fighting-men in Europe. The operations were under
the constant supervision of the foremost captain of
the age; for Maurice, in consultation with the States-General,
received almost daily reports from the garrison, and
regularly furnished advice and instructions as to
their proceedings. He was moreover ever ready
to take the field for a relieving campaign. Nothing
was known of Spinola save that he was a high-born
and very wealthy patrician who had reached his thirty-fourth
year without achieving personal distinction of any
kind, and who, during the previous summer, like so
many other nobles from all parts of Europe, had thought
it worth his while to drawl through a campaign or two
in the Low Countries. It was the mode to do this,
and it was rather a stigma upon any young man of family
not to have been an occasional looker on at that perpetual
military game. His brother Frederic, as already
narrated; had tried his chance for fame and fortune
in the naval service, and had lost his life in the
adventure without achieving the one or the other.
This was not a happy augury for the head of the family.
Frederic had made an indifferent speculation.
What could the brother hope by taking the field against
Maurice of Nassau and Lewis William and the Baxes and
Meetkerkes? Nevertheless the archduke eagerly
accepted his services, while the Infanta, fully confident
of his success before he had ordered a gun to be fired,
protested that if Spinola did not take Ostend nobody
would ever take it. There was also, strangely
enough, a general feeling through the republican ranks
that the long-expected man had come.
Thus a raw volunteer, a man who had never drilled
a hundred men, who had never held an officer’s
commission in any army in the world, became, as by
the waving of a wand, a field-marshal and commander-in-chief
at a most critical moment in history, in the most
conspicuous position in Christendom, and in a great
war, now narrowed down to a single spot of earth,
on which the eyes of the world were fixed, and the
daily accounts from which were longed for with palpitating
anxiety. What but failure and disaster could
be expected from such astounding policy? Every
soldier in the Catholic forces—from grizzled
veterans of half a century who had commanded armies
and achieved victories when this dainty young Italian
was in his cradle, down to the simple musketeer or
rider who had been campaigning for his daily bread
ever since he could carry a piece or mount a horse
was furious with discontent or outraged pride.
Very naturally too, it was said that the position
of the archdukes had become preposterous. It
was obvious, notwithstanding the pilgrimages of the
Infanta to our Lady of Hall, to implore not only the
fall of Ostend, but the birth of a successor to their
sovereignty, that her marriage would for ever remain
barren. Spain was already acting upon this theory,
it was said, for the contract with Spinola was made,
not at Brussels, but at Madrid, and a foreign army
of Spaniards and Italians, under the supreme command
of a Genoese adventurer, was now to occupy indefinitely
that Flanders which had been proclaimed an independent
nation, and duly bequeathed by its deceased proprietor
to his daughter.