daily before
+ the magistrates, they were not thrown into the town jails, they were not
+ hunted from place to place with bows and bills and mounted musketeers.
+ They gave offence to none, and were respected by all. "Such was their
+ singleheartedness and sincere affection one towards another," says their
+ historian and magistrate, "that they came as near the primitive pattern of
+ the first churches as any other church of these later times has done,
+ according to their rank and quality."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here certainly were English Puritans more competent than any men else in
+ the world to judge if it were a slander upon the English government to
+ identify them with Dutch Puritans. Did they sympathize with the party in
+ Holland which the King, who had so scourged and trampled upon themselves
+ in England, was so anxious to crush, the hated Arminians? Did they abhor
+ the Contra-Remonstrants whom James and his ambassador Carleton doted upon
+ and whom Barneveld called "Double Puritans" and "Flanderizers?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their pastor may answer for himself and his brethren.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We profess before God and men," said Robinson in his Apologia, "that we
+ agree so entirely with the Reformed Dutch Churches in the matter of
+ religion as to be ready to subscribe to all and each of their articles
+ exactly as they are set forth in the Netherland Confession. We acknowledge
+ those Reformed Churches as true and genuine, we profess and cultivate
+ communion with them as much as in us lies. Those of us who understand the
+ Dutch language attend public worship under their pastors. We administer
+ the Holy Supper to such of their members as, known to us, appear at our
+ meetings." This was the position of the Puritans. Absolute, unqualified
+ accordance with the Contra-Remonstrants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the controversy grew hot in the university between the Arminians and
+ their adversaries, Mr. Robinson, in the language of his friend Bradford,
+ became "terrible to the Arminians . . . . who so greatly molested the
+ whole state and that city in particular."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Episcopius, the Arminian professor of theology, set forth sundry
+ theses, challenging all the world to the onset, it was thought that "none
+ was fitter to buckle with them" than Robinson. The orthodox professor
+ Polyander so importuned the English Puritan to enter the lists on behalf
+ of the Contra-Remonstrants that at last he consented and overthrew the
+ challenger, horse and man, in three successive encounters. Such at least
+ was the account given by his friend and admirer the historian. "The Lord
+ did so help him to defend the truth and foil this adversary as he put him
+ to an apparent nonplus in this great and public audience. And the like he
+ did a second or third time upon such like occasions," said Bradford,
+ adding that, if it had not been for fear of offending the English
+ government, the university would have bestowed preferments and honours
+ upon the champion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are concerned with this ancient and exhausted controversy only for the
+ intense light it threw, when burning, on the history which occupies us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the extinct volcano itself which once caused such devastation, and in
+ which a great commonwealth was well-nigh swallowed up, little is left but
+ slag and cinders. The past was made black and barren with them. Let us
+ disturb them as little as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little English congregation remained at Leyden till toward the end of
+ the Truce, thriving, orderly, respected, happy. They were witnesses to the
+ tumultuous, disastrous, and tragical events which darkened the Republic in
+ those later years, themselves unobserved and unmolested. Not a syllable
+ seems to remain on record of the views or emotions which may have been
+ excited by those scenes in their minds, nor is there a trace left on the
+ national records of the Netherlands of their protracted residence on the
+ soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They got their living as best they might by weaving, printing, spinning,
+ and other humble trades; they borrowed money on mortgages, they built
+ houses, they made wills, and such births, deaths, and marriages as
+ occurred among them were registered by the town-clerk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And at last for a variety of reasons they resolved to leave the
+ Netherlands. Perhaps the solution of the problem between Church and State
+ in that country by the temporary subjection of State to Church may have
+ encouraged them to realize a more complete theocracy, if a sphere of
+ action could be found where the experiment might be tried without a severe
+ battle against time-hallowed institutions and vested rights. Perhaps they
+ were appalled by the excesses into which men of their own religious
+ sentiments had been carried by theological and political passion. At any
+ rate depart they would; the larger half of the congregation remaining
+ behind however till the pioneers should have broken the way, and in their
+ own language "laid the stepping-stones."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had thought of the lands beneath the Equator, Raleigh having recently
+ excited enthusiasm by his poetical descriptions of Guiana. But the
+ tropical scheme was soon abandoned. They had opened negotiations with the
+ Stadholder and the States-General through Amsterdam merchants in regard to
+ settling in New Amsterdam, and offered to colonize that country if assured
+ of the protection of the United Provinces. Their petition had been
+ rejected. They had then turned their faces to their old master and their
+ own country, applying to the Virginia Company for a land-patent, which
+ they were only too happy to promise, and to the King for liberty of
+ religion in the wilderness confirmed under his broad seal, which his
+ Majesty of course refused. It was hinted however that James would connive
+ at them and not molest them if they carried themselves peaceably. So they
+ resolved to go without the seal, for, said their magistrate very wisely,
+ "if there should be a purpose or desire to wrong them, a seal would not
+ serve their turn though it were as broad as the house-floor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before they left Leyden, their pastor preached to them a farewell sermon,
+ which for loftiness of spirit and breadth of vision has hardly a parallel
+ in that age of intolerance. He laid down the principle that criticism of
+ the Scriptures had not been exhausted merely because it had been begun;
+ that the human conscience was of too subtle a nature to be imprisoned for
+ ever in formulas however ingeniously devised; that the religious
+ reformation begun a century ago was not completed; and that the Creator
+ had not necessarily concluded all His revelations to mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words have long been familiar to students of history, but they can
+ hardly be too often laid to heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Noble words, worthy to have been inscribed over the altar of the first
+ church to be erected by the departing brethren, words to bear fruit after
+ centuries should go by. Had not the deeply injured and misunderstood
+ Grotius already said, "If the trees we plant do not shade us, they will
+ yet serve for our descendants?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet it is passing strange that the preacher of that sermon should be the
+ recent champion of the Contra-Remonstrants in the great controversy; the
+ man who had made himself so terrible to the pupils of the gentle and
+ tolerant Arminius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus half of that English congregation went down to Delftshaven,
+ attended by the other half who were to follow at a later period with their
+ beloved pastor. There was a pathetic leave-taking. Even many of the
+ Hollanders, mere casual spectators, were in tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robinson, kneeling on the deck of the little vessel, offered a prayer and
+ a farewell. Who could dream that this departure of an almost nameless band
+ of emigrants to the wilderness was an epoch in the world's history? Yet
+ these were the Pilgrim Fathers of New England, the founders of what was to
+ be the mightiest republic of modern history, mighty and stable because it
+ had been founded upon an idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were not in search of material comfort and the chances of elevating
+ their condition, by removing from an overpeopled country to an organized
+ Commonwealth, offering a wide field for pauper labourers. Some of them
+ were of good social rank and highest education, most of them in decent
+ circumstances, none of them in absolute poverty. And a few years later
+ they were to be joined by a far larger company with leaders and many
+ brethren of ancient birth and landed possessions, men of "education,
+ figure; and estate," all ready to convert property into cash and to place
+ it in joint-stock, not as the basis of promising speculation, but as the
+ foundation of a church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It signifies not how much or how little one may sympathize with their
+ dogma or their discipline now. To the fact that the early settlement of
+ that wilderness was by self-sacrificing men of earnestness and faith, who
+ were bent on "advancing the Gospel of Christ in remote parts of the
+ world," in the midst of savage beasts, more savage men, and unimaginable
+ difficulties and dangers, there can be little doubt that the highest forms
+ of Western civilization are due. Through their provisional theocracy, the
+ result of the independent church system was to establish the true purport
+ of the Reformation, absolute religious equality. Civil and political
+ equality followed as a matter of course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two centuries and a half have passed away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are now some seventy or eighty millions of the English-speaking race
+ on both sides the Atlantic, almost equally divided between the United
+ Kingdom and the United Republic, and the departure of those outcasts of
+ James has interest and significance for them all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most fitly then, as a distinguished American statesman has remarked, does
+ that scene on board the little English vessel, with the English pastor
+ uttering his farewell blessing to a handful of English exiles for
+ conscience sake; depicted on canvas by eminent artists, now adorn the
+ halls of the American Congress and of the British Parliament. Sympathy
+ with one of the many imperishable bonds of union between the two great and
+ scarcely divided peoples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We return to Barneveld in his solitary prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Barneveld's Imprisonment&mdash;Ledenberg's Examination and Death&mdash;
+ Remonstrance of De Boississe&mdash;Aerssens admitted to the order of
+ Knights&mdash;Trial of the Advocate&mdash;Barneveld's Defence&mdash;The States
+ proclaim a Public Fast&mdash;Du Maurier's Speech before the Assembly&mdash;
+ Barneveld's Sentence&mdash;Barneveld prepares for Death&mdash;Goes to
+ Execution.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate had been removed within a few days after the arrest from the
+ chamber in Maurice's apartments, where he had originally been confined,
+ and was now in another building.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not a dungeon nor a jail. Indeed the commonplace and domestic
+ character of the scenery in which these great events were transacted has
+ in it something pathetic. There was and still remains a two-storied
+ structure, then of modern date, immediately behind the antique hall of the
+ old Counts within the Binnenhof. On the first floor was a courtroom of
+ considerable extent, the seat of one of the chief tribunals of justice The
+ story above was divided into three chambers with a narrow corridor on each
+ side. The first chamber, on the north-eastern side, was appropriated for
+ the judges when the state prisoners should be tried. In the next Hugo
+ Grotius was imprisoned. In the third was Barneveld. There was a tower at
+ the north-east angle of the building, within which a winding and narrow
+ staircase of stone led up to the corridor and so to the prisoners'
+ apartments. Rombout Hoogerbeets was confined in another building.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the Advocate, bent with age and a life of hard work, and leaning on his
+ staff, entered the room appropriated to him, after toiling up the steep
+ staircase, he observed&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is the Admiral of Arragon's apartment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was true. Eighteen years before, the conqueror of Nieuwpoort had
+ assigned this lodging to the chief prisoner of war in that memorable
+ victory over the Spaniards, and now Maurice's faithful and trusted
+ counsellor at that epoch was placed in durance here, as the result of the
+ less glorious series of victories which had just been achieved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a room of moderate dimensions, some twenty-five feet square, with a
+ high vaulted roof and decently furnished. Below and around him in the
+ courtyard were the scenes of the Advocate's life-long and triumphant
+ public services. There in the opposite building were the windows of the
+ beautiful "Hall of Truce," with its sumptuous carvings and gildings, its
+ sculptures and portraits, where he had negotiated with the representatives
+ of all the great powers of Christendom the famous Treaty which had
+ suspended the war of forty years, and where he was wont almost daily to
+ give audience to the envoys of the greatest sovereigns or the least
+ significant states of Europe and Asia, all of whom had been ever
+ solicitous of his approbation and support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farther along in the same building was the assembly room of the
+ States-General, where some of the most important affairs of the Republic
+ and of Europe had for years been conducted, and where he had been so
+ indispensable that, in the words of a contemporary who loved him not,
+ "absolutely nothing could be transacted in his absence, all great affairs
+ going through him alone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were two dull windows, closely barred, looking northward over an
+ irregular assemblage of tile-roofed houses and chimney-stacks, while
+ within a stone's throw to the west, but unseen, was his own elegant
+ mansion on the Voorhout, surrounded by flower gardens and shady pleasure
+ grounds, where now sat his aged wife and her children all plunged in deep
+ affliction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was allowed the attendance of a faithful servant, Jan Franken by name,
+ and a sentinel stood constantly before his door. His papers had been taken
+ from him, and at first he was deprived of writing materials.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had small connection with the outward world. The news of the municipal
+ revolution which had been effected by the Stadholder had not penetrated to
+ his solitude, but his wife was allowed to send him fruit from their
+ garden. One day a basket of fine saffron pears was brought to him. On
+ slicing one with a knife he found a portion of a quill inside it. Within
+ the quill was a letter on thinnest paper, in minutest handwriting in
+ Latin. It was to this effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't rely upon the States of Holland, for the Prince of Orange has
+ changed the magistracies in many cities. Dudley Carleton is not your
+ friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sergeant of the guard however, before bringing in these pears, had put a
+ couple of them in his pocket to take home to his wife. The letter, copies
+ of which perhaps had been inserted for safety in several of them, was thus
+ discovered and the use of this ingenious device prevented for the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secretary Ledenberg, who had been brought to the Hague in the early days
+ of September, was the first of the prisoners subjected to examination. He
+ was much depressed at the beginning of it, and is said to have exclaimed
+ with many sighs, "Oh Barneveld, Barneveld, what have you brought us to!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He confessed that the Waartgelders at Utrecht had been enlisted on
+ notification by the Utrecht deputies in the Hague with knowledge of
+ Barneveld, and in consequence of a resolution of the States in order to
+ prevent internal tumults. He said that the Advocate had advised in the
+ previous month of March a request to the Prince not to come to Utrecht;
+ that the communication of the message, in regard to disbanding the
+ Waartgelders, to his Excellency had been postponed after the deputies of
+ the States of Holland had proposed a delay in that disbandment; that those
+ deputies had come to Utrecht of their own accord; . . . . that they had
+ judged it possible to keep everything in proper order in Utrecht if the
+ garrison in the city paid by Holland were kept quiet, and if the States of
+ Utrecht gave similar orders to the Waartgelders; for they did not believe
+ that his Excellency would bring in troops from the outside. He said that
+ he knew nothing of a new oath to be demanded of the garrison. He stated
+ that the Advocate, when at Utrecht, had exhorted the States, according to
+ his wont, to maintain their liberties and privileges, representing to them
+ that the right to decide on the Synod and the Waartgelders belonged to
+ them. Lastly, he denied knowing who was the author of The Balance, except
+ by common report.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now these statements hardly amounted to a confession of abominable and
+ unpardonable crimes by Ledenberg, nor did they establish a charge of
+ high-treason and corrupt correspondence with the enemy against Barneveld.
+ It is certain that the extent of the revelations seemed far from
+ satisfactory to the accusers, and that some pressure would be necessary in
+ order to extract anything more conclusive. Lieutenant Nythof told Grotius
+ that Ledenberg had accordingly been threatened with torture, and that the
+ executioner had even handled him for that purpose. This was however denied
+ by the judges of instruction who had been charged with the preliminary
+ examination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That examination took place on the 27th September. After it had been
+ concluded, Ledenberg prayed long and earnestly on returning to prison. He
+ then entrusted a paper written in French to his son Joost, a boy of
+ eighteen, who did not understand that language. The youth had been allowed
+ to keep his father company in his confinement, and slept in the same room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next night but one, at two o'clock, Joost heard his father utter a
+ deep groan. He was startled, groped in the darkness towards his bed and
+ felt his arm, which was stone cold. He spoke to him and received no
+ answer. He gave the alarm, the watch came in with lights, and it was found
+ that Ledenberg had given himself two mortal wounds in the abdomen with a
+ penknife and then cut his throat with a table-knife which he had secreted,
+ some days before, among some papers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The paper in French given to his son was found to be to this effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know that there is an inclination to set an example in my person, to
+ confront me with my best friends, to torture me, afterwards to convict me
+ of contradictions and falsehoods as they say, and then to found an
+ ignominious sentence upon points and trifles, for this it will be
+ necessary to do in order to justify the arrest and imprisonment. To escape
+ all this I am going to God by the shortest road. Against a dead man there
+ can be pronounced no sentence of confiscation of property. Done 17th
+ September (o. s.) 1618."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The family of the unhappy gentleman begged his body for decent burial. The
+ request was refused. It was determined to keep the dead secretary above
+ ground and in custody until he could be tried, and, if possible, convicted
+ and punished. It was to be seen whether it were so easy to baffle the
+ power of the States-General, the Synod, and the Stadholder, and whether
+ "going to God by the shortest road" was to save a culprit's carcass from
+ ignominy, and his property from confiscation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French ambassadors, who had been unwearied in their endeavour to
+ restore harmony to the distracted Commonwealth before the arrest of the
+ prisoners, now exerted themselves to throw the shield of their sovereign's
+ friendship around the illustrious statesman and his fellow-sufferers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is with deepest sorrow," said de Boississe, "that I have witnessed the
+ late hateful commotions. Especially from my heart I grieve for the arrest
+ of the Seignior Barneveld, who with his discretion and wise administration
+ for the past thirty years has so drawn the hearts of all neighbouring
+ princes to himself, especially that of the King my master, that on taking
+ up my pen to apprize him of these events I am gravely embarrassed, fearing
+ to infringe on the great respect due to your Mightinesses or against the
+ honour and merits of the Seignior Barneveld. . . . My Lords, take heed to
+ your situation, for a great discontent is smouldering among your citizens.
+ Until now, the Union has been the chief source of your strength. And I now
+ fear that the King my master, the adviser of your renowned Commonwealth,
+ maybe offended that you have taken this resolution after consulting with
+ others, and without communicating your intention to his ambassador . . . .
+ It is but a few days that an open edict was issued testifying to the
+ fidelity of Barneveld, and can it be possible that within so short a time
+ you have discovered that you have been deceived? I summon you once more in
+ the name of the King to lay aside all passion, to judge these affairs
+ without partiality, and to inform me what I am to say to the King. Such
+ very conflicting accounts are given of these transactions that I must beg
+ you to confide to me the secret of the affair. The wisest in the land
+ speak so strongly of these proceedings that it will be no wonder if the
+ King my master should give me orders to take the Seignior Barneveld under
+ his protection. Should this prove to be the case, your Lordships will
+ excuse my course . . . I beg you earnestly in your wisdom not to give
+ cause of offence to neighbouring princes, especially to my sovereign, who
+ wishes from his heart to maintain your dignity and interests and to assure
+ you of his friendship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The language was vigorous and sincere, but the Ambassador forgot that the
+ France of to-day was not the France of yesterday; that Louis XIII. was not
+ Henry IV.; that it was but a cheerful fiction to call the present King the
+ guide and counsellor of the Republic, and that, distraught as she was by
+ the present commotions, her condition was strength and tranquillity
+ compared with the apparently decomposing and helpless state of the once
+ great kingdom of France. De Boississe took little by his demonstration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 12th December both de Boississe and du Maurier came before the
+ States-General once more, and urged a speedy and impartial trial for the
+ illustrious prisoners. If they had committed acts of treason and
+ rebellion, they deserved exemplary punishment, but the ambassadors warned
+ the States-General with great earnestness against the dangerous doctrine
+ of constructive treason, and of confounding acts dictated by violence of
+ party spirit at an excited period with the crime of high-treason against
+ the sovereignty of the State.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Barneveld so honourable," they said, "for his immense and long continued
+ services has both this Republic and all princes and commonwealths for his
+ witnesses. It is most difficult to believe that he has attempted the
+ destruction of his fatherland, for which you know that he has toiled so
+ faithfully."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They admitted that so grave charges ought now to be investigated. "To this
+ end," said the ambassadors, "you ought to give him judges who are neither
+ suspected nor impassioned, and who will decide according to the laws of
+ the land, and on clear and undeniable evidence . . . . So doing you will
+ show to the whole world that you are worthy to possess and to administer
+ this Commonwealth to whose government God has called you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Should they pursue another and a sterner course, the envoys warned the
+ Assembly that the King would be deeply offended, deeming it thus proved
+ how little value they set upon his advice and his friendship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States-General replied on the 19th December, assuring the ambassadors
+ that the delay in the trial was in order to make the evidence of the great
+ conspiracy complete, and would not tend to the prejudice of the prisoners
+ "if they had a good consciousness of their innocence." They promised that
+ the sentence upon them when pronounced would give entire satisfaction to
+ all their allies and to the King of France in particular, of whom they
+ spoke throughout the document in terms of profound respect. But they
+ expressed their confidence that "his Majesty would not place the
+ importunate and unfounded solicitations of a few particular criminals or
+ their supporters before the general interests of the dignity and security
+ of the Republic."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the same day the States-General addressed a letter filled with very
+ elaborate and courteous commonplaces to the King, in which they expressed
+ a certainty that his Majesty would be entirely satisfied with their
+ actions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The official answer of the States-General to the ambassadors, just cited,
+ gave but little comfort to the friends of the imprisoned statesman and his
+ companions. Such expressions as "ambitious and factious spirits,"&mdash;"authors
+ and patrons of the faction,"&mdash;"attempts at novelty through changes in
+ religion, in justice and in the fundamental laws of all orders of polity,"
+ and the frequent mention of the word "conspiracy" boded little good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Information of this condition of affairs was conveyed to Hoogerbeets and
+ Grotius by means of an ingenious device of the distinguished scholar, who
+ was then editing the Latin works of the Hague poet, Janus Secundus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the sheets were going through the press, some of the verses were
+ left out, and their place supplied by others conveying the intelligence
+ which it was desired to send to the prisoners. The pages which contained
+ the secret were stitched together in such wise that in cutting the book
+ open they were not touched but remained closed. The verses were to this
+ effect. "The examination of the Advocate proceeds slowly, but there is
+ good hope from the serious indignation of the French king, whose envoys
+ are devoted to the cause of the prisoners, and have been informed that
+ justice will be soon rendered. The States of Holland are to assemble on
+ the 15th January, at which a decision will certainly be taken for
+ appointing judges. The preachers here at Leyden are despised, and men are
+ speaking strongly of war. The tumult which lately occurred at Rotterdam
+ may bring forth some good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The quick-wited Grotius instantly discovered the device, read the
+ intelligence thus communicated in the proofsheets of Secundus, and made
+ use of the system to obtain further intelligence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hoogerbeets laid the book aside, not taking much interest at that time in
+ the works of the Hague poet. Constant efforts made to attract his
+ attention to those poems however excited suspicion among his keepers, and
+ the scheme was discovered before the Leyden pensionary had found the means
+ to profit by it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The allusions to the trial of the Advocate referred to the preliminary
+ examination which took place, like the first interrogatories of Grotius
+ and Hoogerbeets, in the months of November and December.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thorough manner in which Maurice had reformed the States of Holland
+ has been described. There was one department of that body however which
+ still required attention. The Order of Knights, small in number but
+ potential in influence, which always voted first on great occasions, was
+ still through a majority of its members inclined to Barneveld. Both his
+ sons-in-law had seats in that college. The Stadholder had long believed in
+ a spirit of hostility on the part of those nobles towards himself. He knew
+ that a short time before this epoch there had been a scheme for
+ introducing his young brother, Frederic Henry, into the Chamber of
+ Knights. The Count had become proprietor of the barony of Naaldwyk, a
+ property which he had purchased of the Counts of Arenberg, and which
+ carried with it the hereditary dignity of Great Equerry of the Counts of
+ Holland. As the Counts of Holland had ceased to exist, although their
+ sovereignty had nearly been revived and conferred upon William the Silent,
+ the office of their chief of the stables might be deemed a sinecure. But
+ the jealousy of Maurice was easily awakened, especially by any movement
+ made or favoured by the Advocate. He believed that in the election of
+ Frederic Henry as a member of the College of Knights a plan lay concealed
+ to thrust him into power and to push this elder brother from his place.
+ The scheme, if scheme it were, was never accomplished, but the Prince's
+ rancour remained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He now informed the nobles that they must receive into their body Francis
+ Aerssens, who had lately purchased the barony of Sommelsdyk, and Daniel de
+ Hartaing, Seignior of Marquette. With the presence of this deadly enemy of
+ Barneveld and another gentleman equally devoted to the Stadholder's
+ interest it seemed probable that the refractory majority of the board of
+ nobles would be overcome. But there were grave objections to the admission
+ of these new candidates. They were not eligible. The constitution of the
+ States and of the college of nobles prescribed that Hollanders only of
+ ancient and noble race and possessing estates in the province could sit in
+ that body. Neither Aerssens nor Hartaing was born in Holland or possessed
+ of the other needful qualifications. Nevertheless, the Prince, who had
+ just remodelled all the municipalities throughout the Union which offered
+ resistance to his authority, was not to be checked by so trifling an
+ impediment as the statutes of the House of Nobles. He employed very much
+ the same arguments which he had used to "good papa" Hooft. "This time it
+ must be so." Another time it might not be necessary. So after a
+ controversy which ended as controversies are apt to do when one party has
+ a sword in his hand and the other is seated at a green-baize-covered
+ table, Sommelsdyk and Marquette took their seats among the knights. Of
+ course there was a spirited protest. Nothing was easier for the Stadholder
+ than to concede the principle while trampling it with his boot-heels in
+ practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whereas it is not competent for the said two gentlemen to be admitted to
+ our board," said the nobles in brief, "as not being constitutionally
+ eligible, nevertheless, considering the strong desire of his Excellency
+ the Prince of Orange, we, the nobles and knights of Holland, admit them
+ with the firm promise to each other by noble and knightly faith ever in
+ future for ourselves and descendants to maintain the privileges of our
+ order now violated and never again to let them be directly or indirectly
+ infringed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so Aerssens, the unscrupulous plotter, and dire foe of the Advocate
+ and all his house, burning with bitter revenge for all the favours he had
+ received from him during many years, and the author of the venomous
+ pamphlets and diatribes which had done so much of late to blacken the
+ character of the great statesman before the public, now associated himself
+ officially with his other enemies, while the preliminary proceedings for
+ the state trials went forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the Synod had met at Dordtrecht. The great John Bogerman, with
+ fierce, handsome face, beak and eye of a bird of prey, and a deluge of
+ curly brown beard reaching to his waist, took his seat as president. Short
+ work was made with the Armenians. They and their five Points were soon
+ thrust out into outer darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was established beyond all gainsaying that two forms of Divine worship
+ in one country were forbidden by God's Word, and that thenceforth by
+ Netherland law there could be but one religion, namely, the Reformed or
+ Calvinistic creed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was settled that one portion of the Netherlanders and of the rest of
+ the human race had been expressly created by the Deity to be for ever
+ damned, and another portion to be eternally blessed. But this history has
+ little to do with that infallible council save in the political effect of
+ its decrees on the fate of Barneveld. It was said that the canons of
+ Dordtrecht were likely to shoot off the head of the Advocate. Their
+ sessions and the trial of the Advocate were simultaneous, but not
+ technically related to each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conclusions of both courts were preordained, for the issue of the
+ great duel between Priesthood and State had been decided when the military
+ chieftain threw his sword into the scale of the Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been purposely a delay, before coming to a decision as to the
+ fate of the state prisoners, until the work of the Synod should have
+ approached completion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was thought good that the condemnation of the opinions of the Arminians
+ and the chastisement of their leaders should go hand-in-hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 23rd April 1619, the canons were signed by all the members of the
+ Synod. Arminians were pronounced heretics, schismatics, teachers of false
+ doctrines. They were declared incapable of filling any clerical or
+ academical post. No man thenceforth was to teach children, lecture to
+ adolescents, or preach to the mature, unless a subscriber to the doctrines
+ of the unchanged, unchangeable, orthodox church. On the 30th April and 1st
+ May the Netherland Confession and the Heidelberg Catechism were declared
+ to be infallible. No change was to be possible in either formulary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Schools and pulpits were inexorably bound to the only true religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 6th May there was a great festival at Dordtrecht in honour of the
+ conclusion of the Synod. The canons, the sentence, and long prayers and
+ orations in Latin by President Bogerman gladdened the souls of an immense
+ multitude, which were further enlivened by the decree that both Creed and
+ Catechism had stood the test of several criticisms and come out unchanged
+ by a single hair. Nor did the orator of the occasion forget to render
+ thanks "to the most magnanimous King James of Great Britain, through whose
+ godly zeal, fiery sympathy, and truly royal labour God had so often
+ refreshed the weary Synod in the midst of their toil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Synod held one hundred and eighty sessions between the 13th November
+ 1618 and 29th May 1619, all the doings of which have been recorded in
+ chronicles innumerable. There need be no further mention of them here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld and the companions of his fate remained in prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 7th March the trial of the great Advocate began. He had sat in
+ prison since the 18th of the preceding August. For nearly seven months he
+ had been deprived of all communication with the outward world save such
+ atoms of intelligence as could be secretly conveyed to him in the inside
+ of a quill concealed in a pear and by other devices. The man who had
+ governed one of the most important commonwealths of the world for nearly a
+ generation long&mdash;during the same period almost controlling the
+ politics of Europe&mdash;had now been kept in ignorance of the most
+ insignificant everyday events. During the long summer-heat of the dog-days
+ immediately succeeding his arrest, and the long, foggy, snowy, icy winter
+ of Holland which ensued, he had been confined in that dreary garret-room
+ to which he had been brought when he left his temporary imprisonment in
+ the apartments of Prince Maurice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was nothing squalid in the chamber, nothing specially cruel or
+ repulsive in the arrangements of his captivity. He was not in fetters, nor
+ fed upon bread and water. He was not put upon the rack, nor even
+ threatened with it as Ledenberg had been. He was kept in a mean,
+ commonplace, meagerly furnished, tolerably spacious room, and he was
+ allowed the services of his faithful domestic servant John Franken. A
+ sentinel paced day and night up the narrow corridor before his door. As
+ spring advanced, the notes of the nightingale came through the
+ prison-window from the neighbouring thicket. One day John Franken, opening
+ the window that his master might the better enjoy its song, exchanged
+ greeting with a fellow-servant in the Barneveld mansion who happened to be
+ crossing the courtyard. Instantly workmen were sent to close and barricade
+ the windows, and it was only after earnest remonstrances and pledges that
+ this resolve to consign the Advocate to darkness was abandoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was not permitted the help of lawyer, clerk, or man of business. Alone
+ and from his chamber of bondage, suffering from bodily infirmities and
+ from the weakness of advancing age, he was compelled to prepare his
+ defence against a vague, heterogeneous collection of charges, to meet
+ which required constant reference, not only to the statutes, privileges,
+ and customs of the country and to the Roman law, but to a thousand minute
+ incidents out of which the history of the Provinces during the past dozen
+ years or more had been compounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true that no man could be more familiar with the science and
+ practice of the law than he was, while of contemporary history he was
+ himself the central figure. His biography was the chronicle of his
+ country. Nevertheless it was a fearful disadvantage for him day by day to
+ confront two dozen hostile judges comfortably seated at a great table
+ piled with papers, surrounded by clerks with bags full of documents and
+ with a library of authorities and precedents duly marked and dog's-eared
+ and ready to their hands, while his only library and chronicle lay in his
+ brain. From day to day, with frequent intermissions, he was led down
+ through the narrow turret-stairs to a wide chamber on the floor
+ immediately below his prison, where a temporary tribunal had been arranged
+ for the special commission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been an inclination at first on the part of his judges to treat
+ him as a criminal, and to require him to answer, standing, to the
+ interrogatories propounded to him. But as the terrible old man advanced
+ into the room, leaning on his staff, and surveying them with the air of
+ haughty command habitual to him, they shrank before his glance; several
+ involuntarily, rising uncovered, to salute him and making way for him to
+ the fireplace about which many were standing that wintry morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was thenceforth always accommodated with a seat while he listened to
+ and answered 'ex tempore' the elaborate series of interrogatories which
+ had been prepared to convict him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly seven months he had sat with no charges brought against him. This
+ was in itself a gross violation of the laws of the land, for according to
+ all the ancient charters of Holland it was provided that accusation should
+ follow within six weeks of arrest, or that the prisoner should go free.
