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THE STORY OF HOLLAND.
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XIV.
THE PROJECTS OF PHILIP.
WHEN
the wisest man in Holland had been murdered, and the greatest general
of the age was in the prime of his activity and skill, Philip ought to
have had no difficulty in overcoming the resistance of the Netherlands.
And when we add to this that the cities were so jealous of each other,
that they could not be brought to act together, that they were constantly
at strife even in their own walls, were hesitating when they should have
been bold, penurious when they should have been liberal, and were being
bought and sold by the prince whom they had invited to rule over them,
and the nobles whom they knew to have committed a thousand treasons against
public liberty, it should have been easy to stamp out opposition. Holland
and Zeland, it is true, were uncontaminated. They, had refused to recognize
Anjou, even when William pressed them to do so, and though they were as
yet unconscious of their powers, and could not foresee the great future
which was before them, though they were foolishly timid and parsimonious
at times when courage and self-sacrifice would have been the highest still
they had been made a nation by Father William.
Philip always cherished
the widest schemes of conquest or aggrandisement. He wished to achieve
the empire of the world. It is true he was no warrior, indeed, he was
little better than a clerk. He was no financier, for his revenue was anticipated
and mortgaged, and he was living from hand to mouth. He never imagined
that any difficulties were in his way, for no one about him during his
reign of forty-one years hinted that there was anything which he could
not accomplish. It must be allowed that he bore his own losses, which
were in fact the losses of others, with amazing serenity. He planned the
affairs of the world, the conquest of kingdoms, the assassination of princes,
the extirpation of heretics, the election of popes, and a thousand other
things, at his writing-desk in the vast palace which he had built among
the Spanish mountains in memory of the great victory of St. Quentin, the
winner of which had, by Philips orders, been executed at Brussels.
His hand, or rather his pen, was in everything. Let us look for a short
time at the principal projects which engaged him, the completion of which
was a bar to the rapid conquest of the Netherlands.
The last king of
the house of Valois was on the French throne. His only brother had just
died, and he had no hope of issue. The heir to his house according to
French law, now undisputed for at least two centuries and a half, that
females could not inherit the throne or transmit a title to it, was Henry,
King of Navarre, and prince of Béarn. Philip treated the Salic law,
as the French law regulating the succession to the crown was called, as
an absurdity, and claimed it for his daughter, and whatever husband he
might assign to her. In order to achieve this result he had distributed
bribes lavishly among such leading Frenchmen as professed to favour his
pretensions. Among these was the Duke of Guise, who took enormous sums
from him, and, under pretence of furthering Philips schemes, was
doing his utmost, by means of Philips money, to secure the crown
for himself. Over and over again, during the long course of this eventful
war, Parma and his army were forced to abandon or suspend some necessary
operation in order to further his masters and uncles designs
in France.
Philip laid claim
also to the throne of England, and for a long time had designed to subdue
it. Elizabeth, it is true, was reigning in it, and it was a cardinal article
in Philips political creed, that subjects should be of the religion
of their ruler. But then Elizabeth was a heretic, excommunicated by the
Pope, and deposed by the same infallible authority. Philip admitted that
the claims of Mary Stewart, who had been in an English prison for seventeen
years, were superior to his own, and he therefore intrigued to liberate
her, as he hired assassins to murder her rival and gaoler. Her son, who
had been King of Scotland from infancy, was a heretic, and therefore out
of the question. He would, therefore, be the guardian of Mary Stewarts
interests, and having liberated her, set her on the throne. After Marys
execution he averred himself even more to be the heir to the English throne.
He had some little plea for it, for he was descended from John of Gaunt,
Duke of Lancaster, and titular King of Spain. It was by the fact that
he represented both the daughters of John of Gaunt, that he had become
King of Portugal. After Marys death Philips efforts for the
subjugation of England were redoubled.
He had been exceedingly
anxious to procure his own election as Emperor of Germany. This elective
dignity had become, and remained to the wars of Napoleon, hereditary in
the house of Hapsburg, and Philip was unquestionally the representative
of that house. But after the resignation of Charles the Fifth, the empire
of Germany went to that magnificent monarchs younger brother, much
to Philips disgust and wrath. He had, however, never lost sight
of what he thought his right, and put forward his pretensions whenever
he could. But beside these schemes of temporal aggrandisement, he had
to manage the Papacy, to secure the election of such popes as were favourable
to his views. So he had to fill the Sacred College as far as possible
with his own creatures, and secure a good understanding with them all.
For this end money was wanted. An empty purse was no argument at Rome,
and it was necessary for him to be lavish. So what with bribing statesmen,
hiring assassins, conciliating cardinals, and keeping armies and navies
on foot and on sea, this king of universal ambition was sorely put to
for money. While the Dutch were inventing new taxes by the score and getting
opulent in spite of their sacrifices Philip did not know where to turn,
even for the means to carry on his government. At last he took the desperate
step of repudiating his debts, and so of getting into worse straits than
ever. |

CUSTOM HOUSE AND PIER AT HARLINGEN.
