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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+<title>QUOTES AND IMAGES FROM JOHN LOTHROP MOTLEY</title>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+
+<style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+ body {background:#faebd7; margin:10%; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-top: .75em;
+ margin-bottom: .75em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; }
+ HR { width: 33%; text-align: center; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; }
+ .figleft {float: left;}
+ .figright {float: right;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 15%; margin-bottom: 0em;}
+ CENTER { padding: 10px;}
+ PRE { font-family: Times; font-size: 97%; margin-left: 15%;}
+ // -->
+</style>
+
+</head>
+<body>
+
+<h2>QUOTES AND IMAGES FROM JOHN LOTHROP MOTLEY</h2>
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Quotes and Images From Motley's History of
+the Netherlands, 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.net
+
+
+Title: Quotes and Images From Motley's History of the Netherlands
+
+Author: John Lothrop Motley
+
+Release Date: September 3, 2004 [EBook #7552]
+[Last updated on February 19, 2007]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUOTES FROM MOTLEY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<br>
+<hr>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br>
+
+
+
+<center><h1>HISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDS</h1></center>
+<br><br>
+<center><h2>By John Lothrop Motley</h2></center>
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<center><a name="bookshelf"></a><img alt="bookshelf.jpg (139K)" src="images/bookshelf.jpg" height="809" width="650">
+</center>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<center><a name="titlepage"></a><img alt="titlepage.jpg (28K)" src="images/titlepage.jpg" height="993" width="615">
+</center>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<center><a name="antwerpsiege"></a><img alt="antwerpsiege.jpg (241K)" src="images/antwerpsiege.jpg" height="517" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/antwerpsiege.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg">
+</a>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+
+<center><h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2></center>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+
+<p><a href="#bookself">Motley's History of the Netherlands</a></p>
+<p><a href="#titlepage">Title Page</a></p>
+<p><a href="#antwerpsiege">The Siege of Antwerp</a></p>
+<p><a href="#william">Prince William of Orange-Nassau (William the Silent)</a></p>
+<p><a href="#leichester">The Earl of Leichester</a></p>
+<p><a href="#alexander">Alexander Farnese, Prince of Parma</a></p>
+<p><a href="#barneveld">John of Barneveld</a></p>
+<p><a href="#bookcover">Bookcover</a></p>
+<p><a href="#hague">The Hague</a></p>
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<hr>
+<br><br>
+
+
+
+
+<center>
+<table summary="MEREDITH">
+<tr>
+<td><a name="william"></a><img alt="william.jpg (52K)" src="images/william.jpg" height="775" width="400">
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<a name="leichester"></a><img alt="leichester.jpg (45K)" src="images/leichester.jpg" height="662" width="400">
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<a name="maurice"></a><img alt="maurice.jpg (61K)" src="images/maurice.jpg" height="605" width="400">
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<a name="alexander"></a><img alt="alexander.jpg (56K)" src="images/alexander.jpg" height="568" width="400">
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>
+<a name="barneveld"></a><img alt="barneveld.jpg (51K)" src="images/barneveld.jpg" height="465" width="400">
+
+<td>
+<pre>
+1566, the last year of peace
+
+A pleasantry called voluntary
+contributions or benevolences
+
+A good lawyer is a bad Christian
+
+A terrible animal, indeed, is an
+unbridled woman
+
+A common hatred united them, for a time
+at least
+
+A penal offence in the republic to talk
+of peace or of truce
+
+A most fatal success
+
+A country disinherited by nature of its
+rights
+
+A free commonwealth&mdash;was thought an
+absurdity
+
+A hard bargain when both parties are
+losers
+
+A burnt cat fears the fire
+
+A despot really keeps no accounts, nor
+need to do so
+
+A sovereign remedy for the disease of
+liberty
+
+A pusillanimous peace, always possible
+at any period
+
+A man incapable of fatigue, of
+perplexity, or of fear
+
+A truce he honestly considered a
+pitfall of destruction
+
+A great historian is almost a statesman
+
+Able men should be by design and of
+purpose suppressed
+
+About equal to that of England at the
+same period
+
+Absolution for incest was afforded at
+thirty-six livres
+
+Abstinence from unproductive
+consumption
+
+Abstinence from inquisition into
+consciences and private parlour
+
+Absurd affectation of candor
+
+Accepting a new tyrant in place of the
+one so long ago deposed
+
+Accustomed to the faded gallantries
+
+Achieved the greatness to which they
+had not been born
+
+Act of Uniformity required Papists to
+assist
+
+Acts of violence which under pretext of
+religion
+
+Admired or despised, as if he or she
+were our contemporary
+
+Adulation for inferiors whom they
+despise
+
+Advanced orthodox party-Puritans
+
+Advancing age diminished his tendency
+to other carnal pleasures
+
+Advised his Majesty to bestow an annual
+bribe upon Lord Burleigh
+
+Affecting to discredit them
+
+Affection of his friends and the wrath
+of his enemies
+
+Age when toleration was a vice
+
+Agreements were valid only until he
+should repent
+
+Alas! the benighted victims of
+superstition hugged their chains
+
+Alas! we must always have something to
+persecute
+
+Alas! one never knows when one becomes
+a bore
+
+Alexander's exuberant discretion
+
+All Italy was in his hands
+
+All fellow-worms together
+
+All business has been transacted with
+open doors
+
+All reading of the scriptures
+(forbidden)
+
+All the majesty which decoration could
+impart
+
+All denounced the image-breaking
+
+All claimed the privilege of
+persecuting
+
+All his disciples and converts are to
+be punished with death
+
+All Protestants were beheaded, burned,
+or buried alive
+
+All classes are conservative by
+necessity
+
+All the ministers and great
+functionaries received presents
+
+All offices were sold to the highest
+bidder
+
+Allow her to seek a profit from his
+misfortune
+
+Allowed the demon of religious hatred
+to enter into its body
+
+Almost infinite power of the meanest of
+passions
+
+Already looking forward to the revolt
+of the slave States
+
+Altercation between Luther and Erasmus,
+upon predestination
+
+Always less apt to complain of
+irrevocable events
+
+American Unholy Inquisition
+
+Amuse them with this peace negotiation
+
+An inspiring and delightful recreation
+(auto-da-fe)
+
+An hereditary papacy, a perpetual
+pope-emperor
+
+An age when to think was a crime
+
+An unjust God, himself the origin of
+sin
+
+An order of things in which mediocrity
+is at a premium
+
+Anarchy which was deemed inseparable
+from a non-regal form
+
+Anatomical study of what has ceased to
+exist
+
+And give advice. Of that, although
+always a spendthrift
+
+And now the knife of another priest-led
+fanatic
+
+And thus this gentle and heroic spirit
+took its flight
+
+Angle with their dissimulation as with
+a hook
+
+Announced his approaching marriage with
+the Virgin Mary
+
+Annual harvest of iniquity by which his
+revenue was increased
+
+Anxiety to do nothing wrong, the
+senators did nothing at all
+
+Are apt to discharge such obligations&mdash;
+(by) ingratitude
+
