WILLIAM H. PRESCOTT
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HISTORY OF THE REIGN OF PHILIP THE SECOND
BOOK I.THE SPANISH EMPIRE AT WORK
CHAPTER I.
ABDICATION OF CHARLES THE FIFTH.
In a
former work, I have endeavored to portray the period when the different
provinces of Spain were consolidated into one empire under the rule of
Ferdinand and Isabella; when, by their wise and beneficent policy, the nation
emerged from the obscurity in which it had so long remained behind the
Pyrenees, and took its place as one of the great members of the European
commonwealth. I now propose to examine a later period in the history of the
same nation,—the reign of Philip the Second; when, with resources greatly
enlarged, and territory extended by a brilliant career of discovery and
conquest, it had risen to the zenith of its power; but when, under the
mischievous policy of the administration, it had excited the jealousy of its
neighbors, and already disclosed those germs of domestic corruption which
gradually led to its dismemberment and decay.
By the
marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella, most of the states of the Peninsula became
united under one common rule; and in 1516, the scepter of Spain, with its
dependencies both in the Old and the New World, passed into the hands of their
grandson, Charles the Fifth, who, though he shared the throne nominally with
his mother, Joanna, became, in consequence of her incapacity, the real sovereign
of this vast empire. He had before inherited, through his father, Philip the
Handsome, that fair portion of the ducal realm of Burgundy which comprehended
Franche Comté and the Netherlands. In 1519, he was elected to the imperial
crown of Germany. Not many years elapsed before his domain was still further
enlarged by the barbaric empires of Mexico and Peru; and Spain then first
realized the magnificent vaunt, since so often repeated, that the sun never set
within the borders of her dominions.
Yet the
importance of Spain did not rise with the importance of her acquisitions. She
was, in a manner, lost in the magnitude of these acquisitions. Some of the
rival nations which owned the sway of Charles, in Europe, were of much greater
importance than Spain, and attracted much more attention from their
contemporaries. In the earlier period of that monarch's reign, there was a
moment when a contest was going forward in Castile, of the deepest interest to
mankind. Unfortunately, the “War of the Comunidades”,
as it was termed, was soon closed by the ruin of the patriots; and, on the
memorable field of Villalar, the liberties of Spain
received a blow from which they were destined not to recover for centuries.
From that fatal hour,—the bitter fruit of the jealousy of castes and the
passions of the populace,—an unbroken tranquility reigned throughout the
country; such a tranquility as naturally flows not from a free and
well-conducted government, but from a despotic one. In this political tranquility,
however, the intellect of Spain did not slumber. Sheltered from invasion by the
barrier of the Pyrenees, her people were allowed to cultivate the arts of
peace, so long as they did not meddle with politics or religion,—in other
words, with the great interests of humanity; while the more adventurous found a
scope for their prowess in European wars, or in exploring the boundless regions
of the Western world.
While
there was so little passing in Spain to attract the eye of the historian,
Germany became the theatre of one of those momentous struggles which have had a
permanent influence on the destinies of mankind. It was in this reign that the
great battle of religious liberty was begun; and the attention and personal
presence of Charles were necessarily demanded most in the country where that
battle was to be fought. But a small part of his life was passed in Spain, in
comparison with what he spent in other parts of his dominions. His early
attachments, his lasting sympathies, were with the people of the Netherlands;
for Flanders was the place of his birth. He spoke the language of that country
more fluently than the Castilian; although he knew the various languages of his
dominions so well, that he could address his subjects from every quarter in
their native dialect. In the same manner, he could accommodate himself to their
peculiar national manners and tastes. But this flexibility was foreign to the
genius of the Spaniard. Charles brought nothing from Spain but a religious
zeal, amounting to bigotry, which took deep root in a melancholy temperament
inherited from his mother. His tastes were all Flemish. He introduced the
gorgeous ceremonial of the Burgundian court into his own palace, and into the
household of his son. He drew his most trusted and familiar counsellors from
Flanders; and this was one great cause of the troubles which, at the beginning
of his reign, distracted Castile. There was little to gratify the pride of the
Spaniard in the position which he occupied at the imperial court. Charles
regarded Spain chiefly for the resources she afforded for carrying on his
ambitious enterprises. When he visited her, it was usually to draw supplies
from the cortes. The Spaniards understood this, and bore less affection to his
person than to many of their monarchs far inferior to him in the qualities for
exciting it. They hardly regarded him as one of the nation. There was, indeed,
nothing national in the reign of Charles. His most intimate relations were with
Germany; and as the Emperor Charles the Fifth of Germany, not as King Charles
the First of Spain, he was known in his own time, and stands recorded on the
pages of history.
When
Charles ascended the throne, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, Europe
may be said to have been much in the same condition, in one respect, as she was
at the beginning of the eighth. The Turk menaced her on the east, in the same
manner as the Arab had before menaced her on the west. The hour seemed to be
fast approaching which was to decide whether Christianity or Mahometanism should hold the ascendant. The Ottoman tide of
conquest rolled up to the very walls of Vienna; and Charles, who, as head of
the empire, was placed on the frontier of Christendom, was called on to repel
it. When thirty-two years of age, he marched against the formidable Soliman,
drove him to an ignominious retreat, and, at less cost of life than is often
expended in a skirmish, saved Europe from invasion. He afterwards crossed the
sea to Tunis, then occupied by a horde of pirates, the scourge of the
Mediterranean. He beat them in a bloody battle, slew their chief, and liberated
ten thousand captives from their dungeons. All Europe rang with the praises of
the young hero, who thus consecrated his arms to the service of the Cross, and
stood forward as the true champion of Christendom.
But
from this high position Charles was repeatedly summoned to other contests, of a
more personal and far less honorable character. Such was his long and bloody
quarrel with Francis the First. It was hardly possible that two princes, so
well matched in years, power, pretensions, and, above all, love of military
glory, with dominions touching on one another through their whole extent, could
long remain without cause of rivalry and collision. Such rivalry did exist from
the moment that the great prize of the empire was adjudged to Charles; and
through the whole of their long struggle, with the exception of a few reverses,
the superior genius of the emperor triumphed over his bold, but less politic
adversary.
There
was still a third contest, on which the strength of the Spanish monarch was
freely expended through the greater part of his reign,—his contest with the
Lutheran princes of Germany. Here, too, for a long time, fortune favored him.
But it is easier to contend against man than against a great moral principle.
The principle of reform had struck too deep into the mind of Germany to be
eradicated by force or by fraud. Charles, for a long time, by a course of
crafty policy, succeeded in baffling the Protestant league; and, by the
decisive victory at Muhlberg, seemed, at last, to
have broken it altogether. But his success only ministered to his ruin. The
very man on whom he bestowed the spoils of victory turned them against his
benefactor. Charles, ill in body and mind, and glad to escape from his enemies
under cover of the night and a driving tempest, was at length compelled to sign
the treaty of Passau, which secured to the Protestants those religious
immunities against which he had contended through his whole reign.
Not long
after, he experienced another humiliating reverse from France, then ruled by a
younger rival, Henry the Second, the son of Francis. The good star of
Charles—the star of Austria—seemed to have set; and as he reluctantly raised
the siege of Metz, he was heard bitterly to exclaim, “Fortune is a strumpet,
who reserves her favors for the young!”
With
spirits greatly depressed by his reverses, and still more by the state of his
health, which precluded him from taking part in the manly and martial exercises
to which he had been accustomed, he felt that he had no longer the same
strength as formerly to bear up under the toils of empire. When but little more
than thirty years of age, he had been attacked by the gout, and of late had
been so sorely afflicted with that disorder, that he had nearly lost the use of
his limbs. The man who, cased in steel, had passed whole days and nights in the
saddle, indifferent to the weather and the season, could now hardly drag
himself along with the aid of his staff. For days he was confined to his bed;
and he did not leave his room for weeks together. His mind became oppressed
with melancholy, which was, to some extent, a constitutional infirmity. His
chief pleasure was in listening to books, especially of a religious character.
He denied himself to all except his most intimate and trusted counsellors. He
lost his interest in affairs; and for whole months, according to one of his
biographers, who had access to his person, he refused to receive any public
communication, or to subscribe any document, or even letter. One cannot
understand how the business of the nation could have been conducted in such a
state of things. After the death of his mother, Joanna, his mind became more
deeply tinctured with those gloomy fancies which in her amounted to downright
insanity. He imagined he heard her voice calling on him to follow her. His
thoughts were now turned from secular concerns to those of his own soul; and he
resolved to put in execution a plan for resigning his crown and withdrawing to
some religious retreat, where he might prepare for his latter end. This plan he
had conceived many years before, in the full tide of successful ambition. So
opposite were the elements at work in the character of this extraordinary man!
Although
he had chosen the place of his retreat, he had been deterred from immediately
executing his purpose by the forlorn condition of his mother, and the tender
age of his son. The first obstacle was now removed by the death of Joanna,
after a reign—a nominal reign—of half a century, in which the cloud that had
settled on her intellect at her husband's death was never dispelled.
The age
of Philip, his son and heir, was also no longer an objection. From early
boyhood he had been trained to the duties of his station, and, when very young,
had been intrusted with the government of Castile.
His father had surrounded him with able and experienced counsellors, and their
pupil, who showed a discretion far beyond his years, had largely profited by
their lessons. He had now entered his twenty-ninth year, an age when the
character is formed, and when, if ever, he might be supposed qualified to
assume the duties of government. His father had already ceded to him the
sovereignty of Naples and Milan, on occasion of the prince’s marriage with Mary
of England. He was on a visit to that country, when Charles, having decided on
the act of abdication, sent to require his son’s attendance at Brussels, where
the ceremony was to be performed. The different provinces of the Netherlands
were also summoned to send their deputies, with authority to receive the
emperor’s resignation, and to transfer their allegiance to his successor. As a
preliminary step, on the twenty-second of October, 1555, he conferred on Philip
the grand-mastership—which, as Lord of Flanders, was vested in himself—of
the toison d'or, the order of the
Golden Fleece, of Burgundy; the proudest and most coveted, at that day, of all
the military orders of knighthood.
Preparations
were then made for conducting the ceremony of abdication with all the pomp and
solemnity suited to so august an occasion. The great hall of the royal palace
of Brussels was selected for the scene of it. The walls of the spacious
apartment were hung with tapestry, and the floor was covered with rich
carpeting. A scaffold was erected, at one end of the room, to the height of six
or seven steps. On it was placed a throne, or chair of state, for the emperor,
with other seats for Philip, and for the great Flemish lords who were to attend
the person of their sovereign. Above the throne was suspended a gorgeous
canopy, on which were emblazoned the arms of the ducal house of Burgundy. In
front of the scaffolding, accommodations were provided for the deputies of the
provinces, who were to be seated on benches arranged according to their
respective rights of precedence.
On the
twenty-fifth of October, the day fixed for the ceremony, Charles the Fifth
executed an instrument by which he ceded to his son the sovereignty of
Flanders. Mass was then performed; and the emperor, accompanied by Philip and a
numerous retinue, proceeded in state to the great hall, where the deputies were
already assembled.
Charles
was, at this time, in the fifty-sixth year of his age. His form was slightly
bent,—but it was by disease more than by time,—and on his countenance might be
traced the marks of anxiety and rough exposure. Yet it still wore that majesty
of expression so conspicuous in his portraits by the inimitable pencil of
Titian. His hair, once of a light color, approaching to yellow, had begun to
turn before he was forty, and, as well as his beard, was now gray. His forehead
was broad and expansive; his nose aquiline. His blue eyes and fair complexion
intimated his Teutonic descent. The only feature in his countenance decidedly
bad was his lower jaw, protruding with its thick, heavy lip, so characteristic
of the physiognomies of the Austrian dynasty.
In
stature he was about the middle height. His limbs were strongly knit, and once
well formed, though now the extremities were sadly distorted by disease. The
emperor leaned for support on a staff with one hand, while with the other he
rested on the arm of William of Orange, who, then young, was destined at a
later day to become the most formidable enemy of his house. The grave demeanor
of Charles was rendered still more impressive by his dress; for he was in
mourning for his mother; and the sable hue of his attire was relieved only by a
single ornament, the superb collar of the Golden Fleece, which hung from his
neck.
Behind
the emperor came Philip, the heir of his vast dominions. He was of a middle
height, of much the same proportions as his father, whom he resembled also in
his lineaments,—except that those of the son wore a more somber, and perhaps a
sinister expression; while there was a reserve in his manner, in spite of his
efforts to the contrary, as if he would shroud his thoughts from observation.
The magnificence of his dress corresponded with his royal station, and formed a
contrast to that of his father, who was quitting the pomp and grandeur of the
world, on which the son was about to enter.
Next to
Philip came Mary, the emperor’s sister, formerly queen of Hungary. She had
filled the post of regent of the Low Countries for nearly twenty years, and now
welcomed the hour when she was to resign the burden of sovereignty to her
nephew, and withdraw, like her imperial brother, into private life. Another
sister of Charles, Eleanor, widow of the French king, Francis the First, also
took part in these ceremonies, previous to her departure for Spain, whither she
was to accompany the emperor.
After
these members of the imperial family came the nobility of the Netherlands, the
knights of the Golden Fleece, the royal counsellors, and the great officers of
the household, all splendidly attired in their robes of state, and proudly
displaying the insignia of their orders. When the emperor had mounted his
throne, with Philip on his right hand, the Regent Mary on his left, and the
rest of his retinue disposed along the seats prepared for them on the platform,
the president of the council of Flanders addressed the assembly. He briefly
explained the object for which they had been summoned, and the motives which
had induced their master to abdicate the throne; and he concluded by requiring
them, in their sovereign’s name, to transfer their allegiance from himself to
Philip, his son and rightful heir.
After a
pause, Charles rose to address a few parting words to his subjects. He stood
with apparent difficulty, and rested his right hand on the shoulder of the
Prince of Orange, intimating, by this preference on so distinguished an
occasion, the high favor in which he held the young nobleman. In the other hand
he held a paper, containing some hints for his discourse, and occasionally cast
his eyes on it, to refresh his memory. He spoke in the French language.
He was
unwilling, he said, to part from his people without a few words from his own
lips. It was now forty years since he had been entrusted with the scepter of
the Netherlands. He was soon after called to take charge of a still more
extensive empire, both in Spain and in Germany, involving a heavy
responsibility for one so young. He had, however, endeavored earnestly to do
his duty to the best of his abilities. He had been ever mindful of the
interests of the dear land of his birth, but, above all, of the great interests
of Christianity. His first object had been to maintain these inviolate against
the infidel. In this he had been thwarted, partly by the jealousy of
neighboring powers, and partly by the factions of the heretical princes of
Germany.
In the
performance of his great work, he had never consulted his ease. His
expeditions, in war and in peace, to France, England, Germany, Italy, Spain,
and Flanders, had amounted to no less than forty. Four times he had crossed the
Spanish seas, and eight times the Mediterranean. He had shrunk from no toil,
while he had the strength to endure it. But a cruel malady had deprived him of
that strength. Conscious of his inability to discharge the duties of his
station, he had long since come to the resolution to relinquish it. From this
he had been diverted only by the situation of his unfortunate parent, and by
the inexperience of his son. These objections no longer existed; and he should
not stand excused, in the eye of Heaven or of the world, if he should insist on
still holding the reins of government when he was incapable of managing
them,—when every year his incapacity must become more obvious.
He
begged them to believe that this, and no other motive, induced him to resign
the scepter which he had so long swayed. They had been to him dutiful and
loving subjects; and such, he doubted not, they would prove to his successor.
Above all things, he besought them to maintain the purity of the faith. If any
one, in these licentious times, had admitted doubts into his bosom, let such
doubts be extirpated at once. “I know well”, he concluded, “that, in my long
administration, I have fallen into many errors, and committed some wrongs, but
it was from ignorance; and, if there be any here whom I have wronged, they will
believe that it was not intended, and grant me their forgiveness”.
While
the emperor was speaking, a breathless silence pervaded the whole audience.
Charles had ever been dear to the people of the Netherlands,—the land of his
birth. They took a national pride in his achievements, and felt that his glory
reflected a peculiar luster on themselves. As they now gazed for the last time
on that revered form, and listened to the parting admonitions from his lips,
they were deeply affected, and not a dry eye was to be seen in the assembly.
After a
short interval, Charles, turning to Philip, who, in an attitude of deep
respect, stood awaiting his commands, he thus addressed him:—“If the vast
possessions which are now bestowed on you had come by inheritance, there would
be abundant cause for gratitude. How much more, when they come as a free gift
in the lifetime of your father! But, however large the debt, I shall consider
it all repaid, if you only discharge your duty to your subjects. So rule over
them, that men shall commend, and not censure me for the part I am now acting.
Go on as you have begun. Fear God; live justly; respect the laws; above all,
cherish the interests of religion; and may the Almighty bless you with a son,
to whom, when old and stricken with disease, you may be able to resign your
kingdom with the same good-will with which I now resign mine to you”.
As he
ceased, Philip, much affected, would have thrown himself at his father’s feet,
assuring him of his intention to do all in his power to merit such goodness;
but Charles, raising his son, tenderly embraced him, while the tears flowed
fast down his cheeks. Every one, even the most stoical, was touched by this
affecting scene; “and nothing”, says one who was present, “was to be
heard, throughout the hall, but sobs and ill-suppressed moans”. Charles,
exhausted by his efforts, and deadly pale, sank back upon his seat; while, with
feeble accents, he exclaimed, as he gazed on his people, “God bless you! God
bless you!”
After
these emotions had somewhat subsided, Philip arose, and, delivering himself in
French, briefly told the deputies of the regret which he felt at not being able
to address them in their native language, and to assure them of the favor and
high regard in which he held them. This would be done for him by the bishop of
Arras.
This
was Antony Perennot, better known as Cardinal
Granvelle, son of the famous minister of Charles the Fifth, and destined
himself to a still higher celebrity as the minister of Philip the Second. In
clear and fluent language, he gave the deputies the promise of their new sovereign
to respect the laws and liberties of the nation; invoking them, on his behalf,
to aid him with their counsels, and, like royal vassals, to maintain the
authority of the law in his dominions. After a suitable response from the deputies,
filled with sentiments of regret for the loss of their late monarch, and with
those of loyalty to their new one, the Regent Mary formally abdicated her
authority, and the session closed. So ended a ceremony, which, considering the
importance of its consequences, the character of the actors, and the solemnity
of the proceedings, is one of the most remarkable in history. That the crown of
the monarch is lined with thorns, is a trite maxim; and it requires no
philosophy to teach us that happiness does not depend on station. Yet, numerous
as are the instances of those who have waded to a throne through seas of blood,
there are but few who, when they have once tasted the sweets of sovereignty,
have been content to resign them; still fewer who, when they have done so, have
had the philosophy to conform to their change of condition, and not to repent
it. Charles, as the event proved, was one of these few.
On the
sixteenth day of January, 1556, in the presence of such of the Spanish nobility
as were at the court, he executed the deeds by which he ceded the sovereignty
of Castile and Aragon, with their dependencies, to Philip.
The
last act that remained for him to perform was to resign the crown of Germany in
favor of his brother Ferdinand. But this he consented to defer some time
longer, at the request of Ferdinand himself, who wished to prepare the minds of
the electoral college for this unexpected transfer of the imperial scepter.
But, while Charles consented to retain for the present the title of Emperor,
the real power and the burden of sovereignty would remain with Ferdinand.
At the
time of abdicating the throne of the Netherlands, Charles was still at war with
France. He had endeavored to negotiate a permanent peace with that country;
and, although he failed in this, he had the satisfaction, on the fifth of
February, 1556, to arrange a truce for five years, which left both powers in
the possession of their respective conquests. In the existing state of these
conquests, the truce was by no means favorable to Spain. But Charles would have
made even larger concessions, rather than leave the legacy of a war to his less
experienced successor.
Having thus
completed all his arrangements, by which the most powerful prince of Europe
descended to the rank of a private gentleman, Charles had no longer reason to
defer his departure, and he proceeded to the place of embarkation. He was
accompanied by a train of Flemish courtiers, and by the foreign ambassadors, to
the latter of whom he warmly commended the interests of his son. A fleet of
fifty-six sail was riding at anchor in the port of Flushing, ready to transport
him and his retinue to Spain. From the imperial household, consisting of seven
hundred and sixty-two persons, he selected a hundred and fifty as his escort;
and accompanied by his sisters, after taking an affectionate farewell of
Philip, whose affairs detained him in Flanders, on the thirteenth of September
he sailed from the harbor of Flushing.
The
passage was a boisterous one; and Charles, who suffered greatly from his old
enemy, the gout, landed, in a feeble state, at Laredo, in Biscay, on the
twenty-eighth of the month. Scarcely had he left the vessel, when a storm fell
with fury on the fleet, and did some mischief to the shipping in the harbor.
The pious Spaniard saw in this the finger of Providence, which had allowed no
harm to the squadron till its royal freight had been brought safely to the
shore.
On
landing, Charles complained, and with some reason, of the scanty preparations
that had been made for him. Philip had written several times to his sister, the
regent, ordering her to have everything ready for the emperor on his arrival.
Joanna had accordingly issued her orders to that effect. But promptness and
punctuality are not virtues of the Spaniard. Some apology may be found for
their deficiency in the present instance; as Charles himself had so often
postponed his departure from the Low Countries, that, when he did come, the
people were, in a manner, taken by surprise. That the neglect was not
intentional is evident from their subsequent conduct.
Charles,
whose infirmities compelled him to be borne in a litter, was greeted,
everywhere on the road, like a sovereign returning to his dominions. It was
evening when he reached the ancient city of Burgos; and, as he passed through
its illuminated streets the bells rang merrily, to give him welcome. He
remained there three days, experiencing the hospitalities of the great
constable, and receiving the homage of the northern lords, as well as of the
people, who thronged the route by which he was to pass. At Torquemada, among
those who came to pay their respects to their former master was Gasca, the good
president of Peru. He had been sent to America to suppress the insurrection of
Gonzalo Pizarro, and restore tranquility to the country. In the execution of
this delicate mission, he succeeded so well, that the emperor, on his return,
had raised him to the see of Plasencia; and the excellent man now lived in his
diocese, where, in the peaceful discharge of his episcopal functions, he
probably enjoyed far greater contentment than he could have derived from the
dazzling, but difficult post of an American viceroy.
From
Torquemada, Charles slowly proceeded to Valladolid, where his daughter, the
Regent Joanna, was then holding her court. Preparations were made for receiving
him in a manner suited to his former rank. But Charles positively declined
these honors, reserving them for his two sisters, the dowager queens of France
and Hungary, who accordingly made their entrance into the capital in great
state, on the day following that on which their royal brother had entered it
with the simplicity of a private citizen.
He
remained here some time, in order to recover from the fatigue of his journey;
and, although he took little part in the festivities of the court, he gave
audience to his ancient ministers, and to such of the Castilian grandees as
were eager to render him their obeisance. At the court he had also the
opportunity of seeing his grandson Carlos, the heir of the monarchy; and his
quick eye, it is said, in this short time, saw enough in the prince's
deportment to fill him with ominous forebodings.
Charles
prolonged his stay fourteen days in Valladolid, during which time his health
was much benefited by the purity and the dryness of the atmosphere. On his
departure, his royal sisters would have borne him company, and even have fixed
their permanent residence near his own. But to this he would not consent; and,
taking a tender farewell of every member of his family,—as one who was never to
behold them again,—he resumed his journey.
The
place he had chosen for his retreat was the monastery of Yuste, in the province
of Estremadura, not many miles from Plasencia. On his way thither he halted
near three months at Jarandilla, the residence of the
count of Oropesa, waiting there for the completion of some repairs that were
going on in the monastery, as well as for the remittance of a considerable sum
of money, which he was daily expecting. This he required chiefly to discharge
the arrears due to some of his old retainers; and the failure of the remittance
has brought some obloquy on Philip, who could so soon show himself unmindful of
his obligations to his father. But the blame should rather be charged on
Philip’s ministers than on Philip, absent as he was at that time from the
country, and incapable of taking personal cognizance of the matter. Punctuality
in his pecuniary engagements was a virtue to which neither Charles nor
Philip—the masters of the Indies—could at any time lay claim. But the
imputation of parsimony, or even indifference, on the part of the latter, in
his relations with his father, is fully disproved by the subsequent history of
that monarch at the convent of Yuste.
This
place, it is said, had attracted his eye many years before, when on a visit to that
part of the country, and he marked it for his future residence. The convent was
tenanted by monks of the strictest order of Saint Jerome. But, however strict
in their monastic rule, the good fathers showed much taste in the selection of
their ground, as well as in the embellishment of it. It lay in a wild, romantic
country, embosomed among hills that stretch along the northern confines of
Estremadura. The building, which was of great antiquity, had been surrounded by
its inmates with cultivated gardens, and with groves of orange, lemon, and
myrtle, whose fragrance was tempered by the refreshing coolness of the waters
that gushed forth in abundance from the rocky sides of the hills. It was a
delicious retreat, and, by its calm seclusion and the character of its scenery,
was well suited to withdraw the mind from the turmoil of the world, and dispose
it to serious meditation. Here the monarch, after a life of restless ambition,
proposed to spend the brief remainder of his days, and dedicate it to the salvation
of his soul. He could not, however, as the event proved, close his heart
against all sympathy with mankind, nor refuse to take some part in the great
questions which then agitated the world. Charles was not master of that ignoble
philosophy which enabled Diocletian to turn with contentment from the cares of
an empire to those of a cabbage-garden.—In this retirement we must now leave
the royal recluse, while we follow the opening career of the prince whose reign
is the subject of the present history.
CHAPTER II.
EARLY DAYS OF PHILIP.
1527-1551.
Philip
the Second was born at Valladolid, on the twenty-first of May, 1527. His mother
was the Empress Isabella, daughter of Emanuel the Great of Portugal. By his
father he was descended from the ducal houses of Burgundy and Austria. By both
father and mother he claimed a descent from Ferdinand and Isabella the Catholic
of Spain. As by blood he was half a Spaniard, so by temperament and character
he proved to be wholly so.
The
ceremony of his baptism was performed with all due solemnity, by Tavera,
archbishop of Toledo, on the twenty-fifth of June, when the royal infant
received the name of Philip, after his paternal grandfather, Philip the
Handsome, whose brief reign—for which he was indebted to his union with Joanna,
queen-proprietor of Castile—has hardly secured him a place in the line of
Castilian sovereigns.
The
birth of a son—the heir of so magnificent an empire—was hailed with delight
both by Charles and by the whole nation, who prepared to celebrate it in a
style worthy of the event, when tidings reached them of the capture of Pope
Clement the Seventh and the sack of Rome by the Spanish troops under the
constable de Bourbon. The news of this event, and the cruelties inflicted by
the conquerors, filled all Europe with consternation. Even the Protestants, who
had no superfluous sympathy to spare for the sufferings of the pope, were
shocked by the perpetration of atrocities compared with which the conduct of
Attila and Alaric might almost be deemed merciful. Whatever responsibility may
attach to Charles on the score of the expedition, it would be injustice to him
to suppose that he did not share in the general indignation at the manner in
which it was conducted. At all events, he could hardly venture to outrage the
feelings of Christendom so far as to take the present moment for one of public
rejoicing. Orders were instantly issued to abandon the intended festivities,
greatly to the discontent of the people, whose sympathy for the pope did not by
any means incline them to put this restraint on the expression of their
loyalty; and they drew from the disappointment an uncomfortable augury that the
reign of the young prince boded no good to the Catholic religion.
It was
not long, however, before the people of Castile had an opportunity for the full
display of their enthusiasm, on the occasion of Philip's recognition as
rightful heir to the crown. The ceremony was conducted with great pomp and
splendor in the cortes at Madrid, on the nineteenth of April, 1528, when he was
but eleven months old. The prince was borne in the arms of his mother, who,
with the emperor, was present on the occasion; while the nobles, the clergy,
and the commons took the oath of allegiance to the royal infant, as successor
to the crown of Castile. The act of homage was no sooner published, than the
nation, as if by way of compensation for the past, abandoned itself to a
general jubilee. Illuminations and bonfires were lighted up in all the towns
and villages; while everywhere were to be seen dancing, bull-fights, tilts of
reeds, and the other national games of that chivalrous and romantic land.
Soon
after this, Charles was called by his affairs to other parts of his
far-extended empire, and he left his infant son to the care of a Portuguese
lady, Doña Leonor Mascareñas, or rather to that of
the Empress Isabella, in whose prudence and maternal watchfulness he could
safely confide. On the emperor's return to Spain, when his son was hardly seven
years old, he formed for him a separate establishment, and selected two persons
for the responsible office of superintending his education.
One of
these personages was Juan Martinez Siliceo, at that
time professor in the College of Salamanca. He was a man of piety and learning,
of an accommodating temper,—too accommodating, it appears from some of
Charles's letters, for the good of his pupil, though not, as it would seem, for
his own good, since he found such favor with the prince, that, from an humble
ecclesiastic, he was subsequently preferred to the highest dignities of the
Church.
Under
him Philip was instructed in the ancient classics, and made such progress in Latin,
that he could write it, and did write it frequently in after life, with ease
and correctness. He studied, also, Italian and French. He seems to have had
little knowledge of the former, but French he could speak indifferently well,
though he was rarely inclined to venture beyond his own tongue. He showed a
more decided taste for science, especially the mathematics. He made a careful
study of the principles of architecture; and the fruits of this study are to be
seen in some of the noblest monuments erected in that flourishing period of the
arts. In sculpture and painting he also made some proficiency, and became, in
later life, no contemptible critic,—at least for a sovereign.
The
other functionary charged with Philip'’ education was Don Juan de Zuñiga, commendador mayor of Castile. He taught his
pupil to fence, to ride, to take his part at the tilts and tourneys, and, in
short, to excel in the chivalrous exercises familiar to cavaliers of his time.
He encouraged Philip to invigorate his constitution by the hardy pleasures of
the chase, to which, however, he was but little addicted as he advanced in
years.
But,
besides these personal accomplishments, no one was better qualified than Zuñiga
to instruct his people in the duties belonging to his royal station. He was a
man of ancient family, and had passed much of his life in courts. But he had
none of the duplicity or of the suppleness which often marks the character of
the courtier. He possessed too high a sentiment of honor to allow him to trifle
with truth. He spoke his mind plainly, too plainly sometimes for the taste of
his pupil. Charles, who understood the character of Zuñiga, wrote to his son to
honor and to cherish him. “If he deals plainly with you”, he said, “it is for
the love he bears you. If he were to flatter you, and be only solicitous of
ministering to your wishes, he would be like all the rest of the world, and you
would have no one near to tell you the truth;—and a worse thing cannot happen
to any man, old or young; but most of all to the young, from their want of
experience to discern truth from error”. The wise emperor, who knew how rarely
it is that truth is permitted to find its way to royal ears, set a just value
on the man who had the courage to speak it.
Under
the influence of these teachers, and, still more, of the circumstances in which
he was placed,—the most potent teachers of all,—Philip grew in years, and
slowly unfolded the peculiar qualities of his disposition. He seemed cautious
and reserved in his demeanor, and slow of speech; yet what he said had a
character of thought beyond his age. At no time did he discover that buoyancy
of spirit, or was he betrayed into those sallies of temper, which belong to a
bold and adventurous, and often to a generous nature. His deportment was marked
by a seriousness that to some might seem to savor of melancholy. He was
self-possessed, so that even as a boy he was rarely off his guard.
The
emperor, whose affairs called him away from Spain much the greater part of his
time, had not the power of personally superintending the education of his son.
Unfortunately for the latter, his excellent mother died when he was but twelve
years old. Charles, who loved his wife as much as a man is capable of loving
whose soul is filled with schemes of boundless ambition, was at Madrid when he
received tidings of her illness. He posted in all haste to Toledo, where the
queen then was, but arrived there only in time to embrace her cold remains
before they were consigned to the sepulcher. The desolate monarch abandoned
himself to an agony of grief, and was with difficulty withdrawn from the
apartment by his attendants, to indulge his solitary regrets in the neighboring
monastery of La Sisla.
Isabella
well deserved to be mourned by her husband. She was a woman from all accounts,
possessed of many high and generous qualities. Such was her fortitude, that, at
the time of her confinement, she was never heard to utter a groan. She seemed
to think any demonstration of suffering a weakness, and had the chamber
darkened that her attendants might not see the distress painted on her
countenance. With this constancy of spirit, she united many feminine virtues.
The palace, under her rule, became a school of industry. Instead of wasting her
leisure hours in frivolous pleasures, she might be seen busily occupied, with
her maidens, in the elegant labors of the loom; and, like her ancestor, the
good Queen Isabella the Catholic, she sent more than one piece of tapestry,
worked by her own hands, to adorn the altars of Jerusalem. These excellent
qualities were enhanced by manners so attractive, that her effigy was struck on
a medal, with a device of the three Graces on the reverse side, bearing the
motto, Has Habet et superat.
Isabella
was but thirty-six years old at the time of her death. Charles was not forty.
He never married again. Yet the bereavement seems to have had little power to
soften his nature, or incline him to charity for the misconduct, or compassion
for the misfortunes of others. It was but a few months after the death of his
wife, that, on occasion of the insurrection of Ghent, he sought a passage
through the territory of his ancient enemy of France, descended on the
offending city, and took such vengeance on its wretched inhabitants as made all
Europe ring with his cruelty.
Philip
was too young at this time to take part in the administration of the kingdom
during his father’s absence. But he was surrounded by able statesmen, who
familiarized him with ideas of government, by admitting him to see the workings
of the machinery which he was one day to direct. Charles was desirous that the
attention of his son, even in boyhood, should be turned to those affairs which
were to form the great business of his future life. It seems even thus early—at
this period of mental depression—the emperor cherished the plan of anticipating
the natural consequence of his decease, by resigning his dominions into the
hands of Philip so soon as he should be qualified to rule them.
No
event occurred to disturb the tranquility of Spain during the emperor’s absence
from that country, to which he returned in the winter of 1541. It was after his
disastrous expedition against Algiers,—the most disastrous of any that he had
yet undertaken. He there saw his navy sunk or scattered by the tempest, and was
fortunate in finding a shelter, with its shattered remnants, in the port of
Cartagena. Soon after landing, he received a letter from Philip, condoling with
him on his losses, and striving to cheer him with the reflection, that they had
been caused by the elements, not by his enemies. With this tone of philosophy
were mingled expressions of sympathy; and Charles may have been gratified with
the epistle,—if he could believe it the composition of his son. Philip soon
after this made a journey to the south; and, in the society of one who was now
the chief object of his affections, the emperor may have found the best
consolation in his misfortunes.
