[Holland by Thomas Colley Grattan]@TWC D-Link bookHolland CHAPTER VII 2/46
Nevertheless there was something dangerous and alarming in the situation of the Low Countries; but the danger consisted wholly in the connection between the monarch and the people, and the alarm was not sounded till the mischief was beyond remedy. From the time that Charles V.was called to reign over Spain, he may be said to have been virtually lost to the country of his birth.
He was no longer a mere duke of Brabant or Limberg, a count of Flanders or Holland; he was also king of Castile, Aragon, Leon, and Navarre, of Naples, and of Sicily.
These various kingdoms had interests evidently opposed to those of the Low Countries, and forms of government far different.
It was scarcely to be doubted that the absolute monarch of so many peoples would look with a jealous eye on the institutions of those provinces which placed limits to his power; and the natural consequence was that he who was a legitimate king in the south soon degenerated into a usurping master in the north. But during the reign of Charles the danger was in some measure lessened, or at least concealed from public view, by the apparent facility with which he submitted to and observed the laws and customs of his native country.
With Philip, the case was far different, and the results too obvious.
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