+Are wont to hang their piety on the
+bell-rope
+
+Argument in a circle
+
+Argument is exhausted and either action
+or compromise begins
+
+Aristocracy of God's elect
+
+Arminianism
+
+Arrested on suspicion, tortured till
+confession
+
+Arrive at their end by fraud, when
+violence will not avail them
+
+Artillery
+
+As logical as men in their cups are
+prone to be
+
+As the old woman had told the Emperor
+Adrian
+
+As if they were free will not make them
+free
+
+As lieve see the Spanish as the
+Calvinistic inquisition
+
+As ready as papists, with age, fagot,
+and excommunication
+
+As with his own people, keeping no
+back-door open
+
+As neat a deception by telling the
+truth
+
+At a blow decapitated France
+
+At length the twig was becoming the
+tree
+
+Atheist, a tyrant, because he resisted
+dictation from the clergy
+
+Attachment to a half-drowned land and
+to a despised religion
+
+Attacked by the poetic mania
+
+Attacking the authority of the pope
+
+Attempting to swim in two waters
+
+Auction sales of judicial ermine
+
+Baiting his hook a little to his
+appetite
+
+Barbara Blomberg, washerwoman of
+Ratisbon
+
+Batavian legion was the imperial body
+guard
+
+Beacons in the upward path of mankind
+
+Beating the Netherlanders into
+Christianity
+
+Beautiful damsel, who certainly did not
+lack suitors
+
+Because he had been successful (hated)
+
+Becoming more learned, and therefore
+more ignorant
+
+Been already crimination and
+recrimination more than enough
+
+Before morning they had sacked thirty
+churches
+
+Began to scatter golden arguments with
+a lavish hand
+
+Beggars of the sea, as these
+privateersmen designated themselves
+
+Behead, torture, burn alive, and bury
+alive all heretics
+
+Being the true religion, proved by so
+many testimonies
+
+Believed in the blessed advent of
+peace
+
+Beneficent and charitable purposes
+(War)
+
+best defence in this case is little
+better than an impeachment
+
+Bestowing upon others what was not his
+property
+
+Better to be governed by magistrates
+than mobs
+
+Better is the restlessness of a noble
+ambition
+
+Beware of a truce even more than of a
+peace
+
+Bigotry which was the prevailing
+characteristic of the age
+
+Bishop is a consecrated pirate
+
+Blessed freedom from speech-making
+
+Blessing of God upon the Devil's work
+
+Bold reformer had only a new dogma in
+place of the old ones
+
+Bomb-shells were not often used
+although known for a century
+
+Breath, time, and paper were profusely
+wasted and nothing gained
+
+Brethren, parents, and children, having
+wives in common
+
+Bribed the Deity
+
+Bungling diplomatists and credulous
+dotards
+
+Burned, strangled, beheaded, or buried
+alive (100,000)
+
+Burned alive if they objected to
+transubstantiation
+
+Burning with bitter revenge for all the
+favours he had received
+
+Burning of Servetus at Geneva
+
+Business of an officer to fight, of a
+general to conquer
+
+But the habit of dissimulation was
+inveterate
+
+But after all this isn't a war It is a
+revolution
+
+But not thoughtlessly indulgent to the
+boy
+
+Butchery in the name of Christ was
+suspended
+
+By turns, we all govern and are
+governed
+
+Calling a peace perpetual can never
+make it so
+
+Calumny is often a stronger and more
+lasting power than disdain
+
+Can never be repaired and never
+sufficiently regretted
+
+Canker of a long peace
+
+Care neither for words nor menaces in
+any matter
+
+Cargo of imaginary gold dust was
+exported from the James River
+
+Casting up the matter "as pinchingly as
+possibly might be"
+
+Casual outbursts of eternal friendship
+
+Certain number of powers, almost
+exactly equal to each other
+
+Certainly it was worth an eighty years'
+war
+
+Changed his positions and contradicted
+himself day by day
+
+Character of brave men to act, not to
+expect
+
+Charles the Fifth autocrat of half the
+world
+
+Chief seafaring nations of the world
+were already protestant
+
+Chieftains are dwarfed in the
+estimation of followers
+
+Children who had never set foot on the
+shore
+
+Christian sympathy and a small
+assistance not being sufficient
+
+Chronicle of events must not be
+anticipated
+
+Claimed the praise of moderation that
+their demands were so few
+
+Cold water of conventional and
+commonplace encouragement
+
+College of "peace-makers," who wrangled
+more than all
+
+Colonel Ysselstein, "dismissed for a
+homicide or two"
+
+Compassing a country's emancipation
+through a series of defeats
+
+Conceding it subsequently, after much
+contestation
+
+Conceit, and procrastination which
+marked the royal character
+
+Conciliation when war of extermination
+was intended
+
+Conclusive victory for the allies
+seemed as predestined
+
+Conde and Coligny
+
+Condemned first and inquired upon after
+
+Condemning all heretics to death
+
+Conflicting claims of prerogative and
+conscience
+
+Conformity of Governments to the
+principles of justice
+
+Confused conferences, where neither
+party was entirely sincere
+
+Considerable reason, even if there were
+but little justice
+
+Considerations of state have never yet
+failed the axe
+
+Considerations of state as a reason
+
+Considered it his special mission in
+the world to mediate
+
+Consign to the flames all prisoners
+whatever (Papal letter)
+
+Constant vigilance is the price of
+liberty
+
+Constitute themselves at once universal
+legatees
+
+Constitutional governments, move in the
+daylight
+
+Consumer would pay the tax, supposing
+it were ever paid at all
+
+Contained within itself the germs of a
+larger liberty
+
+Contempt for treaties however solemnly
+ratified
+
+Continuing to believe himself
+invincible and infallible
+
+Converting beneficent commerce into
+baleful gambling
+
+Could handle an argument as well as a
+sword
+
+Could paint a character with the ruddy
+life-blood coloring
+
+Could not be both judge and party in
+the suit
+
+Could do a little more than what was
+possible
+
+Country would bear his loss with
+fortitude
+
+Courage of despair inflamed the French
+
+Courage and semblance of cheerfulness,
+with despair in his heart
+
+Court fatigue, to scorn pleasure
+
+Covered now with the satirical dust of
+centuries
+
+Craft meaning, simply, strength
+
+Created one child for damnation and
+another for salvation
+
+Crescents in their caps: Rather Turkish
+than Popish
+
+Crimes and cruelties such as Christians
+only could imagine
+
+Criminal whose guilt had been
+established by the hot iron
+
+Criminals buying Paradise for money
+
+Cruelties exercised upon monks and
+papists
+
+Crusades made great improvement in the
+condition of the serfs
+
+Culpable audacity and exaggerated
+prudence
+
+Customary oaths, to be kept with the
+customary conscientiousness
+
+Daily widening schism between Lutherans
+and Calvinists
+
+Deadliest of sins, the liberty of
+conscience
+
+Deadly hatred of Puritans in England
+and Holland
+
+Deal with his enemy as if sure to
+become his friend
+
+Death rather than life with a false
+acknowledgment of guilt
+
+Decline a bribe or interfere with the
+private sale of places
+
+Decrees for burning, strangling, and
+burying alive
+
+Deeply criminal in the eyes of all
+religious parties
+
+Defeated garrison ever deserved more
+respect from friend or foe
+
+Defect of enjoying the flattery, of his
+inferiors in station
+
+Delay often fights better than an army
+against a foreign invader
+
+Demanding peace and bread at any price
+
+Democratic instincts of the ancient
+German savages
+
+Denies the utility of prayers for the
+dead
+
+Denounced as an obstacle to peace
+
+Depths theological party spirit could
+descend
+
+Depths of credulity men in all ages can
+sink
+
+Despised those who were grateful
+
+Despot by birth and inclination
+(Charles V.)
