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VII.

private chapel, an altar decked after the Anglican fashion, and CHAP. had not seemed well pleased at finding her with Hooker's Ecclesiastical Polity in her hands.*

wards

France.

He therefore long observed the contest between the English His feelings tofactions attentively, but without feeling a strong predilection wards for either side. Nor in truth did he ever, to the end of his England. life, become either a Whig or a Tory. He wanted that which is the common groundwork of both characters; for he never became an Englishman. He saved England, it is true; but he never loved her; and he never obtained her love. To him she was always a land of exile, visited with reluctance and quitted with delight. Even when he rendered to her those services of which, at this day, we feel the happy effects, her welfare was not his chief object. Whatever patriotic feeling he had was for Holland. There was the stately tomb where His feelslept the great politician whose blood, whose name, whose ings totemperament, and whose genius he had inherited. There the Holland very sound of his title was a spell which had, through three and generations, called forth the affectionate enthusiasm of boors and artisans. The Dutch language was the language of his nursery. Among the Dutch gentry he had chosen his early friends. The amusements, the architecture, the landscape of his native country, had taken hold on his heart. To her he turned with constant fondness from a prouder and fairer rival. In the gallery of Whitehall he pined for the familiar House in the Wood at the Hague, and never was so happy as when he could quit the magnificence of Windsor for his far humbler seat at Loo. During his splendid banishment it was his consolation to create round him, by building, planting, and digging, a scene which might remind him of the formal piles of red brick, of the long canals, and of the symmetrical flowerbeds among which his early life had been passed. Yet even his affection for the land of his birth was subordinate to another feeling which early became supreme in his soul, which mixed itself with all his passions, which impelled him to marvellous enterprises, which supported him when sinking under mortification, pain, sickness, and sorrow, which, towards the close of his career, seemed during a short time to languish, but which soon broke forth again fiercer than ever, and continued to animate him even while the prayer for the departing was read at his bedside. That feeling was enmity to

* Dr. Hooper's MS. narrative, published in the Appendix to Lord Dungannon's Life of William.

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France, and to the magnificent King who, in more than one sense, represented France, and who to virtues and accomplishments eminently French joined in large measure that unquiet, unscrupulous, and vainglorious ambition which has repeatedly drawn on France the resentment of Europe.

It is not difficult to trace the progress of the sentiment which gradually possessed itself of William's whole soul. When he was little more than a boy his country had been attacked by Lewis in ostentatious defiance of justice and public law, had been overrun, had been desolated, had been given up to every excess of rapacity, licentiousness, and cruelty. The Dutch had in dismay humbled themselves before the conqueror, and had implored mercy. They had been told in reply that, if they desired peace, they must resign their independence, and do annual homage to the House of Bourbon. The injured nation, driven to despair, had opened its dykes, and had called in the sea as an ally against the French tyranny. It was in the agony of that conflict, when peasants were flying in terror before the invaders, when hundreds of fair gardens and pleasure houses were buried beneath the waves, when the deliberations of the States were interrupted by the fainting and the loud weeping of ancient senators who could not bear the thought of surviving the freedom and glory of their native land, that William had been called to the head of affairs. For a time it seemed to him that resistance was hopeless. He looked round him for succour, and looked in vain. Spain was unnerved, Germany distracted, England corrupted. Nothing seemed left to the young Stadtholder but to perish sword in hand, or to be the Æneas of a great emigration, and to create another Holland in countries beyond the reach of the tyranny of France. No obstacle would then remain to check the progress of the House of Bourbon. A few years; and that House might add to its dominions Lorraine and Flanders, Castile and Aragon, Naples and Milan, Mexico and Peru. Lewis might wear the imperial crown, might place a prince of his family on the throne of Poland, might be sole master of Europe from the Scythian deserts to the Atlantic Ocean, and of America from regions north of the Tropic of Cancer to regions south of the Tropic of Capricorn. Such was the prospect which lay before William when first he entered on public life, and which never ceased to haunt him till his latest day. The French monarchy was to him what the Roman republic was to Hannibal, what

the Ottoman power was to Scanderbeg, what the Southron
domination was to Wallace. Religion gave her sanction to
that intense and unquenchable animosity. Hundreds of Cal-
vinistic preachers proclaimed that the same power which had
set apart Samson from the womb to be the scourge of the
Philistine, and which had called Gideon from the threshing
floor to smite the Midianite, had raised up William of Orange
to be the champion of all free nations and of all pure Churches;
nor was this notion without influence on his own mind. To
the confidence which the heroic fatalist placed in his high
destiny and in his sacred cause is to be partly attributed his
singular indifference to danger. He had a great work to do;
and till it was done nothing could harm him. Therefore it
was that, in spite of the prognostications of physicians, he
recovered from maladies which seemed hopeless, that bands
of assassins conspired in vain against his life, that the open
skiff to which he trusted himself on a starless night, amidst
raging waves, and near a treacherous shore, brought him safe
to land, and that, on twenty fields of battle, the cannon balls
passed him by to right and left. The ardour and perseverance
with which he devoted himself to his mission have scarcely
any parallel in history. In comparison with his great object
he held the lives of other men as cheap as his own.
It was
but too much the habit even of the most humane and gene-
rous soldiers of that age to think very lightly of the bloodshed
and devastation inseparable from great martial exploits; and
the heart of William was steeled, not only by professional
insensibility, but by that sterner insensibility which is the
effect of a sense of duty. Three great coalitions, three long
and bloody wars in which all Europe from the Vistula to the
Western Ocean was in arms, are to be ascribed to his uncon-
querable energy. When in 1678 the States General, ex-
hausted and disheartened, were desirous of repose, his voice
was still against sheathing the sword. If peace was made,
it was made only because he could not breathe into other men
a spirit as fierce and determined as his own. At the very last
moment, in the hope of breaking off the negotiation which he
knew to be all but concluded, he fought one of the most
bloody and obstinate battles of that age. From the day on
which the treaty of Nimeguen was signed, he began to medi-
tate a second coalition. His contest with Lewis, transferred
from the field to the cabinet, was soon exasperated by a pri-
vate feud. In talents, temper, manners, and opinions, the

