FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3609   3610   3611   3612   3613   3614   3615   3616   3617   3618   3619   3620   3621   3622   3623   3624   3625   3626   3627   3628   3629   3630   3631   3632   3633  
3634   3635   3636   3637   3638   3639   3640   3641   3642   3643   3644   3645   3646   3647   3648   3649   3650   3651   3652   3653   3654   3655   3656   3657   3658   >>   >|  
ipated, and the Prince and the Advocate separated to meet no more on earth. "You have doubtless heard already," wrote Barneveld to the ambassador in London, "of all that has been passing here and in Utrecht. One must pray to God that everything may prosper to his honour and the welfare of the country. They are resolved to go through with the National Synod, the government of Utrecht after the change made in it having consented with the rest. I hope that his Majesty, according to your statement, will send some good, learned, and peace-loving personages here, giving them wholesome instructions to help bring our affairs into Christian unity, accommodation, and love, by which his Majesty and these Provinces would be best served." Were these the words of a baffled conspirator and traitor? Were they uttered to produce an effect upon public opinion and avert a merited condemnation by all good men? There is not in them a syllable of reproach, of anger, of despair. And let it be remembered that they were not written for the public at all. They were never known to the public, hardly heard of either by the Advocate's enemies or friends, save the one to whom they were addressed and the monarch to whom that friend was accredited. They were not contained in official despatches, but in private, confidential outpourings to a trusted political and personal associate of many years. From the day they were written until this hour they have never been printed, and for centuries perhaps not read. He proceeded to explain what he considered to be the law in the Netherlands with regard to military allegiance. It is not probable that there was in the country a more competent expounder of it; and defective and even absurd as such a system was, it had carried the Provinces successfully through a great war, and a better method for changing it might have been found among so law-loving and conservative a people as the Netherlanders than brute force. "Information has apparently been sent to England," he said, "that My Lords of Holland through their commissioners in Utrecht dictated to the soldiery standing at their charges something that was unreasonable. The truth is that the States of Holland, as many of them as were assembled, understanding that great haste was made to send his Excellency and some deputies from the other provinces to Utrecht, while the members of the Utrecht assembly were gone to report these difficulties to their constitue
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   3609   3610   3611   3612   3613   3614   3615   3616   3617   3618   3619   3620   3621   3622   3623   3624   3625   3626   3627   3628   3629   3630   3631   3632   3633  
3634   3635   3636   3637   3638   3639   3640   3641   3642   3643   3644   3645   3646   3647   3648   3649   3650   3651   3652   3653   3654   3655   3656   3657   3658   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

Utrecht

 

public

 

loving

 

Majesty

 

Holland

 

written

 
Advocate
 
country
 

Provinces

 
military

regard
 

official

 
despatches
 

probable

 

competent

 

expounder

 
allegiance
 
private
 

defective

 

proceeded


personal

 
printed
 

associate

 

political

 
trusted
 

explain

 

considered

 
confidential
 
centuries
 

outpourings


Netherlands

 

States

 

assembled

 

understanding

 

unreasonable

 

dictated

 

commissioners

 

soldiery

 

standing

 

charges


Excellency

 

assembly

 

report

 

difficulties

 

constitue

 
members
 
deputies
 

provinces

 
method
 

changing