+
+Determined to bring the very name of
+liberty into contempt
+
+Devote himself to his gout and to his
+fair young wife
+
+Difference between liberties and
+liberty
+
+Difficult for one friend to advise
+another in three matters
+
+Diplomacy of Spain and Rome&mdash;meant
+simply dissimulation
+
+Diplomatic adroitness consists mainly
+in the power to deceive
+
+Disciple of Simon Stevinus
+
+Dismay of our friends and the
+gratification of our enemies
+
+Disordered, and unknit state needs no
+shaking, but propping
+
+Disposed to throat-cutting by the
+ministers of the Gospel
+
+Dispute between Luther and Zwingli
+concerning the real presence
+
+Disputing the eternal damnation of
+young children
+
+Dissenters were as bigoted as the
+orthodox
+
+Dissimulation and delay
+
+Distinguished for his courage, his
+cruelty, and his corpulence
+
+Divine right of kings
+
+Divine right
+
+Do you want peace or war? I am ready
+for either
+
+Doctrine of predestination in its
+sternest and strictest sense
+
+Don John of Austria
+
+Don John was at liberty to be King of
+England and Scotland
+
+Done nothing so long as aught remained
+to do
+
+Drank of the water in which, he had
+washed
+
+Draw a profit out of the necessities of
+this state
+
+During this, whole war, we have never
+seen the like
+
+Dying at so very inconvenient a moment
+
+Each in its turn becoming orthodox, and
+therefore persecuting
+
+Eat their own children than to forego
+one high mass
+
+Eight thousand human beings were
+murdered
+
+Elizabeth, though convicted, could
+always confute
+
+Elizabeth (had not) the faintest idea
+of religious freedom
+
+Eloquence of the biggest guns
+
+Emperor of Japan addressed him as his
+brother monarch
+
+Emulation is not capability
+
+Endure every hardship but hunger
+
+Enemy of all compulsion of the human
+conscience
+
+England hated the Netherlands
+
+English Puritans
+
+Englishmen and Hollanders preparing to
+cut each other's throats
+
+Enmity between Lutherans and Calvinists
+
+Enormous wealth (of the Church) which
+engendered the hatred
+
+Enriched generation after generation by
+wealthy penitence
+
+Enthusiasm could not supply the place
+of experience
+
+Envying those whose sufferings had
+already been terminated
+
+Epernon, the true murderer of Henry
+
+Erasmus of Rotterdam
+
+Erasmus encourages the bold friar
+
+Establish not freedom for Calvinism,
+but freedom for conscience
+
+Estimating his character and judging
+his judges
+
+Even the virtues of James were his
+worst enemies
+
+Even to grant it slowly is to deny it
+utterly
+
+Even for the rape of God's mother, if
+that were possible
+
+Ever met disaster with so cheerful a
+smile
+
+Ever-swarming nurseries of mercenary
+warriors
+
+Every one sees what you seem, few
+perceive what you are
+
+Everybody should mind his own business
+
+Everything else may happen This alone
+must happen
+
+Everything was conceded, but nothing
+was secured
+
+Evil is coming, the sooner it arrives
+the better
+
+Evil has the advantage of rapidly
+assuming many shapes
+
+Excited with the appearance of a gem of
+true philosophy
+
+Excused by their admirers for their
+shortcomings
+
+Excuses to disarm the criticism he had
+some reason to fear
+
+Executions of Huss and Jerome of Prague
+
+Exorcising the devil by murdering his
+supposed victims
+
+Extraordinary capacity for yielding to
+gentle violence
+
+Fable of divine right is invented to
+sanction the system
+
+Faction has rarely worn a more
+mischievous aspect
+
+Famous fowl in every pot
+
+Fanatics of the new religion denounced
+him as a godless man
+
+Fate, free will, or absolute
+foreknowledge
+
+Father Cotton, who was only too ready
+to betray the secrets
+
+Fear of the laugh of the world at its
+sincerity
+
+Fed on bear's liver, were nearly
+poisoned to death
+
+Felix Mants, the anabaptist, is drowned
+at Zurich
+
+Fellow worms had been writhing for half
+a century in the dust
+
+Ferocity which even Christians could
+not have surpassed
+
+Few, even prelates were very dutiful to
+the pope
+
+Fiction of apostolic authority to bind
+and loose
+
+Fifty thousand persons in the provinces
+(put to death)
+
+Financial opposition to tyranny is apt
+to be unanimous
+
+Find our destruction in our immoderate
+desire for peace
+
+Fishermen and river raftsmen become
+ocean adventurers
+
+Fitted "To warn, to comfort, and
+command"
+
+Fitter to obey than to command
+
+Five great rivers hold the Netherland
+territory in their coils
+
+Flattery is a sweet and intoxicating
+potion
+
+Fled from the land of oppression to the
+land of liberty
+
+Fool who useth not wit because he hath
+it not
+
+For myself I am unworthy of the honor
+(of martyrdom)
+
+For faithful service, evil recompense
+
+For women to lament, for men to
+remember
+
+For us, looking back upon the Past,
+which was then the Future
+
+For his humanity towards the conquered
+garrisons (censured)
+
+Forbidding the wearing of mourning at
+all
+
+Forbids all private assemblies for
+devotion
+
+Force clerical&mdash;the power of clerks
+
+Foremost to shake off the fetters of
+superstition
+
+Forget those who have done them good
+service
+
+Forgiving spirit on the part of the
+malefactor
+
+Fortune's buffets and rewards can take
+with equal thanks
+
+Four weeks' holiday&mdash;the first in
+eleven years
+
+France was mourning Henry and waiting
+for Richelieu
+
+French seem madmen, and are wise
+
+Friendly advice still more intolerable
+
+Full of precedents and declamatory
+commonplaces
+
+Furious fanaticism
+
+Furious mob set upon the house of Rem
+Bischop
+
+Furnished, in addition, with a force of
+two thousand prostitutes
+
+Future world as laid down by rival
+priesthoods
+
+Gallant and ill-fated Lamoral Egmont
+
+Gaul derided the Roman soldiers as a
+band of pigmies
+
+German-Lutheran sixteenth-century idea
+of religious freedom
+
+German finds himself sober&mdash;he believes
+himself ill
+
+German Highland and the German
+Netherland
+
+Gigantic vices are proudly pointed to
+as the noblest
+
+Give him advice if he asked it, and
+money when he required
+
+Glory could be put neither into pocket
+nor stomach
+
+God has given absolute power to no
+mortal man
+
+God, whose cause it was, would be
+pleased to give good weather
+
+God alone can protect us against those
+whom we trust
+
+God of wrath who had decreed the
+extermination of all unbeliever
+
+God of vengeance, of jealousy, and of
+injustice
+
+God Save the King! It was the last
+time
+
+Gold was the only passkey to justice
+
+Gomarites accused the Arminians of
+being more lax than Papists
+
+Govern under the appearance of obeying
+
+Great transactions of a reign are
+sometimes paltry things
+
+Great science of political equilibrium
+
+Great Privilege, the Magna Charta of
+Holland
+
+Great error of despising their enemy
+
+Great war of religion and politics was
+postponed
+
+Great battles often leave the world
+where they found it
+
+Guarantees of forgiveness for every
+imaginable sin
+
+Guilty of no other crime than adhesion
+to the Catholic faith
+
+Habeas corpus
+
+Had industry been honoured instead of
+being despised
+
+Haereticis non servanda fides
+
+Hair and beard unshorn, according to
+ancient Batavian custom
+
+Halcyon days of ban, book and candle
+
+Hanged for having eaten meat-soup upon
+Friday
+
+Hanging of Mary Dyer at Boston
+
+Hangman is not the most appropriate
+teacher of religion
+
+Happy to glass themselves in so
+brilliant a mirror
+
+Hard at work, pouring sand through
+their sieves
+
+Hardly a distinguished family in Spain
+not placed in mourning
+
+Hardly a sound Protestant policy
+anywhere but in Holland
+
+Hardly an inch of French soil that had
+not two possessors
+
+Having conjugated his paradigm
+conscientiously
+
+He had omitted to execute heretics
+
+He did his best to be friends with all
+the world
+
+He was a sincere bigot
+
+He that stands let him see that he does
+not fall
+
+He was not always careful in the
+construction of his sentences
+
+He would have no persecution of the
+opposite creed
+
+He came as a conqueror not as a
+mediator
+
+He who spreads the snare always tumbles
+into the ditch himself
+
+He who would have all may easily lose
+all
+
+He knew men, especially he knew their
+weaknesses
+
+He had never enjoyed social converse,
+except at long intervals
+
+He would have no Calvinist inquisition
+set up in its place
+
+He who confessed well was absolved well
+
+He did his work, but he had not his
+reward
+
+He sat a great while at a time. He had
+a genius for sitting
+
+He was not imperial of aspect on canvas
+or coin
+
+He often spoke of popular rights with
+contempt
+
+He spent more time at table than the
+Bearnese in sleep
+
+Heidelberg Catechism were declared to
+be infallible
+
+Henry the Huguenot as the champion of
+the Council of Trent
+
+Her teeth black, her bosom white and
+liberally exposed (Eliz.)
