| READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
|  | THE HISTORY OF THE REFORMATION |  | 
| THE AGE OF ELIZABETHBOOK III.SPAIN AND THE NETHERLANDS.
             CHAPTER I.
                THE SPANISH MONARCHY.
                
             The power exercised by Charles V had come to him from
            different sources. He had gathered it into his hands not because he was the
            representative of any great political idea, but because he was the heir of many
            ruling-families. Charles V had been educated in Flanders under the care of his
            aunt, from whom he imbibed the principles of the old Burgundian policy. His
            great-grandfather on his father's side, Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, had
            done his best to break down the power of the King of France, and had formed the
            plan of creating a separate kingdom along the Rhine, embracing his dominions of
            Burgundy and the Netherlands. His attempt had failed, and the French king had
            seized upon his Burgundian domains. It was the first object of Charles V to
            recover these possessions from France.
             At first Charles began to govern in the interests of
            the Flemings; but this was so distasteful to the Castilians that it provoked a
            serious rebellion. Charles saw his mistake, and detached himself for the future
            from any special connection with any one of the countries under his rule. He
            governed Castile, Aragon, the Netherlands, Germany, Milan, Naples, Sicily,
            besides settlements in Africa and the New World. But over all these he ruled by
            a different title, and exercised a different power. One great object of his
            reign had been to make his power supreme in each of these his dominions, and to
            weld them together by means of a common administrative system.
             To a great extent Charles V succeeded. In Castile,
            Milan, Naples and Sicily, the royal power secured its supremacy by pitting
            against one another contending parties in the old constitution, while it made
            good its own position as against them both. In Germany we have seen that
            Charles V did not succeed in securing the permanent supremacy of his own house.
            In the Netherlands he saw the necessity of behaving with moderation and of
            respecting the constitutional privileges of the several provinces. For the
            Netherlands were the wealthiest part of his dominions, and had always been engaged
            in commerce. The great trading cities each possessed its charter, and they were
            willing to grant money only when this charter was rigidly respected.
             It was from the cities of the Netherlands that Charles
            V had raised the greater part of the money that had enabled him to carry on his
            war with France. He was too prudent to quarrel with the people of these
            provinces, or attempt to make any changes in their constitution. The government
            was carried on by means of a perpetual balance between the power of the prince
            and the rights of the provinces and cities. The Netherlands gave Charles money
            liberally; but they asserted that they would do it of their own free will, and
            would not pay an arbitrary tax. To this Charles answered that he would grant
            them liberties, but they should not haggle with him like a huckster. On this
            basis of the recognition of mutual rights by prince and people, the provinces
            of the Netherlands were loyal to Charles V; they looked upon him as a native
            prince, for he had been brought up among them.
             But under Philip II all this began to
            change. Philip had been brought up in Castile, and was Spanish
            in character, in manner, in appearance, in language. His coldness, haughtiness,
            and pride vexed the Flemings; his reserve seemed to them to be contemptuous.
            Yet they were loyal to Philip at first. It was the troops of the Netherlands
            that won for him the decisive battle of St. Quentin and enabled him to make
            with France the Peace of Cateau Cambresis (1559).
             When this had been concluded Philip returned to Spain,
            which he never left again. Charles V had not ruled in the interest of any one
            of the countries under his power. He had had no capital, but moved about from
            place to place according as the necessities of the times demanded. But Philip II
            first gave to the power which he had inherited a fixed seat in Castile; he
            founded a Spanish empire, with Madrid as its capital. From Madrid he himself
            would govern his dominions. The countries over which he ruled were to be
            regarded as provinces of Spain; they should be cared for by Spanish viceroys,
            and be treated as members of a great administrative system. This change in the
            political relations of the countries which formed the dominions of Philip II
            came gradually. When once it had been made it was most important for the
            destinies of Europe. If one man were to wield absolutely all the resources of
            these scattered provinces, if he were to infuse into all these peoples the
            daring, fierce, fanatical spirit of the Spaniards, if he were to combine them
            to fight for Spain and Catholicism, the control of the future of
            Europe would be in his hands.
             Philip II
                 Philip II was profoundly ambitious. Like his
            ancestors, he believed that to his house belonged the rule of the
            world. But he was obliged to adapt his character of method to his own
            individual character and capacity. He was no military leader who
            could inspire his soldiers by his presence, nor was he a vigorous and genial
            prince, whose winning and affable manners might create enthusiasm for his
            rule. But he was a diligent, industrious, calm, and calculating
            politician. The personal disadvantages and ill-health which prevented him from
            taking a brilliant part in the affairs of the world might, make him more fit to
            take a decisive one. Alone, in quietness, unswayed by the passions of combatants and undisturbed by the tumult of discordant
            advice, he might, as from a height of contemplation, look down upon the
            complicated affairs of Europe and shape them to his own ends. This was
            Philip's ideal of life. In the seclusion of his gloomy residence of the Escurial, he aimed at pulling the threads which were to
            move the course of Europe. From morning to night he sat alone in his cabinet
            and received the dispatches which poured in from every
            quarter. All communications were carried on with him by writing, and he
            was his own chief minister. The dispatches were read and read again, they
            were marked and underlined and analyzed and commented on in their
            margin. They were laid aside and carefully weighed and compared
            laboriously with others; their truth and the integrity of their writers
            were tested by every means which the ingenuity of a suspicious nature without a
            spark of affection or sympathy could suggest. At last the conclusion drawn
            from all this careful thought and comparison of contradictory authorities
            slowly took shape as a definite plan. All was calmly
            and deliberately done; when a plan was once formed it was deliberately
            carried out, and no exultation followed its success, no complaint its failure.
            Philip was an admirable and conscientious man of business. He set about the
            task of governing the world as though it had been a trade, and if the world
            could have been governed by the industry of a painstaking clerk, Philip would
            have succeeded admirably.
             Philip never trusted anyone, but regarded his
            ministers as instruments for carrying out his schemes. Habitually reserved
            himself, he listened to everything that was told him without betraying his own
            feelings. Rival ministers poured out to him their accusations against one
            another; he listened without being carried away. He allowed a plan to be
            carried out, but judged it solely by its success, and if it failed he at once
            abandoned its contriver. None of his ministers were sure of his continued favor.
            If he distrusted a man, he gave no sign of it till he had gradually detached
            him from the business in which he was employed, and had deprived him of all
            means of being harmful; then he suddenly dismissed him.
             Philip felt that the weakness of his political
            position was its unattractiveness and want of interest in the eyes of ordinary
            men. This interest he secured by completely identifying himself and his policy
            with the cause of Catholicism. In so doing he was no hypocrite, for he was
            sincerely religious. But he saw the advantage to be gained by making his own
            interests coincide with those of the old religion. As the champion of
            Catholicism he interfered in the affairs of Europe in such a way that the gain
            of Catholicism must in every case lead to an increase in the power of Spain. It
            was for this purpose that he identified his government with Spain, which had
            still fresh in its memory the crusades against the Moors, and where Protestant
            opinions were regarded as a sure token of the taint of Jewish or Moorish blood.
             Thus, under Philip, Spain became enthusiastically
            Catholic. The Castilians felt their pride gratified at seeing their country
            made the seat of Philip's power, and they were willing to be taxed for its
            maintenance. Their chivalrous spirit was enlisted on the side of their
            religion. Round Philip’s person, as being the champion of that religion, was
            thrown the glamour of a passionate loyalty, such as was far removed from the
            old Spanish spirit. Philip had been wise in identifying himself with Spain. He
            had obtained by that means, in spite of all his disadvantages, a power which
            his father had never been able to gain. It remained for Philip to establish the
            spirit of Spain in the other parts of his dominions, especially in the
            Netherlands.
