The Lord Treasurer ventured to remonstrate, but was
bid to bold his tongue. Ever variable and mutable
as woman, Elizabeth was perplexing and baffling to
her counsellors, at this epoch, beyond all divination.
The “sparing humour” was increasing fearfully,
and she thought it would be easier for her to slip
out of the whole expensive enterprise, provided Leicester
were merely her lieutenant-general, and not stadholder
for the Provinces. Moreover the secret negotiations
for peace were producing a deleterious effect upon
her mind. Upon this subject, the Queen and Burghley,
notwithstanding his resemblance to Mary Magdalen, were
better informed than the Secretary, whom, however,
it had been impossible wholly to deceive. The
man who could read secrets so far removed as the Vatican,
was not to be blinded to intrigues going on before
his face. The Queen, without revealing more than
she could help, had been obliged to admit that informal
transactions were pending, but had authorised the Secretary
to assure the United States that no treaty would be
made without their knowledge and full concurrence.
“She doth think,” wrote Walsingham to
Leicester, “that you should, if you shall see
no cause to the contrary, acquaint the council of
state there that certain overtures of peace are daily
made unto her, but that she meaneth not to proceed
therein without their good liking and privity, being
persuaded that there can no peace be made profitable
or sure for her that shall not also stand with their
safety; and she doth acknowledge hers to be so linked
with theirs as nothing can fall out to their prejudice,
but she must be partaker of their harm.”
This communication was dated on the 21st April, exactly
three weeks after the Queen’s letter to Heneage,
in which she had spoken of the “malicious bruits”
concerning the pretended peace-negotiations; and the
Secretary was now confirming, by her order, what she
had then stated under her own hand, that she would
“do nothing that might concern them without their
own knowledge and good liking.”
And surely nothing could be more reasonable.
Even if the strict letter of the August treaty between
the Queen and the States did not provide against any
separate negotiations by the one party without the
knowledge of the other, there could be no doubt at
all that its spirit absolutely forbade the clandestine
conclusion of a peace with Spain by England alone,
or by the Netherlands alone, and that such an arrangement
would be disingenuous, if not positively dishonourable.
Nevertheless it would almost seem that Elizabeth had
been taking advantage of the day when she was writing
her letter to Heneage on the 1st of April. Never
was painstaking envoy more elaborately trifled with.
On the 26th of the month—and only five days
after the communication by Walsingham just noticed—the
Queen was furious that any admission should have been
made to the States of their right to participate with
her in peace-negotiations.