The
French had availed themselves of the troubled state of Charles’s affairs to
make a descent upon Roussillon; and the Dauphin now lay in some strength before
the gates of Perpignan. The emperor considered this a favorable moment for
Philip to take his first lesson in war. The prince accordingly posted to
Valladolid. A considerable force was quickly mustered; and Philip, taking the
command, and supported by some of the most experienced of his father's
generals, descended rapidly towards the coast. But the Dauphin did not care to
wait for his approach; and, breaking up his camp, he retreated, without
striking a blow, in all haste, across the mountains. Philip entered the town in
triumph, and soon after returned, with the unstained laurels of victory, to receive
his father's congratulations. The promptness of his movements on this occasion
gained him credit with the Spaniards; and the fortunate result seemed to
furnish a favorable augury for the future.
On his
return, the prince was called to preside over the cortes at Monzon,—a central
town, where the deputies of Aragon, Catalonia, and Valencia continued to
assemble separately, long after those provinces had been united to Castile.
Philip, with all the forms prescribed by the constitution, received the homage
of the representatives assembled, as successor to the crown of Aragon.
The war
with France, which, after a temporary suspension, had broken out with greater
violence than ever, did not permit the emperor long to protract his stay in the
Peninsula. Indeed, it seemed to his Spanish subjects that he rarely visited
them, except when his exchequer required to be replenished for carrying on his
restless enterprises, and that he stayed no longer than was necessary to effect
this object. On leaving the country, he entrusted the regency to Philip, under
the general direction of a council consisting of the duke of Alva, Cardinal
Tavera, and the Commendador Cobos. Sometime
after this, while still lingering in Catalonia, previous to his embarkation,
Charles addressed a letter to his son, advising him as to his political course,
and freely criticizing the characters of the great lords associated with him in
the government. The letter, which is altogether a remarkable document,
contains, also, some wholesome admonitions on Philip’s private conduct. “The
duke of Alva”, the emperor emphatically wrote, “is the ablest statesman and the
best soldier I have in my dominions. Consult him, above all, in military
affairs; but do not depend upon him entirely in these or in any other matters.
Depend on no one but yourself. The grandees will be too happy to secure your
favor, and through you to govern the land. But, if you are thus governed, it
will be your ruin. The mere suspicion of it will do you infinite prejudice.
Make use of all; but lean exclusively on none. In your perplexities, ever trust
in your Maker. Have no care but for him”. The emperor then passes some
strictures on the Commendador Cobos, as too
much inclined to pleasure, at the same time admonishing Philip of the
consequences of a libertine career, fatal alike, he tells him, to both soul and
body. There seems to have been some ground for this admonition, as the young
prince had shown a disposition to gallantry, which did not desert him in later
life. “Yet, on the whole”, says the monarch, “I will admit I have much reason
to be satisfied with your behavior. But I would have you perfect; and, to speak
frankly, whatever other persons may tell you, you have some things to mend yet.
Your confessor”, he continues, “is now your old preceptor, the bishop of
Cartagena”,—to which see the worthy professor had been recently raised. “He is
a good man, as all the world knows; but I hope he will take better care of your
conscience than he did of your studies, and that he will not show quite so
accommodating a temper in regard to the former as he did with the latter”.
On the
cover of this curious epistle the emperor indorsed a direction to his son, to
show it to no living person; but if he found himself ill at any time, to
destroy the letter, or seal it up under cover to him. It would, indeed, have
edified those courtiers, who fancied they stood highest in the royal favor, to
see how, to their very depths, their characters were sounded, and how clearly
their schemes of ambition were revealed to the eye of their master. It was this
admirable perception of character which enabled Charles, so generally, to
select the right agent for the execution of his plans, and thus to insure their
success.
The
letter from Palamós is one among many similar proofs
of the care with which, even from a distance, Charles watched over his son's
course, and endeavored to form his character. The experienced navigator would
furnish a chart to the youthful pilot, by which, without other aid, he might
securely steer through seas strange and unknown to him. Yet there was little
danger in the navigation, at this period; for Spain lay in a profound tranquility,
unruffled by a breath from the rude tempest, that, in other parts of Europe,
was unsettling princes on their thrones.
A
change was now to take place in Philip’s domestic relations. His magnificent
expectations made him, in the opinion of the world, the best match in Europe.
His father had long contemplated the event of his son’s marrying. He had first
meditated an alliance for him with Margaret, daughter of Francis the First, by
which means the feud with his ancient rival might be permanently healed. But
Philip’s inclination was turned to an alliance with Portugal. This latter was
finally adopted by Charles; and, in December, 1542, Philip was betrothed to the
Infanta Mary, daughter of John the Third and of Catharine, the emperor’s
sister. She was, consequently, cousin-german to Philip. At the same time,
Joanna, Charles’s youngest daughter, was affianced to the eldest son of John
the Third, and heir to his crown. The intermarriages of the royal houses of
Castile and Portugal were so frequent, that the several members stood in
multiplied and most perplexing degrees of affinity with one another.
Joanna
was eight years younger than her brother. Charles had one other child, Mary,
born the year after Philip. She was destined to a more splendid fortune than
her sister, as bride of the future emperor of Germany. Since Philip and the
Portuguese princess were now both more than sixteen years old, being nearly of
the same age, it was resolved that their marriage should no longer be deferred.
The place appointed for the ceremony was the ancient city of Salamanca.
In
October, 1543, the Portuguese infanta quitted her father’s palace in Lisbon,
and set out for Castile. She was attended by a numerous train of nobles, with
the archbishop of Lisbon at their head. A splendid embassy was sent to meet her
on the borders, and conduct her to Salamanca. At its head was the duke of
Medina Sidonia, chief of the Guzmans, the wealthiest
and most powerful lord in Andalusia. He had fitted up his palace at Badajoz in
the most costly and sumptuous style, for the accommodation of the princess. The
hangings were of cloth of gold; the couches, the sideboards, and some of the
other furniture, of burnished silver. The duke himself rode in a superb litter,
and the mules which carried it were shod with gold. The members of his
household and his retainers swelled to the number of three thousand, well
mounted, wearing the liveries and cognizance of their master. Among them was
the duke's private band, including several natives of the Indies,—then not a
familiar sight in Spain,—displaying on their breasts broad silver escutcheons,
on which were emblazoned the arms of the Guzmans. The
chronicler is diffuse in his account of the infanta’s reception, from which a
few particulars may be selected for such as take an interest in the Spanish
costume and manners of the sixteenth century.
The
infanta was five months younger than Philip. She was of the middle size, with a
good figure, though somewhat inclined to embonpoint, and was
distinguished by a graceful carriage and a pleasing expression of countenance.
Her dress was of cloth of silver, embroidered with flowers of gold. She wore
a capa, or Castilian mantle, of
violet-colored velvet, figured with gold, and a hat of the same materials,
surmounted by a white and azure plume. The housings of the mule were of rich
brocade, and Mary rode on a silver saddle.
As she
approached Salamanca, she was met by the rector and professors of the
university, in their academic gowns. Next followed the judges and regidores of the city, in their robes of
office, of crimson velvet, with hose and shoes of spotless white. After these
came the military,—horse and foot,—in their several companies, making a
brilliant show with their gay uniforms; and, after going through their various
evolutions, they formed into an escort for the princess. In this way, amidst
the sound of music and the shouts of the multitude, the glittering pageant
entered the gates of the capital.
The infanta
was there received under a superb canopy, supported by the magistrates of the
city. The late ambassador to Portugal, Don Luis Sarmiento, who had negotiated
the marriage treaty, held the bridle of her mule; and in this state she arrived
at the palace of the duke of Alva, destined for her reception in Salamanca.
Here she was received with all honor by the duchess, in the presence of a
brilliant company of cavaliers and noble ladies. Each of the ladies was
graciously permitted by the infanta to kiss her hand; but the duchess, the
chronicler is careful to inform us, she distinguished by the honor of an
embrace.
All the
while, Philip had been in the presence of the infanta, unknown to herself.
Impatient to see his destined bride, the young prince had sallied out, with a
few attendants, to the distance of five or six miles from the city, all in the
disguise of huntsmen. He wore a slouched velvet hat on his head, and his face
was effectually concealed under a gauze mask, so that he could mingle in the
crowd by the side of the infanta, and make his own scrutiny, unmarked by any
one. In this way he accompanied the procession during the five hours which it
lasted, until the darkness had set in; “if darkness could be spoken of”, says
the chronicler, “where the blaze of ten thousand torches shed a light stronger
than day”.
The
following evening, November the twelfth, was appointed for the marriage. The
duke and duchess of Alva stood as sponsors, and the nuptial ceremony was
performed by Tavera, archbishop of Toledo. The festivities were prolonged
through another week. The saloons were filled with the beauty of Castile. The
proudest aristocracy in Europe vied with each other in the display of
magnificence at the banquet and the tourney: and sounds of merriment succeeded
to the tranquility which had so long reigned in the cloistered shades of
Salamanca.
On the
nineteenth of the month the new-married pair transferred their residence to
Valladolid,—a city at once fortunate and fatal to the princess. Well might the
chronicler call it “fatal”; for, in less than two years, July 8th, 1545, she
there gave birth to a son, the celebrated Don Carlos, whose mysterious fate has
furnished so fruitful a theme for speculation. Mary survived the birth of her
child but a few days. Had her life been spared, a mother's care might perhaps
have given a different direction to his character, and, through this, to his
fortunes. The remains of the infanta, first deposited in the cathedral of
Granada, were afterwards removed to the Escorial, that magnificent mausoleum
prepared by her husband for the royalty of Spain.
In the
following year died Tavera, archbishop of Toledo. He was an excellent man, and
greatly valued by the emperor; who may be thought to have passed a sufficient
encomium on his worth when he declared, that “by his death Philip had suffered
a greater loss than by that of Mary; for he could get another wife, but not
another Tavera”. His place was filled by Siliceo,
Philip’s early preceptor, who, after having been raised to the archiepiscopal
see of Toledo, received a cardinal's hat from Rome. The accommodating spirit of
the good ecclesiastic had doubtless some influence in his rapid advancement
from the condition of a poor teacher in Salamanca to the highest post,—as the
see of Toledo, with its immense revenues and authority, might be
considered,—next to the papacy, in the Christian Church.
For
some years, no event of importance occurred to disturb the repose of the
Peninsula. But the emperor was engaged in a stormy career abroad, in which his
arms were at length crowned with success by the decisive battle of Muhlberg.
This
victory, which secured him the person of his greatest enemy, placed him in a
position for dictating terms to the Protestant princes of Germany. He had
subsequently withdrawn to Brussels, where he received an embassy from Philip,
congratulating him on the success of his arms. Charles was desirous to see his
son, from whom he had now been separated nearly six years. He wished, moreover,
to introduce him to the Netherlands, and make him personally acquainted with
the people over whom he was one day to rule. He sent instructions, accordingly,
to Philip, to repair to Flanders, so soon as the person appointed to relieve
him in the government should arrive in Castile.
The individual
selected by the emperor for this office was Maximilian, the son of his brother
Ferdinand. He was a young man of good parts, correct judgment, and popular
manners,—well qualified, notwithstanding his youth, for the post assigned to
him. He was betrothed, as already mentioned, to the emperor’s eldest daughter,
his cousin Mary; and the regency was to be delivered into his hands on the
marriage of the parties.
Philip
received his father’s commands while presiding at the cortes of Monzon. He
found the Aragonese legislature by no means so
tractable as the Castilian. The deputies from the mountains of Aragon and from
the sea-coast of Catalonia were alike sturdy in their refusal to furnish
further supplies for those ambitious enterprises, which, whatever glory they
might bring to their sovereign, were of little benefit to them. The independent
people of these provinces urged their own claims with a pertinacity, and criticized
the conduct of their rulers with a bluntness, that was little grateful to the
ear of majesty. The convocation of the Aragonese cortes was, in the view of the king of Spain, what the convocation of a general
council was in that of the pope,—a measure not to be resorted to but from
absolute necessity.
On the
arrival of Maximilian in Castile, his marriage with the Infanta Mary was
immediately celebrated. The ceremony took place, with all the customary pomp,
in the courtly city of Valladolid. Among the festivities that followed may be
noticed the performance of a comedy of Ariosto,—a proof that the beautiful
Italian literature, which had exercised a visible influence on the compositions
of the great Castilian poets of the time, had now commended itself, in some
degree, to the popular taste.
Before
leaving the country, Philip, by his father’s orders, made a change in his
domestic establishment, which he formed on the Burgundian model. This was more
ceremonious, and far more costly, than the primitive usage of Castile. A
multitude of new offices was created, and the most important were filled by
grandees of the highest class. The duke of Alva was made mayor-domo mayor;
Antonio de Toledo, his kinsman, master of the horse; Figueroa, count of Feria,
captain of the body-guard. Among the chamberlains was Ruy Gomez de Silva,
prince of Eboli, one of the most important members of the cabinet under Philip.
Even the menial offices connected with the person and table of the prince were
held by men of rank. A guard was lodged in the palace. Philip dined in public
in great state, attended by his kings-at-arms, and by a host of minstrels and
musicians. One is reminded of the pompous etiquette of the court of Louis the
Fourteenth. All this, however, was distasteful to the Spaniards, who did not
comprehend why the prince should relinquish the simple usages of his own land
for the fashions of Burgundy. Neither was it to the taste of Philip himself;
but it suited that of his father, who was desirous that his son should flatter
the Flemings by the assumption of a state to which they had been accustomed in
their Burgundian princes.
Philip,
having now completed his arrangements, and surrendered the regency into the
hands of his brother-in-law, had no reason longer to postpone his journey. He
was accompanied by the duke of Alva, Enriquez, high-admiral of Castile, Ruy
Gomez, prince of Eboli, and a long train of persons of the highest rank. There
was, besides, a multitude of younger cavaliers of family. The proudest nobles
of the land contended for the honor of having their sons take part in the
expedition. The number was still further augmented by a body of artists and men
of science. The emperor was desirous that Philip should make an appearance that
would dazzle the imaginations of the people among whom he passed.
With
this brilliant company, Philip began his journey in the autumn of 1548. He took
the road to Saragossa, made an excursion to inspect the fortifications of
Perpignan, offered up his prayers at the shrine of Our Lady of Montserrat,
passed a day or two at Barcelona, enjoying the fête prepared for him in the
pleasant citron-gardens of the cardinal of Trent, and thence proceeded to the
port of Rosas, where a Genoese fleet, over which proudly waved the imperial
banner, was riding at anchor, and awaiting his arrival. It consisted of
fifty-eight vessels, furnished by Genoa, Sicily, and Naples, and commanded by
the veteran of a hundred battles, the famous Andrew Doria.
Philip
encountered some rough weather on his passage to Genoa. The doge and the
principal senators came out of port in a magnificent galley to receive him. The
prince landed, amidst the roar of cannon from the walls and the adjacent
fortifications, and was forthwith conducted to the mansion of the Dorias,
preeminent, even in this city of palaces, for its architectural splendor.
During
his stay in Genoa, Philip received all the attentions which an elegant
hospitality could devise. But his hours were not wholly resigned to pleasure.
He received, every day, embassies from the different Italian states, one of
which came from the pope, Paul the Third, with his nephew, Ottavio Farnese, at
its head. Its especial object was to solicit the prince’s interest with his
father, for the restitution of Parma and Placentia to the Holy See. Philip
answered in terms complimentary, indeed, says the historian, "but
sufficiently ambiguous as to the essential. He had already learned his first
lesson in kingcraft. Not long after, the pope sent him a consecrated sword, and
the hat worn by his holiness on Christmas eve, accompanied by an autograph letter,
in which, after expatiating on the mystic import of his gift, he expressed his
confidence that in Philip he was one day to find the true champion of the
Church.
At the
end of a fortnight, the royal traveler resumed his journey. He crossed the
famous battle-field of Pavia, and was shown the place where Francis the First
surrendered himself a prisoner, and where the Spanish ambuscade sallied out and
decided the fortune of the day. His bosom swelled with exultation, as he rode
over the ground made memorable by the most brilliant victory achieved by his
father,—a victory which opened the way to the implacable hatred of his
vanquished rival, and to oceans of blood.
From
Pavia he passed on to Milan, the flourishing capital of Lombardy,—the fairest
portion of the Spanish dominions in Italy. Milan was, at that time, second only
to Naples in population. It was second to no city in the elegance of its
buildings, the splendor of its aristocracy, the opulence and mechanical
ingenuity of its burghers. It was renowned, at the same time, for its delicate
fabrics of silk, and its armor, curiously wrought and inlaid with gold and
silver. In all the arts of luxury and material civilization, it was unsurpassed
by any of the capitals of Christendom.
As the
prince approached the suburbs, a countless throng of people came forth to greet
him. For fifteen miles before he entered the city, the road was spanned by
triumphal arches, garlanded with flowers and fruits, and bearing inscriptions,
both in Latin and Italian, filled with praises of the father and prognostics of
the future glory of the son. Amidst the concourse were to be seen the noble
ladies of Milan, in gay, fantastic cars, shining in silk brocade, and with
sumptuous caparisons for their horses. As he drew near the town, two hundred
mounted gentlemen came out to escort him into the place. They were clothed in
complete mail of the fine Milanese workmanship, and were succeeded by fifty
pages in gaudy livery, devoted to especial attendance on the prince's person,
during his residence in Milan.
Philip
entered the gates under a canopy of state, with the cardinal of Trent on his
right hand, and Philibert, prince of Piedmont, on his left. He was received, at
the entrance, by the governor of the place, attended by the members of the
senate, in their robes of office. The houses which lined the long street
through which the procession passed were hung with tapestries, and with
paintings of the great Italian masters. The balconies and verandahs were
crowded with spectators, eager to behold their future sovereign, and rending
the air with their acclamations. The ceremony of reception was closed, in the
evening, by a brilliant display of fireworks,—in which the Milanese
excelled,—and by a general illumination of the city.
Philip’s
time glided away, during his residence at Milan, in a succession of
banquets, fêtes, and spectacles of every description which the
taste and ingenuity of the people could devise for the amusement of their
illustrious guest. With none was he more pleased than with the theatrical
entertainments, conducted with greater elegance and refinement in Italy than in
any of the countries beyond the Alps. Nor was he always a passive spectator at
these festivities. He was especially fond of dancing, in which his light and
agile figure fitted him to excel. In the society of ladies he lost much of his
habitual reserve; and the dignified courtesy of his manners seems to have made
a favorable impression on the fair dames of Italy, who were probably not less
pleased by the display of his munificence. To the governor's wife, who had
entertained him at a splendid ball, he presented a diamond ring worth five
thousand ducats; and to her daughter he gave a necklace of rubies worth three
thousand. Similar presents, of less value, he bestowed on others of the court,
extending his liberality even to the musicians and inferior persons who had
contributed to his entertainment. To the churches he gave still more
substantial proofs of his generosity. In short, he showed, on all occasions, a
munificent spirit worthy of his royal station.
He took
some pains, moreover, to reciprocate the civilities he had received, by
entertaining his hosts in return. He was particularly fortunate in exhibiting
to them a curious spectacle, which, even with this pleasure-loving people, had
the rare merit of novelty. This was the graceful tourney introduced into
Castile from the Spanish Arabs. The highest nobles in his suite took the lead
in it. The cavaliers were arranged in six quadrilles, or factions, each wearing
its distinctive livery and badges, with their heads protected by shawls, or
turbans, wreathed around them in the Moorish fashion. They were mounted a
la gineta, that is, on the light jennet of
Andalusia,—a cross of the Arabian. In their hands they brandished their slender
lances, with long streamers attached to them, of some gay color, that denoted
the particular faction of the cavalier. Thus lightly equipped and mounted, the
Spanish knights went through the delicate maneuvers of the Moorish tilt of
reeds, showing an easy horsemanship, and performing feats of agility and grace,
which delighted the Italians, keenly alive to the beautiful, but hitherto
accustomed only to the more ponderous and clumsy exercises of the European tourney.
After
some weeks, Prince Philip quitted the hospitable walls of Milan, and set out
for the north. Before leaving the place, he was joined by a body of two hundred
mounted arquebusiers, wearing his own yellow uniform, and commanded by the duke
of Arschot. They had been sent to him as an escort by
his father. He crossed the Tyrol, then took the road by the way of Munich,
Trent, and Heidelberg, and so on towards Flanders. On all the route, the royal
party was beset by multitudes of both sexes, pressing to catch a glimpse of the
young prince who was one day to sway the mightiest scepter in Europe. The
magistrates of the cities through which he passed welcomed him with
complimentary addresses, and with presents, frequently in the form of silver
urns, or goblets, filled with golden ducats. Philip received the donatives with
a gracious condescension; and, in truth, they did not come amiss in this season
of lavish expenditure. To the addresses, the duke of Alva, who rode by the
prince's side, usually responded. The whole of the long journey was performed
on horseback,—the only sure mode of conveyance in a country where the roads
were seldom practicable for carriages.
At
length, after a journey of four months, the royal cavalcade drew near the city
of Brussels. Their approach to a great town was intimated by the crowds who
came to welcome them; and Philip was greeted with a tumultuous enthusiasm,
which made him feel that he was now indeed in the midst of his own people. The
throng was soon swelled by bodies of the military; and with this loyal escort,
amidst the roar of artillery and the ringing of bells, which sent forth a merry
peal from every tower and steeple, Philip made his first entrance into the
capital of Belgium.
The
Regent Mary held her court there, and her brother, the emperor, was occupying
the palace with her. It was not long before the father had again the
satisfaction of embracing his son, from whom he had been separated so many
years. He must have been pleased with the alteration which time had wrought in
Philip’s appearance. He was now twenty-one years of age, and was distinguished
by a comeliness of person, remarked upon by more than one who had access to his
presence. Their report is confirmed by the portraits of him from the pencil of
Titian,—taken before the freshness of youth had faded into the sallow hue of
disease, and when care and anxiety had not yet given a somber, perhaps sullen,
expression, to his features.
He had
a fair, and even delicate complexion. His hair and beard were of a light
yellow. His eyes were blue, with the eyebrows somewhat too closely knit
together. His nose was thin and aquiline. The principal blemish in his
countenance was his thick Austrian lip. His lower jaw protruded even more than
that of his father. To his father, indeed, he bore a great resemblance in his
lineaments, though those of Philip were of a less intellectual cast. In stature
he was somewhat below the middle height, with a slight, symmetrical figure and
well-made limbs. He was attentive to his dress, which was rich and elegant, but
without any affectation of ornament. His demeanor was grave with that
ceremonious observance which marked the old Castilian, and which may be thought
the natural expression of Philip’s slow and phlegmatic temperament.
During
his long residence in Brussels, Charles had the opportunity of superintending
his son’s education in one department in which it was deficient,—the science of
government. And, surely, no instructor could have been found with larger
experience than the man who had been at the head of all the great political
movements in Europe for the last quarter of a century. Philip passed some time,
every day, in his father’s cabinet, conversing with him on public affairs, or
attending the sessions of the council of state. It can hardly be doubted that
Charles, in his private instruction, inculcated on his son two principles so
prominent throughout Philip's administration,—to maintain the royal authority
in its full extent, and to enforce a strict conformity to the Roman Catholic
Communion. It is probable that he found his son an apt and docile scholar.
Philip acquired, at least, such habits of patient application, and of watching
over the execution of his own plans, as have been possessed by few princes.
The
great object of Philip’s visit to the Low Countries had been, to present
himself to the people of the different provinces, to study their peculiar
characters on their own soil, and obtain their recognition as their future
sovereign. After a long residence at Brussels, he set out on a tour through the
provinces. He was accompanied by the queen-regent, and by the same splendid
retinue as on his entrance into the country, with the addition of a large
number of the nobles.
The
Netherlands had ever been treated by Charles with particular favor, and, under
his royal patronage, although the country did not develop its resources as
under its own free institutions of a later period, it had greatly prospered. It
was more thickly studded with trading towns than any country of similar extent
in Europe; and its flourishing communities held the first rank in wealth,
industry, and commercial enterprise, as well as in the splendid way of living
maintained by the aristocracy. On the present occasion, these communities vied
with one another in their loyal demonstrations towards the prince, and in the
splendor of the reception which they gave him. A work was compiled by one of
the royal suite, setting forth the manifold honors paid to Philip through the
whole of the tour, which, even more than his former journey, had the aspect of
a triumphal progress. The book grew, under the hands of its patriotic author,
to the size of a bulky folio, which, however interesting to his contemporaries,
would have but slender attraction for the present generation. The mere
inscriptions emblazoned on the triumphal arches, and on the public buildings,
spread over a multitude of pages. They were both in Latin and in the language
of the country, and they augured the happy days in store for the nation, when,
under the benignant scepter of Philip, it should enjoy the sweets of tranquility
and freedom. Happy auguries! which showed that the prophet was not gifted with
the spirit of prophecy.
In
these solemnities, Antwerp alone expended fifty thousand pistoles. But no place
compared with Brussels in the costliness and splendor of its festivities, the
most remarkable of which was a tournament. Under their Burgundian princes the
Flemings had been familiar with these chivalrous pageants. The age of chivalry
was, indeed, fast fading away before the use of gunpowder and other
improvements in military science. But it was admitted that no tourney had been
maintained with so much magnificence and knightly prowess since the days of
Charles the Bold. The old chronicler’s narrative of the event, like the pages
of Froissart, seems instinct with the spirit of a feudal age. I will give a few
details, at the hazard of appearing trivial to those who may think we have
dwelt long enough on the pageants of the courts of Castile and Burgundy. But
such pageants form part of the natural accompaniment of a picturesque age, and
the illustrations they afford of the manners of the time may have an interest
for the student of history.
The
tourney was held in a spacious square, enclosed for the purpose, in front of
the great palace of Brussels. Four knights were prepared to maintain the field
against all comers, and jewels of price were to be awarded as the prize of the
victors. The four challengers were Count Mansfeldt, Count Hoorne, Count Aremberg, and the Sieur de Hubermont;
among the judges was the duke of Alva; and in the list of the successful
antagonists we find the names of Prince Philip of Spain, Emanuel Philibert,
duke of Savoy, and Count Egmont. These are names famous in history. It is
curious to observe how the men who were soon to be at a deadly feud with one
another were thus sportively met to celebrate the pastimes of chivalry.
The day
was an auspicious one, and the lists were crowded with the burghers of Brussels,
and the people of the surrounding country. The galleries which encompassed the
area were graced with the rank and beauty of the capital. A canopy, embroidered
with the imperial arms in crimson and gold, indicated the place occupied by
Charles the Fifth and his sisters, the regent of the Netherlands, and the
dowager queen of France.
For
several hours the field was gallantly maintained by the four challengers
against every knight who was ambitious to prove his prowess in the presence of
so illustrious an assembly. At length the trumpets sounded, and announced the
entrance of four cavaliers, whose brilliant train of followers intimated them
to be persons of high degree. The four knights were Prince Philip, the duke of
Savoy, Count Egmont, and Juan Manriquez de Lara, majordomo of the emperor. They
were clothed in complete mail, over which they wore surcoats of violet-colored
velvet, while the caparisons of their horses were of cloth of gold.
Philip
ran the first course. His antagonist was the Count Mansfeldt, a Flemish captain
of great renown. At the appointed signal, the two knights spurred against each
other, and met in the center of the lists with a shock that shivered their
lances to the very grasp. Both knights reeled in their saddles, but neither
lost his seat. The arena resounded with the plaudits of the spectators, not the
less hearty that one of the combatants was the heir apparent.
The other
cavaliers then tilted, with various success. A general tournament followed, in
which every knight eager to break a lance on this fair occasion took part; and
many a feat of arms was performed, doubtless long remembered by the citizens of
Brussels. At the end of the seventh hour a flourish of trumpets announced the
conclusion of the contest, and the assembly broke up in admirable order, the
knights retiring to change their heavy panoplies for the lighter vestments of
the ball-room. A banquet was prepared by the municipality, in a style of
magnificence worthy of their royal guests. The emperor and his sisters honored
it with their presence, and witnessed the distribution of the prizes. Among
these, a brilliant ruby, the prize awarded for the lança de las damas,—the “ladies’ lance”, in the
language of chivalry,—was assigned by the loyal judges to Prince Philip of
Spain.
Dancing
succeeded to the banquet; and the high-bred courtesy of the prince was as much
commended in the ball-room as his prowess had been in the lists. Maskers
mingled with the dancers in Oriental costume, some in the Turkish, others in
the Albanian fashion. The merry revels were not prolonged beyond the hour of
midnight, when the company broke up, loudly commending, as they withdrew, the
good cheer afforded them by the hospitable burghers of Brussels.
Philip
won the prize on another occasion, when he tilted against a valiant knight,
named Quiñones. He was not so fortunate in an encounter with the son of his old
preceptor, Zuñiga, in which he was struck with such force on the head, that,
after being carried some distance by his horse, he fell senseless from the
saddle. The alarm was great, but the accident passed away without serious
consequences.
There
were those who denied him skill in the management of his lance. Marillac, the
French ambassador at the imperial court, speaking of a tourney given by Philip
in honor of the princess of Lorraine, at Augsburg, says he never saw worse
lance-playing in his life. At another time he remarks, that the Spanish prince
could not even hit his antagonist. It must have been a very palpable hit to be
noticed by a Frenchman. The French regarded the Spaniards of that day in much
the same manner as they regarded the English at an earlier period, or as they
have continued to regard them at a later. The long rivalry of the French and
Spanish monarchs had infused into the breasts of their subjects such feelings
of mutual aversion, that the opinions of either nation in reference to the
other, in the sixteenth century, must be received with the greatest distrust.
But,
whatever may have been Philip’s success in these chivalrous displays, it is
quite certain they were not to his taste. He took part in them only to conform
to his father's wishes, and to the humor of the age. Though in his youth he
sometimes hunted, he was neither fond of field-sports nor of the athletic
exercises of chivalry. His constitution was far from robust. He sought to
invigorate it less by exercise than by diet. He confined himself almost wholly
to meat, as the most nutritious food, abstaining even from fish; as well as
from fruit. Besides his indisposition to active exercises, he had no relish for
the gaudy spectacles so fashionable in that romantic age. The part he had
played in the pageants, during his long tour, had not been of his own seeking.
Though ceremonious, and exacting deference from all who approached him, he was
not fond of the pomp and parade of a court life. He preferred to pass his hours
in the privacy of his own apartment, where he took pleasure in the conversation
of a few whom he honored with his regard. It was with difficulty that the
emperor could induce him to leave his retirement and present himself in the
audience-chamber, or accompany him on visits of ceremony.
These
reserved and quiet tastes of Philip by no means recommended him to the
Flemings, accustomed as they were to the pomp and profuse magnificence of the
Burgundian court. Their free and social tempers were chilled by his austere
demeanor. They contrasted it with the affable deportment of his father, who
could so well conform to the customs of the different nations under his scepter,
and who seemed perfectly to comprehend their characters,—the astute policy of
the Italian, the home-bred simplicity of the German, and the Castilian
propriety and point of honor. With the latter only of these had Philip anything
in common. He was in everything a Spaniard. He talked of nothing, seemed to
think of nothing, but Spain. The Netherlands were to him a foreign land, with
which he had little sympathy. His counsellors and companions were wholly
Spanish. The people of Flanders felt, that, under his sway, little favor was to
be shown to them; and they looked forward to the time when all the offices of
trust in their own country would be given to Castilians, in the same manner as
those of Castile, in the early days of Charles the Fifth, had been given to
Flemings.
Yet the
emperor seemed so little aware of his son's unpopularity, that he was at this
very time making arrangements for securing to him the imperial crown. He had
summoned a meeting of the electors and great lords of the empire, to be held at
Augsburg, in August, 1550. There he proposed to secure Philip's election as
king of the Romans, so soon as he had obtained his brother Ferdinand’s
surrender of that dignity. But Charles did not show, in all this, his usual
knowledge of human nature. The lust of power on his son’s account—ineffectual
for happiness as he had found the possession of it in his own case—seems to
have entirely blinded him.
He
repaired with Philip to Augsburg, where they were met by Ferdinand and the
members of the German diet. But it was in vain that Charles solicited his
brother to waive his claim to the imperial succession in favor of his nephew.
Neither solicitations nor arguments, backed by the entreaties, even the tears,
it is said, of their common sister, the Regent Mary, could move Ferdinand to
forego the splendid inheritance. Charles was not more successful when he
changed his ground, and urged his brother to acquiesce in Philip’s election as
his successor in the dignity of king of the Romans; or, at least, in his being
associated in that dignity—a thing unprecedented—with his cousin Maximilian,
Ferdinand's son, who, it was understood, was destined by the electors to
succeed his father.
This
young prince, who meanwhile had been summoned to Augsburg, was as little
disposed as Ferdinand had been to accede to the proposals of his too grasping
father-in-law; though he courteously alleged, as the ground of his refusal,
that he had no right to interfere with the decision of the electors. He might
safely rest his cause on their decision. They had no desire to perpetuate the
imperial sceptre in the line of Castilian monarchs.
They had suffered enough from the despotic temper of Charles the Fifth; and
this temper they had no reason to think would be mitigated in the person of
Philip.
They
desired a German to rule over them,—one who would understand the German
character, and enter heartily into the feelings of the people. Maximilian's
directness of purpose and kindly nature had won largely on the affections of
his countrymen, and proved him, in their judgment, worthy of the throne.
Philip,
on the other hand, was even more distasteful to the Germans than he was to the
Flemings. It was in vain that, at their banquets, he drank twice or thrice as
much as he was accustomed to do, until the cardinal of Trent assured him that
he was fast gaining in the good graces of the people. The natural haughtiness
of his temper showed itself on too many occasions to be mistaken. When Charles
returned to his palace, escorted, as he usually was, by a train of nobles and
princes of the empire, he would courteously take them by the hand, and raise
his hat, as he parted from them. But Philip, it was observed, on like
occasions, walked directly into the palace, without so much as turning round,
or condescending in any way to notice the courtiers who had accompanied him.
This was taking higher ground even than his father had done. In fact, it was
said of him, that he considered himself greater than his father, inasmuch as
the son of an emperor was greater than the son of a king!—a foolish vaunt, not
the less indicative of his character, that it was made for him, probably, by
the Germans. In short, Philip's manners, which, in the language of a
contemporary, had been little pleasing to the Italians, and positively
displeasing to the Flemings, were altogether odious to the Germans.
Nor was
the idea of Philip’s election at all more acceptable to the Spaniards
themselves. That nation had been long enough regarded as an appendage to the
empire. Their pride had been wounded by the light in which they were held by
Charles, who seemed to look on Spain as a royal domain, valuable chiefly for
the means it afforded him for playing his part on the great theatre of Europe.
The haughty Castilian of the sixteenth century, conscious of his superior
pretensions, could ill brook this abasement. He sighed for a prince born and
bred in Spain, who would be content to pass his life in Spain, and would have
no ambition unconnected with her prosperity and glory. The Spaniards were even
more tenacious on this head than the Germans. Their remote situation made them
more exclusive, mere strictly national, and less tolerant of foreign influence.
They required a Spaniard to rule over them. Such was Philip; and they
anticipated the hour when Spain should be divorced from the empire, and, under
the sway of a patriotic prince, rise to her just preeminence among the nations.