+ But the arrest itself was so gross a violation of law that respect for it
+ was hardly to be expected in the subsequent proceedings. He was a great
+ officer of the States of Holland. He had been taken under their especial
+ protection. He was on his way to the High Council. He was in no sense a
+ subject of the States-General. He was in the discharge of his official
+ duty. He was doubly and trebly sacred from arrest. The place where he
+ stood was on the territory of Holland and in the very sanctuary of her
+ courts and House of Assembly. The States-General were only as guests on
+ her soil, and had no domain or jurisdiction there whatever. He was not
+ apprehended by any warrant or form of law. It was in time of peace, and
+ there was no pretence of martial law. The highest civil functionary of
+ Holland was invited in the name of its first military officer to a
+ conference, and thus entrapped was forcibly imprisoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last a board of twenty-four commissioners was created, twelve from
+ Holland and two from each of the other six provinces. This affectation of
+ concession to Holland was ridiculous. Either the law 'de non evocando'&mdash;according
+ to which no citizen of Holland could be taken out of the province for
+ trial&mdash;was to be respected or it was to be trampled upon. If it was
+ to be trampled upon, it signified little whether more commissioners were
+ to be taken from Holland than from each of the other provinces, or fewer,
+ or none at all. Moreover it was pretended that a majority of the whole
+ board was to be assigned to that province. But twelve is not a majority of
+ twenty-four. There were three fascals or prosecuting officers, Leeuwen of
+ Utrecht, Sylla of Gelderland, and Antony Duyck of Holland. Duyck was
+ notoriously the deadly enemy of Barneveld, and was destined to succeed to
+ his offices. It would have been as well to select Francis Aerssens
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was necessary to appoint a commission because there was no tribunal
+ appertaining to the States-General. The general government of the
+ confederacy had no power to deal with an individual. It could only
+ negotiate with the sovereign province to which the individual was
+ responsible, and demand his punishment if proved guilty of an offence.
+ There was no supreme court of appeal. Machinery was provided for settling
+ or attempting to settle disputes among the members of the confederacy, and
+ if there was a culprit in this great process it was Holland itself.
+ Neither the Advocate nor any one of his associates had done any act except
+ by authority, express or implied, of that sovereign State. Supposing them
+ unquestionably guilty of blackest crimes against the Generality, the
+ dilemma was there which must always exist by the very nature of things in
+ a confederacy. No sovereign can try a fellow sovereign. The subject can be
+ tried at home by no sovereign but his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The accused in this case were amenable to the laws of Holland only.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a packed tribunal. Several of the commissioners, like Pauw and Muis
+ for example, were personal enemies of Barneveld. Many of them were totally
+ ignorant of law. Some of them knew not a word of any language but their
+ mother tongue, although much of the law which they were to administer was
+ written in Latin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before such a court the foremost citizen of the Netherlands, the first
+ living statesman of Europe, was brought day by day during a period of
+ nearly three months; coming down stairs from the mean and desolate room
+ where he was confined to the comfortable apartment below, which had been
+ fitted up for the commission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no bill of indictment, no arraignment, no counsel. There were no
+ witnesses and no arguments. The court-room contained, as it were, only a
+ prejudiced and partial jury to pronounce both on law and fact without a
+ judge to direct them, or advocates to sift testimony and contend for or
+ against the prisoner's guilt. The process, for it could not be called a
+ trial, consisted of a vast series of rambling and tangled interrogatories
+ reaching over a space of forty years without apparent connection or
+ relevancy, skipping fantastically about from one period to another, back
+ and forthwith apparently no other intent than to puzzle the prisoner,
+ throw him off his balance, and lead him into self-contradiction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spectacle was not a refreshing one. It was the attempt of a multitude
+ of pigmies to overthrow and bind the giant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld was served with no articles of impeachment. He asked for a list
+ in writing of the charges against him, that he might ponder his answer.
+ The demand was refused. He was forbidden the use of pen and ink or any
+ writing materials. His papers and books were all taken from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was allowed to consult neither with an advocate nor even with a single
+ friend. Alone in his chamber of bondage he was to meditate on his defence.
+ Out of his memory and brain, and from these alone, he was to supply
+ himself with the array of historical facts stretching over a longer period
+ than the lifetime of many of his judges, and with the proper legal and
+ historical arguments upon those facts for the justification of his course.
+ That memory and brain were capacious and powerful enough for the task. It
+ was well for the judges that they had bound themselves, at the outset, by
+ an oath never to make known what passed in the courtroom, but to bury all
+ the proceedings in profound secrecy forever. Had it been otherwise, had
+ that been known to the contemporary public which has only been revealed
+ more than two centuries later, had a portion only of the calm and austere
+ eloquence been heard in which the Advocate set forth his defence, had the
+ frivolous and ignoble nature of the attack been comprehended, it might
+ have moved the very stones in the streets to mutiny. Hateful as the
+ statesman had been made by an organized system of calumny, which was
+ continued with unabated vigour and increased venom sine he had been
+ imprisoned, there was enough of justice and of gratitude left in the
+ hearts of Netherlanders to resent the tyranny practised against their
+ greatest man, and the obloquy thus brought against a nation always devoted
+ to their liberties and laws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the political system of the country was miserably defective was no
+ fault of Barneveld. He was bound by oath and duty to administer, not make
+ the laws. A handful of petty feudal sovereignties such as had once covered
+ the soil of Europe, a multitude of thriving cities which had wrested or
+ purchased a mass of liberties, customs, and laws from their little
+ tyrants, all subjected afterwards, without being blended together, to a
+ single foreign family, had at last one by one, or two by two, shaken off
+ that supremacy, and, resuming their ancient and as it were decapitated
+ individualities, had bound themselves by treaty in the midst of a war to
+ stand by each other, as if they were but one province, for purposes of
+ common defence against the common foe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been no pretence of laying down a constitution, of enacting an
+ organic law. The day had not come for even the conception of a popular
+ constitution. The people had not been invented. It was not provinces only,
+ but cities, that had contracted with each other, according to the very
+ first words of the first Article of Union. Some of these cities, like
+ Ghent, Bruges, Antwerp, were Catholic by overwhelming majority, and had
+ subsequently either fallen away from the confederacy or been conquered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as if to make assurance doubly sure, the Articles of Union not only
+ reserved to each province all powers not absolutely essential for carrying
+ on the war in common, but by an express article (the 13th), declared that
+ Holland and Zealand should regulate the matter of religion according to
+ their own discretion, while the other provinces might conform to the
+ provisions of the "Religious Peace" which included mutual protection for
+ Catholics and Protestants&mdash;or take such other order as seemed most
+ conducive to the religious and secular rights of the inhabitants. It was
+ stipulated that no province should interfere with another in such matters,
+ and that every individual in them all should remain free in his religion,
+ no man being molested or examined on account of his creed. A farther
+ declaration in regard to this famous article was made to the effect that
+ no provinces or cities which held to the Roman Catholic religion were to
+ be excluded from the League of Union if they were ready to conform to its
+ conditions and comport themselves patriotically. Language could not be
+ devised to declare more plainly than was done by this treaty that the
+ central government of the League had neither wish nor right to concern
+ itself with the religious affairs of the separate cities or provinces. If
+ it permitted both Papists and Protestants to associate themselves against
+ the common foe, it could hardly have been imagined, when the Articles were
+ drawn, that it would have claimed the exclusive right to define the
+ minutest points in a single Protestant creed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And if the exclusively secular parts of the polity prevailing in the
+ country were clumsy, irregular, and even monstrous, and if its defects had
+ been flagrantly demonstrated by recent events, a more reasonable method of
+ reforming the laws might have been found than the imprisonment of a man
+ who had faithfully administered them forty years long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great commonwealth had grown out of a petty feudal organism, like an oak
+ from an acorn in a crevice, gnarled and distorted, though wide-spreading
+ and vigorous. It seemed perilous to deal radically with such a polity, and
+ an almost timid conservatism on the part of its guardians in such an age
+ of tempests might be pardonable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, as before remarked, the apparent imbecility resulting from
+ confederacy and municipalism combined was for a season remedied by the
+ actual preponderance of Holland. Two-thirds of the total wealth and
+ strength of the seven republics being concentrated in one province, the
+ desired union seemed almost gained by the practical solution of all in
+ that single republic. But this was one great cause of the general
+ disaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be a thankless and tedious task to wander through the wilderness
+ of interrogatories and answers extending over three months of time, which
+ stood in the place of a trial. The defence of Barneveld was his own
+ history, and that I have attempted to give in the preceding pages. A great
+ part of the accusation was deduced from his private and official
+ correspondence, and it is for this reason that I have laid such copious
+ extracts from it before the reader. No man except the judges and the
+ States-General had access to those letters, and it was easy therefore, if
+ needful, to give them a false colouring. It is only very recently that
+ they have been seen at all, and they have never been published from that
+ day to this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out of the confused mass of documents appertaining to the trial, a few
+ generalizations can be made which show the nature of the attack upon him.
+ He was accused of having permitted Arminius to infuse new opinions into
+ the University of Leyden, and of having subsequently defended the
+ appointment of Vorstius to the same place. He had opposed the National
+ Synod. He had made drafts of letters for the King of Great Britain to
+ sign, recommending mutual toleration on the five disputed points regarding
+ predestination. He was the author of the famous Sharp Resolution. He had
+ recommended the enlistment by the provinces and towns of Waartgelders or
+ mercenaries. He had maintained that those mercenaries as well as the
+ regular troops were bound in time of peace to be obedient and faithful,
+ not only to the Generality and the stadholders, but to the magistrates of
+ the cities and provinces where they were employed, and to the states by
+ whom they were paid. He had sent to Leyden, warning the authorities of the
+ approach of the Prince. He had encouraged all the proceedings at Utrecht,
+ writing a letter to the secretary of that province advising a watch to be
+ kept at the city gates as well as in the river, and ordering his letter
+ when read to be burned. He had received presents from foreign potentates.
+ He had attempted to damage the character of his Excellency the Prince by
+ declaring on various occasions that he aspired to the sovereignty of the
+ country. He had held a ciphered correspondence on the subject with foreign
+ ministers of the Republic. He had given great offence to the King of Great
+ Britain by soliciting from him other letters in the sense of those which
+ his Majesty had written in 1613, advising moderation and mutual
+ toleration. He had not brought to condign punishment the author of 'The
+ Balance', a pamphlet in which an oration of the English ambassador had
+ been criticised, and aspersions made on the Order of the Garter. He had
+ opposed the formation of the West India Company. He had said many years
+ before to Nicolas van Berk that the Provinces had better return to the
+ dominion of Spain. And in general, all his proceedings had tended to put
+ the Provinces into a "blood bath."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was however no accusation that he had received bribes from the enemy
+ or held traitorous communication with him, or that he had committed any
+ act of high-treason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His private letters to Caron and to the ambassadors in Paris, with which
+ the reader has been made familiar, had thus been ransacked to find
+ treasonable matter, but the result was meagre in spite of the minute and
+ microscopic analysis instituted to detect traces of poison in them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the most subtle and far-reaching research into past transactions was
+ due to the Greffier Cornelis Aerssens, father of the Ambassador Francis,
+ and to a certain Nicolas van Berk, Burgomaster of Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The process of tale-bearing, hearsay evidence, gossip, and invention went
+ back a dozen years, even to the preliminary and secret conferences in
+ regard to the Treaty of Truce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Readers familiar with the history of those memorable negotiations are
+ aware that Cornelis van Aerssens had compromised himself by accepting a
+ valuable diamond and a bill of exchange drawn by Marquis Spinola on a
+ merchant in Amsterdam, Henry Beekman by name, for 80,000 ducats. These
+ were handed by Father Neyen, the secret agent of the Spanish government,
+ to the Greffier as a prospective reward for his services in furthering the
+ Truce. He did not reject them, but he informed Prince Maurice and the
+ Advocate of the transaction. Both diamond and bill of exchange were
+ subsequently deposited in the hands of the treasurer of the
+ States-General, Joris de Bie, the Assembly being made officially
+ acquainted with the whole course of the affair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is passing strange that this somewhat tortuous business, which
+ certainly cast a shade upon the fair fame of the elder Aerssens, and
+ required him to publish as good a defence as he could against the
+ consequent scandal, should have furnished a weapon wherewith to strike at
+ the Advocate of Holland some dozen years later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But so it was. Krauwels, a relative of Aerssens, through whom Father Neyen
+ had first obtained access to the Greffier, had stated, so it seemed, that
+ the monk had, in addition to the bill, handed to him another draft of
+ Spinola's for 100,000 ducats, to be given to a person of more
+ consideration than Aerssens. Krauwels did not know who the person was, nor
+ whether he took the money. He expressed his surprise however that leading
+ persons in the government "even old and authentic beggars"&mdash;should
+ allow themselves to be so seduced as to accept presents from the enemy. He
+ mentioned two such persons, namely, a burgomaster at Delft and a
+ burgomaster at Haarlem. Aerssens now deposed that he had informed the
+ Advocate of this story, who had said, "Be quiet about it, I will have it
+ investigated," and some days afterwards on being questioned stated that he
+ had made enquiry and found there was something in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the fact that Cornelis Aerssens had taken bribes, and that two
+ burgomasters were strongly suspected by Aerssens of having taken bribes,
+ seems to have been considered as evidence that Barneveld had taken a
+ bribe. It is true that Aerssens by advice of Maurice and Barneveld had
+ made a clean breast of it to the States-General and had given them over
+ the presents. But the States-General could neither wear the diamond nor
+ cash the bill of exchange, and it would have been better for the Greffier
+ not to contaminate his fingers with them, but to leave the gifts in the
+ monk's palm. His revenge against the Advocate for helping him out of his
+ dilemma, and for subsequently advancing his son Francis in a brilliant
+ diplomatic career, seems to have been&mdash;when the clouds were
+ thickening and every man's hand was against the fallen statesman&mdash;to
+ insinuate that he was the anonymous personage who had accepted the
+ apocryphal draft for 100,000 ducats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The case is a pregnant example of the proceedings employed to destroy the
+ Advocate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The testimony of Nicolas van Berk was at any rate more direct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 21st December 1618 the burgomaster testified that the Advocate had
+ once declared to him that the differences in regard to Divine Worship were
+ not so great but that they might be easily composed; asking him at the
+ same time "whether it would not be better that we should submit ourselves
+ again to the King of Spain." Barneveld had also referred, so said van
+ Berk, to the conduct of the Spanish king towards those who had helped him
+ to the kingdom of Portugal. The Burgomaster was unable however to specify
+ the date, year, or month in which the Advocate had held this language. He
+ remembered only that the conversation occurred when Barneveld was living
+ on the Spui at the Hague, and that having been let into the house through
+ the hall on the side of the vestibule, he had been conducted by the
+ Advocate down a small staircase into the office.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only fact proved by the details seems to be that the story had lodged
+ in the tenacious memory of the Burgomaster for eight years, as Barneveld
+ had removed from the Spui to Arenberg House in the Voorhout in the year
+ 1611.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No other offers from the King of Spain or the Archdukes had ever been made
+ to him, said van Berk, than those indicated in this deposition against the
+ Advocate as coming from that statesman. Nor had Barneveld ever spoken to
+ him upon such subjects except on that one occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not necessary and would be wearisome to follow the unfortunate
+ statesman through the long line of defence which he was obliged to make,
+ in fragmentary and irregular form, against these discursive and confused
+ assaults upon him. A continuous argument might be built up with the
+ isolated parts which should be altogether impregnable. It is superfluous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Always instructive to his judges as he swept at will through the record of
+ nearly half a century of momentous European history, in which he was
+ himself a conspicuous figure, or expounding the ancient laws and customs
+ of the country with a wealth and accuracy of illustration which testified
+ to the strength of his memory, he seemed rather like a sage expounding law
+ and history to a class of pupils than a criminal defending himself before
+ a bench of commissioners. Moved occasionally from his austere simplicity,
+ the majestic old man rose to a strain of indignant eloquence which might
+ have shaken the hall of a vast assembly and found echo in the hearts of a
+ thousand hearers as he denounced their petty insults or ignoble
+ insinuations; glaring like a caged lion at his tormentors, who had often
+ shrunk before him when free, and now attempted to drown his voice by
+ contradictions, interruptions, threats, and unmeaning howls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He protested, from the outset and throughout the proceedings, against the
+ jurisdiction of the tribunal. The Treaty of Union on which the Assembly
+ and States-General were founded gave that assembly no power over him. They
+ could take no legal cognizance of his person or his acts. He had been
+ deprived of writing materials, or he would have already drawn up his
+ solemn protest and argument against the existence of the commission. He
+ demanded that they should be provided for him, together with a clerk to
+ engross his defence. It is needless to say that the demand was refused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was notorious to all men, he said, that on the day when violent hands
+ were laid upon him he was not bound to the States-General by oath,
+ allegiance, or commission. He was a well-known inhabitant of the Hague, a
+ householder there, a vassal of the Commonwealth of Holland, enfeoffed of
+ many notable estates in that country, serving many honourable offices by
+ commission from its government. By birth, promotion, and conferred
+ dignities he was subject to the supreme authority of Holland, which for
+ forty years had been a free state possessed of all the attributes of
+ sovereignty, political, religious, judicial, and recognizing no superior
+ save God Almighty alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was amenable to no tribunal save that of their Mightinesses the States
+ of Holland and their ordinary judges. Not only those States but the Prince
+ of Orange as their governor and vassal, the nobles of Holland, the
+ colleges of justice, the regents of cities, and all other vassals,
+ magistrates, and officers were by their respective oaths bound to maintain
+ and protect him in these his rights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After fortifying this position by legal argument and by an array of
+ historical facts within his own experience, and alluding to the repeated
+ instances in which, sorely against his will, he had been solicited and
+ almost compelled to remain in offices of which he was weary, he referred
+ with dignity to the record of his past life. From the youthful days when
+ he had served as a volunteer at his own expense in the perilous sieges of
+ Haarlem and Leyden down to the time of his arrest, through an unbroken
+ course of honourable and most arduous political services, embassies, and
+ great negotiations, he had ever maintained the laws and liberties of the
+ Fatherland and his own honour unstained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That he should now in his seventy-second year be dragged, in violation of
+ every privilege and statute of the country, by extraordinary means, before
+ unknown judges, was a grave matter not for himself alone but for their
+ Mightinesses the States of Holland and for the other provinces. The
+ precious right 'de non evocando' had ever been dear to all the provinces,
+ cities, and inhabitants of the Netherlands. It was the most vital
+ privilege in their possession as well in civil as criminal, in secular as
+ in ecclesiastical affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the King of Spain in 1567, and afterwards, set up an extraordinary
+ tribunal and a course of extraordinary trials, it was an undeniable fact,
+ he said, that on the solemn complaint of the States all princes, nobles,
+ and citizens not only in the Netherlands but in foreign countries, and all
+ foreign kings and sovereigns, held those outrages to be the foremost and
+ fundamental reason for taking up arms against that king, and declaring him
+ to have forfeited his right of sovereignty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet that monarch was unquestionably the born and accepted sovereign of
+ each one of the provinces, while the General Assembly was but a gathering
+ of confederates and allies, in no sense sovereign. It was an unimaginable
+ thing, he said, that the States of each province should allow their whole
+ authority and right of sovereignty to be transferred to a board of
+ commissioners like this before which he stood. If, for example, a general
+ union of France, England, and the States of the United Netherlands should
+ be formed (and the very words of the Act of Union contemplated such
+ possibility), what greater absurdity could there be than to suppose that a
+ college of administration created for the specific purposes of such union
+ would be competent to perform acts of sovereignty within each of those
+ countries in matters of justice, polity, and religion?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was known to mankind, he said, that when negotiations were entered into
+ for bestowing the sovereignty of the Provinces on France and on England,
+ special and full powers were required from, and furnished by, the States
+ of each individual province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the sovereignty been in the assembly of the States-General, they might
+ have transferred it of their own motion or kept it for themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even in the ordinary course of affairs the commissioners from each
+ province to the General Assembly always required a special power from
+ their constituents before deciding any matter of great importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the defence of the respective provinces and cities, he had
+ never heard it doubted, he said, that the states or the magistrates of
+ cities had full right to provide for it by arming a portion of their own
+ inhabitants or by enlisting paid troops. The sovereign counts of Holland
+ and bishops of Utrecht certainly possessed and exercised that right for
+ many hundred years, and by necessary tradition it passed to the states
+ succeeding to their ancient sovereignty. He then gave from the stores of
+ his memory innumerable instances in which soldiers had been enlisted by
+ provinces and cities all over the Netherlands from the time of the
+ abjuration of Spain down to that moment. Through the whole period of
+ independence in the time of Anjou, Matthias, Leicester, as well as under
+ the actual government, it had been the invariable custom thus to provide
+ both by land and sea and on the rivers against robbers, rebels, pirates,
+ mischief-makers, assailing thieves, domestic or foreign. It had been done
+ by the immortal William the Silent on many memorable occasions, and in
+ fact the custom was so notorious that soldiers so enlisted were known by
+ different and peculiar nicknames in the different provinces and towns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the central government had no right to meddle with religious matters
+ was almost too self-evident an axiom to prove. Indeed the chief difficulty
+ under which the Advocate laboured throughout this whole process was the
+ monstrous assumption by his judges of a political and judicial system
+ which never had any existence even in imagination. The profound secrecy
+ which enwrapped the proceedings from that day almost to our own and an
+ ignorant acquiescence of a considerable portion of the public in
+ accomplished facts offer the only explanation of a mystery which must ever
+ excite our wonder. If there were any impeachment at all, it was an
+ impeachment of the form of government itself. If language could mean
+ anything whatever, a mere perusal of the Articles of Union proved that the
+ prisoner had never violated that fundamental pact. How could the general
+ government prescribe an especial formulary for the Reformed Church, and
+ declare opposition to its decrees treasonable, when it did not prohibit,
+ but absolutely admitted and invited, provinces and cities exclusively
+ Catholic to enter the Union, guaranteeing to them entire liberty of
+ religion?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld recalled the fact that when the stadholdership of Utrecht thirty
+ years before had been conferred on Prince Maurice the States of that
+ province had solemnly reserved for themselves the disposition over
+ religious matters in conformity with the Union, and that Maurice had sworn
+ to support that resolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Five years later the Prince had himself assured a deputation from Brabant
+ that the States of each province were supreme in religious matters, no
+ interference the one with the other being justifiable or possible. In 1602
+ the States General in letters addressed to the States of the obedient
+ provinces under dominion of the Archdukes had invited them to take up arms
+ to help drive the Spaniards from the Provinces and to join the
+ Confederacy, assuring them that they should regulate the matter of
+ religion at their good pleasure, and that no one else should be allowed to
+ interfere therewith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate then went into an historical and critical disquisition, into
+ which we certainly have no need to follow him, rapidly examining the whole
+ subject of predestination and conditional and unconditional damnation from
+ the days of St. Augustine downward, showing a thorough familiarity with a
+ subject of theology which then made up so much of the daily business of
+ life, political and private, and lay at the bottom of the terrible
+ convulsion then existing in the Netherlands. We turn from it with a
+ shudder, reminding the reader only how persistently the statesman then on
+ his trial had advocated conciliation, moderation, and kindness between
+ brethren of the Reformed Church who were not able to think alike on one of
+ the subtlest and most mysterious problems that casuistry has ever
+ propounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For fifty years, he said, he had been an enemy of all compulsion of the
+ human conscience. He had always opposed rigorous ecclesiastical decrees.
+ He had done his best to further, and did not deny having inspired, the
+ advice given in the famous letters from the King of Great Britain to the
+ States in 1613, that there should be mutual toleration and abstinence from
+ discussion of disputed doctrines, neither of them essential to salvation.
+ He thought that neither Calvin nor Beza would have opposed freedom of
+ opinion on those points. For himself he believed that the salvation of
+ mankind would be through God's unmerited grace and the redemption of sins
+ though the Saviour, and that the man who so held and persevered to the end
+ was predestined to eternal happiness, and that his children dying before
+ the age of reason were destined not to Hell but to Heaven. He had thought
+ fifty years long that the passion and sacrifice of Christ the Saviour were
+ more potent to salvation than God's wrath and the sin of Adam and Eve to
+ damnation. He had done his best practically to avert personal bickerings
+ among the clergy. He had been, so far as lay in his power, as friendly to
+ Remonstrants as to Contra-Remonstrants, to Polyander and Festus Hommius as
+ to Uytenbogaert and Episcopius. He had almost finished a negotiation with
+ Councillor Kromhout for the peaceable delivery of the Cloister Church on
+ the Thursday preceding the Sunday on which it had been forcibly seized by
+ the Contra-Remonstrants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When asked by one of his judges how he presumed to hope for toleration
+ between two parties, each of which abhorred the other's opinions, and
+ likened each other to Turks and devil-worshippers, he replied that he had
+ always detested and rebuked those mutual revilings by every means in his
+ power, and would have wished to put down such calumniators of either
+ persuasion by the civil authority, but the iniquity of the times and the
+ exasperation of men's humours had prevented him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being perpetually goaded by one judge after another as to his
+ disrespectful conduct towards the King of Great Britain, and asked why his
+ Majesty had not as good right to give the advice of 1617 as the
+ recommendation of tolerance in 1613, he scrupulously abstained, as he had
+ done in all his letters, from saying a disrespectful word as to the
+ glaring inconsistency between the two communications, or to the hostility
+ manifested towards himself personally by the British ambassador. He had
+ always expressed the hope, he said, that the King would adhere to his
+ original position, but did not dispute his right to change his mind, nor
+ the good faith which had inspired his later letters. It had been his
+ object, if possible, to reconcile the two different systems recommended by
+ his Majesty into one harmonious whole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His whole aim had been to preserve the public peace as it was the duty of
+ every magistrate, especially in times of such excitement, to do. He could
+ never comprehend why the toleration of the Five Points should be a danger
+ to the Reformed religion. Rather, he thought, it would strengthen the
+ Church and attract many Lutherans, Baptists, Catholics, and other good
+ patriots into its pale. He had always opposed the compulsory acceptance by
+ the people of the special opinions of scribes and doctors. He did not
+ consider, he said, the difference in doctrine on this disputed point
+ between the Contra-Remonstrants and Remonstrants as one-tenth the value of
+ the civil authority and its right to make laws and ordinances regulating
+ ecclesiastical affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He believed the great bulwark of the independence of the country to be the
+ Reformed Church, and his efforts had ever been to strengthen that bulwark
+ by preventing the unnecessary schism which might prove its ruin. Many
+ questions of property, too, were involved in the question&mdash;the church
+ buildings, lands and pastures belonging to the Counts of Holland and their
+ successors&mdash;the States having always exercised the right of church
+ patronage&mdash;'jus patronatus'&mdash;a privilege which, as well as
+ inherited or purchased advowsons, had been of late flagrantly interfered
+ with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was asked if he had not said that it had never been the intention of
+ the States-General to carry on the war for this or that religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He replied that he had told certain clergymen expressing to him their
+ opinion that the war had been waged solely for the furtherance of their
+ especial shade of belief, that in his view the war had been undertaken for
+ the conservation of the liberties and laws of the land, and of its good
+ people. Of that freedom the first and foremost point was the true
+ Christian religion and liberty of conscience and opinion. There must be
+ religion in the Republic, he had said, but that the war was carried on to
+ sustain the opinion of one doctor of divinity or another on&mdash;differential
+ points was something he had never heard of and could never believe. The
+ good citizens of the country had as much right to hold by Melancthon as by
+ Calvin or Beza. He knew that the first proclamations in regard to the war
+ declared it to be undertaken for freedom of conscience, and so to his, own
+ knowledge it had been always carried on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was asked if he had not promised during the Truce negotiations so to
+ direct matters that the Catholics with time might obtain public exercise
+ of their religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He replied that this was a notorious falsehood and calumny, adding that it
+ ill accorded with the proclamation against the Jesuits drawn up by himself
+ some years after the Truce. He furthermore stated that it was chiefly by
+ his direction that the discourse of President Jeannin&mdash;urging on part
+ of the French king that liberty of worship might be granted to the Papists&mdash;was
+ kept secret, copies of it not having been furnished even to the
+ commissioners of the Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His indignant denial of this charge, especially taken in connection with
+ his repeated assertions during the trial, that among the most patriotic
+ Netherlanders during and since the war were many adherents of the ancient
+ church, seems marvellously in contradiction with his frequent and most
+ earnest pleas for liberty of conscience. But it did not appear
+ contradictory even to his judges nor to any contemporary. His position had
+ always been that the civil authority of each province was supreme in all
+ matters political or ecclesiastical. The States-General, all the provinces
+ uniting in the vote, had invited the Catholic provinces on more than one
+ occasion to join the Union, promising that there should be no interference
+ on the part of any states or individuals with the internal affairs
+ religious or otherwise of the provinces accepting the invitation. But it
+ would have been a gross contradiction of his own principle if he had
+ promised so to direct matters that the Catholics should have public right
+ of worship in Holland where he knew that the civil authority was sure to
+ refuse it, or in any of the other six provinces in whose internal affairs
+ he had no voice whatever. He was opposed to all tyranny over conscience,
+ he would have done his utmost to prevent inquisition into opinion,
+ violation of domicile, interference with private worship, compulsory
+ attendance in Protestant churches of those professing the Roman creed.