+
+Heresy was a plant of early growth in
+the Netherlands
+
+Heretics to the English Church were
+persecuted
+
+Hibernian mode of expressing himself
+
+High officers were doing the work of
+private, soldiers
+
+Highborn demagogues in that as in every
+age affect adulation
+
+Highest were not necessarily the least
+slimy
+
+His inordinate arrogance
+
+His own past triumphs seemed now his
+greatest enemies
+
+His imagination may have assisted his
+memory in the task
+
+His insolence intolerable
+
+His learning was a reproach to the
+ignorant
+
+His invectives were, however, much
+stronger than his arguments
+
+His personal graces, for the moment,
+took the rank of virtues
+
+His dogged, continuous capacity for
+work
+
+Historical scepticism may shut its eyes
+to evidence
+
+History is a continuous whole of which
+we see only fragments
+
+History is but made up of a few
+scattered fragments
+
+History never forgets and never
+forgives
+
+History has not too many really
+important and emblematic men
+
+History shows how feeble are barriers
+of paper
+
+Holland was afraid to give a part,
+although offering the whole
+
+Holland, England, and America, are all
+links of one chain
+
+Holy Office condemned all the
+inhabitants of the Netherlands
+
+Holy institution called the Inquisition
+
+Honor good patriots, and to support
+them in venial errors
+
+Hope delayed was but a cold and meagre
+consolation
+
+Hope deferred, suddenly changing to
+despair
+
+How many more injured by becoming bad
+copies of a bad ideal
+
+Hugo Grotius
+
+Human nature in its meanness and shame
+
+Human ingenuity to inflict human misery
+
+Human fat esteemed the sovereignst
+remedy (for wounds)
+
+Humanizing effect of science upon the
+barbarism of war
+
+Humble ignorance as the safest creed
+
+Humility which was but the cloak to his
+pride
+
+Hundred thousand men had laid down
+their lives by her decree
+
+I did never see any man behave himself
+as he did
+
+I know how to console myself
+
+I am a king that will be ever known not
+to fear any but God
+
+I hope and I fear
+
+I would carry the wood to burn my own
+son withal
+
+I regard my country's profit, not my
+own
+
+I will never live, to see the end of my
+poverty
+
+Idea of freedom in commerce has dawned
+upon nations
+
+Idiotic principle of sumptuary
+legislation
+
+Idle, listless, dice-playing, begging,
+filching vagabonds
+
+If he had little, he could live upon
+little
+
+If to do be as grand as to imagine what
+it were good to do
+
+If he has deserved it, let them strike
+off his head
+
+Ignoble facts which strew the highways
+of political life
+
+Ignorance is the real enslaver of
+mankind
+
+Imagined, and did the work of truth
+
+Imagining that they held the world's
+destiny in their hands
+
+Impatience is often on the part of the
+non-combatants
+
+Implication there was much, of
+assertion very little
+
+Imposed upon the multitudes, with whom
+words were things
+
+Impossible it is to practise arithmetic
+with disturbed brains
+
+Impossible it was to invent terms of
+adulation too gross
+
+In revolutions the men who win are
+those who are in earnest
+
+In character and general talents he was
+beneath mediocrity
+
+In times of civil war, to be neutral is
+to be nothing
+
+In Holland, the clergy had neither
+influence nor seats
+
+In this he was much behind his age or
+before it
+
+Incur the risk of being charged with
+forwardness than neglect
+
+Indecision did the work of indolence
+
+Indignant that heretics had been
+suffered to hang
+
+Individuals walking in advance of their
+age
+
+Indoor home life imprisons them in the
+domestic circle
+
+Indulging them frequently with oracular
+advice
+
+Inevitable fate of talking castles and
+listening ladies
+
+Infamy of diplomacy, when diplomacy is
+unaccompanied by honesty
+
+Infinite capacity for pecuniary
+absorption
+
+Informer, in case of conviction, should
+be entitled to one half
+
+Inhabited by the savage tribes called
+Samoyedes
+
+Innocent generation, to atone for the
+sins of their forefathers
+
+Inquisition of the Netherlands is much
+more pitiless
+
+Inquisition was not a fit subject for a
+compromise
+
+Inquisitors enough; but there were no
+light vessels in The Armada
+
+Insane cruelty, both in the cause of
+the Wrong and the Right
+
+Insensible to contumely, and incapable
+of accepting a rebuff
+
+Insinuate that his orders had been
+hitherto misunderstood
+
+Insinuating suspicions when unable to
+furnish evidence
+
+Intellectual dandyisms of Bulwer
+
+Intelligence, science, and industry
+were accounted degrading
+
+Intense bigotry of conviction
+
+Intentions of a government which did
+not know its own intentions
+
+International friendship, the
+self-interest of each
+
+Intolerable tendency to puns
+
+Invaluable gift which no human being
+can acquire, authority
+
+Invented such Christian formulas as
+these (a curse)
+
+Inventing long speeches for historical
+characters
+
+Invincible Armada had not only been
+vanquished but annihilated
+
+Irresistible force in collision with an
+insuperable resistance
+
+It was the true religion, and there was
+none other
+
+It is not desirable to disturb much of
+that learned dust
+
+It had not yet occurred to him that he
+was married
+
+It is n't strategists that are wanted
+so much as believers
+
+It is certain that the English hate us
+(Sully)
+
+Its humility, seemed sufficiently
+ironical
+
+James of England, who admired, envied,
+and hated Henry
+
+Jealousy, that potent principle
+
+Jesuit Mariana&mdash;justifying the killing
+of excommunicated kings
+
+John Castel, who had stabbed Henry IV.
+
+John Wier, a physician of Grave
+
+John Robinson
+
+John Quincy Adams
+
+Judas Maccabaeus
+
+July 1st, two Augustine monks were
+burned at Brussels
+
+Justified themselves in a solemn
+consumption of time
+
+Kindly shadow of oblivion
+
+King who thought it furious madness to
+resist the enemy
+
+King had issued a general repudiation
+of his debts
+
+King set a price upon his head as a
+rebel
+
+King of Zion to be pinched to death
+with red-hot tongs
+
+King was often to be something much
+less or much worse
+
+King's definite and final intentions,
+varied from day to day
+
+Labored under the disadvantage of never
+having existed
+
+Labour was esteemed dishonourable
+
+Language which is ever living because
+it is dead
+
+Languor of fatigue, rather than any
+sincere desire for peace
+
+Leading motive with all was supposed to
+be religion
+
+Learn to tremble as little at
+priestcraft as at swordcraft
+
+Leave not a single man alive in the
+city, and to burn every house
+
+Let us fool these poor creatures to
+their heart's content
+
+Licences accorded by the crown to carry
+slaves to America
+
+Life of nations and which we call the
+Past
+
+Like a man holding a wolf by the ears
+
+Little army of Maurice was becoming the
+model for Europe
+
+Little grievances would sometimes
+inflame more than vast
+
+Local self-government which is the
+life-blood of liberty
+
+Logic of the largest battalions
+
+Logic is rarely the quality on which
+kings pride themselves
+
+Logical and historical argument of
+unmerciful length
+
+Long succession of so many illustrious
+obscure
+
+Longer they delay it, the less easy
+will they find it
+
+Look through the cloud of dissimulation
+
+Look for a sharp war, or a miserable
+peace
+
+Looking down upon her struggle with
+benevolent indifference
+
+Lord was better pleased with adverbs
+than nouns
+
+Loud, nasal, dictatorial tone, not at
+all agreeable
+
+Louis XIII.
