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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ History of the United Netherlands, Volume II. by John Lothrop Motley
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd7; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ 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;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
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+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of History of the United Netherlands, 1586-89,
+Vol. II. Complete, by John Lothrop Motley
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: History of the United Netherlands, 1586-89, Vol. II. Complete
+
+Author: John Lothrop Motley
+
+Release Date: October 15, 2006 [EBook #4860]
+Last Updated: November 3, 2012
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNITED NETHERLANDS, II. ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <h1>
+ HISTORY OF THE UNITED NETHERLANDS
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ Volume II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ From the Death of William the Silent to the Twelve Year's Truce&mdash;1609
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By John Lothrop Motley
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" border="3" cellpadding="4">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a
+ href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/4847/4847-h/4847-h.htm"><b>Volume
+ I.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</b></a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" border="3" cellpadding="4">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a
+ href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/7552/7552-h/7552-h.htm"><b>IMAGES
+ and QUOTES</b>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER IX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1586 <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER X. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1586 <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER XI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1586 <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER XII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1586 <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1587 <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1587 <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER XV. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1587 <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1587 <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1587 <br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1588, Part 1. <br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XVIII. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1588,
+ Part 2. <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1588,
+ Part 1. <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1588,
+ Part 2. <br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XX. </a>&nbsp;&nbsp;1588-1589
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. 1586
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Military Plans in the Netherlands&mdash;The Elector and Electorate of
+ Cologne&mdash;Martin Schenk&mdash;His Career before serving the States&mdash;
+ Franeker University founded&mdash;Parma attempts Grave&mdash;Battle on the
+ Meuse&mdash;Success and Vainglory of Leicester&mdash;St. George's Day
+ triumphantly kept at Utrecht&mdash;Parma not so much appalled as it was
+ thought&mdash;He besieges and reduces Grave&mdash;And is Master of the Meuse&mdash;
+ Leicester's Rage at the Surrender of Grave&mdash;His Revenge&mdash;Parma on
+ the Rhine&mdash;He besieges aid assaults Neusz&mdash;Horrible Fate of the
+ Garrison and City&mdash;Which Leicester was unable to relieve&mdash;Asel
+ surprised by Maurice and Sidney&mdash;The Zeeland Regiment given to
+ Sidney&mdash;Condition of the Irish and English Troops&mdash;Leicester takes
+ the Field&mdash;He reduces Doesburg&mdash;He lays siege to Zutphen&mdash;Which
+ Parma prepares to relieve&mdash;The English intercept the Convoy&mdash;Battle
+ of Warnsfeld&mdash;Sir Philip Sidney wounded&mdash;Results of the Encounter&mdash;
+ Death of Sidney at Arnheim&mdash;Gallantry of Edward Stanley.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Five great rivers hold the Netherland territory in their coils. Three are
+ but slightly separated&mdash;the Yssel, Waal, and ancient Rhine, while the
+ Scheldt and, Meuse are spread more widely asunder. Along each of these
+ streams were various fortified cities, the possession of which, in those
+ days, when modern fortification was in its infancy, implied the control of
+ the surrounding country. The lower part of all the rivers, where they
+ mingled with the sea and became wide estuaries, belonged to the Republic,
+ for the coasts and the ocean were in the hands of the Hollanders and
+ English. Above, the various strong places were alternately in the hands of
+ the Spaniards and of the patriots. Thus Antwerp, with the other Scheldt
+ cities, had fallen into Parma's power, but Flushing, which controlled them
+ all, was held by Philip Sidney for the Queen and States. On the Meuse,
+ Maastricht and Roermond were Spanish, but Yenloo, Grave, Meghem, and other
+ towns, held for the commonwealth. On the Waal, the town of Nymegen had,
+ through the dexterity of Martin Schenk, been recently transferred to the
+ royalists, while the rest of that river's course was true to the republic.
+ The Rhine, strictly so called, from its entrance into Netherland, belonged
+ to the rebels. Upon its elder branch, the Yssel, Zutphen was in Parma's
+ hands, while, a little below, Deventer had been recently and adroitly
+ saved by Leicester and Count Meurs from falling into the same dangerous
+ grasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the triple Rhine, after it had crossed the German frontier, belonged
+ mainly, although not exclusively, to the States. But on the edge of the
+ Batavian territory, the ancient river, just before dividing itself into
+ its three branches, flowed through a debatable country which was even more
+ desolate and forlorn, if possible, than the land of the obedient
+ Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This unfortunate district was the archi-episcopal electorate of Cologne.
+ The city of Cologne itself, Neusz, and Rheinberg, on the river, Werll and
+ other places in Westphalia and the whole country around, were endangered,
+ invaded, ravaged, and the inhabitants plundered, murdered, and subjected
+ to every imaginable outrage, by rival bands of highwaymen, enlisted in the
+ support of the two rival bishops&mdash;beggars, outcasts, but high-born
+ and learned churchmen both&mdash;who disputed the electorate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the commencement of the year a portion of the bishopric was still in
+ the control of the deposed Protestant elector Gebhard Truchsess, assisted
+ of course by the English and the States. The city of Cologne was held by
+ the Catholic elector, Ernest of Bavaria, bishop of Liege; but Neusz and
+ Rheinberg were in the hands of the Dutch republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The military operations of the year were, accordingly, along the Meuse,
+ where the main object of Parma was to wrest Grave From the Netherlands;
+ along the Waal, where, on the other hand, the patriots wished to recover
+ Nymegen; on the Yssel, where they desired to obtain the possession of
+ Zutphen; and in the Cologne electorate, where the Spaniards meant, if
+ possible, to transfer Neusz and Rheinberg from Truchsess to Elector
+ Ernest. To clear the course of these streams, and especially to set free
+ that debatable portion of the river-territory which hemmed him in from
+ neutral Germany, and cut off the supplies from his starving troops, was
+ the immediate design of Alexander Farnese.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could be more desolate than the condition of the electorate. Ever
+ since Gebhard Truchsess had renounced the communion of the Catholic Church
+ for the love of Agnes Mansfeld, and so gained a wife and lost his
+ principality, he had been a dependant upon the impoverished Nassaus, or a
+ supplicant for alms to the thrifty Elizabeth. The Queen was frequently
+ implored by Leicester, without much effect, to send the ex-elector a few
+ hundred pounds to keep him from starving, as "he had not one groat to live
+ upon," and, a little later, he was employed as a go-between, and almost a
+ spy, by the Earl, in his quarrels with the patrician party rapidly forming
+ against him in the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Godesberg&mdash;the romantic ruins of which stronghold the traveller
+ still regards with interest, placed as it is in the midst of that
+ enchanting region where Drachenfels looks down on the crumbling tower of
+ Roland and the convent of Nonnenwerth&mdash;the unfortunate Gebhard had
+ sustained a conclusive defeat. A small, melancholy man, accomplished,
+ religious, learned, "very poor but very wise," comely, but of mean
+ stature, altogether an unlucky and forlorn individual, he was not, after
+ all, in very much inferior plight to that in which his rival, the Bavarian
+ bishop, had found himself. Prince Ernest, archbishop of Liege and Cologne,
+ a hangeron of his brother, who sought to shake him off, and a stipendiary
+ of Philip, who was a worse paymaster than Elizabeth, had a sorry life of
+ it, notwithstanding his nominal possession of the see. He was forced to
+ go, disguised and in secret, to the Prince of Parma at Brussels, to ask
+ for assistance, and to mention, with lacrymose vehemence, that both his
+ brother and himself had determined to renounce the episcopate, unless the
+ forces of the Spanish King could be employed to recover the cities on the
+ Rhine. If Neusz and Rheinberg were not wrested from the rebels; Cologne
+ itself would soon be gone. Ernest represented most eloquently to
+ Alexander, that if the protestant archbishop were reinstated in the
+ ancient see, it would be a most perilous result for the ancient church
+ throughout all northern Europe. Parma kept the wandering prelate for a few
+ days in his palace in Brussels, and then dismissed him, disguised and on
+ foot, in the dusk of the evening, through the park-gate. He encouraged him
+ with hopes of assistance, he represented to his sovereign the importance
+ of preserving the Rhenish territory to Bishop Ernest and to Catholicism,
+ but hinted that the declared intention of the Bavarian to resign the
+ dignity, was probably a trick, because the archi-episcopate was no such
+ very bad thing after all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The archi-episcopate might be no very bad thing, but it was a most
+ uncomfortable place of residence, at the moment, for prince or peasant.
+ Overrun by hordes of brigands, and crushed almost out of existence by that
+ most deadly of all systems of taxations, the 'brandschatzung,' it was fast
+ becoming a mere den of thieves. The 'brandschatzung' had no name in
+ English, but it was the well-known impost, levied by roving commanders,
+ and even by respectable generals of all nations. A hamlet, cluster of
+ farm-houses, country district, or wealthy city, in order to escape being
+ burned and ravaged, as the penalty of having fallen into a conqueror's
+ hands, paid a heavy sum of ready money on the nail at command of the
+ conqueror. The free companions of the sixteenth century drove a lucrative
+ business in this particular branch of industry; and when to this was added
+ the more direct profits derived from actual plunder, sack, and ransoming,
+ it was natural that a large fortune was often the result to the thrifty
+ and persevering commander of free lances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the professors of this comprehensive art, the terrible Martin
+ Schenk was preeminent; and he was now ravaging the Cologne territory,
+ having recently passed again to the service of the States. Immediately
+ connected with the chief military events of the period which now occupies
+ us, he was also the very archetype of the marauders whose existence was
+ characteristic of the epoch. Born in 1549 of an ancient and noble family
+ of Gelderland, Martin Schenk had inherited no property but a sword.
+ Serving for a brief term as page to the Seigneur of Ysselstein, he joined,
+ while yet a youth, the banner of William of Orange, at the head of two
+ men-at-arms. The humble knight-errant, with his brace of squires, was
+ received with courtesy by the Prince and the Estates, but he soon
+ quarrelled with his patrons. There was a castle of Blyenbeek, belonging to
+ his cousin, which he chose to consider his rightful property, because he
+ was of the same race, and because it was a convenient and productive
+ estate and residence, The courts had different views of public law, and
+ supported the ousted cousin. Martin shut himself up in the castle, and
+ having recently committed a rather discreditable homicide, which still
+ further increased his unpopularity with the patriots, he made overtures to
+ Parma. Alexander was glad to enlist so bold a soldier on his side, and
+ assisted Schenk in his besieged stronghold. For years afterwards, his
+ services under the King's banner were most brilliant, and he rose to the
+ highest military command, while his coffers, meantime, were rapidly
+ filling with the results of his robberies and 'brandschatzungs.' "'Tis a
+ most courageous fellow," said Parma, "but rather a desperate highwayman
+ than a valiant soldier." Martin's couple of lances had expanded into a
+ corps of free companions, the most truculent, the most obedient, the most
+ rapacious in Christendom. Never were freebooters more formidable to the
+ world at large, or more docile to their chief, than were the followers of
+ General Schenk. Never was a more finished captain of highwaymen. He was a
+ man who was never sober, yet who never smiled. His habitual intoxication
+ seemed only to increase both his audacity and his taciturnity, without
+ disturbing his reason. He was incapable of fear, of fatigue, of remorse.
+ He could remain for days and nights without dismounting-eating, drinking,
+ and sleeping in the saddle; so that to this terrible centaur his horse
+ seemed actually a part of himself. His soldiers followed him about like
+ hounds, and were treated by him like hounds. He habitually scourged them,
+ often took with his own hand the lives of such as displeased him, and had
+ been known to cause individuals of them to jump from the top of church
+ steeples at his command; yet the pack were ever stanch to his orders, for
+ they knew that he always led them where the game was plenty. While serving
+ under Parma he had twice most brilliantly defeated Hohenlo. At the battle
+ of Hardenberg Heath he had completely outgeneralled that distinguished
+ chieftain, slaying fifteen hundred of his soldiers at the expense of only
+ fifty or sixty of his own. By this triumph he had preserved the important
+ city of Groningen for Philip, during an additional quarter of a century,
+ and had been received in that city with rapture. Several startling years
+ of victory and rapine he had thus run through as a royalist partisan. He
+ became the terror and the scourge of his native Gelderland, and he was
+ covered with wounds received in the King's service. He had been twice
+ captured and held for ransom. Twice he had effected his escape. He had
+ recently gained the city of Nymegen. He was the most formidable, the most
+ unscrupulous, the most audacious Netherlander that wore Philip's colours;
+ but he had received small public reward for his services, and the wealth
+ which he earned on the high-road did not suffice for his ambition. He had
+ been deeply disgusted, when, at the death of Count Renneberg, Verdugo, a
+ former stable-boy of Mansfeld, a Spaniard who had risen from the humblest
+ rank to be a colonel and general, had been made governor of Friesland. He
+ had smothered his resentment for a time however, but had sworn within
+ himself to desert at the most favourable opportunity. At last, after he
+ had brilliantly saved the city of Breda from falling into the hands of the
+ patriots, he was more enraged than he had ever been before, when
+ Haultepenne, of the house of Berlapmont, was made governor of that place
+ in his stead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 25th of May, 1585, at an hour after midnight, he had a secret
+ interview with Count Meurs, stadholder for the States of Gelderland, and
+ agreed to transfer his mercenary allegiance to the republic. He made good
+ terms. He was to be lieutenant-governor of Gelderland, and he was to have
+ rank as marshal of the camp in the States' army, with a salary of twelve
+ hundred and fifty guilders a month. He agreed to resign his famous castle
+ of Blyenbeek, but was to be reimbursed with estates in Holland and
+ Zeeland, of the annual value of four thousand florins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this treaty, Martin and his free lances served the States
+ faithfully, and became sworn foes to Parma and the King. He gave and took
+ no quarter, and his men, if captured, "paid their ransom with their
+ heads." He ceased to be the scourge of Gelderland, but he became the
+ terror of the electorate. Early in 1586, accompanied by Herman Kloet, the
+ young and daring Dutch commandant of Neusz, he had swept down into the
+ Westphalian country, at the head of five hundred foot and five hundred
+ horse. On the 18th of March he captured the city of Werll by a neat
+ stratagem. The citizens, hemmed in on all sides by marauders, were in want
+ of many necessaries of life, among other things, of salt. Martin had, from
+ time to time, sent some of his soldiers into the place, disguised as boors
+ from the neighbourhood, and carrying bags of that article. A pacific
+ trading intercourse had thus been established between the burghers within
+ and the banditti without the gates. Agreeable relations were formed within
+ the walls, and a party of townsmen had agreed to cooperate with the
+ followers of Schenk. One morning a train of waggons laden with soldiers
+ neatly covered with salt, made their appearance at the gate. At the same
+ time a fire broke out most opportunely within the town. The citizens
+ busily employed themselves in extinguishing the flames. The salted
+ soldiers, after passing through the gateway, sprang from the waggons, and
+ mastered the watch. The town was. carried at a blow. Some of the
+ inhabitants were massacred as a warning to the rest; others were taken
+ prisoners and held for ransom; a few, more fortunate, made their escape to
+ the citadel. That fortress was stormed in vain, but the city was
+ thoroughly sacked. Every house was rifled of its contents. Meantime
+ Haultepenne collected a force of nearly four thousand men, boors,
+ citizens, and soldiers, and came to besiege Schenk in the town, while, at
+ the same time, attacks were made upon him from the castle. It was
+ impossible for him to hold the city, but he had completely robbed it of
+ every thing valuable. Accordingly he loaded a train of waggons with his
+ booty, took with him thirty of the magistrates as hostages, with other
+ wealthy citizens, and marching in good order against Haultepenne,
+ completely routed him, killing a number variously estimated at from five
+ hundred to two thousand, and effected his retreat, desperately wounded in
+ the thigh, but triumphant, and laden with the spoils to Venlo on the
+ Meuse, of which city he was governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Surely this is a noble fellow, a worthy fellow," exclaimed Leicester, who
+ was filled with admiration at the bold marauder's progress, and vowed that
+ he was "the only soldier in truth that they had, for he was never idle,
+ and had succeeded hitherto very happily."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, at every point of the doomed territory of the little
+ commonwealth, the natural atmosphere in which the inhabitants existed was
+ one of blood and rapine. Yet during the very slight lull, which was
+ interposed in the winter of 1585-6 to the eternal clang of arms in
+ Friesland, the Estates of that Province, to their lasting honour, founded
+ the university of Franeker. A dozen years before, the famous institution
+ at Leyden had been established, as a reward to the burghers for their
+ heroic defence of the city. And now this new proof was given of the love
+ of Netherlanders, even in the midst of their misery and their warfare, for
+ the more humane arts. The new college was well endowed from ancient
+ churchlands, and not only was the education made nearly gratuitous, while
+ handsome salaries were provided for the professors, but provision was made
+ by which the poorer scholars could be fed and boarded at a very moderate
+ expense. There was a table provided at an annual cost to the student of
+ but fifty florins, and a second and third table at the very low price of
+ forty and thirty florins respectively. Thus the sum to be paid by the
+ poorer class of scholars for a year's maintenance was less than three
+ pounds sterling a year [1855 exchange rate D.W.]. The voice with which
+ this infant seminary of the Muses first made itself heard above the din of
+ war was but feeble, but the institution was destined to thrive, and to
+ endow the world, for many successive generations, with the golden fruits
+ of science and genius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the spring, the war was seriously taken in hand by Farnese. It
+ has already been seen that the republic had been almost entirely driven
+ out of Flanders and Brabant. The Estates, however, still held Grave,
+ Megem, Batenburg, and Venlo upon the Meuse. That river formed, as it were,
+ a perfect circle of protection for the whole Province of Brabant, and
+ Farnese determined to make himself master of this great natural moat.
+ Afterwards, he meant to possess himself of the Rhine, flowing in a
+ parallel course, about twenty-five miles further to the east. In order to
+ gain and hold the Meuse, the first step was to reduce the city of Grave.
+ That town, upon the left or Brabant bank, was strongly fortified on its
+ land-side, where it was surrounded by low and fertile pastures, while,
+ upon the other, it depended upon its natural Toss, the river. It was,
+ according to Lord North and the Earl of Leicester, the "strongest town in
+ all the Low Countries, though but a little one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baron Hemart, a young Gueldrian noble, of small experience in military
+ affairs, commanded in the city, his garrison being eight hundred soldiers,
+ and about one thousand burgher guard. As early as January, Farnese had
+ ordered Count Mansfeld to lay siege to the place. Five forts had
+ accordingly been constructed, above and below the town, upon the left bank
+ of the river, while a bridge of boats thrown across the stream led to a
+ fortified camp on the opposite side. Mansfeld, Mondragon, Bobadil, Aquila,
+ and other distinguished veterans in Philip's service, were engaged in the
+ enterprise. A few unimportant skirmishes between Schenk and the Spaniards
+ had taken place, but the city was already hard pressed, and, by the series
+ of forts which environed it, was cut off from its supplies. It was highly
+ important, therefore, that Grave should be relieved, with the least
+ possible delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in Easter week, a force of three thousand men, under Hohenlo and Sir
+ John Norris, was accordingly despatched by Leicester, with orders, at
+ every hazard, to throw reinforcements and provisions into the place. They
+ took possession, at once, of a stone sconce, called the Mill-Fort, which
+ was guarded by fifty men, mostly boors of the country. These were nearly
+ all hanged for "using malicious words," and for "railing against Queen
+ Elizabeth," and&mdash;a sufficient number of men being left to maintain
+ the fort&mdash;the whole relieving force marched with great difficulty&mdash;for
+ the river was rapidly rising, and flooding the country&mdash;along the
+ right bank of the Meuse, taking possession of Batenburg and Ravenstein
+ castles, as they went. A force of four or five hundred Englishmen was then
+ pushed forward to a point almost exactly opposite Grave, and within an
+ English mile of the head of the bridge constructed by the Spaniards. Here,
+ in the night of Easter Tuesday, they rapidly formed an entrenched camp,
+ upon the dyke along the river, and, although molested by some armed
+ vessels, succeeded in establishing themselves in a most important
+ position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the morning of Easter Wednesday, April 16, Mansfeld, perceiving that
+ the enemy had thus stolen a march upon him, ordered one thousand picked
+ troops, all Spaniards, under Aquila, Casco and other veterans, to assault
+ this advanced post. A reserve of two thousand was placed in readiness to
+ support the attack. The Spaniards slowly crossed the bridge, which was
+ swaying very dangerously with the current, and then charged the entrenched
+ camp at a run. A quarrel between the different regiments as to the right
+ of precedence precipitated the attack, before the reserve, consisting of
+ some picked companies of Mondragon's veterans, had been able to arrive.
+ Coming in breathless and fatigued, the first assailants were readily
+ repulsed in their first onset. Aquila then opportunely made his
+ appearance, and the attack was renewed with great vigour: The defenders of
+ the camp yielded at the third charge and fled in dismay, while the
+ Spaniards, leaping the barriers, scattered hither and thither in the
+ ardour of pursuit. The routed Englishmen fled swiftly along the oozy dyke,
+ in hopes of joining the main body of the relieving party, who were
+ expected to advance, with the dawn, from their position six miles farther
+ down the river. Two miles long the chace lasted, and it seemed probable
+ that the fugitives would be overtaken and destroyed, when, at last, from
+ behind a line of mounds which stretched towards Batenburg and had masked
+ their approach, appeared Count Hohenlo and Sir John Norris, at the head of
+ twenty-five hundred Englishmen and Hollanders. This force, advanced as
+ rapidly as the slippery ground and the fatigue of a two hours' march would
+ permit to the rescue of their friends, while the retreating English
+ rallied, turned upon their pursuers, and drove them back over the path
+ along which they had just been charging in the full career of victory. The
+ fortune of the day was changed, and in a few minutes Hohenlo and Norris
+ would have crossed the river and entered Grave, when the Spanish companies
+ of Bobadil and other commanders were seen marching along the quaking
+ bridge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three thousand men on each side now met at push of pike on the bank of the
+ Meuse. The rain-was pouring in torrents, the wind was blowing a gale, the
+ stream was rapidly rising, and threatening to overwhelm its shores. By a
+ tacit and mutual consent, both armies paused for a few moments in full
+ view of each other. After this brief interval they closed again, breast to
+ breast, in sharp and steady conflict. The ground, slippery with rain and
+ with blood, which was soon flowing almost as fast as the rain, afforded an
+ unsteady footing to the combatants. They staggered like drunken men, fell
+ upon their knees, or upon their backs, and still, kneeling or rolling
+ prostrate, maintained the deadly conflict. For the space of an hour and a
+ half the fierce encounter of human passion outmastered the fury of the
+ elements. Norris and Hohenlo fought at the head of their columns, like
+ paladins of old. The Englishman was wounded in the mouth and breast, the
+ Count was seen to gallop past one thousand musketeers and caliver-men of
+ the enemy, and to escape unscathed. But as the strength of the soldiers
+ exhausted itself, the violence of the tempest increased. The floods of
+ rain and the blasts of the hurricane at last terminated the affray. The
+ Spaniards, fairly conquered, were compelled to a retreat, lest the rapidly
+ rising river should sweep away the frail and trembling bridge, over which
+ they had passed to their unsuccessful assault. The English and
+ Netherlanders remained masters of the field. The rising flood, too, which
+ was fast converting the meadows into a lake, was as useful to the
+ conquerors as it was damaging to the Spaniards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of the few following days, a large number of boats was
+ despatched before the very eyes of Parma, from Batenburg into Grave;
+ Hohenlo, who had "most desperately adventured his person" throughout the
+ whole affair, entering the town himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A force of five hundred men, together with provisions enough to last a
+ year, was thrown into the city, and the course of the Meuse was,
+ apparently, secured to the republic. In this important action about one
+ hundred and fifty Dutch and English were killed, and probably four hundred
+ Spaniards, including several distinguished officers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl of Leicester was incredibly elated so soon as the success of this
+ enterprise was known. "Oh that her Majesty knew," he cried, "how easy a
+ match now she hath with the King of Spain, and what millions of afflicted
+ people she hath relieved in these, countries. This summer, this summer, I
+ say, would make an end to her immortal glory." He was no friend to his
+ countryman, the gallant Sir John Norris&mdash;whom, however, he could not
+ help applauding on this occasion,&mdash;but he was in raptures with
+ Hohenlo. Next to God, he assured the Queen's government that the victory
+ was owing to the Count. "He is both a valiant man and a wise man, and the
+ painfullest that ever I knew," he said; adding&mdash;as a secret&mdash;that
+ "five hundred Englishmen of the best Flemish training had flatly and
+ shamefully run away," when the fight had been renewed by Hohenlo and
+ Norris. He recommended that her Majesty should, send her picture to the
+ Count, worth two hundred pounds, which he would value at more than one
+ thousand pounds in money, and he added that "for her sake the Count had
+ greatly left his drinking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the Prince of Parma, Leicester looked upon him as conclusively
+ beaten. He spoke of him as "marvellously appalled" by this overthrow of
+ his forces; but he assured the government that if the Prince's "choler
+ should press him to seek revenge," he should soon be driven out of the
+ country. The Earl would follow him "at an inch," and effectually frustrate
+ all his undertakings. "If the Spaniard have such a May as he has had an
+ April," said Lord North, "it will put water in his wine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, as St. George's Day was approaching, and as the Earl was fond of
+ banquets and ceremonies, it was thought desirable to hold a great
+ triumphal feast at Utrecht. His journey to that city from the Hague was a
+ triumphal procession. In all the towns through which he passed he was
+ entertained with military display, pompous harangues, interludes, dumb
+ shows, and allegories. At Amsterdam&mdash;a city which he compared to
+ Venice for situation and splendour, and where one thousand ships were
+ constantly lying&mdash;he was received with "sundry great whales and other
+ fishes of hugeness," that gambolled about his vessel, and convoyed him to
+ the shore. These monsters of the deep presented him to the burgomaster and
+ magistrates who were awaiting him on the quay. The burgomaster made him a
+ Latin oration, to which Dr. Bartholomew Clerk responded, and then the Earl
+ was ushered to the grand square, upon which, in his honour, a magnificent
+ living picture was exhibited, in which he figured as Moses, at the head of
+ the Israelites, smiting the Philistines hip and thigh. After much mighty
+ banqueting in Amsterdam, as in the other cities, the governor-general came
+ to Utrecht. Through the streets of this antique and most picturesque city
+ flows the palsied current of the Rhine, and every barge and bridge were
+ decorated with the flowers of spring. Upon this spot, where, eight
+ centuries before the Anglo-Saxon, Willebrod had first astonished the wild
+ Frisians with the pacific doctrines of Jesus, and had been stoned to death
+ as his reward, stood now a more arrogant representative of English piety.
+ The balconies were crowded with fair women, and decorated with scarves and
+ banners. From the Earl's residence&mdash;the ancient palace of the Knights
+ of Rhodes&mdash;to the cathedral, the way was lined with a double row of
+ burgher guards, wearing red roses on their arms, and apparelled in the
+ splendid uniforms for which the Netherlanders were celebrated. Trumpeters
+ in scarlet and silver, barons, knights, and great officers, in cloth of
+ gold and silks of all colours; the young Earl of Essex, whose career was
+ to be so romantic, and whose fate so tragic; those two ominous personages,
+ the deposed little archbishop-elector of Cologne, with his melancholy
+ face, and the unlucky Don Antonio, Pretender of Portugal, for whom, dead
+ or alive, thirty thousand crowns and a dukedom were perpetually offered by
+ Philip II.; young Maurice of Nassau, the future controller of European
+ destinies; great counsellors of state, gentlemen, guardsmen, and
+ portcullis-herald, with the coat of arms of Elizabeth, rode in solemn
+ procession along. Then great Leicester himself, "most princelike in the
+ robes of his order," guarded by a troop of burghers, and by his own fifty
+ halberd-men in scarlet cloaks trimmed with white and purple velvet,
+ pranced gorgeously by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ancient cathedral, built on the spot where Saint Willebrod had once
+ ministered, with its light, tapering, brick tower, three hundred and sixty
+ feet in height, its exquisitely mullioned windows, and its elegantly
+ foliaged columns, soon received the glittering throng. Hence, after due
+ religious ceremonies, and an English sermon from Master Knewstubs,
+ Leicester's chaplain, was a solemn march back again to the palace, where a
+ stupendous banquet was already laid in the great hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the dais at the upper end of the table, blazing with plate and crystal,
+ stood the royal chair, with the Queen's plate and knife and fork before
+ it, exactly as if she had been present, while Leicester's trencher and
+ stool were set respectfully quite at the edge of the board. In the
+ neighbourhood of this post of honour sat Count Maurice, the Elector, the
+ Pretender, and many illustrious English personages, with the fair Agnes
+ Mansfeld, Princess Chimay, the daughters of William the Silent, and other
+ dames of high degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the covers were removed, came limping up to the dais grim-visaged
+ Martin Schenk, freshly wounded, but triumphant, from the sack of Werll,
+ and black John Norris, scarcely cured of the spearwounds in his face and
+ breast received at the relief of Grave. The sword of knighthood was laid
+ upon the shoulder of each hero, by the Earl of Leicester, as her Majesty's
+ vicegerent; and then the ushers marshalled the mighty feast. Meats in the
+ shape of lions, tigers, dragons, and leopards, flanked by peacocks, swans,
+ pheasants, and turkeys "in their natural feathers as in their greatest
+ pride," disappeared, course after course, sonorous metal blowing meanwhile
+ the most triumphant airs. After the banquet came dancing, vaulting,
+ tumbling; together with the "forces of Hercules, which gave great delight
+ to the strangers," after which the company separated until evensong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then again, "great was the feast," says the chronicler,&mdash;a mighty
+ supper following hard upon the gigantic dinner. After this there was
+ tilting at the barriers, the young Earl of Essex and other knights bearing
+ themselves more chivalrously than would seem to comport with so much
+ eating and drinking. Then, horrible to relate, came another "most
+ sumptuous banquet of sugar-meates for the men-at-arms and the ladies,"
+ after which, it being now midnight, the Lord of Leicester bade the whole
+ company good rest, and the men-at-arms and ladies took their leave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But while all this chivalrous banqueting and holiday-making was in hand,
+ the Prince of Parma was in reality not quite so much "appalled" by the
+ relief of Grave as his antagonist had imagined. The Earl, flushed with the
+ success of Hohenlo, already believed himself master of the country, and
+ assured his government, that, if he should be reasonably well supplied, he
+ would have Antwerp back again and Bruges besides before mid June. Never,
+ said he, was "the Prince of Parma so dejected nor so melancholy since he
+ came into these countries, nor so far out of courage." And it is quite
+ true that Alexander had reason to be discouraged. He had but eight or nine
+ thousand men, and no money to pay even this little force. The soldiers
+ were perishing daily, and nearly all the survivors were described by their
+ chief, as sick or maimed. The famine in the obedient Provinces was
+ universal, the whole population was desperate with hunger; and the
+ merchants, frightened by Drake's successes, and appalled by the ruin all
+ around them, drew their purse-strings inexorably. "I know not to what
+ saint to devote myself," said Alexander. He had been compelled, by the
+ movement before Grave, to withdraw Haultepenne from the projected
+ enterprise against Neusz, and he was quite aware of the cheerful view
+ which Leicester was inclined to take of their relative positions. "The
+ English think they are going to do great things," said he; "and consider
+ themselves masters of the field."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, on the 11th May, the dejected melancholy man had left
+ Brussels, and joined his little army, consisting of three thousand
+ Spaniards and five thousand of all other nations. His veterans, though
+ unpaid; ragged, and half-starved were in raptures to, have their idolized
+ commander among them again, and vowed that under his guidance there was
+ nothing which they could not accomplish. The King's honour, his own, that
+ of the army, all were pledged to take the city. On the success of, that
+ enterprise, he said, depended all his past conquests, and every hope for
+ the future. Leicester and the English, whom he called the head and body of
+ the rebel forces, were equally pledged to relieve the place, and were bent
+ upon meeting him in the field. The Earl had taken some forts in the
+ Batavia&mdash;Betuwe; or "good meadow," which he pronounced as fertile and
+ about as large as Herefordshire,&mdash;and was now threatening Nymegen, a
+ city which had been gained for Philip by the last effort of Schenk, on the
+ royalist side. He was now observing Alexander's demonstrations against
+ Grave; but, after the recent success in victualling that place, he felt a
+ just confidence in its security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 31st May the trenches were commenced, and on the 5th June the
+ batteries were opened. The work went rapidly forward when Farnese was in
+ the field. "The Prince of Parma doth batter it like a Prince," said Lord
+ North, admiring the enemy with the enthusiasm of an honest soldier: On the
+ 6th of June, as Alexander rode through the camp to reconnoitre, previous
+ to an attack. A well-directed cannon ball carried away the hinder half, of
+ his horse. The Prince fell to the ground, and, for a moment, dismay was in
+ the Spanish ranks. At the next instant, though somewhat bruised, he was on
+ his feet again, and, having found the breach sufficiently promising, he
+ determined on the assault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a preliminary measure, he wished to occupy a tower which had been
+ battered nearly to ruins, situate near the river. Captain de Solis was
+ ordered, with sixty veterans, to take possession of this tower, and to
+ "have a look at the countenance of the enemy, without amusing himself with
+ anything else." The tower was soon secured, but Solis, in disobedience to
+ his written instructions led his men against the ravelin, which was still
+ in a state of perfect defence. A musket-ball soon stretched him dead
+ beneath the wall, and his followers, still attempting to enter the
+ impracticable breach, were repelled by a shower of stones and blazing
+ pitch-hoops. Hot sand; too, poured from sieves and baskets, insinuated
+ itself within the armour of the Spaniards, and occasioned such exquisite
+ suffering, that many threw themselves into the river to allay the pain.
+ Emerging refreshed, but confused, they attempted in vain to renew the
+ onset. Several of the little band were slain, the assault was quite
+ unsuccessful, and the trumpet sounded a recal. So completely discomfited
+ were the Spaniards by this repulse, and so thoroughly at their ease were
+ the besieged, that a soldier let himself down from the ramparts of the
+ town for the sake of plundering the body of Captain Solis, who was richly
+ dressed, and, having accomplished this feat, was quietly helped back again
+ by his comrades from above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the surprise of the besiegers, however, on the very next morning came a
+ request from the governor of the city, Baron Hemart, to negotiate for a
+ surrender. Alexander was, naturally, but too glad to grant easy terms, and
+ upon the 7th of June the garrison left the town with colours displayed and
+ drums beating, and the Prince of Parma marched into it, at the head of his
+ troops. He found a year's provision there for six thousand men, while, at
+ the same time, the walls had suffered so little, that he must have been
+ obliged to wait long for a practicable breach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was no good reason even for women to have surrendered the place,"
+ exclaimed Leicester, when he heard the news. And the Earl had cause to be
+ enraged at such a result. He had received a letter only the day before,
+ signed by Hemart himself and by all the officers in Grave, asserting their
+ determination and ability to hold the place for a good five months, or for
+ an indefinite period, and until they should be relieved. And indeed all
+ the officers, with three exceptions, had protested against the base
+ surrender. But at the bottom of the catastrophe&mdash;of the disastrous
+ loss of the city and the utter ruin of young Hemart&mdash;was a woman. The
+ governor was governed by his mistress, a lady of good family in the place,
+ but of Spanish inclinations, and she, for some mysterious reasons, had
+ persuaded him thus voluntarily to capitulate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma lost no time, however, in exulting over his success. Upon the same
+ day the towns of Megen and Batenburg surrendered to him, and immediately
+ afterwards siege was laid to Venlo, a town of importance, lying thirty
+ miles farther up the Meuse. The wife and family of Martin Schenk were in
+ the city, together with two hundred horses, and from forty to one hundred
+ thousand crowns in money, plate; and furniture belonging to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That bold partisan, accompanied by the mad Welshman, Roger Williams, at
+ the head of one hundred and thirty English lances and thirty of Schenk's
+ men, made a wild nocturnal attempt to cut their way through the besieging
+ force, and penetrate to the city. They passed through the enemy's lines,
+ killed all the corps-de-garde, and many Spanish troopers&mdash;the
+ terrible Martin's own hand being most effective in this midnight slaughter&mdash;and
+ reached the very door of Parma's tent, where they killed his secretary and
+ many of his guards. It was even reported; and generally believed, that
+ Farnese himself had been in imminent danger, that Schenk had fired his
+ pistol at him unsuccessfully, and had then struck him on the head with its
+ butt-end, and that the Prince had only saved his life by leaping from his
+ horse, and scrambling through a ditch. But these seem to have been fables.
+ The alarm at last became general, the dawn of a summer's day was fast
+ approaching; the drums beat to arms, and the bold marauders were obliged
+ to effect their retreat, as they best might, hotly pursued by near two
+ thousand men. Having slain many of, the Spanish army, and lost nearly half
+ their own number, they at last obtained shelter in Wachtendonk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon afterwards the place capitulated without waiting for a battery, upon
+ moderate terms. Schenk's wife was sent away (28 June 1586) courteously
+ with her family, in a coach and four, and with as much "apparel" as might
+ be carried with her. His property was confiscated, for "no fair wars could
+ be made with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, within a few weeks after taking the field, the "dejected,
+ melancholy" man, who was so "out of courage," and the soldiers who were so
+ "marvellously beginning to run away"&mdash;according to the Earl of
+ Leicester&mdash;had swept their enemy from every town on the Meuse. That
+ river was now, throughout its whole course, in the power of the Spaniards.
+ The Province of Brabant became thoroughly guarded again by its foes, and
+ the enemy's road was opened into the northern Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, meantime, had not distinguished himself. It must be confessed
+ that he had been sadly out-generalled. The man who had talked of following
+ the enemy inch by inch, and who had pledged himself not only to protect
+ Grave, and any other place that might be attacked, but even to recover
+ Antwerp and Bruges within a few weeks, had wasted the time in very
+ desultory operations. After the St. George feasting, Knewstub sermons, and
+ forces of Hercules, were all finished, the Earl had taken the field with
+ five thousand foot and fifteen hundred horse. His intention was to clear
+ the Yssel; by getting possession of Doesburg and Zutphen, but, hearing of
+ Parma's demonstrations upon Grave, he abandoned the contemplated siege of
+ those cities, and came to Arnheim. He then crossed the Rhine into the Isle
+ of Batavia, and thence, after taking a few sconces of inferior importance&mdash;while
+ Schenk, meanwhile, was building on the Island of Gravenweert, at the
+ bifurcation of the Rhine and Waal, the sconce so celebrated a century
+ later as 'Schenk's Fort' (Schenkenschans)&mdash;-he was preparing to pass
+ the Waal in order to attack Farnese, when he heard to his astonishment, of
+ the surrender of Grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could therefore&mdash;to his chagrin&mdash;no longer save that
+ important city, but he could, at least, cut off the head of the culprit.
+ Leicester was in Bommel when he heard of Baron Hemart's faint-heartedness
+ or treachery, and his wrath was extravagant in proportion to the
+ exultation with which his previous success had inspired him. He breathed
+ nothing but revenge against the coward and the traitor, who had delivered
+ up the town in "such lewd and beastly sort."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will never depart hence," he said, "till by the goodness of God I be
+ satisfied someway of this villain's treachery." There could be little
+ doubt that Hemart deserved punishment. There could be as little that
+ Leicester would mete it out to him in ample measure. "The lewd villain who
+ gave up Grave," said he, "and the captains as deep in fault as himself,
+ shall all suffer together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hemart came boldly to meet him. "The honest man came to me at Bommel,"
+ said Leicester, and he assured the government that it was in the hope of
+ persuading the magistrates of that and other towns to imitate his own
+ treachery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the magistrates straightway delivered the culprit to the
+ governor-general, who immediately placed him under arrest. A court-martial
+ was summoned, 26th of June, at Utrecht, consisting of Hohenlo, Essex, and
+ other distinguished officers. They found that the conduct of the prisoner
+ merited death, but left it to the Earl to decide whether various
+ extenuating circumstances did not justify a pardon. Hohenlo and Norris
+ exerted themselves to procure a mitigation of the young man's sentence,
+ and they excited thereby the governor's deep indignation. Norris,
+ according to Leicester, was in love with the culprit's aunt, and was
+ therefore especially desirous of saving his life. Moreover, much use was
+ made of the discredit which had been thrown by the Queen on the Earl's
+ authority, and it was openly maintained, that, being no longer
+ governor-general, he had no authority to order execution upon a Netherland
+ officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The favourable circumstances urged in the case, were, that Hemart was a
+ young man, without experience in military matters, and that he had been
+ overcome by the supplications and outcries of the women, panic-struck
+ after the first assault. There were no direct proofs of treachery, or even
+ of personal cowardice. He begged hard for a pardon, not on account of his
+ life, but for the sake of his reputation. He earnestly implored permission
+ to serve under the Queen of England, as a private soldier, without pay, on
+ land or sea, for as many years as she should specify, and to be selected
+ for the most dangerous employments, in order that, before he died, he
+ might wipe out the disgrace, which, through his fault, in an hour of
+ weakness, had come upon an ancient and honourable house. Much interest was
+ made for him&mdash;his family connection being powerful&mdash;and a
+ general impression prevailing that he had erred through folly rather than
+ deep guilt. But Leicester beating himself upon the breast&mdash;as he was
+ wont when excited&mdash;swore that there should be no pardon for such a
+ traitor. The States of Holland and Zeeland, likewise, were decidedly in
+ favour of a severe example.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hemart was accordingly led to the scaffold on the 28th June. He spoke to
+ the people with great calmness, and, in two languages, French and Flemish,
+ declared that he was guiltless of treachery, but that the terror and tears
+ of the women, in an hour of panic, had made a coward of him. He was
+ beheaded, standing. The two captains, Du Ban and Koeboekum, who had also
+ been condemned, suffered with him. A third captain, likewise convicted,
+ was, "for very just cause,", pardoned by Leicester. The Earl persisted in
+ believing that Hemart had surrendered the city as part of a deliberate
+ plan, and affirmed that in such a time, when men had come to think no more
+ of giving up a town than of abandoning a house, it was highly necessary to
+ afford an example to traitors and satisfaction to the people. And the
+ people were thoroughly satisfied, according to the governor, and only
+ expressed their regret that three or four members of the States-General
+ could not have their heads cut off as well, being as arrant knaves as
+ Henlart; "and so I think they be," added Leicester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma having thus made himself master of the Meuse, lost no time in making
+ a demonstration upon the parallel course of the Rhine, thirty miles
+ farther east. Schenk, Kloet; and other partisans, kept that portion of the
+ archi-episcopate and of Westphalia in a state of perpetual commotion.
+ Early in the preceding year, Count de Meurs had, by a fortunate stratagem,
+ captured the town of Neusz for the deposed elector, and Herman Kloet, a
+ young and most determined Geldrian soldier, now commanded in the place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Elector Ernest had made a visit in disguise to the camp of Parma, and
+ had represented the necessity of recovering the city. It had become the
+ stronghold of heretics, rebels, and banditti. The Rhine was in their
+ hands, and with it the perpetual power of disturbing the loyal
+ Netherlands. It was as much the interest of his Catholic Majesty as that
+ of the Archbishop that Neusz should be restored to its lawful owner. Parma
+ had felt the force of this reasoning, and had early in the year sent
+ Haultepenne to invest the city. He had been obliged to recal that
+ commander during the siege of Grave. The place being reduced, Alexander,
+ before the grass could grow beneath his feet advanced to the Rhine in
+ person. Early in July he appeared before the walls of Neusz with eight
+ thousand foot and two thousand horse. The garrison under Kloet numbered
+ scarcely more than sixteen hundred effective soldiers, all Netherlanders
+ and Germans, none being English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The city is twenty-miles below Cologne. It was so well fortified that a
+ century before it had stood a year's siege from the famous Charles the
+ Bold, who, after all, had been obliged to retire. It had also resisted the
+ strenuous efforts of Charles the Fifth; and was now stronger than it ever
+ had been. It was thoroughly well provisioned, so that it was safe enough
+ "if those within it," said Leicester, "be men." The Earl expressed the
+ opinion, however, that "those fellows were not good to defend towns,
+ unless the besiegers were obliged to swim to the attack." The issue was to
+ show whether the sarcasm were just or not. Meantime the town was
+ considered by the governor-general to be secure, "unless towns were to be
+ had for the asking."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neusz is not immediately upon the Rhine, but that river, which sweeps away
+ in a north-easterly direction from the walls, throws out an arm which
+ completely encircles the town. A part of the place, cut into an island by
+ the Erpt, was strengthened by two redoubts. This island was abandoned, as
+ being too weak to hold, and the Spaniards took possession of it
+ immediately. There were various preliminary and sanguinary sorties and
+ skirmishes, during which the Spaniards after having been once driven from
+ the island, again occupied that position. Archbishop Ernest came into the
+ camp, and, before proceeding to a cannonade, Parma offered to the city
+ certain terms of capitulation, which were approved by that prelate. Kloet
+ replied to this proposal, that he was wedded to the town and to his
+ honour, which were as one. These he was incapable of sacrificing, but his
+ life he was ready to lay down. There was, through some misapprehension, a
+ delay in reporting this answer to Farnese. Meantime that general became
+ impatient, and advanced to the battery of the Italian regiment. Pretending
+ to be a plenipotentiary from the commander-in-chief, he expostulated in a
+ loud voice at the slowness of their counsels. Hardly had he begun to
+ speak, when a shower of balls rattled about him. His own soldiers were
+ terrified at his danger, and a cry arose in the town that "Holofernese"&mdash;as
+ the Flemings and Germans were accustomed to nickname Farnese&mdash;was
+ dead. Strange to relate, he was quite unharmed, and walked back to his
+ tent with dignified slowness and a very frowning face. It was said that
+ this breach of truce had been begun by the Spaniards, who had fired first,
+ and had been immediately answered by the town. This was hotly denied, and
+ Parma sent Colonel Tasais with a flag of truce to the commander, to rebuke
+ and to desire an explanation of this dishonourable conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The answer given, or imagined, was that Commander Kloet had been sound
+ asleep, but that he now much regretted this untoward accident. The
+ explanation was received with derision, for it seemed hardly probable that
+ so young and energetic a soldier would take the opportunity to refresh
+ himself with slumber at a moment when a treaty for the capitulation of a
+ city under his charge was under discussion. This terminated the
+ negotiation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days afterwards, the feast of St James was celebrated in the Spanish
+ camp, with bonfires and other demonstrations of hilarity. The townsmen are
+ said to have desecrated the same holiday by roasting alive in the
+ market-place two unfortunate soldiers, who had been captured in a sortie a
+ few days before; besides burning the body of the holy Saint Quirinus, with
+ other holy relics. The detestable deed was to be most horribly avenged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A steady cannonade from forty-five great guns was kept up from 2 A.M. of
+ July 15 until the dawn of the following day; the cannoneers&mdash;being
+ all provided with milk and vinegar to cool the pieces. At daybreak the
+ assault was ordered. Eight separate attacks were made with the usual
+ impetuosity of Spaniards, and were steadily repulsed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the ninth, the outer wall was carried, and the Spaniards shouting
+ "Santiago" poured over it, bearing back all resistance. An Italian Knight
+ of the Sepulchre, Cesar Guidiccioni by name, and a Spanish ensign, one
+ Alphonao de Mesa, with his colours in one hand and a ladder in the other,
+ each claimed the honour of having first mounted the breach. Both being
+ deemed equally worthy of reward, Parma, after the city had been won, took
+ from his own cap a sprig of jewels and a golden wheat-ear ornamented with
+ a gem, which he had himself worn in place of a plume, and thus presented
+ each with a brilliant token of his regard. The wall was then strengthened
+ against the inner line of fortification, and all night long a desperate
+ conflict was maintained in the dark upon the narrow space between the two
+ barriers. Before daylight Kloet, who then, as always, had led his men in
+ the moat desperate adventures, was carried into the town, wounded in five
+ places, and with his leg almost severed at the thigh. "'Tis the bravest
+ man," said the enthusiastic Lord North, "that was ever heard of in the
+ world."&mdash;"He is but a boy," said Alexander Farnese, "but a commander
+ of extraordinary capacity and valour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the morning, when this mishap was known, an officer was sent to
+ the camp of the besiegers to treat. The soldiers received him with furious
+ laughter, and denied him access to the general. "Commander Kloet had waked
+ from his nap at a wrong time," they said, "and the Prince of Parma was now
+ sound asleep, in his turn." There was no possibility of commencing a
+ negotiation. The Spaniards, heated by the conflict, maddened by
+ opposition, and inspired by the desire to sack a wealthy city, overpowered
+ all resistance. "My little soldiers were not to be restrained," said
+ Farnese, and so compelling a reluctant consent on the part of the
+ commander-in-chief to an assault, the Italian and Spanish legions poured
+ into the town at two opposite gates; which were no longer strong enough to
+ withstand the enemy. The two streams met in the heart of the place, and
+ swept every living thing in their path out of existence. The garrison was
+ butchered to a man, and subsequently many of the inhabitants&mdash;men,
+ women, and children-also, although the women; to the honour of Alexander,
+ had been at first secured from harm in some of the churches, where they
+ had been ordered to take refuge. The first blast of indignation was
+ against the commandant of the place. Alexander, who had admired, his
+ courage, was not unfavourably disposed towards him, but Archbishop Ernest
+ vehemently, demanded his immediate death, as a personal favour to himself.
+ As the churchman was nominally sovereign of the city although in reality a
+ beggarly dependant on Philip's alms, Farnese felt bound to comply. The
+ manner in which it was at first supposed that the Bishop's Christian
+ request had; been complied, with, sent a shudder through every-heart in
+ the Netherlands. "They took Kloet, wounded as he was," said Lord North,
+ "and first strangled, him, then smeared him with pitch, and burnt him with
+ gunpowder; thus, with their holiness, they, made a tragical end of an
+ heroical service. It is wondered that the Prince would suffer so great an
+ outrage to be done to so noble a soldier, who did but his duty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this was an error. A Jesuit priest was sent to the house of the
+ commandant, for a humane effort was thought necessary in order to save the
+ soul of the man whose life was forfeited for the crime of defending his
+ city. The culprit was found lying in bed. His wife, a woman of remarkable
+ beauty, with her sister, was in attendance upon him. The spectacle of
+ those two fair women, nursing a wounded soldier fallen upon the field of
+ honour, might have softened devils with sympathy. But the Jesuit was
+ closely followed by a band of soldiers, who, notwithstanding the
+ supplications of the women, and the demand of Kloet to be indulged with a
+ soldier's death, tied a rope round the commandant's necks dragged him from
+ his bed, and hanged him from his own window. The Calvinist clergyman,
+ Fosserus of Oppenheim, the deacons of the congregation, two military
+ officers, and&mdash;said Parma&mdash;"forty other rascals," were murdered
+ in the same way at the same time. The bodies remained at the window till
+ they were devoured by the flames, which soon consumed the house. For a
+ vast conflagration, caused none knew whether by accident, by the despair
+ of the inhabitants; by the previous, arrangements of the commandant, by
+ the latest-arrived bands of the besiegers enraged that the Italians and
+ Spaniards had been beforehand with them in the spoils, or&mdash;as Farnese
+ more maturely believed&mdash;by the special agency of the Almighty,
+ offended with the burning of Saint Quirinus,&mdash;now came to complete
+ the horror of the scene. Three-quarters of the town were at once in a
+ blaze. The churches, where the affrighted women had been cowering during
+ the sack and slaughter, were soon on fire, and now, amid the crash of
+ falling houses and the uproar of the drunken soldiery, those unhappy
+ victims were seen flitting along the flaming streets; seeking refuge
+ against the fury of the elements in the more horrible cruelty of man. The
+ fire lasted all day and night, and not one stone would have been left upon
+ another, had not the body of a second saint, saved on a former occasion
+ from the heretics by the piety of a citizen, been fortunately deposited in
+ his house. At this point the conflagration was stayed&mdash;for the flames
+ refused to consume these holy relics&mdash;but almost the whole of the
+ town was destroyed, while at least four thousand people, citizens and
+ soldiers, had perished by sword or fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three hundred survivors of the garrison took refuge in a tower. Its base
+ was surrounded, and, after brief parley, they descended as prisoners. The
+ Prince and Haultepenne attempted in vain to protect them against the fury
+ of the soldiers, and every man of them was instantly put to death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, Alexander gave orders that the wife and sister of the
+ commandant should be protected&mdash;for they had escaped, as if by
+ miracle, from all the horrors of that day and night&mdash;and sent, under
+ escort, to their friends! Neusz had nearly ceased to exist, for according
+ to contemporaneous accounts, but eight houses had escaped destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the reflection was most painful to Leicester and to every generous
+ Englishman or Netherlander in the country, that this important city and
+ its heroic defenders might have been preserved, but for want of harmony
+ and want of money. Twice had the Earl got together a force of four
+ thousand men for the relief of the place, and twice had he been obliged to
+ disband them again for the lack of funds to set them in the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had pawned his plate and other valuables, exhausted his credit, and had
+ nothing for it but to wait for the Queen's tardy remittances, and to
+ wrangle with the States; for the leaders of that body were unwilling to
+ accord large supplies to a man who had become personally suspected by
+ them, and was the representative of a deeply-suspected government.
+ Meanwhile, one-third at least of the money which really found its way from
+ time to time out of England, was filched from the "poor starved wretches,"
+ as Leicester called his soldiers, by the dishonesty of Norris, uncle of
+ Sir John and army-treasurer. This man was growing so rich on his
+ peculations, on his commissions, and on his profits from paying the troops
+ in a depreciated coin, that Leicester declared the whole revenue of his
+ own landed estates in England to be less than that functionary's annual
+ income. Thus it was difficult to say whether the "ragged rogues" of
+ Elizabeth or the maimed and neglected soldiers of Philip were in the more
+ pitiable plight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only consolation in the recent reduction of Neusz was to be found in
+ the fact that Parma had only gained a position, for the town had ceased to
+ exist; and in the fiction that he had paid for his triumph by the loss of
+ six thousand soldiers, killed and wounded. In reality not more than five
+ hundred of Farnese's army lost their lives, and although the town,
+ excepting some churches, had certainly been destroyed; yet the Prince was
+ now master of the Rhine as far as Cologne, and of the Meuse as far as
+ Grave. The famine which pressed so sorely upon him, might now be relieved,
+ and his military communications with Germany be considered secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conqueror now turned his attention to Rheinberg, twenty-five miles
+ farther down the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Philip Sidney had not been well satisfied by the comparative idleness
+ in which, from these various circumstances; he had been compelled to
+ remain. Early in the spring he had been desirous of making an attack upon
+ Flanders by capturing the town of Steenberg. The faithful Roger Williams
+ had strongly seconded the proposal. "We wish to show your Excellency,"
+ said he to Leicester, "that we are not sound asleep." The Welshman was not
+ likely to be accused of somnolence, but on this occasion Sidney and
+ himself had been overruled. At a later moment, and during the siege of
+ Neusz, Sir Philip had the satisfaction of making a successful foray into
+ Flanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The expedition had been planned by Prince Maurice of Nassau, and was his.
+ earliest military achievement. He proposed carrying by surprise, the city
+ of Axel, a well-built, strongly-fortified town on the south-western edge
+ of the great Scheldt estuary, and very important from its position. Its
+ acquisition would make the hold of the patriots and the English upon Sluys
+ and Ostend more secure, and give them many opportunities of annoying the
+ enemy in Flanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in July, Maurice wrote to the Earl of Leicester, communicating the
+ particulars of his scheme, but begging that the affair might be "very
+ secretly handled," and kept from every one but Sidney. Leicester
+ accordingly sent his nephew to Maurice that they might consult together
+ upon the enterprise, and make sure "that there was no ill intent, there
+ being so much treachery in the world." Sidney found no treachery in young
+ Maurice, but only, a noble and intelligent love of adventure, and the two
+ arranged their plans in harmony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, then, in order to deceive the enemy, came to Bergen-op-Zoom,
+ with five hundred men, where he remained two days, not sleeping a wink, as
+ he averred, during the whole time. In the night of Tuesday, 16th of July,
+ the five hundred English soldiers were despatched by water, under charge
+ of Lord Willoughby, "who," said the Earl, "would needs go with them."
+ Young Hatton, too, son of Sir Christopher, also volunteered on the
+ service, "as his first nursling." Sidney had, five hundred of his own
+ Zeeland regiment in readiness, and the rendezvous was upon the broad
+ waters of the Scheldt, opposite Flushing. The plan was neatly carried out,
+ and the united flotilla, in a dark, calm, midsummer's night, rowed across
+ the smooth estuary and landed at Ter Neuse, about a league from Axel. Here
+ they were joined by Maurice with some Netherland companies, and the united
+ troops, between two and three thousand strong, marched at once to the
+ place proposed. Before two in the morning they had reached Axel, but found
+ the moat very deep. Forty soldiers immediately plunged in, however,
+ carrying their ladders with them, swam across, scaled the rampart, killed,
+ the guard, whom they found asleep in their beds, and opened the gates for
+ their comrades. The whole force then marched in, the Dutch companies under
+ Colonel Pyion being first, Lord Willoughby's men being second, and Sir
+ Philip with his Zeelanders bringing up the rear. The garrison, between
+ five and six hundred in number, though surprised, resisted gallantly, and
+ were all put to the sword. Of the invaders, not a single man lost his
+ life. Sidney most generously rewarded from his own purse the adventurous
+ soldiers who had swum the moat; and it was to his care and intelligence
+ that the success of Prince Maurice's scheme was generally attributed. The
+ achievement was hailed with great satisfaction, and it somewhat raised the
+ drooping spirits of the patriots after their severe losses at Grave and
+ Venlo. "This victory hath happened in good time," wrote Thomas Cecil to
+ his father, "and hath made us somewhat to lift up our heads." A garrison
+ of eight hundred, under Colonel Pyron, was left in Axel, and the dykes
+ around were then pierced. Upwards of two millions' worth of property in
+ grass, cattle, corn, was thus immediately destroyed in the territory of
+ the obedient Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After an unsuccessful attempt to surprise Gravelines, the governor of
+ which place, the veteran La Motte, was not so easily taken napping; Sir
+ Philip having gained much reputation by this conquest of Axel, then joined
+ the main body of the army, under Leicester, at Arnheim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, after all, Sir Philip had not grown in favour with her Majesty during
+ his service in the Low Countries. He had also been disappointed in the
+ government of Zeeland, to which post his uncle had destined him. The cause
+ of Leicester's ambition had been frustrated by the policy of Barneveld and
+ Buys, in pursuance of which Count or Prince Maurice&mdash;as he was now
+ purposely designated, in order that his rank might surpass that of the
+ Earl&mdash;had become stadholder and captain general both of Holland and
+ Zeeland. The Earl had given his nephew, however, the colonelcy of the
+ Zeeland regiment, vacant by the death of Admiral Haultain on the Kowenstyn
+ Dyke. This promotion had excited much anger among the high officers in the
+ Netherlands who, at the instigation of Count Hohenlo, had presented a
+ remonstrance upon the subject to the governor-general. It had always been
+ the custom, they said, with the late Prince of Orange, to confer promotion
+ according to seniority, without regard to social rank, and they were
+ therefore unwilling that a young foreigner, who had just entered the
+ service; should thus be advanced over the heads of veterans who had been
+ campaigning there so many weary years. At the same time the gentlemen who
+ signed the paper protested to Sir Philip, in another letter, "with all the
+ same hands," that they had no personal feeling towards him, but, on the
+ contrary, that they wished him all honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Maurice himself had always manifested the most friendly feelings
+ toward Sidney, although influenced in his action by the statesmen who were
+ already organizing a powerful opposition to Leicester. "Count Maurice
+ showed himself constantly, kind in the matter of the regiment," said Sir
+ Philip, "but Mr. Paul Buss has so many busses in his head, such as you
+ shall find he will be to God and man about one pitch. Happy is the
+ communication of them that join in the fear of God." Hohenlo, too, or
+ Hollock, as he was called by the French and English, was much governed by
+ Buys and Olden-Barneveld. Reckless and daring, but loose of life and
+ uncertain of purpose, he was most dangerous, unless under safe guidance.
+ Roger Williams&mdash;who vowed that but for the love he bore to Sidney and
+ Leicester, he would not remain ten days in the Netherlands&mdash;was much
+ disgusted by Hohenlo's conduct in regard to the Zeeland regiment. "'Tis a
+ mutinous request of Hollock," said he, "that strangers should not command
+ Netherlanders. He and his Alemaynes are farther born from Zeeland than Sir
+ Philip is. Either you must make Hollock assured to you, or you must
+ disgrace him. If he will not be yours, I will show you means to disinherit
+ him of all his commands at small danger. What service doth he, Count
+ Solms, Count Overatein, with their Almaynes, but spend treasure and
+ consume great contributions?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was, very natural that the chivalrous Sidney, who had come to the
+ Netherlands to win glory in the field, should be desirous of posts that
+ would bring danger and distinction with them. He was not there merely that
+ he might govern Flushing, important as it was, particularly as the
+ garrison was, according to his statement, about as able to maintain the
+ town, "as the Tower was to answer for London." He disapproved of his
+ wife's inclination to join him in Holland, for he was likely&mdash;so he
+ wrote to her father, Walsingham&mdash;"to run such a course as would not
+ be fit for any of the feminine gender." He had been, however; grieved to
+ the heart, by the spectacle which was perpetually exhibited of the Queen's
+ parsimony, and of the consequent suffering of the soldiers. Twelve or
+ fifteen thousand Englishmen were serving in the Netherlands&mdash;more
+ than two thirds of them in her Majesty's immediate employment. No troops
+ had ever fought better, or more honourably maintained the ancient glory of
+ England. But rarely had more ragged and wretched warriors been seen than
+ they, after a few months' campaigning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Irish Kernes&mdash;some fifteen hundred of whom were among the
+ auxiliaries&mdash;were better off, for they habitually dispensed with
+ clothing; an apron from waist to knee being the only protection of these
+ wild Kelts, who fought with the valour, and nearly, in the costume of
+ Homeric heroes. Fearing nothing, needing nothing, sparing nothing, they
+ stalked about the fens of Zeeland upon their long stilts, or leaped across
+ running rivers, scaling ramparts, robbing the highways, burning,
+ butchering, and maltreating the villages and their inhabitants, with as
+ little regard for the laws of Christian warfare as for those of civilized
+ costume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other soldiers, more sophisticated as to apparel, were less at their ease.
+ The generous Sidney spent all his means, and loaded himself with debt, in
+ order to relieve the necessities of the poor soldiers. He protested that
+ if the Queen would not pay her troops, she would lose her troops, but that
+ no living man should say the fault was in him. "What relief I can do them
+ I will," he wrote to his father-in-law; "I will spare no danger, if
+ occasion serves. I am sure that no creature shall lay injustice to my
+ charge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very soon it was discovered that the starving troops had to contend not
+ only with the Queen's niggardliness but with the dishonesty of her agents.
+ Treasurer Norris was constantly accused by Leicester and Sidney of gross
+ peculation. Five per cent., according to Sir Philip, was lost to the
+ Zeeland soldiers in every payment, "and God knows," he said, "they want no
+ such hindrance, being scarce able to keep life with their entire pay.
+ Truly it is but poor increase to her Majesty, considering what loss it is
+ to the miserable soldier." Discipline and endurance were sure to be
+ sacrificed, in the end, to such short-sighted economy. "When soldiers,"
+ said Sidney, "grow to despair, and give up towns, then it is too late to
+ buy with hundred thousands what might have been saved with a trifle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plain dealing, on the part of Sidney, was anything but agreeable to
+ the Queen, who was far from feeling regret that his high-soaring
+ expectations had been somewhat blighted in the Provinces. He often
+ expressed his mortification that her Majesty was disposed to interpret
+ everything to, his disadvantage. "I understand," said he, "that I am
+ called ambitious, and very proud at home, but certainly, if they knew my
+ heart, they would not altogether so judge me." Elizabeth had taken part
+ with Hohenlo against Sir Philip in the matter of the Zeeland regiment, and
+ in this perhaps she was not entirely to be blamed. But she inveighed
+ needlessly against his ambitious seeking of the office, and&mdash;as
+ Walsingham observed&mdash;"she was very apt, upon every light occasion, to
+ find fault with him." It is probable that his complaints against the army
+ treasurer, and his manful defence of the "miserable soldiers," more than
+ counterbalanced, in the Queen's estimation, his chivalry in the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless he had now the satisfaction of having gained an important
+ city in Flanders; and on subsequently joining the army under his uncle, he
+ indulged the hope of earning still greater distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Martin Schenk had meanwhile been successfully defending Rheinberg, for
+ several weeks, against Parma's forces. It was necessary, however, that
+ Leicester, notwithstanding the impoverished condition of his troops,
+ should make some diversion, while his formidable antagonist was thus
+ carrying all before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He assembled, accordingly, in the month of August, all the troops that
+ could be brought into the field, and reviewed them, with much ceremony, in
+ the neighbourhood of Arnheim. His army&mdash;barely numbered seven
+ thousand foot and two thousand horse, but he gave out, very extensively,
+ that he had fourteen thousand under his command, and he was moreover
+ expecting a force of three thousand reiters, and as many pikemen recently
+ levied in Germany. Lord Essex was general of the cavalry, Sir William
+ Pelham&mdash;a distinguished soldier, who had recently arrived out of
+ England, after the most urgent solicitations to the Queen, for that end,
+ by Leicester&mdash;was lord-marshal of the camp, and Sir John Norris was
+ colonel-general of the infantry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the parade, two sermons were preached upon the hillside to the
+ soldiers, and then there was a council of war: It was decided&mdash;notwithstanding
+ the Earl's announcement of his intentions to attack Parma in person&mdash;that
+ the condition of the army did not warrant such an enterprise. It was
+ thought better to lay siege to Zutphen. This step, if successful, would
+ place in the power of the republic and her ally a city of great importance
+ and strength. In every event the attempt would probably compel Farnese to
+ raise the siege of Berg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, accordingly, with "his brave troop of able and likely men"&mdash;five
+ thousand of the infantry being English&mdash;advanced as far as Doesburg.
+ This city, seated at the confluence of the ancient canal of Drusus and the
+ Yssel, five miles above Zutphen, it was necessary, as a preliminary
+ measure, to secure. It was not a very strong place, being rather slightly
+ walled with brick, and with a foss drawing not more than three feet of
+ water. By the 30th August it had been completely invested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the same night, at ten o'clock, Sir William Pelham, came to the Earl to
+ tell him "what beastly pioneers the Dutchmen were." Leicester accordingly
+ determined, notwithstanding the lord-marshal's entreaties, to proceed to
+ the trenches in person. There being but faint light, the two lost their
+ way, and soon found themselves nearly, at the gate of the town. Here,
+ while groping about in the dark; and trying to effect their retreat, they
+ were saluted with a shot, which struck Sir William in the stomach. For an
+ instant; thinking himself mortally injured, he expressed his satisfaction
+ that he had been, between the commander-in-chief and the blow, and made
+ other "comfortable and resolute speeches." Very fortunately, however, it
+ proved that the marshal was not seriously hurt, and, after a few days, he
+ was about his work as usual, although obliged&mdash;as the Earl of
+ Leicester expressed it&mdash;"to carry a bullet in his belly as long as he
+ should live."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Roger Williams, too, that valiant adventurer&mdash;"but no, more valiant
+ than wise, and worth his weight in gold," according to the appreciative
+ Leicester&mdash;was shot through the arm. For the dare-devil Welshman,
+ much to the Earl's regret, persisted in running up and down the trenches
+ "with a great plume of feathers in his gilt morion," and in otherwise
+ making a very conspicuous mark of himself "within pointblank of a
+ caliver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding these mishaps, however, the siege went successfully
+ forward. Upon the 2nd September the Earl began to batter, and after a
+ brisk cannonade, from dawn till two in the afternoon, he had considerably
+ damaged the wall in two places. One of the breaches was eighty feet wide,
+ the other half as large, but the besieged had stuffed them full of beds,
+ tubs, logs of wood, boards, and "such like trash," by means whereof the
+ ascent was not so easy as it seemed. The soldiers were excessively eager
+ for the assault. Sir John Norris came to Leicester to receive his orders
+ as to the command of the attacking party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl referred the matter to him. "There is no man," answered Sir John,
+ "fitter for that purpose than myself; for I am colonel-general of the
+ infantry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Leicester, not willing to indulge so unreasonable a proposal, replied
+ that he would reserve him for service of less hazard and greater
+ importance. Norris being, as usual, "satis prodigus magnae animae," was
+ out of humour at the refusal, and ascribed it to the Earl's persistent
+ hostility to him and his family. It was then arranged that the assault
+ upon the principal breach should be led by younger officers, to be
+ supported by Sir John and other veterans. The other breach was assigned to
+ the Dutch and Scotch-black Norris scowling at them the while with jealous
+ eyes; fearing that they might get the start of the English party, and be
+ first to enter the town. A party of noble volunteers clustered about Sir
+ John-Lord Burgh, Sir Thomas Cecil, Sir Philip Sidney, and his brother
+ Robert among the rest&mdash;most impatient for the signal. The race was
+ obviously to be a sharp one. The governor-general forbade these violent
+ demonstrations, but Lord Burgh, "in a most vehement passion, waived the
+ countermand," and his insubordination was very generally imitated. Before
+ the signal was given, however, Leicester sent a trumpet to summon the town
+ to surrender, and could with difficulty restrain his soldiers till the
+ answer should be returned. To the universal disappointment, the garrison
+ agreed to surrender. Norris himself then stepped forward to the breach,
+ and cried aloud the terms, lest the returning herald, who had been sent
+ back by Leicester, should offer too favourable a capitulation. It was
+ arranged that the soldiers should retire without arms, with white wands in
+ their hands&mdash;the officers remaining prisoners&mdash;and that the
+ burghers, their lives, and property, should be at Leicester's disposal.
+ The Earl gave most peremptory orders that persons and goods should be
+ respected, but his commands were disobeyed. Sir William Stanley's men
+ committed frightful disorders, and thoroughly, rifled the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And because," said Norris, "I found fault herewith, Sir William began to
+ quarrel with me, hath braved me extremely, refuseth to take any direction
+ from me, and although I have sought for redress, yet it is proceeded in so
+ coldly, that he taketh encouragement rather to increase the quarrel than
+ to leave it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding therefore the decree of Leicester, the expostulations and
+ anger of Norris, and the energetic efforts of Lord Essex and other
+ generals, who went about smiting the marauders on the head, the soldiers
+ sacked the city, and committed various disorders, in spite of the
+ capitulation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doesburg having been thus reduced, the Earl now proceeded toward the more
+ important city which he had determined to besiege. Zutphen, or South-Fen,
+ an antique town of wealth and elegance, was the capital of the old
+ Landgraves of Zutphen. It is situate on the right bank of the Yssel, that
+ branch of the Rhine which flows between Gelderland and Overyssel into the
+ Zuyder-Zee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ancient river, broad, deep, and languid, glides through a plain of
+ almost boundless extent, till it loses itself in the flat and misty
+ horizon. On the other side of the stream, in the district called the
+ Veluwe, or bad meadow, were three sconces, one of them of remarkable
+ strength. An island between the city and the shore was likewise well
+ fortified. On the landward side the town was protected by a wall and moat
+ sufficiently strong in those infant days of artillery. Near the
+ hospital-gate, on the east, was an external fortress guarding the road to
+ Warnsfeld. This was a small village, with a solitary slender church-spire,
+ shooting up above a cluster of neat one-storied houses. It was about an
+ English mile from Zutphen, in the midst of a wide, low, somewhat fenny
+ plain, which, in winter, became so completely a lake, that peasants were
+ not unfrequently drowned in attempting to pass from the city to the
+ village. In summer, the vague expanse of country was fertile and cheerful
+ of aspect. Long rows of poplars marking the straight highways, clumps of
+ pollard willows scattered around the little meres, snug farm-houses, with
+ kitchen-gardens and brilliant flower-patches dotting the level plain,
+ verdant pastures sweeping off into seemingly infinite distance, where the
+ innumerable cattle seemed to swarm like insects, wind-mills swinging their
+ arms in all directions, like protective giants, to save the country from
+ inundation, the lagging sail of market-boats shining through rows of
+ orchard trees&mdash;all gave to the environs of Zutphen a tranquil and
+ domestic charm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deventer and Kampen, the two other places on the river, were in the hands
+ of the States. It was, therefore, desirable for the English and the
+ patriots, by gaining possession of Zutphen, to obtain control of the
+ Yssel; driven, as they had been, from the Meuse and Rhine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir John Norris, by Leicester's direction, took possession of a small
+ rising-ground, called 'Gibbet Dill' on the land-side; where he established
+ a fortified camp, and proceeded to invest the city. With him were Count
+ Lewis William of Nassau, and Sir Philip Sidney, while the Earl himself,
+ crossing the Yssel on a bridge of boats which he had constructed, reserved
+ for himself the reduction of the forts upon the Veluwe side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farnese, meantime, was not idle; and Leicester's calculations proved
+ correct. So soon as the Prince was informed of this important
+ demonstration of the enemy he broke up&mdash;after brief debate with his
+ officers&mdash;his camp before Rheinberg, and came to Wesel. At this place
+ he built a bridge over the Rhine, and fortified it with two block-houses.
+ These he placed under command of Claude Berlot, who was ordered to watch
+ strictly all communication up the river with the city of Rheinberg, which
+ he thus kept in a partially beleaguered state. Alexander then advanced
+ rapidly by way of Groll and Burik, both which places he took possession
+ of, to the neighbourhood of Zutphen. He was determined, at every hazard,
+ to relieve that important city; and although, after leaving necessary
+ detachments on the way; he had but five thousand men under his command,
+ besides fifteen hundred under Verdugo&mdash;making sixty-five hundred in
+ all&mdash;he had decided that the necessity of the case, and his own
+ honour; required him to seek the enemy, and to leave, as he said, the
+ issue with the God of battles, whose cause it was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tassis, lieutenant-governor of Gelderland, was ordered into the city with
+ two cornets of horse and six hundred foot. As large a number, had already
+ been stationed there. Verdugo, who had been awaiting the arrival of the
+ Prince at Borkelo, a dozen miles from Zutphen, with four hundred foot and
+ two hundred horse, now likewise entered the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the night of 29th August Alexander himself entered Zutphen for the
+ purpose of encouraging the garrison by promise of-relief, and of
+ ascertaining the position of the enemy by personal observation. His
+ presence as it always did, inspired the soldiers with enthusiasm, so that
+ they could with difficulty be restrained from rushing forth to assault the
+ besiegers. In regard to the enemy he found that Gibbet Hill was still
+ occupied by Sir John Norris, "the best soldier, in his opinion, that they
+ had," who had entrenched himself very strongly, and was supposed to have
+ thirty-five hundred men under his command. His position seemed quite
+ impregnable. The rest of the English were on the other side of the river,
+ and Alexander observed, with satisfaction, that they had abandoned a small
+ redoubt, near the leper-house, outside the Loor-Gate, through which the
+ reinforcements must enter the city. The Prince determined to profit by
+ this mistake, and to seize the opportunity thus afforded of sending those
+ much needed supplies. During the night the enemy were found to be throwing
+ up works "most furiously," and skirmishing parties were sent out of the
+ town to annoy them. In the darkness nothing of consequence was effected,
+ but a Scotch officer was captured, who informed the Spanish commander that
+ the enemy was fifteen thousand strong&mdash;a number which was nearly
+ double that of Leicester's actual force. In the morning Alexander returned
+ to his camp at Borkelo&mdash;leaving Tassis in command of the Veluwe
+ Forts, and Verdugo in the city itself&mdash;and he at once made rapid work
+ in collecting victuals. He had soon wheat and other supplies in readiness,
+ sufficient to feed four thousand mouths for three months, and these he
+ determined to send into the city immediately, and at every hazard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great convoy which was now to be despatched required great care and a
+ powerful escort. Twenty-five hundred musketeers and pikemen, of whom one
+ thousand were Spaniards, and six hundred cavalry, Epirotes; Spaniards, and
+ Italians, under Hannibal Gonzaga, George Crescia, Bentivoglio, Sesa, and
+ others, were accordingly detailed for this expedition. The Marquis del
+ Vasto, to whom was entrusted the chief command, was ordered to march from
+ Borkelo at midnight on Wednesday, October 1 (St. Nov.) [N.S.]. It was
+ calculated that he would reach a certain hillock not far from Warnsfeld by
+ dawn of day. Here he was to pause, and send forward an officer towards the
+ town, communicating his arrival, and requesting the cooperation of
+ Verdugo, who was to make a sortie with one thousand men, according to
+ Alexander's previous arrangements. The plan was successfully carried out.
+ The Marquis arrived by daybreak at the spot indicated, and despatched
+ Captain de Vega who contrived to send intelligence of the fact. A trooper,
+ whom Parma had himself sent to Verdugo with earlier information of the
+ movement, had been captured on the way. Leicester had therefore been
+ apprized, at an early moment, of the Prince's intentions, but he was not
+ aware that the convoy would be accompanied by so strong a force as had
+ really been detailed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had accordingly ordered Sir John Norris, who commanded on the outside
+ of the town near the road which the Spaniards must traverse, to place an
+ ambuscade in his way. Sir John, always ready for adventurous enterprises,
+ took a body of two hundred cavalry, all picked men, and ordered Sir
+ William Stanley, with three hundred pikemen, to follow. A much stronger
+ force of infantry was held in reserve and readiness, but it was not
+ thought that it would be required. The ambuscade was successfully placed,
+ before the dawn of Thursday morning, in the neighbourhood of Warnsfeld
+ church. On the other hand, the Earl of Leicester himself, anxious as to
+ the result, came across the river just at daybreak. He was accompanied by
+ the chief gentlemen in his camp, who could never be restrained when blows
+ were passing current.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The business that morning was a commonplace and practical though an
+ important, one&mdash;to "impeach" a convoy of wheat and barley, butter,
+ cheese, and beef&mdash;but the names of those noble and knightly
+ volunteers, familiar throughout Christendom, sound like the roll-call for
+ some chivalrous tournament. There were Essex and Audley, Stanley, Pelham,
+ Russell, both the Sidneys, all the Norrises, men whose valour had been.
+ proved on many a hard-fought battle-field. There, too, was the famous hero
+ of British ballad whose name was so often to ring on the plains of the
+ Netherlands&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "The brave Lord Willoughby,
+ Of courage fierce and fell,
+ Who would not give one inch of way
+ For all the devils in hell."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Twenty such volunteers as these sat on horseback that morning around the
+ stately Earl of Leicester. It seemed an incredible extravagance to send a
+ handful of such heroes against an army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the English commander-in-chief had been listening to the insidious
+ tongue of Roland York&mdash;that bold, plausible, unscrupulous partisan,
+ already twice a renegade, of whom more was ere long to be heard in the
+ Netherlands and England. Of the man's courage there could be no doubt, and
+ he was about to fight that morning in the front rank at the head of his
+ company. But he had, for some mysterious reason, been bent upon persuading
+ the Earl that the Spaniards were no match for Englishmen at a hand-to-hand
+ contest. When they could ride freely up and down, he said, and use their
+ lances as they liked, they were formidable. But the English were stronger
+ men, better riders, better mounted, and better armed. The Spaniards hated
+ helmets and proof armour, while the English trooper, in casque, cuirass,
+ and greaves, was a living fortress impregnable to Spanish or Italian light
+ horsemen. And Leicester seemed almost convinced by his reasoning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was five o'clock of a chill autumn morning. It was time for day to
+ break, but the fog was so thick that a man at the distance of five yards
+ was quite invisible. The creaking of waggon-wheels and the measured tramp
+ of soldiers soon became faintly audible however to Sir John Norris and his
+ five hundred as they sat there in the mist. Presently came galloping
+ forward in hot haste those nobles and gentlemen, with their esquires,
+ fifty men in all&mdash;Sidney, Willoughby, and the rest&mdash;whom
+ Leicester had no longer been able to restrain from taking part in the
+ adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A force of infantry, the amount of which cannot be satisfactorily
+ ascertained, had been ordered by the Earl to cross the bridge at a later
+ moment. Sidney's cornet of horse was then in Deventer, to which place it
+ had been sent in order to assist in quelling an anticipated revolt, so
+ that he came, like most of his companions, as a private volunteer and
+ knight-errant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The arrival of the expected convoy was soon more distinctly heard, but no
+ scouts or outposts had been stationed to give timely notice, of the
+ enemy's movements. Suddenly the fog, which had shrouded the scene so
+ closely, rolled away like a curtain, and in the full light of an October
+ morning the Englishmen found themselves face to face with a compact body
+ of more than three thousand men. The Marquis del Vasto rode at the head of
+ the forces surrounded by a band of mounted arquebus men. The cavalry,
+ under the famous Epirote chief George Crescia, Hannibal Gonzaga,
+ Bentivoglio, Sesa, Conti, and other distinguished commanders, followed;
+ the columns of pikemen and musketeers lined the hedge-rows on both sides
+ the causeway; while between them the long train of waggons came slowly
+ along under their protection. The whole force had got in motion after
+ having sent notice of their arrival to Verdugo, who, with one or two
+ thousand men, was expected to sally forth almost immediately from the
+ city-gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was but brief time for deliberation. Notwithstanding the tremendous
+ odds there was no thought of retreat. Black Norris called to Sir William
+ Stanley, with whom he had been at variance so lately at Doesburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There hath been ill-blood between us," he said. "Let us be friends
+ together this day, and die side by side, if need be, in her Majesty's
+ cause."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you see me not serve my prince with faithful courage now," replied
+ Stanley, "account, me for ever a coward. Living or dying I will stand err
+ lie by you in friendship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they were speaking these words the young Earl of Essex, general of the
+ horse, cried to his, handful of troopers:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Follow me, good fellows, for the honour of England and of England's
+ Queen!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he dashed, lance in rest, upon the enemy's cavalry, overthrew
+ the foremost man, horse and rider, shivered his own spear to splinters,
+ and then, swinging his cartel-axe, rode merrily forward. His whole little
+ troop, compact, as an arrow-head, flew with an irresistible shock against
+ the opposing columns, pierced clean through them, and scattered them in
+ all directions. At the very first charge one hundred English horsemen
+ drove the Spanish and Albanian cavalry back upon the musketeers and
+ pikemen. Wheeling with rapidity, they retired before a volley of
+ musket-shot, by which many horses and a few riders were killed; and then
+ formed again to renew the attack. Sir Philip Sidney, an coming to the
+ field, having met Sir William Pelham, the veteran lord marshal, lightly
+ armed, had with chivalrous extravagance thrown off his own cuishes, and
+ now rode to the battle with no armour but his cuirass. At the second
+ charge his horse was shot under him, but, mounting another, he was seen
+ everywhere, in the thick of the fight, behaving himself with a gallantry
+ which extorted admiration even from the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the battle was a series of personal encounters in which high officers
+ were doing the work of private, soldiers. Lord North, who had been lying
+ "bed-rid" with a musket-shot in the leg, had got himself put on horseback,
+ and with "one boot on and one boot off," bore himself, "most lustily"
+ through the whole affair. "I desire that her Majesty may know;" he said,
+ "that I live but to, serve her. A better barony than I have could not hire
+ the Lord North to live, on meaner terms." Sir William Russell laid about
+ him with his curtel-axe to such purpose that the Spaniards pronounced him
+ a devil and not a man. "Wherever," said an eye-witness, "he saw five or
+ six of the enemy together; thither would he, and with his hard knocks soon
+ separated their friendship." Lord Willoughby encountered George Crescia,
+ general of the famed Albanian cavalry, unhorsed him at the first shock,
+ and rolled him into the ditch. "I yield me thy prisoner," called out the
+ Epirote in French, "for thou art a 'preux chevalier;'" while Willoughby,
+ trusting to his captive's word, galloped onward, and with him the rest of
+ the little troop, till they seemed swallowed up by the superior numbers of
+ the enemy. His horse was shot under him, his basses were torn from his
+ legs, and he was nearly taken a prisoner, but fought his way back with
+ incredible strength and good fortune. Sir William Stanley's horse had
+ seven bullets in him, but bore his rider unhurt to the end of the battle.
+ Leicester declared Sir William and "old Reads" to be "worth their weight
+ in pearl."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hannibal Gonzaga, leader of the Spanish cavalry, fell mortally wounded a
+ The Marquis del Vasto, commander of the expedition, nearly met the same
+ fate. An Englishman was just cleaving his head with a battle-axe, when a
+ Spaniard transfixed the soldier with his pike. The most obstinate struggle
+ took place about the train of waggons. The teamsters had fled in the
+ beginning of the action, but the English and Spanish soldiers, struggling
+ with the horses, and pulling them forward and backward, tried in vain to
+ get exclusive possession of the convoy which was the cause of the action.
+ The carts at last forced their way slowly nearer and nearer to the town,
+ while the combat still went on, warm as ever, between the hostile
+ squadrons. The action, lasted an hour and a half, and again and again the
+ Spanish horsemen wavered and broke before the handful of English, and fell
+ back upon their musketeers. Sir Philip Sidney, in the last charge, rode
+ quite through the enemy's ranks till he came upon their entrenchments,
+ when a musket-ball from the camp struck him upon the thigh, three inches
+ above the knee. Although desperately wounded in a part which should have
+ been protected by the cuishes which he had thrown aside, he was not
+ inclined to leave the field; but his own horse had been shot under him at
+ the-beginning of the action, and the one upon which he was now mounted
+ became too restive for him, thus crippled, to control. He turned
+ reluctantly away, and rode a mile and a half back to the entrenchments,
+ suffering extreme pain, for his leg was dreadfully shattered. As he past
+ along the edge of the battle-field his attendants brought him a bottle of
+ water to quench his raging thirst. At, that moment a wounded English
+ soldier, "who had eaten his last at the same feast," looked up wistfully,
+ in his face, when Sidney instantly handed him the flask, exclaiming, "Thy
+ necessity is even greater than mine." He then pledged his dying comrade in
+ a draught, and was soon afterwards met by his uncle. "Oh, Philip," cried
+ Leicester, in despair, "I am truly grieved to see thee in this plight."
+ But Sidney comforted him with manful words, and assured him that death was
+ sweet in the cause of his Queen and country. Sir William Russell, too, all
+ blood-stained from the fight, threw his arms around his friend, wept like
+ a child, and kissing his hand, exclaimed, "Oh! noble Sir Philip, never did
+ man attain hurt so honourably or serve so valiantly as you." Sir William
+ Pelham declared "that Sidney's noble courage in the face of our enemies
+ had won him a name of continuing honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wounded gentleman was borne back to the camp, and thence in a barge to
+ Arnheim. The fight was over. Sir John Norris bade Lord Leicester "be
+ merry, for," said he, "you have had the honourablest day. A handful of men
+ has driven the enemy three times to retreat." But, in truth, it was now
+ time for the English to retire in their turn. Their reserve never arrived.
+ The whole force engaged against the thirty-five hundred Spaniards had
+ never exceeded two hundred and fifty horse and three hundred foot, and of
+ this number the chief work had beer done by the fifty or sixty volunteers
+ and their followers. The heroism which had been displayed was fruitless,
+ except as a proof&mdash;and so Leicester wrote to the Palatine John
+ Casimir&mdash;"that Spaniards were not invincible." Two thousand men now
+ sallied from the Loor Gate under Verdugo and Tassis, to join the force
+ under Vasto, and the English were forced to retreat. The whole convoy was
+ then carried into the city, and the Spaniards remained masters of the
+ field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thirteen troopers and twenty-two foot soldiers; upon the English side,
+ were killed. The enemy lost perhaps two hundred men. They were thrice
+ turned from their position, and thrice routed, but they succeeded at last
+ in their attempt to carry their convoy into Zutphen. Upon that day, and
+ the succeeding ones, the town was completely victualled. Very little,
+ therefore, save honour, was gained by the display of English valour
+ against overwhelming numbers; five hundred against, near, four thousand.
+ Never in the whole course of the war had there been such fighting, for the
+ troops upon both sides were picked men and veterans. For a long time
+ afterwards it was the custom of Spaniards and Netherlanders, in
+ characterising a hardly-contested action, to call it as warm as the fight
+ at Zutphen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think I may call it," said Leicester, "the most notable encounter that
+ hath been in our age, and it will remain to our posterity famous."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless it is probable that the encounter would have been forgotten
+ by posterity but for the melancholy close upon that field to Sidney's
+ bright career. And perhaps the Queen of England had as much reason to
+ blush for the incompetency of her general and favourite as to be proud. of
+ the heroism displayed by her officers and soldiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There were too many indeed at this skirmish of the better sort," said
+ Leicester; "only a two hundred and fifty horse, and most of them the best
+ of this camp, and unawares to me. I was offended when I knew it, but could
+ not fetch them back; but since they all so well escaped (save my dear
+ nephew), I would not for ten thousand pounds but they had been there,
+ since they have all won that honour they have. Your Lordship never heard
+ of such desperate charges as they gave upon the enemies in the face of
+ their muskets."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He described Sidney's wound as "very dangerous, the bone being broken in
+ pieces;" but said that the surgeons were in good hope. "I pray God to save
+ his life," said the Earl, "and I care not how lame he be." Sir Philip was
+ carried to Arnheim, where the best surgeons were immediately in attendance
+ upon him. He submitted to their examination and the pain which they
+ inflicted, with great cheerfulness, although himself persuaded that his
+ wound was mortal. For many days the result was doubtful, and messages were
+ sent day by day to England that he was convalescent&mdash;intelligence
+ which was hailed by the Queen and people as a matter not of private but of
+ public rejoicing. He soon began to fail, however. Count Hohenlo was badly
+ wounded a few days later before the great fort of Zutphen. A musket-ball
+ entered his mouth; and passed through his cheek, carrying off a jewel
+ which hung in his ear. Notwithstanding his own critical condition,
+ however, Hohenlo sent his surgeon, Adrian van den Spiegel, a man of great
+ skill, to wait upon Sir Philip, but Adrian soon felt that the case was
+ hopeless. Meantime fever and gangrene attacked the Count himself; and
+ those in attendance upon him, fearing for his life, sent for his surgeon.
+ Leicester refused to allow Adrian to depart, and Hohenlo very generously
+ acquiescing in the decree, but, also requiring the surgeon's personal
+ care, caused himself to be transported in a litter to Arnheim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sidney was first to recognise the symptoms of mortification, which made a
+ fatal result inevitable. His demeanour during his sickness and upon his
+ death-bed was as beautiful as his life. He discoursed with his friends
+ concerning the immortality of the soul, comparing the doctrines of Plato
+ and of other ancient philosophers, whose writings were so familiar to him,
+ with the revelations of Scripture and with the dictates of natural
+ religion. He made his will with minute and elaborate provisions, leaving
+ bequests, remembrances, and rings, to all his friends. Then he indulged
+ himself with music, and listened particularly to a strange song which he
+ had himself composed during his illness, and which he had entitled 'La
+ Cuisse rompue.' He took leave of the friends around him with perfect
+ calmness; saying to his brother Robert, "Love my memory. Cherish my
+ friends. Above all, govern your will and affections by the will and word
+ of your Creator; in me beholding the end of this world with all her
+ vanities."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus this gentle and heroic spirit took its flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma, after thoroughly victualling Zutphen, turned his attention to the
+ German levies which Leicester was expecting under the care of Count Meurs.
+ "If the enemy is reinforced by these six thousand fresh troops," said
+ Alexander; "it will make him master of the field." And well he might hold
+ this opinion, for, in the meagre state of both the Spanish and the
+ liberating armies, the addition of three thousand fresh reiters and as
+ many infantry would be enough to turn the scale. The Duke of Parma&mdash;for,
+ since the recent death of his father, Farnese had succeeded to his title&mdash;determined
+ in person to seek the German troops, and to destroy them if possible. But
+ they never gave him the chance. Their muster-place was Bremen, but when
+ they heard that the terrible 'Holofernese' was in pursuit of them, and
+ that the commencement of their service would be a pitched battle with his
+ Spaniards and Italians, they broke up and scattered about the country.
+ Soon afterwards the Duke tried another method of effectually dispersing
+ them, in case they still retained a wish to fulfil their engagement with
+ Leicester. He sent a messenger to treat with them, and in consequence two
+ of their rittmeisters; paid him a visit. He offered to give them higher
+ pay, and "ready money in place of tricks and promises." The mercenary
+ heroes listened very favourably to his proposals, although they had
+ already received&mdash;besides the tricks and promises&mdash;at least one
+ hundred thousand florins out of the States' treasury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After proceeding thus far in the negotiation, however, Parma concluded, as
+ the season was so far advanced, that it was sufficient to have dispersed
+ them, and to have deprived the English and patriots of their services. So
+ he gave the two majors a gold chain a-piece, and they went their way
+ thoroughly satisfied. "I have got them away from the enemy for this year,"
+ said Alexander; "and this I hold to be one of the best services that has
+ been rendered for many a long day to your Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the period which intervened between the action at Warnsfeld and the
+ death of Sidney, the siege-operations before Zutphen had been continued.
+ The city, strongly garrisoned and well supplied with provisions, as it had
+ been by Parma's care, remained impregnable; but the sconces beyond the
+ river and upon the island fell into Leicester's hands. The great fortress
+ which commanded the Veluwe, and which was strong enough to have resisted
+ Count Hohenlo on a former, occasion for nearly a whole year, was the scene
+ of much hard fighting. It was gained at last by the signal valour of
+ Edward Stanley, lieutenant to Sir William. That officer, at the
+ commencement of an assault upon a not very practicable breach, sprang at
+ the long pike of a Spanish soldier, who was endeavoring to thrust him from
+ the wall, and seized it with both hands. The Spaniard struggled to
+ maintain his hold of the weapon, Stanley to wrest it from his grasp. A
+ dozen other soldiers broke their pikes upon his cuirass or shot at him
+ with their muskets. Conspicuous by his dress, being all in yellow but his
+ corslet, he was in full sight of Leicester and of fire thousand men. The
+ earth was so shifty and sandy that the soldiers who were to follow him
+ were not able to climb the wall. Still Stanley grasped his adversary's
+ pike, but, suddenly changing his plan, he allowed the Spaniard to lift him
+ from the ground. Then, assisting himself with his feet against the wall,
+ he, much to the astonishment of the spectators, scrambled quite over the
+ parapet, and dashed sword in hand among the defenders of the fort. Had he
+ been endowed with a hundred lives it seemed impossible for him to escape
+ death. But his followers, stimulated by his example, made ladders for
+ themselves of each others' shoulders, clambered at last with great
+ exertion over the broken wall, overpowered the garrison, and made
+ themselves masters of the sconce. Leicester, transported with enthusiasm
+ for this noble deed of daring, knighted Edward Stanley upon the spot,
+ besides presenting him next day with forty pounds in gold and an annuity
+ of one hundred marks, sterling for life. "Since I was born, I did never
+ see any man behave himself as he did," said the Earl. "I shall never
+ forget it, if I live a thousand year, and he shall have a part of my
+ living for it as long as I live."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The occupation of these forts terminated the military operations of the
+ year, for the rainy season, precursor of the winter, had now set in.
+ Leicester, leaving Sir William Stanley, with twelve hundred English and
+ Irish horse, in command of Deventer; Sir John Burrowes, with one thousand
+ men, in Doesburg; and Sir Robert Yorke, with one thousand more, in the
+ great sconce before Zutphen; took his departure for the Hague. Zutphen
+ seemed so surrounded as to authorize the governor to expect ere long its
+ capitulation. Nevertheless, the results of the campaign had not been
+ encouraging. The States had lost ground, having been driven from the Meuse
+ and Rhine, while they had with difficulty maintained themselves on the
+ Flemish coast and upon the Yssel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is now necessary to glance at the internal politics of the Republic
+ during the period of Leicester's administration and to explain the
+ position in which he found himself at the close of the year.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ And thus this gentle and heroic spirit took its flight
+ Five great rivers hold the Netherland territory in their coils
+ High officers were doing the work of private, soldiers
+ I did never see any man behave himself as he did
+ There is no man fitter for that purpose than myself
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. 1586
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Should Elizabeth accept the Sovereignty?&mdash;The Effects of her Anger&mdash;
+ Quarrels between the Earl and the Staten&mdash;The Earl's three
+ Counsellors&mdash;Leicester's Finance&mdash;Chamber&mdash;Discontent of the
+ Mercantile Classes&mdash;Paul Buys and the Opposition&mdash;Been Insight of
+ Paul Buys&mdash;Truchsess becomes a Spy upon him&mdash;Intrigues of Buys with
+ Denmark&mdash;His Imprisonment&mdash;The Earl's Unpopularity&mdash;His Quarrels
+ with the States&mdash;And with the Norrises&mdash;His Counsellors Wilkes and
+ Clerke&mdash;Letter from the Queen to Leicester&mdash;A Supper Party at
+ Hohenlo's&mdash;A drunken Quarrel&mdash;Hohenlo's Assault upon Edward Norris&mdash;
+ Ill Effects of the Riot.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The brief period of sunshine had been swiftly followed by storms. The
+ Governor Absolute had, from the outset, been placed in a false position.
+ Before he came to the Netherlands the Queen had refused the sovereignty.
+ Perhaps it was wise in her to decline so magnificent an offer; yet
+ certainly her acceptance would have been perfectly honourable. The
+ constituted authorities of the Provinces formally made the proposition.
+ There is no doubt whatever that the whole population ardently desired to
+ become her subjects. So far as the Netherlands were concerned, then, she
+ would have been fully justified in extending her sceptre over a free
+ people, who, under no compulsion and without any, diplomatic chicane, had
+ selected her for their hereditary chief. So far as regarded England, the
+ annexation to that country of a continental cluster of states, inhabited
+ by a race closely allied to it by blood, religion, and the instinct for
+ political freedom, seemed, on the whole, desirable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a financial point of view, England would certainly lose nothing by the
+ union. The resources of the Provinces were at leant equal to her own. We
+ have seen the astonishment which the wealth and strength of the
+ Netherlands excited in their English visitors. They were amazed by the
+ evidences of commercial and manufacturing prosperity, by the spectacle of
+ luxury and advanced culture, which met them on every side. Had the Queen&mdash;as
+ it had been generally supposed&mdash;desired to learn whether the
+ Provinces were able and willing to pay the expenses of their own defence
+ before she should definitely decide on, their offer of sovereignty, she
+ was soon thoroughly enlightened upon the subject. Her confidential agents
+ all&mdash;held one language. If she would only, accept the sovereignty,
+ the amount which the Provinces would pay was in a manner boundless. She
+ was assured that the revenue of her own hereditary realm was much inferior
+ to that of the possessions thus offered to her sway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In regard to constitutional polity, the condition of the Netherlands was
+ at least, as satisfactory as that of England. The great amount of civil
+ freedom enjoyed by those countries&mdash;although perhaps an objection&mdash;in
+ the eyes of Elizabeth Tudor&mdash;should certainly have been a
+ recommendation to her liberty-loving subjects. The question of defence had
+ been satisfactorily answered. The Provinces, if an integral part of the
+ English empire, could protect themselves, and would become an additional
+ element of strength&mdash;not a troublesome encumbrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The difference of language was far, less than that which already existed
+ between the English and their Irish fellow-subjects, while it was
+ counterbalanced by sympathy, instead of being aggravated by mutual
+ hostility in the matter of religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the great question of abstract sovereignty, it was
+ certainly impolitic for an absolute monarch to recognize the right of a
+ nation to repudiate its natural allegiance. But Elizabeth had already
+ countenanced that step by assisting the rebellion against Philip. To allow
+ the rebels to transfer their obedience from the King of Spain to herself
+ was only another step in the same direction. The Queen, should she annex
+ the Provinces, would certainly be accused by the world of ambition; but
+ the ambition was a noble one, if, by thus consenting to the urgent
+ solicitations of a free people, she extended the region of civil and
+ religious liberty, and raised up a permanent bulwark against sacerdotal
+ and royal absolutism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A war between herself and Spain was inevitable if she accepted the
+ sovereignty, but peace had been already rendered impossible by the treaty
+ of alliance. It is true that the Queen imagined the possibility of
+ combining her engagements towards the States with a conciliatory attitude
+ towards their ancient master, but it was here that she committed the
+ gravest error. The negotiations of Parma and his sovereign with the
+ English court were a masterpiece of deceit on the part of Spain. We have
+ shown, by the secret correspondence, and we shall in the sequel make it
+ still clearer, that Philip only intended to amuse his antagonists; that he
+ had already prepared his plan for the conquest of England, down to the
+ minutest details; that the idea of tolerating religious liberty had never
+ entered his mind; and that his fixed purpose was not only thoroughly to
+ chastise the Dutch rebels, but to deprive the heretic Queen who had
+ fostered their rebellion both of throne and life. So far as regarded the
+ Spanish King, then, the quarrel between him and Elizabeth was already
+ mortal; while in a religious, moral, political, and financial point of
+ view, it would be difficult to show that it was wrong, or imprudent for
+ England to accept the sovereignty over his ancient subjects. The cause of
+ human, freedom seemed likely to gain by the step, for the States did not
+ consider themselves strong enough to maintain the independent republic
+ which had already risen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It might be a question whether, on the whole, Elizabeth made a mistake in
+ declining the sovereignty. She was certainly wrong, however, in wishing
+ the lieutenant-general of her six thousand auxiliary troops to be clothed,
+ as such, with vice-regal powers. The States-General, in a moment of
+ enthusiasm, appointed him governor absolute, and placed in his hands, not
+ only the command of the forces, but the entire control of their revenues,
+ imposts, and customs, together with the appointment of civil and military
+ officers. Such an amount of power could only be delegated by the
+ sovereign. Elizabeth had refused the sovereignty: it then rested with the
+ States. They only, therefore, were competent to confer the power which
+ Elizabeth wished her favourite to exercise simply as her
+ lieutenant-general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her wrathful and vituperative language damaged her cause and that of the
+ Netherlands more severely than can now be accurately estimated. The Earl
+ was placed at once in a false, a humiliating, almost a ridiculous
+ position. The authority which the States had thus a second time offered to
+ England was a second time and most scornfully thrust back upon them.
+ Elizabeth was indignant that "her own man" should clothe himself in the
+ supreme attributes which she had refused. The States were forced by the
+ violence of the Queen to take the authority into their own hands again,
+ and Leicester was looked upon as a disgraced man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the neglect with which the Earl was treated by her Majesty and
+ her ill-timed parsimony towards the cause. No letters to him in four
+ months, no remittances for the English troops, not a penny of salary for
+ him. The whole expense of the war was thrown for the time upon their
+ hands, and the English soldiers seemed only a few thousand starving,
+ naked, dying vagrants, an incumbrance instead of an aid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States, in their turn, drew the purse-strings. The two hundred
+ thousand florins monthly were paid. The four hundred thousand florins
+ which had been voted as an additional supply were for a time held back, as
+ Leicester expressly stated, because of the discredit which had been thrown
+ upon him from home.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [Strangely enough, Elizabeth was under the impression that the extra
+ grant of 400,000 florins (L40,000) for four months was four hundred
+ thousand pounds sterling. "The rest that was granted by the States,
+ as extraordinary to levy an army, which was 400,000 florins, not
+ pounds, as I hear your Majesty taketh it. It is forty thousand
+ pounds, and to be paid In March, April, May, and June last," &amp;c.
+ Leicester to the Queen, 11 Oct. 1586. (S. P. Office MS.)]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The military operations were crippled for want of funds, but more fatal
+ than everything else were the secret negotiations for peace. Subordinate
+ individuals, like Grafigni and De Loo, went up and down, bringing presents
+ out of England for Alexander Farnese, and bragging that Parma and
+ themselves could have peace whenever they liked to make it, and affirming
+ that Leicester's opinions were of no account whatever. Elizabeth's
+ coldness to the Earl and to the Netherlands was affirmed to be the Prince
+ of Parma's sheet-anchor; while meantime a house was ostentatiously
+ prepared in Brussels by their direction for the reception of an English
+ ambassador, who was every moment expected to arrive. Under such
+ circumstances it was in, vain for the governor-general to protest that the
+ accounts of secret negotiations were false, and quite natural that the
+ States should lose their confidence in the Queen. An unfriendly and
+ suspicious attitude towards her representative was a necessary result, and
+ the demonstrations against the common enemy became still more languid. But
+ for these underhand dealings, Grave, Venlo, and Neusz, might have been
+ saved, and the current 'of the Meuse and Rhine have remained in the hands
+ of the patriots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl was industrious, generous, and desirous of playing well his part.
+ His personal courage was undoubted, and, in the opinion of his admirers&mdash;themselves,
+ some of them, men of large military experience&mdash;his ability as a
+ commander was of a high order. The valour displayed by the English nobles
+ and gentlemen who accompanied him was magnificent, worthy the descendants
+ of the victors at Crecy, Poitiers, and Agincourt; and the good behaviour
+ of their followers&mdash;with a few rare exceptions&mdash;had been equally
+ signal. But now the army was dwindling to a ghastly array of scarecrows,
+ and the recruits, as they came from England, were appalled by the
+ spectacle presented by their predecessors. "Our old ragged rogues here
+ have so discouraged our new men," said Leicester; "as I protest to you
+ they look like dead men." Out of eleven hundred freshly-arrived
+ Englishmen, five hundred ran away in two days. Some were caught and
+ hanged, and all seemed to prefer hanging to remaining in the service,
+ while the Earl declared that he would be hanged as well rather than again
+ undertake such a charge without being assured payment for his troops
+ beforehand!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The valour of Sidney and Essex, Willoughby and Pelham, Roger Williams and
+ Martin Schenk, was set at nought by such untoward circumstances. Had not
+ Philip also left his army to starve and Alexander Farnese to work
+ miracles, it would have fared still worse with Holland and England, and
+ with the cause of civil and religious liberty in the year 1586.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States having resumed, as much as possible; their former authority,
+ were on very unsatisfactory terms with the governor-general. Before long,
+ it was impossible for the twenty or thirty individuals called the States
+ to be in the same town with the man whom, at the commencement of the year,
+ they had greeted so warmly. The hatred between the Leicester faction and
+ the municipalities became intense, for the foundation of the two great
+ parties which were long to divide the Netherland commonwealth was already
+ laid. The mercantile patrician interest, embodied in the states of Holland
+ and Zeeland and inclined to a large toleration in the matter of religion,
+ which afterwards took the form of Arminianism, was opposed by a strict
+ Calvinist party, which desired to subject the political commonwealth to
+ the reformed church; which nevertheless indulged in very democratic views
+ of the social compact; and which was controlled by a few refugees from
+ Flanders and Brabant, who had succeeded in obtaining the confidence of
+ Leicester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the Earl was the nominal head of the Calvinist democratic party;
+ while young Maurice of Nassau; stadholder of Holland and Zeeland, and
+ guided by Barneveld, Buys, and other leading statesmen of these Provinces;
+ was in an attitude precisely the reverse of the one which he was destined
+ at a later and equally memorable epoch to assume. The chiefs of the
+ faction which had now succeeded in gaining the confidence of Leicester
+ were Reingault, Burgrave, and Deventer, all refugees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The laws of Holland and of the other United States were very strict on the
+ subject of citizenship, and no one but a native was competent to hold
+ office in each Province. Doubtless, such regulations were narrow-spirited;
+ but to fly in the face of them was the act of a despot, and this is what
+ Leicester did. Reingault was a Fleming. He was a bankrupt merchant, who
+ had been taken into the protection of Lamoral Egmont, and by that nobleman
+ recommended to Granvelle for an office under the Cardinal's government.
+ The refusal of this favour was one of the original causes of Egmont's
+ hostility to Granvelle. Reingault subsequently entered the service of the
+ Cardinal, however, and rewarded the kindness of his former benefactor by
+ great exertions in finding, or inventing, evidence to justify the
+ execution of that unfortunate nobleman. He was afterwards much employed by
+ the Duke of Alva and by the Grand Commander Requesens; but after the
+ pacification of Ghent he had been completely thrown out of service. He had
+ recently, in a subordinate capacity, accompanied the legations of the
+ States to France and to England, and had now contrived to ingratiate
+ himself with the Earl of Leicester. He affected great zeal for the
+ Calvinistic religion&mdash;an exhibition which, in the old servant of
+ Granvelle and Alva, was far from edifying&mdash;and would employ no man or
+ maid-servant in his household until their religious principles had been
+ thoroughly examined by one or two clergymen. In brief, he was one of
+ those, who, according to a homely Flemish proverb, are wont to hang their
+ piety on the bell-rope; but, with the exception of this brief interlude in
+ his career, he lived and died a Papist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gerard Proninck, called Deventer, was a respectable inhabitant of
+ Bois-le-Duc, who had left that city after it had again become subject to
+ the authority of Spain. He was of decent life and conversation, but a
+ restless and ambitious demagogue. As a Brabantine, he was unfit for
+ office; and yet, through Leicester's influence and the intrigues of the
+ democratic party, he obtained the appointment of burgomaster in the city
+ of Utrecht. The States-General, however, always refused to allow him to
+ appear at their sessions as representative of that city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Daniel de Burgrave was a Flemish mechanic, who, by the exertion of much
+ energy and talent, had risen to the poet of procureur-general of Flanders.
+ After the conquest of the principal portion of that Province by Parma, he
+ had made himself useful to the English governor-general in various ways,
+ and particularly as a linguist. He spoke English&mdash;a tongue with which
+ few Netherlanders of that day were familiar&mdash;and as the Earl knew no
+ other, except (very imperfectly) Italian, he found his services in
+ speaking and writing a variety of languages very convenient. He was the
+ governor's private secretary, and, of course, had no entrance to the
+ council of state, but he was accused of frequently thrusting himself into
+ their hall of sessions, where, under pretence of arranging the Earl's
+ table, or portfolio, or papers, he was much addicted to whispering into
+ his master's ear, listening to conversation,&mdash;to eaves-dropping; in
+ short, and general intrusiveness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A most faithful, honest servant is Burgrave," said Leicester; "a
+ substantial, wise man. 'Tis as sufficient a man as ever I met withal of
+ any nation; very well learned, exceeding wise, and sincere in religion. I
+ cannot commend the man too much. He is the only comfort I have had of any
+ of this nation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These three personages were the leaders of the Leicester faction. They had
+ much, influence with all the refugees from Flanders, Brabant, and the
+ Walloon Provinces. In Utrecht, especially, where the Earl mainly resided,
+ their intrigues were very successful. Deventer was appointed, as already
+ stated, to the important post of burgomaster; many, of the influential
+ citizens were banished, without cause or, trial; the upper branch of the
+ municipal government, consisting of the clerical delegates of the
+ colleges, was in an arbitrary manner abolished; and, finally, the absolute
+ sovereignty of, the Province, without condition, was offered to the Queen,
+ of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester was now determined to carry out one of the great objects which
+ the Queen had in view when she sent him to the Netherlands. She desired
+ thoroughly to ascertain the financial resources of the Provinces, and
+ their capacity to defend themselves. It was supposed by the States, and
+ hoped by the Earl and by a majority of the Netherland people, that she
+ would, in case the results were satisfactory, accept, after all, the
+ sovereignty. She certainly was not to be blamed that she wished to make
+ this most important investigation, but it was her own fault that any new
+ machinery had been rendered necessary. The whole control of the finances
+ had, in the beginning of the year, been placed in the Earl's hands, and it
+ was only by her violently depriving him of his credit and of the
+ confidence of the country that he had not retained it. He now established
+ a finance-chamber, under the chief control of Reingault, who promised him
+ mountains of money, and who was to be chief treasurer. Paul Buys was
+ appointed by Leicester to fill a subordinate position in the new council.