             
             CHAPTER II.
                   THE REVOLT OF THE NETHERLANDS.
                   
             The country, which at the present day forms the two
            kingdoms of Holland and Belgium, was called, from its geographical position,
            the Netherlands, or the Low Countries. It consists of a large plain, formed
            round the mouths of the three great rivers, the Rhine, the Meuse, and the Scheld. During the middle ages, this land had belonged to
            many different lords, but was at last slowly united in the hands of the Valesian Dukes of Burgundy, until by the marriage of Mary,
            daughter of Charles the Bold, to the Emperor Maximilian I, it had passed under
            the rule of the house of Austria. Charles V inherited it as Maximilian's
            grandson.
             But still, under Charles V, the Netherlands did not
            form one state for administrative purposes. Each of the seventeen
            provinces of which it was composed had its own constitution, its own assembly
            of Estates, and some had their own stadtholder, or local governor. For common
            purposes general assemblies were held of the Estates of all the provinces; but,
            each province granted taxes separately, and presented to the prince its own
            statement of grievances. Each province had its own charter and its own
            privileges, to which it tenaciously clung. The principle of local government
            was strong in the Netherlands, and it would obviously be no easy task for
            Philip to reduce them to the position of a province of the Spanish monarchy.
            The towns were rich, and the burghers had a strong spirit of independence. The
            nobles were numerous and warlike, men accustomed to high positions of
            confidence, many of them impoverished, and almost all ambitious. The question
            was, whether Philip would manage to mould them to his
            will.
             In the early part of the sixteenth century, the trade
            of the Netherlands had immensely increased. The Portuguese discoverers, by
            opening a direct communication by sea with India and Southern Africa, had
            deprived Venice of the monopoly of trade with the East. Italy generally had
            been turned into the battlefield of Europe, and its commerce began to decay.
            Trade took up its abode more decidedly than before in the north of Europe.
            Antwerp became the great commercial capital of the world, and the Venetian
            ambassador sighed to see Venice surpassed. Everywhere throughout the
            Netherlands trade flourished and wealth abounded. The people lived in opulence
            and comfort. They were laborious, diligent, and ingenious. They had no delight
            in war, save as a means of securing lasting peace. They took no pleasure in
            martial exercises; but on their holidays their 'guilds of rhetoric'
            delighted to represent some allegory, where they could set forth in
            visible form some moral truth or maxim of worldly wisdom, decked with all the
            glory of costume that art could devise and wealth supply.
             1559. Opposition to Philip II
             When Philip left the Netherlands in 1559, he appointed
            as regent his half-sister Margaret, Duchess of Parma. To help her in the
            government was a State Council, composed mostly of native nobles; but this was
            checked by a privy council, consisting of those whom Philip could trust; and
            even they soon found that the regent had received orders to do nothing which
            was disapproved of by Antony Perrenot, generally
            known as Cardinal Granvella. Granvella was the son of the chief minister of Charles V, and had himself served the
            Emperor; he was now bishop of Arras and was supposed to be deep in Philip's
            confidence, and entirely devoted to Philip's interest. He was an ecclesiastic,
            and as such was likely to use all his influence to suppress the growing
            movement towards the reformed doctrines which Charles V had in vain tried to
            keep down.
             The nobles soon found themselves neglected. William of
            Nassau, whose father had been one of Charles V's most faithful generals, and
            who had himself been a great favorite of the Emperor, found that he was
            subordinate to Granvella. William is generally known
            by the title of Prince of Orange. He inherited this small principality from a
            cousin who married the heiress of Orange-Chalons, and
            died without children. Count Egmont, who had won for Philip the battle of St.
            Quentin, and Count Horn, one of the chief commanders of the day, both found
            that Philip employed only Spaniards, and passed them by. The burghers felt that
            they were in danger of falling under a foreign yoke. They refused, according to
            their old liberties, to admit any foreigner to hold any office in the
            provinces. Their jealousy was awakened by the presence of Spanish troops
            which had been levied for war against France. Before Philip left, the Estates
            demanded their withdrawal, as it was against their liberties to have foreign
            troops quartered within their borders. He promised angrily to withdraw them,
            but did his best to find excuses for keeping them there. The Zealanders
            threatened, that if their lands were longer polluted by foreign troops, they
            would open their dykes and let in the ocean, rather than endure their hated
            presence. The regent was obliged to write and urge their withdrawal, which was
            reluctantly acceded to by Philip at the end of 1560.
             When once popular suspicion was roused, everything
            tended to excite it more; and the ecclesiastical measures of the king soon
            created a ferment. The Netherlands had only three bishoprics, and Philip had
            applied to the Pope to increase the number. A papal bull was accordingly
            issued, making three archbishops and fifteen bishops. These were to be endowed
            out of monastic property; and in this way the wealth of the younger members of
            the noble families would be diminished, while the king, who was to appoint to
            the bishoprics, would greatly strengthen his political power, and also would
            have the means of putting down heresy more effectually. The nobles saw in this
            a means of increasing the power of the detested Granvella;
            if religious persecutions were admitted, he might attack them under pretext of
            heresy. The Inquisition, an institution with regular officials and courts for
            enquiring into cases of heresy, had been established in the Netherlands by
            Charles V in 1522, and had soon committed great devastations. The persecution
            carried on by the inquisitors, already sufficiently hateful to the people, had
            been increased in rigor by an edict of Charles V in 1550, and another of Philip
            in 1555.
             Granvella accordingly was unpopular amongst all classes. The nobles addressed
            remonstrances to the king, asking for his removal, but with no
            effect. At last several of the chief of them entered into a league of defence against him. He was attacked in caricatures and
            lampoons by the people. The nobles, to ridicule his pomp and display, adopted a
            livery of the plainest serge, embroidered only at the sleeve with a fool's cap,
            which might be taken also for a monk's cowl. This rude Flemish wit told among
            the people. Even the regent began to tire of her subordination to Granvella. Orange, Egmont, and Horn all withdrew from the
            State Council, saying that they were mere shadows there, and Granvella was the sole reality.
             At last the king was obliged to give way. He wrote to Granvella (February, 1564) saying that it would be well for
            him to leave the country for a few days to visit his mother; and Granvella never returned. The nobles were triumphant.
            Orange, Egmont, and Horn resumed their seats at the Council, resolved to carry
            out their own plans, and secure a national government for the Netherlands.
             Meanwhile, however, the new bishops had been
            appointed, and new ecclesiastical arrangements were being
            carried out. Religious persecutions were more
            rigorously conducted, and popular discontent had increased. The Spanish troops
            and the Spanish minister had been got rid of; but it seemed that the Spanish
            influence would return through the Church, and that the authority of Philip
            would be established under cover of the maintenance of religion. Nobles and
            people alike bent their endeavours to procure a
            modification of the religious edicts; if they could be suspended, the new
            bishops would be politically harmless, Count Egmont was sent to Philip to
            represent the state of affairs. But Philip would not yield on this point; he
            received Egmont kindly, and dismissed him with fair speeches; but he sent to
            the regent, ordering the publication of the canons which had just been passed
            by the Council of Trent, and bidding the magistrates everywhere to help the
            inquisitors to put down heresy.
             The nobles were alarmed at this, the people were in a
            fury. It was suspected that an alliance had been made between France and Spain
            to crush the Protestants, and establish the royal power more firmly in the
            dominions of both. A deep determination to resist the Inquisition spread among
            all classes in society, amongst patriotic Catholics as much as amongst the
            threatened Protestants. This feeling, early in 1566, found its expression in
            what is known as the ‘Compromise’, which was a bond declaring the Inquisition
            to be ‘iniquitous, contrary to all laws, human and divine’. The signers bound
            themselves to ‘extirpate and eradicate the thing in any form, as the mother of
            all iniquity and disorder.’
