the Silent to the Twelve Year's Truce--1609
By John Lothrop Motley
History United Netherlands, v41, 1584
Alexander Farnese, The Duke of Parma
CHAPTER V., Part 3.
Sainte Aldegonde discouraged--His Critical Position--His
Negotiations with the Enemy--Correspondence with Richardot--
Commotion in the City--Interview of Marnix with Parma--Suspicious
Conduct of Marnix--Deputation to the Prince--Oration of Marnix--
Private Views of Parma--Capitulation of Antwerp--Mistakes of Marnix
--Philip on the Religious Question--Triumphal Entrance of Alexander--
Rebuilding of the Citadel--Gratification of Philip--Note on Sainte
Aldegonde
Sainte Aldegonde's position had become a painful one. The net had been
drawn closely about the city. The bridge seemed impregnable, the great
Kowenstyn was irrecoverably in the hands of the enemy, and now all the
lesser forts in the immediate vicinity of Antwerp-Borght, Hoboken,
Cantecroix, Stralen, Berghen, and the rest--had likewise fallen into his
grasp. An account of grain, taken on the 1st of June, gave an average of
a pound a-head for a month long, or half a pound for two months. This was
not the famine-point, according to the standard which had once been
established in Leyden; but the courage of the burghers had been rapidly
oozing away, under the pressure of their recent disappointments. It
seemed obvious to the burgomaster, that the time for yielding had
arrived.
"I had maintained the city," he said, "for a long period, without any
excessive tumult or great effusion of blood--a city where there was such
a multitude of inhabitants, mostly merchants or artisans deprived of all
their traffic, stripped of their manufactures, destitute of all
commodities and means of living. I had done this in the midst of a great
diversity of humours and opinions, a vast popular license, a confused
anarchy, among a great number of commanders, most of them inexperienced
in war; with very little authority of my own, with slender forces of
ships, soldiers, and sailors; with alight appearance of support from king
or prince without, or of military garrison within; and under all these
circumstances I exerted myself to do my uttermost duty in preserving the
city, both in regard to its internal government, and by force of arms by
land and sea, without sparing myself in any labour or peril.
"I know very well that there are many persons, who, finding themselves
quite at their eas
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