+
+Loving only the persons who flattered
+him
+
+Ludicrous gravity
+
+Luther's axiom, that thoughts are
+toll-free
+
+Lutheran princes of Germany, detested
+the doctrines of Geneva
+
+Luxury had blunted the fine instincts
+of patriotism
+
+Made peace&mdash;and had been at war ever
+since
+
+Made no breach in royal and Roman
+infallibility
+
+Made to swing to and fro over a slow
+fire
+
+Magistracy at that moment seemed to
+mean the sword
+
+Magnificent hopefulness
+
+Maintaining the attitude of an injured
+but forgiving Christian
+
+Make sheep of yourselves, and the wolf
+will eat you
+
+Make the very name of man a term of
+reproach
+
+Man is never so convinced of his own
+wisdom
+
+Man who cannot dissemble is unfit to
+reign
+
+Man had only natural wrongs (No natural
+rights)
+
+Man had no rights at all He was
+property
+
+Mankind were naturally inclined to
+calumny
+
+Manner in which an insult shall be
+dealt with
+
+Many greedy priests, of lower rank, had
+turned shop-keepers
+
+Maritime heretics
+
+Matter that men may rather pray for
+than hope for
+
+Matters little by what name a
+government is called
+
+Meantime the second civil war in France
+had broken out
+
+Mediocrity is at a premium
+
+Meet around a green table except as
+fencers in the field
+
+Men were loud in reproof, who had been
+silent
+
+Men fought as if war was the normal
+condition of humanity
+
+Men who meant what they said and said
+what they meant
+
+Mendacity may always obtain over
+innocence and credulity
+
+Military virtue in the support of an
+infamous cause
+
+Misanthropical, sceptical philosopher
+
+Misery had come not from their being
+enemies
+
+Mistake to stumble a second time over
+the same stone
+
+Mistakes might occur from occasional
+deviations into sincerity
+
+Mockery of negotiation in which nothing
+could be negotiated
+
+Modern statesmanship, even while it
+practises, condemns
+
+Monasteries, burned their invaluable
+libraries
+
+Mondragon was now ninety-two years old
+
+Moral nature, undergoes less change
+than might be hoped
+
+More accustomed to do well than to
+speak well
+
+More easily, as he had no intention of
+keeping the promise
+
+More catholic than the pope
+
+More fiercely opposed to each other
+than to Papists
+
+More apprehension of fraud than of
+force
+
+Most detestable verses that even he had
+ever composed
+
+Most entirely truthful child he had
+ever seen
+
+Motley was twice sacrificed to personal
+feelings
+
+Much as the blind or the deaf towards
+colour or music
+
+Myself seeing of it methinketh that I
+dream
+
+Names history has often found it
+convenient to mark its epochs
+
+National character, not the work of a
+few individuals
+
+Nations tied to the pinafores of
+children in the nursery
+
+Natural to judge only by the result
+
+Natural tendency to suspicion of a
+timid man
+
+Nearsighted liberalism
+
+Necessary to make a virtue of necessity
+
+Necessity of extirpating heresy, root
+and branch
+
+Necessity of deferring to powerful
+sovereigns
+
+Necessity of kingship
+
+Negotiated as if they were all immortal
+
+Neighbour's blazing roof was likely
+soon to fire their own
+
+Neither kings nor governments are apt
+to value logic
+
+Neither wished the convocation, while
+both affected an eagerness
+
+Neither ambitious nor greedy
+
+Never peace well made, he observed,
+without a mighty war
+
+Never did statesmen know better how not
+to do
+
+Never lack of fishers in troubled
+waters
+
+New Years Day in England, 11th January
+by the New Style
+
+Night brings counsel
+
+Nine syllables that which could be more
+forcibly expressed in on
+
+No one can testify but a householder
+
+No man can be neutral in civil
+contentions
+
+No law but the law of the longest purse
+
+No two books, as he said, ever injured
+each other
+
+No retrenchments in his pleasures of
+women, dogs, and buildings
+
+No great man can reach the highest
+position in our government
+
+No man is safe (from news reporters)
+
+No man could reveal secrets which he
+did not know
+
+No authority over an army which they
+did not pay
+
+No man pretended to think of the State
+
+No synod had a right to claim
+Netherlanders as slaves
+
+No qualities whatever but birth and
+audacity to recommend him
+
+No generation is long-lived enough to
+reap the harvest
+
+No man ever understood the art of
+bribery more thoroughly
+
+No calumny was too senseless to be
+invented
+
+None but God to compel me to say more
+than I choose to say
+
+Nor is the spirit of the age to be
+pleaded in defence
+
+Not a friend of giving details larger
+than my ascertained facts
+
+Not distinguished for their docility
+
+Not to let the grass grow under their
+feet
+
+Not a single acquaintance in the place,
+and we glory in the fact
+
+Not safe for politicians to call each
+other hard names
+
+Not his custom nor that of his
+councillors to go to bed
+
+Not of the genus Reptilia, and could
+neither creep nor crouch
+
+Not strong enough to sustain many more
+such victories
+
+Not to fall asleep in the shade of a
+peace negotiation
+
+Not many more than two hundred
+Catholics were executed
+
+Not upon words but upon actions
+
+Not for a new doctrine, but for liberty
+of conscience
+
+Not of the stuff of which martyrs are
+made (Erasmus)
+
+Not so successful as he was picturesque
+
+Nothing could equal Alexander's
+fidelity, but his perfidy
+
+Nothing cheap, said a citizen bitterly,
+but sermons
+
+Nothing was so powerful as religious
+difference
+
+Notre Dame at Antwerp
+
+Nowhere was the persecution of heretics
+more relentless
+
+Nowhere were so few unproductive
+consumers
+
+O God! what does man come to!
+
+Obscure were thought capable of dying
+natural deaths
+
+Obstinate, of both sexes, to be burned
+
+Octogenarian was past work and past
+mischief
+
+Of high rank but of lamentably low
+capacity
+
+Often much tyranny in democracy
+
+Often necessary to be blind and deaf
+
+Oldenbarneveld; afterwards so
+illustrious
+
+On the first day four thousand men and
+women were slaughtered
+
+One-half to Philip and one-half to the
+Pope and Venice (slaves)
+
+One-third of Philip's effective navy
+was thus destroyed
+
+One golden grain of wit into a sheet of
+infinite platitude
+
+One could neither cry nor laugh within
+the Spanish dominions
+
+One of the most contemptible and
+mischievous of kings (James I)
+
+Only healthy existence of the French
+was in a state of war
+
+Only true religion
+
+Only citadel against a tyrant and a
+conqueror was distrust
+
+Only kept alive by milk, which he drank
+from a woman's breast
+
+Only foundation fit for history,&mdash;
+original contemporary document
+
+Opening an abyss between government and
+people
+
+Opposed the subjection of the
+magistracy by the priesthood
+
+Oration, fertile in rhetoric and barren
+in facts
+
+Orator was, however, delighted with his
+own performance
+
+Others that do nothing, do all, and
+have all the thanks
+
+Others go to battle, says the
+historian, these go to war
+
+Our pot had not gone to the fire as
+often
+
+Our mortal life is but a string of
+guesses at the future
+
+Outdoing himself in dogmatism and
+inconsistency
+
+Over excited, when his prejudices were
+roughly handled
+
+Panegyrists of royal houses in the
+sixteenth century
+
+Pardon for crimes already committed, or
+about to be committed
+
+Pardon for murder, if not by poison,
+was cheaper
+
+Partisans wanted not accommodation but
+victory
+
+Party hatred was not yet glutted with
+the blood it had drunk
+
+Passion is a bad schoolmistress for the
+memory
+
+Past was once the Present, and once the
+Future
+
+Pathetic dying words of Anne Boleyn
+
+Patriotism seemed an unimaginable idea
+
+Pauper client who dreamed of justice at
+the hands of law
+
+Paving the way towards atheism (by
+toleration)
+
+Paying their passage through, purgatory
+
+Peace founded on the only secure basis,
+equality of strength
+
+Peace was desirable, it might be more
+dangerous than war
+
+Peace seemed only a process for
+arriving at war
+
+Peace and quietness is brought into a
+most dangerous estate
+
+Peace-at-any-price party
+
+Peace, in reality, was war in its worst
+shape
+
+Peace was unattainable, war was
+impossible, truce was inevitable
+
+Peace would be destruction
+
+Perfection of insolence
+
+Perpetually dropping small innuendos
+like pebbles
+
+Persons who discussed religious matters
+were to be put to death
+
+Petty passion for contemptible details
+
+Philip II. gave the world work enough
+
+Philip of Macedon, who considered no
+city impregnable
+
+Philip IV.