+ He spurned the offer with great indignation, saying that Reingault was not
+ fit to be his clerk, and that he was not likely himself, therefore, to
+ accept a humble post under the administration of such an individual. This
+ scornful refusal filled to the full the hatred of Leicester against the
+ ex-Advocate of Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mercantile interest at once took the alarm, because it was supposed
+ that the finance-chamber, was intended to crush the merchants. Early in
+ April an Act had been passed by the state-council, prohibiting commerce
+ with the Spanish possessions. The embargo was intended to injure the
+ obedient Provinces and their sovereign, but it was shown that its effect
+ would be to blast the commerce of Holland. It forbade the exportation from
+ the republic not only of all provisions and munitions of war, but of all
+ goods and merchandize whatever, to Spain, Portugal, the Spanish
+ Netherlands, or any other of Philip's territories, either in Dutch or
+ neutral vessel. It would certainly seem, at first sight, that such an act
+ was reasonable, although the result would really be, not to deprive the
+ enemy of supplies, but to throw the whole Baltic trade into the hands of
+ the Bremen, Hamburg, and "Osterling" merchants. Leicester expected to
+ derive a considerable revenue by granting passports and licenses to such
+ neutral traders, but the edict became so unpopular that it was never
+ thoroughly enforced, and was before long rescinded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The odium of the measure was thrown upon the governor-general, yet he had
+ in truth opposed it in the state-council, and was influential in procuring
+ its repeal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another important Act had been directed against the mercantile interest,
+ and excited much general discontent. The Netherlands wished the staple of
+ the English cloth manufacture to be removed from Emden&mdash;the petty,
+ sovereign of which place was the humble servant of Spain&mdash;to
+ Amsterdam or Delft. The desire was certainly, natural, and the Dutch
+ merchants sent a committee to confer with Leicester. He was much impressed
+ with their views, and with the sagacity of their chairman, one Mylward, "a
+ wise fellow and well languaged, an ancient man and very, religious," as
+ the Earl pronounced him to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the wisdom however, of this well-languaged fellow, the
+ Queen, for some strange reason, could not be induced to change the staple
+ from Emden, although it was shown that the public revenue of the
+ Netherlands would gain twenty thousand pounds a year by the measure. "All
+ Holland will cry out for it," said Leicester; "but I had rather they cried
+ than that England should weep."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the mercantile community, and especially the patrician families of
+ Holland and Zeeland, all engaged in trade, became more and more hostile to
+ the governor-general and to his financial trio, who were soon almost as
+ unpopular as the famous Consults of Cardinal Granvelle had been. It was
+ the custom of the States to consider the men who surrounded the Earl as
+ needy and unprincipled renegades and adventurers. It was the policy of his
+ advisers to represent the merchants and the States&mdash;which mainly
+ consisted of, or were controlled by merchants&mdash;as a body of corrupt,
+ selfish, greedy money-getters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The calumnies put in circulation against the States by Reingault and his
+ associates grew at last so outrageous, and the prejudice created in the
+ mind of Leicester and his immediate English adherents so intense, that it
+ was rendered necessary for the States, of Holland and Zeeland to write to
+ their agent Ortell in London, that he might forestall the effect of these
+ perpetual misrepresentations on her Majesty's government. Leicester, on
+ the other hand, under the inspiration; of his artful advisers, was
+ vehement in his entreaties that Ortell should be sent away from England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ablest and busiest of the opposition-party, the "nimblest head" in the
+ States-General was the ex-Advocate of Holland; Paul Buys. This man was
+ then the foremost statesman in, the Netherlands. He had been the firmest
+ friend to the English alliance; he had resigned his office when the States
+ were-offering the sovereignty to France, and had been on the point of
+ taking service in Denmark. He had afterwards been prominent in the
+ legation which offered the sovereignty to Elizabeth, and, for a long time,
+ had been the most firm, earnest, and eloquent advocate of the English
+ policy. Leicester had originally courted him, caressed him, especially
+ recommended him to the Queen's favour, given him money&mdash;as he said,
+ "two hundred pounds sterling thick at a time"&mdash;and openly pronounced
+ him to be "in ability above all men." "No man hath ever sought a man," he
+ said, "as I have sought P. B."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The period of their friendship was, however, very brief. Before many weeks
+ had passed there was no vituperative epithet that Leicester was not in the
+ daily habit of bestowing upon Paul. The Earl's vocabulary of abuse was not
+ a limited one, but he exhausted it on the head of the Advocate. He lacked
+ at last words and breath to utter what was like him. He pronounced his
+ former friend "a very dangerous man, altogether hated of the people and
+ the States;"&mdash;"a lewd sinner, nursled in revolutions; a most
+ covetous, bribing fellow, caring for nothing but to bear the sway and grow
+ rich;"&mdash;"a man who had played many parts, both lewd and audacious;"&mdash;"a
+ very knave, a traitor to his country;"&mdash;"the most ungrateful wretch
+ alive, a hater of the Queen and of all the English; a most unthankful man
+ to her Majesty; a practiser to make himself rich and great, and nobody
+ else;"&mdash;"among all villains the greatest;"&mdash;"a bolsterer of all
+ papists and ill men, a dissembler, a devil, an atheist," a "most naughty
+ man, and a most notorious drunkard in the worst degree."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where the Earl hated, his hatred was apt to be deadly, and he was
+ determined, if possible, to have the life of the detested Paul. "You shall
+ see I will do well enough with him, and that shortly," he said. "I will
+ course him as he was not so this twenty year. I will warrant him hanged
+ and one or two of his fellows, but you must not tell your shirt of this
+ yet;" and when he was congratulating the government on his having at
+ length procured the execution of Captain Hemart, the surrenderer of Grave,
+ he added, pithily, "and you shall hear that Mr. P. B. shall follow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the Earl's real griefs against Buys may be easily summed up. The lewd
+ sinner, nursled in revolutions, had detected the secret policy of the
+ Queen's government, and was therefore perpetually denouncing the intrigues
+ going on with Spain. He complained that her Majesty was tired of having
+ engaged in the Netherland enterprise; he declared that she would be glad
+ to get fairly out of it; that her reluctance to spend a farthing more in
+ the cause than she was obliged to do was hourly increasing upon her; that
+ she was deceiving and misleading the States-General; and that she was
+ hankering after a peace. He said that the Earl had a secret intention to
+ possess himself of certain towns in Holland, in which case the whole
+ question of peace and war would be in the hands of the Queen, who would
+ also have it thus in her power to reimburse herself at once for all
+ expenses that she had incurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be difficult to show that there was anything very calumnious in
+ these charges, which, no doubt, Paul was in the habit of making. As to the
+ economical tendencies of her Majesty, sufficient evidence has been given
+ already from Leicester's private letters. "Rather than spend one hundred
+ pounds," said Walsingham, "she can be content to be deceived of five
+ thousand." That she had been concealing from the Staten, from Walsingham,
+ from Leicester, during the whole summer, her secret negotiations with
+ Spain, has also been made apparent. That she was disgusted with the
+ enterprise in which she had embarked, Walsingham, Burghley, Hatton, and
+ all the other statesmen of England, most abundantly testified. Whether
+ Leicester had really an intention to possess himself of certain cities in
+ Holland&mdash;a charge made by Paul Buys, and denounced as especially
+ slanderous by the Earl&mdash;may better appear from his own private
+ statements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This I will do," he wrote to the Queen, "and I hope not to fail of it, to
+ get into my hands three or four most principal places in North Holland;
+ which will be such a strength and assurance for your Majesty, as you shall
+ see you shall both rule these men and make war or peace as you list,
+ always provided&mdash;whatsoever you hear, or is&mdash;part not with the
+ Brill; and having these places in your hands, whatsoever should chance to
+ these countries, your Majesty, I will warrant sure enough to make what
+ peace you will in an hour, and to have your debts and charges readily
+ answered." At a somewhat later moment it will be seen what came of these
+ secret designs. For the present, Leicester was very angry with Paul for
+ daring to suspect him of such treachery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl complained, too, that the influence of Buys with Hohenlo and
+ young Maurice of Nassau was most pernicious. Hohenlo had formerly stood
+ high in Leicester's opinion. He was a "plain, faithful soldier, a most
+ valiant gentleman," and he was still more important, because about to
+ marry Mary of Nassau; eldest slaughter, of William the Silent, and
+ coheiress with Philip William, to the Buren property. But he had been
+ tampered with by the intriguing Paul Buys, and had then wished to resign
+ his office under Leicester. Being pressed for reasons, he had "grown
+ solemn," and withdrawn himself almost entirely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maurice; with his "solemn, sly wit," also gave the Earl much trouble,
+ saying little; but thinking much, and listening to the insidious Paul. He
+ "stood much on making or marring," so Leicester thought, "as he met with
+ good counsel." He had formerly been on intimate terms with the
+ governor-general, who affected to call him his son; but he had
+ subsequently kept aloof, and in three months had not come near him. The
+ Earl thought that money might do much, and was anxious for Sir Francis
+ Drake to come home from the Indies with millions of gold, that the Queen
+ might make both Hohenlo and Maurice a handsome present before it should be
+ too late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime he did what he could with Elector Truchsess to lure them back
+ again. That forlorn little prelate was now poorer and more wretched than
+ ever. He was becoming paralytic, though young, and his heart was broken
+ through want. Leicester, always generous as the sun, gave him money, four
+ thousand florins at a time, and was most earnest that the Queen should put
+ him on her pension list. "His wisdom, his behaviour, his languages, his
+ person," said the Earl, "all would like her well. He is in great
+ melancholy for his town of Neusz, and for his poverty, having a very noble
+ mind. If, he be lost, her Majesty had better lose a hundred thousand
+ pounds."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The melancholy Truchsess now became a spy and a go-between. He insinuated
+ himself into the confidence of Paul Buys, wormed his secrets from him, and
+ then communicated them to Hohenlo and to Leicester; "but he did it very
+ wisely," said the Earl, "so that he was not mistrusted." The governor
+ always affected, in order to screen the elector from suspicion, to obtain
+ his information from persons in Utrecht; and he had indeed many spies in
+ that city; who diligently reported Paul's table-talk. Nevertheless, that
+ "noble gentleman, the elector," said Leicester, "hath dealt most deeply
+ with him, to seek out the bottom." As the ex-Advocate of Holland was very
+ communicative in his cups, and very bitter against the governor-general,
+ there was soon such a fund of information collected on the subject by
+ various eaves-droppers, that Leicester was in hopes of very soon hanging
+ Mr. Paul Buys, as we have already seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burthen of the charges against the culprit was his statement that the
+ Provinces would be gone if her Majesty did not declare herself, vigorously
+ and generously, in their favour; but, as this was the perpetual cry of
+ Leicester himself, there seemed hardly hanging matter in that. That noble
+ gentleman, the elector, however, had nearly saved the hangman his trouble,
+ having so dealt with Hohenlo as to "bring him into as good a mind as ever
+ he was;" and the first fruits of this good mind were, that the honest
+ Count&mdash;a man of prompt dealings&mdash;walked straight to Paul's house
+ in order to kill him on the spot. Something fortunately prevented the
+ execution of this plan; but for a time at least the energetic Count
+ continued to be "governed greatly" by the ex-archbishop, and "did impart
+ wholly unto him his most secret heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the "deep wise Truxy," as Leicester called him, continued to earn
+ golden opinions, and followed up his conversion of Hohenlo by undertaking
+ to "bring Maurice into tune again also," and the young Prince was soon on
+ better terms with his "affectionate father" than he had ever been before.
+ Paul Buys was not so easily put down, however, nor the two magnates so
+ thoroughly gained over. Before the end of the season Maurice stood in his
+ old position, the nominal head of the Holland or patrician party, chief of
+ the opposition to Leicester, while Hohenlo had become more bitter than
+ ever against the Earl. The quarrel between himself and Edward Norris, to
+ which allusion will soon be made, tended to increase the dissatisfaction,
+ although he singularly misunderstood Leicester's sentiments throughout the
+ whole affair. Hohenlo recovered of his wound before Zutphen; but, on his
+ recovery, was more malcontent than ever. The Earl was obliged at last to
+ confess that "he was a very dangerous man, inconstant, envious; and
+ hateful to all our nation, and a very traitor to the cause. There is no
+ dealing to win him," he added, "I have sought it to my cost. His best
+ friends tell me he is not to be trusted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime that lewd sinner, the indefatigable Paul, was plotting
+ desperately&mdash;so Leicester said and believed&mdash;to transfer the
+ sovereignty of the Provinces to the King of Denmark. Buys, who was
+ privately of opinion that the States required an absolute head, "though it
+ were but an onion's head," and that they would thankfully continue under
+ Leicester as governor absolute if Elizabeth would accept the sovereignty,
+ had made up his mind that the Queen would never take that step. He was
+ therefore disposed to offer the crown to the King of Denmark, and was
+ believed to have brought Maurice&mdash;who was to espouse that King's
+ daughter&mdash;to the same way of thinking. Young Count Rantzan, son of a
+ distinguished Danish statesman, made a visit to the Netherlands in order
+ to confer with Buys. Paul was also anxious to be appointed envoy to
+ Denmark, ostensibly to arrange for the two thousand cavalry, which the
+ King had long before promised for the assistance of the Provinces, but in
+ reality, to examine the details of this new project; and Leicester
+ represented to the Queen very earnestly how powerful the Danish monarch
+ would become, thus rendered master of the narrow seas, and how formidable
+ to England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of these plottings, real or supposed, a party of armed men,
+ one fine summer's morning, suddenly entered Paul's bedroom as he lay
+ asleep at the house of the burgomaster, seized his papers, and threw him:
+ into prison in the wine-cellar of the town-house. "Oh my papers, oh my
+ papers!" cried the unfortunate politician, according to Leicester's
+ statement, "the Queen of England will for ever hate me." The Earl
+ disavowed all, participation in the arrest; but he was not believed. He
+ declared himself not sorry that the measure had been taken, and promised
+ that he would not "be hasty to release him," not doubting that "he would
+ be found faulty enough." Leicester maintained that there was stuff enough
+ discovered to cost Paul his head; but he never lost his head, nor was
+ anything treasonable or criminal ever found against him. The intrigue with
+ Denmark&mdash;never proved&mdash;and commenced, if undertaken at all, in
+ utter despair of Elizabeth's accepting the sovereignty, was the gravest
+ charge. He remained, however, six months in prison, and at the beginning
+ of 1587 was released, without trial or accusation, at the request of the
+ English Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States could hardly be blamed for their opposition to the Earl's
+ administration, for he had thrown himself completely into the arms of a
+ faction, whose object was to vilipend and traduce them, and it was now
+ difficult for him to recover the functions of which the Queen had deprived
+ him. "The government they had given from themselves to me stuck in their
+ stomachs always," he said. Thus on the one side, the States were, "growing
+ more stately than ever," and were-always "jumbling underhand," while the
+ aristocratic Earl, on, his part, was resolute not to be put down by
+ "churls and tinkers." He was sure that the people were with him, and that,
+ "having always been governed by some prince, they, never did nor could
+ consent to be ruled by bakers, brewers, and hired advocates. I know they
+ hate them," said this high-born tribune of the people. He was much
+ disgusted with the many-headed chimaera, the monstrous republic, with
+ which he found himself in such unceasing conflict, and was disposed to
+ take a manful stand. "I have been fain of late," he said, "to set the
+ better leg foremost, to handle some of my masters somewhat plainly; for
+ they thought I would droop; and whatsoever becomes of me, you shall hear I
+ will keep my reputation, or die for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But one great accusation, made against the churls and tinkers, and bakers
+ and hired advocates, and Mr. Paul Buys at their head, was that they were
+ liberal towards the Papists. They were willing that Catholics should
+ remain in the country and exercise the rights of citizens, provided they,
+ conducted themselves like good citizens. For this toleration&mdash;a
+ lesson which statesmen like Buys and Barneveld had learned in the school
+ of William the Silent&mdash;the opposition-party were denounced as
+ bolsterers of Papists, and Papists themselves at heart, and "worshippers
+ of idolatrous idols."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From words, too, the government of Leicester passed to acts. Seventy
+ papists were banished from the city of Utrecht at the time of the arrest
+ of Buys. The Queen had constantly enforced upon Leicester the importance
+ of dealing justly with the Catholics in the Netherlands, on the ground
+ that they might be as good patriots and were as much interested in the
+ welfare of their country as were the Protestants; and he was especially
+ enjoined "not to meddle in matters of religion." This wholesome advice it
+ would have been quite impossible for the Earl, under the guidance of
+ Reingault, Burgrave, and Stephen Perret, to carry out. He protested that
+ he should have liked to treat Papists and Calvinists "with indifference,"
+ but that it had proved impossible; that the Catholics were perpetually
+ plotting with the Spanish faction, and that no towns were safe except
+ those in which Papists had been excluded from office. "They love the Pope
+ above all," he said, "and the Prince of Parma hath continual intelligence
+ with them." Nor was it Catholics alone who gave the governor trouble. He
+ was likewise very busy in putting down other denominations that differed
+ from the Calvinists. "Your Majesty will not believe," he said, "the number
+ of sects that are in most towns; especially Anabaptists, Families of Love,
+ Georgians; and I know not what. The godly and good ministers were molested
+ by them in many places, and ready to give over; and even such diversities
+ grew among magistrates in towns, being caused by some sedition-sowers
+ here." It is however, satisfactory to reflect that the anabaptists and
+ families of love, although discouraged and frowned upon, were not burned
+ alive, buried alive, drowned in dungeons, and roasted at slow fires, as
+ had been the case with them and with every other species of Protestants,
+ by thousands and tens of thousands, so long as Charles V. and Philip II.
+ had ruled the territory of that commonwealth. Humanity had acquired
+ something by the war which the Netherlanders had been waging for twenty
+ years, and no man or woman was ever put to death for religious causes
+ after the establishment of the republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With his hands thus full of business, it was difficult for the Earl to
+ obey the Queen's command not to meddle in religious matters; for he was
+ not of the stature of William the Silent, and could not comprehend that
+ the great lesson taught by the sixteenth century was that men were not to
+ meddle with men in matters of religion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But besides his especial nightmare&mdash;Mr. Paul Buys&mdash;the
+ governor-general had a whole set of incubi in the Norris family. Probably
+ no two persons ever detested each other more cordially than did Leicester
+ and Sir John Norris. Sir John had been commander of the forces in the
+ Netherlands before Leicester's arrival, and was unquestionably a man of
+ larger experience than the Earl. He had, however, as Walsingham
+ complained, acquired by his services in "countries where neither
+ discipline military nor religion carried any sway," a very rude and
+ licentious kind of government. "Would to God," said the secretary, "that,
+ with his value and courage, he carried the mind and reputation of a
+ religious soldier." But that was past praying for. Sir John was proud,
+ untractable, turbulent, very difficult to manage. He hated Leicester, and
+ was furious with Sir William Pelham, whom Leicester had made marshal of
+ the camp. He complained, not unjustly, that from the first place in the
+ army, which he had occupied in the Netherlands, he had been reduced to the
+ fifth. The governor-general&mdash;who chose to call Sir John the son of
+ his ancient enemy, the Earl of Sussex&mdash;often denounced him in good
+ set terms. "His brother Edward is as ill as he," he said, "but John is
+ right the late Earl of Sussex' son; he will so dissemble and crouch, and
+ so cunningly carry his doings, as no man living would imagine that there
+ were half the malice or vindictive mind that plainly his words prove to
+ be." Leicester accused him of constant insubordination, insolence, and
+ malice, complained of being traduced by him everywhere in the Netherlands
+ and in England, and declared that he was followed about by "a pack of lewd
+ audacious fellows," whom the Earl vowed he would hang, one and all, before
+ he had done with them. He swore openly, in presence of all his camp, that
+ he would hang Sir John likewise; so that both the brothers, who had never
+ been afraid of anything since they had been born into the world, affected
+ to be in danger of their lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Norrises were on bad terms with many officers&mdash;with Sir William
+ Pelham of course, with "old Reade," Lord North, Roger Williams, Hohenlo,
+ Essex, and other nobles&mdash;but with Sir Philip Sidney, the gentle and
+ chivalrous, they were friends. Sir John had quarrelled in former times&mdash;according
+ to Leicester&mdash;with Hohenlo and even with the "good and brave" La
+ None, of the iron arm; "for his pride," said the Earl, "was the spirit of
+ the devil." The governor complained every day of his malignity, and vowed
+ that he "neither regarded the cause of God, nor of his prince, nor
+ country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He consorted chiefly with Sir Thomas Cecil, governor of Brill, son of Lord
+ Burghley, and therefore no friend to Leicester; but the Earl protested
+ that "Master Thomas should bear small rule," so long as he was himself
+ governor-general. "Now I have Pelham and Stanley, we shall do well
+ enough," he said, "though my young master would countenance him. I will be
+ master while I remain here, will they, nill they."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward Norris, brother of Sir John, gave the governor almost as much
+ trouble as he; but the treasurer Norris, uncle to them both, was, if
+ possible, more odious to him than all. He was&mdash;if half Leicester's
+ accusations are to be believed&mdash;a most infamous peculator. One-third
+ of the money sent by the Queen for the soldiers stuck in his fingers. He
+ paid them their wretched four-pence a-day in depreciated coin, so that for
+ their "naughty money they could get but naughty ware." Never was such
+ "fleecing of poor soldiers," said Leicester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, Sir John maintained that his uncle's accounts were
+ always ready for examination, and earnestly begged the home-government not
+ to condemn that functionary without a hearing. For himself, he complained
+ that he was uniformly kept in the background, left in ignorance of
+ important enterprises, and sent on difficult duty with inadequate forces.
+ It was believed that Leicester's course was inspired by envy, lest any
+ military triumph that might be gained should redound to the glory of Sir
+ John, one of the first commanders of the age, rather than to that of the
+ governor-general. He was perpetually thwarted, crossed, calumniated,
+ subjected to coarse and indecent insults, even from such brave men as Lord
+ North and Roger Williams, and in the very presence of the
+ commander-in-chief, so that his talents were of no avail, and he was most
+ anxious to be gone from the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus with the tremendous opposition formed to his government in the
+ States-General, the incessant bickerings with the Norrises, the
+ peculations of the treasurer, the secret negotiations with Spain, and the
+ impossibility of obtaining money from home for himself or for his starving
+ little army, the Earl was in anything but a comfortable position. He was
+ severely censured in England; but he doubted, with much reason, whether
+ there were many who would take his office, and spend twenty thousand
+ pounds sterling out of their own pockets, as he had done. The Earl was
+ generous and brave as man could be, full of wit, quick of apprehension;
+ but inordinately vain, arrogant, and withal easily led by designing
+ persons. He stood up manfully for the cause in which he was embarked, and
+ was most strenuous in his demands for money. "Personally he cared," he
+ said, "not sixpence for his post; but would give five thousand sixpences,
+ and six thousand shillings beside, to be rid of it;" but it was contrary
+ to his dignity to "stand bucking with the States" for his salary. "Is it
+ reason," he asked, "that I, being sent from so great a prince as our
+ sovereign is, must come to strangers to beg my entertainment: If they are
+ to pay me, why is there no remembrance made of it by her Majesty's
+ letters, or some of the lords?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl and those around him perpetually and vehemently urged upon the
+ Queen to reconsider her decision, and accept the sovereignty of the
+ Provinces at once. There was no other remedy for the distracted state of
+ the country&mdash;no other safeguard for England. The Netherland people
+ anxiously, eagerly desired it. Her Majesty was adored by all the
+ inhabitants, who would gladly hang the fellows called the States. Lord
+ North was of this opinion&mdash;so was Cavendish. Leicester had always
+ held it. "Sure I am," he said, "there is but one way for our safety, and
+ that is, that her Majesty may take that upon her which I fear she will
+ not." Thomas Wilkes, who now made his appearance on the scene, held the
+ same language. This distinguished civilian had been sent by the Queen,
+ early in August, to look into the state of Netherland affairs. Leicester
+ having expressly urged the importance of selecting as wise a politician as
+ could be found&mdash;because the best man in England would hardly be found
+ a match for the dullards and drunkards, as it was the fashion there to
+ call the Dutch statesmen&mdash;had selected Wilkes. After fulfilling this
+ important special mission, he was immediately afterwards to return to the
+ Netherlands as English member of the state-council, at forty shillings
+ a-day, in the place of "little Hal Killigrew," whom Leicester pronounced a
+ "quicker and stouter fellow" than he had at first taken him for, although
+ he had always thought well of him. The other English counsellor, Dr.
+ Bartholomew Clerk, was to remain, and the Earl declared that he too, whom
+ he had formerly undervalued, and thought to have "little stuff in him,"
+ was now "increasing greatly in understanding." But notwithstanding this
+ intellectual progress, poor Bartholomew, who was no beginner, was most
+ anxious to retire. He was a man of peace, a professor, a doctor of laws,
+ fonder of the learned leisure and the trim gardens of England than of the
+ scenes which now surrounded him. "I beseech your good Lordship to
+ consider," he dismally observed to Burghley, "what a hard case it is for a
+ man that these fifteen years hath had vitam sedentariam, unworthily in a
+ place judicial, always in his long robe, and who, twenty-four years since,
+ was a public reader in the University (and therefore cannot be young), to
+ come now among guns and drums, tumbling up and down, day and night, over
+ waters and banks, dykes and ditches, upon every occasion that falleth out;
+ hearing many insolences with silence, bearing many hard measures with
+ patience&mdash;a course most different from my nature, and most unmeet for
+ him that hath ever professed learning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilkes was of sterner stuff. Always ready to follow the camp and to face
+ the guns and drums with equanimity, and endowed beside with keen political
+ insight, he was more competent than most men to unravel the confused skein
+ of Netherland politics. He soon found that the Queen's secret negotiations
+ with Spain, and the general distrust of her intentions in regard to the
+ Provinces, were like to have fatal consequences. Both he and Leicester
+ painted the anxiety of the Netherland people as to the intention of her
+ Majesty in vivid colours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen could not make up her mind&mdash;in the very midst of the
+ Greenwich secret conferences, already described&mdash;to accept the
+ Netherland sovereignty. "She gathereth from your letter," wrote
+ Walsingham, "that the only salve for this sore is to make herself
+ proprietary of the country, and to put in such an army as may be able to
+ make head to the enemy. These two things being so contrary to her
+ Majesty's disposition&mdash;the one, for that it breedeth a doubt of a
+ perpetual war, the other, for that it requireth an increase of charges&mdash;do
+ marvellously distract her, and make her repent that ever she entered into
+ the action."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the great subject of the sovereignty, therefore, she was unable to
+ adopt the resolution so much desired by Leicester and by the people of the
+ Provinces; but she answered the Earl's communications concerning Maurice
+ and Hohenlo, Sir John Norris and the treasurer, in characteristic but
+ affectionate language. And thus she wrote:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rob, I am afraid you will suppose, by my wandering writings, that a
+ midsummer's moon hath taken large possession of my brains this month; but
+ you must needs take things as they come in my head, though order be left
+ behind me. When I remember your request to have a discreet and honest man
+ that may carry my mind, and see how all goes there, I have chosen this
+ bearer (Thomas Wilkes), whom you know and have made good trial of. I have
+ fraught him full of my conceipts of those country matters, and imparted
+ what way I mind to take and what is fit for you to use. I am sure you can
+ credit him, and so I will be short with these few notes. First, that Count
+ Maurice and Count Hollock (Hohenlo) find themselves trusted of you,
+ esteemed of me, and to be carefully regarded, if ever peace should happen,
+ and of that assure them on my word, that yet never deceived any. And for
+ Norris and other captains that voluntarily, without commandment, have many
+ years ventured their lives and won our nation honour and themselves fame,
+ let them not be discouraged by any means, neither by new-come men nor by
+ old trained soldiers elsewhere. If there be fault in using of soldiers, or
+ making of profit by them, let them hear of it without open shame, and
+ doubt not I will well chasten them therefore. It frets me not a little
+ that the poor soldiers that hourly venture life should want their due,
+ that well deserve rather reward; and look, in whom the fault may truly be
+ proved, let them smart therefore. And if the treasurer be found untrue or
+ negligent, according to desert he shall be used. But you know my old wont,
+ that love not to discharge from office without desert. God forbid! I pray
+ you let this bearer know what may be learned herein, and for the treasure
+ I have joined Sir Thomas Shirley to see all this money discharged in due
+ sort, where it needeth and behoveth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now will I end, that do imagine I talk still with you, and therefore
+ loathly say farewell one hundred thousand times; though ever I pray God
+ bless you from all harm, and save you from all foes. With my million and
+ legion of thanks for all your pains and cares,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As you know ever the same,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "E. R.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "P. S. Let Wilkes see that he is acceptable to you. If anything there be
+ that W. shall desire answer of be such as you would have but me to know,
+ write it to myself. You know I can keep both others' counsel and mine own.
+ Mistrust not that anything you would have kept shall be disclosed by me,
+ for although this bearer ask many things, yet you may answer him such as
+ you shall think meet, and write to me the rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, not even her favourite Leicester's misrepresentations could make the
+ Queen forget her ancient friendship for "her own crow;" but meantime the
+ relations between that "bunch of brethren," black Norris and the rest, and
+ Pelham, Hollock, and other high officers in Leicester's army, had grown
+ worse than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One August evening there was a supper-party at Count Hollock's quarters in
+ Gertruydenberg. A military foray into Brabant had just taken place, under
+ the lead of the Count, and of the Lord Marshal, Sir William Pelham. The
+ marshal had requested Lord Willoughby, with his troop of horse and five
+ hundred foot, to join in the enterprise, but, as usual, particular pains
+ had been taken that Sir John Norris should know nothing of the affair.
+ Pelham and Hollock&mdash;who was "greatly in love with Mr. Pelham"&mdash;had
+ invited several other gentlemen high in Leicester's confidence to
+ accompany the expedition; and, among the rest, Sir Philip Sidney, telling
+ him that he "should see some good service." Sidney came accordingly, in
+ great haste, from Flushing, bringing along with him Edward Norris&mdash;that
+ hot-headed young man, who, according to Leicester, "greatly governed his
+ elder brother"&mdash;but they arrived at Gertruydenberg too late. The
+ foray was over, and the party&mdash;"having burned a village, and killed
+ some boors"&mdash;were on their return. Sidney, not perhaps much
+ regretting the loss of his share in this rather inglorious shooting party,
+ went down to the water-side, accompanied by Captain Norris, to meet
+ Hollock and the other commanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the Count stepped on shore he scowled ominously, and looked very much
+ out of temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What has come to Hollock?" whispered Captain Patton, a Scotchman, to
+ Sidney. "Has he a quarrel with any of the party? Look at his face! He
+ means mischief to somebody."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Sidney was equally amazed at the sudden change in the German general's
+ countenance, and as unable to explain it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon afterwards, the whole party, Hollock, Lewis William of Nassau, Lord
+ Carew, Lord Essex, Lord Willoughby, both the Sidneys, Roger Williams,
+ Pelham, Edward Norris, and the rest, went to the Count's lodgings, where
+ they supped, and afterwards set themselves seriously to drinking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Norris soon perceived that he was no welcome guest; for he was not&mdash;like
+ Sidney&mdash;a stranger to the deep animosity which had long existed
+ between Sir John Norris and Sir William Pelham and his friends. The
+ carouse was a tremendous one, as usually was the case where Hollock was
+ the Amphitryon, and, as the potations grew deeper, an intention became
+ evident on the part of some of the company to behave unhandsomely to
+ Norris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time the young Captain ostentatiously restrained himself, very much
+ after the fashion of those meek individuals who lay their swords on the
+ tavern-table, with "God grant I may have no need of thee!" The custom was
+ then prevalent at banquets for the revellers to pledge each other in
+ rotation, each draining a great cup, and exacting the same feat from his
+ neighbour, who then emptied his goblet as a challenge to his next comrade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lord Marshal took a beaker, and called out to Edward Norris. "I drink
+ to the health of my Lord Norris, and of my lady; your mother." So saying,
+ he emptied his glass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man did not accept the pledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Lordship knows," he said somewhat sullenly, "that I am not wont to
+ drink deep. Mr. Sidney there can tell you that, for my health's sake, I
+ have drank no wine these eight days. If your Lordship desires the pleasure
+ of seeing me drunk, I am not of the same mind. I pray you at least to take
+ a smaller glass."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir William insisted on the pledge. Norris then, in no very good humour,
+ emptied his cup to the Earl of Essex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Essex responded by draining a goblet to Count Hollock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A Norris's father," said the young Earl; as he pledged the Count, who was
+ already very drunk, and looking blacker than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An 'orse's father&mdash;an 'orse's father!" growled' Hollock; "I never
+ drink to horses, nor to their fathers either:" and with this wonderful
+ witticism he declined the pledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Essex explained that the toast was Lord Norris, father of the Captain; but
+ the Count refused to understand, and held fiercely, and with damnable
+ iteration, to his jest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl repeated his explanation several times with no better success.
+ Norris meanwhile sat swelling with wrath, but said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the Lord Marshal took the same great glass, and emptied it to the
+ young Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Norris, not knowing exactly what course to take, placed the glass at the
+ side of his plate, and glared grimly at Sir William.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pelham was furious. Reaching over the table, he shoved the glass towards
+ Norris with an angry gesture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take your glass, Captain Norris," he cried; "and if you have a mind to
+ jest, seek other companions. I am not to be trifled with; therefore, I
+ say, pledge me at once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Lordship shall not force me to drink more wine than I list,"
+ returned the other. "It is your pleasure to take advantage of your
+ military rank. Were we both at home, you would be glad to be my
+ companion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Norris was hard beset, and although his language was studiously moderate,
+ it was not surprising that his manner should be somewhat insolent. The
+ veteran Lord Marshal, on the other hand, had distinguished himself on many
+ battle-fields, but his deportment at this banqueting-table was not much to
+ his credit. He paused a moment, and Norris, too, held his peace, thinking
+ that his enemy would desist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was but for a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Captain Norris," cried Pelham, "I bid you pledge me without more ado.
+ Neither you nor your best friends shall use me as you list. I am better
+ born than you and your brother, the colonel-general, and the whole of
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I warn you to say nothing disrespectful against my brother," replied the
+ Captain. "As for yourself, I know how to respect your age and superior
+ rank."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Drink, drink, drink!" roared the old Marshal. "I tell you I am better
+ born than the best of you. I have advanced you all too, and you know it;
+ therefore drink to me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir William was as logical as men in their cups are prone to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed, you have behaved well to my brother Thomas," answered Norris,
+ suddenly becoming very courteous, "and for this I have ever loved your
+ Lordship, and would, do you any service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, then," said the Marshal, becoming tender in his turn, "forget what
+ hath past this night, and do as you would have done before."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very well said, indeed!" cried Sir Philip Sidney, trying to help the
+ natter into the smoother channel towards which it was tending.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Norris, seeing that the eyes of the whole company were upon them; took the
+ glass accordingly, and rose to his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Lord Marshal," he said, "you have done me more wrong this night than
+ you can easily make satisfaction for. But I am unwilling that any trouble
+ or offence should grow through me. Therefore once more I pledge you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He raised the cup to his lips. At that instant Hollock, to whom nothing
+ had been said, and who had spoken no word since his happy remark about the
+ horse's father, suddenly indulged in a more practical jest; and seizing
+ the heavy gilt cover of a silver vase, hurled it at the head of Norris. It
+ struck him full on the forehead, cutting him to the bone. The Captain,
+ stunned for a moment, fell back in his chair, with the blood running down
+ his eyes and face. The Count, always a man of few words, but prompt in
+ action, now drew his dagger, and strode forward, with the intention of
+ despatching him upon the spot. Sir Philip Sidney threw his arms around
+ Hollock, however, and, with the assistance of others in the company,
+ succeeded in dragging him from the room. The affair was over in a few
+ seconds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Norris, coming back to consciousness, sat for a moment as one amazed,
+ rubbing the blood out of his eyes; then rose from the table to seek his
+ adversary; but he was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon afterwards he went to his lodgings. The next morning he was advised
+ to leave the town as speedily as possible; for as it was under the
+ government of Hollock, and filled with his soldiers, he was warned that
+ his life would not be safe there an hour. Accordingly he went to his boat,
+ accompanied only by his man and his page, and so departed with his broken
+ head, breathing vengeance against Hollock, Pelham, Leicester, and the
+ whole crew, by whom he had been thus abused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next evening there was another tremendous carouse at the Count's, and,
+ says the reporter of the preceding scene, "they were all on such good
+ terms, that not one of the company had falling band or ruff left about his
+ neck. All were clean torn away, and yet there was no blood drawn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Edward Norris&mdash;so soon as might be afterwards&mdash;sent a cartel to
+ the Count, demanding mortal combat with sword and dagger. Sir Philip
+ Sidney bore the message. Sir John Norris, of course warmly and violently
+ espoused the cause of his brother, and was naturally more incensed against
+ the Lord Marshal than ever, for Sir William Pelham was considered the
+ cause of the whole affray. "Even if the quarrel is to be excused by
+ drink," said an eye-witness, "'tis but a slender defence for my Lord to
+ excuse himself by his cups; and often drink doth bewray men's humours and
+ unmask their malice. Certainly the Count Hollock thought to have done a
+ pleasure to the company in killing him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could be more ill-timed than this quarrel, or more vexatious to
+ Leicester. The Count&mdash;although considering himself excessively
+ injured at being challenged by a simple captain and an untitled gentleman,
+ whom he had attempted to murder&mdash;consented to waive his privilege,
+ and grant the meeting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester interposed, however, to delay, and, if possible, to patch up the
+ affair. They were on the eve of active military operations, and it was
+ most vexatious for the commander-in-chief to see, as he said, "the quarrel
+ with the enemy changed to private revenge among ourselves." The intended
+ duel did not take place; for various influential personages succeeded in
+ deferring the meeting. Then came the battle of Zutphen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sidney fell, and Hollock was dangerously wounded in the attack which was
+ soon afterwards made upon the fort. He was still pressed to afford the
+ promised satisfaction, however, and agreed to do so whenever he should
+ rise from his bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Strange to say, the Count considered Leicester, throughout the whole
+ business, to have taken part against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet there is no doubt whatever that the Earl&mdash;who detested the
+ Norrises, and was fonder of Pelham than of any man living&mdash;uniformly
+ narrated the story most unjustly, to the discredit of the young Captain.
+ He considered him extremely troublesome, represented him as always
+ quarrelling with some one&mdash;with Colonel Morgan, Roger Williams, old
+ Reade, and all the rest&mdash;while the Lord Marshal, on the contrary, was
+ depicted as the mildest of men. "This I must say," he observed, "that all
+ present, except my two nephews (the Sidneys), who are not here yet,
+ declare the greatest fault to be in Edward Norris, and that he did most
+ arrogantly use the Marshal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is plain, however, that the old Marshal, under the influence of wine,
+ was at least quite as much to blame as the young Captain; and Sir Philip
+ Sidney sufficiently showed his sense of the matter by being the bearer of
+ Edward Norris's cartel. After Sidney's death, Sir John Norris, in his
+ letter of condolence to Walsingham for the death of his illustrious
+ son-in-law, expressed the deeper regret at his loss because Sir Philip's
+ opinion had been that the Norrises were wronged. Hollock had conducted
+ himself like a lunatic, but this he was apt to do whether in his cups or
+ not. He was always for killing some one or another on the slightest
+ provocation, and, while the dog-star of 1586 was raging, it was not his
+ fault if he had not already despatched both Edward Norris and the
+ objectionable "Mr. P. B."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For these energetic demonstrations against Leicester's enemies he
+ considered himself entitled to the Earl's eternal gratitude, and was
+ deeply disgusted at his apparent coldness. The governor was driven almost
+ to despair by these quarrels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His colonel-general, his lord marshal, his lieutenant-general, were all at
+ daggers drawn. "Would God I were rid of this place!" he exclaimed. "What
+ man living would go to the field and have his officers divided almost into
+ mortal quarrel? One blow but by any of their lackeys brings us altogether
+ by the ears."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was clear that there was not room enough on the Netherland soil for the
+ Earl of Leicester and the brothers Norris. The queen, while apparently
+ siding with the Earl, intimated to Sir John that she did not disapprove
+ his conduct, that she should probably recall him to England, and that she
+ should send him back to the Provinces after the Earl had left that
+ country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such had been the position of the governor-general towards the Queen,
+ towards the States-General, and towards his own countrymen, during the
+ year 1586.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Are wont to hang their piety on the bell-rope
+ Arminianism
+ As logical as men in their cups are prone to be
+ Tolerating religious liberty had never entered his mind
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. 1586
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drake in the Netherlands&mdash;Good Results of his Visit&mdash;The Babington
+ Conspiracy&mdash;Leicester decides to visit England&mdash;Exchange of parting
+ Compliments.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Late in the autumn of the same year an Englishman arrived in the
+ Netherlands, bearer of despatches from the Queen. He had been entrusted by
+ her Majesty with a special mission to the States-General, and he had soon
+ an interview with that assembly at the Hague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a small man, apparently forty-five years of age, of a fair but
+ somewhat weather-stained complexion, with light-brown, closely-curling
+ hair, an expansive forehead, a clear blue eye, rather commonplace
+ features, a thin, brown, pointed beard, and a slight moustache. Though low
+ of stature, he was broad-chested, with well-knit limbs. His hands, which
+ were small and nervous, were brown and callous with the marks of toil.
+ There was something in his brow and glance not to be mistaken, and which
+ men willingly call master; yet he did not seem, to have sprung of the born
+ magnates of the earth. He wore a heavy gold chain about his neck, and it
+ might be observed that upon the light full sleeves of his slashed doublet
+ the image of a small ship on a terrestrial globe was curiously and many
+ times embroidered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not the first time that he had visited the Netherlands. Thirty
+ years before the man had been apprentice on board a small lugger, which
+ traded between the English coast and the ports of Zeeland. Emerging in
+ early boyhood from his parental mansion&mdash;an old boat, turned bottom
+ upwards on a sandy down he had naturally taken to the sea, and his master,
+ dying childless not long afterwards, bequeathed to him the lugger. But in
+ time his spirit, too much confined by coasting in the narrow seas, had
+ taken a bolder flight. He had risked his hard-earned savings in a voyage
+ with the old slave-trader, John Hawkins&mdash;whose exertions, in what was
+ then considered an honourable and useful vocation, had been rewarded by
+ Queen Elizabeth with her special favour, and with a coat of arms, the
+ crest whereof was a negro's head, proper, chained&mdash;but the lad's
+ first and last enterprise in this field was unfortunate. Captured by
+ Spaniards, and only escaping with life, he determined to revenge himself
+ on the whole Spanish nation; and this was considered a most legitimate
+ proceeding according to the "sea divinity" in which he, had been schooled.
+ His subsequent expeditions against the Spanish possessions in the West
+ Indies were eminently successful, and soon the name of Francis Drake rang
+ through the world, and startled Philip in the depths of his Escorial. The
+ first Englishman, and the second of any nation, he then ploughed his
+ memorable "furrow round the earth," carrying amazement and, destruction to
+ the Spaniards as he sailed, and after three years brought to the Queen
+ treasure enough, as it was asserted, to maintain a war with the Spanish
+ King for seven years, and to pay himself and companions, and the
+ merchant-adventurers who had participated in his enterprise, forty-seven
+ pounds sterling for every pound invested in the voyage. The speculation
+ had been a fortunate one both, for himself and for the kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The terrible Sea-King was one of the great types of the sixteenth century.
+ The self-helping private adventurer, in his little vessel the 'Golden
+ Hind,' one hundred tons burthen, had waged successful war against a mighty
+ empire, and had shown England how to humble Philip. When he again set foot
+ on his native soil he was followed by admiring crowds, and became the
+ favourite hero of romance and ballad; for it was not the ignoble pursuit
+ of gold alone, through toil and peril, which had endeared his name to the
+ nation. The popular instinct recognized that the true means had been found
+ at last for rescuing England and Protestantism from the overshadowing
+ empire of Spain. The Queen visited him in his 'Golden Hind,' and gave him
+ the honour of knighthood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The treaty between the United Netherlands and England had been followed by
+ an embargo upon English vessels, persons, and property, in the ports of
+ Spain; and after five years of unwonted repose, the privateersman again
+ set forth with twenty-five small vessels&mdash;of which five or six only
+ were armed&mdash;under his command, conjoined with that of General
+ Carlisle. This time the voyage was undertaken with full permission and
+ assistance of the Queen who, however, intended to disavow him, if she
+ should find such a step convenient. This was the expedition in which
+ Philip Sidney had desired to take part. The Queen watched its result with
+ intense anxiety, for the fate of her Netherland adventure was thought to
+ be hanging on the issue. "Upon Drake's voyage, in very truth, dependeth
+ the life and death of the cause, according to man's judgment," said
+ Walsingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The issue was encouraging, even, if the voyage&mdash;as a mercantile
+ speculation&mdash;proved not so brilliant as the previous enterprises of
+ Sir Francis had been. He returned in the midsummer of 1586, having
+ captured and brandschatzed St. Domingo and Carthagena; and burned St.
+ Augustine. "A fearful man to the King of Spain is Sir Francis Drake," said
+ Lord Burghley. Nevertheless, the Queen and the Lord-Treasurer&mdash;as we
+ have shown by the secret conferences at Greenwich&mdash;had,
+ notwithstanding these successes, expressed a more earnest desire for peace
+ than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A simple, sea-faring Englishman, with half-a-dozen miserable little
+ vessels, had carried terror, into the Spanish possessions all over the
+ earth: but even then the great Queen had not learned to rely on the valour
+ of her volunteers against her most formidable enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Drake was, however, bent on another enterprise. The preparations for
+ Philip's great fleet had been going steadily forward in Lisbon, Cadiz, and
+ other ports of Spain and Portugal, and, despite assurances to the
+ contrary, there was a growing belief that England was to be invaded. To
+ destroy those ships before the monarch's face, would be, indeed, to "singe
+ his beard." But whose arm was daring enough for such a stroke? Whose but
+ that of the Devonshire skipper who had already accomplished so much?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so Sir Francis, "a man true to his word, merciful to those under him,
+ and hating nothing so much as idleness," had come to the Netherlands to
+ talk over his project with the States-General, and with the Dutch
+ merchants and sea-captains. His visit was not unfruitful. As a body the
+ assembly did nothing; but they recommended that in every maritime city of
+ Holland and Zeeland one or two ships should be got ready, to participate
+ in all the future enterprises of Sir Francis and his comrades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The martial spirit of volunteer sailors, and the keen instinct of
+ mercantile speculation, were relied upon&mdash;exactly as in England&mdash;to
+ furnish men, ships, and money, for these daring and profitable adventures.
+ The foundation of a still more intimate connection between England and
+ Holland was laid, and thenceforth Dutchmen and Englishmen fought side by
+ side, on land and sea, wherever a blow was to be struck in the cause of
+ human freedom against despotic Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The famous Babington conspiracy, discovered by Walsingham's "travail and
+ cost," had come to convince the Queen and her counsellors&mdash;if further
+ proof were not superfluous&mdash;that her throne and life were both
+ incompatible with Philip's deep designs, and that to keep that monarch out
+ of the Netherlands, was as vital to her as to keep him out of England.
+ "She is forced by this discovery to countenance the cause by all outward
+ means she may," said Walsingham, "for it appeareth unto her most plain,
+ that unless she had entered into the action, she had been utterly undone,
+ and that if she do not prosecute the same she cannot continue." The
+ Secretary had sent Leicester information at an early day of the great
+ secret, begging his friend to "make the letter a heretic after he had read
+ the same," and expressing the opinion that "the matter, if well handled,
+ would break the neck of all dangerous practices during her Majesty's
+ reign."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tragedy of Mary Stuart&mdash;a sad but inevitable portion of the vast
+ drama in which the emancipation of England and Holland, and, through them,
+ of half Christendom, was accomplished&mdash;approached its catastrophe;
+ and Leicester could not restrain his anxiety for her immediate execution.
+ He reminded Walsingham that the great seal had been put upon a warrant for
+ her execution for a less crime seventeen years before, on the occasion of
+ the Northumberland and Westmorland rebellion. "For who can warrant these
+ villains from her," he said, "if that person live, or shall live any time?
+ God forbid! And be you all stout and resolute in this speedy execution, or
+ be condemned of all the world for ever. It is most. certain, if you will
+ have your Majesty safe, it must be done, for justice doth crave it beside
+ policy." His own personal safety was deeply compromised. "Your Lordship
+ and I," wrote Burghley, "were very great motes in the traitors' eyes; for
+ your Lordship there and I here should first, about one time, have been
+ killed. Of your Lordship they thought rather of poisoning than slaying.
+ After us two gone, they purposed her Majesty's death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But on this great affair of state the Earl was not swayed by such personal
+ considerations. He honestly thought&mdash;as did all the statesmen who
+ governed England&mdash;that English liberty, the very existence of the
+ English commonwealth, was impossible so long as Mary Stuart lived. Under
+ these circumstances he was not impatient, for a time at least, to leave
+ the Netherlands. His administration had not been very successful. He had
+ been led away by his own vanity, and by the flattery of artful demagogues,
+ but the immense obstacles with which he had to contend in the Queen's
+ wavering policy, and in the rivalry of both English and Dutch politicians
+ have been amply exhibited. That he had been generous, courageous, and
+ zealous, could not be denied; and, on the whole, he had accomplished as
+ much in the field as could have been expected of him with such meagre
+ forces, and so barren an exchequer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must be confessed, however, that his leaving the Netherlands at that
+ moment was a most unfortunate step, both for his own reputation and for
+ the security of the Provinces. Party-spirit was running high, and a
+ political revolution was much to be dreaded in so grave a position of
+ affairs, both in England and Holland. The arrangements&mdash;and
+ particularly the secret arrangements which he made at his departure&mdash;were
+ the most fatal measures of all; but these will be described in the
+ following chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 31st October; the Earl announced to the state-council his intention
+ of returning to England, stating, as the cause of this sudden
+ determination, that he had been summoned to attend the parliament then
+ sitting in Westminster. Wilkes, who was of course present, having now
+ succeeded Killigrew as one of the two English members, observed that "the
+ States and council used but slender entreaty to his Excellency for his
+ stay and countenance there among them, whereat his Excellency and we that
+ were of the council for her Majesty did not a little marvel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some weeks later, however, upon the 21st November, Leicester summoned
+ Barneveld, and five other of the States General, to discuss the necessary
+ measures for his departure, when those gentlemen remonstrated very
+ earnestly upon the step, pleading the danger and confusion of affairs
+ which must necessarily ensue. The Earl declared that he was not retiring
+ from the country because he was offended, although he had many causes for
+ offence: and he then alluded to the Navigation Act, to the establishment
+ council, and spoke of the finance of Burgrave and Reingault, for his
+ employment of which individuals so much obloquy had been heaped upon his,
+ head. Burgrave he pronounced, as usual, a substantial, wise, faithful,
+ religious personage, entitled to fullest confidence; while Reingault&mdash;who
+ had been thrown into prison by the States on charges of fraud, peculation,
+ and sedition&mdash;he declared to be a great financier, who had promised,
+ on penalty of his head, to bring "great sums into the treasury for
+ carrying on the war, without any burthen to the community." Had he been
+ able to do this, he had certainly claim to be considered the greatest of
+ financiers; but the promised "mountains of gold" were never discovered,
+ and Reingault was now awaiting his trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deputies replied that the concessions upon the Navigation Act had
+ satisfied the country, but that Reingault was a known instrument of the
+ Spaniards, and Burgrave a mischief-making demagogue, who consorted with
+ malignants, and sent slanderous reports concerning the States and the
+ country to her Majesty. They had in consequence felt obliged to write
+ private despatches to envoy Ortel in England, not because they suspected
+ the Earl, but in order to counteract the calumnies of his chief advisers.
+ They had urged the agent to bring the imprisonment of Paul Buys before her
+ Majesty, but for that transaction Leicester boldly disclaimed all
+ responsibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was agreed between the Earl and the deputies that, during his absence,
+ the whole government, civil and military, should devolve upon the
+ state-council, and that Sir John Norris should remain in command of the
+ English forces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days afterwards Leicester, who knew very well that a legation was
+ about to proceed to England, without any previous concurrence on his part,
+ summoned a committee of the States-General, together with Barneveld, into
+ the state-council. Counsellor Wilkes on his behalf then made a speech, in
+ which he observed that more ample communications on the part of the States
+ were to be expected. They had in previous colloquies touched upon
+ comparatively unimportant matters, but he now begged to be informed why
+ these commissioners were proceeding to England, and what was the nature of
+ their instructions. Why did not they formally offer the sovereignty of the
+ Provinces to the Queen without conditions? That step had already been
+ taken by Utrecht.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deputies conferred apart for a little while, and then replied that the
+ proposition made by Utrecht was notoriously factious, illegal, and
+ altogether futile. Without the sanction of all the United States, of what
+ value was the declaration of Utrecht? Moreover the charter of that
+ province had been recklessly violated, its government overthrown, and its
+ leading citizens banished. The action of the Province under such
+ circumstances was not deserving of comment; but should it appear that her
+ Majesty was desirous of assuming the sovereignty of the Provinces upon
+ reasonable conditions, the States of Holland and of Zeeland would not be
+ found backward in the business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester proposed that Prince Maurice of Nassau should go with him to
+ England, as nominal chief of the embassy, and some of the deputies
+ favoured the suggestion. It was however, vigorously and successfully
+ opposed by Barneveld, who urged that to leave the country without a head
+ in such a dangerous position of affairs, would be an act of madness.
+ Leicester was much annoyed when informed of this decision. He was
+ suspected of a design, during his absence, of converting Maurice entirely
+ to his own way of thinking. If unsuccessful, it was believed by the
+ Advocate and by many others that the Earl would cause the young Prince to
+ be detained in England as long as Philip William, his brother, had been
+ kept in Spain. He observed peevishly that he knew how it had all been
+ brought about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Words, of course, and handsome compliments were exchanged between the
+ Governor and the States-General on his departure. He protested that he had
+ never pursued any private ends during his administration, but had ever
+ sought to promote the good of the country and the glory of the Queen, and
+ that he had spent three hundred thousand florins of his own money in the
+ brief period of his residence there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Advocate, on part of the States, assured him that they were all aware
+ that in the friendship of England lay their only chance of salvation, but
+ that united action was the sole means by which that salvation could be
+ effected, and the one which had enabled the late Prince of Orange to
+ maintain a contest unequalled by anything recorded in history. There was
+ also much disquisition on the subject of finance&mdash;the Advocate
+ observing that the States now raised as much in a month as the Provinces
+ in the time of the Emperor used to levy in a year&mdash;and expressed the
+ hope that the Queen would increase her contingent to ten thousand foot,
+ and two thousand horse. He repudiated, in the name of the States-General
+ and his own, the possibility of peace-negotiations; deprecated any
+ allusion to the subject as fatal to their religion, their liberty, their
+ very existence, and equally disastrous to England and to Protestantism,
+ and implored the Earl, therefore, to use all his influence in opposition
+ to any pacific overtures to or from Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 24th November, acts were drawn up and signed by the Earl, according
+ to which the supreme government of the United Netherlands was formally
+ committed to the state-council during his absence. Decrees were to be
+ pronounced in the name of his Excellency, and countersigned by Maurice of
+ Nassau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the following day, Leicester, being somewhat indisposed, requested a
+ deputation of the States-General to wait upon him in his own house. This
+ was done, and a formal and affectionate farewell was then read to him by
+ his secretary, Mr. Atye. It was responded to in complimentary fashion by
+ Advocate Barneveld, who again took occasion at this parting interview to
+ impress upon the governor the utter impossibility, in his own opinion and
+ that of the other deputies, of reconciling the Provinces with Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester received from the States&mdash;as a magnificent parting present&mdash;a
+ silver gilt vase "as tall as a man," and then departed for Flushing to
+ take shipping for England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ill-timed Interregnum in the Provinces&mdash;Firmness of the English and
+ Dutch People&mdash;Factions during Leicester's Government&mdash;Democratic
+ Theories of the Leicestriana&mdash;Suspicions as to the Earl's Designs&mdash;
+ Extreme Views of the Calvinists&mdash;Political Ambition of the Church&mdash;
+ Antagonism of the Church and States&mdash;The States inclined to
+ Tolerance&mdash;Desolation of the Obedient Provinces&mdash;Pauperism and
+ Famine&mdash;Prosperity of the Republic&mdash;The Year of Expectation.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was not unnatural that the Queen should desire the presence of her
+ favourite at that momentous epoch, when the dread question, "aut fer aut
+ feri," had at last demanded its definite solution. It was inevitable, too,
+ that Leicester should feel great anxiety to be upon the spot where the
+ great tragedy, so full of fate to all Christendom, and in which his own
+ fortunes were so closely involved, was to be enacted. But it was most
+ cruel to the Netherlands&mdash;whose well-being was nearly as important to
+ Elizabeth as that of her own realm&mdash;to plunge them into anarchy at
+ such a moment. Yet this was the necessary result of the sudden retirement
+ of Leicester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not resign his government. He did not bind himself to return. The
+ question of sovereignty was still unsettled, for it was still hoped by a
+ large and influential party, that the English Queen would accept the
+ proposed annexation. It was yet doubtful, whether, during the period of
+ abeyance, the States-General or the States-Provincial, each within their
+ separate sphere, were entitled to supreme authority. Meantime, as if here
+ were not already sufficient elements of dissension and doubt, came a
+ sudden and indefinite interregnum, a provisional, an abnormal, and an
+ impotent government. To the state-council was deputed the executive
+ authority. But the state-council was a creature of the States-General,
+ acting in concert with the governor-general, and having no actual life of
+ its own. It was a board of consultation, not of decision, for it could
+ neither enact its own decrees nor interpose a veto upon the decrees of the
+ governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly the selection of Leicester to fill so important a post had not
+ been a very fortunate one; and the enthusiasm which had greeted him, "as
+ if he had been a Messiah," on his arrival, had very rapidly dwindled away,
+ as his personal character became known. The leading politicians of the
+ country had already been aware of the error which they had committed in
+ clothing with almost sovereign powers the delegate of one who had refused
+ the sovereignty. They, were too adroit to neglect the opportunity, which
+ her Majesty's anger offered them, of repairing what they considered their
+ blunder. When at last the quarrel, which looked so much like a lovers'
+ quarrel, between Elizabeth and 'Sweet Robin,' had been appeased to the
+ satisfaction of Robin, his royal mistress became more angry with the
+ States for circumscribing than she had before been for their exaggeration
+ of his authority. Hence the implacable hatred of Leicester to Paul Buys
+ and Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those two statesmen, for eloquence, learning, readiness, administrative
+ faculty, surpassed by few who have ever wielded the destinies of free
+ commonwealths, were fully equal to the task thrown upon their hands by the
+ progress of events. That task was no slight one, for it was to the leading
+ statesmen of Holland and England, sustained by the indomitable resistance
+ to despotism almost universal in the English and Dutch nations, that the
+ liberty of Europe was entrusted at that, momentous epoch. Whether united
+ under one crown, as the Netherlands ardently desired, or closely allied
+ for aggression and defence, the two peoples were bound indissolubly
+ together. The clouds were rolling up from the fatal south, blacker and
+ more portentous than ever; the artificial equilibrium of forces, by which
+ the fate of France was kept in suspense, was obviously growing every day
+ more uncertain; but the prolonged and awful interval before the tempest
+ should burst over the lands of freedom and Protestantism, gave at least
+ time for the prudent to prepare. The Armada was growing every day in the
+ ports of Spain and Portugal, and Walsingham doubted, as little as did Buys
+ or Barneveld, toward what shores that invasion was to be directed. England
+ was to be conquered in order that the rebellious Netherlands might be
+ reduced; and 'Mucio' was to be let slip upon the unhappy Henry III. so
+ soon as it was thought probable that the Bearnese and the Valois had
+ sufficiently exhausted each other. Philip was to reign in Paris,
+ Amsterdam, London, and Edinburgh, without stirring from the Escorial. An
+ excellent programme, had there not been some English gentlemen, some
+ subtle secretaries of state, some Devonshire skippers, some Dutch
+ advocates and merchants, some Zeeland fly-boatsmen, and six million men,
+ women, and children, on the two sides of the North Sea, who had the power
+ of expressing their thoughts rather bluntly than otherwise, in different
+ dialects of old Anglo-Saxon speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly it would be unjust and ungracious to disparage the heroism of
+ the great Queen when the hour of danger really came, nor would it be
+ legitimate for us, who can scan that momentous year of expectation, 1587,
+ by the light of subsequent events and of secret contemporaneous record, to
+ censure or even sharply to criticise the royal hankering for peace, when
+ peace had really become impossible. But as we shall have occasion to
+ examine rather closely the secrets of the Spanish, French, English, and
+ Dutch councils, during this epoch, we are likely to find, perhaps, that at
+ least as great a debt is due to the English and Dutch people, in mass, for
+ the preservation of European liberty at that disastrous epoch as to any
+ sovereign, general, or statesman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For it was in the great waters of the sixteenth century that the nations
+ whose eyes were open, discovered the fountain of perpetual youth, while
+ others, who were blind, passed rapidly onward to decrepitude. England was,
+ in many respects, a despotism so far as regarded governmental forms; and
+ no doubt the Catholics were treated with greater rigour than could be
+ justified even by the perpetual and most dangerous machinations of the
+ seminary priests and their instigators against the throne and life of
+ Elizabeth. The word liberty was never musical in Tudor ears, yet
+ Englishmen had blunt tongues and sharp weapons which rarely rusted for
+ want of use. In the presence of a parliament, and the absence of a
+ standing army, a people accustomed to read the Bible in the vernacular, to
+ handle great questions of religion and government freely, and to bear arms
+ at will, was most formidable to despotism. There was an advance on the
+ olden time. A Francis Drake, a John Hawkins, a Roger Williams, might have
+ been sold, under the Plantagenets, like an ox or an ass. A 'female
+ villain' in the reign of Henry III. could have been purchased for eighteen
+ shillings&mdash;hardly the price of a fatted pig, and not one-third the
+ value of an ambling palfrey&mdash;and a male villain, such an one as could
+ in Elizabeth's reign circumnavigate the globe in his own ship, or take
+ imperial field-marshals by the beard, was worth but two or three pounds
+ sterling in the market. Here was progress in three centuries, for the
+ villains were now become admirals and generals in England and Holland, and
+ constituted the main stay of these two little commonwealths, while the
+ commanders who governed the 'invincible' fleets and armies of omnipotent
+ Spain, were all cousins of emperors, or grandees of bluest blood. Perhaps
+ the system of the reformation would not prove the least effective in the
+ impending crisis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was most important, then, that these two nations should be united in
+ council, and should stand shoulder to shoulder as their great enemy
+ advanced. But this was precisely what had been rendered almost impossible
+ by the course of events during Leicester's year of administration, and by
+ his sudden but not final retirement at its close. The two great national
+ parties which had gradually been forming, had remained in a fluid state
+ during the presence of the governor-general. During his absence they
+ gradually hardened into the forms which they were destined to retain for
+ centuries. In the history of civil liberty, these incessant contests,
+ these oral and written disquisitions, these sharp concussions of opinion,
+ and the still harder blows, which, unfortunately, were dealt on a few
+ occasions by the combatants upon each other, make the year 1587 a
+ memorable one. The great questions of the origin of government, the
+ balance of dynastic forces, the distribution of powers, were dealt with by
+ the ablest heads, both Dutch and English, that could be employed in the
+ service of the kingdom and republic. It was a war of protocols, arguments,
+ orations, rejoinders, apostilles, and pamphlets; very wholesome for the
+ cause of free institutions and the intellectual progress of mankind. The
+ reader may perhaps be surprised to see with how much vigour and boldness
+ the grave questions which underlie all polity, were handled so many years
+ before the days of Russell and Sidney, of Montesquieu and Locke, Franklin,
+ Jefferson, Rousseau, and Voltaire; and he may be even more astonished to
+ find exceedingly democratic doctrines propounded, if not believed in, by
+ trained statesmen of the Elizabethan school. He will be also apt to wonder
+ that a more fitting time could not be found for such philosophical debate
+ than the epoch at which both the kingdom and the republic were called upon
+ to strain every sinew against the most formidable and aggressive despotism
+ that the world had known since the fall of the Roman Empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great dividing-line between the two parties, that of Leicester and
+ that of Holland, which controlled the action of the States-General, was
+ the question of sovereignty. After the declaration of independence and the
+ repudiation of Philip, to whom did the sovereignty belong? To the people,
+ said the Leicestrians. To the States-General and the States-Provincial, as
+ legitimate representatives of the people, said the Holland party. Without
+ looking for the moment more closely into this question, which we shall
+ soon find ably discussed by the most acute reasoners of the time, it is
+ only important at present to make a preliminary reflection. The Earl of
+ Leicester, of all men is the world, would seem to have been precluded by
+ his own action, and by the action of his Queen, from taking ground against
+ the States. It was the States who, by solemn embassy, had offered the
+ sovereignty to Elizabeth. She had not accepted the offer, but she had
+ deliberated on the subject, and certainly she had never expressed a doubt
+ whether or not the offer had been legally made. By the States, too, that
+ governor-generalship had been conferred upon the Earl, which had been so
+ thankfully and eagerly accepted. It was strange, then, that he should deny
+ the existence of the power whence his own authority was derived. If the
+ States were not sovereigns of the Netherlands, he certainly was nothing.
+ He was but general of a few thousand English troops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Leicester party, then, proclaimed extreme democratic principles as to
+ the origin of government and the sovereignty of the people. They sought to
+ strengthen and to make almost absolute the executive authority of their
+ chief, on the ground that such was the popular will; and they denounced
+ with great acrimony the insolence of the upstart members of the States,
+ half a dozen traders, hired advocates, churls, tinkers, and the like&mdash;as
+ Leicester was fond of designating the men who opposed him&mdash;in
+ assuming these airs of sovereignty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This might, perhaps, be philosophical doctrine, had its supporters not
+ forgotten that there had never been any pretence at an expression of the
+ national will, except through the mouths of the States. The States-General
+ and the States-Provincial, without any usurpation, but as a matter of fact
+ and of great political convenience, had, during fifteen years, exercised
+ the authority which had fallen from Philip's hands. The people hitherto
+ had acquiesced in their action, and certainly there had not yet been any
+ call for a popular convention, or any other device to ascertain the
+ popular will. It was also difficult to imagine what was the exact entity
+ of this abstraction called the "people" by men who expressed such extreme
+ contempt for "merchants, advocates, town-orators, churls, tinkers, and
+ base mechanic men, born not to command but to obey." Who were the people
+ when the educated classes and the working classes were thus carefully
+ eliminated? Hardly the simple peasantry&mdash;the boors&mdash;who tilled
+ the soil. At that day the agricultural labourers less than all others
+ dreamed of popular sovereignty, and more than all others submitted to the
+ mild authority of the States. According to the theory of the Netherland
+ constitutions, they were supposed&mdash;and they had themselves not yet
+ discovered the fallacies to which such doctrines could lead&mdash;to be
+ represented by the nobles and country-squires who maintained in the States
+ of each Province the general farming interests of the republic. Moreover,
+ the number of agricultural peasants was comparatively small. The lower
+ classes were rather accustomed to plough the sea than the land, and their
+ harvests were reaped from that element, which to Hollanders and Zeelanders
+ was less capricious than the solid earth. Almost every inhabitant of those
+ sea-born territories was, in one sense or another, a mariner; for every
+ highway was a canal; the soil was percolated by rivers and estuaries,
+ pools and meres; the fisheries were the nurseries in which still more
+ daring navigators rapidly learned their trade, and every child took
+ naturally to the ocean as to its legitimate home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "people," therefore, thus enthroned by the Leicestrians over all the
+ inhabitants of the country, appeared to many eyes rather a misty
+ abstraction, and its claim of absolute sovereignty a doctrine almost as
+ fantastic as that of the divine right of kings. The Netherlanders were, on
+ the whole, a law-abiding people, preferring to conduct even a revolution
+ according to precedent, very much attached to ancient usages and
+ traditions, valuing the liberties, as they called them, which they had
+ wrested from what had been superior force, with their own right hands,
+ preferring facts to theories, and feeling competent to deal with tyrants
+ in the concrete rather than to annihilate tyranny in the abstract by a
+ bold and generalizing phraseology. Moreover the opponents of the Leicester
+ party complained that the principal use to which this newly discovered
+ "people" had been applied, was to confer its absolute sovereignty
+ unconditionally upon one man. The people was to be sovereign in order that
+ it might immediately abdicate in favour of the Earl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Utrecht, the capital of the Leicestrians, had already been deprived of its
+ constitution. The magistracy was, according to law, changed every year. A
+ list of candidates was furnished by the retiring board, an equal number of
+ names was added by the governor of the Province, and from the catalogue
+ thus composed the governor with his council selected the new magistrates
+ for the year. But De Villiers, the governor of the Province, had been made
+ a prisoner by the enemy in the last campaign; Count Moeurs had been
+ appointed provisional stadholder by the States; and, during his temporary
+ absence on public affairs, the Leicestrians had seized upon the
+ government, excluded all the ancient magistrates, banished many leading
+ citizens from the town, and installed an entirely new board, with Gerard
+ Proninck, called Deventer, for chief burgomaster, who was a Brabantine
+ refugee just arrived in the Province, and not eligible to office until
+ after ten years' residence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not unnatural that the Netherlanders, who remembered the scenes of
+ bloodshed and disorder produced by the memorable attempt of the Duke of
+ Anjou to obtain possession of Antwerp and other cities, should be
+ suspicious of Leicester. Anjou, too, had been called to the Provinces by
+ the voluntary action of the States. He too had been hailed as a Messiah
+ and a deliverer. In him too had unlimited confidence been reposed, and he
+ had repaid their affection and their gratitude by a desperate attempt to
+ obtain the control of their chief cities by the armed hand, and thus to
+ constitute himself absolute sovereign of the Netherlands. The inhabitants
+ had, after a bloody contest, averted the intended massacre and the
+ impending tyranny; but it was not astonishing that&mdash;so very, few
+ years having elapsed since those tragical events&mdash;they should be
+ inclined to scan severely the actions of the man who had already obtained
+ by unconstitutional means the mastery of a most important city, and was
+ supposed to harbour designs upon all the cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, doubt it was a most illiberal and unwise policy for the inhabitants of
+ the independent States to exclude from office the wanderers, for
+ conscience' sake, from the obedient Provinces. They should have been
+ welcomed heart and hand by those who were their brethren in religion and
+ in the love of freedom. Moreover, it was notorious that Hohenlo,
+ lieutenant-general under Maurice of Nassau, was a German, and that by the
+ treaty with England, two foreigners sat in the state council, while the
+ army swarmed with English, Irish, end German officers in high command.
+ Nevertheless, violently to subvert the constitution of a Province, and to
+ place in posts of high responsibility men who were ineligible&mdash;some
+ whose characters were suspicious, and some who were known to be dangerous,
+ and to banish large numbers of respectable burghers&mdash;was the act of a
+ despot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides their democratic doctrines, the Leicestrians proclaimed and
+ encouraged an exclusive and rigid Calvinism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would certainly be unjust and futile to detract from the vast debt
+ which the republic owed to the Geneva Church. The reformation had entered
+ the Netherlands by the Walloon gate. The earliest and most eloquent
+ preachers, the most impassioned converts, the sublimest martyrs, had
+ lived, preached, fought, suffered, and died with the precepts of Calvin in
+ their hearts. The fire which had consumed the last vestige of royal and
+ sacerdotal despotism throughout the independent republic, had been lighted
+ by the hands of Calvinists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout the blood-stained soil of France, too, the men who were
+ fighting the same great battle as were the Netherlanders against Philip
+ II. and the Inquisition, the valiant cavaliers of Dauphiny and Provence,
+ knelt on the ground, before the battle, smote their iron breasts with
+ their mailed hands, uttered a Calvinistic prayer, sang a psalm of Marot,
+ and then charged upon Guise, or upon Joyeuse, under the white plume of the
+ Bearnese. And it was on the Calvinist weavers and clothiers of Rochelle
+ that the great Prince relied in the hour of danger as much as on his
+ mountain chivalry. In England too, the seeds of liberty, wrapped up in
+ Calvinism and hoarded through many trying years, were at last destined to
+ float over land and sea, and to bear large harvests of temperate freedom
+ for great commonwealths, which were still unborn. Nevertheless there was a
+ growing aversion in many parts of the States for the rigid and intolerant
+ spirit of the reformed religion. There were many men in Holland who had
+ already imbibed the true lesson&mdash;the only, one worth learning of the
+ reformation&mdash;liberty of thought; but toleration in the eyes of the
+ extreme Calvinistic party was as great a vice as it could be in the
+ estimation of Papists. To a favoured few of other habits of thought, it
+ had come to be regarded as a virtue; but the day was still far distant
+ when men were to scorn the very word toleration as an insult to the
+ dignity of man; as if for any human being or set of human beings, in
+ caste, class, synod, or church, the right could even in imagination be
+ conceded of controlling the consciences of their fellow-creatures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was progress for the sixteenth century that there were individuals,
+ and prominent individuals, who dared to proclaim liberty of conscience for
+ all. William of Orange was a Calvinist, sincere and rigid, but he
+ denounced all oppression of religion, and opened wide the doors of the
+ Commonwealth to Papists, Lutherans, and Anabaptists alike. The Earl of
+ Leicester was a Calvinist, most rigid in tenet, most edifying of
+ conversation, the acknowledged head of the Puritan party of England, but
+ he was intolerant and was influenced only by the most intolerant of his
+ sect. Certainly it would have required great magnanimity upon his part to
+ assume a friendly demeanour towards the Papists. It is easier for us, in
+ more favoured ages, to rise to the heights of philosophical abstraction,
+ than for a man, placed as was Leicester, in the front rank of a mighty
+ battle, in which the triumph of either religion seemed to require the
+ bodily annihilation of all its adversaries. He believed that the success
+ of a Catholic conspiracy against the life of Elizabeth or of a Spanish
+ invasion of England, would raise Mary to the throne and consign himself to
+ the scaffold. He believed that the subjugation of the independent
+ Netherlands would place the Spaniards instantly in England, and he
+ frequently received information, true or false, of Popish plots that were
+ ever hatching in various parts of the Provinces against the English Queen.
+ It was not surprising, therefore, although it was unwise, that he should
+ incline his ear most seriously to those who counselled severe measures not
+ only against Papists, but against those who were not persecutors of
+ Papists, and that he should allow himself to be guided by adventurers, who
+ wore the mask of religion only that they might plunder the exchequer and
+ rob upon the highway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under the administration of this extreme party, therefore, the Papists
+ were maltreated, disfranchised, banished, and plundered. The distribution
+ of the heavy war-taxes, more than two-thirds of which were raised in
+ Holland only, was confided to foreigners, and regulated mainly at Utrecht,
+ where not one-tenth part of the same revenue was collected. This naturally
+ excited the wrath of the merchants and manufacturers of Holland and the
+ other Provinces, who liked not that these hard-earned and lavishly-paid
+ subsidies should be meddled with by any but the cleanest hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clergy, too, arrogated a direct influence in political affairs. Their
+ demonstrations were opposed by the anti-Leicestrians, who cared not to see
+ a Geneva theocracy in the place of the vanished Papacy. They had as little
+ reverence in secular affairs for Calvinistic deacons as for the college of
+ cardinals, and would as soon accept the infallibility of Sixtus V. as that
+ of Herman Modet. The reformed clergy who had dispossessed and confiscated
+ the property of the ancient ecclesiastics who once held a constitutional
+ place in the Estates of Utrecht&mdash;although many of those individuals
+ were now married and had embraced the reformed religion who had
+ demolished, and sold at public auction, for 12,300 florins, the
+ time-honoured cathedral where the earliest Christians of the Netherlands
+ had worshipped, and St. Willibrod had ministered, were roundly rebuked, on
+ more than one occasion, by the blunt matters beyond their sphere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The party of the States-General, as opposed to the Leicester party, was
+ guided by the statesmen of Holland. At a somewhat later period was formed
+ the States-right party, which claimed sovereignty for each Province, and
+ by necessary consequence the hegemony throughout the confederacy, for
+ Holland. At present the doctrine maintained was that the sovereignty
+ forfeited by Philip had naturally devolved upon the States-General. The
+ statesmen of this party repudiated the calumny that it had therefore
+ lapsed into the hands of half a dozen mechanics and men of low degree. The
+ States of each Province were, they maintained, composed of nobles and
+ country-gentlemen, as representing the agricultural interest, and of
+ deputies from the 'vroedschappen,' or municipal governments, of every city
+ and smallest town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such men as Adrian Van der Werff, the heroic burgomaster of Leyden during
+ its famous siege, John Van der Does, statesman, orator, soldier, poet,
+ Adolphus Meetkerke, judge, financier, politician, Carl Roorda, Noel de
+ Carom diplomatist of most signal ability, Floris Thin, Paul Buys, and
+ Olden-Barneveld, with many others, who would have done honour to the
+ legislative assemblies and national councils in any country or any age,
+ were constantly returned as members of the different vroedschaps in the
+ commonwealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far from its being true then that half a dozen ignorant mechanics had
+ usurped the sovereignty of the Provinces, after the abjuration of the
+ Spanish King, it may be asserted in general terms, that of the eight
+ hundred thousand inhabitants of Holland at least eight hundred persons
+ were always engaged in the administration of public affairs, that these
+ individuals were perpetually exchanged for others, and that those whose
+ names became most prominent in the politics of the day were remarkable for
+ thorough education, high talents, and eloquence with tongue and pen. It
+ was acknowledged by the leading statesmen of England and France, on
+ repeated occasions throughout the sixteenth century, that the diplomatists
+ and statesmen of the Netherlands were even more than a match for any
+ politicians who were destined to encounter them, and the profound respect
+ which Leicester expressed for these solid statesmen, these "substantial,
+ wise, well-languaged" men, these "big fellows," so soon as he came in
+ contact with them, and before he began to hate them for outwitting him,
+ has already appeared. They were generally men of the people, born without
+ any of the accidents of fortune; but, the leaders had studied in the
+ common schools, and later in the noble universities of a land where to be
+ learned and eloquent was fast becoming almost as great an honour as to be
+ wealthy or high born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The executive, the legislative, and the judiciary departments were more
+ carefully and scientifically separated than could perhaps have been
+ expected in that age. The lesser municipal courts, in which city-senators
+ presided, were subordinate to the supreme court of Holland, whose officers
+ were appointed by the stadholders and council; the supplies were in the
+ hands of the States-Provincial, and the supreme administrative authority
+ was confided to a stadholder appointed by the states.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States-General were constituted of similar materials to those of which
+ the States-Provincial were constructed, and the same individuals were
+ generally prominent in both. They were deputies appointed by the
+ Provincial Estates, were in truth rather more like diplomatic envoys than
+ senators, were generally bound very strictly by instructions, and were
+ often obliged, by the jealousy springing from the States-right principle,
+ to refer to their constituents, on questions when the times demanded a
+ sudden decision, and when the necessary delay was inconvenient and
+ dangerous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In religious matters, the States-party, to their honour, already leaned to
+ a wide toleration. Not only Catholics were not burned, but they were not
+ banished, and very large numbers remained in the territory, and were quite
+ undisturbed in religious matters, within their own doors. There were even
+ men employed in public affairs who were suspected of papistical
+ tendencies, although their hostility, to Spain and their attachment to
+ their native land could not fairly be disputed. The leaders of the
+ States-party had a rooted aversion to any political influence on the part
+ of the clergy of any denomination whatever. Disposed to be lenient to all
+ forms of worship, they were disinclined to an established church, but
+ still more opposed to allowing church-influence in secular affairs. As a
+ matter of course, political men with such bold views in religious matters
+ were bitterly assailed by their rigid opponents. Barneveld, with his "nil
+ scire tutissima fides," was denounced as a disguised Catholic or an
+ infidel, and as for Paul Buys, he was a "bolsterer of Papists, an atheist,
+ a devil," as it has long since been made manifest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless these men believed that they understood the spirit of their
+ country and of the age. In encouragement to an expanding commerce, the
+ elevation and education of the masses, the toleration of all creeds, and a
+ wide distribution of political functions and rights, they looked for the
+ salvation of their nascent republic from destruction, and the maintenance
+ of the true interests of the people. They were still loyal to Queen
+ Elizabeth, and desirous that she should accept the sovereignty of the
+ Provinces. But they were determined that the sovereignty should be a
+ constitutional one, founded upon and limited by the time-honoured laws and
+ traditions of their commonwealth; for they recognised the value of a free
+ republic with an hereditary chief, however anomalous it might in theory
+ appear. They knew that in Utrecht the Leicestrian party were about to
+ offer the Queen the sovereignty of their Province, without conditions, but
+ they were determined that neither Queen Elizabeth nor any other monarch
+ should ever reign in the Netherlands, except under conditions to be very
+ accurately defined and well secured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, contrasted, then, were the two great parties in the Netherlands, at
+ the conclusion of Leicester's first year of administration. It may easily
+ be understood that it was not an auspicious moment to leave the country
+ without a chief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The strength of the States-party lay in Holland, Zeeland, Friesland. The
+ main stay of the democratic or Leicester faction was in the city of
+ Utrecht, but the Earl had many partizans in Gelderland, Friesland, and in
+ Overyssel, the capital of which Province, the wealthy and thriving
+ Deventer, second only in the republic to Amsterdam for commercial and
+ political importance, had been but recently secured for the Provinces by
+ the vigorous measures of Sir William Pelham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The condition of the republic and of the Spanish Provinces was, at that
+ moment, most signally contrasted. If the effects of despotism and of
+ liberty could ever be exhibited at a single glance, it was certainly only
+ necessary to look for a moment at the picture of the obedient and of the
+ rebel Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the fall of Antwerp, the desolation of Brabant, Flanders, and of the
+ Walloon territories had become complete. The King had recovered the great
+ commercial capital, but its commerce was gone. The Scheldt, which, till
+ recently, had been the chief mercantile river in the world, had become as
+ barren as if its fountains had suddenly dried up. It was as if it no
+ longer flowed to the ocean, for its mouth was controlled by Flushing. Thus
+ Antwerp was imprisoned and paralyzed. Its docks and basins, where 2500
+ ships had once been counted, were empty, grass was growing in its streets,
+ its industrious population had vanished, and the Jesuits had returned in
+ swarms. And the same spectacle was presented by Ghent, Bruges,
+ Valenciennes, Tournay, and those other fair cities, which had once been
+ types of vigorous industry and tumultuous life. The sea-coast was in the
+ hands of two rising commercial powers, the great and free commonwealths of
+ the future. Those powers were acting in concert, and commanding the
+ traffic of the world, while the obedient Provinces were excluded from all
+ foreign intercourse and all markets, as the result of their obedience.
+ Commerce, manufactures, agriculture; were dying lingering deaths. The
+ thrifty farms, orchards, and gardens, which had been a proverb and wonder
+ of industry were becoming wildernesses. The demand for their produce by
+ the opulent and thriving cities, which had been the workshops of the
+ world, was gone. Foraging bands of Spanish and Italian mercenaries had
+ succeeded to the famous tramp of the artizans and mechanics, which had
+ often been likened to an army, but these new customers were less
+ profitable to the gardeners and farmers. The clothiers, the fullers, the
+ tapestry-workers, the weavers, the cutlers, had all wandered away, and the
+ cities of Holland, Friesland, and of England, were growing skilful and
+ rich by the lessons and the industry of the exiles to whom they afforded a
+ home. There were villages and small towns in the Spanish Netherlands that
+ had been literally depopulated. Large districts of country had gone to
+ waste, and cane-brakes and squalid morasses usurped the place of yellow
+ harvest-fields. The fog, the wild boar, and the wolf, infested the
+ abandoned homes of the peasantry; children could not walk in safety in the
+ neighbourhood even of the larger cities; wolves littered their young in
+ the deserted farm-houses; two hundred persons, in the winter of 1586-7,
+ were devoured by wild beasts in the outskirts of Ghent. Such of the
+ remaining labourers and artizans as had not been converted into soldiers,
+ found their most profitable employment as brigands, so that the portion of
+ the population spared by war and emigration was assisting the enemy in
+ preying upon their native country. Brandschatzung, burglary,
+ highway-robbery, and murder, had become the chief branches of industry
+ among the working classes. Nobles and wealthy burghers had been changed to
+ paupers and mendicants. Many a family of ancient lineage, and once of
+ large possessions, could be seen begging their bread, at the dusk of
+ evening, in the streets of great cities, where they had once exercised
+ luxurious hospitality; and they often begged in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For while such was the forlorn aspect of the country&mdash;and the
+ portrait, faithfully sketched from many contemporary pictures, has not
+ been exaggerated in any of its dark details&mdash;a great famine smote the
+ land with its additional scourge. The whole population, soldiers and
+ brigands, Spaniards and Flemings, beggars and workmen, were in danger of
+ perishing together. Where the want of employment had been so great as to
+ cause a rapid depopulation, where the demand for labour had almost
+ entirely ceased, it was a necessary result, that during the process,
+ prices should be low, even in the presence of foreign soldiery, and
+ despite the inflamed' profits, which such capitalists as remained
+ required, by way not only of profit but insurance, in such troublous
+ times. Accordingly, for the last year or two, the price of rye at Antwerp
+ and Brussels had been one florin for the veertel (three bushels) of one
+ hundred and twenty pounds; that of wheat, about one-third of a florin
+ more. Five pounds of rye, therefore, were worth, one penny sterling,
+ reckoning, as was then usual, two shillings to the florin. A pound weight
+ of wheat was worth about one farthing. Yet this was forty-one years after
+ the discovery of the mines of Potosi (A.D. 1545), and full sixteen years
+ after the epoch; from which is dated that rapid fall in the value of
+ silver, which in the course of seventy years, caused the average price of
+ corn and of all other commodities, to be tripled or even quadrupled. At
+ that very moment the average cost of wheat in England was sixty-four
+ shillings the quarter, or about seven and sixpence sterling the bushel,
+ and in the markets of Holland, which in truth regulated all others, the
+ same prices prevailed. A bushel of wheat in England was equal therefore to
+ eight bushels in Brussels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the silver mines, which were the Spanish King's property, had
+ produced their effect everywhere more signally than within the obedient
+ Provinces. The South American specie found its way to Philip's coffers,
+ thence to the paymasters of his troops in Flanders, and thence to the
+ commercial centres of Holland and England. Those countries, first to feel
+ and obey the favourable expanding impulse of the age, were moving surely
+ and steadily on before it to greatness. Prices were rising with unexampled
+ rapidity, the precious metals were comparatively a drug, a world-wide
+ commerce, such as had never been dreamed of, had become an every-day
+ concern, the arts and sciences and a most generous culture in famous
+ schools and universities, which had been founded in the midst of tumult
+ and bloodshed, characterized the republic, and the golden age of English
+ poetry, which was to make the Elizabethan era famous through all time, had
+ already begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Spanish Netherlands the newly-found treasure served to pay the only
+ labourers required in a subjugated and almost deserted country, the
+ pikemen of Spain and Italy, and the reiters of Germany. Prices could not
+ sustain themselves in the face of depopulation. Where there was no
+ security for property, no home-market, no foreign intercourse, industrial
+ pursuits had become almost impossible. The small demand for labour had
+ caused it, as it were, to disappear, altogether. All men had become
+ beggars, brigands, or soldiers. A temporary reaction followed. There were
+ no producers. Suddenly it was discovered that no corn had been planted,
+ and that there was no harvest. A famine was the inevitable result. Prices
+ then rose with most frightful rapidity. The veertel of rye, which in the
+ previous year had been worth one florin at Brussels and Antwerp, rose in
+ the winter of 1586-7 to twenty, twenty-two, and even twenty-four florins;
+ and wheat advanced from one and one-third florin to thirty-two florins the
+ veertel. Other articles were proportionally increased in market-value; but
+ it is worthy of remark that mutton was quoted in the midst of the famine
+ at nine stuyvers (a little more than ninepence sterling) the pound, and
+ beef at fivepence, while a single cod-fish sold for twenty-two florins.
+ Thus wheat was worth sixpence sterling the pound weight (reckoning the
+ veertel of one hundred and twenty pounds at thirty florins), which was a
+ penny more than the price of a pound of beef; while an ordinary fish was
+ equal in value to one hundred and six pounds of beef. No better evidence
+ could be given that the obedient Provinces were relapsing into barbarism,
+ than that the only agricultural industry then practised was to allow what
+ flocks and herds were remaining to graze at will over the ruined farms and
+ gardens, and that their fishermen were excluded from the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The evil cured itself, however, and, before the expiration of another
+ year, prices were again at their previous level. The land was sufficiently
+ cultivated to furnish the necessaries of life for a diminishing
+ population, and the supply of labour was more than enough, for the
+ languishing demand. Wheat was again at tenpence the bushel, and other
+ commodities valued in like proportion, and far below the market-prices in
+ Holland and England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other, hand, the prosperity of the republic was rapidly increasing.
+ Notwithstanding the war, which had beer raging for a terrible quarter of a
+ century without any interruption, population was increasing, property
+ rapidly advancing in value, labour in active demand. Famine was impossible
+ to a state which commanded the ocean. No corn grew in Holland and Zeeland,
+ but their ports were the granary of the world. The fisheries were a mine
+ of wealth almost equal to the famous Potosi, with which the commercial
+ world was then ringing. Their commerce with the Baltic nations was
+ enormous. In one month eight hundred vessels left their havens for the
+ eastern ports alone. There was also no doubt whatever&mdash;and the
+ circumstance was a source of constant complaint and of frequent
+ ineffective legislation&mdash;that the rebellious Provinces were driving a
+ most profitable trade with Spain and the Spanish possessions, in spite of
+ their revolutionary war. The mines of Peru and Mexico were as fertile for
+ the Hollanders and Zeelanders as for the Spaniards themselves. The war
+ paid for the war, one hundred large frigates were constantly cruising
+ along the coasts to protect the fast-growing traffic, and an army of
+ twenty thousand foot soldiers and two thousand cavalry were maintained on
+ land. There were more ships and sailors at that moment in Holland and
+ Zeeland than in the whole kingdom of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the sea-ports were thus rapidly increasing in importance, the towns
+ in the interior were advancing as steadily. The woollen manufacture, the
+ tapestry, the embroideries of Gelderland, and Friesland, and Overyssel,
+ were becoming as famous as had been those of Tournay, Ypres, Brussels, and
+ Valenciennes. The emigration from the obedient Provinces and from other
+ countries was very great. It was difficult to obtain lodgings in the
+ principal cities; new houses, new streets, new towns, were rising every
+ day. The single Province of Holland furnished regularly, for war-expenses
+ alone, two millions of florins (two hundred thousand pounds) a year,
+ besides frequent extraordinary grants for the same purpose, yet the
+ burthen imposed upon the vigorous young commonwealth seemed only to make
+ it the more elastic. "The coming generations may see," says a contemporary
+ historian, "the fortifications erected at that epoch in the cities, the
+ costly and magnificent havens, the docks, the great extension of the
+ cities; for truly the war had become a great benediction to the
+ inhabitants." Such a prosperous commonwealth as this was not a prize to be
+ lightly thrown away. There is no doubt whatever that a large majority of
+ the inhabitants, and of the States by whom the people were represented,
+ ardently and affectionately desired to be annexed to the English crown.
+ Leicester had become unpopular, but Elizabeth was adored, and there was
+ nothing unreasonable in the desire entertained by the Provinces of
+ retaining their ancient constitutions, and of transferring their
+ allegiance to the English Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the English Queen could not resolve to take the step. Although the
+ great tragedy which was swiftly approaching its inevitable catastrophe,
+ the execution of the Scottish Queen, was to make peace with Philip
+ impossible&mdash;even if it were imaginable before&mdash;Elizabeth, during
+ the year 1587, was earnestly bent on peace. This will be made manifest in
+ subsequent pages, by an examination of the secret correspondence of the
+ court. Her most sagacious statesmen disapproved her course, opposed it,
+ and were often overruled, although never convinced; for her imperious will
+ would have its way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States-General loathed the very name of peace with Spain. The people
+ loathed it. All knew that peace with Spain meant the exchange of a
+ thriving prosperous commonwealth, with freedom of religion, constitutional
+ liberty, and self-government, for provincial subjection to the inquisition
+ and to despotism: To dream of any concession from Philip on the religious
+ point was ridiculous. There was a mirror ever held up before their eyes by
+ the obedient Provinces, in which they might see their own image, should,
+ they too return to obedience. And there was never a pretence, on the part
+ of any honest adviser of Queen Elizabeth in the Netherlands, whether
+ Englishman or Hollander, that the idea of peace-negotiation could be
+ tolerated for a moment by States or people. Yet the sum of the Queen's
+ policy, for the year 1587, may be summed up in one word&mdash;peace; peace
+ for the Provinces, peace for herself, with their implacable enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In France, during the same year of expectation, we shall see the long
+ prologue to the tragic and memorable 1588 slowly enacting; the same
+ triangular contest between the three Henrys and their partizans still
+ proceeding. We shall see the misguided and wretched Valois lamenting over
+ his victories, and rejoicing over his defeats; forced into hollow alliance
+ with his deadly enemy; arrayed in arms against his only protector and the
+ true champion of the realm; and struggling vainly in the toils of his own
+ mother and his own secretary of state, leagued with his most powerful
+ foes. We shall see 'Mucio,' with one 'hand extended in mock friendship
+ toward the King, and with the other thrust backward to grasp the purse of
+ 300,000 crowns held forth to aid his fellow-conspirator's dark designs
+ against their common victim; and the Bearnese, ever with lance in rest,
+ victorious over the wrong antagonist, foiled of the fruits of victory,
+ proclaiming himself the English Queen's devoted knight, but railing at her
+ parsimony; always in the saddle, always triumphant, always a beggar,
+ always in love, always cheerful, and always confident to outwit the Guises
+ and Philip, Parma and the Pope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in Spain we shall have occasion to look over the King's shoulder, as
+ he sits at his study-table, in his most sacred retirement; and we shall
+ find his policy for the year 1587 summed up in two words&mdash;invasion of
+ England. Sincerely and ardently as Elizabeth meant peace with Philip, just
+ so sincerely did Philip intend war with England, and the dethronement and
+ destruction of the Queen. To this great design all others were now
+ subservient, and it was mainly on account of this determination that there
+ was sufficient leisure in the republic for the Leicestrians and the
+ States-General to fight out so thoroughly their party-contests.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Acknowledged head of the Puritan party of England (Leicester)
+ Geneva theocracy in the place of the vanished Papacy
+ Hankering for peace, when peace had really become impossible
+ Hating nothing so much as idleness
+ Mirror ever held up before their eyes by the obedient Provinces
+ Rigid and intolerant spirit of the reformed religion
+ Scorn the very word toleration as an insult
+ The word liberty was never musical in Tudor ears
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. 1587
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Barneveld's Influence in the Provinces&mdash;Unpopularity of Leicester
+ intrigues&mdash;of his Servants&mdash;Gossip of his Secretary&mdash;
+ Its mischievous Effects&mdash;The Quarrel of Norris and Hollock&mdash;
+ The Earl's Participation in the Affair&mdash;His increased Animosity to
+ Norris&mdash;Seizure of Deventer&mdash;Stanley appointed its Governor&mdash;York
+ and Stanley&mdash;Leicester's secret Instructions&mdash;Wilkes remonstrates
+ with Stanley&mdash;Stanley's Insolence and Equivocation&mdash;Painful Rumours
+ as to him and York&mdash;Duplicity of York&mdash;Stanley's Banquet at
+ Deventer&mdash;He surrenders the City to Tassis&mdash;Terms of the Bargain&mdash;
+ Feeble Defence of Stanley's Conduct&mdash;Subsequent Fate of Stanley and
+ York&mdash;Betrayal of Gelder to Parma&mdash;These Treasons cast Odium on the
+ English&mdash;Miserable Plight of the English Troops&mdash;Honesty and Energy
+ of Wilkes&mdash;Indignant Discussion in the Assembly.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The government had not been laid down by Leicester on his departure. It
+ had been provisionally delegated, as already mentioned to the
+ state-council. In this body-consisting of eighteen persons&mdash;originally
+ appointed by the Earl, on nomination by the States, several members were
+ friendly to the governor, and others were violently opposed to him. The
+ Staten of Holland, by whom the action of the States-General was mainly
+ controlled, were influenced in their action by Buys and Barneveld. Young
+ Maurice of Nassau, nineteen years of age, was stadholder of Holland and
+ Zeeland. A florid complexioned, fair-haired young man, of sanguine-bilious
+ temperament; reserved, quiet, reflective, singularly self-possessed;
+ meriting at that time, more than his father had ever done, the appellation
+ of the taciturn; discreet, sober, studious. "Count Maurice saith but
+ little, but I cannot tell what he thinketh," wrote Leicester's
+ eaves-dropper-in-chiefs. Mathematics, fortification, the science of war&mdash;these
+ were his daily pursuits. "The sapling was to become the tree," and
+ meantime the youth was preparing for the great destiny which he felt, lay
+ before him. To ponder over the works and the daring conceptions of
+ Stevinus, to build up and to batter the wooden blocks of mimic citadels;
+ to arrange in countless combinations, great armies of pewter soldiers;
+ these were the occupations of his leisure-hours. Yet he was hardly
+ suspected of bearing within him the germs of the great military commander.
+ "Small desire hath Count Maurice to follow the wars," said one who fancied
+ himself an acute observer at exactly this epoch. "And whereas it might be
+ supposed that in respect to his birth and place, he would affect the chief
+ military command in these countries, it is found by experience had of his
+ humour, that there is no chance of his entering into competition with the
+ others." A modest young man, who could bide his time&mdash;but who,
+ meanwhile, under the guidance of his elders, was doing his best, both in
+ field and cabinet, to learn the great lessons of the age&mdash;he had
+ already enjoyed much solid practical instruction, under such a desperate
+ fighter as Hohenlo, and under so profound a statesman as Barneveld. For at
+ this epoch Olden-Barneveld was the preceptor, almost the political patron
+ of Maurice, and Maurice, the official head of the Holland party, was the
+ declared opponent of the democratic-Calvinist organization. It is not
+ necessary, at this early moment, to foreshadow the changes which time was
+ to bring. Meantime it would be seen, perhaps ere long, whether or no, it
+ would be his humour to follow the wars. As to his prudent and dignified
+ deportment there was little doubt. "Count Maurice behaveth himself very
+ discreetly all this while," wrote one, who did not love him, to Leicester,
+ who loved him less: "He cometh every day to the council, keeping no
+ company with Count Hollock, nor with any of them all, and never drinks
+ himself full with any of them, as they do every day among themselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly the most profitable intercourse that Maurice could enjoy with
+ Hohenlo was upon the battle-field. In winter-quarters, that hard-fighting,
+ hard-drinking, and most turbulent chieftain, was not the best Mentor for a
+ youth whose destiny pointed him out as the leader of a free commonwealth.
+ After the campaigns were over&mdash;if they ever could be over&mdash;the
+ Count and other nobles from the same country were too apt to indulge in
+ those mighty potations, which were rather characteristic of their nation
+ and the age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Since your Excellency's departure," wrote Leicester's secretary, "there
+ hath been among the Dutch Counts nothing but dancing and drinking, to the
+ grief of all this people; which foresee that there can come no good of it.
+ Specially Count Hollock, who hath been drunk almost a fortnight together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester had rendered himself unpopular with the States-General, and with
+ all the leading politicians and generals; yet, at that moment, he had
+ deeply mortgaged his English estates in order to raise funds to expend in
+ the Netherland cause. Thirty thousand pounds sterling&mdash;according to
+ his own statement&mdash;he was already out of pocket, and, unless the
+ Queen would advance him the means to redeem his property; his broad lands
+ were to be brought to the hammer. But it was the Queen, not the
+ States-General, who owed the money; for the Earl had advanced these sums
+ as a portion of the royal contingent. Five hundred and sixty thousand
+ pounds sterling had been the cost of one year's war during the English
+ governor's administration; and of this sum one hundred and forty thousand
+ had been paid by England. There was a portion of the sum, over and above
+ their monthly levies; for which the States had contracted a debt, and they
+ were extremely desirous to obtain, at that moment, an additional loan of
+ fifty thousand pounds from Elizabeth; a favour which&mdash;Elizabeth was
+ very firmly determined not to grant. It was this terror at the expense
+ into which the Netherland war was plunging her, which made the English
+ sovereign so desirous for peace, and filled the anxious mind of Walsingham
+ with the most painful forebodings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, in spite of his good qualities&mdash;such as they were&mdash;had
+ not that most necessary gift for a man in his position, the art of making
+ friends. No man made so many enemies. He was an excellent hater, and few
+ men have been more cordially hated in return. He was imperious, insolent,
+ hot-tempered. He could brook no equal. He had also the fatal defect of
+ enjoying the flattery, of his inferiors in station. Adroit intriguers
+ burned incense to him as a god, and employed him as their tool. And now he
+ had mortally offended Hohenlo, and Buys, and Barneveld, while he hated Sir
+ John Norris with a most passionate hatred. Wilkes, the English
+ representative, was already a special object of his aversion. The
+ unvarnished statements made by the stiff counsellor, of the expense of the
+ past year's administration, and the various errors committed, had inspired
+ Leicester with such ferocious resentment, that the friends of Wilkes
+ trembled for his life.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ["It is generally bruited here," wrote Henry Smith to his brother-
+ in-law Wilkes, "of a most heavy displeasure conceived by my Lord of
+ Leicester against you, and it is said to be so great as that he hath
+ protested to be revenged of you; and to procure you the more
+ enemies, it is said he hath revealed to my Lord Treasurer, and
+ Secretary Davison some injurious speeches (which I cannot report)
+ you should have used of them to him at your last being with him.
+ Furthermore some of the said Lord's secretaries have reported here
+ that it were good for you never to return hither, or, if their Lord
+ be appointed to go over again, it will be too hot for you to tarry
+ there. These things thus coming to the ears of your friends have
+ stricken a great fear and grief into the minds of such as love you,
+ lest the wonderful force and authority of this man being bent
+ against you, should do you hurt, while there is none to answer for
+ you." Smith to Wilkes, 26 Jan. 1587. (S. P. Office MS.)]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Cordiality between the governor-general and Count Maurice had become
+ impossible. As for Willoughby and Sir William Pelham, they were both
+ friendly to him, but Willoughby was a magnificent cavalry officer, who
+ detested politics, and cared little for the Netherlands, except as the
+ best battle-field in Europe, and the old marshal of the camp&mdash;the
+ only man that Leicester ever loved&mdash;was growing feeble in health, was
+ broken down by debt, and hardly possessed, or wished for, any general
+ influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides Deventer of Utrecht, then, on whom, the Earl chiefly relied during
+ his, absence, there were none to support him cordially, except two or
+ three members of the state-council. "Madame de Brederode hath sent unto
+ you a kind of rose," said his intelligencer, "which you have asked for,
+ and beseeches you to command anything she has in her garden, or
+ whatsoever. M. Meetkerke, M. Brederode, and Mr. Dorius, wish your return
+ with all, their hearts. For the rest I cannot tell, and will not swear.
+ But Mr. Barneveld is not your very great friend, whereof I can write no
+ more at this time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This certainly was a small proportion out of a council of eighteen, when
+ all the leading politicians of the country were in avowed hostility to the
+ governor. And thus the Earl was, at this most important crisis, to depend
+ upon the subtle and dangerous Deventer, and upon two inferior personages,
+ the "fellow Junius" and a non-descript, whom Hohenlo characterized as a
+ "long lean Englishman, with a little black beard." This meagre individual
+ however seems to have been of somewhat doubtful nationality. He called
+ himself Otheman, claimed to be a Frenchman, had lived much in England,
+ wrote with great fluency and spirit, both in French and English, but was
+ said, in reality, to be named Robert Dale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not the best policy for the representative of the English Queen to
+ trust to such counsellors at a moment when the elements of strife between
+ Holland and England were actively at work; and when the safety, almost the
+ existence, of the two commonwealths depended upon their acting cordially
+ in concert. "Overyssel, Utrecht, Friesland, and Gelderland, have agreed to
+ renew the offer of sovereignty to her Majesty," said Leicester. "I shall
+ be able to make a better report of their love and good inclination than I
+ can of Holland." It was thought very desirable by the English government
+ that this great demonstration should be made once more, whatever might be
+ the ultimate decision of her Majesty upon so momentous a measure. It
+ seemed proper that a solemn embassy should once more proceed to England in
+ order to confer with Elizabeth; but there was much delay in regard to the
+ step, and much indignation, in consequence, on the part of the Earl. The
+ opposition came, of course, from the Barneveld party. "They are in no
+ great haste to offer the sovereignty," said Wilkes. "First some towns of
+ Holland made bones thereat, and now they say that Zeeland is not
+ resolved."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nature and the causes of the opposition offered by Barneveld and the
+ States of Holland have been sufficiently explained. Buys, maddened by his
+ long and unjustifiable imprisonment, had just been released by the express
+ desire of Hohenlo; and that unruly chieftain, who guided the German and
+ Dutch magnates; such as Moeurs and Overstein, and who even much influenced
+ Maurice and his cousin Count Lewis William, was himself governed by
+ Barneveld. It would have been far from impossible for Leicester, even
+ then, to conciliate the whole party. It was highly desirable that he
+ should do so, for not one of the Provinces where he boasted his strength
+ was quite secure for England. Count Moeurs, a potent and wealthy noble,
+ was governor of Utrecht and Gelderland, and he had already begun to favour
+ the party in Holland which claimed for that Province a legal jurisdiction
+ over the whole ancient episcopate. Under these circumstances common
+ prudence would have suggested that as good an understanding as possible
+ might be kept up with the Dutch and German counts, and that the breach
+ might not be rendered quite irreparable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, as if there had not been administrative blunders enough committed in
+ one year, the unlucky lean Englishman, with the black beard, who was the
+ Earl's chief representative, contrived&mdash;almost before his master's
+ back was turned&mdash;to draw upon himself the wrath of all the fine
+ ladies in Holland. That this should be the direful spring of unutterable
+ disasters, social and political, was easy to foretell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just before the governor's departure Otheman came to pay his farewell
+ respects, and receive his last commands. He found Leicester seated at
+ chess with Sir Francis Drake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do leave you here, my poor Otheman," said the Earl, "but so soon as I
+ leave you I know very well that nobody will give you a good look."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Excellency was a true prophet," wrote the secretary a few weeks
+ later, "for, my good Lord, I have been in as great danger of my life as
+ ever man was. I have been hunted at Delft from house to house, and then
+ besieged in my lodgings four or five hours, as though I had been the
+ greatest thief, murderer, and traitor in the land."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And why was the unfortunate Otheman thus hunted to his lair? Because he
+ had chosen to indulge in 'scandalum magnatum,' and had thereby excited the
+ frenzy of all the great nobles whom it was most important for the English
+ party to conciliate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been gossip about the Princess of Chimay and one Calvaert, who
+ lived in her house, much against the advice of all her best friends. One
+ day she complained bitterly to Master Otheman of the spiteful ways of the
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I protest," said she, "that I am the unhappiest lady upon earth to have
+ my name thus called in question."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So said Otheman, in order to comfort her: "Your Highness is aware that
+ such things are said of all. I am sure I hear every day plenty of speeches
+ about lords and ladies, queens and princesses. You have little cause to
+ trouble yourself for such matters, being known to live honestly, and like
+ a good Christian lady. Your Highness is not the only lady spoken of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princess listened with attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Think of the stories about the Queen of England and my Lord of
+ Leicester!" said Otheman, with infinite tact. "No person is exempted from
+ the tongues of evil, speakers; but virtuous and godly men do put all such
+ foolish matter under their feet. Then there is the Countess of Hoeurs, how
+ much evil talk does one hear about her!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Princess seemed still more interested and even excited; and the adroit
+ Otheman having thus, as he imagined, very successfully smoothed away her
+ anger, went off to have a little more harmless gossip about the Princess
+ and the Countess, with Madame de Meetkerke, who had sent Leicester the
+ rose from her garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, no sooner, had he gone, than away went her Highness to Madame de
+ Moeurs, "a marvellous wise and well-spoken gentlewoman and a grave," and
+ informed her and the Count, with some trifling exaggeration, that the vile
+ Englishman, secretary to the odious Leicester, had just been there,
+ abusing and calumniating the Countess in most lewd and abominable fashion.
+ He had also, she protested, used "very evil speeches of all the ladies in
+ the country." For her own part the Princess avowed her determination to
+ have him instantly murdered. Count Moeurs was quite of the same mind, and
+ desired nothing better than to be one of his executioners. Accordingly,
+ the next Sunday, when the babbling secretary had gone down to Delft to
+ hear the French sermon, a select party, consisting of Moeurs, Lewis
+ William of Nassau, Count Overstein, and others, set forth for that city,
+ laid violent hands on the culprit, and brought him bodily before Princess
+ Chimay. There, being called upon to explain his innuendos, he fell into
+ much trepidation, and gave the names of several English captains, whom he
+ supposed to be at that time in England. "For if I had denied the whole
+ matter," said he, "they would have given me the lie, and used me according
+ to their evil mind." Upon this they relented, and released their prisoner,
+ but, the next day they made another attack upon him, hunted him from house
+ to house, through the whole city of Delft, and at last drove him to earth
+ in his own lodgings, where they kept him besieged several hours. Through
+ the intercession of Wilkes and the authority of the council of state, to
+ which body he succeeded in conveying information of his dangerous
+ predicament, he was, in his own language, "miraculously preserved,"
+ although remaining still in daily danger of his life. "I pray God keep me
+ hereafter from the anger of a woman," he exclaimed, "quia non est ira
+ supra iram mulieris."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was immediately examined before the council, and succeeded in clearing
+ and justifying himself to the satisfaction of his friends. His part was
+ afterwards taken by the councillors, by all the preachers and godly men,
+ and by the university of Leyden. But it was well understood that the blow
+ and the affront had been levelled at the English governor and the English
+ nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All your friends do see," said Otheman, "that this disgrace is not meant
+ so much to me as to your Excellency; the Dutch Earls having used such
+ speeches unto me, and against all law, custom, and reason, used such
+ violence to me, that your Excellency shall wonder to hear of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the Princess Chimay, besides being of honourable character, was a
+ sincere and exemplary member of the Calvinist church, and well inclined to
+ the Leicestrians. She was daughter of Count Meghem, one of the earliest
+ victims of Philip II., in the long tragedy of Netherland independence, and
+ widow of Lancelot Berlaymont. Count Moeurs was governor of Utrecht, and by
+ no means, up to that time, a thorough supporter of the Holland party; but
+ thenceforward he went off most abruptly from the party of England, became
+ hand and glove with Hohenlo, accepted the influence of Barneveld, and did
+ his best to wrest the city of Utrecht from English authority. Such was the
+ effect of the secretary's harmless gossip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought Count Moeurs and his wife better friends to your Excellency
+ than I do see them to be," said Otheman afterwards. "But he doth now
+ disgrace the English nation many ways in his speeches&mdash;saying that
+ they are no soldiers, that they do no good to this country, and that these
+ Englishmen that are at Arnheim have an intent to sell and betray the town
+ to the enemy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the disgraceful squabble between Hohenlo and Edward Norris had been
+ more unlucky for Leicester than any other incident during the year, for
+ its result was to turn the hatred of both parties against himself. Yet the
+ Earl of all men, was originally least to blame for the transaction. It has
+ been seen that Sir Philip Sidney had borne Norris's cartel to Hohenlo,
+ very soon after the outrage had been committed. The Count had promised
+ satisfaction, but meantime was desperately wounded in the attack on Fort
+ Zutphen. Leicester afterwards did his best to keep Edward Norris employed
+ in distant places, for he was quite aware that Hohenlo, as
+ lieutenant-general and count of the empire, would consider himself
+ aggrieved at being called to the field by a simple English captain,
+ however deeply he might have injured him. The governor accordingly induced
+ the Queen to recall the young man to England, and invited him&mdash;much
+ as he disliked his whole race&mdash;to accompany him on his departure for
+ that country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Captain then consulted with his brother Sir John, regarding the
+ pending dispute with Hohenlo. His brother advised that the Count should be
+ summoned to keep his promise, but that Lord Leicester's permission should
+ previously be requested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A week before the governor's departure, accordingly, Edward Norris
+ presented himself one morning in the dining-room, and, finding the Earl
+ reclining on a window-seat, observed to him that "he desired his
+ Lordship's favour towards the discharging of his reputation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Count Hollock is now well," he proceeded, "and is fasting and
+ banqueting in his lodgings, although he does not come abroad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what way will you take?" inquired Leicester, "considering that he
+ keeps his house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Twill be best, I thought," answered Norris, "to write unto him, to
+ perform his promise he made me to answer me in the field."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To whom did he make that promise?" asked the Earl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To Sir Philip Sidney," answered the Captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To my nephew Sidney," said Leicester, musingly; "very well; do as you
+ think best, and I will do for you what I can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the governor then added many kind expressions concerning the interest
+ he felt in the young man's reputation. Passing to other matters, Morris
+ then spoke of the great charges he had recently been put to by reason of
+ having exchanged out of the States' service in order to accept a
+ commission from his Lordship to levy a company of horse. This levy had
+ cost him and his friends three hundred pounds, for which he had not been
+ able to "get one groat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I beseech your Lordship to stand good for me," said he; "considering the
+ meanest captain in all the country hath as good entertainment as I."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can do but little for you before my departure," said Leicester; "but at
+ my return I will advise to do more."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this amicable conversation Morris thanked his Lordship, took his
+ leave, and straightway wrote his letter to Count Hollock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That personage, in his answer, expressed astonishment that Norris should
+ summon him, in his "weakness and indisposition;" but agreed to give him
+ the desired meeting; with sword and dagger, so soon as he should be
+ sufficiently recovered. Morris, in reply, acknowledged his courteous
+ promise, and hoped that he might be speedily restored to health.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The state-council, sitting at the Hague, took up the matter at once
+ however, and requested immediate information of the Earl. He accordingly
+ sent for Norris and his brother Sir John, who waited upon him in his
+ bed-chamber, and were requested to set down in writing the reasons which
+ had moved them in the matter. This statement was accordingly furnished,
+ together with a copy of the correspondence. The Earl took the papers, and
+ promised to allow most honourably of it in the Council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such is the exact narrative, word for word, as given by Sir John and
+ Edward Norris, in a solemn memorial to the Lords of Her Majesty's privy
+ council, as well as to the state-council of the United Provinces. A very
+ few days afterwards Leicester departed for England, taking Edward Norris
+ with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Count Hohenlo was furious at the indignity, notwithstanding the polite
+ language in which he had accepted the challenge. "'T was a matter
+ punishable with death," he said, "in all kingdoms and countries, for a
+ simple captain to send such a summons to a man of his station, without
+ consent of the supreme authority. It was plain," he added, "that the
+ English governor-general had connived at the affront," for Norris had been
+ living in his family and dining at his table. Nay, more, Lord Leicester
+ had made him a knight at Flushing just before their voyage to England.