+ This was not attempted. No Catholic was persecuted on account of his
+ religion. Compared with the practice in other countries this was a great
+ step in advance. Religious tolerance lay on the road to religious
+ equality, a condition which had hardly been imagined then and scarcely
+ exists in Europe even to this day. But among the men in history whose life
+ and death contributed to the advancement of that blessing, it would be
+ vain to deny that Barneveld occupies a foremost place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, it should be remembered that religious equality then would have
+ been a most hazardous experiment. So long as Church and State were
+ blended, it was absolutely essential at that epoch for the preservation of
+ Protestantism to assign the predominance to the State. Should the
+ Catholics have obtained religious equality, the probable result would
+ before long have been religious inequality, supremacy of the Catholics in
+ the Church, and supremacy of the Church over the State. The fruits of the
+ forty years' war would have become dust and ashes. It would be mere weak
+ sentimentalism to doubt&mdash;after the bloody history which had just
+ closed and the awful tragedy, then reopening&mdash;that every spark of
+ religious liberty would have soon been trodden out in the Netherlands. The
+ general onslaught of the League with Ferdinand, Maximilian of Bavaria, and
+ Philip of Spain at its head against the distracted, irresolute, and
+ wavering line of Protestantism across the whole of Europe was just
+ preparing. Rather a wilderness to reign over than a single heretic, was
+ the war-cry of the Emperor. The King of Spain, as we have just been
+ reading in his most secret, ciphered despatches to the Archduke at
+ Brussels, was nursing sanguine hopes and weaving elaborate schemes for
+ recovering his dominion over the United Netherlands, and proposing to send
+ an army of Jesuits thither to break the way to the reconquest. To play
+ into his hands then, by granting public right of worship to the Papists,
+ would have been in Barneveld's opinion like giving up Julich and other
+ citadels in the debatable land to Spain just as the great war between
+ Catholicism and Protestantism was breaking out. There had been enough of
+ burning and burying alive in the Netherlands during the century which had
+ closed. It was not desirable to give a chance for their renewal now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the Synod, Barneveld justified his course by a simple
+ reference to the 13th Article of the Union. Words could not more plainly
+ prohibit the interference by the States-General with the religious affairs
+ of any one of the Provinces than had been done by that celebrated clause.
+ In 1583 there had been an attempt made to amend that article by insertion
+ of a pledge to maintain the Evangelical, Reformed, religion solely, but it
+ was never carried out. He disdained to argue so self-evident a truth, that
+ a confederacy which had admitted and constantly invited Catholic states to
+ membership, under solemn pledge of noninterference with their religious
+ affairs, had no right to lay down formulas for the Reformed Church
+ throughout all the Netherlands. The oath of stadholder and magistrates in
+ Holland to maintain the Reformed religion was framed before this unhappy
+ controversy on predestination had begun, and it was mere arrogant
+ assumption on the part of the Contra-Remonstrants to claim a monopoly of
+ that religion, and to exclude the Remonstrants from its folds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had steadily done his utmost to assuage those dissensions while
+ maintaining the laws which he was sworn to support. He had advocated a
+ provincial synod to be amicably assisted by divines from neighbouring
+ countries. He had opposed a National Synod unless unanimously voted by the
+ Seven Provinces, because it would have been an open violation of the
+ fundamental law of the confederacy, of its whole spirit, and of liberty of
+ conscience. He admitted that he had himself drawn up a protest on the part
+ of three provinces (Holland, Utrecht, and Overyssel) against the decree
+ for the National Synod as a breach of the Union, declaring it to be
+ therefore null and void and binding upon no man. He had dictated the
+ protest as oldest member present, while Grotius as the youngest had acted
+ as scribe. He would have supported the Synod if legally voted, but would
+ have preferred the convocation, under the authority of all the provinces,
+ of a general, not a national, synod, in which, besides clergy and laymen
+ from the Netherlands, deputations from all Protestant states and churches
+ should take part; a kind of Protestant oecumenical council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the enlistment, by the States of a province, of soldiers to keep the
+ peace and suppress tumults in its cities during times of political and
+ religious excitement, it was the most ordinary of occurrences. In his
+ experience of more than forty years he had never heard the right even
+ questioned. It was pure ignorance of law and history to find it a novelty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To hire temporarily a sufficient number of professional soldiers, he
+ considered a more wholesome means of keeping the peace than to enlist one
+ portion of the citizens of a town against another portion, when party and
+ religious spirit was running high. His experience had taught him that the
+ mutual hatred of the inhabitants, thus inflamed, became more lasting and
+ mischievous than the resentment caused through suppression of disorder by
+ an armed and paid police of strangers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not only the right but the most solemn duty of the civil authority
+ to preserve the tranquillity, property, and lives of citizens committed to
+ their care. "I have said these fifty years," said Barneveld, "that it is
+ better to be governed by magistrates than mobs. I have always maintained
+ and still maintain that the most disastrous, shameful, and ruinous
+ condition into which this land can fall is that in which the magistrates
+ are overcome by the rabble of the towns and receive laws from them.
+ Nothing but perdition can follow from that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been good reason to believe that the French garrisons as well as
+ some of the train bands could not be thoroughly relied upon in emergencies
+ like those constantly breaking out, and there had been advices of invasion
+ by sympathizers from neighbouring countries. In many great cities the
+ civil authority had been trampled upon and mob rule had prevailed.
+ Certainly the recent example in the great commercial capital of the
+ country&mdash;where the house of a foremost citizen had been besieged,
+ stormed, and sacked, and a virtuous matron of the higher class hunted like
+ a wild beast through the streets by a rabble grossly ignorant of the very
+ nature of the religious quibble which had driven them mad, pelted with
+ stones, branded with vilest names, and only saved by accident from
+ assassination, while a church-going multitude looked calmly on&mdash;with
+ constantly recurring instances in other important cities were sufficient
+ reasons for the authorities to be watchful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He denied that he had initiated the proceedings at Utrecht in conversation
+ with Ledenberg or any one else, but he had not refused, he said, his
+ approval of the perfectly legal measures adopted for keeping the peace
+ there when submitted to him. He was himself a born citizen of that
+ province, and therefore especially interested in its welfare, and there
+ was an old and intimate friendship between Utrecht and Holland. It would
+ have been painful to him to see that splendid city in the control of an
+ ignorant mob, making use of religious problems, which they did not
+ comprehend, to plunder the property and take the lives of peaceful
+ citizens more comfortably housed than themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had neither suggested nor controlled the proceedings at Utrecht. On the
+ contrary, at an interview with the Prince and Count William on the 13th
+ July, and in the presence of nearly thirty members of the general
+ assembly, he had submitted a plan for cashiering the enlisted soldiery and
+ substituting for them other troops, native-born, who should be sworn in
+ the usual form to obey the laws of the Union. The deputation from Holland
+ to Utrecht, according to his personal knowledge, had received no
+ instructions personal or oral to authorize active steps by the troops of
+ the Holland quota, but to abstain from them and to request the Prince that
+ they should not be used against the will and commands of the States of
+ Utrecht, whom they were bound by oath to obey so long as they were in
+ garrison there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No man knew better than he whether the military oath which was called
+ new-fangled were a novelty or not, for he had himself, he said, drawn it
+ up thirty years before at command of the States-General by whom it was
+ then ordained. From that day to this he had never heard a pretence that it
+ justified anything not expressly sanctioned by the Articles of Union, and
+ neither the States of Holland nor those of Utrecht had made any change in
+ the oath. The States of Utrecht were sovereign within their own territory,
+ and in the time of peace neither the Prince of Orange without their order
+ nor the States-General had the right to command the troops in their
+ territory. The governor of a province was sworn to obey the laws of the
+ province and conform to the Articles of the General Union.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was asked why he wrote the warning letter to Ledenberg, and why he was
+ so anxious that the letter should be burned; as if that were a deadly
+ offence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said that he could not comprehend why it should be imputed to him as a
+ crime that he wished in such turbulent times to warn so important a city
+ as Utrecht, the capital of his native province, against tumults,
+ disorders, and sudden assaults such as had often happened to her in times
+ past. As for the postscript requesting that the letter might be put in the
+ fire, he said that not being a member of, the government of that province
+ he was simply unwilling to leave a record that "he had been too curious in
+ aliens republics, although that could hardly be considered a grave
+ offence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to the charge that he had accused Prince Maurice of aspiring to
+ the sovereignty of the country, he had much to say. He had never brought
+ such accusation in public or private. He had reason to believe however&mdash;he
+ had indeed convincing proofs&mdash;that many people, especially those
+ belonging to the Contra-Remonstrant party, cherished such schemes. He had
+ never sought to cast suspicion on the Prince himself on account of those
+ schemes. On the contrary, he had not even formally opposed them. What he
+ wished had always been that such projects should be discussed formally,
+ legally, and above board. After the lamentable murder of the late Prince
+ he had himself recommended to the authorities of some of the cities that
+ the transaction for bestowing the sovereignty of Holland upon William,
+ interrupted by his death, "should be completed in favour of Prince Maurice
+ in despite of the Spaniard." Recently he had requested Grotius to look up
+ the documents deposited in Rotterdam belonging to this affair, in order
+ that they might be consulted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was asked whether according to Buzenval, the former French ambassador,
+ Prince Maurice had not declared he would rather fling himself from the top
+ of the Hague tower than accept the sovereignty. Barneveld replied that the
+ Prince according to the same authority had added "under the conditions
+ which had been imposed upon his father;" a clause which considerably
+ modified the self-denying statement. It was desirable therefore to search
+ the acts for the limitations annexed to the sovereignty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three years long there had been indications from various sources that a
+ party wished to change the form of government. He had not heard nor ever
+ intimated that the Prince suggested such intrigues. In anonymous pamphlets
+ and common street and tavern conversations the Contra-Remonstrants were
+ described by those of their own persuasion as "Prince's Beggars" and the
+ like. He had received from foreign countries information worthy of
+ attention, that it was the design of the Contra-Remonstrants to raise the
+ Prince to the sovereignty. He had therefore in 1616 brought the matter
+ before the nobles and cities in a communication setting forth to the best
+ of his recollection that under these religious disputes something else was
+ intended. He had desired ripe conclusions on the matter, such as should
+ most conduce to the service of the country. This had been in good faith
+ both to the Prince and the Provinces, in order that, should a change in
+ the government be thought desirable, proper and peaceful means might be
+ employed to bring it about. He had never had any other intention than to
+ sound the inclinations of those with whom he spoke, and he had many times
+ since that period, by word of mouth and in writing, so lately as the month
+ of April last assured the Prince that he had ever been his sincere and
+ faithful servant and meant to remain so to the end of his life, desiring
+ therefore that he would explain to him his wishes and intentions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Subsequently he had publicly proposed in full Assembly of Holland that the
+ States should ripely deliberate and roundly declare if they were
+ discontented with the form of government, and if so, what change they
+ would desire. He had assured their Mightinesses that they might rely upon
+ him to assist in carrying out their intentions whatever they might be. He
+ had inferred however from the Prince's intimations, when he had broached
+ the subject to him in 1617, that he was not inclined towards these
+ supposed projects, and had heard that opinion distinctly expressed from
+ the mouth of Count William.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the Contra-Remonstrants secretly entertained these schemes, he had
+ been advised from many quarters, at home and abroad. In the year 1618 he
+ had received information to that effect from France. Certain confidential
+ counsellors of the Prince had been with him recently to confer on the
+ subject. He had told them that, if his Excellency chose to speak to him in
+ regard to it, would listen to his reasoning about it, both as regarded the
+ interests of the country and the Prince himself, and then should desire
+ him to propose and advocate it before the Assembly, he would do so with
+ earnestness, zeal, and affection. He had desired however that, in case the
+ attempt failed, the Prince would allow him to be relieved from service and
+ to leave the country. What he wished from the bottom of his heart was that
+ his Excellency would plainly discover to him the exact nature of his
+ sentiments in regard to the business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He fully admitted receiving a secret letter from Ambassador Langerac,
+ apprising him that a man of quality in France had information of the
+ intention of the Contra-Remonstrants throughout the Provinces, should they
+ come into power, to raise Prince Maurice to the sovereignty. He had
+ communicated on the subject with Grotius and other deputies in order that,
+ if this should prove to be the general inclination, the affair might be
+ handled according to law, without confusion or disorder. This, he said,
+ would be serving both the country and the Prince most judiciously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was asked why he had not communicated directly with Maurice. He replied
+ that he had already seen how unwillingly the Prince heard him allude to
+ the subject, and that moreover there was another clause in the letter of
+ different meaning, and in his view worthy of grave consideration by the
+ States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No question was asked him as to this clause, but we have seen that it
+ referred to the communication by du Agean to Langerac of a scheme for
+ bestowing the sovereignty of the Provinces on the King of France. The
+ reader will also recollect that Barneveld had advised the Ambassador to
+ communicate the whole intelligence to the Prince himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld proceeded to inform the judges that he had never said a word to
+ cast suspicion upon the Prince, but had been actuated solely by the desire
+ to find out the inclination of the States. The communications which he had
+ made on the subject were neither for discrediting the Prince nor for
+ counteracting the schemes for his advancement. On the contrary, he had
+ conferred with deputies from great cities like Dordtrecht, Enkhuyzen, and
+ Amsterdam, most devoted to the Contra-Remonstrant party, and had told them
+ that, if they chose to propose the subject themselves, he would conduct
+ himself to the best of his abilities in accordance with the wishes of the
+ Prince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would seem almost impossible for a statesman placed in Barneveld's
+ position to bear himself with more perfect loyalty both to the country and
+ to the Stadholder. His duty was to maintain the constitution and laws so
+ long as they remained unchanged. Should it appear that the States, which
+ legally represented the country, found the constitution defective, he was
+ ready to aid in its amendment by fair public and legal methods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Maurice wished to propose himself openly as a candidate for the
+ sovereignty, which had a generation before been conferred upon his father,
+ Barneveld would not only acquiesce in the scheme, but propose it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Should it fail, he claimed the light to lay down all his offices and go
+ into exile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had never said that the Prince was intriguing for, or even desired, the
+ sovereignty. That the project existed among the party most opposed to
+ himself, he had sufficient proof. To the leaders of that party therefore
+ he suggested that the subject should be publicly discussed, guaranteeing
+ freedom of debate and his loyal support so far as lay within his power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was his answer to the accusation that he had meanly, secretly, and
+ falsely circulated statements that the Prince was aspiring to the
+ sovereignty.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [Great pains were taken, in the course of the interrogatories, to
+ elicit proof that the Advocate had concealed important diplomatic
+ information from the Prince. He was asked why, in his secret
+ instructions to Ambassador Langerac, he ordered him by an express
+ article to be very cautious about making communications to the
+ Prince. Searching questions were put in regard to these secret
+ instructions, which I have read in the Archives, and a copy of which
+ now lies before me. They are in the form of questions, some of them
+ almost puerile ones, addressed to Barneveld by the Ambassador then
+ just departing on his mission to France in 1614, with the answers
+ written in the margin by the Advocate. The following is all that
+ has reference to the Prince:
+ "Of what matters may I ordinarily write to his Excellency?"
+ Answer&mdash;"Of all great and important matters."
+ It was difficult to find much that was treasonable in that.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Among the heterogeneous articles of accusation he was asked why he had
+ given no attention to those who had so, frequently proposed the formation
+ of the West India Company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He replied that it had from old time been the opinion of the States of
+ Holland, and always his own, that special and private licenses for
+ traffic, navigation, and foreign commerce, were prejudicial to the welfare
+ of the land. He had always been most earnestly opposed to them, detesting
+ monopolies which interfered with that free trade and navigation which
+ should be common to all mankind. He had taken great pains however in the
+ years 1596 and 1597 to study the nature of the navigation and trade to the
+ East Indies in regard to the nations to be dealt with in those regions,
+ the nature of the wares bought and sold there, the opposition to be
+ encountered from the Spaniards and Portuguese against the commerce of the
+ Netherlanders, and the necessity of equipping vessels both for traffic and
+ defence, and had come to the conclusion that these matters could best be
+ directed by a general company. He explained in detail the manner in which
+ he had procured the blending of all the isolated chambers into one great
+ East India Corporation, the enormous pains which it had cost him to bring
+ it about, and the great commercial and national success which had been the
+ result. The Admiral of Aragon, when a prisoner after the battle of
+ Nieuwpoort, had told him, he said, that the union of these petty
+ corporations into one great whole had been as disastrous a blow to the
+ kingdoms of Spain and Portugal as the Union of the Provinces at Utrecht
+ had been. In regard to the West India Company, its sole object, so far as
+ he could comprehend it, had been to equip armed vessels, not for trade but
+ to capture and plunder Spanish merchantmen and silver fleets in the West
+ Indies and South America. This was an advantageous war measure which he
+ had favoured while the war lasted. It was in no sense a commercial scheme
+ however, and when the Truce had been made&mdash;the company not having
+ come into existence&mdash;he failed to comprehend how its formation could
+ be profitable for the Netherlanders. On the contrary it would expressly
+ invite or irritate the Spaniards into a resumption of the war, an object
+ which in his humble opinion was not at all desirable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly these ideas were not especially reprehensible, but had they been
+ as shallow and despicable as they seem to us enlightened, it is passing
+ strange that they should have furnished matter for a criminal prosecution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was doubtless a disappointment for the promoters of the company, the
+ chief of whom was a bankrupt, to fail in obtaining their charter, but it
+ was scarcely high-treason to oppose it. There is no doubt however that the
+ disapprobation with which Barneveld regarded the West India Company, the
+ seat of which was at Amsterdam, was a leading cause of the deadly
+ hostility entertained for him by the great commercial metropolis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was bad enough for the Advocate to oppose unconditional predestination
+ and the damnation of infants, but to frustrate a magnificent system of
+ privateering on the Spaniards in time of truce was an unpardonable crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The patience with which the venerable statesman submitted to the taunts,
+ ignorant and insolent cross-questionings, and noisy interruptions of his
+ judges, was not less remarkable than the tenacity of memory which enabled
+ him thus day after day, alone, unaided by books, manuscripts, or friendly
+ counsel, to reconstruct the record of forty years, and to expound the laws
+ of the land by an array of authorities, instances, and illustrations in a
+ manner that would be deemed masterly by one who had all the resources of
+ libraries, documents, witnesses, and secretaries at command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only when insidious questions were put tending to impute to him
+ corruption, venality, and treacherous correspondence with the enemy&mdash;for
+ they never once dared formally to accuse him of treason&mdash;did that
+ almost superhuman patience desert him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was questioned as to certain payments made by him to a certain van der
+ Vecken in Spanish coin. He replied briefly at first that his money
+ transactions with that man of business extended over a period of twenty or
+ thirty years, and amounted to many hundred thousands of florins, growing
+ out of purchases and sales of lands, agricultural enterprises on his
+ estates, moneys derived from his professional or official business and the
+ like. It was impossible for him to remember the details of every especial
+ money payment that might have occurred between them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then suddenly breaking forth into a storm of indignation; he could mark
+ from these questions, he said, that his enemies, not satisfied with having
+ wounded his heart with their falsehoods, vile forgeries, and
+ honour-robbing libels, were determined to break it. This he prayed that
+ God Almighty might avert and righteously judge between him and them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was plain that among other things they were alluding to the stale and
+ senseless story of the sledge filled with baskets of coin sent by the
+ Spanish envoys on their departure from the Hague, on conclusion of the
+ Truce, to defray expenses incurred by them for board and lodging of
+ servants, forage of horses, and the like-which had accidentally stopped at
+ Barneveld's door and was forthwith sent on to John Spronssen,
+ superintendent of such affairs. Passing over this wanton bit of calumny
+ with disgust, he solemnly asserted that he had never at any period of his
+ life received one penny nor the value of one penny from the King of Spain,
+ the Archdukes, Spinola, or any other person connected with the enemy,
+ saving only the presents publicly and mutually conferred according to
+ invariable custom by the high contracting parties, upon the respective
+ negotiators at conclusion of the Treaty of Truce. Even these gifts
+ Barneveld had moved his colleagues not to accept, but proposed that they
+ should all be paid into the public treasury. He had been overruled, he
+ said, but that any dispassionate man of tolerable intelligence could
+ imagine him, whose whole life had been a perpetual offence to Spain, to be
+ in suspicious relations with that power seemed to him impossible. The most
+ intense party spirit, yea, envy itself, must confess that he had been
+ among the foremost to take up arms for his country's liberties, and had
+ through life never faltered in their defence. And once more in that mean
+ chamber, and before a row of personal enemies calling themselves judges,
+ he burst into an eloquent and most justifiable sketch of the career of one
+ whom there was none else to justify and so many to assail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From his youth, he said, he had made himself by his honourable and
+ patriotic deeds hopelessly irreconcilable with the Spaniards. He was one
+ of the advocates practising in the Supreme Court of Holland, who in the
+ very teeth of the Duke of Alva had proclaimed him a tyrant and had sworn
+ obedience to the Prince of Orange as the lawful governor of the land. He
+ was one of those who in the same year had promoted and attended private
+ gatherings for the advancement of the Reformed religion. He had helped to
+ levy, and had contributed to, funds for the national defence in the early
+ days of the revolt. These were things which led directly to the Council of
+ Blood and the gibbet. He had borne arms himself on various bloody fields
+ and had been perpetually a deputy to the rebel camps. He had been the
+ original mover of the Treaty of Union which was concluded between the
+ Provinces at Utrecht. He had been the first to propose and to draw up the
+ declaration of Netherland independence and the abjuration of the King of
+ Spain. He had been one of those who had drawn and passed the Act
+ establishing the late Prince of Orange as stadholder. Of the sixty signers
+ of these memorable declarations none were now living save himself and two
+ others. When the Prince had been assassinated, he had done his best to
+ secure for his son Maurice the sovereign position of which murder had so
+ suddenly deprived the father. He had been member of the memorable
+ embassies to France and England by which invaluable support for the
+ struggling Provinces had been obtained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus he rapidly sketched the history of the great war of independence
+ in which he had ever been conspicuously employed on the patriotic side.
+ When the late King of France at the close of the century had made peace
+ with Spain, he had been sent as special ambassador to that monarch, and
+ had prevailed on him, notwithstanding his treaty with the enemy, to
+ continue his secret alliance with the States and to promise them a large
+ subsidy, pledges which had been sacredly fulfilled. It was on that
+ occasion that Henry, who was his debtor for past services, professional,
+ official, and perfectly legitimate, had agreed, when his finances should
+ be in better condition, to discharge his obligations; over and above the
+ customary diplomatic present which he received publicly in common with his
+ colleague Admiral Nassau. This promise, fulfilled a dozen years later, had
+ been one of the senseless charges of corruption brought against him. He
+ had been one of the negotiators of the Truce in which Spain had been
+ compelled to treat with her revolted provinces as with free states and her
+ equals. He had promoted the union of the Protestant princes and their
+ alliance with France and the United States in opposition to the designs of
+ Spain and the League. He had organized and directed the policy by which
+ the forces of England, France, and Protestant Germany had possessed
+ themselves of the debateable land. He had resisted every scheme by which
+ it was hoped to force the States from their hold of those important
+ citadels. He had been one of the foremost promoters of the East India
+ Company, an organization which the Spaniards confessed had been as
+ damaging to them as the Union of the Provinces itself had been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idiotic and circumstantial statements, that he had conducted
+ Burgomaster van Berk through a secret staircase of his house into his
+ private study for the purpose of informing him that the only way for the
+ States to get out of the war was to submit themselves once more to their
+ old masters, so often forced upon him by the judges, he contradicted with
+ disdain and disgust. He had ever abhorred and dreaded, he said, the House
+ of Spain, Austria, and Burgundy. His life had passed in open hostility to
+ that house, as was known to all mankind. His mere personal interests,
+ apart from higher considerations, would make an approach to the former
+ sovereign impossible, for besides the deeds he had already alluded to, he
+ had committed at least twelve distinct and separate acts, each one of
+ which would be held high-treason by the House of Austria, and he had
+ learned from childhood that these are things which monarchs never forget.
+ The tales of van Berk were those of a personal enemy, falsehoods scarcely
+ worth contradicting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was grossly and enormously aggrieved by the illegal constitution of the
+ commission. He had protested and continued to protest against it. If that
+ protest were unheeded, he claimed at least that those men should be
+ excluded from the board and the right to sit in judgment upon his person
+ and his deeds who had proved themselves by words and works to be his
+ capital enemies, of which fact he could produce irrefragable evidence. He
+ claimed that the Supreme Court of Holland, or the High Council, or both
+ together, should decide upon that point. He held as his personal enemies,
+ he said, all those who had declared that he, before or since the Truce
+ down to the day of his arrest, had held correspondence with the Spaniards,
+ the Archdukes, the Marquis Spinola, or any one on that side, had received
+ money, money value, or promises of money from them, and in consequence had
+ done or omitted to do anything whatever. He denounced such tales as
+ notorious, shameful, and villainous falsehoods, the utterers and
+ circulators of them as wilful liars, and this he was ready to maintain in
+ every appropriate way for the vindication of the truth and his own honour.