Yet
Charles, far from yielding, continued to press the point with such pertinacity,
that it seemed likely to lead to an open rupture between the different branches
of his family. For a time Ferdinand kept his apartment, and had no intercourse
with Charles or his sister. Yet in the end the genius or the obstinacy of
Charles so far prevailed over his brother, that he acquiesced in a private
compact, by which, while he was to retain possession of the imperial crown, it
was agreed that Philip should succeed him as king of the Romans, and that
Maximilian should succeed Philip. Ferdinand hazarded little by concessions
which could never be sanctioned by the electoral college. The reverses which
befell the emperor's arms in the course of the following year destroyed
whatever influence he might have possessed in that body; and he seems never to
have revived his schemes for aggrandizing his son by securing to him the
succession to the empire.
Philip
had now accomplished the great object of his visit. He had presented himself to
the people of the Netherlands, and had received their homage as heir to the
realm. His tour had been, in some respects, a profitable one. It was scarcely
possible that a young man, whose days had hitherto been passed within the
narrow limits of his own country, for ever under the same local influences,
should not have his ideas greatly enlarged by going abroad and mingling with
different nations. It was especially important to Philip to make himself
familiar, as none but a resident can be, with the character and institutions of
those nations over whom he was one day to preside. Yet his visit to the
Netherlands had not been attended with the happiest results. He evidently did
not make a favorable impression on the people. The more they saw of him, the
less they appeared to like him. Such impressions are usually reciprocal; and
Philip seems to have parted from the country with little regret. Thus, in the
first interview between the future sovereign and his subjects, the symptoms
might already be discerned of that alienation which was afterwards to widen
into a permanent and irreparable breach.
Philip,
anxious to reach Castile, pushed forward his journey, without halting to
receive the civilities that were everywhere tendered to him on his route. He
made one exception at Trent, where the ecclesiastical council was holding the
memorable session that occupies so large a share in Church annals. On his
approach to the city, the cardinal legate, attended by the mitered prelates and
other dignitaries of the council, came out in a body to receive him. During his
stay there, he was entertained with masks, dancing, theatrical exhibitions, and
jousts, contrived to represent scenes in Ariosto. These diversions of the
reverend fathers formed a whimsical contrast, perhaps a welcome relief, to
their solemn occupation of digesting a creed for the Christian world.
From
Trent Philip pursued his way, with all expedition, to Genoa, where he embarked,
under the flag of the veteran Doria, who had brought him from Spain. He landed
at Barcelona, on the twelfth day of July, 1551, and proceeded at once to
Valladolid, where he resumed the government of the kingdom. He was fortified by
a letter from his father, dated at Augsburg, which contained ample instructions
as to the policy he was to pursue, and freely discussed both the foreign and
domestic relations of the country. The letter, which is very long, shows that
the capacious mind of Charles, however little time he could personally give to
the affairs of the monarchy, fully comprehended its internal condition and the
extent of its resources.
The
following years were years of humiliation to Charles; years marked by the
flight from Innsbruck, and the disastrous siege of Metz,—when, beaten by the
Protestants, foiled by the French, the reverses of the emperor pressed heavily
on his proud heart, and did more, probably, than all the homilies of his
ghostly teachers, to disgust him with the world and its vanities.
Yet
these reverses made little impression on Spain. The sounds of war died away
before they reached the foot of the Pyrenees. Spain, it is true, sent forth her
sons, from time to time, to serve under the banners of Charles; and it was in
that school that was perfected the admirable system of discipline and tactics
which, begun by the Great Captain, made the Spanish infantry the most
redoubtable in Europe. But the great body of the people felt little interest in
the success of these distant enterprises, where success brought them no good.
Not that the mind of Spain was inactive, or oppressed with the lethargy which
stole over it in a later age. There was, on the contrary, great intellectual
activity. She was excluded, by an arbitrary government, from pushing her
speculations in the regions of theological or political science. But this, to a
considerable extent, was the case with most of the neighboring nations; and she
indemnified herself for this exclusion by a more diligent cultivation of
elegant literature. The constellation of genius had already begun to show
itself above the horizon, which was to shed a glory over the meridian and the
close of Philip’s reign. The courtly poets in the reign of his father had
confessed the influence of Italian models, derived through the recent
territorial acquisitions in Italy. But the national taste was again asserting
its supremacy; and the fashionable tone of composition was becoming more and
more accommodated to the old Castilian standard.
It
would be impossible that any departure from a national standard should be long
tolerated in Spain, where the language, the manners, the dress, the usages of
the country, were much the same as they had been for generations,—as they
continued to be for generations, long after Cervantes held up the mirror of
fiction, to reflect the traits of the national existence more vividly than is
permitted to the page of the chronicler. In the rude romances of the fourteenth
and the fifteenth century, the Castilian of the sixteenth might see his way of
life depicted with tolerable accuracy. The amorous cavalier still thrummed his
guitar, by moonlight, under the balcony of his mistress, or wore her favors at
the Moorish tilt of reeds. The common people still sung their lively
seguidillas, or crowded to the fiestas de toros,—the cruel
bull-fights,—or to the more cruel autos de fé.
This last spectacle, of comparatively recent origin,—in the time of Ferdinand
and Isabella,—was the legitimate consequence of the long wars with the Moslems,
which made the Spaniard intolerant of religious infidelity. Atrocious as it
seems in a more humane and enlightened age, it was regarded by the ancient
Spaniard as a sacrifice grateful to Heaven, at which he was to rekindle the
dormant embers of his own religious sensibilities.
The
cessation of the long Moorish wars by the fall of Granada, made the most
important change in the condition of the Spaniards. They, however, found a vent
for their chivalrous fanaticism, in a crusade against the heathen of the New
World. Those who returned from their wanderings brought back to Spain little of
foreign usages and manners; for the Spaniard was the only civilized man whom
they found in the wilds of America.
Thus
passed the domestic life of the Spaniard, in the same unvaried circle of
habits, opinions, and prejudices, to the exclusion, and probably contempt of
everything foreign. Not that these habits did not differ in the different
provinces, where their distinctive peculiarities were handed down, with
traditional precision, from father to son. But, beneath these, there was one
common basis of the national character. Never was there a people, probably,
with the exception of the Jews, distinguished by so intense a nationality. It
was among such a people, and under such influences, that Philip was born and
educated. His temperament and his constitution of mind peculiarly fitted him
for the reception of these influences; and the Spaniards, as he grew in years,
beheld, with pride and satisfaction, in their future sovereign, the most
perfect type of the national character.
CHAPTER III.
ENGLISH ALLIANCE. 1553-1554.
In the summer
of 1553, three years after Philip’s return to Spain, occurred an event which
was to exercise a considerable influence on his fortunes. This was the death of
Edward the Sixth of England,—after a brief but important reign. He was
succeeded by his sister Mary, that unfortunate princess, whose sobriquet of
“Bloody” gives her a melancholy distinction among the sovereigns of the house
of Tudor.
The reign
of her father, Henry the Eighth, had opened the way to the great revolution in
religion, the effects of which were destined to be permanent. Yet Henry himself
showed his strength rather in unsettling ancient institutions than in
establishing new ones. By the abolition of the monasteries, he broke up that
spiritual militia which was a most efficacious instrument for maintaining the
authority of Rome; and he completed the work of independence by seating himself
boldly in the chair of St. Peter, and assuming the authority of head of the
Church. Thus, while the supremacy of the pope was rejected, the Roman Catholic
religion was maintained in its essential principles unimpaired. In other words,
the nation remained Catholics, but not Papists.
The
impulse thus given under Henry was followed up to more important consequences
under his son, Edward the Sixth. The opinions of the German Reformers,
considerably modified, especially in regard to the exterior forms and
discipline of worship, met with a cordial welcome from the ministers of the
young monarch. Protestantism became the religion of the land; and the Church of
England received, to a great extent, the peculiar organization which it has
preserved to the present day. But Edward’s reign was too brief to allow the new
opinions to take deep root in the hearts of the people. The greater part of the
aristocracy soon showed that, whatever religious zeal they had affected, they
were not prepared to make any sacrifice of their temporal interests. On the
accession of a Catholic queen to the throne, a reaction soon became visible.
Some embarrassment to a return to the former faith was found in the restitution
which it might naturally involve of the confiscated property of the monastic
orders. But the politic concessions of Rome dispensed with this severe trial of
the sincerity of its new proselytes; and England, after repudiating her
heresies, was received into the fold of the Roman Catholic Church, and placed
once more under the jurisdiction of its pontiff.
After
the specimens given of the ready ductility with which the English of that day
accommodated their religious creeds to the creed of their sovereign, we shall
hardly wonder at the caustic criticism of the Venetian ambassador, resident at
the court of London, in Queen Mary's time. “The example and authority of the
sovereign”, he says, “are everything with the people of this country in matters
of faith. As he believes, they believe; Judaism or Mahometanism,—it
is all one to them. They conform themselves easily to his will, at least so far
as the outward show is concerned; and most easily of all where it concurs with
their own pleasure and profit”.
The
ambassador, Giovanni Micheli, was one of that order of merchant-princes
employed by Venice in her foreign missions; men whose acquaintance with affairs
enabled them to comprehend the resources of the country to which they were
sent, as well as the intrigues of its court. Their observations were digested
into elaborate reports, which, on their return to Venice, were publicly read
before the doge and the senate. The documents thus prepared form some of the
most valuable and authentic materials for the history of Europe in the
sixteenth century. Micheli’s report is diffuse on the condition of England
under the reign of Queen Mary; and some of his remarks will have interest for
the reader of the present day, as affording a standard of comparison with the past.
London
he eulogizes, as one of the noblest capitals in Europe, containing, with its
suburbs, about a hundred and eighty thousand souls. The great lords, as in
France and Germany, passed most of their time on their estates in the country.
The
kingdom was strong enough, if united, to defy any invasion from abroad. Yet its
navy was small, having dwindled, from neglect and an ill-judged economy, to not
more than forty vessels of war. But the mercantile marine could furnish two
thousand more, which, at a short notice, could be well equipped and got ready
for sea. The army was particularly strong in artillery, and provided with all
the munitions of war. The weapon chiefly in repute was the bow, to which the
English people were trained from early youth. In their cavalry they were most
defective. Horses were abundant, but wanted bottom. They were, for the most
part, light, weak, and grass-fed. The nation was, above all, to be envied for
the lightness of the public burdens. There were no taxes on wine, beer, salt,
cloth, nor, indeed, on any of the articles that in other countries furnished
the greatest sources of revenue. The whole revenue did not usually exceed two
hundred thousand pounds. Parliaments were rarely summoned, except to save the
king trouble or to afford a cloak to his designs. No one ventured to resist the
royal will; servile the members came there, and servile they remained.—An
Englishman of the nineteenth century may smile at the contrast presented by
some of these remarks to the condition of the nation at the present day; though
in the item of taxation the contrast may be rather fitted to provoke a sigh.
The
portrait of Queen Mary is given by the Venetian minister, with a coloring
somewhat different from that in which she is commonly depicted by English
historians. She was about thirty-six years of age at the time of her accession.
In stature, she was of rather less than the middle size,—not large, as was the
case with both her father and mother,—and exceedingly well made. “The portraits
of her”, says Micheli, “show that in her youth she must have been not only
good-looking, but even handsome;—though her countenance, when he saw her,
exhibited traces of early trouble and disease”. But whatever she had lost in
personal attractions was fully made up by those of the mind. She was quick of
apprehension, and, like her younger sister, Elizabeth, was mistress of several
languages, three of which, the French, Spanish, and Latin, she could speak; the
last with fluency. But in these accomplishments she was surpassed by her
sister, who knew the Greek well, and could speak Italian with ease and
elegance. Mary, however, both spoke and wrote her own language in a plain,
straightforward manner, that forms a contrast to the ambiguous phrase and cold
conceits in which Elizabeth usually conveyed, or rather concealed, her
sentiments.
Mary
had the misfortune to labor under a chronic infirmity, which confined her for
weeks, and indeed months, of every year to her chamber, and which, with her
domestic troubles, gave her an air of melancholy, that in later years settled
into a repulsive austerity. The tones of her voice were masculine, says the
Venetian, and her eyes inspired a feeling, not merely of reverence, but of
fear, wherever she turned them. Her spirit he adds, was lofty and magnanimous,
never discomposed by danger, showing in all things a blood truly royal.
Her
piety, he continues, and her patience under affliction, cannot be too greatly
admired. Sustained, as she was, by a lively faith and conscious innocence, he
compares her to a light which the fierce winds have no power to extinguish, but
which still shines on with increasing luster. She waited her time, and was
plainly reserved by Providence for a great destiny.—We are reading the language
of the loyal Catholic, grateful for the services which Mary had rendered to the
faith.
Yet it
would be uncharitable not to believe that Mary was devout, and most earnest in
her devotion. The daughter of Katharine of Aragon, the granddaughter of
Isabella of Castile, could hardly have been otherwise. The women of that royal
line were uniformly conspicuous for their piety, though this was too often
tinctured with bigotry. In Mary, bigotry degenerated into fanaticism, and
fanaticism into the spirit of persecution. The worst evils are probably those
that have flowed from fanaticism. Yet the amount of the mischief does not
necessarily furnish us with the measure of guilt in the author of it. The
introduction of the Inquisition into Spain must be mainly charged on Isabella.
Yet the student of her reign will not refuse to this great queen the praise of
tenderness of conscience and a sincere desire to do the right. Unhappily, the
faith in which she, as well as her royal granddaughter, was nurtured, taught
her to place her conscience in the keeping of ministers less scrupulous than
herself; and on those ministers may fairly rest much of the responsibility of
measures on which they only were deemed competent to determine.
Mary’s
sincerity in her religious professions was placed beyond a doubt by the
readiness with which she submitted to the sacrifice of her personal interests
whenever the interests of religion seemed to demand it. She burned her
translation of a portion of Erasmus, prepared with great labor, at the
suggestion of her confessor. An author will readily estimate the value of such
a sacrifice. One more important, and intelligible to all, was the resolute
manner in which she persisted in restoring the Church property which had been
confiscated to the use of the crown. “The crown is too much impoverished to
admit of it”, remonstrated her ministers. “I would rather lose ten crowns”,
replied the high-minded queen, “than place my soul in peril”.
Yet it
cannot be denied, that Mary had inherited, in full measure, some of the sterner
qualities of her father, and that she was wanting in that sympathy for human
suffering which is so graceful in a woman. After a rebellion, the reprisals
were terrible. London was converted into a charnel-house; and the squares and
principal streets were garnished with the unsightly trophies of the heads and
limbs of numerous victims who had fallen by the hand of the executioner. This
was in accordance with the spirit of the age. But the execution of the
unfortunate Lady Jane Grey—the young, the beautiful, and the good—leaves a blot
on the fame of Mary, which finds no parallel but in the treatment of the
ill-fated queen of Scots by Elizabeth.
Mary’s
treatment of Elizabeth has formed another subject of reproach, though the
grounds of it are not sufficiently made out; and, at all events, many
circumstances may be alleged in extenuation of her conduct. She had seen her
mother, the noble-minded Katharine, exposed to the most cruel indignities, and
compelled to surrender her bed and her throne to an artful rival, the mother of
Elizabeth. She had heard herself declared illegitimate, and her right to the
succession set aside in favor of her younger sister. Even after her intrepid
conduct had secured to her the crown, she was still haunted by the same gloomy
apparition. Elizabeth’s pretensions were constantly brought before the public;
and Mary might well be alarmed by the disclosure of conspiracy after
conspiracy, the object of which, it was rumored, was to seat her sister on the
throne. As she advanced in years, Mary had the further mortification of seeing
her rival gain on those affections of the people which had grown cool to her.
Was it wonderful that she should regard her sister, under these circumstances,
with feelings of distrust and aversion? That she did so regard her is asserted
by the Venetian minister; and it is plain that, during the first years of
Mary’s reign, Elizabeth’s life hung upon a thread. Yet Mary had strength of
principle sufficient to resist the importunities of Charles the Fifth and his
ambassador, to take the life of Elizabeth, as a thing indispensable to her own
safety and that of Philip. Although her sister was shown to be privy, though
not openly accessory, to the grand rebellion under Wyatt, Mary would not
constrain the law from its course to do her violence. This was something, under
the existing circumstances, in an age so unscrupulous. After this storm had
passed over, Mary, whatever restraint she imposed on her real feelings, treated
Elizabeth, for the most part, with a show of kindness, though her name still
continued to be mingled, whether with or without cause, with more than one
treasonable plot. Mary's last act—perhaps the only one in which she openly
resisted the will of her husband—was to refuse to compel her sister to accept
the hand of Philibert of Savoy. Yet this act would have relieved her of the
presence of her rival; and by it Elizabeth would have forfeited her independent
possession of the crown,—perhaps the possession of it altogether. It may be
doubted whether Elizabeth, under similar circumstances, would have shown the
like tenderness to the interests of her successor.
But,
however we may be disposed to extenuate the conduct of Mary, and in spiritual
matters, more especially, to transfer the responsibility of her acts from
herself to her advisers, it is not possible to dwell on this reign of religious
persecution without feelings of profound sadness. Not that the number of
victims compares with what is recorded of many similar periods of persecution.
The whole amount, falling probably short of three hundred who perished at the
stake, was less than the number who fell by the hand of the executioner, or by
violence, during the same length of time under Henry the Eighth. It was not
much greater than might sometimes be found at a single Spanish auto de fé. But Spain was the land in which this might be
regarded as the national spectacle,—as much so as the fiesta de toros,
or any other of the popular exhibitions of the country. In England, a few
examples had not sufficed to steel the hearts of men against these horrors. The
heroic company of martyrs, condemned to the most agonizing of deaths for
asserting the rights of conscience, was a sight strange and shocking to
Englishmen. The feelings of that day have been perpetuated to the present. The
reign of religious persecution stands out by itself, as something distinct from
the natural course of events; and the fires of Smithfield shed a melancholy
radiance over this page of the national history, from which the eye of humanity
turns away in pity and disgust.—But it is time to take up the narrative of
events which connected for a brief space the political interests of Spain with
those of England.
Charles
the Fifth had always taken a lively interest in the fortunes of his royal
kinswoman. When a young man he had paid a visit to England, and while there had
been induced by his aunt, Queen Katharine, to contract a marriage with the
Princess Mary,—then only six years old,—to be solemnized on her arriving at the
suitable age. But the term was too remote for the constancy of Charles, or, as
it is said, for the patience of his subjects, who earnestly wished to see their
sovereign wedded to a princess who might present him with an heir to the
monarchy. The English match was, accordingly, broken off, and the young emperor
gave his hand to Isabella of Portugal.
Mary,
who, since her betrothal, had been taught to consider herself as the future
bride of the emperor, was at the time but eleven years old. She was old enough,
however, to feel something like jealousy, it is said, and to show some pique at
this desertion by her imperial lover. Yet this circumstance did not prevent the
most friendly relations from subsisting between the parties in after years; and
Charles continued to watch over the interests of his kinswoman, and interposed,
with good effect, in her behalf, on more than one occasion, both during the
reign of Henry the Eighth and of his son, Edward the Sixth. On the death of the
latter monarch, he declared himself ready to assist Mary in maintaining her
right to the succession; and, when this was finally established, the wary
emperor took the necessary measures for turning it to his own account.
He
formed a scheme for uniting Philip with Mary, and thus securing to his son the
possession of the English crown, in the same manner as that of Scotland had
been secured by marriage to the son of his rival, Henry the Second of France.
It was, doubtless, a great error to attempt to bring under one rule nations so
dissimilar in every particular, and having interests so incompatible as the
Spaniards and the English. Historians have regarded it as passing strange, that
a prince, who had had such large experience of the difficulties attending the
government of kingdoms remote from each other, should seek so to multiply these
difficulties on the head of his inexperienced son. But the love of acquisition
is a universal principle; nor is it often found that the appetite for more is
abated by the consideration that the party is already possessed of more than he
can manage.
It was
a common opinion, that Mary intended to bestow her hand on her young and
handsome kinsman, Courtenay, earl of Devonshire, whom she had withdrawn from
the prison in which he had languished for many years, and afterwards treated
with distinguished favor. Charles, aware of this, instructed Renard, his
minister at the court of London, a crafty, intriguing politician, to sound the
queen’s inclinations on the subject, but so as not to alarm her. He was to
dwell, particularly, on the advantages Mary would derive from a connection with
some powerful foreign prince, and to offer his master's counsel, in this or any
other matter in which she might desire it. The minister was to approach the
subject of the earl of Devonshire with the greatest caution; remembering that,
if the queen had a fancy for her cousin, and was like other women, she would
not be turned from it by anything that he might say, nor would she readily
forgive any reflection upon it. Charles seems to have been as well read in the
characters of women as of men; and, as a natural consequence, it may be added,
had formed a high estimate of the capacity of the sex. In proof of which, he
not only repeatedly committed the government of his states to women, but entrusted
them with some of his most delicate political negotiations.
Mary,
if she had ever entertained the views imputed to her in respect to Courtenay,
must have soon been convinced that his frivolous disposition would ill suit the
seriousness of hers. However this may be, she was greatly pleased when Renard
hinted at her marriage,—“laughing”, says the envoy, “not once, but several
times, and giving me a significant look, which showed that the idea was very
agreeable to her, plainly intimating at the same time that she had no desire to
marry an Englishman”. In a subsequent conversation, when Renard ventured to
suggest that the prince of Spain was a suitable match, Mary broke in upon him,
saying that “she had never felt the smart of what people called love, nor had
ever so much as thought of being married, until Providence had raised her to
the throne; and that, if she now consented to it, it would be in opposition to
her own feelings, from a regard to the public good”; but she begged the envoy
to assure the emperor of her wish to obey and to please him in everything, as she
would her own father; intimating, however, that she could not broach the
subject of her marriage to her council; the question could only be opened by a
communication from him.
Charles,
who readily saw through Mary’s coquetry, no longer hesitated to prefer the suit
of Philip. After commending the queen's course in regard to Courtenay, he
presented to her the advantages that must arise from such a foreign alliance as
would strengthen her on the throne. He declared, in a tone of gallantry rather
amusing, that, if it were not for his age and increasing infirmities, he should
not hesitate to propose himself as her suitor. The next best thing was to offer
her the person dearest to his heart,—his son, the prince of Asturias. He
concluded by deprecating the idea that any recommendation of his should
interfere, in the least degree, with the exercise of her better judgment.
Renard
was further to intimate to the queen the importance of secrecy in regard to
this negotiation. If she were disinclined to the proposed match, it would be
obviously of no advantage to give it publicity. If, on the other hand, as the
emperor had little doubt, she looked on it favorably, but desired to advise
with her council before deciding, Renard was to dissuade her from the latter
step, and advise her to confide in him. The wary emperor had a twofold motive
for these instructions. There was a negotiation on foot at this very time for a
marriage of Philip to the infanta of Portugal, and Charles wished to be
entirely assured of Mary’s acquiescence, before giving such publicity to the
affair as might defeat the Portuguese match, which would still remain for
Philip, should he not succeed with the English queen. In case Mary proved
favorable to his son's suit, Charles, who knew the abhorrence in which
foreigners were held by the English beyond all other nations, wished to gain
time before communicating with Mary's council. With some delay, he had no doubt
that he had the means of winning over a sufficient number of that body to
support Philip's pretensions.
These communications
could not be carried on so secretly but that some rumor of them reached the
ears of Mary's ministers, and of Noailles, the French ambassador at the court
of London. This person was a busy and unscrupulous politician, who saw with
alarm the prospect of Spain strengthening herself by this alliance with
England, and determined, accordingly, in obedience to instructions from home,
to use every effort to defeat it. The queen's ministers, with the chancellor,
Gardiner, bishop of Winchester, at their head, felt a similar repugnance to the
Spanish match. The name of the Spaniards had become terrible from the
remorseless manner in which their wars had been conducted during the present
reign, especially in the New World. The ambition and the widely-extended
dominions of Charles the Fifth made him the most formidable sovereign in
Europe. The English looked with apprehension on so close an alliance with a
prince who had shown too little regard for the liberties of his own land to
make it probable that he or his son would respect those of another. Above all,
they dreaded the fanaticism of the Spaniards; and the gloomy specter of the
Inquisition moving in their train made even the good Catholic shudder at the
thought of the miseries that might ensue from this ill-omened union.
It was
not difficult for Noailles and the chancellor to communicate their own distrust
to the members of the parliament, then in session. A petition to the queen was
voted in the lower house, in which the commons preferred an humble request that
she would marry for the good of the realm, but besought her, at the same time,
not to go abroad for her husband, but to select him among her own subjects.
Mary’s
ministers did not understand her character so well as Charles the Fifth did,
when he cautioned his agent not openly to thwart her. Opposition only fixed her
more strongly in her original purpose. In a private interview with Renard, she
told him that she was apprised of Gardiner's intrigues, and that Noailles, too,
was doing the impossible to prevent her union with Philip.
“But I will be a match for them”, she added. Soon after, taking the ambassador,
at midnight, into her oratory, she knelt before the host, and, having repeated
the hymn Veni Creator, solemnly pledged herself to take no other
man for her husband than the prince of Spain.
This
proceeding took place on the thirtieth of October. On the seventeenth of the
month following, the commons waited on the queen at her palace of Whitehall, to
which she was confined by indisposition, and presented their address. Mary,
instead of replying by her chancellor, as was usual, answered them in person.
She told them, that from God she held her crown, and that to him alone should
she turn for counsel in a matter so important; she had not yet made up her mind
to marry; but since they considered it so necessary for the weal of the
kingdom, she would take it into consideration. It was a matter in which no one
was so much interested as herself. But they might be assured that, in her
choice, she would have regard to the happiness of her people, full as much as
to her own. The commons, who had rarely the courage to withstand the frown of
their Tudor princes, professed themselves contented with this assurance; and,
from this moment, opposition ceased from that quarter.
Mary’s
arguments were reinforced by more conciliatory, but not less efficacious
persuasives, in the form of gold crowns, gold chains, and other compliments of
the like nature, which were distributed pretty liberally by the Spanish
ambassador among the members of her council.
In the
following December, a solemn embassy left Brussels, to wait on Mary and tender
her the hand of Philip. It was headed by Lamoral,
Count Egmont, the Flemish noble so distinguished in later years by his military
achievements, and still more by his misfortunes. He was attended by a number of
Flemish lords and a splendid body of retainers. He landed in Kent, where the
rumor went abroad that it was Philip himself; and so general was the
detestation of the Spanish match among the people, that it might have gone hard
with the envoy, had the mistake not been discovered. Egmont sailed up the
Thames, and went ashore at Tower Wharf, on the second of January, 1554. He was
received with all honor by Lord William Howard and several of the great English
nobles, and escorted in much state to Westminster, where his table was supplied
at the charge of the city. Gardiner entertained the embassy at a sumptuous
banquet; and the next day Egmont and his retinue proceeded to Hampton Court,
“where they had great cheer”, says an old chronicler, “and hunted the deer, and
were so greedy of their destruction, that they gave them not fair play for
their lives; for”, as he peevishly complains, “they killed rag and tag, with
hands and swords”.
On the
twelfth, the Flemish count was presented to the queen, and tendered her
proposals of marriage in behalf of Prince Philip. Mary, who probably thought
she had made advances enough, now assumed a more reserved air. “It was not for
a maiden queen”, she said, “thus publicly to enter on so delicate a subject as
her own marriage. This would be better done by her ministers, to whom she would
refer him. But this she would have him understand”, she added, as she cast her
eyes on the ring on her finger, “her realm was her first husband, and none
other should induce her to violate the oath which she had pledged at her
coronation”.
Notwithstanding
this prudery of Mary, she had already manifested such a prepossession for her
intended lord as to attract the notice of her courtiers, one of whom refers it
to the influence of a portrait of Philip, of which she had become “greatly
enamored”. That such a picture was sent to her appears from a letter of
Philip's aunt, the regent of the Netherlands, in which she tells the English
queen that she has sent her a portrait of the prince, from the pencil of
Titian, which she was to return so soon as she was in possession of the living
original. It had been taken some three years before, she said, and was esteemed
a good likeness, though it would be necessary, as in the case of other
portraits by this master, to look at it from a distance in order to see the
resemblance.
The
marriage treaty was drawn up with great circumspection, under the chancellor's
direction. It will be necessary to notice only the most important provisions.
It was stipulated that Philip should respect the laws of England, and leave
every man in the full enjoyment of his rights and immunities. The power of
conferring titles, honors, emoluments, and offices of every description, was to
be reserved to the queen. Foreigners were to be excluded from office. The issue
of the marriage, if a son, was to succeed to the English crown and to the
Spanish possessions in Burgundy and the Low Countries. But in case of the death
of Don Carlos, Philip's son, the issue of the present marriage was to receive,
in addition to the former inheritance, Spain and her dependencies. The queen
was never to leave her own kingdom without her express desire. Her children
were not to be taken out of it without the consent of the nobles. In case of
Mary's death, Philip was not to claim the right of taking part in the
government of the country. Further it was provided that Philip should not
entangle the nation in his wars with France, but should strive to maintain the
same amicable relations that now subsisted between the two countries.
Such
were the cautious stipulations of this treaty, which had more the aspect of a
treaty for defence against an enemy than a marriage
contract. The instrument was worded with a care that reflected credit on the
sagacity of its framers. All was done that parchment could do to secure the
independence of the crown, as well as the liberties of the people. “But if the
bond be violated”, asked one of the parliamentary speakers on the occasion,
“who is there to sue the bond?” Every reflecting Englishman must have felt the
inefficacy of any guaranty that could be extorted from Philip, who, once united
to Mary, would find little difficulty in persuading a fond and obedient wife to
sanction his own policy, prejudicial though it might be to the true interests
of the kingdom.
No
sooner was the marriage treaty made public, than the popular discontent, before
partially disclosed, showed itself openly throughout the country. Placards were
put up, lampoons were written, reviling the queen's ministers and ridiculing
the Spaniards; ominous voices were heard from old, dilapidated buildings,
boding the ruin of the monarchy. Even the children became infected with the
passions of their fathers. Games were played in which the English were
represented contending with the Spaniards; and in one of these an unlucky
urchin, who played the part of Philip, narrowly escaped with his life from the
hands of his exasperated comrades.
But
something more serious than child's play showed itself, in three several
insurrections which broke out in different quarters of the kingdom. The most
formidable of them was the one led by Sir Thomas Wyatt, son of the celebrated
poet of that name. It soon gathered head, and the number of the insurgents was
greatly augmented by the accession of a considerable body of the royal forces,
who deserted their colours, and joined the very men
against whom they had been sent. Thus strengthened, Wyatt marched on London.
All there were filled with consternation,—all but their intrepid queen, who
showed as much self-possession and indifference to danger as if it were only an
ordinary riot.
Proceeding
at once into the city, she met the people at Guildhall, and made them a
spirited address, which has been preserved in the pages of Holinshed. It
concludes in the following bold strain, containing an allusion to the cause of
the difficulties:—“And certainly, if I did either know or think that this
marriage should either turn to the danger or loss of any of you, my loving
subjects, or to the detriment or impairing of any part or parcel of the royal
estate of this realm of England, I would never consent thereunto, neither would
I ever marry while I lived. And on the word of a queen, I promise and assure
you, that, if it shall not probably appear before the nobility and commons, in
the high court of parliament, that this marriage shall be for the singular
benefit and commodity of all the whole realm, that then I will abstain, not
only from this marriage, but also from any other whereof peril may ensue to
this most noble realm. Wherefore now as good and faithful subjects pluck up
your hearts, and like true men stand fast with your lawful prince against these
rebels, both our enemies and yours, and fear them not; for I assure you that I
fear them nothing at all!” The courageous spirit of their queen communicated
itself to her audience, and in a few hours twenty thousand citizens enrolled
themselves under the royal banner.
Meanwhile,
the rebel force continued its march, and reports soon came that Wyatt was on
the opposite bank of the Thames; then, that he had crossed the river. Soon his
presence was announced by the flight of a good number of the royalists, among
whom was Courtenay, who rode off before the enemy at a speed that did little
credit to his valor. All was now confusion again. The lords and ladies in
attendance gathered round the queen in Whitehall, as if to seek support from
her more masculine nature. Her ministers went down on their knees, to implore
her to seek refuge in the Tower, as the only place of safety. Mary smiled with
contempt at the pusillanimous proposal, and resolved to remain where she was,
and abide the issue.
It was
not long in coming. Wyatt penetrated as far as Ludgate, with desperate courage,
but was not well seconded by his followers. The few who proved faithful were
surrounded and overwhelmed by numbers. Wyatt was made prisoner, and the whole
rebel rout discomfited and dispersed. By this triumph over her enemies, Mary
was seated more strongly than ever on the throne. Henceforward the Spanish
match did not meet with opposition from the people, any more than from the
parliament.
Still
the emperor, after this serious demonstration of hostility to his son, felt a
natural disquietude in regard to his personal safety, which made him desirous
of obtaining some positive guaranty before trusting him among the turbulent
islanders. He wrote to his ambassador to require such security from the
government. But no better could be given than the royal promise that everything
should be done to insure the prince's safety. Renard was much perplexed. He
felt the responsibility of his own position. He declined to pledge himself for
the quiet deportment of the English; but he thought matters had already gone
too far to leave it in the power of Spain to recede.
He
wrote, moreover, both to Charles and to Philip, recommending that the prince
should not bring over with him a larger retinue of Spaniards than was
necessary, and that the wives of his nobles—for he seems to have regarded the
sex as the source of evil—should not accompany them. Above all, he urged Philip
and his followers to lay aside the Castilian hauteur, and to substitute the
conciliatory manners which might disarm the jealousy of the English.
CHAPTER IV.
ENGLISH ALLIANCE. 1554-1555.
In the
month of March, 1554, Count Egmont arrived in England, on a second embassy, for
the purpose of exchanging the ratifications of the marriage treaty. He came in
the same state as before, and was received by the queen in the presence of her
council. The ceremony was conducted with great solemnity. Mary, kneeling down,
called God to witness, that, in contracting this marriage, she had been
influenced by no motive of a carnal or worldly nature, but by the desire of
securing the welfare and tranquility of the kingdom. To her kingdom her faith
had first been plighted; and she hoped that Heaven would give her strength to
maintain inviolate the oath she had taken at her coronation.
This
she said with so much grace, that the bystanders, says Renard,—who was one of
them,—were all moved to tears. The ratifications were then exchanged, and the
oaths taken, in presence of the host, by the representatives of Spain and
England; when Mary, again kneeling, called on those present to unite with her
in prayer to the Almighty, that he would enable her faithfully to keep the
articles of the treaty, and would make her marriage a happy one.
Count
Egmont then presented to the queen a diamond ring which the emperor had sent her.