+ There seems no good reason to doubt the general veracity of the brothers
+ Norris, although, for the express purpose of screening Leicester, Sir John
+ represented at the time to Hohenlo and others that the Earl had not been
+ privy to the transaction. It is very certain, however, that so soon as the
+ general indignation of Hohenlo and his partizans began to be directed
+ against Leicester, he at once denied, in passionate and abusive language,
+ having had any knowledge whatever of Norris's intentions. He protested
+ that he learned, for the first time, of the cartel from information
+ furnished to the council of state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The quarrel between Hohenlo and Norris was afterwards amicably arranged by
+ Lord Buckhurst, during his embassy to the States, at the express desire of
+ the Queen. Hohenlo and Sir John Norris became very good friends, while the
+ enmity between them and Leicester grew more deadly every day. The Earl was
+ frantic with rage whenever he spoke of the transaction, and denounced Sir
+ John Norris as "a fool, liar, and coward" on all occasions, besides
+ overwhelming his brother, Buckhurst, Wilkes, and every other person who
+ took their part, with a torrent of abuse; and it is well known that the
+ Earl was a master of Billingsgate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hollock says that I did procure Edward Norris to send him his cartel,"
+ observed Leicester on one occasion, "wherein I protest before the Lord, I
+ was as ignorant as any man in England. His brother John can tell whether I
+ did not send for him to have committed him for it; but that, in very
+ truth, upon the perusing of it" (after it had been sent), "it was very
+ reasonably written, and I did consider also the great wrong offered him by
+ the Count, and so forbore it. I was so careful for the Count's safety
+ after the brawl between him and Norris, that I charged Sir John, if any
+ harm came to the Count's person by any of his or under him, that he should
+ answer it. Therefore, I take the story to be bred in the bosom of some
+ much like a thief or villain, whatsoever he were."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all this was doubtless true so far as regarded the Earl's original
+ exertions to prevent the consequences of the quarrel, but did not touch
+ the point of the second correspondence preceded by the conversation in the
+ dining-room, eight days before the voyage to England. The affair, in
+ itself of slight importance, would not merit so much comment at this late
+ day had it not been for its endless consequences. The ferocity with which
+ the Earl came to regard every prominent German, Hollander, and Englishman,
+ engaged in the service of the States, sprang very much from the
+ complications of this vulgar brawl. Norris, Hohenlo, Wilkes, Buckhurst,
+ were all denounced to the Queen as calumniators, traitors, and villains;
+ and it may easily be understood how grave and extensive must have been the
+ effects of such vituperation upon the mind of Elizabeth, who, until the
+ last day of his life, doubtless entertained for the Earl the deepest
+ affection of which her nature was susceptible. Hohenlo, with Count
+ Maurice, were the acknowledged chiefs of the anti-English party, and the
+ possibility of cordial cooperation between the countries may be judged of
+ by the entanglement which had thus occurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester had always hated Sir John Norris, but he knew that the mother
+ had still much favour with the Queen, and he was therefore the more
+ vehement in his denunciations of the son the more difficulty he found in
+ entirely destroying his character, and the keener jealousy he felt that
+ any other tongue but his should influence her Majesty. "The story of John
+ Norris about the cartel is, by the Lord God, most false," he exclaimed; "I
+ do beseech you not to see me so dealt withal, but that especially her
+ Majesty may understand these untruths, who perhaps, by the mother's fair
+ speeches and the son's smooth words, may take some other conceit of my
+ doings than I deserve."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was most resolute to stamp the character of falsehood upon both the
+ brothers, for he was more malignant towards Sir John than towards any man
+ in the world, not even excepting Wilkes. To the Queen, to the Lords of the
+ Privy Council, to Walsingham, to Burghley, he poured forth endless
+ quantities of venom, enough to destroy the characters of a hundred honest
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The declaration of the two Norrises for the cartel is most false, as I am
+ a Christian," he said to Walsingham. "I have a dozen witnesses, as good
+ and some better than they, who will testify that they were present when I
+ misliked the writing of the letter before ever I saw it. And by the
+ allegiance I owe to her Majesty, I never knew of the letter, nor gave
+ consent to it, nor heard of it till it was complained of from Count
+ Hollock. But, as they are false in this, so you will find J. N. as false
+ in his other answers; so that he would be ashamed, but that his old
+ conceit hath made him past shame, I fear. His companions in Ireland, as in
+ these countries, report that Sir John Norris would often say that he was
+ but an ass and a fool, who, if a lie would serve his turn, would spare it.
+ I remember I have heard that the Earl of Sussex would say so; and indeed
+ this gentleman doth imitate him in divers things."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But a very grave disaster to Holland and England was soon the fruit of the
+ hatred borne by Leicester to Sir John Norris. Immediately after the battle
+ of Zutphen and the investment of that town by the English and
+ Netherlanders, great pains were taken to secure the city of Deventer. This
+ was, after Amsterdam and Antwerp, the most important mercantile place in
+ all the Provinces. It was a large prosperous commercial and manufacturing
+ capital, a member of the Hanseatic League, and the great centre of the
+ internal trade of the Netherlands with the Baltic nations. There was a
+ strong Catholic party in the town, and the magistracy were disposed to
+ side with Parma. It was notorious that provisions and munitions were
+ supplied from thence to the beleaguered Zutphen; and Leicester despatched
+ Sir William Pelham, accordingly, to bring the inhabitants to reason. The
+ stout Marshal made short work of it. Taking Sir William Stanley and the
+ greater part of his regiment with him, he caused them, day by day, to
+ steal into the town, in small parties of ten and fifteen. No objection was
+ made to this proceeding on the part of the city government. Then Stanley
+ himself arrived in the morning, and the Marshal in the evening, of the
+ 20th of October. Pelham ordered the magistrates to present themselves
+ forthwith at his lodgings, and told them, with grim courtesy, that the
+ Earl of Leicester excused himself from making them a visit, not being
+ able, for grief at the death of Sir Philip Sidney, to come so soon near
+ the scene of his disaster. His Excellency had therefore sent him to
+ require the town to receive an English garrison. "So make up your minds,
+ and delay not," said Pelham; "for I have many important affairs on my
+ hands, and must send word to his Excellency at once. To-morrow morning, at
+ eight o'clock, I shall expect your answer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day, the magistrates were all assembled in the townhouse before six.
+ Stanley had filled the great square with his troops, but he found that the
+ burghers-five thousand of whom constituted the municipal militia&mdash;had
+ chained the streets and locked the gates. At seven o'clock Pelham
+ proceeded, to the town-house, and, followed by his train, made his
+ appearance before the magisterial board. Then there was a knocking at the
+ door, and Sir William Stanley entered, having left a strong guard of
+ soldiers at the entrance to the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am come for an answer," said the Lord Marshal; "tell me straight." The
+ magistrates hesitated, whispered, and presently one of them slipped away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There's one of you gone," cried the Marshal. "Fetch him straight back;
+ or, by the living God, before whom I stand, there is not one of you shall
+ leave this place with life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the burgomasters sent for the culprit, who returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, tell me," said Pelham, "why you have, this night, chained your
+ streets and kept such strong watch while your friends and defenders were
+ in the town? Do you think we came over here to spend our lives and our
+ goods, and to leave all we have, to be thus used and thus betrayed by you?
+ Nay, you shall find us trusty to our friends, but as politic as
+ yourselves. Now, then; set your hands to this document," he proceeded, as
+ he gave them a new list of magistrates, all selected from stanch
+ Protestants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Give over your government to the men here nominated, Straight; dally
+ not!" The burgomasters signed the paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now," said Pelham, "let one of you go to the watch, discharge the guard,
+ bid them unarm, and go home to their lodgings."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A magistrate departed on the errand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now fetch me the keys of the gate," said Pelham, "and that straightway,
+ or, before God, you shall die."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The keys were brought, and handed to the peremptory old Marshal. The old
+ board of magistrates were then clapped into prison, the new ones
+ installed, and Deventer was gained for the English and Protestant party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There could be no doubt that a city so important and thus fortunately
+ secured was worthy to be well guarded. There could be no doubt either that
+ it would be well to conciliate the rich and influential Papists in the
+ place, who, although attached to the ancient religion, were not
+ necessarily disloyal to the republic; but there could be as little that,
+ under the circumstances of this sudden municipal revolution, it would be
+ important to place a garrison of Protestant soldiers there, under the
+ command of a Protestant officer of known fidelity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the astonishment of the whole commonwealth, the Earl appointed Sir
+ William Stanley to be governor of the town, and stationed in it a garrison
+ of twelve hundred wild Irishmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir William was a cadet of one of the noblest English houses. He was the
+ bravest of the brave. His gallantry at the famous Zutphen fight had
+ attracted admiration, where nearly all had performed wondrous exploits,
+ but he was known to be an ardent Papist and a soldier of fortune, who had
+ fought on various sides, and had even borne arms in the Netherlands under
+ the ferocious Alva. Was it strange that there should be murmurs at the
+ appointment of so dangerous a chief to guard a wavering city which had so
+ recently been secured?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Irish kernes&mdash;and they are described by all contemporaries,
+ English and Flemish, in the same language&mdash;were accounted as the
+ wildest and fiercest of barbarians. There was something grotesque, yet
+ appalling, in the pictures painted of these rude, almost naked; brigands,
+ who ate raw flesh, spoke no intelligible language, and ranged about the
+ country, burning, slaying, plundering, a terror to the peasantry and a
+ source of constant embarrassment to the more orderly troops in the service
+ of the republic. "It seemed," said one who had seen them, "that they
+ belonged not to Christendom, but to Brazil." Moreover, they were all
+ Papists, and, however much one might be disposed to censure that great
+ curse of the age, religious intolerance&mdash;which was almost as flagrant
+ in the councils of Queen Elizabeth as in those of Philip&mdash;it was
+ certainly a most fatal policy to place such a garrison, at that critical
+ juncture, in the newly-acquired city. Yet Leicester, who had banished
+ Papists from Utrecht without cause and without trial, now placed most
+ notorious Catholics in Deventer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Zutphen, which was still besieged by the English and the patriots, was
+ much crippled by the loss of the great fort, the capture of which, mainly
+ through the brilliant valour of Stanley's brother Edward, has already been
+ related. The possession of Deventer and of this fort gave the control of
+ the whole north-eastern territory to the patriots; but, as if it were not
+ enough to place Deventer in the hands of Sir William Stanley, Leicester
+ thought proper to confide the government of the fort to Roland York. Not a
+ worse choice could be made in the whole army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ York was an adventurer of the most audacious and dissolute character. He
+ was a Londoner by birth, one of those "ruing blades" inveighed against by
+ the governor-general on his first taking command of the forces. A man of
+ desperate courage, a gambler, a professional duellist, a bravo, famous in
+ his time among the "common hacksters and swaggerers" as the first to
+ introduce the custom of foining, or thrusting with the rapier in single
+ combats&mdash;whereas before his day it had been customary among the
+ English to fight with sword and shield, and held unmanly to strike below
+ the girdle&mdash;he had perpetually changed sides, in the Netherland wars,
+ with the shameless disregard to principle which characterized all his
+ actions. He had been lieutenant to the infamous John Van Imbyze, and had
+ been concerned with him in the notorious attempt to surrender Dendermonde
+ and Ghent to the enemy, which had cost that traitor his head. York had
+ been thrown into prison at Brussels, but there had been some delay about
+ his execution, and the conquest of the city by Parma saved him from the
+ gibbet. He had then taken service under the Spanish commander-in-chief,
+ and had distinguished himself, as usual, by deeds of extraordinary valour,
+ having sprung on board the burning volcano-ship at the siege of Antwerp.
+ Subsequently returning to England, he had, on Leicester's appointment,
+ obtained the command of a company in the English contingent, and had been
+ conspicuous on the field of Warnsveld; for the courage which he always
+ displayed under any standard was only equalled by the audacity with which
+ he was ever ready to desert from it. Did it seem credible that the fort of
+ Zutphen should be placed in the hands of Roland York?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Remonstrances were made by the States-General at once. With regard to
+ Stanley, Leicester maintained that he was, in his opinion, the fittest man
+ to take charge of the whole English army, during his absence in England.
+ In answer to a petition made by the States against the appointment of
+ York, "in respect to his perfidious dealings before," the Earl replied
+ that he would answer for his fidelity as for his own brother; adding
+ peremptorily&mdash;"Do you trust me? Then trust York."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, besides his other qualifications for high command, Stanley possessed
+ an inestimable one in Leicester's eyes. He was, or at least had been, an
+ enemy of Sir John Norris. To be this made a Papist pardonable. It was even
+ better than to be a Puritan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Earl did more than to appoint the traitor York and the Papist
+ Stanley to these important posts. On the very day of his departure, and
+ immediately after his final quarrel with Sir John about the Hohenlo
+ cartel, which had renewed all the ancient venom, he signed a secret paper,
+ by which he especially forbade the council of state to interfere with or
+ set aside any appointments to the government of towns or forts, or to
+ revoke any military or naval commissions, without his consent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now supreme executive authority had been delegated to the state-council by
+ the Governor-General during his absence. Command in chief over all the
+ English forces, whether in the Queen's pay or the State's pay, had been
+ conferred upon Norris, while command over the Dutch and German troops
+ belonged to Hohenlo; but, by virtue of the Earl's secret paper, Stanley
+ and York were now made independent of all authority. The evil consequences
+ natural to such a step were not slow in displaying themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stanley at once manifested great insolence towards Norris. That
+ distinguished general was placed in a most painful position. A post of
+ immense responsibility was confided to him. The honour of England's Queen
+ and of England's soldiers was entrusted to his keeping; at a moment full
+ of danger, and in a country where every hour might bring forth some
+ terrible change; yet he knew himself the mark at which the most powerful
+ man in England was directing all his malice, and that the Queen, who was
+ wax in her great favourite's hands, was even then receiving the most fatal
+ impressions as to his character and conduct. "Well I know," said he to
+ Burghley, "that the root of the former malice borne me is not withered,
+ but that I must look for like fruits therefrom as before;" and he implored
+ the Lord-Treasurer, that when his honour and reputation should be called
+ in question, he might be allowed to return to England and clear himself.
+ "For myself," said he, "I have not yet received any commission, although I
+ have attended his Lordship of Leicester to his ship. It is promised to be
+ sent me, and in the meantime I understand that my Lord hath granted
+ separate commissions to Sir William Stanley and Roland York, exempting
+ them from obeying of me. If this be true, 'tis only done to nourish
+ factions, and to interrupt any better course in our doings than before
+ hath been." He earnestly requested to be furnished with a commission
+ directly from her Majesty. "The enemy is reinforcing," he added. "We are
+ very weak, our troops are unpaid these three months, and we are grown
+ odious, to our friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Honest Councillor Wilkes, who did his best to conciliate all parties, and
+ to do his duty to England and Holland, to Leicester and to Norris, had the
+ strongest sympathy with Sir John. "Truly, besides the value, wisdom, and
+ many other good parts that are in him," he said, "I have noted wonderful
+ patience and modesty in the man, in bearing many apparent injuries done
+ unto him, which I have known to be countenanced and nourished, contrary to
+ all reason, to disgrace him. Please therefore continue your honourable
+ opinion of him in his absence, whatsoever may be maliciously reported to
+ his disadvantage, for I dare avouch, of my own poor skill, that her
+ Majesty hath not a second subject of his place and quality able to serve
+ in those countries as he . . . . I doubt not God will move her Majesty, in
+ despite of the devil, to respect him as he deserves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir John disclaimed any personal jealousy in regard to Stanley's
+ appointment, but, within a week or two of the Earl's departure, he already
+ felt strong anxiety as to its probable results. "If it prove no hindrance
+ to the service," he said, "it shall nothing trouble me. I desire that my
+ doings may show what I am; neither will I seek, by indirect means to
+ calumniate him or any other, but will let them show themselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in December he informed the Lord-Treasurer that Stanley's own men
+ were boasting that their master acknowledged no superior authority to his
+ own, and that he had said as much himself to the magistracy of Deventer.
+ The burghers had already complained, through the constituted guardians of
+ their liberties, of his insolence and rapacity, and of the turbulence of
+ his troops, and had appealed to Sir John; but the colonel-general's
+ remonstrances had been received by Sir William with contumely and abuse,
+ and by daunt that he had even a greater commission than any he had yet
+ shown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Three sheep, an ox, and a whole hog," were required weekly of the
+ peasants for his table, in a time of great scarcity, and it was impossible
+ to satisfy the rapacious appetites of the Irish kernes. The
+ paymaster-general of the English forces was daily appealed to by Stanley
+ for funds&mdash;an application which was certainly not unreasonable, as
+ her Majesty's troops had not received any payment for three months&mdash;but
+ there "was not a denier in the treasury," and he was therefore implored to
+ wait. At last the States-General sent him a month's pay for himself and
+ all his troops, although, as he was in the Queen's service, no claim could
+ justly be made upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilkes, also, as English member of the state council, faithfully conveyed
+ to the governor-general in England the complaints which came up to all the
+ authorities of the republic, against Sir William Stanley's conduct in
+ Deventer. He had seized the keys of the gates, he kept possession of the
+ towers and fortifications, he had meddled with the civil government, he
+ had infringed all their privileges. Yet this was the board of magistrates,
+ expressly set up by Leicester, with the armed hand, by the agency of
+ Marshal Pelham and this very Colonel Stanley&mdash;a board of Calvinist
+ magistrates placed but a few weeks before in power to control a city of
+ Catholic tendencies. And here was a papist commander displaying
+ Leicester's commission in their faces, and making it a warrant for dealing
+ with the town as if it were under martial law, and as if he were an
+ officer of the Duke of Parma. It might easily be judged whether such
+ conduct were likely to win the hearts of Netherlanders to Leicester and to
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Albeit, for my own part," said Wilkes, "I do hold Sir William Stanley to
+ be a wise and a discreet gent., yet when I consider that the magistracy is
+ such as was established by your Lordship, and of the religion, and well
+ affected to her Majesty, and that I see how heavily the matter is
+ conceived of here by the States and council, I do fear that all is not
+ well. The very bruit of this doth begin to draw hatred upon our nation.
+ Were it not that I doubt some dangerous issue of this matter, and that I
+ might be justly charged with negligence, if I should not advertise you
+ beforehand, I would, have forborne to mention this dissension, for the
+ States are about to write to your Lordship and to her Majesty for
+ reformation in this matter." He added that he had already written
+ earnestly to Sir William, "hoping to persuade him to carry a mild hand
+ over the people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus wrote Councillor Wilkes, as in duty bound, to Lord Leicester, so
+ early as the 9th December, and the warning voice of Norris had made itself
+ heard in England quite as soon. Certainly the governor-general, having,
+ upon his own responsibility; and prompted, it would seem, by passion more
+ than reason, made this dangerous appointment, was fortunate in receiving
+ timely and frequent notice of its probable results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the conscientious Wilkes wrote most earnestly, as he said he had done,
+ to the turbulent Stanley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good Sir William," said he, "the magistrates and burgesses of Deventer
+ complain to this council, that you have by violence wrested from them the
+ keys of one of their gates, that you assemble your garrison in arms to
+ terrify them, that you have seized one of their forts, that the Irish
+ soldiers do commit many extortions and exactions upon the inhabitants,
+ that you have imprisoned their burgesses, and do many things against their
+ laws and privileges, so that it is feared the best affected, of the
+ inhabitants towards her Majesty will forsake the town. Whether any of
+ these things be true, yourself doth best know, but I do assure you that
+ the apprehension thereof here doth make us and our government hateful. For
+ mine own part, I have always known you for a gentleman of value, wisdom;
+ and judgment, and therefore should hardly believe any such thing. . . . .
+ I earnestly require you to take heed of consequences, and to be careful of
+ the honour of her Majesty and the reputation of our nation. You will
+ consider that the gaining possession of the town grew by them that are now
+ in office, who being of the religion, and well affected to his
+ Excellency's government, wrought his entry into the same . . . . I know
+ that Lord Leicester is sworn to maintain all the inhabitants of the
+ Provinces in their ancient privileges and customs. I know further that
+ your commission carreeth no authority to warrant you to intermeddle any
+ further than with the government of the soldiers and guard of the town.
+ Well, you may, in your own conceipt, confer some words to authorize you in
+ some larger sort, but, believe me, Sir, they will not warrant you
+ sufficiently to deal any further than I have said, for I have perused a
+ copy of your commission for that purpose. I know the name itself of a
+ governor of a town is odious to this people, and hath been ever since the
+ remembrance of the Spanish government, and if we, by any lack of
+ foresight, should give the like occasion, we should make ourselves as
+ odious as they are; which God forbid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are to consider that we are not come into these countries for their
+ defence only, but for the defence of her Majesty and our own native
+ country, knowing that the preservation of both dependeth altogether upon
+ the preserving of these. Wherefore I do eftsoons intreat and require you
+ to forbear to intermeddle any further. If there shall follow any dangerous
+ effect of your proceedings, after this my friendly advice, I shall be
+ heartily sorry for your sake, but I shall be able to testify to her
+ Majesty that I have done my duty in admonishing you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus spake the stiff councillor, earnestly and well, in behalf of
+ England's honour and the good name of England's Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the brave soldier, whose feet were fast sliding into the paths of
+ destruction, replied, in a tone of indignant innocence, more likely to
+ aggravate than to allay suspicion. "Finding," said Stanley, "that you
+ already threaten, I have gone so far as to scan the terms of my
+ commission, which I doubt not to execute, according to his Excellency's
+ meaning and mine honour. First, I assure you that I have maintained
+ justice, and that severely; else hardly would the soldiers have been
+ contented with bread and bare cheese."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He acknowledged possessing himself of the keys of the town, but defended
+ it on the ground of necessity; and of the character of the people, "who
+ thrust out the Spaniards and Almaynes, and afterwards never would obey the
+ Prince and States." "I would be," he said, "the sorriest man that lives,
+ if by my negligence the place should be lost. Therefore I thought good to
+ seize the great tower and ports. If I meant evil, I needed no keys, for
+ here is force enough."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With much effrontery, he then affected to rely for evidence of his
+ courteous and equitable conduct towards the citizens, upon the very
+ magistrates who had been petitioning the States-General, the
+ state-council, and the English Queen, against his violence:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For my courtesy and humanity," he said, "I refer me unto the magistrates
+ themselves. But I think they sent rhetoricians, who could, allege of
+ little grief, and speak pitiful, and truly I find your ears have been as
+ pitiful in so timorously condemning me. I assure you that her Majesty hath
+ not a better servant than I nor a more faithful in these parts. This I
+ will prove with my flesh and blood. Although I know there be divers flying
+ reports spread by my enemies, which are come to my ears, I doubt not my
+ virtue and truth will prove them calumniators and men of little. So, good
+ Mr. Wilkes, I pray you, consider gravely, give ear discreetly, and
+ advertise into England soundly. For me, I have been and am your friend,
+ and glad to hear any admonition from one so wise as yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then alluded ironically to the "good favour and money" with which he
+ had been so contented of late, that if Mr. Wilkes would discharge him of
+ his promise to Lord Leicester, he would take his leave with all his heart.
+ Captain, officers, and soldiers, had been living on half a pound of cheese
+ a day. For himself, he had received but one hundred and twenty pounds in
+ five months, and was living at three pounds by the day. "This my wealth
+ will not long hold out," he observed, "but yet I will never fail of my
+ promise to his Excellency, whatsoever I endure. It is for her Majesty's
+ service and for the love I bear to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He bitterly complained of the unwillingness of the country-people to
+ furnish vivers, waggons, and other necessaries, for the fort before
+ Zutphen. "Had it not been," he said, "for the travail extraordinary of
+ myself, and patience of my brother, Yorke, that fort would have been in
+ danger. But, according to his desire and forethought, I furnished that
+ place with cavalry and infantry; for I know the troops there be marvellous
+ weak."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reply, Wilkes stated that the complaints had been made "by no
+ rhetorician," but by letter from the magistrates themselves (on whom he
+ relied so confidently) to the state-council. The councillor added, rather
+ tartly, that since his honest words of defence and of warning, had been
+ "taken in so scoffing a manner," Sir William might be sure of not being
+ troubled with any more of his letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, a day or two before thus addressing him, he had already enclosed to
+ Leicester very important letters addressed by the council of Gelderland to
+ Count Moeurs, stadholder of the Province, and by him forwarded to the
+ state-council. For there were now very grave rumours concerning the
+ fidelity of "that patient and foreseeing brother York," whom Stanley had
+ been so generously strengthening in Fort Zutphen. The lieutenant of York,
+ a certain Mr. Zouch, had been seen within the city of Zutphen, in close
+ conference with Colonel Tassis, Spanish governor of the place. Moreover
+ there had been a very frequent exchange of courtesies&mdash;by which the
+ horrors of war seemed to be much mitigated&mdash;between York on the
+ outside and Tassis within. The English commander sent baskets of venison,
+ wild fowl, and other game, which were rare in the market of a besieged
+ town. The Spanish governor responded with baskets of excellent wine and
+ barrels of beer. A very pleasant state of feeling, perhaps, to contemplate&mdash;as
+ an advance in civilization over the not very distant days of the Haarlem
+ and Leyden sieges, when barrels of prisoners' heads, cut off, a dozen or
+ two at a time, were the social amenities usually exchanged between
+ Spaniards and Dutchmen&mdash;but somewhat suspicious to those who had
+ grown grey in this horrible warfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Irish kernes too, were allowed to come to mass within the city, and
+ were received there with as much fraternity by, the Catholic soldiers of
+ Tassis as the want of any common dialect would allow&mdash;a proceeding
+ which seemed better perhaps for the salvation of their souls, than&mdash;for
+ the advancement of the siege.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The state-council had written concerning these rumours to Roland York, but
+ the patient man had replied in a manner which Wilkes characterized as
+ "unfit to have been given to such as were the executors of the Earl of
+ Leicester's authority." The councillor implored the governor-general
+ accordingly to send some speedy direction in this matter, as well to
+ Roland York as to Sir William Stanley; for he explicitly and earnestly
+ warned him, that those personages would pay no heed to the remonstrances
+ of the state-council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus again and again was Leicester&mdash;on whose head rested, by his own
+ deliberate act, the whole responsibility&mdash;forewarned that some great
+ mischief was impending. There was time enough even then&mdash;for it was
+ but the 16th December&mdash;to place full powers in the hands of the
+ state-council, of Norris, or of Hohenlo, and secretly and swiftly to
+ secure the suspected persons, and avert the danger. Leicester did nothing.
+ How could he acknowledge his error? How could he manifest confidence in
+ the detested Norris? How appeal to the violent and deeply incensed
+ Hohenlo?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three weeks more rolled by, and the much-enduring Roland York was still in
+ confidential correspondence with Leicester and Walsingham, although his
+ social intercourse with the Spanish governor of Zutphen continued to be
+ upon the most liberal and agreeable footing. He was not quite satisfied
+ with the general, aspect of the Queen's cause in the Netherlands, and
+ wrote to the Secretary of State in a tone of despondency, and mild
+ expostulation. Walsingham would have been less edified by these
+ communications, had he been aware that York, upon first entering
+ Leicester's service, had immediately opened a correspondence with the Duke
+ of Parma, and had secretly given him to understand that his object was to
+ serve the cause of Spain. This was indeed the fact, as the Duke informed
+ the King, "but then he is such a scatter-brained, reckless dare-devil,"
+ said Parma, "that I hardly expected much of him." Thus the astute Sir
+ Francis had been outwitted, by the adventurous Roland, who was perhaps
+ destined also to surpass the anticipations of the Spanish
+ commander-in-chief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime York informed his English patrons, on the 7th January, that
+ matters were not proceeding so smoothly in the political world as he could
+ wish. He had found "many cross and indirect proceedings," and so,
+ according to Lord Leicester's desire, he sent him a "discourse" on the
+ subject, which he begged Sir Francis to "peruse, add to, or take away
+ from," and then to inclose to the Earl. He hoped he should be forgiven if
+ the style of the production was not quite satisfactory; for, said he, "the
+ place where I am doth too much torment my memory, to call every point to
+ my remembrance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must, in truth, have been somewhat a hard task upon his memory, to keep
+ freshly in mind every detail of the parallel correspondence which he was
+ carrying on with the Spanish and with the English government. Even a cool
+ head like Roland's might be forgiven for being occasionally puzzled. "So
+ if there be anything hard to be understood," he observed to Walsingham,
+ "advertise me, and I will make it plainer." Nothing could be more
+ ingenuous. He confessed, however, to being out of pocket. "Please your
+ honour," said he, "I have taken great pains to make a bad place something,
+ and it has cost me all the money I had, and here I can receive nothing but
+ discontentment. I dare not write you all lest you should think it
+ impossible," he added&mdash;and it is quite probable that even Walsingham
+ would have been astonished, had Roland written all. The game playing by
+ York and Stanley was not one to which English gentlemen were much
+ addicted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I trust the bearer, Edward Stanley; a discreet, brave gentleman," he
+ said, "with details." And the remark proves that the gallant youth who had
+ captured this very Fort Zutphen in, so brilliant a manner was not privy to
+ the designs of his brother and of York; for the object of the "discourse"
+ was to deceive the English government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I humbly beseech that you will send for me home," concluded Roland, "for
+ true as I humbled my mind to please her Majesty, your honour, and the
+ dead, now am I content to humble myself lower to please myself, for now,
+ since his, Excellency's departure, there is no form of proceeding neither
+ honourably nor honestly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three other weeks passed over, weeks of anxiety and dread throughout the
+ republic. Suspicion grew darker than ever, not only as to York and
+ Stanley, but as to all the English commanders, as to the whole English
+ nation. An Anjou plot, a general massacre, was expected by many, yet there
+ were no definite grounds for such dark anticipations. In vain had
+ painstaking, truth-telling Wilkes summoned Stanley to his duty, and called
+ on Leicester, time after time, to interfere. In vain did Sir John Norris,
+ Sir John Conway, the members of the state-council, and all others who
+ should have had authority, do their utmost to avert a catastrophe. Their
+ hands were all tied by the fatal letter of the 24th November. Most
+ anxiously did all implore the Earl of Leicester to return. Never was a
+ more dangerous moment than this for a country to be left to its fate.
+ Scarcely ever in history was there a more striking exemplification of the
+ need of a man&mdash;of an individual&mdash;who should embody the powers
+ and wishes, and concentrate in one brain and arm, the whole energy, of a
+ commonwealth. But there was no such man, for the republic had lost its
+ chief when Orange died. There was much wisdom and patriotism now.
+ Olden-Barneveld was competent, and so was Buys, to direct the councils of
+ the republic, and there were few better soldiers than Norris and Hohenlo
+ to lead her armies against Spain. But the supreme authority had been
+ confided to Leicester. He had not perhaps proved himself extraordinarily
+ qualified for his post, but he was the governor-in-chief, and his
+ departure, without resigning his powers, left the commonwealth headless,
+ at a moment when singleness of action was vitally important.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, very late in January, one Hugh Overing, a haberdasher from
+ Ludgate Hill, was caught at Rotterdam, on his way to Ireland, with a
+ bundle of letters from Sir William Stanley, and was sent, as a suspicious
+ character, to the state-council at the Hague. On the same day, another
+ Englishman, a small youth, "well-favoured," rejoicing in a "very little
+ red beard, and in very ragged clothes," unknown by name; but ascertained
+ to be in the service of Roland York and to have been the bearer of letters
+ to Brussels, also passed through Rotterdam. By connivance of the
+ innkeeper, one Joyce, also an Englishman, he succeeded in making his
+ escape. The information contained in the letters thus intercepted was
+ important, but it came too late, even if then the state-council could have
+ acted without giving mortal offence to Elizabeth and to Leicester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the evening of 28th January (N. S.), Sir William Stanley entertained
+ the magistrates of Deventer at a splendid banquet. There was free
+ conversation at table concerning the idle suspicions which had been rife
+ in the Provinces as to his good intentions and the censures which had been
+ cast upon him for the repressive measures which he had thought necessary
+ to adopt for the security of the city. He took that occasion to assure his
+ guests that the Queen of England had not a more loyal subject than
+ himself, nor the Netherlands a more devoted friend. The company expressed
+ themselves fully restored to confidence in his character and purposes, and
+ the burgomasters, having exchanged pledges of faith and friendship with
+ the commandant in flowing goblets, went home comfortably to bed, highly
+ pleased with their noble entertainer and with themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very late that same night, Stanley placed three hundred of his wild Irish
+ in the Noorenberg tower, a large white structure which commanded the
+ Zutphen gate, and sent bodies of chosen troops to surprise all the
+ burgher-guards at their respective stations. Strong pickets of cavalry
+ were also placed in all the principal thoroughfares of the city. At three
+ o'clock in the following morning he told his officers that he was about to
+ leave Deventer for a few hours, in order to bring in some reinforcements
+ for which he had sent, as he had felt much anxiety for some time past as
+ to the disposition of the burghers. His officers, honest Englishmen,
+ suspecting no evil and having confidence in their chief, saw nothing
+ strange in this proceeding, and Sir William rode deliberately out of
+ Zutphen. After he had been absent an hour or two, the clatter of hoofs and
+ the tramp of infantry was heard without, and presently the commandant
+ returned, followed by a thousand musketeers and three or four hundred
+ troopers. It was still pitch dark; but, dimly lighted by torches, small
+ detachments of the fresh troops picked their way through the black narrow
+ streets, while the main body poured at once upon the Brink, or great
+ square. Here, quietly and swiftly, they were marshalled into order, the
+ cavalry, pikemen, and musketeers, lining all sides of the place, and a
+ chosen band&mdash;among whom stood Sir William Stanley, on foot, and an
+ officer of high rank on horseback&mdash;occupying the central space
+ immediately in front of the town-house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The drums then beat, and proclamation went forth through the city that all
+ burghers, without any distinction&mdash;municipal guards and all&mdash;were
+ to repair forthwith to the city-hall, and deposit their arms. As the
+ inhabitants arose from their slumbers, and sallied forth into the streets
+ to inquire the cause of the disturbance, they soon discovered that they
+ had, in some mysterious manner, been entrapped. Wild Irishmen, with
+ uncouth garb, threatening gesture, and unintelligible jargon, stood
+ gibbering at every corner, instead of the comfortable Flemish faces of the
+ familiar burgher-guard. The chief burgomaster, sleeping heavily after Sir
+ William's hospitable banquet, aroused himself at last, and sent a
+ militia-captain to inquire the cause of the unseasonable drum-beat and
+ monstrous proclamation. Day was breaking as the trusty captain made his
+ way to the scene of action. The wan light of a cold, drizzly January
+ morning showed him the wide, stately square&mdash;with its leafless
+ lime-trees and its tall many storied, gable-ended houses rising dim and
+ spectral through the mist-filled to overflowing with troops, whose
+ uniforms and banners resembled nothing that he remembered in Dutch and
+ English regiments. Fires were lighted at various corners, kettles were
+ boiling, and camp-followers and sutlers were crouching over them, half
+ perished with cold&mdash;for it had been raining dismally all night&mdash;while
+ burghers, with wives and children, startled from their dreams by the
+ sudden reveillee, stood gaping about, with perplexed faces and despairing
+ gestures. As he approached the town-house&mdash;one of those magnificent,
+ many-towered, highly-decorated, municipal palaces of the Netherlands&mdash;he
+ found troops all around it; troops guarding the main entrance, troops on
+ the great external staircase leading to the front balcony, and officers,
+ in yellow jerkin and black bandoleer, grouped in the balcony itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Flemish captain stood bewildered, when suddenly the familiar form of
+ Stanley detached itself from the central group and advanced towards him.
+ Taking him by the hand with much urbanity, Sir William led the militia-man
+ through two or three ranks of soldiers, and presented him to the strange
+ officer on horseback.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Colonel Tassis," said he, "I recommend to you a very particular friend of
+ mine. Let me bespeak your best offices in his behalf."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ah God!" cried the honest burgher, "Tassis! Tassis! Then are we indeed
+ most miserably betrayed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the Spanish colonel who was of Flemish origin, was affected by the
+ despair of the Netherlander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let those look to the matter of treachery whom it concerns," said he; "my
+ business here is to serve the King, my master."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's, and unto God the things
+ which are God's," said Stanley, with piety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burgher-captain was then assured that no harm was intended to the
+ city, but that it now belonged to his most Catholic Majesty of Spain&mdash;Colonel
+ Stanley, to whom its custody had been entrusted, having freely and
+ deliberately restored it to its lawful owner. He was then bid to go and
+ fetch the burgomasters and magistrates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently they appeared&mdash;a dismal group, weeping and woe-begone&mdash;the
+ same board of strict Calvinists forcibly placed in office but three months
+ before by Leicester, through the agency of this very Stanley, who had so
+ summarily ejected their popish predecessors, and who only the night before
+ had so handsomely feasted themselves. They came forward, the tears running
+ down their cheeks, crying indeed so piteously that even Stanley began to
+ weep bitterly himself. "I have not done this," he sobbed, "for power or
+ pelf. Not the hope of reward, but the love of God hath moved me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently some of the ex-magistrates made their appearance, and a party of
+ leading citizens went into a private house with Tassis and Stanley to hear
+ statements and explanations&mdash;as if any satisfactory ones were
+ possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir William, still in a melancholy tone, began to make a speech, through
+ an interpreter, and again to protest that he had not been influenced by
+ love of lucre. But as he stammered and grew incoherent as he approached
+ the point, Tassis suddenly interrupted the conference. "Let us look after
+ our soldiers," said he, "for they have been marching in the foul weather
+ half the night." So the Spanish troops, who had been, standing patiently
+ to be rained upon after their long march, until the burghers had all
+ deposited their arms in the city-hall, were now billeted on the
+ townspeople. Tassis gave peremptory orders that no injury should be
+ offered to persons or property on pain of death; and, by way of wholesome
+ example, hung several Hibernians the same day who had been detected in
+ plundering the inhabitants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The citizens were, as usual in such cases, offered the choice between
+ embracing the Catholic religion or going into exile, a certain interval
+ being allowed them to wind up their affairs. They were also required to
+ furnish Stanley and his regiment full pay for the whole period of their
+ service since coming to the Provinces, and to Tassis three months' wages
+ for his Spaniards in advance. Stanley offered his troops the privilege of
+ remaining with him in the service of Spain, or of taking their departure
+ unmolested. The Irish troops were quite willing to continue under their
+ old chieftain, particularly as it was intimated to them that there was an
+ immediate prospect of a brisk campaign in their native island against the
+ tyrant Elizabeth, under the liberating banners of Philip. And certainly,
+ in an age where religion constituted country, these fervent Catholics
+ could scarcely be censured for taking arms against the sovereign who
+ persecuted their religion and themselves. These honest barbarians had
+ broken no oath, violated no trust, had never pretended sympathy with
+ freedom; or affection for their Queen. They had fought fiercely under the
+ chief who led them into battle&mdash;they had robbed and plundered
+ voraciously as opportunity served, and had been occasionally hanged for
+ their exploits; but Deventer and Fort Zutphen had not been confided to
+ their keeping; and it was a pleasant thought to them, that approaching
+ invasion of Ireland. "I will ruin the whole country from Holland to
+ Friesland," said Stanley to Captain Newton, "and then I will play such a
+ game in Ireland as the Queen has never seen the like all the days of her
+ life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Newton had already been solicited by Roland York to take service under
+ Parma, and had indignantly declined. Sir Edmund Carey and his men, four
+ hundred in all, refused, to a man, to take part in the monstrous treason,
+ and were allowed to leave the city. This was the case with all the English
+ officers. Stanley and York were the only gentlemen who on this occasion
+ sullied the honour of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Henchman, who had been taken prisoner in a skirmish a few days
+ before the surrender of Deventer, was now brought to that city, and
+ earnestly entreated by Tassis and by Stanley to seize this opportunity of
+ entering the service of Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You shall have great advancement and preferment," said Tassis. "His
+ Catholic Majesty has got ready very many ships for Ireland, and Sir
+ William Stanley is to be general of the expedition."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you shall choose your own preferment," said Stanley, "for I know you
+ to be a brave man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would rather," replied Henchman, "serve my prince in loyalty as a
+ beggar, than to be known and reported a rich traitor, with breach of
+ conscience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Continue so," replied Stanley, unabashed; "for this is the very principle
+ of my own enlargement: for, before, I served the devil, and now I am
+ serving God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The offers and the arguments of the Spaniard and the renegade were
+ powerless with the blunt captain, and notwithstanding "divers other
+ traitorous alledgements by Sir William for his most vile facts," as
+ Henchman expressed it, that officer remained in poverty and captivity
+ until such time as he could be exchanged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stanley subsequently attempted in various ways to defend his character. He
+ had a commission from Leicester, he said, to serve whom he chose&mdash;as
+ if the governor-general had contemplated his serving Philip II. with that
+ commission; he had a passport to go whither he liked&mdash;as if his
+ passport entitled him to take the city of Deventer along with him; he owed
+ no allegiance to the States; he was discharged from his promise to the
+ Earl; he was his own master; he wanted neither money nor preferment; he
+ had been compelled by his conscience and his duty to God to restore the
+ city to its lawful master, and so on, and so on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whether he owed the States allegiance or not, it is certain that he
+ had accepted their money to relieve himself and his troops eight days
+ before his treason. That Leicester had discharged him from his promises to
+ such an extent as to justify his surrendering a town committed to his
+ honour for safe keeping, certainly deserved no answer; that his duty to
+ conscience required him to restore the city argued a somewhat tardy
+ awakening of that monitor in the breast of the man who three months before
+ had wrested the place with the armed hand from men suspected of Catholic
+ inclinations; that his first motive however was not the mere love of
+ money, was doubtless true. Attachment to his religion, a desire to atone
+ for his sins against it, the insidious temptings of his evil spirit, York,
+ who was the chief organizer of the conspiracy, and the prospect of
+ gratifying a wild and wicked ambition&mdash;these were the springs that
+ moved him. Sums&mdash;varying from L30,000 to a pension of 1500 pistolets
+ a year&mdash;were mentioned, as the stipulated price of his treason, by
+ Norris, Wilkes, Conway, and others; but the Duke of Parma, in narrating
+ the whole affair in a private letter to the King, explicitly stated that
+ he had found Stanley "singularly disinterested."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The colonel was only actuated by religious motives," he said, "asking for
+ no reward, except that he might serve in his Majesty's army thenceforth&mdash;and
+ this is worthy to be noted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time it appears from this correspondence, that the Duke,
+ recommended, and that the King bestowed, a "merced," which Stanley did not
+ refuse; and it was very well known that to no persons in, the world was
+ Philip apt to be so generous as to men of high rank, Flemish, Walloon, or
+ English, who deserted the cause of his rebellious subjects to serve under
+ his own banners. Yet, strange to relate, almost at the very moment that
+ Stanley was communicating his fatal act of treason, in order that he might
+ open a high career for his ambition, a most brilliant destiny was about to
+ dawn upon him. The Queen had it in contemplation, in recompense for his
+ distinguished services, and by advice of Leicester, to bestow great honors
+ and titles upon him, and to appoint him Viceroy of Ireland&mdash;of that
+ very country which he was now proposing, as an enemy to his sovereign and
+ as the purchased tool of a foreign despot, to invade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stanley's subsequent fate was obscure. A price of 3000 florins was put by
+ the States upon his head and upon that of York. He went to Spain, and
+ afterwards returned to the Provinces. He was even reported to have become,
+ through the judgment of God, a lunatic, although the tale wanted
+ confirmation; and it is certain that at the close of the year he had
+ mustered his regiment under Farnese, prepared to join the Duke in the
+ great invasion of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Roland York, who was used to such practices, cheerfully consummated his
+ crime on the same day that witnessed the surrender of Deventer. He rode up
+ to the gates of that city on the morning of the 29th January, inquired
+ quietly whether Tassis was master of the place, and then galloped
+ furiously back the ten miles to his fort. Entering, he called his soldiers
+ together, bade them tear in pieces the colours of England, and follow him
+ into the city of Zutphen. Two companies of States' troops offered
+ resistance, and attempted to hold the place; but they were overpowered by
+ the English and Irish, assisted by a force of Spaniards, who, by a
+ concerted movement, made their appearance from the town. He received a
+ handsome reward, having far surpassed the Duke of Parma's expectations,
+ when he made his original offer of service. He died very suddenly, after a
+ great banquet at Deventer, in the course of the sane year, not having
+ succeeded in making his escape into Spain to live at ease on his stipend.
+ It was supposed that he was poisoned; but the charge in those days was a
+ common one, and nobody cared to investigate the subject. His body was
+ subsequently exhumed when Deventer came into the hands of the patriots&mdash;and
+ with impotent and contemptible malice hanged upon a gibbet. This was the
+ end of Roland York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma was highly gratified, as may be imagined, at such successful
+ results. "Thus Fort Zutphen," said he, "about which there have been so
+ many fisticuffs, and Deventer&mdash;which was the real object of the last
+ campaign, and which has cost the English so much blood and money, and is
+ the safety of Groningen and of all those Provinces&mdash;is now your
+ Majesty's. Moreover, the effect of this treason must be to sow great
+ distrust between the English and the rebels, who will henceforth never
+ know in whom they can confide."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma was very right in this conjuncture. Moreover, there was just then a
+ fearful run against the States. The castle of Wauw, within a league of
+ Bergen-op-Zoom, which had been entrusted to one Le Marchand, a Frenchman
+ in the service of the republic, was delivered by him to Parma for 16,000
+ florins. "'Tis a very important post," said the Duke, "and the money was
+ well laid out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loss of the city of Gelder, capital of the Province of the same name,
+ took place in the summer. This town belonged to the jurisdiction of Martin
+ Schenk, and was, his chief place of deposit for the large and
+ miscellaneous property acquired by him during his desultory, but most
+ profitable, freebooting career. The Famous partisan was then absent,
+ engaged in a lucrative job in the way of his profession. He had made a
+ contract&mdash;in a very-business-like way&mdash;with the States, to
+ defend the city of Rheinberg and all the country, round against the Duke
+ of Parma, pledging himself to keep on foot for that purpose an army of
+ 3300 foot and 700 horse. For this extensive and important operation, he
+ was to receive 20,000 florins a month from the general exchequer; and in
+ addition he was to be allowed the brandschatz&mdash;the black-mail, that
+ is to say&mdash;of the whole country-side, and the taxation upon all
+ vessels going up and down the river before Rheinberg; an ad valorem duty,
+ in short, upon all river-merchandise, assessed and collected in summary
+ fashion. A tariff thus enforced was not likely to be a mild one; and
+ although the States considered that they had got a "good penny-worth" by
+ the job, it was no easy thing to get the better, in a bargain, of the
+ vigilant Martin, who was as thrifty a speculator as he was a desperate
+ fighter. A more accomplished highwayman, artistically and enthusiastically
+ devoted to his pursuit, never lived. Nobody did his work more thoroughly&mdash;nobody
+ got himself better paid for his work&mdash;and Thomas Wilkes, that
+ excellent man of business, thought the States not likely to make much by
+ their contract. Nevertheless, it was a comfort to know that the work would
+ not be neglected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Schenk was accordingly absent, jobbing the Rheinberg siege, and in his
+ place one Aristotle Patton, a Scotch colonel in the States' service, was
+ commandant of Gelders. Now the thrifty Scot had an eye to business, too,
+ and was no more troubled with qualms of conscience than Rowland York
+ himself. Moreover, he knew himself to be in great danger of losing his
+ place, for Leicester was no friend to him, and intended to supersede him.
+ Patton had also a decided grudge against Schenk, for that truculent
+ personage had recently administered to him a drubbing, which no doubt he
+ had richly deserved. Accordingly, when; the Duke of Parma made a secret
+ offer to him of 36,000 florins if he would quietly surrender the city
+ entrusted to him, the colonel jumped at so excellent an opportunity of
+ circumventing Leicester, feeding his grudge against Martin, and making a
+ handsome fortune for himself. He knew his trade too well, however, to
+ accept the offer too eagerly, and bargained awhile for better terms, and
+ to such good purpose, that it was agreed he should have not only the
+ 36,000 florins, but all the horses, arms, plate, furniture, and other
+ moveables in the city belonging to Schenk, that he could lay his hands
+ upon. Here were revenge and solid damages for the unforgotten assault and
+ battery&mdash;for Schenk's property alone made no inconsiderable fortune&mdash;and
+ accordingly the city, towards Midsummer, was surrendered to the Seigneur
+ d'Haultepenne. Moreover, the excellent Patton had another and a loftier
+ motive. He was in love. He had also a rival. The lady of his thoughts was
+ the widow of Pontus de Noyelle, Seigneur de Bours, who had once saved the
+ citadel of Antwerp, and afterwards sold that city and himself. His rival
+ was no other than the great Seigneur de Champagny, brother of Cardinal
+ Granvelle, eminent as soldier, diplomatist, and financier, but now growing
+ old, not in affluent circumstances, and much troubled with the gout.
+ Madame de Bours had, however, accepted his hand, and had fixed the day for
+ the wedding, when the Scotchman, thus suddenly enriched, renewed a
+ previously unsuccessful suit. The widow then, partially keeping her
+ promise, actually celebrated her nuptials on the appointed evening; but,
+ to the surprise of the Provinces, she became not the 'haulte et puissante
+ dame de Champagny,' but Mrs. Aristotle Patton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this last treason neither Leicester nor the English were responsible.
+ Patton was not only a Scot, but a follower of Hohenlo, as Leicester loudly
+ protested. Le Merchant was a Frenchman. But Deventer and Zutphen were
+ places of vital importance, and Stanley an Englishman of highest
+ consideration, one who had been deemed worthy of the command in chief in
+ Leicester's absence. Moreover, a cornet in the service of the Earl's
+ nephew, Sir Robert Sidney, had been seen at Zutphen in conference with
+ Tassis; and the horrible suspicion went abroad that even the illustrious
+ name of Sidney was to be polluted also. This fear was fortunately false,
+ although the cornet was unquestionably a traitor, with whom the enemy had
+ been tampering; but the mere thought that Sir Robert Sidney could betray
+ the trust reposed in him was almost enough to make the still unburied
+ corpse of his brother arise from the dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma was right when he said that all confidence of the Netherlanders in
+ the Englishmen would now be gone, and that the Provinces would begin to
+ doubt their best friends. No fresh treasons followed, but they were
+ expected every day. An organized plot to betray the country was believed
+ in, and a howl of execration swept through the land. The noble deeds of
+ Sidney and Willoughby, and Norris and Pelham, and Roger Williams, the
+ honest and valuable services of Wilkes, the generosity and courage of
+ Leicester, were for a season forgotten. The English were denounced in
+ every city and village of the Netherlands as traitors and miscreants.
+ Respectable English merchants went from hostelry to hostelry, and from
+ town to town, and were refused a lodging for love or money. The nation was
+ put under ban. A most melancholy change from the beginning of the year,
+ when the very men who were now loudest in denunciation and fiercest in
+ hate, had been the warmest friends of Elizabeth, of England, and of
+ Leicester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Hohenlo's table the opinion was loudly expressed, even in the presence
+ of Sir Roger Williams, that it was highly improbable, if a man like
+ Stanley, of such high rank in the kingdom of England, of such great
+ connections and large means, could commit such a treason, that he could do
+ so without the knowledge and consent of her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Barneveld, in council of state, declared that Leicester, by his
+ restrictive letter of 24th November, had intended to carry the authority
+ over the republic into England, in order to dispose of everything at his
+ pleasure, in conjunction with the English cabinet-council, and that the
+ country had never been so cheated by the French as it had now been by the
+ English, and that their government had become insupportable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Councillor Carl Roorda maintained at the table of Elector Truchsess that
+ the country had fallen 'de tyrannide in tyrrannidem;' and&mdash;if they
+ had spurned the oppression of the Spaniards and the French&mdash;that it
+ was now time to, rebel against the English. Barneveld and Buys loudly
+ declared that the Provinces were able to protect themselves without
+ foreign assistance, and that it was very injurious to impress a contrary
+ opinion upon the public mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole college of the States-General came before the state-council, and
+ demanded the name of the man to whom the Earl's restrictive letter had
+ been delivered&mdash;that document by which the governor had dared
+ surreptitiously to annul the authority which publicly he had delegated to
+ that body, and thus to deprive it of the power of preventing anticipated
+ crimes. After much colloquy the name of Brackel was given, and, had not
+ the culprit fortunately been absent, his life might have, been in danger,
+ for rarely had grave statesmen been so thoroughly infuriated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No language can exaggerate the consequences of this wretched treason.
+ Unfortunately, too; the abject condition to which the English troops had
+ been reduced by the niggardliness of their sovereign was an additional
+ cause of danger. Leicester was gone, and since her favourite was no longer
+ in the Netherlands, the Queen seemed to forget that there was a single
+ Englishman upon that fatal soil. In five months not one penny had been
+ sent to her troops. While the Earl had been there one hundred and forty
+ thousand pounds had been sent in seven or eight months. After his
+ departure not five thousand pounds were sent in one half year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English soldiers, who had fought so well in every Flemish battle-field
+ of freedom, had become&mdash;such as were left of them&mdash;mere
+ famishing half naked vagabonds and marauders. Brave soldiers had been
+ changed by their sovereign into brigands, and now the universal odium
+ which suddenly attached itself to the English name converted them into
+ outcasts. Forlorn and crippled creatures swarmed about the Provinces, but
+ were forbidden to come through the towns, and so wandered about, robbing
+ hen-roosts and pillaging the peasantry. Many deserted to the enemy. Many
+ begged their way to England, and even to the very gates of the palace, and
+ exhibited their wounds and their misery before the eyes of that good Queen
+ Bess who claimed to be the mother of her subjects,&mdash;and begged for
+ bread in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English cavalry, dwindled now to a body of five hundred, starving and
+ mutinous, made a foray into Holland, rather as highwaymen than soldiers.
+ Count Maurice commanded their instant departure, and Hohenlo swore that if
+ the order were not instantly obeyed, he would put himself at the head of
+ his troops and cut every man of them to pieces. A most painful and
+ humiliating condition for brave men who had been fighting the battles of
+ their Queen and of the republic, to behold themselves&mdash;through the
+ parsimony of the one and the infuriated sentiment of the other&mdash;compelled
+ to starve, to rob, or to be massacred by those whom they had left their
+ homes to defend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, honest Wilkes, ever watchful of his duty, succeeded in borrowing
+ eight hundred pounds sterling for two months, by "pawning his own carcase"
+ as he expressed himself. This gave the troopers about thirty shillings a
+ man, with which relief they became, for a time, contented and well
+ disposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is this picture exaggerated? Is it drawn by pencils hostile to the English
+ nation or the English Queen? It is her own generals and confidential
+ counsellors who have told a story in all its painful details, which has
+ hardly found a place in other chronicles. The parsimony of the great Queen
+ must ever remain a blemish on her character, and it was never more
+ painfully exhibited than towards her brave soldiers in Flanders in the
+ year 1587. Thomas Wilkes, a man of truth, and a man of accounts, had
+ informed Elizabeth that the expenses of one year's war, since Leicester
+ had been governor-general, had amounted to exactly five hundred and
+ seventy-nine thousand three hundred and sixty pounds and nineteen
+ shillings, of which sum one hundred and forty-six thousand three hundred
+ and eighty-six pounds and eleven shillings had been spent by her Majesty,
+ and the balance had been paid, or was partly owing by the States. These
+ were not agreeable figures, but the figures of honest accountants rarely
+ flatter, and Wilkes was not one of those financiers who have the wish or
+ the gift to make things pleasant. He had transmitted the accounts just as
+ they had been delivered, certified by the treasurers of the States and by
+ the English paymasters, and the Queen was appalled at the sum-totals. She
+ could never proceed with such a war as that, she said, and she declined a
+ loan of sixty thousand pounds which the States requested, besides stoutly
+ refusing to advance her darling Robin a penny to pay off the mortgages
+ upon two-thirds of his estates, on which the equity of redemption was fast
+ expiring, or to give him the slightest help in furnishing him forth anew
+ for the wars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet not one of her statesmen doubted that these Netherland battles were
+ English battles, almost as much as if the fighting-ground had been the
+ Isle of Wight or the coast of Kent, the charts of which the statesmen and
+ generals of Spain were daily conning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilkes, too, while defending Leicester stoutly behind his back, doing his
+ best, to explain his short-comings, lauding his courage and generosity,
+ and advocating his beloved theory of popular sovereignty with much
+ ingenuity and eloquence, had told him the truth to his face. Although
+ assuring him that if he came back soon, he might rule the States "as a
+ schoolmaster doth his boys," he did not fail to set before him the
+ disastrous effects of his sudden departure and of his protracted absence;
+ he had painted in darkest colours the results of the Deventer treason, he
+ had unveiled the cabals against his authority, he had repeatedly and
+ vehemently implored his return; he had, informed the Queen, that
+ notwithstanding some errors of, administration, he was much the fittest
+ man to represent her in the Netherlands, and, that he could accomplish, by
+ reason of his experience, more in three months than any other man could do
+ in a year. He bad done his best to reconcile the feuds which existed
+ between him and important personages in the Netherlands, he had been the
+ author of the complimentary letters sent to him in the name of the
+ States-General&mdash;to the great satisfaction of the Queen&mdash;but he
+ had not given up his friendship with Sir John Norris, because he said "the
+ virtues of the man made him as worthy of love as any one living, and
+ because the more he knew him, the more he had cause to affect and to
+ admire him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the unpardonable offence, and for this, and for having told the
+ truth about the accounts, Leicester denounced Wilkes to the Queen as a
+ traitor and a hypocrite, and threatened repeatedly to take his life. He
+ had even the meanness to prejudice Burghley against him&mdash;by
+ insinuating to the Lord-Treasurer that he too had been maligned by Wilkes&mdash;and
+ thus most effectually damaged the character of the plain-spoken councillor
+ with the Queen and many of her advisers; notwithstanding that he
+ plaintively besought her to "allow him to reiterate his sorry song, as
+ doth the cuckoo, that she would please not condemn her poor servant
+ unheard."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediate action was taken on the Deventer treason, and on the general
+ relations between the States-General and the English government. Barneveld
+ immediately drew up a severe letter to the Earl of Leicester. On the 2nd
+ February Wilkes came by chance into the assembly of the States-General,
+ with the rest of the councillors, and found Barneveld just demanding the
+ public reading of that document. The letter was read. Wilkes then rose and
+ made a few remarks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The letter seems rather sharp upon his Excellency," he observed. "There
+ is not a word in it," answered Barneveld curtly, "that is not perfectly
+ true;" and with this he cut the matter short, and made a long speech upon
+ other matters which were then before the assembly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilkes, very anxious as to the effect of the letter, both upon public
+ feeling in England and upon his own position as English councillor, waited
+ immediately upon Count Maurice, President van der Myle, and upon Villiers
+ the clergyman, and implored their interposition to prevent the
+ transmission of the epistle. They promised to make an effort to delay its
+ despatch or to mitigate its tone. A fortnight afterwards, however, Wilkes
+ learned with dismay, that the document (the leading passages of which will
+ be given hereafter) had been sent to its destination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, a consultation of civilians and of the family council of Count
+ Maurice was held, and it was determined that the Count should assume the
+ title of Prince more formally than he had hitherto done, in order that the
+ actual head of the Nassaus might be superior in rank to Leicester or to
+ any man who could be sent from England. Maurice was also appointed by the
+ States, provisionally, governor-general, with Hohenlo for his
+ lieutenant-general. That formidable personage, now fully restored to
+ health, made himself very busy in securing towns and garrisons for the
+ party of Holland, and in cashiering all functionaries suspected of English
+ tendencies. Especially he became most intimate with Count Moeurs,
+ stadholder of Utrecht&mdash;the hatred of which individual and his wife
+ towards Leicester and the English nation; springing originally from the
+ unfortunate babble of Otheman, had grown more intense than ever,&mdash;"banquetting
+ and feasting" with him all day long, and concocting a scheme; by which,
+ for certain considerations, the province of Utrecht was to be annexed to
+ Holland under the perpetual stadholderate of Prince Maurice.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Defect of enjoying the flattery, of his inferiors in station
+ The sapling was to become the tree
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. 1587
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Leicester in England&mdash;Trial of the Queen of Scots&mdash;Fearful
+ Perplexity at the English Court&mdash;Infatuation and Obstinacy of the
+ Queen&mdash;Netherland Envoys in England&mdash;Queen's bitter Invective
+ against them&mdash;Amazement of the Envoys&mdash;They consult with her chief
+ Councillors&mdash;Remarks of Burghley and Davison&mdash;Fourth of February
+ Letter from the States&mdash;Its severe Language towards Leicester&mdash;
+ Painful Position of the Envoys at Court&mdash;Queen's Parsimony towards
+ Leicester.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The scene shifts, for a brief interval, to England. Leicester had reached
+ the court late in November. Those "blessed beams," under whose shade he
+ was wont to find so much "refreshment and nutrition," had again fallen
+ with full radiance upon him. "Never since I was born," said he, "did I
+ receive a more gracious welcome."&mdash;[Leicester to 'Wilkes, 4 Dec.
+ 1587. (S. P. Office MS)]&mdash;Alas, there was not so much benignity for
+ the starving English soldiers, nor for the Provinces, which were fast
+ growing desperate; but although their cause was so intimately connected
+ with the "great cause," which then occupied Elizabeth, almost to the
+ exclusion of other matter, it was, perhaps, not wonderful, although
+ unfortunate, that for a time the Netherlands should be neglected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "daughter of debate" had at last brought herself, it was supposed,
+ within the letter of the law, and now began those odious scenes of
+ hypocrisy on the part of Elizabeth, that frightful comedy&mdash;more
+ melancholy even than the solemn tragedy which it preceded and followed&mdash;which
+ must ever remain the darkest passage in the history of the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is unnecessary, in these pages, to make more than a passing allusion to
+ the condemnation and death of the Queen of Scots. Who doubts her
+ participation in the Babington conspiracy? Who doubts that she was the
+ centre of one endless conspiracy by Spain and Rome against the throne and
+ life of Elizabeth? Who doubts that her long imprisonment in England was a
+ violation of all law, all justice, all humanity? Who doubts that the
+ fineing, whipping, torturing, hanging, embowelling of men, women, and
+ children, guilty of no other crime than adhesion to the Catholic faith,
+ had assisted the Pope and Philip, and their band of English, Scotch, and
+ Irish conspirators, to shake Elizabeth's throne and endanger her life? Who
+ doubts that; had the English sovereign been capable of conceiving the
+ great thought of religious toleration, her reign would have been more
+ glorious than, it was, the cause of Protestantism and freedom more
+ triumphant, the name of Elizabeth Tudor dearer to human hearts? Who doubts
+ that there were many enlightened and noble spirits among her Protestant
+ subjects who lifted up their voices, over and over again, in parliament
+ and out of it, to denounce that wicked persecution exercised upon their
+ innocent Catholic brethren, which was fast converting loyal Englishmen,
+ against their will, into traitors and conspirators? Yet who doubts that it
+ would have required, at exactly that moment, and in the midst of that
+ crisis; more elevation of soul than could fairly be predicated of any
+ individual, for Elizabeth in 1587 to pardon Mary, or to relax in the
+ severity of her legislation towards English Papists?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet, although a display of sublime virtue, such as the world has rarely
+ seen, was not to be expected, it was reasonable to look for honest and
+ royal dealing, from a great sovereign, brought at last face to face with a
+ great event. The "great cause" demanded, a great, straightforward blow. It
+ was obvious, however, that it would be difficult, in the midst of the
+ tragedy and the comedy, for the Netherland business to come fairly before
+ her Majesty. "Touching the Low Country causes," said Leicester; "very
+ little is done yet, by reason of the continued business we have had about
+ the Queen of Scots' matters. All the speech I have had with her Majesty
+ hitherto touching those causes hath been but private."&mdash;[Leicester to
+ Wilkes, 4 Des 1586. (S. P. Office MS.)]&mdash;Walsingham, longing for
+ retirement, not only on account of his infinite grief for the death of Sir
+ Philip Sidney, "which hath been the cause;" he said, "that I have ever
+ since betaken myself into solitariness, and withdrawn; from public
+ affairs," but also by reason of the perverseness an difficulty manifested
+ in the gravest affairs by the sovereign he so faithfully served, sent
+ information, that, notwithstanding the arrival of some of the States'
+ deputies, Leicester was persuading her Majesty to proceed first in the
+ great cause. "Certain principal persons, chosen as committees," he said,
+ "of both Houses are sent as humble suitors, to her Majesty to desire that
+ she would be pleased to give order for the execution of the Scottish
+ Queen. Her Majesty made answer that she was loath to proceed in so violent
+ a course against the said Queen; as the taking away of her life, and
+ therefore prayed them to think of some other way which might be for her
+ own and their safety. They replied, no other way but her execution. Her
+ Majesty, though she yielded no answer to this their latter reply, is
+ contented to give order that the proclamation be published, and so also it
+ is hoped that she, will be moved by this, their earnest instance to
+ proceed to the thorough ending of the cause."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the cause went slowly on to its thorough ending. And when "no other
+ way" could be thought of but to take Mary's life, and when "no other way
+ of taking that life could be devised," at Elizabeth's suggestion, except
+ by public execution, when none of the gentlemen "of the association," nor
+ Paulet, nor Drury&mdash;how skilfully soever their "pulses had been felt"
+ by Elizabeth's command&mdash;would commit assassination to serve a Queen
+ who was capable of punishing them afterwards for the murder, the great
+ cause came to its inevitable conclusion, and Mary Stuart was executed by
+ command of Elizabeth Tudor. The world may continue to differ as to the
+ necessity of the execution but it has long since pronounced a unanimous
+ verdict as to the respective display of royal dignity by the two Queens
+ upon that great occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this interval the Netherland matter, almost as vital to England as
+ the execution of Mary, was comparatively neglected. It was not absolutely
+ in abeyance, but the condition of the Queen's mind coloured every
+ state-affair with its tragic hues. Elizabeth, harassed, anxious, dreaming
+ dreams, and enacting a horrible masquerade, was in the worst possible
+ temper to be approached by the envoys. She was furious with the
+ Netherlanders for having maltreated her favourite. She was still more
+ furious because their war was costing so much money. Her disposition
+ became so uncertain, her temper so ungovernable, as to drive her
+ counsellors to their wit's ends. Burghley confessed himself "weary of his
+ miserable life," and protested "that the only desire he had in the world
+ was to be delivered from the ungrateful burthen of service, which her
+ Majesty laid upon him so very heavily." Walsingham wished himself "well
+ established in Basle." The Queen set them all together by the ears. She
+ wrangled spitefully over the sum-totals from the Netherlands; she worried
+ Leicester, she scolded Burghley for defending Leicester, and Leicester
+ abused Burghley for taking part against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lord-Treasurer, overcome with "grief which pierced both his body and
+ his heart," battled his way&mdash;as best he could&mdash;through the
+ throng of dangers which beset the path of England in that great crisis. It
+ was most obvious to every statesman in the realm that this was not the
+ time&mdash;when the gauntlet had been thrown full in the face of Philip
+ and Sixtus and all Catholicism, by the condemnation of Mary&mdash;to leave
+ the Netherland cause "at random," and these outer bulwarks of her own
+ kingdom insufficiently protected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Majesty will hear," wrote Parma to Philip, "of the disastrous,
+ lamentable, and pitiful end of the poor Queen of Scots. Although for her
+ it will be immortal glory, and she will be placed among the number of the
+ many martyrs whose blood has been shed in the kingdom of England, and be
+ crowned in Heaven with a diadem more precious than the one she wore on
+ earth, nevertheless one cannot repress one's natural emotions. I believe
+ firmly that this cruel deed will be the concluding crime of the many which
+ that Englishwoman has committed, and that our Lord will be pleased that
+ she shall at last receive the chastisement which she has these many long
+ years deserved, and which has been reserved till now, for her greater ruin
+ and confusion."&mdash;[Parma to Philip IL, 22 March. 1587. (Arch. de
+ Simancas, MS.)]&mdash;And with this, the Duke proceeded to discuss the all
+ important and rapidly-preparing invasion of England. Farnese was not the
+ man to be deceived by the affected reluctance of Elizabeth before Mary's
+ scaffold, although he was soon to show that he was himself a master in the
+ science of grimace. For Elizabeth&mdash;more than ever disposed to be
+ friends with Spain and Rome, now that war to the knife was made inevitable&mdash;was
+ wistfully regarding that trap of negotiation, against which all her best
+ friends were endeavouring to warn her. She was more ill-natured than ever
+ to the Provinces, she turned her back upon the Warnese, she affronted
+ Henry III. by affecting to believe in the fable of his envoy's complicity
+ in the Stafford conspiracy against her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pray God to open her eyes," said Walsingham, "to see the evident peril
+ of the course she now holdeth . . . . If it had pleased her to have
+ followed the advice given her touching the French ambassador, our ships
+ had been released . . . . but she has taken a very strange course by
+ writing a very sharp letter unto the French King, which I fear will cause
+ him to give ear to those of the League, and make himself a party with
+ them, seeing so little regard had to him here. Your Lordship may see that
+ our courage doth greatly increase, for that we make no difficulty to fall
+ out with all the world . . . . I never saw her worse affected to the poor
+ King of Navarre, and yet doth she seek in no sort to yield contentment to
+ the French King. If to offend all the world;" repeated the Secretary
+ bitterly, "be it good cause of government, then can we not do amiss . . .
+ . I never found her less disposed to take a course of prevention of the
+ approaching mischiefs toward this realm than at this present. And to be
+ plain with you, there is none here that hath either credit or courage to
+ deal effectually with her in any of her great causes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus distracted by doubts and dangers, at war with her best friends, with
+ herself, and with all-the world, was Elizabeth during the dark days and
+ months which, preceded and followed the execution of the Scottish Queen.
+ If the great fight was at last to be fought triumphantly through, it was
+ obvious that England was to depend upon Englishmen of all ranks and
+ classes, upon her prudent and far-seeing statesmen, upon her nobles and
+ her adventurers, on her Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Norman blood ever mounting
+ against, oppression, on Howard and Essex, Drake and Williams, Norris, and
+ Willoughby, upon high-born magnates, plebeian captains, London merchants,
+ upon yeomen whose limbs were made in England, and upon Hollanders and
+ Zeelanders whose fearless mariners were to swarm to the protection of her
+ coasts, quite as much in that year of anxious expectation as upon the
+ great Queen herself. Unquestionable as were her mental capacity and her
+ more than woman's courage, when fairly, brought face, to face with the
+ danger, it was fortunately not on one man or woman's brain and arm that
+ England's salvation depended in that crisis of her fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the Provinces, no one ventured to speak very boldly in their
+ defence. "When I lay before her the peril," said Walsingham, "she scorneth
+ at it. The hope of a peace with Spain has put her into a most dangerous
+ security." Nor would any man now assume responsibility. The fate of
+ Davison&mdash;of the man who had already in so detestable a manner been
+ made the scape-goat for Leicester's sins in the Netherlands, and who had
+ now been so barbarously sacrificed by the Queen for faithfully obeying her
+ orders in regard to the death-warrant, had sickened all courtiers and
+ counsellors for the time. "The late severe, dealing used by her Highness
+ towards Mr. Secretary Davison," said Walsingham to Wilkes, "maketh us very
+ circumspect and careful not to proceed in anything but wherein we receive
+ direction from herself, and therefore you must not find it strange if we
+ now be more sparing than heretofore hath been accustomed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such being the portentous state of the political atmosphere, and such the
+ stormy condition of the royal mind, it may be supposed that the interviews
+ of the Netherland envoys with her Majesty during this period were not
+ likely to be genial. Exactly at the most gloomy moment&mdash;thirteen days
+ before the execution of Mary&mdash;they came first into Elizabeth's
+ presence at Greenwich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The envoys were five in number, all of them experienced and able statesmen&mdash;Zuylen
+ van Nyvelt, Joos de Menyn, Nicasius de Silla, Jacob Valck, and Vitus van
+ Kammings. The Queen was in the privy council-chamber, attended by the
+ admiral of England, Lord Thomas Howard, Lord Hunsdon, great-chamberlain,
+ Sir Christopher Hatton, vice-chamberlain, Secretary Davison, and many
+ other persons of distinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letters of credence were duly presented, but it was obvious from the
+ beginning of the interview that the Queen was ill-disposed toward the
+ deputies, and had not only been misinformed as to matters of fact, but as
+ to the state of feeling of the Netherlanders and of the States-General
+ towards herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Menyu, however, who was an orator by profession&mdash;being pensionary of
+ Dort&mdash;made, in the name of his colleagues, a brief but pregnant
+ speech, to which the Queen listened attentively, although, with frequent
+ indications of anger and impatience. He commenced by observing that the
+ United Provinces still entertained the hope that her Majesty would
+ conclude, upon further thoughts, to accept the sovereignty over them, with
+ reasonable conditions; but the most important passages of his address were
+ those relating to the cost of the war. "Besides our stipulated
+ contributions," said the pensionary, "of 200,000 florins the month, we
+ have furnished 500,000 as an extraordinary grant; making for the year
+ 2,900,000 florins, and this over and above the particular and special
+ expenditures of the Provinces, and other sums for military purposes. We
+ confess, Madam, that the succour of your Majesty is a truly royal one, and
+ that there have been few princes in history who have given such assistance
+ to their neighbours unjustly oppressed. It is certain that by means of
+ that help, joined with the forces of the United Provinces, the Earl of
+ Leicester has been able to arrest the course of the Duke of Parma's
+ victories and to counteract his designs. Nevertheless, it appears, Madam,
+ that these forces have not been sufficient to drive the enemy out of the
+ country. We are obliged, for regular garrison work and defence of cities,
+ to keep; up an army of at least 27,000 foot and 3500 horse. Of this number
+ your Majesty pays 5000 foot and 1000 horse, and we are now commissioned,
+ Madam, humbly to request an increase of your regular succour during the
+ war to 10,000 foot and 2000 horse. We also implore the loan of L60,000
+ sterling, in order to assist us in maintaining for the coming season a
+ sufficient force in the field."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, in brief, was the oration of pensionary Menyn, delivered in the
+ French language. He had scarcely concluded, when the Queen&mdash;evidently
+ in a great passion&mdash;rose to her feet, and without any hesitation,
+ replied in a strain of vehement eloquence in the same tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now I am not deceived, gentlemen," she said, "and that which I have been
+ fearing has occurred. Our common adage, which we have in England, is a
+ very good one. When one fears that an evil is coming, the sooner it
+ arrives the better. Here is a quarter of a year that I have been expecting
+ you, and certainly for the great benefit I have conferred on you, you have
+ exhibited a great ingratitude, and I consider myself very ill treated by
+ you. 'Tis very strange that you should begin by soliciting still greater
+ succour without rendering me any satisfaction for your past actions, which
+ have been so extraordinary, that I swear by the living God I think it
+ impossible to find peoples or states more ungrateful or ill-advised than
+ yourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have sent you this year fifteen, sixteen, aye seventeen or eighteen
+ thousand men. You have left them without payment, you have let some of
+ them die of hunger, driven others to such desperation that they have
+ deserted to the enemy. Is it not mortifying for the English nation and a
+ great shame for you that Englishmen should say that they have found more
+ courtesy from Spaniards than from Netherlanders? Truly, I tell you frankly
+ that I will never endure such indignities. Rather will I act according to
+ my will, and you may do exactly, as you think best.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I chose, I could do something very good without you, although some
+ persons are so fond of saying that it was quite necessary for the Queen of
+ England to do what she does for her own protection. No, no! Disabuse
+ yourselves of that impression. These are but false persuasions. Believe
+ boldly that I can play an excellent game without your assistance, and a
+ better one than I ever did with it! Nevertheless, I do not choose to do
+ that, nor do I wish you so much harm. But likewise do I not choose that
+ you should hold such language to me. It is true that I should not wish the
+ Spaniard so near me if he should be my enemy. But why should I not live in
+ peace, if we were to be friends to each other? At the commencement of my
+ reign we lived honourably together, the King of Spain and I, and he even
+ asked me to, marry him, and, after that, we lived a long time very
+ peacefully, without any attempt having been made against my life. If we
+ both choose, we can continue so to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On the other hand, I sent you the Earl of Leicester, as lieutenant of my
+ forces, and my intention was that he should have exact knowledge of your
+ finances and contributions. But, on the contrary, he has never known
+ anything about them, and you have handled them in your own manner and
+ amongst yourselves. You have given him the title of governor, in order,
+ under this name, to cast all your evils on his head. That title he
+ accepted against my will, by doing which he ran the risk of losing his
+ life, and his estates, and the grace and favour of his Princess, which was
+ more important to him than all. But he did it in order to maintain your
+ tottering state. And what authority, I pray you, have you given him? A
+ shadowy authority, a purely imaginary one. This is but mockery. He is, at
+ any rate, a gentleman, a man of honour and of counsel. You had no right to
+ treat him thus. If I had accepted the title which you wished to give me,
+ by the living God, I would not have suffered you so to treat me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you are so badly advised that when there is a man of worth who
+ discovers your tricks you wish him ill, and make an outcry against him;
+ and yet some of you, in order to save your money, and others in the hope
+ of bribes, have been favouring the Spaniard, and doing very wicked work.
+ No, believe me that God will punish those who for so great a benefit wish
+ to return me so much evil. Believe, boldly too, that the King of Spain
+ will never trust men who have abandoned the party to which they belonged,
+ and from which they have received so many benefits, and will never believe
+ a word of what they promise him. Yet, in order to cover up their filth,
+ they spread the story that the Queen of England is thinking of treating
+ for peace without their knowledge. No, I would rather be dead than that
+ any one should have occasion to say that I had not kept my promise. But
+ princes must listen to both sides, and that can be done without breach of
+ faith. For they transact business in a certain way, and with a princely
+ intelligence, such as private persons cannot imitate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are States, to be sure, but private individuals in regard to princes.
+ Certainly, I would never choose to do anything without your knowledge, and
+ I would never allow the authority which you have among yourselves, nor
+ your privileges, nor your statutes, to be infringed. Nor will I allow you
+ to be perturbed in your consciences. What then would you more of me? You
+ have issued a proclamation in your country that no one is to talk of
+ peace. Very well, very good. But permit princes likewise to do as they
+ shall think best for the security of their state, provided it does you no
+ injury. Among us princes we are not wont to make such long orations as you
+ do, but you ought to be content with the few words that we bestow upon
+ you, and make yourself quiet thereby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I ever do anything for you again, I choose to be treated more
+ honourably. I shall therefore appoint some personages of my council to
+ communicate with you. And in the first place I choose to hear and see for
+ myself what has taken place already, and have satisfaction about that,
+ before I make any reply to what you have said to me as to greater
+ assistance. And so I will leave you to-day, without troubling you
+ further."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this her Majesty swept from the apartment, leaving the deputies
+ somewhat astounded at the fierce but adroit manner in which the tables had
+ for a moment been turned upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was certainly a most unexpected blow, this charge of the States having
+ left the English soldiers&mdash;whose numbers the Queen had so suddenly
+ multiplied by three&mdash;unpaid and unfed. Those Englishmen who, as
+ individuals, had entered the States' service, had been&mdash;like all the
+ other troops regularly paid. This distinctly appeared from the statements
+ of her own counsellors and generals. On the other hand, the Queen's
+ contingent, now dwindled to about half their original number, had been
+ notoriously unpaid for nearly six months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This has already been made sufficiently clear from the private letters of
+ most responsible persons. That these soldiers were starving, deserting;
+ and pillaging, was, alas! too true; but the envoys of the States hardly
+ expected to be censured by her Majesty, because she had neglected to pay
+ her own troops. It was one of the points concerning which they had been
+ especially enjoined to complain, that the English cavalry, converted into
+ highwaymen by want of pay, had been plundering the peasantry, and we have
+ seen that Thomas Wilkes had "pawned his carcase" to provide for their
+ temporary relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the insinuation that prominent personages in the country
+ had been tampered with by the enemy, the envoys were equally astonished by
+ such an attack. The great Deventer treason had not yet been heard of in
+ England for it had occurred only a week before this first interview&mdash;but
+ something of the kind was already feared; for the slippery dealings of
+ York and Stanley with Tassis and Parma, had long been causing painful
+ anxiety, and had formed the subject of repeated remonstrances on the part
+ of the 'States' to Leicester and to the Queen. The deputies were hardly,
+ prepared therefore to defend their own people against dealing privately
+ with the King of Spain. The only man suspected of such practices was
+ Leicester's own favourite and financier, Jacques Ringault, whom the Earl
+ had persisted in employing against the angry remonstrances of the States,
+ who believed him to be a Spanish spy; and the man was now in prison, and
+ threatened with capital punishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To suppose that Buys or Barneveld, Roorda, Meetkerk, or any other leading
+ statesman in the Netherlands, was contemplating a private arrangement with
+ Philip II., was as ludicrous a conception as to imagine Walsingham a
+ pensioner of the Pope, or Cecil in league with the Duke of Guise. The end
+ and aim of the States' party was war. In war they not only saw the safety
+ of the reformed religion, but the only means of maintaining the commercial
+ prosperity of the commonwealth. The whole correspondence of the times
+ shows that no politician in the country dreamed of peace, either by public
+ or secret negotiation. On the other hand&mdash;as will be made still
+ clearer than ever&mdash;the Queen was longing for peace, and was treating
+ for peace at that moment through private agents, quite without the
+ knowledge of the States, and in spite of her indignant disavowals in her
+ speech to the envoys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet if Elizabeth could have had the privilege of entering&mdash;as we are
+ about to do&mdash;into the private cabinet of that excellent King of
+ Spain, with whom, she had once been such good friends, who had even sought
+ her hand in marriage, and with whom she saw no reason whatever why she
+ should not live at peace, she might have modified her expressions an this
+ subject. Certainly, if she could have looked through the piles of papers&mdash;as
+ we intend to do&mdash;which lay upon that library-table, far beyond the
+ seas and mountains, she would have perceived some objections to the scheme
+ of living at peace with that diligent letter-writer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps, had she known how the subtle Farnese was about to express himself
+ concerning the fast-approaching execution of Mary, and the as inevitably
+ impending destruction of "that Englishwoman" through the schemes of his
+ master and himself, she would have paid less heed to the sentiments
+ couched in most exquisite Italian which Alexander was at the same time
+ whispering in her ear, and would have taken less offence at the blunt
+ language of the States-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, for the present, Elizabeth would give no better answer than
+ the hot-tempered one which had already somewhat discomfited the deputies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days afterwards, the five envoys had an interview with several members
+ of her Majesty's council, in the private apartment of the Lord-Treasurer
+ in Greenwich Palace. Burghley, being indisposed, was lying upon his bed.
+ Leicester, Admiral Lord Howard, Lord Hunsden, Sir Christopher Hatton, Lord
+ Buckhurst, and Secretary Davison, were present, and the Lord-Treasurer
+ proposed that the conversation should be in Latin, that being the common
+ language most familiar to them all. Then, turning over the leaves of the
+ report, a copy of which lay on his bed, he asked the envoys, whether, in
+ case her Majesty had not sent over the assistance which she had done under
+ the Earl of Leicester, their country would not have been utterly ruined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To all appearance, yes," replied Menyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But," continued Burghley, still running through the pages of the
+ document, and here and there demanding an explanation of an obscure
+ passage or two, "you are now proposing to her Majesty to send 10,000 foot
+ and 2000 horse, and to lend L60,000. This is altogether monstrous and
+ excessive. Nobody will ever dare even to speak to her Majesty on the
+ subject. When you first came in 1585, you asked for 12,000 men, but you
+ were fully authorized to accept 6000. No doubt that is the case now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "On that occasion," answered Menyn, "our main purpose was to induce her
+ Majesty to accept the sovereignty, or at least the perpetual protection of
+ our country. Failing in that we broached the third point, and not being
+ able to get 12,000 soldiers we compounded for 5000, the agreement being
+ subject to ratification by our principals. We gave ample security in shape
+ of the mortgaged cities. But experience has shown us that these forces and
+ this succour are insufficient. We have therefore been sent to beg her
+ Majesty to make up the contingent to the amount originally requested."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But we are obliged to increase the garrisons in the cautionary towns,"
+ said one of the English councillors, "as 800 men in a city like Flushing
+ are very little."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pardon me," replied Valck, "the burghers are not enemies but friends to
+ her Majesty and to the English nation. They are her dutiful subjects like
+ all the inhabitants of the Netherlands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is quite true," said Burghley, after having made some critical remarks
+ upon the military system of the Provinces, "and a very common adage, 'quod
+ tunc tua res agitur, paries cum proximus ardet,' but, nevertheless, this
+ war principally concerns you. Therefore you are bound to do your utmost to
+ meet its expenses in your own country, quite as much as a man who means to
+ build a house is expected to provide the stone and timber himself. But the
+ States have not done their best. They have not at the appointed time come
+ forward with their extraordinary contributions for the last campaign. How
+ many men," he asked, "are required for garrisons in all the fortresses and
+ cities, and for the field?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But," interposed Lord Hunsden, "not half so many men are needed in the
+ garrisons; for the burghers ought to be able to defend their own cities.
+ Moreover it is probable that your ordinary contributions might be
+ continued and doubled and even tripled."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And on the whole," observed the Lord Admiral, "don't you think that the
+ putting an army in the field might be dispensed with for this year? Her
+ Majesty at present must get together and equip a fleet of war vessels
+ against the King of Spain, which will be an excessively large pennyworth,
+ besides the assistance which she gives her neighbours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, indeed," said Secretary Davison, "it would be difficult to
+ exaggerate the enormous expense which her Majesty must encounter this year
+ for defending and liberating her own kingdoms against the King of Spain.
+ That monarch is making great naval preparations, and is treating all
+ Englishmen in the most hostile manner. We are on the brink of declared war
+ with Spain, with the French King, who is arresting all English persons and
+ property within his kingdom, and with Scotland, all which countries are
+ understood to have made a league together on account of the Queen of
+ Scotland, whom it will be absolutely necessary to put to death in order to
+ preserve the life of her Majesty, and are about to make war upon England.
+ This matter then will cost us, the current year, at least eight hundred
+ thousand pounds sterling. Nevertheless her Majesty is sure to assist you
+ so far as her means allow; and I, for my part, will do my best to keep her
+ Majesty well disposed to your cause, even as I have ever done, as you well
+ know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus spoke poor Davison, but a few days before the fatal 8th of February,
+ little dreaming that the day for his influencing the disposition of her
+ Majesty would soon be gone, and that he was himself to be crushed for ever
+ by the blow which was about to destroy the captive Queen. The political
+ combinations resulting from the tragedy were not to be exactly as he
+ foretold, but there is little doubt that in him the Netherlands, and
+ Leicester, and the Queen of England, were to lose an honest, diligent, and
+ faithful friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, gentlemen," said the Lord-Treasurer, after a few more questions
+ concerning the financial abilities of the States had been asked and
+ answered, "it is getting late into the evening, and time for you all to
+ get back to London. Let me request you, as soon as may be, to draw up some
+ articles in writing, to which we will respond immediately."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Menyn then, in the name of the deputies, expressed thanks for the urbanity
+ shown them in the conference, and spoke of the deep regret with which they
+ had perceived, by her Majesty's answer two days before, that she was so
+ highly offended with them and with the States-General. He then,
+ notwithstanding Burghley's previous hint as to the lateness of the hour,
+ took up the Queen's answer, point by point, contradicted all its
+ statements, appealing frequently to Lord Leicester for confirmation of
+ what he advanced, and concluded by begging the councillors to defend the
+ cause of the Netherlands to her Majesty, Burghley requested them to make
+ an excuse or reply to the Queen in writing, and send it to him to present.
+ Thus the conference terminated, and the envoys returned to London. They
+ were fully convinced by the result of, these interviews, as they told
+ their constituents, that her Majesty, by false statements and reports of
+ persons either grossly ignorant or not having the good of the commonwealth
+ before their eyes, had been very incorrectly informed as to the condition
+ of the Provinces, and of the great efforts made by the States-General to
+ defend their country against the enemy: It was obvious, they said, that
+ their measures had been exaggerated in order to deceive the Queen and her
+ council.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus statements and counter-statements, protocols and apostilles, were
+ glibly exchanged; the heap of diplomatic rubbish was rising higher and
+ higher, and the councillors and envoys, pleased with their work, were
+ growing more and more amicable, when the court was suddenly startled by
+ the news of the Deventer and Zutphen treason. The intelligence was
+ accompanied by the famous 4th of February letter, which descended, like a
+ bombshell, in the midst of the decorous council-chamber. Such language had
+ rarely been addressed to the Earl of Leicester, and; through him; to the
+ imperious sovereign herself, as the homely truths with which Barneveld,
+ speaking with the voice of the States-General, now smote the delinquent
+ governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My Lord," said he, "it is notorious; and needs no illustration whatever,
+ with what true confidence and unfeigned affection we received your
+ Excellency in our land; the States-General, the States-Provincial, the
+ magistrates, and the communities of the chief cities in the United
+ Provinces, all uniting to do honour to her serene Majesty of England and
+ to yourself, and to confer upon you the government-general over us. And
+ although we should willingly have placed some limitations upon the
+ authority thus bestowed on you; in, order that by such a course your own
+ honour and the good and constitutional condition of the country might be
+ alike preserved, yet finding your Excellency not satisfied with those
+ limitations, we postponed every objection, and conformed ourselves to your
+ pleasure. Yet; before coming to that decision, we had well considered that
+ by doing so we might be opening a door to many ambitious, avaricious, and
+ pernicious persons, both of these countries and from other nations, who
+ might seize the occasion to advance their own private profits, to the
+ detriment of the country and the dishonour of your Excellency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And, in truth, such persons have done their work so efficiently as to
+ inspire you with distrust against the most faithful and capable men in the
+ Provinces, against the Estates General and Provincial, magistrates, and
+ private persons, knowing very well that they could never arrive at their
+ own ends so long as you were guided by the constitutional authorities of
+ the country. And precisely upon the distrust; thus created as a
+ foundation, they raised a back-stairs council, by means of which they were
+ able to further their ambitious, avaricious, and seditious practices,
+ notwithstanding the good advice and remonstrances of the council of state,
+ and the States General and Provincial."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He proceeded to handle the subjects of the English rose-noble; put in
+ circulation by Leicester's finance or back-stairs council at two florins
+ above its value, to the manifest detriment of the Provinces, to the
+ detestable embargo which had prevented them from using the means bestowed
+ upon them by God himself to defend their country, to the squandering and
+ embezzlement of the large sums contributed by the Province; and entrusted
+ to the Earl's administration; to the starving condition of the soldiers;
+ maltreated by government, and thus compelled to prey upon the inhabitants&mdash;so
+ that troops in the States' service had never been so abused during the
+ whole war, although the States had never before voted such large
+ contributions nor paid them so promptly&mdash;to the placing in posts of
+ high honour and trust men of notoriously bad character and even Spanish
+ spies; to the taking away the public authority from those to whom it
+ legitimately belonged, and conferring it on incompetent and unqualified
+ persons; to the illegal banishment of respectable citizens, to the
+ violation of time-honoured laws and privileges, to the shameful attempts
+ to repudiate the ancient authority of the States, and to usurp a control
+ over the communities and nobles by them represented, and to the perpetual
+ efforts to foster dissension, disunion, and rebellion among the
+ inhabitants. Having thus drawn up a heavy bill of indictment, nominally
+ against the Earl's illegal counsellors, but in reality against the Earl
+ himself, he proceeded to deal with the most important matter of all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The principal cities and fortresses in the country have been placed in
+ hands of men suspected by the States on legitimate grounds, men who had
+ been convicted of treason against these Provinces, and who continued to be
+ suspected, notwithstanding that your Excellency had pledged your own
+ honour for their fidelity. Finally, by means of these scoundrels, it was
+ brought to pass, that the council of state having been invested by your
+ Excellency with supreme authority during your absence&mdash;a secret
+ document, was brought to light after your departure, by which the most
+ substantial matters, and those most vital to the defence of the country,
+ were withdrawn from the disposition of that council. And now, alas, we see
+ the effects of these practices!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir William Stanley, by you appointed governor of Deventer, and Rowland
+ York, governor of Fort Zutphen, have refused, by virtue of that secret
+ document, to acknowledge any authority in this country. And
+ notwithstanding that since your departure they and their soldiers have
+ been supported at our expense, and had just received a full month's pay
+ from the States, they have traitorously and villainously delivered the
+ city and the fortress to the enemy, with a declaration made by Stanley
+ that he did the deed to ease his conscience, and to render to the King of
+ Spain the city which of right was belonging to him. And this is a crime so
+ dishonourable, scandalous, ruinous, and treasonable, as that, during this,
+ whole war, we have never seen the like. And we are now, in daily fear lest
+ the English commanders in Bergen-op-Zoom, Ostend, and other cities, should
+ commit the same crime. And although we fully suspected the designs of
+ Stanley and York, yet your Excellency's secret document had deprived us of
+ the power to act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We doubt not that her Majesty and your Excellency will think this strange
+ language. But we can assure you, that we too think it strange and grievous
+ that those places should have been confided to such men, against our
+ repeated remonstrances, and that, moreover, this very Stanley should have
+ been recommended by your Excellency for general of all the forces. And
+ although we had many just and grave reasons for opposing your
+ administration&mdash;even as our ancestors were often wont to rise against
+ the sovereigns of the country&mdash;we have, nevertheless, patiently
+ suffered for a long time, in order not to diminish your authority, which
+ we deemed so important to our welfare, and in the hope that you would at
+ last be moved by the perilous condition of the commonwealth, and awake to
+ the artifices of your advisers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But at last-feeling that the existence of the state can no longer be
+ preserved without proper authority, and that the whole community is full
+ of emotion and distrust, on account of these great treasons&mdash;we, the
+ States-General, as well as the States-Provincial, have felt constrained to
+ establish such a government as we deem meet for the emergency. And of this
+ we think proper to apprize your Excellency."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then expressed the conviction that all these evil deeds had been
+ accomplished against the intentions of the Earl and the English
+ government, and requested his Excellency so to deal with her Majesty that
+ the contingent of horse and foot hitherto accorded by her "might be
+ maintained in good order, and in better pay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, then, was substantial choleric phraseology, as good plain speaking
+ as her Majesty had just been employing, and with quite as sufficient
+ cause. Here was no pleasant diplomatic fencing, but straightforward
+ vigorous thrusts. It was no wonder that poor Wilkes should have thought
+ the letter "too sharp," when he heard it read in the assembly, and that he
+ should have done his best to prevent it from being despatched. He would
+ have thought it sharper could he have seen how the pride of her Majesty
+ and of Leicester was wounded by it to the quick. Her list of grievances
+ against the States seem to vanish into air. Who had been tampering with
+ the Spaniards now? Had that "shadowy and imaginary authority" granted to
+ Leicester not proved substantial enough? Was it the States-General, the
+ state-council, or was it the "absolute governor"&mdash;who had carried off
+ the supreme control of the commonwealth in his pocket&mdash;that was
+ responsible for the ruin effected by Englishmen who had scorned all
+ "authority" but his own?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States, in another blunt letter to the Queen herself, declared the
+ loss of Deventer to be more disastrous to them than even the fall of
+ Antwerp had been; for the republic had now been split asunder, and its
+ most ancient and vital portions almost cut away. Nevertheless they were
+ not "dazzled nor despairing," they said, but more determined than ever to
+ maintain their liberties, and bid defiance to the Spanish tyrant. And
+ again they demanded of, rather than implored; her Majesty to be true to
+ her engagements with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interviews which followed were more tempestuous than ever. "I had
+ intended that my Lord of Leicester should return to you," she said to the
+ envoys. "But that shall never be. He has been treated with gross
+ ingratitude, he has served the Provinces with ability, he has consumed his
+ own property there, he has risked his life, he has lost his near kinsman,
+ Sir Philip Sidney, whose life I should be glad to purchase with many
+ millions, and, in place of all reward, he receives these venomous letters,
+ of which a copy has been sent to his sovereign to blacken him with her."
+ She had been advising him to return, she added, but she was now resolved
+ that he should "never set foot in the Provinces again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Earl, who, was present, exclaimed&mdash;beating himself on the
+ breast&mdash;"a tali officio libera nos, Domine!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the States, undaunted by these explosions of wrath, replied that it
+ had ever been their custom, when their laws and liberties were invaded, to
+ speak their mind boldly to kings and governors, and to procure redress of
+ their grievances, as became free men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During that whole spring the Queen was at daggers drawn with all her
+ leading counsellors, mainly in regard to that great question of questions&mdash;the
+ relations of England with the Netherlands and Spain. Walsingham&mdash;who
+ felt it madness to dream of peace, and who believed it the soundest policy
+ to deal with Parma and his veterans upon the soil of Flanders, with the
+ forces of the republic for allies, rather than to await his arrival in
+ London&mdash;was driven almost to frenzy by what he deemed the Queen's
+ perverseness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our sharp words continue," said the Secretary, "which doth greatly
+ disquiet her Majesty, and discomfort her poor servants that attend her.
+ The Lord-Treasurer remaineth still in disgrace, and, behind my back, her
+ Majesty giveth out very hard speeches of myself, which I the rather
+ credit, for that I find, in dealing with her, I am nothing gracious; and
+ if her Majesty could be otherwise served, I know I should not be used . .
+ . . . Her Majesty doth wholly lend herself to devise some further means to
+ disgrace her poor council, in respect whereof she neglecteth all other
+ causes . . . . The discord between her Majesty and her council hindereth
+ the necessary consultations that were to be destined for the preventing of
+ the manifold perils that hang over this realm. . . . Sir Christopher
+ Hatton hath dealt very plainly and dutifully with her, which hath been
+ accepted in so evil part as he is resolved to retire for a time. I assure
+ you I find every man weary of attendance here. . . . I would to God I
+ could find as good resolution in her Majesty to proceed in a princely
+ course in relieving the United Provinces, as I find an honorable
+ disposition in your Lordship to employ yourself in their service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lord-Treasurer was much puzzled, very wretched, but philosophically
+ resigned. "Why her Majesty useth me thus strangely, I know not," he
+ observed. "To some she saith that she meant not I should have gone from
+ the court; to some she saith, she may not admit me, nor give me
+ contentment. I shall dispose myself to enjoy God's favour, and shall do
+ nothing to deserve her disfavour. And if I be suffered to be a stranger to
+ her affairs, I shall have a quieter life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, after the first burst of his anger was over, was willing to
+ return to the Provinces. He protested that he had a greater affection for
+ the Netherland people&mdash;not for the governing powers&mdash;even than
+ he felt for the people of England.&mdash;"There is nothing sticks in my
+ stomach," he said, "but the good-will of that poor afflicted people, for
+ whom, I take God to record, I could be content to lose any limb I have to
+ do them good." But he was crippled with debt, and the Queen resolutely
+ refused to lend him a few thousand pounds, without which he could not
+ stir. Walsingham in vain did battle with her parsimony, representing how
+ urgently and vividly the necessity of his return had been depicted by all
+ her ministers in both countries, and how much it imported to her own
+ safety and service. But she was obdurate. "She would rather," he said
+ bitterly to Leicester, "hazard the increase of confusion there&mdash;which
+ may put the whole country in peril&mdash;than supply your want. The like
+ course she holdeth in the rest of her causes, which maketh me to wish
+ myself from the helm." At last she agreed to advance him ten thousand
+ pounds, but on so severe conditions, that the Earl declared himself
+ heart-broken again, and protested that he would neither accept the money,
+ nor ever set foot in the Netherlands. "Let Norris stay there," he said in
+ a fury; "he will do admirably, no doubt. Only let it not be supposed that
+ I can be there also. Not for one hundred thousand pounds would I be in
+ that country with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime it was agreed that Lord Buckhurst should be sent forth on what
+ Wilkes termed a mission of expostulation, and a very ill-timed one. This
+ new envoy was to inquire into the causes of the discontent, and to do his
+ best to remove them: as if any man in England or in Holland doubted as to
+ the causes, or as to the best means of removing them; or as if it were not
+ absolutely certain that delay was the very worst specific that could be
+ adopted&mdash;delay&mdash;which the Netherland statesmen, as well as the
+ Queen's wisest counsellors, most deprecated, which Alexander and Philip
+ most desired, and by indulging in which her Majesty was most directly
+ playing into her adversary's hand. Elizabeth was preparing to put cards
+ upon the table against an antagonist whose game was close, whose honesty
+ was always to be suspected, and who was a consummate master in what was
+ then considered diplomatic sleight of hand. So Lord Buckhurst was to go
+ forth to expostulate at the Hague, while transports were loading in Cadiz
+ and Lisbon, reiters levying in Germany, pikemen and musketeers in Spain
+ and Italy, for a purpose concerning which Walsingham and Barneveld had for
+ a long time felt little doubt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Lord Leicester went to Bath to drink the waters, and after he had
+ drunk the waters, the Queen, ever anxious for his health, was resolved
+ that he should not lose the benefit of those salubrious draughts by
+ travelling too soon, or by plunging anew into the fountains of bitterness
+ which flowed perennially in the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Buckhurst sent to the Netherlands&mdash;Alarming State of Affairs on his
+ Arrival&mdash;His Efforts to conciliate&mdash;Democratic Theories of Wilkes&mdash;
+ Sophistry of the Argument&mdash;Dispute between Wilkes and Barneveld&mdash;
+ Religious Tolerance by the States&mdash;Their Constitutional Theory&mdash;
+ Deventer's bad Counsels to Leicester&mdash;Their pernicious Effect&mdash;Real
+ and supposed Plots against Hohenlo&mdash;Mutual Suspicion and Distrust&mdash;
+ Buckhurst seeks to restore good Feeling&mdash;The Queen angry and
+ vindictive&mdash;She censures Buckhurst's Course&mdash;Leicester's wrath at
+ Hohenlo's Charges of a Plot by the Earl to murder him&mdash;Buckhurst's
+ eloquent Appeals to the Queen&mdash;Her perplexing and contradictory
+ Orders&mdash;Despair of Wilkes&mdash;Leicester announces his Return&mdash;His
+ Instructions&mdash;Letter to Junius&mdash;Barneveld denounces him in the
+ States.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We return to the Netherlands. If ever proof were afforded of the influence
+ of individual character on the destiny of nations and of the world, it
+ certainly was seen in the year 1587. We have lifted the curtain of the
+ secret council-chamber at Greenwich. We have seen all Elizabeth's advisers
+ anxious to arouse her from her fatal credulity, from her almost as fatal
+ parsimony. We have seen Leicester anxious to return, despite all fancied
+ indignities, Walsingham eager to expedite the enterprise, and the Queen
+ remaining obdurate, while month after month of precious time was melting
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Netherlands, meantime, discord and confusion had been increasing
+ every day; and the first great cause of such a dangerous condition of
+ affairs was the absence of the governor. To this all parties agreed. The
+ Leicestrians, the anti-Leicestriana, the Holland party, the Utrecht party,
+ the English counsellors, the English generals, in private letter, in
+ solemn act, all warned the Queen against the lamentable effects resulting
+ from Leicester's inopportune departure and prolonged absence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the first outbreak of indignation after the Deventer Affair, Prince
+ Maurice was placed at the head of the general government, with the violent
+ Hohenlo as his lieutenant. The greatest exertions were made by these two
+ nobles and by Barneveld, who guided the whole policy of the party, to
+ secure as many cities as possible to their cause. Magistrates and
+ commandants of garrisons in many towns willingly gave in their adhesion to
+ the new government; others refused; especially Diedrich Sonoy, an officer
+ of distinction, who was governor of Enkhuyzen, and influential throughout
+ North Holland, and who remained a stanch partisan of Leicester. Utrecht,
+ the stronghold of the Leicestrians, was wavering and much torn by faction;
+ Hohenlo and Moeurs had "banquetted and feasted" to such good purpose that
+ they had gained over half the captains of the burgher-guard, and, aided by
+ the branch of nobles, were making a good fight against the Leicester
+ magistracy and the clerical force, enriched by the plunder of the old
+ Catholic livings, who denounced as Papistical and Hispaniolized all who
+ favoured the party of Maurice and Barneveld.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the end of March the envoys returned from London, and in their company
+ came Lord Buckhurst, as special ambassador from the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas Sackville, Lord Buckhurst&mdash;afterwards Earl of Dorset and
+ lord-treasurer&mdash;was then fifty-one years of age. A man of large
+ culture-poet, dramatist, diplomatist-bred to the bar; afterwards elevated
+ to the peerage; endowed with high character and strong intellect; ready
+ with tongue and pen; handsome of person, and with a fascinating address,
+ he was as fit a person to send on a mission of expostulation as any man to
+ be found in England. But the author of the 'Induction to the Mirror for
+ Magistrates' and of 'Gorboduc,' had come to the Netherlands on a forlorn
+ hope. To expostulate in favour of peace with a people who knew that their
+ existence depended on war, to reconcile those to delay who felt that delay
+ was death, and to, heal animosities between men who were enemies from
+ their cradles to their graves, was a difficult mission. But the chief
+ ostensible object of Buckhurst was to smooth the way for Leicester, and,
+ if possible, to persuade the Netherlanders as to the good inclinations of
+ the English government. This was no easy task, for they knew that their
+ envoys had been dismissed, without even a promise of subsidy. They had
+ asked for twelve thousand soldiers and sixty thousand pounds, and had
+ received a volley of abuse. Over and over again, through many months, the
+ Queen fell into a paroxysm of rage when even an allusion was made to the
+ loan of fifty or sixty thousand pounds; and even had she promised the
+ money, it would have given but little satisfaction. As Count Moeurs
+ observed, he would rather see one English rose-noble than a hundred royal
+ promises. So the Hollanders and Zeelanders&mdash;not fearing Leicester's
+ influence within their little morsel of a territory&mdash;were
+ concentrating their means of resistance upon their own soil, intending to
+ resist Spain, and, if necessary, England, in their last ditch, and with
+ the last drop of their blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While such was the condition of affairs, Lord Buckhurst landed at Flushing&mdash;four
+ months after the departure of Leicester&mdash;on the 24th March, having
+ been tossing three days and nights at sea in a great storm, "miserably
+ sick and in great danger of drowning." Sir William Russell, governor of
+ Flushing, informed him of the progress making by Prince Maurice in virtue
+ of his new authority. He told him that the Zeeland regiment, vacant by
+ Sidney's death, and which the Queen wished bestowed upon Russell himself,
+ had been given to Count Solms; a circumstance which was very sure to exite
+ her Majesty's ire; but that the greater number, and those of the better
+ sort; disliked the alteration of government, and relied entirely upon the
+ Queen. Sainte Aldegonde visited him at Middelburgh, and in a "long
+ discourse" expressed the most friendly sentiments towards England, with
+ free offers of personal service. "Nevertheless," said Buckhurst,
+ cautiously, "I mean to trust the effect, not his words, and so I hope he
+ will not much deceive me. His opinion is that the Earl of Leicester's
+ absence hath chiefly caused this change, and that without his return it
+ will hardly be restored again, but that upon his arrival all these clouds
+ will prove but a summershower."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a matter of course the new ambassador lifted up his voice, immediately
+ after setting foot on shore, in favour of the starving soldiers of his
+ Queen. "'Tis a most lamentable thing," said he, "to hear the complaints of
+ soldiers and captains for want of pay." . . . . Whole companies made their
+ way into his presence, literally crying aloud for bread. "For Jesus'
+ sake," wrote Buckhurst, "hasten to send relief with all speed, and let
+ such victuallers be appointed as have a conscience not to make themselves
+ rich with the famine of poor soldiers. If her Majesty send not money, and
+ that with speed, for their payment, I am afraid to think what mischief and
+ miseries are like to follow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the ambassador proceeded to the Hague, holding interviews with
+ influential personages in private, and with the States-General in public.
+ Such was the charm of his manner, and so firm the conviction of sincerity
+ and good-will which he inspired, that in the course of a fortnight there
+ was already a sensible change in the aspect of affairs. The enemy, who, at
+ the time of their arrival, had been making bonfires and holding triumphal
+ processions for joy of the great breach between Holland and England, and
+ had been "hoping to swallow them all up, while there were so few left who
+ knew how to act," were already manifesting disappointment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a solemn meeting of the States-General with the State-council,
+ Buckhurst addressed the assembly upon the general subject of her Majesty's
+ goodness to the Netherlands. He spoke of the gracious assistance rendered
+ by her, notwithstanding her many special charges for the common cause, and
+ of the mighty enmities which she had incurred for their sake. He sharply
+ censured the Hollanders for their cruelty to men who had shed their blood
+ in their cause, but who were now driven forth from their towns; and left
+ to starve on the highways, and hated for their nation's sake; as if the
+ whole English name deserved to be soiled "for the treachery of two
+ miscreants." He spoke strongly of their demeanour towards the Earl of
+ Leicester, and of the wrongs they had done him, and told them, that, if
+ they were not ready to atone to her Majesty for such injuries, they were
+ not to wonder if their deputies received no better answer at her hands.
+ "She who embraced your cause," he said, "when other mighty princes forsook
+ you, will still stand fast unto you, yea, and increase her goodness, if
+ her present state may suffer it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After being addressed in this manner the council of state made what
+ Counsellor Clerk called a "very honest, modest, and wise answer;" but the
+ States-General, not being able "so easily to discharge that which had so
+ long boiled within them," deferred their reply until the following day.
+ They then brought forward a deliberate rejoinder, in which they expressed
+ themselves devoted to her Majesty, and, on the whole, well disposed to the
+ Earl. As to the 4th February letter, it had been written "in amaritudine
+ cordis," upon hearing the treasons of York and Stanley, and in accordance
+ with "their custom and liberty used towards all princes, whereby they had
+ long preserved their estate," and in the conviction that the real culprits
+ for all the sins of his Excellency's government were certain "lewd persons
+ who sought to seduce his Lordship, and to cause him to hate the States."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckhurst did not think it well to reply, at that moment, on the ground
+ that there had been already crimination and recrimination more than
+ enough, and that "a little bitterness more had rather caused them to
+ determine dangerously than solve for the best."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They then held council together&mdash;the envoys and the State-General, as
+ to the amount of troops absolutely necessary&mdash;casting up the matter
+ "as pinchingly as possibly might be." And the result was, that 20,000 foot
+ and 2000 horse for garrison work, and an army of 13,000 foot, 5000 horse,
+ and pioneers, for a campaign of five or six months, were pronounced
+ indispensable. This would require all their L240,000 sterling a-year,
+ regular contribution, her Majesty's contingent of L140,000, and an extra
+ sum of L150,000 sterling. Of this sum the States requested her Majesty
+ should furnish two-thirds, while they agreed to furnish the other third,
+ which would make in all L240,000 for the Queen, and L290,000 for the
+ States. As it was understood that the English subsidies were only a loan,
+ secured by mortgage of the cautionary towns, this did not seem very
+ unreasonable, when the intimate blending of England's welfare with that of
+ the Provinces was considered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it will be observed that Lord Buckhurst&mdash;while doing his best to
+ conciliate personal feuds and heart-burnings&mdash;had done full justice
+ to the merits of Leicester, and had placed in strongest light the favours
+ conferred by her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then proceeded to Utrecht, where he was received with many
+ demonstrations of respect, "with solemn speeches" from magistrates and
+ burgher-captains, with military processions, and with great banquets,
+ which were, however, conducted with decorum, and at which even Count
+ Moeurs excited universal astonishment by his sobriety. It was difficult,
+ however, for matters to go very smoothly, except upon the surface. What
+ could be more disastrous than for a little commonwealth&mdash;a mere
+ handful of people, like these Netherlanders, engaged in mortal combat with
+ the most powerful monarch in the world, and with the first general of the
+ age, within a league of their borders&mdash;thus to be deprived of all
+ organized government at a most critical moment, and to be left to wrangle
+ with their allies and among themselves, as to the form of polity to be
+ adopted, while waiting the pleasure of a capricious and despotic woman?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the very foundation of the authority by which the Spanish yoke had
+ been abjured, the sovereignty offered to Elizabeth, and the
+ government-general conferred on Leicester, was fiercely assailed by the
+ confidential agents of Elizabeth herself. The dispute went into the very
+ depths of the social contract. Already Wilkes, standing up stoutly for the
+ democratic views of the governor, who was so foully to requite him, had
+ assured the English government that the "people were ready to cut the
+ throats" of the Staten-General at any convenient moment. The sovereign
+ people, not the deputies, were alone to be heeded, he said, and although
+ he never informed the world by what process he had learned the deliberate
+ opinion of that sovereign, as there had been no assembly excepting those
+ of the States-General and States-Provincial&mdash;he was none the less
+ fully satisfied that the people were all with Leicester, and bitterly
+ opposed to the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For the sovereignty, or supreme authority," said he, through failure of a
+ legitimate prince, belongs to the people, and not to you, gentlemen, who
+ are only servants, ministers, and deputies of the people. You have your
+ commissions or instructions surrounded by limitations&mdash;which
+ conditions are so widely different from the power of sovereignty, as the
+ might of the subject is in regard to his prince, or of a servant in,
+ respect to his master. For sovereignty is not limited either as to power
+ or as to time. Still less do you represent the sovereignty; for the
+ people, in giving the general and absolute government to the Earl of
+ Leicester, have conferred upon him at once the exercise of justice, the
+ administration of polity, of naval affairs, of war, and of all the other
+ points of sovereignty. Of these a governor-general is however only the
+ depositary or guardian, until such time as it may please the prince or
+ people to revoke the trust; there being no other in this state who can do
+ this; seeing that it was the people, through the instrumentality of your
+ offices&mdash;through you as its servants&mdash;conferred on his
+ Excellency, this power, authority, and government. According to the common
+ rule law, therefore, 'quo jure quid statuitur, eodem jure tolli debet.'
