登陆注册
18989900000371

第371章

Toledo had been for some time the retreat of two ambitious, turbulent and vindicative intriguers, the Queen Dowager and Cardinal Porto Carrero. They had long been deadly enemies. They had led the adverse factions of Austria and France. Each had in turn domineered over the weak and disordered mind of the late King. At length the impostures of the priest had triumphed over the blandishments of the woman; Porto Carrero had remained victorious; and the Queen had fled in shame and mortification, from the Court where she had once been supreme. In her retirement she was soon joined by him whose arts had destroyed her influence. The Cardinal, having held power just long enough to convince all parties of his incompetency, had been dismissed to his See, cursing his own folly and the ingratitude of the House which he had served too well. Common interests and common enmities reconciled the fallen rivals. The Austrian troops were admitted into Toledo without opposition. The Queen Dowager flung off that mournful garb which the widow of a King of Spain wears through her whole life, and blazed forth in jewels. The Cardinal blessed the standards of the invaders in his magnificent cathedral, and lighted up his palace in honour of the great deliverance. It seemed that the struggle had terminated in favour of the Archduke, and that nothing remained for Philip but a prompt flight into the dominions of his grandfather.

So judged those who were ignorant of the character and habits of the Spanish people. There is no country in Europe which it is so easy to overrun as Spain, there is no country in Europe which it is more difficult to conquer. Nothing can be more contemptible than the regular military resistance which Spain offers to an invader; nothing more formidable than the energy which she puts forth when her regular military resistance has been beaten down.

Her armies have long borne too much resemblance to mobs; but her mobs have had, in an unusual degree, the spirit of armies. The soldier, as compared with other soldiers, is deficient in military qualities; but the peasant has as much of those qualities as the soldier. In no country have such strong fortresses been taken by surprise: in no country have unfortified towns made so furious and obstinate a resistance to great armies.

War in Spain has, from the days of the Romans, had a character of its own; it is a fire which cannot be raked out; it burns fiercely under the embers; and long after it has, to all seeming, been extinguished, bursts forth more violently than ever. This was seen in the last war. Spain had no army which could have looked in the face an equal number of French or Prussian soldiers; but one day laid the Prussian monarchy in the dust; one day put the crown of France at the disposal of invaders. No Jena, no Waterloo, would have enabled Joseph to reign in quiet at Madrid.

The conduct of the Castilians throughout the War of the Succession was most characteristic. With all the odds of number and situation on their side, they had been ignominiously beaten.

All the European dependencies of the Spanish crown were lost.

Catalonia, Arragon, and Valencia had acknowledged the Austrian Prince. Gibraltar had been taken by a few sailors; Barcelona stormed by a few dismounted dragoons. The invaders had penetrated into the centre of the Peninsula, and were quartered at Madrid and Toledo. While these events had been in progress, the nation had scarcely given a sign of life. The rich could hardly be prevailed on to give or to lend for the support of war; the troops had shown neither discipline nor courage; and now at last, when it seemed that all was lost, when it seemed that the most sanguine must relinquish all hope, the national spirit awoke, fierce, proud, and unconquerable. The people had been sluggish when the circumstances might well have inspired hope; they reserved all their energy for what appeared to be a season of despair. Castile, Leon, Andalusia, Estremadura, rose at once; every peasant procured a firelock or a pike; the Allies were masters only of the ground on which they trod. No soldier could wander a hundred yards from the main body of the invading army without imminent risk of being poniarded. The country through which the conquerors had passed to Madrid, and which, as they thought, they had subdued, was all in arms behind them. Their communications with Portugal were cut off. In the meantime, money began, for the first time, to flow rapidly into the treasury of the fugitive King. "The day before yesterday," says the Princess Orsini, in a letter written at this time, "the priest of a village which contains only a hundred and twenty houses brought a hundred and twenty pistoles to the Queen. 'My flock,' said he, 'are ashamed to send you so little; but they beg you to believe that in this purse there are a hundred and twenty hearts faithful even to the death.' The good man wept as he spoke; and indeed we wept too. Yesterday another small village, in which there are only twenty houses, sent us fifty pistoles."

While the Castilians were everywhere arming in the cause of Philip, the Allies were serving that cause as effectually by their mismanagement. Galway staid at Madrid, where his soldiers indulged in such boundless licentiousness that one half of them were in the hospitals. Charles remained dawdling in Catalonia.

Peterborough had taken Requena, and wished to march from Valencia towards Madrid, and to effect a junction with Galway; but the Archduke refused his consent to the plan. The indignant general remained accordingly in his favourite city, on the beautiful shores of the Mediterranean, reading Don Quixote, giving balls and suppers, trying in vain to get some good sport out of the Valencia bulls, and making love, not in vain, to the Valencian women.