Mary, putting it on her finger, showed it to the company; “and assuredly”,
exclaims the Spanish minister, “the jewel was a precious one, and well worthy
of admiration”. Egmont, before departing for Spain, inquired of Mary whether
she would entrust him with any message to Prince Philip. The queen replied,
that “he might tender to the prince her most affectionate regards, and assure
him that she should be always ready to vie with him in such offices of kindness
as became a loving and obedient wife”. When asked if she would write to him,
she answered, “Not till he had begun the correspondence”.
This
lets us into the knowledge of a little fact, very significant. Up to this time
Philip had neither written, nor so much as sent a single token of regard to his
mistress. All this had been left to his father. Charles had arranged the
marriage, had wooed the bride, had won over her principal advisers,—in short,
had done all the courtship. Indeed, the inclinations of Philip, it is said, had
taken another direction, and he would have preferred the hand of his royal
kinswoman, Mary of Portugal. However this may be, it is not probable that he
felt any great satisfaction in the prospect of being united to a woman who was
eleven years older than himself, and whose personal charms, whatever they might
once have been, had long since faded, under the effects of disease and a
constitutional melancholy. But he loved power; and whatever scruples he might
have entertained on his own account were silenced before the wishes of his
father. “Like another Isaac”, exclaims Sandoval, in admiration of his conduct,
"he sacrificed himself on the altar of filial duty. The same implicit
deference which Philip showed his father in this delicate matter, he
afterwards, under similar circumstances, received from his own son.
After
the marriage articles had been ratified, Philip sent a present of a magnificent
jewel to the English queen, by a Spanish noble of high rank, the Marquis de las
Nayas. The marquis, who crossed from Biscay with a squadron of four ships,
landed at Plymouth, and, as he journeyed towards London, was met by the young
Lord Herbert, son of the earl of Pembroke, who conducted him, with an escort of
four hundred mounted gentlemen, to his family seat in Wiltshire. “And as they
rode together to Wilton”, says Lord Edmund Dudley, one of the party, “there
were certain courses at the hare, which was so pleasant that the marquis much
delighted in finding the course so readily appointed. As for the marquis's
great cheer, as well that night at supper as otherwise at his breakfast the
next day, surely it was so abundant, that it was not a little marvel to
consider that so great a preparation could be made in so small a warning....
Surely it was not a little comfort to my heart to see all things so honorably
used for the honor and service of the queen’s majesty”.
Meanwhile,
Philip was making his arrangements for leaving Spain, and providing a
government for the country during his absence. It was decided by the emperor to
entrust the regency to his daughter, the Princess Joanna. She was eight years
younger than Philip. About eighteen months before, she had gone to Portugal as
the bride of the heir of that kingdom. But the fair promise afforded by this
union was blasted by the untimely death of her consort, which took place on the
second of January, 1554. Three weeks afterwards, the unhappy widow gave birth
to a son, the famous Don Sebastian, whose Quixotic adventures have given him a
wider celebrity than is enjoyed by many a wiser sovereign. After the cruel
calamity which had befallen her, it was not without an effort that Joanna
resigned herself to her father’s wishes, and consented to enter on the duties
of public life. In July, she quitted Lisbon,—the scene of early joys, and of
hopes for ever blighted,—and, amidst the regrets of the whole court, returned,
under a princely escort, to Castile. She was received on the borders by the
king, her brother, who conducted her to Valladolid. Here she was installed,
with due solemnity, in her office of regent. A council of state was associated
with her in the government. It consisted of persons of the highest
consideration, with the archbishop of Seville at their head. By this body
Joanna was to be advised, and indeed to be guided in all matters of moment.
Philip, on his departure, left his sister an ample letter of instructions as to
the policy to be pursued by the administration, especially in affairs of
religion.
Joanna
seems to have been a woman of discretion and virtue,—qualities which belonged
to the females of her line. She was liberal in her benefactions to convents and
colleges; and their cloistered inmates showed their gratitude by the most
lavish testimony to her deserts. She had one rather singular practice. She was
in the habit of dropping her veil, when giving audience to foreign ambassadors.
To prevent all doubts as to her personal identity, she began the audience by
raising her veil, saying, “Am I not the princess?” She then again covered her
face, and the conference was continued without her further exposing her
features. “It was not necessary”, says her biographer, in an accommodating
spirit, “to have the face uncovered in order to hear”. Perhaps Joanna
considered this reserve as suited to the season of her mourning, intending it
as a mark of respect to the memory of her deceased lord. In any other view, we
might suspect that there entered into her constitution a vein of the same
madness which darkened so large a part of the life of her grandmother and
namesake, Joanna of Castile.
Before
leaving Valladolid, Philip formed a separate establishment for his son, Don
Carlos, and placed his education under the care of a preceptor, Luis de Vives,
a scholar not to be confounded with his namesake, the learned tutor of Mary of
England. Having completed his arrangements, Philip set out for the place of his
embarkation in the north. At Compostella he passed some days, offering up his
devotions to the tutelar saint of Spain, whose shrine, throughout the Middle
Ages, had been the most popular resort of pilgrims from the western parts of
Christendom.
While
at Compostella, Philip subscribed the marriage treaty, which had been brought
over from England by the earl of Bedford. He then proceeded to Corunna, where a
fleet of more than a hundred sail was riding at anchor, in readiness to receive
him. It was commanded by the admiral of Castile, and had on board, besides its
complement of seamen, four thousand of the best troops of Spain. On the
eleventh of July, Philip embarked, with his numerous retinue, in which,
together with the Flemish Counts Egmont and Hoorne, were to be seen the dukes
of Alva and Medina Coeli, the prince of Eboli,—in short, the flower of the
Castilian nobility. They came attended by their wives and vassals, minstrels
and mummers, and a host of idle followers, to add to the splendor of the
pageant and do honor to their royal master. Yet the Spanish ambassador at
London had expressly recommended to Philip that his courtiers should leave
their ladies at home, and should come in as simple guise as possible, so as not
to arouse the jealousy of the English.
After a
pleasant run of a few days, the Spanish squadron came in sight of the combined
fleets of England and Flanders, under the command of the Lord Admiral Howard,
who was cruising in the channel in order to meet the prince and convoy him to
the English shore. The admiral seems to have been a blunt sort of man, who
spoke his mind with more candor than courtesy. He greatly offended the Flemings
by comparing their ships to muscle-shells. He is even said to have fired a gun
as he approached Philip's squadron, in order to compel it to lower its topsails
in acknowledgment of the supremacy of the English in the "narrow
seas." But this is probably the patriotic vaunt of an English writer,
since it is scarcely possible that the haughty Spaniard of that day would have
made such a concession, and still less so that the British commander would have
been so discourteous as to exact it on this occasion.
On the
nineteenth of July, the fleets came to anchor in the port of Southampton. A
number of barges were soon seen pushing off from the shore; one of which,
protected by a rich awning and superbly lined with cloth of gold, was manned by
sailors, whose dress of white and green intimated the royal livery. It was the
queen’s barge, intended for Philip; while the other boats, all gaily
ornamented, received his nobles and their retinues.
The
Spanish prince was welcomed, on landing, by a goodly company of English lords,
assembled to pay him their obeisance. The earl of Arundel presented him, in the
queen’s name, with the splendid insignia of the order of the Garter. Philip’s
dress, as usual, was of plain black velvet, with a berret cap, ornamented, after the fashion of the time, with gold chains. By Mary's
orders, a spirited Andalusian jennet had been provided for him, which the
prince instantly mounted. He was a good rider, and pleased the people by his
courteous bearing, and the graceful manner in which he managed his horse.
The
royal procession then moved forward to the ancient church of the Holy Rood,
where mass was said, and thanks were offered up for their prosperous voyage.
Philip, after this, repaired to the quarters assigned to him during his stay in
the town. They were sumptuously fitted up, and the walls of the principal
apartment hung with arras, commemorating the doings of that royal polemic,
Henry the Eighth. Among other inscriptions in honor of him might be seen one
proclaiming him “Head of the Church”, and “Defender of the Faith”;—words which,
as they were probably in Latin, could not have been lost on the Spaniards.
The
news of Philip’s landing was received in London with every demonstration of
joy. Guns were fired, bells were rung, processions were made to the churches,
bonfires were lighted in all the principal streets, tables were spread in the
squares laden with good cheer, and wine and ale flowed freely as water for all
comers. In short, the city gave itself up to a general jubilee, as if it were
celebrating some victorious monarch returned to his dominions, and not the man
whose name had lately been the object of such general execration. Mary gave
instant orders that the nobles of her court should hold themselves in readiness
to accompany her to Winchester, where she was to receive the prince; and on the
twenty-first of July she made her entry, in great state, into that capital, and
established her residence in the episcopal palace.
During
the few days that Philip stayed at Southampton, he rode constantly abroad, and
showed himself frequently to the people. The information he had received,
before his voyage, of the state of public feeling, had suggested to him some
natural apprehensions for his safety. He seems to have resolved, from the
first, therefore, to adopt such a condescending, and indeed affable demeanor,
as would disarm the jealousy of the English, and if possible conciliate their
good-will. In this he appears to have been very successful, although some of
the more haughty of the aristocracy did take exception at his neglecting to
raise his cap to them. That he should have imposed the degree of restraint
which he seems to have done on the indulgence of his natural disposition, is
good proof of the strength of his apprehensions.
The
favor which Philip showed the English gave umbrage to his own nobles. They were
still more disgusted by the rigid interpretation of one of the marriage
articles, by which some hundreds of their attendants were prohibited, as
foreigners, from landing, or, after landing, were compelled to reembark, and
return to Spain. Whenever Philip went abroad he was accompanied by Englishmen.
He was served by Englishmen at his meals. He breakfasted and dined in public, a
thing but little to his taste. He drank healths,
after the manner of the English, and encouraged his Spanish followers to
imitate his example, as he quaffed the strong ale of the country.
On the
twenty-third of the month, the earl of Pembroke arrived, with a brilliant
company of two hundred mounted gentlemen, to escort the prince to Winchester.
He was attended, moreover, by a body of English archers, whose tunics of yellow
cloth, striped with bars of red velvet, displayed the gaudy-colored livery of
the house of Aragon. The day was unpropitious. The rain fell heavily, in such
torrents as might have cooled the enthusiasm of a more ardent lover than
Philip. But he was too gallant a cavalier to be daunted by the elements. The
distance, not great in itself, was to be travelled on horseback,—the usual mode
of conveyance at a time when roads were scarcely practicable for carriages.
Philip
and his retinue had not proceeded far, when they were encountered by a
cavalier, riding at full speed, and bringing with him a ring which Mary had
sent her lover, with the request that he would not expose himself to the
weather, but postpone his departure to the following day. The prince, not
understanding the messenger, who spoke in English, and suspecting that it was
intended by Mary to warn him of some danger in his path, instantly drew up by
the road-side, and took counsel with Alva and Egmont as to what was to be done.
One of the courtiers, who perceived his embarrassment, rode up and acquainted
the prince with the real purport of the message. Relieved of his alarm, Philip
no longer hesitated, but, with his red felt cloak wrapped closely about him and
a broad beaver slouched over his eyes, manfully pushed forward, in spite of the
tempest.
As he
advanced, his retinue received continual accessions from the neighboring gentry
and yeomanry, until it amounted to some thousands before he reached Winchester.
It was late in the afternoon when the cavalcade, soiled with travel and
thoroughly drenched with rain, arrived before the gates of the city. The mayor
and aldermen, dressed in their robes of scarlet, came to welcome the prince,
and, presenting the keys of the city, conducted him to his quarters.
That
evening Philip had his first interview with Mary. It was private, and he was
taken to her residence by the chancellor, Gardiner, bishop of Winchester. The
royal pair passed an hour or more together; and, as Mary spoke the Castilian
fluently, the interview must have been spared much of the embarrassment that
would otherwise have attended it.
On the
following day the parties met in public. Philip was attended by the principal
persons of his suite, of both sexes; and as the procession, making a goodly
show, passed through the streets on foot, the minstrelsy played before them
till they reached the royal residence. The reception-room was the great hall of
the palace. Mary, stepping forward to receive her betrothed, saluted him with a
loving kiss before all the company. She then conducted him to a sort of throne,
where she took her seat by his side, under a stately canopy. They remained
there for an hour or more, conversing together, while their courtiers had
leisure to become acquainted with one another, and to find ample food,
doubtless, for future criticism, in the peculiarities of national costume and
manners. Notwithstanding the Spanish blood in Mary's veins, the higher circles
of Spain and England had personally almost as little intercourse with one
another at that period, as England and Japan have at the present.
The
ensuing day, the festival of St. James, the patron saint of Spain, was the one
appointed for the marriage. Philip exchanged his usual simple dress for the
bridal vestments provided for him by his mistress. They were of spotless white,
as the reporter is careful to inform us, satin and cloth of gold, thickly
powdered with pearls and precious stones. Round his neck he wore the superb
collar of the Golden Fleece, the famous Burgundian order; while the brilliant
riband below his knee served as the badge of the no less illustrious order of
the Garter. He went on foot to the cathedral, attended by all his nobles, vying
with one another in the ostentatious splendor of their retinues.
Half an
hour elapsed before Philip was joined by the queen at the entrance of the
cathedral. Mary was surrounded by the lords and ladies of her court. Her dress,
of white satin and cloth of gold, like his own, was studded and fringed with
diamonds of inestimable price, some of them, doubtless, the gift of Philip,
which he had sent to her by the hands of the prince of Eboli, soon after his
landing. Her bright-red slippers, and her mantle of black velvet, formed a
contrast to the rest of her apparel, and, for a bridal costume, would hardly
suit the taste of the present day. The royal party then moved up the nave of
the cathedral, and were received in the choir by the bishop of Winchester,
supported by the great prelates of the English Church. The greatest of all,
Cranmer, the primate of all England, who should have performed the ceremony,
was absent,—in disgrace and a prisoner.
Philip
and Mary took their seats under a royal canopy, with an altar between them. The
queen was surrounded by the ladies of her court; whose beauty, says an Italian
writer, acquired additional luster by contrast with the shadowy complexions of
the south. The aisles and spacious galleries were crowded with spectators of
every degree, drawn together from the most distant quarters to witness the
ceremony.
The
silence was broken by Figueroa, one of the imperial council, who read aloud an
instrument of the emperor, Charles the Fifth. It stated that this marriage had
been of his own seeking; and he was desirous that his beloved son should enter
into it in a manner suitable to his own expectations and the dignity of his
illustrious consort. He therefore resigned to him his entire right and
sovereignty over the kingdom of Naples and the duchy of Milan. The rank of the
parties would thus be equal, and Mary, instead of giving her hand to a subject,
would wed a sovereign like herself.
Some
embarrassment occurred as to the person who should give the queen away,—a part
of the ceremony not provided for. After a brief conference, it was removed by
the marquis of Winchester and the earls of Pembroke and Derby, who took it on
themselves to give her away in the name of the whole realm; at which the
multitude raised a shout that made the old walls of the cathedral ring again.
The marriage service was then concluded by the bishop of Winchester. Philip and
Mary resumed their seats, and mass was performed, when the bridegroom, rising,
gave his consort the “kiss of peace”, according to the custom of the time. The
whole ceremony occupied nearly four hours. At the close of it Philip, taking
Mary by the hand, led her from the church. The royal couple were followed by
the long train of prelates and nobles, and were preceded by the earls of
Pembroke and Derby, each bearing aloft a naked sword, the symbol of
sovereignty. The effect of the spectacle was heightened by the various costumes
of the two nations,—the richly-tinted and picturesque dresses of the Spaniards,
and the solid magnificence of the English and Flemings, mingling together in
gay confusion. The glittering procession moved slowly on, to the blithe sounds
of festal music, while the air was rent with the loyal acclamations of the
populace, delighted, as usual, with the splendor of the pageant.
In the
great hall of the episcopal palace, a sumptuous banquet was prepared for the
whole company. At one end of the apartment was a dais, on which, under a superb
canopy, a table was set for the king and queen; and a third seat was added for
Bishop Gardiner, the only one of the great lords who was admitted to the
distinction of dining with royalty.
Below
the dais, the tables were set on either side through the whole length of the hall,
for the English and Spanish nobles, all arranged—a perilous point of
etiquette—with due regard to their relative rank. The royal table was covered
with dishes of gold. A spacious beaufet, rising to the height of eight stages,
or shelves, and filled with a profusion of gold and silver vessels, somewhat
ostentatiously displayed the magnificence of the prelate, or of his sovereign.
Yet this ostentation was rather Spanish than English; and was one of the forms
in which the Castilian grandee loved to display his opulence.
At the
bottom of the hall was an orchestra, occupied by a band of excellent
performers, who enlivened the repast by their music. But the most interesting part
of the show was that of the Winchester boys, some of whom were permitted to
enter the presence, and recite in Latin their epithalamiums in honor of the
royal nuptials, for which they received a handsome guerdon from the queen.
After
the banquet came the ball, at which, if we are to take an old English
authority, "the Spaniards were greatly out of countenance when they saw
the English so far excel them."[106] This seems somewhat strange,
considering that dancing is, and always has been, the national pastime of
Spain. Dancing is to the Spaniard what music is to the Italian,—the very
condition of his{51} social existence. It did not continue late on the present
occasion, and, at the temperate hour of nine, the bridal festivities closed for
the evening.
Philip
and Mary passed a few days in this merry way of life, at Winchester, whence
they removed, with their court, to Windsor. Here a chapter of the order of the
Garter was held, for the purpose of installing King Philip. The herald, on this
occasion, ventured to take down the arms of England, and substitute those of
Spain, in honor of the new sovereign,—an act of deference which roused the
indignation of the English lords, who straightway compelled the functionary to
restore the national escutcheon to its proper place.
On the
twenty-eighth of August, Philip and Mary made their public entry into London.
They rode in on horseback, passing through the borough of Southwark, across
London Bridge. Every preparation was made by the loyal citizens to give them a
suitable reception. The columns of the buildings were festooned with flowers,
triumphal arches spanned the streets, the walls were hung with pictures or
emblazoned with legends in commemoration of the illustrious pair, and a
genealogy was traced for Philip, setting forth his descent from John of
Gaunt,—making him out, in short, as much of an Englishman as possible.
Among
the paintings was one in which Henry the Eighth was seen holding in his hand a
Bible. This device gave great scandal to the chancellor, Gardiner, who called
the painter sundry hard names, rating him roundly for putting into King Harry’s
hand the sacred volume, which should rather have been given to his daughter,
Queen Mary, for her zeal to restore the primitive worship of the Church. The
unlucky artist lost no time in repairing his error by brushing out the
offending volume, and did it so effectually, that he brushed out the royal
fingers with it, leaving the old monarch's mutilated stump held up, like some
poor mendicant's, to excite the compassion of the spectators.
But the
sight which, more than all these pageants, gave joy to the hearts of the
Londoners, was an immense quantity of bullion, which Philip caused to be
paraded through the city on its way to the Tower, where it was deposited in the
royal treasury. The quantity was said to be so great, that, on one occasion,
the chests containing it filled twenty carts. On another, two wagons were so
heavily laden with the precious metal as to require to be drawn by nearly a
hundred horses. The good people, who had looked to the coming of the Spaniards
as that of a swarm of locusts which was to consume their substance, were
greatly pleased to see their exhausted coffers so well replenished from the
American mines.
From
London the royal pair proceeded to the shady solitudes of Hampton Court, and
Philip, weary of the mummeries in which he had been compelled to take part,
availed himself of the indisposition of his wife to indulge in that retirement
and repose which were more congenial to his taste. This way of life in his
pleasant retreat, however, does not appear to have been so well suited to the
taste of his English subjects. At least, an old chronicler peevishly complains
that “the hall-door within the court was continually shut, so that no man might
enter unless his errand were first known; which seemed strange to Englishmen
that had not been used thereto”.
Yet
Philip, although his apprehensions for his safety had doubtless subsided, was
wise enough to affect the same conciliatory manners as on his first
landing,—and not altogether in vain. “He discovered”, says the Venetian
ambassador, in his report to the senate, “none of that sosiego—the
haughty indifference of the Spaniards—which distinguished him when he first
left home for Italy and Flanders. He was, indeed, as accessible as any one
could desire, and gave patient audience to all who asked it. He was solicitous”,
continues Micheli, “to instruct himself in affairs, and showed a taste for
application to business”,—which, it may be added, grew stronger with years. “He
spoke little. But his remarks, though brief, were pertinent. In short”, he
concludes, “he is a prince of an excellent genius, a lively apprehension, and a
judgment ripe beyond his age”.
Philip’s
love of business, however, was not such as to lead him to take part prematurely
in the management of affairs. He discreetly left this to the queen and her
ministers, to whose judgment he affected to pay the greatest deference. He
particularly avoided all appearance of an attempt to interfere with the
administration of justice, unless it were to obtain some act of grace. Such
interference only served to gain him the more credit with the people
That he
gained largely on their good-will may be inferred from the casual remarks of
more than one contemporary writer. They bear emphatic testimony to the
affability of his manners, so little to have been expected from the popular
reports of his character. “Among other things”, writes Wotton, the English
minister at the French court, “one I have been right glad to hear of is, that
the king’s highness useth himself so gently and
lovingly to all men. For, to tell you the truth, I have heard some say, that, when
he came out of Spain into Italy, it was by some men wished that he had showed a
somewhat more benign countenance to the people than it was said he then did”.
Another contemporary, in a private letter, written soon after the king's
entrance into London, after describing his person as “so well proportioned that
Nature cannot work a more perfect pattern”, concludes with commending him for
his pregnant wit and most gentle nature.
Philip,
from the hour of his landing, had been constant in all his religious
observances. “He was as punctual”, says Micheli, “in his attendance at mass,
and his observance of all the forms of devotion, as any monk;—more so, as some
people thought, than became his age and station. The ecclesiastics”, he adds,
“with whom Philip had constant intercourse, talked loudly of his piety”.
Yet
there was no hypocrisy in this. However willing Philip may have been that his
concern for the interests of religion might be seen of men, it is no less true
that, as far as he understood these interests, his concern was perfectly
sincere. The actual state of England may have even operated as an inducement
with him to overcome his scruples as to the connection with Mary. “Better not
reign at all”, he often remarked, “than reign over heretics”. But what triumph
more glorious than that of converting these heretics, and bringing them back
again into the bosom of the Church? He was most anxious to prepare the minds of
his new subjects for an honorable reception of the papal legate, Cardinal Pole,
who was armed with full authority to receive the submission of England to the
Holy See. He employed his personal influence with the great nobles, and
enforced it occasionally by liberal drafts on those Peruvian ingots which he
had sent to the Tower. At least, it is asserted that he gave away yearly
pensions, to the large amount of between fifty and sixty thousand gold crowns,
to sundry of the queen’s ministers. It was done on the general plea of
recompensing their loyalty to their mistress.
Early
in November, tidings arrived of the landing of Pole. He had been detained some
weeks in Germany, by the emperor, who felt some distrust—not ill-founded, as it
seems—of the cardinal's disposition in regard to the Spanish match. Now that
this difficulty was obviated, he was allowed to resume his journey. He came up
the Thames in a magnificent barge, with a large silver cross, the emblem of his
legatine authority, displayed on the prow. The legate, on landing, was received
by the king, the queen, and the whole court, with a reverential deference which
argued well for the success of his mission.
He was
the man, of all others, best qualified to execute it. To a natural kindness of
temper he united an urbanity and a refinement of manners, derived from familiar
intercourse with the most polished society of Europe, his royal descent
entitled him to mix on terms of equality with persons of the highest rank, and
made him feel as much at ease in the court as in the cloister. His long exile
had opened to him an acquaintance with man as he is found in various climes,
while, as a native-born Englishman, he perfectly understood the prejudices and
peculiar temper of his own countrymen. “Cardinal Pole”, says the Venetian
minister, “is a man of unblemished nobility, and so strict in his integrity,
that he grants nothing to the importunity of friends. He is so much beloved,
both by prince and people, that he may well be styled the king where all is
done by his authority”. An English cardinal was not of too frequent occurrence
in the sacred college. That one should have been found at the present juncture,
with personal qualities, moreover, so well suited to the delicate mission to
England, was a coincidence so remarkable, that Philip and Mary might well be
excused for discerning in it the finger of Providence.
On the
seventeenth of the month, parliament, owing to the queen’s indisposition, met
at Whitehall; and Pole made that celebrated speech in which he recapitulated
some of the leading events of his own life, and the persecutions he had endured
for conscience’ sake. He reviewed the changes in religion which had taken place
in England, and implored his audience to abjure their spiritual errors, and to
seek a reconciliation with the Catholic Church. He assured them of his plenary
power to grant absolution for the past; and—what was no less important—to
authorize the present proprietors to retain possession of the abbey lands which
had been confiscated under King Henry. This last concession, which had been
extorted with difficulty from the pope, reconciling, as it did, temporal with
spiritual interests, seems to have dispelled whatever scruples yet lingered in
the breasts of the legislature. There were few, probably, in that goodly
company, whose zeal would have aspired to the crown of martyrdom.
The
ensuing day, parliament, in obedience to the royal summons, again assembled at
Whitehall. Philip took his seat on the left of Mary, under the same canopy,
while Cardinal Pole sat at a greater distance on her right.
The
chancellor, Gardiner, then presented a petition in the name of the lords and
commons, praying for reconciliation with the papal see. Absolution was solemnly
pronounced by the legate, and the whole assembly received his benediction on
their bended knees. England, purified from her heresy, was once more restored
to the communion of the Roman Catholic Church.
Philip
instantly dispatched couriers, with the glad tidings, to Rome, Brussels, and
other capitals of Christendom. Everywhere the event was celebrated with public
rejoicings, as if it had been some great victory over the Saracens. As Philip's
zeal for the faith was well known, and as the great change had taken place soon
after his arrival in England, much of the credit of it was ascribed to him.
Thus, before ascending the throne of Spain, he had vindicated his claim to the
title of Catholic, so much prized by the Spanish monarchs. He had won a triumph
greater than that which his father had been able to win after years of war,
over the Protestants of Germany; greater than any which had been won by the
arms of Cortés or Pizarro in the New World. Their contest had been with the
barbarian; the field of Philip's labors was one of the most potent and
civilized countries of Europe.
The
work of conversion was speedily followed by that of persecution. To what extent
Philip’s influence was exerted in this is not manifest. Indeed, from anything
that appears, it would not be easy to decide whether his influence was employed
to promote or to prevent it. One fact is certain, that, immediately after the
first martyrs suffered at Smithfield, Alfonso de Castro, a Spanish friar,
preached a sermon in which he bitterly inveighed against these proceedings. He
denounced them as repugnant to the true spirit of Christianity, which was that
of charity and forgiveness, and which enjoined its ministers not to take
vengeance on the sinner, but to enlighten him as to his errors, and bring him
to repentance. This bold appeal had its effect, even in that season of
excitement. For a few weeks the arm of persecution seemed to be palsied. But it
was only for a few weeks. Toleration was not the virtue of the sixteenth
century. The charitable doctrines of the good friar fell on hearts withered by
fanaticism; and the spirit of intolerance soon rekindled the fires of
Smithfield into a fiercer glow than before.
Yet men
wondered at the source whence these strange doctrines had proceeded. The friar
was Philip's confessor. It was argued that he would not have dared to speak
thus boldly, had it not been by the command of Philip, or, at least, by his
consent. That De Castro should have thus acted at the suggestion of his master
is contradicted by the whole tenor of Philip's life. Hardly four years elapsed
before he countenanced by his presence an auto de fé in
Valladolid, where fourteen persons perished at the stake; and the burning of
heretics in England could have done no greater violence to his feelings than
the burning of heretics in Spain. If the friar did indeed act in obedience to
Philip, we may well suspect that the latter was influenced less by motives of
humanity than of policy; and that the disgust manifested by the people at the
spectacle of these executions may have led him to employ this expedient to
relieve himself of any share in the odium which attached to them.
What
was the real amount of Philip’s influence, in this or other matters, it is not
possible to determine. It is clear that he was careful not to arouse the
jealousy of the English by any parade of it. One obvious channel of it lay in
the queen, who seems to have doated on him with a fondness that one would
hardly have thought a temper cold and repulsive, like that of Philip, capable
of exciting. But he was young and good-looking. His manners had always been
found to please the sex, even where he had not been so solicitous to please as
he was in England. He was Mary’s first and only love; for the emperor was too
old to have touched aught but her vanity, and Courtenay was too frivolous to
have excited any other than a temporary feeling. This devotion to Philip,
according to some accounts, was ill requited by his gallantries. The Venetian
ambassador says of him, that “he well deserved the tenderness of his wife, for
he was the most loving and the best of husbands”. But it seems probable that
the Italian, in his estimate of the best of husbands, adopted the liberal
standard of his own country.
About
the middle of November, parliament was advised that the queen was in a state of
pregnancy. The intelligence was received with the joy usually manifested by
loyal subjects on like occasions. The emperor seems to have been particularly
pleased with this prospect of an heir, who, by the terms of the marriage
treaty, would make a division of that great empire which it had been the object
of its master's life to build up and consolidate under one scepter. The
commons, soon after, passed an act empowering Philip, in case it should go
otherwise than well with the queen at the time of her confinement, to assume
the regency, and take charge of the education of her child during its minority.
The regency was to be limited by the provisions of the marriage treaty. But the
act may be deemed evidence that Philip had gained on the confidence of his new
subjects.
The
symptoms continued to be favorable; and, as the time approached for Mary's
confinement, messengers were held in readiness to bear the tidings to the
different courts. The loyal wishes of the people ran so far ahead of reality,
that the rumor went abroad of the actual birth of a prince. Bells were rung,
bonfires lighted; Te Deum was
sung in some of the churches; and one of the preachers “took upon him to
describe the proportions of the child, how fair, how beautiful and great a
prince it was, as the like had not been seen!”. “But for all this great labor”,
says the caustic chronicler, “for their young master long looked for coming so
surely into the world, in the end appeared neither young master nor young
mistress, that any man to this day can hear of”.
The
queen’s disorder proved to be a dropsy. But, notwithstanding the mortifying
results of so many prognostics and preparations, and the ridicule which
attached to it, Mary still cherished the illusion of one day giving an heir to
the crown. Her husband did not share in this illusion; and, as he became
convinced that she had no longer prospect of issue, he found less inducement to
protract his residence in a country which, on many accounts, was most
distasteful to him. Whatever show of deference might be paid to him, his
haughty spirit could not be pleased by the subordinate part which he was
compelled to play, in public, to the queen. The parliament had never so far
acceded to Mary’s wishes as to consent to his coronation as king of England.
Whatever weight he may have had in the cabinet, it had not been such as to
enable him to make the politics of England subservient to his own interests,
or, what was the same thing, to those of his father. Parliament would not
consent to swerve so far from the express provisions of the marriage treaty as
to become a party in the emperor's contest with France.
Nor
could the restraint constantly imposed on Philip, by his desire to accommodate
himself to the tastes and habits of the English, be otherwise than irksome to
him. If he had been more successful in this than might have been expected, yet
it was not possible to overcome the prejudices, the settled antipathy, with
which the Spaniards were regarded by the great mass of the people, as was
evident from the satirical shafts, which, from time to time, were launched by
pamphleteers and ballad-makers, both against the king and his followers.
These
latter were even more impatient than their master of their stay in a country
where they met with so many subjects of annoyance. If a Spaniard bought
anything, complains one of the nation, he was sure to be charged an exorbitant
price for it. If he had a quarrel with an Englishman, says another writer, he
was to be tried by English law, and was very certain to come off the worst.
Whether right or wrong, the Spaniards could hardly fail to find abundant cause
of irritation and disgust. The two nations were too dissimilar for either of
them to comprehend the other. It was with no little satisfaction, therefore,
that Philip's followers learned that their master had received a summons from
his father to leave England, and join him in Flanders.
The cause
of this sudden movement was one that filled the Castilians, as it did all
Europe, with astonishment,—the proposed abdication of Charles the Fifth. It was
one that might seem to admit of neither doubt nor delay on Philip’s part. But
Mary, distressed by the prospect of separation, prevailed on her husband to
postpone his departure for several weeks. She yielded, at length, to the
necessity of the case. Preparations were made for Philip’s journey, and Mary,
with a heavy heart, accompanied her royal consort down the Thames to Greenwich.
Here they parted; and Philip, taking an affectionate farewell, and commending
the queen and her concerns to the care of Cardinal Pole, took the road to
Dover.
After a
short detention there by contrary winds, he crossed over to Calais, and on the
fourth of September made his entry into that strong place, the last remnant of
all their continental acquisitions that still belonged to the English.
Philip
was received by the authorities of the city with the honors due to his rank. He
passed some days there receiving the respectful courtesies of the inhabitants,
and, on his departure, rejoiced the hearts of the garrison by distributing
among them a thousand crowns of gold. He resumed his journey, with his splendid
train of Castilian and English nobles, among whom were the earls of Arundel,
Pembroke, Huntington, and others of the highest station in the realm. On the
road, he was met by a military escort sent by his father; and towards the
latter part of September, 1555, Philip, with his gallant retinue, made his
entry into the Flemish capital, where the emperor and his court were eagerly
awaiting his arrival.
CHAPTER V.
WAR WITH THE POPE. 1555-1556.
Soon after
Philip’s arrival in Brussels took place that memorable scene of the abdication
of Charles the Fifth, which occupies the introductory pages of our narrative.
By this event, Philip saw himself master of the most widely extended and
powerful monarchy in Europe. He was king of Spain, comprehending under that
name Castile, Aragon, and Granada, which, after surviving as independent states
for centuries, had been first brought under one scepter in the reign of his
father, Charles the Fifth. He was king of Naples and Sicily, and duke of Milan,
which important possessions enabled him to control, to a great extent, the
nicely balanced scales of Italian politics. He was lord of Franche Comté, and of
the Low Countries, comprehending the most flourishing and populous provinces in
Christendom, whose people had made the greatest progress in commerce,
husbandry, and the various mechanic arts. As titular king of England, he
eventually obtained an influence, which, as we shall see, enabled him to direct
the counsels of that country to his own purposes. In Africa he possessed the
Cape de Verd Islands and the Canaries, as well as Tunis, Oran, and some other
important places on the Barbary coast. He owned the Philippines and the Spice
Islands in Asia. In America, besides his possessions in the West Indies, he was
master of the rich empires of Mexico and Peru, and claimed a right to a
boundless extent of country, that offered an inexhaustible field to the cupidity
and enterprise of the Spanish adventurer. Thus the dominions of Philip
stretched over every quarter of the globe. The flag of Castile was seen in the
remotest latitudes,—on the Atlantic, the Pacific, and the far-off Indian
seas,—passing from port to port, and uniting by commercial intercourse the
widely scattered members of her vast colonial empire.
The
Spanish army consisted of the most formidable infantry in Europe; veterans who
had been formed under the eye of Charles the Fifth and of his generals, who had
fought on the fields of Pavia and of Muhlberg, or
who, in the New World, had climbed the Andes with Almagro and Pizarro, and
helped these bold chiefs to overthrow the dynasty of the Incas. The navy of
Spain and Flanders combined far exceeded that of any other power in the number
and size of its vessels; and if its supremacy might be contested by England on
the “narrow seas”, it rode the undisputed mistress of the ocean. To supply the
means for maintaining this costly establishment, as well as the general
machinery of government, Philip had at his command the treasures of the New
World; and if the incessant enterprises of his father had drained the
exchequer, it was soon replenished by the silver streams that flowed in from
the inexhaustible mines of Zacatecas and Potosí.
