upon, and who had since that period been most influential
in procuring the present triumph of the English policy.
Through his exertions the Province of Holland had been
induced at an early moment to furnish the most ample
instructions to the commissioners for the satisfaction
of Queen Elizabeth in the great matter of the mortgages.
“Judge if this Paul Buys has done his work well,”
said a French agent in the Netherlands, who, despite
the infamous conduct of his government towards the
Provinces, was doing his best to frustrate the subsequent
negotiation with England, “and whether or no
he has Holland under his thumb.” The same
individual had conceived hopes from Falck of Zeeland.
That Province, in which lay the great bone of contention
between the Queen and the States—the important
town of Flushing—was much slower than Holland
to agree to the English policy. It is to be feared
that Falck was not the most ingenuous and disinterested
politician that could be found even in an age not
distinguished for frankness or purity; for even while
setting forth upon the mission to Elizabeth, he was
still clingihg, or affecting to cling, to the wretched
delusion of French assistance. “I regret
infinitely,” said Falck to the French agent just
mentioned, “that I am employed in this affair,
and that it is necessary in our present straits to
have recourse to England. There is—so
to speak—not a person in our Province that
is inclined that way, all recognizing very well that
France is much more salutary for us, besides that
we all bear her a certain affection. Indeed, if
I were assured that the King still felt any goodwill
towards us, I would so manage matters that neither
the Queen of England, nor any other prince whatever
except his most Christian-Majesty should take a bite
at this country, at least at this Province, and with
that view, while waiting for news from France, I will
keep things in suspense, and spin them out as long
as it is possible to do.”
The news from France happened soon to be very conclusive,
and it then became difficult even for Falek to believe—after
intelligence received of the accord between Henry
iii. and the Guises—that his Christian
Majesty, would be inclined for a bite at the Netherlands.
This duplicity on the part of so leading a personage
furnishes a key to much of the apparent dilatoriness
on the part of the English government: It has
been seen that Elizabeth, up to the last moment, could
not fairly comprehend the ineffable meanness of the
French monarch. She told Ortel that she saw no
reason to believe in that great Catholic conspiracy
against herself and against all Protestantism which
was so soon to be made public by the King’s
edict of July, promulgated at the very instant of the
arrival in England of the Netherland envoys.
Then that dread fiat had gone forth, the most determined
favourer of the French alliance could no longer admit
its possibility, and Falck became the more open to
that peculiar line of argument which Leicester had
suggested with regard to one of the other deputies.
“I will do my best,” wrote Walsingham,
“to procure that Paul Buys and Falck shall receive
underhand some reward.”