FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3031   3032   3033   3034   3035   3036   3037   3038   3039   3040   3041   3042   3043   3044   3045   3046   3047   3048   3049   3050   3051   3052   3053   3054   3055  
3056   3057   3058   3059   3060   3061   3062   3063   3064   3065   3066   3067   3068   3069   3070   3071   3072   3073   3074   3075   3076   3077   3078   3079   3080   >>   >|  
uld renounce its commerce with more than half the world. The scorn of the States' commissioners at this proposition can be imagined, and it became difficult indeed for them to speak on the subject in decorous language. Because the archdukes were willing to give up something which was not their property, the republic was voluntarily to open its veins and drain its very life-blood at the bidding of a foreign potentate. She was to fling away all the trophies of Heemskerk and Sebalt de Weerd, of Balthasar de Cordes, Van der Hagen, Matelieff, and Verhoeff; she was to abdicate the position which she had already acquired of mistress of the seas, and she was to deprive herself for ever of that daily increasing ocean commerce which was rapidly converting a cluster of puny, half-submerged provinces into a mighty empire. Of a certainty the Spanish court at this new epoch was an astounding anachronism. In its view Pope Alexander VI. still lived and reigned. Liberty was not a boon conferred upon the Netherlanders by their defeated enemy. It had been gained by their own right hands; by the blood, and the gold, and the sweat of two generations. If it were the king's to give, let him try once more if he could take it away. Such were the opinions and emotions of the Dutchmen, expressed in as courteous language as they could find. "It would be a political heresy," said Barneveld to the Spanish commissioners at this session, "if my lords the States should by contract banish their citizens out of two-thirds of the world, both land and sea." "'Tis strange," replied the Spaniards, "that you wish to have more than other powers--kings or republics--who never make any such pretensions. The Indies, East and West, are our house, privately possessed by us for more than a hundred years, and no one has a right to come into it without our permission. This is not banishment, but a custom to which all other nations submit. We give you your sovereignty before all the world, quitting all claims upon it. We know very well that you deny receiving it from us; but to give you a quit claim, and to permit free trade besides, would be a little more than you have a right to expect." Was it not well for the cause of liberty, commercial intercourse, and advancement of the human intellect, that there was this obstinate little republic in the world, refusing to tolerate that to which all other great powers of the earth submitted; that there was one nation d
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3031   3032   3033   3034   3035   3036   3037   3038   3039   3040   3041   3042   3043   3044   3045   3046   3047   3048   3049   3050   3051   3052   3053   3054   3055  
3056   3057   3058   3059   3060   3061   3062   3063   3064   3065   3066   3067   3068   3069   3070   3071   3072   3073   3074   3075   3076   3077   3078   3079   3080   >>   >|  



Top keywords:
commerce
 

Spanish

 

republic

 

powers

 
commissioners
 

language

 

States

 
political
 

republics

 

pretensions


courteous

 

heresy

 

Dutchmen

 

Spaniards

 

thirds

 
Indies
 

banish

 
citizens
 
session
 
contract

expressed

 

replied

 

Barneveld

 

strange

 
custom
 

expect

 

liberty

 

permit

 

commercial

 

intercourse


submitted
 

nation

 

tolerate

 
refusing
 
advancement
 

intellect

 

obstinate

 
receiving
 

hundred

 

possessed


privately

 
permission
 

sovereignty

 

quitting

 

claims

 

submit

 

banishment

 
emotions
 
nations
 

Sebalt