All
this vast empire, with its magnificent resources, was placed at the disposal of
a single man. Philip ruled over it with an authority more absolute than that
possessed by any European prince since the days of the Caesars. The
Netherlands, indeed, maintained a show of independence under the shadow of
their ancient institutions. But they consented to supply the necessities of the
crown by a tax larger than the revenues of America. Naples and Milan were ruled
by Spanish viceroys. Viceroys, with delegated powers scarcely less than those
of their sovereign, presided over the American colonies, which received their
laws from the parent country. In Spain itself, the authority of the nobles was
gone. First assailed under Ferdinand and Isabella, it was completely broken
down under Charles the Fifth. The liberties of the commons were crushed at the
fatal battle of Villalar, in the beginning of that
monarch’s reign. Without nobles, without commons, the ancient cortes had faded
into a mere legislative pageant, with hardly any other right than that of
presenting petitions, and of occasionally raising an ineffectual note of
remonstrance against abuses. It had lost the power to redress them. Thus all
authority vested in the sovereign. His will was the law of the land. From his
palace at Madrid he sent forth the edicts which became the law of Spain and of
her remotest colonies. It may well be believed that foreign nations watched
with interest the first movements of a prince who seemed to hold in his hands
the destinies of Europe; and that they regarded with no little apprehension the
growth of that colossal power which had already risen to a height that cast a
shadow over every other monarchy.
From
his position, Philip stood at the head of the Roman Catholic princes. He was in
temporal matters what the pope was in spiritual. In the existing state of
Christendom, he had the same interest as the pope in putting down that spirit
of religious reform which had begun to show itself, in public or in private, in
every corner of Europe. He was the natural ally of the pope. He understood this
well, and would have acted on it. Yet, strange to say, his very first war,
after his accession, was with the pope himself. It was a war not of Philip’s
seeking.
The
papal throne was at that time filled by Paul the Fourth, one of those
remarkable men, who, amidst the shadowy personages that have reigned in the
Vatican, and been forgotten, have vindicated to themselves a permanent place in
history. He was a Neapolitan by birth, of the noble family of the Caraffas. He was bred to the religious profession, and
early attracted notice by his diligent application and the fruits he gathered
from it. His memory was prodigious. He was not only deeply read in theological
science, but skilled in various languages, ancient and modern, several of which
he spoke with fluency. His rank, sustained by his scholarship, raised him
speedily to high preferment in the Church. In 1513, when thirty-six years of
age, he went as nuncio to England. In 1525, he resigned his benefices, and,
with a small number of his noble friends, he instituted a new religious order,
called the Theatins. The object of the society was,
to combine, to some extent, the contemplative habits of the monk with the more
active duties of the secular clergy. The members visited the sick, buried the
dead, and preached frequently in public, thus performing the most important
functions of the priesthood. For this last vocation, of public speaking,
Caraffa was peculiarly qualified by a flow of natural eloquence, which, if it
did not always convince, was sure to carry away the audience by its
irresistible fervor. The new order showed itself particularly zealous in
enforcing reform in the Catholic clergy, and in stemming the tide of heresy
which now threatened to inundate the Church. Caraffa and his associates were
earnest to introduce the Inquisition. A life of asceticism and penance too
often extinguishes sympathy with human suffering, and leads its votaries to
regard the sharpest remedies as the most effectual for the cure of spiritual
error.
From
this austere way of life Caraffa was called, in 1536, to a situation which
engaged him more directly in worldly concerns. He was made cardinal by Paul the
Third. He had, as far back as the time of Ferdinand the Catholic, been one of
the royal council of Naples. The family of Caraffa, however, was of the
Angevine party, and regarded the house of Aragon in the light of usurpers. The
cardinal had been educated in this political creed, and, even after his
elevation to his new dignity, he strongly urged Paul the Third to assert the
claims of the holy see to the sovereignty of Naples. This conduct, which came
to the ears of Charles the Fifth, so displeased that monarch that he dismissed
Caraffa from the council. Afterwards, when the cardinal was named by the pope,
his unfailing patron, to the archbishopric of Naples, Charles resisted the
nomination, and opposed all the obstacles in his power to the collection of the
episcopal revenues. These indignities sank deep into the cardinal’s mind,
naturally tenacious of affronts; and what, at first, had been only a political
animosity, was now sharpened into personal hatred of the most implacable
character.
Such
was the state of feeling when, on the death of Marcellus the Second, in 1555,
Cardinal Caraffa was raised to the papal throne. His election, as was natural,
greatly disgusted the emperor, and caused astonishment throughout Europe; for
he had not the conciliatory manners which win the favor and the suffrages of
mankind. But the Catholic Church stood itself in need of a reformer, to enable
it to resist the encroaching spirit of Protestantism. This was well understood
not only by the highest, but by the humblest ecclesiastics; and in Caraffa they
saw the man whose qualities precisely fitted him to effect such a reform. He
was, moreover, at the time of his election, in his eightieth year; and age and
infirmity have always proved powerful arguments with the sacred college, as
affording the numerous competitors the best guaranties for a speedy vacancy.
Yet it has more than once happened that the fortunate candidate, who has owed
his election mainly to his infirmities, has been miraculously restored by the touch
of the tiara.
Paul
the Fourth—for such was the name assumed by the new pope, in gratitude to the
memory of his patron—adopted a way of life, on his accession, for which his
brethren of the college were not at all prepared. The austerity and self-denial
of earlier days formed a strong contrast to the pomp of his present
establishment and the profuse luxury of his table. When asked how he would be
served, “How but as a great prince?” he answered. He usually passed three hours
at his dinner, which consisted of numerous courses of the most refined and
epicurean dishes. No one dined with him, though one or more of the cardinals
were usually present, with whom he freely conversed; and as he accompanied his
meals with large draughts of the thick, black wine of Naples, it no doubt gave
additional animation to his discourse. At such times, his favorite theme was
the Spaniards, whom he denounced as the scum of the earth, a race accursed of
God, heretics and schismatics, the spawn of Jews and of Moors. He bewailed the
humiliation of Italy, galled by the yoke of a nation so abject. But the day had
come, he would thunder out, when Charles and Philip were to be called to a
reckoning for their ill-gotten possessions, and be driven from the land!
Yet
Paul did not waste all his hours in this idle vaporing, nor in the pleasures of
the table. He showed the same activity as ever in the labors of the closet, and
in attention to business. He was irregular in his hours, sometimes prolonging
his studies through the greater part of the night, and at others rising long
before the dawn. When thus engaged, it would not have been well for any one of
his household to venture into his presence, without a summons.
Paul
seemed to be always in a state of nervous tension. “He is all nerve”, the
Venetian minister, Navagero, writes of him; “and when
he walks, it is with a free, elastic step, as if he hardly touched the ground”.
His natural arrogance, was greatly increased by his elevation to the first
dignity in Christendom. He had always entertained the highest ideas of the
authority of the sacerdotal office; and now that he was in the chair of St.
Peter, he seemed to have entire confidence in his own infallibility. He looked
on the princes of Europe, not so much as his sons—the language of the Church—as
his servants, bound to do his bidding. Paul's way of thinking would have better
suited the twelfth century than the sixteenth. He came into the world at least
three centuries too late. In all his acts he relied solely on himself. He was
impatient of counsel from any one, and woe to the man who ventured to oppose
any remonstrance, still more any impediment to the execution of his plans. He
had no misgivings as to the wisdom of these plans. An idea that had once taken
possession of his mind lay there, to borrow a cant phrase of the day, like “a
fixed fact”,—not to be disturbed by argument or persuasion. We occasionally
meet with such characters, in which strength of will and unconquerable energy
in action pass for genius with the world. They, in fact, serve as the best
substitute for genius, by the ascendancy which such qualities secure their
possessors over ordinary minds. Yet there were ways of approaching the pontiff,
for those who understood his character, and who, by condescending to flatter
his humors, could turn them to their own account. Such was the policy pursued
by some of Paul's kindred, who, cheered by his patronage, now came forth from
their obscurity to glitter in the rays of the meridian sun.
Paul
had all his life declaimed against nepotism as an opprobrious sin in the head
of the Church. Yet no sooner did he put on the tiara than he gave a glaring
example of the sin he had denounced, in the favors which he lavished on three
of his own nephews. This was the more remarkable, as they were men whose way of
life had given scandal even to the Italians, not used to be too scrupulous in
their judgments.
The
eldest, who represented the family, he raised to the rank of duke, providing
him with an ample fortune from the confiscated property of the Colonnas,—which illustrious house was bitterly persecuted
by Paul, for its attachment to the Spanish interests.
Another
of his nephews he made a cardinal,—a dignity for which he was indifferently
qualified by his former profession, which was that of a soldier, and still less
fitted by his life, which was that of a libertine. He was a person of a busy,
intriguing disposition, and stimulated his uncle's vindictive feelings against
the Spaniards, whom he himself hated, for some affront which he conceived had
been put upon him while in the emperor’s service.
But
Paul needed no prompter in this matter. He very soon showed that, instead of
ecclesiastical reform, he was bent on a project much nearer to his heart,—the
subversion of the Spanish power in Naples. Like Julius the Second, of warlike
memory, he swore to drive out the barbarians from Italy. He seemed to think
that the thunders of the Vatican were more than a match for all the strength of
the empire and of Spain. But he was not weak enough to rely wholly on his
spiritual artillery in such a contest. Through the French ambassador at his
court, he opened negotiations with France, and entered into a secret treaty
with that power, by which each of the parties agreed to furnish a certain
contingent of men and money to carry on the war for the recovery of Naples. The
treaty was executed on the sixteenth of December, 1555.
In less
than two months after this event, on the fifth of February, 1556, the fickle
monarch of France, seduced by the advantageous offers of Charles, backed,
moreover, by the ruinous state of his own finances, deserted his new ally, and
signed the treaty of Vaucelles, which secured a truce
for five years between his dominions and those of Philip.
Paul
received the news of this treaty while surrounded by his courtiers. He treated
the whole with skepticism, but expressed the pious hope, that such a peace
might be in store for the nations of Christendom. In private he was not so
temperate. But without expending his wrath in empty menaces, he took effectual
means to bring things back to their former state,—to induce the French king to
renew the treaty with himself, and at once to begin hostilities. He knew the
vacillating temper of the monarch he had to deal with. Cardinal Caraffa was
accordingly dispatched on a mission to Paris, fortified with ample powers for
the arrangement of a new treaty, and with such tempting promises on the part of
his holiness as might insure its acceptance by the monarch and his ministers.
The
French monarchy was, at that time, under the scepter of Henry the Second, the
son of Francis the First, to whose character his own bore no resemblance; or
rather the resemblance consisted in those showy qualities which lie too near
the surface to enter into what may be called character. He affected a chivalrous
vein, excelled in the exercises of the tourney, and indulged in vague
aspirations after military renown. In short, he fancied himself a hero, and
seems to have imposed on some of his own courtiers so far as to persuade them
that he was designed for one. But he had few of the qualities which enter into
the character of a hero. He was as far from being a hero as he was from being a
good Christian, though he thought to prove his orthodoxy by persecuting the
Protestants, who were now rising into a formidable sect in the southern parts
of his kingdom. He had little reliance on his own resources, leading a life of
easy indulgence, and trusting the direction of his affairs to his favorites and
his mistresses.
The
most celebrated of these was Diana of Poitiers, created by Henry duchess of Valentinois, who preserved her personal charms and her
influence over her royal lover to a much later period than usually happens. The
persons of his court in whom the king most confided were the Constable
Montmorency and the duke of Guise.
Anne de
Montmorency, constable of France, was one of the proudest of the French
nobility,—proud alike of his great name, his rank, and his authority with his
sovereign. He had grown gray in the service of the court, and Henry, accustomed
to his society from boyhood, had learned to lean on him for the execution of
his measures. Yet his judgments, though confidently given, were not always
sound. His views were far from being enlarged; and though full of courage, he
showed little capacity for military affairs. A consciousness of this, perhaps,
may have led him to recommend a pacific policy, suited to his own genius. He
was a stanch Catholic, extremely punctilious in all the ceremonies of devotion,
and, if we may credit Brantôme, would strangely mingle together the military
and the religious. He repeated his Pater-Noster at certain
fixed hours, whatever might be his occupation at the time. He would
occasionally break off to give his orders, calling out, “Cut me down such a
man!” “Hang up another!” “Run those fellows through with your lances!” “Set
fire to that village!”—and so on; when, having thus relieved the military part
of his conscience, he would go on with his Pater-Nosters as
before.
A very
different character was that of his younger rival, Francis, duke of Guise,
uncle to Mary, queen of Scots, and brother to the regent. Of a bold, aspiring
temper, filled with the love of glory, brilliant and popular in his address, he
charmed the people by his manners and the splendor of his equipage and dress.
He came to court, attended usually by three or four hundred cavaliers, who
formed themselves on Guise as their model. His fine person was set off by the
showy costume of the time,—a crimson doublet and cloak of spotless ermine, and
a cap ornamented with a scarlet plume. In this dress he might often be seen,
mounted on his splendid charger and followed by a gay retinue of gentlemen,
riding at full gallop through the streets of Paris, and attracting the
admiration of the people.
But his
character was not altogether made up of such vanities. He was sagacious in
counsel, and had proved himself the best captain of France. It was he who
commanded at the memorable siege of Metz, and foiled the efforts of the
imperial forces under Charles and the duke of Alva. Caraffa found little
difficulty in winning him over to his cause, as he opened to the ambitious
chief the brilliant perspective of the conquest of Naples. The arguments of the
wily Italian were supported by the duchess of Valentinois.
It was in vain that the veteran Montmorency reminded the king of the ruinous
state of the finances, which had driven him to the shameful expedient of
putting up public offices to sale. The other party represented that the
condition of Spain, after her long struggle, was little better; that the reins
of government had now been transferred from the wise Charles to the hands of
his inexperienced son; and that the cooperation of Rome afforded a favorable
conjunction of circumstances, not to be neglected. Henry was further allured by Caraffa’s assurance that his uncle would grant to the
French monarch the investiture of Naples for one of his younger sons, and
bestow Milan on another. The offer was too tempting to be resisted.
One
objection occurred, in certain conscientious scruples as to the violation of
the recent treaty of Vaucelles. But for this the
pope, who had anticipated the objection, readily promised absolution. As the
king also intimated some distrust lest the successor of Paul, whose advanced
age made his life precarious, might not be inclined to carry out the treaty,
Caraffa was authorized to assure him that this danger should be obviated by the
creation of a batch of French cardinals, or of cardinals in the French interest.
All the
difficulties being thus happily disposed of, the treaty was executed in the
month of July, 1556. The parties agreed each to furnish about twelve thousand
infantry, five hundred men-at-arms, and the same number of light horse. France
was to contribute three hundred and fifty thousand ducats to the expenses of
the war, and Rome one hundred and fifty thousand. The French troops were to be
supplied with provisions by the pope, for which they were to reimburse his
holiness. It was moreover agreed, that the crown of Naples should be settled on
a younger son of Henry, that a considerable tract on the northern frontier
should be transferred to the papal territory, and that ample estates should be
provided from the new conquests for the three nephews of his holiness. In
short, the system of partition was as nicely adjusted as if the quarry were
actually in their possession, ready to be cut up and divided among the parties.
Finally,
it was arranged that Henry should invite the Sultan Soliman to renew his former
alliance with France, and make a descent with his galleys on the coast of
Calabria. Thus did his most Christian majesty, with the pope for one of his
allies and the Grand Turk for the other, prepare to make war on the most
Catholic prince in Christendom!
Meanwhile,
Paul the Fourth, elated by the prospect of a successful negotiation, threw off
the little decency he had hitherto preserved in his deportment. He launched out
into invectives more bitter than ever against Philip, and in a tone of defiance
told such of the Spanish cardinals as were present that they might repeat his
sayings to their master. He talked of instituting a legal process against the
king for the recovery of Naples, which he had forfeited by omitting to pay the
yearly tribute to the holy see. The pretext was ill-founded, as the pope well
knew. But the process went on with suitable gravity, and a sentence of
forfeiture was ultimately pronounced against the Spanish monarch.
With
these impotent insults, Paul employed more effectual means of annoyance. He
persecuted all who showed any leaning to the Spanish interest. He set about
repairing the walls of Rome, and strengthening the garrisons on the frontier.
His movements raised great alarm among the Romans, who had too vivid a
recollection of their last war with Spain, under Clement the Seventh, to wish
for another. Garcilasso de la Vega, who had
represented Philip, during his father's reign, at the papal court, wrote a full
account of these doings to the viceroy of Naples. Garcilasso was instantly thrown into prison. Taxis, the Spanish director of the posts, was
both thrown into prison and put to the torture. Saria, the imperial ambassador,
after in vain remonstrating against these outrages, waited on the pope to
demand his passport, and was kept standing a full hour at the gate of the
Vatican, before he was admitted.
Philip had
full intelligence of all these proceedings. He had long since descried the dark
storm that was mustering beyond the Alps. He had provided for it at the close
of the preceding year, by committing the government of Naples to the man most
competent to such a crisis. This was the duke of Alva, at that time governor of
Milan, and commander-in-chief of the army in Italy. As this remarkable person
is to occupy a large space in the subsequent pages of this narrative, it may be
well to give some account of his earlier life.
Fernando
Alvarez de Toledo was descended from an illustrious house in Castile, whose
name is associated with some of the most memorable events in the national
history. He was born in 1508, and while a child had the misfortune to lose his
father, who perished in Africa, at the siege of Gelves.
The care of the orphan devolved on his grandfather, the celebrated conqueror of
Navarre. Under this veteran teacher the young Fernando received his first
lessons in war, being present at more than one skirmish when quite a boy. This
seems to have sharpened his appetite for a soldier’s life, for we find him at
the age of sixteen, secretly leaving his home and taking service under the
banner of the Constable Velasco, at the siege of Fontarabia.
He was subsequently made governor of that place. In 1527, when not twenty years
of age, he came, by his grandfather's death, into possession of the titles and
large patrimonial estates of the house of Toledo.
The
capacity which he displayed, as well as his high rank, soon made him an object
of attention; and as Philip grew in years, the duke of Alva was placed near his
person, formed one of his council, and took part in the regency of Castile. He
accompanied Philip on his journeys from Spain, and, as we have seen, made one
of his retinue both in Flanders and in England. The duke was of too haughty and
imperious a temper to condescend to those arts which are thought to open the
most ready avenues to the favor of the sovereign. He met with rivals of a finer
policy and more accommodating disposition. Yet Philip perfectly comprehended
his character. He knew the strength of his understanding, and did full justice
to his loyalty; and he showed his confidence in his integrity by placing him in
offices of the highest responsibility.
The
emperor, with his usual insight into character, had early discerned the
military talents of the young nobleman. He took Alva along with him on his
campaigns in Germany, where from a subordinate station he rapidly rose to the
first command in the army. Such was his position at the unfortunate siege of
Metz, where the Spanish infantry had nearly been sacrificed to the obstinacy of
Charles.
In his
military career the duke displayed some of the qualities most characteristic of
his countrymen. But they were those qualities which belong to a riper period of
life. He showed little of that romantic and adventurous spirit of the Spanish
cavalier, which seemed to court peril for its own sake, and would hazard all on
a single cast. Caution was his prominent trait, in which he was a match for any
graybeard in the army;—a caution carried to such a length as sometimes to put a
curb on the enterprising spirit of the emperor. Men were amazed to see so old a
head on so young shoulders.
Yet
this caution was attended by a courage which dangers could not daunt, and by a
constancy which toil, however severe, could not tire. He preferred the surest,
even though the slowest, means to attain his object. He was not ambitious of
effect; he never sought to startle by a brilliant coup-de-main. He would not
have compromised a single chance in his own favor by appealing to the issue of
a battle. He looked steadily to the end, and he moved surely towards it by a
system of operations planned with the nicest forecast. The result of these
operations was almost always success. Few great commanders have been more
uniformly successful in their campaigns. Yet it was rare that these campaigns
were marked by what is so dazzling to the imagination of the young aspirant for
glory,—a great and decisive victory.—Such were some of the more obvious traits
in the military character of the chief to whom Philip, at this crisis, confided
the post of viceroy of Naples.
Before
commencing hostilities against the Church, the Spanish monarch determined to
ease his conscience, by obtaining, if possible, a warrant for his proceedings
from the Church itself. He assembled a body composed of theologians from
Salamanca, Alcalá, Valladolid, and some other places, and of jurists from his
several councils, to resolve certain queries which he propounded. Among the
rest, he inquired whether, in case of a defensive war with the pope, it would
not be lawful to sequestrate the revenues of those persons, natives or
foreigners, who had benefices in Spain, but who refused obedience to the orders
of its sovereign;—whether he might not lay an embargo on all revenues of the
Church, and prohibit any remittance of moneys to Rome;—whether a council might
not be convoked to determine the validity of Paul’s election, which, in some
particulars, was supposed to have been irregular;—whether inquiry might not be
made into the gross abuses of ecclesiastical patronage by the Roman see, and
effectual measures taken to redress them. The suggestion of an ecclesiastical
council was a menace that grated unpleasantly on the pontifical ear, and was
used by European princes as a sort of counterblast to the threat of
excommunication. The particular objects for which this council was to be
summoned were not of a kind to soothe the irritable nerves of his holiness. The
conclave of theologians and jurists made as favorable responses as the king had
anticipated to his several interrogatories; and Philip, under so respectable a
sanction, sent orders to his viceroy to take effectual measures for the
protection of Naples.
Alva
had not waited for these orders, but had busily employed himself in mustering
his resources, and in collecting troops from the Abruzzi and other parts of his
territory. As hostilities were inevitable, he determined to strike the first
blow, and carry the war into the enemy's country, before he had time to cross
the Neapolitan frontier. Like his master, however, the duke was willing to
release himself, as far as possible, from personal responsibility before taking
up arms against the head of the Church. He accordingly addressed a manifesto to
the pope and the cardinals, setting forth in glowing terms the manifold
grievances of his sovereign; the opprobrious and insulting language of Paul;
the indignities offered to Philip's agents, and to the imperial ambassador; the
process instituted for depriving his master of Naples; and, lastly, the warlike
demonstrations of the pope along the frontier, which left no doubt as to his
designs. He conjured his holiness to pause before he plunged his country into
war. As the head of the Church, it was his duty to preserve peace, not to bring
war into Christendom. He painted the inevitable evils of war, and the ruin and
devastation which it must bring on the fair fields of Italy. If this were done,
it would be the pope's doing, and his would be the responsibility. On the part
of Naples, the war would be a war of defense. For himself, he had no
alternative. He was placed there to maintain the possessions of his sovereign;
and, by the blessing of God, he would maintain them to the last drop of his
blood.
Alva,
while making this appeal to the pope, invoked the good offices of the Venetian
government in bringing about a reconciliation between Philip and the Vatican.
His spirited manifesto to the pope was entrusted to a special messenger, a
person of some consideration in Naples. The only reply which the hot-headed
pontiff made to it was to throw the envoy into prison, and, as some state, to
put him to the torture.
Meanwhile,
Alva, who had not placed much reliance on the success of his appeal, had
mustered a force, amounting in all to twelve thousand infantry, fifteen hundred
horse, and a train of twelve pieces of artillery. His infantry was chiefly made
up of Neapolitans, some of whom had seen but little service. The strength of
his army lay in his Spanish veterans, forming one third of his force. The place
of rendezvous was San Germano, a town on the northern
frontier of the kingdom. On the first of September, 1556, Alva, attended by a
gallant band of cavaliers, left the capital, and on the fourth arrived at the
place appointed. The following day he crossed the borders at the head of his
troops, and marched on Pontecorvo. He met with no resistance from the inhabitants,
who at once threw open their gates to him. Several other places followed the
example of Pontecorvo; and Alva, taking possession of them, caused a scutcheon
displaying the arms of the sacred college to be hung up in the principal church
of each town, with a placard announcing that he held it only for the college,
until the election of a new pontiff. By this act he proclaimed to the Christian
world that the object of the war, as far as Spain was concerned, was not
conquest, but defense. Some historians find in it a deeper policy,—that of
exciting feelings of distrust between the pope and the cardinals.
Anagni, a place of some
strength, refused the duke's summons to surrender. He was detained three days
before his guns had opened a practicable breach in the walls. He then ordered
an assault. The town was stormed and delivered up to sack,—by which phrase is
to be understood the perpetration of all those outrages which the ruthless code
of war allowed, in that age, on the persons and property of the defenseless
inhabitants, without regard to sex or age.
One or
two other places which made resistance shared the fate of Anagni;
and the duke of Alva, having garrisoned his new conquests with such forces as
he could spare, led his victorious legions against Tivoli,—a town strongly
situated on elevated ground, commanding the eastern approaches to the capital.
The place surrendered without attempting a defense; and Alva, willing to give
his men some repose, made Tivoli his head-quarters; while his army spread over
the suburbs and adjacent country, which afforded good forage for his cavalry.
The
rapid succession of these events, the fall of town after town, and, above all,
the dismal fate of Anagni, filled the people of Rome
with terror. The women began to hurry out of the city; many of the men would
have followed but for the interference of Cardinal Caraffa. The panic was as
great as if the enemy had been already at the gates of the capital. Amidst this
general consternation, Paul seemed to be almost the only person who retained
his self-possession. Navagero, the Venetian minister,
was present when he received tidings of the storming of Anagni,
and bears witness to the composure with which he went through the official
business of the morning, as if nothing had happened. This was in public; but
the shock was sufficiently strong to strike out some sparkles of his fiery
temper, as those found who met him that day in private. To the Venetian agent
who had come to Rome to mediate a peace, and who had pressed him to enter into
some terms of accommodation with the Spaniards, he haughtily replied, that Alva
must first recross the frontier, and then, if he had aught to solicit, prefer
his petition like a dutiful son of the Church. This course was not one very
likely to be adopted by the victorious general.
In an
interview with two French gentlemen, who, as he had reason to suppose, were
interesting themselves in the affair of a peace, he exclaimed: “Whoever would
bring me into a peace with heretics is a servant of the Devil. Heaven will take
vengeance on him. I will pray that God's curse may fall on him. If I find that
you intermeddle in any such matter, I will cut your heads off your shoulders.
Do not think this an empty threat. I have an eye in my back on you”,—quoting an
Italian proverb,—“and if I find you playing me false, or attempting to entangle
me a second time in an accursed truce, I swear to you by the eternal God, I
will make your heads fly from your shoulders, come what may come of it!” “In
this way”, concludes the narrator, one of the parties, “his holiness continued
for nearly an hour, walking up and down the apartment, and talking all the
while of his own grievances and of cutting off our heads, until he had talked
himself quite out of breath”.
But the
valor of the pope did not expend itself in words. He instantly set about
putting the capital in the best state of defense. He taxed the people to raise
funds for his troops, drew in the garrisons from the neighboring places, formed
a body-guard of six or seven hundred horse, and soon had the satisfaction of
seeing his Roman levies, amounting to six thousand infantry, well equipped for
the war. They made a brave show, with their handsome uniforms and their banners
richly emblazoned with the pontifical arms. As they passed in review before his
holiness, who stood at one of the windows of his palace, he gave them his
benediction. But the edge of the Roman sword, according to an old proverb, was
apt to be blunt; and these holiday troops were soon found to be no match for
the hardy veterans of Spain.
Among
the soldiers at the pope's disposal was a body of German mercenaries, who
followed war as a trade, and let themselves out to the highest bidder. They
were Lutherans, with little knowledge of the Roman Catholic religion, and less
respect for it. They stared at its rites as mummeries, and made a jest of its
most solemn ceremonies, directly under the eyes of the pope. But Paul, who at
other times would have punished offences like these with the gibbet and the
stake, could not quarrel with his defenders, and was obliged to digest his
mortification as he best might. It was remarked that the times were sadly out
of joint, when the head of the Church had heretics for his allies and Catholics
for his enemies.
Meanwhile
the duke of Alva was lying at Tivoli. If he had taken advantage of the panic
caused by his successes, he might, it was thought, without much difficulty,
have made himself master of the capital. But this did not suit his policy,
which was rather to bring the pope to terms than to ruin him. He was desirous
to reduce the city by cutting off its supplies. The possession of Tivoli, as
already noticed, enabled him to command the eastern approaches to Rome, and he
now proposed to make himself master of Ostia and thus destroy the
communications with the coast.
Accordingly,
drawing together his forces, he quitted Tivoli, and directed his march across
the Campagna, south of the Roman capital. On his way he made himself master of
some places belonging to the holy see, and in the early part of November
arrived before Ostia, and took up a position on the banks of the Tiber, where
it spread into two branches, the northern one of which was called the
Fiumicino, or little river. The town, or rather village, consisted of only a
few straggling houses, very different from the proud Ostia, whose capacious
harbor was once filled with the commerce of the world. It was protected by a
citadel of some strength, garrisoned by a small but picked body of troops, so
indifferently provided with military stores, that it was clear the government
had not anticipated an attack in this quarter.
The
duke ordered a number of boats to be sent round from Nettuno, a place on the
coast, of which he had got possession. By means of these he formed a bridge,
over which he passed a small detachment of his army, together with his
battering train of artillery. The hamlet was easily taken, but, as the citadel
refused to surrender, Alva laid regular siege to it. He constructed two
batteries, on which he planted his heavy guns, commanding opposite quarters of
the fortress. He then opened a lively cannonade on the outworks, which was
returned with great spirit by the garrison.
Meanwhile
he detached a considerable body of horse, under Colonna, who swept the country
to the very walls of Rome. A squadron of cavalry, whose gallant bearing had
filled the heart of the old pope with exultation, sallied out against the
marauders. An encounter took place not far from the city. The Romans bore
themselves up bravely to the shock; but, after splintering their lances, they
wheeled about, and, without striking another blow, abandoned the field to the
enemy, who followed them up to the gates of the capital. They were so roughly
handled in their flight, that the valiant troopers could not be induced again
to leave their walls, although Cardinal Caraffa—who had a narrow escape from
the enemy—sallied out with a handful of his followers, to give them confidence.
During
this time Alva was vigorously pressing the siege of Ostia; but though more than
a week had elapsed, the besieged showed no disposition to surrender. At length,
the Spanish commander, on the seventeenth of November, finding his ammunition
nearly expended and his army short of provisions, determined on a general
assault. Early on the following morning, after hearing mass as usual, the duke
mounted his horse, and, riding among the ranks to animate the spirits of his
soldiers, gave orders for the attack. A corps of Italians was first detached,
to scale the works; but they were repulsed with considerable loss. It was found
impossible for their officers to rally them, and bring them back to the
assault. A picked body of Spanish infantry was then dispatched on this
dangerous service. With incredible difficulty they succeeded in scaling the
ramparts, under a storm of combustibles and other missiles hurled down by the
garrison, and effected an entrance into the place. But here they were met with
a courage as dauntless as their own. The struggle was long and desperate. There
had been no such fighting in the course of the campaign. At length, the duke,
made aware of the severe loss sustained by his men, and of the impracticability
of the attempt, as darkness was setting in, gave the signal for retreat. The
assailants had doubtless the worst of it in the conflict; but the besieged,
worn out with fatigue, with their ammunition nearly exhausted, and almost
without food, did not feel themselves in condition to sustain another assault
on the following day. On the nineteenth of November, therefore, the morning
after the conflict, the brave garrison capitulated, and were treated with honor
as prisoners of war.
The
fate of the campaign seemed now to be decided. The pope, with, his principal
towns in the hands of the enemy, his communications cut off both with the
country and the coast, may well have felt his inability to contend thus
single-handed against the power of Spain. At all events, his subjects felt it,
and they were not deterred by his arrogant bearing from clamoring loudly
against the continuance of this ruinous war. But Paul would not hear of a
peace. However crippled by his late reverses, he felt confident of repairing
them all on the arrival of the French, who, as he now learned with joy, were in
full march across the territory of Milan. He was not so disinclined to a truce,
which might give time for their coming.
Cardinal
Caraffa, accordingly, had a conference with the duke of Alva, and entered into
negotiations with him for a suspension of arms. The proposal was not unwelcome
to the duke, who, weakened by losses of every kind, was by no means in
condition at the end of an active campaign to contend with a fresh army under
the command of so practiced a leader as the duke of Guise. He did not care to
expose himself a second time to an encounter with the French general, under
disadvantages nearly as great as those which had foiled him at Metz.
With
these amiable dispositions, a truce was soon arranged between the parties, to
continue forty days. The terms were honorable to Alva, since they left him in
possession of all his conquests. Having completed these arrangements, the
Spanish commander broke up his camp on the southern bank of the Tiber,
recrossed the frontier, and in a few days made his triumphant entry, at the
head of his battalions, into the city of Naples.
So
ended the first campaign of the war with Rome. It had given a severe lesson,
that might have shaken the confidence and humbled the pride of a pontiff less
arrogant than Paul the Fourth. But it served only to deepen his hatred of the
Spaniards, and to stimulate his desire for vengeance.
CHAPTER VI.
WAR WITH THE POPE. 1557.
While
the events recorded in the preceding pages were passing in Italy, the French
army, under the duke of Guise, had arrived on the borders of Piedmont. That
commander, on leaving Paris, found himself at the head of a force consisting of
twelve thousand infantry, of which five thousand were Swiss, and the rest
French, including a considerable number of Gascons. His cavalry amounted to two
thousand, and he was provided with twelve pieces of artillery. In addition to
this, Guise was attended by a gallant body of French gentlemen, young for the
most part, and eager to win laurels under the renowned defender of Metz.
The
French army met with no opposition in its passage through Piedmont. The king of
Spain had ordered the government of Milan to strengthen the garrisons of the
fortresses, but to oppose no resistance to the French, unless the latter began
hostilities. Some of the duke's counsellors would have persuaded him to do so.
His father-in-law, the duke of Ferrara, in particular, who had brought him a
reinforcement of six thousand troops, strongly pressed the French general to
make sure of the Milanese before penetrating to the south; otherwise he would
leave a dangerous enemy in his rear. The Italian urged, moreover, the
importance of such a step in giving confidence to the Angevine faction in
Naples, and in drawing over to France those states which hesitated as to their
policy, or which had but lately consented to an alliance with Spain.
