FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2890   2891   2892   2893   2894   2895   2896   2897   2898   2899   2900   2901   2902   2903   2904   2905   2906   2907   2908   2909   2910   2911   2912   2913   2914  
2915   2916   2917   2918   2919   2920   2921   2922   2923   2924   2925   2926   2927   2928   2929   2930   2931   2932   2933   2934   2935   2936   2937   2938   2939   >>   >|  
ived with great benignity by the king and his ministers. Meantime there was much delay. The enormous labours thus devolved upon one pair of shoulders by the do-nothing king and a mayor of the palace whose soul was absorbed by his own private robberies, were almost too much for human strength. On his return to the Netherlands Spinola fell dangerously ill in Genoa. Meantime, during his absence and the enforced idleness of the Catholic armies, there was an opportunity for the republicans to act with promptness and vigour. They displayed neither quality. Never had there been so much sluggishness as in the preparations for the campaign of 1606. The States' exchequer was lower than it had been for years. The republic was without friends. Left to fight their battle for national existence alone, the Hollanders found themselves perpetually subjected to hostile censure from their late allies, and to friendly advice still more intolerable. There were many brave Englishmen and Frenchmen sharing in the fatigues of the Dutch war of independence, but the governments of Henry and of James were as protective, as severely virtuous, as offensive, and, in their secret intrigues with the other belligerent, as mischievous as it was possible for the best-intentioned neutrals to be. The fame and the popularity of the stadholder had been diminished by the results of the past campaign. The States-General were disappointed, dissatisfied, and inclined to censure very unreasonably the public servant who had always obeyed their decrees with docility. While Henry IV. was rapidly transferring his admiration from Maurice to Spinola, the disagreements at home between the Advocate and the Stadholder were becoming portentous. There was a want of means and of soldiers for the new campaign. Certain causes were operating in Europe to the disadvantage of both belligerents. In the south, Venice had almost drawn her sword against the pope in her settled resolution to put down the Jesuits and to clip the wings of the church party, before, with bequests and donations, votive churches and magnificent monasteries, four-fifths of the domains of the republic should fall into mortmain, as was already the case in Brabant. Naturally there was a contest between the ex-Huguenot, now eldest son of the Church, and the most Catholic king, as to who should soonest defend the pope. Henry offered thorough protection to his Holiness, but only under condition that he shoul
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2890   2891   2892   2893   2894   2895   2896   2897   2898   2899   2900   2901   2902   2903   2904   2905   2906   2907   2908   2909   2910   2911   2912   2913   2914  
2915   2916   2917   2918   2919   2920   2921   2922   2923   2924   2925   2926   2927   2928   2929   2930   2931   2932   2933   2934   2935   2936   2937   2938   2939   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

campaign

 

Catholic

 

Spinola

 
States
 

republic

 

censure

 
Meantime
 

Advocate

 

Stadholder

 
operating

disadvantage

 

Europe

 

Certain

 

soldiers

 

portentous

 

disappointed

 

General

 

dissatisfied

 

inclined

 

unreasonably


results

 

popularity

 

stadholder

 

diminished

 

public

 

servant

 

admiration

 

transferring

 
Maurice
 

disagreements


rapidly
 
belligerents
 
obeyed
 

decrees

 

docility

 

resolution

 

Huguenot

 

eldest

 

Church

 

contest


mortmain

 

Brabant

 

Naturally

 

soonest

 

condition

 

Holiness

 

defend

 

offered

 

protection

 
neutrals