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| 1571.
9 Jan. |
230. Guerau De Spes to the King.
I have advised that Count Ludovic of Nassau was arming in
Rochelle, and a servant of his has now arrived to summon the
corsairs who are about here, and to take him the artillery and
stores which this Queen was lending him. They will have 12
fine ships together, amongst them the great Venetian ship, in which
the Count himself will go. The valuable Spanish ship loaded with
oil has already been transported from Cornwall to some other
place. The Council reply to all complaints with dissimulation,
and do not take much notice of the fact that the Englishmen who
took the two smacks actually brought them out from the Meuse.
Three vessels and a thirty-ton boat have left Plymouth for the
Indies, and another boat and a frigate are ready to leave. All the
efforts made and promised by the Judge of the Admiralty are
insufficient to prevent them from going.
This Queen has sent to say to the Scotch commissioners that she
will be here in five days, and will receive them, together with the
commissioners of the carl of Lennox, to discuss the means they
propose for a settlement.
This Queen is very proud of the embassy sent by the Protestant
princes of Germany to the king of France, and gives out that it
was done by her orders.—London, 9th January 1571. |
231. Guerau De Spes to Zayas,
It is not my fault that so much delay had occurred in the
conclusion of the English business which is being discussed in
Flanders, as I should like to sec it done differently and without
any loss of dignity on our side. It is undesirable that the matter
should be protracted because the robberies are increasing and the
insolence of the thieves getting worse. They think that all must
give way to them, whereas they are really of no account at all, and
their power is based on such frail foundations that they could be
overturned with the slightest effort. Notwithstanding this, seeing,
as they say, the remissness of the foreigners, and their own artfulness
day and night in the business, they succeed in the most
impudent adventures. As a sort of boast of this, the earl of
Leicester made a new year's present to the Queen, consisting of a
jewel containing a painting in which the Queen was represented
on a great throne with the queen of Scotland in chains at her feet,
begging for mercy, whilst the neighbouring countries of Spain and
France were as if covered by the waves of the sea, and Neptune
and the rest of them bowing to this Queen. With these vanities
they flatter the Queen to the top of her bent, who, in other ways,
lives with more freedom than Joan of Naples or the like. It is
really necessary, although we possess so much power, not to allow
it to fall from our hands, and we should be as careful to take
advantage of opportunities and artifice as if we were as weak as
we are strong. By this means our monarchy would be durable and
feared by all for the service of God.—London, 9th January
1571. |
| 16 Jan. |
232. Guerau De Spes to the King.
The Queen gave audience in Hampton Court on the 13th instant
to the bishop of Ross and the Scotch commissioners with the result
that they have to wait 12 days until the commissioners from the
other party arrive. In the meanwhile a committee has been
appointed to deal with them, consisting of the earls of Leicester
and Sussex, the marquis of Northampton, the Lord Keeper, Cecil
and Knollys.
Cardinal Chatillon was summoned to all the conferences, and
the Queen is now offering to intercede with the Christian King
that he, the Cardinal, should be restored to the enjoyment of his
revenues. He wishes to push forward the treaty of marriage
between the Queen and the duke of Anjou, but her matrimonial
intentions are of no use any longer for deceiving people.
In the meanwhile Count Ludovic of Nassau is expected on this
coast, and to complaints of robbery, they reply very coolly,
thinking that all this will only tend to their advantage in the
questim of the restitution, and that if they only restore what
they have proposed to do, all their offences will be forgotten and a
settlement effected.—London, l6th January 1571. |
| 22 Jan. |
233. Guerau De Spes to the King.
I have informed your Majesty that Cardinal Chatillon was
pushing forward with great warmth the marriage of the duke of
Anjou with the Queen, and the business is now quite advanced, the
Queen-mother having written very gently about it to the Cardinal. (fn. 1)
The Queen has already proposed it to her Council ; one of the
members said that the Duke would be rather young, and that it
would be well to consider deeply before they broke entirely with
the House of Burgundy. The other members were silent, surprised
to see her so set upon this marriage, which they had always thought
was merely a fiction. The earl of Leicester is greatly dismayed at
having been the instigator of this treaty, but the Cardinal promises
him grand estate and honours, and says that he shall go to France
at the conclusion of it. The fickleness of the Queen makes it
impossible to say whether the marriage will go forward or not.
