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24 - To Tesselschade

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 February 2021

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Summary

My tongue was never hired, nor my pen e’er sold,

My hands were never snared by gold or jewels,

My freedom ne’er enslaved, so that I handled

The truth with velvet gloves, against belief.

Yes, tongue, pen, hand and freedom all have served

The princely order that our freedom sowed,

‘Gainst Spanish force its counter force opposing,

And Babel's filthy creatures (I’ll speak plain).

But wordly power strikes never to the root

Of holy knowledge; ‘tis no contentious use

To fear eternal God, and a prudent Prince

Who can and does suffer what truth may yield.

So I ask justice of you, and no grace,

Famous, alas, but Papist Tesselscha.

24 MS dated 22 January 1645 (Huygens 1894, p. 25). Despite (or, as Huygens writes in another poem, precisely because of) their warm friendship, Huygens passionately disapproved of Tesselschade's conversion to Catholicism, and for many years harassed her with fiercely critical and often indelicate poems. In answer to one of the most offensive of them (of 14 December 1644; Huygens 1894, pp. 8-9), she apparently suggested that Huygens’ implacable stance was prompted by his official position at the Protestant court. 7 The identification of Rome and Spain of course came naturally to the Dutch mind. 8 Babel: probably an abbreviation for ‘Babylon’ with reference to Isaiah 13.19-21; and implying the complete decay of the Roman church. 14 The pun in ‘Beroemde/ beRoomde’ (‘Celebrated/ be-Romed’) is unfortunately untranslatable.

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Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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