             The Compromise was largely signed by the
            lesser nobles and the richer merchants. The merchants
            especially felt the pressure of the disturbed effects on state
            of things. It is reckoned that 30,000 Flemish weavers had fled to England
            before the persecution. There they were readily welcomed by Elizabeth. She gave
            them settlements in Sandwich and Norwich, and every Fleming so settled was
            obliged by law to employ at least one English apprentice. The English learned
            better the arts of cloth-making, silk-making, and dyeing, and no longer
            exported their wool for manufacture to Flanders. Instead of Antwerp sending its
            wares to England, Norwich sent out vessels laden with English fabrics for sale
            in the marts of Flanders. The Netherlands began to feel acutely the result of
            Philip's policy of intolerance.
             1566. Iconoclasm at Antwerp. 
                   The signers of the Compromise next drew up a petition
            to the regent, setting forth that the Inquisition was likely to lead to
            rebellion, and begging her to suspend it until the king's pleasure could be
            more fully known. It was presented with great ceremony, by a body of some two
            hundred nobles, on April 5, 1566. The duchess dismissed them without an answer;
            she was much agitated, and one of her counselors, Berlaymont,
            exclaimed, to cheer her—“ What, madam, is it possible your highness can fear
            these beggars?”. The saying spread, and the confederates in bravado adopted the
            badge of a beggar's wallet, and called themselves 'the beggars'. The excitement
            spread amongst the common people, who flocked in crowds to hear the Protestant
            preachers. In the Netherlands, as elsewhere, Protestantism had assumed a strong
            political significance; but in the Netherlands it did so almost at once, for it
            was associated most directly with opposition to the foreign oppressor.
             This popular excitement could not last long without
            finding some very definite expression. On August 18 was the ceremony of the 'Ommegang', or procession of a miraculous image of the
            Virgin at Antwerp. As the priests swept through the streets, they were greeted
            by the jeers of the crowd— “Mayken! Mayken!” (little Mary), they exclaimed, “your hour is
            come”. For the next two days there were riots in the cathedral; at last the
            crowd was roused to fury; the image was torn in pieces, and all the images and
            statues that adorned the building were pulled down. The example was followed in
            other churches, and soon spread to other towns. A wave of iconoclasm passed
            over the land, and the noble ecclesiastical buildings of many cities in the
            Netherlands were robbed of their richest ornaments.
             The duchess was alarmed and was on the point of
            flight. She was stayed, however, by her council, and on August 25 published an
            ‘Accord’ which abolished the Inquisition, and allowed liberty of preaching the
            new doctrines in places where it had already been practised.
             Philip, however, was not likely to be content with
            this. He waited first for the natural reaction to follow on the
            iconoclastic riots. All moderate men had been shocked by them; all fervent
            Catholics dad been dismayed by this turn of affairs. The leading nobles
            had been willing enough to use Protestant religious feeling as a political
            weapon against Philip; but they were not prepared to establish Protestantism.
            They were willing enough to bring pressure to bear upon the king; but they felt
            they could not be concerned in riots, and they were not prepared for violent
            measures against Philip. Egmont withdrew from his former opposition and
            resolved henceforward to serve Philip. Horn retired to his own house,
            determined to interfere no more in political matters. The confederate nobles,
            now somewhat weary of noisy demonstration, professed themselves satisfied with
            the Accord, and dissolved their bond.
             The result of this naturally was that the hands of the
            government were strengthened, and the party of opposition was hopelessly
            divided. It was not long before the regent took advantage of this state of
            feeling. The disturbances were everywhere checked. The city of Valenciennes,
            which had refused to admit a garrison, was besieged and at last taken by
            Egmont, who punished the citizens with ruthless severity. He was determined to
            prove his loyalty to Philip, and show him that he had no sympathy with
            rebellion. The fate of Valenciennes was decisive for the time; the Protestants
            either hastened to make their submission, or left the country. A new and
            most stringent oath of allegiance, requiring a promise of unqualified obedience
            to the government, was imposed on all who held office under the Crown. It was
            taken by all the nobles, except only the Prince of Orange, who refused to admit
            this innovation upon the old constitution. He resigned all his offices, and
            withdrew from the Netherlands into Germany, to see what course events were
            likely to take.
             There were in Philip II’s privy council two men whose
            opinion most weighed with him: the Duke of Alva and Don Ruy Gomez de Silva,
            Prince of Eboli. They were two widely different men. Ruy Gomez had gained the
            royal favor by his suppleness and address; he thoroughly knew his master's
            character and fell in unobtrusively with his master's ways; Philip was helped
            in the process of thinking, which he found a slow one, by the forethought and
            considerateness of his careful minister, who seemed to anticipate his thoughts,
            yet with due deference. Alva, on the other hand, was a noble of the old Spanish
            type, haughty, proud, self-asserting, who felt that his position was only the
            due reward of his merits; he was devoted to the king, for only in the king's
            service could he honorably obtain glory. Between these two ministers a bitter
            opposition raged. Philip encouraged each of them in turn, and listened to the
            complaints of the one against the other, for he thought that in this way he
            would get to their true opinions, and so would gain the greatest amount of good
            out of both.
             About the policy to be pursued towards the Netherlands
            these two ministers, as usual, differed. Ruy Gomez, as being no soldier, was in
            favor of pacific measures; Alva, as one of the chief captains of the age,
            advocated severe repression. He undertook, if he were only supplied with
            Spanish troops, to reduce the Netherlands to subjection one for all, and
            secure that the Netherland taxes should flow regularly into Philip's coffers.
            The wealth of the heretics was to pay for the war and enrich the king as well.
            Philip's finances could ill endure the losses that came from the disturbed
            state of the Netherlands. He agreed with Alva's policy and sent him with an
            army of 10,000 veterans, the picked troops of Italy and Spain, to reduce the
            provinces to submission.
             Alva set out in May, 1567, resolved to do his work
            thoroughly. His own political credit was at stake. Alva sent Here was a
            splendid opportunity of doing the greatest possible service to the king, of
            vindicating his own foresight, and of returning triumphant over his rival. He
            went to the Netherlands with full powers, and the Duchess of Parma, finding
            herself superseded, resigned her office and retired. Alva occupied the towns
            with his troops. Determined to strike terror at once, he arrested Counts Egmont
            and Horn, and committed them to prison. He next established a council for the
            trial of offences committed during the recent disturbances. From its severity
            this council has won for itself the title of the 'Blood Council', and the
            number of its victims spread terror throughout the land. Counts Egmont and Horn
            were indicted on the charge of having stirred up a plot against the king; they
            were found guilty and condemned to death. Neither their high position, their
            noble birth, nor their former services could save them from Philip’s wrath.
            They were beheaded on June 5, 1568, in the great square at Brussels.
             Alva had cowed the Netherlands into submission; but
            there was still one man who talked of resistance, one whom Alva's power could
            not reach. The Prince of Orange, condemned by the Blood Council with Egmont and
            Horn, published, from his retirement in Germany, a 'Justification', which was
            an indignant attack upon Philip's tyranny. A change had come over the character
            of Orange. Up to this time he had been an adherent of the old Church; but his
            opinions slowly changed in exile. He became a determined Protestant of the
            school of Calvin, yet with views of wider toleration than were common in his
            day. He now, in Philip's name, enlisted soldiers against Alva, and granted a
            commission to his brother, Count Louis of Nassau, setting forth that to show
            his love to the king and to the provinces, and to maintain the privileges sworn
            to by the king, he empowered his brother to enroll troops. At first Count Louis
            obtained some advantage in Friesland, and hoped for assistance from the
            Huguenots in France. But Alva took the field against him and at Jemmingen the raw recruits of Count Louis fled at once
            before the veterans of Spain (July 22, 1568). For two days the fugitives were slaughtered.