+
+Philip, who did not often say a great
+deal in a few words
+
+Picturesqueness of crime
+
+Placid unconsciousness on his part of
+defeat
+
+Plain enough that he is telling his own
+story
+
+Planted the inquisition in the
+Netherlands
+
+Played so long with other men's
+characters and good name
+
+Plea of infallibility and of authority
+soon becomes ridiculous
+
+Plundering the country which they came
+to protect
+
+Poisoning, for example, was absolved
+for eleven ducats
+
+Pope excommunicated him as a heretic
+
+Pope and emperor maintain both
+positions with equal logic
+
+Portion of these revenues savoured much
+of black-mail
+
+Possible to do, only because we see
+that it has been done
+
+Pot-valiant hero
+
+Power the poison of which it is so
+difficult to resist
+
+Power to read and write helped the
+clergy to much wealth
+
+Power grudged rather than given to the
+deputies
+
+Practised successfully the talent of
+silence
+
+Pray here for satiety, (said Cecil)
+than ever think of variety
+
+Preferred an open enemy to a
+treacherous protector
+
+Premature zeal was prejudicial to the
+cause
+
+Presents of considerable sums of money
+to the negotiators made
+
+Presumption in entitling themselves
+Christian
+
+Preventing wrong, or violence, even
+towards an enemy
+
+Priests shall control the state or the
+state govern the priests
+
+Princes show what they have in them at
+twenty-five or never
+
+Prisoners were immediately hanged
+
+Privileged to beg, because ashamed to
+work
+
+Proceeds of his permission to eat meat
+on Fridays
+
+Proclaiming the virginity of the
+Virgin's mother
+
+Procrastination was always his first
+refuge
+
+Progress should be by a spiral movement
+
+Promises which he knew to be binding
+only upon the weak
+
+Proposition made by the wolves to the
+sheep, in the fable
+
+Protect the common tranquillity by
+blood, purse, and life
+
+Provided not one Huguenot be left alive
+in France
+
+Public which must have a slain
+reputation to devour
+
+Purchased absolution for crime and
+smoothed a pathway to heaven
+
+Puritanism in Holland was a very
+different thing from England
+
+Put all those to the torture out of
+whom anything can be got
+
+Putting the cart before the oxen
+
+Queen is entirely in the hands of Spain
+and the priests
+
+Questioning nothing, doubting nothing,
+fearing nothing
+
+Quite mistaken: in supposing himself
+the Emperor's child
+
+Radical, one who would uproot, is a man
+whose trade is dangerous
+
+Rarely able to command, having never
+learned to obey
+
+Rashness alternating with hesitation
+
+Rather a wilderness to reign over than
+a single heretic
+
+Readiness to strike and bleed at any
+moment in her cause
+
+Readiness at any moment to defend
+dearly won liberties
+
+Rearing gorgeous temples where paupers
+are to kneel
+
+Reasonable to pay our debts rather than
+to repudiate them
+
+Rebuked him for his obedience
+
+Rebuked the bigotry which had already
+grown
+
+Recall of a foreign minister for
+alleged misconduct in office
+
+Reformer who becomes in his turn a
+bigot is doubly odious
+
+Reformers were capable of giving a
+lesson even to inquisitors
+
+Religion was made the strumpet of
+Political Ambition
+
+Religion was rapidly ceasing to be the
+line of demarcation
+
+Religion was not to be changed like a
+shirt
+
+Religious toleration, which is a phrase
+of insult
+
+Religious persecution of Protestants by
+Protestants
+
+Repentance, as usual, had come many
+hours too late
+
+Repentant males to be executed with the
+sword
+
+Repentant females to be buried alive
+
+Repose under one despot guaranteed to
+them by two others
+
+Repose in the other world, "Repos
+ailleurs"
+
+Republic, which lasted two centuries
+
+Republics are said to be ungrateful
+
+Repudiation of national debts was never
+heard of before
+
+Requires less mention than Philip III
+himself
+
+Resolve to maintain the civil authority
+over the military
+
+Resolved thenceforth to adopt a system
+of ignorance
+
+Respect for differences in religious
+opinions
+
+Result was both to abandon the
+provinces and to offend Philip
+
+Revocable benefices or feuds
+
+Rich enough to be worth robbing
+
+Righteous to kill their own children
+
+Road to Paris lay through the gates of
+Rome
+
+Rose superior to his doom and took
+captivity captive
+
+Round game of deception, in which
+nobody was deceived
+
+Royal plans should be enforced
+adequately or abandoned entirely
+
+Ruinous honors
+
+Rules adopted in regard to pretenders
+to crowns
+
+Sacked and drowned ten infant princes
+
+Sacrificed by the Queen for faithfully
+obeying her orders
+
+Safest citadel against an invader and a
+tyrant is distrust
+
+Sages of every generation, read the
+future like a printed scroll
+
+Saint Bartholomew's day
+
+Sale of absolutions was the source of
+large fortunes to the priests
+
+Same conjury over ignorant baron and
+cowardly hind
+
+Scaffold was the sole refuge from the
+rack
+
+Scepticism, which delights in reversing
+the judgment of centuries
+
+Schism in the Church had become a
+public fact
+
+Schism which existed in the general
+Reformed Church
+
+Science of reigning was the science of
+lying
+
+Scoffing at the ceremonies and
+sacraments of the Church
+
+Secret drowning was substituted for
+public burning
+
+Secure the prizes of war without the
+troubles and dangers
+
+Security is dangerous
+
+Seeking protection for and against the
+people
+
+Seem as if born to make the idea of
+royalty ridiculous
+
+Seemed bent on self-destruction
+
+Seems but a change of masks, of
+costume, of phraseology
+
+Sees the past in the pitiless light of
+the present
+
+Self-assertion&mdash;the healthful but not
+engaging attribute
+
+Self-educated man, as he had been a
+self-taught boy
+
+Selling the privilege of eating eggs
+upon fast-days
+
+Senectus edam maorbus est
+
+Sent them word by carrier pigeons
+
+Sentiment of Christian self-complacency
+
+Sentimentality that seems highly
+apocryphal
+
+Served at their banquets by hosts of
+lackeys on their knees
+
+Seven Spaniards were killed, and seven
+thousand rebels
+
+Sewers which have ever run beneath
+decorous Christendom
+
+Shall Slavery die, or the great
+Republic?
