History of the United Netherlands, 1588b eBook

History of the United Netherlands, 1588b by John Lothrop Motley

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Title:  History of the United Netherlands, 15881
1
MOTLEY’S HISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDS, Project Gutenberg Edition, Vol. 561
CHAPTER XVIII.  Part 2.1
ETEXT EDITOR’S BOOKMARKS: 33
Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)34
(Three Pages)35

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Title:  History of the United Netherlands, 1588

Author:  John Lothrop Motley

Release Date:  January, 2004 [EBook #4856] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on April 5, 2002]

Edition:  10

Language:  English

Character set encoding:  ASCII

*** Start of the project gutenberg EBOOK history united Netherlands, 1588 ***

This eBook was produced by David Widger widger@cecomet.net

[Note:  There is a short list of bookmarks, or pointers, at the end of the file for those who may wish to sample the author’s ideas before making an entire meal of them.  D.W.]

HISTORY OF THE UNITED NETHERLANDS From the Death of William the Silent to the Twelve Year’s Truce—­1609

By John Lothrop Motley

MOTLEY’S HISTORY OF THE NETHERLANDS, Project Gutenberg Edition, Vol. 56

History of the United Netherlands, 1588

CHAPTER XVIII.  Part 2.

Dangerous Discord in North Holland—­Leicester’s Resignation arrives —­Enmity of Willoughby and Maurice—­Willoughby’s dark Picture of Affairs—­Hatred between States and Leicestrians—­Maurice’s Answer to the Queen’s Charges—­End of Sonoy’s Rebellion—­Philip foments the Civil War in France—­League’s Threats and Plots against Henry—­Mucio arrives in Paris—­He is received with Enthusiasm—­The King flies, and Spain triumphs in Paris—­States expostulate with the Queen—­ English Statesmen still deceived—­Deputies from Netherland Churches —­Hold Conference with the Queen—­And present long Memorials—­More Conversations with the Queen—­National Spirit of England and Holland—­Dissatisfaction with Queen’s Course—­Bitter Complaints of Lord Howard—­Want of Preparation in Army and Navy—­Sanguine Statements of Leicester—­Activity of Parma—­The painful Suspense continues.

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—­to cast a glance at the internal politics of the States most involved in Philip’s meshes.

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

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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.

During the winter, spring, and summer of 1588, while the Duke—­in the face of mighty obstacles—­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—­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.

Young Maurice—­deep thinker for his years and peremptory in action—­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.

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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—­a free commonwealth—­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.

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.

“But how if they make war upon us?” asked the Leicestrians.

“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?”

When at last the resignation of Leicester—­presented to the States by Killegrew on the 31st March—­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—­in consequence of the troubles, discontent, mutiny of garrisons, and the like, that it was most necessary for the good

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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.”

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.

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.

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?

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—­“lean as his purse was”—­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

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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.”

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—­a very small faction—­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.”

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.

“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.”

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.

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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.”

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—­weighing what a slender ground the appetite of a young man is, unfurnished with the sinews of war to manage so great a cause—­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.”

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—­as the general proceeded to observe—­“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—­that the worst were encouraged with their good success, and the best sort assured of no fortune or favour.”

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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”—­that is to say, the unhappy Leicestrians—­came to Willoughby, asking his advice in their “declining and desperate cause.”

“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.”

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—­patriots as they were—­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—­near four months long—­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.”

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—­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.

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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.

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.”

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

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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.

“If, by your advice,” continued the Count; “the Queen should appoint fitting’ personages to office here—­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—­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.”

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.

At last the Queen informed Willoughby, that—­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—­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.

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—­certainly without necessity or excuse—­and whether through design, malice, wantonness, or incomprehensible carelessness, it is difficult to say.

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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.

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.

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?

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—­so long as it remained in the power of the States—­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—­numerous as the days of the year—­who owned Germany and the Germans.

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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—­an uncultivated, barbarous province of Spain.  Mucio—­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.

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.

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

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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.

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—­as usual—­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.”

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—­more rabid than ever—­ were impatient that their adored Balafre should come to Paris and begin the holy work.

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—­fatal sister of Guise, with the famous scissors ever at her girdle—­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

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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—­the leaders of the League within the city—­to prove the truth of the charges which he had made.

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—­through the treachery of Poulain—­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—­like one fascinated at the destruction awaiting him.