            Count Louis succeeded in making his escape, but few of his soldiers were so
            fortunate; seven Spaniards only were killed, and seven thousand rebels. It
            seemed too clear that it was hopeless for the unhappy Netherlanders to think of
            resistance. But Orange was not daunted; in September he entered Brabant and
            challenged Alva, who refused a battle, but inflicted severe damage on the army
            of Orange, who, after a month's campaign, was obliged to retire without having
            effected anything.
             Again Alva was triumphant. The Netherlands lay at his
            feet. His severities were redoubled, and in the citadel of Antwerp he erected a
            colossal statue to himself, for having “extinguished sedition, chastised
            rebellion, restored religion, secured justice, and established peace”.
             
             CHAPTER III.
                   RESULTS OF ALVA'S MEASURES
            ON FRANCE, ENGLAND, AND SCOTLAND.
             
             Alva’s measures in the Netherlands were felt as a
            menace to Protestantism throughout Europe generally. If Philip succeeded, he
            would first help to put down the Huguenots in France, and then would turn his
            attention to England.
             In France the Huguenots were at once stirred to alarm
            by their danger. They saw that the queen-mother leant towards the Catholic
            party, and that the Cardinal of Lorraine again took his place at the Council.
            Troops were being raised by the government, ostensibly to protect the frontier,
            but the Huguenots suspected that they might be used against themselves.
            Determined to forestall the danger, they swiftly and secretly armed, and made
            an attempt to surprise the court at Monceaux, near Meaux, their plan being to
            compel the removal of the cardinal and the dismissal of the Swiss troops. The
            surprise failed, and the court escaped to Paris. The old Constable Montmorency
            led the royal army against the rebels, and after a fierce battle, in which he
            was killed, defeated them at St. Denis, November 10, 1567. A German army came
            to their aid, and the king was compelled to make peace, and re-issue the edict
            of toleration in its full extent. (March, 1568.)
             But this pacification was not to last long. Alva urged
            upon the young king of France that to make concessions in matters concerning
            religion was beyond the royal power; he was granting what belonged to God, not
            to himself. Alva's example encouraged other Catholic powers. Moreover, he
            offered the French king aid against the rebels. The late rising of the
            Huguenots had filled the common people with terror of their power, and there
            was a strong feeling against them. The edict of pacification was revoked, on the
            demand of the Pope, only six months after it had been granted. Both parties
            armed, and the struggle which in 1568 had been carried on in the Netherlands
            was in 1569 to be carried on in France.
             The Prince of Orange and Count Louis of Nassau made
            common cause with the Huguenots; the German Protestants sent them succors, and
            Elizabeth sent them money. But they were not fortunate in battle; in May
            they were defeated at Jarnac, and their leader,
            Condé, was slain. When in October they again ventured to meet the royal forces
            under the Duke of Anjou, the king's brother, they were disastrously defeated at Moncontour. Still Coligny did not despair. He
            retreated in good order towards Rochelle, the district round which had become
            exclusively Protestant. It was vain to attempt to subdue this country. It had
            refused to recognize the legality of the act which withdrew the edict of
            tolerance, and now declared itself to be under the government of the young
            Prince of Navarre. The little town of St. Jean d'Angely offered a stubborn resistance to the royal troops, though the king himself was
            in the camp. The men of Rochelle even fitted out a small fleet, with which they
            made raids on the neighbouring coast, seized booty,
            and sold it for the benefit of the prince whom they had adopted. Coligny again
            raised an army, and threatened to march against Paris.
             The Huguenots were too strong to be put down at once
            by force, and had been well aided by England and the Netherlands. If the
            war were to last, it could only be by a close alliance of the
            Catholic party with Spain. But here the old national jealousy stood in the
            way. Alva had not given such cordial help as was expected; his success in the
            Netherlands was threatening to France; to subdue the Huguenots by Philip's
            assistance would be to sacrifice the national independence and lay open a new
            field to the boundless ambition of Spain. The court resolved on peace, and
            offered again to renew the edict of pacification. But as the Huguenots demanded
            some guarantee for their security, four towns were put into their hands for two
            years, amongst them Rochelle. The peace of St. Germain (August 1570) again
            restored quiet in France; but it showed that, if need were, the Huguenots were
            determined to maintain their own safety by arms.
             But the presence of Alva in the Netherlands affected
            England almost as closely as it did France. It was just at the time of
            Alva's expedition that Mary of Scotland had exhausted the patience of her
            subjects. The deposition and captivity of Mary deprived the Catholic party in
            England of its head. Mary at that time had so entirely disgraced herself in the
            eyes of Europe, that a rising in her name was not to be thought of. Still
            Elizabeth was afraid of Alva, and was unwilling to seem to be in league with
            the Scottish nobles, who had deposed their sovereign. She felt the danger of
            admitting their right to do so. Though keenly alive to the advantages she had
            gained from recent events in Scotland, she could not bring herself to sanction
            them. Perhaps she thought that Mary had so far discredited herself as to be
            henceforth harmless; perhaps she thought that her restoration through English
            influence would silence her. At all events she urged her release upon the
            Scottish lords, till she was met by the threat that her further importunity
            might cost Mary her life.
             The nobles were resolved that Mary should not return
            to power. But her party gathered strength from Alva's successes. Before
            she had been in prison a year she managed to escape to Hamilton, and soon
            found herself at the head of an army of her adherents. Murray, though taken by
            surprise, armed also, and cut off Mary's advance to the strong castle of
            Dumbarton Rock, where she felt she would be secure. The two armies met at
            Langside near Glasgow (May 13, 1568). The battle is interesting, as showing the
            strange results produced by the old method of warfare. In front of both armies
            were stationed the heavy armed men. When they charged, the spears of both
            opposing lines stuck in the joints of each other's armour.
            The front lines were consequently fastened together, and the battle became a
            mere tussle, in which the hinder ranks could take no part, except by throwing
            stones and sticks over the impeding mass of mail. At last the battle was
            decided by a charge of Murray's cavalry. Mary's troops fled, and she herself
            galloped from the field and hurried across the Solway Frith to Workington. Thence she went to Carlisle, and begged for
            Elizabeth's protection.
             This was a step extremely perplexing to Elizabeth and
            her advisers. What was to be done? To restore Mary by force would be to
            alienate the Scots, and to establish in Scotland a hostile in place of a
            friendly government. To allow Mary to go to France would be to put a most
            dangerous instrument in the hands of the Catholic party on the Continent. To
            keep her in England was equally difficult, for Elizabeth had no grounds for
            treating her as a prisoner, and if she were at large she would be a centre for Catholic plots. Her presence in the northern
            counties was dangerous, for there the Catholics were strongest. Before Mary's
            presence and the story of her misfortunes, the remembrance of her crimes began
            to fade away, and the old chivalrous spirit revived. It was thought wise to remove her
            from Carlisle to Bolton Castle in Yorkshire.
             At first Elizabeth tried to arrange a compromise
            between Mary and the Regent Murray; but this was impossible. Mary demanded that
            Elizabeth should either restore her, or give her free passage to France. She
            asked for an interview. Elizabeth refused the interview till Mary had cleared
            herself of the charges brought against her, urging that she could not proceed
            to restore her, and so punish the rebellious lords, till she knew the extent of
            their guilt. Mary accordingly agreed to a conference, which was held at York
            towards the end of the year. The Duke of Norfolk, the chief Catholic peer, was
            the principal commissioner appointed by Elizabeth. Murray and Mary both sent
            their representatives; but the conference led to no decided result, except that
            the evidence against Mary for the murder of Darnley, including the ‘casket
            letters’ was laid before the chief English peers. They reported to the queen
            that they had seen 'such foul matters' as to justify her in refusing to give
            Mary an interview. On the main question nothing was done. Mary still remained
            at Bolton, and Murray returned to Scotland with a loan of 5,000£. from
            Elizabeth, “for the maintenance of peace between England and Scotland”.