France,
at this time, exercised but little influence in the counsels of the Italian
powers. Genoa, after an ineffectual attempt at revolution, was devoted to
Spain. The cooperation of Cosmo de' Medici, then lord of Tuscany, had been
secured by the cession of Sienna. The duke of Parma, who had coquetted for some
time with the French monarch, was won over to Spain by the restoration of
Placentia, of which he had been despoiled by Charles the Fifth. His young son,
Alexander Farnese, was sent as a hostage, to be educated under Philip’s eye, at
the court of Madrid,—the fruits of which training were to be gathered in the
war of the Netherlands, where he proved himself the most consummate captain of
his time. Venice, from her lonely watch-tower on the Adriatic, regarded at a
distance the political changes of Italy, prepared to profit by any chances in
her own favor. Her conservative policy, however, prompted her to maintain
things as far as possible in their present position. She was most desirous that
the existing equilibrium should not be disturbed by the introduction of any new
power on the theatre of Italy; and she had readily acquiesced in the invitation
of the duke of Alva, to mediate an accommodation between the contending
parties. This pacific temper found little encouragement from the belligerent
pontiff who had brought the war upon Italy.
The
advice of the duke of Ferrara, however judicious in itself, was not relished by
his son-in-law, the duke of Guise, who was anxious to press forward to Naples
as the proper scene of his conquests. The pope, too, called on him, in the most
peremptory terms, to hasten his march, as Naples was the object of the
expedition. The French commander had the address to obtain instructions to the
same effect from his own court, by which he affected to be decided. His Italian
father-in-law was so much disgusted by this determination, that he instantly
quitted the camp, and drew off his six thousand soldiers, declaring that he
needed all he could muster to protect his own states against the troops of
Milan.
Thus
shorn of his Italian reinforcement, the duke of Guise resumed his march, and,
entering the States of the Church, followed down the shores of the Adriatic,
passing through Ravenna and Rimini; then, striking into the interior, he halted
at Gesi, where he found good accommodations for his
men and abundant forage for the horses.
Leaving
his army in their pleasant quarters, he soon after repaired to Rome, in order
to arrange with the pope the plan of the campaign. He was graciously received
by Paul, who treated him with distinguished honor as the loyal champion of the
Church. Emboldened by the presence of the French army in his dominions, the
pope no longer hesitated to proclaim the renewal of the war against Spain. The
Roman levies, scattered over the Campagna, assaulted the places but feebly
garrisoned by the Spaniards. Most of them, including Tivoli and Ostia, were
retaken; and the haughty bosom of the pontiff swelled with exultation as he
anticipated the speedy extinction of the Spanish rule in Italy.
After
some days consumed in the Vatican, Guise rejoined his army at Gesi. He was fortified by abundant assurances of aid from
his holiness, and he was soon joined by one of Paul's nephews, the duke of
Montebello, with a slender reinforcement. It was determined to cross the
Neapolitan frontier at once, and to begin operations by the siege of Campli.
This
was a considerable place, situated in the midst of a fruitful territory. The
native population had been greatly increased by the influx of people from the
surrounding country, who had taken refuge in Campli as a place of security. But they did little for its defense. It did not long
resist the impetuosity of the French, who carried the town by storm. The
men—all who made resistance—were put to the sword. The women were abandoned to
the licentious soldiery. The houses, first pillaged, were then fired; and the
once flourishing place was soon converted into a heap of smoldering ruins. The
booty was great, for the people of the neighborhood had brought their effects
thither for safety, and a large amount of gold and silver was found in the
dwellings. The cellars, too, were filled with delicate wines; and the victors
abandoned themselves to feasting and wassail, while the wretched citizens
wandered like specters amidst the ruins of their ancient habitations.
The
fate of Italy, in the sixteenth century, was hard indeed. She had advanced far
beyond the age in most of the arts which belong to a civilized community. Her
cities, even her smaller towns, throughout the country, displayed the evidences
of architectural taste. They were filled with stately temples and elegant
mansions; the squares were ornamented with fountains of elaborate workmanship;
the rivers were spanned by arches of solid masonry. The private as well as
public edifices were furnished with costly works of art, of which the value was
less in the material than in the execution. A generation had scarcely passed
since Michael Angelo and Raphael{75} had produced their miracles of sculpture
and of painting; and now Correggio, Paul Veronese, and Titian were filling
their country with those immortal productions which have been the delight and
the despair of succeeding ages. Letters kept pace with art. The magical strains
of Ariosto had scarcely died away when a greater bard had arisen in Tasso, to
take up the tale of Christian chivalry. This extraordinary combination of
elegant art and literary culture was the more remarkable, from the contrast
presented by the condition of the rest of Europe, then first rising into the
light of a higher civilization. But, with all this intellectual progress, Italy
was sadly deficient in some qualities found among the hardier sons of the
north, and which seem indispensable to a national existence. She could boast of
her artists, her poets, her politicians; but of few real patriots, few who
rested their own hopes on the independence of their country. The freedom of the
old Italian republics had passed away. There was scarcely one that had not
surrendered its liberties to a master. The principle of union for defense
against foreign aggression was as little understood as the principle of
political liberty at home. The states were jealous of one another. The cities
were jealous of one another, and were often torn by factions within themselves.
Thus their individual strength was alike ineffectual, whether for
self-government or self-defense. The gift of beauty which Italy possessed in so
extraordinary a degree only made her a more tempting prize to the spoiler, whom
she had not the strength or the courage to resist. The Turkish corsair fell
upon her coasts, plundered her maritime towns, and swept off their inhabitants
into slavery. The Europeans, scarcely less barbarous, crossed the Alps, and,
striking into the interior, fell upon the towns and hamlets that lay sheltered
among the hills and in the quiet valleys, and converted them into heaps of
ruins. Ill fares it with the land which, in an age of violence, has given
itself up to the study of the graceful and the beautiful, to the neglect of
those hardy virtues which can alone secure a nation's independence.
From
the smoking ruins of Campli, Guise led his troops
against Civitella, a town but a few miles distant. It was built round a conical
hill, the top of which was crowned by a fortress well lined with artillery. It
was an important place for the command of the frontier, and the duke of Alva
had thrown into it a garrison of twelve hundred men under the direction of an
experienced officer, the marquis of Santa Fiore. The French general considered
that the capture of this post, so soon following the sack of Campli, would spread terror among the Neapolitans, and
encourage those of the Angevine faction to declare openly in his favor.
As the place
refused to surrender, he prepared to besiege it in form, throwing up
intrenchments, and only waiting for his heavy guns to begin active hostilities.
He impatiently expected their arrival for some days, when he caused four
batteries to be erected, to operate simultaneously against four quarters of the
town. After a brisk cannonade, which was returned by the besieged with equal
spirit, and with still greater loss to the enemy, from his exposed position,
the duke, who had opened a breach in the works, prepared for a general assault.
It was conducted with the usual impetuosity of the French, but was repulsed
with courage by the Italians. More than once the assailants were brought up to
the breach, and as often driven back with slaughter. The duke, convinced that
he had been too precipitate, was obliged to sound a retreat, and again renewed
the cannonade from his batteries, keeping it up night and day, though, from the
vertical direction of the fire, with comparatively little effect. The French
camp offered a surer mark to the guns of Civitella.
The
women of the place displayed an intrepidity equal to that of the men. Armed
with buckler and cuirass, they might be seen by the side of their husbands and
brothers, in the most exposed situations on the ramparts; and, as one was shot
down, another stepped forward to take the place of her fallen comrade. The fate
of Campli had taught them to expect no mercy from the
victor, and they preferred death to dishonor.
As day
after day passed on in the same monotonous manner, Guise's troops became weary
of their inactive life. The mercurial spirits of the French soldier, which
overleaped every obstacle in his path, were often found to evaporate in the
tedium of protracted operations, where there was neither incident nor
excitement. Such a state of things was better suited to the patient and
persevering Spaniard. The men began openly to murmur against the pope, whom
they regarded as the cause of their troubles. They were led by priests, they
said, "who knew much more of praying than of fighting."
Guise
himself had causes of disgust with the pontiff which he did not care to
conceal. For all the splendid promises of his holiness, he had received few supplies
either of men, ammunition, or money; and of the Angevine lords not one had
ventured to declare in his favor or to take service under his banner. He urged
all this with much warmth on the pope's nephew, the duke of Montebello. The
Italian, recriminated as warmly, till the dialogue was abruptly ended, it is
said, by the duke of Guise throwing a napkin, or, according to some accounts, a
dish, at the head of his ally. However this may be, Montebello left the camp in
disgust and returned to Rome. But the defender of the Church was too important
a person to quarrel with, and Paul deemed it prudent, for the present, at
least, to stifle his resentment.
Meanwhile
heavy rains set in, causing great annoyance to the French troops in their
quarters, spoiling their provisions, and doing great damage to their powder.
The same rain did good service to the besieged, by filling their cisterns.
"God," exclaimed the profane Guise, "must have turned
Spaniard."
While
these events were taking place in the north of Naples, the duke of Alva, in the
south, was making active preparations for the defense of the kingdom. He had
seen with satisfaction the time consumed by his antagonist, first at Gesi, and afterwards at the siege of Civitella; and he had
fully profited by the delay. On reaching the city of Naples, he had summoned a
parliament of the great barons, had clearly exposed the necessities of the
state, and demanded an extraordinary loan of two millions of ducats. The loyal
nobles readily responded to the call; but as not more than one third of the
whole amount could be instantly raised, an order was obtained from the council,
requiring the governors of the several provinces to invite the great
ecclesiastics in their districts to advance the remaining two thirds of the
loan. In case they did not consent with a good grace, they were to be forced to
comply by the seizure of their revenues.
By
another decree of the council, the gold and silver plate belonging to the
monasteries and churches, throughout the kingdom, after being valued, was to be
taken for the use of the government. A quantity of it, belonging to a city in
the Abruzzi, was in fact put up to be sent to Naples; but it caused such a
tumult among the people, that it was found expedient to suspend proceedings in
the matter for the present.
The
viceroy still further enlarged his resources by the sequestration of the
revenues belonging to such ecclesiastics as resided in Rome. By these various
expedients the duke of Alva found himself in possession of sufficient funds,
for carrying on the war as he desired. He mustered a force of twenty-two, or,
as some accounts state, twenty-five thousand men. Of these three thousand only
were Spanish veterans, five thousand were Germans, and the remainder Italians,
chiefly from the Abruzzi,—for the most part raw recruits, on whom little
reliance was to be placed. He had besides seven hundred men-at-arms and fifteen
hundred light horse. His army, therefore, though, as far as the Italians were
concerned, inferior in discipline to that of his antagonist, was greatly
superior in numbers.
In a
council of war that was called, some were of opinion that the viceroy should
act on the defensive, and await the approach of the enemy in the neighborhood
of the capital. But Alva looked on this as a timid course, arguing distrust in
himself, and likely to infuse distrust into his followers. He determined to
march at once against the enemy, and prevent his gaining a permanent foothold
in the kingdom.
Pescara,
on the Adriatic, was appointed as the place of rendezvous for the army, and
Alva quitted the city of Naples for that place on the eleventh of April, 1557.
Here he concentrated his whole strength, and received his artillery and
military stores, which were brought to him by water. Having reviewed his
troops, he began his march to the north. On reaching Rio Umano,
he detached a strong body of troops to get possession of Giulia Nuova, a town
of some importance lately seized by the enemy. Alva supposed, and it seems
correctly, that the French commander had secured this as a good place of
retreat in case of his failure before Civitella, since its position was such as
would enable him readily to keep up his communications with the sea. The French
garrison sallied out against the Spaniards, but were driven back with loss;
and, as Alva's troops followed in their rear, the enemy fled in confusion
through the streets of the city, and left it in the hands of the victors. In
this commodious position, the viceroy for the present took up his quarters.
On the
approach of the Spanish army, the duke of Guise saw the necessity of bringing
his operations against Civitella to a decisive issue. He accordingly, as a last
effort, prepared for a general assault. But, although it was conducted with
great spirit, it was repulsed with still greater by the garrison; and the
French commander, deeply mortified at his repeated failures, saw the necessity
of abandoning the siege. He could not effect even this without sustaining some
loss from the brave defenders of Civitella, who sallied out on his rear, as he
drew off his discomfited troops to the neighboring valley of Nireto. Thus ended the siege of Civitella, which, by the
confidence it gave to the loyal Neapolitans throughout the country as well as
by the leisure it afforded to Alva for mustering his resources, may be said to
have decided the fate of the war. The siege lasted twenty-two days, during
fourteen of which the guns from the four batteries of the French had played
incessantly on the beleaguered city. The viceroy was filled with admiration at
the heroic conduct of the inhabitants; and, in token of respect for it, granted
some important immunities, to be enjoyed for ever by the citizens of Civitella.
The women, too, came in for their share of the honors, as whoever married a
maiden of Civitella was to be allowed the same immunities, from whatever part
of the country he might come.
The two
armies were now quartered within a few miles of each other. Yet no
demonstration was made, on either side, of bringing matters to the issue of a
battle. This was foreign to Alva's policy, and was not to be expected from
Guise, so inferior in strength to his antagonist. On the viceroy's quitting
Giulia Nuova, however, to occupy a position somewhat nearer the French
quarters, Guise did not deem it prudent to remain there any longer, but,
breaking up his camp, retreated, with his whole army, across the Tronto, and, without further delay, evacuated the kingdom
of Naples.
The
Spanish general made no attempt to pursue, or even to molest his adversary in
his retreat. For this he has been severely criticized, more particularly as the
passage of a river offers many points of advantage to an assailant. But, in
truth, Alva never resorted to fighting when he could gain his end without it.
In an appeal to arms, however favorable may be the odds, there must always be
some doubt as to the result. But the odds here were not so decisively on the
side of the Spaniards as they appeared. The duke of Guise carried off his
battalions in admirable order, protecting his rear with the flower of his
infantry and with his cavalry, in which last he was much superior to his enemy.
Thus the parts of the hostile armies likely to have been brought into immediate
conflict would have afforded no certain assurance of success to the Spaniards.
Alva's object had been, not so much to defeat the French as to defend Naples.
This he had now achieved, with but little loss; and rather than incur the risk
of greater, he was willing, in the words of an old proverb, to make a bridge of
silver for the flying foe. In the words of Alva himself, "he had no idea
of staking the kingdom of Naples against the embroidered coat of the duke of
Guise."
On the
retreat of the French, Alva laid siege at once to two or three places, of no
great note, in the capture of which he and his lieutenants were guilty of the
most deliberate cruelty; though, in the judgment of the chronicler, it was not
cruelty, but a wholesome severity, designed as a warning to such petty places
not to defy the royal authority. Soon after this, Alva himself crossed the Tronto, and took up a position not far removed from the
French, who lay in the neighborhood of Ascoli. Although the two armies were but
a few miles asunder, there was no attempt at hostilities, with the exception of
a skirmish in which but a small number on either side were engaged, and which
terminated in favor of the Spaniards. This state of things was at length ended
by a summons from the pope to the French commander to draw nearer to Rome, as
he needed his presence for the protection of the capital. The duke, glad, no
doubt, of so honorable an apology for his retreat, and satisfied with having so
long held his ground against a force superior to his own, fell back, in good
order, upon Tivoli, which, as it commanded the great avenues to Rome on the
east, and afforded good accommodations for his troops, he made his head
quarters for the present. The manner in which the duke of Alva adhered to the
plan of defensive operations settled at the beginning of the campaign, and
that, too, under circumstances which would have tempted most men to depart from
such a plan, is a remarkable proof of his perseverance and inflexible spirit.
It proves, moreover, the empire which he held over the minds of his followers,
that, under such circumstances, he could maintain implicit obedience to his
orders.
The
cause of the pope's alarm was the rapid successes of Alva's confederate, Mark
Antony Colonna, who had defeated the papal levies, and taken one place after
another in the Campagna, till the Romans began to tremble for their capital.
Colonna was now occupied with the siege of Segni, a
place of considerable importance; and the duke of Alva, relieved of the
presence of the French, resolved to march to his support. He accordingly
recrossed the Tronto, and, passing through the
Neapolitan territory, halted for some days at Sora. He then traversed the
frontier, but had not penetrated far into the Campagna when he received tidings
of the fall of Segni. That strong place, after a
gallant defense, had been taken by storm. All the usual atrocities were
perpetrated by the brutal soldiery. Even the sanctity of the convents did not
save them from pollution. It was in vain that Colonna interfered to prevent
these excesses. The voice of authority was little heeded in the tempest of
passion.—It mattered little, in that age, into whose hands a captured city
fell; Germans, French, Italians, it was all the same. The wretched town, so
lately flourishing, it might be, in all the pride of luxury and wealth, was
claimed as the fair spoil of the victors. It was their prize-money, which
served in default of payment of their long arrears,—usually long in those days;
and it was a mode of payment as convenient for the general as for his soldiers.
The
fall of Segni caused the greatest consternation in
the capital. The next thing, it was said, would be to assault the capital
itself. Paul the Fourth, incapable of fear, was filled with impotent fury.
"They have taken Segni," he said in a
conclave of the cardinals; "they have murdered the people, destroyed their
property, fired their dwellings. Worse than this, they will next pillage Palliano. Even this will not fill up the measure of their
cruelty. They will sack the city of Rome itself; nor will they respect even my
person. But, for myself, I long to be with Christ, and await without fear the
crown of martyrdom." Paul the Fourth, after having brought this tempest
upon Italy, began to consider himself a martyr!
Yet
even in this extremity, though urged on all sides to make concessions, he would
abate nothing of his haughty tone. He insisted, as a sine qua non, that Alva
should forthwith leave the Roman territory and restore his conquests. When
these conditions were reported to the duke, he coolly remarked, that "his
holiness seemed to be under the mistake of supposing that his own army was
before Naples, instead of the Spanish army being at the gates of Rome."
After
the surrender of Segni, Alva effected a junction with
the Italian forces, and marched to the town of Colona, in the Campagna, where
for the present he quartered his army. Here he formed the plan of an
enterprise, the adventurous character of which it seems difficult to reconcile
with his habitual caution. This was a night assault on Rome. He did not
communicate his whole purpose to his officers, but simply ordered them to
prepare to march on the following night, the twenty-sixth of August, against a
neighboring city, the name of which he did not disclose. It was a wealthy
place, he said, but he was most anxious that no violence should be offered to
the inhabitants, in either their persons or property. The soldiers should be
forbidden even to enter the dwellings; but he promised that the loss of booty
should be compensated by increase of pay. The men were to go lightly armed,
without baggage, and with their shirts over their mail, affording the best
means of recognizing one another in the dark.
The
night was obscure, but unfortunately a driving storm of rain set in, which did
such damage to the roads as greatly to impede the march, and the dawn was nigh
at hand when the troops reached the place of destination. To their great
surprise, they then understood that the object of attack was Rome itself.
Alva
halted at a short distance from the city, in a meadow, and sent forward a small
party to reconnoiter the capital, which seemed to slumber in quiet. But, on a
nearer approach, the Spaniards saw a great light, as if occasioned by a
multitude of torches, that seemed glancing to and fro within the walls, inferring some great stir among the inhabitants of that
quarter. Soon after this, a few horsemen were seen to issue from one of the
gates, and ride off in the direction of the French camp at Tivoli. The duke, on
receiving the report, was satisfied that the Romans had, in some way or other,
got notice of his design; that the horsemen had gone to give the alarm to the
French in Tivoli; and that he should soon find himself between two enemies. Not
relishing this critical position, he at once abandoned his design, and made a
rapid countermarch on the place he had left the preceding evening.
In his
conjectures the duke was partly in the right and partly in the wrong. The
lights which were seen glancing within the town were owing to the watchfulness
of Caraffa, who, from some apprehensions of an attack, in consequence of
information he had received of preparations in the Spanish camp, was patrolling
this quarter before daybreak to see that all was safe; but the horsemen who
left the gates at that early hour in the direction of the French camp were far
from thinking that hostile battalions lay within gunshot of their walls.
Such is
the account we have of this strange affair. Some historians assert that it was
not the duke's design to attack Rome, but only to make a feint, and, by the
panic which he would create, to afford the pope a good pretext for terminating
the war. In support of this, it is said that he told his son Ferdinand, just
before his departure, that he feared it would be impossible to prevent the
troops from sacking the city, if they once set foot in it. Other accounts state
that it was no feint, but a surprise meditated in good earnest, and defeated
only by the apparition of the lights and the seeming state of preparation in
which the place was found. Indeed, one writer asserts that he saw the
scaling-ladders, brought by a corps of two hundred arquebusiers, who were
appointed to the service of mounting the walls.
The
Venetian minister, Navagero, assures us that Alva's
avowed purpose was to secure the person of his holiness, which, he thought,
must bring the war at once to a close. The duke's uncle, the cardinal of
Sangiacomo, had warned his nephew, according to the same authority, not to
incur the fate of their countrymen who had served under the Constable de
Bourbon, at the sack of Rome, all of whom, sooner or later, had come to a
miserable end.
This
warning may have made some impression on the mind of Alva, who, however
inflexible by nature, had conscientious scruples of his own, and was, no doubt,
accessible, as others of his time, to arguments founded on superstition.
We cannot but admit that the whole affair,—the
preparations for the assault, the counsel to the officers, and the sudden
retreat on suspicion of a discovery,—all look very much like earnest. It is
quite possible that the duke, as the Venetian asserts, may have intended
nothing beyond the seizure of the pope. But that the matter would have stopped
there, no one will believe. Once fairly within the walls, even the authority of
Alva would have been impotent to restrain the license of the soldiery; and the
same scenes might have been acted over again as at the taking of Rome under the
Constable de Bourbon, or on the capture of the ancient capital by the Goths.
When
the Romans, on the following morning, learned the peril they had been in during
the night, and that the enemy had been prowling round, like wolves about a
sheepfold, ready to rush in upon their sleeping victims, the whole city was
seized with a panic. All the horrors of the sack by the Constable de Bourbon
rose up to their imaginations,—or rather memories, for many there were who were
old enough to remember that terrible day. They loudly clamored for peace before
it was too late; and they pressed the demand in a manner which showed that the
mood of the people was a dangerous one. Strozzi, the most distinguished of the
Italian captains, plainly told the pope that he had no choice but to come to
terms with the enemy at once.
Paul
was made more sensible of this by finding now, in his greatest need, the very
arm withdrawn from him on which he most leaned for support. Tidings had reached
the French camp of the decisive victory gained by the Spaniards at St. Quentin,
and they were followed by a summons from the king to the duke of Guise, to
return with his army, as speedily as possible, for the protection of Paris. The
duke, who was probably not unwilling to close a campaign which had been so
barren of laurels to the French, declared that "no chains were strong
enough to keep him in Italy." He at once repaired to the Vatican, and
there laid before his holiness the commands of his master. The case was so
pressing, that Paul could not in reason oppose the duke's departure. But he
seldom took counsel of reason, and in a burst of passion exclaimed to Guise,
"Go, then; and take with you the consciousness of having done little for
your king, still less for the Church, and nothing for your own honor."
Negotiations
were now opened for an accommodation between the belligerents, at the town of Cavi. Cardinal Caraffa appeared in behalf of his uncle, the
pope, and the duke of Alva for the Spaniards. Through the mediation of Venice,
the terms of the treaty were finally settled, on the fourteenth of September,
although the inflexible pontiff still insisted on concessions nearly as
extravagant as those he had demanded before. It was stipulated in a preliminary
article, that the duke of Alva should publicly ask pardon, and receive
absolution, for having borne arms against the holy see. "Sooner than
surrender this point," said Paul, "I would see the whole world
perish; and this, not so much for my own sake as for the honor of Jesus
Christ."
It was
provided by the treaty, that the Spanish troops should be immediately withdrawn
from the territory of the Church, that all the places taken from the Church
should be at once restored, and that the French army should be allowed a free
passage to their own country. Philip did not take so good care of his allies as
Paul did of his. Colonna, who had done the cause such good service, was not
even reinstated in the possessions of which the pope had deprived him. But a
secret article provided that his claims should be determined hereafter by the
joint arbitration of the pontiff and the king of Spain.
The treaty
was, in truth, one which, as Alva bitterly remarked, "seemed to have been
dictated by the vanquished rather than by the victor." It came hard to the
duke to execute it, especially the clause relating to himself. "Were I the
king," said he haughtily, "his holiness should send one of his
nephews to Brussels, to sue for my pardon, instead of my general's suing for
his." But Alva had no power to consult his own will in the matter. The
orders from Philip were peremptory, to come to some terms, if possible, with
the pope. Philip had long since made up his own mind, that neither profit nor
honor was to be derived from a war with the Church,—a war not only repugnant to
his own feelings, but which placed him in a false position, and one most
prejudicial to his political interests.
The
news of peace filled the Romans with a joy great in proportion to their former
consternation. Nor was this joy much diminished by a calamity which at any
other time would have thrown the city into mourning. The Tiber, swollen by the
autumnal rains, rose above its banks, sweeping away houses and trees in its
fury, drowning men and cattle, and breaking down a large piece of the wall that
surrounded the city. It was well that this accident had not occurred a few days
earlier, when the enemy was at the gates.
On the
twenty-seventh of September, 1557, the duke of Alva made his public entrance
into Rome. He was escorted by the papal guard, dressed in its gay uniform. It
was joined by the other troops in the city, who, on this holiday service, did
as well as better soldiers. On entering the gates, the concourse was swelled by
thousands of citizens, who made the air ring with their acclamations, as they
saluted the Spanish general with the titles of Defender and Liberator of the
capital. The epithets might be thought an indifferent compliment to their own
government. In this state the procession moved along, like the triumph of a
conqueror returned from his victorious campaigns to receive the wreath of
laurel in the capitol.
On
reaching the Vatican, the Spanish commander fell on his knees before the pope,
and asked his pardon for the offence of bearing arms against the Church. Paul,
soothed by this show of concession, readily granted absolution. He paid the
duke the distinguished honor of giving him a seat at his own table; while he
complimented the duchess by sending her the consecrated golden rose, reserved
only for royal persons and illustrious champions of the Church.
Yet the
haughty spirit of Alva saw in all this more of humiliation than of triumph. His
conscience, like that of his master, was greatly relieved by being discharged
from the responsibilities of such a war. But he had also a military conscience,
which seemed to be quite as much scandalized by the conditions of the peace. He
longed to be once more at Naples, where the state of things imperatively
required his presence. When he returned there, he found abundant occupation in
reforming the abuses which had grown out of the late confusion, and especially
in restoring, as far as possible, the shattered condition of the finances,—a
task hardly less difficult than that of driving out the French from Naples.
Thus
ended the war with Paul the Fourth,—a war into which that pontiff had plunged
without preparation, which he had conducted without judgment, and terminated
without honor. Indeed, it brought little honor to any of the parties concerned
in it, but, on the other hand, a full measure of those calamities which always
follow in the train of war.
The
French met with the same fate which uniformly befell them, when, lured by the
phantom of military glory, they crossed the Alps to lay waste the garden of
Italy,—in the words of their own proverb, "the grave of the French."
The duke of Guise, after a vexatious campaign, in which it was his greatest
glory that he had sustained no actual defeat, thought himself fortunate in
being allowed a free passage, with the shattered remnant of his troops, back to
his own country. Naples, besides the injuries she had sustained on her borders,
was burdened with a debt which continued to press heavily for generations to
come. Nor were her troubles ended by the peace. In the spring of the following
year, 1558, a Turkish squadron appeared off Calabria; and, running down the
coast, the Moslems made a landing on several points, sacked some of the
principal towns, butchered the inhabitants, or swept them off into hopeless
slavery. Such were some of the blessed fruits of the alliance between the grand
seignior and the head of the Catholic Church. Soliman had come into the league
at the invitation of the Christian princes. But it was not found so easy to lay
the spirit of mischief as it had been to raise it.
The
weight of the war, however, fell, as was just, most heavily on the author of
it. Paul, from his palace of the Vatican, could trace the march of the enemy by
the smoking ruins of the Campagna. He saw his towns sacked, his troops
scattered, his very capital menaced, his subjects driven by ruinous taxes to
the verge of rebellion. Even peace, when it did come, secured to him none of
the objects for which he had contended, while he had the humiliating
consciousness that he owed this peace, not to his own arms, but to the
forbearance—or the superstition of his enemies. One lesson he might have
learned,—that the thunders of the Vatican could no longer strike terror into
the hearts of princes, as in the days of the Crusades.
In this
war Paul had called in the French to aid him in driving out the Spaniards. The
French, he said, might easily be dislodged hereafter; "but the Spaniards
were like dog-grass, which is sure to strike root wherever it is
cast."—This was the last great effort that was made to overturn the
Spanish power in Naples; and the scepter of that kingdom continued to be
transmitted in the dynasty of Castile, with as little opposition as that of any
other portion of its broad empire.
Being
thus relieved of his military labors, Paul set about those great reforms, the
expectation of which had been the chief inducement to his election. But first
he gave a singular proof of self-command, in the reforms which he introduced
into his own family. Previously to his election, no one, as we have seen, had
declaimed more loudly than Paul against nepotism,—the besetting sin of his
predecessors, who, most of them old men and without children, naturally sought
a substitute for these in their nephews and those nearest of kin. Paul's
partiality for his nephews was made the more conspicuous by the profligacy of
their characters. Yet the real bond which held the parties together was hatred
of the Spaniards. When peace came, and this bond of union was dissolved, Paul
readily opened his ears to the accusations against his kinsmen. Convinced at
length of their unworthiness, and of the flagrant manner in which they had
abused his confidence, he deprived the Caraffas of
all their offices, and banished them to the farthest part of his dominions. By
the sterner sentence of his successor, two of the brothers, the duke and the
cardinal, perished by the hand of the public executioner.
After giving
this proof of mastery over his own feelings, Paul addressed himself to those
reforms which had engaged his attention in early life. He tried to enforce a
stricter discipline and greater regard for morals, both in the religious orders
and the secular clergy. Above all, he directed his efforts against the
Protestant heresy, which had begun to show itself in the head of Christendom,
as it had long since done in the extremities. The course he adopted was
perfectly characteristic. Scorning the milder methods of argument and
persuasion, he resorted wholly to persecution. The Inquisition, he declared,
was the true battery with which to assail the defenses of the heretic. He
suited the action so well to the word, that in a short time the prisons of the
Holy Office were filled with the accused. In the general distrust no one felt
himself safe; and a panic was created, scarcely less than that felt by the inhabitants
when the Spaniards were at their gates.
Happily,
their fears were dispelled by the death of Paul, which took place suddenly,
from a fever, on the eighteenth of August, 1559, in the eighty-third year of
his age, and fifth of his pontificate. Before the breath was out of his body,
the populace rose en masse, broke open the prisons of
the Inquisition, and liberated all who were confined there. They next attacked
the house of the grand-inquisitor, which they burned to the ground; and that
functionary narrowly escaped with his life. They tore down the scutcheons,
bearing the arms of the family of Caraffa, which were affixed to the public
edifices. They wasted their rage on the senseless statue of the pope, which
they overturned, and, breaking off the head, rolled it, amidst the groans and
execrations of the by-standers, into the Tiber. Such was the fate of the
reformer, who, in his reforms, showed no touch of humanity, no sympathy with
the sufferings of his species.
Yet,
with all its defects, there is something in the character of Paul the Fourth
that may challenge our admiration. His project—renewing that of Julius the
Second—of driving out the barbarians from Italy, was nobly conceived, though
impracticable. "Whatever others may feel, I at least will have some care
for my country," he once said to the Venetian ambassador.
"If
my voice is unheeded, it will at least be a consolation to me to reflect, that
it has been raised in such a cause; and that it will one day be said that an
old Italian, on the verge of the grave, who might be thought to have nothing
better to do than to give himself up to repose, and weep over his sins, had his
soul filled with this lofty design."
CHAPTER VII.
WAR WITH FRANCE. 1557.
While
the events related in the preceding chapter were passing in Italy, the war was
waged on a larger scale, and with more important results, in the northern
provinces of France. As soon as Henry had broken the treaty, and sent his army
across the Alps, Philip lost no time in assembling his troops, although in so
quiet a manner as to attract as little attention as possible. His preparations
were such as enabled him, not merely to defend the frontier of the Netherlands,
but to carry the war into the enemy's country.
He dispatched
his confidential minister, Ruy Gomez, to Spain, for supplies both of men and
money; instructing him to visit his father, Charles the Fifth, and, after
acquainting him with the state of affairs, to solicit his aid in raising the
necessary funds.
Philip
had it much at heart to bring England into the war. During his stay in the Low
Countries, he was in constant communication with the English cabinet, and took
a lively interest in the government of the kingdom. The minutes of the privy
council were regularly sent to him, and as regularly returned with his remarks,
in his own handwriting, on the margin. In this way he discussed and freely
criticized every measure of importance; and, on one occasion, we find him
requiring that nothing of moment should be brought before parliament until it
had first been submitted to him.
In
March, 1557, Philip paid a second visit to England, where he was received by
his fond queen in the most tender and affectionate manner. In her letters she
had constantly importuned him to return to her. On that barren eminence which
placed her above the reach of friendship, Mary was dependent on her husband for
sympathy and support. But if the channel of her affections was narrow, it was
deep.
Philip
found no difficulty in obtaining the queen's consent to his wishes with respect
to the war with France. She was induced to this, not merely by her habitual
deference to her husband, but by natural feelings of resentment at the policy
of Henry the Second. She had put up with affronts, more than once, from the
French ambassador, in her own court; and her throne had been menaced by
repeated conspiracies, which, if not organized, had been secretly encouraged by
France. Still, it was not easy to bring the English nation to this way of
thinking. It had been a particular proviso of the marriage treaty, that England
should not be made a party to the war against France; and subsequent events had
tended to sharpen the feeling of jealousy rather towards the Spaniards than
towards the French.
The
attempted insurrection of Stafford, who crossed over from the shores of France
at this time, did for Philip what possibly neither his own arguments nor the
authority of Mary could have done. It was the last of the long series of
indignities which had been heaped on the country from the same quarter; and
parliament now admitted that it was no longer consistent with its honor to keep
terms with a power which persisted in fomenting conspiracies to overturn the
government and plunge the nation into civil war. On the seventh of June, a
herald was dispatched, with the formality of ancient and somewhat obsolete
usages, to proclaim war against the French king in the presence of his court
and in his capital. This was done in such a bold tone of defiance, that the hot
old constable, Montmorency, whose mode of proceeding, as we have seen, was apt
to be summary, strongly urged his master to hang up the envoy on the spot.
The
state of affairs imperatively demanded Philip's presence in the Netherlands,
and, after a residence of less than four months in London, he bade a final
adieu to his disconsolate queen, whose excessive fondness may have been as
little to his taste as the coldness of her subjects.
Nothing
could be more forlorn than the condition of Mary. Her health wasting under a disease
that cheated her with illusory hopes, which made her ridiculous in the eyes of
the world; her throne, her very life, continually menaced by conspiracies, to
some of which even her own sister was supposed to be privy; her spirits
affected by the consciousness of the decline of her popularity under the gloomy
system of persecution into which she had been led by her ghostly advisers;
without friends, without children, almost it might be said without a
husband,—she was alone in the world, more to be commiserated than the meanest
subject in her dominions. She has had little commiseration, however, from
Protestant writers, who paint her in the odious colors of a fanatic. This has
been compensated, it may be thought, by the Roman Catholic historians, who have
invested the English queen with all the glories of the saint and the martyr.