+ You having been fully empowered by the provinces and cities, or, to speak
+ more correctly, by your masters and superiors, to confer the government on
+ his Excellency, it follows that you require a like power in order to take
+ it away either in whole or in part. If then you had no commission to
+ curtail his authority, or even that of the state-council, and thus to
+ tread upon and usurp his power as governor general and absolute, there
+ follows of two things one: either you did not well understand what you
+ were doing, nor duly consider how far that power reached, or&mdash;much
+ more probably&mdash;you have fallen into the sin of disobedience,
+ considering how solemnly you swore allegiance to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus subtly and ably did Wilkes defend the authority of the man who had
+ deserted his post at a most critical moment, and had compelled the States,
+ by his dereliction, to take the government into their own hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For, after all, the whole argument of the English counsellor rested upon a
+ quibble. The people were absolutely sovereign, he said, and had lent that
+ sovereignty to Leicester. How had they made that loan? Through the
+ machinery of the States-General. So long then as the Earl retained the
+ absolute sovereignty, the States were not even representatives of the
+ sovereign people. The sovereign people was merged into one English Earl.
+ The English Earl had retired&mdash;indefinitely&mdash;to England. Was the
+ sovereign people to wait for months, or years, before it regained its
+ existence? And if not, how was it to reassert its vitality? How but
+ through the agency of the States-General, who&mdash;according to Wilkes
+ himself&mdash;had been fully empowered by the Provinces and Cities to
+ confer the government on the Earl? The people then, after all, were the
+ provinces and cities. And the States-General were at that moment as much
+ qualified to represent those provinces and cities as they ever had been,
+ and they claimed no more. Wilkes, nor any other of the Leicester party,
+ ever hinted at a general assembly of the people. Universal suffrage was
+ not dreamed of at that day. By the people, he meant, if he meant anything,
+ only that very small fraction of the inhabitants of a country, who,
+ according to the English system, in the reign of Elizabeth, constituted
+ its Commons. He chose, rather from personal and political motives than
+ philosophical ones, to draw a distinction between the people and the
+ States, but it is quite obvious, from the tone of his private
+ communications, that by the 'States' he meant the individuals who
+ happened, for the time-being, to be the deputies of the States of each
+ Province. But it was almost an affectation to accuse those individuals of
+ calling or considering themselves 'sovereigns;' for it was very well known
+ that they sat as envoys, rather than as members of a congress, and were
+ perpetually obliged to recur to their constituents, the States of each
+ Province, for instructions. It was idle, because Buys and Barneveld, and
+ Roorda, and other leaders, exercised the influence due to their talents,
+ patriotism, and experience, to stigmatize them as usurpers of sovereignty,
+ and to hound the rabble upon them as tyrants and mischief-makers. Yet to
+ take this course pleased the Earl of Leicester, who saw no hope for the
+ liberty of the people, unless absolute and unconditional authority over
+ the people, in war, naval affairs, justice, and policy, were placed in his
+ hands. This was the view sustained by the clergy of the Reformed Church,
+ because they found it convenient, through such a theory, and by
+ Leicester's power, to banish Papists, exercise intolerance in matters of
+ religion, sequestrate for their own private uses the property of the
+ Catholic Church, and obtain for their own a political power which was
+ repugnant to the more liberal ideas of the Barneveld party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States of Holland&mdash;inspired as it were by the memory of that
+ great martyr to religious and political liberty, William the Silent&mdash;maintained
+ freedom of conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Leicester party advocated a different theory on the religious
+ question. They were also determined to omit no effort to make the States
+ odious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Seeing their violent courses," said Wilkes to Leicester, "I have not been
+ negligent, as well by solicitations to the ministers, as by my letters to
+ such as have continued constant in affection to your Lordship, to have the
+ people informed of the ungrateful and dangerous proceedings of the States.
+ They have therein travailed with so good effect, as the people are now
+ wonderfully well disposed, and have delivered everywhere in speeches, that
+ if, by the overthwart dealings of the States, her Majesty shall be drawn
+ to stay her succours and goodness to them, and that thereby your Lordship
+ be also discouraged to return, they will cut their throats."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who the "people" exactly were, that had been so wonderfully well disposed
+ to throat-cutting by the ministers of the Gospel, did not distinctly
+ appear. It was certain, however, that they were the special friends of
+ Leicester, great orators, very pious, and the sovereigns of the country.
+ So much could not be gainsaid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Lordship would wonder," continued the councillor, "to see the people&mdash;who
+ so lately, by the practice of the said States and the accident of
+ Deventer, were notably alienated&mdash;so returned to their former
+ devotion towards her Majesty, your Lordship, and our nation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilkes was able moreover to gratify the absent governor-general with the
+ intelligence&mdash;of somewhat questionable authenticity however&mdash;that
+ the States were very "much terrified with these threats of the people."
+ But Barneveld came down to the council to inquire what member of that body
+ it was who had accused the States of violating the Earl's authority.
+ "Whoever he is," said the Advocate, "let him deliver his mind frankly, and
+ he shall be answered." The man did not seem much terrified by the
+ throat-cutting orations. "It is true," replied Wilkes, perceiving himself
+ to be the person intended, "that you have very injuriously, in many of
+ your proceedings, derogated from and trodden the authority of his Lordship
+ and of this council under your feet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then he went into particulars, and discussed, 'more suo,' the
+ constitutional question, in which various Leicestrian counsellors seconded
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Barneveld grimly maintained that the States were the sovereigns, and
+ that it was therefore unfit that the governor, who drew his authority from
+ them, should call them to account for their doings. "It was as if the
+ governors in the time of Charles V.," said the Advocate, "should have
+ taxed that Emperor for any action of his done in the government."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In brief, the rugged Barneveld, with threatening voice, and lion port,
+ seemed to impersonate the Staten, and to hold reclaimed sovereignty in his
+ grasp. It seemed difficult to tear it from him again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did what I could," said Wilkes, "to beat them from this humour of their
+ sovereignty, showing that upon that error they had grounded the rest of
+ their wilful absurdities."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next night, he drew up sixteen articles, showing the disorders of the
+ States, their breach of oaths, and violations of the Earl's authority; and
+ with that commenced a series of papers interchanged by the two parties, in
+ which the topics of the origin of government and the principles of
+ religious freedom were handled with much ability on both sides, but at
+ unmerciful length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the religious question, the States-General, led by Barneveld and by
+ Francis Franck, expressed themselves manfully, on various occasions,
+ during the mission of Buckhurst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The nobles and cities constituting the States," they said, "have been
+ denounced to Lord Leicester as enemies of religion, by the self-seeking
+ mischief-makers who surround him. Why? Because they had refused the demand
+ of certain preachers to call a general synod, in defiance of the
+ States-General, and to introduce a set of ordinances, with a system of
+ discipline, according to their arbitrary will. This the late Prince of
+ Orange and the States-General had always thought detrimental both to
+ religion and polity. They respected the difference in religious opinions,
+ and leaving all churches in their freedom, they chose to compel no man's
+ conscience&mdash;a course which all statesmen, knowing the diversity of
+ human opinions, had considered necessary in order to maintain fraternal
+ harmony."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such words shine through the prevailing darkness of the religious
+ atmosphere at that epoch, like characters of light. They are beacons in
+ the upward path of mankind. Never before, had so bold and wise a tribute
+ to the genius of the reformation been paid by an organized community.
+ Individuals walking in advance of their age had enunciated such truths,
+ and their voices had seemed to die away, but, at last, a little,
+ struggling, half-developed commonwealth had proclaimed the rights of
+ conscience for all mankind&mdash;for Papists and Calvinists, Jews and
+ Anabaptists&mdash;because "having a respect for differences in religious
+ opinions, and leaving all churches in their freedom, they chose to compel
+ no man's conscience."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the constitutional question, the States commenced by an astounding
+ absurdity. "These mischief-makers, moreover," said they, "have not been
+ ashamed to dispute, and to cause the Earl of Leicester to dispute, the
+ lawful constitution of the Provinces; a matter which has not been disputed
+ for eight hundred years."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was indeed to claim a respectable age for their republic. Eight
+ hundred years took them back to the days of Charlemagne, in whose time it
+ would have been somewhat difficult to detect a germ of their
+ States-General and States-Provincial. That the constitutional government&mdash;consisting
+ of nobles and of the vroedschaps of chartered cities&mdash;should have
+ been in existence four hundred and seventeen years before the first
+ charter had ever been granted to a city, was a very loose style of
+ argument. Thomas Wilkes, in reply; might as well have traced the English
+ parliament to Hengist and Horsa. "For eight hundred years;" they said,
+ "Holland had been governed by Counts and Countesses, on whom the nobles
+ and cities, as representing the States, had legally conferred
+ sovereignty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the first incorporated city of Holland and Zeeland that ever existed
+ was Middelburg, which received its charter from Count William I. of
+ Holland and Countess Joan of Flanders; in the year 1217. The first Count
+ that had any legal recognized authority was Dirk the First to whom Charles
+ the Simple presented the territory of Holland, by letters-patent, in 922.
+ Yet the States-General, in a solemn and eloquent document, gravely dated
+ their own existence from the year 787, and claimed the regular possession
+ and habitual delegation of sovereignty from that epoch down!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this fabulous preamble, they proceeded to handle the matter of fact
+ with logical precision. It was absurd, they said, that Mr. Wilkes and Lord
+ Leicester should affect to confound the persons who appeared in the
+ assembly with the States themselves; as if those individuals claimed or
+ exercised sovereignty. Any man who had observed what had been passing
+ during the last fifteen years, knew very well that the supreme authority
+ did not belong to the thirty or forty individuals who came to the meetings
+ . . . . The nobles, by reason of their ancient dignity and splendid
+ possessions, took counsel together over state matters, and then, appearing
+ at the assembly, deliberated with the deputies of the cities. The cities
+ had mainly one form of government&mdash;a college of counsellors; or wise
+ men, 40, 32, 28, or 24 in number, of the most respectable out of the whole
+ community. They were chosen for life, and vacancies were supplied by the
+ colleges themselves out of the mass of citizens. These colleges alone
+ governed the city, and that which had been ordained by them was to be
+ obeyed by all the inhabitants&mdash;a system against which there had never
+ been any rebellion. The colleges again, united with those of the nobles,
+ represented the whole state, the whole body of the population; and no form
+ of government could be imagined, they said, that could resolve, with a
+ more thorough knowledge of the necessities of the country, or that could
+ execute its resolves with more unity of purpose and decisive authority. To
+ bring the colleges into an assembly could only be done by means of
+ deputies. These deputies, chosen by their colleges, and properly
+ instructed, were sent to the place of meeting. During the war they had
+ always been commissioned to resolve in common on matters regarding the
+ liberty of the land. These deputies, thus assembled, represented, by
+ commission, the States; but they are not, in their own persons, the
+ States; and no one of them had any such pretension. "The people of this
+ country," said the States, "have an aversion to all ambition; and in these
+ disastrous times, wherein nothing but trouble and odium is to be gathered
+ by public employment, these commissions are accounted 'munera necessaria'.
+ . . . This form of government has, by God's favour, protected Holland and
+ Zeeland, during this war, against a powerful foe, without lose of
+ territory, without any popular outbreak, without military mutiny, because
+ all business has been transacted with open doors; and because the very
+ smallest towns are all represented, and vote in the assembly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In brief, the constitution of the United Provinces was a matter of fact.
+ It was there in good working order, and had, for a generation of mankind,
+ and throughout a tremendous war, done good service. Judged by the
+ principles of reason and justice, it was in the main a wholesome
+ constitution, securing the independence and welfare of the state, and the
+ liberty and property of the individual, as well certainly as did any
+ polity then existing in the world. It seemed more hopeful to abide by it
+ yet a little longer than to adopt the throat-cutting system by the people,
+ recommended by Wilkes and Leicester as an improvement on the old
+ constitution. This was the view of Lord Buckhurst. He felt that threats of
+ throat-cutting were not the best means of smoothing and conciliating, and
+ he had come over to smooth and conciliate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To spend the time," said he, "in private brabbles and piques between the
+ States and Lord Leicester, when we ought to prepare an army against the
+ enemy, and to repair the shaken and torn state, is not a good course for
+ her Majesty's service." Letters were continually circulating from hand to
+ hand among the antagonists of the Holland party, written out of England by
+ Leicester, exciting the ill-will of the populace against the organized
+ government. "By such means to bring the States into hatred," said
+ Buckhurst, "and to stir up the people against them; tends to great damage
+ and miserable end. This his Lordship doth full little consider, being the
+ very way to dissolve all government, and so to bring all into confusion,
+ and open the door for the enemy. But oh, how lamentable a thing it is, and
+ how doth my Lord of Leicester abuse her Majesty, making her authority the
+ means to uphold and justify, and under her name to defend and maintain,
+ all his intolerable errors. I thank God that neither his might nor his
+ malice shall deter me from laying open all those things which my
+ conscience knoweth, and which appertaineth to be done for the good of this
+ cause and of her Majesty's service. Herein, though I were sure to lose my
+ life, yet will I not offend neither the one nor the other, knowing very
+ well that I must die; and to die in her Majesty's faithful service, and
+ with a good conscience, is far more happy than the miserable life that I
+ am in. If Leicester do in this sort stir up the people against the States
+ to follow his revenge against them, and if the Queen do yield no better
+ aid, and the minds of Count Maurice and Hohenlo remain thus in fear and
+ hatred of him, what good end or service can be hoped for here?"&mdash;[Buckhurst
+ to Walsingham, 13th June, 1587. (Brit. Mus. Galba, D. I. p. 95, MS.)]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckhurst was a man of unimpeached integrity and gentle manners. He had
+ come over with the best intentions towards the governor-general, and it
+ has been seen that he boldly defended him in, his first interviews with
+ the States. But as the intrigues and underhand plottings of the Earl's
+ agents were revealed to him, he felt more and more convinced that there
+ was a deep laid scheme to destroy the government, and to constitute a
+ virtual and absolute sovereignty for Leicester. It was not wonderful that
+ the States were standing vigorously on the defensive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The subtle Deventer, Leicester's evil genius, did not cease to poison the
+ mind of the governor, during his protracted absence, against all persons
+ who offered impediments to the cherished schemes of his master and
+ himself. "Your Excellency knows very well," he said, "that the state of
+ this country is democratic, since, by failure of a prince, the sovereign
+ disposition of affairs has returned to the people. That same people is
+ everywhere so incredibly affectionate towards you that the delay in your
+ return drives them to extreme despair. Any one who would know the real
+ truth has but to remember the fine fear the States-General were in when
+ the news of your displeasure about the 4th February letter became known."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had it not been for the efforts of Lord Buckhurst in calming the popular
+ rage, Deventer assured the Earl that the writers of the letter would "have
+ scarcely saved their skins;" and that they had always continued in great
+ danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He vehemently urged upon Leicester, the necessity of his immediate return&mdash;not
+ so much for reasons drawn from the distracted state of the country, thus
+ left to a provisional government and torn by faction&mdash;but because of
+ the facility with which he might at once seize upon arbitrary power. He
+ gratified his master by depicting in lively colours the abject condition
+ into which Barneveld, Maurice, Hohenlo, and similar cowards, would be
+ thrown by his sudden return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If," said he, "the States' members and the counts, every one of them, are
+ so desperately afraid of the people, even while your Excellency is afar
+ off, in what trepidation will they be when you are here! God, reason, the
+ affection of the sovereign people, are on your side. There needs, in a
+ little commonwealth like ours, but a wink of the eye, the slightest
+ indication of dissatisfaction on your part, to take away all their valour
+ from men who are only brave where swords are too short. A magnanimous
+ prince like yourself should seek at once the place where such plots are
+ hatching, and you would see the fury of the rebels change at once to
+ cowardice. There is more than one man here in the Netherlands that brags
+ of what he will do against the greatest and most highly endowed prince in
+ England, because he thinks he shall never see him again, who, at the very
+ first news of your return, my Lord, would think only of packing his
+ portmanteau, greasing his boots, or, at the very least, of sneaking back
+ into his hole."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the sturdy democrat was quite sure that his Excellency, that most
+ magnanimous prince of England would not desert his faithful followers&mdash;thereby
+ giving those "filthy rascals," his opponents, a triumph, and "doing so
+ great an injury to the sovereign people, who were ready to get rid of them
+ all at a single blow, if his Excellency would but say the word."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then implored the magnanimous prince to imitate the example of Moses,
+ Joshua, David, and that of all great emperors and captains, Hebrew, Greek,
+ and Roman, to come at once to the scene of action, and to smite his
+ enemies hip and thigh. He also informed his Excellency, that if the delay
+ should last much longer, he would lose all chance of regaining power,
+ because the sovereign people had quite made up their mind to return to the
+ dominion of Spain within three months, if they could not induce his
+ Excellency to rule over them. In that way at least, if in no other, they
+ could circumvent those filthy rascals whom they so much abhorred, and
+ frustrate the designs of Maurice, Hohenlo, and Sir John Norris, who were
+ represented as occupying the position of the triumvirs after the death of
+ Julius Caesar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To place its neck under the yoke of Philip II. and the Inquisition, after
+ having so handsomely got rid of both, did not seem a sublime manifestation
+ of sovereignty on the part of the people, and even Deventer had some
+ misgivings as to the propriety of such a result. "What then will become of
+ our beautiful churches?" he cried, "What will princes say, what will the
+ world in general say, what will historians say, about the honour of the
+ English nation?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the first question, it is probable that the prospect of the reformed
+ churches would not have been cheerful, had the inquisition been
+ re-established in Holland and Utrecht, three months after that date. As to
+ the second, the world and history were likely to reply, that the honour of
+ the English nation was fortunately not entirely, entrusted at that epoch
+ to the "magnanimous prince" of Leicester, and his democratic,
+ counsellor-in-chief, burgomaster Deventer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are but samples of the ravings which sounded incessantly in the ears
+ of the governor-general. Was it strange that a man, so thirsty for power,
+ so gluttonous of flattery, should be influenced by such passionate
+ appeals? Addressed in strains of fulsome adulation, convinced that
+ arbitrary power was within his reach, and assured that he had but to wink
+ his eye to see his enemies scattered before him, he became impatient of
+ all restraint; and determined, on his return, to crush the States into
+ insignificance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, while Buckhurst had been doing his best as a mediator to prepare the
+ path for his return, Leicester himself end his partisans had been secretly
+ exerting themselves to make his arrival the signal for discord; perhaps of
+ civil war. The calm, then, immediately succeeding the mission of Buckhurst
+ was a deceitful one, but it seemed very promising. The best feelings were
+ avowed and perhaps entertained. The States professed great devotion to her
+ Majesty and friendly regard for the governor. They distinctly declared
+ that the arrangements by which Maurice and Hohenlo had been placed in
+ their new positions were purely provisional ones, subject to modifications
+ on the arrival of the Earl. "All things are reduced to a quiet calm," said
+ Buckhurst, "ready to receive my Lord of Leicester and his authority,
+ whenever he cometh."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The quarrel of Hohenlo with Sir Edward Norris had been, by the exertions
+ of Buckhurst, amicably arranged: the Count became an intimate friend of
+ Sir John, "to the gladding of all such as wished well to, the country;"
+ but he nourished a deadly hatred to the Earl. He ran up and down like a
+ madman whenever his return was mentioned. "If the Queen be willing to take
+ the sovereignty," he cried out at his own dinner-table to a large company,
+ "and is ready to proceed roundly in this action, I will serve her to the
+ last drop of my blood; but if she embrace it in no other sort than
+ hitherto she hath done, and if Leicester is to return, then am I as good a
+ man as Leicester, and will never be commanded by him. I mean to continue
+ on my frontier, where all who love me can come and find me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He declared to several persons that he had detected a plot on the part of
+ Leicester to have him assassinated; and the assertion seemed so important,
+ that Villiers came to Councillor Clerk to confer with him on the subject.
+ The worthy Bartholomew, who had again, most reluctantly, left his quiet
+ chambers in the Temple to come again among the guns and drums, which his
+ soul abhorred, was appalled by such a charge. It was best to keep it a
+ secret, he said, at least till the matter could be thoroughly
+ investigated. Villiers was of the same opinion, and accordingly the
+ councillor, in the excess of his caution, confided the secret only&mdash;to
+ whom? To Mr. Atye, Leicester's private secretary. Atye, of course,
+ instantly told his master&mdash;his master in a frenzy of rage, told the
+ Queen, and her Majesty, in a paroxysm of royal indignation at this new
+ insult to her favourite, sent furious letters to her envoys, to the
+ States-General, to everybody in the Netherlands&mdash;so that the
+ assertion of Hohenlo became the subject of endless recrimination.
+ Leicester became very violent, and denounced the statement as an impudent
+ falsehood, devised wilfully in order to cast odium upon him and to prevent
+ his return. Unquestionably there was nothing in the story but table-talk;
+ but the Count would have been still more ferocious towards Leicester than
+ he was, had he known what was actually happening at that very moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Buckhurst was at Utrecht, listening to the "solemn-speeches" of the
+ militia-captains and exchanging friendly expressions at stately banquets
+ with Moeurs, he suddenly received a letter in cipher from her Majesty. Not
+ having the key, he sent to Wilkes at the Hague. Wilkes was very ill; but
+ the despatch was marked pressing and immediate, so he got out of bed and
+ made the journey to Utrecht. The letter, on being deciphered, proved to be
+ an order from the Queen to decoy Hohenlo into some safe town, on pretence
+ of consultation and then to throw him into prison, on the ground that he
+ had been tampering with the enemy, and was about to betray the republic to
+ Philip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commotion which would have been excited by any attempt to enforce this
+ order, could be easily imagined by those familiar with Hohenlo and with
+ the powerful party in the Netherlands of which he was one of the chiefs.
+ Wilkes stood aghast as he deciphered the letter. Buckhurst felt the
+ impossibility of obeying the royal will. Both knew the cause, and both
+ foresaw the consequences of the proposed step. Wilkes had heard some
+ rumours of intrigues between Parma's agents at Deventer and Hohenlo, and
+ had confided them to Walsingham, hoping that the Secretary would keep the
+ matter in his own breast, at least till further advice. He was appalled at
+ the sudden action proposed on a mere rumour, which both Buckhurst and
+ himself had begun to consider an idle one. He protested, therefore, to
+ Walsingham that to comply with her Majesty's command would not only be
+ nearly impossible, but would, if successful, hazard the ruin of the
+ republic. Wilkes was also very anxious lest the Earl of Leicester should
+ hear of the matter. He was already the object of hatred to that powerful
+ personage, and thought him capable of accomplishing his destruction in any
+ mode. But if Leicester could wreak his vengeance upon his enemy Wilkes by
+ the hand of his other deadly enemy Hohenlo, the councillor felt that this
+ kind of revenge would have a double sweetness for him. The Queen knows
+ what I have been saying, thought Wilkes, and therefore Leicester knows it;
+ and if Leicester knows it, he will take care that Hohenlo shall hear of it
+ too, and then wo be unto me. "Your honour knoweth," he said to Walsingham,
+ "that her Majesty can hold no secrets, and if she do impart it to
+ Leicester, then am I sped."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing came of it however, and the relations of Wilkes and Buckhurst with
+ Hohenlo continued to be friendly. It was a lesson to Wilkes to be more
+ cautious even with the cautious Walsingham. "We had but bare suspicions,"
+ said Buckhurst, "nothing fit, God knoweth, to come to such a reckoning.
+ Wilkes saith he meant it but for a premonition to you there; but I think
+ it will henceforth be a premonition to himself&mdash;there being but bare
+ presumptions, and yet shrewd presumptions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here then were Deventer and Leicester plotting to overthrow the government
+ of the States; the States and Hohenlo arming against Leicester; the
+ extreme democratic party threatening to go over to the Spaniards within
+ three months; the Earl accused of attempting the life of Hohenlo; Hohenlo
+ offering to shed the last drop of his blood for Queen Elizabeth; Queen
+ Elizabeth giving orders to throw Hohenlo into prison as a traitor;
+ Councillor Wilkes trembling for his life at the hands both of Leicester
+ and Hohenlo; and Buckhurst doing his best to conciliate all parties, and
+ imploring her Majesty in vain to send over money to help on the war, and
+ to save her soldiers from starving.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the Queen continued to refuse the loan of fifty thousand pounds which
+ the provinces solicited, and in hope of which the States had just agreed
+ to an extra contribution of a million florins (L100,000), a larger sum
+ than had been levied by a single vote since the commencement of the war.
+ It must be remembered, too, that the whole expense of the war fell upon
+ Holland and Zeeland. The Province of Utrecht, where there was so strong a
+ disposition to confer absolute authority upon Leicester, and to destroy
+ the power of the States-General contributed absolutely nothing. Since the
+ Loss of Deventer, nothing could be raised in the Provinces of Utrecht,
+ Gelderland or Overyssel; the Spaniards levying black mail upon the whole
+ territory, and impoverishing the inhabitants till they became almost a
+ nullity. Was it strange then that the States of Holland and Zeeland, thus
+ bearing nearly the whole; burden of the war, should be dissatisfied with
+ the hatred felt toward them by their sister Provinces so generously
+ protected by them? Was it unnatural that Barneveld, and Maurice, and
+ Hohenlo, should be disposed to bridle the despotic inclinations of
+ Leicester, thus fostered by those who existed, as it were, at their
+ expense?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Queen refused the L50,000, although Holland and Zeeland had voted
+ the L100,000. "No reason that breedeth charges," sighed Walsingham, "can
+ in any sort be digested."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not for want of vehement entreaty on the part of the Secretary of
+ State and of Buckhurst that the loan was denied. At least she was
+ entreated to send over money for her troops, who for six months past were
+ unpaid. "Keeping the money in your coffers," said Buckhurst, "doth yield
+ no interest to you, and&mdash;which is above all earthly, respects&mdash;it
+ shall be the means of preserving the lives of many of your faithful
+ subjects which otherwise must needs, daily perish. Their miseries, through
+ want of meat and money, I do protest to God so much moves, my soul with
+ commiseration of that which is past, and makes my heart tremble to think
+ of the like to come again, that I humbly beseech your Majesty, for Jesus
+ Christ sake, to have compassion on their lamentable estate past, and send
+ some money to prevent the like hereafter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were moving words,&mdash;but the money did not come&mdash;charges
+ could not be digested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The eternal God," cried Buckhurst, "incline your heart to grant the
+ petition of the States for the loan of the L50,000, and that speedily, for
+ the dangerous terms of the State here and the mighty and forward
+ preparation of the enemy admit no minute of delay; so that even to grant
+ it slowly is to deny it utterly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then drew a vivid picture of the capacity of the Netherlands to assist
+ the endangered realm of England, if delay were not suffered to destroy
+ both commonwealths, by placing the Provinces in an enemy's hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Their many and notable good havens," he said, "the great number of ships
+ and mariners, their impregnable towns, if they were in the hands of a
+ potent prince that would defend them, and, lastly, the state of this
+ shore; so near and opposite unto the land and coast of England&mdash;lo,
+ the sight of all this, daily in mine eye, conjoined with the deep,
+ enrooted malice of that your so mighty enemy who seeketh to regain them;
+ these things entering continually into the meditations of my heart&mdash;so
+ much do they import the safety of yourself and your estate&mdash;do
+ enforce me, in the abundance of my love and duty to your Majesty, most
+ earnestly to speak, write, and weep unto you, lest when the occasion yet
+ offered shall be gone by, this blessed means of your defence, by God's
+ provident goodness thus put into your hand, will then be utterly lost, lo;
+ never, never more to be recovered again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a noble, wise, and eloquent appeal, but it was muttered in vain.
+ Was not Leicester&mdash;his soul filled with petty schemes of reigning in
+ Utrecht, and destroying the constitutional government of the Provinces&mdash;in
+ full possession of the royal ear? And was not the same ear lent, at most
+ critical moment, to the insidious Alexander Farnese, with his whispers of
+ peace, which were potent enough to drown all the preparations for the
+ invincible Armada?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six months had rolled away since Leicester had left the Netherlands; six
+ months long, the Provinces, left in a condition which might have become
+ anarchy, had been saved by the wise government of the States-General; six
+ months long the English soldiers had remained unpaid by their sovereign;
+ and now for six weeks the honest, eloquent, intrepid, but gentle Buckhurst
+ had done his best to conciliate all parties, and to mould the
+ Netherlanders into an impregnable bulwark for the realm of England. But
+ his efforts were treated with scorn by the Queen. She was still maddened
+ by a sense of the injuries done by the States to Leicester. She was
+ indignant that her envoy should have accepted such lame apologies for the
+ 4th of February letter; that he should have received no better atonement
+ for their insolent infringements of the Earl's orders during his absence;
+ that he should have excused their contemptuous proceedings and that, in
+ short, he should have been willing to conciliate and forgive when he
+ should have stormed and railed. "You conceived, it seemeth," said her
+ Majesty, "that a more sharper manner of proceeding would have exasperated
+ matters to the prejudice of the service, and therefore you did think it
+ more fit to wash the wounds rather with water than vinegar, wherein we
+ would rather have wished, on the other side, that you had better
+ considered that festering wounds had more need of corrosives than
+ lenitives. Your own judgment ought to have taught that such a alight and
+ mild kind of dealing with a people so ingrate and void of consideration as
+ the said Estates have showed themselves toward us, is the ready way to
+ increase their contempt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The envoy might be forgiven for believing that at any rate there would be
+ no lack of corrosives or vinegar, so long as the royal tongue or pen could
+ do their office, as the unfortunate deputies had found to their cost in
+ their late interviews at Greenwich, and as her own envoys in the
+ Netherlands were perpetually finding now. The Queen was especially
+ indignant that the Estates should defend the tone of their letters to the
+ Earl on the ground that he had written a piquant epistle to them. "But you
+ can manifestly see their untruths in naming it a piquant letter," said
+ Elizabeth, "for it has no sour or sharp word therein, nor any clause or
+ reprehension, but is full of gravity and gentle admonition. It deserved a
+ thankful answer, and so you may maintain it to them to their reproof."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States doubtless thought that the loss of Deventer and, with it, the
+ almost ruinous condition of three out of the seven Provinces, might excuse
+ on their part a little piquancy of phraseology, nor was it easy for them
+ to express gratitude to the governor for his grave and gentle admonitions,
+ after he had, by his secret document of 24th November, rendered himself
+ fully responsible for the disaster they deplored.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She expressed unbounded indignation with Hohenlo, who, as she was well
+ aware, continued to cherish a deadly hatred for Leicester. Especially she
+ was exasperated, and with reason, by the assertion the Count had made
+ concerning the governor's murderous designs upon him. "'Tis a matter,"
+ said the Queen, "so foul and dishonourable that doth not only touch
+ greatly the credit of the Earl, but also our own honour, to have one who
+ hath been nourished and brought up by us, and of whom we have made show to
+ the world to have extraordinarily favoured above any other of our own
+ subjects, and used his service in those countries in a place of that
+ reputation he held there, stand charged with so horrible and unworthy a
+ crime. And therefore our pleasure is, even as you tender the continuance
+ of our favour towards you, that you seek, by all the means you may,
+ examining the Count Hollock, or any other party in this matter, to
+ discover and to sift out how this malicious imputation hath been wrought;
+ for we have reason to think that it hath grown out of some cunning device
+ to stay the Earl's coming, and to discourage him from the continuance of
+ his service in those countries."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there the Queen was undoubtedly in the right. Hohenlo was resolved, if
+ possible, to make the Earl's government of the Netherlands impossible.
+ There was nothing in the story however; and all that by the most diligent
+ "sifting" could ever be discovered, and all that the Count could be
+ prevailed upon to confess, was an opinion expressed by him that if he had
+ gone with Leicester to England, it might perhaps have fared ill with him.
+ But men were given to loose talk in those countries. There was great
+ freedom of tongue and pen; and as the Earl, whether with justice or not,
+ had always been suspected of strong tendencies to assassination, it was
+ not very wonderful that so reckless an individual as Hohenlo should
+ promulgate opinions on such subjects, without much reserve. "The number of
+ crimes that have been imputed to me," said Leicester, "would be
+ incomplete, had this calumny not been added to all preceding ones." It is
+ possible that assassination, especially poisoning, may have been a more
+ common-place affair in those days than our own. At any rate, it is certain
+ that accusations of such crimes were of ordinary occurrence. Men were apt
+ to die suddenly if they had mortal enemies, and people would gossip. At
+ the very same moment, Leicester was deliberately accused not only of
+ murderous intentions towards Hohenlo, but towards Thomas Wilkes and Count
+ Lewis William of Nassau likewise. A trumpeter, arrested in Friesland, had
+ just confessed that he had been employed by the Spanish governor of that
+ Province, Colonel Verdugo, to murder Count Lewis, and that four other
+ persons had been entrusted with the same commission. The Count wrote to
+ Verdugo, and received in reply an indignant denial of the charge. "Had I
+ heard of such a project," said the Spaniard, "I would, on the contrary,
+ have given you warning. And I give you one now." He then stated, as a fact
+ known to him on unquestionable authority, that the Earl of Leicester had
+ assassins at that moment in his employ to take the life of Count Lewis,
+ adding that as for the trumpeter, who had just been hanged for the crime
+ suborned by the writer, he was a most notorious lunatic. In reply, Lewis,
+ while he ridiculed this plea of insanity set up for a culprit who had
+ confessed his crime succinctly and voluntarily, expressed great contempt
+ for the counter-charge against Leicester. "His Excellency," said the
+ sturdy little Count, "is a virtuous gentleman, the most pious and
+ God-fearing I have ever known. I am very sure that he could never treat
+ his enemies in the manner stated, much less his friends. As for yourself,
+ may God give me grace, in requital of your knavish trick, to make such a
+ war upon you as becomes an upright soldier and a man of honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus there was at least one man&mdash;and a most important, one&mdash;in
+ the opposition&mdash;party who thoroughly believed in the honour of the
+ governor-general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen then proceeded to lecture Lord Buckhurst very severely for
+ having tolerated an instant the States' proposition to her for a loan of
+ L50,000. "The enemy," she observed, "is quite unable to attempt the siege
+ of any town."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckhurst was, however, instructed, in case the States' million should
+ prove insufficient to enable the army to make head against the enemy, and
+ in the event of "any alteration of the good-will of the people towards
+ her, caused by her not yielding, in this their necessity, some convenient
+ support," to let them then understand, "as of himself, that if they would
+ be satisfied with a loan of ten or fifteen thousand pounds, he, would do
+ his best endeavour to draw her Majesty to yield unto the furnishing of
+ such a sum, with assured hope to obtaining the same at her hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Truly Walsingham was right in saying that charges of any kind were
+ difficult of digestion: Yet, even at that moment, Elizabeth had no more
+ attached subjects in England than sere the burghers of the Netherlands;
+ who were as anxious ever to annex their territory to her realms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thus, having expressed an affection for Leicester which no one doubted,
+ having once more thoroughly brow-beaten the states, and having soundly
+ lectured Buckhurst&mdash;as a requital for his successful efforts to bring
+ about a more wholesome condition of affairs&mdash;she gave the envoy a
+ parting stab, with this postscript;&mdash;"There is small disproportion,"
+ she said "twist a fool who useth not wit because he hath it not, and him
+ that useth it not when it should avail him." Leicester, too, was very
+ violent in his attacks upon Buckhurst. The envoy had succeeded in
+ reconciling Hohenlo with the brothers Norris, and had persuaded Sir John
+ to offer the hand of friendship to Leicester, provided it were sure of
+ being accepted. Yet in this desire to conciliate, the Earl found renewed
+ cause for violence. "I would have had more regard of my Lord of
+ Buckhurst," he said, "if the case had been between him and Norris, but I
+ must regard my own reputation the more that I see others would impair it.
+ You have deserved little thanks of me, if I must deal plainly, who do
+ equal me after this sort with him, whose best place is colonel under me,
+ and once my servant, and preferred by me to all honourable place he had."
+ And thus were enterprises of great moment, intimately affecting the safety
+ of Holland, of England, of all Protestantism, to be suspended between
+ triumph and ruin, in order that the spleen of one individual&mdash;one
+ Queen's favourite&mdash;might be indulged. The contempt of an insolent
+ grandee for a distinguished commander&mdash;himself the son, of a Baron,
+ with a mother the dear friend of her sovereign&mdash;was to endanger the
+ existence of great commonwealths. Can the influence of the individual, for
+ good or bad, upon the destinies of the race be doubted, when the
+ characters and conduct of Elizabeth and Leicester, Burghley and
+ Walsingham, Philip and Parma, are closely scrutinized and broadly traced
+ throughout the wide range of their effects?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I must now, in your Lordship's sight," continued Leicester, "be made
+ a counsellor with this companion, who never yet to this day hath done so
+ much as take knowledge of my mislike of him; no, not to say this much,
+ which I think would well become his better, that he was sorry, to hear I
+ had mislike to him, that he desired my suspension till he might either
+ speak with me, or be charged from me, and if then he were not able to
+ satisfy me, he would acknowledge his fault, and make me any honest
+ satisfaction. This manner of dealing would have been no disparagement to
+ his better. And even so I must think that your Lordship doth me wrong,
+ knowing what you do, to make so little difference between John Norris, my
+ man not long since, and now but my colonel under me, as though we were
+ equals. And I cannot but more than marvel at this your proceeding, when I
+ remember your promises of friendship, and your opinions resolutely set
+ down . . . . You were so determined before you went hence, but must have
+ become wonderfully enamoured of those men's unknown virtues in a few days
+ of acquaintance, from the alteration that is grown by their own
+ commendations of themselves. You know very well that all the world should
+ not make me serve with John Norris. Your sudden change from mislike to
+ liking has, by consequence, presently cast disgrace upon me. But all is
+ not gold that glitters, nor every shadow a perfect representation . . . .
+ You knew he should not serve with me, but either you thought me a very
+ inconstant man, or else a very simple soul, resolving with you as I did,
+ for you to take the course you have done." He felt, however, quite strong
+ in her Majesty's favour. He knew himself her favourite, beyond all chance
+ or change, and was sure, so long as either lived, to thrust his enemies,
+ by her aid, into outer darkness. Woe to Buckhurst, and Norris, and Wilkes,
+ and all others who consorted with his enemies. Let them flee from the
+ wrath to come! And truly they were only too anxious to do so, for they
+ knew that Leicester's hatred was poisonous. "He is not so facile to forget
+ as ready to revenge," said poor Wilkes, with neat alliteration. "My very
+ heavy and mighty adversary will disgrace and undo me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It sufficeth," continued Leicester, "that her Majesty both find my
+ dealings well enough, and so, I trust will graciously use me. As for the
+ reconciliations and love-days you have made there, truly I have liked well
+ of it; for you did sow me your disposition therein before, and I allowed
+ of it, and I had received letters both from Count Maurice and Hohenlo of
+ their humility and kindness, but now in your last letters you say they
+ have uttered the cause of their mislike towards me, which you forbear to
+ write of, looking so speedily for my return."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Earl knew well enough what the secret was, for had it not been
+ specially confided by the judicious Bartholomew to Atye, who had
+ incontinently told his master? "This pretense that I should kill Hohenlo,"
+ cried Leicester, "is a matter properly foisted in to bring me to choler. I
+ will not suffer it to rest, thus. Its authors shall be duly and severely
+ punished. And albeit I see well enough the plot of this wicked device, yet
+ shall it not work the effect the devisers have done it for. No, my Lord,
+ he is a villain and a false lying knave whosoever he be, and of what,
+ nation soever that hath forged this device. Count Hohenlo doth know I
+ never gave him cause to fear me so much. There were ways and means offered
+ me to have quitted him of the country if I had so liked. This new
+ monstrous villany which is now found out I do hate and detest, as I would
+ look for the right judgment of God to fall upon myself, if I had but once
+ imagined it. All this makes good proof of Wilkes's good dealing with me,
+ that hath heard of so vile and villainous a reproach of me, and never gave
+ me knowledge. But I trust your Lordship shall receive her Majesty's order
+ for this, as for a matter that toucheth herself in honour, and me her poor
+ servant and minister, as dearly as any matter can do; and I will so take
+ it and use it to the uttermost."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have seen how anxiously Buckhurst had striven to do his duty upon a
+ most difficult mission. Was it unnatural that so fine a nature as his
+ should be disheartened, at reaping nothing but sneers and contumely from
+ the haughty sovereign he served, and from the insolent favourite who
+ controlled her councils? "I beseech your Lordship," he said to Burghley,
+ "keep one ear for me, and do not hastily condemn me before you hear mine
+ answer. For if I ever did or shall do any acceptable service to her
+ Majesty, it was in, the stay and appeasing of these countries, ever ready
+ at my coming to have cast off all good respect towards us, and to have
+ entered even into some desperate cause. In the meantime I am hardly
+ thought of by her Majesty, and in her opinion condemned before mine answer
+ be understood. Therefore I beseech you to help me to return, and not thus
+ to lose her Majesty's favour for my good desert, wasting here my mind,
+ body, my wits, wealth, and all; with continual toils, taxes, and troubles,
+ more than I am able to endure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But besides his instructions to smooth and expostulate, in which he had
+ succeeded so well, and had been requited so ill; Buckhurst had received a
+ still more difficult commission. He had been ordered to broach the subject
+ of peace, as delicately as possible, but without delay; first sounding the
+ leading politicians, inducing them to listen to the Queen's suggestions on
+ the subject, persuading them that they ought to be satisfied with the
+ principles of the pacification of Ghent, and that it was hopeless for the
+ Provinces to continue the war with their mighty adversary any longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most reluctantly had Buckhurst fulfilled his sovereign's commands in this
+ disastrous course. To talk to the Hollanders of the Ghent pacification
+ seemed puerile. That memorable treaty, ten years before, had been one of
+ the great landmarks of progress, one of the great achievements of William
+ the Silent. By its provisions, public exercise of the reformed religion
+ had been secured for the two Provinces of Holland and Zeeland, and it had
+ been agreed that the secret practice of those rites should be elsewhere
+ winked at, until such time as the States-General, under the auspices of
+ Philip II., should otherwise ordain. But was it conceivable that now,
+ after Philip's authority had been solemnly abjured, and the reformed
+ worship had become the public, dominant religion, throughout all the
+ Provinces,&mdash;the whole republic should return to the Spanish dominion,
+ and to such toleration as might be sanctioned by an assembly professing
+ loyalty to the most Catholic King?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckhurst had repeatedly warned the Queen, in fervid and eloquent
+ language, as to the intentions of Spain. "There was never peace well
+ made," he observed, "without a mighty war preceding, and always, the sword
+ in hand is the best pen to write the conditions of peace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If ever prince had cause," he continued, "to think himself beset with
+ doubt and danger, you, sacred Queen, have most just cause not only to
+ think it, but even certainly to believe it. The Pope doth daily plot
+ nothing else but how he may bring to pass your utter overthrow; the French
+ King hath already sent you threatenings of revenge, and though for that
+ pretended cause I think little will ensue, yet he is blind that seeth not
+ the mortal dislike that boileth deep in his heart for other respects
+ against you. The Scottish King, not only in regard of his future hope, but
+ also by reason of some over conceit in his heart, may be thought a
+ dangerous neighbour to you. The King of Spain armeth and extendeth all his
+ power to ruin both you and your estate. And if the Indian gold have
+ corrupted also the King of Denmark, and made him likewise Spanish, as I
+ marvellously fear; why will not your Majesty, beholding the flames of your
+ enemies on every side kindling around, unlock all your coffers and convert
+ your treasure for the advancing of worthy men, and for the arming of ships
+ and men-of-war that may defend you, since princes' treasures serve only to
+ that end, and, lie they never so fast or so full in their chests, can no
+ ways so defend them?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The eternal God, in whose hands the hearts of kings do rest, dispose and
+ guide your sacred Majesty to do that which may be most according to His
+ blessed will, and best for you, as I trust He will, even for His mercy's
+ sake, both toward your Majesty and the whole realm of England, whose
+ desolation is thus sought and compassed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was this the language of a mischievous intriguer, who was sacrificing the
+ true interest of his country, and whose proceedings were justly earning
+ for him rebuke and disgrace at the hands of his sovereign? Or was it
+ rather the noble advice of an upright statesman, a lover of his country, a
+ faithful servant of his Queen, who had looked through the atmosphere of
+ falsehood in which he was doing his work, and who had detected, with rare
+ sagacity, the secret purposes of those who were then misruling the world?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckhurst had no choice, however, but to obey. His private efforts were of
+ course fruitless, but he announced to her Majesty that it was his
+ intention very shortly to bring the matter&mdash;according to her wish&mdash;before
+ the assembly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Elizabeth, seeing that her counsel had been unwise and her action
+ premature, turned upon her envoy, as she was apt to do, and rebuked him
+ for his obedience, so soon as obedience had proved inconvenient to
+ herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Having perused your letters," she said, "by which you at large debate
+ unto us what you have done in the matter of peace . . . . we find it
+ strange that you should proceed further. And although we had given you
+ full and ample direction to proceed to a public dealing in that cause, yet
+ our own discretion, seeing the difficulties and dangers that you yourself
+ saw in the propounding of the matter, ought to have led you to delay till
+ further command from us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Majesty then instructed her envoy, in case he had not yet "propounded
+ the matter in the state-house to the general assembly," to pause entirely
+ until he heard her further pleasure. She concluded, as usual, with a
+ characteristic postcript in her own hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh weigh deeplier this matter," she said, "than, with so shallow a
+ judgment, to spill the cause, impair my honour, and shame yourself, with
+ all your wit, that once was supposed better than to lose a bargain for the
+ handling."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly the sphinx could have propounded no more puzzling riddles than
+ those which Elizabeth thus suggested to Buckhurst. To make war without an
+ army, to support an army without pay, to frame the hearts of a whole
+ people to peace who were unanimous for war, and this without saying a word
+ either in private or public; to dispose the Netherlanders favourably to
+ herself and to Leicester, by refusing them men and money, brow-beating
+ them for asking for it, and subjecting them to a course of perpetual
+ insults, which she called "corrosives," to do all this and more seemed
+ difficult. If not to do it, were to spill the cause and to lose the
+ bargain, it was more than probable that they would be spilt and lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the ambassador was no OEdipus&mdash;although a man of delicate
+ perceptions and brilliant intellect&mdash;and he turned imploringly to a
+ wise counsellor for aid against the tormentor who chose to be so
+ stony-faced and enigmatical.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Touching the matter of peace," said he to Walsingham, "I have written
+ somewhat to her Majesty in cipher, so as I am sure you will be called for
+ to decipher it. If you did know how infinitely her Majesty did at my
+ departure and before&mdash;for in this matter of peace she hath specially
+ used me this good while&mdash;command me, pray me, and persuade me to
+ further and hasten the same with all the speed possible that might be, and
+ how, on the other side, I have continually been the man and the mean that
+ have most plainly dehorted her from such post-haste, and that she should
+ never make good peace without a puissant army in the field, you would then
+ say that I had now cause to fear her displeasure for being too slow, and
+ not too forward. And as for all the reasons which in my last letters are
+ set down, her Majesty hath debated them with me many times."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus midsummer was fast approaching, the commonwealth was without a
+ regular government, Leicester remained in England nursing his wrath and
+ preparing his schemes, the Queen was at Greenwich, corresponding with
+ Alexander Farnese, and sending riddles to Buckhurst, when the enemy&mdash;who,
+ according to her Majesty, was "quite unable to attempt the siege of any
+ town" suddenly appeared in force in Flanders, and invested Sluy's. This
+ most important seaport, both for the destiny of the republic and of
+ England at that critical moment, was insufficiently defended. It was quite
+ time to put an army in the field, with a governor-general to command it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 5th June there was a meeting of the state-council at the Hague.
+ Count Maurice, Hohenlo, and Moeurs were present, besides several members
+ of the States-General. Two propositions were before the council. The first
+ was that it was absolutely necessary to the safety of the republic, now
+ that the enemy had taken the field, and the important city of Sluy's was
+ besieged, for Prince Maurice to be appointed captain-general, until such
+ time as the Earl of Leicester or some other should be sent by her Majesty.
+ The second was to confer upon the state-council the supreme government in
+ civil affairs, for the same period, and to repeal all limitations and
+ restrictions upon the powers of the council made secretly by the Earl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Chancellor Leoninus, "that grave, wise old man," moved the propositions.
+ The deputies of the States were requested to withdraw. The vote of each
+ councillor was demanded. Buckhurst, who, as the Queen's representative&mdash;together
+ with Wilkes and John Norris&mdash;had a seat in the council, refused to
+ vote. "It was a matter," he discreetly observed with which "he had not
+ been instructed by her Majesty to intermeddle." Norris and Wilkes also
+ begged to be excused from voting, and, although earnestly urged to do so
+ by the whole council, persisted in their refusal. Both measures were then
+ carried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner was the vote taken, than an English courier entered the
+ council-chamber, with pressing despatches from Lord Leicester. The letters
+ were at once read. The Earl announced his speedy arrival, and summoned
+ both the States-General and the council to meet him at Dort, where his
+ lodgings were already taken. All were surprised, but none more than
+ Buckhurst, Wilkes, and Norris; for no intimation of this sudden resolution
+ had been received by them, nor any answer given to various propositions,
+ considered by her Majesty as indispensable preliminaries to the governor's
+ visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The council adjourned till after dinner, and Buckhurst held conference
+ meantime with various counsellors and deputies. On the reassembling of the
+ board, it was urged by Barneveld, in the name of the States, that the
+ election of Prince Maurice should still hold good. "Although by these
+ letters," said he, "it would seem that her Majesty had resolved upon the
+ speedy return of his Excellency, yet, inasmuch as the counsels and
+ resolutions of princes are often subject to change upon new occasion, it
+ does not seem fit that our late purpose concerning Prince Maurice should
+ receive any interruption."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, after brief debate, both resolutions, voted in the morning,
+ were confirmed in the afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So now," said Wilkes, "Maurice is general of all the forces, 'et quid
+ sequetur nescimus.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whatever else was to follow, it was very certain that Wilkes would not
+ stay. His great enemy had sworn his destruction, and would now take his
+ choice, whether to do him to death himself, or to throw him into the
+ clutch of the ferocious Hohenlo. "As for my own particular," said the
+ counsellor, "the word is go, whosoever cometh or cometh not," and he
+ announced to Walsingham his intention of departing without permission,
+ should he not immediately receive it from England. "I shall stay to be
+ dandled with no love-days nor leave-takings," he observed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Leicester had delayed his coming too long. The country felt that
+ it-had been trifled with by his: absence&mdash;at so critical a period&mdash;of
+ seven months. It was known too that the Queen was secretly treating with
+ the enemy, and that Buckhurst had been privately sounding leading
+ personages upon that subject, by her orders. This had caused a deep,
+ suppressed indignation. Over and over again had the English government
+ been warned as to the danger of delay. "Your length in resolving;" Wilkes
+ had said, "whatsoever your secret purposes may be&mdash;will put us to new
+ plunges before long." The mission of Buckhurst was believed to be "but a
+ stale, having some other intent than was expressed." And at last, the new
+ plunge had been fairly taken. It seemed now impossible for Leicester to
+ regain the absolute authority, which he coveted; and which he had for a
+ brief season possessed. The States-General, under able leaders, had become
+ used to a government which had been forced upon them, and which they had
+ wielded with success. Holland and Zeeland, paying the whole expense of the
+ war, were not likely to endure again the absolute sovereignty of a
+ foreigner, guided by a back stairs council of reckless politicians&mdash;most
+ of whom were unprincipled, and some of whom had been proved to be felons&mdash;and
+ established, at Utrecht, which contributed nothing to the general purse.
+ If Leicester were really-coming, it seemed certain that he would be held
+ to acknowledge the ancient constitution, and to respect the sovereignty of
+ the States-General. It was resolved that he should be well bridled. The
+ sensations of Barneveld and his party may therefore be imagined, when a
+ private letter of Leicester, to his secretary "the fellow named Junius,"
+ as Hohenlo called him&mdash;having been intercepted at this moment, gave
+ them an opportunity of studying the Earl's secret thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl informed his correspondent that he was on the point of starting
+ for the Netherlands. He ordered him therefore to proceed at once to
+ reassure those whom he knew well disposed as to the good intentions of her
+ Majesty and of the governor-general. And if, on the part of Lord Buckhurst
+ or others, it should be intimated that the Queen was resolved to treat for
+ peace with the King of Spain; and wished to have the opinion of the
+ Netherlanders on that subject, he was to say boldly that Lord Buckhurst
+ never had any such charge, and that her Majesty had not been treating at
+ all. She had only been attempting to sound the King's intentions towards
+ the Netherlands, in case of any accord. Having received no satisfactory
+ assurance on the subject, her Majesty was determined to proceed with the
+ defence of these countries. This appeared by the expedition of Drake
+ against Spain, and by the return of the Earl, with a good cumber of
+ soldiers paid by her Majesty, over and above her ordinary subsidy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are also;" said the Earl, "to tell those who have the care of the
+ people" (the ministers of the reformed church and others), "that I am
+ returning, in the confidence that they will, in future, cause all past
+ difficulties to cease, and that they will yield to me a legitimate
+ authority, such as befits for administering the sovereignty of the
+ Provinces, without my being obliged to endure all the oppositions and
+ counter-minings of the States, as in times past. The States must content
+ themselves with retaining the power which they claim to have exercised
+ under the governors of the Emperor and the King&mdash;without attempting
+ anything farther during my government&mdash;since I desire to do nothing
+ of importance without the advice of the council, which will be composed
+ legitimately of persons of the country. You will also tell them that her
+ Majesty commands me to return unless I can obtain from the States the
+ authority which is necessary, in order not to be governor in appearance
+ only and on paper. And I wish that those who are good may be apprized of
+ all this, in order that nothing may happen to their prejudice and ruin,
+ and contrary to their wishes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were two very obvious comments to be made upon this document.
+ Firstly, the States&mdash;de jure, as they claimed, and de facto most
+ unquestionably&mdash;were in the position of the Emperor and King. They
+ were the sovereigns. The Earl wished them to content themselves with the
+ power which they exercised under the Emperor's governors. This was like
+ requesting the Emperor, when in the Netherlands, to consider himself
+ subject to his own governor. The second obvious reflection was that the
+ Earl, in limiting his authority by a state-council, expected, no doubt, to
+ appoint that body himself&mdash;as he had done before&mdash;and to allow
+ the members only the right of talking, and of voting,&mdash;without the
+ power of enforcing their decisions. In short, it was very plain that
+ Leicester meant to be more absolute than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the flat contradiction given to Buckhurst's proceedings in the
+ matter of peace, that statement could scarcely deceive any one who had
+ seen her Majesty's letters and instructions to her envoy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was also a singularly deceitful course to be adopted by Leicester
+ towards Buckhurst and towards the Netherlands, because his own private
+ instructions, drawn up at the same moment, expressly enjoined him to do
+ exactly what Buckhurst had been doing. He was most strictly and earnestly
+ commanded to deal privately with all such persons as bad influence with
+ the "common sort of people," in order that they should use their influence
+ with those common people in favour of peace, bringing vividly before them
+ the excessive burthens of the war, their inability to cope with so potent
+ a prince as Philip, and the necessity the Queen was under of discontinuing
+ her contributions to their support. He was to make the same
+ representations to the States, and he was further most explicitly to
+ inform all concerned, that, in case they were unmoved by these
+ suggestions, her Majesty had quite made up her mind to accept the handsome
+ offers of peace held out by the King of Spain, and to leave them to their
+ fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed scarcely possible that the letter to Junius and the instructions
+ for the Earl should have been dated the same week, and should have
+ emanated from the same mind; but such was the fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was likewise privately to assure Maurice and Hohenlo&mdash;in order to
+ remove their anticipated opposition to the peace&mdash;that such care
+ should be taken in providing for them, as that "they should have no just
+ cause to dislike thereof, but to rest satisfied withal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With regard to the nature of his authority, he was instructed to claim a
+ kind of dictatorship in everything regarding the command of the forces,
+ and the distribution of the public treasure. All offices were to be at his
+ disposal. Every florin contributed by the States was to be placed in his
+ hands, and spent according to his single will. He was also to have plenary
+ power to prevent the trade in victuals with the enemy by death and
+ confiscation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If opposition to any of these proposals were made by the States-General,
+ he was to appeal to the States of each Province; to the towns and
+ communities, and in case it should prove impossible for him "to be
+ furnished with the desired authority," he was then instructed to say that
+ it was "her Majesty's meaning to leave them to their own counsel and
+ defence, and to withdraw the support that she had yielded to them: seeing
+ plainly that the continuance of the confused government now reigning among
+ them could not but work their ruin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both these papers came into Barneveld's hands, through the agency of
+ Ortel, the States' envoy in England, before the arrival of the Earl in the
+ Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course they soon became the topics of excited conversation and of alarm
+ in every part of the country. Buckhurst, touched to the quick by the
+ reflection upon those&mdash;proceedings of his which had been so
+ explicitly enjoined upon him, and so reluctantly undertaken&mdash;appealed
+ earnestly to her Majesty. He reminded her, as delicately as possible, that
+ her honour, as well as his own, was at stake by Leicester's insolent
+ disavowals of her authorized ambassador. He besought her to remember "what
+ even her own royal hand had written to the Duke of Parma;" and how much
+ his honour was interested "by the disavowing of his dealings about the
+ peace begun by her Majesty's commandment." He adjured her with much
+ eloquence to think upon the consequences of stirring up the common and
+ unstable multitude against their rulers; upon the pernicious effects of
+ allowing the clergy to inflame the passions of the people against the
+ government. "Under the name of such as have charge over the people," said
+ Buckhurst, "are understood the ministers and chaplains of the churches in
+ every town, by the means of whom it, seems that his Lordship tendeth his
+ whole purpose to attain to his desire of the administration of the
+ sovereignty." He assured the Queen that this scheme of Leicester to seize
+ virtually upon that sovereignty, would be a disastrous one. "The States
+ are resolved," said he, "since your Majesty doth refuse the sovereignty,
+ to lay it upon no creature else, as a thing contrary to their oath and
+ allegiance to their country." He reminded her also that the States had
+ been dissatisfied with the Earl's former administration, believing that he
+ had exceeded his commission, and that they were determined therefore to
+ limit his authority at his return. "Your sacred Majesty may consider," he
+ said, "what effect all this may work among the common and ignorant people,
+ by intimating that, unless they shall procure him the administration of
+ such a sovereignty as he requireth, their ruin may ensue." Buckhurst also
+ informed her that he had despatched Councillor Wilkes to England, in order
+ that he might give more ample information on all these affairs by word of
+ mouth than could well be written.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It need hardly be stated that Barneveld came down to the states'-house
+ with these papers in his hand, and thundered against the delinquent and
+ intriguing governor till the general indignation rose to an alarming
+ height. False statements of course were made to Leicester as to the
+ substance of the Advocate's discourse. He was said to have charged upon
+ the English government an intention to seize forcibly upon their cities,
+ and to transfer them to Spain on payment of the sums due to the Queen from
+ the States, and to have declared that he had found all this treason in the
+ secret instructions of the Earl. But Barneveld had read the instructions,
+ to which the attention of the reader has just been called, and had
+ strictly stated the truth which was damaging enough, without need of
+ exaggeration.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ All business has been transacted with open doors
+ Beacons in the upward path of mankind
+ Been already crimination and recrimination more than enough
+ Casting up the matter "as pinchingly as possibly might be"
+ Disposed to throat-cutting by the ministers of the Gospel
+ During this, whole war, we have never seen the like
+ Even to grant it slowly is to deny it utterly
+ Evil is coming, the sooner it arrives the better
+ Fool who useth not wit because he hath it not
+ Guilty of no other crime than adhesion to the Catholic faith
+ Individuals walking in advance of their age
+ Never peace well made, he observed, without a mighty war
+ Rebuked him for his obedience
+ Respect for differences in religious opinions
+ Sacrificed by the Queen for faithfully obeying her orders
+ Succeeded so well, and had been requited so ill
+ Sword in hand is the best pen to write the conditions of peace
+ Their existence depended on war
+ They chose to compel no man's conscience
+ Torturing, hanging, embowelling of men, women, and children
+ Universal suffrage was not dreamed of at that day
+ Waiting the pleasure of a capricious and despotic woman
+ Who the "people" exactly were
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. 1587
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Situation of Sluys&mdash;Its Dutch and English Garrison&mdash;Williams writes
+ from Sluys to the Queen&mdash;Jealousy between the Earl and States&mdash;
+ Schemes to relieve Sluys&mdash;Which are feeble and unsuccessful&mdash;The
+ Town Capitulates&mdash;Parma enters&mdash;Leicester enraged&mdash;The Queen angry
+ with the Anti-Leicestrians&mdash;Norris, Wilkes, and Buckhurst punished&mdash;
+ Drake sails for Spain&mdash;His Exploits at Cadiz and Lisbon&mdash;He is
+ rebuked by Elizabeth.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When Dante had passed through the third circle of the Inferno&mdash;a
+ desert of red-hot sand, in which lay a multitude of victims of divine
+ wrath, additionally tortured by an ever-descending storm of fiery flakes&mdash;he
+ was led by Virgil out of this burning wilderness along a narrow causeway.
+ This path was protected, he said, against the showers of flame, by the
+ lines of vapour which rose eternally from a boiling brook. Even by such
+ shadowy bulwarks, added the poet, do the Flemings between Kadzand and
+ Bruges protect their land against the ever-threatening sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was precisely among these slender dykes between Kadzand and Bruges that
+ Alexander Farnese had now planted all the troops that he could muster in
+ the field. It was his determination to conquer the city of Sluys; for the
+ possession of that important sea-port was necessary for him as a basis for
+ the invasion of England, which now occupied all the thoughts of his
+ sovereign and himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Exactly opposite the city was the island of Kadzand, once a fair and
+ fertile territory, with a city and many flourishing villages upon its
+ surface, but at that epoch diminished to a small dreary sand-bank by the
+ encroachments of the ocean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A stream of inland water, rising a few leagues to the south of Sluys,
+ divided itself into many branches just before reaching the city, converted
+ the surrounding territory into a miniature archipelago&mdash;the islands
+ of which were shifting treacherous sand-banks at low water, and submerged
+ ones at flood&mdash;and then widening and deepening into a considerable
+ estuary, opened for the city a capacious harbour, and an excellent
+ although intricate passage to the sea. The city, which was well built and
+ thriving, was so hidden in its labyrinth of canals and streamlets, that it
+ seemed almost as difficult a matter to find Sluys as to conquer it. It
+ afforded safe harbour for five hundred large vessels; and its possession,
+ therefore, was extremely important for Parma. Besides these natural
+ defences, the place was also protected by fortifications; which were as
+ well constructed as the best of that period. There was a strong rampire
+ and many towers. There was also a detached citadel of great strength,
+ looking towards the sea, and there was a ravelin, called St. Anne's,
+ looking in the direction of Bruges. A mere riband of dry land in that
+ quarter was all of solid earth to be found in the environs of Sluys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The city itself stood upon firm soil, but that soil had been hollowed into
+ a vast system of subterranean magazines, not for warlike purposes, but for
+ cellars, as Sluys had been from a remote period the great entrepot of
+ foreign wines in the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the eternal disputes between Leicester and the States were going on
+ both in Holland and in England, while the secret negotiations between
+ Alexander Farnese and Queen slowly proceeding at Brussels and Greenwich,
+ the Duke, notwithstanding the destitute condition of his troops, and the
+ famine which prevailed throughout the obedient Provinces, had succeeded in
+ bringing a little army of five thousand foot, and something less than one
+ thousand horse, into the field. A portion of this force he placed under
+ the command of the veteran La Motte. That distinguished campaigner had
+ assured the commander-in-chief that the reduction of the city would be an
+ easy achievement. Alexander soon declared that the enterprise was the most
+ difficult one that he had ever undertaken. Yet, two years before, he had
+ carried to its triumphant conclusion the famous siege of Antwerp. He
+ stationed his own division upon the isle of Kadzand, and strengthened his
+ camp by additionally fortifying those shadowy bulwarks, by which the
+ island, since the age of Dante, had entrenched itself against the assaults
+ of ocean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, La Motte, by the orders of his chief, had succeeded,
+ after a sharp struggle, in carrying the fort of St. Anne. A still more
+ important step was the surprising of Blankenburg, a small fortified place
+ on the coast, about midway between Ostend and Sluys, by which the
+ sea-communications with the former city for the relief of the beleaguered
+ town were interrupted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parma's demonstrations against Sluys had commenced in the early days of
+ June. The commandant of the place was Arnold de Groenevelt, a Dutch noble
+ of ancient lineage and approved valour. His force was, however, very
+ meagre, hardly numbering more than eight hundred, all Netherlanders, but
+ counting among its officers several most distinguished personages-Nicholas
+ de Maulde, Adolphus de Meetkerke and his younger brother, Captain
+ Heraugiere, and other well-known partisans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the threatening of danger the commandant had made application to Sir
+ William Russell, the worthy successor of Sir Philip Sidney in the
+ government of Flushing. He had received from him, in consequence, a
+ reinforcement of eight hundred English soldiers, under several eminent
+ chieftains, foremost among whom were the famous Welshman Roger Williams,
+ Captain Huntley, Baskerville, Sir Francis Vere, Ferdinando Gorges, and
+ Captain Hart. This combined force, however, was but a slender one; there
+ being but sixteen hundred men to protect two miles and a half of rampart,
+ besides the forts and ravelins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, such as it was, no time was lost in vain regrets. The sorties against
+ the besiegers were incessant and brilliant. On one occasion Sir Francis
+ Vere&mdash;conspicuous in the throng, in his red mantilla, and supported
+ only by one hundred Englishmen and Dutchmen, under Captain Baskerville&mdash;held
+ at bay eight companies of the famous Spanish legion called the Terzo
+ Veijo, at push of pike, took many prisoners, and forced the Spaniards from
+ the position in which they were entrenching themselves. On the other hand,
+ Farnese declared that he had never in his life witnessed anything so
+ unflinching as the courage of his troops; employed as they were in digging
+ trenches where the soil was neither land nor water, exposed to inundation
+ by the suddenly-opened sluices, to a plunging fire from the forts, and to
+ perpetual hand-to-hand combats with an active and fearless foe, and yet
+ pumping away in the coffer-dams-which they had invented by way of
+ obtaining a standing-ground for their operations&mdash;as steadily and
+ sedately as if engaged in purely pacific employments. The besieged here
+ inspired by a courage equally remarkable. The regular garrison was small
+ enough, but the burghers were courageous, and even the women organized
+ themselves into a band of pioneers. This corps of Amazons, led by two
+ female captains, rejoicing in the names of 'May in the Heart' and
+ 'Catherine the Rose,' actually constructed an important redoubt between
+ the citadel and the rampart, which received, in compliment to its
+ builders, the appellation of 'Fort Venus.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The demands of the beleaguered garrison, however, upon the States and upon
+ Leicester were most pressing. Captain Hart swam thrice out of the city
+ with letters to the States, to the governor-general, and to Queen
+ Elizabeth; and the same perilous feat was performed several times by a
+ Netherland officer. The besieged meant to sell their lives dearly, but it
+ was obviously impossible for them, with so slender a force, to resist a
+ very long time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our ground is great and our men not so many," wrote Roger Williams to his
+ sovereign, "but we trust in God and our valour to defend it. . . . We
+ mean, with God's help, to make their downs red and black, and to let out
+ every acre of our ground for a thousand of their lives, besides our own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Welshman was no braggart, and had proved often enough that he was more
+ given to performances than promises. "We doubt not your Majesty will
+ succour us," he said, "for our honest mind and plain dealing toward your
+ royal person and dear country;" adding, as a bit of timely advice, "Royal
+ Majesty, believe not over much your peacemakers. Had they their mind, they
+ will not only undo your friend's abroad, but, in the end, your royal
+ estate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly it was from no want of wholesome warning from wise statesmen and
+ blunt soldiers that the Queen was venturing into that labyrinth of
+ negotiation which might prove so treacherous. Never had been so
+ inopportune a moment for that princess to listen to the voice of him who
+ was charming her so wisely, while he was at the same moment battering the
+ place, which was to be the basis of his operations against her realm. Her
+ delay in sending forth Leicester, with at least a moderate contingent, to
+ the rescue, was most pernicious. The States&mdash;ignorant of the Queen's
+ exact relations with Spain, and exaggerating her disingenuousness into
+ absolute perfidy became on their own part exceedingly to blame. There is
+ no doubt whatever that both Hollanders and English men were playing into
+ the hands of Parma as adroitly as if he had actually directed their
+ movements. Deep were the denunciations of Leicester and his partisans by
+ the States' party, and incessant the complaints of the English and Dutch
+ troops shut up in Sluys against the inactivity or treachery of Maurice and
+ Hohenlo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If Count Maurice and his base brother, the Admiral (Justinus de Nassau),
+ be too young to govern, must Holland and Zeeland lose their countries and
+ towns to make them expert men of war?" asked Roger Williams.' A pregnant
+ question certainly, but the answer was, that by suspicion and jealousy,
+ rather than by youth and inexperience, the arms were paralyzed which
+ should have saved the garrison. "If these base fellows (the States) will
+ make Count Hollock their instrument," continued the Welshman; "to cover
+ and maintain their folly and lewd dealing, is it necessary for her royal
+ Majesty to suffer it? These are too great matters to be rehearsed by me;
+ but because I am in the town, and do resolve to, sign with my blood my
+ duty in serving my sovereign and country, I trust her Majesty will pardon
+ me." Certainly the gallant adventurer on whom devolved at least half the
+ work of directing the defence of the city, had a right to express his
+ opinions. Had he known the whole truth, however, those opinions would have
+ been modified. And he wrote amid the smoke and turmoil of daily and
+ nightly battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yesterday was the fifth sally we made," he observed: "Since I followed
+ the wars I never saw valianter captains, nor willinger soldiers. At eleven
+ o'clock the enemy entered the ditch of our fort, with trenches upon
+ wheels, artillery-proof. We sallied out, recovered their trenches, slew
+ the governor of Dam, two Spanish captains, with a number of others,
+ repulsed them into their artillery, kept the ditch until yesternight, and
+ will recover it, with God's help, this night, or else pay dearly for it. .
+ . . I care not what may become of me in this world, so that her Majesty's
+ honour,&mdash;with the rest of honourable good friends, will think me an
+ honest man."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one ever doubted the simple-hearted Welshman's honesty, any more than
+ his valour; but he confided in the candour of others who were somewhat
+ more sophisticated than himself. When he warned her, royal Majesty against
+ the peace-makers, it was impossible for him to know that the great
+ peace-maker was Elizabeth herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the expiration of a month the work had become most fatiguing. The
+ enemy's trenches had been advanced close to the ramparts, and desperate
+ conflicts were of daily occurrence. The Spanish mines, too, had been
+ pushed forward towards the extensive wine-caverns below the city, and the
+ danger of a vast explosion or of a general assault from beneath their very
+ feet, seemed to the inhabitants imminent. Eight days long, with scarcely
+ an intermission, amid those sepulchral vaults, dimly-lighted with torches,
+ Dutchmen, Englishmen, Spaniards, Italians, fought hand to hand, with pike,
+ pistol, and dagger, within the bowels of the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the operations of the States were not commendable. The
+ ineradicable jealousy between the Leicestrians and the Barneveldians had
+ done its work. There was no hearty effort for the relief of Sluys. There
+ were suspicions that, if saved, the town would only be taken possession of
+ by the Earl of Leicester, as an additional vantage-point for coercing the
+ country into subjection to his arbitrary authority. Perhaps it would be
+ transferred to Philip by Elizabeth as part of the price for peace. There
+ was a growing feeling in Holland and Zeeland that as those Provinces bore
+ all the expense of the war, it was an imperative necessity that they
+ should limit their operations to the defence of their own soil. The
+ suspicions as to the policy of the English government were sapping the
+ very foundations of the alliance, and there was small disposition on the
+ part of the Hollanders, therefore, to protect what remained of Flanders,
+ and thus to strengthen the hands of her whom they were beginning to look
+ upon as an enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maurice and Hohenlo made, however, a foray into Brabant, by way of
+ diversion to the siege of Sluys, and thus compelled Farnese to detach a
+ considerable force under Haultepenne into that country, and thereby to
+ weaken himself. The expedition of Maurice was not unsuccessful. There was
+ some sharp skirmishing between Hohenlo and Haultepenne, in which the
+ latter, one of the most valuable and distinguished generals on the royal
+ side, was defeated and slain; the fort of Engel, near Bois-le-Duc, was
+ taken, and that important city itself endangered; but, on the other hand,
+ the contingent on which Leicester relied from the States to assist in
+ relieving Sluys was not forthcoming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For, meantime, the governor-general had at last been sent back by his
+ sovereign to the post which he had so long abandoned. Leaving Leicester
+ House on the 4th July (N. S.), he had come on board the fleet two days
+ afterwards at Margate. He was bringing with him to the Netherlands three
+ thousand fresh infantry, and thirty thousand pounds, of which sum fifteen
+ thousand pounds had been at last wrung from Elizabeth as an extra loan, in
+ place of the sixty thousand pounds which the States had requested. As he
+ sailed past Ostend and towards Flushing, the Earl was witness to the
+ constant cannonading between the besieged city and the camp of Farnese,
+ and saw that the work could hardly be more serious; for in one short day
+ more shots were fired than had ever been known before in a single day in
+ all Parma's experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arriving at Flushing, the governor-general was well received by the
+ inhabitants; but the mischief, which had been set a-foot six months
+ before, had done its work. The political intrigues, disputes, and the
+ conflicting party-organizations, have already been set in great detail
+ before the reader, in order that their effect might now be thoroughly
+ understood without&mdash;explanation. The governor-general came to
+ Flushing at a most critical moment. The fate of all the Spanish
+ Netherlands, of Sluys, and with it the whole of Philip and Parma's great
+ project, were, in Farnese's own language, hanging by a thread.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would have been possible&mdash;had the transactions of the past six
+ months, so far as regarded Holland and England, been the reverse of what
+ they had been&mdash;to save the city; and, by a cordial and united effort,
+ for the two countries to deal the Spanish power such a blow, that summer,
+ as would have paralyzed it for a long time to come, and have placed both
+ commonwealths in comparative security.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of all this, general distrust and mutual jealousy prevailed.
+ Leicester had, previously to his departure from England, summoned the
+ States to meet him at Dort upon his arrival. Not a soul appeared. Such of
+ the state-councillors as were his creatures came to him, and Count Maurice
+ made a visit of ceremony. Discussions about a plan for relieving the siege
+ became mere scenes of bickering and confusion. The officers within Sluys
+ were desirous that a fleet should force its way into the harbour, while,
+ at the same time, the English army, strengthened by the contingent which
+ Leicester had demanded from the States, should advance against the Duke of
+ Parma by land. It was, in truth, the only way to succour the place. The
+ scheme was quite practicable. Leicester recommended it, the Hollanders
+ seemed to favour it, Commandant Groenevelt and Roger Williams urged it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do assure you," wrote the honest Welshman to Leicester, "if you will
+ come afore this town, with as many galliots and as many flat-bottomed
+ boats as can cause two men-of-war to enter, they cannot stop their
+ passage, if, your mariners will do a quarter of their duty, as I saw them
+ do divers times. Before, they make their entrance, we will come with our
+ boats, and fight with the greatest part, and show them there is no such
+ great danger. Were it not for my wounded arm, I would be, in your first
+ boat to enter. Notwithstanding, I and other Englishmen will approach their
+ boats in such sort, that we will force them to give their saker of
+ artillery upon us. If, your Excellency will give ear unto those false lewd
+ fellows (the Captain meant the States-General), you shall lose great
+ opportunity. Within ten or twelve days the enemy will make his bridge from
+ Kadzand unto St. Anne, and force you to hazard battle before you succour
+ this town. Let my Lord Willoughby and Sir William Russell land at
+ Terhoven, right against Kadzand, with 4000, and entrench hard by the
+ waterside, where their boats can carry them victual and munition. They may
+ approach by trenches without engaging any dangerous fight . . . . We dare
+ not show the estate of this town more than we have done by Captain Herte.
+ We must fight this night within our rampart in the fort. You may sure the
+ world here are no Hamerts, but valiant captains and valiant soldiers, such
+ as, with God's help, had rather be buried in the place than be disgraced
+ in any point that belongs to such a number of men-of-war."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in vain did the governor of the place, stout Arnold Froenevelt,
+ assisted by the rough and direct eloquence of Roger Williams, urge upon
+ the Earl of Leicester and the States-General the necessity and the
+ practicability of the plan proposed. The fleet never entered the harbour.
+ There was no William of Orange to save Antwerp and Sluys, as Leyden had
+ once been saved, and his son was not old enough to unravel the web of
+ intrigue by which he was surrounded, or to direct the whole energies of
+ the commonwealth towards an all-important end. Leicester had lost all
+ influence, all authority, nor were his military abilities equal to the
+ occasion, even if he had been cordially obeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten days longer the perpetual battles on the ramparts and within the mines
+ continued, the plans conveyed by the bold swimmer, Captain Hart, for
+ saving the place were still unattempted, and the city was tottering to its
+ fall. "Had Captain Hart's words taken place," wrote Williams, bitterly,
+ "we had been succoured, or, if my letters had prevailed, our pain had
+ been, no peril: All wars are best executed in sight of the enemy . . . .
+ The last night of June (10th July, N. S.) the enemy entered the ditches of
+ our fort in three several places, continuing in fight in mine and on
+ rampart for the space of eight nights. The ninth; he battered us
+ furiously, made a breach of five score paces suitable for horse and man.
+ That day be attempted us in all, places with a general, assault for the
+ space of almost five hours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The citadel was now lost. It had been gallantly defended; and it was
+ thenceforth necessary to hold the town itself, in the very teeth of an
+ overwhelming force. "We were forced to quit the fort," said-Sir Roger,
+ "leaving nothing behind us but bare earth. But here we do remain
+ resolutely to be buried, rather than to be dishonoured in the least
+ point."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was still possible for the fleet to succour the city. "I do assure
+ you," said-Williams, "that your captains and mariners do not their duty
+ unless they enter with no great loss; but you must consider that no wars
+ may be made without danger. What you mean to do, we beseech you to do with
+ expedition, and persuade yourself that we will die valiant, honest-men.
+ Your Excellency will do well to thank the old President de Meetkerk far
+ the honesty and valour of his son."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Count Maurice and his natural brother, the Admiral, now undertook the
+ succour by sea; but, according to the Leicestrians, they continued
+ dilatory and incompetent. At any rate, it is certain that they did
+ nothing. At last, Parma had completed the bridge; whose construction, was
+ so much dreaded: The haven was now enclosed by a strong wooden structure,
+ resting an boats, on a plan similar to that of the famous bridge with
+ which he had two years before bridled the Scheldt, and Sluys was thus
+ completely shut in from the sea. Fire-ships were now constructed, by order
+ of Leicester&mdash;feeble imitations: of the floating volcanoes of
+ Gianihelli&mdash;and it was agreed that they should be sent against the
+ bridge with the first flood-tide. The propitious moment never seemed to
+ arrive, however, and, meantime, the citizens of Flushing, of their own
+ accord, declared that they would themselves equip and conduct a fleet into
+ the harbour of Sluys. But the Nassaus are said to have expressed great
+ disgust that low-born burghers should presume to meddle with so important
+ an enterprise, which of right belonged to their family. Thus, in the midst
+ of these altercations and contradictory schemes; the month of July wore
+ away, and the city was reduced to its last gasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the cannonading had thoroughly done its work. Eighteen days long the
+ burghers and what remained of the garrison had lived upon the ramparts,
+ never leaving their posts, but eating, sleeping, and fighting day and
+ night. Of the sixteen hundred Dutch and English but seven hundred
+ remained. At last a swimming messenger was sent out by the besieged with
+ despatches for the States, to the purport that the city could hold out no
+ longer. A breach in the wall had been effected wide enough to admit a
+ hundred men abreast. Sluys had, in truth, already fallen, and it was
+ hopeless any longer to conceal the fact. If not relieved within a day or
+ two, the garrison would be obliged to surrender; but they distinctly
+ stated, that they had all pledged themselves, soldiers and burghers, men,
+ women, and all, unless the most honourable terms were granted, to set fire
+ to the city in a hundred places, and then sally, in mass, from the gates,
+ determined to fight their way through, or be slain in the attempt. The
+ messenger who carried these despatches was drowned, but the letters were
+ saved, and fell into Parma's hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same moment, Leicester was making, at last, an effort to raise the
+ siege. He brought three or four thousand men from Flushing, and landed
+ them at Ostend; thence he marched to Blanckenburg. He supposed that if he
+ could secure that little port, and thus cut the Duke completely off from
+ the sea, he should force the Spanish commander to raise (or at least
+ suspend) the siege in order to give him battle. Meantime, an opportunity
+ would be afforded for Maurice and Hohenlo to force an entrance into the
+ harbour of Sluys, In this conjecture he was quite correct; but
+ unfortunately he did not thoroughly carry out his own scheme. If the Earl
+ had established himself at Blanckenburg, it would have been necessary for
+ Parma&mdash;as he himself subsequently declared-to raise the siege.
+ Leicester carried the outposts of the place successfully; but, so soon as
+ Farnese was aware of this demonstration, he detached a few companies with
+ orders to skirmish with the enemy until the commander-in-chief, with as
+ large a force as he could spare, should come in person to his support. To
+ the unexpected gratification of Farnese, however, no sooner did the
+ advancing Spaniards come in sight, than the Earl, supposing himself
+ invaded by the whole of the Duke's army, under their famous general, and
+ not feeling himself strong enough for such an encounter, retired, with
+ great precipitation, to his boats, re-embarked his troops with the utmost
+ celerity, and set sail for Ostend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next night had been fixed for sending forth the fireships against the
+ bridge, and for the entrance of the fleet into the harbour. One fire-ship
+ floated a little way towards the bridge and exploded ingloriously.
+ Leicester rowed in his barge about the fleet, superintending the soundings
+ and markings of the channel, and hastening the preparations; but, as the
+ decisive moment approached, the pilots who had promised to conduct the
+ expedition came aboard his pinnace and positively refused to have aught to
+ do with the enterprise, which they now declared an impossibility. The Earl
+ was furious with the pilots, with Maurice, with Hohenlo, with Admiral de
+ Nassau, with the States, with all the world. He stormed and raged and beat
+ his breast, but all in vain. His ferocity would have been more useful the
+ day before, in face of the Spaniards, than now, against the Zeeland
+ mariners: but the invasion by the fleet alone, unsupported by a successful
+ land-operation, was pronounced impracticable, and very soon the relieving
+ fleet was seen by the distressed garrison sailing away from the
+ neighbourhood, and it soon disappeared beneath the horizon. Their fate was
+ sealed. They entered into treaty with Parma, who, secretly instructed, as
+ has been seen, of their desperate intentions, in case any but the most
+ honourable conditions were offered, granted those conditions. The garrison
+ were allowed to go out with colours displayed, lighted matches, bullet in
+ mouth, and with bag and baggage. Such burghers as chose to conform to the
+ government of Spain and the church of Rome; were permitted to remain.
+ Those who preferred to depart were allowed reasonable time to make their
+ necessary arrangements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have hurt and slain very near eight hundred," said Sir Roger Williams.
+ "We had not powder to fight two hours. There was a breach of almost four
+ hundred paces, another of three score, another of fifty, saltable for
+ horse and men. We had lain continually eighteen nights all on the
+ breaches. He gave us honourable composition. Had the state of England lain
+ on it, our lives could not defend the place, three hours, for half the
+ rampires were his, neither had we any pioneers but ourselves. We were sold
+ by their negligence who are now angry with us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 5th August Parma entered the city. Roger Williams with his gilt
+ morion rather battered, and his great plume of feathers much
+ bedraggled-was a witness to the victor's entrance. Alexander saluted
+ respectfully an officer so well known to him by reputation, and with some
+ complimentary remarks urged him to enter the Spanish service, and to take
+ the field against the Turks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My sword," replied the doughty Welshman, "belongs to her royal Majesty,
+ Queen Elizabeth, above and before all the world. When her Highness has no
+ farther use for it, it is at the service of the King of Navarre."
+ Considering himself sufficiently answered, the Duke then requested Sir
+ Roger to point out Captain Baskerville&mdash;very conspicuous by a greater
+ plume of feathers than even that of the Welshman himself&mdash;and
+ embraced that officer; when presented to him, before all his staff. "There
+ serves no prince in Europe a braver man than this Englishman," cried
+ Alexander, who well knew how to appreciate high military qualities,
+ whether in his own army or in that of his foes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The garrison then retired, Sluy's became Spanish, and a capacious harbour,
+ just opposite the English coast, was in Parma's hands. Sir Roger Williams
+ was despatched by Leicester to bear the melancholy tidings to his
+ government, and the Queen was requested to cherish the honest Welshman,
+ and at least to set him on horseback; for he was of himself not rich
+ enough to buy even a saddle. It is painful to say that the captain did not
+ succeed in getting the horse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl was furious in his invectives against Hohenlo, against Maurice,
+ against the States, uniformly ascribing the loss of Sluy's to negligence
+ and faction. As for Sir John Norris, he protested that his misdeeds in
+ regard to this business would, in King Henry VIII.'s time, have "cost him
+ his pate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loss of Sluys was the beginning and foreshadowed the inevitable end of
+ Leicester's second administration. The inaction of the States was one of
+ the causes of its loss. Distrust of Leicester was the cause of the
+ inaction. Sir William Russell, Lord Willoughby, Sir William Pelham, and
+ other English officers, united in statements exonerating the Earl from all
+ blame for the great failure to relieve the place. At the same time, it
+ could hardly be maintained that his expedition to Blanckenburg and his
+ precipitate retreat on the first appearance of the enemy were proofs of
+ consummate generalship. He took no blame to himself for the disaster; but
+ he and his partisans were very liberal in their denunciations of the
+ Hollanders, and Leicester was even ungrateful enough to censure Roger
+ Williams, whose life had been passed, as it were, at push of pike with the
+ Spaniards, and who was one of his own most devoted adherents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen was much exasperated when informed of the fall of the city. She
+ severely denounced the Netherlanders, and even went so far as to express
+ dissatisfaction with the great Leicester himself. Meantime, Farnese was
+ well satisfied with his triumph, for he had been informed that "all
+ England was about to charge upon him," in order to relieve the place. All
+ England, however, had been but feebly represented by three thousand raw
+ recruits with a paltry sum of L15,000 to help pay a long bill of arrears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilkes and Norris had taken their departure from the Netherlands before
+ the termination of the siege, and immediately after the return of
+ Leicester. They did not think it expedient to wait upon the governor
+ before leaving the country, for they had very good reason to believe that
+ such an opportunity of personal vengeance would be turned to account by
+ the Earl. Wilkes had already avowed his intention of making his escape
+ without being dandled with leave-takings, and no doubt he was right. The
+ Earl was indignant when he found that they had given him the slip, and
+ denounced them with fresh acrimony to the Queen, imploring her to wreak
+ full measure of wrath upon their heads; and he well knew that his
+ entreaties would meet with the royal attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Buckhurst had a parting interview with the governor-general, at which
+ Killigrew and Beale, the new English counsellors who had replaced Wilkes
+ and Clerk, were present. The conversation was marked by insolence on the
+ part of Leicester, and by much bitterness on that of Buckhurst. The
+ parting envoy refused to lay before the Earl a full statement of the
+ grievances between the States-General and the governor, on the ground that
+ Leicester had no right to be judge in his own cause. The matter, he said,
+ should be laid before the Queen in council, and by her august decision he
+ was willing to abide. On every other subject he was ready to give any
+ information in his power. The interview lasted a whole forenoon and
+ afternoon. Buckhurst, according to his own statement, answered, freely all
+ questions put to him by Leicester and his counsellors; while, if the
+ report of those personages is to be trusted, he passionately refused to
+ make any satisfactory communication. Under the circumstances, however, it
+ may well be believed that no satisfactory communication was possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On arriving in England, Sir John Norris was forbidden to come into her
+ Majesty's presence, Wilkes was thrown into the Fleet Prison, and Buckhurst
+ was confined in his own country house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Norris had done absolutely nothing, which, even by implication, could be
+ construed into a dereliction of duty; but it was sufficient that he was
+ hated by Leicester, who had not scrupled, over and over again, to denounce
+ this first general of England as a fool, a coward, a knave, and a liar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Wilkes, his only crime was a most conscientious discharge of his
+ duty, in the course of which he had found cause to modify his abstract
+ opinions in regard to the origin of sovereignty, and had come reluctantly
+ to the conviction that Leicester's unpopularity had made perhaps another
+ governor-general desirable. But this admission had only been made
+ privately and with extreme caution; while, on the other hand, he had
+ constantly defended the absent Earl, with all the eloquence at his
+ command. But the hatred cf Leicester was sufficient to consign this able
+ and painstaking public servant to a prison; and thus was a man of worth,
+ honour, and talent, who had been placed in a position of grave
+ responsibility and immense fatigue, and who had done his duty like an
+ upright, straight-forward Englishman, sacrificed to the wrath of a
+ favourite. "Surely, Mr. Secretary," said the Earl, "there was never a
+ falser creature, a more seditious wretch, than Wilkes. He is a villain, a
+ devil, without faith or religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Buckhurst himself, it is unnecessary to say a word in his defence.
+ The story of his mission has been completely detailed from the most
+ authentic and secret documents, and there is not a single line written to
+ the Queen, to her ministers, to the States, to any public body or to any
+ private friend, in England or elsewhere, that does not reflect honour on
+ his name. With sagacity, without passion, with unaffected sincerity, he
+ had unravelled the complicated web of Netherland politics, and, with clear
+ vision, had penetrated the designs of the mighty enemy whom England and
+ Holland had to encounter in mortal combat. He had pointed out the errors
+ of the Earl's administration&mdash;he had fearlessly, earnestly, but
+ respectfully deplored the misplaced parsimony of the Queen&mdash;he had
+ warned her against the delusions which had taken possession of her keen
+ intellect&mdash;he had done&mdash;his best to place the governor-general
+ upon good terms with the States and with his sovereign; but it had been
+ impossible for him to further his schemes for the acquisition of a virtual
+ sovereignty over the Netherlands, or to extinguish the suspicions of the
+ States that the Queen was secretly negotiating with the Spaniard, when he
+ knew those suspicions to be just.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For deeds, such as these, the able and high-minded ambassador, the
+ accomplished statesman and poet, was forbidden to approach his sovereign's
+ presence, and was ignominiously imprisoned in his own house until the
+ death of Leicester. After that event, Buckhurst emerged from confinement,
+ received the order of the garter and the Earldom of Dorset, and on the
+ death of Burghley succeeded that statesman in the office of
+ Lord-Treasurer. Such was the substantial recognition of the merits of a
+ man who was now disgraced for the conscientious discharge of the most
+ important functions that had yet been confided to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be a thankless and superfluous task to give the details of the
+ renewed attempt, during a few months, made by Leicester to govern the
+ Provinces. His second administration consisted mainly of the same
+ altercations with the States, on the subject of sovereignty, the same
+ mutual recriminations and wranglings, that had characterized the period of
+ his former rule. He rarely met the States in person, and almost never
+ resided at the Hague, holding his court at Middleburg, Dort, or Utrecht,
+ as his humour led him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The one great feature of the autumn of 1587 was the private negotiation
+ between Elizabeth and the Duke of Parma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before taking a glance at the nature of those secrets, however, it is
+ necessary to make a passing allusion to an event which might have seemed
+ likely to render all pacific communications with Spain, whether secret or
+ open, superfluous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For while so much time had been lost in England and Holland, by
+ misunderstandings and jealousies, there was one Englishman who had not
+ been losing time. In the winter and early spring of 1587, the Devonshire
+ skipper had organized that expedition which he had come to the
+ Netherlands, the preceding autumn, to discuss. He meant to aim a blow at
+ the very heart of that project which Philip was shrouding with so much
+ mystery, and which Elizabeth was attempting to counteract by so much
+ diplomacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 2nd April, Francis Drake sailed from Plymouth with four ships
+ belonging to the Queen, and with twenty-four furnished by the merchants of
+ London, and other private individuals. It was a bold buccaneering
+ expedition&mdash;combining chivalrous enterprise with the chance of
+ enormous profit&mdash;which was most suited to the character of English
+ adventurers at that expanding epoch. For it was by England, not by
+ Elizabeth, that the quarrel with Spain was felt to be a mortal one. It was
+ England, not its sovereign, that was instinctively arming, at all points,
+ to grapple with the great enemy of European liberty. It was the spirit of
+ self-help, of self-reliance, which was prompting the English nation to
+ take the great work of the age into its own hands. The mercantile instinct
+ of the nation was flattered with the prospect of gain, the martial quality
+ of its patrician and of its plebeian blood was eager to confront danger,
+ the great Protestant mutiny. Against a decrepit superstition in
+ combination with an aggressive tyranny, all impelled the best energies of
+ the English people against Spain, as the embodiment of all which was
+ odious and menacing to them, and with which they felt that the life and
+ death struggle could not long be deferred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And of these various tendencies, there were no more fitting
+ representatives than Drake and Frobisher, Hawkins and Essex, Cavendish and
+ Grenfell, and the other privateersmen of the sixteenth century. The same
+ greed for danger, for gold, and for power, which, seven centuries before,
+ had sent the Norman race forth to conquer all Christendom, was now sending
+ its Anglo-Saxon and Anglo-Norman kindred to take possession of the old
+ world and the new.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The wind commands me away," said Drake on the 2nd April, 1587; "our ship
+ is under sail. God grant that we may so live in His fear, that the enemy
+ may have cause to say that God doth fight for her Majesty abroad as well
+ as at home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he felt that he was not without enemies behind him, for the strong
+ influence brought to bear against the bold policy which Walsingham
+ favoured, was no secret to Drake. "If we deserve ill," said he, "let us be
+ punished. If we discharge our duty, in doing our best, it is a hard
+ measure to be reported ill by those who will either keep their fingers out
+ of the fire; or who too well affect that alteration in our government
+ which I hope in God they shall never live to see." In latitude 40 deg. he
+ spoke two Zeeland ships, homeward bound, and obtained information of great
+ warlike stores accumulating in Cadiz and Lisbon. His mind was instantly
+ made up. Fortunately, the pinnace which the Queen despatched with orders
+ to stay his hand in the very act of smiting her great adversary, did not
+ sail fast enough to overtake the swift corsair and his fleet. Sir Francis
+ had too promptly obeyed the wind, when it "commanded him away," to receive
+ the royal countermand. On the 19th April, the English ships entered the
+ harbour of Cadiz, and destroyed ten thousand tons of shipping, with their
+ contents, in the very face of a dozen great galleys, which the nimble
+ English vessels soon drove under their forts for shelter. Two nights and a
+ day, Sir Francis, that "hater of idleness," was steadily doing his work;
+ unloading, rifling, scuttling, sinking, and burning those transportships
+ which contained a portion of the preparations painfully made by Philip for
+ his great enterprise. Pipe-staves and spikes, horse-shoes and saddles,
+ timber and cutlasses, wine, oil, figs, raisins, biscuits, and flour, a
+ miscellaneous mass of ingredients long brewing for the trouble of England,
+ were emptied into the harbour, and before the second night, the blaze of a
+ hundred and fifty burning vessels played merrily upon the grim walls of
+ Philip's fortresses. Some of these ships were of the largest size then
+ known. There was one belonging to Marquis Santa Cruz of 1500 tons, there
+ was a Biscayan of 1200, there were several others of 1000, 800, and of
+ nearly equal dimensions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thence sailing for Lisbon, Sir Francis, captured and destroyed a hundred
+ vessels more, appropriating what was portable of the cargoes, and
+ annihilating the rest. At Lisbon, Marquis Santa Cruz, lord high admiral of
+ Spain and generalissimo of the invasion, looked on, mortified and amazed,
+ but offering no combat, while the Plymouth privateersman swept the harbour
+ of the great monarch of the world. After thoroughly accomplishing his
+ work, Drake sent a message to Santa Cruz, proposing to exchange his
+ prisoners for such Englishmen as might then be confined in Spain. But the
+ marquis denied all prisoners. Thereupon Sir Francis decided to sell his
+ captives to the Moors, and to appropriate the proceeds of the sale towards
+ the purchase of English slaves put of the same bondage. Such was the
+ fortune of war in the sixteenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having dealt these great blows, Drake set sail again from Lisbon, and,
+ twenty leagues from St. Michaels, fell in with one of those famous Spanish
+ East Indiamen, called carracks, then the great wonder of the seas. This
+ vessel, San Felipe by name, with a cargo of extraordinary value, was
+ easily captured, and Sir Francis now determined to return. He had done a
+ good piece of work in a few weeks, but he was by no means of opinion that
+ he had materially crippled the enemy. On the contrary, he gave the
+ government warning as to the enormous power and vast preparations of
+ Spain. "There would be forty thousand men under way ere long," he said,
+ "well equipped and provisioned;" and he stated, as the result of personal
+ observation, that England could not be too energetic in, its measures of
+ resistance. He had done something with his little fleet, but he was no
+ braggart, and had no disposition to underrate the enemy's power. "God make
+ us all thankful again and again," he observed, "that we have, although it
+ be little, made a beginning upon the coast of Spain." And modestly as he
+ spoke of what he had accomplished, so with quiet self-reliance did he
+ allude to the probable consequences. It was certain, he intimated, that
+ the enemy would soon seek revenge with all his strength, and "with all the
+ devices and traps he could devise." This was a matter which could not be
+ doubted. "But," said Sir Francis, "I thank them much that they have staid
+ so long, and when they come they shall be but the sons of mortal men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the most precious result of the expedition, was the lesson which
+ the Englishmen had thus learned in handling the great galleys of Spain. It
+ might soon stand them in stead. The little war-vessels which had come from
+ Plymouth, had sailed round and round these vast unwieldy hulks, and had
+ fairly driven them off the field, with very slight damage to themselves.
+ Sir Francis had already taught the mariners of England, even if he had
+ done nothing else by this famous Cadiz expedition, that an armada, of
+ Spain might not be so invincible as men imagined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet when the conqueror returned from his great foray, he received no
+ laurels. His sovereign met him, not with smiles, but with frowns and cold
+ rebukes. He had done his duty, and helped to save her endangered throne,
+ but Elizabeth was now the dear friend of Alexander Farnese, and in
+ amicable correspondence with his royal master. This "little" beginning on
+ the coast of Spain might not seem to his Catholic Majesty a matter to be
+ thankful for, nor be likely to further a pacification, and so Elizabeth
+ hastened to disavow her Plymouth captain.'
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ["True it is, and I avow it on my faith, her Majesty did send a ship
+ expressly before he went to Cadiz with a message by letters charging
+ Sir Francis Drake not to show any act of hostility, which messenger
+ by contrary winds could never come to the place where he was, but
+ was constrained to come home, and hearing of Sir F. Drake's actions,
+ her Majesty commanded the party that returned to have been punished,
+ but that he acquitted himself by the oaths of himself and all his
+ company. And so unwitting yea unwilling to her Majesty those
+ actions were committed by Sir F. Drake, for the which her Majesty is
+ as yet greatly offended with him." Burghley to Andreas de Loo, 18
+ July, 1587. Flanders Correspondence.' (S. P. Office MS.)]
+
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ The blaze of a hundred and fifty burning vessels
+ We were sold by their negligence who are now angry with us
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII. 1587
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Secret Treaty between Queen and Parma&mdash;Excitement and Alarm in the
+ States&mdash;Religious Persecution in England&mdash;Queen's Sincerity toward
+ Spain&mdash;Language and Letters of Parma&mdash;Negotiations of De Loo&mdash;
+ English Commissioners appointed&mdash;Parma's affectionate Letter to the
+ Queen&mdash;Philip at his Writing-Table&mdash;His Plots with Parma against
+ England&mdash;Parma's secret Letters to the King&mdash;Philip's Letters to
+ Parma Wonderful Duplicity of Philip&mdash;His sanguine Views as to
+ England&mdash;He is reluctant to hear of the Obstacles&mdash;and imagines
+ Parma in England&mdash;But Alexander's Difficulties are great&mdash;He
+ denounces Philip's wild Schemes&mdash;Walsingham aware of the Spanish
+ Plot&mdash;which the States well understand&mdash;Leicester's great
+ Unpopularity&mdash;The Queen warned against Treating&mdash;Leicester's Schemes
+ against Barneveld&mdash;Leicestrian Conspiracy at Leyden&mdash;The Plot to
+ seize the City discovered&mdash;Three Ringleaders sentenced to Death&mdash;
+ Civil War in France&mdash;Victory gained by Navarre, and one by Guise&mdash;
+ Queen recalls Leicester&mdash;Who retires on ill Terms with the States&mdash;
+ Queen warned as to Spanish Designs&mdash;Result's of Leicester's
+ Administration.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The course of Elizabeth towards the Provinces, in the matter of the peace,
+ was certainly not ingenuous, but it was not absolutely deceitful. She
+ concealed and denied the negotiations, when the Netherland statesmen were
+ perfectly aware of their existence, if not of their tenour; but she was
+ not prepared, as they suspected, to sacrifice their liberties and their
+ religion, as the price of her own reconciliation with Spain. Her attitude
+ towards the States was imperious, over-bearing, and abusive. She had
+ allowed the Earl of Leicester to return, she said, because of her love for
+ the poor and oppressed people, but in many of her official and in all her
+ private communications, she denounced the men who governed that people as
+ ungrateful wretches and impudent liars!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were the corrosives and vinegar which she thought suitable for the
+ case; and the Earl was never weary in depicting the same statesmen as
+ seditious, pestilent, self-seeking, mischief-making traitors. These
+ secret, informal negotiations, had been carried on during most of the year
+ 1587. It was the "comptroller's peace;", as Walsingham contemptuously
+ designated the attempted treaty; for it will be recollected that Sir James
+ Croft, a personage of very mediocre abilities, had always been more busy
+ than any other English politician in these transactions. He acted;
+ however, on the inspiration of Burghley, who drew his own from the
+ fountainhead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was in vain for the Queen to affect concealment. The States knew
+ everything which was passing, before Leicester knew. His own secret
+ instructions reached the Netherlands before he did. His secretary, Junius,
+ was thrown into prison, and his master's letter taken from him, before
+ there had been any time to act upon its treacherous suggestions. When the
+ Earl wrote letters with, his own hand to his sovereign, of so secret a
+ nature that he did not even retain a single copy for himself, for fear of
+ discovery, he found, to his infinite disgust, that the States were at once
+ provided with an authentic transcript of every line that he had written.
+ It was therefore useless, almost puerile, to deny facts which were quite
+ as much within the knowledge of the Netherlanders as of himself. The worst
+ consequence of the concealment was, that a deeper treachery was thought
+ possible than actually existed. "The fellow they call Barneveld," as
+ Leicester was in the habit of designating one of the first statesmen in
+ Europe, was perhaps justified, knowing what he did, in suspecting more.
+ Being furnished with a list of commissioners, already secretly agreed upon
+ between the English and Spanish governments, to treat for peace, while at
+ the same time the Earl was beating his breast, and flatly denying that
+ there was any intention of treating with Parma at all, it was not
+ unnatural that he should imagine a still wider and deeper scheme than
+ really existed, against the best interests of his country. He may have
+ expressed, in private conversation, some suspicions of this nature, but
+ there is direct evidence that he never stated in public anything which was
+ not afterwards proved to be matter of fact, or of legitimate inference
+ from the secret document which had come into his hands. The Queen
+ exhausted herself in opprobious language against those who dared to impute
+ to her a design to obtain possession of the cities and strong places of
+ the Netherlands, in order to secure a position in which to compel the
+ Provinces into obedience to her policy. She urged, with much logic, that
+ as she had refused the sovereignty of the whole country when offered to
+ her, she was not likely to form surreptitious schemes to make herself
+ mistress of a portion of it. On the other hand, it was very obvious, that
+ to accept the sovereignty of Philip's rebellious Provinces, was to declare
+ war upon Philip; whereas, had she been pacifically inclined towards that
+ sovereign, and treacherously disposed towards the Netherlands, it would be
+ a decided advantage to her to have those strong places in her power. But
+ the suspicions as to her good faith were exaggerated. As to the intentions
+ of Leicester, the States were justified in their almost unlimited
+ distrust. It is very certain that both in 1586, and again, at this very
+ moment, when Elizabeth was most vehement in denouncing such aspersions on
+ her government, he had unequivocally declared to her his intention of
+ getting possession, if possible, of several cities, and of the whole
+ Island of Walcheren, which, together with the cautionary towns already in
+ his power, would enable the Queen to make good terms for herself with
+ Spain, "if the worst came to the worst." It will also soon be shown that
+ he did his best to carry these schemes into execution. There is no
+ evidence, however, and no probability, that he had received the royal
+ commands to perpetrate such a crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States believed also, that in those secret negotiations with Parma the
+ Queen was disposed to sacrifice the religious interests of the
+ Netherlands. In this they were mistaken. But they had reason for their
+ mistake, because the negotiator De Loo, had expressly said, that, in her
+ overtures to Farnese, she had abandoned that point altogether. If this had
+ been so, it would have simply been a consent on the part of Elizabeth,
+ that the Catholic religion and the inquisition should be re-established in
+ the Provinces, to the exclusion of every other form of worship or polity.
+ In truth, however, the position taken by her Majesty on the subject was as
+ fair as could be reasonably expected. Certainly she was no advocate for
+ religious liberty. She chose that her own subjects should be Protestants,
+ because she had chosen to be a Protestant herself, and because it was an
+ incident of her supremacy, to dictate uniformity of creed to all beneath
+ her sceptre. No more than her father, who sent to the stake or gallows
+ heretics to transubstantiation as well as believers in the Pope, had
+ Elizabeth the faintest idea of religious freedom. Heretics to the English
+ Church were persecuted, fined, imprisoned, mutilated, and murdered, by
+ sword, rope, and fire. In some respects, the practice towards those who
+ dissented from Elizabeth was more immoral and illogical, even if less
+ cruel, than that to which those were subjected who rebelled against
+ Sixtus. The Act of Uniformity required Papists to assist at the Protestant
+ worship, but wealthy Papists could obtain immunity by an enormous fine.
+ The Roman excuse to destroy bodies in order to save souls, could scarcely
+ be alleged by a Church which might be bribed into connivance at heresy,
+ and which derived a revenue from the very nonconformity for which humbler
+ victims were sent to the gallows. It would, however, be unjust in the
+ extreme to overlook the enormous difference in the amount of persecution,
+ exercised respectively by the Protestant and the Roman Church. It is
+ probable that not many more than two hundred Catholics were executed as
+ such, in Elizabeth's reign, and this was ten score too many. But what was
+ this against eight hundred heretics burned, hanged, and drowned, in one
+ Easter week by Alva, against the eighteen thousand two hundred went to
+ stake and scaffold, as he boasted during his administration, against the
+ vast numbers of Protestants, whether they be counted by tens or by
+ hundreds of thousands, who perished by the edicts of Charles V., in the
+ Netherlands, or in the single Saint Bartholomew Massacre in France?
+ Moreover, it should never be forgotten&mdash;from undue anxiety for
+ impartiality&mdash;that most of the Catholics who were executed in
+ England, suffered as conspirators rather than as heretics. No foreign
+ potentate, claiming to be vicegerent of Christ, had denounced Philip as a
+ bastard and, usurper, or had, by means of a blasphemous fiction, which
+ then was a terrible reality, severed the bonds of allegiance by which his
+ subjects were held, cut him off from all communion with his
+ fellow-creatures, and promised temporal rewards and a crown of glory in
+ heaven to those who should succeed in depriving him of throne and life.
+ Yet this was the position of Elizabeth. It was war to the knife between
+ her and Rome, declared by Rome itself; nor was there any doubt whatever
+ that the Seminary Priests&mdash;seedlings transplanted from foreign
+ nurseries, which were as watered gardens for the growth of treason&mdash;were
+ a perpetually organized band of conspirators and assassins, with whom it
+ was hardly an act of excessive barbarity to deal in somewhat summary
+ fashion. Doubtless it would have been a more lofty policy, and a far more
+ intelligent one, to extend towards the Catholics of England, who as a body
+ were loyal to their country, an ample toleration. But it could scarcely be
+ expected that Elizabeth Tudor, as imperious and absolute by temperament as
+ her father had ever been, would be capable of embodying that great
+ principle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When, in the preliminaries to the negotiations of 1587, therefore, it was
+ urged on the part of Spain, that the Queen was demanding a concession of
+ religious liberty from Philip to the Netherlanders which she refused to
+ English heretics, and that he only claimed the same right of dictating a
+ creed to his subjects which she exercised in regard to her own, Lord
+ Burghley replied that the statement was correct. The Queen permitted&mdash;it
+ was true&mdash;no man to profess any religion but the one which she
+ professed. At the same time it was declared to be unjust, that those
+ persons in the Netherlands who had been for years in the habit of
+ practising Protestant rites, should be suddenly compelled, without
+ instruction, to abandon that form of worship. It was well known that many
+ would rather die than submit to such oppression, and it was affirmed that
+ the exercise of this cruelty would be resisted by her to the uttermost.
+ There was no hint of the propriety&mdash;on any logical basis&mdash;of
+ leaving the question of creed as a matter between man and his Maker, with
+ which any dictation on the part of crown or state was an act of odious
+ tyranny. There was not even a suggestion that the Protestant doctrines
+ were true, and the Catholic doctrines false. The matter was merely taken
+ up on the 'uti possidetis' principle, that they who had acquired the fact
+ of Protestant worship had a right to retain it, and could not justly be
+ deprived of it, except by instruction and persuasion. It was also affirmed
+ that it was not the English practice to inquire into men's consciences. It
+ would have been difficult, however, to make that very clear to Philip's
+ comprehension, because, if men, women, and children, were scourged with
+ rods, imprisoned and hanged, if they refused to conform publicly to a
+ ceremony at which their consciences revolted-unless they had money enough
+ to purchase non-conformity&mdash;it seemed to be the practice to inquire
+ very effectively into their consciences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if there was a certain degree of disingenuousness on the part of
+ Elizabeth towards the States, her attitude towards Parma was one of
+ perfect sincerity. A perusal of the secret correspondence leaves no doubt
+ whatever on that point. She was seriously and fervently desirous of peace
+ with Spain. On the part of Farnese and his master, there was the most
+ unscrupulous mendacity, while the confiding simplicity and truthfulness of
+ the Queen in these negotiations was almost pathetic. Especially she
+ declared her trust in the loyal and upright character of Parma, in which
+ she was sure of never being disappointed. It is only doing justice to
+ Alexander to say that he was as much deceived by her frankness as she by
+ his falsehood. It never entered his head that a royal personage and the
+ trusted counsellors of a great kingdom could be telling the truth in a
+ secret international transaction, and he justified the industry with which
+ his master and himself piled fiction upon fiction, by their utter
+ disbelief in every word which came to them from England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The private negotiations had been commenced, or rather had been renewed,
+ very early in February of this year. During the whole critical period
+ which preceded and followed the execution of Mary, in the course of which
+ the language of Elizabeth towards the States had been so shrewish, there
+ had been the gentlest diplomatic cooing between Farnese and herself. It
+ was&mdash;Dear Cousin, you know how truly I confide in your sincerity, how
+ anxious I am that this most desirable peace should be arranged; and it was&mdash;Sacred
+ Majesty, you know how much joy I feel in your desire for the repose of the
+ world, and for a solid peace between your Highness and the King my master;
+ how much I delight in concord&mdash;how incapable I am by ambiguous words
+ of spinning out these transactions, or of deceiving your Majesty, and what
+ a hatred I feel for steel, fire, and blood.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four or five months rolled on, during which Leicester had been wasting
+ time in England, Farnese wasting none before Sluys, and the States doing
+ their best to counteract the schemes both of their enemy and of their
+ ally. De Loo made a visit, in July, to the camp of the Duke of Parma, and
+ received the warmest assurances of his pacific dispositions. "I am much
+ pained," said Alexander, "with this procrastination. I am so full of
+ sincerity myself, that it seems to me a very strange matter, this hostile
+ descent by Drake upon the coasts of Spain. The result of such courses will
+ be, that the King will end by being exasperated, and I shall be touched in
+ my honour&mdash;so great is the hopes I have held out of being able to
+ secure a peace. I have ever been and I still am most anxious for concord,
+ from the affection I bear to her sacred Majesty. I have been obliged, much
+ against my will, to take the field again. I could wish now that our
+ negotiations might terminate before the arrival of my fresh troops,
+ namely, 9000 Spaniards and 9000 Italians, which, with Walloons, Germans,
+ and Lorrainers, will give me an effective total of 30,000 soldiers. Of
+ this I give you my word as a gentleman. Go, then, Andrew de Loo,"
+ continued the Duke, "write to her sacred Majesty, that I desire to make
+ peace; and to serve her faithfully; and that I shall not change my mind,
+ even in case of any great success, for I like to proceed rather by the
+ ways of love than of rigour and effusion of bleed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can assure you, oh, most serene Duke," replied Andrew, "that the most
+ serene Queen is in the very same dispositions with yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Excellent well then," said the Duke, "we shall come to an agreement at
+ once, and the sooner the deputies on both sides are appointed the better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A feeble proposition was then made, on the part of the peace-loving
+ Andrew, that the hostile operations against Sluy's should be at once
+ terminated. But this did not seem so clear to the most serene Duke. He had
+ gone to great expense in that business; and he had not built bridges,
+ erected forts, and dug mines, only to abandon them for a few fine words,
+ Fine words were plenty, but they raised no sieges. Meantime these pacific
+ and gentle murmurings from Farnese's camp had lulled the Queen into
+ forgetfulness of Roger Williams and Arnold Groenevelt and their men,
+ fighting day and night in trench and mine during that critical midsummer.
