brought into conflict by their creeds, and the question
whether the republic was a confederation or a nation,
the same question which has been practically raised,
and for the time at least settled, in our own republic,
was in some way to be decided. After various
disturbances and acts of violence by both parties,
Maurice, representing the States-General, pronounced
for the Calvinists or Contra-Remonstrants, and took
possession of one of the great churches, as an assertion
of his authority. Barneveld, representing the
Arminian or Remonstrant provinces, levied a body of
mercenary soldiers in several of the cities.
These were disbanded by Maurice, and afterwards by
an act of the States-General. Barneveld was apprehended,
imprisoned, and executed, after an examination which
was in no proper sense a trial. Grotius, who
was on the Arminian side and involved in the inculpated
proceedings, was also arrested and imprisoned.
His escape, by a stratagem successfully repeated by
a slave in our own times, may challenge comparison
for its romantic interest with any chapter of fiction.
How his wife packed him into the chest supposed to
contain the folios of the great oriental scholar Erpenius,
how the soldiers wondered at its weight and questioned
whether it did not hold an Arminian, how the servant-maid,
Elsje van Houwening, quick-witted as Morgiana of the
“Forty Thieves,” parried their questions
and convoyed her master safely to the friendly place
of refuge,—all this must be read in the
vivid narrative of the author.
The questions involved were political, local, personal, and above all religious. Here is the picture which Motley draws of the religious quarrel as it divided the people:—
“In burghers’ mansions, peasants’ cottages, mechanics’ back-parlors; on board herring-smacks, canal-boats, and East Indiamen; in shops, counting-rooms, farm-yards, guard-rooms, alehouses; on the exchange, in the tennis court, on the mall; at banquets, at burials, christenings, or bridals; wherever and whenever human creatures met each other, there was ever to be found the fierce wrangle of Remonstrant and Contra-Remonstrant, the hissing of red-hot theological rhetoric, the pelting of hostile texts. The blacksmith’s iron cooled on the anvil, the tinker dropped a kettle half mended, the broker left a bargain unclinched, the Scheveningen fisherman in his wooden shoes forgot the cracks in his pinkie, while each paused to hold high converse with friend or foe on fate, free- will, or absolute foreknowledge; losing himself in wandering mazes whence there was no issue. Province against province, city against city, family against family; it was one vast scene of bickering, denunciation, heart-burnings, mutual excommunication and hatred.”
The religious grounds of the quarrel which set these seventeenth-century Dutchmen to cutting each other’s throats were to be looked for in the “Five Points” of the Arminians as arrayed against the “Seven Points” of the Gomarites, or Contra-Remonstrants. The most important of the differences which were to be settled by fratricide seem to have been these:—