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| We
know a little of his financial position, and how hopeless was the prospect
of improving it. Spain, though populous and fertile, was less fruitful
for revenue purposes than any European country. In Spain, labour was dishonourable,
manufactures and trade were looked down on with contempt, and indolence
was a mark of gentility. Spanish bigotry and Spanish pride had expelled
the most industrious and wealth-producing part of the nation. It may be
doubted whether the Italian possessions of Philip paid the cost of their
civil and military establishments. The Netherlands, which supplied three-fifths,
at one time, of the revenues which his ancestors enjoyed and squandered,
were now beggared or hostile. The Flemish artisans had been murdered or
exiled, had quitted Flanders in thousands for England and Holland. These
wealth-winning people were gone and their places were ill supplied, at
least from a revenue-raising point of view, by Jesuits, monks, inquisitors,
and bishops.
It is difficult to
discover what he got from his possessions in the New and Old World. He
had inherited at least all the dominions which Alexander the Sixth, Spaniard,
Pope, and profligate, had bestowed on his ancestors. In his eyes the Atlantic
and Pacific were Spanish lakes, as much his property, his exclusive property,
as the fishponds in the Escurial were. Indians of the Old World, Indians
of the New World, from the Northern land of frost to the Southern land
of fire, were as much his subjects as the Spaniards and the Flemings were.
In accordance with the gift of Alexander, the whole world outside Europe
was under the indefeasible sovereignty of Spain. Now in Philips
reign the mine of Potosi was discovered, and the king had a royalty on
all mines in his dominions. But it may be safely alleged that much metal
was raised on which the royal dues were not paid. Still it is clear that
vast quantities of metallic wealth were annually poured into Spain. The
misfortune to Philips government was that so little of these great
riches abode with him. His expenditure was a vast sieve, through which
his revenue instantly drained away. Besides, the population of Philips
American dominions was speedily extirpated by the compulsory labour which
the Spanish conquest put on them. There is not a single descendant left
of the races which Columbus found in the Caribbees. The native populations
of Mexico and Peru were attenuated to a shadow of what they were when
Cortes and Pizarro made their conquests. To fill up the void which this
vigorous and exhausting process had made, and to save the residue of the
population, the benevolent bishop, Las Casas, had suggested the importation
of negro slaves, and his advice had been followed.
We shall never know
all, or much more than a little, of what Philip disbursed annually in
bribes. Work of this kind is always done secretly, and neither the giver
nor the receiver cares to keep, or at least to expose, a record of the
transaction. But it is pretty certain that wherever in any European country
Philip had an interest, or thought he had an interest, he paid and fertilized
his agents, though he was impoverishing himself. The age was not nice
in receiving money. Kings and nobles, ministers of state and judges, were
not at all above taking money or moneys worth for their services.
Men who wanted favours done, or losses averted, went with cash in their
hands to those who were sworn to execute Justice between parties.
Of course the greater
part of Philips bribes were wasted. He did not get value received
for what he spent. In the nature of things, it was not possible always
to carry out a timely treason. There must be opportunities, there must
be agents. The opportunity may not come, and a rash attempt, foredoomed
to failure, would be worse than any delay, however long and costly. The
agents too must be carefully selected. They might turn on those who employed
them, and make terms with those whom they prefessed to betray, or pretended
to destroy. One of the men whom Parma hired to murder Orange went straight
to the Prince, gave full details of the plot, and remained for his whole
life a faithful and useful servant of the States. We do not read that
he sent back the money to Parma with which he was supplied. We know that
Guise, who took Philips money, intended to baffle Philips
plans in his own interest; and after the murder of Guise, when his brother
and son also took Philips money, for the same professed aims, they
in the end, and for a price, threw over Philip and acknowledged Henry
of Navarre.
It is inevitable
that the tools and hirelings of bad men will be bad themselves. The doctrines
of Machiavelli were not even wise, shrewd as they seem to be. For one
hit which policy succeeds infor dissimulation and lying used to
be called policy in public affairsit makes twenty misses. Perfidy
may not only make its victims cautious, it may make them equally perfidious.
At any rate, the man who secures agents by hire for evil ends, need not
be surprised if his agents betray him, and he loses both money and reputation.
No political system, which has been founded on lying, is discovered to
be stable in the end. The ambitious schemes of Philip, and the arts he
employed to effect them, were the ruin of Spain. For a long time she was
the terror of the nations. Even when Holland pricked the bubble she still
seemed formidable.
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GRONINGEN.
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