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—­peopled with a thousand fantastic heads—­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—­was somewhat perplexed, now that decisive action seemed necessary—­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

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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.

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!”—­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.

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.

“Sire, is the Duke of Guise your friend or enemy?” said Alphonse.  The King answered by an expressive shrug.

“Say the word, Sire,” continued Alphonse, “and I pledge myself to bring his head this instant, and lay it at your feet.”

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.

But Henry—­irresolute and fascinated—­said it was not yet time for such a blow.

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—­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.

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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—­all night long—­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.

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.

“Enough, too much, my good friends,” he said, taking off the great hat—­ ("I don’t know whether he was laughing in it,” observed one who was looking on that day)—­“Enough of ‘Long live Guise!’ Cry ’Long live the King!’”

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.

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.

“You must give me these soldiers as a present, my friends,” said he to the populace.

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.

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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.

“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.”

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.”

And so, followed by a rabble rout of courtiers, without boots or cloaks; and mounted on, sorry hacks—­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.

[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.)]

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

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affectionate friendship, and utterly repudiating all knowledge of these troublesome and dangerous plots.  Yet they had been especially organized —­as we have seen—­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—­and circumstantially—­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.

“I represent the majesty of England,” he said, “and can take no safeguard from a subject of the sovereign to whom I am accredited.”

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.”

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.

Such were the consequences of the day of the barricades—­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!”

And it might be long before the League would catch the Bearnese; but, meantime, he could render slight assistance to Queen Elizabeth.

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—­as usual—­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. 

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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.

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—­as we have seen—­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.

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—­she still believed in the possibility of averting the danger by negotiation.

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.”

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And even much later, in the middle of July—­when the mask was hardly, maintained—­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.”

All through the spring and early summer, Stafford, in Paris, was kept in a state of much perplexity as to the designs of Spain—­so contradictory were the stories circulated—­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—­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.”

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—­as well appointed as might be—­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.”

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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—­notwithstanding many bold announcements of an attack upon Elizabeth—­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.

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.

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—­who had been a wolf instead of a shepherd to his flock—­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

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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.

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.

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.

“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.”

“But,” asked a deputy, “if the Spanish fleet does not succeed in its enterprise, will the peace-negotiations be renewed?”

“By no means,” said Walsingham; “the Queen can never do that, consistently with her honour.  They have scattered infamous libels against her—­so scandalous, that you would be astounded should you read them.  Arguments drawn from honour are more valid with princes than any other.”

He alluded to the point in their memorial touching the free exercise of the reformed religion in the Provinces.

“’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—­should our negotiations succeed—­the foreign troops will have evacuated the Netherlands on condition that the States-General shall settle the religious question.”

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“But,” said Daniel de Dieu, one of the deputies, “the majority of the States is Popish.”

“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.”

He then alluded to the proposition of the deputies to exclude all religious worship but that of the reformed church—­all false religion—­ as they expressed themselves.

“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.”

“But,” said one of the deputies—­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—­“but her Majesty will, we hope, follow the advice of her good and faithful counsellors.”

“To tell you the truth,” answered Sir Francis, “great princes are not always inspired with a sincere and upright zeal;”—­it was the third time he had made this observation”—­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.”

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.

Accordingly on the 15th July, as her Majesty came forth at the gate, with a throng of nobles and ladies—­some about to accompany her and some bidding her adieu—­the deputies fell on their knees before her.  Notwithstanding the advice of Walsingham, Daniel de Dieu was bent upon an oration.

“Oh illustrious Queen!” he began, “the churches of the United Netherlands——­”

He had got no further, when the Queen, interrupting, exclaimed, “Oh!  I beg you—­at another time—­I cannot now listen to a speech.  Let me see the memorial.”

Daniel de Dieu then humbly presented that document, which her Majesty graciously received, and then, getting on horseback, rode off to Richmond.’

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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.

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.

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.

Between six and seven in the evening she came into the throne-room, and the deputies again fell on their knees before her.

She then seated herself—­the deputies remaining on their knees on her right side and the Earl of Leicester standing at her left—­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.

“I shall provide,” she said, “for the maintenance of the reformed worship.”

De Dieu—­“The enemy will never concede it.”

The Queen.—­“I think differently.”

De Dieu.—­“There is no place within his dominions where he has permitted the exercise of the pure religion.  He has never done so.”

The Queen.—­“He conceded it in the pacification of Ghent.”

