in all of which he had acquitted himself with dignity
and brilliancy. He was but twenty-six when he
published his argument for the liberty of the sea,
the famous Mare Liberum, and a little later appeared
his work on the Antiquity of the Batavian Republic,
which procured for him in Spain the title of “Hugo
Grotius, auctor damnatus.” At the age of
twenty-nine he had completed his Latin history of
the Netherlands from the period immediately preceding
the war of independence down to the conclusion of the
Truce, 1550-1609—a work which has been
a classic ever since its appearance, although not
published until after his death. A chief magistrate
of Rotterdam, member of the States of Holland and
the States-General, jurist, advocate, attorney-general,
poet, scholar, historian, editor of the Greek and Latin
classics, writer of tragedies, of law treatises, of
theological disquisitions, he stood foremost among
a crowd of famous contemporaries. His genius,
eloquence, and learning were esteemed among the treasures
not only of his own country but of Europe. He
had been part and parcel of his country’s history
from his earliest manhood, and although a child in
years compared to Barneveld, it was upon him that the
great statesman had mainly relied ever since the youth’s
first appearance in public affairs. Impressible,
emotional, and susceptive, he had been accused from
time to time, perhaps not entirely without reason,
of infirmity of purpose, or at least of vacillation
in opinion; but his worst enemies had never assailed
the purity of his heart or integrity of his character.
He had not yet written the great work on the ‘Rights
of War and Peace’, which was to make an epoch
in the history of civilization and to be the foundation
of a new science, but the materials lay already in
the ample storehouse of his memory and his brain.
Possessed of singular personal beauty—which
the masterly portraits of Miereveld attest to the
present day—tall, brown-haired; straight-featured,
with a delicate aquiline nose and piercing dark blue
eyes, he was also athletic of frame and a proficient
in manly exercises. This was the statesman and
the scholar, of whom it is difficult to speak but
in terms of affectionate but not exaggerated eulogy,
and for whom the Republic of the Netherlands could
now find no better use than to shut him up in the
grim fortress of Loevestein for the remainder of his
days. A commonwealth must have deemed itself
rich in men which, after cutting off the head of Barneveld,
could afford to bury alive Hugo Grotius.
His deportment in prison was a magnificent moral lesson.
Shut up in a kind of cage consisting of a bedroom
and a study, he was debarred from physical exercise,
so necessary for his mental and bodily health.
Not choosing for the gratification of Lieutenant Deventer
to indulge in weak complaints, he procured a huge
top, which he employed himself in whipping several
hours a day; while for intellectual employment he plunged
once more into those classical, juridical, and theological
studies which had always employed his leisure hours
from childhood upwards.