He further advised that old Peter Ernest Mansfeld should be left commander-in-chief of the forces in the Netherlands during his own absence in England. “Mansfeld was an honourable cavalier,” he said, “and a faithful servant of the King;” and although somewhat ill-conditioned at times, yet he had essential good qualities, and was the only general fit to be trusted alone.
The reader, having thus been permitted to read the inmost thoughts of Philip and Alexander, and to study their secret plans for conquering England in October, while their frivolous yet mischievous negotiations with the Queen had been going on from April to June, will be better able than before to judge whether Leicester were right or no in doubting if a good peace could be obtained by a “merchant’s brokerage.”
And now, after examining these pictures of inter-aulic politics and back-stairs diplomacy, which represent so large and characteristic a phasis of European history during the year 1586, we must throw a glance at the external, more stirring, but not more significant public events which were taking place during the same period.
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Could do a little more
than what was possible
Elizabeth, though convicted,
could always confute
He sat a great while
at a time. He had a genius for sitting
Mistakes might occur
from occasional deviations into sincerity
Nine syllables that
which could be more forcibly expressed in on
They were always to
deceive every one, upon every occasion
We mustn’t tickle
ourselves to make ourselves laugh
ETEXT editor’s bookmarks of the history of the united Netherlands 1584-86
A hard bargain when
both parties are losers
Able men should be by
design and of purpose suppressed
Anarchy which was deemed
inseparable from a non-regal form
College of “peace-makers,”
who wrangled more than all
Condemned first and
inquired upon after
Could do a little more
than what was possible
Courage and semblance
of cheerfulness, with despair in his heart
Demanding peace and
bread at any price
Diplomatic adroitness
consists mainly in the power to deceive
Dismay of our friends
and the gratification of our enemies
Disordered, and unknit
state needs no shaking, but propping
Elizabeth, though convicted,
could always confute
Enmity between Lutherans
and Calvinists
Find our destruction
in our immoderate desire for peace
German-Lutheran sixteenth-century
idea of religious freedom
He sat a great while
at a time. He had a genius for sitting
He did his work, but
he had not his reward
Her teeth black, her
bosom white and liberally exposed (Eliz.)
Hibernian mode of expressing
himself
His inordinate arrogance