同类推荐
  • 社学要略

    社学要略

    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。
  • John Stuart Mill

    John Stuart Mill

    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。
  • 洞玄灵宝太上真人问疾经

    洞玄灵宝太上真人问疾经

    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。
  • 大同平叛志

    大同平叛志

    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。
  • 沙弥尼戒经

    沙弥尼戒经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 爱上校园男神

    爱上校园男神

    女主赵佳佳爱上了校园男神,看她如何抉择自己的爱情吧!爱情故事将在他们中上演这唯美的一瞬!
  • 末世之战国风云

    末世之战国风云

    整个世界都乱了,世界变成了游戏,为了在这强敌环视的世界生存只能不断的强化自己。英雄难免也会孤掌难鸣啊!努力活下去吧,在这乱世之中!
  • 男人如何调节自己

    男人如何调节自己

    不要让心灵的阴云和迷雾战胜阳光成为人生的主导。只有让心灵充满阳光,才能够健康快乐地生活。作为男人,只有拥有一个健康轻松的心态,才能自信地面对人生,才能负担起自己的责任,才能让自己的人生变得更加丰富多彩。心灵的园地长出杂草是很正常的,因为每个人都有可能受到外界的负面影响,同时每个人的心理知识与个人素质水平的参差不齐也是重要原因。
  • 邪气主神

    邪气主神

    碧灵克鲁森,神舞琼殿镇,万千精灵舞天涯。冰寒兽人域,兽皇雄威慑,悍兽躁狂觐天下。灵涧矮人脉,圣器凛绝天,神眷矮人巧夺天。蓝洋哥布林,天族王者掌,龙焱大洋霸绝天。天涯万千纷纭地,青年笃自草莽出。冽寒凌刃荡天涯,伏尸万步浴血狂。浮尘苍莽踏天下,九天苍穹啸天狂。千道称雄万道纷纭,主宰天下法则吾掌!
  • 冥王的恩赐:盛宠废柴甜妻

    冥王的恩赐:盛宠废柴甜妻

    一代杀手被自己亲妹妹害死导致穿越?千翎雪对此表示非常淡定,作为新一代人类外加杀手之王,看她如何在异世闯出自己的一番天地。没事捉几只神兽做烧烤,闲着无聊时去玩拆皇宫的游戏,再或者去整整渣男渣女。可是这个长得那么妖孽,实力还强大的人神共愤的货是从哪里冒出来的。他一步一步的用柔情攻势瓦解她被早已被冰封的心。当她真正爱上他,决定与他厮守终身时,却知道了一个惊天秘密……当他终是用他的生命守护着她时,她才发现,原来他和她早已这般错过了……【绝对甜文,稍稍有点点虐,不喜勿喷!】
  • 浮生六梦

    浮生六梦

    被渲染被撕裂的恶魔之恋,因为难以企及所以宁愿玷污的惊世骇俗,在万恶之主掌控下蹂躏着纯白灵魂匍匐殒灭的,我的天使。
  • 妖女临世:祸乱天下

    妖女临世:祸乱天下

    他对她宠入骨髓,爱入身体。她冰冷的心正在为他一点点的融化。当她对他的依赖到了无可抑制的地步。他却无情的将她推入无尽的深渊。她的心像被万千只的蚂蚁啃咬着,剧痛瘙痒难忍。她才惊觉发现,原来这一切都只不过是一场阴谋。也许爱情对于她来说只不过是一场阴谋,一场一场的绝望与心碎。她,或许是真的根本就没有爱情。既是妖女,定要毁于天下!负我者必定要百倍奉还!
  • 桃红又是一年春

    桃红又是一年春

    这是个禁欲系腹黑美叔推倒呆萌小萝莉的故事。来历神秘的孤儿幼春,女扮男装,遭遇贵公子秀之,从最初的猜忌敌视到逐渐磨合相处融洽,秀之渐被幼春的聪慧善良吸引,却因以为幼春是男孩及唐家家规所束,欲罢不能。
  • 御族族谱

    御族族谱

    吾以一人之身承一族之任吾以一人之心受一族之情吾以一人之魂载一族之灵那么吾是否能以一人之力盛一族之昌------------------------------------------我是可爱的分割线----------------------------------------煜风想要变强上天给他来了个前世今生勾出了御族的事情得了御族族谱这个神器,但奈何自己太弱要防着被神器反噬,不省心的是自己身边还有一个口是心非俗称傲娇的家伙。复兴御族!抗击天道!当真是前路坎坷啊!
  • 木天禁语

    木天禁语

    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。