to understand”—“to be appointed
to him that shall be their governor? First, that
he have as much authority as the Prince of Orange,
or any other governor or captain-general, hath had
heretofore.” Now the Prince of Orange hath
been stadholder of each of the United Provinces, governor-general,
commander-in-chief, count of Holland in prospect, and
sovereign, if he had so willed it. It would doubtless
have been most desirable for the country, in its confused
condition, had there been a person competent to wield,
and willing to accept, the authority once exercised
by William I. But it was also certain that this was
exactly the authority which Elizabeth had forbidden
Leicester to assume. Yet it is difficult to understand
what position the Queen intended that her favourite
should maintain, nor how he was to carry out her instructions,
while submitting to her prohibitions. He was directed
to cause the confused government of the Provinces
to be redressed, and a better form of polity to be
established. He was ordered, in particular, to
procure a radical change in the constitution, by causing
the deputies to the General Assembly to be empowered
to decide upon important matters, without, as had
always been the custom, making direct reference to
the assemblies of the separate Provinces. He
was instructed to bring about, in some indefinite
way, a complete reform in financial matters, by compelling
the States-General to raise money by liberal taxation,
according to the “advice of her Majesty, delivered
unto them by her lieutenant.”
And how was this radical change in the institutions
of the Provinces to be made by an English earl, whose
only authority was that of commander-in-chief over
five thousand half-starved, unpaid, utterly-forlorn
English troops?
The Netherland envoys in England, in their parting
advice, most distinctly urged him “to hale authority
with the first, to declare himself chief head and
governor-general” of the whole country,—for
it was a political head that was wanted in order to
restore unity of action—not an additional
general, where there were already generals in plenty.
Sir John Norris, valiant, courageous, experienced—even
if not, as Walsingham observed, a “religious
soldier,” nor learned in anything “but
a kind of licentious and corrupt government”—was
not likely to require the assistance of the new lieutenant-general
in field operations nor could the army be brought
into a state of thorough discipline and efficiency
by the magic of Leicester’s name. The rank
and file of the English army—not the commanders-needed
strengthening. The soldiers required shoes and
stockings, bread and meat, and for these articles
there were not the necessary funds, nor would the title
of Lieutenant-General supply the deficiency.
The little auxiliary force was, in truth, in a condition
most pitiable to behold: it was difficult to say
whether the soldiers who had been already for a considerable
period in the Netherlands, or those who had been recently