formally assembled by Alva in September, at Brussels,
to devise ways and means for continuing the struggle.
It seemed to the Prince a good opportunity to make
an appeal to the patriotism of the whole country.
He furnished the province of Holland, accordingly,
with the outlines of an address which was forthwith
despatched in their own and his name, to the general
assembly of the Netherlands. The document was
a nervous and rapid review of the course of late events
in the provinces, with a cogent statement of the reasons
which should influence them all to unite in the common
cause against the common enemy. It referred to
the old affection and true-heartedness with which
they had formerly regarded each other, and to the
certainty that the inquisition would be for ever established
in the land, upon the ruins of all their ancient institutions,
unless they now united to overthrow it for ever.
It demanded of the people, thus assembled through
their representatives, how they could endure the tyranny,
murders, and extortions of the Duke of Alva. The
princes of Flanders, Burgundy, Brabant, or Holland,
had never made war or peace, coined money, or exacted
a stiver from the people without the consent of the
estates. How could the nation now consent to the
daily impositions which were practised? Had Amsterdam
and Middelburg remained true; had those important
cities not allowed themselves to be seduced from the
cause of freedom, the northern provinces would have
been impregnable. “’Tis only by the
Netherlands that the Netherlands are crushed,”
said the appeal. “Whence has the Duke of
Alva the power of which he boasts, but from yourselves—from
Netherland cities? Whence his ships, supplies,
money, weapons, soldiers? From the Netherland
people. Why has poor Netherland thus become degenerate
and bastard? Whither has fled the noble spirit
of our brave forefathers, that never brooked the tyranny
of foreign nations, nor suffered a stranger even to
hold office within our borders? If the little
province of Holland can thus hold at bay the power
of Spain, what could not all the Netherlands—Brabant,
Flanders, Friesland, and the rest united accomplish?”
In conclusion, the estates-general were earnestly
adjured to come forward like brothers in blood, and
join hands with Holland, that together they might rescue
the fatherland and restore its ancient prosperity
and bloom.
At almost the same time the Prince drew up and put in circulation one of the most vigorous and impassioned productions which ever came from his pen. It was entitled, an “Epistle, in form of supplication, to his royal Majesty of Spain, from the Prince of Orange and the estates of Holland and Zealand.” The document produced a profound impression throughout Christendom. It was a loyal appeal to the monarch’s loyalty—a demand that the land-privileges should be restored, and the Duke of Alva removed. It contained a startling picture of his atrocities and the nation’s misery, and, with a few energetic