CHAP.

VII.

CHAP.
VII.

rivals were diametrically opposed to each other. Lewis, polite and dignified, profuse and voluptuous, fond of display and averse from danger, a munificent patron of arts and letters, and a cruel persecutor of Calvinists, presented a remarkable contrast to William, simple in tastes, ungracious in demeanour, indefatigable and intrepid in war, regardless of all the ornamental branches of knowledge, and firmly attached to the theology of Geneva. The enemies did not long observe those courtesies which men of their rank, even when opposed to each other at the head of armies, seldom neglect. William, indeed, went through the form of tendering his best services to Lewis. But this civility was rated at its true value, and requited with a dry reprimand. The great King affected contempt for the petty Prince who was the servant of a confederacy of trading towns; and to every mark of contempt the dauntless Stadtholder replied by a fresh defiance. William took his title, a title which the events of the preceding century had made one of the most illustrious in Europe, from a city which lies on the banks of the Rhone not far from Avignon, and which, like Avignon, though enclosed on every side by the French territory, was properly a fief not of the French but of the Imperial Crown. Lewis, with that ostentatious contempt of public law which was characteristic of him, occupied Orange, dismantled the fortifications, and confiscated the revenues. William declared aloud at his table before many persons that he would make the most Christian King repent the outrage, and when questioned about these words by Lewis's Ambassador, the Count of Avaux, positively refused either to retract them or to explain them away. The quarrel was carried so far that the French minister could not venture to present himself at the drawingroom of the Princess for fear of receiving some affront.*

The feeling with which William regarded France explains the whole of his policy towards England. His public spirit was an European public spirit. The chief object of his care was not our island, not even his native Holland, but the great community of nations threatened with subjugation by one too powerful member. Those who commit the error of considering him as an English statesman must necessarily see his whole life in a false light, and will be unable to discover any principle, good or bad, Whig or Tory, to which some of his most important acts can be referred. But, when we consider

* Avaux, Negotiations, Aug. 18., Sept. 14,

0.2, Dec. 7. 1682.

8.

him as a man whose especial task was to join a crowd of feeble, divided and dispirited states in firm and energetic union against a common enemy, when we consider him as a man in whose eyes England was important chiefly because, without her, the great coalition which he projected must be incomplete, we shall be forced to admit that no long career recorded in history has been more uniform from the beginning to the close than that of this great Prince.*

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The clue of which we are now possessed will enable us to His policy track without difficulty the course, in reality consistent, though consistent throughin appearance sometimes tortuous, which he pursued towards out. our domestic factions. He clearly saw what had not escaped persons far inferior to him in sagacity, that the enterprise on which his whole soul was intent would probably be successful if England were on his side, would be of uncertain issue if England were neutral, and would be hopeless if England acted as she had acted in the days of the Cabal. He saw not less clearly that between the foreign policy and the domestic policy of the English government there was a close connection; that the sovereign of this country, acting in harmony with the legislature, must always have a great sway in the affairs of Christendom, and must also have an obvious interest in opposing the undue aggrandisement of any Continental potentate; that, on the other hand, the sovereign distrusted and thwarted by the legislature, could be of little weight in European politics, and that the whole of that little weight would be thrown into the wrong scale. The Prince's first wish therefore was that there should be concord between the throne and the Parliament. How that concord should be established, and on which side concessions should be made, were, in his view, questions of secondary importance. He would have been best pleased, no doubt, to see a complete reconciliation effected without the sacrifice of one tittle of the prerogative. For in the integrity of that prerogative he had a reversionary interest; and he was, by nature, at least as covetous of power and as impatient of restraint as any of the

I cannot deny myself the pleasure of quoting Massillon's unfriendly, yet discriminating and noble, character of William. "Un prince profond dans ses vues; habile à former des ligues et à réunir les esprits; plus heureux à exciter les guerres qu'à combattre; plus à craindre encore dans le secret du cabinet, qu'à la tête des armées; un ennemi que

la haine du nom Français avoit rendu
capable d'imaginer de grandes choses et
de les exécuter; un de ces génies qui
semblent être nés pour mouvoir à leur
gré les peuples et les souverains; un
grand homme, s'il n'avoit jamais voulu
être roi."-Oraison Funèbre de M. le
Dauphin.

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