Etext editor’s bookmarks:
Acts of violence which
under pretext of religion
Adulation for inferiors
whom they despise
Calumny is often a stronger
and more lasting power than disdain
Created one child for
damnation and another for salvation
Depths of credulity
men in all ages can sink
Devote himself to his
gout and to his fair young wife
Furious mob set upon
the house of Rem Bischop
Highborn demagogues
in that as in every age affect adulation
In this he was much
behind his age or before it
Logic is rarely the
quality on which kings pride themselves
Necessity of deferring
to powerful sovereigns
Not his custom nor that
of his councillors to go to bed
Partisans wanted not
accommodation but victory
Puritanism in Holland
was a very different thing from England
Seemed bent on self-destruction
Stand between hope and
fear
The evils resulting
from a confederate system of government
To stifle for ever the
right of free enquiry
THE LIFE AND DEATH of JOHN OF BARNEVELD, ADVOCATE OF HOLLAND
WITH A VIEW OF THE PRIMARY CAUSES AND MOVEMENTS OF THE THIRTY YEARS’ WAR
By John Lothrop Motley, D.C.L., LL.D.
Life and Death of John of Barneveld, v9, 1618
CHAPTER XVI.
Maurice revolutionizes the Provinces—Danckaert’s libellous Pamphlet —Barneveld’s Appeal to the Prince—Barneveld’a Remonstrance to the States—The Stadholder at Amsterdam—The Treaty of Truce nearly expired—King of Spain and Archduke Albert—Scheme for recovering the Provinces—Secret Plot to make Maurice Sovereign.
Early in the year (1618) Maurice set himself about revolutionizing the provinces on which he could not yet thoroughly rely. The town of Nymegen since its recovery from the Spaniards near the close of the preceding century had held its municipal government, as it were, at the option of the Prince. During the war he had been, by the terms of surrender, empowered to appoint and to change its magistracy at will. No change had occurred for many years, but as the government had of late fallen into the hands of the Barneveldians, and as Maurice considered the Truce to be a continuance of the war, he appeared suddenly, in the city at the head of a body of troops and surrounded by his lifeguard. Summoning the whole board of magistrates into the townhouse, he gave them all notice to quit, disbanding them like a company of mutinous soldiery, and immediately afterwards appointed a fresh list of functionaries in their stead.
This done, he proceeded to Arnhem, where the States of Gelderland were in session, appeared before that body, and made a brief announcement of the revolution which he had so succinctly effected in the most considerable town of their province. The Assembly, which seems, like many other assemblies at precisely this epoch, to have had an extraordinary capacity for yielding to gentle violence, made but little resistance to the extreme measures now undertaken by the Stadholder, and not only highly applauded the subjugation of Nymegen, but listened with sympathy to his arguments against the Waartgelders and in favour of the Synod.