Rise of the Dutch Republic, the — Volume 18: 1572 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about Rise of the Dutch Republic, the — Volume 18.

Rise of the Dutch Republic, the — Volume 18: 1572 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about Rise of the Dutch Republic, the — Volume 18.
of ammunition, were also captured.  The unexpected condition of affairs made a pause natural and almost necessary, before the government could be decorously transferred.  Medina Coeli with Spanish grandiloquence, avowed his willingness to serve as a soldier, under a general whom he so much venerated, while Alva ordered that, in all respects, the same outward marks of respect should be paid to his appointed successor as to himself.  Beneath all this external ceremony, however, much mutual malice was concealed.

Meantime, the Duke, who was literally “without a single real,” was forced at last to smother his pride in the matter of the tenth penny.  On the 24th June, he summoned the estates of Holland to assemble on the 15th of the ensuing month.  In the missive issued for this purpose, he formally agreed to abolish the whole tax, on condition that the estates-general of the Netherlands would furnish him with a yearly supply of two millions of florins.  Almost at the same moment the King had dismissed the deputies of the estates from Madrid, with the public assurance that the tax was to be suspended, and a private intimation that it was not abolished in terms, only in order to save the dignity of the Duke.

These healing measures came entirely too late.  The estates of Holland met, indeed, on the appointed day of July; but they assembled not in obedience to Alva, but in consequence of a summons from William of Orange.  They met, too, not at the Hague, but at Dort, to take formal measures for renouncing the authority of the Duke.  The first congress of the Netherland commonwealth still professed loyalty to the Crown, but was determined to accept the policy of Orange without a question.

The Prince had again assembled an army in Germany, consisting of fifteen thousand foot and seven thousand horse, besides a number of Netherlanders, mostly Walloons, amounting to nearly three thousand more.  Before taking the field, however, it was necessary that he should guarantee at least three months’ pay to his troops.  This he could no longer do, except by giving bonds endorsed by certain cities of Holland as his securities.  He had accordingly addressed letters in his own name to all the principal cities, fervently adjuring them to remember, at last, what was due to him, to the fatherland, and to their own character.  “Let not a sum of gold,” said he in one of these letters, “be so dear to you, that for its sake you will sacrifice your lives, your wives, your children, and all your descendants, to the latest generations; that you will bring sin and shame upon yourselves, and destruction upon us who have so heartily striven to assist you.  Think what scorn you will incur from foreign nations, what a crime you will commit against the.  Lord God, what a bloody yoke ye will impose forever upon yourselves and your children, if you now seek for subterfuges; if you now prevent us from taking the field with the troops which we have enlisted.  On the other hand, what inexpressible benefits you will confer on your country, if you now help us to rescue that fatherland from the power of Spanish vultures and wolves.”

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Rise of the Dutch Republic, the — Volume 18: 1572 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.