+ The wily tongue of the Duke had been more effective than his batteries in
+ obtaining the much-coveted city. The Queen obstinately held back her men
+ and money, confident of effecting a treaty, whether Sluys fell or not. Was
+ it strange that the States should be distrustful of her intentions, and,
+ in their turn, become neglectful of their duty?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus summer wore into autumn, Sluys fell, the States and their
+ governor-general were at daggers-drawn, the Netherlanders were full of
+ distrust with regard to England, Alexander hinted doubts as to the Queen's
+ sincerity; the secret negotiations, though fertile in suspicions,
+ jealousies, delays, and such foul weeds, had produced no wholesome fruit,
+ and the excellent De Loo became very much depressed. At last a letter from
+ Burghley relieved his drooping spirits. From the most disturbed and
+ melancholy man in the world, he protested, he had now become merry and
+ quiet. He straightway went off to the Duke of Parma, with the letter in
+ his pocket, and translated it to him by candlelight, as he was careful to
+ state, as an important point in his narrative. And Farnese was fuller of
+ fine phrases than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no cause whatever," said he, in a most loving manner, "to doubt
+ my sincerity. Yet the Lord-Treasurer intimates that the most serene Queen
+ is disposed so to do. But if I had not the very best intentions, and
+ desires for peace, I should never have made the first overtures. If I did
+ not wish a pacific solution, what in the world forced me to do what I have
+ done? On the contrary, it is I that have reason to suspect the other
+ parties with their long delays, by which they have made me lose the best
+ part of the summer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then commented on the strong expressions in the English letters, as to
+ the continuance of her Majesty in her pious resolutions; observed that he
+ was thoroughly advised of the disputes between the Earl of Leicester and
+ the States; and added that it was very important for the time indicated by
+ the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whatever is to be done," said he, in conclusion, "let it be done
+ quickly;" and with that he said he would go and eat a bit of supper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And may I communicate Lord Burghley's letter to any one else?" asked De
+ Loo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, yes, to the Seigneur de Champagny, and to my secretary Cosimo,"
+ answered his Highness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the merchant negotiator proceeded at once to the mansion of Champagny,
+ in company with the secretary Cosimo. There was a long conference, in
+ which De Loo was informed of many things which he thoroughly believed, and
+ faithfully transmitted to the court of Elizabeth. Alexander had done his
+ best, they said, to delay the arrival of his fresh troops. He had
+ withdrawn from the field, on various pretexts, hoping, day after day, that
+ the English commissioners would arrive, and that a firm and perpetual
+ peace would succeed to the miseries of war. But as time wore away, and
+ there came no commissioners, the Duke had come to the painful conclusion
+ that he had been trifled with. His forces would now be sent into Holland
+ to find something to eat; and this would ensure the total destruction of
+ all that territory. He had also written to command all the officers of the
+ coming troops to hasten their march, in order that he might avoid
+ incurring still deeper censure. He was much ashamed, in truth, to have
+ been wheedled into passing the whole fine season in idleness. He had been
+ sacrificing himself for her sacred Majesty, and to, serve her best
+ interests; and now he found himself the object of her mirth. Those who
+ ought to be well informed had assured him that the Queen was only waiting
+ to see how the King of Navarre was getting on with the auxiliary force
+ just, going to him from Germany, that she had no intention whatever to
+ make peace, and that, before long, he might expect all these German
+ mercenaries upon his shoulders in the Netherlands. Nevertheless he was
+ prepared to receive them with 40,000 good infantry, a splendid cavalry
+ force, and plenty of money.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this and more did the credulous Andrew greedily devour; and he lost no
+ time in communicating the important intelligence to her Majesty and the
+ Lord-Treasurer. He implored her, he said, upon his bare knees, prostrate
+ on the ground, and from the most profound and veritable centre of his
+ heart and with all his soul and all his strength, to believe in the truth
+ of the matters thus confided to him. He would pledge his immortal soul,
+ which was of more value to him&mdash;as he correctly observed&mdash;than
+ even the crown of Spain, that the King, the Duke, and his counsellors,
+ were most sincerely desirous of peace, and actuated by the most loving and
+ benevolent motives. Alexander Farnese was "the antidote to the Duke of
+ Alva," kindly sent by heaven, 'ut contraria contrariis curenter,' and if
+ the entire security of the sacred Queen were not now obtained, together
+ with a perfect reintegration of love between her Majesty and the King of
+ Spain, and with the assured tranquillity and perpetual prosperity of the
+ Netherlands, it would be the fault of England; not of Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And no doubt the merchant believed all that was told him, and&mdash;what
+ was worse&mdash;that he fully impressed his own convictions upon her
+ Majesty and Lord Burghley, to say nothing of the comptroller, who, poor
+ man, had great facility in believing anything that came from the court of
+ the most Catholic King: yet it is painful to reflect, that in all these
+ communications of Alexander and his agents, there was not one single word
+ of truth.&mdash;It was all false from beginning to end, as to the
+ countermanding of the troops,&mdash;as to the pacific intentions of the
+ King and Duke, and as to the proposed campaign in Friesland, in case of
+ rupture; and all the rest. But this will be conclusively proved a little
+ later.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the conference had been most amicable and satisfactory. And when
+ business was over, Champagny&mdash;not a whit the worse for the severe
+ jilting which he had so recently sustained from the widow De Bours, now
+ Mrs. Aristotle Patton&mdash;invited De Loo and Secretary Cosimo to supper.
+ And the three made a night of it, sitting up late, and draining such huge
+ bumpers to the health of the Queen of England, that&mdash;as the excellent
+ Andrew subsequently informed Lord Burghley&mdash;his head ached most
+ bravely next morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so, amid the din of hostile preparation not only in Cadiz and Lisbon,
+ but in Ghent and Sluys and Antwerp, the import of which it seemed
+ difficult to mistake, the comedy of, negotiation was still rehearsing, and
+ the principal actors were already familiar with their respective parts.
+ There were the Earl of Derby, knight of the garter, and my Lord Cobham;
+ and puzzling James Croft, and other Englishmen, actually believing that
+ the farce was a solemn reality. There was Alexander of Parma thoroughly
+ aware of the contrary. There was Andrew de Loo, more talkative, more
+ credulous, more busy than ever, and more fully impressed with the
+ importance of his mission, and there was the white-bearded Lord-Treasurer
+ turning complicated paragraphs; shaking his head and waving his wand
+ across the water, as if, by such expedients, the storm about to burst over
+ England could, be dispersed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commissioners should come, if only the Duke of Parma would declare on
+ his word of honour, that these hostile preparations with which all
+ Christendom was ringing; were not intended against England; or if that
+ really were the case&mdash;if he would request his master to abandon all
+ such schemes, and if Philip in consequence would promise on the honour of
+ a prince, to make no hostile attempts against that country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There would really seem an almost Arcadian simplicity in such demands,
+ coming from so practised a statesman as the Lord-Treasurer, and from a
+ woman of such brilliant intellect as Elizabeth unquestionably possessed.
+ But we read the history of 1587, not only by the light of subsequent
+ events, but by the almost microscopic revelations of sentiments and
+ motives, which a full perusal of the secret documents in those ancient
+ cabinets afford. At that moment it was not ignorance nor dulness which was
+ leading England towards the pitfall so artfully dug by Spain. There was
+ trust in the plighted word of a chivalrous soldier like Alexander Farnese,
+ of a most religious and anointed monarch like Philip II. English
+ frankness, playing cards upon the table, was no match for Italian and
+ Spanish legerdemain, a system according to which, to defraud the
+ antagonist by every kind of falsehood and trickery was the legitimate end
+ of diplomacy and statesmanship. It was well known that there were great
+ preparations in Spain, Portugal, and the obedient Netherlands, by land and
+ sea. But Sir Robert Sidney was persuaded that the expedition was intended
+ for Africa; even the Pope was completely mystified&mdash;to the intense
+ delight of Philip&mdash;and Burghley, enlightened by the sagacious De Loo,
+ was convinced, that even in case of a rupture, the whole strength of the
+ Spanish arms was to be exerted in reducing Friesland and Overyssel. But
+ Walsingham was never deceived; for he had learned from Demosthenes a
+ lesson with which William the Silent, in his famous Apology, had made the
+ world familiar, that the only citadel against a tyrant and a conqueror was
+ distrust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander, much grieved that doubts should still be felt as to his
+ sincerity, renewed the most exuberant expressions of that sentiment,
+ together with gentle complaints against the dilatoriness which had
+ proceeded from the doubt. Her Majesty had long been aware, he said, of his
+ anxiety to bring about a perfect reconciliation; but he had waited, month
+ after month, for her commissioners, and had waited in vain. His hopes had
+ been dashed to the ground. The affair had been indefinitely spun out, and
+ he could not resist the conviction that her Majesty had changed her mind.
+ Nevertheless, as Andrew de Loo was again proceeding to England, the Duke
+ seized the opportunity once more to kiss her hand, and&mdash;although he
+ had well nigh resolved to think no more on the subject&mdash;to renew his
+ declarations, that, if the much-coveted peace were not concluded, the
+ blame could not be imputed to him, and that he should stand guiltless
+ before God and the world. He had done, and was still ready to do, all
+ which became a Christian and a man desirous of the public welfare and
+ tranquillity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Burghley read these fine phrases, he was much impressed; and they
+ were pronounced at the English court to be "very princely and
+ Christianly." An elaborate comment too was drawn up by the comptroller on
+ every line of the letter. "These be very good words," said the
+ comptroller.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Queen was even more pleased with the last proof of the Duke's
+ sincerity, than even Burghley and Croft had been. Disregarding all the
+ warnings of Walsingham, she renewed her expressions of boundless
+ confidence in the wily Italian. "We do assure you," wrote the Lords, "and
+ so you shall do well to avow it to the Duke upon our honours, that her
+ Majesty saith she thinketh both their minds to accord upon one good and
+ Christian meaning, though their ministers may perchance sound upon a
+ discord." And she repeated her resolution to send over her commissioners,
+ so soon as the Duke had satisfied her as to the hostile preparations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have now seen the good faith of the English Queen towards the Spanish
+ government. We have seen her boundless trust in the sincerity of Farnese
+ and his master. We have heard the exuberant professions of an honest
+ intention to bring about a firm and lasting peace, which fell from the
+ lips of Farnese and of his confidential agents. It is now necessary to
+ glide for a moment into the secret cabinet of Philip, in order to satisfy
+ ourselves as to the value of all those professions. The attention of the
+ reader is solicited to these investigations, because the year 1587 was a
+ most critical period in the history of English, Dutch, and European
+ liberty. The coming year 1588 had been long spoken of in prophecy, as the
+ year of doom, perhaps of the destruction of the world, but it was in 1587,
+ the year of expectation and preparation, that the materials were slowly
+ combining out of which that year's history was to be formed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there sat the patient letter-writer in his cabinet, busy with his
+ schemes. His grey head was whitening fast. He was sixty years of age. His
+ frame was slight, his figure stooping, his digestion very weak, his manner
+ more glacial and sepulchral than ever; but if there were a hard-working
+ man in Europe, that man was Philip II. And there he sat at his table,
+ scrawling his apostilles. The fine innumerable threads which stretched
+ across the surface of Christendom, and covered it as with a net, all
+ converged in that silent cheerless cell. France was kept in a state of
+ perpetual civil war; the Netherlands had been converted into a shambles;
+ Ireland was maintained in a state of chronic rebellion; Scotland was torn
+ with internal feuds, regularly organized and paid for by Philip; and its
+ young monarch&mdash;"that lying King of Scots," as Leicester called him&mdash;was
+ kept in a leash ready to be slipped upon England, when his master should
+ give the word; and England herself was palpitating with the daily
+ expectation of seeing a disciplined horde of brigands let loose upon her
+ shores; and all this misery, past, present, and future, was almost wholly
+ due to the exertions of that grey-haired letter-writer at his peaceful
+ library-table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the very beginning of the year the King of Denmark had made an offer to
+ Philip of mediation. The letter, entrusted to a young Count de Rantzan,
+ had been intercepted by the States&mdash;the envoy not having availed
+ himself, in time, of his diplomatic capacity, and having in consequence
+ been treated, for a moment, like a prisoner of war. The States had
+ immediately addressed earnest letters of protest to Queen Elizabeth,
+ declaring that nothing which the enemy could do in war was half so
+ horrible to them as the mere mention of peace. Life, honour, religion,
+ liberty, their all, were at stake, they said, and would go down in one
+ universal shipwreck, if peace should be concluded; and they implored her
+ Majesty to avert the proposed intercession of the Danish King. Wilkes
+ wrote to Walsingham denouncing that monarch and his ministers as
+ stipendiaries of Spain, while, on the other hand, the Duke of Parma, after
+ courteously thanking the King for his offer of mediation, described him to
+ Philip as such a dogged heretic, that no good was to be derived from him,
+ except by meeting his fraudulent offers with an equally fraudulent
+ response. There will be nothing lost, said Alexander, by affecting to
+ listen to his proposals, and meantime your Majesty must proceed with the
+ preparations against England. This was in the first week of the year 1587.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In February, and almost on the very day when Parma was writing those
+ affectionate letters to Elizabeth, breathing nothing but peace, he was
+ carefully conning Philip's directions in regard to the all-important
+ business of the invasion. He was informed by his master, that one hundred
+ vessels, forty of them of largest size, were quite ready, together with
+ 12,000 Spanish infantry, including 3000 of the old legion, and that there
+ were volunteers more than enough. Philip had also taken note, he said, of
+ Alexander's advice as to choosing the season when the crops in England had
+ just been got in, as the harvest of so fertile a country would easily
+ support an invading force; but he advised nevertheless that the army
+ should be thoroughly victualled at starting. Finding that Alexander did
+ not quite approve of the Irish part of the plan, he would reconsider the
+ point, and think more of the Isle of Wight; but perhaps still some other
+ place might be discovered, a descent upon which might inspire that enemy
+ with still greater terror and confusion. It would be difficult for him, he
+ said, to grant the 6000 men asked for by the Scotch malcontents, without
+ seriously weakening his armada; but there must be no positive refusal, for
+ a concerted action with the Scotch lords and their adherents was
+ indispensable. The secret, said the King, had been profoundly kept, and
+ neither in Spain nor in Rome had anything been allowed to transpire.
+ Alexander was warned therefore to do his best to maintain the mystery, for
+ the enemy was trying very hard to penetrate their actions and their
+ thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And certainly Alexander did his best. He replied to his master, by
+ transmitting copies of the letters he had been writing with his own hand
+ to the Queen, and of the pacific messages he had sent her through
+ Champagny and De Loo. She is just now somewhat confused, said he, and
+ those of her counsellors who desire peace, are more eager, than ever for
+ negotiation. She is very much afflicted with the loss of Deventer, and is
+ quarrelling with the French ambassador about the new conspiracy for her
+ assassination. The opportunity is a good one, and if she writes an answer
+ to my letter, said Alexander, we can keep the negotiation, alive, while,
+ if she does not, 'twill be a proof that she has contracted leagues with
+ other parties. But, in any event, the Duke fervently implored Philip not
+ to pause in his preparations for the great enterprise which he had
+ conceived in his royal breast. So urgent for the invasion was the
+ peace-loving general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He alluded also to the supposition that the quarrel between her Majesty
+ and the French envoy was a mere fetch, and only one of the results of
+ Bellievre's mission. Whether that diplomatist had been sent to censure, or
+ in reality to approve, in the name of his master, of the Scottish Queen's
+ execution, Alexander would leave to be discussed by Don Bernardino de
+ Mendoza, the Spanish ambassador in Paris; but he was of opinion that the
+ anger of the Queen with France was a fiction, and her supposed league with
+ France and Germany against Spain a fact. Upon this point, as it appears
+ from Secretary Walsingham's lamentations, the astute Farnese was mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth he was frequently, led into error to the English policy the same
+ serpentine movement and venomous purpose which characterized his own; and
+ we have already seen; that Elizabeth was ready, on the contrary, to
+ quarrel with the States, with France, with all the world, if she could
+ only secure the good-will of Philip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French-matter, indissolubly connected in that monarch's schemes, with
+ his designs upon England and Holland, was causing Alexander much anxiety.
+ He foresaw great difficulty in maintaining that, indispensable civil war
+ in France, and thought that a peace might, some fine day, be declared
+ between Henry III. and the Huguenots, when least expected. In consequence,
+ the Duke of Guise was becoming very importunate for Philip's subsidies.
+ "Mucio comes begging to me," said Parma, "with the very greatest
+ earnestness, and utters nothing but lamentations and cries of misery. He
+ asked for 25,000 of the 150,000 ducats promised him. I gave them. Soon
+ afterwards he writes, with just as much anxiety, for 25,000 more. These I
+ did not give; firstly, because I had them not," (which would seem a
+ sufficient reason) "and secondly, because I wished to protract matters as
+ much as possible. He is constantly reminding me of your Majesty's promise
+ of 300,000 ducats, in case he comes to a rupture with the King of France,
+ and I always assure him that your Majesty will keep all promises."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip, on his part, through the months of spring, continued to assure his
+ generalissimo of his steady preparations&mdash;by sea and land. He had
+ ordered Mendoza to pay the Scotch lords the sum demanded by them, but not
+ till after they had done the deed as agreed upon; and as to the 6000 men,
+ he felt obliged, he said, to defer that matter for the moment; and to
+ leave the decision upon it to the Duke. Farnese kept his sovereign
+ minutely informed of the negociations carried on through Champagny and De
+ Loo, and expressed his constant opinion that the Queen was influenced by
+ motives as hypocritical as his own. She was only seeking, he said, to
+ deceive, to defraud, to put him to sleep, by those feigned negotiations,
+ while, she was making her combinations with France and Germany, for the
+ ruin of Spain. There was no virtue to be expected from her, except she was
+ compelled thereto by pure necessity. The English, he said, were hated and
+ abhorred by the natives of Holland and Zeeland, and it behoved Philip to
+ seize so favourable an opportunity for urging on his great plan with all
+ the speed in the world. It might be that the Queen, seeing these mighty
+ preparations, even although not suspecting that she herself was to be
+ invaded, would tremble for her safety, if the Netherlands should be
+ crushed. But if she succeeded in deceiving Spain, and putting Philip and
+ Parma to sleep, she might well boast of having made fools of them all. The
+ negotiations for peace and the preparations for the invasion should go
+ simultaneously forward therefore, and the money would, in consequence,
+ come more sparingly to the Provinces from the English coffers, and the
+ disputes between England and the States would be multiplied. The Duke also
+ begged to be informed whether any terms could be laid down, upon which the
+ King really would conclude peace; in order that he might make no mistake
+ for want of instructions or requisite powers. The condition of France was
+ becoming more alarming every day, he said. In other words, there was an
+ ever-growing chance of peace for that distracted country. The Queen of
+ England was cementing a strong league between herself, the French King,
+ and the Huguenots; and matters were looking very serious. The impending
+ peace in France would never do, and Philip should prevent it in time, by
+ giving Mucio his money. Unless the French are entangled and at war among
+ themselves, it is quite clear, said Alexander, that we can never think of
+ carrying out our great scheme of invading England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King thoroughly concurred in all that was said and done by his
+ faithful governor and general. He had no intention of concluding a peace
+ on any terms whatever, and therefore could name no conditions; but he
+ quite approved of a continuance of the negotiations. The English, he was
+ convinced, were utterly false on their part, and the King of Denmark's
+ proposition to-mediate was part and parcel of the same general fiction. He
+ was quite sensible of the necessity of giving Mucio the money to prevent a
+ pacification in France, and would send letters of exchange on Agostino
+ Spinola for the 300,000 ducats. Meantime Farnese was to go on steadily
+ with his preparations for the invasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The secretary-of-state, Don Juan de Idiaquez, also wrote most earnestly on
+ the great subject to the Duke. "It is not to be exaggerated", he said,
+ "how set his Majesty is in the all-important business. If you wish to
+ manifest towards him the most flattering obedience on earth, and to oblige
+ him as much as you could wish, give him this great satisfaction this year.
+ Since you have money, prepare everything out there, conquer all
+ difficulties, and do the deed so soon as the forces of Spain and Italy
+ arrive, according to the plan laid down by your Excellency last year. Make
+ use of the negotiations for peace for this one purpose, and no more, and
+ do the business like the man you are. Attribute the liberty of this advice
+ to my desire to serve you more than any other, to my knowledge of how much
+ you will thereby gratify his Majesty, and to my fear of his resentment
+ towards you, in the contrary case."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, on the same day, in order that there might be no doubt of the royal
+ sentiments, Philip expressed himself at length on the whole subject. The
+ dealings of Farnese with the English, and his feeding them with hopes of
+ peace, would have given him more satisfaction, he observed, if it had
+ caused their preparations to slacken; but, on the contrary, their boldness
+ had increased. They had perpetrated the inhuman murder of the Queen of
+ Scots, and moreover, not content with their piracies at sea and in the
+ Indies, they had dared to invade the ports of Spain, as would appear in
+ the narrative transmitted to Farnese of the late events at Cadiz. And
+ although that damage was small, said Philip; there resulted a very great
+ obligation to take them 'seriously in hand.' He declined sending fill
+ powers for treating; but in order to make use of the same arts employed by
+ the English, he preferred that Alexander should not undeceive them, but
+ desired him to express, as out of his own head; to the negotiators, his
+ astonishment that while they were holding such language they should commit
+ such actions. Even their want of prudence in thus provoking the King; when
+ their strength was compared to his, should be spoken of by Farnese as&mdash;wonderful,
+ and he was to express the opinion that his Majesty would think him much
+ wanting in circumspection, should he go on negotiating while they were
+ playing such tricks. "You must show yourself very sensitive, about this
+ event," continued Philip, "and you must give them to understand that I am
+ quite as angry as you. You must try to draw from them some offer of
+ satisfaction&mdash;however false it will be in reality&mdash;such as a
+ proposal to recall the fleet, or an assertion that the deeds of Drake in
+ Cadiz were without the knowledge and contrary to the will of the Queen,
+ and that she very much regrets them, or something of that sort."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has already been shown that Farnese was very successful in eliciting
+ from the Queen, through the mouth of Lord' Burghley, as ample a disavowal
+ and repudiation of Sir Francis Drake as the King could possibly desire.
+ Whether it would have the desired effect&mdash;of allaying the wrath of
+ Philip; might have been better foretold, could the letter, with which we
+ are now occupied, have been laid upon the Greenwich council-board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When you have got, such a disavowal," continued his Majesty, "you are to
+ act as if entirely taken in and imposed upon by them, and, pretending to
+ believe everything they tell you, you must renew the negotiations, proceed
+ to name commissioners, and propose a meeting upon neutral territory. As
+ for powers; say that you, as my governor-general, will entrust them to
+ your deputies, in regard to the Netherlands. For all other matters, say
+ that you have had full powers for many months, but that you cannot exhibit
+ them until conditions worthy of my acceptance have been offered.&mdash;Say
+ this only for the sake of appearance. This is the true way to take them
+ in, and so the peace-commissioners may meet. But to you only do I declare
+ that my intention is that this shall never lead to any result, whatever
+ conditions maybe offered by them. On the contrary, all this is done&mdash;just
+ as they do&mdash;to deceive them, and to cool them in their preparations
+ for defence, by inducing them to believe that such preparations will be
+ unnecessary. You are well aware that the reverse of all this is the truth,
+ and that on our part there is to be no slackness, but the greatest
+ diligence in our efforts for the invasion of England, for which we have
+ already made the most abundant provision in men, ships, and money, of
+ which you are well aware."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is it strange that the Queen of England was deceived? Is it matter of
+ surprise, censure, or shame, that no English statesman was astute enough
+ or base enough to contend with such diplomacy, which seemed inspired only
+ by the very father of lies?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Although we thus enter into negotiations," continued the King&mdash;unveiling
+ himself, with a solemn indecency, not agreeable to contemplate&mdash;"without
+ any intention of concluding them, you can always get out of them with
+ great honour, by taking umbrage about the point of religion and about some
+ other of the outrageous propositions which they are like to propose, and
+ of which there are plenty, in the letters of Andrew de Loo. Your
+ commissioners must be instructed; to refer all important matters to your
+ personal decision. The English will be asking for damages for money, spent
+ in assisting my rebels; your commissioners will contend that damages are
+ rather due to me. Thus, and in other ways, time will be agent. Your own
+ envoys are not to know the secret any more than the English themselves. I
+ tell it to you only. Thus you will proceed with the negotiations, now,
+ yielding on one point, and now insisting on another, but directing all to
+ the same object&mdash;to gain time while proceeding with the preparation
+ for the invasion, according to the plan already agreed upon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly the most Catholic King seemed, in this remarkable letter to have
+ outdone himself; and Farnese&mdash;that sincere Farnese, in whose loyal,
+ truth-telling, chivalrous character, the Queen and her counsellors placed
+ such implicit reliance&mdash;could thenceforward no longer be embarrassed
+ as to the course he was to adopt. To lie daily, through, thick, and thin,
+ and with every variety of circumstance and detail which; a genius fertile
+ in fiction could suggest, such was the simple rule prescribed by his
+ sovereign. And the rule was implicitly obeyed, and the English sovereign
+ thoroughly deceived. The secret confided only, to the faithful breast of
+ Alexander was religiously kept. Even the Pope was outwitted. His Holiness
+ proposed to, Philip the invasion of England, and offered a million to
+ further the plan. He was most desirous to be informed if the project was,
+ resolved upon, and, if so, when it was to be accomplished. The King took
+ the Pope's million, but refused the desired information. He answered
+ evasively. He had a very good will to invade the country, he said, but
+ there were great difficulties in the way. After a time, the Pope again
+ tried to pry into the matter, and again offered the million which Philip
+ had only accepted for the time when it might be wanted; giving him at the
+ same time, to understand that it was not necessary at that time, because
+ there were then great impediments. "Thus he is pledged to give me the
+ subsidy, and I am not pledged for the time," said Philip, "and I keep my
+ secret, which is the most important of all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet after all, Farnese did not see his way clear towards the consummation
+ of the plan. His army had wofully dwindled, and before he could seriously
+ set about ulterior matters, it would be necessary to take the city of
+ Sluys. This was to prove&mdash;as already seen&mdash;a most arduous
+ enterprise. He complained to Philip' of his inadequate supplies both in
+ men and money. The project conceived in the royal breast was worth
+ spending millions for, he said, and although by zeal and devotion he could
+ accomplish something, yet after all he was no more than a man, and without
+ the necessary means the scheme could not succeed. But Philip, on the
+ contrary, was in the highest possible spirits. He had collected more
+ money, he declared than had ever been seen before in the world. He had two
+ million ducats in reserve, besides the Pope's million; the French were in
+ a most excellent state of division, and the invasion should be made this
+ year without fail. The fleet would arrive in the English channel by the
+ end of the summer; which would be exactly in conformity with Alexander's
+ ideas. The invasion was to be threefold: from Scotland, under the Scotch
+ earls and their followers, with the money and troops furnished by Philip;
+ from the Netherlands, under Parma; and by the great Spanish armada itself,
+ upon the Isle of Wight. Alexander must recommend himself to God, in whose
+ cause he was acting, and then do his duty; which lay very plain before
+ him. If he ever wished to give his sovereign satisfaction in his life; he
+ was to do the deed that year, whatever might betide. Never could there be
+ so fortunate a conjunction of circumstances again. France was in a state
+ of revolution, the German levies were weak, the Turk was fully occupied in
+ Persia, an enormous mass of money, over and above the Pope's million, had
+ been got together, and although the season was somewhat advanced, it was
+ certain that the Duke would conquer all impediments, and be the instrument
+ by which his royal master might render to God that service which he was so
+ anxious to perform. Enthusiastic, though gouty, Philip grasped the pen in
+ order to scrawl a few words with his own royal hand. "This business is of
+ such importance," he said, "and it is so necessary that it should not be
+ delayed, that I cannot refrain from urging it upon you as much as I can. I
+ should do it even more amply; if this hand would allow me, which has been
+ crippled with gout these several days, and my feet as well, and although
+ it is unattended with pain, yet it is an impediment to writing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Struggling thus against his own difficulties, and triumphantly,
+ accomplishing a whole paragraph with disabled hand, it was natural that
+ the King should expect Alexander, then deep in the siege of Sluy's, to
+ vanquish all his obstacles as successfully; and to effect the conquest of
+ England so soon as the harvests of that kingdom should be garnered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sluy's was surrendered at last, and the great enterprise seemed opening
+ from hour to hour. During the months of autumn; upon the very days when
+ those loving messages, mixed with gentle reproaches, were sent by
+ Alexander to Elizabeth, and almost at the self-same hours in which honest
+ Andrew de Loo was getting such head-aches by drinking the Queen's health
+ with Cosimo, and Champagny, the Duke and Philip were interchanging
+ detailed information as to the progress of the invasion. The King
+ calculated that by the middle of September Alexander would have 30,000 men
+ in the Netherlands ready for embarcation.&mdash;Marquis Santa Cruz was
+ announced as nearly ready to, sail for the English channel with 22,000
+ more, among whom were to be 16,000 seasoned Spanish infantry. The Marquis
+ was then to extend the hand to Parma, and protect that passage to England
+ which the Duke was at once to effect. The danger might be great for so
+ large a fleet to navigate the seas at so late a season of the year; but
+ Philip was sure that God, whose cause it was, would be pleased to give
+ good weather. The Duke was to send, with infinite precautions of secrecy,
+ information which the Marquis would expect off Ushant, and be quite ready
+ to act so soon as Santa Cruz should arrive. Most earnestly and anxiously
+ did the King deprecate any, thought of deferring the expedition to another
+ year. If delayed, the obstacles of the following summer&mdash;a peace in
+ France, a peace between the Turk and Persia, and other contingencies&mdash;would
+ cause the whole project to fail, and Philip declared, with much iteration,
+ that money; reputation, honour, his own character and that of Farnese, and
+ God's service, were all at stake. He was impatient at suggestions of
+ difficulties occasionally, ventured by the Duke, who was reminded that he
+ had been appointed chief of the great enterprise by the spontaneous choice
+ of his master, and that all his plans had been minutely followed. "You are
+ the author of the whole scheme," said Philip, "and if it, is all to vanish
+ into space, what kind of a figure shall we cut the coming year?" Again and
+ again he referred to the immense sum collected&mdash;such as never before
+ had been seen since the world was made&mdash;4,800,000 ducats with
+ 2,000,000 in reserve, of which he was authorized to draw for 500,000 in
+ advance, to say nothing of the Pope's million.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alexander, while straining every nerve to obey his master's wishes
+ about the invasion, and to blind the English by the fictitious
+ negotiations, was not so sanguine as his sovereign. In truth, there was
+ something puerile in the eagerness which Philip manifested. He had made up
+ his mind that England was to be conquered that autumn, and had endeavoured&mdash;as
+ well as he could&mdash;to comprehend, the plans which his illustrious
+ general had laid down for accomplishing that purpose. Of, course; to any
+ man of average intellect, or, in truth, to any man outside a madhouse; it
+ would seem an essential part of the conquest that the Armada should
+ arrive. Yet&mdash;wonderful to relate-Philip, in his impatience,
+ absolutely suggested that the Duke might take possession of England
+ without waiting for Santa Cruz and his Armada. As the autumn had been
+ wearing away, and there had been unavoidable delays about the shipping in
+ Spanish ports, the King thought it best not to defer matters till, the
+ winter. "You are, doubtless, ready," he said to Farnese. "If you think you
+ can make the passage to England before the fleet from Spain arrives, go at
+ once. You maybe sure that it will come ere long to support, you. But if,
+ you prefer, to wait, wait. The dangers of winter, to the fleet and to your
+ own person are to be regretted; but God, whose cause it is; will protect
+ you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was, easy to sit quite out of harm's way, and to make such excellent,
+ arrangements for smooth weather in the wintry channel, and for the
+ conquest of a maritime and martial kingdom by a few flat bottoms. Philip
+ had little difficulty on that score, but the affairs of France were not
+ quite to his mind. The battle of Coutras, and the entrance of the German
+ and Swiss mercenaries into that country, were somewhat perplexing. Either
+ those auxiliaries of the Huguenots would be defeated, or they would be
+ victorious, or both parties would come to an agreement. In the first
+ event, the Duke, after sending a little assistance to Mucio, was to effect
+ his passage to England at once. In the second case, those troops, even
+ though successful, would doubtless be so much disorganized that it might
+ be still safe for Farnese to go on. In the third contingency&mdash;that of
+ an accord&mdash;it would be necessary for him to wait till the foreign
+ troops had disbanded and left France. He was to maintain all his forces in
+ perfect readiness, on pretext of the threatening aspect of French matters
+ and, so soon as the Swiss and Germane were dispersed, he was to proceed to
+ business without delay. The fleet would be ready in Spain in all November,
+ but as sea-affairs were so doubtful, particularly in winter, and as the
+ Armada could not reach the channel till mid-winter; the Duke was not to
+ wait for its arrival. "Whenever you see a favourable opportunity," said
+ Philip, "you must take care not to lose it, even if the fleet has not made
+ its appearance. For you may be sure that it will soon come to give you
+ assistance, in one way or another."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farnese had also been strictly enjoined to deal gently with the English,
+ after the conquest, so that they would have cause to love their new
+ master. His troops were not to forget discipline after victory. There was
+ to be no pillage or rapine. The Catholics were to be handsomely rewarded
+ and all the inhabitants were to be treated with so much indulgence that,
+ instead of abhorring Parma and his soldiers, they would conceive a strong
+ affection for them all, as the source of so many benefits. Again the Duke
+ was warmly commended for the skill with which he had handled the peace
+ negotiation. It was quite right to appoint commissioners, but it was never
+ for an instant to be forgotten that the sole object of treating was to
+ take the English unawares. "And therefore do you guide them to this end,"
+ said the King with pious unction, "which is what you owe to God, in whose
+ service I have engaged in this enterprise, and to whom I have dedicated
+ the whole." The King of France, too&mdash;that unfortunate Henry III.,
+ against whose throne and life Philip maintained in constant pay an
+ organized band of conspirators&mdash;was affectionately adjured, through
+ the Spanish envoy in Paris, Mendoza,&mdash;to reflect upon the advantages
+ to France of a Catholic king and kingdom of England, in place of the
+ heretics now in power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Philip, growing more and more sanguine, as those visions of fresh
+ crowns and conquered kingdoms rose before him in his solitary cell, had
+ even persuaded himself that the deed was already done. In the early days
+ of December, he expressed a doubt whether his 14th November letter had
+ reached the Duke, who by that time was probably in England. One would have
+ thought the King addressing a tourist just starting on a little
+ pleasure-excursion. And this was precisely the moment when Alexander had
+ been writing those affectionate phrases to the Queen which had been
+ considered by the counsellors at Greenwich so "princely and Christianly,"
+ and which Croft had pronounced such "very good words."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there had been no hostile, fleet to prevent, it was to be hoped, said
+ Philip, that, in the name of God, the passage had been made. "Once landed
+ there," continued the King, "I am persuaded that you will give me a good
+ account of yourself, and, with the help of our Lord, that you will do that
+ service which I desire to render to Him, and that He will guide our cause,
+ which is His own, and of such great importance to His Church." A part of
+ the fleet would soon after arrive and bring six thousand Spaniards, the
+ Pope's million, and other good things, which might prove useful to Parma,
+ presupposing that they would find him established on the enemy's
+ territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This conviction that the enterprise had been already accomplished grew
+ stronger in the King's breast every day. He was only a little disturbed
+ lest Farnese should have misunderstood that 14th November letter. Philip&mdash;as
+ his wont was&mdash;had gone into so many petty and puzzling details, and
+ had laid down rules of action suitable for various contingencies, so easy
+ to put comfortably upon paper, but which might become perplexing in
+ action, that it was no wonder he should be a little anxious. The third
+ contingency suggested by him had really occurred. There had been a
+ composition between the foreign mercenaries and the French King.
+ Nevertheless they had also been once or twice defeated, and this was
+ contingency number two. Now which of the events would the Duke consider as
+ having really occurred. It was to be hoped that he would have not seen
+ cause for delay, for in truth number three was not exactly the contingency
+ which existed. France was still in a very satisfactory state of discord
+ and rebellion. The civil war was by no means over. There was small fear of
+ peace that winter. Give Mucio his pittance with frugal hand, and that
+ dangerous personage would ensure tranquillity for Philip's project, and
+ misery for Henry III. and his subjects for an indefinite period longer.
+ The King thought it improbable that Farnese could have made any mistake.
+ He expressed therefore a little anxiety at having received no intelligence
+ from him, but had great confidence that, with the aid of the Lord and of
+ with his own courage he had accomplished the great exploit. Philip had
+ only, recommended delay in event of a general peace in France&mdash;Huguenots,
+ Royalists, Leaguers, and all. This had not happened. "Therefore, I trust,"
+ said the King; "that you&mdash;perceiving that this is not contingency
+ number three which was to justify a pause&mdash;will have already executed
+ the enterprise, and fulfilled my desire. I am confident that the deed is
+ done, and that God has blessed it, and I am now expecting the news from
+ hour to hour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alexander had not yet arrived in England. The preliminaries for the
+ conquest caused him more perplexity than the whole enterprise occasioned
+ to Philip. He was very short of funds. The five millions were not to be
+ touched, except for the expenses of the invasion. But as England was to be
+ subjugated, in order that rebellious Holland might be recovered, it was
+ hardly reasonable to go away leaving such inadequate forces in the
+ Netherlands as to ensure not only independence to the new republic, but to
+ hold out temptation for revolt to the obedient Provinces. Yet this was the
+ dilemma in which the Duke was placed. So much money had been set aside for
+ the grand project that there was scarcely anything for the regular
+ military business. The customary supplies had not been sent. Parma had
+ leave to draw for six hundred thousand ducats, and he was able to get that
+ draft discounted on the Antwerp Exchange by consenting to receive five
+ hundred thousand, or sacrificing sixteen per cent. of the sum. A good
+ number of transports, and scows had been collected, but there had been a
+ deficiency of money for their proper equipment, as the five millions had
+ been very slow in coming, and were still upon the road. The whole
+ enterprise was on the point of being sacrificed, according to Farnese, for
+ want of funds. The time for doing the deed had arrived, and he declared
+ himself incapacitated by poverty. He expressed his disgust and resentment
+ in language more energetic than courtly; and protested that he was not to
+ blame. "I always thought," said he bitterly, "that your Majesty would
+ provide all that was necessary even in superfluity, and not limit me
+ beneath the ordinary. I did not suppose, when it was most important to
+ have ready money, that I should be kept short, and not allowed to draw
+ certain sums by anticipation, which I should have done had you not
+ forbidden."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was, through life, a striking characteristic of Philip. Enormous
+ schemes were laid out with utterly inadequate provision for their
+ accomplishment, and a confident expectation entertained that wild, visions
+ were; in some indefinite way, to be converted into substantial realities,
+ without fatigue or personal exertion on his part, and with a very trifling
+ outlay of ready money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the faithful Farnese did his best. He was indefatigable night and
+ day in getting his boats together and providing his munitions of war. He
+ dug a canal from Sas de Gand&mdash;which was one of his principal depots&mdash;all
+ the way to Sluys, because the water-communication between those two points
+ was entirely in the hands of the Hollanders and Zeelanders. The rebel
+ cruisers swarmed in the Scheldt, from, Flushing almost to Antwerp, so that
+ it was quite impossible for Parma's forces to venture forth at all; and it
+ also seemed hopeless to hazard putting to sea from Sluys. At the same,
+ time he had appointed his, commissioners to treat with the English envoys
+ already named by the Queen. There had been much delay in the arrival of
+ those deputies, on account of the noise raised by Barneveld and his
+ followers; but Burghley was now sanguine that the exposure of what he
+ called the Advocate's seditious, false, and perverse proceedings, would
+ enable Leicester to procure the consent of the States to a universal
+ peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, with these parallel schemes of invasion and negotiation, spring;
+ summer, and autumn, had worn away. Santa Cruz was still with his fleet in
+ Lisbon, Cadiz, and the Azores; and Parma was in Brussels, when Philip
+ fondly imagined him established in Greenwich Palace. When made aware of
+ his master's preposterous expectations, Alexander would have been perhaps
+ amused, had he not been half beside himself with indignation. Such folly
+ seemed incredible. There was not the slightest appearance of a possibility
+ of making a passage without the protection of the Spanish fleet, he
+ observed. His vessels were mere transport-boats, without the least power
+ of resisting an enemy. The Hollanders and Zeelanders, with one hundred and
+ forty cruisers, had shut him up in all directions. He could neither get
+ out from Antwerp nor from Sluys. There were large English ships, too,
+ cruising in the channel, and they were getting ready in the Netherlands
+ and in England "most furiously." The delays had been so great, that their
+ secret had been poorly kept, and the enemy was on his guard. If Santa Cruz
+ had come, Alexander declared that he should have already been in England.
+ When he did come he should still be prepared to make the passage; but to
+ talk of such an attempt without the Armada was senseless, and he denounced
+ the madness of that proposition to his Majesty in vehement and unmeasured
+ terms. His army, by sickness and other causes, had been reduced to
+ one-half the number considered necessary for the invasion, and the rebels
+ had established regular squadrons in the Scheldt, in the very teeth of the
+ forts, at Lillo, Liefkenshoek, Saftingen, and other points close to
+ Antwerp. There were so many of these war-vessels, and all in such
+ excellent order, that they were a most notable embarrassment to him, he
+ observed, and his own flotilla would run great risk of being utterly
+ destroyed. Alexander had been personally superintending matters at Sluys,
+ Ghent, and Antwerp, and had strengthened with artillery the canal which he
+ had constructed between Sas and Sluys. Meantime his fresh troops had been
+ slowly arriving, but much sickness prevailed among them. The Italians were
+ dying fast, almost all the Spaniards were in hospital, and the others were
+ so crippled and worn out that it was most pitiable to behold them; yet it
+ was absolutely necessary that those who were in health should accompany
+ him to England, since otherwise his Spanish force would be altogether too
+ weak to do the service expected. He had got together a good number of
+ transports. Not counting his Antwerp fleet&mdash;which could not stir from
+ port, as he bitterly complained, nor be of any use, on account of the
+ rebel blockade&mdash;he had between Dunkerk and Newport seventy-four
+ vessels of various kinds fit for sea-service, one hundred and fifty
+ flat-bottoms (pleytas), and seventy riverhoys, all which were to be
+ assembled at Sluys, whence they would&mdash;so soon as Santa Cruz should
+ make his appearance&mdash;set forth for England. This force of transports
+ he pronounced sufficient, when properly protected by the Spanish Armada,
+ to carry himself and his troops across the channel. If, therefore, the
+ matter did not become publicly known, and if the weather proved
+ favourable, it was probable that his Majesty's desire would soon be
+ fulfilled according to the plan proposed. The companies of light horse and
+ of arquebusmen, with which he meant to make his entrance into London, had
+ been clothed, armed, and mounted, he said, in a manner delightful to
+ contemplate, and those soldiers at least might be trusted&mdash;if they
+ could only effect their passage&mdash;to do good service, and make matters
+ quite secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But craftily as the King and Duke had been dealing, it had been found
+ impossible to keep such vast preparations entirely secret. Walsingham was
+ in full possession of their plans down to the most minute details. The
+ misfortune was that he was unable to persuade his sovereign, Lord
+ Burghley, and others of the peace-party, as to the accuracy of his
+ information. Not only was he thoroughly instructed in regard to the number
+ of men, vessels, horses, mules, saddles, spurs, lances, barrels of beer
+ and tons of biscuit, and other particulars of the contemplated invasion,
+ but he had even received curious intelligence as to the gorgeous equipment
+ of those very troops, with which the Duke was just secretly announcing to
+ the King his intention of making his triumphal entrance into the English
+ capital. Sir Francis knew how many thousand yards of cramoisy velvet, how
+ many hundredweight of gold and silver embroidery, how much satin and
+ feathers, and what quantity of pearls and diamonds; Farnese had been
+ providing himself withal. He knew the tailors, jewellers, silversmiths,
+ and haberdashers, with whom the great Alexander&mdash;as he now began to
+ be called&mdash;had been dealing; but when he spoke at the council-board,
+ it was to ears wilfully deaf.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ["There is provided for lights a great number of torches, and so
+ tempered that no water can put them out. A great number of little
+ mills for grinding corn, great store of biscuit baked and oxen
+ salted, great number of saddles and boots also there is made 500
+ pair of velvet shoes-red, crimson velvet, and in every cloister
+ throughout the country great quantity of roses made of silk, white
+ and red, which are to be badges for divers of his gentlemen. By
+ reason of these roses it is expected he is going for England. There
+ is sold to the Prince by John Angel, pergaman, ten hundred-weight of
+ velvet, gold and silver to embroider his apparel withal. The
+ covering to his mules is most gorgeously embroidered with gold and
+ silver, which carry his baggage. There is also sold to him by the
+ Italian merchants at least 670 pieces of velvet to apparel him and
+ his train. Every captain has received a gift from the Prince to
+ make himself brave, and for Captain Corralini, an Italian, who hath
+ one cornet of horse, I have seen with my eyes a saddle with the
+ trappings of his horse, his coat and rapier and dagger, which cost
+ 3,500 French crowns. (!!) All their lances are painted of divers
+ colours, blue and white, green and White, and most part blood-red&mdash;
+ so there is as great preparation for a triumph as for war. A great
+ number of English priests come to Antwerp from all places. The
+ commandment is given to all the churches to read the Litany daily
+ for the prosperity of the Prince in his enterprise." John Giles to
+ Walsingham, 4 Dec. 1587.(S. P. Office MS.)
+
+ The same letter conveyed also very detailed information concerning
+ the naval preparations by the Duke, besides accurate intelligence in
+ regard to the progress of the armada in Cadiz and Lisbon.
+
+ Sir William Russet wrote also from Flushing concerning these
+ preparations in much the same strain; but it is worthy of note that
+ he considered Farnese to be rather intending a movement against
+ France.
+
+ "The Prince of Parma," he said, "is making great preparations for
+ war, and with all expedition means to march a great army, and for a
+ triumph, the coats and costly, apparel for his own body doth exceed
+ for embroidery, and beset with jewels; for all the embroiderers and
+ diamond-cutters work both night and day, such haste is made. Five
+ hundred velvet coats of one sort for lances, and a great number of
+ brave new coats made for horsemen; 30,000 men are ready, and gather
+ in Brabant and Flanders. It is said that there shall be in two days
+ 10,000 to do some great exploit in these parts, and 20,000 to march
+ with the Prince into France, and for certain it is not known what
+ way or how they shall march, but all are ready at an hour's warning
+ &mdash;4,000 saddles, 4000 lances. 6,000 pairs of boots, 2,000 barrels of
+ beer, biscuit sufficient for a camp of 20,000 men, &amp;c. The Prince
+ hath received a marvellous costly garland or crown from the Pope,
+ and is chosen chief of the holy league..."]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Nor was much concealed from the Argus-eyed politicians in the republic.
+ The States were more and more intractable. They knew nearly all the truth
+ with regard to the intercourse between the Queen's government and Farnese,
+ and they suspected more than the truth. The list of English commissioners
+ privately agreed upon between Burghley and De Loo was known to Barneveld,
+ Maurice, and Hohenlo, before it came to the ears of Leicester. In June,
+ Buckhurst had been censured by Elizabeth for opening the peace matter to
+ members of the States, according to her bidding, and in July Leicester was
+ rebuked for exactly the opposite delinquency. She was very angry that he
+ had delayed the communication of her policy so long, but she expressed her
+ anger only when that policy had proved so transparent as to make
+ concealment hopeless. Leicester, as well as Buckhurst, knew that it was
+ idle to talk to the Netherlanders of peace, because of their profound
+ distrust in every word that came from Spanish or Italian lips; but
+ Leicester, less frank than Buckhurst, preferred to flatter his sovereign,
+ rather than to tell her unwelcome truths. More fortunate than Buckhurst,
+ he was rewarded for his flattery by boundless affection, and promotion to
+ the very highest post in England when the hour of England's greatest peril
+ had arrived, while the truth-telling counsellor was consigned to
+ imprisonment and disgrace. When the Queen complained sharply that the
+ States were mocking her, and that she was touched in honour at the
+ prospect of not keeping her plighted word to Farnese, the Earl assured her
+ that the Netherlanders were fast changing their views; that although the
+ very name of peace had till then been odious and loathsome, yet now, as
+ coming from her Majesty, they would accept it with thankful hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States, or the leading members of that assembly, factious fellows,
+ pestilent and seditious knaves, were doing their utmost, and were singing
+ sirens' songs' to enchant and delude the people, but they were fast losing
+ their influence&mdash;so warmly did the country desire to conform to her
+ Majesty's pleasure. He expatiated, however, upon the difficulties in his
+ path. The knowledge possessed by the pestilent fellows as to the actual
+ position of affairs, was very mischievous. It was honey to Maurice and
+ Hohenlo, he said, that the Queen's secret practices with Farnese had thus
+ been discovered. Nothing could be more marked than the jollity with which
+ the ringleaders hailed these preparations for peace-making, for they now
+ felt certain that the government of their country had been fixed securely
+ in their own hands. They were canonized, said the Earl, for their
+ hostility to peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Should not this conviction, on the part of men who had so many means of
+ feeling the popular pulse, have given the Queen's government pause? To
+ serve his sovereign in truth, Leicester might have admitted a possibility
+ at least of honesty on the part of men who were so ready to offer up their
+ lives for their country. For in a very few weeks he was obliged to confess
+ that the people were no longer so well disposed to acquiesce in her
+ Majesty's policy. The great majority, both of the States and the people,
+ were in favour, he agreed, of continuing the war. The inhabitants of the
+ little Province of Holland alone, he said, had avowed their determination
+ to maintain their rights&mdash;even if obliged to fight single-handed&mdash;and
+ to shed the last drop in their veins, rather than to submit again to
+ Spanish tyranny. This seemed a heroic resolution, worthy the sympathy of a
+ brave Englishman, but the Earl's only comment upon it was, that it proved
+ the ringleaders "either to be traitors or else the most blindest asses in
+ the world." He never scrupled, on repeated occasions, to insinuate that
+ Barneveld, Hohenlo, Buys, Roorda, Sainte Aldegonde, and the Nassaus, had
+ organized a plot to sell their country to Spain. Of this there was not the
+ faintest evidence, but it was the only way in which he chose to account
+ for their persistent opposition to the peace-negotiations, and to their
+ reluctance to confer absolute power on himself. "'Tis a crabbed, sullen,
+ proud kind of people," said he, "and bent on establishing a popular
+ government,"&mdash;a purpose which seemed somewhat inconsistent with the
+ plot for selling their country to Spain, which he charged in the same
+ breath on the same persons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in August, by the Queen's command, he had sent a formal
+ communication respecting the private negotiations to the States, but he
+ could tell them no secret. The names of the commissioners, and even the
+ supposed articles of a treaty already concluded, were flying from town to
+ town, from mouth to mouth, so that the Earl pronounced it impossible for
+ one, not on the spot, to imagine the excitement which existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had sent a state-counsellor, one Bardesius, to the Hague, to open the
+ matter; but that personage had only ventured to whisper a word to one or
+ two members of the States, and was assured that the proposition, if made,
+ would raise such a tumult of fury, that he might fear for his life. So
+ poor Bardesius came back to Leicester, fell on his knees, and implored
+ him; at least to pause in these fatal proceedings. After an interval, he
+ sent two eminent statesmen, Valk and Menin, to lay the subject before the
+ assembly. They did so, and it was met by fierce denunciation. On their
+ return, the Earl, finding that so much violence had been excited,
+ pretended that they had misunderstood his meaning, and that he had never
+ meant to propose peace-negotiations. But Valk and Menin were too old
+ politicians to be caught in such a trap, and they produced a brief, drawn
+ up in Italian&mdash;the foreign language best understood by the Earl&mdash;with
+ his own corrections and interlineations, so that he was forced to admit
+ that there had been no misconception.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester at last could no longer doubt that he was universally odious in
+ the Provinces. Hohenlo, Barneveld, and the rest, who had "championed the
+ country against the peace," were carrying all before them. They had
+ persuaded the people, that the "Queen was but a tickle stay for them," and
+ had inflated young Maurice with vast ideas of his importance, telling him
+ that he was "a natural patriot, the image of his noble father, whose
+ memory was yet great among them, as good reason, dying in their cause, as
+ he had done." The country was bent on a popular government, and on
+ maintaining the war. There was no possibility, he confessed, that they
+ would ever confer the authority on him which they had formerly bestowed.
+ The Queen had promised, when he left England the second time, that his
+ absence should be for but three months, and he now most anxiously claimed
+ permission to depart. Above all things, he deprecated being employed as a
+ peace-commissioner. He was, of all men, the most unfit for such a post. At
+ the same time he implored the statesmen at home to be wary in selecting
+ the wisest persons for that arduous duty, in order that the peace might be
+ made for Queen Elizabeth, as well as for King Philip. He strongly
+ recommended, for that duty, Beale, the councillor, who with Killigrew had
+ replaced the hated Wilkes and the pacific Bartholomew Clerk. "Mr. Beale,
+ brother-in-law to Walsingham, is in my books a prince," said the Earl. "He
+ was drowned in England, but most useful in the Netherlands. Without him I
+ am naked."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And at last the governor told the Queen what Buckhurst and Walsingham had
+ been perpetually telling her, that the Duke of Parma meant mischief; and
+ he sent the same information as to hundreds of boats preparing, with six
+ thousand shirts for camisados, 7000 pairs of wading boots, and saddles,
+ stirrups, and spurs, enough for a choice band of 3000 men. A shrewd troop,
+ said the Earl, of the first soldiers in Christendom, to be landed some
+ fine morning in England. And he too had heard of the jewelled suits of
+ cramoisy velvet, and all the rest of the finery with which the triumphant
+ Alexander was intending to astonish London. "Get horses enough, and
+ muskets enough in England," exclaimed Leicester, "and then our people will
+ not be beaten, I warrant you, if well led."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now, the governor&mdash;who, in order to soothe his sovereign and
+ comply with her vehement wishes, had so long misrepresented the state of
+ public feeling&mdash;not only confessed that Papists and Protestants,
+ gentle and simple, the States and the people, throughout the republic,
+ were all opposed to any negotiation with the enemy, but lifted up his own
+ voice, and in earnest language expressed his opinion of the Queen's
+ infatuation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, my Lord, what a treaty is this for peace," said he to Burghley, "that
+ we must treat, altogether disarmed and weakened, and the King having made
+ his forces stronger than ever he had known in these parts, besides what is
+ coming out, of Spain, and yet we will presume of good conditions. It
+ grieveth me to the heart. But I fear you will all smart for it, and I pray
+ God her Majesty feel it not, if it be His blessed will. She meaneth well
+ and sincerely to have peace, but God knows that this is not the way. Well,
+ God Almighty defend us and the realm, and especially her Majesty. But look
+ for a sharp war, or a miserable peace, to undo others and ourselves
+ after."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Walsingham, too, was determined not to act as a commissioner. If his
+ failing health did not serve as an excuse, he should be obliged to refuse,
+ he said, and so forfeit her Majesty's favour, rather than be instrumental
+ in bringing about her ruin, and that of his country. Never for an instant
+ had the Secretary of State faltered in his opposition to the timid policy
+ of Burghley. Again and again he had detected the intrigues of the
+ Lord-Treasurer and Sir James Croft, and ridiculed the "comptroller's
+ peace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And especially did Walsingham bewail the implicit confidence which the
+ Queen placed in the sugary words of Alexander, and the fatal parsimony
+ which caused her to neglect defending herself against Scotland; for he was
+ as well informed as was Farnese himself of Philip's arrangements with the
+ Scotch lords, and of the subsidies in men and money by which their
+ invasion of England was to be made part of the great scheme. "No one
+ thing," sighed Walsingham, "doth more prognosticate an alteration of this
+ estate, than that a prince of her Majesty's judgment should neglect, in
+ respect of a little charges, the stopping of so dangerous a gap. . . . The
+ manner of our cold and careless proceeding here, in this time of peril,
+ maketh me to take no comfort of my recovery of health, for that I see,
+ unless it shall please God in mercy and miraculously to preserve us, we
+ cannot long stand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, finding himself unable to counteract the policy of Barneveld
+ and his party, by expostulation or argument, conceived a very dangerous
+ and criminal project before he left the country. The facts are somewhat
+ veiled in mystery; but he was suspected, on weighty evidence, of a design
+ to kidnap both Maurice and Barneveld, and carry them off to England. Of
+ this intention, which was foiled at any rate, before it could be carried
+ into execution, there is perhaps not conclusive proof, but it has already
+ been shown, from a deciphered letter, that the Queen had once given
+ Buckhurst and Wilkes peremptory orders to seize the person of Hohenlo, and
+ it is quite possible that similar orders may have been received at a later
+ moment with regard to the young Count and the Advocate. At any rate, it is
+ certain that late in the autumn, some friends of Barneveld entered his
+ bedroom, at the Hague, in the dead of night, and informed him that a plot
+ was on foot to lay violent hands upon him, and that an armed force was
+ already on its way to execute this purpose of Leicester, before the dawn
+ of day. The Advocate, without loss of time, took his departure for Delft,
+ a step which was followed, shortly afterwards, by Maurice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was this the only daring&mdash;stroke which the Earl had meditated.
+ During the progress of the secret negotiations with Parma, he had not
+ neglected those still more secret schemes to which he had occasionally
+ made allusion. He had determined, if possible, to obtain possession of the
+ most important cities in Holland and Zeeland. It was very plain to him,
+ that he could no longer hope, by fair means, for the great authority once
+ conferred upon him by the free will of the States. It was his purpose,
+ therefore, by force and stratagem to recover his lost power. We have heard
+ the violent terms in which both the Queen and the Earl denounced the men
+ who accused the English government of any such intention. It had been
+ formally denied by the States-General that Barneveld had ever used the
+ language in that assembly with which he had been charged. He had only
+ revealed to them the exact purport of the letter to Junius, and of the
+ Queen's secret instructions to Leicester. Whatever he may have said in
+ private conversation, and whatever deductions he may have made among his
+ intimate friends, from the admitted facts in the case, could hardly be
+ made matters of record. It does not appear that he, or the statesmen who
+ acted with him, considered the Earl capable of a deliberate design to sell
+ the cities, thus to be acquired, to Spain, as the price of peace for
+ England. Certainly Elizabeth would have scorned such a crime, and was
+ justly indignant at rumours prevalent to that effect; but the wrath of the
+ Queen and of her favourite were, perhaps, somewhat simulated, in order to
+ cover their real mortification at the discovery of designs on the part of
+ the Earl which could not be denied. Not only had they been at last
+ compelled to confess these negotiations, which for several months had been
+ concealed and stubbornly denied, but the still graver plots of the Earl to
+ regain his much-coveted authority had been, in a startling manner,
+ revealed. The leaders of the States-General had a right to suspect the
+ English Earl of a design to reenact the part of the Duke of Anjou, and
+ were justified in taking stringent measures to prevent a calamity, which,
+ as they believed, was impending over their little commonwealth. The
+ high-handed dealings of Leicester in the city of Utrecht have been already
+ described. The most respectable and influential burghers of the place had
+ been imprisoned and banished, the municipal government wrested from the
+ hands to which it legitimately belonged, and confided to adventurers, who
+ wore the cloak of Calvinism to conceal their designs, and a successful
+ effort had been made, in the name of democracy, to eradicate from one
+ ancient province the liberty on which it prided itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the course of the autumn, an attempt was made to play the same game at
+ Amsterdam. A plot was discovered, before it was fairly matured, to seize
+ the magistrates of that important city, to gain possession of the
+ arsenals, and to place the government in the hands of well-known
+ Leicestrians. A list of fourteen influential citizens, drawn up in the
+ writing of Burgrave, the Earl's confidential secretary, was found, all of
+ whom, it was asserted, had been doomed to the scaffold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plot to secure Amsterdam had failed, but, in North Holland, Medenblik
+ was held firmly for Leicester, by Diedrich Sonoy, in the very teeth of the
+ States. The important city of Enkhuyzen, too, was very near being secured
+ for the Earl, but a still more significant movement was made at Leyden.
+ That heroic city, ever since the famous siege of 1574, in which the
+ Spaniard had been so signally foiled, had distinguished itself by great
+ liberality of sentiment in religious matters. The burghers were inspired
+ by a love of country, and a hatred of oppression, both civil and,
+ ecclesiastical; and Papists and Protestants, who had fought side by side
+ against the common foe, were not disposed to tear each other to pieces,
+ now that he had been excluded from their gates. Meanwhile, however,
+ refugee Flemings and Brabantines had sought an asylum in the city, and
+ being, as usual, of the strictest sect of the Calvinists were shocked at
+ the latitudinarianism which prevailed. To the honour of the city&mdash;as
+ it seems to us now&mdash;but, to their horror, it was even found that one
+ or two Papists had seats in the magistracy. More than all this, there was
+ a school in the town kept by a Catholic, and Adrian van der Werff himself&mdash;the
+ renowned burgomaster, who had sustained the city during the dreadful
+ leaguer of 1574, and who had told the famishing burghers that they might
+ eat him if they liked, but that they should never surrender to the
+ Spaniards while he remained alive&mdash;even Adrian van der Werff had sent
+ his son to this very school? To the clamour made by the refugees against
+ this spirit of toleration, one of the favourite preachers in the town, of
+ Arminian tendencies, had declared in the pulpit, that he would as lieve
+ see the Spanish as the Calvinistic inquisition established over his
+ country; using an expression, in regard to the church of Geneva, more
+ energetic than decorous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was from Leyden that the chief opposition came to a synod, by which a
+ great attempt was to be made towards subjecting the new commonwealth to a
+ masked theocracy; a scheme which the States of Holland had resisted with
+ might and main. The Calvinistic party, waxing stronger in Leyden, although
+ still in a minority, at last resolved upon a strong effort to place the
+ city in the hands of that great representative of Calvinism, the Earl of
+ Leicester. Jacques Volmar, a deacon of the church, Cosmo de Pescarengis, a
+ Genoese captain of much experience in the service of the republic,
+ Adolphus de Meetkerke, former president of Flanders, who had been, by the
+ States, deprived of the seat in the great council to which the Earl had
+ appointed him; Doctor Saravia, professor of theology in the university,
+ with other deacons, preachers, and captains, went at different times from
+ Leyden to Utrecht, and had secret interviews with Leicester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A plan was at last agreed upon, according to which, about the middle of
+ October, a revolution should be effected in Leyden. Captain Nicholas de
+ Maulde, who had recently so much distinguished himself in the defence of
+ Sluys, was stationed with two companies of States' troops in the city. He
+ had been much disgusted&mdash;not without reason&mdash;at the culpable
+ negligence through which the courageous efforts of the Sluys garrison had
+ been set at nought, and the place sacrificed, when it might so easily have
+ been relieved; and he ascribed the whole of the guilt to Maurice, Hohenlo,
+ and the States, although it could hardly be denied that at least an equal
+ portion belonged to Leicester and his party. The young captain listened,
+ therefore, to a scheme propounded to him by Colonel Cosine, and Deacon
+ Volmar, in the name of Leicester. He agreed, on a certain day, to muster
+ his company, to leave the city by the Delft gate&mdash;as if by command of
+ superior authority&mdash;to effect a junction with Captain Heraugiere,
+ another of the distinguished malcontent defenders of Sluys, who was
+ stationed, with his command, at Delft, and then to re-enter Leyden, take
+ possession of the town-hall, arrest all the magistrates, together with
+ Adrian van der Werff, ex-burgomaster, and proclaim Lord Leicester, in the
+ name of Queen Elizabeth, legitimate master of the city. A list of
+ burghers, who were to be executed, was likewise agreed upon, at a final
+ meeting of the conspirators in a hostelry, which bore the ominous name of
+ 'The Thunderbolt.' A desire had been signified by Leicester, in the
+ preliminary interviews at Utrecht, that all bloodshed, if possible, should
+ be spared, but it was certainly an extravagant expectation, considering
+ the temper, the political convictions, and the known courage of the Leyden
+ burghers, that the city would submit, without a struggle, to this invasion
+ of all their rights. It could hardly be doubted that the streets would run
+ red with blood, as those of Antwerp had done, when a similar attempt, on
+ the part of Anjou, had been foiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately for the scheme, a day or two before the great stroke was to
+ be hazarded, Cosmo de Pescarengis had been accidentally arrested for debt.
+ A subordinate accomplice, taking alarm, had then gone before the
+ magistrate and revealed the plot. Volmar and de Maulde fled at once, but
+ were soon arrested in the neighbourhood. President de Meetkerke, Professor
+ Saravia, the preacher Van der Wauw, and others most compromised, effected
+ their escape. The matter was instantly laid before the States of Holland
+ by the magistracy of Leyden, and seemed of the gravest moment. In the
+ beginning of the year, the fatal treason of York and Stanley had implanted
+ a deep suspicion of Leicester in the hearts of almost all the
+ Netherlanders, which could not be eradicated. The painful rumours
+ concerning the secret negotiations with Spain, and the design falsely
+ attributed to the English Queen, of selling the chief cities of the
+ republic to Philip as the price of peace, and of reimbursement for
+ expenses incurred by her, increased the general excitement to fever. It
+ was felt by the leaders of the States that as mortal a combat lay before
+ them with the Earl of Leicester, as with the King of Spain, and that it
+ was necessary to strike a severe blow, in order to vindicate their
+ imperilled authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A commission was appointed by the high court of Holland, acting in
+ conjunction with the States of the Provinces, to try the offenders. Among
+ the commissioners were Adrian van der Werff, John van der Does, who had
+ been military commandant of Leyden during the siege, Barneveld, and other
+ distinguished personages, over whom Count Maurice presided. The accused
+ were subjected to an impartial trial. Without torture, they confessed
+ their guilt. It is true, however, that Cosmo was placed within sight of
+ the rack. He avowed that his object had been to place the city under the
+ authority of Leicester, and to effect this purpose, if possible, without
+ bloodshed. He declared that the attempt was to be made with the full
+ knowledge and approbation of the Earl, who had promised him the command of
+ a regiment of twelve companies, as a recompense for his services, if they
+ proved successful. Leicester, said Cosmo, had also pledged himself, in
+ case the men, thus executing his plans, should be discovered and
+ endangered, to protect and rescue them, even at the sacrifice of all his
+ fortune, and of the office he held. When asked if he had any written
+ statement from his Excellency to that effect, Cosmo replied, no, nothing
+ but his princely word which he had voluntarily given.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Volmar made a similar confession. He, too, declared that he had acted
+ throughout the affair by express command of the Earl of Leicester. Being
+ asked if he had any written evidence of the fact, he, likewise, replied in
+ the negative. "Then his Excellency will unquestionably deny your
+ assertion," said the judges. "Alas, then am I a dead man," replied Volmar,
+ and the unfortunate deacon never spoke truer words. Captain de Maulde also
+ confessed his crime. He did not pretend, however, to have had any personal
+ communication with Leicester, but said that the affair had been confided
+ to him by Colonel Cosmo, on the express authority of the Earl, and that he
+ had believed himself to be acting in obedience to his Excellency's
+ commands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 26th October, after a thorough investigation, followed by a full
+ confession on the part of the culprits, the three were sentenced to death.
+ The decree was surely a most severe one. They had been guilty of no actual
+ crime, and only in case of high treason could an intention to commit a
+ crime be considered, by the laws of the state, an offence punishable with
+ death. But it was exactly because it was important to make the crime high
+ treason that the prisoners were condemned. The offence was considered as a
+ crime not against Leyden, but as an attempt to levy war upon a city which
+ was a member of the States of Holland and of the United States. If the
+ States were sovereign, then this was a lesion of their sovereignty.
+ Moreover, the offence had been aggravated by the employment of United
+ States' troops against the commonwealth of the United States itself. To
+ cut off the heads of these prisoners was a sharp practical answer to the
+ claims of sovereignty by Leicester, as representing the people, and a
+ terrible warning to all who might, in future; be disposed to revive the
+ theories of Deventer and Burgrave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the case of De Maulde the punishment seemed especially severe. His fate
+ excited universal sympathy, and great efforts were made to obtain his
+ pardon. He was a universal favourite; he was young; he was very handsome;
+ his manners were attractive; he belonged to an ancient and honourable
+ race. His father, the Seigneur de Mansart, had done great services in the
+ war of independence, had been an intimate friend of the great Prince of
+ Orange, and had even advanced large sums of money to assist his noble
+ efforts to liberate the country. Two brothers of the young captain had
+ fallen in the service of the republic. He, too, had distinguished himself
+ at Ostend, and his gallantry during the recent siege of Sluys had been in
+ every mouth, and had excited the warm applause of so good a judge of
+ soldiership as the veteran Roger Williams. The scars of the wounds
+ received in the desperate conflicts of that siege were fresh upon his
+ breast. He had not intended to commit treason, but, convinced by the
+ sophistry of older soldiers than himself, as well as by learned deacons
+ and theologians, he had imagined himself doing his duty, while obeying the
+ Earl of Leicester. If there were ever a time for mercy, this seemed one,
+ and young Maurice of Nassau might have remembered, that even in the case
+ of the assassins who had attempted the life of his father, that
+ great-hearted man had lifted up his voice&mdash;which seemed his dying one&mdash;in
+ favour of those who had sought his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they authorities were inexorable. There was no hope of a mitigation of
+ punishment, but a last effort was made, under favour of a singular ancient
+ custom, to save the life of De Maulde. A young lady of noble family in
+ Leyden&mdash;Uytenbroek by name&mdash;claimed the right of rescuing the
+ condemned malefactor, from the axe, by appearing upon the scaffold, and
+ offering to take him for her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Intelligence was brought to the prisoner in his dungeon, that the young,
+ lady had made the proposition, and he was told to be of good cheer: But he
+ refused to be comforted. He was slightly acquainted with the gentle-woman,
+ he observed; and doubted much whether her request would be granted.
+ Moreover if contemporary chronicle can be trusted he even expressed a
+ preference for the scaffold, as the milder fate of the two. The lady,
+ however, not being aware of those uncomplimentary sentiments, made her
+ proposal to the magistrates, but was dismissed with harsh rebukes. She had
+ need be ashamed, they said; of her willingness to take a condemned traitor
+ for her husband. It was urged, in her behalf, that even in the cruel
+ Alva's time, the ancient custom had been respected, and that victims had
+ been saved from the executioners, on a demand in marriage made even by
+ women of abandoned character. But all was of no avail. The prisoners were
+ executed on the 26th October, the same day on which the sentence had been
+ pronounced. The heads of Volmar and Cosmo were exposed on one of the
+ turrets of the city. That of Maulde was interred with his body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl was indignant when he heard of the event. As there had been no
+ written proof of his complicity in the conspiracy, the judges had thought
+ it improper to mention his name in the sentences. He, of course, denied
+ any knowledge of the plot, and its proof rested therefore only on the
+ assertion of the prisoners themselves, which, however, was circumstantial,
+ voluntary, and generally believed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ France, during the whole of this year of expectation, was ploughed
+ throughout its whole surface by perpetual civil war. The fatal edict of
+ June, 1585, had drowned the unhappy land in blood. Foreign armies, called
+ in by the various contending factions, ravaged its-fair territory,
+ butchered its peasantry, and changed its fertile plains to a wilderness.
+ The unhappy creature who wore the crown of Charlemagne and of Hugh Capet,
+ was but the tool in the hands of the most profligate and designing of his
+ own subjects, and of foreigners. Slowly and surely the net, spread by the
+ hands of his own mother, of his own prime minister, of the Duke of Guise,
+ all obeying the command and receiving the stipend of Philip, seemed
+ closing over him. He was without friends, without power to know his
+ friends, if he had them. In his hatred to the Reformation, he had allowed
+ himself to be made the enemy of the only man who could be his friend, or
+ the friend of France. Allied with his mortal foe, whose armies were
+ strengthened by contingents from Parma's forces, and paid for by Spanish
+ gold, he was forced to a mock triumph over the foreign mercenaries who
+ came to save his crown, and to submit to the defeat of the flower of his
+ chivalry, by the only man who could rescue France from ruin, and whom
+ France could look up to with respect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For, on the 20th October, Henry of Navarre had at last gained a victory.
+ After twenty-seven years of perpetual defeat, during which they had been
+ growing stronger and stronger, the Protestants had met the picked troops
+ of Henry III., under the Due de Joyeuse, near the burgh of Contras. His
+ cousins Conde and Soissons each commanded a wing in the army of the
+ Warnese. "You are both of my family," said Henry, before the engagement,
+ "and the Lord so help me, but I will show you that I am the eldest born."
+ And during that bloody day the white plume was ever tossing where the
+ battle, was fiercest. "I choose to show myself. They shall see the
+ Bearnese," was his reply to those who implored him to have a care for his
+ personal safety. And at last, when the day was done, the victory gained,
+ and more French nobles lay dead on the field, as Catharine de' Medici
+ bitterly declared, than had fallen in a battle for twenty years; when two
+ thousand of the King's best troops had been slain, and when the bodies of
+ Joyeuse and his brother had been laid out in the very room where the
+ conqueror's supper, after the battle, was served, but where he refused,
+ with a shudder, to eat, he was still as eager as before&mdash;had the
+ wretched Valois been possessed of a spark of manhood, or of intelligence&mdash;to
+ shield him and his kingdom from the common enemy.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For it could hardly be doubtful, even to Henry III., at that moment, that
+ Philip II. and his jackal, the Duke of Guise, were pursuing him to the
+ death, and that, in his breathless doublings to escape, he had been forced
+ to turn upon his natural protector. And now Joyeuse was defeated and
+ slain. "Had it been my brother's son," exclaimed Cardinal de Bourbon,
+ weeping and wailing, "how much better it would have been." It was not easy
+ to slay the champion of French Protestantism; yet, to one less buoyant,
+ the game, even after the brilliant but fruitless victory of Contras, might
+ have seemed desperate. Beggared and outcast, with literally scarce a shirt
+ to his back, without money to pay a corporal's guard, how was he to
+ maintain an army?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But 'Mucio' was more successful than Joyeuse had been, and the German and
+ Swiss mercenaries who had come across the border to assist the Bearnese,
+ were adroitly handled by Philip's great stipendiary. Henry of Valois,
+ whose troops had just been defeated at Contras, was now compelled to
+ participate in a more fatal series of triumphs. For alas, the victim had
+ tied himself to the apron-string of "Madam League," and was paraded by
+ her, in triumph, before the eyes of his own subjects and of the world. The
+ passage of the Loire by the auxiliaries was resisted; a series of petty
+ victories was gained by Guise, and, at last, after it was obvious that the
+ leaders of the legions had been corrupted with Spanish ducats, Henry
+ allowed them to depart, rather than give the Balafre opportunity for still
+ farther successes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the triumph in Paris&mdash;hosannahs in the churches, huzzas in
+ the public places&mdash;not for the King, but for Guise. Paris, more madly
+ in love with her champion than ever, prostrated herself at his feet. For
+ him paeans as to a deliverer. Without him the ark would have fallen into
+ the hands of the Philistines. For the Valois, shouts of scorn from the
+ populace, thunders from the pulpit, anathemas from monk and priest,
+ elaborate invectives from all the pedants of the Sorbonne, distant
+ mutterings of excommunication from Rome&mdash;not the toothless beldame of
+ modern days, but the avenging divinity of priest-rid monarchs. Such were
+ the results of the edicts of June. Spain and the Pope had trampled upon
+ France, and the populace in her capital clapped their hands and jumped for
+ joy. "Miserable country miserable King," sighed an illustrious patriot,
+ "whom his own countrymen wish rather to survive, than to die to defend
+ him! Let the name of Huguenot and of Papist be never heard of more. Let us
+ think only of the counter-league. Is France to be saved by opening all its
+ gates to Spain? Is France to be turned out of France, to make a lodging
+ for the Lorrainer and the Spaniard?" Pregnant questions, which could not
+ yet be answered, for the end was not yet. France was to become still more
+ and more a wilderness. And well did that same brave and thoughtful lover,
+ of his: country declare, that he who should suddenly awake from a sleep of
+ twenty-five years, and revisit that once beautiful land, would deem
+ himself transplanted to a barbarous island of cannibals.&mdash;[Duplessis
+ Mornay, 'Mem.' iv. 1-34.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had now become quite obvious that the game of Leicester was played out.
+ His career&mdash;as it has now been fully exhibited&mdash;could have but
+ one termination. He had made himself thoroughly odious to the nation whom
+ he came to govern. He had lost for ever the authority once spontaneously
+ bestowed; and he had attempted in vain, both by fair means and foul, to
+ recover that power. There was nothing left him but retreat. Of this he was
+ thoroughly convinced. He was anxious to be gone, the republic most
+ desirous to be rid of him, her Majesty impatient to have her favourite
+ back again. The indulgent Queen, seeing nothing to blame in his conduct,
+ while her indignation, at the attitude maintained by the Provinces was
+ boundless, permitted him, accordingly, to return; and in her letter to the
+ States, announcing this decision, she took a fresh opportunity of emptying
+ her wrath upon their heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She told them, that, notwithstanding her frequent messages to them,
+ signifying her evil contentment with their unthankfulness for her
+ exceeding great benefits, and with their gross violations of their
+ contract with herself and with Leicester, whom they had, of their own
+ accord, made absolute governor without her instigation; she had never
+ received any good answer to move, her to commit their sins to oblivion,
+ nor had she remarked, any amendment in their conduct. On the contrary, she
+ complained: that they daily increased their offences, most notoriously in
+ the sight of&mdash;the world and in so many points that she lacked words
+ to express them in one letter. She however thought it worth while to
+ allude to some of their transgressions. She, declared that their sinister,
+ or rather barbarous interpretation of her conduct had been notorious in
+ perverting and falsifying her princely and Christian intentions; when she
+ imparted to them the overtures that had been made to her for a treaty of
+ peace for herself and for them with the King of Spain. Yet although she
+ had required their allowance, before she would give her assent, she had
+ been grieved that the world should see what impudent untruths had been
+ forged upon her, not only by their sufferance; but by their special
+ permission for her Christian good meaning towards them. She denounced the
+ statements as to her having concluded a treaty, not only without their
+ knowledge; but with the sacrifice of their liberty and religion, as
+ utterly false, either for anything done in act, or intended in thought, by
+ her. She complained that upon this most false ground had been heaped a
+ number of like untruths and malicious slanders against her cousin
+ Leicester, who had hazarded his life, spend his substance, left his native
+ country, absented himself from her, and lost his time, only for their
+ service. It had been falsely stated among them, she said, that the Earl
+ had come over the last time, knowing that peace had been secretly
+ concluded. It was false that he had intended to surprise divers of their
+ towns, and deliver them to the King of Spain. All such untruths contained
+ matter so improbable, that it was most, strange that any person; having
+ any sense, could imagine them correct. Having thus slightly animadverted
+ upon their wilfulness, unthankfulness, and bad government, and having, in
+ very plain English, given them the lie, eight distinct and separate times
+ upon a single page, she proceeded to inform them that she had recalled her
+ cousin Leicester, having great cause to use his services in England, and
+ not seeing how, by his tarrying there, he could either profit them or
+ herself. Nevertheless she protested herself not void of compassion for
+ their estate, and for the pitiful condition of the great multitude of kind
+ and godly people, subject to the miseries which, by the States government,
+ were like to fall upon them, unless God should specially interpose; and
+ she had therefore determined, for the time, to continue her subsidies,
+ according to the covenant between them. If, meantime, she should conclude
+ a peace with Spain, she promised to them the same care for their country
+ as for her own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly the Earl, after despatching an equally ill-tempered letter to
+ the States, in which he alluded, at unmerciful length, to all the old
+ grievances, blamed them for the loss of Sluys, for which place he
+ protested that they had manifested no more interest than if it had been
+ San Domingo in Hispaniola, took his departure for Flushing. After
+ remaining there, in a very moody frame of mind, for several days,
+ expecting that the States would, at least, send a committee to wait upon
+ him and receive his farewells, he took leave of them by letter. "God send
+ me shortly a wind to blow me from them all," he exclaimed&mdash;a prayer
+ which was soon granted&mdash;and before the end of the year he was safely
+ landed in England. "These legs of mine," said he, clapping his hands upon
+ them as he sat in his chamber at Margate, "shall never go again into
+ Holland. Let the States get others to serve their mercenary turn, for me
+ they shall not have." Upon giving up the government, he caused a medal to
+ be struck in his own honour. The device was a flock of sheep watched by an
+ English mastiff. Two mottoes&mdash;"non gregem aed ingratos," and "invitus
+ desero"&mdash;expressed his opinion of Dutch ingratitude and his own
+ fidelity. The Hollanders, on their part, struck several medals to
+ commemorate the same event, some of which were not destitute of invention.
+ Upon one of them, for instance, was represented an ape smothering her
+ young ones to death in her embrace, with the device, "Libertas ne its
+ chara ut simiae catuli;" while upon the reverse was a man avoiding smoke
+ and falling into the fire, with the inscription, "Fugiens fumum, incidit
+ in ignem."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester found the usual sunshine at Greenwich. All the efforts of
+ Norris, Wilkes, and Buckhurst, had been insufficient to raise even a doubt
+ in Elizabeth's mind as to the wisdom and integrity by which his
+ administration of the Provinces had been characterised from beginning to
+ end. Those who had appealed from his hatred to the justice of their
+ sovereign, had met with disgrace and chastisement. But for the great Earl;
+ the Queen's favour was a rock of adamant. At a private interview he threw
+ himself at her feet, and with tears and sobs implored her not to receive
+ him in disgrace whom she had sent forth in honour. His blandishments
+ prevailed, as they had always done. Instead, therefore, of appearing
+ before the council, kneeling, to answer such inquiries as ought surely to
+ have been instituted, he took his seat boldly among his colleagues,
+ replying haughtily to all murmurs by a reference to her Majesty's secret
+ instructions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unhappy English soldiers, who had gone forth under his banner in
+ midsummer, had been returning, as they best might, in winter, starving,
+ half-naked wretches, to beg a morsel of bread at the gates of Greenwich
+ palace, and to be driven away as vagabonds, with threats of the stock.
+ This was not the fault of the Earl, for he had fed them with his own
+ generous hand in the Netherlands, week after week, when no money for their
+ necessities could be obtained from the paymasters. Two thousand pounds had
+ been sent by Elizabeth to her soldiers when sixty-four thousand pounds
+ arrearage were due, and no language could exaggerate the misery to which
+ these outcasts, according to eye-witnesses of their own nation, were
+ reduced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Willoughby was appointed to the command, of what remained of these
+ unfortunate troops, upon&mdash;the Earl's departure. The sovereignty of
+ the Netherlands remained undisputed with the States. Leicester resigned
+ his, commission by an instrument dated 17/27 December, which, however,
+ never reached the Netherlands till April of the following year. From that
+ time forth the government of the republic maintained the same forms which
+ the assembly had claimed for it in the long controversy with the
+ governor-general, and which have been sufficiently described.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the negotiations for a treaty, no longer secret, continued. The
+ Queen; infatuated as ever, still believed in the sincerity of Farnese,
+ while that astute personage and his master were steadily maturing their
+ schemes. A matrimonial alliance was secretly projected between the King of
+ Scots and Philip's daughter, the Infants Isabella, with the consent of the
+ Pope and the whole college of cardinals; and James, by the whole force of
+ the Holy League, was to be placed upon the throne of Elizabeth. In the
+ case of his death, without issue, Philip was to succeed quietly to the
+ crowns of England, Scotland, and Ireland. Nothing could be simpler or more
+ rational, and accordingly these arrangements were the table-talk at Rome,
+ and met with general approbation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Communications to this effect; coming straight from the Colonna palace,
+ were thought sufficiently circumstantial to be transmitted to the English
+ government. Maurice of Nassau wrote with his own hand to Walsingham,
+ professing a warm attachment to the cause in which Holland and England
+ were united, and perfect personal devotion to the English Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His language, was not that of a youth, who, according to Leicester's
+ repeated insinuations, was leagued with the most distinguished soldiers
+ and statesmen of the Netherlands to sell their country to Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Elizabeth was not to be convinced. She thought it extremely probable
+ that the Provinces would be invaded, and doubtless felt some anxiety for
+ England. It was unfortunate that the possession of Sluys had given
+ Alexander such a point of vantage; and there was moreover, a fear that he
+ might take possession of Ostend. She had, therefore, already recommended
+ that her own troops should be removed from that city, that its walls
+ should be razed; its marine bulwarks destroyed, and that the ocean. should
+ be let in to swallow the devoted city forever&mdash;the inhabitants having
+ been previously allowed to take their departure. For it was assumed by her
+ Majesty that to attempt resistance would be idle, and that Ostend could
+ never stand a siege.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The advice was not taken; and before the end of her reign Elizabeth was
+ destined to see this indefensible city&mdash;only fit, in her judgment, to
+ be abandoned to the waves&mdash;become memorable; throughout all time, for
+ the longest; and, in many respects, the most remarkable siege which modern
+ history has recorded, the famous leaguer, in which the first European
+ captains of the coming age were to take their lessons, year after year, in
+ the school of the great Dutch soldier, who was now but a "solemn, sly
+ youth," just turned of twenty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only military achievement which characterized the close of the year,
+ to the great satisfaction of the Provinces and the annoyance of Parma, was
+ the surprise of the city of Bonn. The indefatigable Martin Schenk&mdash;in
+ fulfilment of his great contract with the States-General, by which the war
+ on the Rhine had been farmed out to him on such profitable terms:&mdash;had
+ led his mercenaries against this important town. He had found one of its
+ gates somewhat insecurely guarded, placed a mortar under it at night, and
+ occupied a neighbouring pig-stye with a number of his men, who by chasing,
+ maltreating, and slaughtering the swine, had raised an unearthly din,
+ sufficient to drown the martial operations at the gate. In brief, the
+ place was easily mastered, and taken possession of by Martin, in the name
+ of the deposed elector, Gebhard Truchsess&mdash;the first stroke of good
+ fortune which had for a long time befallen that melancholy prelate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The administration of Leicester has been so minutely pictured, that it
+ would be superfluous to indulge in many concluding reflections. His acts
+ and words have been made to speak for themselves. His career in the
+ country has been described with much detail, because the period was a
+ great epoch of transition. The republic of the Netherlands, during those
+ years, acquired consistency and permanent form. It seemed possible, on the
+ Earl's first advent, that the Provinces might become part and parcel of
+ the English realm. Whether such a consummation would have been desirable
+ or not, is a fruitless enquiry. But it is certain that the selection of
+ such a man as Leicester made that result impossible. Doubtless there were
+ many errors committed by all parties. The Queen was supposed by the
+ Netherlands to be secretly desirous of accepting the sovereignty of the
+ Provinces, provided she were made sure, by the Earl's experience, that
+ they were competent to protect themselves. But this suspicion was
+ unfounded. The result of every investigation showed the country so full of
+ resources, of wealth, and of military and naval capabilities, that, united
+ with England, it would have been a source of great revenue and power, not
+ a burthen and an expense. Yet, when convinced of such facts, by the
+ statistics which were liberally laid before her by her confidential
+ agents, she never manifested, either in public or private, any intention
+ of accepting the sovereignty. This being her avowed determination, it was
+ an error on the part of the States, before becoming thoroughly acquainted
+ with the man's character, to confer upon Leicester the almost boundless
+ authority which they granted on, his first arrival. It was a still graver
+ mistake, on the part of Elizabeth, to give way to such explosions of fury,
+ both against the governor and the States, when informed of the offer and
+ acceptance of that authority. The Earl, elevated by the adulation of
+ others, and by his own vanity, into an almost sovereign attitude, saw
+ himself chastised before the world, like an aspiring lackey, by her in
+ whose favour he had felt most secure. He found, himself, in an instant,
+ humbled and ridiculous. Between himself and the Queen it was, something of
+ a lovers' quarrel, and he soon found balsam in the hand that smote him.
+ But though reinstated in authority, he was never again the object of
+ reverence in the land he was attempting to rule. As he came to know the
+ Netherlanders better, he recognized the great capacity which their
+ statesmen concealed under a plain and sometimes a plebeian exterior, and
+ the splendid grandee hated, where at first he had only despised. The
+ Netherlanders, too, who had been used to look up almost with worship to a
+ plain man of kindly manners, in felt hat and bargeman's woollen jacket,
+ whom they called "Father William," did not appreciate, as they ought, the
+ magnificence of the stranger who had been sent to govern them. The Earl
+ was handsome, quick-witted, brave; but he was, neither wise in council nor
+ capable in the field. He was intolerably arrogant, passionate, and
+ revengeful. He hated easily, and he hated for life. It was soon obvious
+ that no cordiality of feeling or of action could exist between him and the
+ plain, stubborn Hollanders. He had the fatal characteristic of loving only
+ the persons who flattered him. With much perception of character, sense of
+ humour, and appreciation of intellect, he recognized the power of the
+ leading men in the nation, and sought to gain them. So long as he hoped
+ success, he was loud in their praises. They were all wise, substantial,
+ well-languaged, big fellows, such as were not to be found in England or
+ anywhere else. When they refused to be made his tools, they became
+ tinkers, boors, devils, and atheists. He covered them with curses and
+ devoted them to the gibbet. He began by warmly commending Buys and
+ Barneveld, Hohenlo and Maurice, and endowing them with every virtue.
+ Before he left the country he had accused them of every crime, and would
+ cheerfully, if he could, have taken the life of every one of them. And it
+ was quite the same with nearly every Englishman who served with or under
+ him. Wilkes and Buckhurst, however much the objects of his previous
+ esteem; so soon as they ventured to censure or even to criticise his
+ proceedings, were at once devoted to perdition. Yet, after minute
+ examination of the record, public and private, neither Wilkes nor
+ Buckhurst can be found guilty of treachery or animosity towards him, but
+ are proved to have been governed, in all their conduct, by a strong sense
+ of duty to their sovereign, the Netherlands, and Leicester himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Sir John Norris, it must be allowed, that he was never fickle, for he
+ had always entertained for that distinguished general an honest,
+ unswerving, and infinite hatred, which was not susceptible of increase or
+ diminution by any act or word. Pelham, too, whose days were numbered, and
+ who was dying bankrupt and broken-hearted, at the close of the Earl's
+ administration, had always been regarded by him with tenderness and
+ affection. But Pelham had never thwarted him, had exposed his life for
+ him, and was always proud of being his faithful, unquestioning, humble
+ adherent. With perhaps this single exception, Leicester found himself at
+ the end of his second term in the Provinces, without a single friend and
+ with few respectable partisans. Subordinate mischievous intriguers like
+ Deventer, Junius, and Otheman, were his chief advisers and the instruments
+ of his schemes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such qualifications it was hardly possible&mdash;even if the current
+ of affairs had been flowing smoothly&mdash;that he should prove a
+ successful governor of the new republic. But when the numerous errors and
+ adventitious circumstances are considered&mdash;for some of which he was
+ responsible, while of others he was the victim&mdash;it must be esteemed
+ fortunate that no great catastrophe occurred. His immoderate elevation;
+ his sudden degradation, his controversy in regard to the sovereignty, his
+ abrupt departure for England, his protracted absence, his mistimed return,
+ the secret instructions for his second administration, the obstinate
+ parsimony and persistent ill-temper of the Queen&mdash;who, from the
+ beginning to the end of the Earl's government, never addressed a kindly
+ word to the Netherlanders, but was ever censuring and brow beating them in
+ public state-papers and private epistles&mdash;the treason of York and
+ Stanley, above all, the disastrous and concealed negotiations with Parma,
+ and the desperate attempts upon Amsterdam and Leyden&mdash;all placed him
+ in a most unfortunate position from first to last. But he was not
+ competent for his post under any circumstances. He was not the statesman
+ to deal in policy with Buys, Barneveld, Ortel, Sainte Aldegonde; nor the
+ soldier to measure himself against Alexander Farnese. His administration
+ was a failure; and although he repeatedly hazarded his life, and poured
+ out his wealth in their behalf with an almost unequalled liberality, he
+ could never gain the hearts of the Netherlanders. English valour, English
+ intelligence, English truthfulness, English generosity, were endearing
+ England more and more to Holland. The statesmen of both countries were
+ brought into closest union, and learned to appreciate and to respect each
+ other, while they recognized that the fate of their respective
+ commonwealths was indissolubly united. But it was to the efforts of
+ Walsingham, Drake, Raleigh, Wilkes, Buckburst, Norris, Willoughby,
+ Williams, Vere, Russell, and the brave men who fought under their banners
+ or their counsels, on every battle-field, and in every beleaguered town in
+ the Netherlands, and to the universal spirit and sagacity of the English
+ nation, in this grand crisis of its fate, that these fortunate results
+ were owing; not to the Earl of Leicester, nor&mdash;during the term of his
+ administration&mdash;to Queen Elizabeth herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In brief, the proper sphere of this remarkable personage, and the one in
+ which he passed the greater portion of his existence, was that of a
+ magnificent court favourite, the spoiled darling, from youth to his
+ death-bed, of the great English Queen; whether to the advantage or not of
+ his country and the true interests of his sovereign, there can hardly be
+ at this day any difference of opinion.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Act of Uniformity required Papists to assist
+ As lieve see the Spanish as the Calvinistic inquisition
+ Elizabeth (had not) the faintest idea of religious freedom
+ God, whose cause it was, would be pleased to give good weather
+ Heretics to the English Church were persecuted
+ Look for a sharp war, or a miserable peace
+ Loving only the persons who flattered him
+ Not many more than two hundred Catholics were executed
+ Only citadel against a tyrant and a conqueror was distrust
+ Stake or gallows (for) heretics to transubstantiation
+ States were justified in their almost unlimited distrust
+ Undue anxiety for impartiality
+ Wealthy Papists could obtain immunity by an enormous fine
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. 1588, Part 1.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Prophecies as to the Year 1588&mdash;Distracted Condition of the Dutch
+ Republic&mdash;Willoughby reluctantly takes Command&mdash;English
+ Commissioners come to Ostend&mdash;Secretary Gamier and Robert Cecil&mdash;
+ Cecil accompanies Dale to Ghent&mdash;And finds the Desolation complete&mdash;
+ Interview of Dale and Cecil with Parma&mdash;His fervent Expressions in
+ favour of Peace&mdash;Cecil makes a Tour in Flanders&mdash;And sees much that
+ is remarkable&mdash;Interviews of Dr. Rogers with Parma&mdash;Wonderful
+ Harangues of the Envoy&mdash;Extraordinary Amenity of Alexander&mdash;With
+ which Rogers is much touched&mdash;The Queen not pleased with her Envoy&mdash;
+ Credulity of the English Commissioners&mdash;Ceremonious Meeting of all
+ the Envoys&mdash;Consummate Art in wasting Time&mdash;Long Disputes about
+ Commissions&mdash;The Spanish Commissions meant to deceive&mdash;Disputes
+ about Cessation of Arms&mdash;Spanish Duplicity and Procrastination&mdash;
+ Pedantry and Credulity of Dr. Dale&mdash;The Papal Bull and Dr. Allen's
+ Pamphlet&mdash;Dale sent to ask Explanations&mdash;Parma denies all Knowledge
+ of either&mdash;Croft believes to the last in Alexander.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The year 1588 had at last arrived&mdash;that fatal year concerning which
+ the German astrologers&mdash;more than a century before had prognosticated
+ such dire events. As the epoch approached it was firmly believed by many
+ that the end of the world was at hand, while the least superstitious could
+ not doubt that great calamities were impending over the nations. Portents
+ observed during the winter and in various parts of Europe came to increase
+ the prevailing panic. It rained blood in Sweden, monstrous births occurred
+ in France, and at Weimar it was gravely reported by eminent chroniclers
+ that the sun had appeared at mid-day holding a drawn sword in his mouth&mdash;a
+ warlike portent whose meaning could not be mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, in truth, it needed no miracles nor prophecies to enforce the
+ conviction that a long procession of disasters was steadily advancing.
+ With France rent asunder by internal convulsions, with its imbecile king
+ not even capable of commanding a petty faction among his own subjects,
+ with Spain the dark cause of unnumbered evils, holding Italy in its grasp,
+ firmly allied with the Pope, already having reduced and nearly absorbed
+ France, and now, after long and patient preparation, about to hurl the
+ concentrated vengeance and hatred of long years upon the little kingdom of
+ England, and its only ally&mdash;the just organized commonwealth of the
+ Netherlands&mdash;it would have been strange indeed if the dullest
+ intellect had not dreamed of tragical events. It was not encouraging that
+ there should be distraction in the counsels of the two States so
+ immediately threatened; that the Queen of England should be at variance
+ with her wisest and most faithful statesmen as to their course of action,
+ and that deadly quarrels should exist between the leading men of the Dutch
+ republic and the English governor, who had assumed the responsibility of
+ directing its energies against the common enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blackest night that ever descended upon the Netherlands&mdash;more
+ disappointing because succeeding a period of comparative prosperity and
+ triumph&mdash;was the winter of 1587-8, when Leicester had terminated his
+ career by his abrupt departure for England, after his second brief attempt
+ at administration. For it was exactly at this moment of anxious
+ expectation, when dangers were rolling up from the south till not a ray of
+ light or hope could pierce the universal darkness, that the little
+ commonwealth was left without a chief. The English Earl departed, shaking
+ the dust from his feet; but he did not resign. The supreme authority&mdash;so
+ far as he could claim it&mdash;was again transferred,&mdash;with his
+ person, to England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The consequences were immediate and disastrous. All the Leicestrians
+ refused to obey the States-General. Utrecht, the stronghold of that party,
+ announced its unequivocal intention to annex itself, without any
+ conditions whatever, to the English crown, while, in Holland, young
+ Maurice was solemnly installed stadholder, and captain-general of the
+ Provinces, under the guidance of Hohenlo and Barneveld. But his authority
+ was openly defied in many important cities within his jurisdiction by
+ military chieftains who had taken the oaths of allegiance to Leicester as
+ governor, and who refused to renounce fidelity to the man who had deserted
+ their country, but who had not resigned his authority. Of these mutineers
+ the most eminent was Diedrich Sonoy, governor of North Holland, a soldier
+ of much experience, sagacity, and courage, who had rendered great services
+ to the cause of liberty and Protestantism, and had defaced it by acts of
+ barbarity which had made his name infamous. Against this refractory
+ chieftain it was necessary for Hohenlo and Maurice to lead an armed force,
+ and to besiege him in his stronghold&mdash;the important city of Medenblik&mdash;which
+ he resolutely held for Leicester, although Leicester had definitely
+ departed, and which he closed against Maurice, although Maurice was the
+ only representative of order and authority within the distracted
+ commonwealth. And thus civil war had broken out in the little
+ scarcely-organized republic, as if there were not dangers and bloodshed
+ enough impending over it from abroad. And the civil war was the necessary
+ consequence of the Earl's departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English forces&mdash;reduced as they were by sickness, famine, and
+ abject poverty&mdash;were but a remnant of the brave and well-seasoned
+ bands which had faced the Spaniards with success on so many battle-fields.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general who now assumed chief command over them&mdash;by direction of
+ Leicester, subsequently confirmed by the Queen&mdash;was Lord Willoughby.
+ A daring, splendid dragoon, an honest, chivalrous, and devoted servant of
+ his Queen, a conscientious adherent of Leicester, and a firm believer in
+ his capacity and character, he was, however, not a man of sufficient
+ experience or subtlety to perform the various tasks imposed upon him by
+ the necessities of such a situation. Quick-witted, even brilliant in
+ intellect, and the bravest of the brave on the battle-field, he was
+ neither a sagacious administrator nor a successful commander. And he
+ honestly confessed his deficiencies, and disliked the post to which he had
+ been elevated. He scorned baseness, intrigue, and petty quarrels, and he
+ was impatient of control. Testy, choleric, and quarrelsome, with a high
+ sense of honour, and a keen perception of insult, very modest and very
+ proud, he was not likely to feed with wholesome appetite upon the
+ unsavoury annoyances which were the daily bread of a chief commander in
+ the Netherlands. "I ambitiously affect not high titles, but round
+ dealing," he said; "desiring rather to be a private lance with indifferent
+ reputation, than a colonel-general spotted or defamed with wants." He was
+ not the politician to be matched against the unscrupulous and
+ all-accomplished Farnese; and indeed no man better than Willoughby could
+ illustrate the enormous disadvantage under which Englishmen laboured at
+ that epoch in their dealings with Italians and Spaniards. The profuse
+ indulgence in falsehood which characterized southern statesmanship, was
+ more than a match for English love of truth. English soldiers and
+ negotiators went naked into a contest with enemies armed in a panoply of
+ lies. It was an unequal match, as we have already seen, and as we are soon
+ more clearly to see. How was an English soldier who valued his knightly
+ word&mdash;how were English diplomatists&mdash;among whom one of the most
+ famous&mdash;then a lad of twenty, secretary to Lord Essex in the
+ Netherlands&mdash;had poetically avowed that "simple truth was highest
+ skill,"&mdash;to deal with the thronging Spanish deceits sent northward by
+ the great father of lies who sat in the Escorial?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It were an ill lesson," said Willoughby, "to teach soldiers the
+ dissimulations of such as follow princes' courts, in Italy. For my own
+ part, it is my only end to be loyal and dutiful to my sovereign, and plain
+ to all others that I honour. I see the finest reynard loses his best coat
+ as well as the poorest sheep." He was also a strong Leicestrian, and had
+ imbibed much of the Earl's resentment against the leading politicians of
+ the States. Willoughby was sorely in need of council. That shrewd and
+ honest Welshman&mdash;Roger Williams&mdash;was, for the moment, absent.
+ Another of the same race and character commanded in Bergen-op-Zoom, but
+ was not more gifted with administrative talent than the general himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir Thomas Morgan is a very sufficient, gallant gentleman," said
+ Willoughby, "and in truth a very old soldier; but we both have need of one
+ that can both give and keep counsel better than ourselves. For action he
+ is undoubtedly very able, if there were no other means to conquer but only
+ to give blows."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In brief, the new commander of the English forces in the Netherlands was
+ little satisfied with the States, with the enemy, or with himself; and was
+ inclined to take but a dismal view of the disjointed commonwealth, which
+ required so incompetent a person as he professed himself to be to set it
+ right.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis a shame to show my wants," he said, "but too great a fault of duty
+ that the Queen's reputation be frustrate. What is my slender experience!
+ What an honourable person do I succeed! What an encumbered popular state
+ is left! What withered sinews, which it passes my cunning to restore! What
+ an enemy in head greater than heretofore! And wherewithal should I sustain
+ this burthen? For the wars I am fitter to obey than to command. For the
+ state, I am a man prejudicated in their opinion, and not the better liked
+ of them that have earnestly followed the general, and, being one that
+ wants both opinion and experience with them I have to deal, and means to
+ win more or to maintain that which is left, what good may be looked for?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The supreme authority&mdash;by the retirement of Leicester&mdash;was once
+ more the subject of dispute. As on his first departure, so also on this
+ his second and final one, he had left a commission to the state-council to
+ act as an executive body during his absence. But, although he&mdash;nominally
+ still retained his office, in reality no man believed in his return; and
+ the States-General were ill inclined to brook a species of guardianship
+ over them, with which they believed themselves mature enough to dispense.
+ Moreover the state-council, composed mainly of Leicestrians, would expire,
+ by limitation of its commission, early in February of that year. The
+ dispute for power would necessarily terminate, therefore, in favour of the
+ States-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime&mdash;while this internal revolution was taking place in the
+ polity of the commonwealth-the gravest disturbances were its natural
+ consequence. There were mutinies in the garrisons of Heusden, of
+ Gertruydenberg, of Medenblik, as alarming, and threatening to become as
+ chronic in their character, as those extensive military rebellions which
+ often rendered the Spanish troops powerless at the most critical epochs.
+ The cause of these mutinies was uniformly, want of pay, the pretext, the
+ oath to the Earl of Leicester, which was declared incompatible with the
+ allegiance claimed by Maurice in the name of the States-General. The
+ mutiny of Gertruydenberg was destined to be protracted; that of Medenblik,
+ dividing, as it did, the little territory of Holland in its very heart, it
+ was most important at once to suppress. Sonoy, however&mdash;who was so
+ stanch a Leicestrian, that his Spanish contemporaries uniformly believed
+ him to be an Englishman&mdash;held out for a long time, as will be seen,
+ against the threats and even the armed demonstrations of Maurice and the
+ States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the English sovereign, persisting in her delusion, and despite
+ the solemn warnings of her own wisest counsellors; and the passionate
+ remonstrances of the States-General of the Netherlands, sent her
+ peace-commissioners to the Duke of Parma.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl of Derby, Lord Cobham, Sir James Croft, Valentine Dale, doctor of
+ laws, and former ambassador at Vienna, and Dr. Rogers, envoys on the part
+ of the Queen, arrived in the Netherlands in February. The commissioners
+ appointed on the part of Farnese were Count Aremberg, Champagny,
+ Richardot, Jacob Maas, and Secretary Garnier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If history has ever furnished a lesson, how an unscrupulous tyrant, who
+ has determined upon enlarging his own territories at the expense of his
+ neighbours, upon oppressing human freedom wherever it dared to manifest
+ itself, with fine phrases of religion and order for ever in his mouth, on
+ deceiving his friends and enemies alike, as to his nefarious and almost
+ incredible designs, by means of perpetual and colossal falsehoods; and if
+ such lessons deserve to be pondered, as a source of instruction and
+ guidance for every age, then certainly the secret story of the
+ negotiations by which the wise Queen of England was beguiled, and her
+ kingdom brought to the verge of ruin, in the spring of 1588, is worthy of
+ serious attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English commissioners arrived at Ostend. With them came Robert Cecil,
+ youngest son of Lord-Treasurer Burghley, then twenty-five years of age.&mdash;He
+ had no official capacity, but was sent by his father, that he might
+ improve his diplomatic talents, and obtain some information as to the
+ condition of the Netherlands. A slight, crooked, hump-backed young
+ gentleman, dwarfish in stature, but with a face not irregular in feature,
+ and thoughtful and subtle in expression, with reddish hair, a thin tawny
+ beard, and large, pathetic, greenish-coloured eyes, with a mind and
+ manners already trained to courts and cabinets, and with a disposition
+ almost ingenuous, as compared to the massive dissimulation with which it
+ was to be contrasted, and with what was, in aftertimes, to constitute a
+ portion of his own character, Cecil, young as he was, could not be
+ considered the least important of the envoys. The Queen, who loved proper
+ men, called him "her pigmy;" and "although," he observed with whimsical
+ courtliness, "I may not find fault with the sporting name she gives me,
+ yet seem I only not to mislike it, because she gives it." The strongest
+ man among them was Valentine Dale, who had much shrewdness, experience,
+ and legal learning, but who valued himself, above all things, upon his
+ Latinity. It was a consolation to him, while his adversaries were breaking
+ Priscian's head as fast as the Duke, their master, was breaking his oaths,
+ that his own syntax was as clear as his conscience. The feeblest
+ commissioner was James-a-Croft, who had already exhibited himself with
+ very anile characteristics, and whose subsequent manifestations were to
+ seem like dotage. Doctor Rogers, learned in the law, as he unquestionably
+ was, had less skill in reading human character, or in deciphering the
+ physiognomy of a Farnese, while Lord Derby, every inch a grandee, with
+ Lord Cobham to assist him, was not the man to cope with the astute
+ Richardot, the profound and experienced Champagny, or that most voluble
+ and most rhetorical of doctors of law, Jacob Maas of Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commissioners, on their arrival, were welcomed by Secretary Garnier,
+ who had been sent to Ostend to greet them. An adroit, pleasing, courteous
+ gentleman, thirty-six years of age, small, handsome, and attired not quite
+ as a soldier, nor exactly as one of the long robe, wearing a cloak furred
+ to the knee, a cassock of black velvet, with plain gold buttons, and a
+ gold chain about his neck, the secretary delivered handsomely the Duke of
+ Parma's congratulations, recommended great expedition in the negotiations,
+ and was then invited by the Earl of Derby to dine with the commissioners.
+ He was accompanied by a servant in plain livery, who&mdash;so soon as his
+ master had made his bow to the English envoys&mdash;had set forth for a
+ stroll through the town. The modest-looking valet, however, was a
+ distinguished engineer in disguise, who had been sent by Alexander for the
+ especial purpose of examining the fortifications of Ostend&mdash;that town
+ being a point much coveted, and liable to immediate attack by the Spanish
+ commander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Secretary Gamier made himself very agreeable, showing wit,
+ experience, and good education; and, after dinner, was accompanied to his
+ lodgings by Dr. Rogers and other gentlemen, with whom&mdash;especially
+ with Cecil&mdash;he held much conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Knowing that this young gentleman "wanted not an honourable father," the
+ Secretary was very desirous that he should take this opportunity to make a
+ tour through the Provinces, examine the cities, and especially "note the
+ miserable ruins of the poor country and people." He would then feelingly
+ perceive how much they had to answer for, whose mad rebellion against
+ their sovereign lord and master had caused so great an effusion of blood,
+ and the wide desolation of such goodly towns and territories.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cecil probably entertained a suspicion that the sovereign lord and master,
+ who had been employed, twenty years long, in butchering his subjects and
+ in ravaging their territory to feed his executioners and soldiers, might
+ almost be justified in treating human beings as beasts and reptiles, if
+ they had not at last rebelled. He simply and diplomatically answered,
+ however, that he could not but concur with the Secretary in lamenting the
+ misery of the Provinces and people so utterly despoiled and ruined, but,
+ as it might be matter of dispute; "from what head this fountain of
+ calamity was both fed and derived, he would not enter further therein, it
+ being a matter much too high for his capacity." He expressed also the hope
+ that the King's heart might sympathize with that of her Majesty, in
+ earnest compassion for all this suffering, and in determination to
+ compound their differences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the following day there was some conversation with Gamier, on
+ preliminary and formal matters, followed in the evening by a dinner at
+ Lord Cobham's lodgings&mdash;a banquet which the forlorn condition of the
+ country scarcely permitted to be luxurious. "We rather pray here for
+ satiety," said Cecil, "than ever think of variety."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was hoped by the Englishmen that the Secretary would take his departure
+ after dinner; for the governor of Ostend, Sir John Conway, had an uneasy
+ sensation, during his visit, that the unsatisfactory condition of the
+ defences would attract his attention, and that a sudden attack by Farnese
+ might be the result. Sir John was not aware however, of the minute and
+ scientific observations then making at the very moment when Mr. Garnier
+ was entertaining the commissioners with his witty and instructive
+ conversation&mdash;by the unobtrusive menial who had accompanied the
+ Secretary to Ostend. In order that those observations might be as thorough
+ as possible, rather than with any view to ostensible business, the envoy
+ of Parma now declared that&mdash;on account of the unfavourable state of
+ the tide&mdash;he had resolved to pass another night at Ostend. "We could
+ have spared his company," said Cecil, "but their Lordships considered it
+ convenient that he should be used well." So Mr. Comptroller Croft gave the
+ affable Secretary a dinner-invitation for the following day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here certainly was a masterly commencement on the part of the Spanish
+ diplomatists. There was not one stroke of business during the visit of the
+ Secretary. He had been sent simply to convey a formal greeting, and to
+ take the names of the English commissioners&mdash;a matter which could
+ have been done in an hour as well as in a week. But it must be remembered,
+ that, at that very moment, the Duke was daily expecting intelligence of
+ the sailing of the Armada, and that Philip, on his part, supposed the Duke
+ already in England, at the head of his army. Under these circumstances,
+ therefore&mdash;when the whole object of the negotiation, so far as Parma
+ and his master were, concerned, was to amuse and to gain time&mdash;it was
+ already ingenious in Garnier to have consumed several days in doing
+ nothing; and to have obtained plans and descriptions of Ostend into the
+ bargain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Garnier&mdash;when his departure could no longer, on any pretext, be
+ deferred&mdash;took his leave, once more warmly urging Robert Cecil to
+ make a little tour in the obedient Netherlands, and to satisfy himself, by
+ personal observation, of their miserable condition. As Dr. Dale purposed
+ making a preliminary visit to the Duke of Parma at Ghent, it was
+ determined accordingly that he should be accompanied by Cecil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That young gentleman had already been much impressed by the forlorn aspect
+ of the country about Ostend&mdash;for, although the town was itself in
+ possession of the English, it was in the midst of the enemy's territory.