Experience may convince us that public acts do not always furnish a safe
criterion of private character,—especially when these acts are connected with
religion. In the Catholic Church the individual might seem to be relieved, in
some measure, of his moral responsibility, by the system of discipline which entrusts
his conscience to the keeping of his spiritual advisers. If the lights of the
present day allow no man to plead so humiliating an apology, this was not the
case in the first half of the sixteenth century,—the age of Mary,—when the
Reformation had not yet diffused that spirit of independence in religious
speculation, which, in some degree at least, has now found its way to the
darkest corner of Christendom.
A
larger examination of contemporary documents, especially of the queen's own
correspondence, justifies the inference, that, with all the infirmities of a
temper soured by disease, and by the difficulties of her position, she
possessed many of the good qualities of her illustrious progenitors, Katharine
of Aragon and Isabella of Castile; the same conjugal tenderness and devotion,
the same courage in times of danger, the same earnest desire, misguided as she
was, to do her duty,—and, unfortunately, the same bigotry. It was, indeed, most
unfortunate, in Mary's case, as in that of the Catholic queen, that this
bigotry, from their position as independent sovereigns, should have been
attended with such fatal consequences as have left an indelible blot on the history
of their reigns.
On his
return to Brussels, Philip busied himself with preparations for the campaign.
He employed the remittances from Spain to subsidize a large body of German
mercenaries. Germany was the country which furnished, at this time, more
soldiers of fortune than any other; men who served indifferently under the
banner that would pay them best. They were not exclusively made up of infantry,
like the Swiss, but, besides pikemen,—lanzknechts,—they
maintained a stout array of cavalry, reiters,
as they were called,—"riders,"—who, together with the cuirass and
other defensive armor, carried pistols, probably of rude workmanship, but which
made them formidable from the weapon being little known in that day. They were,
indeed, the most dreaded troops of their time. The men-at-arms, encumbered with
their unwieldy lances, were drawn up in line, and required an open plain to maneuver
to advantage, being easily discomposed by obstacles; and once broken, they
could hardly rally. But the reiters, each with
five or six pistols in his belt, were formed into columns of considerable
depth, the size of their weapons allowing them to go through all the evolutions
of light cavalry, in which they were perfectly drilled. Philip's cavalry was
further strengthened by a fine corps of Burgundian lances, and by a great
number of nobles and cavaliers from Spain, who had come to gather laurels in
the fields of France, under the eye of their young sovereign. The flower of his
infantry, too, was drawn from Spain; men who, independently of the indifference
to danger, and wonderful endurance, which made the Spanish soldier inferior to
none of the time, were animated by that loyalty to the cause which foreign
mercenaries could not feel. In addition to these, the king expected, and soon
after received, a reinforcement of eight thousand English under the earl of
Pembroke. They might well fight bravely on the soil where the arms of England
had won two of the most memorable victories in her history.
The
whole force, exclusive of the English, amounted to thirty-five thousand foot
and twelve thousand horse, besides a good train of battering artillery. The
command of this army was given to Emanuel Philibert, prince of Piedmont, better
known by his title of duke of Savoy. No man had a larger stake in the contest,
for he had been stripped of his dominions by the French, and his recovery of
them depended on the issue of the war. He was at this time but twenty-nine
years of age; but he had had large experience in military affairs, and had been
entrusted by Charles the Fifth, who had early discerned his capacity, with
important commands. His whole life may be said to have trained him for the
profession of arms. He had no taste for effeminate pleasures, but amused
himself, in seasons of leisure, with the hardy exercise of the chase. He
strengthened his constitution, naturally not very robust, by living as much as
possible in the open air. Even when conversing, or dictating to his
secretaries, he preferred to do so walking in his garden. He was indifferent to
fatigue. After hunting all day he would seem to require no rest, and in a
campaign had been known, like the knights-errant of old, to eat, drink, and
sleep in his armor for thirty days together.
He was
temperate in his habits, eating little, and drinking water. He was punctual in
attention to business, was sparing of his words, and, as one may gather from
the piquant style of his letters, had a keen insight into character, looking
below the surface of men's actions into their motives.
His
education had not been neglected. He spoke several languages fluently, and,
though not a great reader, was fond of histories. He was much devoted to
mathematical science, which served him in his profession, and he was reputed an
excellent engineer. In person the duke was of the middle size; well-made,
except that he was somewhat bow-legged. His complexion was fair, his hair
light, and his deportment very agreeable.
Such is
the portrait of Emanuel Philibert, to whom Philip now entrusted the command of
his forces, and whose pretensions he warmly supported as the suitor of
Elizabeth of England. There was none more worthy of the royal maiden. But the
duke was a Catholic; and Elizabeth, moreover, had seen the odium which her
sister had incurred by her marriage with a foreign sovereign. Philip, who would
have used some constraint in the matter, pressed it with such earnestness on
the queen as proved how much importance he attached to the connection. Mary's
conduct on the occasion was greatly to her credit; and, while she deprecated
the displeasure of her lord, she honestly told him that she could not in
conscience do violence to the inclinations of her sister.
The
plan of the campaign, as determined by Philip's cabinet, was that the duke
should immediately besiege some one of the great towns on the northern borders
of Picardy, which in a manner commanded the entrance into the Netherlands. Rocroy was the first selected. But the garrison, who were
well provided with ammunition, kept within their defenses, and maintained so
lively a cannonade on the Spaniards, that the duke, finding the siege was
likely to consume more time than it was worth, broke up his camp, and resolved
to march against St. Quentin. This was an old frontier town of Picardy,
important in time of peace as an entrepôt for the trade that was carried on
between France and the Low Countries. It formed a convenient place of deposit,
at the present period, for such booty as marauding parties from time to time
brought back from Flanders. It was well protected by its natural situation, and
the fortifications had been originally strong; but, as in many of the frontier
towns, they had been of late years much neglected.
Before
beginning operations against St. Quentin, the duke of Savoy, in order to throw
the enemy off his guard, and prevent his introducing supplies into the town,
presented himself before Guise, and made a show of laying siege to that place.
After this demonstration he resumed his march, and suddenly sat down before St.
Quentin, investing it with his whole army.
Meanwhile
the French had been anxiously watching the movements of their adversary. Their
forces were assembled on several points in Picardy and Champagne. The principal
corps was under the command of the duke of Nevers, governor of the latter
province, a nobleman of distinguished gallantry, and who had seen some active
service. He now joined his forces to those under Montmorency, the constable of
France, who occupied a central position in Picardy, and who now took the
command, for which his rash and impetuous temper but indifferently qualified
him. As soon as the object of the Spaniards was known, it was resolved to
reinforce the garrison of St. Quentin, which otherwise, it was understood,
could not hold out a week. This perilous duty was assumed by Gaspard de
Coligni, admiral of France. This personage, the head of an ancient and honored
house, was one of the most remarkable men of his time. His name had gained a
mournful celebrity in the page of history, as that of the chief martyr in the
massacre of St. Bartholomew. He embraced the doctrines of Calvin, and by his
austere manners and the purity of his life well illustrated the doctrines he
embraced. The decent order of his household, and their scrupulous attention to
the services of religion, formed a striking contrast to the licentious conduct
of too many of the Catholics, who, however, were as prompt as Coligni to do
battle in defense of their faith. In early life he was the gay companion of the
duke of Guise. But as the Calvinists, or Huguenots, were driven by persecution
to an independent and even hostile position, the two friends, widely separated
by opinion and by interest, were changed into mortal foes. That hour had not
yet come. But the heresy that was soon to shake France to its center was
silently working under ground.
As the
admiral was well instructed in military affairs, and was possessed of an
intrepid spirit and great fertility of resource, he was precisely the person to
undertake the difficult office of defending St. Quentin. As governor of Picardy
he felt this to be his duty. Without loss of time, he put himself at the head
of some ten or twelve hundred men, horse and foot, and used such dispatch that
he succeeded in entering the place before it had been entirely invested. He had
the mortification, however, to be followed only by seven hundred of his men,
the remainder having failed through fatigue, or mistaken the path.
The
admiral found the place in even worse condition than he had expected. The
fortifications were much dilapidated; and in many parts of the wall the masonry
was of so flimsy a character, that it must have fallen before the first
discharge of the enemy's cannon. The town was victualled for three weeks, and
the magazines were tolerably well supplied with ammunition. But there were not
fifty arquebuses fit for use.
St.
Quentin stands on a gentle eminence, protected on one side by marshes, or
rather a morass of great extent, through which flows the river Somme, or a
branch of it. On the same side of the river with St. Quentin lay the army of
the besiegers, with their glittering lines extending to the very verge of the
morass. A broad ditch defended the outer wall. But this ditch was commanded by
the houses of the suburbs, which had already been taken possession of by the
besiegers. There was, moreover, a thick plantation of trees close to the town,
which would afford an effectual screen for the approach of an enemy.
One of
the admiral's first acts was to cause a sortie to be made. The ditch was
crossed, and some of the houses were burned to the ground. The trees on the
banks were then levelled, and the approach to the town was laid open. Every
preparation was made for a protracted defense. The exact quantity of provision
was ascertained, and the rations were assigned for each man's daily
consumption. As the supplies were inadequate to support the increased
population for any length of time, Coligni ordered that all except those
actively engaged in the defense of the place should leave it without delay.
Many, under one pretext or another, contrived to remain, and share the fortunes
of the garrison. But by this regulation he got rid of seven hundred useless
persons, who, if they had staid, must have been the victims of famine; and
"their dead bodies," the admiral coolly remarked, "would have
bred a pestilence among the soldiers."
He
assigned to his men their several posts, talked boldly of maintaining himself
against all the troops of Spain, and by his cheerful tone endeavored to inspire
a confidence in others which he was far from feeling himself. From one of the
highest towers he surveyed the surrounding country, tried to ascertain the most
practicable fords in the morass, and sent intelligence to Montmorency, that,
without relief, the garrison could not hold out more than a few days.
That
commander, soon after the admiral's departure, had marched his army to the
neighborhood of St. Quentin, and established it in the towns of La Fère and Ham, together with the adjoining villages, so as
to watch the movements of the Spaniards, and cooperate, as occasion served,
with the besieged. He at once determined to strengthen the garrison, if
possible, by a reinforcement of two thousand men under Dandelot,
a younger brother of the admiral, and not inferior to him in audacity and
enterprise. But the expedition miserably failed. Through the treachery or the
ignorance of the guide, the party mistook the path, came on one of the enemy's
outposts, and, disconcerted by the accident, were thrown into confusion, and
many of them cut to pieces or drowned in the morass. Their leader, with the
remainder, succeeded, under cover of the night, in making his way back to La Fère.
BATTLE
OF ST. QUENTIN.
The
constable now resolved to make another attempt, and in the open day. He
proposed to send a body, under the same commander, in boats across the Somme,
and to cover the embarkation in person with his whole army. His force was
considerably less than that of the Spaniards, amounting in all to about
eighteen thousand foot and six thousand horse, besides a train of artillery
consisting of sixteen guns. His levies, like those of his antagonist, were
largely made up of German mercenaries. The French peasantry, with the exception
of the Gascons, who formed a fine body of infantry, had long since ceased to
serve in war. But the chivalry of France was represented by as gallant an array
of nobles and cavaliers as ever fought under the banner of the lilies.
On the
ninth of August, 1557, Montmorency put his whole army in motion; and on the
following morning, the memorable day of St. Lawrence, by nine o'clock, he took
up a position on the bank of the Somme. On the opposite side, nearest the town,
lay the Spanish force, covering the ground, as far as the eye could reach, with
their white pavilions; while the banners of Spain, of Flanders, and of England,
unfurled in the morning breeze, showed the various nations from which the
motley host had been gathered.
On the
constable's right was a windmill, commanding a ford of the river which led to
the Spanish quarters. The building was held by a small detachment of the enemy.
Montmorency's first care was to get possession of the mill, which he did
without difficulty; and, by placing a garrison there, under the prince of
Condé, he secured himself from surprise in that quarter. He then profited by a
rising ground to get his guns in position, so as to sweep the opposite bank,
and at once opened a brisk cannonade on the enemy. The march of the French had
been concealed by some intervening hills, so that, when they suddenly appeared
on the farther side of the Somme, it was as if they had dropped from the
clouds; and the shot which fell among the Spaniards threw them into great
disorder. There was hurrying to and fro, and some of
the balls striking the duke of Savoy's tent, he had barely time to escape with
his armor in his hand. It was necessary to abandon his position, and he marched
some three miles down the river, to the quarters occupied by the commander of
the cavalry, Count Egmont.
Montmorency,
as much elated with this cheap success as if it had been a victory, now set
himself about passing his troops across the water. It was attended with more
difficulty than he had expected. There were no boats in readiness, and two
hours were wasted in procuring them. After all, only four or five could be
obtained, and these so small that it would be necessary to cross and recross
the stream many times to effect the object. The boats, crowded with as many as
they could carry, stuck fast in the marshy banks, or rather quagmire, on the
opposite side; and when some of the soldiers jumped out to lighten the load,
they were swallowed up and suffocated in the mud. To add to these distresses,
they were galled by the incessant fire of a body of troops which the Spanish
general had stationed on an eminence that commanded the landing.
While,
owing to these causes, the transportation of the troops was going slowly on,
the duke of Savoy had called a council of war, and determined that the enemy,
since he had ventured so near, should not be allowed to escape without a
battle. There was a practicable ford in the river, close to Count Egmont's
quarters; and that officer received orders to cross it at the head of his
cavalry, and amuse the enemy until the main body of the Spanish army, under the
duke, should have time to come up.
Lamoral, Count
Egmont, and prince of Gavre, a person who is to
occupy a large space in our subsequent pages, was a Flemish noble of an ancient
and illustrious lineage. He had early attracted the notice of the emperor, who
had raised him to various important offices, both civil and military, in which
he had acquitted himself with honor. At this time, when thirty-five years old,
he held the post of lieutenant-general of the horse, and that of governor of
Flanders.
Egmont
was of a lofty and aspiring nature, filled with dreams of glory, and so much
elated by success, that the duke of Savoy was once obliged to rebuke him, by
reminding him that he was not the commander-in-chief of the army. With these
defects he united some excellent qualities, which not unfrequently go along
with them. In his disposition he was frank and manly, and, though hasty in
temper, had a warm and generous heart. He was distinguished by a chivalrous
bearing, and a showy, imposing address, which took with the people, by whom his
name was held dear in later times for his devotion to the cause of freedom. He
was a dashing officer, prompt and intrepid, well fitted for a brilliant coup-de-main,
or for an affair like the present, which required energy and dispatch; and he
eagerly undertook the duty assigned him.
The
light horse first passed over the ford, the existence of which was known to
Montmorency; and he had detached a corps of German pistoleers, of whom there
was a body in the French service, to defend the passage. But the number was too
small, and the Burgundian horse, followed by the infantry, advanced, in face of
the fire, as coolly and in as good order as if they had been on parade. The
constable soon received tidings that the enemy had begun to cross; and, aware
of his mistake, he reinforced his pistoleers with a squadron of horse under the duc de Nevers. It was too late; when the French
commander reached the ground, the enemy had already crossed in such strength
that it would have been madness to attack him. After a brief consultation with
his officers, Nevers determined, by as speedy a countermarch as possible, to
join the main body of the army.
The prince
of Condé, as has been mentioned, occupied the mill which commanded the other
ford, on the right of Montmorency. From its summit he could descry the
movements of the Spaniards, and their battalions debouching on the plain, with
scarcely any opposition from the French. He advised the constable of this at
once, and suggested the necessity of an immediate retreat. The veteran did not
relish advice from one so much younger than himself, and testily replied,
"I was a soldier before the prince of Condé was born; and, by the blessing
of Heaven, I trust to teach him some good lessons in war for many a year to
come." Nor would he quit the ground while a man of the reinforcement under Dandelot remained to cross.
The
cause of this fatal confidence was information he had received that the ford
was too narrow to allow more than four or five persons to pass abreast, which
would give him time enough to send over the troops, and then secure his own
retreat to La Fère. As it turned out, unfortunately,
the ford was wide enough to allow fifteen or twenty men to go abreast.
The
French, meanwhile, who had crossed the river, after landing on the opposite
bank, were many of them killed or disabled by the Spanish arquebusiers; others
were lost in the morass; and of the whole number not more than four hundred and
fifty, wet, wounded, and weary, with Dandelot at
their head, succeeded in throwing themselves into St. Quentin. The constable,
having seen the last boat put off, gave instant orders for retreat. The
artillery was sent forward in the front, then followed the infantry, and, last
of all, he brought up the rear with the horse, of which he took command in
person. He endeavored to make up for the precious time he had lost by
quickening his march, which, however, was retarded by the heavy guns in the
van.
The duc de Nevers, as we have seen, declining to give battle to
the Spaniards who had crossed the stream, had prepared to retreat on the main
body of the army. On reaching the ground lately occupied by his countrymen, he
found it abandoned; and joining Condé, who still held the mill, the two
officers made all haste to overtake the constable.
Meanwhile,
Count Egmont, as soon as he was satisfied that he was in sufficient strength to
attack the enemy, gave orders to advance, without waiting for more troops to
share with him the honors of victory. Crossing the field lately occupied by the
constable, he took the great road to La Fère. But the
rising ground which lay between him and the French prevented him from seeing
the enemy until he had accomplished half a league or more. The day was now well
advanced, and the Flemish captain had some fears that, notwithstanding his
speed, the quarry had escaped him. But, as he turned the hill, he had the
satisfaction to descry the French columns in full retreat. On their rear hung a
body of sutlers and other followers of the camp, who, by the sudden apparition
of the Spaniards, were thrown into a panic, which they had wellnigh
communicated to the rest of the army. To retreat before an enemy is in itself a
confession of weakness sufficiently dispiriting to the soldier. Montmorency,
roused by the tumult, saw the dark cloud gathering along the heights, and knew
that it must soon burst on him. In this emergency, he asked counsel of an old
officer near him as to what he should do. "Had you asked me," replied
the other, "two hours since, I could have told you; it is now too
late." It was indeed too late, and there was nothing to be done but to
face about and fight the Spaniards. The constable, accordingly, gave the word
to halt, and made dispositions to receive his assailants.
Egmont,
seeing him thus prepared, formed his own squadron into three divisions. One,
which was to turn the left flank of the French, he gave to the prince of
Brunswick and to Count Hoorne,—a name afterwards associated with his own on a
sadder occasion than the present. Another, composed chiefly of Germans, he
placed under Count Mansfeldt, with orders to assail the center. He himself, at
the head of his Burgundian lances, rode on the left against Montmorency's right
flank. Orders were then given to charge, and, spurring forward their horses,
the whole column came thundering on against the enemy. The French met the shock
like well-trained soldiers, as they were; but the cavalry fell on them with the
fury of a torrent sweeping everything before it, and for a few moments it
seemed as if all were lost. But the French chivalry was true to its honor, and,
at the call of Montmorency, who gallantly threw himself into the thick of the
fight, it rallied, and, returning the charge, compelled the assailants to give
way in their turn. The struggle, now continued on more equal terms, grew
desperate; man against man, horse against horse,—it seemed to be a contest of
personal prowess, rather than of tactics or military science. So well were the
two parties matched, that for a long time the issue was doubtful; and the
Spaniards might not have prevailed in the end, but for the arrival of reinforcements,
both foot and heavy cavalry, who came up to their support. Unable to withstand
this accumulated force, the French cavaliers, overpowered by numbers, not by
superior valor, began to give ground. Hard pressed by Egmont, who cheered on
his men to renewed efforts, their ranks were at length broken. The retreat
became a flight; and, scattered over the field in all directions, they were
hotly pursued by their adversaries, especially the German schwarzreiters,—those
riders "black as devils",—who did such execution with their fire-arms
as completed the discomfiture of the French.
Amidst
this confusion, the Gascons, the flower of the French infantry, behaved with
admirable coolness. Throwing themselves into squares, with the pikemen armed
with their long pikes in front, and the arquebusiers in the center, they
presented an impenetrable array, against which the tide of battle raged and
chafed in impotent fury. It was in vain that the Spanish horse rode round the
solid masses bristling with steel, if possible, to force an entrance, while an
occasional shot, striking a trooper from his saddle, warned them not to
approach too near.
It was
in this state of things that the duke of Savoy, with the remainder of the
troops, including the artillery, came on the field of action. His arrival could
not have been more seasonable. The heavy guns were speedily turned on the
French squares, whose dense array presented an obvious mark to the Spanish
bullets. Their firm ranks were rent asunder; and, as the brave men tried in
vain to close over the bodies of their dying comrades, the horse took advantage
of the openings to plunge into the midst of the phalanx. Here the long spears
of the pikemen were of no avail, and, striking right and left, the cavaliers
dealt death on every side. All now was confusion and irretrievable ruin. No one
thought of fighting, or even of self-defense. The only thought was of flight.
Men overturned one another in their eagerness to escape. They were soon mingled
with the routed cavalry, who rode down their own countrymen. Horses ran about
the field without riders. Many of the soldiers threw away their arms, to fly
the more quickly. All strove to escape from the terrible pursuit which hung on
their rear. The artillery and ammunition-wagons choked up the road, and
obstructed the flight of the fugitives. The slaughter was dreadful. The best
blood of France flowed like water.
Yet
mercy was shown to those who asked it. Hundreds and thousands threw down their
arms, and obtained quarter. Nevers, according to some accounts, covered the
right flank of the French army. Others state that he was separated from it by a
ravine or valley. At all events, he fared no better than his leader. He was
speedily enveloped by the cavalry of Hoorne and Brunswick, and his fine corps
of light horse cut to pieces. He himself, with the prince of Condé, was so
fortunate as to make his escape, with the remnant of his forces, to La Fère.
Had the
Spaniards followed up the pursuit, few Frenchmen might have been left that day
to tell the story of the rout of St. Quentin. But the fight had already lasted
four hours; evening was setting in; and the victors, spent with toil and sated
with carnage, were content to take up their quarters on the field of battle.
The
French, in the mean time, made their way, one after another, to La Fère, and, huddling together in the public squares, or in
the quarters they had before occupied, remained like a herd of panic-struck
deer, in whose ears the sounds of the chase are still ringing. But the loyal
cavaliers threw off their panic, and recovered heart, when a rumor reached them
that their commander, Montmorency, was still making head, with a body of stout
followers, against the enemy. At the tidings, faint and bleeding as they were,
they sprang to the saddles which they had just quitted, and were ready again to
take the field.
But the
rumor was without foundation. Montmorency was a prisoner in the hands of the
Spaniards. The veteran had exposed his own life throughout the action, as if
willing to show that he would not shrink in any degree from the peril into
which he had brought his followers. When he saw that the day was lost, he threw
himself into the hottest of the battle, holding life cheap in comparison with
honor. A shot from the pistol of a schwarzreiter,
fracturing his thigh, disabled him from further resistance; and he fell into
the hands of the Spaniards, who treated him with the respect due to his rank.
The number of prisoners was very large,—according to some accounts, six
thousand, of whom six hundred were said to be gentlemen and persons of
condition. The number of the slain is stated, as usual, with great discrepancy,
varying from three to six thousand. A much larger proportion of them than usual
were men of family. Many a noble house in France went into mourning for that
day. Among those who fell was Jean de Bourbon, count d'Enghien,
a prince of the blood. Mortally wounded, he was carried to the tent of the duke
of Savoy, where he soon after expired, and his body was sent to his countrymen
at La Fère for honorable burial. To balance this
bloody roll, no account states the loss of the Spaniards at over a thousand
men.
More
than eighty standards, including those of the cavalry, fell into the hands of
the victors, together with all the artillery, ammunition-wagons, and baggage of
the enemy. France had not experienced such a defeat since the battle of
Agincourt.
King
Philip had left Brussels, and removed his quarters to Cambray, that he might be
near the duke of Savoy, with whom he kept up daily communication throughout the
siege. Immediately after the battle, on the eleventh of August, he visited the
camp in person. At the same time, he wrote to his father, expressing his regret
that he had not been there to share the glory of the day. The emperor seems to
have heartily shared this regret. It is quite certain, if Charles had had the
direction of affairs, he would not have been absent. But Philip had not the
bold, adventurous spirit of his father. His talent lay rather in meditation
than in action; and his calm, deliberate forecast better fitted him for the
council than the camp. In enforcing levies, in raising supplies, in
superintending the organization of the army, he was indefatigable. The plan of
the campaign was determined under his own eye; and he was most sagacious in the
selection of his agents. But to those agents he prudently left the conduct of
the war, for which he had no taste, perhaps no capacity, himself. He did not,
like his rival, Henry the Second, fancy himself a great captain because he
could carry away the prizes of a tourney.
Philip
was escorted to the camp by his household troops. He appeared on this occasion
armed cap-à-pie,—a thing by no means common with him. It seems to have pleased
his fancy to be painted in military costume. At least, there are several
portraits of him in complete mail,—one from the pencil of Titian. A picture
taken at the present time was sent by him to Queen Mary, who, in this age of
chivalry, may have felt some pride in seeing her lord in the panoply of war.
On the
king's arrival at the camp, he was received with all the honors of a victor;
with flourishes of trumpets, salvos of artillery, and the loud shouts of the
soldiery. The duke of Savoy laid at his feet the banners and other trophies of
the fight, and, kneeling down, would have kissed Philip's hand; but the king,
raising him from the ground, and embracing him as he did so, said that the
acknowledgments were due from himself to the general who had won him such a
victory. At the same time, he paid a well-deserved compliment to the brilliant
part which Egmont and his brave companions had borne in the battle.
The
first thing to be done was to dispose of the prisoners, whose number
embarrassed the conquerors. Philip dismissed all those of the common file, on
the condition that they should not bear arms for six months against the
Spaniards. The condition did no great detriment to the French service, as the
men, on their return, were sent to garrison some distant towns, and their
places in the army filled by the troops whom they had relieved. The cavaliers
and persons of condition were lodged in fortresses, where they could be
securely detained till the amount of their respective ransoms was determined.
These ransoms formed an important part of the booty of the conqueror. How
important, may be inferred from the sum offered by the constable on his own
account and that of his son,—no less, it is said, than a hundred and sixty-five
thousand gold crowns. The soldier of that day, when the penalty was loss of
fortune as well as of freedom, must be confessed to have fought on harder
conditions than at present.
A
council of war was next called, to decide on further operations. When Charles
the Fifth received tidings of the victory of St. Quentin, the first thing he
asked, as we are told, was "whether Philip were at Paris". Had
Charles been in command, he would doubtless have followed up the blow by
presenting himself at once before the French capital. But Philip was not of
that sanguine temper which overlooks, or at least overleaps, the obstacles in
its way. Charles calculated the chances of success; Philip, those of failure.
Charles's character opened the way to more brilliant achievements, but exposed
him also to severer reverses. His enterprising spirit was more favorable to
building up a great empire; the cautious temper of Philip was better fitted to
preserve it. Philip came in the right time; and his circumspect policy was
probably better suited to his position, as well as to his character, than the
bolder policy of the emperor.
When
the duke of Savoy urged, as it is said, the expediency of profiting by the
present panic to march at once on the French capital, Philip looked at the
dangers of such a step. Several strong fortresses of the enemy would be left in
his rear. Rivers must be crossed, presenting lines of defense which could
easily be maintained against a force even superior to his own. Paris was
covered by formidable works, and forty thousand citizens could be enrolled, at
the shortest notice, for its protection. It was not wise to urge the foe to
extremity, to force a brave and loyal people, like the French, to rise en masse, as they would do for the defense of their
capital. The emperor, his father, had once invaded France with a powerful army,
and laid siege to Marseilles. The issue of that invasion was known to
everybody. "The Spaniards," it was tauntingly said, "had come
into the country feasting on turkeys; they were glad to escape from it feeding
on roots!" Philip determined, therefore, to abide by his original plan of
operations, and profit by the late success of his arms to press the siege of
St. Quentin with his whole force.—It would not be easy for any one, at this
distance of time, to pronounce on the wisdom of his decision. But subsequent
events tend considerably to strengthen our confidence in it.
Preparations
were now made to push the siege with vigor. Besides the cannon already in the
camp, and those taken in the battle, a good number of pieces were brought from
Cambray to strengthen the battering-train of the besiegers. The river was
crossed; and the Faubourg d'Ile was carried by the
duke, after a stout resistance on the part of the French, who burned the houses
in their retreat. The Spanish commander availed himself of his advantage to
establish batteries close to the town, which kept up an incessant cannonade,
that shook the old walls and towers to their foundation. The miners also
carried on their operations, and galleries were excavated almost to the center
of the place.
The
condition of the besieged, in the mean time, was forlorn in the extreme; not so
much from want of food, though their supplies were scanty, as from excessive
toil and exposure. Then it was that Coligni displayed all the strength of his
character. He felt the importance of holding out as long as possible, that the
nation might have time to breathe, as it were, and recover from the late
disaster. He endeavored to infuse his own spirit into the hearts of his
soldiers, toiling with the meanest of them, and sharing all their privations.
He cheered the desponding, by assuring them of speedy relief from their
countrymen. Some he complimented for their bravery; others he flattered by
asking their advice. He talked loudly of the resources at his command. If any should
hear him so much as hint at a surrender, he gave them leave to tie him hand and
foot, and throw him into the moat. If he should hear one of them talk of it,
the admiral promised to do as much by him.
The duc de Nevers, who had established himself, with the wreck
of the French army and such additional levies as he could muster, in the
neighborhood of St. Quentin, contrived to communicate with the admiral. On one
occasion he succeeded in throwing a reinforcement of a hundred and twenty
arquebusiers into the town, though it cost him thrice that number, cut to
pieces by the Spaniards in the attempt. Still the number of the garrison was
altogether inadequate to the duties imposed on it. With scanty refreshment,
almost without repose, watching and fighting by turns, the day passed in
defending the breaches which the night was not long enough to repair. No frame
could be strong enough to endure it.
Coligni
had, fortunately, the services of a skillful engineer, named St. Rémy, who
aided him in repairing the injuries inflicted on the works by the artillery,
and by the scarcely less destructive mines of the Spaniards. In the want of
solid masonry, every material was resorted to for covering up the breaches.
Timbers were thrown across; and boats filled with earth, laid on the broken
rampart, afforded a good bulwark for the French musketeers. But the time was
come when neither the skill of the engineer nor the courage of the garrison
could further avail. Eleven practicable breaches had been opened, and St. Rémy
assured the admiral that he could not engage to hold out four-and-twenty hours
longer.
The
duke of Savoy also saw that the time had come to bring the siege to a close by
a general assault. The twenty-seventh of August was the day assigned for it. On
that preceding he fired three mines, which shook down some fragments of the
wall, but did less execution than was expected. On the morning of the
twenty-seventh, his whole force was under arms. The duke divided it into as
many corps as there were breaches, placing these corps under his best and
bravest officers. He proposed to direct the assault in person.
Coligni
made his preparations also with consummate coolness. He posted a body of troops
at each of the breaches, while he and his brother Dandelot took charge of the two which, still more exposed than the others, might be
considered as the post of danger. He had the satisfaction to find, in this hour
of trial, that the men, as well as their officers, seemed to be animated with
his own heroic spirit.
Before
proceeding to storm the place, the duke of Savoy opened a brisk cannonade, in
order to clear away the barricades of timber, and other temporary defenses,
which had been thrown across the breaches. The fire continued for several
hours, and it was not till afternoon that the signal was given for the assault.
The troops rushed forward,—Spaniards, Flemings, English, and Germans,—spurred
on by feelings of national rivalry. A body of eight thousand brave Englishmen
had joined the standard of Philip in the early part of the campaign; and they
now eagerly coveted the opportunity for distinction which had been denied them
at the battle of St. Quentin, where the fortune of the day was chiefly decided
by cavalry. But no troops felt so keen a spur to their achievements as the
Spaniards, fighting as they were under the eye of their sovereign, who from a
neighboring eminence was spectator of the combat.
The
obstacles were not formidable in the path of the assailants, who soon clambered
over the fragments of masonry and other rubbish which lay scattered below the
ramparts, and, in the face of a steady fire of musketry, presented themselves
before the breaches. The brave men stationed to defend them were in sufficient
strength to occupy the open spaces; their elevated position gave them some
advantage over the assailants, and they stood to their posts with the
resolution of men prepared to die rather than surrender. A fierce conflict now
ensued along the whole extent of the ramparts; and the French, sustained by a
dauntless spirit, bore themselves as stoutly in the fight as if they had been
in training for it of late, instead of being enfeebled by scanty subsistence
and excessive toil. After a severe struggle, which lasted nearly an hour, the
Spaniards were driven back at all points. Not a breach was won; and, broken and
dispirited, the assailants were compelled to retire on their former position.
After
this mortifying repulse, the duke did not give them a long time to breathe,
before he again renewed the assault. This time he directed the main attack
against a tower where the resistance had been weakest. In fact, Coligni had
there placed the troops on whom he had least reliance, trusting to the greater
strength of the works. But a strong heart is worth all the defenses in the
world. After a sharp but short struggle, the assailants succeeded in carrying
the tower. The faint-hearted troops gave way; and the Spaniards, throwing
themselves on the rampart, remained masters of one of the breaches. A footing
once gained, the assailants poured impetuously into the opening, Spaniards,
Germans, and English streaming like a torrent along the ramparts, and attacking
the defenders on their flank. Coligni, meanwhile, and his brother Dandelot, had rushed, with a few followers, to the spot, in
the hope, if possible, to arrest the impending ruin. But they were badly
supported. Overwhelmed by numbers, they were trodden down, disarmed, and made
prisoners. Still the garrison, at the remaining breaches, continued to make a
desperate stand. But, with one corps pressing them on flank, and another in
front, they were speedily cut to pieces, or disabled and{100} taken. In half an
hour resistance had ceased along the ramparts. The town was in possession of
the Spaniards.
A scene
of riot and wild uproar followed, such as made the late conflict seem tame in
comparison. The victorious troops spread over the town in quest of plunder,
perpetrating those deeds of ruthless violence, usual, even in this enlightened
age, in a city taken by storm. The wretched inhabitants fled before them; the
old and the helpless, the women and children, taking refuge in garrets,
cellars, and any other corner where they could hide themselves from their
pursuers. Nothing was to be heard but the groans of the wounded and the dying,
the cries of women and children,—"so pitiful," says one present,
"that they would grieve any Christian heart,"—mingled, with the
shouts of the victors, who, intoxicated with liquor, and loaded with booty, now
madly set fire to several of the buildings, which soon added the dangers of
conflagration to the other horrors of the scene. In a short time, the town
would have been reduced to ashes, and the place which Philip had won at so much
cost would have been lost to him by the excesses of his own soldiers.
