[The Rise of the Dutch Republic Volume III.(of III) 1574-84 by John Lothrop Motley]@TWC D-Link bookThe Rise of the Dutch Republic Volume III.(of III) 1574-84 CHAPTER V 49/57
These letters were premature.
On the other hand, the states of Holland and Zealand remained in permanent session, awaiting with extreme anxiety the result of the Prince's wound.
"With the death of his Excellency, if God should please to take him to himself," said the magistracy of Leyden, "in the death of the Prince we all foresee our own death." It was, in truth, an anxious moment, and the revulsion of feeling consequent on his recovery was proportionately intense. In consequence of the excitement produced by this event, it was no longer possible for the Prince to decline accepting the countship of Holland and Zealand, which he had refused absolutely two years before, and which he had again rejected, except for a limited period, in the year 1581.
It was well understood, as appears by the treaty with Anjou, and afterwards formally arranged, "that the Duke was never, to claim sovereignty over Holland and Zealand," and the offer of the sovereign countship of Holland was again made to the Prince of Orange in most urgent terms.
It will be recollected that he had accepted the sovereignty on the 5th of July, 1581, only for the term of the war.
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