villages under their government, were rather petty
states than municipalities. Although the supreme
legislative and executive functions belonged to the
sovereign, yet each city made its by-laws, and possessed,
beside, a body of statutes and regulations, made from
time to time by its own authority and confirmed by
the prince. Thus a large portion, at least, of
the nation shared practically in the legislative functions,
which, technically, it did not claim; nor had the requirements
of society made constant legislation so necessary,
as that to exclude the people from the work was to
enslave the country. There was popular power enough
to effect much good, but it was widely scattered, and,
at the same time, confined in artificial forms.
The guilds were vassals of the towns, the towns, vassals
of the feudal lord. The guild voted in the “broad
council” of the city as one person; the city
voted in the estates as one person. The people
of the United Netherlands was the personage yet to
be invented, It was a privilege, not a right, to exercise
a handiwork, or to participate in the action of government.
Yet the mass of privileges was so large, the shareholders
so numerous, that practically the towns were republics.
The government was in the hands of a large number of
the people. Industry and intelligence led to
wealth and power. This was great progress from
the general servitude of the 11th and 12th centuries,
an immense barrier against arbitrary rule. Loftier
ideas of human rights, larger conceptions of commerce,
have taught mankind, in later days, the difference
between liberties and liberty, between guilds and free
competition. At the same time it was the principle
of mercantile association, in the middle ages, which
protected the infant steps of human freedom and human
industry against violence and wrong. Moreover,
at this period, the tree of municipal life was still
green and vigorous. The healthful flow of sap
from the humblest roots to the most verdurous branches
indicated the internal soundness of the core, and provided
for the constant development of exterior strength.
The road to political influence was open to all, not
by right of birth, but through honorable exertion
of heads and hands.
The chief city of the Netherlands, the commercial
capital of the world, was Antwerp. In the North
and East of Europe, the Hanseatic league had withered
with the revolution in commerce. At the South,
the splendid marble channels, through which the overland
India trade had been conducted from the Mediterranean
by a few stately cities, were now dry, the great aqueducts
ruinous and deserted. Verona, Venice, Nuremberg,
Augsburg, Bruges, were sinking, but Antwerp, with its
deep and convenient river, stretched its arm to the
ocean and caught the golden prize, as it fell from
its sister cities’ grasp. The city was so
ancient that its genealogists, with ridiculous gravity,
ascended to a period two centuries before the Trojan
war, and discovered a giant, rejoicing in the classic