             Elizabeth was still doubtful what course to pursue.
            The suppression of the Huguenots in France, and the entire subjugation of the
            Netherlands might arm all Europe against her. In the face of this danger Cecil
            and the Protestants urged the queen to put herself at the head of Protestantism
            in Europe, to make war openly against Alva, and send back Mary to Scotland. The
            Catholic and moderate party wished for peace with Spain, and the recognition of
            Mary's claim to the succession in England. Elizabeth adopted a middle
            course. She sent money to the Huguenots in France, and seriously crippled Alva
            by seizing some ships laden with money for the pay of his soldiers, which had
            been driven by bad weather into Southampton and Plymouth (December 1568). Alva
            was furious, and seized all English ships and property in the Netherlands.
            Elizabeth retaliated on the Spaniards in England. She pleaded that the money
            belonged to Genoese bankers, not to Alva; it had come into her hands, and she
            had borrowed it instead of him. Philip, desirous of settling matters in the
            Netherlands before engaging with England, allowed the affront to pass by.
             Similarly, Elizabeth hoped that the documents laid
            before her commissioners would destroy in their minds any doubts they might
            feel about Mary's detention. But in this she was mistaken. The Duke of Norfolk
            had formed the scheme of marrying Mary; and many who, from political reasons,
            were opposed to Cecil, and were in favor of a conciliatory policy towards Mary and
            Spain, promised him their assistance. Elizabeth, however, discovered the plan
            too soon. Norfolk was committed for a short time to the Tower, and his
            confederates, amongst whom was Leicester, were for a while disgraced.
             Mary was indeed a dangerous captive. Her
            partisans had waited to see if this powerful political coalition would succeed;
            but when they saw that it had failed, and that Cecil's watchfulness was
            not to be eluded, they had recourse to arms. The Earls
            of Northumberland and Westmoreland headed a premature rising in
            the north. They demanded the restoration of the old
            religion and the dismissal of the queen's upstart advisers. They
            advanced to Durham, celebrated the mass once more in the cathedral, and
            tore the English Bible in pieces before the people. But their triumph was
            brief. The Catholic gentry were not yet prepared to turn rebels, and the aid
            expected from the Duke of Alva never came. The Earl of Sussex kept them
            occupied in the north till he was joined by reinforcements from the southern counties.
            When at length he was strong enough to proceed against them, the rebel army
            dispersed. Westmoreland fled to the Netherlands, where he ended his days
            miserably in the receipt of a small pension from Philip. Northumberland took
            refuge in Scotland, where he was taken prisoner by Murray, and at last given up
            to the English government and executed at York.
             The rebellion was easily put down, and severely
            punished. The queen had been thoroughly frightened, and her terror showed
            itself in revenge. Sussex complained that he was left in the north 'but to
            direct hanging matters'. In every little village the insurgents were sought out
            and executed. As yet Elizabeth had been merciful; but as the great conflict of
            her reign deepened around her, mercy gave way before desperate endeavours.
             Still, the end of the year 1569 showed Elizabeth to be
            strong in her hold upon her people. The long-threatened Catholic rebellion had
            failed to shake her position. Alva had not yet felt himself strong enough to
            help her rebels. Philip, in spite of an outrageous affront, was not prepared
            for war. There was nothing to fear from France; for the French dread of Spain
            was tending to bring England and France nearer together, and a French marriage
            was even proposed to Elizabeth.
             CHAPTER IV.
                STRUGCLE OF CATHOLICISM AND PROTESTANTISM,1570-1572.
                
             One great reason of the failure of the rising in
            England had been that the Catholics, as a body, did not join it. Their
            allegiance was as yet due to their queen, and they did not feel that their
            religion called upon them to take part in a rebellion. This feeling, however,
            was soon to be disturbed. Open and avowed hostility between Catholicism and
            Protestantism was to be introduced into England also.
             Pope Pius V, Michele Ghislieri,
            had been a Dominican inquisitor before his elevation to the papacy. Austere,
            zealous and determined, he devoted all his energies to the suppression of
            heresy. Under his rule the Inquisition crushed out Protestantism in Italy.
            Though a man of fervent piety and blameless life, he shrunk from no measures
            which were likely to put down the schism. He rejoiced over Alva's cruelties in
            the Netherlands, and sent him a sword and cap which he had blessed, as a token
            of his favor. A man of this kind was not likely to leave the English Catholics
            doubtful of their duties. He proceeded to the excommunication of Elizabeth; but
            he did it secretly that he might not be prevented by the remonstrances of
            France and Spain. In May 1570 the bull of excommunication was found fixed on the
            door of the Bishop of London's house, and a student of Lincoln's Inn, by name
            Felton, paid with his life for his rash act.
             This excommunication was felt by Elizabeth and her
            ministers to be a declaration of war; it was resented by the mass of the
            English people as an act of aggression.
             Moreover, fears for the queen’s life had been awakened
            by recent events in Scotland. The Catholic party had there roused itself for a
            desperate effort, and had hoped, if the Regent Murray were removed, to succeed
            once more in gaining power. James Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh undertook Murray's assassination, and shot him from the balcony of a house in
            Linlithgow, as he was riding out of the town, January 23, 1570. The result was
            anarchy in Scotland, where for the next few years a civil war raged between the
            queen's party and the adherents of the king.
             In England the Parliament which met in 1571 proceeded
            to pass bills declaring it high treason to call the
            queen a heretic, or to affirm that anyone particular
            person was her successor, or to publish any bull from the Pope. A bill was even
            introduced to compel all above a certain age to receive the Communion according
            to the established service; but this was withdrawn after a discussion. The
            Catholic attack upon England had called forth severe reprisals. England entered
            upon a course of persecution, not, however, of religious opinions as such, but
            because of their political consequences. Conformity to the Established Church
            was rigidly required from all; and while Parliament passed laws against the
            Catholics, the High Commission Court, under the presidency of Archbishop
            Parker, demanded from the Puritans obedience to the established ceremonies.
             1572. Ridolfi's plot. 
                   The religious struggle was not long in breaking out
            again. The old plan of the liberation of Mary, her marriage with the Duke of
            Norfolk, and of the restoration of Catholicism was again revived. But this time
            it was seen that the aid of foreign powers was necessary for its success.
            Ridolfi, a Florentine, who had long resided in England, was sent to confer with
            the Duke of Alva, Philip II, and the Pope. Philip II warmly entered into the
            scheme. The Pope declared himself ready to sell even the chalices from his
            churches for such a worthy object. It was agreed that Alva was to send 10,000
            men to help the conspirators. But Ridolfi was too dull a plotter to escape the
            vigilance of Lord Burleigh, by which title Sir William Cecil was now known. A
            suspicious packet of papers was seized. Norfolk's secretary was imprisoned and
            confessed, and the whole plot was discovered. Mary's ambassador in England, the
            Bishop of Ross, was thrown into the Tower, and the Spanish ambassador was
            dismissed from England. Norfolk was brought to trial before his brother peers,
            was found guilty of treason and condemned to death. It was some time before
            Elizabeth could be brought to consent to the execution of the chief nobleman in
            the kingdom; but at last she gave way, and Norfolk was beheaded, June 2, 1572.