+ Since the fall of Sluys the Spaniards were masters of all Flanders, save
+ this one much-coveted point. And although the Queen had been disposed to
+ abandon that city, and to suffer the ocean to overwhelm it, rather than
+ that she should be at charges to defend it, yet its possession was of
+ vital consequence to the English-Dutch cause, as time was ultimately to
+ show. Meanwhile the position was already a very important one, for&mdash;according
+ to the predatory system of warfare of the day&mdash;it was an excellent
+ starting-point for those marauding expeditions against persons and
+ property, in which neither the Dutch nor English were less skilled than
+ the Flemings or Spaniards. "The land all about here," said Cecil, "is so
+ devastated, that where the open country was wont to be covered with kine
+ and sheep, it is now fuller of wild boars and wolves; whereof many come so
+ nigh the town that the sentinels&mdash;three of whom watch every night
+ upon a sand-hill outside the gates&mdash;have had them in a dark night
+ upon them ere they were aware."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the garrison of Ostend was quite as dangerous to the peasants and the
+ country squires of Flanders, as were the wolves or wild boars; and many a
+ pacific individual of retired habits, and with a remnant of property worth
+ a ransom, was doomed to see himself whisked from his seclusion by Conway's
+ troopers, and made a compulsory guest at the city. Prisoners were brought
+ in from a distance of sixty miles; and there was one old gentlemen,
+ "well-languaged," who "confessed merrily to Cecil, that when the soldiers
+ fetched him out of his own mansion-house, sitting safe in his study, he
+ was as little in fear of the garrison of Ostend as he was of the Turk or
+ the devil."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [And Doctor Rogers held very similar language: "The most dolorous
+ and heavy sights in this voyage to Ghent, by me weighed," he said;
+ "seeing the countries which, heretofore; by traffic of merchants, as
+ much as any other I have seen flourish, now partly drowned, and,
+ except certain great cities, wholly burned, ruined, and desolate,
+ possessed I say, with wolves, wild boars, and foxes&mdash;a great,
+ testimony of the wrath of God," &amp;c. &amp;c. Dr. Rogers to the Queen,-
+ April, 1588. (S. P. Office MS.)]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Three days after the departure of Garnier, Dr. Dale and his attendants
+ started upon their expedition from Ostend to Ghent&mdash;an hour's journey
+ or so in these modern times.&mdash;The English envoys, in the sixteenth
+ century, found it a more formidable undertaking. They were many hours
+ traversing the four miles to Oudenburg, their first halting-place; for the
+ waters were out, there having been a great breach of the sea-dyke of
+ Ostend, a disaster threatening destruction to town and country. At
+ Oudenburg, a "small and wretched hole," as Garnier had described it to be,
+ there was, however, a garrison of three thousand Spanish soldiers, under
+ the Marquis de Renti. From these a convoy of fifty troopers was appointed
+ to protect the English travellers to Bruges. Here they arrived at three
+ o'clock, were met outside the gates by the famous General La Motte, and by
+ him escorted to their lodgings in the "English house," and afterwards
+ handsomely entertained at supper in his own quarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The General's wife; Madame de la Motte, was, according to Cecil, "a fair
+ gentlewoman of discreet and modest behaviour, and yet not unwilling
+ sometimes to hear herself speak;" so that in her society, and in that of
+ her sister&mdash;"a nun of the order of the Mounts, but who, like the rest
+ of the sisterhood, wore an ordinary dress in the evening, and might leave
+ the convent if asked in marriage"&mdash;the supper passed off very
+ agreeably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the evening Cecil found that his father had formerly occupied the same
+ bedroom of the English hotel in which he was then lodged; for he found
+ that Lord Burghley had scrawled his name in the chimney-corner&mdash;a
+ fact which was highly gratifying to the son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning, at seven o'clock, the travellers set forth for Ghent.
+ The journey was a miserable one. It was as cold and gloomy weather as even
+ a Flemish month of March could furnish. A drizzling rain was falling all
+ day long, the lanes were foul and miry, the frequent thickets which
+ overhung their path were swarming with the freebooters of Zeeland, who
+ were "ever at hand," says Cecil, "to have picked our purses, but that they
+ descried our convoy, and so saved themselves in the woods." Sitting on
+ horseback ten hours without alighting, under such circumstances as these,
+ was not luxurious for a fragile little gentleman like Queen Elizabeth's
+ "pigmy;" especially as Dr. Dale and himself had only half a red herring
+ between them for luncheon, and supped afterwards upon an orange. The envoy
+ protested that when they could get a couple of eggs a piece, while
+ travelling in Flanders, "they thought they fared like princes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless Cecil and himself fought it out manfully, and when they
+ reached Ghent, at five in the evening, they were met by their acquaintance
+ Garnier, and escorted to their lodgings. Here they were waited upon by
+ President Richardot, "a tall gentleman," on behalf of the Duke of Parma,
+ and then left to their much-needed repose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could be more forlorn than the country of the obedient
+ Netherlands, through which their day's journey had led them. Desolation
+ had been the reward of obedience. "The misery of the inhabitants," said
+ Cecil, "is incredible, both without the town, where all things are wasted,
+ houses spoiled, and grounds unlaboured, and also, even in these great
+ cities, where they are for the most part poor beggars even in the fairest
+ houses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And all this human wretchedness was the elaborate work of one man&mdash;one
+ dull, heartless bigot, living, far away, a life of laborious ease and
+ solemn sensuality; and, in reality, almost as much removed from these
+ fellow-creatures of his, whom he called his subjects, as if he had been
+ the inhabitant of another planet. Has history many more instructive
+ warnings against the horrors of arbitrary government&mdash;against the
+ folly of mankind in ever tolerating the rule of a single irresponsible
+ individual, than the lesson furnished by the life-work of that crowned
+ criminal, Philip the Second?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The longing for peace on the part of these unfortunate obedient Flemings
+ was intense. Incessant cries for peace reached the ears of the envoys on
+ every side. Alas, it would have been better for these peace-wishers, had
+ they stood side by side with their brethren, the noble Hollanders and
+ Zeelanders, when they had been wresting, if not peace, yet independence
+ and liberty, from Philip, with their own right hands. Now the obedient
+ Flemings were but fuel for the vast flame which the monarch was kindling
+ for the destruction of Christendom&mdash;if all Christendom were not
+ willing to accept his absolute dominion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burgomasters of Ghent&mdash;of Ghent, once the powerful, the
+ industrious, the opulent, the free, of all cities in the world now the
+ most abject and forlorn&mdash;came in the morning to wait upon Elizabeth's
+ envoy, and to present him, according to ancient custom, with some flasks
+ of wine. They came with tears streaming down their cheeks, earnestly
+ expressing the desire of their hearts for peace, and their joy that at
+ least it had now "begun to be thought on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is quite true," replied Dr. Dale, "that her excellent Majesty the
+ Queen&mdash;filled with compassion for your condition, and having been
+ informed that the Duke of Parma is desirous of peace&mdash;has vouchsafed
+ to make this overture. If it take not the desired effect, let not the
+ blame rest upon her, but upon her adversaries." To these words the
+ magistrates all said Amen, and invoked blessings on her Majesty. And most
+ certainly, Elizabeth was sincerely desirous of peace; even at greater
+ sacrifices than the Duke could well have imagined; but there was something
+ almost diabolic in the cold dissimulation by which her honest compassion
+ was mocked, and the tears of a whole people in its agony made the
+ laughingstock of a despot and his tools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Saturday morning, Richardot and Garnier waited upon the envoy to escort
+ him to the presence of the Duke. Cecil, who accompanied him, was not much
+ impressed with the grandeur of Alexander's lodgings; and made unfavourable
+ and rather unreasonable comparisons between them and the splendour of
+ Elizabeth's court. They passed through an ante-chamber into a dining-room,
+ thence into an inner chamber, and next into the Duke's room. In the
+ ante-chamber stood Sir William Stanley, the Deventer traitor, conversing
+ with one Mockett, an Englishman, long resident in Flanders. Stanley was
+ meanly dressed, in the Spanish fashion, and as young Cecil, passing
+ through the chamber, looked him in the face, he abruptly turned from him,
+ and pulled his hat over his eyes. "'Twas well he did so," said that young
+ gentleman, "for his taking it off would hardly have cost me mine." Cecil
+ was informed that Stanley was to have a commandery of Malta, and was in
+ good favour with the Duke, who was, however, quite weary of his mutinous
+ and disorderly Irish regiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the bed-chamber, Farnese&mdash;accompanied by the Marquis del Guasto,
+ the Marquis of Renty, the Prince of Aremberg, President Richardot, and
+ Secretary Cosimo&mdash;received the envoy and his companion. "Small and
+ mean was the furniture of the chamber," said Cecil; "and although they
+ attribute this to his love of privacy, yet it is a sign that peace is the
+ mother of all honour and state, as may best be perceived by the court of
+ England, which her Majesty's royal presence doth so adorn, as that it
+ exceedeth this as far as the sun surpasseth in light the other stars of
+ the firmament."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was a compliment to the Queen and her upholsterers drawn in by the
+ ears. Certainly, if the first and best fruit of the much-longed-for peace
+ were only to improve the furniture of royal and ducal apartments, it might
+ be as well perhaps for the war to go on, while the Queen continued to
+ outshine all the stars in the firmament. But the budding courtier and
+ statesman knew that a personal compliment to Elizabeth could never be
+ amiss or ill-timed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The envoy delivered the greetings of her Majesty to the Duke, and was
+ heard with great attention. Alexander attempted a reply in French, which
+ was very imperfect, and, apologizing, exchanged that tongue for Italian.
+ He alluded with great fervour to the "honourable opinion concerning his
+ sincerity and word," expressed to him by her Majesty, through the mouth of
+ her envoy. "And indeed," said he, "I have always had especial care of
+ keeping my word. My body and service are at the commandment of the King,
+ my lord and master, but my honour is my own, and her Majesty may be
+ assured that I shall always have especial regard of my word to so great
+ and famous a Queen as her Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The visit was one of preliminaries and of ceremony. Nevertheless Farnese
+ found opportunity to impress the envoy and his companions with his
+ sincerity of heart. He conversed much with Cecil, making particular and
+ personal inquiries, and with appearance of deep interest, in regard to
+ Queen Elizabeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is not a prince in the world&mdash;" he said, "reserving all
+ question between her Majesty and my royal master&mdash;to whom I desire
+ more to do service. So much have I heard of her perfections, that I wish
+ earnestly that things might so fall out, as that it might be my fortune to
+ look upon her face before my return to my own country. Yet I desire to
+ behold her, not as a servant to him who is not able still to maintain war,
+ or as one that feared any harm that might befall him; for in such matters
+ my account was made long ago, to endure all which God may send. But, in
+ truth, I am weary to behold the miserable estate of this people, fallen
+ upon them through their own folly, and methinks that he who should do the
+ best offices of peace would perform a 'pium et sanctissimum opus.' Right
+ glad am I that the Queen is not behind me in zeal for peace." He then
+ complimented Cecil in regard to his father, whom he understood to be the
+ principal mover in these negotiations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man expressed his thanks, and especially for the good affection
+ which the Duke had manifested to the Queen and in the blessed cause of
+ peace. He was well aware that her Majesty esteemed him a prince of great
+ honour and virtue, and that for this good work, thus auspiciously begun,
+ no man could possibly doubt that her Majesty, like himself, was most
+ zealously affected to bring all things to a perfect peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The matters discussed in this first interview were only in regard to the
+ place to be appointed for the coming conferences, and the exchange of
+ powers. The Queen's commissioners had expected to treat at Ostend.
+ Alexander, on the contrary, was unable to listen to such a suggestion, as
+ it would be utter dereliction of his master's dignity to send envoys to a
+ city of his own, now in hostile occupation by her Majesty's forces. The
+ place of conference, therefore, would be matter of future consideration.
+ In respect to the exchange of powers, Alexander expressed the hope that no
+ man would doubt as to the production on his commissioners' part of ample
+ authority both from himself and from the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet it will be remembered, that, at this moment, the Duke had not only no
+ powers from the King, but that Philip had most expressly refused to send a
+ commission, and that he fully expected the negotiation to be superseded by
+ the invasion, before the production of the powers should become
+ indispensable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when Farnese was speaking thus fervently in favour of peace, and
+ parading his word and his honour, the letters lay in his cabinet in that
+ very room, in which Philip expressed his conviction that his general was
+ already in London, that the whole realm of England was already at the
+ mercy of a Spanish soldiery, and that the Queen, upon whose perfection
+ Alexander had so long yearned to gaze, was a discrowned captive, entirely
+ in her great enemy's power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus ended the preliminary interview. On the following Monday, 11th March,
+ Dr. Dale and his attendants made the best of their way back to Ostend,
+ while young Cecil, with a safe conduct from Champagny, set forth on a
+ little tour in Flanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The journey from Ghent to Antwerp was easy, and he was agreeably surprised
+ by the apparent prosperity of the country. At intervals of every few
+ miles; he was refreshed with the spectacle of a gibbet well garnished with
+ dangling freebooters; and rejoiced, therefore, in comparative security.
+ For it seemed that the energetic bailiff of Waasland had levied a
+ contribution upon the proprietors of the country, to be expended mainly in
+ hanging brigands; and so well had the funds been applied, that no
+ predatory bands could make their appearance but they were instantly
+ pursued by soldiers, and hanged forthwith, without judge or trial. Cecil
+ counted twelve such places of execution on his road between Ghent and
+ Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his journey he fell in with an Italian merchant,&mdash;Lanfranchi by
+ name, of a great commercial house in Antwerp, in the days when Antwerp had
+ commerce, and by him, on his arrival the same evening in that town, he was
+ made an honoured guest, both for his father's sake and his Queen's. "'Tis
+ the pleasantest city that ever I saw," said Cecil, "for situation and
+ building; but utterly left and abandoned now by those rich merchants that
+ were wont to frequent the place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His host was much interested in the peace-negotiations, and indeed,
+ through his relations with Champagny and Andreas de Loo, had been one of
+ the instruments by which it had been commenced. He inveighed bitterly
+ against the Spanish captains and soldiers, to whose rapacity and ferocity
+ he mainly ascribed the continuance of the war;&mdash;and he was especially
+ incensed with Stanley and other&mdash;English renegades, who were thought
+ fiercer haters of England than were the Spaniards themselves: Even in the
+ desolate and abject condition of Antwerp and its neighbourhood, at that
+ moment, the quick eye of Cecil detected the latent signs of a possible
+ splendour. Should peace be restored, the territory once more be tilled,
+ and the foreign merchants attracted thither again, he believed that the
+ governor of the obedient Netherlands might live there in more magnificence
+ than the King of Spain himself, exhausted as were his revenues by the
+ enormous expense of this protracted war: Eight hundred thousand dollars
+ monthly; so Lanfranchi informed Cecil, were the costs of the forces on the
+ footing then established. This, however, was probably an exaggeration, for
+ the royal account books showed a less formidable sum, although a
+ sufficiently large one to appal a less obstinate bigot than Philip. But
+ what to him were the ruin of the Netherlands; the impoverishment of Spain,
+ and the downfall of her ancient grandeur compared to the glory of
+ establishing the Inquisition in England and Holland?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While at dinner in Lanfranchi's house; Cecil was witness to another
+ characteristic of the times, and one which afforded proof of even more
+ formidable freebooters abroad than those for whom the bailiff of Waasland
+ had erected his gibbets. A canal-boat had left Antwerp for Brussels that
+ morning, and in the vicinity of the latter city had been set upon by a
+ detachment from the English garrison of Bergen-op-Zoom, and captured, with
+ twelve prisoners and a freight of 60,000 florins in money. "This struck
+ the company at the dinner-table all in a dump;" said Cecil. And well it
+ might; for the property mainly belonged to themselves, and they forthwith
+ did their best to have the marauders waylaid on their return. But Cecil,
+ notwithstanding his gratitude for the hospitality of Lanfranchi, sent word
+ next day to the garrison of Bergen of the designs against them, and on his
+ arrival at the place had the satisfaction of being informed by Lord
+ Willoughby that the party had got safe home with their plunder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And, well worthy they are of it," said young Robert, "considering how far
+ they go for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The traveller, on, leaving Antwerp, proceeded down the river to
+ Bergen-op-Zoom, where he was hospitably entertained by that doughty old
+ soldier Sir William Reade, and met Lord Willoughby, whom he accompanied to
+ Brielle on a visit to the deposed elector Truchsess, then living in that
+ neighbourhood. Cecil&mdash;who was not passion's slave&mdash;had small
+ sympathy with the man who could lose a sovereignty for the sake of Agnes
+ Mansfeld. "'Tis a very goodly gentleman," said he, "well fashioned, and of
+ good speech, for which I must rather praise him than for loving a wife
+ better than so great a fortune as he lost by her occasion." At Brielle he
+ was handsomely entertained by the magistrates, who had agreeable
+ recollections of his brother Thomas, late governor of that city. Thence he
+ proceeded by way of Delft&mdash;which, like all English travellers, he
+ described as "the finest built town that ever he saw"&mdash;to the Hague,
+ and thence to Fushing, and so back by sea to Ostend.&mdash;He had made the
+ most of his three weeks' tour, had seen many important towns both in the
+ republic and in the obedient Netherlands, and had conversed with many
+ "tall gentlemen," as he expressed himself, among the English commanders,
+ having been especially impressed by the heroes of Sluys, Baskerville and
+ that "proper gentleman Francis Vere."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was also presented by Lord Willoughby to Maurice of Nassau, and was
+ perhaps not very benignantly received by the young prince. At that
+ particular moment, when Leicester's deferred resignation, the rebellion of
+ Sonoy in North Holland, founded on a fictitious allegiance to the late
+ governor-general, the perverse determination of the Queen to treat for
+ peace against the advice of all the leading statesmen of the Netherlands,
+ and the sharp rebukes perpetually administered by her, in consequence, to
+ the young stadholder and all his supporters, had not tended to produce the
+ most tender feelings upon their part towards the English government, it
+ was not surprising that the handsome soldier should look askance at the
+ crooked little courtier, whom even the great Queen smiled at while she
+ petted him. Cecil was very angry with Maurice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In my life I never saw worse behaviour," he said, "except it were in one
+ lately come from school. There is neither outward appearance in him of any
+ noble mind nor inward virtue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although Cecil had consumed nearly the whole month of March in his tour,
+ he had been more profitably employed than were the royal commissioners
+ during the same period at Ostend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never did statesmen know better how not to do that which they were
+ ostensibly occupied in doing than Alexander Farnese and his agents,
+ Champagny, Richardot, Jacob Maas, and Gamier. The first pretext by which
+ much time was cleverly consumed was the dispute as to the place of
+ meeting. Doctor Dale had already expressed his desire for Ostend as the
+ place of colloquy. "'Tis a very slow old gentleman, this Doctor Dale,"
+ said Alexander; "he was here in the time of Madam my mother, and has also
+ been ambassador at Vienna. I have received him and his attendants with
+ great courtesy, and held out great hopes of peace. We had conversations
+ about the place of meeting. He wishes Ostend: I object. The first
+ conference will probably be at some point between that place and Newport."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next opportunity for discussion and delay was afforded by the question
+ of powers. And it must be ever borne in mind that Alexander was daily
+ expecting the arrival of the invading fleets and armies of Spain, and was
+ holding himself in readiness to place himself at their head for the
+ conquest of England. This was, of course, so strenuously denied by himself
+ and those under his influence, that Queen Elizabeth implicitly. believed
+ him, Burghley was lost in doubt, and even the astute Walsingham began to
+ distrust his own senses. So much strength does a falsehood acquire in
+ determined and skilful hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to the commissions, it will be absolutely necessary for, your Majesty
+ to send them," wrote Alexander at the moment when he was receiving the
+ English envoy at Ghent, "for unless the Armada arrive soon&mdash;it will
+ be indispensable for me, to have them, in order to keep the negotiation
+ alive. Of course they will never broach the principal matters without
+ exhibition of powers. Richardot is aware of the secret which your Majesty
+ confided to me, namely, that the negotiations are only intended to deceive
+ the Queen and to gain time for the fleet; but the powers must be sent in
+ order that we may be able to produce them; although your secret intentions
+ will be obeyed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke commented, however, on the extreme difficulty of carrying out the
+ plan, as originally proposed. "The conquest of England would have been
+ difficult," he said, "even although the country had been taken by
+ surprise. Now they are strong and armed; we are comparatively weak. The
+ danger and the doubt are great; and the English deputies, I think, are
+ really desirous of peace. Nevertheless I am at your Majesty's disposition&mdash;life
+ and all&mdash;and probably, before the answer arrives to this letter, the
+ fleet will have arrived, and I shall have undertaken the passage to
+ England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After three weeks had thus adroitly been frittered away, the English
+ commissioners became somewhat impatient, and despatched Doctor Rogers to
+ the Duke at Ghent. This was extremely obliging upon their part, for if
+ Valentine Dale were a "slow old gentleman," he was keen, caustic, and
+ rapid, as compared to John Rogers. A formalist and a pedant, a man of red
+ tape and routine, full of precedents and declamatory commonplaces which he
+ mistook for eloquence, honest as daylight and tedious as a king, he was
+ just the time-consumer for Alexander's purpose. The wily Italian listened
+ with profound attention to the wise saws in which the excellent
+ diplomatist revelled, and his fine eyes often filled with tears at the
+ Doctor's rhetoric.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three interviews&mdash;each three mortal hours long&mdash;did the two
+ indulge in at Ghent, and never, was high-commissioner better satisfied
+ with himself than was John Rogers upon those occasions. He carried every
+ point; he convinced, he softened, he captivated the great Duke; he turned
+ the great Duke round his finger. The great Duke smiled, or wept, or fell
+ into his arms, by turns. Alexander's military exploits had rung through
+ the world, his genius for diplomacy and statesmanship had never been
+ disputed; but his talents as a light comedian were, in these interviews,
+ for the first time fully revealed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 26th March the learned Doctor made his first bow and performed his
+ first flourish of compliments at Ghent. "I assure your Majesty," said he,
+ "his Highness followed my compliments of entertainment with so much
+ honour, as that&mdash;his Highness or I, speaking of the Queen of England&mdash;he
+ never did less than uncover his head; not covering the same, unless I was
+ covered also." And after these salutations had at last been got through
+ with, thus spake the Doctor of Laws to the Duke of Parma:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Almighty God, the light of lights, be pleased to enlighten the
+ understanding of your Alteza, and to direct the same to his glory, to the
+ uniting of both their Majesties and the finishing of these most bloody
+ wars, whereby these countries, being in the highest degree of misery
+ desolate, lie as it were prostrate before the wrathful presence of the
+ most mighty God, most lamentably beseeching his Divine Majesty to withdraw
+ his scourge of war from them, and to move the hearts of princes to restore
+ them unto peace, whereby they might attain unto their ancient flower and
+ dignity. Into the hands of your Alteza are now the lives of many
+ thousands, the destruction of cities, towns, and countries, which to put
+ to the fortune of war how perilous it were, I pray consider. Think ye, ye
+ see the mothers left alive tendering their offspring in your presence,
+ 'nam matribus detestata bells,'" continued the orator. "Think also of
+ others of all sexes, ages, and conditions, on their knees before your
+ Alteza, most humbly praying and crying most dolorously to spare their
+ lives, and save their property from the ensanguined scourge of the insane
+ soldiers," and so on, and so on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Philip II. was slow in resolving, slower in action. The ponderous
+ three-deckers of Biscay were notoriously the dullest sailers ever known,
+ nor were the fettered slaves who rowed the great galleys of Portugal or of
+ Andalusia very brisk in their movements; and yet the King might have found
+ time to marshal his ideas and his squadrons, and the Armada had leisure to
+ circumnavigate the globe and invade England afterwards, if a succession of
+ John Rogerses could have entertained his Highness with compliments while
+ the preparations were making.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alexander&mdash;at the very outset of the Doctor's eloquence&mdash;found
+ it difficult to suppress his feelings. "I can assure your Majesty," said
+ Rogers, "that his eyes&mdash;he has a very large eye&mdash;were moistened.
+ Sometimes they were thrown upward to heaven, sometimes they were fixed
+ full upon me, sometimes they were cast downward, well declaring how his
+ heart was affected."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Honest John even thought it necessary to mitigate the effect of his
+ rhetoric, and to assure his Highness that it was, after all, only he
+ Doctor Rogers, and not the minister plenipotentiary of the Queen's most
+ serene Majesty, who was exciting all this emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "At this part of my speech," said he, "I prayed his Highness not to be
+ troubled, for that the same only proceeded from Doctor Rogers, who, it
+ might please him to know, was so much moved with the pitiful case of these
+ countries, as also that which of war was sure to ensue, that I wished, if
+ my body were full of rivers of blood, the same to be poured forth to
+ satisfy any that were blood-thirsty, so there might an assured peace
+ follow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Highness, at any rate, manifesting no wish to drink of such sanguinary
+ streams&mdash;even had the Doctor's body contained them&mdash;Rogers
+ became calmer. He then descended from rhetoric to jurisprudence and
+ casuistry, and argued at intolerable length the propriety of commencing
+ the conferences at Ostend, and of exhibiting mutually the commissions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is quite unnecessary to follow him as closely as did Farnese. When he
+ had finished the first part of his oration, however, and was "addressing
+ himself to the second point," Alexander at last interrupted the torrent of
+ his eloquence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He said that my divisions and subdivisions," wrote the Doctor, "were
+ perfectly in his remembrance, and that he would first answer the first
+ point, and afterwards give audience to the second, and answer the same
+ accordingly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly Alexander put on his hat, and begged the envoy also to be
+ covered. Then, "with great gravity, as one inwardly much moved," the Duke
+ took up his part in the dialogue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Signor Ruggieri," said he, "you have propounded unto me speeches of two
+ sorts: the one proceeds from Doctor Ruggieri, the other from the lord
+ ambassador of the most serene Queen of England. Touching the first, I do
+ give you my hearty thanks for your godly speeches, assuring you that
+ though, by reason I have always followed the wars, I cannot be ignorant of
+ the calamities by you alleged, yet you have so truly represented the same
+ before mine eyes as to effectuate in me at this instant, not only the
+ confirmation of mine own disposition to have peace, but also an assurance
+ that this treaty shall take good and speedy end, seeing that it hath
+ pleased God to raise up such a good instrument as you are."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Many are the causes," continued the Duke, "which, besides my disposition,
+ move me to peace. My father and mother are dead; my son is a young prince;
+ my house has truly need of my presence. I am not ignorant how ticklish a
+ thing is the fortune of war, which&mdash;how victorious soever I have been&mdash;may
+ in one moment not only deface the same, but also deprive me of my life.
+ The King, my master, is now, stricken in years, his children are young,
+ his dominions in trouble. His desire is to live, and to leave his
+ posterity in quietness. The glory of God, the honor of both their
+ Majesties, and the good of these countries, with the stay of the effusion
+ of Christian blood, and divers other like reasons, force him to peace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus spoke Alexander, like an honest Christian gentleman, avowing the most
+ equitable and pacific dispositions on the part of his master and himself.
+ Yet at that moment he knew that the Armada was about to sail, that his own
+ nights and days were passed in active preparations for war, and that no
+ earthly power could move Philip by one hair's-breadth from his purpose to
+ conquer England that summer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be superfluous to follow the Duke or the Doctor through their
+ long dialogue on the place of conference, and the commissions. Alexander
+ considered it "infamy" on his name if he should send envoys to a place of
+ his master's held by the enemy. He was also of opinion that it was unheard
+ of to exhibit commissions previous to a preliminary colloquy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both propositions were strenuously contested by Rogers. In regard to the
+ second point in particular, he showed triumphantly, by citations from the
+ "Polonians, Prussians, and Lithuanians," that commissions ought to be
+ previously exhibited. But it was not probable that even the Doctor's
+ learning and logic would persuade Alexander to produce his commission;
+ because, unfortunately, he had no commission to produce. A comfortable
+ argument on the subject, however, would, none the less, consume time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three hours of this work brought them, exhausted and hungry; to the hour
+ of noon and of dinner Alexander, with profuse and smiling thanks for the
+ envoy's plain dealing and eloquence, assured him that there would have
+ been peace long ago "had Doctor Rogers always been the instrument," and
+ regretted that he was himself not learned enough to deal creditably with
+ him. He would, however, send Richardot to bear him company at table, and
+ chop logic with him afterwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day, at the same, hour, the Duke and Doctor had another encounter. So
+ soon as the envoy made his appearance, he found himself "embraced most
+ cheerfully and familiarly by his Alteza," who, then entering at once into
+ business, asked as to the Doctor's second point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Doctor answered with great alacrity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certain expressions have been reported to her Majesty," said he, "as
+ coming both from your Highness and from Richardot, hinting at a possible
+ attempt by the King of Spain's forces against the Queen. Her Majesty,
+ gathering that you are going about belike to terrify her, commands me to
+ inform you very clearly and very expressly that she does not deal so
+ weakly in her government, nor so improvidently, but that she is provided
+ for anything that might be attempted against her by the King, and as able
+ to offend him as he her Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander&mdash;with a sad countenance, as much offended, his eyes
+ declaring miscontentment&mdash;asked who had made such a report.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Upon the honour of a gentleman," said he, "whoever has said this has much
+ abused me, and evil acquitted himself. They who know me best are aware
+ that it is not my manner to let any word pass my lips that might offend
+ any prince." Then, speaking most solemnly, he added, "I declare really and
+ truly (which two words he said in Spanish), that I know not of any
+ intention of the King of Spain against her Majesty or her realm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment the earth did not open&mdash;year of portents though it was&mdash;and
+ the Doctor, "singularly rejoicing" at this authentic information from the
+ highest source, proceeded cheerfully with the conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hold myself," he exclaimed, "the man most satisfied in the world,
+ because I may now write to her Majesty that I have heard your Highness
+ upon your honour use these words."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Upon my honour, it is true," repeated the Duke; "for so honourably do I
+ think of her Majesty, as that, after the King, my master, I would honour
+ and serve her before any prince in Christendom." He added many earnest
+ asseverations of similar import.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do not deny, however," continued Alexander, "that I have heard of
+ certain ships having been armed by the King against that Draak"&mdash;he
+ pronounced the "a" in Drake's name very broadly, or "Doric"&mdash;"who has
+ committed so many outrages; but I repeat that I have never heard of any
+ design against her Majesty or against England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke then manifested much anxiety to know by whom he had been so
+ misrepresented. "There has been no one with me but Dr. Dale," said, he,
+ "and I marvel that he should thus wantonly have injured me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dr. Dale," replied Ropers, "is a man of honour, of good years, learned,
+ and well experienced; but perhaps he unfortunately misapprehended some of
+ your Alteza's words, and thought himself bound by his allegiance strictly
+ to report them to her Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I grieve that I should be misrepresented and injured," answered Farnese,
+ "in a manner so important to my honour. Nevertheless, knowing the virtues
+ with which her Majesty is endued, I assure myself that the protestations I
+ am now making will entirely satisfy her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then expressed the fervent hope that the holy work of negotiation now
+ commencing would result in a renewal of the ancient friendship between the
+ Houses of Burgundy and of England, asserting that "there had never been so
+ favourable a time as the present."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under former governments of the Netherlands there had been many mistakes
+ and misunderstandings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Duke of Alva," said he, "has learned by this time, before the
+ judgment-seat of God, how he discharged his functions, succeeding as he
+ did my mother, the Duchess of Parma who left the Provinces in so
+ flourishing a condition. Of this, however, I will say no more, because of
+ a feud between the Houses of Farnese and of Alva. As for Requesens, he was
+ a good fellow, but didn't understand his business. Don John of Austria
+ again, whose soul I doubt not is in heaven, was young and poor, and
+ disappointed in all his designs; but God has never offered so great a hope
+ of assured peace as might now be accomplished by her Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding the Duke in so fervent and favourable a state of mind, the envoy
+ renewed his demand that at least the first meeting of the commissioners
+ might be held at Ostend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty finds herself so touched in honour upon this point, that if
+ it be not conceded&mdash;as I doubt not it will be, seeing the singular
+ forwardness of your Highness"&mdash;said the artful Doctor with a smile,
+ "we are no less than commanded to return to her Majesty's presence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I sent Richardot to you yesterday," said Alexander; "did he not content
+ you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your Highness, no," replied Ropers. "Moreover her Majesty sent me to your
+ Alteza, and not to Richardot. And the matter is of such importance that I
+ pray you to add to all your graces and favours heaped upon me, this one of
+ sending your commissioners to Ostend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Highness could hold out no longer; but suddenly catching the Doctor in
+ his arms, and hugging him "in most honourable and amiable manner," he
+ cried&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be contented, be cheerful; my lord ambassador. You shall be satisfied
+ upon this point also."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And never did envoy depart;" cried the lord ambassador, when he could get
+ his breath, "more bound to you; and more resolute to speak honour of your
+ Highness than I do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To-morrow we will ride together towards Bruges;" said the Duke, in
+ conclusion. "Till then farewell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon, this he again heartily embraced the envoy, and the friends parted
+ for the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning; 28th March, the Duke, who was on his way to Bruges and Sluys
+ to look after his gun-boats, and, other naval, and military preparations,
+ set forth on horseback, accompanied by the Marquis del Vasto, and, for
+ part of the way, by Rogers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They conversed on the general topics of the approaching negotiations; the
+ Duke, expressing the opinion that the treaty of peace would be made short
+ work with; for it only needed to renew the old ones between the Houses of
+ England and Burgundy. As for the Hollanders and Zeelanders, and their
+ accomplices, he thought there would be no cause of stay on their account;
+ and in regard to the cautionary towns he felt sure that her Majesty had
+ never had any intention of appropriating them to herself, and would
+ willingly surrender them to the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rogers thought it a good opportunity to put in a word for the Dutchmen;
+ who certainly, would not have thanked him for his assistance at that
+ moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not, to give offence to your Highness," he said, "if the Hollanders and
+ Zeelanders, with their confederates, like to come into this treaty, surely
+ your Highness would not object?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander, who had been riding along quietly during this conversation;
+ with his right, hand, on, his hip, now threw out his arm energetically:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let them come into it; let them treat, let them conclude," he exclaimed,
+ "in the name of Almighty God! I have always been well disposed to peace,
+ and am now more so than ever. I could even, with the loss of my life, be
+ content to have peace made at this time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing more, worthy of commemoration, occurred during this concluding
+ interview; and the envoy took his leave at Bruges, and returned to Ostend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have furnished the reader with a minute account of these conversations,
+ drawn entirely, from the original records; not so much because the
+ interviews were in themselves of vital importance; but because they afford
+ a living and breathing example&mdash;better than a thousand homilies&mdash;of
+ the easy victory which diplomatic or royal mendacity may always obtain
+ over innocence and credulity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly never was envoy more thoroughly beguiled than the excellent John
+ upon this occasion. Wiser than a serpent, as he imagined himself to be,
+ more harmless than a dove; as Alexander found him, he could not,
+ sufficiently congratulate himself upon the triumphs of his eloquence and
+ his adroitness; and despatched most glowing accounts of his proceedings to
+ the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His ardour was somewhat damped, however, at receiving a message from her
+ Majesty in reply, which was anything but benignant. His eloquence was not
+ commended; and even his preamble, with its touching allusion to the live
+ mothers tendering their offspring&mdash;the passage: which had brought the
+ tears into the large eyes of Alexander&mdash;was coldly and cruelly
+ censured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty can in no sort like such speeches"&mdash;so ran the
+ return-despatch&mdash;"in which she is made to beg for peace. The King of
+ Spain standeth in as great need of peace as her self; and she doth greatly
+ mislike the preamble of Dr. Rogers in his address to the Duke at Ghent,
+ finding it, in very truth quite fond and vain. I am commanded by a
+ particular letter to let him understand how much her Majesty is offended
+ with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander, on his part, informed his royal master of these interviews, in
+ which there had been so much effusion of sentiment, in very brief fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dr. Rogers, one of the Queen's commissioners, has been here," he said,
+ "urging me with all his might to let all your Majesty's deputies go, if
+ only for one hour, to Ostend. I refused, saying, I would rather they
+ should go to England than into a city of your Majesty held by English
+ troops. I told him it ought to be satisfactory that I had offered the
+ Queen, as a lady, her choice of any place in the Provinces, or on neutral
+ ground. Rogers expressed regret for all the bloodshed and other
+ consequences if the negotiations should fall through for so trifling a
+ cause; the more so as in return for this little compliment to the Queen
+ she would not only restore to your Majesty everything that she holds in
+ the Netherlands, but would assist you to recover the part which remains
+ obstinate. To quiet him and to consume time, I have promised that
+ President Richardot shall go and try to satisfy them. Thus two or three
+ weeks more will be wasted. But at last the time will come for exhibiting
+ the powers. They are very anxious to see mine; and when at last they find
+ I have none, I fear that they will break off the negotiations."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could the Queen have been informed of this voluntary offer on the part of
+ her envoy to give up the cautionary towns, and to assist in reducing the
+ rebellion, she might have used stronger language of rebuke. It is quite
+ possible, however, that Farnese&mdash;not so attentively following the
+ Doctor's eloquence as he had appeared to do-had somewhat inaccurately
+ reported the conversations, which, after all, he knew to be of no
+ consequence whatever, except as time-consumers. For Elizabeth, desirous of
+ peace as she was, and trusting to Farnese's sincerity as she was disposed
+ to do, was more sensitive than ever as to her dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We charge you all," she wrote with her own hand to the commissioners,
+ "that no word he overslipt by them, that may, touch our honour and
+ greatness, that be not answered with good sharp words. I am a king that
+ will be ever known not to fear any but God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would have been better, however, had the Queen more thoroughly
+ understood that the day for scolding had quite gone by, and that something
+ sharper than the sharpest words would soon be wanted to protect England
+ and herself from impending doom. For there was something almost gigantic
+ in the frivolities with which weeks and months of such precious time were
+ now squandered. Plenary powers&mdash;"commission bastantissima"&mdash;from
+ his sovereign had been announced by Alexander as in his possession;
+ although the reader has seen that he had no such powers at all. The
+ mission of Rogers had quieted the envoys at Ostend for a time, and they
+ waited quietly for the visit of Richardot to Ostend, into which the
+ promised meeting of all the Spanish commissioners in that city had
+ dwindled. Meantime there was an exchange of the most friendly amenities
+ between the English and their mortal enemies. Hardly a day passed that La
+ Motte, or Renty, or Aremberg, did not send Lord Derby, or Cobham, or
+ Robert Cecil, a hare, or a pheasant, or a cast of hawks, and they in
+ return sent barrel upon barrel of Ostend oysters, five or six hundred at a
+ time. The Englishmen, too; had it in their power to gratify Alexander
+ himself with English greyhounds, for which he had a special liking. "You
+ would wonder," wrote Cecil to his father, "how fond he is of English
+ dogs." There was also much good preaching among other occupations, at
+ Ostend. "My Lord of Derby's two chaplains," said Cecil, "have seasoned
+ this town better with sermons than it had been before for a year's apace."
+ But all this did not expedite the negotiations, nor did the Duke manifest
+ so much anxiety for colloquies as for greyhounds. So, in an unlucky hour
+ for himself, another "fond and vain" old gentleman&mdash;James Croft, the
+ comptroller who had already figured, not much to his credit, in the secret
+ negotiations between the Brussels and English courts&mdash;betook himself,
+ unauthorized and alone; to the Duke at Bruges. Here he had an interview
+ very similar in character to that in which John Rogers had been indulged,
+ declared to Farnese that the Queen was most anxious for peace, and invited
+ him to send a secret envoy to England, who would instantly have ocular
+ demonstration of the fact. Croft returned as triumphantly as the excellent
+ Doctor had done; averring that there was no doubt as to the immediate
+ conclusion of a treaty. His grounds of belief were very similar to those
+ upon which Rogers had founded his faith. "Tis a weak old man of seventy,"
+ said Parma, "with very little sagacity. I am inclined to think that his
+ colleagues are taking him in, that they may the better deceive us. I will
+ see that they do nothing of the kind." But the movement was purely one of
+ the comptroller's own inspiration; for Sir James had a singular facility
+ for getting himself into trouble, and for making confusion. Already, when
+ he had been scarcely a day in Ostend, he had insulted the governor of the
+ place, Sir John Conway, had given him the lie in the hearing of many of
+ his own soldiers, had gone about telling all the world that he had express
+ authority from her Majesty to send him home in disgrace, and that the
+ Queen had called him a fool, and quite unfit for his post. And as if this
+ had not been mischief-making enough, in addition to the absurd De Loo and
+ Bodman negotiations of the previous year, in which he had been the
+ principal actor, he had crowned his absurdities by this secret and
+ officious visit to Ghent. The Queen, naturally very indignant at this
+ conduct, reprehended him severely, and ordered him back to England. The
+ comptroller was wretched. He expressed his readiness to obey her commands,
+ but nevertheless implored his dread sovereign to take merciful
+ consideration of the manifold misfortunes, ruin, and utter undoing, which
+ thereby should fall upon him and his unfortunate family. All this he
+ protested he would "nothing esteem if it tended to her Majesty's pleasure
+ or service," but seeing it should effectuate nothing but to bring the aged
+ carcase of her poor vassal to present decay, he implored compassion upon
+ his hoary hairs, and promised to repair the error of his former
+ proceedings. He avowed that he would not have ventured to disobey for a
+ moment her orders to return, but "that his aged and feeble limbs did not
+ retain sufficient force, without present death, to comply with her
+ commandment." And with that he took to his bed, and remained there until
+ the Queen was graciously pleased to grant him her pardon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, early in May&mdash;instead of the visit of Richardot&mdash;there
+ was a preliminary meeting of all the commissioners in tents on the sands;
+ within a cannon-shot of Ostend, and between that place and Newport. It was
+ a showy and ceremonious interview, in which no business was transacted.
+ The commissioners of Philip were attended by a body of one hundred and
+ fifty light horse, and by three hundred private gentlemen in magnificent
+ costume. La Motte also came from Newport with one thousand Walloon cavalry
+ while the English Commissioners, on their part were escorted from Ostend
+ by an imposing array of English and Dutch troops.' As the territory was
+ Spanish; the dignity of the King was supposed to be preserved, and
+ Alexander, who had promised Dr. Rogers that the first interview should
+ take place within Ostend itself, thought it necessary to apologize to his
+ sovereign for so nearly keeping his word as to send the envoys within
+ cannon-shot of the town. "The English commissioners," said he, "begged
+ with so much submission for this concession, that I thought it as well to
+ grant it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spanish envoys were despatched by the Duke of Parma, well provided
+ with full powers for himself, which were not desired by the English
+ government, but unfurnished with a commission from Philip, which had been
+ pronounced indispensable. There was, therefore, much prancing of cavalry,
+ flourishing of trumpets, and eating of oysters; at the first conference,
+ but not one stroke of business. As the English envoys had now been three
+ whole months in Ostend, and as this was the first occasion on which they
+ had been brought face to face with the Spanish commissioners, it must be
+ confessed that the tactics of Farnese had been masterly. Had the haste in
+ the dock-yards of Lisbon and Cadiz been at all equal to the magnificent
+ procrastination in the council-chambers of Bruges and Ghent, Medina
+ Sidonia might already have been in the Thames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But although little ostensible business was performed, there was one man
+ who had always an eye to his work. The same servant in plain livery, who
+ had accompanied Secretary Garnier, on his first visit to the English
+ commissioners at Ostend, had now come thither again, accompanied by a
+ fellow-lackey. While the complimentary dinner, offered in the name of the
+ absent Farnese to the Queen's representatives, was going forward, the two
+ menials strayed off together to the downs, for the purpose of
+ rabbit-shooting. The one of them was the same engineer who had already, on
+ the former occasion, taken a complete survey of the fortifications of
+ Ostend; the other was no less a personage than the Duke of Parma himself.
+ The pair now made a thorough examination of the town and its
+ neighbourhood, and, having finished their reconnoitring, made the best of
+ their way back to Bruges. As it was then one of Alexander's favourite
+ objects to reduce the city of Ostend, at the earliest possible moment, it
+ must be allowed that this preliminary conference was not so barren to
+ himself as it was to the commissioners. Philip, when informed of this
+ manoeuvre, was naturally gratified at such masterly duplicity, while he
+ gently rebuked his nephew for exposing his valuable life; and certainly it
+ would have been an inglorious termination to the Duke's splendid career;
+ had he been hanged as a spy within the trenches of Ostend. With the other
+ details of this first diplomatic colloquy Philip was delighted. "I see you
+ understand me thoroughly," he said. "Keep the negotiation alive till my
+ Armada appears, and then carry out my determination, and replant the
+ Catholic religion on the soil of England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen was not in such high spirits. She was losing her temper very
+ fast, as she became more and more convinced that she had been trifled
+ with. No powers had been yet exhibited, no permanent place of conference
+ fixed upon, and the cessation of arms demanded by her commissioners for
+ England, Spain, and all the Netherlands, was absolutely refused. She
+ desired her commissioners to inform the Duke of Parma that it greatly
+ touched his honour&mdash;as both before their coming and afterwards, he
+ had assured her that he had 'comision bastantissima' from his sovereign&mdash;to
+ clear himself at once from the imputation of insincerity. "Let not the
+ Duke think," she wrote with her own hand, "that we would so long time
+ endure these many frivolous and unkindly dealings, but that we desire all
+ the world to know our desire of a kingly peace, and that we will endure no
+ more the like, nor any, but will return you from your charge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly&mdash;by her Majesty's special command&mdash;Dr. Dale made
+ another visit to Bruges, to discover, once for all, whether there was a
+ commission from Philip or not; and, if so, to see it with his own eyes. On
+ the 7th May he had an interview with the Duke. After thanking his Highness
+ for the honourable and stately manner in which the conferences had been,
+ inaugurated near Ostend, Dale laid very plainly before him her Majesty's
+ complaints of the tergiversations and equivocations concerning the
+ commission, which had now lasted three months long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In answer, Alexander made a complimentary harangue; confining himself
+ entirely to the first part of the envoy's address, and assuring him in
+ redundant phraseology, that he should hold himself very guilty before the
+ world, if he had not surrounded the first colloquy between the
+ plenipotentiaries of two such mighty princes, with as much pomp as the
+ circumstances of time and place would allow. After this superfluous
+ rhetoric had been poured forth, he calmly dismissed the topic which Dr.
+ Dale had come all the way from. Ostend to discuss, by carelessly observing
+ that President Richardot would confer with him on the subject of the
+ commission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But," said the envoy, "tis no matter of conference or dispute. I desire
+ simply to see the commission."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Richardot and Champagny shall deal with you in the afternoon," repeated
+ Alexander; and with this reply, the Doctor was fair to be contented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dale then alluded to the point of cessation of arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Although," said he, "the Queen might justly require that the cessation
+ should be general for all the King's dominion, yet in order not to stand
+ on precise points, she is content that it should extend no further than to
+ the towns of Flushing; Brief, Ostend, and Bergen-op-Zoom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To this he said nothing," wrote the envoy, "and so I went no further."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon Dale had conference with Champagny and Richardot. As
+ usual, Champagny was bound hand and foot by the gout, but was as
+ quick-witted and disputatious as ever. Again Dale made an earnest
+ harangue, proving satisfactorily&mdash;as if any proof were necessary on
+ such a point&mdash;that a commission from Philip ought to be produced, and
+ that a commission had been promised, over and over again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a pause, both the representatives of Parma began to wrangle with the
+ envoy in very insolent fashion. "Richardot is always their mouth-piece,"
+ said Dale, "only Champagny choppeth in at every word, and would do so
+ likewise in ours if we would suffer it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall never have done with these impertinent demands," said the
+ President. "You ought to be satisfied with the Duke's promise of
+ ratification contained in his commission. We confess what you say
+ concerning the former requisitions and promises to be true, but when will
+ you have done? Have we not showed it to Mr. Croft, one of your own
+ colleagues? And if we show it you now, another may come to-morrow, and so
+ we shall never have an end."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The delays come from yourselves," roundly replied the Englishman, "for
+ you refuse to do what in reason and law you are bound to do. And the more
+ demands the more 'mora aut potius culpa' in you. You, of all men, have
+ least cause to hold such language, who so confidently and even
+ disdainfully answered our demand for the commission, in Mr. Cecil's
+ presence, and promised to show a perfect one at the very first meeting. As
+ for Mr. Comptroller Croft, he came hither without the command of her
+ Majesty and without the knowledge of his colleagues."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richardot then began to insinuate that, as Croft had come without
+ authority, so&mdash;for aught they could tell&mdash;might Dale also. But
+ Champagny here interrupted, protested that the president was going too
+ far, and begged him to show the commission without further argument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this Richardot pulled out the commission from under his gown, and
+ placed it in Dr. Dale's hands!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was dated 17th April, 1588, signed and sealed by the King, and written
+ in French, and was to the effect, that as there had been differences
+ between her Majesty and himself; as her Majesty had sent ambassadors into
+ the Netherlands, as the Duke of Parma had entered into treaty with her
+ Majesty, therefore the King authorised the Duke to appoint commissioners
+ to treat, conclude, and determine all controversies and misunderstandings,
+ confirmed any such appointments already made, and promised to ratify all
+ that might be done by them in the premises.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Dale expressed his satisfaction with the tenor of this document, and
+ begged to be furnished with a copy of it, but his was peremptorily
+ refused. There was then a long conversation&mdash;ending, as usual, in
+ nothing&mdash;on the two other points, the place for the conferences,
+ namely, and the cessation of arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nest morning Dale, in taking leave of the Duke of Parma, expressed the
+ gratification which he felt, and which her Majesty was sure to feel at the
+ production of the commission. It was now proved, said the envoy, that the
+ King was as earnestly in favour of peace as the Duke was himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dale then returned, well satisfied, to Ostend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth the commission had arrived just in time. "Had I not received it
+ soon enough to produce it then," said Alexander, "the Queen would have
+ broken off the negotiations. So I ordered Richardot, who is quite aware of
+ your Majesty's secret intentions, from which we shall not swerve one jot,
+ to show it privately to Croft, and afterwards to Dr. Dale, but without
+ allowing a copy of it to be taken."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have done very well," replied Philip, "but that commission is, on no
+ account, to be used, except for show. You know my mind thoroughly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus three months had been consumed, and at last one indispensable
+ preliminary to any negotiation had, in appearance, been performed. Full
+ powers on both sides had been exhibited. When the Queen of England gave
+ the Earl of Derby and his colleagues commission to treat with the King's
+ envoys, and pledged herself beforehand to, ratify all their proceedings,
+ she meant to perform the promise to which she had affixed her royal name
+ and seal. She could not know that the Spanish monarch was deliberately
+ putting his name to a lie, and chuckling in secret over the credulity of
+ his English sister, who was willing to take his word and his bond. Of a
+ certainty the English were no match for southern diplomacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Elizabeth was now more impatient than ever that the other two
+ preliminaries should be settled, the place of conferences, and the
+ armistice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be plain with the Duke," she wrote to her envoys, "that we have tolerated
+ so many weeks in tarrying a commission, that I will never endure more
+ delays. Let him know he deals with a prince who prizes her honour more
+ than her life: Make yourselves such as stand of your reputations."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sharp words, but not sharp enough to prevent a further delay of a month;
+ for it was not till the 6th June that the commissioners at last came
+ together at Bourbourg, that "miserable little hole," on the coast between
+ Ostend and Newport, against which Gamier had warned them. And now there
+ was ample opportunity to wrangle at full length on the next preliminary,
+ the cessation of arms. It would be superfluous to follow the altercations
+ step by step&mdash;for negotiations there were none&mdash;and it is only
+ for the sake of exhibiting at full length the infamy of diplomacy, when
+ diplomacy is unaccompanied by honesty, that we are hanging up this series
+ of pictures at all. Those bloodless encounters between credulity and
+ vanity upon one side, and gigantic fraud on the other, near those very
+ sands of Newport, and in sight of the Northern Ocean, where, before long,
+ the most terrible battles, both by land and sea, which the age had yet
+ witnessed, were to occur, are quite as full of instruction and moral as
+ the most sanguinary combats ever waged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the commissioners exchanged copies of their respective powers.
+ After four months of waiting and wrangling, so much had been achieved&mdash;a
+ show of commissions and a selection of the place for conference. And now
+ began the long debate about the cessation of arms. The English claimed an
+ armistice for the whole dominion of Philip and Elizabeth respectively,
+ during the term of negotiation, and for twenty days after. The Spanish
+ would grant only a temporary truce, terminable at six days' notice, and
+ that only for the four cautionary towns of Holland held by the Queen. Thus
+ Philip would be free to invade England at his leisure out of the obedient
+ Netherlands or Spain. This was inadmissible, of course, but a week was
+ spent at the outset in reducing the terms to writing; and when the Duke's
+ propositions were at last produced in the French tongue, they were refused
+ by the Queen's commissioners, who required that the documents should be in
+ Latin. Great was the triumph of Dr. Dale, when, after another interval, he
+ found their Latin full of barbarisms and blunders, at which a school-boy
+ would have blushed. The King's commissioners, however, while halting in
+ their syntax, had kept steadily to their point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You promised a general cessation of aims at our coming," said Dale, at a
+ conference on the 2/12 June, "and now ye have lingered five times twenty
+ days, and nothing done at all. The world may see the delays come of you
+ and not of us, and that ye are not so desirous of peace as ye pretend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But as far your invasion of England," stoutly observed the Earl of Derby,
+ "ye shall find it hot coming thither. England was never so ready in any
+ former age,&mdash;neither by sea nor by land; but we would show your
+ unreasonableness in proposing a cessation of arms by which ye would bind
+ her Majesty to forbear touching all the Low Countries, and yet leave
+ yourselves at liberty to invade England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While they were thus disputing, Secretary Gamier rushed into the room,
+ looking very much frightened, and announced that Lord Henry Seymour's
+ fleet of thirty-two ships of war was riding off Gravelines, and that he
+ had sent two men on shore who were now waiting in the ante-chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men being accordingly admitted, handed letters to the English
+ commissioners from Lord Henry, in which he begged to be informed in what
+ terms they were standing, and whether they needed his assistance or
+ countenance in the cause in which they were engaged. The envoys found his
+ presence very "comfortable," as it showed the Spanish commissioners that
+ her Majesty was so well provided as to make a cessation of arms less
+ necessary to her than it was to the King. They therefore sent their thanks
+ to the Lord Admiral, begging him to cruise for a time off Dunkirk and its
+ neighbourhood, that both their enemies and their friends might have a
+ sight of the English ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great was the panic all along the coast at this unexpected demonstration.
+ The King's commissioners got into their coaches, and drove down to the
+ coast to look at the fleet, and&mdash;so soon as they appeared&mdash;were
+ received with such a thundering cannonade an hour long, by way of salute,
+ as to convince them, in the opinion of the English envoys, that the Queen
+ had no cause to be afraid of any enemies afloat or ashore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But these noisy arguments were not much more effective than the
+ interchange of diplomatic broadsides which they had for a moment
+ superseded. The day had gone by for blank cartridges and empty protocols.
+ Nevertheless Lord Henry's harmless thunder was answered, the next day, by
+ a "Quintuplication" in worse Latin than ever, presented to Dr. Dale and
+ his colleagues by Richardot and Champagny, on the subject of the
+ armistice. And then there was a return quintuplication, in choice Latin,
+ by the classic Dale, and then there was a colloquy on the quintuplication,
+ and everything that had been charged, and truly charged, by the English;
+ was now denied by the King's commissioners; and Champagny&mdash;more gouty
+ and more irascible than ever&mdash;"chopped in" at every word spoken by
+ King's envoys or Queen's, contradicted everybody, repudiated everything
+ said or done by Andrew de Loo, or any of the other secret negotiators
+ during the past year, declared that there never had been a general
+ cessation of arms promised, and that, at any rate, times were now changed,
+ and such an armistice was inadmissible! Then the English answered with
+ equal impatience, and reproached the King's representatives with duplicity
+ and want of faith, and censured them for their unseemly language, and
+ begged to inform Champagny and Richardot that they had not then to deal
+ with such persons as they might formerly have been in the habit of
+ treating withal, but with a "great prince who did justify the honour of
+ her actions," and they confuted the positions now assumed by their
+ opponents with official documents and former statements from those very
+ opponents' lips. And then, after all this diplomatic and rhetorical
+ splutter, the high commissioners recovered their temper and grew more
+ polite, and the King's "envoys excused themselves in a mild, merry
+ manner," for the rudeness of their speeches, and the Queen's envoys
+ accepted their apologies with majestic urbanity, and so they separated for
+ the day in a more friendly manner than they had done the day before.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You see to what a scholar's shift we have been driven for want of
+ resolution," said Valentine Dale. "If we should linger here until there
+ should be broken heads, in what case we should be God knoweth. For I can
+ trust Champagny and Richardot no farther than I can see them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the whole month of June passed by; the English commissioners
+ "leaving no stone unturned to get a quiet cessation of arms in general
+ terms," and being constantly foiled; yet perpetually kept in hope that the
+ point would soon be carried. At the same time the signs of the approaching
+ invasion seemed to thicken. "In my opinion," said Dale, "as Phormio spake
+ in matters of wars, it were very requisite that my Lord Harry should be
+ always on this coast, for they will steal out from hence as closely as
+ they can, either to join with the Spanish navy or to land, and they may be
+ very easily scattered, by God's grace." And, with the honest pride of a
+ protocol-maker, he added, "our postulates do trouble the King's
+ commissioners very much, and do bring them to despair."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The excellent Doctor had not even yet discovered that the King's
+ commissioners were delighted with his postulates; and that to have kept
+ them postulating thus five months in succession, while naval and military
+ preparations were slowly bringing forth a great event&mdash;which was soon
+ to strike them with as much amazement as if the moon had fallen out of
+ heaven&mdash;was one of the most decisive triumphs ever achieved by
+ Spanish diplomacy. But the Doctor thought that his logic had driven the
+ King of Spain to despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time he was not insensible to the merits of another and more
+ peremptory style of rhetoric,&mdash;"I pray you," said he to Walsingham,
+ "let us hear some arguments from my Lord Harry out of her Majesty's navy
+ now and then. I think they will do more good than any bolt that we can
+ shoot here. If they be met with at their going out, there is no
+ possibility for them to make any resistance, having so few men that can
+ abide the sea; for the rest, as you know, must be sea-sick at first."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the envoys were completely puzzled. Even at the beginning of July, Sir
+ James Croft was quite convinced of the innocence of the King and the Duke;
+ but Croft was in his dotage. As for Dale, he occasionally opened his eyes,
+ and his ears, but more commonly kept them well closed to the significance
+ of passing events; and consoled himself with his protocols and his
+ classics, and the purity of his own Latin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis a very wise saying of Terence," said he, "omnibus nobis ut res dant
+ sese; ita magni aut humiles sumus.' When the King's commissioners hear of
+ the King's navy from Spain, they are in such jollity that they talk loud.
+ . . . In the mean time&mdash;as the wife of Bath sath in Chaucer by her
+ husband, we owe them not a word. If we should die tomorrow; I hope her
+ Majesty will find by our writings that the honour of the cause, in the
+ opinion of the world, must be with her Majesty; and that her commissioners
+ are, neither of such imperfection in their reasons, or so barbarous in
+ language, as they who fail not, almost in every line, of some barbarism
+ not to be borne in a grammar-school, although in subtleness and impudent
+ affirming of untruths and denying of truths, her commissioners are not in
+ any respect to match with Champagny and Richardot, who are doctors in that
+ faculty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It might perhaps prove a matter of indifference to Elizabeth and to
+ England, when the Queen should be a state-prisoner in Spain and the
+ Inquisition quietly established in her kingdom, whether the world should
+ admit or not, in case of his decease, the superiority of Dr. Dale's logic
+ and latin to those of his antagonists. And even if mankind conceded the
+ best of the argument to the English diplomatists, that diplomacy might
+ seem worthless which could be blind to the colossal falsehoods growing
+ daily before its eyes. Had the commissioners been able to read the secret
+ correspondence between Parma and his master&mdash;as we have had the
+ opportunity of doing&mdash;they would certainly not have left their homes
+ in February, to be made fools of until July; but would, on their knees,
+ have implored their royal mistress to awake from her fatal delusion before
+ it should be too late. Even without that advantage, it seems incredible
+ that they should have been unable to pierce through the atmosphere of
+ duplicity which surrounded them, and to obtain one clear glimpse of the
+ destruction so, steadily advancing upon England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the famous bull of Sixtus V. had now been fulminated. Elizabeth had
+ bean again denounced as a bastard and usurper, and her kingdom had been
+ solemnly conferred upon Philip, with title of defender of the Christian,
+ faith, to have and to hold as tributary and feudatory of Rome. The
+ so-called Queen had usurped the crown contrary to the ancient treaties
+ between the apostolic stool and the kingdom of England, which country, on
+ its reconciliation with the head of the church after the death of St.
+ Thomas of Canterbury, had recognised the necessity of the Pope's consent
+ in the succession to its throne; she had deserved chastisement for the
+ terrible tortures inflicted by her upon English Catholics and God's own
+ saints; and it was declared an act of virtue, to be repaid with plenary
+ indulgence and forgiveness of all sins, to lay violent hands on the
+ usurper, and deliver her into the hands of the Catholic party. And of the
+ holy league against the usurper, Philip was appointed the head, and
+ Alexander of Parma chief commander. This document was published in large
+ numbers in Antwerp in the English tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pamphlet of Dr. Allen, just named Cardinal, was also translated in the
+ same city, under the direction of the Duke of Parma, in-order to be
+ distributed throughout England, on the arrival in that kingdom of the
+ Catholic troops. The well-known 'Admonition to the Nobility and People of
+ England and Ireland' accused the Queen of every crime and vice which can
+ pollute humanity; and was filled with foul details unfit for the public
+ eye in these more decent days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon as the intelligence of these publications reached England, the
+ Queen ordered her commissioners at Bourbourg to take instant cognizance of
+ them, and to obtain a categorical explanation on the subject from
+ Alexander himself: as if an explanation were possible, as if the designs
+ of Sixtus, Philip, and Alexander, could any longer be doubted, and as if
+ the Duke were more likely now than before to make a succinct statement of
+ them for the benefit of her Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Having discovered," wrote Elizabeth on the 9th July (N.S.), "that this
+ treaty of peace is entertained only to abuse us, and being many ways given
+ to understand that the preparations which have so long been making, and
+ which now are consummated, both in Spain and the Low Countries, are
+ purposely to be employed against us and our country; finding that, for the
+ furtherance of these exploits, there is ready to be published a vile,
+ slanderous, and blasphemous book, containing as many lies as lines,
+ entitled, 'An Admonition,' &amp;c., and contrived by a lewd born-subject
+ of ours, now become an arrant traitor, named Dr. Allen, lately made, a
+ cardinal at Rome; as also a bull of the Pope, whereof we send you a copy,
+ both very lately brought into those Low Countries, the one whereof is
+ already printed at Antwerp, in a great multitude; in the English tongue,
+ and the other ordered to be printed, only to stir up our subjects,
+ contrary to the laws of God and their allegiance, to join with such
+ foreign purposes as are prepared against us and our realm, to come out of
+ those Low Countries and out of Spain; and as it appears by the said bull
+ that the Duke of Parma is expressly named and chosen by the Pope and the
+ King of Spain to be principal executioner of these intended enterprises,
+ we cannot think it honourable for us to continue longer the treaty of
+ peace with them that, under colour of treaty, arm themselves with all the
+ power they can to a bloody war."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly the Queen commanded Dr. Dale, as one of the commissioners, to
+ proceed forthwith to the Duke, in order to obtain explanations as to his
+ contemplated conquest of her realm, and as to his share in the publication
+ of the bull and pamphlet, and to "require him, as he would be accounted a
+ prince of honour, to let her plainly understand what she might think
+ thereof." The envoy was to assure him that the Queen would trust
+ implicitly to his statement, to adjure him to declare the truth, and, in
+ case he avowed the publications and the belligerent intentions suspected,
+ to demand instant safe-conduct to England for her commissioners, who
+ would, of course, instantly leave the Netherlands. On the other hand, if
+ the Duke disavowed those infamous documents, he was to be requested to
+ punish the printers, and have the books burned by the hangman?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Dale, although suffering from cholic, was obliged to set forth, at
+ once upon what he felt would be a bootless journey. At his return&mdash;which
+ was upon the 22nd of July (N.S.)the shrewd old gentleman had nearly
+ arrived at the opinion that her Majesty might as well break off the
+ negotiations. He had a "comfortless voyage and a ticklish message;" found
+ all along the road signs of an approaching enterprise, difficult to be
+ mistaken; reported 10,000 veteran Spaniards, to which force Stanley's
+ regiment was united; 6000 Italians, 3000 Germans, all with pikes,
+ corselets, and slash swords complete; besides 10,000 Walloons. The
+ transports for the cavalry at Gravelingen he did not see, nor was he much
+ impressed with what he heard as to the magnitude of the naval preparations
+ at Newport. He was informed that the Duke was about making a
+ foot-pilgrimage from Brussels to Our Lady of Halle, to implore victory for
+ his banners, and had daily evidence of the soldier's expectation to invade
+ and to "devour England." All this had not tended to cure him of the low
+ spirits with which he began the journey. Nevertheless, although he was
+ unable&mdash;as will be seen&mdash;to report an entirely satisfactory
+ answer from Farnese to the Queen upon the momentous questions entrusted to
+ him, he, at least, thought of a choice passage in 'The AEneid,' so very
+ apt to the circumstances, as almost to console him for the "pangs of his
+ cholic" and the terrors of the approaching invasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have written two or three verses out of Virgil for the Queen to read,"
+ said he, "which I pray your Lordship to present unto her. God grant her to
+ weigh them. If your Lordship do read the whole discourse of Virgil in that
+ place, it will make your heart melt. Observe the report of the ambassadors
+ that were sent to Diomedes to make war against the Trojans, for the old
+ hatred that he, being a Grecian, did bear unto them; and note the answer
+ of Diomedes dissuading them from entering into war with the Trojans, the
+ perplexity of the King, the miseries of the country, the reasons of
+ Drances that spake against them which would have war, the violent
+ persuasions of Turnus to war; and note, I pray you; one word, 'nec te
+ ullius violentia frangat.' What a lecture could I make with Mr. Cecil upon
+ that passage in Virgil!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most important point for the reader to remark is the date of this
+ letter. It was received in the very last days of the month of July. Let
+ him observe&mdash;as he will soon have occasion to do&mdash;the events
+ which were occurring on land and sea, exactly at the moment when this
+ classic despatch reached its destination, and judge whether the hearts of
+ the Queen and Lord Burghley would be then quite at leisure to melt at the
+ sorrows of the Trojan War. Perhaps the doings of Drake and Howard, Medina
+ Sidonia, and Ricalde, would be pressing as much on their attention as the
+ eloquence of Diomede or the wrath of Turnus. Yet it may be doubted whether
+ the reports of these Grecian envoys might not in truth, be almost as much
+ to the purpose as the despatches of the diplomatic pedant, with his Virgil
+ and his cholic, into whose hands grave matters of peace and war were
+ entrusted in what seemed the day of England's doom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What a lecture I could make with Mr. Cecil on the subject!&mdash;" An
+ English ambassador, at the court of Philip II.'s viceroy, could indulge
+ himself in imaginary prelections on the AEneid, in the last days of July,
+ of the year of our Lord 1588!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Doctor, however&mdash;to do him justice&mdash;had put the questions
+ categorically, to his Highness as he had been instructed to do. He went to
+ Bruges so mysteriously; that no living man, that side the sea, save Lord
+ Derby and Lord Cobham, knew the cause of his journey. Poor-puzzling James
+ Croft, in particular, was moved almost to tears, by being kept out of the
+ secret. On the 8/18 July Dale had audience of the Duke at Bruges. After a
+ few commonplaces, he was invited by the Duke to state what special purpose
+ had brought him to Bruges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is a book printed at Antwerp," said Dale, "and set forth by a
+ fugitive from England, who calleth himself a cardinal."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon this the Duke began diligently to listen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This book," resumed Dale, "is an admonition to the nobility and people of
+ England and Ireland touching the execution of the sentence of the Pope
+ against the Queen which the King Catholic hath entrusted to your Highness
+ as chief of the enterprise. There is also a bull of the Pope declaring my
+ sovereign mistress illegitimate and an usurper, with other matters too
+ odious for any prince or gentleman to name or hear. In this bull the Pope
+ saith that he hath dealt with the most Catholic King to employ all the
+ means in his power to the deprivation and deposition of my sovereign, and
+ doth charge her subjects to assist the army appointed by the King Catholic
+ for that purpose, under the conduct of your Highness. Therefore her
+ Majesty would be satisfied from your Highness in that point, and will take
+ satisfaction of none other; not doubting but that as you are a prince of
+ word and credit; you will deal plainly with her Majesty. Whatsoever it may
+ be, her Majesty will not take it amiss against your Highness, so she may
+ only be informed by you of the truth. Wherefore I do require you to
+ satisfy the Queen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad," replied the Duke, "that her Majesty and her commissioners do
+ take in good part my good-will towards them. I am especially touched by
+ the good opinion her Majesty hath of my sincerity, which I should be glad
+ always to maintain. As to the book to which you refer, I have never read
+ it, nor seen it, nor do I take heed of it. It may well be that her
+ Majesty, whom it concerneth, should take notice of it; but, for my part, I
+ have nought to do with it, nor can I prevent men from writing or printing
+ at their pleasure. I am at the commandment of my master only."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Alexander made no reference to the Pope's bull, Dr. Dale observed, that
+ if a war had been, of purpose, undertaken at the instance of the Pope, all
+ this negotiation had been in vain, and her Majesty would be obliged to
+ withdraw her commissioners, not doubting that they would receive
+ safe-conduct as occasion should require.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yea, God forbid else," replied Alexander; "and further, I know nothing of
+ any bull of the Pope, nor do I care for any, nor do I undertake anything
+ for him. But as for any misunderstanding (mal entendu) between my master
+ and her Majesty, I must, as a soldier, act at the command of my sovereign.
+ For my part, I have always had such respect for her Majesty, being so
+ noble a Queen, as that I would never hearken to anything that might be
+ reproachful to her. After my master, I would do most to serve your Queen,
+ and I hope she will take my word for her satisfaction on that point. And
+ for avoiding of bloodshed and the burning of houses and such other
+ calamities as do follow the wars, I have been a petitioner to my sovereign
+ that all things might be ended quietly by a peace. That is a thing,
+ however," added the Duke; "which you have more cause to desire than we;
+ for if the King my master, should lose a battle, he would be able to
+ recover it well enough, without harm to himself, being far enough off in
+ Spain, while, if the battle be lost on your side, you may lose kingdom and
+ all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By God's sufferance," rejoined the Doctor, "her Majesty is not without
+ means to defend her crown, that hath descended to her from so long a
+ succession of ancestors. Moreover your Highness knows very well that one
+ battle cannot conquer a kingdom in another country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said the Duke, "that is in God's hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So it is," said the Doctor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But make an end of it," continued Alexander quietly, "and if you have
+ anything to put into writing; you will do me a pleasure by sending it to
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Valentine Dale was not the man to resist the temptation to make a
+ protocol, and promised one for the next day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am charged only to give your Highness satisfaction," he said, "as to
+ her Majesty's sincere intentions, which have already been published to the
+ world in English, French, and Italian, in the hope that you may also
+ satisfy the Queen upon this other point. I am but one of her
+ commissioners, and could not deal without my colleagues. I crave leave to
+ depart to-morrow morning, and with safe-convoy, as I had in coming."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the envoy had taken leave, the Duke summoned Andrea de Loo, and
+ related to him the conversation which had taken place. He then, in the
+ presence of that personage, again declared&mdash;upon his honour and with
+ very constant affirmations, that he had never seen nor heard of the book&mdash;the
+ 'Admonition' by Cardinal Allen&mdash;and that he knew nothing of any bull,
+ and had no regard to it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plausible Andrew accompanied the Doctor to his lodgings, protesting
+ all the way of his own and his master's sincerity, and of their
+ unequivocal intentions to conclude a peace. The next day the Doctor, by
+ agreement, brought a most able protocol of demands in the name of all the
+ commissioners of her Majesty; which able protocol the Duke did not at that
+ moment read, which he assuredly never read subsequently, and which no
+ human soul ever read afterwards. Let the dust lie upon it, and upon all
+ the vast heaps of protocols raised mountains high during the spring and
+ summer of 1588.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dr. Dale has been with me two or three, times," said Parma, in giving his
+ account of these interviews to Philip. "I don't know why he came, but I
+ think he wished to make it appear, by coming to Bruges, that the rupture,
+ when it occurs, was caused by us, not by the English. He has been
+ complaining of Cardinal Allen's book, and I told him that I didn't
+ understand a word of English, and knew nothing whatever of the matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It has been already seen that the Duke had declared, on his word of
+ honour, that he had never heard of the famous pamphlet. Yet at that very
+ moment letters were lying in his cabinet, received more than a fortnight
+ before from Philip, in which that monarch thanked Alexander for having had
+ the Cardinal's book translated at Antwerp! Certainly few English
+ diplomatists could be a match for a Highness so liberal of his word of
+ honour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even Dr. Dale had at last convinced himself&mdash;even although the
+ Duke knew nothing of bull or pamphlet&mdash;that mischief was brewing
+ against England. The sagacious man, having seen large bodies of Spaniards
+ and Walloons making such demonstrations of eagerness to be led against his
+ country, and "professing it as openly as if they were going to a fair or
+ market," while even Alexander himself could "no more hide it than did
+ Henry VIII. when he went to Boulogne," could not help suspecting something
+ amiss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His colleague, however, Comptroller Croft, was more judicious, for he
+ valued himself on taking a sound, temperate, and conciliatory view of
+ affairs. He was not the man to offend a magnanimous neighbour&mdash;who
+ meant nothing unfriendly by regarding his manoeuvres with superfluous
+ suspicion. So this envoy wrote to Lord Burghley on the 2nd August (N.S.)&mdash;let
+ the reader mark the date&mdash;that, "although a great doubt had been
+ conceived as to the King's sincerity, . . . . yet that discretion and
+ experience induced him&mdash;the envoy&mdash;to think, that besides the
+ reverent opinion to be had of princes' oaths, and the general incommodity
+ which will come by the contrary, God had so balanced princes' powers in
+ that age, as they rather desire to assure themselves at home, than with
+ danger to invade their neighbours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the mariners of England&mdash;at that very instant exchanging
+ broadsides off the coast of Devon and Dorset with the Spanish Armada, and
+ doing their best to protect their native land from the most horrible
+ calamity which had ever impended over it&mdash;had arrived at a less
+ reverent opinion of princes' oaths; and it was well for England in that
+ supreme hour that there were such men as Howard and Drake, and Winter and
+ Frobisher, and a whole people with hearts of oak to defend her, while
+ bungling diplomatists and credulous dotards were doing their best to
+ imperil her existence.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Bungling diplomatists and credulous dotards
+ Fitter to obey than to command
+ Full of precedents and declamatory commonplaces
+ I am a king that will be ever known not to fear any but God
+ Infamy of diplomacy, when diplomacy is unaccompanied by honesty
+ Mendacity may always obtain over innocence and credulity
+ Never did statesmen know better how not to do
+ Pray here for satiety, (said Cecil) than ever think of variety
+ Simple truth was highest skill
+ Strength does a falsehood acquire in determined and skilful hand
+ That crowned criminal, Philip the Second
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. 1588, Part 2.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Dangerous Discord in North Holland&mdash;Leicester's Resignation arrives
+ &mdash;Enmity of Willoughby and Maurice&mdash;Willoughby's dark Picture of
+ Affairs&mdash;Hatred between States and Leicestrians&mdash;Maurice's Answer to
+ the Queen's Charges&mdash;End of Sonoy's Rebellion&mdash;Philip foments the
+ Civil War in France&mdash;League's Threats and Plots against Henry&mdash;Mucio
+ arrives in Paris&mdash;He is received with Enthusiasm&mdash;The King flies,
+ and Spain triumphs in Paris&mdash;States expostulate with the Queen&mdash;
+ English Statesmen still deceived&mdash;Deputies from Netherland Churches
+ &mdash;Hold Conference with the Queen&mdash;And present long Memorials&mdash;More
+ Conversations with the Queen&mdash;National Spirit of England and
+ Holland&mdash;Dissatisfaction with Queen's Course&mdash;Bitter Complaints of
+ Lord Howard&mdash;Want of Preparation in Army and Navy&mdash;Sanguine
+ Statements of Leicester&mdash;Activity of Parma&mdash;The painful Suspense
+ continues.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But it is necessary-in order to obtain a complete picture of that famous
+ year 1588, and to understand the cause from which such great events were
+ springing&mdash;to cast a glance at the internal politics of the States
+ most involved in Philip's meshes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly, if there had ever been a time when the new commonwealth of the
+ Netherlands should be both united in itself and on thoroughly friendly
+ terms with England, it was exactly that epoch of which we are treating.
+ There could be no reasonable doubt that the designs of Spain against
+ England were hostile, and against Holland revengeful. It was at least
+ possible that Philip meant to undertake the conquest of England, and to
+ undertake it as a stepping-stone to the conquest of Holland. Both the
+ kingdom and the republic should have been alert, armed, full of suspicion
+ towards the common foe, full of confidence in each other. What decisive
+ blows might have been struck against Parma in the Netherlands, when his
+ troops were starving, sickly, and mutinous, if the Hollanders and
+ Englishmen had been united under one chieftain, and thoroughly convinced
+ of the impossibility of peace! Could the English and Dutch statesmen of
+ that day have read all the secrets of their great enemy's heart, as it is
+ our privilege at this hour to do, they would have known that in sudden and
+ deadly strokes lay their best chance of salvation. But, without that
+ advantage, there were men whose sagacity told them that it was the hour
+ for deeds and not for dreams. For to Leicester and Walsingham, as well as
+ to Paul Buys and Barneveld, peace with Spain seemed an idle vision. It was
+ unfortunate that they were overruled by Queen Elizabeth and Burghley, who
+ still clung to that delusion; it was still more disastrous that the
+ intrigues of Leicester had done so much to paralyze the republic; it was
+ almost fatal that his departure, without laying down his authority, had
+ given the signal for civil war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the winter, spring, and summer of 1588, while the Duke&mdash;in the
+ face of mighty obstacles&mdash;was slowly proceeding with his preparations
+ in Flanders, to co-operate with the armaments from Spain, it would have
+ been possible by a combined movement to destroy his whole plan, to
+ liberate all the Netherlands, and to avert, by one great effort, the ruin
+ impending over England. Instead of such vigorous action, it was thought
+ wiser to send commissioners, to make protocols, to ask for armistices, to
+ give profusely to the enemy that which he was most in need of&mdash;time.
+ Meanwhile the Hollanders and English could quarrel comfortably among
+ themselves, and the little republic, for want of a legal head, could come
+ as near as possible to its dissolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Maurice&mdash;deep thinker for his years and peremptory in action&mdash;was
+ not the man to see his great father's life-work annihilated before his
+ eyes, so long as he had an arm and brain of his own. He accepted his
+ position at the head of the government of Holland and Zeeland, and as
+ chief of the war-party. The council of state, mainly composed of
+ Leicester's creatures, whose commissions would soon expire by their own
+ limitation, could offer but a feeble resistance to such determined
+ individuals as Maurice, Buys, and Barneveld. The party made rapid
+ progress. On the other hand, the English Leicestrians did their best to
+ foment discord in the Provinces. Sonoy was sustained in his rebellion in
+ North Holland, not only by the Earl's partizans, but by Elizabeth herself.
+ Her rebukes to Maurice, when Maurice was pursuing the only course which
+ seemed to him consistent with honour and sound policy, were sharper than a
+ sword. Well might Duplessis Mornay observe, that the commonwealth had been
+ rather strangled than embraced by the English Queen. Sonoy, in the name of
+ Leicester, took arms against Maurice and the States; Maurice marched
+ against him; and Lord Willoughby, commander-in-chief of the English
+ forces, was anxious to march against Maurice. It was a spectacle to make
+ angels weep, that of Englishmen and Hollanders preparing to cut each
+ other's throats, at the moment when Philip and Parma were bending all
+ their energies to crush England and Holland at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, the interregnum between the departure of Leicester and his
+ abdication was diligently employed by his more reckless partizans to
+ defeat and destroy the authority of the States. By prolonging the
+ interval, it was hoped that no government would be possible except the
+ arbitrary rule of the Earl, or of a successor with similar views: for a
+ republic&mdash;a free commonwealth&mdash;was thought an absurdity. To
+ entrust supreme power to advocates; merchants, and mechanics, seemed as
+ hopeless as it was vulgar. Willoughby; much devoted to Leicester and much
+ detesting Barneveld, had small scruple in fanning the flames of discord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was open mutiny against the States by the garrison of
+ Gertruydenberg, and Willoughby's brother-in-law, Captain Wingfield,
+ commanded in Gertruydenberg. There were rebellious demonstrations in
+ Naarden, and Willoughby went to Naarden. The garrison was troublesome, but
+ most of the magistrates were firm. So Willoughby supped with the
+ burgomasters, and found that Paul Buys had been setting the people against
+ Queen Elizabeth, Leicester, and the whole English nation, making them all
+ odious. Colonel Dorp said openly that it was a shame for the country to
+ refuse their own natural-born Count for strangers. He swore that he would
+ sing his song whose bread he had eaten. A "fat militia captain" of the
+ place, one Soyssons, on the other hand, privately informed Willoughby that
+ Maurice and Barneveld were treating underhand with Spain. Willoughby was
+ inclined to believe the calumny, but feared that his corpulent friend
+ would lose his head for reporting it. Meantime the English commander did
+ his best to strengthen the English party in their rebellion against the
+ States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But how if they make war upon us?" asked the Leicestrians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is very likely," replied Willoughby, "that if they use violence you
+ will have her Majesty's assistance, and then you who continue constant to
+ the end will be rewarded accordingly. Moreover, who would not rather be a
+ horse-keeper to her Majesty, than a captain to Barneveld or Buys?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When at last the resignation of Leicester&mdash;presented to the States by
+ Killegrew on the 31st March&mdash;seemed to promise comparative repose to
+ the republic, the vexation of the Leicestrians was intense. Their efforts
+ to effect a dissolution of the government had been rendered unsuccessful,
+ when success seemed within their grasp. "Albeit what is once executed
+ cannot be prevented," said Captain Champernoun; "yet 'tis thought certain
+ that if the resignation of Lord Leicester's commission had been deferred
+ yet some little time; the whole country and towns would have so revolted
+ and mutinied against the government and authority of the States, as that
+ they should have had no more credit given them by the people than pleased
+ her Majesty. Most part of the people could see&mdash;in consequence of the
+ troubles, discontent, mutiny of garrisons, and the like, that it was most
+ necessary for the good success of their affairs that the power of the
+ States should be abolished, and the whole government of his Excellency
+ erected. As these matters were busily working into the likelihood of some
+ good effect, came the resignation of his Excellency's commission and
+ authority, which so dashed the proceedings of it, as that all people and
+ commanders well affected unto her Majesty and my Lord of Leicester are
+ utterly discouraged. The States, with their adherents, before they had any
+ Lord's resignations were much perplexed what course to take, but now begin
+ to hoist their heads." The excellent Leicestrian entertained hopes,
+ however; that mutiny and intrigue might still carry the day. He had seen
+ the fat militiaman of Naarden and other captains, and, hoped much mischief
+ from their schemes. "The chief mutineers of Gertruydenberg," he said,
+ "maybe wrought to send unto 'the States, that if they do not procure them
+ some English governor, they will compound with the enemy, whereon the
+ States shall be driven to request her Majesty to accept the place,
+ themselves entertaining the garrison. I know certain captains discontented
+ with the States for arrears of pay, who will contrive to get into Naarden
+ with their companies, with the States consent, who, once entered, will
+ keep the place for their satisfaction, pay their soldiers out of the
+ contributions of the country; and yet secretly hold the place at her
+ Majesty's command."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is not an agreeable picture; yet it is but one out of many examples
+ of the intrigues by which Leicester and his party were doing their best to
+ destroy the commonwealth of the Netherlands at a moment when its existence
+ was most important to that of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To foment mutiny in order to subvert the authority of Maurice, was not a
+ friendly or honourable course of action either towards Holland or England;
+ and it was to play into the hands of Philip as adroitly as his own
+ stipendiaries could have done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With mischief-makers like Champernoun in every city, and with such
+ diplomatists at Ostend as Croft and Ropers and Valentine Dale, was it
+ wonderful that the King and the Duke of Parma found time to mature their
+ plans for the destruction of both countries?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Willoughby, too, was extremely dissatisfied with his own position. He
+ received no commission from the Queen for several months. When it at last
+ reached him, it seemed inadequate, and he became more sullen than ever. He
+ declared that he would rather serve the Queen as a private soldier, at his
+ own expense&mdash;"lean as his purse was"&mdash;than accept the limited
+ authority conferred on him. He preferred to show his devotion "in a
+ beggarly state, than in a formal show." He considered it beneath her
+ Majesty's dignity that he should act in the field under the States, but
+ his instructions forbade his acceptance of any office from that body but
+ that of general in their service. He was very discontented, and more
+ anxious than ever to be rid of his functions. Without being extremely
+ ambitious, he was impatient of control. He desired not "a larger-shaped
+ coat," but one that fitted him better. "I wish to shape my garment homely,
+ after my cloth," he said, "that the better of my parish may not be misled
+ by my sumptuousness. I would live quietly, without great noise, my poor
+ roof low and near the ground, not subject to be overblown with
+ unlooked-for storms, while the sun seems most shining."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being the deadly enemy of the States and their leaders, it was a matter of
+ course that he should be bitter against Maurice. That young Prince, bold,
+ enterprising, and determined, as he was, did not ostensibly meddle with
+ political affairs more than became his years; but he accepted the counsels
+ of the able statesmen in whom his father had trusted. Riding, hunting, and
+ hawking, seemed to be his chief delight at the Hague, in the intervals of
+ military occupations. He rarely made his appearance in the state-council
+ during the winter, and referred public matters to the States-General, to
+ the States of Holland, to Barneveld, Buys, and Hohenlo. Superficial
+ observers like George Gilpin regarded him as a cipher; others, like Robert
+ Cecil, thought him an unmannerly schoolboy; but Willoughby, although
+ considering him insolent and conceited, could not deny his ability. The
+ peace partisans among the burghers&mdash;a very small faction&mdash;were
+ furious against him, for they knew that Maurice of Nassau represented war.
+ They accused of deep designs against the liberties of their country the
+ youth who was ever ready to risk his life in their defence. A burgomaster
+ from Friesland, who had come across the Zuyder Zee to intrigue against the
+ States' party, was full of spleen at being obliged to dance attendance for
+ a long time at the Hague. He complained that Count Maurice, green of
+ years, and seconded by greener counsellors, was meditating the dissolution
+ of the state-council, the appointment of a new board from his own
+ creatures, the overthrow of all other authority, and the assumption of the
+ sovereignty of Holland and Zeeland, with absolute power. "And when this is
+ done;" said the rueful burgomaster, "he and his turbulent fellows may make
+ what terms they like with Spain, to the disadvantage of the Queen and of
+ us poor wretches."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was nothing farther from the thoughts of the turbulent fellows
+ than any negotiations with Spain. Maurice was ambitious enough, perhaps,
+ but his ambition ran in no such direction. Willoughby knew better; and
+ thought that by humouring the petulant young man it might be possible to
+ manage him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maurice is young," he said, "hot-headed; coveting honour. If we do but
+ look at him through our fingers, without much words, but with providence
+ enough, baiting his hook a little to his appetite, there is no doubt but
+ he might be caught and kept in a fish-pool; while in his imagination he
+ may judge it a sea. If not, 'tis likely he will make us fish in troubled
+ waters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maurice was hardly the fish for a mill-pond even at that epoch, and it
+ might one day be seen whether or not he could float in the great ocean of
+ events. Meanwhile, he swam his course without superfluous gambols or
+ spoutings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commander of her Majesty's forces was not satisfied with the States,
+ nor their generals, nor their politicians. "Affairs are going 'a malo in
+ pejus,'" he said. "They embrace their liberty as apes their young. To this
+ end are Counts Hollock and Maurice set upon the stage to entertain the
+ popular sort. Her Majesty and my Lord of Leicester are not forgotten. The
+ Counts are in Holland, especially Hollock, for the other is but the
+ cipher. And yet I can assure you Maurice hath wit and spirit too much for
+ his time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the troubles of the interregnum increased Willoughby was more
+ dissatisfied than ever with the miserable condition of the Provinces, but
+ chose to ascribe it to the machinations of the States' party, rather than
+ to the ambiguous conduct of Leicester. "These evils," he said, "are
+ especially, derived from the childish ambition of the young Count Maurice,
+ from the covetous and furious counsels of the proud Hollanders, now chief
+ of the States-General, and, if with pardon it may be said, from our
+ slackness and coldness to entertain our friends. The provident and wiser
+ sort&mdash;weighing what a slender ground the appetite of a young man is,
+ unfurnished with the sinews of war to manage so great a cause&mdash;for a
+ good space after my Lord of Leicester's departure, gave him far looking
+ on, to see him play has part on the stage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Willoughby's spleen caused him to mix his metaphors more recklessly than
+ strict taste would warrant, but his violent expressions painted the
+ relative situation of parties more vividly than could be done by a calm
+ disquisition. Maurice thus playing his part upon the stage&mdash;as the
+ general proceeded to observe&mdash;"was a skittish horse, becoming by
+ little and little assured of what he had feared, and perceiving the
+ harmlessness thereof; while his companions, finding no safety of
+ neutrality in so great practices, and no overturning nor barricado to stop
+ his rash wilded chariot, followed without fear; and when some of the first
+ had passed the bog; the rest, as the fashion is, never started after. The
+ variable democracy; embracing novelty, began to applaud their prosperity;
+ the base and lewdest sorts of men, to whom there is nothing more agreeable
+ than change of estates, is a better monture to degrees than their merit,
+ took present hold thereof. Hereby Paul Buys, Barneveld, and divers others,
+ who were before mantled with a tolerable affection, though seasoned with a
+ poisoned intention, caught the occasion, and made themselves the
+ Beelzebubs of all these mischiefs, and, for want of better angels, spared
+ not to let fly our golden-winged ones in the name of guilders, to prepare
+ the hearts and hands that hold money more dearer than honesty, of which
+ sort, the country troubles and the Spanish practices having suckled up
+ many, they found enough to serve their purpose. As the breach is safely
+ saltable where no defence is made, so they, finding no head, but those
+ scattered arms that were disavowed, drew the sword with Peter, and gave
+ pardon with the Pope, as you shall plainly perceive by the proceedings at
+ Horn. Thus their force; fair words, or corruption, prevailing everywhere,
+ it grew to this conclusion&mdash;that the worst were encouraged with their
+ good success, and the best sort assured of no fortune or favour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out of all this hubbub of stage-actors, skittish horses, rash wilded
+ chariots, bogs, Beelzebubs, and golden-winged angels, one truth was
+ distinctly audible; that Beelzebub, in the shape of Barneveld, had been
+ getting the upper hand in the Netherlands, and that the Lecestrians were
+ at a disadvantage. In truth those partisans were becoming extremely
+ impatient. Finding themselves deserted by their great protector, they
+ naturally turned their eyes towards Spain, and were now threatening to
+ sell themselves to Philip. The Earl, at his departure, had given them
+ privately much encouragement. But month after month had passed by while
+ they were waiting in vain for comfort. At last the "best"&mdash;that is to
+ say, the unhappy Leicestrians&mdash;came to Willoughby, asking his advice
+ in their "declining and desperate cause."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well nigh a month longer," said that general, "I nourished them with
+ compliments, and assured them that my Lord of Leicester would take care of
+ them." The diet was not fattening. So they began to grumble more loudly
+ than ever, and complained with great bitterness of the miserable condition
+ in which they had been left by the Earl, and expressed their fears lest
+ the Queen likewise meant to abandon them. They protested that their
+ poverty, their powerful foes, and their slow friends, would compel them
+ either to make their peace with the States' party, or "compound with the
+ enemy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would have seemed that real patriots, under such circumstances, would
+ hardly hesitate in their choice, and would sooner accept the dominion of
+ "Beelzebub," or even Paul Buys, than that of Philip II. But the
+ Leicestrians of Utrecht and Friesland&mdash;patriots as they were&mdash;hated
+ Holland worse than they hated the Inquisition. Willoughby encouraged them
+ in that hatred. He assured him of her Majesty's affection for them,
+ complained of the factious proceedings of the States, and alluded to the
+ unfavourable state of the weather, as a reason why&mdash;near four months
+ long&mdash;they had not received the comfort out of England which they had
+ a right to expect. He assured them that neither the Queen nor Leicester
+ would conclude this honourable action, wherein much had been hazarded, "so
+ rawly and tragically" as they seemed to fear, and warned them, that "if
+ they did join with Holland, it would neither ease nor help them, but draw
+ them into a more dishonourable loss of their liberties; and that, after
+ having wound them in, the Hollanders would make their own peace with the
+ enemy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed somewhat unfair-while the Queen's government was straining every
+ nerve to obtain a peace from Philip, and while the Hollanders were
+ obstinately deaf to any propositions for treating&mdash;that Willoughby
+ should accuse them of secret intentions to negotiate. But it must be
+ confessed that faction has rarely worn a more mischievous aspect than was
+ presented by the politics of Holland and England in the winter and spring
+ of 1588.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Maurice was placed in a very painful position. He liked not to be
+ "strangled in the great Queen's embrace;" but he felt most keenly the
+ necessity of her friendship, and the importance to both countries of a
+ close alliance. It was impossible for him, however, to tolerate the
+ rebellion of Sonoy, although Sonoy was encouraged by Elizabeth, or to fly
+ in the face of Barneveld, although Barneveld was detested by Leicester. So
+ with much firmness and courtesy, notwithstanding the extravagant pictures
+ painted by Willoughby, he suppressed mutiny in Holland, while avowing the
+ most chivalrous attachment to the sovereign of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her Majesty expressed her surprise and her discontent, that,
+ notwithstanding his expressions of devotion to herself, he should thus
+ deal with Sonoy, whose only crime was an equal devotion. "If you do not
+ behave with more moderation in future," she said, "you may believe that we
+ are not a princess of so little courage as not to know how to lend a
+ helping hand to those who are unjustly oppressed. We should be sorry if we
+ had cause to be disgusted with your actions, and if we were compelled to
+ make you a stranger to the ancient good affection which we bore to your
+ late father, and have continued towards yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Maurice maintained a dignified attitude, worthy of his great father's
+ name. He was not the man to crouch like Leicester, when he could no longer
+ refresh himself in the "shadow of the Queen's golden beams," important as
+ he knew her friendship to be to himself and his country. So he defended
+ himself in a manly letter to the privy council against the censures of
+ Elizabeth. He avowed his displeasure, that, within his own jurisdiction,
+ Sonoy should give a special oath of obedience to Leicester; a thing never
+ done before in the country, and entirely illegal. It would not even be
+ tolerated in England, he said, if a private gentleman should receive a
+ military appointment in Warwickshire or Norfolk without the knowledge of
+ the lord-lieutenant of the shire. He had treated the contumacious Sonoy
+ with mildness during a long period, but without effect. He had abstained
+ from violence towards him, out of reverence to the Queen, under whose
+ sacred name he sheltered himself. Sonoy had not desisted, but had
+ established himself in organized rebellion at Medenblik, declaring that he
+ would drown the whole country, and levy black-mail upon its whole
+ property, if he were not paid one hundred thousand crowns. He had declared
+ that he would crush Holland like a glass beneath his feet. Having nothing
+ but religion in his mouth, and protecting himself with the Queen's name,
+ he had been exciting all the cities of North Holland to rebellion, and
+ bringing the poor people to destruction. He had been offered money enough
+ to satisfy the most avaricious soldier in the world, but he stood out for
+ six years' full pay for his soldiers, a demand with which it was
+ impossible to comply. It was necessary to prevent him from inundating the
+ land and destroying the estates of the country gentlemen and the peasants.
+ "This gentlemen," said Maurice, "is the plain truth; nor do I believe that
+ you will sustain against me a man who was under such vast obligations to
+ my late father, and who requites his debt by daring to speak of myself as
+ a rascal; or that you will countenance his rebellion against a country to
+ which he brought only, his cloak and sword, and, whence he has filched one
+ hundred thousand crowns. You will not, I am sure, permit a simple captain,
+ by his insubordination to cause such mischief, and to set on fire this and
+ other Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If, by your advice," continued the Count; "the Queen should appoint
+ fitting' personages to office here&mdash;men who know what honour is; born
+ of illustrious and noble-race, or who by their great virtue have been
+ elevated to the honours of the kingdom&mdash;to them I will render an
+ account of my actions. And it shall appear that I have more ability and
+ more desire to do my duty, to her Majesty than those who render her
+ lip-service only, and only make use of her sacred name to fill their
+ purses, while I and, mine have been ever ready to employ our lives, and
+ what remains of our fortunes, in the cause of God, her Majesty, and our
+ country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly no man had a better right: to speak with consciousness of the
+ worth of race than the son of William the Silent, the nephew of Lewis,
+ Adolphus, and Henry of Nassau, who had all laid down their lives for the
+ liberty of their country. But Elizabeth continued to threaten the
+ States-General, through the mouth of Willoughby, with the loss of her
+ protection, if they should continue thus to requite her favours with
+ ingratitude and insubordination: and Maurice once more respectfully but
+ firmly replied that Sonoy's rebellion could not and would not be
+ tolerated; appealing boldly to her sense of justice, which was the noblest
+ attribute of kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the Queen informed Willoughby, that&mdash;as the cause of Sonoy's
+ course seemed to be his oath of obedience to Leicester, whose resignation
+ of office had not yet been received in the Netherlands&mdash;she had now
+ ordered Councillor Killigrew to communicate the fact of that resignation.
+ She also wrote to Sonoy, requiring him to obey the States and Count
+ Maurice, and to accept a fresh commission from them, or at least to
+ surrender Medenblik, and to fulfil all their orders with zeal and
+ docility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This act of abdication by Leicester, which had been received on the 22nd
+ of January by the English envoy, Herbert, at the moment of his departure
+ from the Netherlands, had been carried back by him to England, on the
+ ground that its communication to the States at that moment would cause him
+ inconveniently to postpone his journey. It never officially reached the
+ States-General until the 31st of March, so that this most dangerous crisis
+ was protracted nearly five months long&mdash;certainly without necessity
+ or excuse&mdash;and whether through design, malice, wantonness, or
+ incomprehensible carelessness, it is difficult to say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon as the news reached Sonoy, that contumacious chieftain found his
+ position untenable, and he allowed the States' troops to take possession
+ of Medenblik, and with it the important territory of North Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maurice now saw himself undisputed governor. Sonoy was in the course of
+ the summer deprived of all office, and betook himself to England. Here he
+ was kindly received by the Queen, who bestowed upon him a ruined tower,
+ and a swamp among the fens of Lincolnshire. He brought over some of his
+ countrymen, well-skilled in such operations, set himself to draining and
+ dyking, and hoped to find himself at home and comfortable in his ruined
+ tower. But unfortunately, as neither he nor his wife, notwithstanding
+ their English proclivities, could speak a word of the language; they found
+ their social enjoyments very limited. Moreover, as his work-people were
+ equally without the power of making their wants understood, the dyking
+ operations made but little progress. So the unlucky colonel soon abandoned
+ his swamp, and retired to East Friesland, where he lived a morose and
+ melancholy life on a pension of one thousand florins, granted him by the
+ States of Holland, until the year 1597, when he lost his mind, fell into
+ the fire, and thus perished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus; in the Netherlands, through hollow negotiations between enemies
+ and ill-timed bickerings among friends, the path of Philip and Parma had
+ been made comparatively smooth during the spring and early summer of 1588.
+ What was the aspect of affairs in Germany and France?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The adroit capture of Bonn by Martin Schenk had given much trouble. Parma
+ was obliged to detach a strong force; under Prince Chimay, to attempt the
+ recovery of that important place, which&mdash;so long as it remained in
+ the power of the States&mdash;rendered the whole electorate insecure and a
+ source of danger to the Spanish party. Farnese endeavoured in vain to win
+ back the famous partizan by most liberal offers, for he felt bitterly the
+ mistake he had made in alienating so formidable a freebooter. But the
+ truculent Martin remained obdurate and irascible. Philip, much offended
+ that the news of his decease had proved false, ordered rather than
+ requested the Emperor Rudolph to have a care that nothing was done in
+ Germany to interfere with the great design upon England. The King gave
+ warning that he would suffer no disturbance from that quarter, but
+ certainly the lethargic condition of Germany rendered such threats
+ superfluous. There were riders enough, and musketeers enough, to be sold
+ to the highest bidder. German food for powder was offered largely in the
+ market to any foreign consumer, for the trade in their subjects', lives
+ was ever a prolific source of revenue to the petty sovereigns&mdash;numerous
+ as the days of the year&mdash;who owned Germany and the Germans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mercenaries who had so recently been, making their inglorious campaign
+ in France had been excluded from that country at the close of 1587, and
+ furious were the denunciations of the pulpits and the populace of Paris
+ that the foreign brigands who had been devastating the soil of France, and
+ attempting to oppose the decrees of the Holy Father of Rome, should; have
+ made their escape so easily. Rabid Lincestre and other priests and monks
+ foamed with rage, as they execrated and anathematized the devil-worshipper
+ Henry of Valois, in all the churches of that monarch's capital. The
+ Spanish ducats were flying about, more profusely than ever, among the
+ butchers and porters, and fishwomen, of the great city; and Madam League
+ paraded herself in the day-light with still increasing insolence. There
+ was scarcely a pretence at recognition of any authority, save that of
+ Philip and Sixtus. France had become a wilderness&mdash;an uncultivated,
+ barbarous province of Spain. Mucio&mdash;Guise had been secretly to Rome,
+ had held interviews with the Pope and cardinals, and had come back with a
+ sword presented by his Holiness, its hilt adorned with jewels, and its
+ blade engraved with tongues of fire. And with this flaming sword the
+ avenging messenger of the holy father was to smite the wicked, and to
+ drive them into outer darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there had been fresh conferences among the chiefs of the sacred League
+ within the Lorraine territory, and it was resolved to require of the
+ Valois an immediate extermination of heresy and heretics throughout the
+ kingdom, the publication of the Council of Trent, and the formal
+ establishment of the Holy Inquisition in every province of France. Thus,
+ while doing his Spanish master's bidding, the great Lieutenant of the
+ league might, if he was adroit enough, to outwit Philip, ultimately carve
+ out a throne for himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet Philip felt occasional pangs of uneasiness lest there should, after
+ all, be peace in France, and lest his schemes against Holland and England
+ might be interfered with from that quarter. Even Farnese, nearer the
+ scene, could, not feel completely secure that a sudden reconciliation
+ among contending factions might not give rise to a dangerous inroad across
+ the Flemish border. So Guise was plied more vigourously than ever by the
+ Duke with advice and encouragement, and assisted with such Walloon
+ carabineers as could be spared, while large subsidies and larger promises
+ came from Philip, whose prudent policy was never to pay excessive sums,
+ until the work contracted for was done. "Mucio must do the job long since
+ agreed upon," said Philip to Farnese, "and you and Mendoza must see that
+ he prevents the King of France from troubling me in my enterprize against
+ England." If the unlucky Henry III. had retained one spark of
+ intelligence, he would have seen that his only chance of rescue lay in the
+ arm of the Bearnese, and in an honest alliance with England. Yet so strong
+ was his love for the monks, who were daily raving against him, that he was
+ willing to commit any baseness, in order to win back their affection. He
+ was ready to exterminate heresy and to establish the inquisition, but he
+ was incapable of taking energetic measures of any kind, even when throne
+ and life were in imminent peril. Moreover, he clung to Epernon and the
+ 'politiques,' in whose swords he alone found protection, and he knew that
+ Epernon and the 'politiques' were the objects of horror to Paris and to
+ the League. At the same time he looked imploringly towards England and
+ towards the great Huguenot chieftain, Elizabeth's knight-errant. He had a
+ secret interview with Sir Edward Stafford, in the garden of the Bernardino
+ convent, and importuned that envoy to implore the Queen to break off her
+ negotiations with Philip, and even dared to offer the English ambassador a
+ large reward, if such a result could be obtained. Stafford was also
+ earnestly, requested to beseech the Queen's influence with Henry of
+ Navarre, that he should convert himself to Catholicism, and thus destroy
+ the League.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the magniloquent Mendoza, who was fond of describing
+ himself as "so violent and terrible to the French that they wished to be
+ rid of him," had&mdash;as usual&mdash;been frightening the poor King, who,
+ after a futile attempt at dignity, had shrunk before the blusterings of
+ the ambassador. "This King," said Don Bernardino, "thought that he could
+ impose, upon me and silence me, by talking loud, but as I didn't talk
+ softly to him, he has undeceived himself . . . . I have had another
+ interview with him, and found him softer than silk, and he made me many
+ caresses, and after I went out, he said that I was a very skilful
+ minister."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the purpose of the League to obtain possession of the King's
+ person, and, if necessary, to dispose of the 'politiques' by a general
+ massacre, such as sixteen years before had been so successful in the case
+ of Coligny and the Huguenots. So the populace&mdash;more rabid than ever&mdash;were
+ impatient that their adored Balafre should come to Paris and begin the
+ holy work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He came as far as Gonesse to do the job he had promised to Philip, but
+ having heard that Henry had reinforced himself with four thousand Swiss
+ from the garrison of Lagny, he fell back to Soissons. The King sent him a
+ most abject message, imploring him not to expose his sovereign to so much
+ danger, by setting his foot at that moment in the capital. The Balafre
+ hesitated, but the populace raved and roared for its darling. The
+ Queen-Mother urged her unhappy son to yield his consent, and the
+ Montpensier&mdash;fatal sister of Guise, with the famous scissors ever at
+ her girdle&mdash;insisted that her brother had as good a right as any man
+ to come to the city. Meantime the great chief of the 'politiques,' the
+ hated and insolent Epernon, had been appointed governor of Normandy, and
+ Henry had accompanied his beloved minion a part of the way towards Rouen.
+ A plot contrived by the Montpensier to waylay the monarch on his return,
+ and to take him into the safe-keeping of the League, miscarried, for the
+ King reentered the city before the scheme was ripe. On the other hand,
+ Nicholas Poulain, bought for twenty thousand crowns by the 'politiques,'
+ gave the King and his advisers-full information of all these intrigues,
+ and, standing in Henry's cabinet, offered, at peril of his life, if he
+ might be confronted with the conspirators&mdash;the leaders of the League
+ within the city&mdash;to prove the truth of the charges which he had made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the whole city was now thoroughly organized. The number of its
+ districts had been reduced from sixteen to five, the better to bring it
+ under the control of the League; and, while it could not be denied that
+ Mucio, had, been doing his master's work very thoroughly, yet it was still
+ in the power of the King&mdash;through the treachery of Poulain&mdash;to
+ strike a blow for life and freedom, before he was quite, taken in the
+ trap. But he stood helpless, paralyzed, gazing in dreamy stupor&mdash;like
+ one fascinated at the destruction awaiting him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, one memorable May morning, a traveller alighted outside the gate
+ of Saint Martin, and proceeded on foot through the streets of Paris. He
+ was wrapped in a large cloak, which he held carefully over his face. When
+ he had got as far as the street of Saint Denis, a young gentleman among
+ the passers by, a good Leaguer, accosted the stranger, and with coarse
+ pleasantry, plucked the cloak from his face, and the hat from his head.
