FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1667   1668   1669   1670   1671   1672   1673   1674   1675   1676   1677   1678   1679   1680   1681   1682   1683   1684   1685   1686   1687   1688   1689   1690   1691  
1692   1693   1694   1695   1696   1697   1698   1699   1700   1701   1702   1703   1704   1705   1706   1707   1708   1709   1710   1711   1712   1713   1714   1715   1716   >>   >|  
ret convention to that effect, and there were those about the court who were not ill-disposed for such a combination. The king was, however, far too adroit to be caught in any such trap. The marriage proposals in themselves he did not dislike, but Jeannin and he were both of a mind that they should be kept entirely secret. Don Pedro, on the contrary, for obvious reasons, was for making the transactions ostentatiously public, and, as a guarantee of his master's good faith in regard to the heritage of the Netherlands, he proposed that every portion of the republic, thenceforth to be conquered by the allies, should be confided to hands in which Henry and the archdukes would have equal confidence. But these artifices were too trivial to produce much effect. Henry remained true, in his way, to the States-General, and Don Pedro was much laughed at in Paris, although the public scarcely knew wherefore. These intrigues had not been conducted so mysteriously but that Barneveld was aware of what was going on. Both before Jeannin's departure from the Hague in June, and on his return in the middle of August, he catechised him very closely on the subject. The old Leaguer was too deep, however, to be thoroughly pumped, even by so practised a hand as the Advocate's, so that more was suspected than at the time was accurately known. As, at the memorable epoch of the accession of the King of Scots to the throne of Elizabeth, Maximilian de Bethune had flattered the new monarch with the prospect of a double marriage, so now Don Fernando Girono had been sent on solemn mission to England, in order to offer the same infants to James which Don Pedro was placing at the disposition of Henry. The British sovereign, as secretly fascinated by the idea of a Spanish family alliance as he had ever been by the proposals of the Marquis de Rosny for the French marriages, listened with eagerness. Money was scattered as profusely among the English courtiers by Don Fernando as had been done by De Bethune four years before. The bribes were accepted, and often by the very personages who knew the colour of Bourbon money, but the ducats were scarcely earned. Girono, thus urging on the English Government the necessity of deserting the republic and cementing a cordial, personal, and political understanding between James and Philip, effected but little. It soon became thoroughly understood in England that the same bargaining was going on simultaneously in
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   1667   1668   1669   1670   1671   1672   1673   1674   1675   1676   1677   1678   1679   1680   1681   1682   1683   1684   1685   1686   1687   1688   1689   1690   1691  
1692   1693   1694   1695   1696   1697   1698   1699   1700   1701   1702   1703   1704   1705   1706   1707   1708   1709   1710   1711   1712   1713   1714   1715   1716   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

scarcely

 

England

 

republic

 
English
 

effect

 
Jeannin
 

Fernando

 

Girono

 

Bethune

 
proposals

marriage

 

public

 

disposition

 

British

 

sovereign

 

placing

 

infants

 
solemn
 
mission
 
memorable

accession

 

accurately

 
suspected
 

throne

 

monarch

 

prospect

 

double

 
secretly
 

Elizabeth

 

Maximilian


flattered

 

necessity

 

Government

 

deserting

 

cementing

 

cordial

 

urging

 
Bourbon
 

ducats

 
earned

personal

 

political

 

understood

 

bargaining

 

simultaneously

 

understanding

 

Philip

 

effected

 

colour

 

personages