She has already assured the Cardinal that she is quite free from
any pledge elsewhere, and that she is determined to marry a prince
and not a subject, whilst she has a good opinion of the character of
the duke of Anjou.
In the meanwhile they are delaying the settlement of the queen
of Scotland's business, on the excuse that they must await the
arrival of the commissioners from the opposite party, and their
only urgency is to find means of assuring the safety of the earl of
Lennox, whose life is in great danger by reason of the executions
which he has carried out. The Council here wishes to mutually
bind the parties very strictly for the present, under the threat that
if any hostility is committed the present negotiations shall be
stopped.
I have had arrested the two Flemish pirates who captured the
smacks in the Meuse, and sixteen hundred thalers were found upon
them, which I will try to have restored with the goods to their
owners. This has not been ordered yet, although the Council
promise me that it shall be. In the meanwhile the other pirates
go on robbing, and very little can be done towards punishing
them or recovering their booty. The ships from Rochelle, to the
number of about ten, are expected, and by means of the screw thus
applied the Councillors think they will be able to do as they like
in Flanders.
The revenues that the Crown of England receive from Ireland
used formerly to exceed 80,000l., but for the last 10 years they
have been only about 20,000l. a year, with the extraordinary duty
on wine. The diminution has come about by reason of bad
government. I write this in fulfilment of your Majesty's order,
which I could not do before, as I had not the information.
Whilst this letter was being put into cipher the French ambassador
came to see me, and in the course of conversation, complained that
Cardinal Chatillon had made so much noise about the marriage of
the prince (the duke of Anjou) with so little foundation. The
Cardinal went to his house to explain his design to him, mentioning
the Vidame de Chartres as the originator of the idea, and wished
to make the ambassador believe that the Queen would agree to it,
but he, the ambassador, thinks that she will not do so. I treated
the whole matter as a joke.
The French ambassador was summoned yesterday to the Queen
who complained to him of the French who have possession of the
castle (fn. 2) belonging to the earl of Desmond. She says they are
fortifying a little island opposite, and have refused to leave on the
request of the governor. She desires that the king of France
should be asked to order them to retire.—London, 22nd January
1571. |
| 31 Jan. |
234. The King to Guerau de Spes.
I have received your letters of 1st, 5th, and 20th of December
and Zayas has told me what you wrote to him on the 28th. I am
well informed thereby of affairs in England, and the plans and
plots which are being carried on there with the German heretics.
Continue to advise me of everything and particularly with regard
to placing Count Ludovic at the head of the pirates. Let me know
what strength of ships and men he can dispose of, and what routes
are taken both by Ludovic and the seven ships which you say are
being fitted out for India.
All this is quite incompatible with the settlement which is being
discussed with the Queen. The duke of Alba writes on the
1st December that this settlement was quite advanced, and we are
surprised that you do not mention this in your letters, as it
is the most important subject at present pending. So much
is this so, that until we know how this negotiation ends
no new prohibition can be made of the export from here of the
merchandise you mention, nor can I take fresh steps to prevent
the bringing hither of English goods needed by my subjects. You
will therefore in all your letters report to me what is being done
about this treaty and what hopes may be entertained of its being
carried through.
I have nothing special to say to you respecting the affairs of the
queen of Scotland and the English Catholics, as the Duke will
convey my intentions to you as may be needful. I have only to
say that you can assure the queen of Scotland and the Catholics
that I desire their amelioration more than I can say, and that I
will not fail to duly aid and support them by word and deed.
Having considered what you have written on various occasions
about Bartolomé Bayon and the memorandum he gave you, I have
come to the conclusion that his proposals are quite out of the
question, and were no doubt only made for the purpose of getting
more credit and reputation with the people there in consequence of
the reply he hoped to get from here. Although this was the case,
you will do well not to appear to slight him, and you may tell him,
as if on your own account, that the person who was your intermediary
had informed you that, if he would moderate somewhat
the demands he makes, he might be dealt with reasonably, but that
it would be much better, in order that it should be settled more
speedily and easily, that he himself should come here to treat on
the matter ; for which purpose a safe conduct would be given to
him. You can proceed cautiously in accordance with this as you
see fit, and let me know what passes.—Madrid, 31st January
1571. |