             The rising of 1569 had failed, because it was confined
            within too narrow limits and had nor appealed to the Catholic world. Now a
            great plot in which all the chief Catholic powers were to have taken part was
            stopped before it could come to a head, Philip II did not venture to resent his
            ambassador's dismissal. The queen only became dearer to her people as they saw
            the efforts directed against her.
             Meanwhile in France the dread of the encroachments of
            Spain had been increased. The combined fleets of Venice, the Pope, and Philip
            II had won a brilliant victory at Lepanto over the Turks, and a new course of
            aggrandizement seemed open to Philip. France drew nearer to England, and
            proposals were made for a marriage between Elizabeth and the Duke of Anjou, the
            younger brother of Charles IX. The negotiations gave Elizabeth an opportunity
            for the display of her vacillation and her delight in mystifying those around
            her. The marriage was not popular in England, and all talk of it was laid aside
            for a while in consequence of the events of 1572 in France.
             In that country peace with the Huguenots and jealousy
            of Spain had become, both of them, parts of the royal policy. The young
            king, Charles IX, was of weak intelligence, yet of a wild and passionate
            nature. His education had been neglected owing to his feeble health, and he was
            unable to give serious attention to the affairs of state. He was entirely under
            the influence of his mother, Catharine de' Medici, who ruled in his name.
            Catharine was the daughter of the man t0 whom Machiavelli had dedicated the
            'Prince', and she was well skilled in all the arts of dissimulation. After
            living powerless at court during her husband's lifetime, she was determined to
            satisfy her desire for power when her time came. Yet her title to power was
            very precarious. She was a stranger by birth; she represented no great national
            interest, no political party; she was supported by no great family, and awoke
            no enthusiasm amongst the common people. Yet when she once had power in her
            hands she devoted all her energies to keep it. About the great questions which
            at that time agitated France, she was entirely indifferent; but she was willing
            to play off one party against the other so as to maintain herself in power.
            Tall, and of strong, commanding appearance, she exercised great influence over
            those who were around her. She had a powerful nature, which could adapt itself
            to any circumstances. She had great quickness of mind and penetration. She knew
            well how to conciliate opponents, and how to satisfy them without committing
            herself to definite promises. She trusted no one, and no one trusted
            her. She preferred to be regarded as a peacemaker and mediator between the
            contending parties in France; but would hesitate at nothing to rid herself of
            one who was likely to disturb her position.
             Gaspard de Coligny. 
                   Hence she had opposed the Guises, and had been a foe
            to Mary of Scotland. Over Charles IX her rule seemed absolute, and she was
            determined to maintain it at any cost. But she saw this rule over her son's
            mind suddenly threatened. Charles IX became jealous of the fame gained by his
            younger brother, the Duke of Anjou, who had been the leader of the victorious
            Catholics at the battle of Moncontour. The populace
            of Paris was distinguished by its bitter hatred of the Huguenots, whose chief
            opponent was always the popular hero of the capital. Charles IX was alarmed at
            his brother's superior position; he was afraid of some plot against himself.
            Stung to a sudden energy, he determined to gain glory himself also. For this
            end he would make common cause with the Huguenots, and wage war against Spain.
             The head of the Huguenot party was also the most
            famous general in France, and was in French history at this age the one
            prominent man who rose above the level of intrigue, fanaticism, and
            self-seeking into a higher region of lofty self-devotion. Gaspard de Coligny
            was sprung from an old Burgundian family, and was in early life distinguished
            as a soldier. He knew every branch of the soldier's trade, and to courage and
            coolness united a capacity for discipline and military organization. He had
            undertaken the hopeless task of defending St. Quentin against Philip's army; he
            had undertaken it though he knew it to be hopeless, and knew that his
            reputation would suffer through the failure. He was taken prisoner in the
            battle, and during his imprisonment a change came over his religious opinions
            and he adopted the faith of Calvin. When the religious wars began in France,
            Coligny fully appreciated the momentous importance of the issue involved. He
            counted the cost, and gave himself unreservedly to the conflict. He asked his
            wife if she had the courage to face dangers, misfortunes, exile, and, if need
            were, death,—if she were prepared to ruin the future of her children for the
            sake of her religious convictions. His wife, as heroic as her husband, bade him
            go forth upon the path of duty without fear for her. In this spirit Coligny
            entered upon the strife. His mind was not under the sway of fierce passion, or
            desire for power, or thirst for fame. Sternly and sadly he undertook a sacred
            duty, which he carried out without being elevated by success or cast down by
            failure. Through evil report and good report he went upon his solitary way. His
            calm prudence and commanding temper enforced obedience upon his party, which
            respected and obeyed rather than loved him. High above the fierce passions, the
            mean intrigues, the unscrupulous self-seeking, which distinguished France in
            his age, his figure rises as the one man endowed with a noble purpose, who felt
            laid upon him a mighty weight of duty, which he must carry unflinchingly to the
            end.
             Such was the man with whom Charles IX now found
            himself brought into connection. Coligny had so strong a belief in the
            possibility of a reconciliation between the two contending parties, that he
            went himself to the court to urge his views more decidedly. He endeavoured to fan the king's dread of Philip II, and
            prevail on him to declare war against Spain,—a step which must aid greatly the
            struggling cause of Protestantism in the Netherlands.
             In that country Alva's savage measures had failed of
            complete success. He flattered himself at the end of 1569 that he had put
            down heresy and had reduced the provinces to obedience. It only remained for
            him , to carry out the rest of his promise, to make the provinces pay
            for the trouble they had given, and make them contribute largely to the royal
            resources for the future. For this purpose he devised a new scheme of taxation.
            Instead of grants of money being made by the states to their prince according
            to their sympathy with the purposes for which he proposed to use it, they were
            henceforth to pay according to a regular system. A tax of the twentieth penny
            (five per cent.) was to be paid every time real property changed hands; and a
            tax of the tenth penny (ten per cent.) was to be paid on all personal property
            or merchandise every time it was sold.
             Alva was a soldier and not a financier, or he would
            have known that these measures would involve the entire ruin of the commerce of
            the Netherlands. An active trading people, made liable to this tax of ten per
            cent. on every sale, would necessarily be unable to manufacture and sell any
            article at the same price as formerly. Instead of being the great merchants of
            Europe, they would be unable to compete with other countries whose productions
            were not subject to this heavy tax. Alva's endeavour to increase the royal income by extorting money from the Netherlands would
            really result in a diminution of the capital sum on which the taxes must be
            levied, and would ruin the people without enriching the king.
             Men who had stood by Alva and applauded him in his
            severe measures against heresy now rose in opposition against him. Loud
            outcries were raised in Madrid. In the Netherlands trade was at a standstill,
            and men shut their shops rather than submit to the tax. Universal discontent
            and deep hatred towards Alva prevailed amongst the whole mass of the people.
             In this state of feeling it required very little to
            rouse the People t0 resistance. A sudden raid of a band of Netherlandish
            outlaws laid the foundation of the memorable revolt of the Netherlands.
             Among those who had left the Netherlands rather than
            submit to Alva, many were accustomed to the sea. These now, seizing upon
            vessels, cruised as pirates in the Channel, professing to make war on Alva on
            the name of Orange. Hardy, brave, and cruel adventurers, they
            inflicted much damage on the Spanish ships, and found in England a ready market
            for their booty. Alva, in the beginning of 1572, remonstrated with Elizabeth on
            the shelter which she gave to these freebooters, who were at that time lying in
            some of the southern ports of England. Elizabeth, wishing to be conciliatory in
            a little matter, sent orders that the Netherland pirates were no longer to be
            supplied with provisions. Forced by hunger, the little fleet of twenty-four
            ships, under the command of a rude Flemish noble, William de la March, set sail
            from England for a foray. They were driven by stress of weather to enter the
            mouth of the Meuse, and came opposite the city of Brill. More in bravado than
            with any serious expectation of success, this handful of men, not more than
            250, sent a message demanding the surrender of Brill. A panic seized the
            magistrates and citizens; they fled and left their fortified city to the 'water
            beggars', who took possession of the city in the name of the Prince of Orange,
            stadtholder of the king.
