trade had ceased to exist. It was a pity only
to look upon the raggedness of his soldiers. No
language could describe the misery of the reconciled
Provinces—Artois, Hainault, Flanders.
The condition of Bruges would melt the hardest heart;
other cities were no better; Antwerp was utterly ruined;
its inhabitants were all starving. The famine
throughout the obedient Netherlands was such as had
not been known for a century. The whole country
had been picked bare by the troops, and the plough
was not put into the ground. Deputations were
constantly with him from Bruges, Dendermonde, Bois-le-Duc,
Brussels, Antwerp, Nymegen, proving to him by the most
palpable evidence that the whole population of those
cities had almost literally nothing to eat. He
had nothing, however, but exhortations to patience
to feed them withal. He was left without a groat
even to save his soldiers from starving, and he wildly
and bitterly, day after day, implored his sovereign
for aid. These pictures are not the sketches of
a historian striving for effect, but literal transcripts
from the most secret revelations of the Prince himself
to his sovereign. On the other hand, although
Leicester’s complaints of the destitution of
the English troops in the republic were almost as
bitter, yet the condition of the United Provinces
was comparatively healthy. Trade, external and
internal, was increasing daily. Distant commercial
and military expeditions were fitted out, manufactures
were prosperous, and the war of independence was gradually
becoming—strange to say—a source
of prosperity to the new commonwealth.
Philip—being now less alarmed than his
nephew concerning French affairs, and not feeling
so keenly the misery of the obedient Provinces, or
the wants of the Spanish army—sent to Alexander
six hundred thousand ducats, by way of Genoa.
In the letter submitted by his secretary recording
this remittance, the King made, however, a characteristic
marginal note:—“See if it will not
be as well to tell him something concerning the two
hundred thousand ducats to be deducted for Mucio, for
fear of more mischief, if the Prince should expect
the whole six hundred thousand.”
Accordingly Mucio got the two hundred thousand.
One-third of the meagre supply destined for the relief
of the King’s starving and valiant little army
in the Netherlands was cut off to go into the pockets
of the intriguing Duke of Guise. “We must
keep the French,” said Philip, “in a state
of confusion at home, and feed their civil war.
We must not allow them to come to a general peace,
which would be destruction for the Catholics.
I know you will put a good face on the matter; and,
after all, ’tis in the interest of the Netherlands.
Moreover, the money shall be immediately refunded.”