Men quailed before his majestic intellect, but hated
him for the power which was its necessary result.
They already felt a stupid delight in cavilling at
his pedigree. To dispute his claim to a place
among the ancient nobility to which he was an honour
was to revenge themselves for the rank he unquestionably
possessed side by side in all but birth with the kings
and rulers of the world. Whether envy and jealousy
be vices more incident to the republican form of government
than to other political systems may be an open question.
But it is no question whatever that Barneveld’s
every footstep from this period forward was dogged
by envy as patient as it was devouring. Jealousy
stuck to him like his shadow. We have examined
the relations which existed between Winwood and himself;
we have seen that ambassador, now secretary of state
for James, never weary in denouncing the Advocate’s
haughtiness and grim resolution to govern the country
according to its laws rather than at the dictate of
a foreign sovereign, and in flinging forth malicious
insinuations in regard to his relations to Spain.
The man whose every hour was devoted in spite of a
thousand obstacles strewn by stupidity, treachery,
and apathy, as well as by envy, hatred, and bigotry—to
the organizing of a grand and universal league of
Protestantism against Spain, and to rolling up with
strenuous and sometimes despairing arms a dead mountain
weight, ever ready to fall back upon and crush him,
was accused in dark and mysterious whispers, soon to
grow louder and bolder, of a treacherous inclination
for Spain.
There is nothing less surprising nor more sickening
for those who observe public life, and wish to retain
faith in the human species, than the almost infinite
power of the meanest of passions.
The Advocate was obliged at the very outset of Langerac’s
mission to France to give him a warning on this subject.
“Should her Majesty make kindly mention of me,”
he said, “you will say nothing of it in your
despatches as you did in your last, although I am
sure with the best intentions. It profits me not,
and many take umbrage at it; wherefore it is wise
to forbear.”
But this was a trifle. By and by there would
be many to take umbrage at every whisper in his favour,
whether from crowned heads or from the simplest in
the social scale. Meantime he instructed the Ambassador,
without paying heed to personal compliments to his
chief, to do his best to keep the French government
out of the hands of Spain, and with that object in
view to smooth over the differences between the two
great parties in the kingdom, and to gain the confidence,
if possible, of Conde and Nevers and Bouillon, while
never failing in straightforward respect and loyal
friendship to the Queen-Regent and her ministers, as
the legitimate heads of the government.