             The failure of an attempt to regain Brill for the
            Spaniards gave additional courage to the Netherlanders. Flushing was the first
            to expel its Spanish government. The example was followed by all the chief
            cities of Holland and Zeeland, and many of the cities of Gelderland, Oberyssel, and Friesland. By the middle of 1572 a large
            portion of the Netherlands was in open revolt against Alva. Meanwhile Count
            Louis of Nassau had been busy in France, where he enlisted the sympathies of
            the Huguenots, who sent out forces under Genlis to
            aid him in a bold scheme which he had formed, of surprising Mons, the chief
            city of Hainault. His surprise was successful, and Alva saw himself assailed on
            two sides. In the north the land was in rebellion; in the south a rising was
            being promoted by French help. When it was too late he abolished his tax of the
            tenth penny. The revolt had now taken shape. Representatives of the Estates of
            Holland met at Dort in July, and recognized the Prince of Orange as the king's
            lawful stadtholder in Holland, Zeeland, Friesland, and Utrecht. There was no
            talk of throwing off their allegiance to Philip II; but against the despotic
            system of government introduced by Alva they set up their old constitution. The
            Prince of Orange had been appointed by Philip stadtholder of Holland in 1569;
            him they would follow in maintaining their lawful privileges against tyrannical
            governors. The revolt of the Netherlands was not directed against Philip's
            legitimate authority, but against the arbitrary use of his authority to
            introduce constitutional changes to which the Estates had never agreed. Alva's
            first step was to send his son, Don Frederic de Toledo, to besiege Mons, which
            could not be defended unless speedy reinforcements arrived. Genlis had hurried to France to raise fresh troops, but was defeated by Don Frederic
            outside Mons, and few of his reinforcements reached the city. Still Count Louis
            hoped for greater succors, and the fate of Mons depended on Coligny’s influence
            over the French king.
             
             
             CHAPTER V.
                ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S DAY.
                
             Coligny had cast over Charles IX the spell of his
            powerful mind, and the king inclined more and more to his view of war with
            Spain in the Netherlands. But the queen-mother was alarmed at Coligny's power;
            if he were to succeed, her influence over the king would be gone for ever. She made common cause with the Catholic party,
            resolved that at any cost Coligny's plans should fail. She joined with the
            widow of the murdered Francis, Duke of Guise, and the two women plotted
            Coligny's assassination. A gentleman attached to the house of Guise, Maurevert, shot at Coligny (August 22) as he was slowly
            entering his house engaged in reading a letter. The shot was fired from the
            window of a house opposite; it wounded Coligny in the arm, but the wounds were
            not dangerous. It was clear that an enquiry would be made into the attempted
            assassination.
             Catharine was not a woman to shrink from carrying out
            a scheme she had undertaken. Coligny must be got rid of, and the king must be
            rescued once for all from his influence. His wounds gave him greater hold upon
            the king's sympathies. The Huguenots gathered round him demanding vengeance.
            They were prepared to go in a body to the king, and denounce the Duke of Guise
            as the assassin; they muttered threats of what they would do if they failed to
            obtain redress. Men's passions had grown fiercer. The populace of Paris
            prepared themselves to defend the Guises against an attack of the Huguenots.
            The Huguenots stood sullenly opposed to the excited populace amongst whom
            they lived.
             Coligny had striven for the reconciliation of the two
            parties; of this the marriage of Henry the young King
            of Navarre, with Margaret of Valois, the French king's
            sister (August 18) had been regarded as the pledge. The Prince of Navarre,
            after his father's death, had become the titular head of the Huguenot party.
            His marriage with Margaret was to bring the two parties together, and the
            Huguenots had streamed into Paris to be present at the festival, and make a
            demonstration of their power. The people of Paris had received them with silent
            threats. They themselves were fanatically Catholic, and saw with hatred Coligny
            enter the city and take his place at the royal council by the side of Henry of
            Anjou and Henry of Guise. The attempted assassination of Coligny awoke all the
            deepest passions of both parties. Catholics and Protestants alike began to
            gather apprehensively round their chiefs.
             In this excited state of popular feeling Catharine and
            the Guises saw their safety. The king was perplexed at finding that his mother was
            privy to the attempt on Coligny's life. She repeated to him exaggerations of
            the wild words and threats uttered by the Huguenots. She showed him their armed
            bands in the streets, and asked if a royal army could be raised to meet them.
            She warned him that soon the royal power would pass entirely into the hands of
            Coligny. She stirred up the king's feeble mind to alarm, and then suggested to
            him the way out of the difficulty. All the chiefs of the Huguenots were in
            Paris, caught as in a net. It only needed a word from the king to arm the
            people of Paris against them, and rid himself of his enemies at one stroke.
             The scheme was not premeditated, nor had the Huguenots
            been deliberately invited to the capital to be massacred. Perhaps old plans of
            a general massacre for the suppression of Protestantism, which had been
            suggested in former times by Philip II, recurred to Catharine's mind. But the
            plan in itself arose to her Italian brain as a possible means of extricating
            herself from her present difficulties. To rid himself of his enemies at one
            blow was a device sometimes adopted with success by an Italian tyrant in his
            small state. Catharine believed it possible in France. At first Charles IX
            shrunk with horror from the proposal. Catharine reasoned in its favor as an act
            of policy, appealed to Charles's affection by declaring that her life was no
            longer safe in Paris, and at last taunted the feeble youth with want of
            courage. Charles was stung by his mother's taunt. He gave his assent to the
            plan, and when once his assent had been given he hurried on with feverish
            excitement.
             Early in the morning of St. Bartholomew's Day, Sunday,
            August 24, the massacre began; it was known in after days by the bitter name of
            the 'Paris Matins'. The Duke of Guise himself superintended the murder of
            Coligny; the corpse was thrown out of the window into the courtyard where Guise
            stood. All the Huguenot chiefs, except only the two princes, Navarre and Condé,
            were put to death. On every side the bells rang; and the populace in the king's
            name stormed and robbed the houses of the Huguenots and murdered their masters,
            who were entirely taken by surprise. It was a night of horror. Private revenge
            and personal hatred ran riot under the protection of the royal authority;
            religious fanaticism sheltered itself under the name of patriotism. A terrible
            fury had seized the people. For years they had been disturbed and
            disquieted by Huguenot rebellion; it needed but a few sharp hours of determined
            action, and these disturbers of their peace would be got rid of forever.
             The fury spread quickly from town to town. The royal
            orders were everywhere acted upon, and for days the massacre went on. It
            is difficult to
            estimate the number of victims; the calculations vary between 25,000 and 100,000 in the whole
            of the kingdom. In the excitement of the act, its terrible significance
            was not regarded by those concerned. The king rejoiced that at last he had
            acted decidedly and had become a king indeed. Catharine thought that she had
            freed herself from her enemies and had wrought a good deed for her country
            at the same time. The Catholic powers exulted over this victory of
            Catholicism. Gregory XIII, who had but lately become Pope, ordered a 'Te  Deum' to be sung in honor of the event, and went in
            solemn procession to be present at the
            thanksgiving. Philip forgot his usual severity of manner, and laughed for
            joy. No doubt the atrocity of the deed was not known at first. It was
            believed that a plot of the Huguenots had been discovered, that their designs
            had been anticipated, and that they had met with the punishment that was
            their due. In England only was the moral bearing of the massacre at once
            perceived; a shudder went through the land at the thought that a king
            should arm one part of his people against another. The French ambassador was
            long refused an audience of the queen; and when at last he was admitted, he was
            received in solemn silence by the queen and court, who were all dressed in
            mourning.
