in whose favour he had felt most secure. He found,
himself, in an instant, humbled and ridiculous.
Between himself and the Queen it was, something of
a lovers’ quarrel, and he soon found balsam
in the hand that smote him. But though reinstated
in authority, he was never again the object of reverence
in the land he was attempting to rule. As he
came to know the Netherlanders better, he recognized
the great capacity which their statesmen concealed
under a plain and sometimes a plebeian exterior, and
the splendid grandee hated, where at first he had
only despised. The Netherlanders, too, who had
been used to look up almost with worship to a plain
man of kindly manners, in felt hat and bargeman’s
woollen jacket, whom they called “Father William,”
did not appreciate, as they ought, the magnificence
of the stranger who had been sent to govern them.
The Earl was handsome, quick-witted, brave; but he
was, neither wise in council nor capable in the field.
He was intolerably arrogant, passionate, and revengeful.
He hated easily, and he hated for life. It was
soon obvious that no cordiality of feeling or of action
could exist between him and the plain, stubborn Hollanders.
He had the fatal characteristic of loving only the
persons who flattered him. With much perception
of character, sense of humour, and appreciation of
intellect, he recognized the power of the leading men
in the nation, and sought to gain them. So long
as he hoped success, he was loud in their praises.
They were all wise, substantial, well-languaged, big
fellows, such as were not to be found in England or
anywhere else. When they refused to be made his
tools, they became tinkers, boors, devils, and atheists.
He covered them with curses and devoted them to the
gibbet. He began by warmly commending Buys and
Barneveld, Hohenlo and Maurice, and endowing them
with every virtue. Before he left the country
he had accused them of every crime, and would cheerfully,
if he could, have taken the life of every one of them.
And it was quite the same with nearly every Englishman
who served with or under him. Wilkes and Buckhurst,
however much the objects of his previous esteem; so
soon as they ventured to censure or even to criticise
his proceedings, were at once devoted to perdition.
Yet, after minute examination of the record, public
and private, neither Wilkes nor Buckhurst can be found
guilty of treachery or animosity towards him, but
are proved to have been governed, in all their conduct,
by a strong sense of duty to their sovereign, the
Netherlands, and Leicester himself.
To Sir John Norris, it must be allowed, that he was never fickle, for he had always entertained for that distinguished general an honest, unswerving, and infinite hatred, which was not susceptible of increase or diminution by any act or word. Pelham, too, whose days were numbered, and who was dying bankrupt and broken-hearted, at the close of the, Earl’s administration, had always been regarded by him with tenderness and