GROTIUS AFTER HIS ESCAPE FROM PRISON,
TILL HIS APPOINTMENT OF AMBASSADOR FROM SWEDEN TO
THE COURT OF FRANCE.
1621-1634.
Soon after the escape of Grotius from
prison, he repaired to Paris: in this, he followed
the advice of Du Maurier, the French ambassador at
the Hague. His works had made him known in every
part of Europe, in which learning was cultivated:
but persons properly qualified to appreciate their
merit, existed no where in such abundance as at Paris:
he was personally esteemed and regarded by the monarch;
and the principal officers of state were attached
to him. Paris was also recommended to him by
its libraries, the easy access to them, and the habitual
intercourse of the men of letters, who, during, at
least, a great part of the year, made that city their
place of residence.
Grotius arrived at Paris on the 13th
of April 1621. He was immediately noticed by
a multitude of persons of distinction and rank; but
it was not till March 1622, that he was presented
to the king. His majesty received him graciously,
and settled upon him a pension of 3,000 livres.
The Prince of Conde, the Chancellor, and the Keeper
of the Seals, had exerted themselves to dispose the
king in his favour. His majesty professed kindness
towards those, who had been persecuted by the States;
and issued an edict, dated the 22d April 1622, by which
he took them under his protection, in the same manner
as if they were his own subjects; he even extended
this benefit to their children. The celebrated
President Jeannin was one of the most active and useful
of Grotius’s friends; but he died soon after
Grotius arrived at Paris.
Grotius, during his stay in that city,
attended frequently the courts of justice. He
observed the wretched style of oratory, which at that
time, prevailed in them. It was, in some measure,
corrected by Patru and Le Maitre; but
it did not reach its best state, till the end of the
reign of Lewis XIV. The rhetorical march and
laboured amplifications allowed at the French bar,
are offensive to English ears. Has any nation
produced a more perfect style of forensic or judicial
eloquence, than that of Sir William Grant?
The wisdom and justice of Lord Stowell’s
decisions, and the admirable arguments by which he
explains or illustrates them, are known and acknowledged
by every Court.
Grotius’s love of his native
country continued unabated; all his views, all his
hopes, were directed thither. With these feelings
he wrote his Apology. He composed it in
the Dutch language, and translated it afterwards into
Latin: it was published in 1622. He dedicated
it to the people of Holland and West Friesland.
It is divided into twenty chapters; in the first,
he argues the important point, that each of the United
Provinces is sovereign and independent of the States
General, and that the authority of these is confined
to the defence of the provinces against their enemies.
In the second chapter, he applies the position to
ecclesiastical concerns; these, he says, are subject
to the sovereign power of each State. In the
following chapters, he descends into the particular
charges against him; defending himself against all
the crimes and irregularities of which he was accused,
and shewing the informality of the judicial proceedings
by which he and his companions in misfortune were
tried and condemned.
His answer was universally read and
approved: It greatly incensed the States General:
They proscribed it, and forbade all persons to have
it in their possession, under pain of death; but no
answer to it was published. The edict made Grotius
and his friends entertain apprehensions for his personal
safety. On this account, he obtained from the
French monarch letters of naturalization, dated the
26th February 1623: By these, his majesty took
him under his special protection.
Grotius retained many friends in every
part of the United Provinces: Prince Frederick
Henry, the brother of Maurice, was among them.
He had never entered into his brother’s persecuting
projects.
“The Count d’Estrades
has given us,” says Burigni, “some anecdotes
on this subject, which we shall relate on his authority.
He assures us, that, being one day tete a tete
with Prince Henry Frederick in his coach, he heard
him say, that he had much to do to keep well with his
brother Maurice, who suspected him of secretly favouring
Barneveldt and the Arminians. He told me, (these
were the Count’s own words), it was true that
he kept a correspondence with them, to prevent their
opposing his election, in case his brother should
die; but that, as it imported him to be on good terms
with his brother, and to efface the notion he had
of his connection with the Arminians, he made use of
Vandenuse, one of his particular friends, and Barneveldt’s
son-in-law, to let the cabal know, that it was necessary
for him to accommodate himself to his brother, that
he might be better able to serve them, which
Barneveldt approved of.”
In the meantime, the situation of
Grotius at Paris, became very uncomfortable.
His resources, and those of his wife, were small; and
his pension was paid irregularly. Cardinal de
Richelieu wished to attach Grotius; but required from
him an absolute and unqualified devotion to him, which
was utterly irreconcileable with the slightest degree
of honourable independence. Grotius therefore
declined the offers of the Cardinal. From this
time, the Cardinal regarded him with an evil eye,
and often made him feel the effects of his displeasure.
This rendered Grotius desirous of
quitting France. Trusting to some protestations
of friendship, which he had received from Prince Frederick;
to his numerous friends, to his claims upon the gratitude
of the States of Holland, to his feelings of innocence,
and to the effect produced, as he flattered himself,
by his Apology, he ventured into Holland in
1631. But he met with no countenance: and
in that year was banished a second time. Upon
this, he formally bade a final adieu to Holland, and
determined to seek his fortune elsewhere: He then
fixed his residence at Hamburgh.
He sought to preserve his friends
in France; but announced to them his intention to
receive no more money from the French government.
“I shall always,” he said
in a letter to the First President of the Cour
des Monnoies, “be grateful for the King’s
liberality; but it is enough that I was chargeable
to you, while I resided in France. I have never
done you any service, though I made you an offer of
myself. But it would not be proper that I should
now live, like an hornet, on the goods of other men.
I shall not, however, forget the kindness of so great
a king, and the good offices of so many friends.”
It may appear surprising that Prince
Frederick of Orange should pertinaciously exclude
Grotius from his native country. But ambition
listens to nothing that conflicts with its own views.
Prince Frederick inherited from his father and brother
the wish of becoming the sovereign of the United Provinces.
To this, he knew he should always find a zealous and
able opponent in Grotius: hence, notwithstanding
his great personal regard for Grotius, he always kept
him a banished man. Grotius wished to be employed
by the Government of England, and Archbishop Laud
was sounded upon this subject; but the application
was coldly received. Prince Frederick sustained,
both in military and civil concerns, the character
of the former princes of his family. Under his
administration, the affairs of the republic prospered
at sea and land. Peter Haim captured the Spanish
flotilla, estimated at twelve millions of florins.
The Prince took Bois-le duc, Maestricht,
and Breda, and reduced the Dutchy of Limburgh.
Under his auspices, the celebrated Van Tromp commenced
his career of naval glory, by obtaining a complete
victory over the Spanish fleet, consisting of seventy
men of war. Prince Frederick died in 1658.
From the close of his Stadtholderate,
we may date the origin of the jealousy entertained,
by France and England, of the rising power of the
United Provinces. It is to be observed that Prince
Frederick was Stadtholder only of the Provinces of
Holland, Zealand, Utrecht, Gueldres and Overyssell:
Count Ernest Casimir of Nassau was Stadtholder of the
provinces of Groeningen, Frizeland, and the county
of the Drenta. In 1631, their eldest sons were
chosen, in the lifetime of their fathers, their successors
in their respective Stadtholderates. This was
a great step towards making the Stadtholderate hereditary
in their families, one of the leading objects
of their ambitious views.