+ He declared solemnly before God Almighty to the States-General and to the
+ States of Holland that his course in the religious matter had been solely
+ directed to the strengthening of the Reformed religion and to the
+ political security of the provinces and cities. He had simply desired
+ that, in the awful and mysterious matter of predestination, the
+ consciences of many preachers and many thousands of good citizens might be
+ placed in tranquillity, with moderate and Christian limitations against
+ all excesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From all these reasons, he said, the commissioners, the States-General,
+ the Prince, and every man in the land could clearly see, and were bound to
+ see, that he was the same man now that he was at the beginning of the war,
+ had ever been, and with God's help should ever remain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proceedings were kept secret from the public and, as a matter of
+ course, there had been conflicting rumours from day to day as to the
+ probable result of these great state trials. In general however it was
+ thought that the prisoner would be acquitted of the graver charges, or
+ that at most he would be permanently displaced from all office and
+ declared incapable thenceforth to serve the State. The triumph of the
+ Contra-Remonstrants since the Stadholder had placed himself at the head of
+ them, and the complete metamorphosis of the city governments even in the
+ strongholds of the Arminian party seemed to render the permanent political
+ disgrace of the Advocate almost a matter of certainty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first step that gave rise to a belief that he might be perhaps more
+ severely dealt with than had been anticipated was the proclamation by the
+ States-General of a public fast and humiliation for the 17th April.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this document it was announced that "Church and State&mdash;during
+ several years past having been brought into great danger of utter
+ destruction through certain persons in furtherance of their ambitious
+ designs&mdash;had been saved by the convocation of a National Synod; that
+ a lawful sentence was soon to be expected upon those who had been
+ disturbing the Commonwealth; that through this sentence general
+ tranquillity would probably be restored; and that men were now to thank
+ God for this result, and pray to Him that He would bring the wicked
+ counsels and stratagems of the enemy against these Provinces to naught."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the prisoners were asked if they too would like in their chambers of
+ bondage to participate in the solemnity, although the motive for the
+ fasting and prayer was not mentioned to them. Each of them in his separate
+ prison room, of course without communication together, selected the 7th
+ Psalm and sang it with his servant and door-keeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the date of this fast-day Barneveld looked upon the result of his
+ trial as likely to be serious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many clergymen refused or objected to comply with the terms of this
+ declaration. Others conformed with it greedily, and preached lengthy
+ thanksgiving sermons, giving praise to God that, He had confounded the
+ devices of the ambitious and saved the country from the "blood bath" which
+ they had been preparing for it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The friends of Barneveld became alarmed at the sinister language of this
+ proclamation, in which for the first time allusions had been made to a
+ forthcoming sentence against the accused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Especially the staunch and indefatigable du Maurier at once addressed
+ himself again to the States-General. De Boississe had returned to France,
+ having found that the government of a country torn, weakened, and rendered
+ almost impotent by its own internecine factions, was not likely to exert
+ any very potent influence on the fate of the illustrious prisoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States had given him to understand that they were wearied with his
+ perpetual appeals, intercessions, and sermons in behalf of mercy. They
+ made him feel in short that Lewis XIII. and Henry IV. were two entirely
+ different personages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Du Maurier however obtained a hearing before the Assembly on the 1st May,
+ where he made a powerful and manly speech in presence of the Prince,
+ urging that the prisoners ought to be discharged unless they could be
+ convicted of treason, and that the States ought to show as much deference
+ to his sovereign as they had always done to Elizabeth of England. He made
+ a personal appeal to Prince Maurice, urging upon him how much it would
+ redound to his glory if he should now in generous and princely fashion
+ step forward in behalf of those by whom he deemed himself to have been
+ personally offended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His speech fell upon ears hardened against such eloquence and produced no
+ effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the family of Barneveld, not yet reduced to despair, chose to
+ take a less gloomy view of the proclamation. Relying on the innocence of
+ the great statesman, whose aims, in their firm belief, had ever been for
+ the welfare and glory of his fatherland, and in whose heart there had
+ never been kindled one spark of treason, they bravely expected his
+ triumphant release from his long and, as they deemed it, his iniquitous
+ imprisonment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this very 1st of May, in accordance with ancient custom, a may-pole was
+ erected on the Voorhout before the mansion of the captive statesman, and
+ wreaths of spring flowers and garlands of evergreen decorated the walls
+ within which were such braised and bleeding hearts. These demonstrations
+ of a noble hypocrisy, if such it were, excited the wrath, not the
+ compassion, of the Stadholder, who thought that the aged matron and her
+ sons and daughters, who dwelt in that house of mourning, should rather
+ have sat in sackcloth with ashes on their heads than indulge in these
+ insolent marks of hope and joyful expectation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is certain however that Count William Lewis, who, although most staunch
+ on the Contra-Remonstrant side, had a veneration for the Advocate and
+ desired warmly to save him, made a last and strenuous effort for that
+ purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was believed then, and it seems almost certain, that, if the friends of
+ the Advocate had been willing to implore pardon for him, the sentence
+ would have been remitted or commuted. Their application would have been
+ successful, for through it his guilt would seem to be acknowledged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Count William sent for the Fiscal Duyck. He asked him if there were no
+ means of saving the life of a man who was so old and had done the country
+ so much service. After long deliberation, it was decided that Prince
+ Maurice should be approached on the subject. Duyck wished that the Count
+ himself would speak with his cousin, but was convinced by his reasoning
+ that it would be better that the Fiscal should do it. Duyck had a long
+ interview accordingly with Maurice, which was followed by a very secret
+ one between them both and Count William. The three were locked up
+ together, three hours long, in the Prince's private cabinet. It was then
+ decided that Count William should go, as if of his own accord, to the
+ Princess-Dowager Louise, and induce her to send for some one of
+ Barneveld's children and urge that the family should ask pardon for him.
+ She asked if this was done with the knowledge of the Prince of Orange, or
+ whether he would not take it amiss. The Count eluded the question, but
+ implored her to follow his advice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result was an interview between the Princess and Madame de Groeneveld,
+ wife of the eldest son. That lady was besought to apply, with the rest of
+ the Advocate's children, for pardon to the Lords States, but to act as if
+ it were done of her own impulse, and to keep their interview profoundly
+ secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame de Groeneveld took time to consult the other members of the family
+ and some friends. Soon afterwards she came again to the Princess, and
+ informed her that she had spoken with the other children, and that they
+ could not agree to the suggestion. "They would not move one step in it&mdash;no,
+ not if it should cost him his head."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princess reported the result of this interview to Count William, at
+ which both were so distressed that they determined to leave the Hague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is something almost superhuman in the sternness of this stoicism.
+ Yet it lay in the proud and highly tempered character of the
+ Netherlanders. There can be no doubt that the Advocate would have
+ expressly dictated this proceeding if he had been consulted. It was
+ precisely the course adopted by himself. Death rather than life with a
+ false acknowledgment of guilt and therefore with disgrace. The loss of his
+ honour would have been an infinitely greater triumph to his enemies than
+ the loss of his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no delay in drawing up the sentence. Previously to this
+ interview with the widow of William the Silent, the family of the Advocate
+ had presented to the judges three separate documents, rather in the way of
+ arguments than petitions, undertaking to prove by elaborate reasoning and
+ citations of precedents and texts of the civil law that the proceedings
+ against him were wholly illegal, and that he was innocent of every crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No notice had been taken of those appeals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the questions and answers as already set forth the sentence soon
+ followed, and it may be as well that the reader should be aware, at this
+ point in the narrative, of the substance of that sentence so soon to be
+ pronounced. There had been no indictment, no specification of crime. There
+ had been no testimony or evidence. There had been no argument for the
+ prosecution or the defence. There had been no trial whatever. The prisoner
+ was convicted on a set of questions to which he had put in satisfactory
+ replies. He was sentenced on a preamble. The sentence was a string of
+ vague generalities, intolerably long, and as tangled as the
+ interrogatories. His proceedings during a long career had on the whole
+ tended to something called a "blood bath"&mdash;but the blood bath had
+ never occurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an effrontery which did not lack ingenuity, Barneveld's defence was
+ called by the commissioners his confession, and was formally registered as
+ such in the process and the sentence; while the fact that he had not been
+ stretched upon the rack during his trial, nor kept in chains for the eight
+ months of his imprisonment, were complacently mentioned as proofs of
+ exceptionable indulgence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whereas the prisoner John of Barneveld," said the sentence, "without
+ being put to the torture and without fetters of iron, has confessed . . .
+ to having perturbed religion, greatly afflicted the Church of God, and
+ carried into practice exorbitant and pernicious maxims of State . . .
+ inculcating by himself and accomplices that each province had the right to
+ regulate religious affairs within its own territory, and that other
+ provinces were not to concern themselves therewith"&mdash;therefore and
+ for many other reasons he merited punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had instigated a protest by vote of three provinces against the
+ National Synod. He had despised the salutary advice of many princes and
+ notable personages. He had obtained from the King of Great Britain certain
+ letters furthering his own opinions, the drafts of which he had himself
+ suggested, and corrected and sent over to the States' ambassador in
+ London, and when written out, signed, and addressed by the King to the
+ States-General, had delivered them without stating how they had been
+ procured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Afterwards he had attempted to get other letters of a similar nature from
+ the King, and not succeeding had defamed his Majesty as being a cause of
+ the troubles in the Provinces. He had permitted unsound theologians to be
+ appointed to church offices, and had employed such functionaries in
+ political affairs as were most likely to be the instruments of his own
+ purposes. He had not prevented vigorous decrees from being enforced in
+ several places against those of the true religion. He had made them odious
+ by calling them Puritans, foreigners, and "Flanderizers," although the
+ United Provinces had solemnly pledged to each other their lives, fortunes,
+ and blood by various conventions, to some of which the prisoner was
+ himself a party, to maintain the Reformed, Evangelical, religion only, and
+ to, suffer no change in it to be made for evermore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to carry out his design and perturb the political state of the
+ Provinces he had drawn up and caused to be enacted the Sharp Resolution of
+ 4th August 1617. He had thus nullified the ordinary course of justice. He
+ had stimulated the magistrates to disobedience, and advised them to
+ strengthen themselves with freshly enlisted military companies. He had
+ suggested new-fangled oaths for the soldiers, authorizing them to refuse
+ obedience to the States-General and his Excellency. He had especially
+ stimulated the proceedings at Utrecht. When it was understood that the
+ Prince was to pass through Utrecht, the States of that province not
+ without the prisoner's knowledge had addressed a letter to his Excellency,
+ requesting him not to pass through their city. He had written a letter to
+ Ledenberg suggesting that good watch should be held at the town gates and
+ up and down the river Lek. He had desired that Ledenberg having read that
+ letter should burn it. He had interfered with the cashiering of the
+ mercenaries at Utrecht. He had said that such cashiering without the
+ consent of the States of that province was an act of force which would
+ justify resistance by force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although those States had sent commissioners to concert measures with the
+ Prince for that purpose, he had advised them to conceal their instructions
+ until his own plan for the disbandment could be carried out. At a secret
+ meeting in the house of Tresel, clerk of the States-General, between
+ Grotius, Hoogerbeets, and other accomplices, it was decided that this
+ advice should be taken. Report accordingly was made to the prisoner. He
+ had advised them to continue in their opposition to the National Synod.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had sought to calumniate and blacken his Excellency by saying that he
+ aspired to the sovereignty of the Provinces. He had received intelligence
+ on that subject from abroad in ciphered letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had of his own accord rejected a certain proposed, notable alliance of
+ the utmost importance to this Republic.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [This refers, I think without doubt, to the conversation between
+ King James and Caron at the end of the year 1815.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He had received from foreign potentates various large sums of money and
+ other presents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All "these proceedings tended to put the city of Utrecht into a
+ blood-bath, and likewise to bring the whole country, and the person of his
+ Excellency into the uttermost danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is the substance of the sentence, amplified by repetitions and
+ exasperating tautology into thirty or forty pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will have been perceived by our analysis of Barneveld's answers to the
+ commissioners that all the graver charges which he was now said to have
+ confessed had been indignantly denied by him or triumphantly justified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will also be observed that he was condemned for no categorical crime&mdash;lese-majesty,
+ treason, or rebellion. The commissioners never ventured to assert that the
+ States-General were sovereign, or that the central government had a right
+ to prescribe a religious formulary for all the United Provinces. They
+ never dared to say that the prisoner had been in communication with the
+ enemy or had received bribes from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of insinuation and implication there was much, of assertion very little,
+ of demonstration nothing whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But supposing that all the charges had been admitted or proved, what
+ course would naturally be taken in consequence? How was a statesman who
+ adhered to the political, constitutional, and religious opinions on which
+ he had acted, with the general acquiescence, during a career of more than
+ forty years, but which were said to be no longer in accordance with public
+ opinion, to be dealt with? Would the commissioners request him to retire
+ honourably from the high functions which he had over and over again
+ offered to resign? Would they consider that, having fairly impeached and
+ found him guilty of disturbing the public peace by continuing to act on
+ his well-known legal theories, they might deprive him summarily of power
+ and declare him incapable of holding office again?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conclusion of the commissioners was somewhat more severe than either
+ of these measures. Their long rambling preamble ended with these decisive
+ words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Therefore the judges, in name of the Lords States-General, condemn the
+ prisoner to be taken to the Binnenhof, there to be executed with the sword
+ that death may follow, and they declare all his property confiscated."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The execution was to take place so soon as the sentence had been read to
+ the prisoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the 1st of May Barneveld had not appeared before his judges. He had
+ been examined in all about sixty times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the beginning of May his servant became impatient. "You must not be
+ impatient," said his master. "The time seems much longer because we get no
+ news now from the outside. But the end will soon come. This delay cannot
+ last for ever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Intimation reached him on Saturday the 11th May that the sentence was
+ ready and would soon be pronounced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a bitter folk," said Barneveld as he went to bed. "I have nothing
+ good to expect of them." Next day was occupied in sewing up and concealing
+ his papers, including a long account of his examination, with the
+ questions and answers, in his Spanish arm-chair. Next day van der Meulen
+ said to the servant, "I will bet you a hundred florins that you'll not be
+ here next Thursday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The faithful John was delighted, not dreaming of the impending result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Sunday afternoon, 12th May, and about half past five o'clock.
+ Barneveld sat in his prison chamber, occupied as usual in writing,
+ reviewing the history of the past, and doing his best to reduce into
+ something like order the rambling and miscellaneous interrogatories, out
+ of which his trial had been concocted, while the points dwelt in his
+ memory, and to draw up a concluding argument in his own defence. Work
+ which according to any equitable, reasonable, or even decent procedure
+ should have been entrusted to the first lawyers of the country&mdash;preparing
+ the case upon the law and the facts with the documents before them, with
+ the power of cross-questioning witnesses and sifting evidence, and
+ enlightened by constant conferences with the illustrious prisoner himself&mdash;came
+ entirely upon his own shoulders, enfeebled as he was by age, physical
+ illness, and by the exhaustion of along imprisonment. Without books, notes
+ of evidence, or even copies of the charges of which he stood accused, he
+ was obliged to draw up his counter-arguments against the impeachment and
+ then by aid of a faithful valet to conceal his manuscript behind the
+ tapestry of the chamber, or cause them to be sewed up in the lining of his
+ easy-chair, lest they should be taken from him by order of the judges who
+ sat in the chamber below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was thus occupied in preparations for his next encounter with the
+ tribunal, the door opened, and three gentlemen entered. Two were the
+ prosecuting officers of the government, Fiscal Sylla and Fiscal van
+ Leeuwen. The other was the provost-marshal, Carel de Nijs. The servant was
+ directed to leave the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld had stepped into his dressing-room on hearing footsteps, but
+ came out again with his long furred gown about him as the three entered.
+ He greeted them courteously and remained standing, with his hands placed
+ on the back of his chair and with one knee resting carelessly against the
+ arm of it. Van Leeuwen asked him if he would not rather be seated, as they
+ brought a communication from the judges. He answered in the negative. Von
+ Leeuwen then informed him that he was summoned to appear before the judges
+ the next morning to hear his sentence of death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The sentence of death!" he exclaimed, without in the least changing his
+ position; "the sentence of death! the sentence of death!" saying the words
+ over thrice, with an air of astonishment rather than of horror. "I never
+ expected that! I thought they were going to hear my defence again. I had
+ intended to make some change in my previous statements, having set some
+ things down when beside myself with choler."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then made reference to his long services. Van Leeuwen expressed himself
+ as well acquainted with them. "He was sorry," he said, "that his lordship
+ took this message ill of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not take it ill of you," said Barneveld, "but let them," meaning the
+ judges, "see how they will answer it before God. Are they thus to deal
+ with a true patriot? Let me have pen, ink, and paper, that for the last
+ time I may write farewell to my wife."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will go ask permission of the judges," said van Leenwen, "and I cannot
+ think that my lord's request will be refused."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While van Leeuwen was absent, the Advocate exclaimed, looking at the other
+ legal officer:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Sylla, Sylla, if your father could only have seen to what uses they
+ would put you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sylla was silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Permission to write the letter was soon received from de Voogt, president
+ of the commission. Pen, ink, and paper were brought, and the prisoner
+ calmly sat down to write, without the slightest trace of discomposure upon
+ his countenance or in any of his movements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was writing, Sylla said with some authority, "Beware, my lord,
+ what you write, lest you put down something which may furnish cause for
+ not delivering the letter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld paused in his writing, took the glasses from his eyes, and
+ looked Sylla in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Sylla," he said very calmly, "will you in these my last moments lay
+ down the law to me as to what I shall write to my wife?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then added with a half-smile, "Well, what is expected of me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have no commission whatever to lay down the law," said van Leeuwen.
+ "Your worship will write whatever you like."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was writing, Anthony Walaeus came in, a preacher and professor of
+ Middelburg, a deputy to the Synod of Dordtrecht, a learned and amiable
+ man, sent by the States-General to minister to the prisoner on this
+ supreme occasion; and not unworthy to be thus selected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate, not knowing him, asked him why he came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am not here without commission," said the clergyman. "I come to console
+ my lord in his tribulation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am a man," said Barneveld; "have come to my present age, and I know how
+ to console myself. I must write, and have now other things to do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The preacher said that he would withdraw and return when his worship was
+ at leisure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do as you like," said the Advocate, calmly going on with his writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the letter was finished, it was sent to the judges for their
+ inspection, by whom it was at once forwarded to the family mansion in the
+ Voorhout, hardly a stone's throw from the prison chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it ran:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very dearly beloved wife, children, sons-in-law, and grandchildren, I
+ greet you altogether most affectionately. I receive at this moment the
+ very heavy and sorrowful tidings that I, an old man, for all my services
+ done well and faithfully to the Fatherland for so many years (after having
+ performed all respectful and friendly offices to his Excellency the Prince
+ with upright affection so far as my official duty and vocation would
+ permit, shown friendship to many people of all sorts, and wittingly
+ injured no man), must prepare myself to die to-morrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I console myself in God the Lord, who knows all hearts, and who will
+ judge all men. I beg you all together to do the same. I have steadily and
+ faithfully served My Lords the States of Holland and their nobles and
+ cities. To the States of Utrecht as sovereigns of my own Fatherland I have
+ imparted at their request upright and faithful counsel, in order to save
+ them from tumults of the populace, and from the bloodshed with which they
+ had so long been threatened. I had the same views for the cities of
+ Holland in order that every one might be protected and no one injured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Live together in love and peace. Pray for me to Almighty God, who will
+ graciously hold us all in His holy keeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "From my chamber of sorrow, the 12th May 1619.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your very dear husband, father, father-in-law, and grandfather,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "JOHN OF BARNEVELD."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was thought strange that the judges should permit so simple and clear a
+ statement, an argument in itself, to be forwarded. The theory of his
+ condemnation was to rest before the public on his confessions of guilt,
+ and here in the instant of learning the nature of the sentence in a few
+ hours to be pronounced upon him he had in a few telling periods declared
+ his entire innocence. Nevertheless the letter had been sent at once to its
+ address.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon as this sad business had been disposed of, Anthony Walaeus
+ returned. The Advocate apologized to the preacher for his somewhat abrupt
+ greeting on his first appearance. He was much occupied and did not know
+ him, he said, although he had often heard of him. He begged him, as well
+ as the provost-marshal, to join him at supper, which was soon brought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld ate with his usual appetite, conversed cheerfully on various
+ topics, and pledged the health of each of his guests in a glass of beer.
+ Contrary to his wont he drank at that repast no wine. After supper he went
+ out into the little ante-chamber and called his servant, asking him how he
+ had been faring. Now John Franken had just heard with grief unspeakable
+ the melancholy news of his master's condemnation from two soldiers of the
+ guard, who had been sent by the judges to keep additional watch over the
+ prisoner. He was however as great a stoic as his master, and with no
+ outward and superfluous manifestations of woe had simply implored the
+ captain-at-arms, van der Meulen, to intercede with the judges that he
+ might be allowed to stay with his lord to the last. Meantime he had been
+ expressly informed that he was to say nothing to the Advocate in secret,
+ and that his master was not to speak to him in a low tone nor whisper in
+ his ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Advocate came out into the ante-chamber and looking over his
+ shoulder saw the two soldiers he at once lowered his voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hush-speak low," he whispered; "this is too cruel." John then informed
+ him of van der Meulen's orders, and that the soldiers had also been
+ instructed to look to it sharply that no word was exchanged between master
+ and man except in a loud voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is it possible," said the Advocate, "that so close an inspection is held
+ over me in these last hours? Can I not speak a word or two in freedom?
+ This is a needless mark of disrespect."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soldiers begged him not to take their conduct amiss as they were
+ obliged strictly to obey orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He returned to his chamber, sat down in his chair, and begged Walaeus to
+ go on his behalf to Prince Maurice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell his Excellency," said he, "that I have always served him with
+ upright affection so far as my office, duties, and principles permitted.
+ If I, in the discharge of my oath and official functions, have ever done
+ anything contrary to his views, I hope that he will forgive it, and that
+ he will hold my children in his gracious favour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was then ten o'clock. The preacher went downstairs and crossed the
+ courtyard to the Stadholder's apartments, where he at once gained
+ admittance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maurice heard the message with tears in his eyes, assuring Walaeus that he
+ felt deeply for the Advocate's misfortunes. He had always had much
+ affection for him, he said, and had often warned him against his mistaken
+ courses. Two things, however, had always excited his indignation. One was
+ that Barneveld had accused him of aspiring to sovereignty. The other that
+ he had placed him in such danger at Utrecht. Yet he forgave him all. As
+ regarded his sons, so long as they behaved themselves well they might rely
+ on his favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Walaeus was about to leave the apartment, the Prince called him back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did he say anything of a pardon?" he asked, with some eagerness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Lord," answered the clergyman, "I cannot with truth say that I
+ understood him to make any allusion to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walaeus returned immediately to the prison chamber and made his report of
+ the interview. He was unwilling however to state the particulars of the
+ offence which Maurice declared himself to have taken at the acts of the
+ Advocate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as the prisoner insisted upon knowing, the clergyman repeated the
+ whole conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His Excellency has been deceived in regard to the Utrecht business," said
+ Barneveld, "especially as to one point. But it is true that I had fear and
+ apprehension that he aspired to the sovereignty or to more authority in
+ the country. Ever since the year 1600 I have felt this fear and have tried
+ that these apprehensions might be rightly understood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Walaeus had been absent, the Reverend Jean la Motte (or Lamotius)
+ and another clergyman of the Hague had come to the prisoner's apartment.
+ La Motte could not look upon the Advocate's face without weeping, but the
+ others were more collected. Conversation now ensued among the four; the
+ preachers wishing to turn the doomed statesman's thought to the
+ consolations of religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was characteristic of the old lawyer's frame of mind that even now
+ he looked at the tragical position in which he found himself from a
+ constitutional and controversial point of view. He was perfectly calm and
+ undaunted at the awful fate so suddenly and unexpectedly opened before his
+ eyes, but he was indignant at what he esteemed the ignorance, injustice,
+ and stupidity of the sentence to be pronounced against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am ready enough to die," he said to the three clergymen, "but I cannot
+ comprehend why I am to die. I have done nothing except in obedience to the
+ laws and privileges of the land and according to my oath, honour, and
+ conscience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These judges," he continued, "come in a time when other maxims prevail in
+ the State than those of my day. They have no right therefore to sit in
+ judgment upon me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clergymen replied that the twenty-four judges who had tried the case
+ were no children and were conscientious men; that it was no small thing to
+ condemn a man, and that they would have to answer it before the Supreme
+ Judge of all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I console myself," he answered, "in the Lord my God, who knows all hearts
+ and shall judge all men. God is just.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They have not dealt with me," he continued, "as according to law and
+ justice they were bound to deal. They have taken away from me my own
+ sovereign lords and masters and deposed them. To them alone I was
+ responsible. In their place they have put many of my enemies who were
+ never before in the government, and almost all of whom are young men who
+ have not seen much or read much. I have seen and read much, and know that
+ from such examples no good can follow. After my death they will learn for
+ the first time what governing means."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The twenty-four judges are nearly all of them my enemies. What they have
+ reproached me with, I have been obliged to hear. I have appealed against
+ these judges, but it has been of no avail. They have examined me in
+ piecemeal, not in statesmanlike fashion. The proceedings against me have
+ been much too hard. I have frequently requested to see the notes of my
+ examination as it proceeded, and to confer upon it with aid and counsel of
+ friends, as would be the case in all lands governed by law. The request
+ was refused. During this long and wearisome affliction and misery I have
+ not once been allowed to speak to my wife and children. These are indecent
+ proceedings against a man seventy-two years of age, who has served his
+ country faithfully for three-and-forty years. I bore arms with the
+ volunteers at my own charges at the siege of Haarlem and barely escaped
+ with life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not unnatural that the aged statesman's thoughts should revert in
+ this supreme moment to the heroic scenes in which he had been an actor
+ almost a half-century before. He could not but think with bitterness of
+ those long past but never forgotten days when he, with other patriotic
+ youths, had faced the terrible legions of Alva in defence of the
+ Fatherland, at a time when the men who were now dooming him to a traitor's
+ death were unborn, and who, but for his labours, courage, wisdom, and
+ sacrifices, might have never had a Fatherland to serve, or a judgment-seat
+ on which to pronounce his condemnation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not in a spirit of fretfulness, but with disdainful calm, he criticised
+ and censured the proceedings against himself as a violation of the laws of
+ the land and of the first principles of justice, discussing them as
+ lucidly and steadily as if they had been against a third person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The preachers listened, but had nothing to say. They knew not of such
+ matters, they said, and had no instructions to speak of them. They had
+ been sent to call him to repentance for his open and hidden sins and to
+ offer the consolations of religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know that very well," he said, "but I too have something to say
+ notwithstanding." The conversation then turned upon religious topics, and
+ the preachers spoke of predestination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have never been able to believe in the matter of high predestination,"
+ said the Advocate. "I have left it in the hands of God the Lord. I hold
+ that a good Christian man must believe that he through God's grace and by
+ the expiation of his sin through our Redeemer Jesus Christ is predestined
+ to be saved, and that this belief in his salvation, founded alone on God's
+ grace and the merits of our Redeemer Jesus Christ, comes to him through
+ the same grace of God. And if he falls into great sins, his firm hope and
+ confidence must be that the Lord God will not allow him to continue in
+ them, but that, through prayer for grace and repentance, he will be
+ converted from evil and remain in the faith to the end of his life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These feelings, he said, he had expressed fifty-two years before to three
+ eminent professors of theology in whom he confided, and they had assured
+ him that he might tranquilly continue in such belief without examining
+ further. "And this has always been my creed," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The preachers replied that faith is a gift of God and not given to all
+ men, that it must be given out of heaven to a man before he could be
+ saved. Hereupon they began to dispute, and the Advocate spoke so earnestly
+ and well that the clergymen were astonished and sat for a time listening
+ to him in silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He asked afterwards about the Synod, and was informed that its decrees had
+ not yet been promulgated, but that the Remonstrants had been condemned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a pity," said he. "One is trying to act on the old Papal system,
+ but it will never do. Things have gone too far. As to the Synod, if My
+ Lords the States of Holland had been heeded there would have been first a
+ provincial synod and then a national one."&mdash;"But," he added, looking
+ the preachers in the face, "had you been more gentle with each other,
+ matters would not have taken so high a turn. But you have been too fierce
+ one against the other, too full of bitter party spirit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They replied that it was impossible for them to act against their
+ conscience and the supreme authority. And then they asked him if there was
+ nothing that troubled him in, his conscience in the matters for which he
+ must die; nothing for which he repented and sorrowed, and for which he
+ would call upon God for mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This I know well," he said, "that I have never willingly done wrong to
+ any man. People have been ransacking my letters to Caron&mdash;confidential
+ ones written several years ago to an old friend when I was troubled and
+ seeking for counsel and consolation. It is hard that matter of impeachment
+ against me to-day should be sought for thus."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then he fell into political discourse again on the subject of the
+ Waartgelders and the State rights, and the villainous pasquils and libels
+ that had circulated so long through the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have sometimes spoken hastily, I confess," he said; "but that was when
+ I was stung by the daily swarm of infamous and loathsome pamphlets,
+ especially those directed against my sovereign masters the States of
+ Holland. That I could not bear. Old men cannot well brush such things
+ aside. All that was directly aimed at me in particular I endeavoured to
+ overcome with such patience as I could muster. The disunion and mutual
+ enmity in the country have wounded me to the heart. I have made use of all
+ means in my power to accommodate matters, to effect with all gentleness a
+ mutual reconciliation. I have always felt a fear lest the enemy should
+ make use of our internal dissensions to strike a blow against us. I can
+ say with perfect truth that ever since the year '77 I have been as
+ resolutely and unchangeably opposed to the Spaniards and their adherents,
+ and their pretensions over these Provinces, as any man in the world, no
+ one excepted, and as ready to sacrifice property and shed my blood in
+ defence of the Fatherland. I have been so devoted to the service of the
+ country that I have not been able to take the necessary care of my own
+ private affairs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So spoke the great statesman in the seclusion of his prison, in the
+ presence of those clergymen whom he respected, at a supreme moment, when,
+ if ever, a man might be expected to tell the truth. And his whole life
+ which belonged to history, and had been passed on the world's stage before
+ the eyes of two generations of spectators, was a demonstration of the
+ truth of his words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Burgomaster van Berk knew better. Had he not informed the twenty-four
+ commissioners that, twelve years before, the Advocate wished to subject
+ the country to Spain, and that Spinola had drawn a bill of exchange for
+ 100,000 ducats as a compensation for his efforts?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was eleven o'clock. Barneveld requested one of the brethren to say an
+ evening prayer. This was done by La Motte, and they were then requested to
+ return by three or four o'clock next morning. They had been directed, they
+ said, to remain with him all night. "That is unnecessary," said the
+ Advocate, and they retired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His servant then helped his master to undress, and he went to bed as
+ usual. Taking off his signet-ring, he gave it to John Franken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For my eldest son," he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The valet sat down at the head of his bed in order that his master might
+ speak to him before he slept. But the soldiers ordered him away and
+ compelled him to sit in a distant part of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour after midnight, the Advocate having been unable to lose himself,
+ his servant observed that Isaac, one of the soldiers, was fast asleep. He
+ begged the other, Tilman Schenk by name, to permit him some private words
+ with his master. He had probably last messages, he thought, to send to his
+ wife and children, and the eldest son, M. de Groeneveld, would no doubt
+ reward him well for it. But the soldier was obstinate in obedience to the
+ orders of the judges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld, finding it impossible to sleep, asked his servant to read to
+ him from the Prayer-book. The soldier called in a clergyman however,
+ another one named Hugo Bayerus, who had been sent to the prison, and who
+ now read to him the Consolations of the Sick. As he read, he made
+ exhortations and expositions, which led to animated discussion, in which
+ the Advocate expressed himself with so much fervour and eloquence that all
+ present were astonished, and the preacher sat mute a half-hour long at the
+ bed-side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Had there been ten clergymen," said the simple-hearted sentry to the
+ valet, "your master would have enough to say to all of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld asked where the place had been prepared in which he was to die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In front of the great hall, as I understand," said Bayerus, "but I don't
+ know the localities well, having lived here but little."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you heard whether my Grotius is to die, and Hoogerbeets also?" he
+ asked?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have heard nothing to that effect," replied the clergyman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should most deeply grieve for those two gentlemen," said Barneveld,
+ "were that the case. They may yet live to do the land great service. That
+ great rising light, de Groot, is still young, but a very wise and learned
+ gentleman, devoted to his Fatherland with all zeal, heart, and soul, and
+ ready to stand up for her privileges, laws, and rights. As for me, I am an
+ old and worn-out man. I can do no more. I have already done more than I
+ was really able to do. I have worked so zealously in public matters that I
+ have neglected my private business. I had expressly ordered my house at
+ Loosduinen" [a villa by the seaside] "to be got ready, that I might
+ establish myself there and put my affairs in order. I have repeatedly
+ asked the States of Holland for my discharge, but could never obtain it.