             In the Netherlands the events which we have been
            relating produced the most disastrous results. The patriots saw themselves cut
            off from any hope of French help, Orange, who was advancing to the relief of
            Mons, was driven back into Holland, and Mons was compelled to surrender. The
            rebellion was crushed in the southern provinces; and the Spanish troops,
            by their atrocities, exacted a terrible revenge. Alva sent orders that every
            town which refused to admit a garrison should be besieged, and all its inhabitants
            be put to death. At Mechlin, Zutphen, and Naarden, these orders were almost literally carried out.
            Alva was consistent in his policy of crushing rebellion by the example of
            terrible severity.
             But the men of Holland and Zeeland were not to be
            crushed without making an effort, and a struggle now began which has made the
            name of Holland memorable. It was a struggle conducted on both sides with
            desperate bravery and determined daring. Marvels of force and cruelty attract
            our attention as much as marvels of patriotism and self-devotion. The Spanish
            soldiers were unequalled in Europe; they were devoted to their leader and
            zealous for the Catholic cause; they fought with as much desperation and fury
            as did the burghers, whose only hope of life lay in their courage. The struggle
            which now began is marked by matchless deeds of valor on both sides.
             An attempt on the part of the patriots to obtain
            possession of the town of Goes, in South Beveland,
            led to a wonderful exploit on the part of the Spaniards. South Beveland is an island lying off the mouth of the Scheld. It had once formed part of the mainland, but the
            sea in a heavy storm had dashed away the dykes, and now ran in a channel, ten
            miles broad at its narrowest part, between South Beveland and the shore of which it had once formed part. Goes was invested by the
            patriots, and the Spaniards were cut off by the fleet of the Zeelanders from sending reinforcements.
             Determined not to lose the town, they formed the bold
            undertaking of wading along a narrow causeway on the ‘Drowned land’ as it was
            called. The water on this narrow causeway was four feet deep at low tide, and
            rose with the tide ten feet. It was a terrible hazard for the band of 3,000 men
            who undertook this journey of ten miles by night with the water reaching up to
            their shoulders. A few false steps and they would be lost; if they failed to
            accomplish their task in six hours, the rising tide would sweep them away. Yet
            such was the disciplined precision of the Spanish soldiers, that of the three
            thousand only nine were lost on the way. The rest reached Beveland in safety, and Goes was saved.
             1573. Siege of Haarlem.
             The siege of Haarlem is again famous for the desperate
            courage of the patriots. When summoned to admit a Spanish garrison, the men of
            Haarlem determined to resist. Their fortifications were weak; their garrison
            was only 4,000 men, while Don Frederic de Toledo led against them 30,000
            veterans. Yet for seven months they kept the Spaniards at bay, and only yielded
            at last to famine. Three hundred women armed themselves and fought in a regular
            corps. Assaults upon the city were repelled by the determination of the
            citizens, who poured boiling oil and blazing pitch on their assailants. Women
            and children worked day and night to repair the breaches in the walls. When it
            was found hopeless to take the city by assault, the Spaniards tried to
            undermine the walls. The citizens made countermines, and sometimes the opposing
            parties would meet underground and engage in savage contest. But the valor of
            the men of Haarlem could not hold out against famine. On July 12, 1573, the
            city surrendered. Its garrison was butchered, and the city was left a heap of
            ruins. Alkmaar was next attacked; but the patriots resolved that the dykes
            should be broken down and the country round be swallowed up by the waters of
            the sea, rather than that Alkmaar should fall into the enemy's hands. The
            Spaniards, discovering this resolution, retired in dismay; they had come to
            fight against men, not against the ocean.
             Thus, at the end of 1573, it was clear that Alva's
            severity, so far from having broken the spirit of the Netherlander, had only
            stirred them up to from the the most stubborn
            resistance. For seven years Alva had tried his utmost; he was
            weary of his task, and Philip was convinced of the failure of his measures. He
            was consequently allowed to return to Spain, where soon after, on a slight
            pretext, he and his son were imprisoned; nor was Alva restored to favor till
            his military talents were required for an expedition against Portugal.
             In the Netherlands a more pacific policy was adopted
            by Alva's successor, Don Luis de Requesens, who was
            governor for the next three years, 1573-6.
             In France the result of the massacre of St.
            Bartholomew's had not been quite so decisive as the fanatics who had engaged in
            it had hoped. The moral horror of the deed dawned upon the minds of its actors.
            Charles IX was haunted in his dreams by the terrible remembrance of that night;
            he sprung from his bed in terror; and to the excited minds of those around him
            the air seemed to be filled with groans and shrieks. Even in the camp, men
            thought they saw the dice thrown by Henry of Guise stain the table with a mark
            of blood.
             Moreover, the general policy of France had been
            contradicted by this massacre, and when men's feelings settled down, it was
            seen to have been a mistake. Spain was the leader of the Catholic world; and
            France could not hope to dispute that leadership with Spain. By the
            massacre France had lost her moderating position between the two parties. All
            dealings with the Netherlanders were broken off. The negotiations for the
            marriage of Elizabeth with the Duke of Anjou were stopped. The Huguenots still
            held out against the royal troops in their cities of Rochelle, Nismes, and Sancerre. It was in vain that these cities were
            besieged; they defended themselves with desperate heroism. Though many of the
            Huguenots had been massacred, and many had changed their religion through
            terror, still there remained too many to be put down by force. Moreover the
            Poles were thinking of the election of the Duke of Anjou to their throne; but
            if Anjou were to become king of Poland, he must declare himself willing to
            mediate between the two religious parties, and to allow religious freedom. For
            all these reasons the old policy of pacification again won the upper hand in
            France. In July 1573 free exercise of religion was granted to the towns of
            Rochelle, Montauban, Nismes, and Sancerre.
             The Huguenots obtained peace for a while; and the
            discords at court soon strengthened their hands. The youngest brother of the
            king, the Duke of Alencon, openly opposed his mother. In the dissensions and
            quarrels that followed, a new party gradually gained ground. It was composed of
            men who for political reasons wished to maintain the edicts of toleration, and
            so to allow the fury of religious passions to settle for awhile.
            In this distracted state of things Charles IX died, in May 1574. His brother
            hastened to leave his Polish kingdom, from which he fled secretly, as he was afraid
            the Poles might put hindrances in his way, and succeeded in France as Henry
            III.
             The next few years are free from any decisive events
            in Europe generally. The first outburst of the great commotions which mark the
            reign of Elizabeth had subsided.
             Things had begun somewhat to find their level. At
            first all was doubtful and uncertain. The chief actors had to watch eagerly for
            indications which way fortune was likely to turn. It had seemed that the
            chances were greatly against Protestantism and Elizabeth. Elizabeth had never
            ventured to ally herself definitely with the Protestant cause. She had no
            rational hope that the Netherlands would give Philip so much trouble, or the
            Huguenots so long make head in France. Year by year Elizabeth's throne grew stronger.
            The failure of the rising in the north, and then of the Ridolfi plot, showed
            that she was firm upon her seat. England had been growing more united, more
            decided, more adventurous. A bold and eager national spirit had been growing up
            amongst the people. From the year 1572 to 1576 the country was quiet and
            secure. When again England came forward, it was no longer uncertain of its
            position or its destiny, but was prepared for a struggle with Spain which
            should determine the future of both countries, and should decide the fate of
            Protestantism in Europe.
             
             BOOK IV.HOME GOVERNMENT OF ELIZABETH. | 
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