Elizabeth promised that there should be as strict
regard paid to the interests of Holland as to those
of England, in case of a pacification, and that she
would never forget her duty to them, to herself, and
to the world, as the protectress of the reformed religion.
The deputies, on the other hand, warned her that peace
with Spain was impossible; that the intention of the
Spanish court was to deceive her, while preparing
her destruction and theirs; that it was hopeless to
attempt the concession of any freedom of conscience
from Philip
ii.; and that any stipulations which
might be made upon that, or any other subject, by
the Spanish commissioners, would be tossed to the
wind. In reply to the Queen’s loud complaints
that the States had been trifling with her, and undutiful
to her, and that they had kept her waiting seven months
long for an answer to her summons to participate in
the negotiations, they replied, that up to the 15th
October of the previous year, although there had been
flying rumours of an intention on the part of her
Majesty’s government to open those communications
with the enemy, it had, “nevertheless been earnestly
and expressly, and with high words and oaths, denied
that there was any truth in those rumours.”
Since that time the States had not once only, but many
times, in private letters, in public documents, and
in conversations with Lord Leicester and other eminent
personages, deprecated any communications whatever
with Spain, asserting uniformly their conviction that
such proceedings would bring ruin on their country,
and imploring her Majesty not to give ear to any propositions
whatever.
And not only were the envoys, regularly appointed
by the States-General, most active in England, in
their, attempts to prevent the negotiations, but delegates
from the Netherland churches were also sent to the
Queen, to reason with her on the subject, and to utter
solemn warnings that the cause of the reformed religion
would be lost for ever, in case of a treaty on her
part with Spain. When these clerical envoys reached
England the Queen was already beginning to wake from
her delusion; although her commissioners were still—as
we have seen—hard at work, pouring sand
through their sieves at Ostend, and although the steady
protestations, of the Duke of Parma, and the industrious
circulation of falsehoods by Spanish emissaries, had
even caused her wisest statesmen, for a time, to participate
in that delusion.
For it is not so great an impeachment on the sagacity
of the great Queen of England, as it would now appear
to those who judge by the light of subsequent facts,
that she still doubted whether the armaments, notoriously
preparing in Spain and Flanders, were intended against
herself; and that even if such were the case—she
still believed in the possibility of averting the
danger by negotiation.