+ It seems that the Almighty had otherwise disposed of me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then said he would try once more if he could sleep. The clergyman and
+ the servant withdrew for an hour, but his attempt was unsuccessful. After
+ an hour he called for his French Psalm Book and read in it for some time.
+ Sometime after two o'clock the clergymen came in again and conversed with
+ him. They asked him if he had slept, if he hoped to meet Christ, and if
+ there was anything that troubled his conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have not slept, but am perfectly tranquil," he replied. "I am ready to
+ die, but cannot comprehend why I must die. I wish from my heart that,
+ through my death and my blood, all disunion and discord in this land may
+ cease."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bade them carry his last greetings to his fellow prisoners. "Say
+ farewell for me to my good Grotius," said he, "and tell him that I must
+ die."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clergymen then left him, intending to return between five and six
+ o'clock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He remained quiet for a little while and then ordered his valet to cut
+ open the front of his shirt. When this was done, he said, "John, are you
+ to stay by me to the last?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," he replied, "if the judges permit it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Remind me to send one of the clergymen to the judges with the request,"
+ said his master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The faithful John, than whom no servant or friend could be more devoted,
+ seized the occasion, with the thrift and stoicism of a true Hollander, to
+ suggest that his lord might at the same time make some testamentary
+ disposition in his favour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell my wife and children," said the Advocate, "that they must console
+ each other in mutual love and union. Say that through God's grace I am
+ perfectly at ease, and hope that they will be equally tranquil. Tell my
+ children that I trust they will be loving and friendly to their mother
+ during the short time she has yet to live. Say that I wish to recommend
+ you to them that they may help you to a good situation either with
+ themselves or with others. Tell them that this was my last request."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bade him further to communicate to the family the messages sent that
+ night through Walaeus by the Stadholder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The valet begged his master to repeat these instructions in presence of
+ the clergyman, or to request one of them to convey them himself to the
+ family. He promised to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As long as I live," said the grateful servant, "I shall remember your
+ lordship in my prayers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, John," said the Advocate, "that is Popish. When I am dead, it is all
+ over with prayers. Pray for me while I still live. Now is the time to
+ pray. When one is dead, one should no longer be prayed for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ La Motte came in. Barneveld repeated his last wishes exactly as he desired
+ them to be communicated to his wife and children. The preacher made no
+ response. "Will you take the message?" asked the prisoner. La Motte
+ nodded, but did not speak, nor did he subsequently fulfil the request.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before five o'clock the servant heard the bell ring in the apartment of
+ the judges directly below the prison chamber, and told his master he had
+ understood that they were to assemble at five o'clock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I may as well get up then," said the Advocate; "they mean to begin early,
+ I suppose. Give me my doublet and but one pair of stockings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was accustomed to wear two or three pair at a time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took off his underwaistcoat, saying that the silver bog which was in
+ one of the pockets was to be taken to his wife, and that the servant
+ should keep the loose money there for himself. Then he found an
+ opportunity to whisper to him, "Take good care of the papers which are in
+ the apartment." He meant the elaborate writings which he had prepared
+ during his imprisonment and concealed in the tapestry and within the
+ linings of the chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As his valet handed him the combs and brushes, he said with a smile,
+ "John, this is for the last time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he was dressed, he tried, in rehearsal of the approaching scene, to
+ pull over his eyes the silk skull-cap which he usually wore under his hat.
+ Finding it too tight he told the valet to put the nightcap in his pocket
+ and give it him when he should call for it. He then swallowed a half-glass
+ of wine with a strengthening cordial in it, which he was wont to take.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clergymen then re-entered, and asked if he had been able to sleep. He
+ answered no, but that he had been much consoled by many noble things which
+ he had been reading in the French Psalm Book. The clergymen said that they
+ had been thinking much of the beautiful confession of faith which he had
+ made to them that evening. They rejoiced at it, they said, on his account,
+ and had never thought it of him. He said that such had always been his
+ creed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At his request Walaeus now offered a morning prayer Barneveld fell on his
+ knees and prayed inwardly without uttering a sound. La Motte asked when he
+ had concluded, "Did my Lord say Amen?"&mdash;"Yes, Lamotius," he replied;
+ "Amen."&mdash;"Has either of the brethren," he added, "prepared a prayer
+ to be offered outside there?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ La Motte informed him that this duty had been confided to him. Some
+ passages from Isaiah were now read aloud, and soon afterwards Walaeus was
+ sent for to speak with the judges. He came back and said to the prisoner,
+ "Has my Lord any desire to speak with his wife or children, or any of his
+ friends?" It was then six o'clock, and Barneveld replied:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, the time is drawing near. It would excite a new emotion." Walaeus
+ went back to the judges with this answer, who thereupon made this official
+ report:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The husband and father of the petitioners, being asked if he desired that
+ any of the petitioners should come to him, declared that he did not
+ approve of it, saying that it would cause too great an emotion for himself
+ as well as for them. This is to serve as an answer to the petitioners."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the Advocate knew nothing of the petition. Up to the last moment his
+ family had been sanguine as to his ultimate acquittal and release. They
+ relied on a promise which they had received or imagined that they had
+ received from the Stadholder that no harm should come to the prisoner in
+ consequence of the arrest made of his person in the Prince's apartments on
+ the 8th of August. They had opened this tragical month of May with
+ flagstaffs and flower garlands, and were making daily preparations to
+ receive back the revered statesman in triumph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter written by him from his "chamber of sorrow," late in the
+ evening of 12th May, had at last dispelled every illusion. It would be
+ idle to attempt to paint the grief and consternation into which the
+ household in the Voorhout was plunged, from the venerable dame at its
+ head, surrounded by her sons and daughters and children's children, down
+ to the humblest servant in their employment. For all revered and loved the
+ austere statesman, but simple and benignant father and master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No heed had been taken of the three elaborate and argumentative petitions
+ which, prepared by learned counsel in name of the relatives, had been
+ addressed to the judges. They had not been answered because they were
+ difficult to answer, and because it was not intended that the accused
+ should have the benefit of counsel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An urgent and last appeal was now written late at night, and signed by
+ each member of the family, to his Excellency the Prince and the judge
+ commissioners, to this effect:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The afflicted wife and children of M. van Barneveld humbly show that
+ having heard the sorrowful tidings of his coming execution, they humbly
+ beg that it may be granted them to see and speak to him for the last
+ time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two sons delivered this petition at four o'clock in the morning into
+ the hands of de Voogd, one of the judges. It was duly laid before the
+ commission, but the prisoner was never informed, when declining a last
+ interview with his family, how urgently they had themselves solicited the
+ boon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louise de Coligny, on hearing late at night the awful news, had been
+ struck with grief and horror. She endeavoured, late as it was, to do
+ something to avert the doom of one she so much revered, the man on whom
+ her illustrious husband had leaned his life long as on a staff of iron.
+ She besought an interview of the Stadholder, but it was refused. The wife
+ of William the Silent had no influence at that dire moment with her
+ stepson. She was informed at first that Maurice was asleep, and at four in
+ the morning that all intervention was useless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The faithful and energetic du Maurier, who had already exhausted himself
+ in efforts to save the life of the great prisoner, now made a last appeal.
+ He, too, heard at four o'clock in the morning of the 13th that sentence of
+ death was to be pronounced. Before five o'clock he made urgent application
+ to be heard before the Assembly of the States-General as ambassador of a
+ friendly sovereign who took the deepest interest in the welfare of the
+ Republic and the fate of its illustrious statesman. The appeal was
+ refused. As a last resource he drew up an earnest and eloquent letter to
+ the States-General, urging clemency in the name of his king. It was of no
+ avail. The letter may still be seen in the Royal Archives at the Hague,
+ drawn up entirely in du Maurier's clear and beautiful handwriting.
+ Although possibly a first draft, written as it was under such a mortal
+ pressure for time, its pages have not one erasure or correction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was seven o'clock. Barneveld having observed by the preacher (La
+ Motte's) manner that he was not likely to convey the last messages which
+ he had mentioned to his wife and children, sent a request to the judges to
+ be allowed to write one more letter. Captain van der Meulen came back with
+ the permission, saying he would wait and take it to the judges for their
+ revision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter has been often published.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Must they see this too? Why, it is only a line in favour of John," said
+ the prisoner, sitting quietly down to write this letter:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very dear wife and children, it is going to an end with me. I am, through
+ the grace of God, very tranquil. I hope that you are equally so, and that
+ you may by mutual love, union, and peace help each other to overcome all
+ things, which I pray to the Omnipotent as my last request. John Franken
+ has served me faithfully for many years and throughout all these my
+ afflictions, and is to remain with me to the end. He deserves to be
+ recommended to you and to be furthered to good employments with you or
+ with others. I request you herewith to see to this.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+"I have requested his Princely Excellency to hold my sons and children in
+his favour, to which he has answered that so long as you conduct
+yourselves well this shall be the case. I recommend this to you in the
+best form and give you all into God's holy keeping. Kiss each other and
+all my grandchildren, for the last time in my name, and fare you well.
+Out of the chamber of sorrow, 13th May 1619. Your dear husband and
+father,
+ JOHN OF BARNEVELD.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "P.S. You will make John Franken a present in memory of me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly it would be difficult to find a more truly calm, courageous, or
+ religious spirit than that manifested by this aged statesman at an hour
+ when, if ever, a human soul is tried and is apt to reveal its innermost
+ depths or shallows. Whatever Gomarus or Bogerman, or the whole Council of
+ Dordtrecht, may have thought of his theology, it had at least taught him
+ forgiveness of his enemies, kindness to his friends, and submission to the
+ will of the Omnipotent. Every moment of his last days on earth had been
+ watched and jealously scrutinized, and his bitterest enemies had failed to
+ discover one trace of frailty, one manifestation of any vacillating,
+ ignoble, or malignant sentiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The drums had been sounding through the quiet but anxiously expectant town
+ since four o'clock that morning, and the tramp of soldiers marching to the
+ Inner Court had long been audible in the prison chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walaeus now came back with a message from the judges. "The high
+ commissioners," he said, "think it is beginning. Will my Lord please to
+ prepare himself?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well, very well," said the prisoner. "Shall we go at once?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Walaeus suggested a prayer. Upon its conclusion, Barneveld gave his
+ hand to the provost-marshal and to the two soldiers, bidding them adieu,
+ and walked downstairs, attended by them, to the chamber of the judges. As
+ soon as he appeared at the door, he was informed that there had been a
+ misunderstanding, and he was requested to wait a little. He accordingly
+ went upstairs again with perfect calmness, sat down in his chamber again,
+ and read in his French Psalm Book. Half an hour later he was once more
+ summoned, the provost-marshal and Captain van der Meulen reappearing to
+ escort him. "Mr. Provost," said the prisoner, as they went down the narrow
+ staircase, "I have always been a good friend to you."&mdash;"It is true,"
+ replied that officer, "and most deeply do I grieve to see you in this
+ affliction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was about to enter the judges' chamber as usual, but was informed that
+ the sentence would be read in the great hall of judicature. They descended
+ accordingly to the basement story, and passed down the narrow flight of
+ steps which then as now connected the more modern structure, where the
+ Advocate had been imprisoned and tried, with what remained of the ancient
+ palace of the Counts of Holland. In the centre of the vast hall&mdash;once
+ the banqueting chamber of those petty sovereigns; with its high vaulted
+ roof of cedar which had so often in ancient days rung with the sounds of
+ mirth and revelry&mdash;was a great table at which the twenty-four judges
+ and the three prosecuting officers were seated, in their black caps and
+ gowns of office. The room was lined with soldiers and crowded with a dark,
+ surging mass of spectators, who had been waiting there all night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A chair was placed for the prisoner. He sat down, and the clerk of the
+ commission, Pots by name, proceeded at once to read the sentence. A
+ summary of this long, rambling, and tiresome paper has been already laid
+ before the reader. If ever a man could have found it tedious to listen to
+ his own death sentence, the great statesman might have been in that
+ condition as he listened to Secretary Pots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the reading of the sentence the Advocate moved uneasily on his
+ seat, and seemed about to interrupt the clerk at several passages which
+ seemed to him especially preposterous. But he controlled himself by a
+ strong effort, and the clerk went steadily on to the conclusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Barneveld said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The judges have put down many things which they have no right to draw
+ from my confession. Let this protest be added."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought too," he continued, "that My Lords the States-General would
+ have had enough in my life and blood, and that my wife and children might
+ keep what belongs to them. Is this my recompense for forty-three years'
+ service to these Provinces?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ President de Voogd rose:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your sentence has been pronounced," he said. "Away! away!" So saying he
+ pointed to the door into which one of the great windows at the
+ south-eastern front of the hall had been converted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without another word the old man rose from his chair and strode, leaning
+ on his staff, across the hall, accompanied by his faithful valet and the
+ provost and escorted by a file of soldiers. The mob of spectators flowed
+ out after him at every door into the inner courtyard in front of the
+ ancient palace.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Better to be governed by magistrates than mobs
+ Burning with bitter revenge for all the favours he had received
+ Death rather than life with a false acknowledgment of guilt
+ Enemy of all compulsion of the human conscience
+ Heidelberg Catechism were declared to be infallible
+ I know how to console myself
+ Implication there was much, of assertion very little
+ John Robinson
+ Magistracy at that moment seemed to mean the sword
+ Only true religion
+ Rather a wilderness to reign over than a single heretic
+ William Brewster
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI. 1619-23
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Barneveld's Execution&mdash;The Advocate's Conduct on the Scaffold&mdash;The
+ Sentence printed and sent to the Provinces&mdash;The Proceedings
+ irregular and inequitable.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the beautiful village capital of the "Count's Park," commonly called
+ the Hague, the most striking and picturesque spot then as now was that
+ where the transformed remains of the old moated castle of those feudal
+ sovereigns were still to be seen. A three-storied range of simple,
+ substantial buildings in brown brickwork, picked out with white stone in a
+ style since made familiar both in England and America, and associated with
+ a somewhat later epoch in the history of the House of Orange, surrounded
+ three sides of a spacious inner paved quadrangle called the Inner Court,
+ the fourth or eastern side being overshadowed by a beechen grove. A square
+ tower flanked each angle, and on both sides of the south-western turret
+ extended the commodious apartments of the Stadholder. The great gateway on
+ the south-west opened into a wide open space called the Outer Courtyard.
+ Along the north-west side a broad and beautiful sheet of water, in which
+ the walls, turrets, and chapel-spires of the enclosed castle mirrored
+ themselves, was spread between the mass of buildings and an umbrageous
+ promenade called the Vyverberg, consisting of a sextuple alley of
+ lime-trees and embowering here and there a stately villa. A small island,
+ fringed with weeping willows and tufted all over with lilacs, laburnums,
+ and other shrubs then in full flower, lay in the centre of the miniature
+ lake, and the tall solid tower of the Great Church, surmounted by a light
+ openwork spire, looked down from a little distance over the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a bright morning in May. The white swans were sailing tranquilly to
+ and fro over the silver basin, and the mavis, blackbird, and nightingale,
+ which haunted the groves surrounding the castle and the town, were singing
+ as if the daybreak were ushering in a summer festival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not to a merry-making that the soldiers were marching and the
+ citizens thronging so eagerly from every street and alley towards the
+ castle. By four o'clock the Outer and Inner Courts had been lined with
+ detachments of the Prince's guard and companies of other regiments to the
+ number of 1200 men. Occupying the north-eastern side of the court rose the
+ grim, time-worn front of the ancient hall, consisting of one tall
+ pyramidal gable of ancient grey brickwork flanked with two tall slender
+ towers, the whole with the lancet-shaped windows and severe style of the
+ twelfth century, excepting a rose-window in the centre with the decorated
+ mullions of a somewhat later period.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In front of the lower window, with its Gothic archway hastily converted
+ into a door, a shapeless platform of rough, unhewn planks had that night
+ been rudely patched together. This was the scaffold. A slight railing
+ around it served to protect it from the crowd, and a heap of coarse sand
+ had been thrown upon it. A squalid, unclean box of unplaned boards,
+ originally prepared as a coffin for a Frenchman who some time before had
+ been condemned to death for murdering the son of Goswyn Meurskens, a Hague
+ tavern-keeper, but pardoned by the Stadholder&mdash;lay on the scaffold.
+ It was recognized from having been left for a long time, half forgotten,
+ at the public execution-place of the Hague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this coffin now sat two common soldiers of ruffianly aspect playing
+ at dice, betting whether the Lord or the Devil would get the soul of
+ Barneveld. Many a foul and ribald jest at the expense of the prisoner was
+ exchanged between these gamblers, some of their comrades, and a few
+ townsmen, who were grouped about at that early hour. The horrible libels,
+ caricatures, and calumnies which had been circulated, exhibited, and sung
+ in all the streets for so many months had at last thoroughly poisoned the
+ minds of the vulgar against the fallen statesman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great mass of the spectators had forced their way by daybreak into the
+ hall itself to hear the sentence, so that the Inner Courtyard had remained
+ comparatively empty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, at half past nine o'clock, a shout arose, "There he comes! there
+ he comes!" and the populace flowed out from the hall of judgment into the
+ courtyard like a tidal wave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In an instant the Binnenhof was filled with more than three thousand
+ spectators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old statesman, leaning on his staff, walked out upon the scaffold and
+ calmly surveyed the scene. Lifting his eyes to Heaven, he was heard to
+ murmur, "O God! what does man come to!" Then he said bitterly once more:
+ "This, then, is the reward of forty years' service to the State!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ La Motte, who attended him, said fervently: "It is no longer time to think
+ of this. Let us prepare your coming before God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is there no cushion or stool to kneel upon?" said Barneveld, looking
+ around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The provost said he would send for one, but the old man knelt at once on
+ the bare planks. His servant, who waited upon him as calmly and composedly
+ as if he had been serving him at dinner, held him by the arm. It was
+ remarked that neither master nor man, true stoics and Hollanders both,
+ shed a single tear upon the scaffold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ La Motte prayed for a quarter of an hour, the Advocate remaining on his
+ knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then rose and said to John Franken, "See that he does not come near
+ me," pointing to the executioner who stood in the background grasping his
+ long double-handed sword. Barneveld then rapidly unbuttoned his doublet
+ with his own hands and the valet helped him off with it. "Make haste! make
+ haste!" said his master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The statesman then came forward and said in a loud, firm voice to the
+ people:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Men, do not believe that I am a traitor to the country. I have ever acted
+ uprightly and loyally as a good patriot, and as such I shall die."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crowd was perfectly silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then took his cap from John Franken, drew it over his eyes, and went
+ forward towards the sand, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Christ shall be my guide. O Lord, my heavenly Father, receive my spirit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he was about to kneel with his face to the south, the provost said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My lord will be pleased to move to the other side, not where the sun is
+ in his face."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knelt accordingly with his face towards his own house. The servant took
+ farewell of him, and Barneveld said to the executioner:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be quick about it. Be quick."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The executioner then struck his head off at a single blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many persons from the crowd now sprang, in spite of all opposition, upon
+ the scaffold and dipped their handkerchiefs in his blood, cut wet
+ splinters from the boards, or grubbed up the sand that was steeped in it;
+ driving many bargains afterwards for these relics to be treasured, with
+ various feelings of sorrow, joy, glutted or expiated vengeance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been recorded, and has been constantly repeated to this day, that
+ the Stadholder, whose windows exactly faced the scaffold, looked out upon
+ the execution with a spy-glass; saying as he did so:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "See the old scoundrel, how he trembles! He is afraid of the stroke."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this is calumny. Colonel Hauterive declared that he was with Maurice
+ in his cabinet during the whole period of the execution, that by order of
+ the Prince all the windows and shutters were kept closed, that no person
+ wearing his livery was allowed to be abroad, that he anxiously received
+ messages as to the proceedings, and heard of the final catastrophe with
+ sorrowful emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be admitted, however, that the letter which Maurice wrote on the
+ same morning to his cousin William Lewis does not show much pathos.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After the judges," he said, "have been busy here with the sentence
+ against the Advocate Barneveld for several days, at last it has been
+ pronounced, and this morning, between nine o'clock and half past, carried
+ into execution with the sword, in the Binnenhof before the great hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The reasons they had for this you will see from the sentence, which will
+ doubtless be printed, and which I will send you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The wife of the aforesaid Barneveld and also some of his sons and
+ sons-in-law or other friends have never presented any supplication for his
+ pardon, but till now have vehemently demanded that law and justice should
+ be done to him, and have daily let the report run through the people that
+ he would soon come out. They also planted a may-pole before their house
+ adorned with garlands and ribbands, and practised other jollities and
+ impertinences, while they ought to have conducted themselves in a humble
+ and lowly fashion. This is no proper manner of behaving, and moreover not
+ a practical one to move the judges to any favour even if they had been
+ thereto inclined."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sentence was printed and sent to the separate provinces. It was
+ accompanied by a declaration of the States-General that they had received
+ information from the judges of various points, not mentioned in the
+ sentence, which had been laid to the charge of the late Advocate, and
+ which gave much reason to doubt whether he had not perhaps turned his eyes
+ toward the enemy. They could not however legally give judgment to that
+ effect without a sharper investigation, which on account of his great age
+ and for other reasons it was thought best to spare him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A meaner or more malignant postscript to a state paper recounting the
+ issue of a great trial it would be difficult to imagine. The first
+ statesman of the country had just been condemned and executed on a
+ narrative, without indictment of any specified crime. And now, by a kind
+ of apologetic after-thought, six or eight individuals calling themselves
+ the States-General insinuated that he had been looking towards the enemy,
+ and that, had they not mercifully spared him the rack, which is all that
+ could be meant by their sharper investigation, he would probably have
+ confessed the charge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus the dead man's fame was blackened by those who had not hesitated
+ to kill him, but had shrunk from enquiring into his alleged crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not entirely without semblance of truth did Grotius subsequently say that
+ the men who had taken his life would hardly have abstained from torturing
+ him if they had really hoped by so doing to extract from him a confession
+ of treason.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sentence was sent likewise to France, accompanied with a statement
+ that Barneveld had been guilty of unpardonable crimes which had not been
+ set down in the act of condemnation. Complaints were also made of the
+ conduct of du Maurier in thrusting himself into the internal affairs of
+ the States and taking sides so ostentatiously against the government. The
+ King and his ministers were indignant with these rebukes, and sustained
+ the Ambassador. Jeannin and de Boississe expressed the opinion that he had
+ died innocent of any crime, and only by reason of his strong political
+ opposition to the Prince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The judges had been unanimous in finding him guilty of the acts recorded
+ in their narrative, but three of them had held out for some time in favour
+ of a sentence of perpetual imprisonment rather than decapitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They withdrew at last their opposition to the death penalty for the
+ wonderful reason that reports had been circulated of attempts likely to be
+ made to assassinate Prince Maurice. The Stadholder himself treated these
+ rumours and the consequent admonition of the States-General that he would
+ take more than usual precautions for his safety with perfect indifference,
+ but they were conclusive with the judges of Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Republica poscit exemplum," said Commissioner Junius, one of the three,
+ as he sided with the death-warrant party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same Doctor Junius a year afterwards happened to dine, in company of
+ one of his fellow-commissioners, with Attorney-General Sylla at Utrecht,
+ and took occasion to ask them why it was supposed that Barneveld had been
+ hanging his head towards Spain, as not one word of that stood in the
+ sentence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question was ingenuous on the part of one learned judge to his
+ colleagues in one of the most famous state trials of history, propounded
+ as a bit of after-dinner casuistry, when the victim had been more than a
+ year in his grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But perhaps the answer was still more artless. His brother lawyers replied
+ that the charge was easily to be deduced from the sentence, because a man
+ who breaks up the foundation of the State makes the country indefensible,
+ and therefore invites the enemy to invade it. And this Barneveld had done,
+ who had turned the Union, religion, alliances, and finances upside down by
+ his proceedings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly if every constitutional minister, accused by the opposition
+ party of turning things upside down by his proceedings, were assumed to be
+ guilty of deliberately inviting a hostile invasion of his country, there
+ would have been few from that day to this to escape hanging.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Constructive treason could scarcely go farther than it was made to do in
+ these attempts to prove, after his death, that the Advocate had, as it was
+ euphuistically expressed, been looking towards the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And no better demonstrations than these have ever been discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He died at the age of seventy-one years seven months and eighteen days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His body and head were huddled into the box upon which the soldiers had
+ been shaking the dice, and was placed that night in the vault of the
+ chapel in the Inner Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was subsequently granted as a boon to the widow and children that it
+ might be taken thence and decently buried in the family vault at
+ Amersfoort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the day of the execution a formal entry was made in the register of the
+ States of Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Monday, 13th May 1619. To-day was executed with the sword here in the
+ Hague, on a scaffold thereto erected in the Binnenhof before the steps of
+ the great hall, Mr. John of Barneveld, in his life Knight, Lord of Berkel,
+ Rodenrys, &amp;c., Advocate of Holland and West Friesland, for reasons
+ expressed in the sentence and otherwise, with confiscation of his
+ property, after he had served the State thirty-three years two months and
+ five days since 8th March 1586.; a man of great activity, business,
+ memory, and wisdom&mdash;yes, extraordinary in every respect. He that
+ stands let him see that he does not fall, and may God be merciful to his
+ soul. Amen?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A year later-on application made by the widow and children of the deceased
+ to compound for the confiscation of his property by payment of a certain
+ sum, eighty florins or a similar trifle, according to an ancient privilege
+ of the order of nobility&mdash;the question was raised whether he had been
+ guilty of high-treason, as he had not been sentenced for such a crime, and
+ as it was only in case of sentence for lese-majesty that this composition
+ was disallowed. It was deemed proper therefore to ask the court for what
+ crime the prisoner had been condemned. Certainly a more sarcastic question
+ could not have been asked. But the court had ceased to exist. The
+ commission had done its work and was dissolved. Some of its members were
+ dead. Letters however were addressed by the States-General to the
+ individual commissioners requesting them to assemble at the Hague for the
+ purpose of stating whether it was because the prisoners had committed
+ lese-majesty that their property had been confiscated. They never
+ assembled. Some of them were perhaps ignorant of the exact nature of that
+ crime. Several of them did not understand the words. Twelve of them, among
+ whom were a few jurists, sent written answers to the questions proposed.
+ The question was, "Did you confiscate the property because the crime was
+ lese-majesty?" The reply was, "The crime was lese-majesty, although not so
+ stated in the sentence, because we confiscated the property." In one of
+ these remarkable documents this was stated to be "the unanimous opinion of
+ almost all the judges."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The point was referred to the commissioners, some of whom attended the
+ court of the Hague in person, while others sent written opinions. All
+ agreed that the criminal had committed high-treason because otherwise his
+ property would not have been confiscated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A more wonderful example of the argument in a circle was never heard of.