+ Looking at the handsome, swarthy features, marked with a deep scar, and
+ the dark, dangerous eyes which were then revealed, the practical jester at
+ once recognized in the simple traveller the terrible Balafre, and kissed
+ the hem of his garments with submissive rapture. Shouts of "Vive Guise"
+ rent the air from all the bystanders, as the Duke, no longer affecting
+ concealment, proceeded with a slow and stately step toward the residence
+ of Catharine de' Medici.' That queen of compromises and of magic had been
+ holding many a conference with the leaders of both parties; had been
+ increasing her son's stupefaction by her enigmatical counsels; had been
+ anxiously consulting her talisman of goat's and human blood, mixed with
+ metals melted under the influence of the star of her nativity, and had
+ been daily visiting the wizard Ruggieri, in whose magic circle&mdash;peopled
+ with a thousand fantastic heads&mdash;she had held high converse with the
+ world of spirits, and derived much sound advice as to the true course of
+ action to be pursued between her son and Philip, and between the
+ politicians and the League. But, in spite of these various sources of
+ instruction, Catharine&mdash;was somewhat perplexed, now that decisive
+ action seemed necessary&mdash;a dethronement and a new massacre impending,
+ and judicious compromise difficult. So after a hurried conversation with
+ Mucio, who insisted on an interview with the King, she set forth for the
+ Louvre, the Duke lounging calmly by the aide of her, sedan chair, on foot,
+ receiving the homage of the populace, as men, women, and children
+ together, they swarmed around him as he walked, kissing his garments, and
+ rending the air with their shouts. For that wolfish mob of Paris, which
+ had once lapped the blood of ten thousand Huguenots in a single night, and
+ was again rabid with thirst, was most docile and fawning to the great
+ Balafre. It grovelled before him, it hung upon his look, it licked his
+ hand, and, at the lifting of his finger, or the glance of his eye, would
+ have sprung at the throat of King or Queen-Mother, minister, or minion,
+ and devoured them all before his eyes. It was longing for the sign, for,
+ much as Paris adored and was besotted with Guise and the League, even
+ more, if possible, did it hate those godless politicians, who had grown
+ fat on extortions from the poor, and who had converted their substance
+ into the daily bread of luxury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless the city was full of armed men, Swiss and German mercenaries,
+ and burgher guards, sworn to fidelity to the throne. The place might have
+ been swept clean, at that moment, of rebels who were not yet armed or
+ fortified in their positions. The Lord had delivered Guise into Henry's
+ hands. "Oh, the madman!"&mdash;cried Sixtus V., when he heard that the
+ Duke had gone to Paris, "thus to put himself into the clutches of the King
+ whom he had so deeply offended!" And, "Oh, the wretched coward, the
+ imbecile?" he added, when he heard how the King had dealt with his great
+ enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the monarch was in his cabinet that May morning, irresolutely awaiting
+ the announced visit of the Duke. By his aide stood Alphonse Corse,
+ attached as a mastiff to his master, and fearing not Guise nor Leaguer,
+ man nor devil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sire, is the Duke of Guise your friend or enemy?" said Alphonse. The King
+ answered by an expressive shrug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Say the word, Sire," continued Alphonse, "and I pledge myself to bring
+ his head this instant, and lay it at your feet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he would have done it. Even at the side of Catharine's sedan chair,
+ and in the very teeth of the worshipping mob, the Corsican would have had
+ the Balafre's life, even though he laid down his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Henry&mdash;irresolute and fascinated&mdash;said it was not yet time
+ for such a blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon afterward; the Duke was announced. The chief of the League and the
+ last of the Valois met, face to face; but not for the last time. The
+ interview&mdash;was coldly respectful on the part of Mucio, anxious and
+ embarrassed on that of the King. When the visit, which was merely one of
+ ceremony, was over, the Duke departed as he came, receiving the renewed
+ homage of the populace as he walked to his hotel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night precautions were taken. All the guards were doubled around the
+ palace and through the streets. The Hotel de Ville and the Place de la
+ Greve were made secure, and the whole city was filled with troops. But the
+ Place Maubert was left unguarded, and a rabble rout&mdash;all night long&mdash;was
+ collecting in that distant spot. Four companies of burgher-guards went
+ over to the League at three o'clock in the morning. The rest stood firm in
+ the cemetery of the Innocents, awaiting the orders of the King. At
+ day-break on the 11th the town was still quiet. There was an awful pause
+ of expectation. The shops remained closed all the morning, the royal
+ troops were drawn up in battle-array, upon the Greve and around the Hotel
+ de Ville, but they stood motionless as statues, until the populace began
+ taunting them with cowardice, and then laughing them to scorn. For their
+ sovereign lord and master still sat paralyzed in his palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mob had been surging through all the streets and lanes, until, as by a
+ single impulse, chains were stretched across the streets, and barricades
+ thrown up in all the principal thoroughfares. About noon the Duke of
+ Guise, who had been sitting quietly in his hotel, with a very few armed
+ followers, came out into the street of the Hotel Montmorency, and walked
+ calmly up and down, arm-in-aim with the Archbishop of Lyons, between a
+ double hedge-row of spectators and admirers, three or four ranks thick. He
+ was dressed in a white slashed doublet and hose, and wore a very large
+ hat. Shouts of triumph resounded from a thousand brazen throats, as he
+ moved calmly about, receiving, at every instant, expresses from the great
+ gathering in the Place Maubert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Enough, too much, my good friends," he said, taking off the great hat&mdash;("I
+ don't know whether he was laughing in it," observed one who was looking on
+ that day)&mdash;"Enough of 'Long live Guise!' Cry 'Long live the King!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no response, as might be expected, and the people shouted more
+ hoarsely than ever for Madam League and the Balafre. The Duke's face was
+ full of gaiety; there was not a shadow of anxiety upon it in that perilous
+ and eventful moment. He saw that the day was his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For now, the people, ripe, ready; mustered, armed, barricaded; awaited but
+ a signal to assault the King's mercenaries, before rushing to the palace:
+ On every house-top missiles were provided to hurl upon their heads. There
+ seemed no escape for Henry or his Germans from impending doom, when Guise,
+ thoroughly triumphant, vouchsafed them their lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must give me these soldiers as a present, my friends," said he to the
+ populace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the armed Swiss, French, and German troopers and infantry,
+ submitted to be led out of Paris, following with docility the aide-de-camp
+ of Guise, Captain St. Paul, who walked quietly before them, with his sword
+ in its scabbard, and directing their movements with a cane. Sixty of them
+ were slain by the mob, who could not, even at the command of their beloved
+ chieftain, quite forego their expected banquet. But this was all the blood
+ shed on the memorable day of Barricades, when another Bartholomew massacre
+ had been, expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime; while Guise was making his promenade through the city,
+ exchanging embraces with the rabble; and listening to the coarse
+ congratulations and obscene jests of the porters and fishwomen, the poor
+ King sat crying all day long in the Louvre. The Queen-Mother was with him,
+ reproaching him bitterly with his irresolution and want of confidences in
+ her, and scolding him for his tears. But the unlucky Henry only wept the
+ more as he cowered in a corner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "These are idle tears," said Catherine. "This is no time for crying. And
+ for myself, though women weep so easily; I feel my heart too deeply wrung
+ for tears. If they came to my eyes they would be tears of blood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day the last Valois walked-out, of the Louvre; as if for a promenade
+ in, the Tuileries, and proceeded straightway to the stalls, where his
+ horse stood saddled. Du Halde, his equerry, buckled his master's spurs on
+ upside down. "No; matter;" said Henry; "I am not riding to see my
+ mistress. I have a longer journey before me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so, followed by a rabble rout of courtiers, without boots or cloaks;
+ and mounted on, sorry hacks&mdash;the King-of France rode forth from his
+ capital post-haste, and turning as he left the gates, hurled back impotent
+ imprecations upon Paris and its mob. Thenceforth, for a long interval,
+ there: was no king in that country. Mucio had done his work, and earned
+ his wages, and Philip II. reigned in Paris. The commands of the League
+ were now complied with. Heretics were doomed to extermination. The edict
+ of 19th July, 1588, was published with the most exclusive and stringent
+ provisions that the most bitter Romanist could imagine, and, as a fair
+ beginning; two young girls, daughters of Jacques Forcade, once 'procureur
+ au parlement,' were burned in Paris, for the crime, of Protestantism. The
+ Duke of Guise was named Generalissimo of the Kingdom (26th August, 1588).
+ Henry gave in his submission to the Council of Trent, the edicts, the
+ Inquisition, and the rest of the League's infernal machinery, and was
+ formally reconciled to Guise, with how much sincerity time was soon to
+ show.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [The King bound himself by oath to extirpate heresy, to remove all
+ persons suspected of that crime from office, and never to lay down
+ arms so long as a single, heretic remained. By secret articles,'two
+ armies against the Huguenots were agreed upon, one under the Duke of
+ Mayenne, the other under some general to be appointed by the grog.
+ The Council of Trent was forthwith to be proclaimed, and by a
+ refinement of malice the League stipulated that all officers
+ appointed in Paris by the Duke of Guise on the day after the
+ barricades should resign their powers, and be immediately
+ re-appointed by the King himself (DeThou, x.1. 86, pp. 324-325.)]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Philip, for whom and at whose expense all this work had been done
+ by he hands of the faithful Mucio, was constantly assuring his royal
+ brother of France, through envoy Longlee, at Madrid, of his most
+ affectionate friendship, and utterly repudiating all knowledge of these
+ troublesome and dangerous plots. Yet they had been especially organized&mdash;as
+ we have seen&mdash;by himself and the Balafre, in order that France might
+ be kept a prey to civil war, and thus rendered incapable of offering any
+ obstruction to his great enterprise against England. Any complicity of
+ Mendoza, the Spanish ambassador in Paris, or, of the Duke of Parma, who
+ were important agents in all these proceedings, with the Duke of Guise,
+ was strenuously&mdash;and circumstantially&mdash;denied; and the Balafre,
+ on the day of the barricades, sent Brissac to Elizabeth's envoy, Sir
+ Edward Stafford, to assure him as to his personal safety; and as to the
+ deep affection with which England and its Queen were regarded by himself
+ and all his friends. Stafford had also been advised to accept a guard for
+ his house of embassy. His reply was noble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I represent the majesty of England," he said, "and can take no safeguard
+ from a subject of the sovereign to whom I am accredited."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the threat of being invaded, and to the advice to close his gates, he
+ answered, "Do you see these two doors? now, then, if I am attacked, I am
+ determined to defend myself to the last drop of my blood, to serve as an
+ example to the universe of the law of nations, violated in my person. Do
+ not imagine that I shall follow your advice. The gates of an ambassador
+ shall be open to all the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brissac returned with this answer to Guise, who saw that it was hopeless
+ to attempt making a display in the eyes of Queen Elizabeth, but gave
+ private orders that the ambassador should not be molested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the consequences of the day of the barricades&mdash;and thus the
+ path of Philip was cleared of all obstructions on, the part of France. His
+ Mucio was now, generalissimo. Henry was virtually deposed. Henry of
+ Navarre, poor and good-humoured as ever, was scarcely so formidable at
+ that moment as he might one day become. When the news of the day of
+ barricades was brought at night to that cheerful monarch, he started from
+ his couch. "Ha," he exclaimed with a laugh, "but they havn't yet caught
+ the Bearnese!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it might be long before the League would catch the Bearnese; but,
+ meantime, he could render slight assistance to Queen Elizabeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In England there had been much fruitless negotiation between the
+ government of that country and the commissioners from the States-General.
+ There was perpetual altercation on the subject of Utrecht, Leyden, Sonoy,
+ and the other causes of contention; the Queen&mdash;as usual&mdash;being
+ imperious and choleric, and the envoys, in her opinion, very insolent. But
+ the principal topic of discussion was the peace-negotiations, which the
+ States-General, both at home and through their delegation in England, had
+ been doing their best to prevent; steadily refusing her Majesty's demand
+ that commissioners, on their part, should be appointed to participate in
+ the conferences at Ostend. Elizabeth promised that there should be as
+ strict regard paid to the interests of Holland as to those of England, in
+ case of a pacification, and that she would never forget her duty to them,
+ to herself, and to the world, as the protectress of the reformed religion.
+ The deputies, on the other hand, warned her that peace with Spain was
+ impossible; that the intention of the Spanish court was to deceive her,
+ while preparing her destruction and theirs; that it was hopeless to
+ attempt the concession of any freedom of conscience from Philip II.; and
+ that any stipulations which might be made upon that, or any other subject,
+ by the Spanish commissioners, would be tossed to the wind. In reply to the
+ Queen's loud complaints that the States had been trifling with her, and
+ undutiful to her, and that they had kept her waiting seven months long for
+ an answer to her summons to participate in the negotiations, they replied,
+ that up to the 15th October of the previous year, although there had been
+ flying rumours of an intention on the part of her Majesty's government to
+ open those communications with the enemy, it had, "nevertheless been
+ earnestly and expressly, and with high words and oaths, denied that there
+ was any truth in those rumours." Since that time the States had not once
+ only, but many times, in private letters, in public documents, and in
+ conversations with Lord Leicester and other eminent personages, deprecated
+ any communications whatever with Spain, asserting uniformly their
+ conviction that such proceedings would bring ruin on their country, and
+ imploring her Majesty not to give ear to any propositions whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And not only were the envoys, regularly appointed by the States-General,
+ most active in England, in their attempts to prevent the negotiations, but
+ delegates from the Netherland churches were also sent to the Queen, to
+ reason with her on the subject, and to utter solemn warnings that the
+ cause of the reformed religion would be lost for ever, in case of a treaty
+ on her part with Spain. When these clerical envoys reached England the
+ Queen was already beginning to wake from her delusion; although her
+ commissioners were still&mdash;as we have seen&mdash;hard at work, pouring
+ sand through their sieves at Ostend, and although the steady
+ protestations, of the Duke of Parma, and the industrious circulation of
+ falsehoods by Spanish emissaries, had even caused her wisest statesmen,
+ for a time, to participate in that delusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For it is not so great an impeachment on the sagacity of the great Queen
+ of England, as it would now appear to those who judge by the light of
+ subsequent facts, that she still doubted whether the armaments,
+ notoriously preparing in Spain and Flanders, were intended against
+ herself; and that even if such were the case&mdash;she still believed in
+ the possibility of averting the danger by negotiation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So late as the beginning of May, even the far-seeing and anxious
+ Walsingham could say, that in England "they were doing nothing but
+ honouring St. George, of whom the Spanish Armada seemed to be afraid. We
+ hear," he added, "that they will not be ready to set forward before the
+ midst of May, but I trust that it will be May come twelve months. The King
+ of Spain is too old and too sickly to fall to conquer kingdoms. If he be
+ well counselled, his best course will be to settle his own kingdoms in his
+ own hands."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And even much later, in the middle of July&mdash;when the mask was hardly,
+ maintained&mdash;even then there was no certainty as to the movements of
+ the Armada; and Walsingham believed, just ten days before the famous fleet
+ was to appear off Plymouth, that it had dispersed and returned to Spain,
+ never to re-appear. As to Parma's intentions, they were thought to lie
+ rather in the direction: of Ostend than of England; and Elizabeth; on the
+ 20th July, was more anxious for that city than for her own kingdom. "Mr.
+ Ned, I am persuaded," she wrote to Morris, "that if a Spanish fleet break,
+ the Prince of Parma's enterprise for England will fall to the ground, and
+ then are you to look to Ostend. Haste your works."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All through the spring and early summer, Stafford, in Paris, was kept in a
+ state of much perplexity as to the designs of Spain&mdash;so contradictory
+ were the stories circulated&mdash;and so bewildering the actions of men
+ known to be hostile to England. In, the last days of April he intimated it
+ as a common opinion in Paris, that these naval preparations of Philip were
+ an elaborate farce; "that the great elephant would bring forth but a mouse&mdash;that
+ the great processions, prayers, and pardons, at Rome, for the prosperous
+ success of the Armada against England; would be of no effect; that the
+ King of Spain was laughing in his sleeve at the Pope, that he could make
+ such a fool of him; and that such an enterprise was a thing the King never
+ durst think of in deed, but only in show to feed the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, although furnished with minute details as to these, armaments, and
+ as to the exact designs of Spain against his country, by the ostentatious
+ statements of the Spanish ambassador in Paris himself, the English, envoy
+ was still inclined to believe that these statements were a figment,
+ expressly intended to deceive. Yet he was aware that Lord Westmoreland,
+ Lord Paget, Sir Charles Paget, Morgan, and other English refugees, were
+ constantly meeting with Mendoza, that they were told to get themselves in
+ readiness, and to go down&mdash;as well appointed as might be&mdash;to the
+ Duke of Parma; that they had been "sending for their tailor to make them
+ apparel, and to put themselves in equipage;" that, in particular,
+ Westmoreland had been assured of being restored by Philip to his native
+ country in better condition than before. The Catholic and Spanish party in
+ Paris were however much dissatisfied with the news from Scotland, and were
+ getting more and more afraid that King James would object to the Spaniards
+ getting a foot-hold in his country, and that "the Scots would soon be
+ playing them a Scottish trick."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stafford was plunged still more inextricably into doubt by the accounts
+ from Longlee in Madrid. The diplomatist, who had been completely convinced
+ by Philip as to his innocence of any participation in the criminal
+ enterprise of Guise against Henry III., was now almost staggered by the
+ unscrupulous mendacity of that monarch with regard to any supposed designs
+ against England. Although the Armada was to be ready by the 15th May,
+ Longlee was of opinion&mdash;notwithstanding many bold announcements of an
+ attack upon Elizabeth&mdash;that the real object of the expedition was
+ America. There had recently been discovered, it was said, "a new country,
+ more rich in gold and silver than any yet found, but so full of stout
+ people that they could not master them." To reduce these stout people
+ beyond the Atlantic, therefore, and to get possession of new gold mines,
+ was the real object at which Philip was driving, and Longlee and Stafford
+ were both very doubtful whether it were worth the Queen's while to exhaust
+ her finances in order to protect herself against an imaginary invasion.
+ Even so late as the middle of July, six to one was offered on the Paris
+ exchange that the Spanish fleet would never be seen in the English seas,
+ and those that offered the bets were known to be well-wishers to the
+ Spanish party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus sharp diplomatists and statesmen like Longlee, Stafford, and
+ Walsingham, were beginning to lose their fear of the great bugbear by
+ which England had so long been haunted. It was, therefore no deep stain on
+ the Queen's sagacity that she, too, was willing to place credence in the
+ plighted honour of Alexander Farnese, the great prince who prided himself
+ on his sincerity, and who, next to the King his master, adored the virgin
+ Queen of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deputies of the Netherland churches had come, with the permission of
+ Count Maurice and of the States General; but they represented more
+ strongly than any other envoys could do, the English and the monarchical
+ party. They were instructed especially to implore the Queen to accept the
+ sovereignty of their country; to assure her that the restoration of Philip&mdash;who
+ had been a wolf instead of a shepherd to his flock&mdash;was an
+ impossibility, that he had been solemnly and for ever deposed, that under
+ her sceptre only could the Provinces ever recover their ancient
+ prosperity; that ancient and modern history alike made it manifest that a
+ free republic could never maintain itself, but that it must, of necessity,
+ run its course through sedition, bloodshed, and anarchy, until liberty was
+ at last crushed by an absolute despotism; that equality of condition, the
+ basis of democratic institutions, could never be made firm; and that a
+ fortunate exception, like that of Switzerland, whose historical and
+ political circumstances were peculiar, could never serve as a model to the
+ Netherlands, accustomed as those Provinces had ever been to a monarchical
+ form of government; and that the antagonism of aristocratic and democratic
+ elements in the States had already produced discord, and was threatening
+ destruction to the whole country. To avert such dangers the splendour of
+ royal authority was necessary, according to the venerable commands of Holy
+ Writ; and therefore the Netherland churches acknowledged themselves the
+ foster-children of England, and begged that in political matters also the
+ inhabitants of the Provinces might be accepted as the subjects of her
+ Majesty. They also implored the Queen to break off these accursed
+ negotiations with Spain, and to provide that henceforth in the Netherlands
+ the reformed religion might be freely exercised, to the exclusion of any
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it was very evident that these clerical envoys, although they were
+ sent by permission of the States, did not come as the representatives of
+ the dominant party. For that 'Beelzebub,' Barneveld, had different notions
+ from theirs as to the possibility of a republic, and as to the propriety
+ of tolerating other forms of worship than his own. But it was for such
+ pernicious doctrines, on religious matters in particular, that he was
+ called Beelzebub, Pope John, a papist in disguise, and an atheist; and
+ denounced, as leading young Maurice and the whole country to destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the basis of these instructions, the deputies drew up a memorial of
+ pitiless length, filled with astounding parallels between their own
+ position and that of the Hebrews, Assyrians, and other distinguished
+ nations of antiquity. They brought it to Walsingham on the 12th July,
+ 1588, and the much enduring man heard it read from beginning to end. He
+ expressed his approbation of its sentiments, but said it was too long. It
+ must be put on one sheet of paper, he said, if her Majesty was expected to
+ read it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Moreover," said the Secretary of State, "although your arguments are full
+ of piety, and your examples from Holy Writ very apt, I must tell you the
+ plain truth. Great princes are not always so zealous in religious matters
+ as they might be. Political transactions move them more deeply, and they
+ depend too much on worldly things. However there is no longer much danger,
+ for our envoys will return from Flanders in a few days."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But," asked a deputy, "if the Spanish fleet does not succeed in its
+ enterprise, will the peace-negotiations be renewed?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By no means," said Walsingham; "the Queen can never do that, consistently
+ with her honour. They have scattered infamous libels against her&mdash;so
+ scandalous, that you would be astounded should you read them. Arguments
+ drawn from honour are more valid with princes than any other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He alluded to the point in their memorial touching the free exercise of
+ the reformed religion in the Provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis well and piously said," he observed; "but princes and great lords
+ are not always very earnest in such matters. I think that her Majesty's
+ envoys will not press for the free exercise of the religion so very much;
+ not more than for two or three years. By that time&mdash;should our
+ negotiations succeed&mdash;the foreign troops will have evacuated the
+ Netherlands on condition that the States-General shall settle the
+ religious question."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But," said Daniel de Dieu, one of the deputies, "the majority of the
+ States is Popish."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be it so," replied Sir Francis; "nevertheless they will sooner permit the
+ exercise of the reformed religion than take up arms and begin the war
+ anew."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then alluded to the proposition of the deputies to exclude all
+ religious worship but that of the reformed church&mdash;all false religion&mdash;as
+ they expressed themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Her Majesty," said he, "is well disposed to permit some exercise of their
+ religion to the Papists. So far as regards my own feelings, if we were now
+ in the beginning, of the reformation, and the papacy were still entire, I
+ should willingly concede such exercise; but now that the Papacy has been
+ overthrown, I think it would not be safe to give such permission. When we
+ were disputing, at the time of the pacification of Ghent, whether the
+ Popish religion should be partially permitted, the Prince of Orange was of
+ the affirmative opinion; but I, who was then at Antwerp, entertained the
+ contrary conviction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But," said one of the deputies&mdash;pleased to find that Walsingham was
+ more of their way of thinking on religious toleration than the great
+ Prince of Orange had been, or than Maurice and Barneveld then were&mdash;"but
+ her Majesty will, we hope, follow the advice of her good and faithful
+ counsellors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To tell you the truth," answered Sir Francis, "great princes are not
+ always inspired with a sincere and upright zeal;"&mdash;it was the third
+ time he had made this observation"&mdash;although, so far as regards the
+ maintenance of the religion in the Netherlands, that is a matter of
+ necessity. Of that there is no fear, since otherwise all the pious would
+ depart, and none would remain but Papists, and, what is more, enemies of
+ England. Therefore the Queen is aware that the religion must be
+ maintained."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then advised the deputies to hand in the memorial to her Majesty,
+ without any long speeches, for which there was then no time or
+ opportunity; and it was subsequently arranged that they should be
+ presented to the Queen as she would be mounting her horse at St. James's
+ to ride to Richmond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly on the 15th July, as her Majesty came forth at the gate, with
+ a throng of nobles and ladies&mdash;some about to accompany her and some
+ bidding her adieu&mdash;the deputies fell on their knees before her.
+ Notwithstanding the advice of Walsingham, Daniel de Dieu was bent upon an
+ oration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh illustrious Queen!" he began, "the churches of the United Netherlands&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had got no further, when the Queen, interrupting, exclaimed, "Oh! I beg
+ you&mdash;at another time&mdash;I cannot now listen to a speech. Let me
+ see the memorial."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Daniel de Dieu then humbly presented that document, which her Majesty
+ graciously received, and then, getting on horseback, rode off to
+ Richmond.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The memorial was in the nature of an exhortation to sustain the religion,
+ and to keep clear of all negotiations with idolaters and unbelievers; and
+ the memorialists supported themselves by copious references to
+ Deuteronomy, Proverbs, Isaiah, Timothy, and Psalms, relying mainly on the
+ case of Jehosaphat, who came to disgrace and disaster through his treaty
+ with the idolatrous King Ahab. With regard to any composition with Spain,
+ they observed, in homely language, that a burnt cat fears the fire; and
+ they assured the Queen that, by following their advice, she would gain a
+ glorious and immortal name, like those of David, Ezekiel, Josiah, and
+ others, whose fragrant memory, even as precious incense from the
+ apothecary's, endureth to the end of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not surprising that Elizabeth, getting on horseback on the 15th
+ July, 1588, with her head full of Tilbury Fort and Medina Sidonia, should
+ have as little relish for the affairs of Ahab and Jehosophat, as for those
+ melting speeches of Diomede and of Turnus, to which Dr. Valentine Dale on
+ his part was at that moment invoking her attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 20th July, the deputies were informed by Leicester that her Majesty
+ would grant them an interview, July 20, and that they must come into his
+ quarter of the palace and await her arrival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between six and seven in the evening she came into the throne-room, and
+ the deputies again fell on their knees before her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She then seated herself&mdash;the deputies remaining on their knees on her
+ right side and the Earl of Leicester standing at her left&mdash;and
+ proceeded to make many remarks touching her earnestness in the pending
+ negotiations to provide for their religious freedom. It seemed that she
+ must have received a hint from Walsingham on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall provide," she said, "for the maintenance of the reformed
+ worship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Dieu&mdash;"The enemy will never concede it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"I think differently."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Dieu.&mdash;"There is no place within his dominions where he has
+ permitted the exercise of the pure religion. He has never done so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"He conceded it in the pacification of Ghent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Dieu.&mdash;"But he did not keep his agreement. Don John had concluded
+ with the States, but said he was not held to his promise, in case he
+ should repent; and the King wrote afterwards to our States, and said that
+ he was no longer bound to his pledge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"That is quite another thing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Dieu.&mdash;"He has very often broken his faith."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"He shall no longer be allowed to do so. If he does not
+ keep his word, that is my affair, not yours. It is my business to find the
+ remedy. Men would say, see in what a desolation the Queen of England has
+ brought this poor people. As to the freedom of worship, I should have
+ proposed three or four years' interval&mdash;leaving it afterwards to the
+ decision of the States."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Dieu.&mdash;"But the majority of the States is Popish."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"I mean the States-General, not the States of any
+ particular Province."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Dieu.&mdash;"The greater part of the States-General is Popish."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"I mean the three estates&mdash;the clergy, the nobles,
+ and the cities." The Queen&mdash;as the deputies observed&mdash;here fell
+ into an error. She thought that prelates of the reformed Church, as in
+ England, had seats in the States-General. Daniel de Dieu explained that
+ they had no such position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"Then how were you sent hither?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Dieu.&mdash;"We came with the consent of Count Maurice of Nassau."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"And of the States?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Dieu.&mdash;"We came with their knowledge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"Are you sent only from Holland and Zeeland? Is there no
+ envoy from Utrecht and the other Provinces?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helmichius.&mdash;"We two," pointing to his colleague Sossingius, "are
+ from Utrecht."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"What? Is this young man also a minister?" She meant
+ Helmichius, who had a very little beard, and looked young.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sossingius.&mdash;"He is not so young as he looks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"Youths are sometimes as able as old men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Dieu.&mdash;"I have heard our brother preach in France more than
+ fourteen years ago."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"He must have begun young. How old were you when you
+ first became a preacher?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helmichius.&mdash;"Twenty-three or twenty-four years of age."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"It was with us, at first, considered a scandal that a
+ man so young as that should be admitted to the pulpit. Our antagonists
+ reproached us with it in a book called 'Scandale de l'Angleterre,' saying
+ that we had none but school-boys for ministers. I understand that you pray
+ for me as warmly as if I were your sovereign princess. I think I have done
+ as much for the religion as if I were your Queen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helmichius.&mdash;"We are far from thinking otherwise. We acknowledge
+ willingly your Majesty's benefits to our churches."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"It would else be ingratitude on your part."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Helmichius.&mdash;"But the King of Spain will never keep any promise about
+ the religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"He will never come so far: he does nothing but make a
+ noise on all sides. Item, I don't think he has much confidence in
+ himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Dieu.&mdash;"Your Majesty has many enemies. The Lord hath hitherto
+ supported you, and we pray that he may continue to uphold your Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen.&mdash;"I have indeed many enemies; but I make no great account
+ of them. Is there anything else you seek?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ De Dieu.&mdash;"There is a special point: it concerns our, or rather your
+ Majesty's, city of Flushing. We hope that Russelius&mdash;(so he called
+ Sir William Russell)&mdash;may be continued in its government, although he
+ wishes his discharge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aha!" said the Queen, laughing and rising from her seat, "I shall not
+ answer you; I shall call some one else to answer you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She then summoned Russell's sister, Lady Warwick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you could speak French," said the Queen to that gentlewoman, "I should
+ bid you reply to these gentlemen, who beg that your brother may remain in
+ Flushing, so very agreeable has he made himself to them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen was pleased to hear this good opinion of Sir William, and this
+ request that he might continue to be governor of Flushing, because he had
+ uniformly supported the Leicester party, and was at that moment in high
+ quarrel with Count Maurice and the leading members of the States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the deputies took their leave, they requested an answer to their
+ memorial, which was graciously promised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three days afterwards, Walsingham gave them a written answer to their
+ memorial&mdash;conceived in the same sense as had been the expressions of
+ her Majesty and her counsellors. Support to the Netherlands and
+ stipulations for the free exercise of their religion were promised; but it
+ was impossible for these deputies of the churches to obtain a guarantee
+ from England that the Popish religion should be excluded from the
+ Provinces, in case of a successful issue to the Queen's negotiation with
+ Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus during all those eventful days-the last weeks of July and the
+ first weeks of August&mdash;the clerical deputation remained in England,
+ indulging in voluminous protocols and lengthened conversations with the
+ Queen and the principal members of her government. It is astonishing, in
+ that breathless interval of history, that so much time could be found for
+ quill-driving and oratory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, both in Holland and England, there had been other work than
+ protocolling. One throb of patriotism moved the breast of both nations. A
+ longing to grapple, once for all, with the great enemy of civil and
+ religious liberty inspired both. In Holland, the States-General and all
+ the men to whom the people looked for guidance, had been long deprecating
+ the peace-negotiations. Extraordinary supplies&mdash;more than had ever
+ been granted before&mdash;were voted for the expenses of the campaign; and
+ Maurice of Nassau, fitly embodying the warlike tendencies of his country
+ and race, had been most importunate with Queen Elizabeth that she would
+ accept his services and his advice. Armed vessels of every size, from the
+ gun-boat to the galleon of 1200 tons&mdash;then the most imposing ship in
+ those waters&mdash;swarmed in all the estuaries and rivers, and along the
+ Dutch and Flemish coast, bidding defiance to Parma and his armaments; and
+ offers of a large contingent from the fleets of Jooat de Moor and Justinua
+ de Nassau, to serve under Seymour and Howard, were freely made to the
+ States-General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was decided early in July, by the board of admiralty, presided over by
+ Prince Maurice, that the largest square-rigged vessels of Holland and
+ Zeeland should cruise between England and the Flemish coast, outside the
+ banks; that a squadron of lesser ships should be stationed within the
+ banks; and that a fleet of sloops and fly-boats should hover close in
+ shore, about Flushing and Rammekens. All the war-vessels of the little
+ republic were thus fully employed. But, besides this arrangement, Maurice
+ was empowered to lay an embargo&mdash;under what penalty he chose and
+ during his pleasure&mdash;on all square-rigged vessels over 300 tons, in
+ order that there might be an additional supply in case of need. Ninety
+ ships of war under Warmond, admiral, and Van der Does, vice-admiral of
+ Holland; and Justinus de Nassau, admiral, and Joost de Moor, vice-admiral
+ of Zeeland; together with fifty merchant-vessels of the best and
+ strongest, equipped and armed for active service, composed a formidable
+ fleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The States-General, a month before, had sent twenty-five or thirty good
+ ships, under Admiral Rosendael, to join Lord Henry Seymour, then cruising
+ between Dover and Calais. A tempest, drove them back, and their absence
+ from Lord Henry's fleet being misinterpreted by the English, the States
+ were censured for ingratitude and want of good faith. But the injustice of
+ the accusation was soon made manifest, for these vessels, reinforcing the
+ great Dutch fleet outside the banks, did better service than they could
+ have done; in the straits. A squadron of strong well-armed vessels, having
+ on board, in addition to their regular equipment, a picked force of twelve
+ hundred musketeers, long accustomed to this peculiar kind of naval
+ warfare, with crews of, grim Zeelanders, who had faced Alva, and Valdez in
+ their day, now kept close watch over Farnese, determined that he should
+ never thrust his face out of any haven or nook on the coast so long as
+ they should be in existence to prevent him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in England the protracted diplomacy at Ostend, ill-timed though it
+ was, had not paralyzed the arm or chilled the heart of the nation. When
+ the great Queen, arousing herself from the delusion in which the
+ falsehoods of Farnese and of Philip had lulled her, should once more.
+ represent&mdash;as no man or woman better than Elizabeth Tudor could
+ represent&mdash;the defiance of England to foreign insolence; the resolve
+ of a whole people to die rather than yield; there was a thrill of joy
+ through the national heart. When the enforced restraint was at last taken
+ off, there was one bound towards the enemy. Few more magnificent
+ spectacles have been seen in history than the enthusiasm which pervaded
+ the country as the great danger, so long deferred, was felt at last to be
+ closely approaching. The little nation of four millions, the merry England
+ of the sixteenth century, went forward to the death-grapple with its
+ gigantic antagonist as cheerfully as to a long-expected holiday. Spain was
+ a vast empire, overshadowing the world; England, in comparison, but a
+ province; yet nothing could surpass the steadiness with which the conflict
+ was awaited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For, during all the months of suspense; the soldiers and sailors, and many
+ statesman of England, had deprecated, even as the Hollanders had been
+ doing, the dangerous delays of Ostend. Elizabeth was not embodying the
+ national instinct, when she talked of peace; and shrank penuriously from
+ the expenses of war. There was much disappointment, even indignation, at
+ the slothfulness with which the preparations for defence went on, during
+ the period when there was yet time to make them. It was feared with
+ justice that England, utterly unfortified as were its cities, and defended
+ only by its little navy without, and by untaught enthusiasm within, might;
+ after all, prove an easier conquest than Holland and Zeeland, every town,
+ in whose territory bristled with fortifications. If the English ships&mdash;well-trained
+ and swift sailors as they were&mdash;were unprovided with spare and
+ cordage, beef and biscuit, powder and shot, and the militia-men, however
+ enthusiastic, were neither drilled nor armed, was it so very certain,
+ after all, that successful resistance would be made to the great Armada,
+ and to the veteran pikemen and musketeers of Farnese, seasoned on a
+ hundred, battlefields, and equipped as for a tournament? There was
+ generous confidence and chivalrous loyalty on the part of Elizabeth's
+ naval and military commanders; but there had been deep regret and
+ disappointment at her course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hawkins was anxious, all through the winter and spring, to cruise with a
+ small squadron off the coast of Spain. With a dozen vessels he undertook
+ to "distress anything that went through the seas." The cost of such a
+ squadron, with eighteen hundred men, to be relieved every four months, he
+ estimated at two thousand seven hundred pounds sterling the month, or a
+ shilling a day for each man; and it would be a very unlucky month, he
+ said, in which they did not make captures to three times that amount; for
+ they would see nothing that would not be presently their own. "We might
+ have peace, but not with God," said the pious old slave-trader; "but
+ rather than serve Baal, let us die a thousand deaths. Let us have open war
+ with these Jesuits, and every man will contribute, fight, devise, or do,
+ for the liberty of our country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it was open war with the Jesuits for which those stouthearted sailors
+ longed. All were afraid of secret mischief. The diplomatists&mdash;who
+ were known to be flitting about France, Flanders, Scotland, and England&mdash;were
+ birds of ill omen. King James was beset by a thousand bribes and
+ expostulations to avenge his mother's death; and although that mother had
+ murdered his father, and done her best to disinherit himself, yet it was
+ feared that Spanish ducats might induce him to be true to his mother's
+ revenge, and false to the reformed religion. Nothing of good was hoped for
+ from France. "For my part," said Lord Admiral Howard, "I have made of the
+ French King, the Scottish King, and the King of Spain, a trinity that I
+ mean never to trust to be saved by, and I would that others were of my
+ opinion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The noble sailor, on whom so much responsibility rested, yet who was so
+ trammelled and thwarted by the timid and parsimonious policy of Elizabeth
+ and of Burghley, chafed and shook his chains like a captive. "Since
+ England was England," he exclaimed, "there was never such a stratagem and
+ mask to deceive her as this treaty of peace. I pray God that we do not
+ curse for this a long grey beard with a white head witless, that will make
+ all the world think us heartless. You know whom I mean." And it certainly
+ was not difficult to understand the allusion to the pondering
+ Lord-Treasurer. "'Opus est aliquo Daedalo,' to direct us out of the maze,"
+ said that much puzzled statesman; but he hardly seemed to be making
+ himself wings with which to lift England and himself out of the labyrinth.
+ The ships were good ships, but there was intolerable delay in getting a
+ sufficient number of them as ready for action as was the spirit of their
+ commanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our ships do show like gallants here," said Winter; "it would do a man's
+ heart good to behold them. Would to God the Prince of Parma were on the
+ seas with all his forces, and we in sight of them. You should hear that we
+ would make his enterprise very unpleasant to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Howard, too, was delighted not only with his own little flag-ship the
+ Ark-Royal&mdash;"the odd ship of the world for all conditions,"&mdash;but
+ with all of his fleet that could be mustered. Although wonders were
+ reported, by every arrival from the south, of the coming Armada, the
+ Lord-Admiral was not appalled. He was perhaps rather imprudent in the
+ defiance he flung to the enemy. "Let me have the four great ships and
+ twenty hoys, with but twenty men a-piece, and each with but two iron
+ pieces, and her Majesty shall have a good account of the Spanish forces;
+ and I will make the King wish his galleys home again. Few as we are, if
+ his forces be not hundreds, we will make good sport with them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But those four great ships of her Majesty, so much longed for by Howard,
+ were not forthcoming. He complained that the Queen was "keeping them to
+ protect Chatham Church withal, when they should be serving their turn
+ abroad." The Spanish fleet was already reported as numbering from 210
+ sail, with 36,000 men,' to 400 or 500 ships, and 80,000 soldiers and
+ mariners; and yet Drake was not ready with his squadron. "The fault is not
+ in him," said Howard, "but I pray God her Majesty do not repent her slack
+ dealing. We must all lie together, for we shall be stirred very shortly
+ with heave ho! I fear ere long her Majesty will be sorry she hath believed
+ some so much as she hath done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Howard had got to sea, and was cruising all the stormy month of March in
+ the Channel with his little unprepared squadron; expecting at any moment&mdash;such
+ was the profound darkness which, enveloped the world at that day&mdash;that
+ the sails of the Armada might appear in the offing. He made a visit to the
+ Dutch coast, and was delighted with the enthusiasm with which he was
+ received. Five thousand people a day came on board his ships, full of
+ congratulation and delight; and he informed the Queen that she was not
+ more assured of the Isle of Sheppey than of Walcheren.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless time wore on, and both the army and navy of England were
+ quite unprepared, and the Queen was more reluctant than ever to incur the
+ expense necessary to the defence of her kingdom. At least one of those
+ galleys, which, as Howard bitterly complained, seemed destined to defend
+ Chatham Church, was importunately demanded; but it was already Easter-Day
+ (17th April), and she was demanded in vain. "Lord! when should she serve,"
+ said the Admiral, "if not at such a time as this? Either she is fit now to
+ serve, or fit for the fire. I hope never in my time to see so great a
+ cause for her to be used. I dare say her Majesty will look that men should
+ fight for her, and I know they will at this time. The King of Spain doth
+ not keep any ship at home, either of his own or any other, that he can get
+ for money. Well, well, I must pray heartily for peace," said Howard with
+ increasing spleen, "for I see the support of an honourable, war will never
+ appear. Sparing and war have no affinity together."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth Elizabeth's most faithful subjects were appalled at the ruin
+ which she seemed by her mistaken policy to be rendering inevitable. "I am
+ sorry," said the Admiral, "that her Majesty is so careless of this most
+ dangerous time. I fear me much, and with grief I think it, that she
+ relieth on a hope that will deceive her, and greatly endanger her, and
+ then it will not be her money nor her jewels that will help; for as they
+ will do good in time, so they will help nothing for the redeeming of
+ time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The preparations on shore were even more dilatory than those on the sea.
+ We have seen that the Duke of Parma, once landed, expected to march
+ directly upon London; and it was notorious that there were no fortresses
+ to oppose a march of the first general in Europe and his veterans upon
+ that unprotected and wealthy metropolis. An army had been enrolled&mdash;a
+ force of 86,016 foot, and 13,831 cavalry; but it was an army on paper
+ merely. Even of the 86,000, only 48,000 were set down as trained; and it
+ is certain that the training had been of the most meagre and
+ unsatisfactory description. Leicester was to be commander-in-chief; but we
+ have already seen that nobleman measuring himself, not much to his
+ advantage, with Alexander Farnese, in the Isle of Bommel, on the sands of
+ Blankenburg, and at the gates of Sluys. His army was to consist of 27,000
+ infantry, and 2000 horse; yet at midsummer it had not reached half that
+ number. Lord Chamberlain Hunsdon was to protect the Queen's person with
+ another army of 36,000; but this force, was purely an imaginary one; and
+ the lord-lieutenant of each county was to do his best with the militia.
+ But men were perpetually escaping out of the general service, in order to
+ make themselves retainers for private noblemen, and be kept at their
+ expense. "You shall hardly believe," said Leicester, "how many new
+ liveries be gotten within these six weeks, and no man fears the penalty.
+ It would be better that every nobleman did as Lord Dacres, than to take
+ away from the principal service such as are set down to serve."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of enthusiasm and courage, then, there was enough, while of drill and
+ discipline, of powder and shot, there was a deficiency. No braver or more
+ competent soldier could be found than Sir Edward Stanley&mdash;the man
+ whom we have seen in his yellow jerkin, helping himself into Fort Zutphen
+ with the Spanish soldier's pike&mdash;and yet Sir Edward Stanley gave but
+ a sorry account of the choicest soldiers of Chester and Lancashire, whom
+ he had been sent to inspect. "I find them not," he said, "according to
+ your expectation, nor mine own liking. They were appointed two years past
+ to have been trained six days by the year or more, at the discretion of
+ the muster-master, but, as yet, they have not been trained one day, so
+ that they have benefited nothing, nor yet know their leaders. There is now
+ promise of amendment, which, I doubt, will be very slow, in respect to my
+ Lord Derby's absence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My Lord Derby was at that moment, and for many months afterwards,
+ assisting Valentine Dale in his classical prolusions on the sands of
+ Bourbourg. He had better have been mustering the trainbands of Lancashire.
+ There was a general indisposition in the rural districts to expend money
+ and time in military business, until the necessity should become
+ imperative. Professional soldiers complained bitterly of the canker of a
+ long peace. "For our long quietness, which it hath pleased God to send
+ us," said Stanley, "they think their money very ill bestowed which they
+ expend on armour or weapon, for that they be in hope they shall never have
+ occasion to use it, so they may pass muster, as they have done heretofore.
+ I want greatly powder, for there is little or none at all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day was fast approaching when all the power in England would be too
+ little for the demand. But matters had not very much mended even at
+ midsummer. It is true that Leicester, who was apt to be
+ sanguine-particularly in matters under his immediate control&mdash;spoke
+ of the handful of recruits assembled at his camp in Essex, as "soldiers of
+ a year's experience, rather than a month's camping;" but in this opinion
+ he differed from many competent authorities, and was somewhat in
+ contradiction to himself. Nevertheless he was glad that the Queen had
+ determined to visit him, and encourage his soldiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have received in secret," he said, "those news that please me, that
+ your Majesty doth intend to behold the poor and bare company that lie here
+ in the field, most willingly to serve you, yea, most ready to die for you.
+ You shall, dear Lady, behold as goodly, loyal, and as able men as any
+ prince Christian can show you, and yet but a handful of your own, in
+ comparison of the rest you have. What comfort not only these shall receive
+ who shall be the happiest to behold yourself I cannot express; but
+ assuredly it will give no small comfort to the rest, that shall be
+ overshined with the beams of so gracious and princely a party, for what
+ your royal Majesty shall do to these will be accepted as done to all. Good
+ sweet Queen, alter not your purpose, if God give you health. It will be
+ your pain for the time, but your pleasure to behold such people. And
+ surely the place must content you, being as fair a soil and as goodly a
+ prospect as may be seen or found, as this extreme weather hath made trial,
+ which doth us little annoyance, it is so firm and dry a ground. Your usher
+ also liketh your lodging&mdash;a proper, secret, cleanly house. Your camp
+ is a little mile off, and your person will be as sure as at St. James's,
+ for my life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But notwithstanding this cheerful view of the position expressed by the
+ commander-in-chief, the month of July had passed, and the early days of
+ August had already arrived; and yet the camp was not formed, nor anything
+ more than that mere handful of troops mustered about Tilbury, to defend
+ the road from Dover to London. The army at Tilbury never, exceeded sixteen
+ or seventeen thousand men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole royal navy-numbering about thirty-four vessels in all&mdash;of
+ different sizes, ranging from 1100 and 1000 tons to 30, had at last been
+ got ready for sea. Its aggregate tonnage was 11,820; not half so much as
+ at the present moment&mdash;in the case of one marvellous merchant-steamer&mdash;floats
+ upon a single keel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These vessels carried. 837 guns and 6279 men. But the navy was reinforced
+ by the patriotism and liberality of English merchants and private
+ gentlemen. The city of London having been requested to furnish 15 ships of
+ war and 5000 men, asked two days for deliberation, and then gave 30 ships
+ and 10,000 men of which number 2710 were seamen. Other cities,
+ particularly Plymouth, came forward with proportionate liberality, and
+ private individuals, nobles, merchants, and men of humblest rank, were
+ enthusiastic in volunteering into the naval service, to risk property and
+ life in defence of the country. By midsummer there had been a total force
+ of 197 vessels manned, and partially equipped, with an aggregate of 29,744
+ tons, and 15,785 seamen. Of this fleet a very large number were mere
+ coasters of less than 100 tons each; scarcely ten ships were above 500,
+ and but one above 1000 tons&mdash;the Triumph, Captain Frobisher, of 1100
+ tons, 42 guns, and 500 sailors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Howard of Effingham, Lord High-Admiral of England, distinguished for
+ his martial character, public spirit, and admirable temper, rather than
+ for experience or skill as a seaman, took command of the whole fleet, in
+ his "little odd ship for all conditions," the Ark-Royal, of 800 tons, 425
+ sailors, and 55 guns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next in rank was Vice-Admiral Drake, in the Revenge, of 500 tons, 250 men
+ and 40 guns. Lord Henry Seymour, in the Rainbow, of precisely the same
+ size and strength, commanded the inner squadron, which cruised in the
+ neighbourhood of the French and Flemish coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hollanders and Zeelanders had undertaken to blockade the Duke of Parma
+ still more closely, and pledged themselves that he should never venture to
+ show himself upon the open sea at all. The mouth of the Scheldt, and the
+ dangerous shallows off the coast of Newport and Dunkirk, swarmed with
+ their determined and well-seasoned craft, from the flybooter or filibuster
+ of the rivers, to the larger armed vessels, built to confront every
+ danger, and to deal with any adversary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farnese, on his part, within that well-guarded territory, had, for months
+ long, scarcely slackened in his preparations, day or night. Whole forests
+ had been felled in the land of Waas to furnish him with transports and
+ gun-boats, and with such rapidity, that&mdash;according to his
+ enthusiastic historiographer&mdash;each tree seemed by magic to
+ metamorphose itself into a vessel at the word of command. Shipbuilders,
+ pilots, and seamen, were brought from the Baltic, from Hamburgh, from
+ Genoa. The whole surface of the obedient Netherlands, whence wholesome
+ industry had long been banished, was now the scene of a prodigious baleful
+ activity. Portable bridges for fording the rivers of England, stockades
+ for entrenchments, rafts and oars, were provided in vast numbers, and
+ Alexander dug canals and widened natural streams to facilitate his
+ operations. These wretched Provinces, crippled, impoverished, languishing
+ for peace, were forced to contribute out of their poverty, and to find
+ strength even in their exhaustion, to furnish the machinery for destroying
+ their own countrymen, and for hurling to perdition their most healthful
+ neighbour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this approaching destruction of England&mdash;now generally believed
+ in&mdash;was like the sound of a trumpet throughout Catholic Europe.
+ Scions of royal houses, grandees of azure blood, the bastard of Philip
+ II., the bastard of Savoy, the bastard of Medici, the Margrave of
+ Burghaut, the Archduke Charles, nephew of the Emperor, the Princes of
+ Ascoli and of Melfi, the Prince of Morocco, and others of illustrious
+ name, with many a noble English traitor, like Paget, and Westmoreland, and
+ Stanley, all hurried to the camp of Farnese, as to some famous tournament,
+ in which it was a disgrace to chivalry if their names were not enrolled.
+ The roads were trampled with levies of fresh troops from Spain, Naples,
+ Corsica, the States of the Church, the Milanese, Germany, Burgundy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Blas Capizucca was sent in person to conduct reinforcements from the north
+ of Italy. The famous Terzio of Naples, under Carlos Pinelo, arrived 3500
+ strong&mdash;the most splendid regiment ever known in the history of war.
+ Every man had an engraved corslet and musket-barrel, and there were many
+ who wore gilded armour, while their waving plumes and festive caparisons
+ made them look like holiday-makers, rather than real campaigners, in the
+ eyes of the inhabitants of the various cities through which their road led
+ them to Flanders. By the end of April the Duke of Parma saw himself at the
+ head of 60,000 men, at a monthly expense of 454,315 crowns or dollars. Yet
+ so rapid was the progress of disease&mdash;incident to northern climates&mdash;among
+ those southern soldiers, that we shall find the number woefully diminished
+ before they were likely to set foot upon the English shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus great preparations, simultaneously with pompous negotiations, had
+ been going forward month after month, in England, Holland, Flanders.
+ Nevertheless, winter, spring, two-thirds of summer, had passed away, and
+ on the 29th July, 1588, there remained the same sickening uncertainty,
+ which was the atmosphere in which the nations had existed for a
+ twelvemonth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Howard had cruised for a few weeks between England and Spain, without any
+ results, and, on his return, had found it necessary to implore her
+ Majesty, as late as July, to "trust no more to Judas' kisses, but to her
+ sword, not her enemy's word."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ A burnt cat fears the fire
+ A free commonwealth&mdash;was thought an absurdity
+ Baiting his hook a little to his appetite
+ Canker of a long peace
+ Englishmen and Hollanders preparing to cut each other's throats
+ Faction has rarely worn a more mischievous aspect
+ Hard at work, pouring sand through their sieves
+ She relieth on a hope that will deceive her
+ Sparing and war have no affinity together
+ The worst were encouraged with their good success
+ Trust her sword, not her enemy's word
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. 1588, Part 1.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Philip Second in his Cabinet&mdash;His System of Work and Deception&mdash;His
+ vast but vague Schemes of Conquest&mdash;The Armada sails&mdash;Description of
+ the Fleet&mdash;The Junction with Parma unprovided for&mdash;The Gale off
+ Finisterre&mdash;Exploits of David Gwynn&mdash;First Engagements in the
+ English Channel&mdash;Considerable Losses of the Spaniards&mdash;General
+ Engagement near Portland&mdash;Superior Seamanship of the English
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is now time to look in upon the elderly letter-writer in the Escorial,
+ and see how he was playing his part in the drama.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His counsellors were very few. His chief advisers were rather like private
+ secretaries than cabinet ministers; for Philip had been withdrawing more
+ and more into seclusion and mystery as the webwork of his schemes
+ multiplied and widened. He liked to do his work, assisted by a very few
+ confidential servants. The Prince of Eboli, the famous Ruy Gomez, was
+ dead. So was Cardinal Granvelle. So were Erasso and Delgado. His midnight
+ council&mdash;junta de noche&mdash;for thus, from its original hour of
+ assembling, and the all of secrecy in which it was enwrapped, it was
+ habitually called&mdash;was a triumvirate. Don Juan de Idiaquez was chief
+ secretary of state and of war; the Count de Chinchon was minister for the
+ household, for Italian affairs, and for the kingdom of Aragon; Don
+ Cristoval de Moura, the monarch's chief favourite, was at the head of the
+ finance department, and administered the affairs of Portugal and Castile!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The president of the council of Italy, after Granvelle's death, was
+ Quiroga, cardinal of Toledo, and inquisitor-general. Enormously long
+ letters, in the King's: name, were prepared chiefly by the two
+ secretaries, Idiaquez and Moura. In their hands was the vast
+ correspondence with Mendoza and Parma, and Olivarez at Rome, and with
+ Mucio; in which all the stratagems for the subjugation of Protestant
+ Europe were slowly and artistically contrived. Of the great conspiracy
+ against human liberty, of which the Pope and Philip were the double head,
+ this midnight triumvirate was the chief executive committee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These innumerable despatches, signed by Philip, were not the emanations of
+ his own mind. The King had a fixed purpose to subdue Protestantism and to
+ conquer the world; but the plans for carrying the purpose into effect were
+ developed by subtler and more comprehensive minds than his own. It was
+ enough for him to ponder wearily over schemes which he was supposed to
+ dictate, and to give himself the appearance of supervising what he
+ scarcely comprehended. And his work of supervision was often confined to
+ pettiest details. The handwriting of Spain and Italy at that day was
+ beautiful, and in our modern eyes seems neither antiquated nor ungraceful.
+ But Philip's scrawl was like that of 'a' clown just admitted to a
+ writing-school, and the whole margin of a fairly penned despatch perhaps
+ fifty pages long; laid before him for comment and signature by Idiaquez or
+ Moura, would be sometimes covered with a few awkward sentences, which it
+ was almost impossible to read, and which, when deciphered, were apt to
+ reveal suggestions of astounding triviality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus a most important despatch&mdash;in which the King, with his own hand,
+ was supposed to be conveying secret intelligence to Mendoza concerning the
+ Armada, together with minute directions for the regulation of Guise's
+ conduct at the memorable epoch of the barricades&mdash;contained but a
+ single comment from the monarch's own pen. "The Armada has been in Lisbon
+ about a month&mdash;quassi un mes"&mdash;wrote the secretary. "There is
+ but one s in quasi," said Philip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, a despatch of Mendoza to the King contained the intelligence that
+ Queen Elizabeth was, at the date of the letter, residing at St. James's.
+ Philip, who had no objection to display his knowledge of English affairs&mdash;as
+ became the man who had already been almost sovereign of England, and meant
+ to be entirely so&mdash;supplied a piece of information in an apostille to
+ this despatch. "St. James is a house of recreation," he said, "which was
+ once a monastery. There is a park between it, and the palace which is
+ called Huytal; but why it is called Huytal, I am sure I don't know." His
+ researches in the English language had not enabled him to recognize the
+ adjective and substantive out of which the abstruse compound White-Hall
+ (Huyt-al), was formed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On another occasion, a letter from England containing important
+ intelligence concerning the number of soldiers enrolled in that country to
+ resist the Spanish invasion, the quantity of gunpowder and various
+ munitions collected, with other details of like nature, furnished besides
+ a bit of information of less vital interest. "In the windows of the
+ Queen's presence-chamber they have discovered a great quantity of lice,
+ all clustered together," said the writer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a minute piece of statistics could not escape the microscopic eye of
+ Philip. So, disregarding the soldiers and the gunpowder, he commented only
+ on this last-mentioned clause of the letter; and he did it cautiously too,
+ as a King surnamed the Prudent should:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But perhaps they were fleas," wrote Philip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such examples&mdash;and many more might be given&mdash;sufficiently
+ indicate the nature of the man on whom such enormous responsibilities
+ rested, and who had been, by the adulation of his fellow-creatures,
+ elevated into a god. And we may cast a glance upon him as he sits in his
+ cabinet-buried among those piles of despatches&mdash;and receiving
+ methodically, at stated hours, Idiaquez, or Moura, or Chincon, to settle
+ the affairs of so many millions of the human race; and we may watch
+ exactly the progress of that scheme, concerning which so many
+ contradictory rumours were circulating in Europe. In the month of April a
+ Walsingham could doubt, even in August an ingenuous comptroller could
+ disbelieve, the reality of the great project, and the Pope himself, even
+ while pledging himself to assistance, had been systematically deceived. He
+ had supposed the whole scheme rendered futile by the exploit of Drake at
+ Cadiz, and had declared that "the Queen of England's distaff was worth
+ more than Philip's sword, that the King was a poor creature, that he would
+ never be able to come to a resolution, and that even if he should do so,
+ it would be too late;" and he had subsequently been doing his best,
+ through his nuncio in France, to persuade the Queen to embrace the
+ Catholic religion, and thus save herself from the impending danger. Henry
+ III. had even been urged by the Pope to send a special ambassador to her
+ for this purpose&mdash;as if the persuasions of the wretched Valois were
+ likely to be effective with Elizabeth Tudor&mdash;and Burghley had, by
+ means of spies in Rome, who pretended to be Catholics, given out
+ intimations that the Queen was seriously contemplating such a step. Thus
+ the Pope, notwithstanding Cardinal Allan, the famous million, and the
+ bull, was thought by Mendoza to be growing lukewarm in the Spanish cause,
+ and to be urging upon the "Englishwoman" the propriety of converting
+ herself, even at the late hour of May, 1588.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Philip, for years, had been maturing his scheme, while reposing entire
+ confidence&mdash;beyond his own cabinet doors&mdash;upon none but
+ Alexander Farnese; and the Duke&mdash;alone of all men&mdash;was perfectly
+ certain that the invasion would, this year, be attempted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain-general of the expedition was the Marquis of Santa Cruz, a man
+ of considerable naval experience, and of constant good fortune, who, in
+ thirty years, had never sustained a defeat. He had however shown no desire
+ to risk one when Drake had offered him the memorable challenge in the year
+ 1587, and perhaps his reputation of the invincible captain had been
+ obtained by the same adroitness on previous occasions. He was no friend to
+ Alexander Farnese, and was much disgusted when informed of the share
+ allotted to the Duke in the great undertaking. A course of reproach and
+ perpetual reprimand was the treatment to which he was, in consequence,
+ subjected, which was not more conducive to the advancement of the
+ expedition than it was to the health of the captain-general. Early in
+ January the Cardinal Archduke was sent to Lisbon to lecture him, with
+ instructions to turn a deaf ear to all his remonstrances, to deal with him
+ peremptorily, to forbid his writing letters on the subject to his Majesty,
+ and to order him to accept his post or to decline it without conditions,
+ in which latter contingency he was to be informed that his successor was
+ already decided upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not the most eligible way perhaps for bringing the
+ captain-general into a cheerful mood; particularly as he was expected to
+ be ready in January to sail to the Flemish coast. Nevertheless the Marquis
+ expressed a hope to accomplish his sovereign's wishes; and great had been
+ the bustle in all the dockyards of Naples, Sicily, and Spain; particularly
+ in the provinces of Guipuzcoa, Biscay, and Andalusia, and in the four
+ great cities of the coast. War-ships of all dimensions, tenders,
+ transports, soldiers, sailors, sutlers, munitions of war, provisions, were
+ all rapidly concentrating in Lisbon as the great place of rendezvous; and
+ Philip confidently believed, and as confidently informed the Duke of
+ Parma, that he, might be expecting the Armada at any time after the end of
+ January.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps in the history of mankind there has never been a vast project of
+ conquest conceived and matured in so protracted and yet so desultory a
+ manner, as was this famous Spanish invasion. There was something almost
+ puerile in the whims rather than schemes of Philip for carrying out his
+ purpose. It was probable that some resistance would be offered, at least
+ by the navy of England, to the subjugation of that country, and the King
+ had enjoyed an opportunity, the preceding summer, of seeing the way in
+ which English sailors did their work. He had also appeared to understand
+ the necessity of covering the passage of Farnese from the Flemish ports
+ into the Thames, by means of the great Spanish fleet from Lisbon.
+ Nevertheless he never seemed to be aware that Farnese could not invade
+ England quite by himself, and was perpetually expecting to hear that he
+ had done so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Holland and Zeeland," wrote Alexander to Philip, "have been arming with
+ their accustomed promptness; England has made great preparations. I have
+ done my best to make the impossible possible; but your letter told me to
+ wait for Santa Cruz, and to expect him very shortly. If, on the contrary,
+ you had told me to make the passage without him, I would have made the
+ attempt, although we had every one of us perished. Four ships of war could
+ sink every one of my boats. Nevertheless I beg to be informed of your
+ Majesty's final order. If I am seriously expected to make the passage
+ without Santa Cruz, I am ready to do it, although I should go all alone in
+ a cock-boat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Santa Cruz at least was not destined to assist in the conquest of
+ England; for, worn out with fatigue and vexation, goaded by the reproaches
+ and insults of Philip, Santa Cruz was dead. He was replaced in the chief
+ command of the fleet by the Duke of Medina Sidonia, a grandee of vast
+ wealth, but with little capacity and less experience. To the iron marquis
+ it was said that a golden duke had succeeded; but the duke of gold did not
+ find it easier to accomplish impossibilities than his predecessor had
+ done. Day after day, throughout the months of winter and spring, the King
+ had been writing that the fleet was just on the point of sailing, and as
+ frequently he had been renewing to Alexander Farnese the intimation that
+ perhaps, after all, he might find an opportunity of crossing to England,
+ without waiting for its arrival. And Alexander, with the same regularity,
+ had been informing his master that the troops in the Netherlands had been
+ daily dwindling from sickness and other causes, till at last, instead of
+ the 30,000 effective infantry, with which it had been originally intended
+ to make the enterprise, he had not more than 17,000 in the month of April.
+ The 6000 Spaniards, whom he was to receive from the fleet of Medina
+ Sidonia, would therefore be the very mainspring of his army. After leaving
+ no more soldiers in the Netherlands than were absolutely necessary for the
+ defence of the obedient Provinces against the rebels, he could only take
+ with him to England 23,000 men, even after the reinforcements from Medina.
+ "When we talked of taking England by surprise," said Alexander, "we never
+ thought of less than 30,000. Now that she is alert and ready for us, and
+ that it is certain we must fight by sea and by land, 50,000 would be few."
+ He almost ridiculed the King's suggestion that a feint might be made by
+ way of besieging some few places in Holland or Zeeland. The whole matter
+ in hand, he said, had become as public as possible, and the only efficient
+ blind was the peace-negotiation; for many believed, as the English
+ deputies were now treating at Ostend, that peace would follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, on the 28th, 29th, and 30th May, 1588, the fleet, which had been
+ waiting at Lisbon more than a month for favourable weather, set sail from
+ that port, after having been duly blessed by the Cardinal Archduke Albert,
+ viceroy of Portugal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were rather more than one hundred and thirty ships in all, divided
+ into ten squadrons. There was the squadron of Portugal, consisting of ten
+ galleons, and commanded by the captain-general, Medina Sidonia. In the
+ squadron of Castile were fourteen ships of various sizes, under General
+ Diego Flores de Valdez. This officer was one of the most experienced naval
+ officers in the Spanish service, and was subsequently ordered, in
+ consequence, to sail with the generalissimo in his flag-ship. In the
+ squadron of Andalusia were ten galleons and other vessels, under General
+ Pedro de Valdez. In the squadron of Biscay were ten galleons and lesser
+ ships, under General Juan Martinet de Recalde, upper admiral of the fleet.
+ In the squadron of Guipuzcoa were ten galleons, under General Miguel de
+ Oquendo. In the squadron of Italy were ten ships, under General Martin de
+ Bertendona. In the squadron of Urcas, or store-ships, were twenty-three
+ sail, under General Juan Gomez de Medina. The squadron of tenders,
+ caravels, and other vessels, numbered twenty-two sail, under General
+ Antonio Hurtado de Mendoza. The squadron of four galeasses was commanded
+ by Don Hugo de Moncada. The squadron of four galeras, or galleys, was in
+ charge of Captain Diego de Medrado.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next in command to Medina Sidonia was Don Alonzo de Leyva, captain-general
+ of the light horse of Milan. Don Francisco de Bobadilla was
+ marshal-general of the camp. Don Diego de Pimentel was marshal of the camp
+ to the famous Terzio or legion of Sicily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The total tonnage of the fleet was 59,120: the number of guns was 3165. Of
+ Spanish troops there were 19,295 on board: there were 8252 sailors and
+ 2088 galley-slaves. Besides these, there was a force of noble volunteers,
+ belonging to the most illustrious houses of Spain, with their attendants
+ amounting to nearly 2000 in all. There was also Don Martin Alaccon,
+ administrator and vicar-general of the Holy Inquisition, at the head of
+ some 290 monks of the mendicant orders, priests and familiars. The grand
+ total of those embarked was about 30,000. The daily expense of the fleet
+ was estimated by Don Diego de Pimentel at 12,000 ducats a-day, and the
+ daily cost of the combined naval and military force under Farnese and
+ Medina Sidonia was stated at 30,000 ducats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The size of the ships ranged from 1200 tons to 300. The galleons, of which
+ there were about sixty, were huge round-stemmed clumsy vessels, with
+ bulwarks three or four feet thick, and built up at stem and stern, like
+ castles. The galeasses of which there were four&mdash;were a third larger
+ than the ordinary galley, and were rowed each by three hundred
+ galley-slaves. They consisted of an enormous towering fortress at the
+ stern; a castellated structure almost equally massive in front, with seats
+ for the rowers amidships. At stem and stern and between each of the
+ slaves' benches were heavy cannon. These galeasses were floating edifices,
+ very wonderful to contemplate. They were gorgeously decorated. There were
+ splendid state-apartments, cabins, chapels, and pulpits in each, and they
+ were amply provided with awnings, cushions, streamers, standards, gilded
+ saints, and bands of music. To take part in an ostentatious pageant,
+ nothing could be better devised. To fulfil the great objects of a
+ war-vessel&mdash;to sail and to fight&mdash;they were the worst machines
+ ever launched upon the ocean. The four galleys were similar to the
+ galeasses in every respect except that of size, in which they were by
+ one-third inferior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the ships of the fleet&mdash;galeasses, galleys, galleons, and hulks&mdash;were
+ so encumbered with top-hamper, so overweighted in proportion to their
+ draught of water, that they could bear but little canvas, even with smooth
+ seas and light and favourable winds. In violent tempests, therefore, they
+ seemed likely to suffer. To the eyes of the 16th century these vessels
+ seemed enormous. A ship of 1300 tons was then a monster rarely seen, and a
+ fleet, numbering from 130 to 150 sail, with an aggregate tonnage of
+ 60,000, seemed sufficient to conquer the world, and to justify the
+ arrogant title, by which it had baptized itself, of the Invincible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the machinery which Philip had at last set afloat, for the
+ purpose of dethroning Elizabeth and establishing the inquisition in
+ England. One hundred and forty ships, eleven thousand Spanish veterans, as
+ many more recruits, partly Spanish, partly Portuguese, 2000 grandees, as
+ many galley-slaves, and three hundred barefooted friars and inquisitors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plan was simple. Medina Sidonia was to proceed straight from Lisbon to
+ Calais roads: there he was to wait: for the Duke of Parma, who was to come
+ forth from Newport, Sluys, and Dunkerk, bringing with him his 17,000
+ veterans, and to assume the chief command of the whole expedition. They
+ were then to cross the channel to Dover, land the army of Parma,
+ reinforced with 6000 Spaniards from the fleet, and with these 23,000 men
+ Alexander was to march at once upon London. Medina Sidonia was to seize
+ and fortify the Isle of Wight, guard the entrance of the harbours against
+ any interference from the Dutch and English fleets, and&mdash;so soon as
+ the conquest of England had been effected&mdash;he was to proceed to
+ Ireland. It had been the wish of Sir William Stanley that Ireland should
+ be subjugated first, as a basis of operations against England; but this
+ had been overruled. The intrigues of Mendoza and Farnese, too, with the
+ Catholic nobles of Scotland, had proved, after all, unsuccessful. King
+ James had yielded to superior offers of money and advancement held out to
+ him by Elizabeth, and was now, in Alexander's words, a confirmed heretic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no course left, therefore, but to conquer England at once. A
+ strange omission had however been made in the plan from first to last. The
+ commander of the whole expedition was the Duke of Parma: on his head was
+ the whole responsibility. Not a gun was to be fired&mdash;if it could be
+ avoided&mdash;until he had come forth with his veterans to make his
+ junction with the Invincible Armada off Calais. Yet there was no
+ arrangement whatever to enable him to come forth&mdash;not the slightest
+ provision to effect that junction. It would almost seem that the
+ letter-writer of the Escorial had been quite ignorant of the existence of
+ the Dutch fleets off Dunkerk, Newport, and Flushing, although he had
+ certainly received information enough of this formidable obstacle to his
+ plan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Most joyful I shall be," said Farnese&mdash;writing on one of the days
+ when he had seemed most convinced by Valentine Dale's arguments, and
+ driven to despair by his postulates&mdash;"to see myself with these
+ soldiers on English ground, where, with God's help, I hope to accomplish
+ your Majesty's demands." He was much troubled however to find doubts
+ entertained at the last moment as to his 6000 Spaniards; and certainly it
+ hardly needed an argument to prove that the invasion of England with but
+ 17,000 soldiers was a somewhat hazardous scheme. Yet the pilot Moresini
+ had brought him letters from Medina Sidonia, in which the Duke expressed
+ hesitation about parting with these 6000 veterans; unless the English
+ fleet should have been previously destroyed, and had also again expressed
+ his hope that Parma would be punctual to the rendezvous. Alexander
+ immediately combated these views in letters to Medina and to the King. He
+ avowed that he would not depart one tittle from the plan originally laid
+ down. The 6000 men, and more if possible, were to be furnished him, and
+ the Spanish Armada was to protect his own flotilla, and to keep the
+ channel clear of enemies. No other scheme was possible, he said, for it
+ was clear that his collection of small flat-bottomed river-boats and hoys
+ could not even make the passage, except in smooth weather. They could not
+ contend with a storm, much less with the enemy's ships, which would
+ destroy them utterly in case of a meeting, without his being able to avail
+ himself of his soldiers&mdash;who would be so closely packed as to be
+ hardly moveable&mdash;or of any human help. The preposterous notion that
+ he should come out with his flotilla to make a junction with Medina off
+ Calais, was over and over again denounced by Alexander with vehemence and
+ bitterness, and most boding expressions were used by him as to the
+ probable result, were such a delusion persisted in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every possible precaution therefore but one had been taken. The King of
+ France&mdash;almost at the same instant in which Guise had been receiving
+ his latest instructions from the Escorial for dethroning and destroying
+ that monarch&mdash;had been assured by Philip of his inalienable
+ affection; had been informed of the object of this great naval expedition&mdash;which
+ was not by any means, as Mendoza had stated to Henry, an enterprise
+ against France or England, but only a determined attempt to clear the sea,
+ once for all, of these English pirates who had done so much damage for
+ years past on the high seas&mdash;and had been requested, in case any
+ Spanish ship should be driven by stress of weather into French ports, to
+ afford them that comfort and protection to which the vessels of so close
+ and friendly an ally were entitled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus there was bread, beef, and powder enough&mdash;there were monks and
+ priests enough&mdash;standards, galley-slaves, and inquisitors enough; but
+ there were no light vessels in the Armada, and no heavy vessels in Parma's
+ fleet. Medina could not go to Farnese, nor could Farnese come to Medina.
+ The junction was likely to be difficult, and yet it had never once entered
+ the heads of Philip or his counsellors to provide for that difficulty. The
+ King never seemed to imagine that Farnese, with 40,000 or 50,000 soldiers
+ in the Netherlands, a fleet of 300 transports, and power to dispose of
+ very large funds for one great purpose, could be kept in prison by a fleet
+ of Dutch skippers and corsairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With as much sluggishness as might have been expected from their clumsy
+ architecture, the ships of the Armada consumed nearly three weeks in
+ sailing from Lisbon to the neighbourhood of Cape Finisterre. Here they
+ were overtaken by a tempest, and were scattered hither and thither, almost
+ at the mercy of the winds and waves; for those unwieldy hulks were ill
+ adapted to a tempest in the Bay of Biscay. There were those in the Armada,
+ however, to whom the storm was a blessing. David Gwynn, a Welsh mariner,
+ had sat in the Spanish hulks a wretched galley-slave&mdash;as prisoner of
+ war for more than eleven years, hoping, year after year, for a chance of
+ escape from bondage. He sat now among the rowers of the great galley, the
+ Trasana, one of the humblest instruments by which the subjugation of his
+ native land to Spain and Rome was to be effected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very naturally, among the ships which suffered most in the gale were the
+ four huge unwieldy galleys&mdash;a squadron of four under Don Diego de
+ Medrado&mdash;with their enormous turrets at stem and stern, and their low
+ and open waists. The chapels, pulpits, and gilded Madonnas proved of
+ little avail in a hurricane. The Diana, largest of the four, went down
+ with all hands; the Princess was labouring severely in the trough of the
+ sea, and the Trasana was likewise in imminent danger. So the master of
+ this galley asked the Welsh slave, who had far more experience and
+ seamanship than he possessed himself, if it were possible to save the
+ vessel. Gwynn saw an opportunity for which he had been waiting eleven
+ years. He was ready to improve it. He pointed out to the captain the
+ hopelessness of attempting to overtake the Armada. They should go down, he
+ said, as the Diana had already done, and as the Princess was like at any
+ moment to do, unless they took in every rag of sail, and did their best
+ with their oars to gain the nearest port. But in order that the rowers
+ might exert themselves to the utmost, it was necessary that the soldiers,
+ who were a useless incumbrance on deck, should go below. Thus only could
+ the ship be properly handled. The captain, anxious to save his ship and
+ his life, consented. Most of the soldiers were sent beneath the hatches: a
+ few were ordered to sit on the benches among the slaves. Now there had
+ been a secret understanding for many days among these unfortunate men, nor
+ were they wholly without weapons. They had been accustomed to make
+ toothpicks and other trifling articles for sale out of broken sword-blades
+ and other refuse bits of steel. There was not a man among them who had not
+ thus provided himself with a secret stiletto.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first Gwynn occupied himself with arrangements for weathering the gale.
+ So soon however as the ship had been made comparatively easy, he looked
+ around him, suddenly threw down his cap, and raised his hand to the
+ rigging. It was a preconcerted signal. The next instant he stabbed the
+ captain to the heart, while each one of the galley-slaves killed the
+ soldier nearest him; then, rushing below, they surprised and overpowered
+ the rest of the troops, and put them all to death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Coming again upon deck, David Gwynn descried the fourth galley of the
+ squadron, called the Royal, commanded by Commodore Medrado in person,
+ bearing down upon them, before the wind. It was obvious that the Vasana
+ was already an object of suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Comrades," said Gwynn, "God has given us liberty, and by our courage we
+ must prove ourselves worthy of the boon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke there came a broadside from the galley Royal which killed nine
+ of his crew. David, nothing daunted; laid his ship close alongside of the
+ Royal, with such a shock that the timbers quivered again. Then at the head
+ of his liberated slaves, now thoroughly armed, he dashed on board the
+ galley, and, after a furious conflict, in which he was assisted by the
+ slaves of the Royal, succeeded in mastering the vessel, and putting all
+ the Spanish soldiers to death. This done, the combined rowers, welcoming
+ Gwynn as their deliverer from an abject slavery which seemed their lot for
+ life, willingly accepted his orders. The gale had meantime abated, and the
+ two galleys, well conducted by the experienced and intrepid Welshman, made
+ their way to the coast of France, and landed at Bayonne on the 31st,
+ dividing among them the property found on board the two galleys. Thence,
+ by land, the fugitives, four hundred and sixty-six in number&mdash;Frenchmen,
+ Spaniards, Englishmen, Turks, and Moors, made their way to Rochelle. Gwynn
+ had an interview with Henry of Navarre, and received from that chivalrous
+ king a handsome present. Afterwards he found his way to England, and was
+ well commended by the Queen. The rest of the liberated slaves dispersed in
+ various directions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the first adventure of the invincible Armada. Of the squadron of
+ galleys, one was already sunk in the sea, and two of the others had been
+ conquered by their own slaves. The fourth rode out the gale with
+ difficulty, and joined the rest of the fleet, which ultimately
+ re-assembled at Coruna; the ships having, in distress, put in at first at
+ Vivera, Ribadeo, Gijon, and other northern ports of Spain. At the Groyne&mdash;as
+ the English of that day were accustomed to call Coruna&mdash;they remained
+ a month, repairing damages and recruiting; and on the 22nd of July 3
+ (N.S.) the Armada set sail: Six days later, the Spaniards took soundings,
+ thirty leagues from the Scilly Islands, and on&mdash;Friday, the 29th of
+ July, off the Lizard, they had the first glimpse of the land of promise
+ presented them by Sixtus V., of which they had at last come to take
+ possession.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [The dates in the narrative will be always given according to the
+ New Style, then already adopted by Spain, Holland, and France,
+ although not by England. The dates thus given are, of course, ten
+ days later than they appear in contemporary English records.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the same day and night the blaze and smoke of ten thousand beacon-fires
+ from the Land's End to Margate, and from the Isle of Wight to Cumberland,
+ gave warning to every Englishman that the enemy was at last upon them.
+ Almost at that very instant intelligence had been brought from the court
+ to the Lord-Admiral at Plymouth, that the Armada, dispersed and shattered
+ by the gales of June, was not likely to make its appearance that year; and
+ orders had consequently been given to disarm the four largest ships, and
+ send them into dock. Even Walsingham, as already stated, had participated
+ in this strange delusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Howard had time to act upon this ill-timed suggestion&mdash;even
+ had he been disposed to do so&mdash;he received authentic intelligence
+ that the great fleet was off the Lizard. Neither he nor Francis Drake were
+ the men to lose time in such an emergency, and before that Friday, night
+ was spent, sixty of the best English ships had been warped out of Plymouth
+ harbour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Saturday, 30th July, the wind was very light at southwest, with a mist
+ and drizzling rain, but by three in the afternoon the two fleets could
+ descry and count each other through the haze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By nine o'clock, 31st July, about two miles from Looe, on the Cornish
+ coast, the fleets had their first meeting. There were 136 sail of the
+ Spaniards, of which ninety were large ships, and sixty-seven of the
+ English. It was a solemn moment. The long-expected Armada presented a
+ pompous, almost a theatrical appearance. The ships seemed arranged for a
+ pageant, in honour of a victory already won. Disposed in form of a
+ crescent, the horns of which were seven miles asunder, those gilded,
+ towered, floating castles, with their gaudy standards and their martial
+ music, moved slowly along the channel, with an air of indolent pomp. Their
+ captain-general, the golden Duke, stood in his private shot-proof
+ fortress, on the&mdash;deck of his great galleon the Saint Martin,
+ surrounded by generals of infantry, and colonels of cavalry, who knew as
+ little as he did himself of naval matters. The English vessels, on the
+ other hand&mdash;with a few exceptions, light, swift, and easily handled&mdash;could
+ sail round and round those unwieldy galleons, hulks, and galleys rowed by
+ fettered slave-gangs. The superior seamanship of free Englishmen,
+ commanded by such experienced captains as Drake, Frobisher, and Hawkins&mdash;from
+ infancy at home on blue water&mdash;was manifest in the very, first
+ encounter. They obtained the weather-gage at once, and cannonaded the
+ enemy at intervals with considerable effect, easily escaping at will out
+ of range of the sluggish Armada, which was incapable of bearing sail in
+ pursuit, although provided with an armament which could sink all its
+ enemies at close quarters. "We had some small fight with them that Sunday
+ afternoon," said Hawkins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Medina Sidonia hoisted the royal standard at the fore, and the whole fleet
+ did its utmost, which was little, to offer general battle. It was in vain.
+ The English, following at the heels of the enemy, refused all such
+ invitations, and attacked only the rear-guard of the Armada, where Recalde
+ commanded. That admiral, steadily maintaining his post, faced his nimble
+ antagonists, who continued to teaze, to maltreat, and to elude him, while
+ the rest of the fleet proceeded slowly up the Channel closely, followed by
+ the enemy. And thus the running fight continued along the coast, in full
+ view of Plymouth, whence boats with reinforcements and volunteers were
+ perpetually arriving to the English ships, until the battle had drifted
+ quite out of reach of the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already in this first "small fight" the Spaniards had learned a lesson,
+ and might even entertain a doubt of their invincibility. But before the
+ sun set there were more serious disasters. Much powder and shot had been
+ expended by the Spaniards to very little purpose, and so a master-gunner
+ on board Admiral Oquendo's flag-ship was reprimanded for careless
+ ball-practice. The gunner, who was a Fleming, enraged with his captain,
+ laid a train to the powder-magazine, fired it, and threw himself into the
+ sea. Two decks blew up. The into the clouds, carrying with it the
+ paymaster-general of the fleet, a large portion of treasure, and nearly
+ two hundred men.' The ship was a wreck, but it was possible to save the
+ rest of the crew. So Medina Sidonia sent light vessels to remove them, and
+ wore with his flag-ship, to defend Oquendo, who had already been fastened
+ upon by his English pursuers. But the Spaniards, not being so light in
+ hand as their enemies, involved themselves in much embarrassment by this
+ manoeuvre; and there was much falling foul of each other, entanglement of
+ rigging, and carrying away of yards. Oquendo's men, however, were
+ ultimately saved, and taken to other ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Don Pedro de Valdez, commander of the Andalusian squadron, having
+ got his galleon into collision with two or three Spanish ships
+ successively, had at last carried away his fore-mast close to the deck,
+ and the wreck had fallen against his main-mast. He lay crippled and
+ helpless, the Armada was slowly deserting him, night was coming on, the
+ sea was running high, and the English, ever hovering near, were ready to
+ grapple with him. In vain did Don Pedro fire signals of distress. The
+ captain-general, even as though the unlucky galleon had not been connected
+ with the Catholic fleet&mdash;calmly fired a gun to collect his scattered
+ ships, and abandoned Valdez to his fate. "He left me comfortless in sight
+ of the whole fleet," said poor Pedro, "and greater inhumanity and
+ unthankfulness I think was never heard of among men."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the Spaniard comported himself most gallantly. Frobisher, in the
+ largest ship of the English fleet, the Triumph, of 1100 tons, and Hawkins
+ in the Victory, of 800, cannonaded him at a distance, but, night coming
+ on, he was able to resist; and it was not till the following morning that
+ he surrendered to the Revenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Drake then received the gallant prisoner on board his flagship&mdash;much
+ to the disgust and indignation of Frobisher and Hawkins, thus disappointed
+ of their prize and ransom-money&mdash;treated him with much courtesy, and
+ gave his word of honour that he and his men should be treated fairly like
+ good prisoners of war. This pledge was redeemed, for it was not the
+ English, as it was the Spanish custom, to convert captives into slaves,
+ but only to hold them for ransom. Valdez responded to Drake's politeness
+ by kissing his hand, embracing him, and overpowering him with magnificent
+ compliments. He was then sent on board the Lord-Admiral, who received him
+ with similar urbanity, and expressed his regret that so distinguished a
+ personage should have been so coolly deserted by the Duke of Medina. Don
+ Pedro then returned to the Revenge, where, as the guest of Drake, he was a
+ witness to all subsequent events up to the 10th of August, on which day he
+ was sent to London with some other officers, Sir Francis claiming his
+ ransom as his lawful due.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here certainly was no very triumphant beginning for the Invincible Armada.
+ On the very first day of their being in presence of the English fleet&mdash;then
+ but sixty-seven in number, and vastly their inferior in size and weight of
+ metal&mdash;they had lost the flag ships of the Guipuzcoan and of the
+ Andalusian squadrons, with a general-admiral, 450 officers and, men, and
+ some 100,000 ducats of treasure. They had been out-manoeuvred, out-sailed,
+ and thoroughly maltreated by their antagonists, and they had been unable
+ to inflict a single blow in return. Thus the "small fight" had been a
+ cheerful one for the opponents of the Inquisition, and the English were
+ proportionably encouraged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Monday, 1st of August, Medina Sidonia placed the rear-guard-consisting
+ of the galeasses, the galleons St. Matthew, St. Luke, St. James, and the
+ Florence and other ships, forty-three in all&mdash;under command of Don
+ Antonio de Leyva. He was instructed to entertain the enemy&mdash;so
+ constantly hanging on the rear&mdash;to accept every chance of battle, and
+ to come to close quarters whenever it should be possible. The Spaniards
+ felt confident of sinking every ship in the English navy, if they could
+ but once come to grappling; but it was growing more obvious every hour
+ that the giving or withholding battle was entirely in the hands of their
+ foes. Meantime&mdash;while the rear was thus protected by Leyva's division&mdash;the
+ vanguard and main body of the Armada, led by the captain-general, would
+ steadily pursue its way, according to the royal instructions, until it
+ arrived at its appointed meeting-place with the Duke of Parma. Moreover,
+ the Duke of Medina&mdash;dissatisfied with the want of discipline and of
+ good seamanship hitherto displayed in his fleet&mdash;now took occasion to
+ send a serjeant-major, with written sailing directions, on board each ship
+ in the Armada, with express orders to hang every captain, without appeal
+ or consultation, who should leave the position assigned him; and the
+ hangmen were sent with the sergeant-majors to ensure immediate attention
+ to these arrangements. Juan Gil was at the name time sent off in a sloop
+ to the Duke of Parma, to carry the news of the movements of the Armada, to
+ request information as to the exact spot and moment of the junction, and
+ to beg for pilots acquainted with the French and Flemish coasts. "In case
+ of the slightest gale in the world," said Medina, "I don't know how or
+ where to shelter such large ships as ours."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Disposed in this manner; the Spaniards sailed leisurely along the English
+ coast with light westerly breezes, watched closely by the Queen's fleet,
+ which hovered at a moderate distance to windward, without offering, that
+ day, any obstruction to their course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By five o'clock on Tuesday morning, 2nd of August, the Armada lay between
+ Portland Bill and St. Albans' Head, when the wind shifted to the
+ north-east, and gave the Spaniards the weather-gage. The English did their
+ beat to get to windward, but the Duke, standing close into the land with
+ the whole Armada, maintained his advantage. The English then went about,
+ making a tack seaward, and were soon afterwards assaulted by the
+ Spaniards. A long and spirited action ensued. Howard in his little
+ Ark-Royal&mdash;"the odd ship of the world for all conditions"&mdash;was
+ engaged at different times with Bertendona, of the Italian squadron, with
+ Alonzo de Leyva in the Batta, and with other large vessels. He was hard
+ pressed for a time, but was gallantly supported by the Nonpareil, Captain
+ Tanner; and after a long and confused combat, in which the St. Mark, the
+ St. Luke, the St. Matthew, the St. Philip, the St. John, the St. James,
+ the St. John Baptist, the St. Martin, and many other great galleons, with
+ saintly and apostolic names, fought pellmell with the Lion, the Bear, the
+ Bull, the Tiger, the Dreadnought, the Revenge, the Victory, the Triumph,
+ and other of the more profanely-baptized English ships, the Spaniards were
+ again baffled in all their attempts to close with, and to board, their
+ ever-attacking, ever-flying adversaries. The cannonading was incessant.
+ "We had a sharp and a long fight," said Hawkins. Boat-loads of men and
+ munitions were perpetually arriving to the English, and many, high-born
+ volunteers&mdash;like Cumberland, Oxford, Northumberland, Raleigh, Brooke,
+ Dudley, Willoughby, Noel, William Hatton, Thomas Cecil, and others&mdash;could
+ no longer restrain their impatience, as the roar of battle sounded along
+ the coasts of Dorset, but flocked merrily on board the ships of Drake,&mdash;Hawkins,
+ Howard, and Frobisher, or came in small vessels which they had chartered
+ for themselves, in order to have their share in the delights of the
+ long-expected struggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The action, irregular, desultory, but lively, continued nearly all day,
+ and until the English had fired away most of their powder and shot. The
+ Spaniards, too, notwithstanding their years of preparation, were already
+ sort of light metal, and Medina Sidonia had been daily sending to Parma
+ for a Supply of four, six, and ten pound balls. So much lead and gunpowder
+ had never before been wasted in a single day; for there was no great
+ damage inflicted on either side. The artillery-practice was certainly not
+ much to the credit of either nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If her Majesty's ships had been manned with a full supply of good
+ gunners," said honest William Thomas, an old artilleryman, "it would have
+ been the woefullest time ever the Spaniard took in hand, and the most
+ noble victory ever heard of would have been her Majesty's. But our sins
+ were the cause that so much powder and shot were spent, so long time in
+ fight, and in comparison so little harm done. It were greatly to be wished
+ that her Majesty were no longer deceived in this way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the English, at any rate, had succeeded in displaying their
+ seamanship, if not their gunnery, to advantage. In vain the unwieldly
+ hulks and galleons had attempted to grapple with their light-winged foes,
+ who pelted them, braved them, damaged their sails and gearing; and then
+ danced lightly off into the distance; until at last, as night fell, the
+ wind came out from the west again, and the English regained and kept the
+ weather-gage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen's fleet, now divided into four squadrons, under Howard, Drake,
+ Hawkins, and Frobisher, amounted to near one hundred sail, exclusive of
+ Lord Henry Seymour's division, which was cruising in the Straits of Dover.
+ But few of all this number were ships of war however, and the merchant
+ vessels; although zealous and active enough, were not thought very
+ effective. "If you had seen the simple service done by the merchants and
+ coast ships," said Winter, "you would have said we had been little holpen
+ by them, otherwise than that they did make a show."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All night the Spaniards, holding their course towards Calais, after the
+ long but indecisive conflict had terminated, were closely pursued by their
+ wary antagonists. On Wednesday, 3rd of August, there was some slight
+ cannonading, with but slender results; and on Thursday, the 4th, both
+ fleets were off Dunnose, on the Isle of Wight. The great hulk Santana and
+ a galleon of Portugal having been somewhat damaged the previous day, were
+ lagging behind the rest of the Armada, and were vigorously attacked by the
+ Triumph, and a few other vessels. Don Antonio de Leyva, with some of the
+ galeasses and large galleons, came to the rescue, and Frobisher, although
+ in much peril, maintained an unequal conflict, within close range, with
+ great spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing his danger, the Lord Admiral in the Ark-Royal, accompanied by the
+ Golden Lion; the White Bear, the Elizabeth, the Victory, and the
+ Leicester, bore boldly down into the very midst of the Spanish fleet, and
+ laid himself within three or four hundred yards of Medina's flag ship, the
+ St. Martin, while his comrades were at equally close quarters with
+ Vice-Admiral Recalde and the galleons of Oquendo, Mexia, and Almanza. It
+ was the hottest conflict which had yet taken place. Here at last was
+ thorough English work. The two, great fleets, which were there to
+ subjugate and to defend the realm of Elizabeth, were nearly yard-arm and
+ yard-arm together&mdash;all England on the lee. Broadside after broadside
+ of great guns, volley after volley of arquebusry from maintop and rigging,
+ were warmly exchanged, and much damage was inflicted on the Spaniards,
+ whose gigantic ships, were so easy a mark to aim at, while from their
+ turreted heights they themselves fired for the most part harmlessly over
+ the heads of their adversaries. The leaders of the Armada, however, were
+ encouraged, for they expected at last to come to even closer quarters, and
+ there were some among the English who were mad enough to wish to board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But so soon as Frobisher, who was the hero of the day, had extricated
+ himself from his difficulty, the Lord-Admiral&mdash;having no intention of
+ risking the existence of his fleet, and with it perhaps of the English
+ crown, upon the hazard of a single battle, and having been himself
+ somewhat damaged in the fight&mdash;gave the signal for retreat, and
+ caused the Ark-Royal to be towed out of action. Thus the Spaniards were
+ frustrated of their hopes, and the English; having inflicted much.
+ punishment at comparatively small loss to themselves, again stood off to
+ windward; and the Armada continued its indolent course along the cliffs of
+ Freshwater and Blackgang.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Friday; 5th August, the English, having received men and munitions from
+ shore, pursued their antagonists at a moderate distance; and the
+ Lord-Admiral; profiting by the pause&mdash;for, it was almost a flat calm&mdash;sent
+ for Martin Frobisher, John Hawkins, Roger Townsend, Lord Thomas Howard,
+ son of the Duke of Norfolk, and Lord Edmund Sheffield; and on the deck of
+ the Royal Ark conferred the honour of knighthood on each for his gallantry
+ in the action of the previous day. Medina Sidonia, on his part, was again
+ despatching messenger after messenger to the Duke of Parma, asking for
+ small shot, pilots, and forty fly-boats, with which to pursue the teasing
+ English clippers. The Catholic Armada, he said, being so large and heavy,
+ was quite in the power of its adversaries, who could assault, retreat,
+ fight, or leave off fighting, while he had nothing for it but to proceed,
+ as expeditiously as might be; to his rendezvous in Calais roads.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Inquisitors enough; but there were no light vessels in The Armada
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. 1588, Part 2.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Both Fleets off Calais&mdash;A Night of Anxiety&mdash;Project of Howard and
+ Winter&mdash;Impatience of the Spaniards&mdash;Fire-Ships sent against the
+ Armada&mdash;A great Galeasse disabled&mdash;Attacked and captured by English
+ Boats&mdash;General Engagement of both Fleets&mdash;Loss of several Spanish
+ Ships&mdash;Armada flies, followed by the English&mdash;English insufficiently
+ provided&mdash;Are obliged to relinquish the Chase&mdash;A great Storm
+ disperses the Armada&mdash;Great Energy of Parma Made fruitless by
+ Philip's Dulness&mdash;England readier at Sea than on Shore&mdash;The
+ Lieutenant&mdash;General's Complaints&mdash;His Quarrels with Norris and
+ Williams&mdash;Harsh Statements as to the English Troops&mdash;Want of
+ Organization in England&mdash;Royal Parsimony and Delay&mdash;Quarrels of
+ English Admirals&mdash;England's narrow Escape from great Peril&mdash;Various
+ Rumours as to the Armada's Fate&mdash;Philip for a long Time in Doubt&mdash;He
+ believes himself victorious&mdash;Is tranquil when undeceived.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And in Calais roads the great fleet&mdash;sailing slowly all next day in
+ company with the English, without a shot being fired on either side&mdash;at
+ last dropped anchor on Saturday afternoon, August 6th.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here then the Invincible Armada had arrived at its appointed
+ resting-place. Here the great junction&mdash;of Medina Sidonia with the
+ Duke of Parma was to be effected; and now at last the curtain was to rise
+ upon the last act of the great drama so slowly and elaborately prepared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That Saturday afternoon, Lord Henry Seymour and his squadron of sixteen
+ lay between Dungeness and Folkestone; waiting the approach of the two
+ fleets. He spoke several-coasting vessels coming from the west; but they
+ could give him no information&mdash;strange to say&mdash;either of the
+ Spaniards or, of his own countrymen,&mdash;Seymour; having hardly three
+ days' provision in his fleet, thought that there might be time to take in
+ supplies; and so bore into the Downs. Hardly had he been there half an
+ hour; when a pinnace arrived from the Lord-Admiral; with orders for Lord
+ Henry's squadron to hold itself in readiness. There was no longer time for
+ victualling, and very soon afterwards the order was given to make sail and
+ bear for the French coast. The wind was however so light; that the whole
+ day was spent before Seymour with his ships could cross the channel. At
+ last, towards seven in the evening; he saw the great Spanish Armada, drawn
+ up in a half-moon, and riding at anchor&mdash;the ships very near each
+ other&mdash;a little to the eastward of Calais, and very near the shore.
+ The English, under Howard Drake, Frobisher, and Hawkins, were slowly
+ following, and&mdash;so soon as Lord Henry, arriving from the opposite
+ shore; had made his junction with them&mdash;the whole combined fleet
+ dropped anchor likewise very near Calais, and within one mile and a half
+ of the Spaniards. That invincible force had at last almost reached its
+ destination. It was now to receive the cooperation of the great Farnese,
+ at the head of an army of veterans, disciplined on a hundred
+ battle-fields, confident from countless victories, and arrayed, as they
+ had been with ostentatious splendour, to follow the most brilliant general
+ in Christendom on his triumphal march into the capital of England. The
+ long-threatened invasion was no longer an idle figment of politicians,
+ maliciously spread abroad to poison men's minds as to the intentions of a
+ long-enduring but magnanimous, and on the whole friendly sovereign. The
+ mask had been at last thrown down, and the mild accents of Philip's
+ diplomatists and their English dupes, interchanging protocols so
+ decorously month after month on the sands of Bourbourg, had been drowned
+ by the peremptory voice of English and Spanish artillery, suddenly
+ breaking in upon their placid conferences. It had now become
+ supererogatory to ask for Alexander's word of honour whether he had, ever
+ heard of Cardinal Allan's pamphlet, or whether his master contemplated
+ hostilities against Queen Elizabeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never, since England was England, had such a sight been seen as now
+ revealed itself in those narrow straits between Dover and Calais. Along
+ that long, low, sandy shore, and quite within the range of the Calais
+ fortifications, one hundred and thirty Spanish ships&mdash;the greater
+ number of them the largest and most heavily armed in the world lay face to
+ face, and scarcely out of cannon-shot, with one hundred and fifty English
+ sloops and frigates, the strongest and swiftest that the island could
+ furnish, and commanded by men whose exploits had rung through the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farther along the coast, invisible, but known to be performing a post
+ perilous and vital service, was a squadron of Dutch vessels of all sizes,
+ lining both the inner and outer edges of the sandbanks off the Flemish
+ coasts, and swarming in all the estuaries and inlets of that intricate and
+ dangerous cruising-ground between Dunkerk and Walcheren. Those fleets of
+ Holland and Zeeland, numbering some one hundred and fifty galleons,
+ sloops, and fly-boats, under Warmond, Nassau, Van der Does, de Moor, and
+ Rosendael, lay patiently blockading every possible egress from Newport, or
+ Gravelines; or Sluys, or Flushing, or Dunkerk, and longing to grapple with
+ the Duke of Parma, so soon as his fleet of gunboats and hoys, packed with
+ his Spanish and Italian veterans, should venture to set forth upon the sea
+ for their long-prepared exploit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a pompous spectacle, that midsummer night, upon those narrow seas.
+ The moon, which was at the full, was rising calmly upon a scene of anxious
+ expectation. Would she not be looking, by the morrow's night, upon a
+ subjugated England, a re-enslaved Holland&mdash;upon the downfall of civil
+ and religious liberty? Those ships of Spain, which lay there with their
+ banners waving in the moonlight, discharging salvoes of anticipated
+ triumph and filling the air with strains of insolent music; would they
+ not, by daybreak, be moving straight to their purpose, bearing the
+ conquerors of the world to the scene of their cherished hopes?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That English fleet, too, which rode there at anchor, so anxiously on the
+ watch&mdash;would that swarm of, nimble, lightly-handled, but slender
+ vessels,&mdash;which had held their own hitherto in hurried and desultory
+ skirmishes&mdash;be able to cope with their great antagonist now that the
+ moment had arrived for the death grapple? Would not Howard, Drake,
+ Frobisher, Seymour, Winter, and Hawkins, be swept out of the straits at
+ last, yielding an open passage to Medina, Oquendo, Recalde, and Farnese?
+ Would those Hollanders and Zeelanders, cruising so vigilantly among their
+ treacherous shallows, dare to maintain their post, now that the terrible
+ 'Holofernese,' with his invincible legions, was resolved to come forth?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So soon as he had cast anchor, Howard despatched a pinnace to the
+ Vanguard, with a message to Winter to come on board the flag-ship. When
+ Sir William reached the Ark, it was already nine in the evening. He was
+ anxiously consulted by the Lord-Admiral as to the course now to be taken.
+ Hitherto the English had been teasing and perplexing an enemy, on the
+ retreat, as it were, by the nature of his instructions. Although anxious
+ to give battle, the Spaniard was forbidden to descend upon the coast until
+ after his junction with Parma. So the English had played a comparatively
+ easy game, hanging upon their enemy's skirts, maltreating him as they
+ doubled about him, cannonading him from a distance, and slipping out of
+ his reach at their pleasure. But he was now to be met face to face, and
+ the fate of the two free commonwealths of the world was upon the issue of
+ the struggle, which could no longer be deferred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Winter, standing side by aide with the Lord-Admiral on the deck of the
+ little Ark-Royal, gazed for the first time on those enormous galleons and
+ galleys with which his companion, was already sufficiently familiar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Considering their hugeness," said he, "twill not be possible to remove
+ them but by a device."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then remembering, in a lucky moment, something that he had heard four
+ years before of the fire ships sent by the Antwerpers against Parma's
+ bridge&mdash;the inventor of which, the Italian Gianibelli, was at that
+ very moment constructing fortifications on the Thames to assist the
+ English against his old enemy Farnese&mdash;Winter suggested that some
+ stratagem of the same kind should be attempted against the Invincible
+ Armada. There was no time nor opportunity to prepare such submarine
+ volcanoes as had been employed on that memorable occasion; but burning
+ ships at least might be sent among the fleet. Some damage would doubtless
+ be thus inflicted by the fire, and perhaps a panic, suggested by the
+ memories of Antwerp and by the knowledge that the famous Mantuan wizard
+ was then a resident of England, would be still more effective. In Winter's
+ opinion, the Armada might at least be compelled to slip its cables, and be
+ thrown into some confusion if the project were fairly carried out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Howard approved of the device, and determined to hold, next morning, a
+ council of war for arranging the details of its execution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the two sat in the cabin, conversing thus earnestly, there had well
+ nigh been a serious misfortune. The ship, White Bear, of 1000 tons
+ burthen, and three others of the English fleet, all tangled together, came
+ drifting with the tide against the Ark. There were many yards carried
+ away; much tackle spoiled, and for a time there was great danger; in the
+ opinion of Winter, that some of the very best ships in the fleet would be
+ crippled and quite destroyed on the eve of a general engagement. By
+ alacrity and good handling, however, the ships were separated, and the
+ ill-consequences of an accident&mdash;such as had already proved fatal to
+ several Spanish vessels&mdash;were fortunately averted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day, Sunday, 7th August, the two great fleets were still lying but a
+ mile and a half apart, calmly gazing at each other, and rising and falling
+ at their anchors as idly as if some vast summer regatta were the only
+ purpose of that great assemblage of shipping. Nothing as yet was heard of
+ Farnese. Thus far, at least, the Hollanders had held him at bay, and there
+ was still breathing-time before the catastrophe. So Howard hung out his
+ signal for council early in the morning, and very soon after Drake and
+ Hawkins, Seymour, Winter, and the rest, were gravely consulting in his
+ cabin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was decided that Winter's suggestion should be acted upon, and Sir
+ Henry Palmer was immediately despatched in a pinnace to Dover, to bring
+ off a number of old vessels fit to be fired, together with a supply of
+ light wood, tar, rosin, sulphur, and other combustibles, most adapted to
+ the purpose.' But as time wore away, it became obviously impossible for
+ Palmer to return that night, and it was determined to make the most of
+ what could be collected in the fleet itself. Otherwise it was to be feared
+ that the opportunity might be for ever lost. Parma, crushing all
+ opposition, might suddenly appear at any moment upon the channel; and the
+ whole Spanish Armada, placing itself between him and his enemies, would
+ engage the English and Dutch fleets, and cover his passage to Dover. It
+ would then be too late to think of the burning ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, upon the decks of the Armada, there was an impatience
+ that night which increased every hour. The governor of Calais; M. de
+ Gourdon, had sent his nephew on board the flag-ship of Medina Sidonia,
+ with courteous salutations, professions of friendship, and bountiful
+ refreshments. There was no fear&mdash;now that Mucio was for the time in
+ the ascendency&mdash;that the schemes of Philip would be interfered with
+ by France. The governor, had, however, sent serious warning of&mdash;the
+ dangerous position in which the Armada had placed itself. He was quite
+ right. Calais roads were no safe anchorage for huge vessels like those of
+ Spain and Portugal; for the tides and cross-currents to which they were
+ exposed were most treacherous. It was calm enough at the moment, but a
+ westerly gale might, in a few hours, drive the whole fleet hopelessly
+ among the sand-banks of the dangerous Flemish coast. Moreover, the Duke,
+ although tolerably well furnished with charts and pilots for the English
+ coast, was comparatively unprovided against the dangers which might beset
+ him off Dunkerk, Newport, and Flushing. He had sent messengers, day after
+ day, to Farnese, begging for assistance of various kinds, but, above all,
+ imploring his instant presence on the field of action. It was the time
+ and, place for Alexander to assume the chief command. The Armada was ready
+ to make front against the English fleet on the left, while on the right,
+ the Duke, thus protected, might proceed across the channel and take
+ possession of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the impatience of the soldiers and sailors on board the fleet was
+ equal to that of their commanders. There was London almost before their
+ eyes&mdash;a huge mass of treasure, richer and more accessible than those
+ mines beyond the Atlantic which had so often rewarded Spanish chivalry
+ with fabulous wealth. And there were men in those galleons who remembered
+ the sack of Antwerp, eleven years before&mdash;men who could tell, from
+ personal experience, how helpless was a great commercial city, when once
+ in the clutch of disciplined brigands&mdash;men who, in that dread 'fury
+ of Antwerp,' had enriched themselves in an hour with the accumulations of
+ a merchant's life-time, and who had slain fathers and mothers, sons and
+ daughters, brides and bridegrooms, before each others' eyes, until the
+ number of inhabitants butchered in the blazing streets rose to many
+ thousands; and the plunder from palaces and warehouses was counted by
+ millions; before the sun had set on the 'great fury.' Those Spaniards, and
+ Italians, and Walloons, were now thirsting for more gold, for more blood;
+ and as the capital of England was even more wealthy and far more
+ defenceless than the commercial metropolis of the Netherlands had been, so
+ it was resolved that the London 'fury' should be more thorough and more
+ productive than the 'fury' of Antwerp, at the memory&mdash;of which the
+ world still shuddered. And these professional soldiers had been taught to
+ consider the English as a pacific, delicate, effeminate race, dependent on
+ good living, without experience of war, quickly fatigued and discouraged,
+ and even more easily to be plundered and butchered than were the excellent
+ burghers of Antwerp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so these southern conquerors looked down from their great galleons and
+ galeasses upon the English vessels. More than three quarters of them were
+ merchantmen. There was no comparison whatever between the relative
+ strength of the fleets. In number they were about equal being each from
+ one hundred and thirty to one hundred and fifty strong&mdash;but the
+ Spaniards had twice the tonnage of the English, four times the artillery,
+ and nearly three times the number of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where was Farnese? Most impatiently the Golden Duke paced the deck of the
+ Saint Martin. Most eagerly were thousands of eyes strained towards the
+ eastern horizon to catch the first glimpse of Parma's flotilla. But the
+ day wore on to its close, and still the same inexplicable and mysterious
+ silence prevailed. There was utter solitude on the waters in the direction
+ of Gravelines and Dunkerk&mdash;not a sail upon the sea in the quarter
+ where bustle and activity had been most expected. The mystery was
+ profound, for it had never entered the head of any man in the Armada that
+ Alexander could not come out when he chose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now to impatience succeeded suspicion and indignation; and there were
+ curses upon sluggishness and upon treachery. For in the horrible
+ atmosphere of duplicity, in which all Spaniards and Italians of that epoch
+ lived, every man: suspected his brother, and already Medina Sidonia
+ suspected Farnese of playing him false. There were whispers of collusion
+ between the Duke and the English commissioners at Bourbourg. There were
+ hints that Alexander was playing his own game, that he meant to divide the
+ sovereignty of the Netherlands with the heretic Elizabeth, to desert his
+ great trust, and to effect, if possible, the destruction of his master's
+ Armada, and the downfall of his master's sovereignty in the north. Men
+ told each other, too, of a vague rumour, concerning which Alexander might
+ have received information, and in which many believed, that Medina Sidonia
+ was the bearer of secret orders to throw Farnese into bondage, so soon as
+ he should appear, to send him a disgraced captive back to Spain for
+ punishment, and to place the baton of command in the hand of the Duke of
+ Pastrana, Philip's bastard by the Eboli. Thus, in the absence of
+ Alexander, all was suspense and suspicion. It seemed possible that
+ disaster instead of triumph was in store for them through the treachery of
+ the commander-in-chief. Four and twenty hours and more, they had been
+ lying in that dangerous roadstead, and although the weather had been calm
+ and the sea tranquil, there seemed something brooding in the atmosphere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the twilight deepened, the moon became totally obscured, dark
+ cloud-masses spread over the heavens, the sea grew black, distant thunder
+ rolled, and the sob of an approaching tempest became distinctly audible.
+ Such indications of a westerly gale, were not encouraging to those
+ cumbrous vessels, with the treacherous quicksands of Flanders under their
+ lee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At an hour past midnight, it was so dark that it was difficult for the
+ most practiced eye to pierce far into the gloom. But a faint drip of oars
+ now struck the ears of the Spaniards as they watched from the decks. A few
+ moments afterwards the sea became, suddenly luminous, and six flaming
+ vessels appeared at a slight distance, bearing steadily down upon them
+ before the wind and tide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were men in the Armada who had been at the siege of Antwerp only
+ three years before. They remembered with horror the devil-ships of
+ Gianibelli, those floating volcanoes, which had seemed to rend earth and
+ ocean, whose explosion had laid so many thousands of soldiers dead at a
+ blow, and which had shattered the bridge and floating forts of Farnese, as
+ though they had been toys of glass. They knew, too, that the famous
+ engineer was at that moment in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a moment one of those horrible panics, which spread with such
+ contagious rapidity among large bodies of men, seized upon the Spaniards.
+ There was a yell throughout the fleet&mdash;"the fire-ships of Antwerp,
+ the fire-ships of Antwerp!" and in an instant every cable was cut, and
+ frantic attempts were made by each galleon and galeasse to escape what
+ seemed imminent destruction. The confusion was beyond description. Four or
+ five of the largest ships became entangled with each other. Two others
+ were set on fire by the flaming&mdash;vessels, and were consumed. Medina
+ Sidonia, who had been warned, even, before his departure from Spain, that
+ some such artifice would probably be attempted, and who had even, early
+ that morning, sent out a party of sailors in a pinnace to search for
+ indications of the scheme, was not surprised or dismayed. He gave orders&mdash;as
+ well as might be that every ship, after the danger should be passed, was
+ to return to its post, and, await his further orders. But it was useless,
+ in that moment of unreasonable panic to issue commands. The despised
+ Mantuan, who had met with so many rebuffs at Philip's court, and who&mdash;owing
+ to official incredulity had been but partially successful in his
+ magnificent enterprise at Antwerp, had now; by the mere terror of his
+ name, inflicted more damage on Philip's Armada than had hitherto been
+ accomplished by Howard and Drake, Hawkins and Frobisher, combined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So long as night and darkness lasted, the confusion and uproar continued.
+ When the Monday morning dawned, several of the Spanish vessels lay
+ disabled, while the rest of the fleet was seen at a distance of two
+ leagues from Calais, driving towards the Flemish coast. The threatened
+ gale had not yet begun to blow, but there were fresh squalls from the
+ W.S.W., which, to such awkward sailers as the Spanish vessels; were
+ difficult to contend with. On the other hand, the English fleet were all
+ astir; and ready to pursue the Spaniards, now rapidly drifting into the
+ North Sea. In the immediate neighbourhood of Calais, the flagship of the
+ squadron of galeasses, commanded by Don Hugo de Moncada, was discovered
+ using her foresail and oars, and endeavouring to enter the harbour. She
+ had been damaged by collision with the St. John of Sicily and other ships,
+ during the night's panic, and had her rudder quite torn away. She was the
+ largest and most splendid vessel in the Armada&mdash;the show-ship of the
+ fleet,&mdash;"the very glory and stay of the Spanish navy," and during the
+ previous two days she had been visited and admired by great numbers of
+ Frenchmen from the shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Admiral Howard bore dawn upon her at once, but as she was already in
+ shallow water, and was rowing steadily towards the town, he saw that the
+ Ark could not follow with safety. So he sent his long-boat to cut her out,
+ manned with fifty or sixty volunteers, most of them "as valiant in courage
+ as gentle in birth"&mdash;as a partaker in the adventure declared. The
+ Margaret and Joan of London, also following in pursuit, ran herself
+ aground, but the master despatched his pinnace with a body of musketeers,
+ to aid in the capture of the galeasse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That huge vessel failed to enter the harbour, and stuck fast upon the bar.
+ There was much dismay on board, but Don Hugo prepared resolutely to defend
+ himself. The quays of Calais and the line of the French shore were lined
+ with thousands of eager spectators, as the two boats-rowing steadily
+ toward a galeasse, which carried forty brass pieces of artillery, and was
+ manned with three hundred soldiers and four hundred and fifty slaves&mdash;seemed
+ rushing upon their own destruction. Of these daring Englishmen, patricians
+ and plebeians together, in two open pinnaces, there were not more than one
+ hundred in number, all told. They soon laid themselves close to the
+ Capitana, far below her lofty sides, and called on Don Hugo to surrender.
+ The answer was, a smile of derision from the haughty Spaniard, as he
+ looked down upon them from what seemed an inaccessible height. Then one
+ Wilton, coxswain of the Delight; of Winter's squadron, clambered up to the
+ enemy's deck and fell dead the same instant. Then the English volunteers
+ opened a volley upon the Spaniards; "They seemed safely ensconced in their
+ ships," said bold Dick Tomson, of the Margaret and Joan, "while we in our
+ open pinnaces, and far under them, had nothing to shroud and cover us."
+ Moreover the numbers were, seven hundred and fifty to one hundred. But,
+ the Spaniards, still quite disconcerted by the events of the preceding
+ night, seemed under a spell. Otherwise it would have been an easy matter
+ for the great galeasse to annihilate such puny antagonists in a very short
+ space of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English pelted the Spaniards quite cheerfully, however, with arquebus
+ shot, whenever they showed themselves above the bulwarks, picked off a
+ considerable number, and sustained a rather severe loss themselves,
+ Lieutenant Preston of the Ark-Royal, among others, being dangerously
+ wounded. "We had a pretty skirmish for half-an-hour," said Tomson. At last
+ Don Hugo de Moncada, furious at the inefficiency of his men, and leading
+ them forward in person, fell back on his deck with a bullet through both
+ eyes. The panic was instantaneous, for, meantime, several other English
+ boats&mdash;some with eight, ten; or twelve men on board&mdash;were seen
+ pulling&mdash;towards the galeasse; while the dismayed soldiers at once
+ leaped overboard on the land side, and attempted to escape by swimming and
+ wading to the shore. Some of them succeeded, but the greater number were
+ drowned. The few who remained&mdash;not more, than twenty in all&mdash;hoisted
+ two handkerchiefs upon two rapiers as a signal of truce. The English,
+ accepting it as a signal of defeat; scrambled with great difficulty up the
+ lofty sides of the Capitana, and, for an hour and a half, occupied
+ themselves most agreeably in plundering the ship and in liberating the
+ slaves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was their intention, with the flood-tide, to get the vessel off, as she
+ was but slightly damaged, and of very great value. But a serious obstacle
+ arose to this arrangement. For presently a boat came along-side, with
+ young M. de Gourdon and another French captain, and hailed the galeasse.