+
+Sharpened the punishment for reading
+the scriptures in private
+
+She relieth on a hope that will deceive
+her
+
+She declined to be his procuress
+
+She knew too well how women were
+treated in that country
+
+Shift the mantle of religion from one
+shoulder to the other
+
+Shutting the stable-door when the steed
+is stolen
+
+Sick soldiers captured on the water
+should be hanged
+
+Sick and wounded wretches were burned
+over slow fires
+
+Simple truth was highest skill
+
+Sixteen of their best ships had been
+sacrificed
+
+Slain four hundred and ten men with his
+own hand
+
+Slavery was both voluntary and
+compulsory
+
+Slender stock of platitudes
+
+Small matter which human folly had
+dilated into a great one
+
+Smooth words, in the plentiful lack of
+any substantial
+
+So much responsibility and so little
+power
+
+So often degenerated into tyranny
+(Calvinism)
+
+So much in advance of his time as to
+favor religious equality
+
+So unconscious of her strength
+
+Soldier of the cross was free upon his
+return
+
+Soldiers enough to animate the good and
+terrify the bad
+
+Solitary and morose, the necessary
+consequence of reckless study
+
+Some rude lessons from that vigorous
+little commonwealth
+
+Sometimes successful, even although
+founded upon sincerity
+
+Sonnets of Petrarch
+
+Sovereignty was heaven-born, anointed
+of God
+
+Spain was governed by an established
+terrorism
+
+Spaniards seem wise, and are madmen
+
+Sparing and war have no affinity
+together
+
+Spendthrift of time, he was an
+economist of blood
+
+Spirit of a man who wishes to be proud
+of his country
+
+St. Peter's dome rising a little nearer
+to the clouds
+
+St. Bartholomew was to sleep for seven
+years longer
+
+Stake or gallows (for) heretics to
+transubstantiation
+
+Stand between hope and fear
+
+State can best defend religion by
+letting it alone
+
+States were justified in their almost
+unlimited distrust
+
+Steeped to the lips in sloth which
+imagined itself to be pride
+
+Storm by which all these treasures were
+destroyed (in 7 days)
+
+Strangled his nineteen brothers on his
+accession
+
+Strength does a falsehood acquire in
+determined and skilful hand
+
+String of homely proverbs worthy of
+Sancho Panza
+
+Stroke of a broken table knife
+sharpened on a carriage wheel
+
+Studied according to his inclinations
+rather than by rule
+
+Style above all other qualities seems
+to embalm for posterity
+
+Subtle and dangerous enemy who wore the
+mask of a friend
+
+Succeeded so well, and had been
+requited so ill
+
+Successful in this step, he is ready
+for greater ones
+
+Such a crime as this had never been
+conceived (bankruptcy)
+
+Such an excuse was as bad as the
+accusation
+
+Suicide is confession
+
+Superfluous sarcasm
+
+Suppress the exercise of the Roman
+religion
+
+Sure bind, sure find
+
+Sword in hand is the best pen to write
+the conditions of peace
+
+Take all their imaginations and
+extravagances for truths
+
+Talked impatiently of the value of my
+time
+
+Tanchelyn
+
+Taxation upon sin
+
+Taxed themselves as highly as fifty per
+cent
+
+Taxes upon income and upon consumption
+
+Tempest of passion and prejudice
+
+Ten thousand two hundred and twenty
+individuals were burned
+
+Tension now gave place to exhaustion
+
+That vile and mischievous animal called
+the people
+
+That crowned criminal, Philip the
+Second
+
+That unholy trinity&mdash;Force; Dogma, and
+Ignorance
+
+That cynical commerce in human lives
+
+That he tries to lay the fault on us is
+pure malice
+
+The tragedy of Don Carlos
+
+The worst were encouraged with their
+good success
+
+The history of the Netherlands is
+history of liberty
+
+The great ocean was but a Spanish lake
+
+The divine speciality of a few
+transitory mortals
+
+The sapling was to become the tree
+
+The nation which deliberately carves
+itself in pieces
+
+The expenses of James's household
+
+The Catholic League and the Protestant
+Union
+
+The blaze of a hundred and fifty
+burning vessels
+
+The magnitude of this wonderful
+sovereign's littleness
+
+The defence of the civil authority
+against the priesthood
+
+The assassin, tortured and torn by four
+horses
+
+The Gaul was singularly unchaste
+
+The vivifying becomes afterwards the
+dissolving principle
+
+The bad Duke of Burgundy, Philip
+surnamed "the Good,"
+
+The greatest crime, however, was to be
+rich
+
+The more conclusive arbitration of
+gunpowder
+
+The disunited provinces
+
+The noblest and richest temple of the
+Netherlands was a wreck
+
+The voice of slanderers
+
+The calf is fat and must be killed
+
+The illness was a convenient one
+
+The egg had been laid by Erasmus,
+hatched by Luther
+
+The perpetual reproductions of history
+
+The very word toleration was to sound
+like an insult
+
+The most thriving branch of national
+industry (Smuggler)
+
+The pigmy, as the late queen had been
+fond of nicknaming him
+
+The slightest theft was punished with
+the gallows
+
+The art of ruling the world by doing
+nothing
+
+The wisest statesmen are prone to
+blunder in affairs of war
+
+The Alcoran was less cruel than the
+Inquisition
+
+The People had not been invented
+
+The small children diminished rapidly
+in numbers
+
+The busy devil of petty economy
+
+The record of our race is essentially
+unwritten
+
+The truth in shortest about matters of
+importance
+
+The time for reasoning had passed
+
+The effect of energetic, uncompromising
+calumny
+
+The evils resulting from a confederate
+system of government
+
+The vehicle is often prized more than
+the freight
+
+The faithful servant is always a
+perpetual ass
+
+The dead men of the place are my
+intimate friends
+
+The loss of hair, which brings on
+premature decay
+
+The personal gifts which are nature's
+passport everywhere
+
+The nation is as much bound to be
+honest as is the individual
+
+The fellow mixes blood with his colors!