+ Moreover it is difficult to understand by what right the high commission,
+ which had been dissolved a year before, after having completed its work,
+ could be deemed competent to emit afterwards a judicial decision. But the
+ fact is curious as giving one more proof of the irregular,
+ unphilosophical, and inequitable nature of these famous proceedings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Grotius urged to ask Forgiveness&mdash;Grotius shows great Weakness&mdash;
+ Hoogerbeets and Grotius imprisoned for Life&mdash;Grotius confined at
+ Loevestein&mdash;Grotius' early Attainments&mdash;Grotius' Deportment in
+ Prison&mdash;Escape of Grotius&mdash;Deventer's Rage at Grotius' Escape.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Two days after the execution of the Advocate, judgment was pronounced upon
+ Gillis van Ledenberg. It would have been difficult to try him, or to
+ extort a confession of high-treason from him by the rack or otherwise, as
+ the unfortunate gentleman had been dead for more than seven months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not often has a court of justice pronounced a man, without trial, to be
+ guilty of a capital offence. Not often has a dead man been condemned and
+ executed. But this was the lot of Secretary Ledenberg. He was sentenced to
+ be hanged, his property declared confiscated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His unburied corpse, reduced to the condition of a mummy, was brought out
+ of its lurking-place, thrust into a coffin, dragged on a hurdle to the
+ Golgotha outside the Hague, on the road to Ryswyk, and there hung on a
+ gibbet in company of the bodies of other malefactors swinging there in
+ chains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His prudent scheme to save his property for his children by committing
+ suicide in prison was thus thwarted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reading of the sentence of Ledenberg, as had been previously the case
+ with that of Barneveld, had been heard by Grotius through the open window
+ of his prison, as he lay on his bed. The scaffold on which the Advocate
+ had suffered was left standing, three executioners were still in the town,
+ and there was every reason for both Grotius and Hoogerbeets to expect a
+ similar doom. Great efforts were made to induce the friends of the
+ distinguished prisoners to sue for their pardon. But even as in the case
+ of the Barneveld family these attempts were fruitless. The austere
+ stoicism both on the part of the sufferers and their relatives excites
+ something like wonder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three of the judges went in person to the prison chamber of Hoogerbeets,
+ urging him to ask forgiveness himself or to allow his friends to demand it
+ for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If my wife and children do ask," he said, "I will protest against it. I
+ need no pardon. Let justice take its course. Think not, gentlemen, that I
+ mean by asking for pardon to justify your proceedings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stoutly refused to do either. The judges, astonished, took their
+ departure, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you will fare as Barneveld. The scaffold is still standing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He expected consequently nothing but death, and said many years afterwards
+ that he knew from personal experience how a man feels who goes out of
+ prison to be beheaded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wife of Grotius sternly replied to urgent intimations from a high
+ source that she should ask pardon for her husband, "I shall not do it. If
+ he has deserved it, let them strike off his head."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet no woman could be more devoted to her husband than was Maria van
+ Reigersbergen to Hugo de Groot, as time was to prove. The Prince
+ subsequently told her at a personal interview that "one of two roads must
+ be taken, that of the law or that of pardon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the arrest it was rumoured that Grotius was ready to make
+ important revelations if he could first be assured of the Prince's
+ protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His friends were indignant at the statement. His wife stoutly denied its
+ truth, but, to make sure, wrote to her husband on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One thing amazes me," she said; "some people here pretend to say that you
+ have stated to one gentleman in private that you have something to
+ disclose greatly important to the country, but that you desired beforehand
+ to be taken under the protection of his Excellency. I have not chosen to
+ believe this, nor do I, for I hold that to be certain which you have
+ already told me&mdash;that you know no secrets. I see no reason therefore
+ why you should require the protection of any man. And there is no one to
+ believe this, but I thought best to write to you of it. Let me, in order
+ that I may contradict the story with more authority, have by the bearer of
+ this a simple Yes or No. Study quietly, take care of your health, have
+ some days' patience, for the Advocate has not yet been heard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The answer has not been preserved, but there is an allusion to the subject
+ in an unpublished memorandum of Grotius written while he was in prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be confessed that the heart of the great theologian and jurist
+ seems to have somewhat failed him after his arrest, and although he was
+ incapable of treachery&mdash;even if he had been possessed of any secrets,
+ which certainly was not the case&mdash;he did not show the same Spartan
+ firmness as his wife, and was very far from possessing the heroic calm of
+ Barneveld. He was much disposed to extricate himself from his unhappy
+ plight by making humble, if not abject, submission to Maurice. He differed
+ from his wife in thinking that he had no need of the Prince's protection.
+ "I begged the Chamberlain, Matthew de Cors," he said, a few days after his
+ arrest, "that I might be allowed to speak with his Excellency of certain
+ things which I would not willingly trust to the pen. My meaning was to
+ leave all public employment and to offer my service to his Excellency in
+ his domestic affairs. Thus I hoped that the motives for my imprisonment
+ would cease. This was afterwards misinterpreted as if I had had wonderful
+ things to reveal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Grotius towards the end of his trial showed still greater weakness.
+ After repeated refusals, he had at last obtained permission of the judges
+ to draw up in writing the heads of his defence. To do this he was allowed
+ a single sheet of paper, and four hours of time, the trial having lasted
+ several months. And in the document thus prepared he showed faltering in
+ his faith as to his great friend's innocence, and admitted, without any
+ reason whatever, the possibility of there being truth in some of the vile
+ and anonymous calumnies against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The friendship of the Advocate of Holland I had always highly prized," he
+ said, "hoping from the conversation of so wise and experienced a person to
+ learn much that was good . . . . I firmly believed that his Excellency,
+ notwithstanding occasional differences as to the conduct of public
+ affairs, considered him a true and upright servant of the land . . . . I
+ have been therefore surprised to understand, during my imprisonment, that
+ the gentlemen had proofs in hand not alone of his correspondence with the
+ enemy, but also of his having received money from them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He being thus accused, I have indicated by word of mouth and afterwards
+ resumed in writing all matters which I thought&mdash;the above-mentioned
+ proofs being made good&mdash;might be thereto indirectly referred, in
+ order to show that for me no friendships were so dear as the preservation
+ of the freedom of the land. I wish that he may give explanation of all to
+ the contentment of the judges, and that therefore his actions&mdash;which,
+ supposing the said correspondence to be true, are subject to a bad
+ interpretation&mdash;may be taken in another sense."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas! could the Advocate&mdash;among whose first words after hearing of
+ his own condemnation to death were, "And must my Grotius die too?" adding,
+ with a sigh of relief when assured of the contrary, "I should deeply
+ grieve for that; he is so young and may live to do the State much
+ service." could he have read those faltering and ungenerous words from one
+ he so held in his heart, he would have felt them like the stab of Brutus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grotius lived to know that there were no such proofs, that the judges did
+ not dare even allude to the charge in their sentence, and long years
+ afterwards he drew a picture of the martyred patriot such as one might
+ have expected from his pen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But these written words of doubt must have haunted him to his grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 18th May 1619&mdash;on the fifty-first anniversary, as Grotius
+ remarked, of the condemnation of Egmont and Hoorn by the Blood Tribunal of
+ Alva&mdash;the two remaining victims were summoned to receive their doom.
+ The Fiscal Sylla, entering de Groot's chamber early in the morning to
+ conduct him before the judges, informed him that he was not instructed to
+ communicate the nature of the sentence. "But," he said, maliciously, "you
+ are aware of what has befallen the Advocate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have heard with my own ears," answered Grotius, "the judgment
+ pronounced upon Barneveld and upon Ledenberg. Whatever may be my fate, I
+ have patience to bear it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sentence, read in the same place and in the same manner as had been
+ that upon the Advocate, condemned both Hoogerbeets and Grotius to
+ perpetual imprisonment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The course of the trial and the enumeration of the offences were nearly
+ identical with the leading process which has been elaborately described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grotius made no remark whatever in the court-room. On returning to his
+ chamber he observed that his admissions of facts had been tortured into
+ confessions of guilt, that he had been tried and sentenced against all
+ principles and forms of law, and that he had been deprived of what the
+ humblest criminal could claim, the right of defence and the examination of
+ testimony. In regard to the penalty against him, he said, there was no
+ such thing as perpetual imprisonment except in hell. Alluding to the
+ leading cause of all these troubles, he observed that it was with the
+ Stadholder and the Advocate as Cato had said of Caesar and Pompey. The
+ great misery had come not from their being enemies, but from their having
+ once been friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the night of 5th June the prisoners were taken from their prison in the
+ Hague and conveyed to the castle of Loevestein.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This fortress, destined thenceforth to be famous in history and&mdash;from
+ its frequent use in after-times as a state-prison for men of similar
+ constitutional views to those of Grotius and the Advocate&mdash;to give
+ its name to a political party, was a place of extraordinary strength.
+ Nature and art had made it, according to military ideas of that age,
+ almost impregnable. As a prison it seemed the very castle of despair.
+ "Abandon all hope ye who enter" seemed engraven over its portal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Situate in the very narrow, acute angle where the broad, deep, and turbid
+ Waal&mdash;the chief of the three branches into which the Rhine divides
+ itself on entering the Netherlands&mdash;mingles its current with the
+ silver Meuse whose name it adopts as the united rivers roll to the sea, it
+ was guarded on many sides by these deep and dangerous streams. On the
+ land-side it was surrounded by high walls and a double foss, which
+ protected it against any hostile invasion from Brabant. As the Twelve
+ Years' Truce was running to its close, it was certain that pains would be
+ taken to strengthen the walls and deepen the ditches, that the place might
+ be proof against all marauders and land-robbers likely to swarm over from
+ the territory of the Archdukes. The town of Gorcum was exactly opposite on
+ the northern side of the Waal, while Worcum was about a league's distance
+ from the castle on the southern side, but separated from it by the Meuse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prisoners, after crossing the drawbridge, were led through thirteen
+ separate doors, each one secured by iron bolts and heavy locks, until they
+ reached their separate apartments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were never to see or have any communication with each other. It had
+ been accorded by the States-General however that the wives of the two
+ gentlemen were to have access to their prison, were to cook for them in
+ the castle kitchen, and, if they chose to inhabit the fortress, might
+ cross to the neighbouring town of Gorcum from time to time to make
+ purchases, and even make visits to the Hague. Twenty-four stuivers, or two
+ shillings, a day were allowed by the States-General for the support of
+ each prisoner and his family. As the family property of Grotius was at
+ once sequestered, with a view to its ultimate confiscation, it was clear
+ that abject indigence as well as imprisonment was to be the lifelong lot
+ of this illustrious person, who had hitherto lived in modest affluence,
+ occupying the most considerable of social positions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commandant of the fortress was inspired from the outset with a desire
+ to render the prisoner's situation as hateful as it was in his power to
+ make it. And much was in his power. He resolved that the family should
+ really live upon their daily pittance. Yet Madame de Groot, before the
+ final confiscation of her own and her husband's estates, had been able to
+ effect considerable loans, both to carry on process against government for
+ what the prisoners contended was an unjust confiscation, and for providing
+ for the household on a decent scale and somewhat in accordance with the
+ requirements of the prisoner's health. Thus there was a wearisome and
+ ignoble altercation, revived from day to day, between the Commandant and
+ Madame de Groot. It might have been thought enough of torture for this
+ virtuous and accomplished lady, but twenty-nine years of age and belonging
+ to one of the eminent families of the country, to see her husband, for his
+ genius and accomplishments the wonder of Europe, thus cut off in the
+ flower of his age and doomed to a living grave. She was nevertheless to be
+ subjected to the perpetual inquisition of the market-basket, which she was
+ not ashamed with her maid to take to and from Gorcum, and to petty
+ wrangles about the kitchen fire where she was proud to superintend the
+ cooking of the scanty fare for her husband and her five children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a reason for the spite of the military jailer. Lieutenant
+ Prouninx, called Deventer, commandant of Loevestein, was son of the
+ notorious Gerard Prouninx, formerly burgomaster of Utrecht, one of the
+ ringleaders of the Leicester faction in the days when the Earl made his
+ famous attempts upon the four cities. He had sworn revenge upon all those
+ concerned in his father's downfall, and it was a delight therefore to
+ wreak a personal vengeance on one who had since become so illustrious a
+ member of that party by which the former burgomaster had been deposed,
+ although Grotius at the time of Leicester's government had scarcely left
+ his cradle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus these ladies were to work in the kitchen and go to market from time
+ to time, performing this menial drudgery under the personal inspection of
+ the warrior who governed the garrison and fortress, but who in vain
+ attempted to make Maria van Reigersbergen tremble at his frown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugo de Groot, when thus for life immured, after having already undergone
+ a preliminary imprisonment of nine months, was just thirty-six years of
+ age. Although comparatively so young, he had been long regarded as one of
+ the great luminaries of Europe for learning and genius. Of an ancient and
+ knightly race, his immediate ancestors had been as famous for literature,
+ science, and municipal abilities as their more distant progenitors for
+ deeds of arms in the feudal struggles of Holland in the middle ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His father and grandfather had alike been eminent for Hebrew, Greek, and
+ Latin scholarship, and both had occupied high positions in the University
+ of Leyden from its beginning. Hugo, born and nurtured under such
+ quickening influences, had been a scholar and poet almost from his cradle.
+ He wrote respectable Latin verses at the age of seven, he was matriculated
+ at Leyden at the age of eleven. That school, founded amid the storms and
+ darkness of terrible war, was not lightly to be entered. It was already
+ illustrated by a galaxy of shining lights in science and letters, which
+ radiated over Christendom. His professors were Joseph Scaliger, Francis
+ Junius, Paulus Merula, and a host of others. His fellow-students were men
+ like Scriverius, Vossius, Baudius, Daniel Heinsius. The famous soldier and
+ poet Douza, who had commanded the forces of Leyden during the immortal
+ siege, addressed him on his admission to the university as "Magne peer
+ magni dignissime cura parentis," in a copy of eloquent verses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When fourteen years old, he took his bachelor's degree, after a rigorous
+ examination not only in the classics but astronomy, mathematics,
+ jurisprudence, and theology, at an age when most youths would have been
+ accounted brilliant if able to enter that high school with credit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On leaving the University he was attached to the embassy of Barneveld and
+ Justinus van Nassau to the court of Henry IV. Here he attracted the
+ attention of that monarch, who pointed him out to his courtiers as the
+ "miracle of Holland," presented him with a gold chain with his miniature
+ attached to it, and proposed to confer on him the dignity of knighthood,
+ which the boy from motives of family pride appears to have refused. While
+ in France he received from the University of Orleans, before the age of
+ fifteen, the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws in a very eulogistic
+ diploma. On his return to Holland he published an edition of the poet
+ Johannes Capella with valuable annotations, besides giving to the public
+ other learned and classical works and several tragedies of more or less
+ merit. At the age of seventeen he was already an advocate in full practice
+ before the supreme tribunals of the Hague, and when twenty-three years old
+ he was selected by Prince Maurice from a list of three candidates for the
+ important post of Fiscal or Attorney-General of Holland. Other civic
+ dignities, embassies, and offices of various kinds, had been thrust upon
+ him one after another, in all of which he had acquitted himself with
+ dignity and brilliancy. He was but twenty-six when he published his
+ argument for the liberty of the sea, the famous Mare Liberum, and a little
+ later appeared his work on the Antiquity of the Batavian Republic, which
+ procured for him in Spain the title of "Hugo Grotius, auctor damnatus." At
+ the age of twenty-nine he had completed his Latin history of the
+ Netherlands from the period immediately preceding the war of independence
+ down to the conclusion of the Truce, 1550-1609&mdash;a work which has been
+ a classic ever since its appearance, although not published until after
+ his death. A chief magistrate of Rotterdam, member of the States of
+ Holland and the States-General, jurist, advocate, attorney-general, poet,
+ scholar, historian, editor of the Greek and Latin classics, writer of
+ tragedies, of law treatises, of theological disquisitions, he stood
+ foremost among a crowd of famous contemporaries. His genius, eloquence,
+ and learning were esteemed among the treasures not only of his own country
+ but of Europe. He had been part and parcel of his country's history from
+ his earliest manhood, and although a child in years compared to Barneveld,
+ it was upon him that the great statesman had mainly relied ever since the
+ youth's first appearance in public affairs. Impressible, emotional, and
+ susceptive, he had been accused from time to time, perhaps not entirely
+ without reason, of infirmity of purpose, or at least of vacillation in
+ opinion; but his worst enemies had never assailed the purity of his heart
+ or integrity of his character. He had not yet written the great work on
+ the 'Rights of War and Peace', which was to make an epoch in the history
+ of civilization and to be the foundation of a new science, but the
+ materials lay already in the ample storehouse of his memory and his brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Possessed of singular personal beauty&mdash;which the masterly portraits
+ of Miereveld attest to the present day&mdash;tall, brown-haired;
+ straight-featured, with a delicate aquiline nose and piercing dark blue
+ eyes, he was also athletic of frame and a proficient in manly exercises.
+ This was the statesman and the scholar, of whom it is difficult to speak
+ but in terms of affectionate but not exaggerated eulogy, and for whom the
+ Republic of the Netherlands could now find no better use than to shut him
+ up in the grim fortress of Loevestein for the remainder of his days. A
+ commonwealth must have deemed itself rich in men which, after cutting off
+ the head of Barneveld, could afford to bury alive Hugo Grotius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His deportment in prison was a magnificent moral lesson. Shut up in a kind
+ of cage consisting of a bedroom and a study, he was debarred from physical
+ exercise, so necessary for his mental and bodily health. Not choosing for
+ the gratification of Lieutenant Deventer to indulge in weak complaints, he
+ procured a huge top, which he employed himself in whipping several hours a
+ day; while for intellectual employment he plunged once more into those
+ classical, juridical, and theological studies which had always employed
+ his leisure hours from childhood upwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been forbidden by the States-General to sell his likeness in the
+ shops. The copper plates on which they had been engraved had as far as
+ possible been destroyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wish of the government, especially of his judges, was that his name
+ and memory should die at once and for ever. They were not destined to be
+ successful, for it would be equally difficult to-day to find an educated
+ man in Christendom ignorant of the name of Hugo Grotius, or acquainted
+ with that of a single one of his judges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And his friends had not forgotten him as he lay there living in his tomb.
+ Especially the learned Scriverius, Vossius, and other professors, were
+ permitted to correspond with him at intervals on literary subjects, the
+ letters being subjected to preliminary inspection. Scriverius sent him
+ many books from his well-stocked library, de Groot's own books and papers
+ having been confiscated by the government. At a somewhat later period the
+ celebrated Orientalist Erpenius sent him from time to time a large chest
+ of books, the precious freight being occasionally renewed and the chest
+ passing to and from Loevestein by way of Gorcum. At this town lived a
+ sister of Erpenius, married to one Daatselaer, a considerable dealer in
+ thread and ribbons, which he exported to England. The house of Daatselaer
+ became a place of constant resort for Madame de Groot as well as the wife
+ of Hoogerbeets, both dames going every few days from the castle across the
+ Waal to Gorcum, to make their various purchases for the use of their
+ forlorn little households in the prison. Madame Daatselaer therefore
+ received and forwarded into Loevestein or into Holland many parcels and
+ boxes, besides attending to the periodical transmission of the mighty
+ chest of books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Professor Vossius was then publishing a new edition of the tragedies of
+ Seneca, and at his request Grotius enriched that work, from his prison,
+ with valuable notes. He employed himself also in translating the moral
+ sentences extracted by Stobaeus from the Greek tragedies; drawing
+ consolation from the ethics and philosophy of the ancient dramatists, whom
+ he had always admired, especially the tragedies of Euripides; he formed a
+ complete moral anthology from that poet and from the works of Sophocles,
+ Menander, and others, which he translated into fluent Dutch verse.
+ Becoming more and more interested in the subject, he executed a masterly
+ rhymed translation of the 'Theban Brothers' of Euripides, thus seeking
+ distraction from his own tragic doom in the portraiture of antique,
+ distant, and heroic sorrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning again to legal science, he completed an Introduction to the
+ Jurisprudence of Holland, a work which as soon as published became
+ thenceforward a text-book and an oracle in the law courts and the high
+ schools of the country. Not forgetting theology, he composed for the use
+ of the humbler classes, especially for sailors, in whose lot, so exposed
+ to danger and temptation, he ever took deep interest, a work on the proofs
+ of Christianity in easy and familiar rhyme&mdash;a book of gold, as it was
+ called at once, which became rapidly popular with those for whom it was
+ designed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At a somewhat later period Professor Erpenius, publishing a new edition of
+ the New Testament in Greek, with translations in Arabic, Syriac, and
+ Ethiopian, solicited his friend's help both in translations and in the
+ Latin commentaries and expositions with which he proposed to accompany the
+ work. The prisoner began with a modest disclaimer, saying that after the
+ labours of Erasmus and Beza, Maldonatus and Jasenius, there was little for
+ him to glean. Becoming more enthusiastic as he went on, he completed a
+ masterly commentary on the Four Evangelists, a work for which the learned
+ and religious world has ever recognized a kind of debt of gratitude to the
+ castle of Loevestein, and hailed in him the founder of a school of manly
+ Biblical criticism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus nearly two years wore away. Spinning his great top for exercise;
+ soothing his active and prolific brain with Greek tragedy, with Flemish
+ verse, with jurisprudence, history, theology; creating, expounding,
+ adorning, by the warmth of his vivid intellect; moving the world, and
+ doing good to his race from the depths of his stony sepulchre; Hugo
+ Grotius rose superior to his doom and took captivity captive. The man is
+ not to be envied who is not moved by so noble an example of great calamity
+ manfully endured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wife of Hoogerbeets, already advanced in years, sickened during the
+ imprisonment and died at Loevestein after a lingering illness, leaving six
+ children to the care of her unfortunate husband. Madame de Groot had not
+ been permitted by the prison authorities to minister to her in sickness,
+ nor to her children after her death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the year 1621 Francis Aerssens, Lord of Sommelsdyk, the arch
+ enemy of Barneveld and of Grotius, was appointed special ambassador to
+ Paris. The intelligence&mdash;although hardly unexpected, for the
+ stratagems of Aerssens had been completely successful&mdash;moved the
+ prisoner deeply. He felt that this mortal enemy, not glutted with
+ vengeance by the beheading of the Advocate and the perpetual imprisonment
+ of his friend, would do his best at the French court to defame and to
+ blacken him. He did what he could to obviate this danger by urgent letters
+ to friends on whom he could rely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At about the same time Muis van Holy, one of the twenty-four
+ commissioners, not yet satisfied with the misery he had helped to inflict,
+ informed the States-General that Madame de Groot had been buying ropes at
+ Gorcum. On his motion a committee was sent to investigate the matter at
+ Castle Loevestein, where it was believed that the ropes had been concealed
+ for the purpose of enabling Grotius to make his escape from prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lieutenant Deventer had heard nothing of the story. He was in high spirits
+ at the rumour however, and conducted the committee very eagerly over the
+ castle, causing minute search to be made in the apartment of Grotius for
+ the ropes which, as they were assured by him and his wife, had never
+ existed save in the imagination of Judge Muis. They succeeded at least in
+ inflicting much superfluous annoyance on their victims, and in satisfying
+ themselves that it would be as easy for the prisoner to fly out of the
+ fortress on wings as to make his escape with ropes, even if he had them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grotius soon afterwards addressed a letter to the States-General
+ denouncing the statement of Muis as a fable, and these persistent attempts
+ to injure him as cowardly and wicked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few months later Madame de Groot happened to be in the house of
+ Daatselaer on one of her periodical visits to Gorcum. Conversation turning
+ on these rumours March of attempts at escape, she asked Madame Daatselaer
+ if she would not be much embarrassed, should Grotius suddenly make his
+ appearance there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh no," said the good woman with a laugh; "only let him come. We will
+ take excellent care of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At another visit one Saturday, 20th March, (1621) Madame de Groot asked
+ her friend why all the bells of Gorcum march were ringing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because to-morrow begins our yearly fair," replied Dame Daatselaer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I suppose that all exiles and outlaws may come to Gorcum on this
+ occasion," said Madame de Groot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such is the law, they say," answered her friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And my husband might come too?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No doubt," said Madame Daatselaer with a merry laugh, rejoiced at finding
+ the wife of Grotius able to speak so cheerfully of her husband in his
+ perpetual and hopeless captivity. "Send him hither. He shall have, a warm
+ welcome."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What a good woman you are!" said Madame de Groot with a sigh as she rose
+ to take leave. "But you know very well that if he were a bird he could
+ never get out of the castle, so closely, he is caged there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning a wild equinoctial storm was howling around the battlements
+ of the castle. Of a sudden Cornelia, daughter of the de Groots, nine years
+ of age, said to her mother without any reason whatever,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To-morrow Papa must be off to Gorcum, whatever the weather may be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Groot, as well as his wife, was aghast at the child's remark, and took
+ it as a direct indication from Heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For while Madame Daatselaer had considered the recent observations of her
+ visitor from Loevestein as idle jests, and perhaps wondered that Madame de
+ Groot could be frivolous and apparently lighthearted on so dismal a topic,
+ there had been really a hidden meaning in her words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For several weeks past the prisoner had been brooding over a means of
+ escape. His wife, whose every thought was devoted to him, had often cast
+ her eyes on the great chest or trunk in which the books of Erpenius had
+ been conveyed between Loevestein and Gorcum for the use of the prisoner.
+ At first the trunk had been carefully opened and its contents examined
+ every time it entered or left the castle. As nothing had ever been found
+ in it save Hebrew, Greek, and Latin folios, uninviting enough to the
+ Commandant, that warrior had gradually ceased to inspect the chest very
+ closely, and had at last discontinued the practice altogether.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been kept for some weeks past in the prisoner's study. His wife
+ thought&mdash;although it was two finger breadths less than four feet in
+ length, and not very broad or deep in proportion&mdash;that it might be
+ possible for him to get into it. He was considerably above middle height,
+ but found that by curling himself up very closely he could just manage to
+ lie in it with the cover closed. Very secretly they had many times
+ rehearsed the scheme which had now taken possession of their minds, but
+ had not breathed a word of it to any one. He had lain in the chest with
+ the lid fastened, and with his wife sitting upon the top of it, two hours
+ at a time by the hour-glass. They had decided at last that the plan,
+ though fraught with danger, was not absolutely impossible, and they were
+ only waiting now for a favourable opportunity. The chance remark of the
+ child Cornelia settled the time for hazarding the adventure. By a strange
+ coincidence, too, the commandant of the fortress, Lieutenant Deventer, had
+ just been promoted to a captaincy, and was to go to Heusden to receive his
+ company. He left the castle for a brief absence that very Sunday evening.
+ As a precautionary measure, the trunk filled with books had been sent to
+ Gorcum and returned after the usual interval only a few days before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The maid-servant of the de Groots, a young girl of twenty, Elsje van
+ Houwening by name, quick, intelligent, devoted, and courageous, was now
+ taken into their confidence. The scheme was explained to her, and she was
+ asked if she were willing to take the chest under her charge with her
+ master in it, instead of the usual freight of books, and accompany it to
+ Gorcum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She naturally asked what punishment could be inflicted upon her in case
+ the plot were discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "None legally," answered her master; "but I too am innocent of any crime,
+ and you see to what sufferings I have been condemned."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whatever come of it," said Elsje stoutly; "I will take the risk and
+ accompany my master."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every detail was then secretly arranged, and it was provided beforehand,
+ as well as possible, what should be said or done in the many contingencies
+ that might arise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Sunday evening Madame de Groot then went to the wife of the Commandant,
+ with whom she had always been on more friendly terms than with her
+ malicious husband. She had also recently propitiated her affections by
+ means of venison and other dainties brought from Gorcum. She expressed the
+ hope that, notwithstanding the absence of Captain Deventer, she might be
+ permitted to send the trunk full of books next day from the castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My husband is wearing himself out," she said, "with his perpetual
+ studies. I shall be glad for a little time to be rid of some of these
+ folios."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Commandant's wife made no objection to this slight request.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Monday morning the gale continued to beat with unabated violence on the
+ turrets. The turbid Waal, swollen by the tempest, rolled darkly and
+ dangerously along the castle walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the die was cast. Grotius rose betimes, fell on his knees, and prayed
+ fervently an hour long. Dressed only in linen underclothes with a pair of
+ silk stockings, he got into the chest with the help of his wife. The big
+ Testament of Erpenius, with some bunches of thread placed upon it, served
+ him as a pillow. A few books and papers were placed in the interstices
+ left by the curves of his body, and as much pains as possible taken to
+ prevent his being seriously injured or incommoded during the hazardous
+ journey he was contemplating. His wife then took solemn farewell of him,
+ fastened the lock, which she kissed, and gave the key to Elsje.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The usual garments worn by the prisoner were thrown on a chair by the
+ bedside and his slippers placed before it. Madame de Groot then returned
+ to her bed, drew the curtains close, and rang the bell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was answered by the servant who usually waited on the prisoner, and who
+ was now informed by the lady that it had been her intention to go herself
+ to Gorcum, taking charge of the books which were valuable. As the weather
+ was so tempestuous however, and as she was somewhat indisposed, it had
+ been decided that Elsje should accompany the trunk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She requested that some soldiers might be sent as usual to take it down to
+ the vessel. Two or three of the garrison came accordingly, and seeing the
+ clothes and slippers of Grotius lying about, and the bed-curtains closed,
+ felt no suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On lifting the chest, however, one of them said, half in jest:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Arminian must be in it himself, it seems so heavy!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not the Arminian," replied Madame de Groot, in a careless voice, from the
+ bed; "only heavy Arminian books."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Partly lifting, partly dragging the ponderous box, the soldiers managed to
+ get it down the stairs and through the thirteen barred and bolted doors.
+ Four several times one or other of the soldiers expressed the opinion that
+ Grotius himself must be locked within it, but they never spoke quite
+ seriously, and Elsje was ever ready to turn aside the remark with a jest.
+ A soldier's wife, just as the box was approaching the wharf, told a story
+ of a malefactor who had once been carried out of the castle in a chest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And if a malefactor, why not a lawyer?" she added. A soldier said he
+ would get a gimlet and bore a hole into the Arminian. "Then you must get a
+ gimlet that will reach to the top of the castle, where the Arminian lies
+ abed and asleep," said Elsje.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not much heed was given to this careless talk, the soldiers, before
+ leaving the chamber of Grotius, having satisfied themselves that there
+ were no apertures in the chest save the keyhole, and that it would be
+ impossible by that means alone for sufficient air to penetrate to keep a
+ man enclosed in it from smothering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Deventer was asked if she chose to inspect the contents of the
+ trunk, and she enquired whether the Commandant had been wont so to do.