+ There was nobody on board who could speak French but Richard Tomson. So
+ Richard returned the hail, and asked their business. They said they came
+ from the governor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And what is the&mdash;governor's pleasure?" asked Tomson, when they had
+ come up the side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The governor has stood and beheld your fight, and rejoiced in your
+ victory," was the reply; "and he says that for your prowess and manhood
+ you well deserve the pillage of the galeasse. He requires and commands
+ you, however, not to attempt carrying off either the ship or its ordnance;
+ for she lies a-ground under the battery of his castle, and within his
+ jurisdiction, and does of right appertain to him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This seemed hard upon the hundred volunteers, who, in their two open
+ boats, had so manfully carried a ship of 1200 tons, 40 guns, and 750 men;
+ but Richard answered diplomatically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We thank M. de Gourdon," said he, "for granting the pillage to mariners
+ and soldiers who had fought for it, and we acknowledge that without his
+ good-will we cannot carry away anything we have got, for the ship lies on
+ ground directly under his batteries and bulwarks. Concerning the ship and
+ ordnance, we pray that he would send a pinnace to my Lord Admiral Howard,
+ who is here in person hard by, from whom he will have an honourable and
+ friendly answer, which we shall all-obey."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this&mdash;the French officers, being apparently content, were about
+ to depart, and it is not impossible that the soft answer might have
+ obtained the galeasse and the ordnance, notwithstanding the arrangement
+ which Philip II. had made with his excellent friend Henry III. for aid and
+ comfort to Spanish vessels in French ports. Unluckily, however, the
+ inclination for plunder being rife that morning, some of the Englishmen
+ hustled their French visitors, plundered them of their rings and jewels,
+ as if they had been enemies, and then permitted them to depart. They rowed
+ off to the shore, vowing vengeance, and within a few minutes after their
+ return the battery of the fort was opened upon the English, and they were
+ compelled to make their escape as they could with the plunder already
+ secured, leaving the galeasse in the possession of M. de Gourdon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This adventure being terminated, and the pinnaces having returned to the
+ fleet, the Lord-Admiral, who had been lying off and on, now bore away with
+ all his force in pursuit of the Spaniards. The Invincible Armada, already
+ sorely crippled, was standing N.N.E. directly before a fresh
+ topsail-breeze from the S.S.W. The English came up with them soon after
+ nine o'clock A.M. off Gravelines, and found them sailing in a half-moon,
+ the admiral and vice-admiral in the centre, and the flanks protected by
+ the three remaining galeasses and by the great galleons of Portugal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing the enemy approaching, Medina Sidonia ordered his whole fleet to
+ luff to the wind, and prepare for action. The wind shifting a few points,
+ was now at W.N.W., so that the English had both the weather-gage and the
+ tide in their favour. A general combat began at about ten, and it was soon
+ obvious to the Spaniards that their adversaries were intending warm work.
+ Sir Francis Drake in the Revenge, followed by, Frobisher in the Triumph,
+ Hawkins in the Victory, and some smaller vessels, made the first attack
+ upon the Spanish flagships. Lord Henry in the Rainbow, Sir Henry Palmer in
+ the Antelope, and others, engaged with three of the largest galleons of
+ the Armada, while Sir William Winter in the Vanguard, supported by most of
+ his squadron, charged the starboard wing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The portion of the fleet thus assaulted fell back into the main body. Four
+ of the ships ran foul of each other, and Winter, driving into their
+ centre, found himself within musket-shot of many of their most formidable'
+ ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I tell you, on the credit of a poor gentleman," he said, "that there were
+ five hundred discharges of demi-cannon, culverin, and demi-culverin, from
+ the Vanguard; and when I was farthest off in firing my pieces, I was not
+ out of shot of their harquebus, and most time within speech, one of
+ another."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The battle lasted six hours long, hot and furious; for now there was no
+ excuse for retreat on the part of the Spaniards, but, on the contrary, it
+ was the intention of the Captain-General to return to his station off
+ Calais, if it were within his power. Nevertheless the English still
+ partially maintained the tactics which had proved so successful, and
+ resolutely refused the fierce attempts of the Spaniards to lay themselves
+ along-side. Keeping within musket-range, the well-disciplined English
+ mariners poured broadside after broadside against the towering ships of
+ the Armada, which afforded so easy a mark; while the Spaniards, on their
+ part, found it impossible, while wasting incredible quantities of powder
+ and shot, to inflict any severe damage on their enemies. Throughout the
+ action, not an English ship was destroyed, and not a hundred men were
+ killed. On the other hand, all the best ships of the Spaniards were
+ riddled through and through, and with masts and yards shattered, sails and
+ rigging torn to shreds, and a north-went wind still drifting them towards
+ the fatal sand-batiks of Holland, they, laboured heavily in a chopping
+ sea, firing wildly, and receiving tremendous punishment at the hands of
+ Howard Drake, Seymour, Winter, and their followers. Not even master-gunner
+ Thomas could complain that day of "blind exercise" on the part of the
+ English, with "little harm done" to the enemy. There was scarcely a ship
+ in the Armada that did not suffer severely; for nearly all were engaged in
+ that memorable action off the sands of Gravelines. The Captain-General
+ himself, Admiral Recalde, Alonzo de Leyva, Oquendo, Diego Flores de
+ Valdez, Bertendona, Don Francisco de Toledo, Don Diego de Pimentel, Telles
+ Enriquez, Alonzo de Luzon, Garibay, with most of the great galleons and
+ galeasses, were in the thickest of the fight, and one after the other each
+ of those huge ships was disabled. Three sank before the fight was over,
+ many others were soon drifting helpless wrecks towards a hostile shore,
+ and, before five o'clock, in the afternoon, at least sixteen of their best
+ ships had been sacrificed, and from four to five thousand soldiers killed.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ["God hath mightily preserved her Majesty's forces with the least
+ losses that ever hath been heard of, being within the compass of so
+ great volleys of shot, both small and great. I verily believe there
+ is not threescore men lost of her Majesty's forces." Captain J.
+ Fenner to Walsingham, 4/14 Aug. 1588. (S. P. Office MS.)]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Nearly all the largest vessels of the Armada, therefore, having, been
+ disabled or damaged&mdash;according to a Spanish eye-witness&mdash;and all
+ their small shot exhausted, Medina Sidonia reluctantly gave orders to
+ retreat. The Captain-General was a bad sailor; but he was, a chivalrous
+ Spaniard of ancient Gothic blood, and he felt deep mortification at the
+ plight of his invincible fleet, together with undisguised: resentment
+ against Alexander Farnese, through whose treachery and incapacity, he
+ considered. the great Catholic cause to have been, so foully sacrificed.
+ Crippled, maltreated, and diminished in number, as were his ships; he
+ would have still faced, the enemy, but the winds and currents were fast
+ driving him on, a lee-shore, and the pilots, one and all, assured him that
+ it would be inevitable destruction to remain. After a slight and very
+ ineffectual attempt to rescue Don Diego de Pimentel in the St. Matthew&mdash;who
+ refused to leave his disabled ship&mdash;and Don Francisco de Toledo;
+ whose great galleon, the St. Philip, was fast driving, a helpless wreck,
+ towards Zeeland, the Armada bore away N.N.E. into the open sea, leaving
+ those, who could not follow, to their fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The St. Matthew, in a sinking condition, hailed a Dutch fisherman, who was
+ offered a gold chain to pilot her into Newport. But the fisherman, being a
+ patriot; steered her close to the Holland fleet, where she was immediately
+ assaulted by Admiral Van der Does, to whom, after a two hours' bloody
+ fight, she struck her flag. Don Diego, marshal of the camp to the famous
+ legion of Sicily, brother, of the Marquis of Tavera, nephew of the Viceroy
+ of Sicily, uncle to the Viceroy of Naples, and numbering as many titles,
+ dignities; and high affinities as could be expected of a grandee of the
+ first class, was taken, with his officers, to the Hague. "I was the
+ means," said Captain Borlase, "that the best sort were saved, and the rest
+ were cast overboard and slain at our entry. He, fought with us two hours;
+ and hurt divers of our men, but at, last yielded."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Van der Does, his captor; presented the banner; of the Saint Matthew
+ to the great church of Leyden, where&mdash;such was its prodigious length&mdash;it
+ hung; from floor to ceiling without being entirely unrolled; and there
+ hung, from generation to generation; a worthy companion to the Spanish
+ flags which had been left behind when Valdez abandoned the siege of that
+ heroic city fifteen years before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The galleon St. Philip, one of the four largest ships in the Armada,
+ dismasted and foundering; drifted towards Newport, where camp-marshal Don
+ Francisco de Toledo hoped in, vain for succour. La Motte made a feeble
+ attempt at rescue, but some vessels from the Holland fleet, being much
+ more active, seized the unfortunate galleon, and carried her into
+ Flushing. The captors found forty-eight brass cannon and other things of
+ value on board, but there were some casks of Ribadavia wine which was more
+ fatal to her enemies than those pieces of artillery had proved. For while
+ the rebels were refreshing themselves, after the fatigues of the capture,
+ with large draughts of that famous vintage, the St. Philip, which had been
+ bored through and through with English shot, and had been rapidly filling
+ with water, gave a sudden lurch, and went down in a moment, carrying with
+ her to the bottom three hundred of those convivial Hollanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A large Biscay galleon, too, of Recalde's squadron, much disabled in
+ action, and now, like many others, unable to follow the Armada, was
+ summoned by Captain Cross of the Hope, 48 guns, to surrender. Although
+ foundering, she resisted, and refused to strike her flag. One of her
+ officers attempted to haul down her colours, and was run through the body
+ by the captain, who, in his turn, was struck dead by a brother of the
+ officer thus slain. In the midst of this quarrel the ship went down with
+ all her crew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six hours and more, from ten till nearly five, the fight had lasted&mdash;a
+ most cruel battle, as the Spaniard declared. There were men in the Armada
+ who had served in the action of Lepanto, and who declared that famous
+ encounter to have been far surpassed in severity and spirit by this fight
+ off Gravelines. "Surely every man in our fleet did well," said Winter,
+ "and the slaughter the enemy received was great." Nor would the Spaniards
+ have escaped even worse punishment, had not, most unfortunately, the
+ penurious policy of the Queen's government rendered her ships useless at
+ last, even in this supreme moment. They never ceased cannonading the
+ discomfited enemy until the ammunition was exhausted. "When the cartridges
+ were all spent," said Winter, "and the munitions in some vessels gone
+ altogether, we ceased fighting, but followed the enemy, who still kept
+ away." And the enemy&mdash;although still numerous, and seeming strong
+ enough, if properly handled, to destroy the whole English fleet&mdash;fled
+ before them. There remained more than fifty Spanish vessels, above six
+ hundred tons in size, besides sixty hulks and other vessels of less
+ account; while in the whole English navy were but thirteen ships of or
+ above that burthen. "Their force is wonderful great and strong," said
+ Howard, "but we pluck their feathers by little and little."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Medina Sidonia had now satisfied himself that he should never succeed
+ in boarding those hard-fighting and swift-sailing craft, while, meantime,
+ the horrible panic of Sunday night and the succession of fights throughout
+ the following day, had completely disorganized his followers. Crippled,
+ riddled, shorn, but still numerous, and by no means entirely vanquished,
+ the Armada was flying with a gentle breeze before an enemy who, to save
+ his existence; could not have fired a broadside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Though our powder and shot was well nigh spent," said the Lord-Admiral,
+ "we put on a brag countenance and gave them chase, as though we had wanted
+ nothing." And the brag countenance was successful, for that "one day's
+ service had much appalled the enemy" as Drake observed; and still the
+ Spaniards fled with a freshening gale all through the Monday night. "A
+ thing greatly to be regarded," said Fenner, of the Nonpariel, "is that
+ that the Almighty had stricken them with a wonderful fear. I have hardly,
+ seen any of their companies succoured of the extremities which befell them
+ after their fights, but they have been left, at utter ruin, while they
+ bear as much sail as ever they possibly can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Tuesday morning, 9th August, the English ships were off the isle of
+ Walcheren, at a safe distance from the shore. "The wind is hanging
+ westerly," said Richard Tomson, of the Margaret and Joan, "and we drive
+ our enemies apace, much marvelling in what port they will direct
+ themselves. Those that are left alive are so weak and heartless that they
+ could be well content to lose all charges and to be at home, both rich and
+ poor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In my conscience," said Sir William Winter, "I think the Duke would give
+ his dukedom to be in Spain again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English ships, one-hundred and four in number, being that morning
+ half-a-league to windward, the Duke gave orders for the whole Armada to
+ lay to and, await their approach. But the English had no disposition to
+ engage, for at, that moment the instantaneous destruction of their enemies
+ seemed inevitable. Ill-managed, panic-struck, staggering before their
+ foes, the Spanish fleet was now close upon the fatal sands of Zeeland.
+ Already there were but six and a-half fathoms of water, rapidly shoaling
+ under their keels, and the pilots told Medina that all were irretrievably
+ lost, for the freshening north-welter was driving them steadily upon the
+ banks. The English, easily escaping the danger, hauled their wind, and
+ paused to see the ruin of the proud Armada accomplished before their eyes.
+ Nothing but a change of wind at the instant could save them from
+ perdition. There was a breathless shudder of suspense, and then there came
+ the change. Just as the foremost ships were about to ground on the Ooster
+ Zand, the wind suddenly veered to the south-west, and the Spanish ships
+ quickly squaring their sails to the new impulse, stood out once more into
+ the open sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All that day the galleons and galeasses, under all the canvas which they
+ dared to spread, continued their flight before the south-westerly breeze,
+ and still the Lord-Admiral, maintaining the brag countenance, followed, at
+ an easy distance, the retreating foe. At 4 p. m., Howard fired a signal
+ gun, and ran up a flag of council. Winter could not go, for he had been
+ wounded in action, but Seymour and Drake, Hawkins, Frobisher, and the rest
+ were present, and it was decided that Lord Henry should return,
+ accompanied by Winter and the rest of the inner, squadron, to guard the
+ Thames mouth against any attempt of the Duke of Parma, while the Lord
+ Admiral and the rest of the navy should continue the pursuit of the
+ Armada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very wroth was Lord Henry at being deprived of his share in the chase.
+ "The Lord-Admiral was altogether desirous to have me strengthen him," said
+ he, "and having done so to the utmost of my good-will and the venture of
+ my life, and to the distressing of the Spaniards, which was thoroughly
+ done on the Monday last, I now find his Lordship jealous and loath to take
+ part of the honour which is to come. So he has used his authority to
+ command me to look to our English coast, threatened by the Duke of Parma.
+ I pray God my Lord Admiral do not find the lack of the Rainbow and her
+ companions, for I protest before God I vowed I would be as near or nearer
+ with my little ship to encounter our enemies as any of the greatest ships
+ in both armies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no insubordination, however, and Seymour's squadron; at twilight
+ of Tuesday evening, August 9th&mdash;according to orders, so that the
+ enemy might not see their departure&mdash;bore away for Margate. But
+ although Winter and Seymour were much disappointed at their enforced
+ return, there was less enthusiasm among the sailors of the fleet. Pursuing
+ the Spaniards without powder or fire, and without beef and bread to eat,
+ was not thought amusing by the English crews. Howard had not three days'
+ supply of food in his lockers, and Seymour and his squadron had not food
+ for one day. Accordingly, when Seymour and Winter took their departure,
+ "they had much ado," so Winter said; "with the staying of many ships that
+ would have returned with them, besides their own company." Had the
+ Spaniards; instead of being panic-struck, but turned on their pursuers,
+ what might have been the result of a conflict with starving and unarmed
+ men?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Howard, Drake, and Frobisher, with the rest of the fleet, followed the
+ Armada through the North Sea from Tuesday night (9th August) till Friday
+ (the 12th), and still, the strong southwester swept the Spaniards before
+ them, uncertain whether to seek refuge, food, water, and room to repair
+ damages, in the realms of the treacherous King of Scots, or on the
+ iron-bound coasts of Norway. Medina Sidonia had however quite abandoned
+ his intention of returning to England, and was only anxious for a safe
+ return: to Spain. So much did he dread that northern passage; unpiloted,
+ around the grim Hebrides, that he would probably have surrendered, had the
+ English overtaken him and once more offered battle. He was on the point of
+ hanging out a white flag as they approached him for the last time&mdash;but
+ yielded to the expostulations of the ecclesiastics on board the Saint
+ Martin, who thought, no doubt, that they had more to fear from England
+ than from the sea, should they be carried captive to that country, and who
+ persuaded him that it would be a sin and a disgrace to surrender before
+ they had been once more attacked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the Devonshire skipper, Vice-Admiral Drake, now
+ thoroughly in his element, could not restrain his hilarity, as he saw the
+ Invincible Armada of the man whose beard he had so often singed, rolling
+ through the German Ocean, in full flight from the country which was to
+ have been made, that week, a Spanish province. Unprovided as were his
+ ships, he was for risking another battle, and it is quite possible that
+ the brag countenance might have proved even more successful than Howard
+ thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have the army of Spain before us," wrote Drake, from the Revenge, "and
+ hope with the grace of God to wrestle a pull with him. There never was any
+ thing pleased me better than seeing the enemy flying with a southerly wind
+ to the northward. God grant you have a good eye to the Duke of Parma, for
+ with the grace of God, if we live, I doubt not so to handle the matter
+ with the Duke of Sidonia as he shall wish himself at St. Mary's Port among
+ his orange trees."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Howard decided to wrestle no further pull. Having followed the
+ Spaniards till Friday, 12th of August, as far as the latitude of 56d. 17'
+ the Lord Admiral called a council. It was then decided, in order to save
+ English lives and ships, to put into the Firth of Forth for water and
+ provisions, leaving two "pinnaces to dog, the fleet until it should be
+ past the Isles of Scotland." But the next day, as the wind shifted to the
+ north-west, another council decided to take advantage of the change, and
+ bear away for the North Foreland, in order to obtain a supply of powder,
+ shot, and provisions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to this period, the weather, though occasionally threatening, had been
+ moderate. During the week which succeeded the eventful night off. Calais,
+ neither the 'Armada nor the English ships had been much impeded in their
+ manoeuvres by storms of heavy seas. But on the following Sunday, 14th of
+ August, there was a change. The wind shifted again to the south-west, and,
+ during the whole of that day and the Monday, blew a tremendous gale.
+ "'Twas a more violent storm," said Howard, "than was ever seen before at
+ this time of the year." The retreating English fleet was, scattered, many
+ ships were in peril, "among the ill-favoured sands off Norfolk," but
+ within four or five days all arrived safely in Margate roads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far different was the fate of the Spaniards. Over their Invincible Armada,
+ last seen by the departing English midway between the coasts of Scotland
+ and Denmark, the blackness of night seemed suddenly to descend. A mystery
+ hung for a long time over their fate. Damaged, leaking, without pilots,
+ without a competent commander, the great fleet entered that furious storm,
+ and was whirled along the iron crags of Norway and between the savage
+ rocks of Faroe and the Hebrides. In those regions of tempest the insulted
+ North wreaked its full vengeance on the insolent Spaniards. Disaster after
+ disaster marked their perilous track; gale after gale swept them hither
+ and thither, tossing them on sandbanks or shattering them against granite
+ cliffs. The coasts of Norway, Scotland, Ireland, were strewn with the
+ wrecks of that pompous fleet, which claimed the dominion of the seas with
+ the bones of those invincible legions which were to have sacked London and
+ made England a Spanish vice-royalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the remainder of the month of August there, was a succession of
+ storms. On the 2nd September a fierce southwester drove Admiral Oquendo in
+ his galleon, together with one of the great galeasses, two large Venetian
+ ships, the Ratty and the Balauzara, and thirty-six other vessels, upon the
+ Irish coast, where nearly every soul on board perished, while the few who
+ escaped to the shore&mdash;notwithstanding their religious affinity with
+ the inhabitants&mdash;were either butchered in cold blood, or sent coupled
+ in halters from village to village, in order to be shipped to England. A
+ few ships were driven on the English coast; others went ashore near
+ Rochelle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the four galeasses and four galleys, one of each returned to Spain. Of
+ the ninety-one great galleons and hulks, fifty-eight were lost and
+ thirty-three returned. Of the tenders and zabras, seventeen were lost. and
+ eighteen returned. Of one hundred and, thirty-four vessels, which sailed
+ from Corona in July, but fifty-three, great and small, made their escape
+ to Spain, and these were so damaged as to be, utterly worthless. The
+ invincible Armada had not only been vanquished but annihilated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the 30,000 men who sailed in the fleet; it is probable that not more
+ than 10,000 ever saw their native land again. Most of the leaders of the
+ expedition lost their lives. Medina Sidonia reached Santander in October,
+ and, as Philip for a moment believed, "with the greater part of the
+ Armada," although the King soon discovered his mistake. Recalde, Diego
+ Flores de Valdez, Oquendo, Maldonado, Bobadilla, Manriquez, either
+ perished at sea, or died of exhaustion immediately after their return.
+ Pedro de Valdez, Vasco de Silva, Alonzo de Sayas, Piemontel, Toledo, with
+ many other nobles, were prisoners in England and Holland. There was hardly
+ a distinguished family in Spain not placed in mourning, so that, to
+ relieve the universal gloom, an edict was published, forbidding the
+ wearing of mourning at all. On the other hand, a merchant of Lisbon, not
+ yet reconciled to the Spanish conquest of his country, permitted himself
+ some tokens of hilarity at the defeat of the Armada, and was immediately
+ hanged by express command of Philip. Thus&mdash;as men said&mdash;one
+ could neither cry nor laugh within the Spanish dominions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the result of the invasion, so many years preparing, and at an
+ expense almost incalculable. In the year 1588 alone, the cost of Philip's
+ armaments for the subjugation of England could not have been less than six
+ millions of ducats, and there was at least as large a sum on board the
+ Armada itself, although the Pope refused to pay his promised million. And
+ with all this outlay, and with the sacrifice of so many thousand lives,
+ nothing had been accomplished, and Spain, in a moment, instead of seeming
+ terrible to all the world, had become ridiculous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Beaten and shuffled together from the Lizard to Calais, from Calais
+ driven with squibs from their anchors, and chased out of sight of England
+ about Scotland and Ireland," as the Devonshire skipper expressed himself,
+ it must be confessed that the Spaniards presented a sorry sight. "Their
+ invincible and dreadful navy," said Drake, "with all its great and
+ terrible ostentation, did not in all their sailing about England so much
+ as sink or take one ship, bark, pinnace, or cock-boat of ours, or even
+ burn so much as one sheep-tote on this land."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Farnese sat chafing under the unjust reproaches heaped upon him,
+ as if he, and not his master, had been responsible for the gigantic
+ blunders of the invasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As for the Prince of Parma," said Drake, "I take him to be as a bear
+ robbed of her whelps." The Admiral was quite right. Alexander was beside
+ himself with rage. Day after day, he had been repeating to Medina Sidonia
+ and to Philip that his flotilla and transports could scarcely live in any
+ but the smoothest sea, while the supposition that they could serve a
+ warlike purpose he pronounced absolutely ludicrous. He had always
+ counselled the seizing of a place like Flushing, as a basis of operations
+ against England, but had been overruled; and he had at least reckoned upon
+ the Invincible Armada to clear the way for him, before he should be
+ expected to take the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With prodigious energy and at great expense he had constructed or improved
+ internal water-communications from Ghent to Sluy's, Newport, and Dunkerk.
+ He had, thus transported all his hoys, barges, and munitions for the
+ invasion, from all points of the obedient Netherlands to the sea-coast,
+ without coming within reach of the Hollanders and Zeelanders, who were
+ keeping close watch on the outside. But those Hollanders and Zeelanders,
+ guarding every outlet to the ocean, occupying every hole and cranny of the
+ coast, laughed the invaders of England to scorn, braving them, jeering
+ them, daring them to come forth, while the Walloons and Spaniards shrank
+ before such amphibious assailants, to whom a combat on the water was as
+ natural as upon dry land. Alexander, upon one occasion, transported with
+ rage, selected a band of one thousand musketeers, partly Spanish, partly
+ Irish, and ordered an assault upon those insolent boatmen. With his own
+ hand&mdash;so it was related&mdash;he struck dead more than one of his own
+ officers who remonstrated against these commands; and then the attack was
+ made by his thousand musketeers upon the Hollanders, and every man of the
+ thousand was slain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had been reproached for not being ready, for not having embarked his
+ men; but he had been ready for a month, and his men could be embarked in a
+ single day. "But it was impossible," he said, "to keep them long packed up
+ on board vessels, so small that there was no room to turn about in the
+ people would sicken, would rot, would die." So soon as he had received
+ information of the arrival of the fleet before Calais&mdash;which was on
+ the 8th August&mdash;he had proceeded the same night to Newport and
+ embarked 16,000 men, and before dawn he was at Dunkerk, where the troops
+ stationed in that port were as rapidly placed on board the transports. Sir
+ William Stanley, with his 700 Irish kernes, were among the first shipped
+ for the enterprise. Two-days long these regiments lay heaped together,
+ like sacks of corn, in the boats&mdash;as one of their officers described
+ it&mdash;and they lay cheerfully hoping that the Dutch fleet would be
+ swept out of the sea by the Invincible Armada, and patiently expecting the
+ signal for setting sail to England. Then came the Prince of Ascoli, who
+ had gone ashore from the Spanish fleet at Calais, accompanied by
+ serjeant-major Gallinato and other messengers from Medina Sidonia,
+ bringing the news of the fire-ships and the dispersion and flight of the
+ Armada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God knows," said Alexander, "the distress in which this event has plunged
+ me, at the very moment when I expected to be sending your Majesty my
+ congratulations on the success of the great undertaking. But these are the
+ works of the Lord, who can recompense your Majesty by giving you many
+ victories, and the fulfilment of your Majesty's desires, when He thinks
+ the proper time arrived. Meantime let Him be praised for all, and let your
+ Majesty take great care of your health, which is the most important thing
+ of all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidently the Lord did not think the proper time yet arrived for
+ fulfilling his Majesty's desires for the subjugation of England, and
+ meanwhile the King might find what comfort he could in pious commonplaces
+ and in attention to his health.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is very certain that, of all the high parties concerned, Alexander
+ Farnese was the least reprehensible for the over-throw of Philips hopes.
+ No man could have been more judicious&mdash;as it has been sufficiently
+ made evident in the course of this narrative&mdash;in arranging all the
+ details of the great enterprise, in pointing out all the obstacles, in
+ providing for all emergencies. No man could have been more minutely
+ faithful to his master, more treacherous to all the world beside.
+ Energetic, inventive, patient, courageous; and stupendously false, he had
+ covered Flanders with canals and bridges, had constructed flotillas, and
+ equipped a splendid army, as thoroughly as he had puzzled Comptroller
+ Croft. And not only had that diplomatist and his wiser colleagues been
+ hoodwinked, but Elizabeth and Burghley, and, for a moment, even
+ Walsingham, were in the dark, while Henry III. had been his passive
+ victim, and the magnificent Balafre a blind instrument in his hands.
+ Nothing could equal Alexander's fidelity, but his perfidy. Nothing could
+ surpass his ability to command but his obedience. And it is very possible
+ that had Philip followed his nephew's large designs, instead of imposing
+ upon him his own most puerile schemes; the result far England, Holland,
+ and, all Christendom might have been very different from the actual one.
+ The blunder against which Farnese had in vain warned his master, was the
+ stolid ignorance in which the King and all his counsellors chose to remain
+ of the Holland and Zeeland fleet. For them Warmond and Nassau, and Van der
+ Does and Joost de Moor; did not exist, and it was precisely these gallant
+ sailors, with their intrepid crews, who held the key to the whole
+ situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the Queen's glorious naval-commanders, to the dauntless mariners of
+ England, with their well-handled vessels; their admirable seamanship,
+ their tact and their courage, belonged the joys of the contest, the
+ triumph, and the glorious pursuit; but to the patient Hollanders and
+ Zeelanders, who, with their hundred vessels held Farneae, the chief of the
+ great enterprise, at bay, a close prisoner with his whole army in his own
+ ports, daring him to the issue, and ready&mdash;to the last plank of their
+ fleet and to the last drop of their blood&mdash;to confront both him and
+ the Duke of Medina Sidona, an equal share of honour is due. The safety of
+ the two free commonwealths of the world in that terrible contest was
+ achieved by the people and the mariners of the two states combined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great was the enthusiasm certainly of the English people as the volunteers
+ marched through London to the place of rendezvous, and tremendous were the
+ cheers when the brave Queen rode on horseback along the lines of Tilbury.
+ Glowing pictures are revealed to us of merry little England, arising in
+ its strength, and dancing forth to encounter the Spaniards, as if to a
+ great holiday. "It was a pleasant sight," says that enthusiastic
+ merchant-tailor John Stowe, "to behold the cheerful countenances,
+ courageous words, and gestures, of the soldiers, as they marched to
+ Tilbury, dancing, leaping wherever they came, as joyful at the news of the
+ foe's approach as if lusty giants were to run a race. And Bellona-like did
+ the Queen infuse a second spirit of loyalty, love, and resolution, into
+ every soldier of her army, who, ravished with their sovereign's sight,
+ prayed heartily that the Spaniards might land quickly, and when they heard
+ they were fled, began to lament."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if the Spaniards had not fled, if there had been no English navy in
+ the Channel, no squibs at Calais, no Dutchmen off Dunkerk, there might
+ have been a different picture to paint. No man who has, studied the
+ history of those times, can doubt the universal and enthusiastic
+ determination of the English nation to repel the invaders. Catholics and
+ Protestants felt alike on the great subject. Philip did not flatter,
+ himself with assistance from any English Papists, save exiles and
+ renegades like Westmoreland, Paget, Throgmorton, Morgan, Stanley, and the
+ rest. The bulk of the Catholics, who may have constituted half the
+ population of England, although malcontent, were not rebellious; and
+ notwithstanding the precautionary measures taken by government against
+ them, Elizabeth proudly acknowledged their loyalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But loyalty, courage, and enthusiasm, might not have sufficed to supply
+ the want of numbers and discipline. According to the generally accepted
+ statement of contemporary chroniclers, there were some 75,000 men under
+ arms: 20,000 along the southern coast, 23,000 under Leicester, and 33,000
+ under Lord Chamberlain Hunsdon, for the special defence of the Queen's
+ person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it would have been very difficult, in the moment of danger, to bring
+ anything like these numbers into the field. A drilled and disciplined army&mdash;whether
+ of regulars or of militia-men&mdash;had no existence whatever. If the
+ merchant vessels, which had been joined to the royal fleet, were thought
+ by old naval commanders to be only good to make a show, the volunteers on
+ land were likely to be even less effective than the marine militia, so
+ much more accustomed than they to hard work. Magnificent was the spirit of
+ the great feudal lords as they rallied round their Queen. The Earl of
+ Pembroke offered to serve at the head of three hundred horse and five
+ hundred footmen, armed at his own cost, and all ready to "hazard the blood
+ of their hearts" in defence of her person. "Accept hereof most excellent
+ sovereign," said the Earl, "from a person desirous to live no longer than
+ he may see your Highness enjoy your blessed estate, maugre the beards of
+ all confederated leaguers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Earl of Shrewsbury, too, was ready to serve at the head of his
+ retainers, to the last drop of his blood. "Though I be old," he said, "yet
+ shall your quarrel make me young again. Though lame in body, yet lusty in
+ heart to lend your greatest enemy one blow, and to stand near your
+ defence, every way wherein your Highness shall employ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there was perhaps too much of this feudal spirit. The
+ lieutenant-general complained bitterly that there was a most mischievous
+ tendency among all the militia-men to escape from the Queen's colours, in
+ order to enrol themselves as retainers to the great lords. This spirit was
+ not favourable to efficient organization of a national army. Even, had the
+ commander-in-chief been a man, of genius and experience it would have been
+ difficult for him, under such circumstances, to resist a splendid army,
+ once landed, and led by Alexander Farnese, but even Leicester's most
+ determined flatterers hardly ventured to compare him in-military ability
+ with that first general of his age. The best soldier in England was
+ un-questionably Sir John Norris, and Sir John was now marshal of the camp
+ to Leicester. The ancient quarrel between the two had been smoothed over,
+ and&mdash;as might be expected&mdash;the Earl hated Norris more bitterly
+ than before, and was perpetually vituperating him, as he had often done in
+ the Netherlands. Roger William, too, was entrusted with the important
+ duties of master of the horse, under the lieutenant-general, and Leicester
+ continued to bear the grudge towards that honest Welshman, which had begun
+ in Holland. These were not promising conditions in a camp, when an
+ invading army was every day expected; nor was the completeness or
+ readiness of the forces sufficient to render harmless the quarrels of the
+ commanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Armada had arrived in Calais roads on Saturday afternoon; the 6th
+ August. If it had been joined on that day, or the next&mdash;as Philip and
+ Medina Sidonia fully expected&mdash;by the Duke of Parma's flotilla, the
+ invasion would have been made at once. If a Spanish army had ever landed
+ in England at all, that event would have occurred on the 7th August. The
+ weather was not unfavourable; the sea was smooth, and the circumstances
+ under which the catastrophe of the great drama was that night
+ accomplished, were a profound mystery to every soul in England. For aught
+ that Leicester, or Burghley, or Queen Elizabeth, knew at the time, the
+ army of Farnese might, on Monday, have been marching upon London. Now, on
+ that Monday morning, the army of Lord Hunsdon was not assembled at all,
+ and Leicester with but four thousand men, under his command, was just
+ commencing his camp at Tilbury. The "Bellona-like" appearance of the Queen
+ on her white palfrey,&mdash;with truncheon in hand, addressing her troops,
+ in that magnificent burst of eloquence which has so often been repeated,
+ was not till eleven days afterwards; not till the great Armada, shattered
+ and tempest-tossed, had been, a week long, dashing itself against the
+ cliffs of Norway and the Faroes, on, its forlorn retreat to Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester, courageous, self-confident, and sanguine as ever; could not
+ restrain his indignation at the parsimony with which his own impatient
+ spirit had to contend. "Be you assured," said he, on the 3rd August, when
+ the Armada was off the Isle of Wight, "if the Spanish fleet arrive safely
+ in the narrow seas, the Duke of Parma will join presently with all his
+ forces, and lose no time in invading this realm. Therefore I beseech you,
+ my good Lords, let no man, by hope or other abuse; prevent your speedy
+ providing defence against, this mighty enemy now knocking at our gate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For even at this supreme moment doubts were entertained at court as to the
+ intentions of the Spaniards:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day he informed Walsingham that his four thousand men had arrived.
+ "They be as forward men and willing to meet the enemy as I ever saw," said
+ he. He could not say as much in, praise of the commissariat: "Some want
+ the captains showed," he observed, "for these men arrived without one meal
+ of victuals so that on their-arrival, they had not one barrel of beer nor
+ loaf of bread&mdash;enough after twenty miles' march to have discouraged
+ them, and brought them to mutiny. I see many causes to increase my former
+ opinion of the dilatory wants you shall find upon all sudden hurley
+ burleys. In no former time was ever so great a cause, and albeit her
+ Majesty hath appointed an army to resist her enemies if they land, yet how
+ hard a matter it will be to gather men together, I find it now. If it will
+ be five days to gather these countrymen, judge what it will be to look in
+ short space for those that dwell forty, fifty, sixty miles off."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had immense difficulty in feeding even this slender force. "I made
+ proclamation," said he, "two days ago, in all market towns, that
+ victuallers should come to the camp and receive money for their
+ provisions, but there is not one victualler come in to this hour. I have
+ sent to all the justices of peace about it from place to place. I speak it
+ that timely consideration be had of these things, and that they be not
+ deferred till the worst come. Let her Majesty not defer the time, upon any
+ supposed hope, to assemble a convenient force of horse and foot about her.
+ Her Majesty cannot be strong enough too soon, and if her navy had not been
+ strong and abroad as it is, what care had herself and her whole realm been
+ in by this time! And what care she will be in if her forces be not only
+ assembled, but an army presently dressed to withstand the mighty enemy
+ that is to approach her gates."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God doth know, I speak it not to bring her to charges. I would she had
+ less cause to spend than ever she had, and her coffers fuller than ever
+ they were; but I will prefer her life and safety, and the defence of the
+ realm, before all sparing of charges in the present danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, on the 5th August, no army had been assembled&mdash;not even the
+ body-guard of the Queen&mdash;and Leicester, with four thousand men,
+ unprovided with a barrel of beer or a loaf of bread, was about commencing
+ his entrenched camp at Tilbury. On the 6th August the Armada was in Calais
+ roads, expecting Alexander Farnese to lead his troops upon London!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Norris and Williams, on the news of Medina Sidonia's approach, had rushed
+ to Dover, much to the indignation of Leicester, just as the Earl was
+ beginning his entrenchments at Tilbury. "I assure you I am angry with Sir
+ John Norris and Sir Roger Williams," he said. "I am here cook, caterer,
+ and huntsman. I am left with no one to supply Sir John's place as marshal,
+ but, for a day or two, am willing to work the harder myself. I ordered
+ them both to return this day early, which they faithfully promised. Yet,
+ on arriving this morning, I hear nothing of either, and have nobody to
+ marshal the camp either for horse or foot. This manner of dealing doth
+ much mislike me in them both. I am ill-used. 'Tis now four o'clock, but
+ here's not one of them. If they come not this night, I assure you I will
+ not receive them into office, nor bear such loose careless dealing at
+ their hands. If you saw how weakly I am assisted you would be sorry to
+ think that we here, should be the front against the enemy that is so
+ mighty, if he should land here. And seeing her Majesty hath appointed me
+ her lieutenant-general, I look that respect be used towards me, such as is
+ due to my place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the ancient grudge&mdash;between Leicester and the Earl of Sussex's
+ son was ever breaking forth, and was not likely to prove beneficial at
+ this eventful season.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day the Welshman arrived, and Sir John promised to come back in the
+ evening. Sir Roger brought word from the coast that Lord Henry Seymour's
+ fleet was in want both of men and powder. "Good Lord!" exclaimed
+ Leicester, "how is this come to pass, that both he and, my Lord-Admiral
+ are so weakened of men. I hear they be running away. I beseech you,
+ assemble your forces, and play not away this kingdom by delays. Hasten our
+ horsemen hither and footmen: . . . . If the Spanish fleet come to the
+ narrow seas the Prince of Parma will play another part than is looked
+ for."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the Armada approached Calais, Leicester was informed that the soldiers
+ at Dover began to leave the coast. It seemed that they were dissatisfied
+ with the penuriousness of the government. "Our soldiers do break away at
+ Dover, or are not pleased. I assure you, without wages, the people will
+ not tarry, and contributions go hard with them. Surely I find that her
+ Majesty must needs deal liberally, and be at charges to entertain her
+ subjects that have chargeably, and liberally used, themselves to serve
+ her." The lieutenant-general even thought it might be necessary for him to
+ proceed to Dover in person, in order to remonstrate with these
+ discontented troops; for it was possible that those ill-paid,
+ undisciplined, and very meagre forces, would find much difficulty in
+ opposing Alexander's march, to London, if he should once succeed in
+ landing. Leicester had a very indifferent opinion too of the train-bands
+ of the metropolis. "For your Londoners," he said, "I see their service
+ will be little, except they have their own captains, and having them, I
+ look for none at all by them, when we shall meet the enemy." This was not
+ complimentary, certainly, to the training of the famous Artillery Garden,
+ and furnished a still stronger motive for defending the road over which
+ the capital was to be approached. But there was much jealousy, both among
+ citizens and nobles, of any authority entrusted to professional soldiers.
+ "I know what burghers be, well enough," said the Earl, "as brave and
+ well-entertained as ever the Londoners were. If they should go forth from
+ the city they should have good leaders. You know the imperfections of the
+ time, how few-leaders you have, and the gentlemen of the counties are very
+ loth to have any captains placed with them. So that the beating out of our
+ best captains is like to be cause of great danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir John Smith, a soldier of experience, employed to drill and organize
+ some of the levies, expressed still more disparaging opinions than those
+ of Leicester concerning the probable efficiency in the field of these
+ English armies. The Earl was very angry with the knight, however, and
+ considered, him incompetent, insolent, and ridiculous. Sir John seemed,
+ indeed, more disposed to keep himself out of harm's way, than to render
+ service to the Queen by leading awkward recruits against Alexander
+ Farnese. He thought it better to nurse himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You would laugh to see how Sir John Smith has dealt since my coming,"
+ said Leicester. "He came to me, and told me that his disease so grew upon
+ him as he must needs go to the baths. I told him I would not be against
+ his health, but he saw what the time was, and what pains he had taken with
+ his countrymen, and that I had provided a good place for him. Next day he
+ came again, saying little to my offer then, and seemed desirous, for his
+ health, to be gone. I told him what place I did appoint, which was a
+ regiment of a great part of his countrymen. He said his health was dear to
+ him, and he desired to take leave of me, which I yielded unto. Yesterday,
+ being our muster-day, he came again to me to dinner; but such foolish and
+ vain-glorious paradoxes he burst withal, without any cause offered, as
+ made all that knew anything smile and answer little, but in sort rather to
+ satisfy men present than to argue with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the knight went that day to review Leicester's choice troops&mdash;the
+ four thousand men of Essex&mdash;but was not much more deeply impressed
+ with their proficiency than he had been with that of his own regiment. He
+ became very censorious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "After the muster," said the lieutenant-general, "he entered again into
+ such strange cries for ordering of men, and for the fight with the weapon,
+ as made me think he was not well. God forbid he should have charge of men
+ that knoweth so little, as I dare pronounce that he doth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the critical knight was a professional&mdash;campaigner, whose
+ opinions were entitled to respect; and the more so, it would seem, because
+ they did not materially vary from those which Leicester himself was in the
+ habit of expressing. And these interior scenes of discord, tumult,
+ parsimony, want of organization, and unsatisfactory mustering of troops,
+ were occurring on the very Saturday and Sunday when the Armada lay in
+ sight of Dover cliffs, and when the approach of the Spaniards on the Dover
+ road might at any moment be expected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Leicester's jealous and overbearing temper itself was also proving a
+ formidable obstacle to a wholesome system of defence. He was already
+ displeased with the amount of authority entrusted to Lord Hunsdon,
+ disposed to think his own rights invaded; and desirous that the Lord
+ Chamberlain should accept office under himself. He wished saving clauses
+ as to his own authority inserted in Hunsdon's patent. "Either it must be
+ so, or I shall have wrong," said he, "if he absolutely command where my
+ patent doth give me power. You may easily conceive what absurd dealings
+ are likely to fall out, if you allow two absolute commanders."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Looking at these pictures of commander-in-chief, officers, and rank and
+ file&mdash;as painted by themselves&mdash;we feel an inexpressible
+ satisfaction that in this great crisis of England's destiny, there were
+ such men as Howard, Drake, Frobisher, Hawkins, Seymour, Winter, Fenner,
+ and their gallant brethren, cruising that week in the Channel, and that
+ Nassau and Warmond; De Moor and Van der Does, were blockading the Flemish
+ coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was but little preparation to resist the enemy once landed. There
+ were no fortresses, no regular army, no population trained to any weapon.
+ There were patriotism, loyalty, courage, and enthusiasm, in abundance; but
+ the commander-in-chief was a queen's favourite, odious to the people, with
+ very moderate abilities, and eternally quarrelling with officers more
+ competent than himself; and all the arrangements were so hopelessly
+ behind-hand, that although great disasters might have been avenged, they
+ could scarcely have been avoided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Remembering that the Invincible Armada was lying in Calais roads on the
+ 6th of August, hoping to cross to Dover the next morning, let us ponder
+ the words addressed on that very day to Queen Elizabeth by the
+ Lieutenant-General of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My most dear and gracious Lady," said the Earl, "it is most true that
+ those enemies that approach your kingdom and person are your undeserved
+ foes, and being so, and hating you for a righteous cause, there is the
+ less fear to be had of their malice or their forces; for there is a most
+ just God that beholdeth the innocence of that heart. The cause you are
+ assailed for is His and His Church's, and He never failed any that
+ faithfully do put their chief trust in His goodness. He hath, to comfort
+ you withal, given you great and mighty means to defend yourself, which
+ means I doubt not but your Majesty will timely and princely use them, and
+ your good God that ruleth all will assist you and bless you with victory."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then proceeded to give his opinion on two points concerning which the
+ Queen had just consulted him&mdash;the propriety of assembling her army,
+ and her desire to place herself at the head of it in person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the first point one would have thought discussion superfluous on the
+ 6th of August. "For your army, it is more than time it were gathered and
+ about you," said Leicester, "or so near you as you may have the use of it
+ at a few hours' warning. The reason is that your mighty enemies are at
+ hand, and if God suffers them to pass by your fleet, you are sure they
+ will attempt their purpose of landing with all expedition. And albeit your
+ navy be very strong, but, as we have always heard, the other is not only
+ far greater, but their forces of men much beyond yours. No doubt if the
+ Prince of Parma come forth, their forces by sea shall not only be greatly,
+ augmented, but his power to land shall the easier take effect whensoever
+ he shall attempt it. Therefore it is most requisite that your Majesty at
+ all events have as great a force every way as you can devise; for there is
+ no dalliance at such a time, nor with such an enemy. You shall otherwise
+ hazard your own honour, besides your person and country, and must offend
+ your gracious God that gave you these forces and power, though you will
+ not use them when you should."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seems strange enough that such phrases should be necessary when the
+ enemy was knocking at the gate; but it is only too, true that the
+ land-forces were never organized until the hour, of danger had, most
+ fortunately and unexpectedly, passed by. Suggestions at this late moment
+ were now given for the defence of the throne, the capital, the kingdom,
+ and the life of the great Queen, which would not have seemed premature had
+ they been made six months before, but which, when offered in August,
+ excite unbounded amazement. Alexander would have had time to, march from
+ Dover to Duxham before these directions, now leisurely stated with all the
+ air of novelty, could be carried into effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now for the placing of your army," says the lieutenant-general on the
+ memorable Saturday, 6th of August, "no doubt but I think about London the
+ meetest, and I suppose that others will be of the same mind. And your
+ Majesty should forthwith give the charge thereof to some special nobleman
+ about you, and likewise place all your chief officers that every man may
+ know what he shall do, and gather as many good horse above all things as
+ you can, and the oldest, best, and assuredest captains to lead; for
+ therein will consist the greatest hope of good success under God. And so
+ soon as your army is assembled, let them by and by be exercised, every man
+ to know his weapon, and that there be all other things prepared in
+ readiness, for your army, as if they should march upon a day's warning,
+ especially carriages, and a commissary of victuals, and a master of
+ ordnance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly, with Alexander of Parma on his way to London, at the head of
+ his Italian pikemen, his Spanish musketeers, his famous veteran legion&mdash;"that
+ nursing mother of great soldiers"&mdash;it was indeed more than time that
+ every man should know what he should do, that an army of Englishmen should
+ be-assembled, and that every man should know his weapon. "By and by" was
+ easily said, and yet, on the 6th of August it was by and by that an army,
+ not yet mustered, not yet officered, not yet provided with a general, a
+ commissary of victuals, or a master of ordinance, was to be exercised,
+ "every man to know his weapon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ English courage might ultimately triumph over, the mistakes of those who
+ governed the country, and over those disciplined brigands by whom it was
+ to be invaded. But meantime every man of those invaders had already
+ learned on a hundred battle-fields to know his weapon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a magnificent determination on the part of Elizabeth to place
+ herself at the head of her troops; and the enthusiasm which her attitude
+ inspired, when she had at last emancipated herself from the delusions of
+ diplomacy and the seductions of thrift, was some recompense at least for
+ the perils caused by her procrastination. But Leicester could not approve
+ of this hazardous though heroic resolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The danger passed away. The Invincible Armada was driven out of the
+ Channel by the courage; the splendid seamanship, and the enthusiasm of
+ English sailors and volunteers. The Duke of Parma was kept a close
+ prisoner by the fleets of Holland and Zeeland; and the great storm of the
+ 14th and 15th of August at last completed the overthrow of the Spaniards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was, however, supposed for a long time that they would come back, for
+ the disasters which had befallen them in the north were but tardily known
+ in England. The sailors, by whom England had been thus defended in her
+ utmost need, were dying by hundreds, and even thousands, of ship-fever, in
+ the latter days of August. Men sickened one day, and died the next, so
+ that it seemed probable that the ten thousand sailors by whom the English
+ ships of war were manned, would have almost wholly disappeared, at a
+ moment when their services might be imperatively required. Nor had there
+ been the least precaution taken for cherishing and saving these brave
+ defenders of their country. They rotted in their ships, or died in the
+ streets of the naval ports, because there were no hospitals to receive
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Tis a most pitiful sight," said the Lord-Admiral, "to see here at
+ Margate how the men, having no place where they can be received, die in,
+ the streets. I am driven of force myself to come on land to see them
+ bestowed in some lodgings; and the best I can get is barns and such
+ outhouses, and the relief is small that I can provide for them here. It
+ would grieve any man's heart to see men that have served so valiantly die
+ so miserably."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The survivors, too, were greatly discontented; for, after having been
+ eight months at sea, and enduring great privations, they could not get
+ their wages. "Finding it to come thus scantily," said Howard, "it breeds a
+ marvellous alteration among them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But more dangerous than the pestilence or the discontent was the
+ misunderstanding which existed at the moment between the leading admirals
+ of the English fleet. Not only was Seymour angry with Howard, but Hawkins
+ and Frobisher were at daggers drawn with Drake; and Sir Martin&mdash;if
+ contemporary, affidavits can be trusted&mdash;did not scruple to heap the
+ most virulent abuse upon Sir Francis, calling him, in language better
+ fitted for the forecastle than the quarter-deck, a thief and a coward, for
+ appropriating the ransom for Don Pedro Valdez in which both Frobisher and
+ Hawkins claimed at least an equal share with himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And anxious enough was the Lord-Admiral with his sailors perishing by
+ pestilence, with many of his ships so weakly manned that as Lord Henry
+ Seymour declared there were not mariners enough to weigh the anchors, and
+ with the great naval heroes, on whose efforts the safety of the realm
+ depended, wrangling like fisherwomen among themselves, when rumours came,
+ as they did almost daily, of the return of the Spanish Armada, and of new
+ demonstrations on the part of Farnese. He was naturally unwilling that the
+ fruits of English valour on the seas should now be sacrificed by the false
+ economy of the government. He felt that, after all that had been endured
+ and accomplished, the Queen and her counsellors were still capable of
+ leaving England at the mercy of a renewed attempt, "I know not what you
+ think at the court," said he; "but I think, and so do all here, that there
+ cannot be too great forces maintained for the next five or six weeks. God
+ knoweth whether the Spanish fleet will not, after refreshing themselves in
+ Norway; Denmark, and the Orkneys, return. I think they dare not go back to
+ Sprain with this, dishonour, to their King and overthrow of the Pope's
+ credit. Sir, sure bind, sure find. A kingdom is a grand wager. Security is
+ dangerous; and, if God had not been our best friend; we should have found
+ it so."
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [Howard to Walsingham, Aug.8/18 1588. (S. P. Office MS.)]
+
+ ["Some haply may say that winter cometh on apace," said Drake, "but
+ my poor opinion is that I dare not advise her Majesty to hazard a
+ kingdom with the saving of a little charge." (Drake to Walsingham,
+ Aug. 8/18 1588.)]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could be more replete, with sound common sense than this simple
+ advice, given as it was in utter ignorance of the fate of the Armada;
+ after it had been lost sight of by the English vessels off the Firth of
+ Forth, and of the cold refreshment which: it had found in Norway and the
+ Orkneys. But, Burghley had a store of pithy apophthegms, for which&mdash;he
+ knew he could always find sympathy in the Queen's breast, and with which
+ he could answer these demands of admirals and generals. "To spend in time
+ convenient is wisdom;" he observed&mdash;"to continue charges without
+ needful cause bringeth, repentance;"&mdash;"to hold on charges without
+ knowledge of the certainty thereof and of means how to support them, is
+ lack of wisdom;" and so on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the Spanish fleet might have returned into the Channel for ought the
+ Lord-Treasurer on the 22nd August knew&mdash;or the Dutch fleet might have
+ relaxed, in its vigilant watching of Farnese's movements. It might have
+ then seemed a most plentiful lack of wisdom to allow English sailors to
+ die of plague in the streets for want of hospitals; and to grow mutinous
+ for default of pay. To have saved under such circumstances would, perhaps
+ have brought repentance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The invasion of England by Spain had been most portentous. That the danger
+ was at last averted is to be ascribed to the enthusiasm of the English,
+ nation&mdash;both patricians and plebeians&mdash;to the heroism of the
+ little English fleet, to the spirit of the naval commanders and
+ volunteers, to the stanch, and effective support of the Hollanders; and to
+ the hand of God shattering the Armada at last; but very little credit can
+ be conscientiously awarded to the diplomatic or the military efforts of
+ the Queen's government. Miracles alone, in the opinion of Roger Williams,
+ had saved England on this occasion from perdition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the end of August, Admiral de Nassau paid a visit to Dover with
+ forty ships, "well appointed and furnished." He dined and conferred with
+ Seymour, Palmer, and other officers&mdash;Winter being still laid up with
+ his wound&mdash;and expressed the opinion that Medina Sidonia would hardly
+ return to the Channel, after the banquet he had received from her
+ Majesty's navy between Calais and Gravelines. He also gave the information
+ that the States had sent fifty Dutch vessels in pursuit of the Spaniards,
+ and had compelled all the herring-fishermen for the time to serve in the
+ ships of war, although the prosperity of the country depended on that
+ industry. "I find the man very wise, subtle, and cunning," said Seymour of
+ the Dutch Admiral, "and therefore do I trust him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nassau represented the Duke of Parma as evidently discouraged, as having
+ already disembarked his troops, and as very little disposed to hazard any
+ further enterprise against England. "I have left twenty-five Kromstevens,"
+ said he, "to prevent his egress from Sluys, and I am immediately returning
+ thither myself. The tide will not allow his vessels at present to leave
+ Dunkerk, and I shall not fail&mdash;before the next full moon&mdash;to
+ place myself before that place, to prevent their coming out, or to have a
+ brush with them if they venture to put to sea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But after the scenes on which the last full moon had looked down in those
+ waters, there could be no further pretence on the part of Farnese to issue
+ from Sluys and Dunkerk, and England and Holland were thenceforth saved
+ from all naval enterprises on the part of Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, the same uncertainty which prevailed in England as to the
+ condition and the intentions of the Armada was still more remarkable
+ elsewhere. There was a systematic deception practised not only upon other
+ governments; but upon the King of Spain as well. Philip, as he sat at his
+ writing-desk, was regarding himself as the monarch of England, long after
+ his Armada had been hopelessly dispersed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Paris, rumours were circulated during the first ten days of August that
+ England was vanquished, and that the Queen was already on her way to Rome
+ as a prisoner, where she was to make expiation, barefoot, before his
+ Holiness. Mendoza, now more magnificent than ever&mdash;stalked into Notre
+ Dame with his drawn sword in his hand, crying out with a loud voice,
+ "Victory, victory!" and on the 10th of August ordered bonfires to be made
+ before his house; but afterwards thought better of that scheme. He had
+ been deceived by a variety of reports sent to him day after day by agents
+ on the coast; and the King of France&mdash;better informed by Stafford,
+ but not unwilling thus to feed his spite against the insolent ambassador&mdash;affected
+ to believe his fables. He even confirmed them by intelligence, which he
+ pretended to have himself received from other sources, of the landing of
+ the Spaniards in England without opposition, and of the entire subjugation
+ of that country without the striking of a blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon, on the night of August 10th, the envoy&mdash;"like a wise man,"
+ as Stafford observed&mdash;sent off four couriers, one after another, with
+ the great news to Spain, that his master's heart might be rejoiced, and
+ caused a pamphlet on the subject to be printed and distributed over Paris!
+ "I will not waste a large sheet of paper to express the joy which we must
+ all feel," he wrote to Idiaquez, "at this good news. God be praised for
+ all, who gives us small chastisements to make us better, and then, like a
+ merciful Father, sends us infinite rewards." And in the same strain he
+ wrote; day after day, to Moura and Idiaquez, and to Philip himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stafford, on his side, was anxious to be informed by his government of the
+ exact truth, whatever it were, in order that these figments of Mendoza
+ might be contradicted. "That which cometh from me," he said, "Will be
+ believed; for I have not been used to tell lies, and in very truth I have
+ not the face to do it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the news of the Calais squibs, of the fight off Gravelines, and the
+ retreat of the Armada towards the north; could not be very long concealed.
+ So soon, therefore, as authentic intelligence reached, the English envoy
+ of those events&mdash;which was not however for nearly ten days after
+ their&mdash;occurrence&mdash;Stafford in his turn wrote a pamphlet, in
+ answer to that of Mendoza, and decidedly the more successful one of the
+ two. It cost him but five crowns, he said, to print 'four hundred copies
+ of it; but those in whose name it was published got one hundred crowns by
+ its sale. The English ambassador was unwilling to be known as the author&mdash;although
+ "desirous of touching up the impudence of the Spaniard"&mdash;but the King
+ had no doubt of its origin. Poor Henry, still smarting under the insults
+ of Mendoza and 'Mucio,&mdash;was delighted with this blow to Philip's
+ presumption; was loud in his praises of Queen Elizabeth's valour,
+ prudence, and marvellous fortune, and declared that what she had just done
+ could be compared to the greatest: exploits of the most illustrious men in
+ history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So soon as ever he saw the pamphlet," said Stafford; "he offered to lay a
+ wager it was my doing; and laughed at it heartily." And there were
+ malicious pages about the French; court; who also found much amusement in
+ writing to the ambassador, begging his interest with the Duke of Parma
+ that they might obtain from that conqueror some odd-refuse town or so in:
+ England, such as York, Canterbury, London, or the like&mdash;till the
+ luckless Don Bernardino was ashamed to show his face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A letter, from Farnese, however, of 10th August, apprized Philip before
+ the end of August of the Calais disasters and caused him great uneasiness,
+ without driving him to despair. "At the very moment," wrote the King to
+ Medina Sidonia; "when I was expecting news of the effect hoped for from my
+ Armada, I have learned the retreat from before Calais, to which it was
+ compelled by the weather; [!] and I have received a very great shock which
+ keeps, me in anxiety not to be exaggerated. Nevertheless I hope in our
+ Lord that he will have provided a remedy; and that if it was possible for
+ you to return upon the enemy to come back to the appointed posts and to
+ watch an opportunity for the great stroke; you will have done as the case
+ required; and so I am expecting with solicitude, to hear what has
+ happened, and please God it may be that which is so suitable for his
+ service."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Spanish children the sacking of London, and the butchering of the
+ English nation-rewards and befits similar to those which they bad formerly
+ enjoyed in the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in the same strain, melancholy yet hopeful, were other letters
+ despatched on that day to the Duke of Parma. "The satisfaction caused by
+ your advices on the 8th August of the arrival of the Armada near Calais,
+ and of your preparations to embark your troops, was changed into a
+ sentiment which you can imagine, by your letter of the 10th. The anxiety
+ thus occasioned it would be impossible to exaggerate, although the cause
+ being such as it is&mdash;there is no ground for distrust. Perhaps the
+ Armada, keeping together, has returned upon the enemy, and given a good
+ account of itself, with the help of the Lord. So I still promise myself
+ that you will have performed your part in the enterprise in such wise as
+ that the service intended to the Lord may have been executed, and repairs
+ made to the reputation of all; which has been so much compromised."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the King's drooping spirits were revived by fresh accounts which
+ reached him in September, by way of France. He now learned that the Armada
+ had taken captive four Dutch men-of-war and many English ships; that,
+ after the Spaniards had been followed from Calais roads by the enemy's
+ fleet, there had been an action, which the English had attempted in vain
+ to avoid; off Newcastle; that Medina Sidonia had charged upon them so
+ vigorously, as to sink twenty of their ships, and to capture twenty-six
+ others, good and sound; that the others, to escape perdition, had fled,
+ after suffering great damage, and had then gone to pieces, all hands
+ perishing; that the Armada had taken a port in Scotland, where it was very
+ comfortably established; that the flag-ship of Lord-admiral Howard, of
+ Drake; and of that "distinguished mariner Hawkins," had all been sunk in
+ action, and that no soul had been saved except Drake, who had escaped in a
+ cock-boat. "This is good news," added the writer; "and it is most
+ certain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King pondered seriously over these conflicting accounts, and remained
+ very much in the dark. Half, the month of September went by, and he had
+ heard nothing&mdash;official since the news of the Calais catastrophe. It
+ may be easily understood that Medina Sidonia, while flying round the
+ Orkneys had not much opportunity for despatching couriers to Spain, and as
+ Farnese had not written since the 10th August, Philip was quite at a loss
+ whether to consider himself triumphant or defeated. From the reports by
+ way of Calais, Dunkerk, and Rouen, he supposed that the Armada, had
+ inflicted much damage on the enemy. He suggested accordingly, on the 3rd
+ September, to the Duke of Parma, that he might now make the passage to
+ England, while the English fleet, if anything was left of it was repairing
+ its damages. "'Twill be easy enough to conquer the country," said Philip,
+ "so soon as you set foot on the soil. Then perhaps our Armada can come
+ back and station itself in the Thames to support you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could be simpler. Nevertheless the King felt a pang of doubt lest
+ affairs, after all, might not be going on so swimmingly; so he dipped his
+ pen in the inkstand again, and observed with much pathos, "But if this
+ hope must be given up, you must take the Isle of Walcheren: something must
+ be done to console me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And on the 15th September he was still no wiser. "This business of the
+ Armada leaves me no repose," he said; "I can think of nothing else. I
+ don't content myself with what I have written, but write again and again,
+ although in great want of light. I hear that the Armada has sunk and
+ captured many English ships, and is refitting in a Scotch pert. If this is
+ in the territory, of Lord Huntley, I hope he will stir up the Catholics of
+ that country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so, in letter after letter, Philip clung to the delusion that
+ Alexander could yet, cross to England, and that the Armada might sail up
+ the Thames. The Duke was directed to make immediate arrangements to that
+ effect with Medina Sidonia, at the very moment when that tempest-tossed
+ grandee was painfully-creeping back towards the Bay of Biscay, with what
+ remained of his invincible fleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sanguine and pertinacious, the King refused to believe in, the downfall of
+ his long-cherished scheme; and even when the light was at last dawning
+ upon him, he was like a child, crying for a fresh toy, when the one which
+ had long amused him had been broken. If the Armada were really very much
+ damaged, it was easy enough, he thought, for the Duke of Parma to make him
+ a new one, while the old, one was repairing. "In case the Armada is too
+ much shattered to come out," said Philip, "and winter compels it to stay
+ in that port, you must cause another Armada to be constructed at Emden and
+ the adjacent towns, at my expense, and, with the two together, you will
+ certainly be able to conquer England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he wrote to Medina Sidonia in similar terms. That naval commander was
+ instructed to enter the Thames at once, if strong enough. If not, he was
+ to winter in the Scotch port which he was supposed to have captured.
+ Meantime Farnese would build a new fleet at Emden, and in the spring the
+ two dukes would proceed to accomplish the great purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at last the arrival of Medina Sidonia at Santander dispelled these
+ visions, and now the King appeared in another attitude. A messenger,
+ coming post-haste from the captain-general, arrived in the early days of
+ October at the Escorial. Entering the palace he found Idiaquez and Moura
+ pacing up and down the corridor, before the door of Philip's cabinet, and
+ was immediately interrogated by those counsellors, most anxious, of
+ course, to receive authentic intelligence at last as to the fate, of the
+ Armada. The entire overthrow of the great project was now, for the first
+ time, fully revealed in Spain; the fabulous victories over the English,
+ and the annihilation of Howard and all his ships, were dispersed in air.
+ Broken, ruined, forlorn, the invincible Armada&mdash;so far as it still
+ existed&mdash;had reached a Spanish port. Great was the consternation of
+ Idiaquez and Moura, as they listened to the tale, and very desirous was
+ each of the two secretaries that the other should, discharge the unwelcome
+ duty of communicating the fatal intelligence to the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last Moura consented to undertake the task, and entering the cabinet,
+ he found Philip seated at his desk. Of course he was writing letters.
+ Being informed of the arrival of a messenger from the north, he laid down
+ his pen, and inquired the news. The secretary replied that the accounts,
+ concerning the Armada were by no means so favourable as, could be wished.
+ The courier was then introduced, and made his dismal report. The King did
+ not change countenance. "Great thanks," he observed, "do I render to
+ Almighty God, by whose generous hand I am gifted with such power, that I
+ could easily, if I chose, place another fleet upon the seas. Nor is it of
+ very great importance that a running stream should be sometimes
+ intercepted, so long as the fountain from which it flows remains
+ inexhaustible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying he resumed his pen, and serenely proceeded with his letters.
+ Christopher Moura stared with unaffected amazement at his sovereign, thus
+ tranquil while a shattered world was falling on his head, and then retired
+ to confer with his colleague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And how did his Majesty receive the blow?" asked Idiaquez.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "His Majesty thinks nothing of the blow," answered Moura, "nor do I,
+ consequently, make more of this great calamity than does his Majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the King&mdash;as fortune flew away from him, wrapped himself in his
+ virtue; and his counsellors, imitating their sovereign, arrayed themselves
+ in the same garment. Thus draped, they were all prepared to bide the
+ pelting of the storm which was only beating figuratively on their heads,
+ while it had been dashing the King's mighty galleons on the rocks, and
+ drowning by thousands the wretched victims of his ambition. Soon
+ afterwards, when the particulars of the great disaster were thoroughly
+ known, Philip ordered a letter to be addressed in his name to all the
+ bishops of Spain, ordering a solemn thanksgiving to the Almighty for the
+ safety of that portion of the invincible Armada which it had pleased Him
+ to preserve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, with the sound of mourning throughout Spain&mdash;for there was
+ scarce a household of which some beloved member had not perished in the
+ great catastrophe&mdash;and with the peals of merry bells over all England
+ and Holland, and with a solemn 'Te Deum' resounding in every church, the
+ curtain fell upon the great tragedy of the Armada.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ Forbidding the wearing of mourning at all
+ Hardly a distinguished family in Spain not placed in mourning
+ Invincible Armada had not only been vanquished but annihilated
+ Nothing could equal Alexander's fidelity, but his perfidy
+ One could neither cry nor laugh within the Spanish dominions
+ Security is dangerous
+ Sixteen of their best ships had been sacrificed
+ Sure bind, sure find
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX. 1588-1589
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Alexander besieges Bergen-op-Zoom&mdash;Pallavicini's Attempt to seduce
+ Parma&mdash;Alexander's Fury&mdash;He is forced to raise the Siege, of Bergen
+ &mdash;Gertruydenberg betrayed to Parma&mdash;Indignation of the States&mdash;
+ Exploits, of Schenk&mdash;His Attack on Nymegen&mdash;He is defeated and
+ drowned&mdash;English-Dutch Expedition to Spain&mdash;Its meagre Results&mdash;
+ Death of Guise and of the Queen&mdash;Mother&mdash;Combinations after the
+ Murder of Henry III.&mdash;Tandem fit Surculus Arbor.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The fever of the past two years was followed by comparative languor. The
+ deadly crisis was past, the freedom of Europe was saved, Holland and
+ England breathed again; but tension now gave place to exhaustion. The
+ events in the remainder of the year 1588, with those of 1589&mdash;although
+ important in themselves&mdash;were the immediate results of that history
+ which has been so minutely detailed in these volumes, and can be indicated
+ in a very few pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of Parma, melancholy, disappointed, angry stung to the soul by
+ calumnies as stupid as they were venomous, and already afflicted with a
+ painful and lingering disease, which his friends attributed to poison
+ administered by command of the master whom he had so faithfully served&mdash;determined,
+ if possible, to afford the consolation which that master was so
+ plaintively demanding at his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Alexander led the splendid army which had been packed in, and unpacked
+ from, the flat boats of Newport and Dunkerk, against Bergen-op-Zoom, and
+ besieged that city in form. Once of great commercial importance, although
+ somewhat fallen away from its original prosperity, Bergen was well situate
+ on a little stream which connected it with the tide-waters of the Scheldt,
+ and was the only place in Brabant, except Willemstad, still remaining to
+ the States. Opposite lay the Isle of Tholen from which it was easily to be
+ supplied and reinforced. The Vosmeer, a branch of the Scheldt, separated
+ the island from the main, and there was a path along the bed of that
+ estuary, which, at dead low-water, was practicable for wading. Alexander,
+ accordingly, sent a party of eight hundred pikemen, under Montigny,
+ Marquis of Renty, and Ottavio Mansfeld, supported on the dyke by three
+ thousand musketeers, across; the dangerous ford, at ebb-tide, in order to
+ seize this important island. It was an adventure similar to those, which,
+ in the days of the grand commander, and under the guidance of Mondragon;
+ had been on two occasions so brilliantly successful. But the Isle of
+ Tholen was now defended by Count Solms and a garrison of fierce amphibious
+ Zeelanders&mdash;of those determined bands which had just been holding
+ Farnese and his fleet in prison, and daring him to the issue&mdash;and the
+ invading party, after fortunately accomplishing their night journey along
+ the bottom of the Vosmeer, were unable to effect a landing, were driven
+ with considerable loss into the waves again, and compelled to find their
+ way back as best they could, along their dangerous path, and with a
+ rapidly rising tide. It was a blind and desperate venture, and the Vosmeer
+ soon swallowed four hundred of the Spaniards. The rest, half-drowned or
+ smothered, succeeded in reaching the shore&mdash;the chiefs of the
+ expedition, Renty and Mansfeld, having been with difficulty rescued by
+ their followers, when nearly sinking in the tide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke continued the siege, but the place was well defended by an
+ English and Dutch garrison, to the number of five thousand, and commanded
+ by Colonel Morgan, that bold and much experienced Welshman, so well known
+ in the Netherland wars. Willoughby and Maurice of Nassau, and
+ Olden-Barneveld were, at different times, within the walls; for the Duke
+ had been unable to invest the place so closely as to prevent all
+ communications from without; and, while Maurice was present, there were
+ almost daily sorties from the town, with many a spirited skirmish, to give
+ pleasure to the martial young Prince. The English, officers, Vere and
+ Baskerville, and two Netherland colonels, the brothers Bax, most
+ distinguished themselves on these occasions. The siege was not going on
+ with the good fortune which had usually attended the Spanish leaguer of
+ Dutch cities, while, on the 29th September, a personal incident came to
+ increase Alexander's dissatisfaction and melancholy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On that day the Duke was sitting in his tent, brooding, as he was apt to
+ do, over the unjust accusations which had been heaped upon him in regard
+ to the failure of the Armada, when a stranger was announced. His name, he
+ said, was Giacomo Morone, and he was the bearer of a letter from Sir
+ Horace Pallavicini, a Genoese gentleman long established in London; and
+ known to be on confidential terms with the English government. Alexander
+ took the letter, and glancing at the bottom of the last page, saw that it
+ was not signed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How dare you bring me a dispatch without a signature?" he exclaimed. The
+ messenger, who was himself a Genoese, assured the Duke that the letter was
+ most certainly written by Pallavicini&mdash;who had himself placed it,
+ sealed, in his hands&mdash;and that he had supposed it signed, although he
+ had of course, not seen the inside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander began to read the note, which was not a very long one, and his
+ brow instantly darkened. He read a line or two more, when, with an
+ exclamation of fury, he drew his dagger, and, seizing the astonished
+ Genoese by the throat, was about to strike him dead. Suddenly mastering
+ his rage, however, by a strong effort, and remembering that the man might
+ be a useful witness; he flung Morone from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I had Pallavicini here," he said, "I would treat, him as I have just
+ refrained from using you. And if I had any suspicion that you were aware
+ of the contents of this letter, I would send you this instant to be
+ hanged."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unlucky despatch-bearer protested his innocence of all complicity with
+ Pallavicini, and his ignorance of the tenor of the communication by which
+ the Duke's wrath had been so much excited. He was then searched and
+ cross-examined most carefully by Richardot and other counsellors, and his
+ innocence being made apparent-he was ultimately discharged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letter of Pallavicini was simply an attempt to sound Farnese as to his
+ sentiments in regard to a secret scheme, which could afterwards be
+ arranged in form, and according, to which he was to assume the sovereignty
+ of the Netherlands himself, to the exclusion of his King, to guarantee to
+ England the possession of the cautionary towns, until her advances to the
+ States should be refunded, and to receive the support and perpetual
+ alliance of the Queen in his new and rebellious position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was additional evidence, if any were wanting, of the universal belief
+ in his disloyalty; and Alexander, faithful, if man ever were to his master&mdash;was
+ cut to the heart, and irritated almost to madness, by such insolent
+ propositions. There is neither proof nor probability that the Queen's
+ government was implicated in this intrigue of Pallavicini, who appears to
+ have been inspired by the ambition of achieving a bit of Machiavellian
+ policy, quite on his own account. Nothing came of the proposition, and the
+ Duke; having transmitted to the King a minute narrative of, the affair,
+ together with indignant protestations of the fidelity, which all the world
+ seemed determined to dispute, received most affectionate replies from that
+ monarch, breathing nothing but unbounded confidence in his nephew's
+ innocence and devotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such assurances from any other man in the world might have disarmed
+ suspicion, but Alexander knew his master too well to repose upon his word,
+ and remembered too bitterly the last hours of Don John of Austria &mdash;whose
+ dying pillow he had soothed, and whose death had been hastened, as he
+ knew, either by actual poison or by the hardly less fatal venom of slander&mdash;to
+ regain tranquillity as to his own position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King was desirous that Pallavicini should be invited over to Flanders,
+ in order that Alexander, under pretence of listening to his propositions,
+ might draw from the Genoese all the particulars of his scheme, and then,
+ at leisure, inflict the punishment which he had deserved. But insuperable
+ obstacles presented themselves, nor was Alexander desirous of affording
+ still further pretexts for his slanderers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very soon after this incident&mdash;most important as showing the real
+ situation of various parties, although without any immediate result&mdash;Alexander
+ received a visit in his tent from another stranger. This time the visitor
+ was an Englishman, one Lieutenant Grimstone, and the object of his
+ interview with the Duke was not political, but had, a direct reference to
+ the siege of Bergen. He was accompanied by a countryman of his own,
+ Redhead by name, a camp-suttler by profession. The two represented
+ themselves as deserters from the besieged city, and offered, for a
+ handsome reward, to conduct a force of Spaniards, by a secret path, into
+ one of the gates. The Duke questioned them narrowly, and being satisfied
+ with their intelligence and coolness, caused them to take an oath on the
+ Evangelists, that they were not playing him false. He then selected a band
+ of one hundred musketeers, partly Spaniards, partly Walloons&mdash;to be
+ followed at a distance by a much, more considerable force; two thousand in
+ number, under Sancho de Leyva: and the Marquis of Renti&mdash;and
+ appointed the following night for an enterprise against the city, under
+ the guidance of Grimstone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a wild autumnal night, moonless, pitch-dark, with a storm of wind
+ and rain. The waters were out&mdash;for the dykes had been cut in all
+ 'directions by the defenders of the city&mdash;and, with exception of some
+ elevated points occupied by Parma's forces, the whole country was
+ overflowed. Before the party set forth on their daring expedition, the two
+ Englishmen were tightly bound with cords, and led, each by two soldiers,
+ instructed to put them to instant death if their conduct should give cause
+ for suspicion. But both Grimstone and Redhead preserved a cheerful
+ countenance, and inspired a strong confidence in their honest intention to
+ betray their countrymen. And thus the band of bold adventurers plunged at
+ once into the darkness, and soon found themselves contending with the
+ tempest, and wading breast high in the black waters of the Scheldt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a long and perilous struggle, they at length reached the appointed
+ gate, The external portcullis was raised and the fifteen foremost of the
+ band rushed into the town. At the next moment, Lord Willoughby, who had
+ been privy to the whole scheme, cut with his own hand the cords which,
+ held the portcullis, and entrapped the leaders of the expedition, who were
+ all, at once put to the sword, while their followers were thundering at
+ the gate. The lieutenant and suttler who had thus overreached that great
+ master of dissimulation; Alexander Farnese; were at the same time unbound
+ by their comrades, and rescued from the fate intended for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Notwithstanding the probability&mdash;when the portcullis fell&mdash;that
+ the whole party, had been deceived by an artifice of war the adventurers,
+ who had come so far, refused to abandon the enterprise, and continued an
+ impatient battery upon the gate. At last it was swung wide open, and a
+ furious onslaught was made by the garrison upon the Spaniards. There was&mdash;a
+ fierce brief struggle, and then the assailants were utterly routed. Some
+ were killed under the walls, while the rest were hunted into the waves.
+ Nearly every one of the expedition (a thousand in number) perished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had now become obvious to the Duke that his siege must be raised. The
+ days were gone when the walls of Dutch towns seemed to melt before the
+ first scornful glance of the Spanish invader; and when a summons meant a
+ surrender, and a surrender a massacre. Now, strong in the feeling of
+ independence, and supported by the courage and endurance of their English
+ allies, the Hollanders had learned to humble the pride of Spain as it had
+ never been humbled before. The hero of a hundred battle-fields, the
+ inventive and brilliant conqueror of Antwerp, seemed in the deplorable
+ issue of the English invasion to have lost all his genius, all his
+ fortune. A cloud had fallen upon his fame, and he now saw himself; at the
+ head of the best army in Europe, compelled to retire, defeated and
+ humiliated, from the walls of Bergen. Winter was coming on apace; the
+ country was flooded; the storms in that-bleak region and inclement season
+ were incessant; and he was obliged to retreat before his army should be
+ drowned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the night of 12-13 November he set fire to his camp; and took his
+ departure. By daybreak he was descried in full retreat, and was hotly
+ pursued by the English and Dutch from the city, who drove the great
+ Alexander and his legions before them in ignominious flight. Lord
+ Willoughby, in full view of the retiring enemy, indulged the allied forces
+ with a chivalrous spectacle. Calling a halt, after it had become obviously
+ useless, with their small force of cavalry; to follow any longer, through
+ a flooded country, an enemy who had abandoned his design, he solemnly
+ conferred the honour of knighthood, in the name of Queen Elizabeth, on the
+ officers who had most distinguished themselves during the siege, Francis
+ Vere, Baskerville, Powell, Parker, Knowles, and on the two Netherland
+ brothers, Paul and Marcellus Bax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of Parma then went into winter quarters in Brabant, and, before
+ the spring, that obedient Province had been eaten as bare as Flanders had
+ already been by the friendly Spaniards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An excellent understanding between England and Holland had been the result
+ of their united and splendid exertions against the Invincible Armada. Late
+ in the year 1588 Sir John Norris had been sent by the Queen to offer her
+ congratulations and earnest thanks to the States for their valuable
+ assistance in preserving her throne, and to solicit their cooperation in
+ some new designs against the common foe. Unfortunately, however, the epoch
+ of good feeling was but of brief duration. Bitterness and dissension
+ seemed the inevitable conditions of the English-Dutch alliance. It will
+ be, remembered, that, on the departure of Leicester, several cities had
+ refused to acknowledge the authority of Count Maurice and the States; and
+ that civil war in the scarcely-born commonwealth had been the result.
+ Medenblik, Naarden, and the other contumacious cities, had however been
+ reduced to obedience after the reception of the Earl's resignation, but
+ the important city of Gertruydenberg had remained in a chronic state of
+ mutiny. This rebellion had been partially appeased during the year 1588 by
+ the efforts of Willoughby, who had strengthened, the garrison by
+ reinforcements of English troops under command of his brother-in-law, Sir
+ John Wingfield. Early in 1589 however, the whole garrison became
+ rebellious, disarmed and maltreated the burghers, and demanded immediate
+ payment of the heavy arrearages still due to the troops. Willoughby, who&mdash;much
+ disgusted with his career in the Netherlands&mdash;was about leaving for
+ England, complaining that the States had not only left him without
+ remuneration for his services, but had not repaid his own advances, nor
+ even given him a complimentary dinner, tried in vain to pacify them. A
+ rumour became very current, moreover, that the garrison had opened
+ negotiations with Alexander Farnese, and accordingly Maurice of Nassau&mdash;of
+ whose patrimonial property the city of Gertruydenberg made a considerable
+ proportion, to the amount of eight thousand pounds sterling a years&mdash;after
+ summoning the garrison, in his own name and that of the States, to
+ surrender, laid siege to the place in form. It would have been cheaper, no
+ doubt, to pay the demands of the garrison in full, and allow them to
+ depart. But Maurice considered his honour at stake. His letters of
+ summons, in which he spoke of the rebellious commandant and his garrison
+ as self-seeking foreigners and mercenaries, were taken in very ill part.
+ Wingfield resented the statement in very insolent language, and offered to
+ prove its falsehood with his sword against any man and in any place
+ whatever. Willoughby wrote to his brother-in-law, from Flushing, when
+ about to embark, disapproving of his conduct and of his language; and to
+ Maurice, deprecating hostile measures against a city under the protection
+ of Queen Elizabeth. At any rate, he claimed that Sir John Wingfield and
+ his wife, the Countess of Kent, with their newly-born child, should be
+ allowed to depart from the place. But Wingfield expressed great scorn at
+ any suggestion of retreat, and vowed that he would rather surrender the
+ city to the Spaniards than tolerate the presumption of Maurice and the
+ States. The young Prince accordingly, opened his batteries, but before an
+ entrance could be effected into the town, was obliged to retire at the
+ approach of Count Mansfield with a much superior force. Gertruydenberg was
+ now surrendered to the Spaniards in accordance with a secret negotiation
+ which had been proceeding all the spring, and had been brought to a
+ conclusion at last. The garrison received twelve months' pay in full and a
+ gratuity of five months in addition, and the city was then reduced into
+ obedience to Spain and Rome on the terms which had been usual during the
+ government of Farnese.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loss of this city was most severe to the republic, for the enemy had
+ thus gained an entrance into the very heart of Holland. It was a more
+ important acquisition to Alexander than even Bergen-op-Zoom would have
+ been, and it was a bitter reflection that to the treachery of
+ Netherlanders and of their English allies this great disaster was owing.
+ All the wrath aroused a year before by the famous treason of York and
+ Stanley, and which had been successfully extinguished, now flamed forth
+ afresh. The States published a placard denouncing the men who had thus
+ betrayed the cause of freedom, and surrendered the city of Gertruydenberg
+ to the Spaniards, as perjured traitors whom it was made lawful to hang,
+ whenever or wherever caught, without trial or sentence, and offering fifty
+ florins a-head for every private soldier and one hundred florins for any
+ officer of the garrison. A list of these Englishmen and Netherlanders, so
+ far as known, was appended to the placard, and the catalogue was headed by
+ the name of Sir John Wingfield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the consequences of the fatal event were even more deplorable than
+ the loss of the city itself. The fury of Olden-Barneveld at the treason
+ was excessive, and the great Advocate governed the policy of the republic,
+ at this period, almost like a dictator. The States, easily acknowledging
+ the sway of the imperious orator, became bitter&mdash;and wrathful with
+ the English, side by side with whom they had lately been so cordially
+ standing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Willoughby, on his part, now at the English court, was furious with the
+ States, and persuaded the leading counsellors of the Queen as well as her
+ Majesty herself, to adopt his view of the transaction. Wingfield, it was
+ asserted, was quite innocent in the matter; he was entirely ignorant of
+ the French language, and therefore was unable to read a word of the
+ letters addressed to him by Maurice and the replies which had been signed
+ by himself. Whether this strange excuse ought to be accepted or not, it is
+ quite certain that he was no traitor like York and Stanley, and no friend
+ to Spain; for he had stipulated for himself the right to return to
+ England, and had neither received nor desired any reward. He hated Maurice
+ and he hated the States, but he asserted that he had been held in durance,
+ that the garrison was mutinous, and that he was no more responsible for
+ the loss of the city than Sir Francis Vere had been, who had also been
+ present, and whose name had been subsequently withdrawn, in honourable
+ fashion from the list of traitors, by authority of the States. His
+ position&mdash;so far as he was personally concerned&mdash;seemed
+ defensible, and the Queen was thoroughly convinced of his innocence.
+ Willoughby complained that the republic was utterly in the hands of
+ Barneveld, that no man ventured to lift his voice or his eyes in presence
+ of the terrible Advocate who ruled every Netherlander with a rod of iron,
+ and that his violent and threatening language to Wingfield and himself at
+ the dinner-table in Bergen-op-Zoom on the subject of the mutiny (when one
+ hundred of the Gertruydenberg garrison were within sound of his voice) had
+ been the chief cause of the rebellion. Inspired by these remonstrances,
+ the Queen once more emptied the vials of her wrath upon the United
+ Netherlands. The criminations and recriminations seemed endless, and it
+ was most fortunate that Spain had been weakened, that Alexander, a prey to
+ melancholy and to lingering disease, had gone to the baths of Spa to
+ recruit his shattered health, and that his attention and the schemes of
+ Philip for the year 1589 and the following period were to be directed
+ towards France. Otherwise the commonwealth could hardly have escaped still
+ more severe disasters than those already experienced in this unfortunate
+ condition of its affairs, and this almost hopeless misunderstanding with
+ its most important and vigorous friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While these events had been occurring in the heart of the republic, Martin
+ Schenk, that restless freebooter, had been pursuing a bustling and most
+ lucrative career on its outskirts. All the episcopate of Cologne&mdash;that
+ debatable land of the two rival paupers, Bavarian Ernest and Gebhard
+ Truchsess&mdash;trembled before him. Mothers scared their children into
+ quiet with the terrible name of Schenk, and farmers and land-younkers
+ throughout the electorate and the land of Berg, Cleves, and Juliers, paid
+ their black-mail, as if it were a constitutional impost, to escape the
+ levying process of the redoubtable partisan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Martin was no longer seconded, as he should have been, by the States,
+ to whom he had been ever faithful since he forsook the banner of Spain for
+ their own; and he had even gone to England and complained to the Queen of
+ the short-comings of those who owed him so much. His ingenious and daring
+ exploit&mdash;the capture of Bonn&mdash;has already been narrated, but the
+ States had neglected the proper precautions to secure that important city.
+ It had consequently, after a six months' siege, been surrendered to the
+ Spaniards under Prince Chimay, on the 19th of September; while, in
+ December following, the city of Wachtendonk, between the Rhine and Meuse,
+ had fallen into Mansfeld's hands. Rheinberg, the only city of the
+ episcopate which remained to the deposed Truchsess, was soon afterwards
+ invested by the troops of Parma, and Schenk in vain summoned the
+ States-General to take proper measures for its defence. But with the enemy
+ now eating his way towards the heart of Holland, and with so many dangers
+ threatening them on every side, it was thought imprudent to go so far away
+ to seek the enemy. So Gebhard retired in despair into Germany, and Martin
+ did what he could to protect Rheinberg, and to fill his own coffers at the
+ expense of the whole country side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had built a fort, which then and long afterwards bore his name-Schenken
+ Schans, or Schenk's Sconce&mdash;at that important point where the Rhine,
+ opening its two arms to enclose the "good meadow" island of Batavia,
+ becomes on the left the Waal, while on the right it retains its ancient
+ name; and here, on the outermost edge of the republic, and looking
+ straight from his fastness into the fruitful fields of Munster,
+ Westphalia, and the electorate, the industrious Martin devoted himself
+ with advantage to his favourite pursuits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 7th of August, on the heath of Lippe, he had attacked a body of
+ Spanish musketeers, more than a thousand strong, who were protecting a
+ convoy of provisions, treasure, and furniture, sent by Farnese to Verdugo,
+ royal governor of Friesland. Schenk, without the loss of a single man, had
+ put the greater part of these Spaniards and Walloons to the sword, and
+ routed the rest. The leader of the expedition, Colonel Aristotle Patton,
+ who had once played him so foul a trick in the surrender of Gelder, had
+ soon taken to flight, when he found his ancient enemy upon him, and,
+ dashing into the Lippe, had succeeded, by the strength and speed of his
+ horse, in gaining the opposite bank, and effecting his escape. Had he
+ waited many minutes longer it is probable that the treacherous Aristotle
+ would have passed a comfortless half-hour with his former comrade.
+ Treasure to the amount of seven thousand crowns in gold, five hundred
+ horses, with jewels, plate, and other articles of value, were the fruit of
+ this adventure, and Schenk returned with his followers, highly delighted,
+ to Schenkenschans, and sent the captured Spanish colours to her Majesty of
+ England as a token.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few miles below his fortress was Nymegen, and towards that ancient and
+ wealthy city Schenk had often cast longing eyes. It still held for the
+ King, although on the very confines of Batavia; but while acknowledging
+ the supremacy of Philip, it claimed the privileges of the empire. From
+ earliest times it had held its head very high among imperial towns, had
+ been one of the three chief residences of the Emperor. Charlemagne, and
+ still paid the annual tribute of a glove full of pepper to the German
+ empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the evening of the 10th of August, 1589, there was a wedding feast in
+ one of the splendid mansions of the stately city. The festivities were
+ prolonged until deep in the midsummer's night, and harp and viol were
+ still inspiring the feet of the dancers, when on a sudden, in the midst of
+ the holiday-groups, appeared the grim visage of Martin Schenk, the man who
+ never smiled. Clad in no wedding-garment, but in armour of proof, with
+ morion on head, and sword in hand, the great freebooter strode heavily
+ through the ball-room, followed by a party of those terrible musketeers
+ who never gave or asked for quarter, while the affrighted revellers
+ fluttered away before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking advantage of a dark night, he had just dropped down the river from
+ his castle, with five-and-twenty barges, had landed with his most trusted
+ soldiers in the foremost vessels, had battered down the gate of St.
+ Anthony, and surprised and slain the guard. Without waiting for the rest
+ of his boats, he had then stolen with his comrades through the silent
+ streets, and torn away the lattice-work, and other slight defences on the
+ rear of the house which they had now entered, and through which they
+ intended to possess themselves of the market-place. Martin had long since
+ selected this mansion as a proper position for his enterprise, but he had
+ not been bidden to the wedding, and was somewhat disconcerted when he
+ found himself on the festive scene which he had so grimly interrupted.
+ Some of the merry-makers escaped from the house, and proceeded to alarm
+ the town; while Schenk hastily fortified his position; and took possession
+ of the square. But the burghers and garrison were soon on foot, and he was
+ driven back into the house. Three times he recovered the square by main
+ strength of his own arm, seconded by the handful of men whom he had
+ brought with him, and three times he was beaten back by overwhelming
+ numbers into the wedding mansion. The arrival of the greater part of his
+ followers, with whose assistance he could easily have mastered the city in
+ the first moments of surprise, was mysteriously delayed. He could not
+ account for their prolonged, absence, and was meanwhile supported only by
+ those who had arrived with him in the foremost barges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The truth&mdash;of which he was ignorant&mdash;was, that the remainder of
+ the flotilla, borne along by the strong and deep current of the Waal, then
+ in a state of freshet, had shot past the landing-place, and had ever since
+ been vainly struggling against wind and tide to force their way back to
+ the necessary point. Meantime Schenk and his followers fought desperately
+ in the market-place, and desperately in the house which he had seized. But
+ a whole garrison, and a town full of citizens in arms proved too much for
+ him, and he was now hotly besieged in the mansion, and at last driven
+ forth into the streets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time day was dawning, the whole population, soldiers and burghers,
+ men, women, and children, were thronging about the little band of
+ marauders, and assailing them with every weapon and every missile to be
+ found. Schenk fought with his usual ferocity, but at last the musketeers,
+ in spite of his indignant commands, began rapidly to retreat towards the
+ quay. In vain Martin stormed and cursed, in vain with his own hand he
+ struck more than one of his soldiers dead. He was swept along with the
+ panic-stricken band, and when, shouting and gnashing his teeth with
+ frenzy, he reached the quay at last, he saw at a glance why his great
+ enterprise had failed. The few empty barges of his own party were moored
+ at the steps; the rest were half a mile off, contending hopelessly against
+ the swollen and rapid Waal. Schenk, desperately wounded, was left almost
+ alone upon the wharf, for his routed followers had plunged helter skelter
+ into the boats, several of which, overladen in the panic, sank at once,
+ leaving the soldiers to drown or struggle with the waves. The game was
+ lost. Nothing was left the freebooter but retreat. Reluctantly turning his
+ back on his enemies, now in full cry close behind him, Schenk sprang into
+ the last remaining boat just pushing from the quay. Already overladen, it
+ foundered with his additional weight, and Martin Schenk, encumbered with
+ his heavy armour, sank at once to the bottom of the Waal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the fugitives succeeded in swimming down the stream, and were
+ picked up by their comrades in the barges below the town, and so made
+ their escape. Many were drowned with their captain. A few days afterwards,
+ the inhabitants of Nymegen fished up the body of the famous partisan. He
+ was easily recognized by his armour, and by his truculent face, still
+ wearing the scowl with which he had last rebuked his followers. His head
+ was taken off at once, and placed on one of the turrets of the town, and
+ his body, divided in four, was made to adorn other portions of the
+ battlements; so that the burghers were enabled to feast their eyes on the
+ remnants of the man at whose name the whole country had so often trembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the end of Sir Martin Schenk of Niddegem, knight, colonel, and
+ brigand; save that ultimately his dissevered limbs were packed in a chest,
+ and kept in a church tower, until Maurice of Nassau, in course of time
+ becoming master of Nymegen, honoured the valiant and on the whole faithful
+ freebooter with a Christian and military burial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few months later (October, 1589) another man who had been playing an
+ important part in the Netherlands' drama lost his life. Count Moeurs and
+ Niewenaar, stadholder of Utrecht, Gelderland, and Overysael, while
+ inspecting some newly-invented fireworks, was suddenly killed by their
+ accidental ignition and explosion. His death left vacant three great
+ stadholderates, which before long were to be conferred upon a youth whose
+ power henceforth was rapidly to grow greater.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The misunderstanding between Holland and England continuing,
+ Olden-Barneveld, Aerssens, and Buys, refusing to see that they had done
+ wrong in denouncing the Dutch and English traitors who had sold
+ Gertruydenberg to the enemy, and the Queen and her counsellors persisting
+ in their anger at so insolent a proceeding, it may easily be supposed that
+ there was no great heartiness in the joint expedition against Spain, which
+ had been projected in the autumn of 1588, and was accomplished in the
+ spring and summer of 1589.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was this well-known enterprise fruitful of any remarkable result. It
+ had been decided to carry the war into Spain itself, and Don Antonio,
+ prior of Crato, bastard of Portugal, and pretender to its crown, had
+ persuaded himself and the English government that his name would be potent
+ to conjure with in that kingdom, hardly yet content with the Spanish yoke.
+ Supported by a determined force of English and Dutch adventurers, he
+ boasted that he should excite a revolution by the magic of his presence,
+ and cause Philip's throne to tremble, in return for the audacious
+ enterprise of that monarch against England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If a foray were to be made into Spain, no general and no admiral could be
+ found in the world so competent to the adventure as Sir John Norris and
+ Sir Francis Drake. They were accompanied, too, by Sir Edward Norris, and
+ another of those 'chickens of Mars,' Henry Norris; by the indomitable and
+ ubiquitous Welshman, Roger Williams, and by the young Earl of Essex, whom
+ the Queen in vain commanded to remain at home, and who, somewhat to the
+ annoyance of the leaders of the expedition, concealed himself from her
+ Majesty's pursuit, and at last embarked in a vessel which he had equipped,
+ in order not to be cheated of his share in the hazard and the booty. "If I
+ speed well," said the spendthrift but valiant youth; "I will adventure to
+ be rich; if not, I will never live, to see the end of my poverty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no great riches were to be gathered in the expedition. With some
+ fourteen thousand men, and one hundred and sixty vessels&mdash;of which
+ six were the Queen's ships of war, including the famous Revenge and the
+ Dreadnought, and the rest armed merchantmen, English, and forty Hollanders&mdash;and
+ with a contingent of fifteen hundred Dutchmen under Nicolas van Meetkerke
+ and Van Laen, the adventurers set sail from Plymouth on the 18th of April,
+ 1589.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They landed at Coruna&mdash;at which place they certainly could not expect
+ to create a Portuguese revolution, which was the first object of the
+ expedition&mdash;destroyed some shipping in the harbour, captured and
+ sacked the lower town, and were repulsed in the upper; marched with six
+ thousand men to Burgos, crossed the bridge at push of pike, and routed ten
+ thousand Spaniards under Andrada and Altamira&mdash;Edward Norris
+ receiving a desperate blow on the head at the passage' of the bridge, and
+ being rescued from death by his brother John&mdash;took sail for the south
+ after this action, in which they had killed a thousand Spaniards, and had
+ lost but two men of their own; were joined off Cape Finisterre by Essex;
+ landed a force at Peniche, the castle of which place surrendered to them,
+ and acknowledged the authority of Don Antonio; and thence marched with the
+ main body of the troops, under Sir John Norris, forty-eight miles to
+ Lisbon, while Drake, with the fleet, was to sail up the Tagus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing like a revolution had been effected in Portugal. No one seemed to
+ care for the Pretender, or even to be aware that he had ever existed,
+ except the governor of Peniche Castle, a few ragged and bare-footed
+ peasants, who, once upon the road, shouted "Viva Don Antonio," and one old
+ gentleman by the way side, who brought him a plate of plums. His hopes of
+ a crown faded rapidly, and when the army reached Lisbon it had dwindled to
+ not much more than four thousand effective men&mdash;the rest being dead
+ of dysentery, or on the sick-list from imprudence in eating and drinking&mdash;while
+ they found that they had made an unfortunate omission in their machinery
+ for assailing the capital, having not a single fieldpiece in the whole
+ army. Moreover, as Drake was prevented by bad weather and head-winds from
+ sailing up the Tagus, it seemed a difficult matter to carry the city. A
+ few cannon, and the co-operation of the fleet, were hardly to be dispensed
+ with on such an occasion. Nevertheless it would perhaps have proved an
+ easier task than it appeared&mdash;for so great was the panic within the
+ place that a large number of the inhabitants had fled, the Cardinal
+ Viceroy Archduke Albert had but a very insufficient guard, and there were
+ many gentlemen of high station who were anxious to further the entrance of
+ the English, and who were afterwards hanged or garotted for their hostile
+ sentiments to the Spanish government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the leaders were deliberating what course to take, they were
+ informed that Count Fuentes and Henriquez de Guzman, with six thousand
+ men, lay at a distance of two miles from Lisbon, and that they had been
+ proclaiming by sound of trumpet that the English had been signally
+ defeated before Lisbon, and that they were in full retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fired at this bravado, Norris sent a trumpet to Fuentes and Guzman, with a
+ letter signed and sealed, giving them the lie in plainest terms,
+ appointing the next day for a meeting of the two forces, and assuring them
+ that when the next encounter should take place, it should be seen whether
+ a Spaniard or an Englishman would be first to fly; while Essex, on his
+ part, sent a note, defying either or both those boastful generals to
+ single combat. Next day the English army took the field, but the Spaniards
+ retired before them; and nothing came of this exchange of cartels, save a
+ threat on the part of Fuentes to hang the trumpeter who had brought the
+ messages. From the execution of this menace he refrained, however, on
+ being assured that the deed would be avenged by the death of the Spanish
+ prisoner of highest rank then in English hands, and thus the trumpeter
+ escaped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon afterwards the fleet set sail from the Tagus, landed, and burned Vigo
+ on their way homeward, and returned to Plymouth about the middle of July.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the thirteen thousand came home six thousand, the rest having perished
+ of dysentery and other disorders. They had braved and insulted Spain,
+ humbled her generals, defied her power, burned some defenceless villages,
+ frightened the peasantry, set fire to some shipping, destroyed wine, oil,
+ and other merchandize, and had divided among the survivors of the
+ expedition, after landing in England, five shillings a head prize-money;
+ but they had not effected a revolution in Portugal. Don Antonio had been
+ offered nothing by his faithful subjects but a dish of plums&mdash;so that
+ he retired into obscurity from that time forward&mdash;and all this was
+ scarcely a magnificent result for the death of six or seven thousand good
+ English and Dutch soldiers, and the outlay of considerable treasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a free-booting foray&mdash;and it was nothing else&mdash;it could
+ hardly be thought successful; although it was a splendid triumph compared
+ with the result of the long and loudly heralded Invincible Armada.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In France, great events during the remainder of 1588 and the following
+ year, and which are well known even to the most superficial student of
+ history, had much changed the aspect of European affairs. It was fortunate
+ for the two commonwealths of Holland and England, engaged in the great
+ struggle for civil and religious liberty, and national independence, that
+ the attention of Philip became more and more absorbed-as time wore on&mdash;with
+ the affairs of France. It seemed necessary for him firmly to establish his
+ dominion in that country before attempting once more the conquest of
+ England, or the recovery of the Netherlands. For France had been brought
+ more nearly to anarchy and utter decomposition than ever. Henry III.,
+ after his fatal forgiveness of the deadly offence of Guise, felt day by
+ day more keenly that he had transferred his sceptre&mdash;such as it was&mdash;to
+ that dangerous intriguer. Bitterly did the King regret having refused the
+ prompt offer of Alphonse Corse on the day of the barricades; for now, so
+ long as the new generalissimo should live, the luckless Henry felt himself
+ a superfluity in his own realm. The halcyon days were for ever past, when,
+ protected by the swords of Joyeuse and of Epernon, the monarch of France
+ could pass his life playing at cup and ball, or snipping images out of
+ pasteboard, or teaching his parrots-to talk, or his lap-dogs to dance. His
+ royal occupations were gone, and murder now became a necessary preliminary
+ to any future tranquillity or enjoyment. Discrowned as he felt himself
+ already, he knew that life or liberty was only held by him now at the will
+ of Guise. The assassination of the Duke in December was the necessary
+ result of the barricades in May; and accordingly that assassination was
+ arranged with an artistic precision of which the world had hardly
+ suspected the Valois to be capable, and which Philip himself might have
+ envied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of the murders of Blois&mdash;the destruction of Guise and his
+ brother the Cardinal, and the subsequent imprisonment of the Archbishop of
+ Lyons, the Cardinal Bourbon, and the Prince de Joinville, now, through the
+ death of his father, become the young Duke of Guise&mdash;all these events
+ are too familiar in the realms of history, song, romance, and painting, to
+ require more than this slight allusion here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never had an assassination been more technically successful; yet its
+ results were not commensurate with the monarch's hopes. The deed which he
+ had thought premature in May was already too late in December. His mother
+ denounced his cruelty now, as she had, six months before, execrated his
+ cowardice. And the old Queen, seeing that her game was played out&mdash;that
+ the cards had all gone against her&mdash;that her son was doomed, and her
+ own influence dissolved in air, felt that there was nothing left for her
+ but to die. In a week she was dead, and men spoke no more of Catharine de'
+ Medici, and thought no more of her than if&mdash;in the words of a
+ splenetic contemporary&mdash;"she had been a dead she-goat." Paris howled
+ with rage when it learned the murders of Blois, and the sixteen quarters
+ became more furious than ever against the Valois. Some wild talk there was
+ of democracy and republicanism after the manner of Switzerland, and of
+ dividing France into cantons&mdash;and there was an earnest desire on the
+ part of every grandee, every general, every soldier of fortune, to carve
+ out a portion of French territory with his sword, and to appropriate it
+ for himself and his heirs. Disintegration was making rapid progress, and
+ the epoch of the last Valois seemed mare dark and barbarous than the times
+ of the degenerate Carlovingians had been. The letter-writer of the
+ Escorial, who had earnestly warned his faithful Mucio, week after week,
+ that dangers were impending over him, and that "some trick would be played
+ upon him," should he venture into the royal presence, now acquiesced in
+ his assassination, and placidly busied himself with fresh combinations and
+ newer tools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Baked, hunted, scorned by all beside, the luckless Henry now threw himself
+ into the arms of the Bearnese&mdash;the man who could and would have
+ protected him long before, had the King been capable of understanding
+ their relative positions and his own true interests. Could the Valois have
+ conceived the thought of religious toleration, his throne even then might
+ have been safe. But he preferred playing the game of the priests and
+ bigots, who execrated his name and were bent upon his destruction. At
+ last, at Plessis les Tours, the Bearnese, in his shabby old chamois jacket
+ and his well-dinted cuirass took the silken Henry in his arms, and the two&mdash;the
+ hero and the fribble&mdash;swearing eternal friendship, proceeded to
+ besiege Paris. A few weeks later, the dagger of Jacques Clement put an end
+ for ever to, the line of Valois. Luckless Henry III. slept with his
+ forefathers, and Henry of Bourbon and Navarre proclaimed himself King of
+ France. Catharine and her four sons had all past away at last, and it
+ would be a daring and a dexterous schemer who should now tear the crown,
+ for which he had so long and so patiently waited, from the iron grasp of
+ the Bearnese. Philip had a more difficult game than ever to play in
+ France. It would be hard for him to make valid the claims of the Infanta
+ and any husband he might select for her to the crown of her grandfather
+ Henry II. It seemed simple enough for him, while waiting the course of
+ events, to set up a royal effigy before the world in the shape of an
+ effete old Cardinal Bourbon, to pour oil upon its head and to baptize it
+ Charles X.; but meantime the other Bourbon was no effigy, and he called
+ himself Henry IV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was easy enough for Paris, and Madam League, and Philip the Prudent, to
+ cry wo upon the heretic; but the cheerful leader of the Huguenots was a
+ philosopher, who in the days of St. Bartholomew had become orthodox to
+ save his life, and who was already "instructing himself" anew in order to
+ secure his crown. Philip was used to deal with fanatics, and had often
+ been opposed by a religious bigotry as fierce as his own; but he might
+ perhaps be baffled by a good-humoured free-thinker, who was to teach him a
+ lesson in political theology of which he had never dreamed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Leaguers were not long in doubt as to the meaning of "instruction,"
+ and they were thoroughly persuaded that&mdash;so soon as Henry IV. should
+ reconcile himself with Rome&mdash;their game was likely to become
+ desperate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless prudent Philip sat in his elbow-chairs writing his
+ apostilles, improving himself and his secretaries in orthography, but
+ chiefly confining his attention to the affairs of France. The departed
+ Mucio's brother Mayenne was installed as chief stipendiary of Spain and
+ lieutenant-general for the League in France, until Philip should determine
+ within himself in what form to assume the sovereignty of that kingdom. It
+ might be questionable however whether that corpulent Duke, who spent more
+ time in eating than Henry IV. did in sleeping, and was longer in reading a
+ letter than Henry in winning a battle, were likely to prove a very
+ dangerous rival even with all Spain at his back&mdash;to the lively
+ Bearnese. But time would necessarily be consumed before the end was
+ reached, and time and Philip were two. Henry of Navarre and France was
+ ready to open his ears to instruction; but even he had declared, several
+ years before, that "a religion was not to be changed like a shirt." So
+ while the fresh garment was airing for him at Rome, and while he was
+ leisurely stripping off the old, he might perhaps be taken at a
+ disadvantage. Fanaticism on both sides, during this process of
+ instruction, might be roused. The Huguenots on their part might denounce
+ the treason of their great chief, and the Papists, on theirs, howl at the
+ hypocrisy of the pretended conversion. But Henry IV. had philosophically
+ prepared himself for the denunciations of the Protestants, while
+ determined to protect them against the persecutions of the Romanism to
+ which he meant to give his adhesion. While accepting the title of
+ renegade, together with an undisputed crown, he was not the man to
+ rekindle those fires of religious bigotry which it was his task to quench,
+ now that they had lighted his way to the throne. The demands of his
+ Catholic supporters for the exclusion from the kingdom of all religions
+ but their own, were steadily refused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus the events of 1588 and 1589 indicated that the great game of
+ despotism against freedom would be played, in the coming years, upon the
+ soil of France. Already Elizabeth had furnished the new King with L22,000
+ in gold&mdash;a larger sum; as he observed, than he had ever seen before
+ in his life, and the States of the Netherlands had provided him with as
+ much more. Willoughby too, and tough Roger Williams, and Baskerville, and
+ Umpton, and Vere, with 4000 English pikemen at their back, had already
+ made a brief but spirited campaign in France; and the Duke of Parma, after
+ recruiting his health; so, far as it was possible; at Spa, was preparing
+ himself to measure swords with that great captain of Huguenots; who now
+ assumed the crown of his ancestors, upon the same ground. It seemed
+ probable that for the coming years England would be safe from Spanish
+ invasion, and that Holland would have a better opportunity than it had
+ ever enjoyed before of securing its liberty and perfecting its political
+ organization. While Parma, Philip; and Mayenne were fighting the Bearnese
+ for the crown of France, there might be a fairer field for the new
+ commonwealth of the United Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus many of the personages who have figured in these volumes have
+ already passed away. Leicester had died just after the defeat of the
+ Armada, and the thrifty Queen, while dropping a tear upon the grave of
+ 'sweet Robin,' had sold his goods at auction to defray his debts to
+ herself; and Moeurs, and Martin Schenk, and 'Mucio,' and Henry III., and
+ Catharine de' Medici, were all dead. But Philip the Prudent remained, and
+ Elizabeth of England, and Henry of France and Navarre, and John of
+ Olden-Barneveld; and there was still another personage, a very young man
+ still, but a deep-thinking, hard-working student, fagging steadily at
+ mathematics and deep in the works of Stevinus, who, before long, might
+ play a conspicuous part in the world's great drama. But, previously to
+ 1590, Maurice of Nassau seemed comparatively insignificant, and he could
+ be spoken of by courtiers as a cipher, and as an unmannerly boy just let
+ loose from school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <table summary="" border="3" cellpadding="4">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a
+ href="https://www.gutenberg.org/files/4872/4872-h/4872-h.htm"><b>Volume
+ III.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</b></a>
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS:
+
+ I will never live, to see the end of my poverty
+ Religion was not to be changed like a shirt
+ Tension now gave place to exhaustion
+
+
+ ETEXT EDITOR'S BOOKMARKS, ENTIRE 1586-89 UNITED NETHERLANDS:
+
+ A burnt cat fears the fire
+ A free commonwealth&mdash;was thought an absurdity
+ Act of Uniformity required Papists to assist
+ All business has been transacted with open doors
+ And thus this gentle and heroic spirit took its flight
+ Are wont to hang their piety on the bell-rope
+ Arminianism
+ As lieve see the Spanish as the Calvinistic inquisition
+ As logical as men in their cups are prone to be
+ Baiting his hook a little to his appetite
+ Beacons in the upward path of mankind
+ Been already crimination and recrimination more than enough
+ Bungling diplomatists and credulous dotards
+ Canker of a long peace
+ Casting up the matter "as pinchingly as possibly might be"
+ Defect of enjoying the flattery, of his inferiors in station
+ Disposed to throat-cutting by the ministers of the Gospel
+ During this, whole war, we have never seen the like
+ Elizabeth (had not) the faintest idea of religious freedom
+ Englishmen and Hollanders preparing to cut each other's throats
+ Even to grant it slowly is to deny it utterly
+ Evil is coming, the sooner it arrives the better
+ Faction has rarely worn a more mischievous aspect
+ Fitter to obey than to command
+ Five great rivers hold the Netherland territory in their coils
+ Fool who useth not wit because he hath it not
+ Forbidding the wearing of mourning at all
+ Full of precedents and declamatory commonplaces
+ God, whose cause it was, would be pleased to give good weather
+ Guilty of no other crime than adhesion to the Catholic faith
+ Hard at work, pouring sand through their sieves
+ Hardly a distinguished family in Spain not placed in mourning
+ Heretics to the English Church were persecuted
+ High officers were doing the work of private, soldiers
+ I did never see any man behave himself as he did
+ I am a king that will be ever known not to fear any but God
+ I will never live, to see the end of my poverty
+ Individuals walking in advance of their age
+ Infamy of diplomacy, when diplomacy is unaccompanied by honesty
+ Inquisitors enough; but there were no light vessels in The Armada
+ Invincible Armada had not only been vanquished but annihilated
+ Look for a sharp war, or a miserable peace
+ Loving only the persons who flattered him
+ Mendacity may always obtain over innocence and credulity
+ Never peace well made, he observed, without a mighty war
+ Never did statesmen know better how not to do
+ Not many more than two hundred Catholics were executed
+ Nothing could equal Alexander's fidelity, but his perfidy
+ One could neither cry nor laugh within the Spanish dominions
+ Only citadel against a tyrant and a conqueror was distrust
+ Pray here for satiety, (said Cecil) than ever think of variety
+ Rebuked him for his obedience
+ Religion was not to be changed like a shirt
+ Respect for differences in religious opinions
+ Sacrificed by the Queen for faithfully obeying her orders
+ Security is dangerous
+ She relieth on a hope that will deceive her
+ Simple truth was highest skill
+ Sixteen of their best ships had been sacrificed
+ Sparing and war have no affinity together
+ Stake or gallows (for) heretics to transubstantiation
+ States were justified in their almost unlimited distrust
+ Strength does a falsehood acquire in determined and skilful hand
+ Succeeded so well, and had been requited so ill
+ Sure bind, sure find
+ Sword in hand is the best pen to write the conditions of peace
+ Tension now gave place to exhaustion
+ That crowned criminal, Philip the Second
+ The worst were encouraged with their good success
+ The blaze of a hundred and fifty burning vessels
+ The sapling was to become the tree
+ Their existence depended on war
+ There is no man fitter for that purpose than myself
+ They chose to compel no man's conscience
+ Tolerating religious liberty had never entered his mind
+ Torturing, hanging, embowelling of men, women, and children
+ Trust her sword, not her enemy's word
+ Undue anxiety for impartiality
+ Universal suffrage was not dreamed of at that day
+ Waiting the pleasure of a capricious and despotic woman
+ We were sold by their negligence who are now angry with us
+ Wealthy Papists could obtain immunity by an enormous fine
+ Who the "people" exactly were
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of History of the United Netherlands,
+1586-89, Vol. II. Complete, by John Lothrop Motley
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+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+ </body>
+</html>