De Dieu.—­“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.”

The Queen.—­“That is quite another thing.”

De Dieu.—­“He has very often broken his faith.”

The Queen.—­“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—­leaving it afterwards to the decision of the States.”

Page 24

De Dieu.—­“But the majority of the States is Popish.”

The Queen.—­“I mean the States-General, not the States of any particular
Province.”

De Dieu.—­“The greater part of the States-General is Popish.”

The Queen.—­“I mean the three estates—­the clergy, the nobles, and the cities.”  The Queen—­as the deputies observed—­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.

The Queen.—­“Then how were you sent hither?”

De Dieu.—­“We came with the consent of Count Maurice of Nassau.”

The Queen.—­“And of the States?”

De Dieu.—­“We came with their knowledge.”

The Queen.—­“Are you sent only from Holland and Zeeland?  Is there no envoy from Utrecht and the other Provinces?”

Helmichius.—­“We two,” pointing to his colleague Sossingius, “are from
Utrecht.”

The Queen.—­“What?  Is this young man also a minister?” She meant
Helmichius, who had a very little beard, and looked young.

Sossingius.—­“He is not so young as he looks.”

The Queen.—­“Youths are sometimes as able as old men.”

De Dieu.—­“I have heard our brother preach in France more than fourteen years ago.”

The Queen.—­“He must have begun young.  How old were you when you first became a preacher?”

Helmichius.—­“Twenty-three or twenty-four years of age.”

The Queen.—­“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.”

Helmichius.—­“We are far from thinking otherwise.  We acknowledge willingly your Majesty’s benefits to our churches.”

The Queen.—­“It would else be ingratitude on your part.”

Helmichius.—­“But the King of Spain will never keep any promise about the religion.”

The Queen.—­“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.”

De Dieu.—­“Your Majesty has many enemies.  The Lord hath hitherto supported you, and we pray that he may continue to uphold your Majesty.”

The Queen.—­“I have indeed many enemies; but I make no great account of them.  Is there anything else you seek?”

De Dieu.—­“There is a special point:  it concerns our, or rather your Majesty’s, city of Flushing.  We hope that Russelius—­(so he called Sir William Russell)—­may be continued in its government, although he wishes his discharge.”

“Aha!” said the Queen, laughing and rising from her seat, “I shall not answer you; I shall call some one else to answer you.”

Page 25

She then summoned Russell’s sister, Lady Warwick.

“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.”

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.

As the deputies took their leave, they requested an answer to their memorial, which was graciously promised.

Three days afterwards, Walsingham gave them a written answer to their memorial—­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.

And thus during all those eventful days-the last weeks of July and the first weeks of August—­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.

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—­more than had ever been granted before—­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—­then the most imposing ship in those waters—­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.

Page 26

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—­under what penalty he chose and during his pleasure—­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.

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.

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—­as no man or woman better than Elizabeth Tudor could represent —­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.

Page 27

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—­well-trained and swift sailors as they were—­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.

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.”

And it was open war with the Jesuits for which those stouthearted sailors longed.  All were afraid of secret mischief.  The diplomatists—­who were known to be flitting about France, Flanders, Scotland, and England—­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.”

Page 28

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.

“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.”

And Howard, too, was delighted not only with his own little flag-ship the Ark-Royal—­“the odd ship of the world for all conditions,”—­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.”

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.”

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 —­such was the profound darkness which, enveloped the world at that day—­ 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.

Page 29

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.”

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.”

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—­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.”

Page 30

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—­the man whom we have seen in his yellow jerkin, helping himself into Fort Zutphen with the Spanish soldier’s pike—­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.”

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.”

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—­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.

“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

Page 31

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—­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.”

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.

The whole royal navy-numbering about thirty-four vessels in all—­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—­in the case of one marvellous merchant-steamer—­ floats upon a single keel.

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—­the Triumph, Captain Frobisher, of 1100 tons, 42 guns, and 500 sailors.

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.

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.

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.

Page 32

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—­according to his enthusiastic historiographer—­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.

And this approaching destruction of England—­now generally believed in—­ 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.

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—­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—­ incident to northern climates—­among those southern soldiers, that we shall find the number woefully diminished before they were likely to set foot upon the English shore.

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.

Page 33

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.”

ETEXT EDITOR’S BOOKMARKS: 

A burnt cat fears the fire
A free commonwealth—­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

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