+ When told that such search had been for a long time discontinued, as
+ nothing had ever been found there but books, she observed that there was
+ no reason why she should be more strict than her husband, and ordered the
+ soldiers to take their heavy load to the vessel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elsje insisted that the boatmen should place a doubly thick plank for
+ sliding the box on board, as it seemed probable, she said, that the usual
+ one would break in two, and then the valuable books borrowed of Professor
+ Erpenius would be damaged or destroyed. The request caused much further
+ grumbling, but was complied with at last and the chest deposited on the
+ deck. The wind still continued to blow with great fury, and as soon as the
+ sails were set the vessel heeled over so much, that Elsje implored the
+ skipper to cause the box to be securely lashed, as it seemed in imminent
+ danger, at the first lurch of the vessel, of sliding into the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This done, Elsje sat herself down and threw her white handkerchief over
+ her head, letting it flutter in the wind. One of the crew asked her why
+ she did so, and she replied that the servant in the castle had been
+ tormenting her, saying that she would never dare to sail to Gorcum in such
+ tempestuous weather, and she was now signalling him that she had been as
+ good as her word. Whereupon she continued to wave the handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reality the signal was for her mistress, who was now straining her eyes
+ from the barred window which looked out upon the Waal, and with whom the
+ maid had agreed that if all went prosperously she would give this token of
+ success. Otherwise she would sit with her head in her hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the voyage an officer of the garrison, who happened to be on board,
+ threw himself upon the chest as a convenient seat, and began drumming and
+ pounding with his heels upon it. The ever watchful Elsje, feeling the
+ dreadful inconvenience to the prisoner of these proceedings, who perhaps
+ was already smothering and would struggle for air if not relieved,
+ politely addressed the gentleman and induced him to remove to another seat
+ by telling him that, besides the books, there was some valuable porcelain
+ in the chest which might easily be broken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No further incident occurred. The wind, although violent, was favourable,
+ and Gorcum in due time was reached. Elsje insisted upon having her own
+ precious freight carried first into the town, although the skipper for
+ some time was obstinately bent on leaving it to the very last, while all
+ the other merchandise in the vessel should be previously unshipped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last on promise of payment of ten stuivers, which was considered an
+ exorbitant sum, the skipper and son agreed to transport the chest between
+ them on a hand-barrow. While they were trudging with it to the town, the
+ son remarked to his father that there was some living thing in the box.
+ For the prisoner in the anguish of his confinement had not been able to
+ restrain a slight movement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you hear what my son says?" cried the skipper to Elsje. "He says you
+ have got something alive in your trunk."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes," replied the cheerful maid-servant; "Arminian books are always
+ alive, always full of motion and spirit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They arrived at Daatselaer's house, moving with difficulty through the
+ crowd which, notwithstanding the boisterous weather, had been collected by
+ the annual fair. Many people were assembled in front of the building,
+ which was a warehouse of great resort, while next door was a book-seller's
+ shop thronged with professors, clergymen, and other literary persons. The
+ carriers accordingly entered by the backway, and Elsje, deliberately
+ paying them their ten stuivers, and seeing them depart, left the box lying
+ in a room at the rear and hastened to the shop in front.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she found the thread and ribbon dealer and his wife, busy with their
+ customers, unpacking and exhibiting their wares. She instantly whispered
+ in Madame Daatselaer's ear, "I have got my master here in your back
+ parlour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dame turned white as a sheet, and was near fainting on the spot. It
+ was the first imprudence Elsje had committed. The good woman recovered
+ somewhat of her composure by a strong effort however, and instantly went
+ with Elsje to the rear of the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master! master!" cried Elsje, rapping on the chest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My God! my God!" shrieked the poor maid-servant. "My poor master is
+ dead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah!" said Madame Daatselaer, "your mistress has made a bad business of
+ it. Yesterday she had a living husband. Now she has a dead one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But soon there was a vigorous rap on the inside of the lid, and a cry from
+ the prisoner:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Open the chest! I am not dead, but did not at first recognize your
+ voice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lock was instantly unfastened, the lid thrown open, and Grotius arose
+ in his linen clothing, like a dead man from his coffin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dame instantly accompanied the two through a trapdoor into an upper
+ room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grotius asked her if she was always so deadly pale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," she replied, "but I am frightened to see you here. My lord is no
+ common person. The whole world is talking of you. I fear this will cause
+ the loss of all my property and perhaps bring my husband into prison in
+ your place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grotius rejoined: "I made my prayers to God before as much as this had
+ been gained, and I have just been uttering fervent thanks to Him for my
+ deliverance so far as it has been effected. But if the consequences are to
+ be as you fear, I am ready at once to get into the chest again and be
+ carried back to prison."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she answered, "No; whatever comes of it, we have you here and will do
+ all that we can to help you on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grotius being faint from his sufferings, the lady brought him a glass of
+ Spanish wine, but was too much flustered to find even a cloak or shawl to
+ throw over him. Leaving him sitting there in his very thin attire, just as
+ he had got out of the chest, she went to the front warehouse to call her
+ husband. But he prudently declined to go to his unexpected guest. It would
+ be better in the examination sure to follow, he said, for him to say with
+ truth that he had not seen him and knew nothing of the escape, from first
+ to last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grotius entirely approved of the answer when told to him. Meantime Madame
+ Daatselaer had gone to her brother-in-law van der Veen, a clothier by
+ trade, whom she found in his shop talking with an officer of the
+ Loevestein garrison. She whispered in the clothier's ear, and he, making
+ an excuse to the officer, followed her home at once. They found Grotius
+ sitting where he had been left. Van der Veen gave him his hand, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir, you are the man of whom the whole country is talking?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, here I am," was the reply, "and I put myself in your hands&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There isn't a moment to lose," replied the clothier. "We must help you
+ away at once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went immediately in search of one John Lambertsen, a man in whom he
+ knew he could confide, a Lutheran in religion, a master-mason by
+ occupation. He found him on a scaffold against the gable-end of a house,
+ working at his trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He told him that there was a good deed to be done which he could do better
+ than any man, that his conscience would never reproach him for it, and
+ that he would at the same time earn no trifling reward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He begged the mason to procure a complete dress as for a journeyman, and
+ to follow him to the house of his brother-in-law Daatselaer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lambertsen soon made his appearance with the doublet, trunk-hose, and
+ shoes of a bricklayer, together with trowel and measuring-rod. He was
+ informed who his new journeyman was to be, and Grotius at once put on the
+ disguise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doublet did not reach to the waistband of the trunkhose, while those
+ nether garments stopped short of his knees; the whole attire belonging to
+ a smaller man than the unfortunate statesman. His delicate white hands,
+ much exposed by the shortness of the sleeves, looked very unlike those of
+ a day-labourer, and altogether the new mason presented a somewhat
+ incongruous and wobegone aspect. Grotius was fearful too lest some of the
+ preachers and professors frequenting the book-shop next door would
+ recognize him through his disguise. Madame Daatselaer smeared his face and
+ hands with chalk and plaster however and whispered encouragement, and so
+ with a felt hat slouched over his forehead and a yardstick in his hand, he
+ walked calmly forth into the thronged marketplace and through the town to
+ the ferry, accompanied by the friendly Lambertsen. It had been agreed that
+ van der Veen should leave the house in another direction and meet them at
+ the landing-place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they got to the ferry, they found the weather as boisterous as ever.
+ The boatmen absolutely refused to make the dangerous crossing of the
+ Merwede over which their course lay to the land of Altona, and so into the
+ Spanish Netherlands, for two such insignificant personages as this mason
+ and his scarecrow journeyman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lambertsen assured them that it was of the utmost importance that he
+ should cross the water at once. He had a large contract for purchasing
+ stone at Altona for a public building on which he was engaged. Van der
+ Veen coming up added his entreaties, protesting that he too was interested
+ in this great stone purchase, and so by means of offering a larger price
+ than they at first dared to propose, they were able to effect their
+ passage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After landing, Lambertsen and Grotius walked to Waalwyk, van der Veen
+ returning the same evening to Gorcum. It was four o'clock in the afternoon
+ when they reached Waalwyk, where a carriage was hired to convey the
+ fugitive to Antwerp. The friendly mason here took leave of his illustrious
+ journeyman, having first told the driver that his companion was a
+ disguised bankrupt fleeing from Holland into foreign territory to avoid
+ pursuit by his creditors. This would explain his slightly concealing his
+ face in passing through a crowd in any village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grotius proved so ignorant of the value of different coins in making small
+ payments on the road, that the honest waggoner, on being occasionally
+ asked who the odd-looking stranger was, answered that he was a bankrupt,
+ and no wonder, for he did not know one piece of money from another. For,
+ his part he thought him little better than a fool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the depreciatory opinion formed by the Waalwyk coachman as to the
+ "rising light of the world" and the "miracle of Holland." They travelled
+ all night and, arriving on the morning of the 21st within a few leagues of
+ Antwerp, met a patrol of soldiers, who asked Grotius for his passport. He
+ enquired in whose service they were, and was told in that of "Red Rod," as
+ the chief bailiff of Antwerp was called. That functionary happened to be
+ near, and the traveller approaching him said that his passport was on his
+ feet, and forthwith told him his name and story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Red Rod treated him at once with perfect courtesy, offered him a horse for
+ himself with a mounted escort, and so furthered his immediate entrance to
+ Antwerp. Grotius rode straight to the house of a banished friend of his,
+ the preacher Grevinkhoven. He was told by the daughter of that clergyman
+ that her father was upstairs ministering at the bedside of his sick wife.
+ But so soon as the traveller had sent up his name, both the preacher and
+ the invalid came rushing downstairs to fall upon the neck of one who
+ seemed as if risen from the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The news spread, and Episcopius and other exiled friends soon thronged to
+ the house of Grevinkhoven, where they all dined together in great glee,
+ Grotius, still in his journeyman's clothes, narrating the particulars of
+ his wonderful escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had no intention of tarrying in his resting-place at Antwerp longer
+ than was absolutely necessary. Intimations were covertly made to him that
+ a brilliant destiny might be in store for him should he consent to enter
+ the service of the Archdukes, nor were there waning rumours, circulated as
+ a matter of course by his host of enemies, that he was about to become a
+ renegade to country and religion. There was as much truth in the slanders
+ as in the rest of the calumnies of which he had been the victim during his
+ career. He placed on record a proof of his loyal devotion to his country
+ in the letters which he wrote from Antwerp within a week of his arrival
+ there. With his subsequent history, his appearance and long residence at
+ the French court as ambassador of Sweden, his memorable labours in
+ history, diplomacy, poetry, theology, the present narrative is not
+ concerned. Driven from the service of his Fatherland, of which his name to
+ all time is one of the proudest garlands, he continued to be a benefactor
+ not only to her but to all mankind. If refutation is sought of the charge
+ that republics are ungrateful, it will certainly not be found in the
+ history of Hugo Grotius or John of Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor is there need to portray the wrath of Captain Deventer when he
+ returned to Castle Loevestein.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here is the cage, but your bird is flown," said corpulent Maria Grotius
+ with a placid smile. The Commandant solaced himself by uttering
+ imprecations on her, on her husband, and on Elsje van Houwening. But these
+ curses could not bring back the fugitive. He flew to Gorcum to browbeat
+ the Daatselaers and to search the famous trunk. He found in it the big New
+ Testament and some skeins of thread, together with an octavo or two of
+ theology and of Greek tragedies; but the Arminian was not in it, and was
+ gone from the custody of the valiant Deventer for ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a brief period Madame de Groot was released and rejoined her
+ husband. Elsje van Houwening, true heroine of the adventure, was
+ subsequently married to the faithful servant of Grotius, who during the
+ two years' imprisonment had been taught Latin and the rudiments of law by
+ his master, so that he subsequently rose to be a thriving and respectable
+ advocate at the tribunals of Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Stadholder, when informed of the escape of the prisoner, observed, "I
+ always thought the black pig was deceiving me," making not very
+ complimentary allusion to the complexion and size of the lady who had thus
+ aided the escape of her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He is also reported as saying that it "is no wonder they could not keep
+ Grotius in prison, as he has more wit than all his judges put together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Barneveld's Sons plot against Maurice&mdash;The Conspiracy betrayed to
+ Maurice&mdash;Escape of Stoutenburg&mdash;Groeneveld is arrested&mdash;Mary of
+ Barneveld appeals to the Stadholder&mdash;Groeneveld condemned to Death&mdash;
+ Execution of Groeneveld.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The widow of Barneveld had remained, since the last scene of the fatal
+ tragedy on the Binnenhof, in hopeless desolation. The wife of the man who
+ during a whole generation of mankind had stood foremost among the foremost
+ of the world, and had been one of those chief actors and directors in
+ human affairs to whom men's eyes turned instinctively from near and from
+ afar, had led a life of unbroken prosperity. An heiress in her own right,
+ Maria van Utrecht had laid the foundation of her husband's wealth by her
+ union with the rising young lawyer and statesman. Her two sons and two
+ daughters had grown up around her, all four being married into the leading
+ families of the land, and with apparently long lives of prosperity and
+ usefulness before them. And now the headsman's sword had shivered all this
+ grandeur and happiness at a blow. The name of the dead statesman had
+ become a word of scoffing and reproach; vagabond mountebanks enacted
+ ribald scenes to his dishonour in the public squares and streets;
+ ballad-mongers yelled blasphemous libels upon him in the very ears of his
+ widow and children. For party hatred was not yet glutted with the blood it
+ had drunk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be idle to paint the misery of this brokenhearted woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great painters of the epoch have preserved her face to posterity; the
+ grief-stricken face of a hard-featured but commanding and not uncomely
+ woman, the fountains of whose tears seem exhausted; a face of austere and
+ noble despair. A decorous veil should be thrown over the form of that aged
+ matron, for whose long life and prosperity Fate took such merciless
+ vengeance at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the woes of Maria of Barneveld had scarcely begun. Desolation had
+ become her portion, but dishonour had not yet crossed her threshold. There
+ were sterner strokes in store for her than that which smote her husband on
+ the scaffold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had two sons, both in the prime of life. The eldest, Reinier, Lord of
+ Groeneveld, who had married a widow of rank and wealth, Madame de
+ Brandwyk, was living since the death of his father in comparative ease,
+ but entire obscurity. An easy-tempered, genial, kindly gentleman, he had
+ been always much beloved by his friends and, until the great family
+ catastrophe, was popular with the public, but of an infirm and vacillating
+ character, easily impressed by others, and apt to be led by stronger
+ natures than his own. He had held the lucrative office of head forester of
+ Delfland of which he had now been deprived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The younger son William, called, from an estate conferred on him by his
+ father, Lord of Stoutenburg, was of a far different mould. We have seen
+ him at an earlier period of this narrative attached to the embassy of
+ Francis Aerssens in Paris, bearing then from another estate the unmusical
+ title of Craimgepolder, and giving his subtle and dangerous chief great
+ cause of complaint by his irregular, expensive habits. He had been however
+ rather a favourite with Henry IV., who had so profound a respect for the
+ father as to consult him, and him only of all foreign statesmen, in the
+ gravest affairs of his reign, and he had even held an office of honour and
+ emolument at his court. Subsequently he had embraced the military career,
+ and was esteemed a soldier of courage and promise. As captain of cavalry
+ and governor of the fortress of Bergen op Zoom, he occupied a
+ distinguished and lucrative position, and was likely, so soon as the Truce
+ ran to its close, to make a name for himself in that gigantic political
+ and religious war which had already opened in Bohemia, and in which it was
+ evident the Republic would soon be desperately involved. His wife, Walburg
+ de Marnix, was daughter to one of the noblest characters in the history of
+ the Netherlands, or of any history, the illustrious Sainte-Aldegonde. Two
+ thousand florins a year from his father's estate had been settled on him
+ at his marriage, which, in addition to his official and military income,
+ placed him in a position of affluence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the death of his father the family estates were confiscated, and he
+ was likewise deprived of his captaincy and his governorship. He was
+ reduced at a blow from luxury and high station to beggary and obscurity.
+ At the renewal of the war he found himself, for no fault of his own,
+ excluded from the service of his country. Yet the Advocate almost in his
+ last breath had recommended his sons to the Stadholder, and Maurice had
+ sent a message in response that so long as the sons conducted themselves
+ well they might rely upon his support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto they had not conducted themselves otherwise than well.
+ Stoutenburg, who now dwelt in his house with his mother, was of a dark,
+ revengeful, turbulent disposition. In the career of arms he had a right to
+ look forward to success, but thus condemned to brood in idleness on the
+ cruel wrongs to himself and his house it was not improbable that he might
+ become dangerous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Years long he fed on projects of vengeance as his daily bread. He was
+ convinced that his personal grievances were closely entwined with the
+ welfare of the Commonwealth, and he had sworn to avenge the death of his
+ father, the misery of his mother, and the wrongs which he was himself
+ suffering, upon the Stadholder, whom he considered the author of all their
+ woe. To effect a revolution in the government, and to bring back to power
+ all the municipal regents whom Maurice had displaced so summarily, in
+ order, as the son believed, to effect the downfall of the hated Advocate,
+ this was the determination of Stoutenburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not pause to reflect whether the arm which had been strong enough
+ to smite to nothingness the venerable statesman in the plenitude of his
+ power would be too weak to repel the attack of an obscure and disarmed
+ partisan. He saw only a hated tyrant, murderer, and oppressor, as he
+ considered him, and he meant to have his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had around him a set of daring and desperate men to whom he had from
+ time to time half confided his designs. A certain unfrocked preacher of
+ the Remonstrant persuasion, who, according to the fashion of the learned
+ of that day, had translated his name out of Hendrik Sleet into Henricus
+ Slatius, was one of his most unscrupulous instruments. Slatius, a big,
+ swarthy, shag-eared, beetle-browed Hollander, possessed learning of no
+ ordinary degree, a tempestuous kind of eloquence, and a habit of dealing
+ with men; especially those of the humbler classes. He was passionate,
+ greedy, overbearing, violent, and loose of life. He had sworn vengeance
+ upon the Remonstrants in consequence of a private quarrel, but this did
+ not prevent him from breathing fire and fury against the
+ Contra-Remonstrants also, and especially against the Stadholder, whom he
+ affected to consider the arch-enemy of the whole Commonwealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another twelvemonth went by. The Advocate had been nearly four years in
+ his grave. The terrible German war was in full blaze. The Twelve Years'
+ Truce had expired, the Republic was once more at war, and Stoutenburg,
+ forbidden at the head of his troop to campaign with the Stadholder against
+ the Archdukes, nourished more fiercely than ever his plan against the
+ Stadholder's life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the ferocious Slatius he had other associates. There was his
+ cousin by marriage, van der Dussen, a Catholic gentleman, who had married
+ a daughter of Elias Barneveld, and who shared all Stoutenburg's feelings
+ of resentment towards Maurice. There was Korenwinder, another Catholic,
+ formerly occupying an official position of responsibility as secretary of
+ the town of Berkel, a man of immense corpulence, but none the less an
+ active and dangerous conspirator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was van Dyk, a secretary of Bleiswyk, equally active and dangerous,
+ and as lean and hungry as Korenwinder was fat. Stoutenburg, besides other
+ rewards, had promised him a cornetcy of cavalry, should their plans be
+ successful. And there was the brother-in-law of Slatius, one Cornelis
+ Gerritaen, a joiner by trade, living at Rotterdam, who made himself very
+ useful in all the details of the conspiracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the plot was now arranged, the men just mentioned being its active
+ agents and in constant communication with Stoutenburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Korenwinder and van Dyk in the last days of December 1622 drew up a scheme
+ on paper, which was submitted to their chief and met with his approval.
+ The document began with a violent invective against the crimes and tyranny
+ of the Stadholder, demonstrated the necessity of a general change in the
+ government, and of getting rid of Maurice as an indispensable preliminary,
+ and laid down the means and method of doing this deed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Prince was in the daily habit of driving, unattended by his
+ body-guard, to Ryswyk, about two miles from the Hague. It would not be
+ difficult for a determined band of men divided into two parties to set
+ upon him between the stables and his coach, either when alighting from or
+ about to enter it&mdash;the one party to kill him while the other
+ protected the retreat of the assassins, and beat down such defence as the
+ few lackeys of the Stadholder could offer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scheme, thus mapped out, was submitted to Stoutenburg, who gave it his
+ approval after suggesting a few amendments. The document was then burnt.
+ It was estimated that twenty men would be needed for the job, and that to
+ pay them handsomely would require about 6000 guilders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The expenses and other details of the infamous plot were discussed as
+ calmly as if it had been an industrial or commercial speculation. But 6000
+ guilders was an immense sum to raise, and the Seigneur de Stoutenburg was
+ a beggar. His associates were as forlorn as himself, but his
+ brother-in-law, the ex-Ambassador van der Myle, was living at Beverwyk
+ under the supervision of the police, his property not having been
+ confiscated. Stoutenburg paid him a visit, accompanied by the Reverend
+ Slatius, in hopes of getting funds from him, but at the first obscure hint
+ of the infamous design van der Myle faced them with such looks, gestures,
+ and words of disgust and indignation that the murderous couple recoiled,
+ the son of Barneveld saying to the expreacher: "Let us be off, Slaet,'tis
+ a mere cur. Nothing is to be made of him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other son of Barneveld, the Seigneur de Groeneveld, had means and
+ credit. His brother had darkly hinted to him the necessity of getting rid
+ of Maurice, and tried to draw him into the plot. Groeneveld, more unstable
+ than water, neither repelled nor encouraged these advances. He joined in
+ many conversations with Stoutenburg, van Dyk, and Korenwinder, but always
+ weakly affected not to know what they were driving at. "When we talk of
+ business," said van Dyk to him one day, "you are always turning off from
+ us and from the subject. You had better remain." Many anonymous letters
+ were sent to him, calling on him to strike for vengeance on the murderer
+ of his father, and for the redemption of his native land and the
+ Remonstrant religion from foul oppression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last yielding to the persuasions and threats of his fierce younger
+ brother, who assured him that the plot would succeed, the government be
+ revolutionized, and that then all property would be at the mercy of the
+ victors, he agreed to endorse certain bills which Korenwinder undertook to
+ negotiate. Nothing could be meaner, more cowardly, and more murderous than
+ the proceedings of the Seigneur de Groeneveld. He seems to have felt no
+ intense desire of vengeance upon Maurice, which certainly would not have
+ been unnatural, but he was willing to supply money for his assassination.
+ At the same time he was careful to insist that this pecuniary advance was
+ by no means a free gift, but only a loan to be repaid by his more
+ bloodthirsty brother upon demand with interest. With a businesslike
+ caution, in ghastly contrast with the foulness of the contract, he exacted
+ a note of hand from Stoutenburg covering the whole amount of his
+ disbursements. There might come a time, he thought, when his brother's
+ paper would be more negotiable than it was at that moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Korenwinder found no difficulty in discounting Groeneveld's bills, and the
+ necessary capital was thus raised for the vile enterprise. Van Dyk, the
+ lean and hungry conspirator, now occupied himself vigorously in engaging
+ the assassins, while his corpulent colleague remained as treasurer of the
+ company. Two brothers Blansaerts, woollen manufacturers at Leyden&mdash;one
+ of whom had been a student of theology in the Remonstrant Church and had
+ occasionally preached&mdash;and a certain William Party, a Walloon by
+ birth, but likewise a woollen worker at Leyden, agreed to the secretary's
+ propositions. He had at first told, them that their services would be
+ merely required for the forcible liberation of two Remonstrant clergymen,
+ Niellius and Poppius, from the prison at Haarlem. Entertaining his new
+ companions at dinner, however, towards the end of January, van Dyk,
+ getting very drunk, informed them that the object of the enterprise was to
+ kill the Stadholder; that arrangements had been made for effecting an
+ immediate change in the magistracies in all the chief cities of Holland so
+ soon as the deed was done; that all the recently deposed regents would
+ enter the Hague at once, supported by a train of armed peasants from the
+ country; and that better times for the oppressed religion, for the
+ Fatherland, and especially for everyone engaged in the great undertaking,
+ would begin with the death of the tyrant. Each man taking direct part in
+ the assassination would receive at least 300 guilders, besides being
+ advanced to offices of honour and profit according to his capacity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Blansaerts assured their superior that entire reliance might be placed
+ on their fidelity, and that they knew of three or four other men in Leyden
+ "as firm as trees and fierce as lions," whom they would engage&mdash;a
+ fustian worker, a tailor, a chimney-sweeper, and one or two other
+ mechanics. The looseness and utter recklessness with which this hideous
+ conspiracy was arranged excites amazement. Van Dyk gave the two brothers
+ 100 pistoles in gold&mdash;a coin about equal to a guinea&mdash;for their
+ immediate reward as well as for that of the comrades to be engaged. Yet it
+ seems almost certain from subsequent revelations that they were intending
+ all the time to deceive him, to take as much money as they could get from
+ him, "to milk, the cow as long as she would give milk," as William Party
+ expressed it, and then to turn round upon and betray him. It was a
+ dangerous game however, which might not prove entirely successful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Van Dyk duly communicated with Stoutenburg, who grew more and more
+ feverish with hatred and impatience as the time for gratifying those
+ passions drew nigh, and frequently said that he would like to tear the
+ Stadholder to pieces with his own hands. He preferred however to act as
+ controlling director over the band of murderers now enrolled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For in addition to the Leyden party, the Reverend Slatius, supplied with
+ funds by van Dyk, had engaged at Rotterdam his brother-in-law Gerritsen, a
+ joiner, living in that city, together with three sailors named
+ respectively Dirk, John, and Herman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ex-clergyman's house was also the arsenal of the conspiracy, and here
+ were stored away a stock of pistols, snaphances, and sledge-hammers&mdash;together
+ with that other death-dealing machinery, the whole edition of the
+ 'Clearshining Torch', an inflammatory, pamphlet by Slatius&mdash;all to be
+ used on the fatal day fast approaching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 1st February van Dyk visited Slatius at Rotterdam. He found
+ Gerritsen hard at work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There in a dark back kitchen, by the lurid light of the fire in a dim
+ wintry afternoon, stood the burly Slatius, with his swarthy face and heavy
+ eyebrows, accompanied by his brother-in-law the joiner, both in workman's
+ dress, melting lead, running bullets, drying powder, and burnishing and
+ arranging the fire-arms and other tools to be used in the great crime now
+ so rapidly maturing. The lean, busy, restless van Dyk, with his adust and
+ sinister visage, came peering in upon the couple thus engaged, and
+ observed their preparations with warm approval.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He recommended that in addition to Dirk, John, and Herman, a few more
+ hardy seafaring men should be engaged, and Slatius accordingly secured
+ next day the services of one Jerome Ewouts and three other sailors. They
+ were not informed of the exact nature of the enterprise, but were told
+ that it was a dangerous although not a desperate one, and sure to be of
+ great service to the Fatherland. They received, as all the rest had done,
+ between 200 and 300 guilders in gold, that they would all be promoted to
+ be captains and first mates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was agreed that all the conspirators should assemble four days later at
+ the Hague on Sunday, the 5th February, at the inn of the "Golden Helmet."
+ The next day, Monday the 6th, had been fixed by Stoutenburg for doing the
+ deed. Van Dyk, who had great confidence in the eloquence of William Party,
+ the Walloon wool manufacturer, had arranged that he should make a
+ discourse to them all in a solitary place in the downs between that city
+ and the sea-shore, taking for his theme or brief the Clearshining Torch of
+ Slatius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Saturday that eminent divine entertained his sister and her husband
+ Gerritsen, Jerome Ewouts, who was at dinner but half informed as to the
+ scope of the great enterprise, and several other friends who were entirely
+ ignorant of it. Slatius was in high spirits, although his sister, who had
+ at last become acquainted with the vile plot, had done nothing but weep
+ all day long. They had better be worms, with a promise of further reward
+ and an intimation she said, and eat dirt for their food, than crawl in so
+ base a business. Her brother comforted her with assurances that the
+ project was sure to result in a triumph for religion and Fatherland, and
+ drank many healths at his table to the success of all engaged in it. That
+ evening he sent off a great chest filled with arms and ammunition to the
+ "Golden Helmet" at the Hague under the charge of Jerome Ewouts and his
+ three mates. Van Dyk had already written a letter to the landlord of that
+ hostelry engaging a room there, and saying that the chest contained
+ valuable books and documents to be used in a lawsuit, in which he was soon
+ to be engaged, before the supreme tribunal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the Sunday this bustling conspirator had John Blansaert and William
+ Party to dine with him at the "Golden Helmet" in the Hague, and produced
+ seven packages neatly folded, each containing gold pieces to the amount of
+ twenty pounds sterling. These were for themselves and the others whom they
+ had reported as engaged by them in Leyden. Getting drunk as usual, he
+ began to bluster of the great political revolution impending, and after
+ dinner examined the carbines of his guests. He asked if those weapons were
+ to be relied upon. "We can blow a hair to pieces with them at twenty
+ paces," they replied. "Ah! would that I too could be of the party," said
+ van Dyk, seizing one of the carbines. "No, no," said John Blansaert, "we
+ can do the deed better without you than with you. You must look out for
+ the defence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Van Dyk then informed them that they, with one of the Rotterdam sailors,
+ were to attack Maurice as he got out of his coach at Ryswyk, pin him
+ between the stables and the coach, and then and there do him to death.
