登陆注册
5246300001179

第1179章 CHAPTER XXIV(8)

William too was well pleased; and he had reason to be so. Had the King of Spain died, as all men expected, before the end of that year, it is highly probable that France would have kept faith with England and the United Provinces; and it is almost certain that, if France had kept faith, the treaty would have been carried into effect without any serious opposition in any quarter. The Emperor might have complained and threatened; but he must have submitted; for what could he do? He had no fleet; and it was therefore impossible for him even to attempt to possess himself of Castile, of Arragon, of Sicily, of the Indies, in opposition to the united navies of the three greatest maritime powers in the world. In fact, the only part of the Spanish empire which he could hope to seize and hold by force against the will of the confederates of Loo was the Milanese; and the Milanese the confederates of Loo had agreed to assign to his family. He would scarcely have been so mad as to disturb the peace of the world when the only thing which he had any chance of gaining by war was offered him without war. The Castilians would doubtless have resented the dismemberment of the unwieldy body of which they formed the head. But they would have perceived that by resisting they were much more likely to lose the Indies than to preserve Guipuscoa. As to Italy, they could no more make war there than in the moon. Thus the crisis which had seemed likely to produce an European war of ten years would have produced nothing worse than a few angry notes and plaintive manifestoes.

Both the confederate Kings wished their compact to remain a secret while their brother Charles lived; and it probably would have remained secret, had it been confided only to the English and French Ministers. But the institutions of the United Provinces were not well fitted for the purpose of concealment. It had been necessary to trust so many deputies and magistrates that rumours of what had been passing at Loo got abroad. Quiros, the Spanish Ambassador at the Hague, followed the trail with such skill and perseverance that he discovered, if not the whole truth, yet enough to furnish materials for a despatch which produced much irritation and alarm at Madrid. A council was summoned, and sate long in deliberation. The grandees of the proudest of Courts could hardly fail to perceive that their next sovereign, be he who he might, would find it impossible to avoid sacrificing part of his defenceless and widely scattered empire in order to preserve the rest; they could not bear to think that a single fort, a single islet, in any of the four quarters of the world was about to escape from the sullen domination of Castile.

To this sentiment all the passions and prejudices of the haughty race were subordinate. "We are ready," such was the phrase then in their mouths, "to go to any body, to go to the Dauphin, to go to the Devil, so that we all go together." In the hope of averting the threatened dismemberment, the Spanish ministers advised their master to adopt as his heir the candidate whose pretensions it was understood that France, England and Holland were inclined to support. The advice was taken; and it was soon every where known that His Catholic Majesty had solemnly designated as his successor his nephew Francis Joseph, Electoral Prince of Bavaria. France protested against this arrangement, not, as far as can now be judged, because she meant to violate the Treaty of Loo, but because it would have been difficult for her, if she did not protest, to insist on the full execution of that treaty. Had she silently acquiesced in the nomination of the Electoral Prince, she would have appeared to admit that the Dauphin's pretensions were unfounded; and, if she admitted the Dauphin's pretensions to be unfounded, she could not, without flagrant injustice, demand several provinces as the price in consideration of which she would consent to waive those pretensions. Meanwhile the confederates had secured the cooperation of a most important person, the Elector of Bavaria, who was actually Governor of the Netherlands, and was likely to be in a few months, at farthest, Regent of the whole Spanish monarchy. He was perfectly sensible that the consent of France, England and Holland to his son's elevation was worth purchasing at almost any cost, and, with much alacrity, promised that, when the time came, he would do all in his power to facilitate the execution of the Treaty of Partition. He was indeed bound by the strongest ties to the confederates of Loo. They had, by a secret article, added to the treaty, agreed that, if the Electoral Prince should become King of Spain, and then die without issue, his father should be his heir. The news that young Francis Joseph had been declared heir to the throne of Spain was welcome to all the potentates of Europe with the single exception of his grandfather the Emperor. The vexation and indignation of Leopold were extreme. But there could be no doubt that, graciously or ungraciously, he would submit. It would have been madness in him to contend against all Western Europe on land; and it was physically impossible for him to wage war on the sea. William was therefore able to indulge, during some weeks, the pleasing belief that he had by skill and firmness averted from the civilised world a general war which had lately seemed to be imminent, and that he had secured the great community of nations against the undue predominance of one too powerful member.

