as to his past accounts; an ignorance in which it
is probable that the Duke himself shared to the fullest
extent. His enemies stoutly maintained that,
however loosely his accounts had been kept, he had
been very careful to make no mistakes against himself,
and that he had retired full of wealth, if not of honor,
from his long and terrible administration. His
own letters, on the contrary, accused the King of
ingratitude, in permitting an old soldier to ruin
himself, not only in health but in fortune, for want
of proper recompense during an arduous administration.
At any rate it is very certain that the rebellion
had already been an expensive matter to the Crown.
The army in the Netherlands numbered more than sixty-two
thousand men, eight thousand being Spaniards, the
rest Walloons and Germans. Forty millions of
dollars had already been sunk, and it seemed probable
that it would require nearly the whole annual produce
of the American mines to sustain the war. The
transatlantic gold and silver, disinterred from the
depths where they had been buried for ages, were employed,
not to expand the current of a healthy, life-giving
commerce, but to be melted into blood. The sweat
and the tortures of the King’s pagan subjects
in the primeval forests of the New World, were made
subsidiary to the extermination of his Netherland
people, and the destruction of an ancient civilization.
To this end had Columbus discovered a hemisphere
for Castile and Aragon, and the new Indies revealed
their hidden treasures?
Forty millions of ducats had been spent. Six
and a half millions of arrearages were due to the
army, while its current expenses were six hundred
thousand a month. The military expenses alone
of the Netherlands were accordingly more than seven
millions of dollars yearly, and the mines of the New
World produced, during the half century of Philip’s
reign, an average of only eleven. Against this
constantly increasing deficit, there was not a stiver
in the exchequer, nor the means of raising one.
The tenth penny had been long virtually extinct, and
was soon to be formally abolished. Confiscation
had ceased to afford a permanent revenue, and the
estates obstinately refused to grant a dollar.
Such was the condition to which the unrelenting tyranny
and the financial experiments of Alva had reduced
the country.
It was, therefore, obvious to Requesens that it would
be useful at the moment to hold out hopes of pardon
and reconciliation. He saw, what he had not
at first comprehended, and what few bigoted supporters
of absolutism in any age have ever comprehended, that
national enthusiasm, when profound and general, makes
a rebellion more expensive to the despot than to the
insurgents. “Before my arrival,”
wrote the Grand Commander to his sovereign, “I
did not understand how the rebels could maintain such
considerable fleets, while your Majesty could not support
a single one. It appears, however, that men
who are fighting for their lives, their firesides,