+ "You are not to leave him," he cried, "till his soul has left his body."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two expressed their hearty concurrence with this arrangement, and took
+ leave of their host for the night, going, they said, to distribute the
+ seven packages of blood-money. They found Adam Blansaert waiting for them
+ in the downs, and immediately divided the whole amount between themselves
+ and him&mdash;the chimney-sweeper, tailor, and fustian worker, "firm as
+ trees and fierce as lions," having never had any existence save in their
+ fertile imaginations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Monday, 6th February, van Dyk had a closing interview with Stoutenburg
+ and his brother at the house of Groeneveld, and informed them that the
+ execution of the plot had been deferred to the following day. Stoutenburg
+ expressed disgust and impatience at the delay. "I should like to tear the
+ Stadholder to pieces with my own hands!" he cried. He was pacified on
+ hearing that the arrangements had been securely made for the morrow, and
+ turning to his brother observed, "Remember that you can never retract. You
+ are in our power and all your estates at our mercy." He then explained the
+ manner in which the magistracies of Leyden, Gouda, Rotterdam, and other
+ cities were to be instantly remodelled after the death of Maurice, the
+ ex-regents of the Hague at the head of a band of armed peasants being
+ ready at a moment's warning to take possession of the political capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prince Frederic Henry moreover, he hinted darkly and falsely, but in a
+ manner not to be mistaken, was favourable to the movement, and would after
+ the murder of Maurice take the government into his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stoutenburg then went quietly home to pass the day and sleep at his
+ mother's house awaiting the eventful morning of Tuesday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Van Dyk went back to his room at the "Golden Helmet" and began inspecting
+ the contents of the arms and ammunition chest which Jerome Ewouts and his
+ three mates had brought the night before from Rotterdam. He had been
+ somewhat unquiet at having seen nothing of those mariners during the day;
+ when looking out of window, he saw one of them in conference with some
+ soldiers. A minute afterwards he heard a bustle in the rooms below, and
+ found that the house was occupied by a guard, and that Gerritsen, with the
+ three first engaged sailors Dirk, Peter, and Herman, had been arrested at
+ the Zotje. He tried in vain to throw the arms back into the chest and
+ conceal it under the bed, but it was too late. Seizing his hat and
+ wrapping himself in his cloak, with his sword by his side, he walked
+ calmly down the stairs looking carelessly at the group of soldiers and
+ prisoners who filled the passages. A waiter informed the provost-marshal
+ in command that the gentleman was a respectable boarder at the tavern,
+ well known to him for many years. The conspirator passed unchallenged and
+ went straight to inform Stoutenburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The four mariners, last engaged by Slatius at Rotterdam, had signally
+ exemplified the danger of half confidences. Surprised that they should
+ have been so mysteriously entrusted with the execution of an enterprise
+ the particulars of which were concealed from them, and suspecting that
+ crime alone could command such very high prices as had been paid and
+ promised by the ex-clergyman, they had gone straight to the residence of
+ the Stadholder, after depositing the chest at the "Golden Helmet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding that he had driven as usual to Ryswyk, they followed him thither,
+ and by dint of much importunity obtained an audience. If the enterprise
+ was a patriotic one, they reasoned, he would probably know of it and
+ approve it. If it were criminal, it would be useful for them to reveal and
+ dangerous to conceal it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They told the story so far as they knew it to the Prince and showed him
+ the money, 300 florins apiece, which they had already received from
+ Slatius. Maurice hesitated not an instant. It was evident that a dark
+ conspiracy was afoot. He ordered the sailors to return to the Hague by
+ another and circuitous road through Voorburg, while he lost not a moment
+ himself in hurrying back as fast as his horses would carry him. Summoning
+ the president and several councillors of the chief tribunal, he took
+ instant measures to take possession of the two taverns, and arrest all the
+ strangers found in them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime van Dyk came into the house of the widow Barneveld and found
+ Stoutenburg in the stable-yard. He told him the plot was discovered, the
+ chest of arms at the "Golden Helmet" found. "Are there any private letters
+ or papers in the bog?" asked Stoutenburg. "None relating to the affair,"
+ was the answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take yourself off as fast as possible," said Stoutenburg. Van Dyk needed
+ no urging. He escaped through the stables and across the fields in the
+ direction of Leyden. After skulking about for a week however and making
+ very little progress, he was arrested at Hazerswoude, having broken
+ through the ice while attempting to skate across the inundated and frozen
+ pastures in that region.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Proclamations were at once made, denouncing the foul conspiracy in which
+ the sons of the late Advocate Barneveld, the Remonstrant clergyman
+ Slatius, and others, were the ringleaders, and offering 4000 florins each
+ for their apprehension. A public thanksgiving for the deliverance was made
+ in all the churches on the 8th February.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 12th February the States-General sent letters to all their
+ ambassadors and foreign agents, informing them of this execrable plot to
+ overthrow the Commonwealth and take the life of the Stadholder, set on
+ foot by certain Arminian preachers and others of that faction, and this
+ too in winter, when the ice and snow made hostile invasion practicable,
+ and when the enemy was encamped in so many places in the neighbourhood.
+ "The Arminians," said the despatch, "are so filled with bitterness that
+ they would rather the Republic should be lost than that their pretended
+ grievances should go unredressed." Almost every pulpit shook with
+ Contra-Remonstrant thunder against the whole society of Remonstrants, who
+ were held up to the world as rebels and prince-murderers; the criminal
+ conspiracy being charged upon them as a body. Hardly a man of that
+ persuasion dared venture into the streets and public places, for fear of
+ being put to death by the rabble. The Chevalier William of Nassau, natural
+ son of the Stadholder, was very loud and violent in all the taverns and
+ tap-rooms, drinking mighty draughts to the damnation of the Arminians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the timid in consequence shrank away from the society and joined
+ the Contra-Remonstrant Church, while the more courageous members, together
+ with the leaders of that now abhorred communion, published long and
+ stirring appeals to the universal sense of justice, which was outraged by
+ the spectacle of a whole sect being punished for a crime committed by a
+ few individuals, who had once been unworthy members of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime hue and cry was made after the fugitive conspirators. The
+ Blansaerts and William Party having set off from Leyden towards the Hague
+ on Monday night, in order, as they said, to betray their employers, whose
+ money they had taken, and whose criminal orders they had agreed to
+ execute, attempted to escape, but were arrested within ten days. They were
+ exhibited at their prison at Amsterdam to an immense concourse at a
+ shilling a peep, the sums thus collected being distributed to the poor.
+ Slatius made his way disguised as a boor into Friesland, and after various
+ adventures attempted to cross the Bourtange Moors to Lingen. Stopping to
+ refresh himself at a tavern near Koevorden, he found himself in the
+ tap-room in presence of Quartermaster Blau and a company of soldiers from
+ the garrison. The dark scowling boor, travel-stained and weary, with felt
+ hat slouched over his forbidding visage, fierce and timorous at once like
+ a hunted wild beast, excited their suspicion. Seeing himself watched, he
+ got up, paid his scot, and departed, leaving his can of beer untasted.
+ This decided the quartermaster, who accordingly followed the peasant out
+ of the house, and arrested him as a Spanish spy on the watch for the train
+ of specie which the soldiers were then conveying into Koevorden Castle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slatius protested his innocence of any such design, and vehemently
+ besought the officer to release him, telling him as a reason for his
+ urgency and an explanation of his unprepossessing aspect&mdash;that he was
+ an oculist from Amsterdam, John Hermansen by name, that he had just
+ committed a homicide in that place, and was fleeing from justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The honest quartermaster saw no reason why a suspected spy should go free
+ because he proclaimed himself a murderer, nor why an oculist should escape
+ the penalties of homicide. "The more reason," he said, "why thou shouldst
+ be my prisoner." The ex-preacher was arrested and shut up in the state
+ prison at the Hague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The famous engraver Visser executed a likeness on copper-plate of the grim
+ malefactor as he appeared in his boor's disguise. The portrait,
+ accompanied by a fiercely written broadsheet attacking the Remonstrant
+ Church, had a great circulation, and deepened the animosity against the
+ sect upon which the unfrocked preacher had sworn vengeance. His evil face
+ and fame thus became familiar to the public, while the term Hendrik Slaet
+ became a proverb at pot-houses, being held equivalent among tipplers to
+ shirking the bottle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Korenwinder, the treasurer of the association, coming to visit Stoutenburg
+ soon after van Dyk had left him, was informed of the discovery of the plot
+ and did his best to escape, but was arrested within a fortnight's time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stoutenburg himself acted with his usual promptness and coolness. Having
+ gone straightway to his brother to notify him of the discovery and to urge
+ him to instant flight, he contrived to disappear. A few days later a chest
+ of merchandise was brought to the house of a certain citizen of Rotterdam,
+ who had once been a fiddler, but was now a man of considerable property.
+ The chest, when opened, was found to contain the Seigneur de Stoutenburg,
+ who in past times had laid the fiddler under obligations, and in whose
+ house he now lay concealed for many days, and until the strictness with
+ which all roads and ferries in the neighbourhood were watched at first had
+ somewhat given way. Meantime his cousin van der Dussen had also effected
+ his escape, and had joined him in Rotterdam. The faithful fiddler then,
+ for a thousand florins, chartered a trading vessel commanded by one Jacob
+ Beltje to take a cargo of Dutch cheese to Wesel on the Rhine. By this
+ means, after a few adventures, they effected their escape, and, arriving
+ not long afterwards at Brussels, were formally taken under the protection
+ of the Archduchess Isabella.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stoutenburg afterwards travelled in France and Italy, and returned to
+ Brussels. His wife, loathing his crime and spurning all further
+ communication with him, abandoned him to his fate. The daughter of Marnix
+ of Sainte-Aldegonde had endured poverty, obscurity, and unmerited obloquy,
+ which had become the lot of the great statesman's family after his tragic
+ end, but she came of a race that would not brook dishonour. The
+ conspirator and suborner of murder and treason, the hirer and companion of
+ assassins, was no mate for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stoutenburg hesitated for years as to his future career, strangely enough
+ keeping up a hope of being allowed to return to his country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Subsequently he embraced the cause of his country's enemies, converted
+ himself to the Roman Church, and obtained a captaincy of horse in the
+ Spanish service. He was seen one day, to the disgust of many spectators,
+ to enter Antwerp in black foreign uniform, at the head of his troopers,
+ waving a standard with a death's-head embroidered upon it, and wearing,
+ like his soldiers, a sable scarf and plume. History disdains to follow
+ further the career of the renegade, traitor, end assassin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Seigneur de Groeneveld learned from his younger brother, on the
+ eventful 6th of February, that the plot had been discovered, he gave
+ himself up for lost. Remorse and despair, fastening upon his naturally
+ feeble character, seemed to render him powerless. His wife, of more
+ hopeful disposition than himself and of less heroic mould than Walburg de
+ Marnix, encouraged him to fly. He fled accordingly, through the desolate
+ sandy downs which roll between the Hague and the sea, to Scheveningen,
+ then an obscure fishing village on the coast, at a league's distance from
+ the capital. Here a fisherman, devoted to him and his family, received him
+ in his hut, disguised him in boatman's attire, and went with him to the
+ strand, proposing to launch his pinkie, put out at once to sea, and to
+ land him on the English coast, the French coast, in Hamburg&mdash;where he
+ would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sight of that long, sandy beach stretching for more than seventy miles
+ in an unbroken, melancholy line, without cove, curve, or indentation to
+ break its cruel monotony, and with the wild waves of the German Ocean,
+ lashed by a wintry storm, breaking into white foam as far as the eye could
+ reach, appalled the fugitive criminal. With the certainty of an
+ ignominious death behind him, he shrank abjectly from the terrors of the
+ sea, and, despite the honest fisherman's entreaties, refused to enter the
+ boat and face the storm. He wandered feebly along the coast, still
+ accompanied by his humble friend, to another little village, where the
+ fisherman procured a waggon, which took them as far as Sandvoort. Thence
+ he made his way through Egmond and Petten and across the Marsdiep to
+ Tegel, where not deeming himself safe he had himself ferried over to the
+ neighbouring island of Vlieland. Here amongst the quicksands, whirlpools,
+ and shallows which mark the last verge of habitable Holland, the unhappy
+ fugitive stood at bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime information had come to the authorities that a suspicious
+ stranger had been seen at Scheveningen. The fisherman's wife was arrested.
+ Threatened with torture she at last confessed with whom her husband had
+ fled and whither. Information was sent to the bailiff of Vlieland, who
+ with a party of followers made a strict search through his narrow
+ precincts. A group of seamen seated on the sands was soon discovered,
+ among whom, dressed in shaggy pea jacket with long fisherman's boots, was
+ the Seigneur de Groeneveld, who, easily recognized through his disguise,
+ submitted to his captors without a struggle. The Scheveningen fisherman,
+ who had been so faithful to him, making a sudden spring, eluded his
+ pursuers and disappeared; thus escaping the gibbet which would probably
+ have been his doom instead of the reward of 4000 golden guilders which he
+ might have had for betraying him. Thus a sum more than double the amount
+ originally furnished by Groeneveld, as the capital of the assassination
+ company, had been rejected by the Rotterdam boatman who saved Stoutenburg,
+ and by the Scheveningen fisherman who was ready to save Groeneveld. On the
+ 19th February, within less than a fortnight from the explosion of the
+ conspiracy, the eldest son of Barneveld was lodged in the Gevangen Poort
+ or state prison of the Hague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The awful news of the 6th February had struck the widow of Barneveld as
+ with a thunderbolt. Both her sons were proclaimed as murderers and
+ suborners of assassins, and a price put upon their heads. She remained for
+ days neither speaking nor weeping; scarcely eating, drinking, or sleeping.
+ She seemed frozen to stone. Her daughters and friends could not tell
+ whether she were dying or had lost her reason. At length the escape of
+ Stoutenburg and the capture of Groeneveld seemed to rouse her from her
+ trance. She then stooped to do what she had sternly refused to do when her
+ husband was in the hands of the authorities. Accompanied by the wife and
+ infant son of Groeneveld she obtained an audience of the stern Stadholder,
+ fell on her knees before him, and implored mercy and pardon for her son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maurice received her calmly and not discourteously, but held out no hopes
+ of pardon. The criminal was in the hands of justice, he said, and he had
+ no power to interfere. But there can scarcely be a doubt that he had power
+ after the sentence to forgive or to commute, and it will be remembered
+ that when Barneveld himself was about to suffer, the Prince had asked the
+ clergyman Walaeus with much anxiety whether the prisoner in his message
+ had said nothing of pardon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Referring to the bitter past, Maurice asked Madame de Barneveld why she
+ not asked mercy for her son, having refused to do so for her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her answer was simple and noble:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My husband was innocent of crime," she said; "my son is guilty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idea of pardon in this case was of course preposterous. Certainly if
+ Groeneveld had been forgiven, it would have been impossible to punish the
+ thirteen less guilty conspirators, already in the hands of justice, whom
+ he had hired to commit the assassination. The spectacle of the two
+ cowardly ringleaders going free while the meaner criminals were gibbeted
+ would have been a shock to the most rudimentary ideas of justice. It would
+ have been an equal outrage to pardon the younger Barnevelds for intended
+ murder, in which they had almost succeeded, when their great father had
+ already suffered for a constructive lese-majesty, the guilt of which had
+ been stoutly denied. Yet such is the dreary chain of cause and effect that
+ it is certain, had pardon been nobly offered to the statesman, whose views
+ of constitutional law varied from those of the dominant party, the later
+ crime would never have been committed. But Francis Aerssens&mdash;considering
+ his own and other partisans lives at stake if the States' right party did
+ not fall&mdash;had been able to bear down all thoughts of mercy. He was
+ successful, was called to the house of nobles, and regained the embassy of
+ Paris, while the house of Barneveld was trodden into the dust of dishonour
+ and ruin. Rarely has an offended politician's revenge been more thorough
+ than his. Never did the mocking fiend betray his victims into the hands of
+ the avenger more sardonically than was done in this sombre tragedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trials of the prisoners were rapidly conducted. Van Dyk, cruelly
+ tortured, confessed on the rack all the details of the conspiracy as they
+ were afterwards embodied in the sentences and have been stated in the
+ preceding narrative. Groeneveld was not tortured. His answers to the
+ interrogatories were so vague as to excite amazement at his general
+ ignorance of the foul transaction or at the feebleness of his memory,
+ while there was no attempt on his part to exculpate himself from the
+ damning charge. That it was he who had furnished funds for the proposed
+ murder and mutiny, knowing the purpose to which they were to be applied,
+ was proved beyond all cavil and fully avowed by him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 28th May, he, Korenwinder, and van Dyk were notified that they were
+ to appear next day in the courthouse to hear their sentence, which would
+ immediately afterwards be executed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night his mother, wife, and son paid him a long visit of farewell in
+ his prison. The Gevangen Poort of the Hague, an antique but mean building
+ of brown brick and commonplace aspect, still stands in one of the most
+ public parts of the city. A gloomy archway, surmounted by windows grimly
+ guarded by iron lattice-work, forms the general thoroughfare from the
+ aristocratic Plaats and Kneuterdyk and Vyverberg to the inner court of the
+ ancient palace. The cells within are dark, noisome, and dimly lighted, and
+ even to this day the very instruments of torture, used in the trials of
+ these and other prisoners, may be seen by the curious. Half a century
+ later the brothers de Witt were dragged from this prison to be literally
+ torn to pieces by an infuriated mob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The misery of that midnight interview between the widow of Barneveld, her
+ daughter-in-law, and the condemned son and husband need not be described.
+ As the morning approached, the gaoler warned the matrons to take their
+ departure that the prisoner might sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What a woful widow you will be," said Groeneveld to his wife, as she sank
+ choking with tears upon the ground. The words suddenly aroused in her the
+ sense of respect for their name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At least for all this misery endured," she said firmly, "do me enough
+ honour to die like a gentleman." He promised it. The mother then took
+ leave of the son, and History drops a decorous veil henceforth over the
+ grief-stricken form of Mary of Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning the life-guards of the Stadholder and other troops were drawn
+ up in battle-array in the outer and inner courtyard of the supreme
+ tribunal and palace. At ten o'clock Groeneveld came forth from the prison.
+ The Stadholder had granted as a boon to the family that he might be
+ neither fettered nor guarded as he walked to the tribunal. The prisoner
+ did not forget his parting promise to his wife. He appeared full-dressed
+ in velvet cloak and plumed hat, with rapier by his side, walking calmly
+ through the inner courtyard to the great hall. Observing the windows of
+ the Stadholder's apartments crowded with spectators, among whom he seemed
+ to recognize the Prince's face, he took off his hat and made a graceful
+ and dignified salute. He greeted with courtesy many acquaintances among
+ the crowd through which he passed. He entered the hall and listened in
+ silence to the sentence condemning him to be immediately executed with the
+ sword. Van Dyk and Korenwinder shared the same doom, but were
+ provisionally taken back to prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Groeneveld then walked calmly and gracefully as before from the hall to
+ the scaffold, attended by his own valet, and preceded by the
+ provost-marshal and assistants. He was to suffer, not where his father had
+ been beheaded, but on the "Green Sod." This public place of execution for
+ ordinary criminals was singularly enough in the most elegant and
+ frequented quarter of the Hague. A few rods from the Gevangen Poort, at
+ the western end of the Vyverberg, on the edge of the cheerful triangle
+ called the Plaats, and looking directly down the broad and stately
+ Kneuterdyk, at the end of which stood Aremberg House, lately the residence
+ of the great Advocate, was the mean and sordid scaffold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Groeneveld ascended it with perfect composure. The man who had been
+ browbeaten into crime by an overbearing and ferocious brother, who had
+ quailed before the angry waves of the North Sea, which would have borne
+ him to a place of entire security, now faced his fate with a smile upon
+ his lips. He took off his hat, cloak, and sword, and handed them to his
+ valet. He calmly undid his ruff and wristbands of pointlace, and tossed
+ them on the ground. With his own hands and the assistance of his servant
+ he unbuttoned his doublet, laying breast and neck open without suffering
+ the headsman's hands to approach him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then walked to the heap of sand and spoke a very few words to the vast
+ throng of spectators.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Desire of vengeance and evil counsel," he said, "have brought me here. If
+ I have wronged any man among you, I beg him for Christ's sake to forgive
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Kneeling on the sand with his face turned towards his father's house at
+ the end of the Kneuterdyk, he said his prayers. Then putting a red velvet
+ cap over his eyes, he was heard to mutter:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "O God! what a man I was once, and what am I now?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Calmly folding his hands, he said, "Patience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The executioner then struck off his head at a blow. His body, wrapped in a
+ black cloak, was sent to his house and buried in his father's tomb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Van Dyk and Korenwinder were executed immediately afterwards. They were
+ quartered and their heads exposed on stakes. The joiner Gerritsen and the
+ three sailors had already been beheaded. The Blansaerts and William Party,
+ together with the grim Slatius, who was savage and turbulent to the last,
+ had suffered on the 5th of May.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fourteen in all were executed for this crime, including an unfortunate
+ tailor and two other mechanics of Leyden, who had heard something
+ whispered about the conspiracy, had nothing whatever to do with it, but
+ from ignorance, apathy, or timidity did not denounce it. The ringleader
+ and the equally guilty van der Dussen had, as has been seen, effected
+ their escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus ended the long tragedy of the Barnevelds. The result of this foul
+ conspiracy and its failure to effect the crime proposed strengthened
+ immensely the power, popularity, and influence of the Stadholder, made the
+ orthodox church triumphant, and nearly ruined the sect of the
+ Remonstrants, the Arminians&mdash;most unjustly in reality, although with
+ a pitiful show of reason&mdash;being held guilty of the crime of
+ Stoutenburg and Slatius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Republic&mdash;that magnificent commonwealth which in its infancy had
+ confronted, single-handed, the greatest empire of the earth, and had
+ wrested its independence from the ancient despot after a forty years'
+ struggle&mdash;had now been rent in twain, although in very unequal
+ portions, by the fiend of political and religious hatred. Thus crippled,
+ she was to go forth and take her share in that awful conflict now in full
+ blaze, and of which after-ages were to speak with a shudder as the Thirty
+ Years' War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Argument in a circle
+ He that stands let him see that he does not fall
+ If he has deserved it, let them strike off his head
+ Misery had come not from their being enemies
+ O God! what does man come to!
+ Party hatred was not yet glutted with the blood it had drunk
+ Rose superior to his doom and took captivity captive
+ This, then, is the reward of forty years' service to the State
+ To milk, the cow as long as she would give milk
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS, ENTIRE JOHN OF BARNEVELD 1609-1623:
+
+ Abstinence from inquisition into consciences and private parlour
+ Acts of violence which under pretext of religion
+ Adulation for inferiors whom they despise
+ Advanced orthodox party-Puritans
+ Affection of his friends and the wrath of his enemies
+ Allowed the demon of religious hatred to enter into its body
+ Almost infinite power of the meanest of passions
+ And give advice. Of that, although always a spendthrift
+ And now the knife of another priest-led fanatic
+ Argument in a circle
+ Aristocracy of God's elect
+ As with his own people, keeping no back-door open
+ At a blow decapitated France
+ Atheist, a tyrant, because he resisted dictation from the clergy
+ Behead, torture, burn alive, and bury alive all heretics
+ Better to be governed by magistrates than mobs
+ Burning with bitter revenge for all the favours he had received
+ Calumny is often a stronger and more lasting power than disdain
+ Casual outbursts of eternal friendship
+ Changed his positions and contradicted himself day by day
+ Christian sympathy and a small assistance not being sufficient
+ Conciliation when war of extermination was intended
+ Conclusive victory for the allies seemed as predestined
+ Considered it his special mission in the world to mediate
+ Contained within itself the germs of a larger liberty
+ Could not be both judge and party in the suit
+ Covered now with the satirical dust of centuries
+ Created one child for damnation and another for salvation
+ Deadly hatred of Puritans in England and Holland
+ Death rather than life with a false acknowledgment of guilt
+ Denoungced as an obstacle to peace
+ Depths of credulity men in all ages can sink
+ Depths theological party spirit could descend
+ Determined to bring the very name of liberty into contempt
+ Devote himself to his gout and to his fair young wife
+ Disputing the eternal damnation of young children
+ Doctrine of predestination in its sternest and strictest sense
+ Emperor of Japan addressed him as his brother monarch
+ Enemy of all compulsion of the human conscience
+ Epernon, the true murderer of Henry
+ Estimating his character and judging his judges
+ Everybody should mind his own business
+ Extraordinary capacity for yielding to gentle violence
+ Fate, free will, or absolute foreknowledge
+ Father Cotton, who was only too ready to betray the secrets
+ France was mourning Henry and waiting for Richelieu
+ Furious mob set upon the house of Rem Bischop
+ Give him advice if he asked it, and money when he required
+ Great war of religion and politics was postponed
+ Hardly a sound Protestant policy anywhere but in Holland
+ He was not imperial of aspect on canvas or coin
+ He who would have all may easily lose all
+ He who spreads the snare always tumbles into the ditch himself
+ He was a sincere bigot
+ He that stands let him see that he does not fall
+ Heidelberg Catechism were declared to be infallible
+ Highborn demagogues in that as in every age affect adulation
+ History has not too many really important and emblematic men
+ Human nature in its meanness and shame
+ I know how to console myself
+ I hope and I fear
+ If he has deserved it, let them strike off his head
+ Impatience is often on the part of the non-combatants
+ Implication there was much, of assertion very little
+ In this he was much behind his age or before it
+ Intense bigotry of conviction
+ International friendship, the self-interest of each
+ It had not yet occurred to him that he was married
+ It was the true religion, and there was none other
+ James of England, who admired, envied, and hated Henry
+ Jealousy, that potent principle
+ Jesuit Mariana&mdash;justifying the killing of excommunicated kings
+ John Robinson
+ King who thought it furious madness to resist the enemy
+ King's definite and final intentions, varied from day to day
+ Language which is ever living because it is dead
+ Logic is rarely the quality on which kings pride themselves
+ Louis XIII.
+ Ludicrous gravity
+ Magistracy at that moment seemed to mean the sword
+ Make the very name of man a term of reproach
+ Misery had come not from their being enemies
+ Mockery of negotiation in which nothing could be negotiated
+ More apprehension of fraud than of force
+ More fiercely opposed to each other than to Papists
+ Most detestable verses that even he had ever composed
+ Necessity of deferring to powerful sovereigns
+ Neither kings nor governments are apt to value logic
+ Never lack of fishers in troubled waters
+ No man pretended to think of the State
+ No man can be neutral in civil contentions
+ No synod had a right to claim Netherlanders as slaves
+ None but God to compel me to say more than I choose to say
+ Not his custom nor that of his councillors to go to bed
+ O God! what does man come to!
+ Only true religion
+ Opening an abyss between government and people
+ Opposed the subjection of the magistracy by the priesthood
+ Outdoing himself in dogmatism and inconsistency
+ Partisans wanted not accommodation but victory
+ Party hatred was not yet glutted with the blood it had drunk
+ Philip IV.
+ Pot-valiant hero
+ Power the poison of which it is so difficult to resist
+ Practised successfully the talent of silence
+ Presents of considerable sums of money to the negotiators made
+ Priests shall control the state or the state govern the priests
+ Princes show what they have in them at twenty-five or never
+ Puritanism in Holland was a very different thing from England
+ Putting the cart before the oxen
+ Queen is entirely in the hands of Spain and the priests
+ Rather a wilderness to reign over than a single heretic
+ Religion was made the strumpet of Political Ambition
+ Religious toleration, which is a phrase of insult
+ Resolve to maintain the civil authority over the military
+ Rose superior to his doom and took captivity captive
+ Safest citadel against an invader and a tyrant is distrust
+ Schism in the Church had become a public fact
+ Secure the prizes of war without the troubles and dangers
+ Seemed bent on self-destruction
+ Senectus edam maorbus est
+ She declined to be his procuress
+ Small matter which human folly had dilated into a great one
+ Smooth words, in the plentiful lack of any substantial
+ So much in advance of his time as to favor religious equality
+ Stand between hope and fear
+ Stroke of a broken table knife sharpened on a carriage wheel
+ Successful in this step, he is ready for greater ones
+ Tempest of passion and prejudice
+ That he tries to lay the fault on us is pure malice
+ That cynical commerce in human lives
+ The effect of energetic, uncompromising calumny
+ The evils resulting from a confederate system of government
+ The vehicle is often prized more than the freight
+ The voice of slanderers
+ The truth in shortest about matters of importance
+ The assassin, tortured and torn by four horses
+ The defence of the civil authority against the priesthood
+ The magnitude of this wonderful sovereign's littleness
+ The Catholic League and the Protestant Union
+ Their own roofs were not quite yet in a blaze
+ Theological hatred was in full blaze throughout the country
+ Theology and politics were one
+ There was no use in holding language of authority to him
+ There was but one king in Europe, Henry the Bearnese
+ Therefore now denounced the man whom he had injured
+ They have killed him, 'e ammazato,' cried Concini
+ Things he could tell which are too odious and dreadful
+ Thirty Years' War tread on the heels of the forty years
+ This wonderful sovereign's littleness oppresses the imagination
+ This, then, is the reward of forty years' service to the State
+ To milk, the cow as long as she would give milk
+ To stifle for ever the right of free enquiry
+ To look down upon their inferior and lost fellow creatures
+ Uncouple the dogs and let them run
+ Unimaginable outrage as the most legitimate industry
+ Vows of an eternal friendship of several weeks' duration
+ What could save the House of Austria, the cause of Papacy
+ Whether repentance could effect salvation
+ Whether dead infants were hopelessly damned
+ Whose mutual hatred was now artfully inflamed by partisans
+ William Brewster
+ Wise and honest a man, although he be somewhat longsome
+ Wish to appear learned in matters of which they are ignorant
+ Work of the aforesaid Puritans and a few Jesuits
+ Wrath of the Jesuits at this exercise of legal authority
+ Yes, there are wicked men about
+ Yesterday is the preceptor of To-morrow
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life of John of Barneveld,
+1614-23, Volume II., by John Lothrop Motley
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+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </body>
+</html>