同类推荐
  • 仁王般若陀罗尼释

    仁王般若陀罗尼释

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 李文节集

    李文节集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说三摩竭经

    佛说三摩竭经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 酒经

    酒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 青囊秘诀

    青囊秘诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 大比丘三千威仪

    大比丘三千威仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 杜威教育箴言

    杜威教育箴言

    本书系作者在主编《“偷师”杜威——开启教育智慧的12把钥匙》一书的“副产品”,即作者在编选的过程,摘录了大量杜威的经典话语,并在此基础上,结合今天教育教学的现状和实践需求,从教学观、教材观、德育观、师生观等角度,梳理了诸多具有现实指导意义的教育箴言。
  • 蜀锦谱

    蜀锦谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 90后最喜爱的名言警句

    90后最喜爱的名言警句

    名言警句是人类智慧宝库里的一份珍贵财富,是古今中外先哲们和无数有志之士的厚积薄发,是人类知识的积累,是民族智慧的提炼,所以它跨越国界,世代相传,给人启迪,发人深思,成为人生旅途中的良师益友。《90后最喜爱的名言警句》是一本具有“麻辣”效果的好书,精选多位青春作家的睿智思想和时代惊语,青春活力与叛逆的回归。
  • 与古人一起吟诵古文(快乐校园精品读物丛书)

    与古人一起吟诵古文(快乐校园精品读物丛书)

    《快乐校园精品读物丛书:与古人一起吟诵古文》所收篇目的思想性和艺术性都较高,是历史保留下来的优秀文化遗产。本着开拓青少年视野的目的,本书只收录了少数几篇中学课本中的古文,大多都是教材之外的篇目。
  • 中外探案推理故事经典大全集(超值金版)

    中外探案推理故事经典大全集(超值金版)

    本书共收有400个侦探推理故事,完全按照福尔摩斯的四大思维进行归类定位,但每个侦探故事却不是福尔摩斯的探案故事(因为福尔摩斯探案故事集图书市场上各种版本很容易找得到),而是从每一个思维出发,进行了主题的再选择再开掘。这些故事有古有今,有中有外,里面包涵较广,既有人们耳熟能详的大侦探、大警官,也有不为人们所知的小侦探、小警官,他们每个人都有着运筹帷幄的智慧、敏锐缜密的逻辑分析能力,掌握多种技能的科学知识、无所不知的百科万事通。
  • 农门哑女

    农门哑女

    本是京城贵女,却阴差阳错成了农门媳妇。又哑又失忆的她如何在这里生活活下去?她以为自己一无是处,原来她还有一种特有的天赋。且看她在从商一路,如何风生水起?
  • 爱之踪迹

    爱之踪迹

    木紫溪为了让抛弃母亲的父亲遗憾,为了给母亲治病,一心追求名利,偶遇龙飞,机缘巧合,又进了龙飞的公司。她以为她的人生从此辉煌,却没想到自己遭遇一系列麻烦,工作艰辛,爱情迷茫,但为了让父遗憾,为了母亲,她能忍,直到她与龙飞发生一夜情。不知道自己为什么会和他发生关系,明明自律很强的她昨晚却失控了。他明明爱她,在与她亲昵过后,却说出了那么残忍的话:“我只是把你当成了我的未婚妻意洁。他应该知道她不是一个渴求麻雀变凤凰的人,她即使爱他,但不曾奢望嫁给她,她可以隐没自己的爱,过平淡的日子,照顾相依为命,有病在身的母亲。但命运从来不会按意愿进行...
  • 淡水观赏鱼饲养指南

    淡水观赏鱼饲养指南

    国内权威淡水观赏鱼饲养专家,对淡水观赏鱼饲养进行专业性、科普性、知识性的介绍。让大家了解饲养淡水鱼的技巧。配有大量精美的淡水观赏鱼彩色图片,图文并茂、文字浅显易懂,操作性强。详细地介绍饲养淡水观赏鱼的基础知识,让你在饲养观赏鱼前先了解它们。常见近100种淡水观赏鱼的生活习性、饲养环境等方面知识。让你轻松养好每一种鱼。
  • 糊涂学(下)

    糊涂学(下)

    难得糊涂不是真的糊涂,学会糊涂是一种真聪明,运用糊涂是工作之大气,取舍糊涂是生活之必须。糊涂学,大智慧。这个智慧就是给你一颗自由的心,用这颗自由的心去重新审视世界和人生,宁静以致远,淡泊以明志,以出世的态度去过人世的生活,以无为的心态去持有为的事业。糊涂学不是一种处世的技巧,也不是基督的那种泛爱与宽容,它是中国特有大智慧。具备了它,你就会感到“天在内,人在外”,天人合一,心灵自由,获得一种从未有的解放。凭借之颗自由的心,你再不会为物所累,为名所诱,为色所惑。你才会有机会顿悟,参透人生,超越生命。