never put his hand into the press but to
ascertain whether
his bulbs were dry, and that he never looked into it but to
see if they were
beginning to sprout.
To this again it was objected, that his pretended
indifference
respecting this
deposit was not to be
reasonably entertained, as he could not have received such
papers from the hand of his godfather without being made
acquainted with their important
character.
He replied that his godfather Cornelius loved him too well,
and, above all, that he was too
considerate a man to have
communicated to him anything of the
contents of the
parcel,
well
knowing that such a confidence would only have caused
anxiety to him who received it.
To this it was objected that, if De Witt had wished to act
in such a way, he would have added to the
parcel, in case of
accidents, a
certificatesetting forth that his godson was
an entire stranger to the nature of this
correspondence, or
at least he would during his trial have written a letter to
him, which might be produced as his justification.
Cornelius replied that
undoubtedly his godfather could not
have thought that there was any risk for the safety of his
deposit,
hidden as it was in a press which was looked upon
as
sacred as the
tabernacle by the whole household of Van
Baerle; and that
consequently he had considered the
certificate as
useless. As to a letter, he certainly had
some
remembrance that some moments
previous to his
arrest,
whilst he was absorbed in the
contemplation of one of the
rarest of his bulbs, John de Witt's servant entered his
dry-room, and handed to him a paper, but the whole was to
him only like a vague dream; the servant had disappeared,
and as to the paper, perhaps it might be found if a proper
search were made.
As far as Craeke was
concerned, it was impossible to find
him, as he had left Holland.
The paper also was not very likely to be found, and no one
gave himself the trouble to look for it.
Cornelius himself did not much press this point, since, even
supposing that the paper should turn up, it could not have
any direct
connection with the
correspondence which
constituted the crime.
The judges wished to make it appear as though they wanted to
urge Cornelius to make a better defence; they displayed that
benevolent
patience which is generally a sign of the
magistrate's being interested for the prisoner, or of a
man's having so completely got the better of his adversary
that he needs no longer any
oppressive means to ruin him.
Cornelius did not accept of this hypocritical protection,
and in a last answer, which he set forth with the noble
bearing of a
martyr and the calm serenity of a righteous
man, he said, --
"You ask me things, gentlemen, to which I can answer only
the exact truth. Hear it. The
parcel was put into my hands
in the way I have described; I vow before God that I was,
and am still,
ignorant of its
contents, and that it was not
until my
arrest that I
learned that this
deposit was the
correspondence of the Grand Pensionary with the Marquis de
Louvois. And
lastly, I vow and protest that I do not
understand how any one should have known that this
parcelwas in my house; and, above all, how I can be deemed
criminal for having received what my
illustrious and
unfortunate godfather brought to my house."
This was Van Baerle's whole defence; after which the judges
began to
deliberate on the verdict.
They considered that every offshoot of civil
discord is
mischievous, because it revives the
contest which it is the
interest of all to put down.
One of them, who bore the
character of a
profound observer,
laid down as his opinion that this young man, so phlegmatic
in appearance, must in
reality be very dangerous, as under
this icy
exterior he was sure to
conceal an
ardent desire to
avenge his friends, the De Witts.
Another observed that the love of tulips agreed
perfectlywell with that of
politics, and that it was proved in
history that many very dangerous men were engaged in
gardening, just as if it had been their
profession,
whilstreally they occupied themselves with
perfectly different
concerns;
witness Tarquin the Elder, who grew poppies at
Gabii, and the Great Conde, who watered his carnations at
the
dungeon of Vincennes at the very moment when the former
meditated his return to Rome, and the latter his escape from
prison.
The judge summed up with the following dilemma: --
"Either Cornelius van Baerle is a great lover of tulips, or
a great lover of
politics; in either case, he has told us a
falsehood; first, because his having occupied himself with
politics is proved by the letters which were found at his
house; and
secondly, because his having occupied himself
with tulips is proved by the bulbs which leave no doubt of
the fact. And
herein lies the enormity of the case. As
Cornelius van Baerle was
concerned in the growing of tulips
and in the
pursuit of
politics at one and the same time, the
prisoner is of
hybridcharacter, of an amphibious
organisation,
working with equal
ardour at
politics and at
tulips, which proves him to belong to the class of men most
dangerous to public tranquillity, and shows a certain, or
rather a complete,
analogy between his
character and that of
those master minds of which Tarquin the Elder and the Great
Conde have been felicitously quoted as examples."
The upshot of all these reasonings was, that his Highness
the Prince Stadtholder of Holland would feel infinitely
obliged to the magistracy of the Hague if they simplified
for him the government of the Seven Provinces by destroying
even the least germ of
conspiracy against his authority.
This
argument capped all the others, and, in order so much
the more
effectually to destroy the germ of
conspiracy,
sentence of death was
unanimouslypronounced against
Cornelius van Baerle, as being arraigned, and convicted, for
having, under the
innocent appearance of a tulip-fancier,
participated in the detestable intrigues and abominable
plots of the brothers De Witt against Dutch
nationality and
in their secret relations with their French enemy.
A supplementary
clause was tacked to the
sentence, to the
effect that "the aforesaid Cornelius van Baerle should be
led from the prison of the Buytenhof to the scaffold in the
yard of the same name, where the public executioner would
cut off his head."
As this
deliberation was a most serious affair, it lasted a
full
half-hour, during which the prisoner was remanded to
his cell.
There the Recorder of the States came to read the
sentenceto him.
Master Gryphus was detained in bed by the fever caused by
the
fracture of his arm. His keys passed into the hands of
one of his assistants. Behind this turnkey, who introduced
the Recorder, Rosa, the fair Frisian maid, had slipped into
the
recess of the door, with a
handkerchief to her mouth to
stifle her sobs.
Cornelius listened to the
sentence with an expression rather
of surprise than sadness.
After the
sentence was read, the Recorder asked him whether
he had anything to answer.
"Indeed, I have not," he replied. "Only I
confess that,