+
+Their existence depended on war
+
+Their own roofs were not quite yet in a
+blaze
+
+Theological hatred was in full blaze
+throughout the country
+
+Theology and politics were one
+
+There is no man who does not desire to
+enjoy his own
+
+There was but one king in Europe, Henry
+the Bearnese
+
+There are few inventions in morals
+
+There was no use in holding language of
+authority to him
+
+There was apathy where there should
+have been enthusiasm
+
+There is no man fitter for that purpose
+than myself
+
+Therefore now denounced the man whom he
+had injured
+
+These human victims, chained and
+burning at the stake
+
+They had come to disbelieve in the
+mystery of kingcraft
+
+They chose to compel no man's
+conscience
+
+They could not invent or imagine
+toleration
+
+They knew very little of us, and that
+little wrong
+
+They have killed him, 'e ammazato,'
+cried Concini
+
+They were always to deceive every one,
+upon every occasion
+
+They liked not such divine right nor
+such gentle-mindedness
+
+They had at last burned one more
+preacher alive
+
+Things he could tell which are too
+odious and dreadful
+
+Thirty thousand masses should be said
+for his soul
+
+Thirty-three per cent. interest was
+paid (per month)
+
+Thirty Years' War tread on the heels of
+the forty years
+
+This Somebody may have been one whom we
+should call Nobody
+
+This, then, is the reward of forty
+years' service to the State
+
+This obstinate little republic
+
+This wonderful sovereign's littleness
+oppresses the imagination
+
+Those who fish in troubled waters only
+to fill their own nets
+
+Those who "sought to swim between two
+waters"
+
+Those who argue against a foregone
+conclusion
+
+Thought that all was too little for him
+
+Thousands of burned heretics had not
+made a single convert
+
+Three hundred fighting women
+
+Three hundred and upwards are hanged
+annually in London
+
+Three or four hundred petty sovereigns
+(of Germany)
+
+Throw the cat against their legs
+
+Thus Hand-weapen, hand-throwing, became
+Antwerp
+
+Time and myself are two
+
+Tis pity he is not an Englishman
+
+To think it capable of error, is the
+most devilish heresy of all
+
+To stifle for ever the right of free
+enquiry
+
+To attack England it was necessary to
+take the road of Ireland
+
+To hear the last solemn commonplaces
+
+To prefer poverty to the wealth
+attendant upon trade
+
+To shirk labour, infinite numbers
+become priests and friars
+
+To doubt the infallibility of Calvin
+was as heinous a crime
+
+To negotiate with Government in England
+was to bribe
+
+To milk, the cow as long as she would
+give milk
+
+To work, ever to work, was the primary
+law of his nature
+
+To negotiate was to bribe right and
+left, and at every step
+
+To look down upon their inferior and
+lost fellow creatures
+
+Toil and sacrifices of those who have
+preceded us
+
+Tolerate another religion that his own
+may be tolerated
+
+Tolerating religious liberty had never
+entered his mind
+
+Toleration&mdash;that intolerable term of
+insult
+
+Toleration thought the deadliest heresy
+of all
+
+Torquemada's administration (of the
+inquisition)
+
+Torturing, hanging, embowelling of men,
+women, and children
+
+Tranquil insolence
+
+Tranquillity rather of paralysis than
+of health
+
+Tranquillity of despotism to the
+turbulence of freedom
+
+Triple marriages between the respective
+nurseries
+
+Trust her sword, not her enemy's word
+
+Twas pity, he said, that both should be
+heretics
+
+Twenty assaults upon fame and had forty
+books killed under him
+
+Two witnesses sent him to the stake,
+one witness to the rack
+
+Tyrannical spirit of Calvinism
+
+Tyranny, ever young and ever old,
+constantly reproducing herself
+
+Uncouple the dogs and let them run
+
+Under the name of religion (so many
+crimes)
+
+Understood the art of managing men,
+particularly his superiors
+
+Undue anxiety for impartiality
+
+Unduly dejected in adversity
+
+Unequivocal policy of slave
+emancipation
+
+Unimaginable outrage as the most
+legitimate industry
+
+Universal suffrage was not dreamed of
+at that day
+
+Unlearned their faith in bell, book,
+and candle
+
+Unproductive consumption being
+accounted most sagacious
+
+Unproductive consumption was alarmingly
+increasing
+
+Unremitted intellectual labor in an
+honorable cause
+
+Unwise impatience for peace
+
+Upon their knees, served the queen with
+wine
+
+Upon one day twenty-eight master cooks
+were dismissed
+
+Upper and lower millstones of royal
+wrath and loyal subserviency
+
+Use of the spade
+
+Usual phraseology of enthusiasts
+
+Usual expedient by which bad
+legislation on one side countered
+
+Utter disproportions between the king's
+means and aims
+
+Utter want of adaptation of his means
+to his ends
+
+Uttering of my choler doth little ease
+my grief or help my case
+
+Uunmeaning phrases of barren benignity
+
+Vain belief that they were men at
+eighteen or twenty
+
+Valour on the one side and discretion
+on the other
+
+Villagers, or villeins
+
+Visible atmosphere of power the poison
+of which
+
+Volatile word was thought preferable to
+the permanent letter
+
+Vows of an eternal friendship of
+several weeks' duration
+
+Waiting the pleasure of a capricious
+and despotic woman
+
+Walk up and down the earth and destroy
+his fellow-creatures
+
+War was the normal and natural
+condition of mankind
+
+War was the normal condition of
+Christians
+
+War to compel the weakest to follow the
+religion of the strongest
+
+Was it astonishing that murder was more
+common than fidelity?
+
+Wasting time fruitlessly is sharpening
+the knife for himself
+
+We were sold by their negligence who
+are now angry with us
+
+We believe our mothers to have been
+honest women
+
+We are beginning to be vexed
+
+We must all die once
+
+We have been talking a little bit of
+truth to each other
+
+We have the reputation of being a good
+housewife
+
+We mustn't tickle ourselves to make
+ourselves laugh
+
+Wealth was an unpardonable sin
+
+Wealthy Papists could obtain immunity
+by an enormous fine
+
+Weapons
+
+Weary of place without power
+
+Weep oftener for her children than is
+the usual lot of mothers
+
+Weight of a thousand years of error
+
+What exchequer can accept chronic
+warfare and escape bankruptcy
+
+What could save the House of Austria,
+the cause of Papacy
+
+What was to be done in this world and
+believed as to the next
+
+When persons of merit suffer without
+cause
+
+When all was gone, they began to eat
+each other
+
+When the abbot has dice in his pocket,
+the convent will play
+
+Whether dead infants were hopelessly
+damned
+
+Whether murders or stratagems, as if
+they were acts of virtue
+
+Whether repentance could effect
+salvation
+
+While one's friends urge moderation
+
+Who the "people" exactly were
+
+Who loved their possessions better than
+their creed
+
+Whole revenue was pledged to pay the
+interest, on his debts
+
+Whose mutual hatred was now artfully
+inflamed by partisans
+
+William of Nassau, Prince of Orange
+
+William Brewster
+
+Wise and honest a man, although he be
+somewhat longsome
+
+Wiser simply to satisfy himself
+
+Wish to sell us the bear-skin before
+they have killed the bear
+
+Wish to appear learned in matters of
+which they are ignorant
+
+With something of feline and feminine
+duplicity
+
+Wonder equally at human capacity to
+inflict and to endure misery
+
+Wonders whether it has found its harbor
+or only lost its anchor
+
+Word peace in Spanish mouths simply
+meant the Holy Inquisition
+
+Word-mongers who, could clothe one
+shivering thought
+
+Words are always interpreted to the
+disadvantage of the weak
+
+Work of the aforesaid Puritans and a
+few Jesuits
+
+World has rolled on to fresher fields
+of carnage and ruin
+
+Worn crescents in their caps at Leyden
+
+Worn nor caused to be worn the collar
+of the serf
+
+Worship God according to the dictates
+of his conscience
+
+Would not help to burn fifty or sixty
+thousand Netherlanders
+
+Wrath of the Jesuits at this exercise
+of legal authority
+
+Wrath of bigots on both sides
+
+Wrath of that injured personage as he
+read such libellous truths
+
+Wringing a dry cloth for drops of
+evidence
+
+Write so illegibly or express himself
+so awkwardly
+
+Writing letters full of injured
+innocence
+
+Yes, there are wicked men about
+
+Yesterday is the preceptor of To-morrow
+
+You must show your teeth to the
+Spaniard
+</pre>
+</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center><a name="hague"></a><img alt="hague.jpg (95K)" src="images/hague.jpg" height="413" width="650">
+</center>
+<a href="images/hague.jpg" target="_blank"><img alt="Full Size" src="images/enlarge.jpg"></a>
+<br><br>
+
+<br><br>
+<p>If you wish to read the entire context of any of these quotations, select a short segment and
+copy it into your clipboard memory&mdash;then open the following eBook and paste the phrase
+into your computer's find or search operation.</p>
+
+<h3>
+<a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/4/9/0/4900/4900.txt">The History of the Netherlands, Complete</a>
+</h3>
+<br>
+<blockquote><blockquote><blockquote>
+
+<p>These quotations were collected from John Lothrop Motley's nine volumes of The
+History of the Netherlands by <a href="mailto:widger@cecomet.net">David Widger</a> while
+preparing etexts for Project Gutenberg. Comments and suggestions will be most welcome.</p>
+
+
+</blockquote></blockquote></blockquote>
+
+<center><a name="bookcover"></a><img alt="bookcover.jpg (139K)" src="images/bookcover.jpg" height="970" width="650">
+</center>
+
+
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<hr>
+<br><br>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Quotes and Images From Motley's
+History of the Netherlands, by John Lothrop Motley
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUOTES FROM MOTLEY ***
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