[1034] State Papers, Dom., ccccxxxi, 30.

[1035] With the exception of the Amboyna affair, a case once more of the ‘prancing proconsul,’ the Dutch showed, throughout this century, exemplary patience and moderation under a long course of provocation, in affairs of salutes, right of search, and seizures of ships, several instances of which there will be occasion to mention. The rulers of the United Netherlands chose to consider wider aims and more urgent needs than revenge for insults to their flag, however flagrant, but when the Navigation Act of 1651 brought matters to a crisis the Dutch must have felt that they had a long score to settle.

[1036] State Papers, Dom., cccclxxxii, 13.

[1037] State Papers, Dom., ccccxciv, 2nd Jan. 1643.

[1038] Public Acts, 17th Charles I.

[1039] Preface to Calendar of State Papers, 1652-3, p. xii. In other prefaces Mrs Green refers to the same point.

[1040] The number eventually serving that year was nearer 20,000, but this included some thousands of soldiers.

[1041] Infra [p. 244].

[1042] State Papers, Dom., cii, 72.

[1043] Ibid., cclxiv, f. 33.