and invited him to send a secret envoy to England,
who would instantly have ocular demonstration of the
fact. Croft returned as triumphantly as the excellent
Doctor had done; averring that there was no doubt
as to the immediate conclusion of a treaty. His
grounds of belief were very similar to those upon which
Rogers had founded his faith. “Tis a weak
old man of seventy,” said Parma, “with
very little sagacity. I am inclined to think that
his colleagues are taking him in, that they may the
better deceive us. I will see that they do nothing
of the kind.” But the movement was purely
one of the comptroller’s own inspiration; for
Sir James had a singular facility for getting himself
into trouble, and for making confusion. Already,
when he had been scarcely a day in Ostend, he had
insulted the governor of the place, Sir John Conway,
had given him the lie in the hearing of many of his
own soldiers, had gone about telling all the world
that he had express authority from her Majesty to
send him home in disgrace, and that the Queen had
called him a fool, and quite unfit for his post.
And as if this had not been mischief-making enough,
in addition to the absurd De Loo and Bodman negotiations
of the previous year, in which he had been the principal
actor, he had crowned his absurdities by this secret
and officious visit to Ghent. The Queen, naturally
very indignant at this conduct, reprehended him severely,
and ordered him back to England. The comptroller
was wretched. He expressed his readiness to obey
her commands, but nevertheless implored his dread
sovereign to take merciful consideration of the manifold
misfortunes, ruin, and utter undoing, which thereby
should fall upon him and his unfortunate family.
All this he protested he would “nothing esteem
if it tended to her Majesty’s pleasure or service,”
but seeing it should effectuate nothing but to bring
the aged carcase of her poor vassal to present decay,
he implored compassion upon his hoary hairs, and promised
to repair the error of his former proceedings.
He avowed that he would not have ventured to disobey
for a moment her orders to return, but “that
his aged and feeble limbs did not retain sufficient
force, without present death, to comply with her commandment.”
And with that he took to his bed, and remained there
until the Queen was graciously pleased to grant him
her pardon.
At last, early in May—instead of the visit of Richardot—there was a preliminary meeting of all the commissioners in tents on the sands; within a cannon-shot of Ostend, and between that place and Newport. It was a showy and ceremonious interview, in which no business was transacted. The commissioners of Philip were attended by a body of one hundred and fifty light horse, and by three hundred private gentlemen in magnificent costume. La Motte also came from Newport with one thousand Walloon cavalry while the English Commissioners, on their part were escorted from Ostend by an imposing array of English and Dutch