The
king had now entered the city in person. He had never been present at the
storming of a place, and the dreadful spectacle which he witnessed touched his
heart. Measures were instantly taken to extinguish the flames, and orders were
issued that no one, under pain of death, should offer any violence to the old
and infirm, to the women and children, to the ministers of religion, to
religious edifices, or, above all, to the relics of the blessed St. Quentin.
Several hundred of the poor people, it is said, presented themselves before
Philip, and claimed his protection. By his command they were conducted, under a
strong escort, to a place of safety.
It was not
possible, however, to prevent the pillage of the town. It would have been as
easy to snatch the carcass from the tiger that was rending it. The pillage of a
place taken by storm was regarded as the perquisite of the soldier, on which he
counted as regularly as on his pay. Those who distinguished themselves most, in
this ruthless work, were the German mercenaries. Their brutal rapacity filled
even their confederates with indignation. The latter seem to have been
particularly disgusted with the unscrupulous manner in which the schwarzreiters appropriated not only their own share
of the plunder, but that of both English and Spaniards.
Thus
fell the ancient town of St. Quentin, after a defense which reflects equal
honor on the courage of the garrison, and on the conduct of their commander.
With its fortifications wretchedly out of repair, its supplies of arms
altogether inadequate, the number of its garrison at no time exceeding a
thousand, it still held out for near a month against a powerful army, fighting
under the eyes of its sovereign, and led by one of the best captains of Europe.
Philip,
having taken measures to restore the fortifications of St. Quentin, placed it
under the protection of a Spanish garrison, and marched against the neighboring
town of Catelet. It was a strong place, but its
defenders, unlike their valiant countrymen at St. Quentin, after a brief show
of resistance, capitulated on the sixth of September. This was followed by the
surrender of Ham, once renowned through Picardy for the strength of its defenses.
Philip then led his victorious battalions against Noyon and Chaulny,
which last town was sacked by the soldiers. The French were filled with
consternation, as one strong place after another, on the frontier, fell into
the hands of an enemy who seemed as if he were planting his foot permanently on
their soil. That Philip did not profit by his success to push his conquests
still further, is to be attributed not to remissness on his part, but to the
conduct, or rather the composition, of his army, made up, as it was, of troops,
who, selling their swords to the highest bidder, cared little for the banner
under which they fought. Drawn from different countries, the soldiers, gathered
into one camp, soon showed all their national rivalries and animosities. The
English quarreled with the Germans, and neither could brook the insolent
bearing of the Spaniards. The Germans complained that their arrears were not
paid,—a complaint probably well founded, as, notwithstanding his large
resources, Philip, on an emergency, found the difficulty in raising funds,
which every prince in that day felt, when there was no such thing known as a
well-arranged system of taxation. Tempted by the superior offers of Henry the
Second, the schwarzreiters left the standard
of Philip in great numbers, to join that of his rival.
The
English were equally discontented. They had brought from home the aversion for
the Spaniards which had been festering there since the queen's marriage. The
sturdy islanders were not at all pleased with serving under Philip. They were
fighting, not the battles of England, they said, but of Spain. Every new
conquest was adding to the power of a monarch far too powerful already. They
had done enough, and insisted on being allowed to return to their own country.
The king, who dreaded nothing so much as a rupture between his English and his
Spanish subjects, to which he saw the state of things rapidly tending, was fain
to consent.
By this
departure of the English force, and the secession of the Germans, Philip's
strength was so much impaired, that he was in no condition to make conquests,
hardly to keep the field. The season was now far advanced, for it was the end
of October. Having, therefore, garrisoned the conquered places, and put them in
the best posture of defense, he removed his camp to Brussels, and soon after
put his army into winter-quarters.
Thus
ended the first campaign of Philip the Second; the first, and, with the
exception of the following, the only campaign in which he was personally
present. It had been eminently successful. Besides the important places which
he had gained on the frontier of Picardy, he had won a signal victory in the
field.
But the
campaign was not so memorable for military results as in a moral view. It
showed the nations of Europe that the Spanish scepter had passed into the hands
of a prince who was as watchful as his predecessor had been over the interests
of the state; and who, if he were not so actively ambitious as Charles the
Fifth, would be as little likely to brook any insult from his neighbors. The
victory of St. Quentin, occurring at the commencement of his reign, reminded
men of the victory won at Pavia by his father, at a similar period of his
career, and, like that, furnished a brilliant augury for the future. Philip,
little given to any visible expression of his feelings, testified his joy at
the success of his arms, by afterwards raising the magnificent pile of the
Escorial, in honor of the blessed martyr St. Lawrence, on whose day the battle
was fought, and to whose interposition with Heaven he attributed the victory.
CHAPTER VIII.
WAR WITH FRANCE. 1557-1559.
The
state of affairs in France justified Philip's conclusions in respect to the
loyalty of the people. No sooner did Henry the Second receive tidings of the
fatal battle of St. Quentin, than he dispatched couriers in all directions,
summoning his chivalry to gather round his banner, and calling on the towns for
aid in his extremity. The nobles and cavaliers promptly responded to the call,
flocking in with their retainers; and not only the large towns, but those of
inferior size, cheerfully submitted to be heavily taxed for the public service.
Paris nobly set the example. She did not exhaust her zeal in processions of the
clergy, headed by the queen and the royal family, carrying with them relics
from the different churches. All the citizens capable of bearing arms enrolled
themselves for the defense of the capital; and large appropriations were made
for strengthening Montmartre, and for defraying the expenses of the war.
With
these and other resources at his command, Henry was speedily enabled to
subsidize a large body of Swiss and German mercenaries. The native troops
serving abroad were ordered home. The veteran Marshal Termes came, with a large
corps, from Tuscany, and the duke of Guise returned, with the remnant of his
battalions, from Rome. This popular commander was welcomed with enthusiasm. The
nation seemed to look to him as to the deliverer of the country. His late
campaign in the kingdom of Naples was celebrated as if it had been a brilliant
career of victory. He was made lieutenant-general of the army, and the oldest
captains were proud to take service under so renowned a chief.
The
government was not slow to profit by the extraordinary resources thus placed at
its disposal. Though in the depth of winter, it was resolved to undertake some
enterprise that should retrieve the disasters of the late campaign, and raise
the drooping spirits of the nation. The object proposed was the recovery of
Calais, that strong place, which for more than two centuries had remained in
possession of the English.
The
French had ever been keenly sensible to the indignity of an enemy thus planting
his foot immovably, as it were, on their soil. They had looked to the recovery
of Calais with the same feelings with which the Spanish Moslems, when driven
into Africa, looked to the recovery of their ancient possessions in Granada.
They showed how constantly this was in their thoughts, by a common saying
respecting any commander whom they held lightly, that he was "not a man to
drive the English out of France". The feelings they entertained, however,
were rather those of desire than of expectation. The place was so strong, so
well garrisoned, and so accessible to the English, that it seemed impregnable.
These same circumstances, and the long possession of the place, had inspired
the English, on the other hand, with no less confidence, as was pretty well
intimated by an inscription on the bronze gates of the town,—"When the
French besiege Calais, lead and iron will swim like cork". This
confidence, as it often happens, proved their ruin.
The
bishop of Acqs, the French envoy to England, on
returning home, a short time before this, had passed through Calais, and gave a
strange report of the decay of the works, and the small number of the garrison,
in short, of the defenseless condition of the place. Guise, however, as
cautious as he was brave, was unwilling to undertake so hazardous an enterprise
without more precise information. When satisfied of the fact, he entered on the
project with his characteristic ardor. The plan adopted was said to have been
originally suggested by Coligni. In order to deceive the enemy, the duke sent
the largest division of the army, under Nevers, in the direction of Luxemburg.
He then marched with the remainder into Picardy, as if to menace one of the
places conquered by the Spaniards. Soon afterwards the two corps united, and
Guise, at the head of his whole force, by a rapid march, presented himself
before the walls of Calais.
The
town was defended by a strong citadel, and by two forts. One of these,
commanding the approach by water, the duke stormed and captured on the second
of January, 1558. The other, which overlooked the land, he carried on the
following day. Possessed of these two forts, he felt secure from any annoyance
by the enemy, either by land or by water. He then turned his powerful
battering-train against the citadel, keeping up a furious cannonade by day and
by night. On the fifth, as soon as a breach was opened, the victorious troops
poured in, and, overpowering the garrison, planted the French colors on the
walls. The earl of Wentworth, who commanded in Calais, unable, with his scanty
garrison, to maintain the place now that the defenses were in the hands of the
enemy, capitulated on the eighth. The fall of Calais was succeeded by that of Guisnes and of Hames. Thus, in a few days the English were
stripped of every rood of the territory which they had held in France since the
time of Edward the Third.
The
fall of Calais caused the deepest sensation on both sides of the Channel. The
English, astounded by the event, loudly inveighed against the treachery of the
commander. They should rather have blamed the treachery of their own
government, who had so grossly neglected to provide for the defense of the
place. Philip, suspecting the designs of the French, had intimated his
suspicions to the English government, and had offered to strengthen the
garrison by a reinforcement of his own troops. But his allies, perhaps
distrusting his motives, despised his counsel, or at least failed to profit by
it. After the place was taken, he made another offer to send a strong force to
recover it, provided the English would support him with a sufficient fleet.
This also, perhaps from the same feeling of distrust, though on the plea of
inability to meet the expense, was declined, and the opportunity for the
recovery of Calais was lost for ever.
Yet, in
truth, it was no great loss to the nation. Like more than one, probably, of the
colonial possessions of England at the present day, Calais cost every year more
than it was worth. Its chief value was the facility it afforded for the
invasion of France. Yet such a facility for war with their neighbors, always
too popular with the English before the time of Philip the Second, was of
questionable value. The real injury from the loss of Calais was the wound which
it inflicted on the national honor.
The
exultation of the French was boundless. It could not well have been greater, if
the duke of Guise had crossed the Channel and taken London itself. The
brilliant and rapid manner in which the exploit had been performed, the
gallantry with which the young general had exposed his own person in the
assault, the generosity with which he had divided his share of the booty among
the soldiers, all struck the lively imagination of the French; and he became
more than ever the idol of the people.
Yet,
during the remainder of the campaign, his arms were not crowned with such
distinguished success. In May he marched against the strong town of Thionville, in Luxemburg. After a siege of twenty days, the
place surrendered. Having taken one or two other towns of less importance, the
French army wasted nearly three weeks in a state of inaction, unless, indeed,
we take into account the activity caused by intestine troubles of the army
itself. It is difficult to criticize fairly the conduct of a commander of that
age, when his levies were made up so largely of foreign mercenaries, who felt
so little attachment to the service in which they were engaged, that they were
ready to quarrel with it on the slightest occasion. Among these the German schwarzreiters were the most conspicuous,
manifesting too often a degree of insolence and insubordination that made them
hardly less dangerous as friends than as enemies. The importance they attached
to their own services made them exorbitant in their demands of pay. When this,
as was too frequently the case, was in arrears, they took the matter into their
own hands, by pillaging the friendly country in which they were quartered, or
by breaking out into open mutiny. A German baron, on one occasion, went so far
as to level his pistol at the head of the duke of Guise. So widely did this
mutinous spirit extend, that it was only by singular coolness and address that
this popular chieftain could bring these adventurers into anything like
subjection to his authority. As it was, the loss of time caused by these
troubles was attended with most disastrous consequences.
The
duke had left Calais garrisoned by a strong force, under Marshal Termes. He had
since ordered that veteran to take command of a body of fifteen hundred horse
and five thousand foot, drawn partly from the garrison itself, and to march
into West Flanders. Guise proposed to join him there with his own troops, when
they would furnish such occupation to the Spaniards as would effectually
prevent them from a second invasion of Picardy.
The plan
was well designed, and the marshal faithfully executed his part of it. Taking
the road by St. Omer, he entered Flanders in the neighborhood of Dunkirk, laid
siege to that flourishing town, stormed and gave it up to pillage. He then
penetrated as far as Nieuport, when the fatigue and
the great heat of the weather brought on an attack of gout, which entirely
disabled him. The officer on whom the command devolved allowed the men to
spread themselves over the country, where they perpetrated such acts of rapacity
and violence as were not sanctioned even by the code of that unscrupulous age.
The wretched inhabitants, driven from their homes, called loudly on Count
Egmont, their governor, to protect them. The duke of Savoy lay with his army,
at this time, at Maubeuge, in the province of Namur;
but he sent orders to Egmont to muster such forces as he could raise in the
neighboring country, and to intercept the retreat of the French, until the duke
could come to his support and chastise the enemy.
Egmont,
indignant at the wrongs of his countrymen, and burning with the desire of
revenge, showed the greatest alacrity in obeying these orders. Volunteers came
in from all sides, and he soon found himself at the head of an army consisting
of ten or twelve thousand foot and two thousand horse. With these he crossed
the borders at once, and sent forward a detachment to occupy the great road by
which De Termes had penetrated into Flanders.
The
French commander, advised too late of these movements, saw that it was
necessary to abandon at once his present quarters, and secure, if possible, his
retreat. Guise was at a distance, occupied with the troubles of his own camp.
The Flemings had possession of the route by which the marshal had entered the
country. One other lay open to him along the sea-shore, in the neighborhood of Gravelines, where the Aa pours its waters into the ocean.
By taking advantage of the ebb, the river might be forded, and a direct road to
Calais would be presented.
Termes
saw that no time was to be lost. He caused himself to be removed from his
sick-bed to a litter, and began his retreat at once. On leaving Dunkirk, he
fired the town, where the houses were all that remained to the wretched
inhabitants of their property. His march was impeded by his artillery, by his
baggage, and especially by the booty which he was conveying back from the
plundered provinces. He however succeeded in crossing the Aa at low water, and
gained the sands on the opposite side. But the enemy was there before him.
Egmont,
on getting tidings of the marshal's movements, had crossed the river higher up,
where the stream was narrower. Disencumbering himself of artillery, and even of
baggage, in order to move the lighter, he made a rapid march to the sea-side,
and reached it in time to intercept the enemy. There was no choice left for
Termes but to fight his way through the Spaniards or surrender.
Ill as
he was, the marshal mounted his horse, and addressed a few words to his troops.
Pointing in the direction of the blazing ruins of Dunkirk, he told them that
they could not return there. Then turning towards Calais, "There is your
home," he said, "and you must beat the enemy before you can gain
it." He determined, however, not to begin the action, but to secure his
position as strongly as he could, and wait the assault of the Spaniards.
He
placed his infantry in the center, and flanked it on either side by his
cavalry. In the front he established his artillery, consisting of six or seven
falconets,—field-pieces of smaller size. He threw a considerable body of Gascon
pikemen in the rear, to act as a reserve wherever their presence should be
required. The river Aa, which flowed behind his troops, formed also a good
protection in that quarter. His left wing he covered by a barricade made of the
baggage and artillery wagons. His right, which rested on the ocean, seemed
secure from any annoyance on that side.
Count
Egmont, seeing the French thus preparing to give battle, quickly made his own
dispositions. He formed his cavalry into three divisions. The center he
proposed to lead in person. It was made up chiefly of the heavy men-at-arms and
some Flemish horse. On the right he placed his light cavalry, and on the left
wing rode the Spanish. His infantry he drew up in such a manner as to support
the several divisions of horse. Having completed his arrangements, he gave
orders to the center and the right wing to charge, and rode at full gallop
against the enemy.
Though
somewhat annoyed by the heavy guns in their advance, the battalions came on in
good order, and fell with such fury on the French left and centre,
that horse and foot were borne down by the violence of the shock. But the
French gentlemen who formed the cavalry were of the same high mettle as those
who fought at St. Quentin. Though borne down for a moment, they were not
overpowered; and, after a desperate struggle, they succeeded in rallying and in
driving back the assailants. Egmont returned to the charge, but was forced back
with greater loss than before. The French, following up their advantage,
compelled the assailants to retreat on their own lines. The guns, at the same
time, opening on the exposed flank of the retreating troopers, did them considerable
mischief. Egmont's horse was killed under him, and he had nearly been run over
by his own followers. In the mean while, the Gascon reserve, armed with their
long spears, pushed on to the support of the cavalry, and filled the air with
their shouts of "Victory!"
The
field seemed to be already lost; when the left wing of Spanish horse, which had
not yet come into action, seeing the disorderly state of the French, as they
were pressing on, charged them briskly on the flank. This had the effect to
check the tide of pursuit, and give the fugitives time to rally. Egmont,
meanwhile, was mounted on a fresh horse, and, throwing himself into the midst
of his followers, endeavored to reanimate their courage and reform their
disordered ranks. Then, cheering them on by his voice and example, he cried
out, "We are conquerors! Those who love glory and their fatherland, follow
me!" and spurred furiously against the enemy.
BATTLE
OF GRAVELINES.
The
French, hard pressed both on front and on flank, fell back in their turn, and
continued to retreat till they had gained their former position. At the same
time, the lanzknechts in Egmont's service,
marched up, in defiance of the fire of the artillery, and got possession of the
guns, running the men who had charge of them through with their lances. The
fight now became general; and, as the combatants were brought into close quarters,
they fought as men fight where numbers are nearly balanced, and each one seems
to feel that his own arm may turn the scale of victory. The result was brought
about by an event which neither party could control, and neither have foreseen.
An
English squadron of ten or twelve vessels lay at some distance, but out of
sight of the combatants. Attracted by the noise of the firing, its commander
drew near the scene of action, and, ranging along shore, opened his fire on the
right wing of the French, nearest the sea. The shot, probably, from the
distance of the ships, did no great execution, and is even said to have killed
some of the Spaniards. But it spread a panic among the French, as they found
themselves assailed by a new enemy, who seemed to have risen from the depths of
the ocean. In their eagerness to extricate themselves from the fire, the
cavalry on the right threw themselves on the center, trampling down their own
comrades, until all discipline was lost, and horse and foot became mingled
together in wild disorder. Egmont profited by the opportunity to renew his
charge; and at length, completely broken and dispirited, the enemy gave way in
all directions. The stout body of Gascons who formed the reserve alone held
their ground for a time, until, vigorously charged by the phalanx of Spanish
spearmen, they broke, and were scattered like the rest.
The
rout was now general, and the victorious cavalry rode over the field, trampling
and cutting down the fugitives on all sides. Many who did not fall under their
swords perished in the waters of the Aa, now swollen by the rising tide. Others
were drowned in the ocean. No less than fifteen hundred of those who escaped
from the field are said to have been killed by the peasantry, who occupied the
passes, and thus took bloody revenge for the injuries inflicted on their
country. Two thousand French are stated to have fallen on the field, and not
more than five hundred Spaniards, or rather Flemings, who composed the bulk of
the army. The loss fell most severely on the French cavalry; severely indeed,
if, according to some accounts, not very credible, they were cut to pieces
almost to a man. The number of prisoners was three thousand. Among them was
Marshal Termes himself, who had been disabled by a wound in the head. All the
baggage, the ammunition, and the rich spoil gleaned by the foray into Flanders,
became the prize of the victors.—Although not so important for the amount of
forces engaged, the victory of Gravelines was as
complete as that of St. Quentin.
Yet the
French, who had a powerful army on foot, were in better condition to meet their
reverses than on that day. The duke of Guise, on receiving the tidings,
instantly marched with his whole force, and posted himself strongly behind the
Somme, in order to cover Picardy from invasion. The duke of Savoy, uniting his
forces with those of Count Egmont, took up a position along the line of the Authie, and made demonstrations of laying siege to Dourlens. The French and Spanish monarchs both took the
field. So well appointed and large a force as that led by Henry had not been
seen in France for many a year; yet that monarch might justly be mortified by
the reflection that the greater part of this force was made up of foreign
mercenaries, amounting, it is said, to forty thousand. Philip was in equal
strength, and the length of the war had enabled him to assemble his best
captains around him. Among them was Alva, whose cautious councils might serve
to temper the bolder enterprise of the duke of Savoy.
A level
ground, four leagues in breadth, lay between the armies. Skirmishes took place
occasionally between the light troops on either side, and a general engagement
might be brought on at any moment. All eyes were turned to the battlefield,
where the two greatest princes of Europe might so soon contend for mastery with
each other. Had the fathers of these princes, Charles the Fifth and Francis the
First, been in the field, such very probably would have been the issue. But
Philip was not disposed to risk the certain advantages he had already gained by
a final appeal to arms. And Henry was still less inclined to peril all—his
capital, perhaps his crown—on the hazard of a single cast.
There were
many circumstances which tended to make both monarchs prefer a more peaceful
arbitrament of their quarrel, and to disgust them with the war. Among these was
the ruinous state of their finances. When Ruy Gomez de Silva, as has been
already stated, was sent to Spain by Philip, he was commanded to avail himself
of every expedient that could be devised to raise money. Offices were put up
for sale to the highest bidder. The public revenues were mortgaged. Large sums
were obtained from merchants at exorbitant rates of interest. Forced loans were
exacted from individuals, especially from such as were known to have received
large returns by the late arrivals from the New World. Three hundred thousand
ducats were raised on the security of the coming fair at Villalon. The Regent
Joanna was persuaded to sell her yearly pension, assigned her on the alcavala,
for a downright sum to meet the exigencies of the state. Goods were obtained
from the king of Portugal, in order to be sent to Flanders for the profit to be
raised on the sale. Such were the wretched devices by which Philip, who
inherited this policy of temporizing expedients from his father, endeavored to
replenish his exhausted treasury. Besides the sums drawn from Castile, the king
obtained also no less than a million and a half of ducats, as an extraordinary
grant from the states of the Netherlands.[244] Yet these sums, large as they
were, were soon absorbed by the expense of keeping armies on foot in France and
in Italy. Philip's correspondence with his ministers teems with representations
of the low state of his finances, of the arrears due to his troops, and the
necessity of immediate supplies to save him from bankruptcy. The prospects the
ministers hold out to him in return are anything but encouraging.
Another
circumstance which made both princes desire the termination of the war was the
disturbed state of their own kingdoms. The Protestant heresy had already begun
to rear its formidable crest in the Netherlands; and the Huguenots were
beginning to claim the notice of the French government. Henry the Second, who
was penetrated, as much as Philip himself, with the spirit of the Inquisition,
longed for leisure to crush the heretical doctrines in the bud. In this pious
purpose he was encouraged by Paul the Fourth, who, now that he was himself
restrained from levying war against his neighbors, seemed resolved that no one
else should claim that indulgence. He sent legates to both Henry and Philip,
conjuring them, instead of warring with each other, to turn their arms against
the heretics in their dominions, who were sapping the foundations of the
Church.
The
pacific disposition of the two monarchs was, moreover, fostered by the French
prisoners, and especially by Montmorency, whose authority had been such at
court, that Charles the Fifth declared "his capture was more important
than would have been that of the king himself." The old constable was most
anxious to return to his own country, where he saw with uneasiness the
ascendancy which his absence and the prolongation of the war were giving to his
rival, Guise, in the royal counsels. Through him negotiations were opened with
the French court, until, Henry the Second thinking, with good reason, that
these negotiations would be better conducted by a regular congress than by
prisoners in the custody of his enemies, commissioners were appointed on both
sides, to arrange the terms of accommodation. Montmorency and his
fellow-captive, Marshal St. André, were included in the commission. But the
person of most importance in it, on the part of France, was the cardinal of
Lorraine, brother of the duke of Guise, a man of a subtle, intriguing temper,
and one who, like the rest of his family, notwithstanding his pacific
demonstrations, may be said to have represented the war party in France.
On the
part of Spain the agents selected were the men most conspicuous for talent and
authority in the kingdom; the names of some of whom, whether for good or for
evil report, remain immortal on the page of history. Among these were the duke
of Alva and his great antagonist,—as he became afterwards in the
Netherlands,—William of Orange. But the principal person in the commission, the
man who in fact directed it, was Anthony Perrenot, bishop of Arras, better
known by his later title of Cardinal Granvelle. He was son of the celebrated
chancellor of that name under Charles the Fifth, by whom he was early trained,
not so much to the duties of the ecclesiastical profession as of public life.
He profited so well by the instruction, that, in the emperor's time, he
succeeded his father in the royal confidence, and surpassed him in his talent
for affairs. His accommodating temper combined with his zeal for the interests
of Philip to recommend Granvelle to the favor of that monarch; and his
insinuating address and knowledge of character well qualified him for
conducting a negotiation where there were so many jarring feelings to be
brought into concord, so many hostile and perplexing interests to be
reconciled.
As a
suspension of hostilities was agreed on during the continuance of the
negotiations, it was decided to remove the armies from the neighborhood of each
other, where a single spark might at any time lead to a general explosion. A
still stronger earnest was given of their pacific intentions, by both the
monarchs disbanding part of their foreign mercenaries, whose services were
purchased at a ruinous cost, that made one of the great evils of the war.
The
congress met on the fifteenth of October, 1558, at the abbey of Cercamps, near Cambray. Between parties so well disposed,
it might be thought that some general terms of accommodation would soon be
settled. But the war, which ran back pretty far into Charles the Fifth's time,
had continued so long, that many territories had changed masters during the
contest, and it was not easy to adjust the respective claims to them. The duke
of Savoy's dominions, for example, had passed into the hands of Henry the Second,
who, moreover, asserted an hereditary right to them through his grandmother.
Yet it was not possible for Philip to abandon his ally, the man whom he had
placed at the head of his armies. But the greatest obstacle was Calais.
"If we return without the recovery of Calais," said the English
envoys, who also took part in this congress, "we shall be stoned to death
by the people."
Philip
supported the claim of England; and yet it was evident that France would never
relinquish a post so important to herself, which, after so many years of hope
deferred, had at last come again into her possession. While engaged in the
almost hopeless task of adjusting these differences, an event occurred which
suspended the negotiations for a time, and exercised an important influence on
the affairs of Europe. This was the death of one of the parties to the war,
Queen Mary of England.
Mary's
health had been fast declining of late, under the pressure of both mental and
bodily disease. The loss of Calais bore heavily on her spirits, as she thought
of the reproach it would bring on her reign, and the increased unpopularity it
would draw upon herself. "When I die," she said, in the strong
language since made familiar to Englishmen by the similar expression of their
great admiral, "Calais will be found written on my heart."
Philip,
who was not fully apprised of the queen's low condition, early in November sent
the count, afterwards duke, of Feria as his envoy to London, with letters for
Mary. This nobleman, who had married one of the queen's maids of honor, stood
high in the favor of his master. With courtly manners, and a magnificent way of
living, he combined a shrewdness and solidity of judgment, that eminently
fitted him for his present mission. The queen received with great joy the
letters which he brought her, though too ill to read them. Feria, seeing the
low state of Mary's health, was earnest with the council to secure the
succession for Elizabeth.
He had
the honor of supping with the princess at her residence in Hatfield, about eighteen
miles from London. The Spaniard enlarged, in the course of conversation, on the
good-will of his master to Elizabeth, as shown in the friendly offices he had
rendered her during her imprisonment, and his desire to have her succeed to the
crown. The envoy did not add that this desire was prompted not so much by the
king's concern for the interests of Elizabeth as by his jealousy of the French,
who seemed willing to countenance the pretensions of Mary Stuart, the wife of
the dauphin, to the English throne. The princess acknowledged the protection
she had received from Philip in her troubles. "But for her present
prospects," she said, "she was indebted neither to the king nor to
the English lords, however much these latter might vaunt their fidelity. It was
to the people that she owed them, and on the people she relied." This
answer of Elizabeth furnishes the key to her success.
The
penetrating eye of the envoy soon perceived that the English princess was under
evil influences. The persons most in her confidence, he wrote, were understood
to have a decided leaning to the Lutheran heresy, and he augured most
unfavorably for the future prospects of the kingdom.
On the
seventeenth of November, 1558, after a brief, but most disastrous reign, Queen
Mary died. Her fate had been a hard one. Unimpeachable in her private life,
and, however misguided, with deeply-seated religious principles, she has yet
left a name held in more general execration than any other on the roll of
English sovereigns. One obvious way of accounting for this, doubtless, is by
the spirit of persecution which hung like a dark cloud over her reign. And this
not merely on account of the persecution; for that was common with the line of
Tudor; but because it was directed against the professors of a religion which
came to be the established religion of the country. Thus the blood of the
martyr became the seed of a great and powerful church, ready through all after
time to bear testimony to the ruthless violence of its oppressor.
There
was still another cause of Mary's unpopularity. The daughter of Katharine of
Aragon could not fail to be nurtured in a reverence for the illustrious line
from which she was descended. The education begun in the cradle was continued
in later years. When the young princess was betrothed to her cousin, Charles
the Fifth, it was stipulated that she should be made acquainted with the
language and the institutions of Castile, and should even wear the costume of
the country. "And who," exclaimed Henry the Eighth, "is so well
fitted to instruct her in all this as the queen, her mother?" Even after
the match with her imperial suitor was broken off by his marriage with the
Portuguese infanta, Charles still continued to take a lively interest in the fortunes
of his young kinswoman; while she, in her turn, naturally looked to the
emperor, as her nearest relative, for counsel and support. Thus drawn towards
Spain by the ties of kindred, by sympathy, and by interest, Mary became in
truth more of a Spanish than an English woman; and when all this was completed
by the odious Spanish match, and she gave her hand to Philip the Second, the
last tie seemed to be severed which had bound her to her native land.
Thenceforth she remained an alien in the midst of her own subjects.—Very
different was the fate of her sister and successor, Elizabeth, who ruled over
her people like a true-hearted English queen, under no influence, and with no
interests distinct from theirs. She was requited for it by the most loyal
devotion on their part; while round her throne have gathered those patriotic
recollections which, in spite of her many errors, still render her name dear to
Englishmen.
On the
death of her sister, Elizabeth, without opposition, ascended the throne of her
ancestors. It may not be displeasing to the reader to see the portrait of her
sketched by the Venetian minister at this period, or rather two years earlier,
when she was twenty-three years of age. "The princess," he says,
"is as beautiful in mind as she is in body; though her countenance is
rather pleasing from its expression, than beautiful. She is large and
well-made; her complexion clear, and of an olive tint; her eyes are fine, and
her hands, on which she prides herself, small and delicate. She has an
excellent genius, with much address and self-command, as was abundantly shown
in the severe trials to which she was exposed in the earlier part of her life.
In her temper she is haughty and imperious, qualities inherited from her
father, King Henry the Eighth, who, from her resemblance to himself, is said to
have regarded her with peculiar fondness."—He had, it must be owned, an
uncommon way of showing it.
One of
the first acts of Elizabeth was to write an elegant Latin epistle to Philip, in
which she acquainted him with her accession to the crown, and expressed the
hope that they should continue to maintain "the same friendly relations as
their ancestors had done, and, if possible, more friendly."
Philip
received the tidings of his wife's death at Brussels, where her obsequies were
celebrated, with great solemnity, on the same day with her funeral in London.
All outward show of respect was paid to her memory. But it is doing no
injustice to Philip to suppose that his heart was not very deeply touched by
the loss of a wife so many years older than himself, whose temper had been
soured, and whose personal attractions, such as they were, had long since faded
under the pressure of disease. Still, it was not without feelings of deep
regret that the ambitious monarch saw the scepter of England—barren though it
had proved to him—thus suddenly snatched from his grasp.
We have
already seen that Philip, during his residence in the country, had occasion
more than once to interpose his good offices in behalf of Elizabeth. It was
perhaps the friendly relation in which he thus stood to her, quite as much as
her personal qualities, that excited in the king a degree of interest which
seems to have provoked something like jealousy in the bosom of his queen.
However this may be, motives of a very different character from those founded
on sentiment now determined him to retain, if possible, his hold on England, by
transferring to Elizabeth the connection which had subsisted with Mary.
A month
had not elapsed since Mary's remains were laid in Westminster Abbey, when the
royal widower made direct offers, through his ambassador, Feria, for the hand
of her successor. Yet his ardor did not precipitate him into any unqualified
declaration of his passion; on the contrary, his proposals were limited by some
very prudent conditions.
It was
to be understood that Elizabeth must be a Roman Catholic, and, if not one
already, must repudiate her errors and become one. She was to obtain a
dispensation from the pope for the marriage. Philip was to be allowed to visit
Spain, whenever he deemed it necessary for the interests of that kingdom;—a
provision which seems to show that Mary's over-fondness, or her jealousy, must
have occasioned him some inconvenience on that score. It was further to be
stipulated, that the issue of the marriage should not, as was agreed in the
contract with Mary, inherit the Netherlands, which were to pass to his son Don
Carlos, the prince of Asturias.
Feria
was directed to make these proposals by word of mouth, not in writing,
"although," adds his considerate master, "it is no disgrace for
a man to have his proposals rejected, when they are founded, not on worldly
considerations, but on zeal for his Maker and the interests of religion."
Elizabeth
received the offer of Philip's hand, qualified as it was, in the most gracious
manner. She told the ambassador, indeed, that, "in a matter of this kind,
she could take no step without consulting her parliament. But his master might
rest assured, that, should she be induced to marry, there was no man she should
prefer to him." Philip seems to have been contented with the encouragement
thus given, and shortly after he addressed Elizabeth a letter, written with his
own hand, in which he endeavored to impress on her how much he had at heart the
successes of his ambassador's mission.
The
course of events in England, however, soon showed that such success was not to
be relied on, and that Feria's prognostics in regard to the policy of Elizabeth
were well founded. Parliament soon entered on the measures which ended in the
subversion of the Roman Catholic, and the restoration of the Reformed religion.
And it was very evident that these measures, if not originally dictated by the
queen, must at least have received her sanction.
Philip,
in consequence, took counsel with two of his ministers, on whom he most relied,
as to the expediency of addressing Elizabeth on the subject, and telling her
plainly, that, unless she openly disavowed the proceedings of parliament, the
marriage could not take place. Her vanity should be soothed by the expressions
of his regret at being obliged to relinquish the hopes of her hand. But, as her
lover modestly remarked, after this candid statement of all the consequences
before her, whatever the result might be, she would have no one to blame but
herself. His sage advisers, probably not often called to deliberate on
questions of this delicate nature, entirely concurred in opinion with their
master. In any event, they regarded it as impossible that he should wed a
Protestant.
What
effect this frank remonstrance had on the queen we are not told. Certain it is,
Philip's suit no longer sped so favorably as before. Elizabeth, throwing off
all disguise, plainly told Feria, when pressed on the matter, that she felt
great scruples as to seeking a dispensation from the pope; and soon after she
openly declared in parliament, what she was in the habit of repeating so often,
that she had no other purpose but to live and die a maid.—It can hardly be
supposed that Elizabeth entertained serious thoughts, at any time, of marrying
Philip. If she encouraged his addresses, it was only until she felt herself so
securely seated on the throne, that she was independent of the ill-will she
would incur by their rejection. It was a game in which the heart, probably,
formed no part of the stake on either side. In this game, it must be confessed,
the English queen showed herself the better player of the two.
TREATY
OF CATEAU-CAMBRESIS.
Philip
bore his disappointment with great equanimity. He expressed his regret to
Elizabeth that she should have decided in a way so contrary to what the public
interests seemed to demand. But since it appeared to her otherwise, he should
acquiesce, and only hoped that the same end might be attained by the
continuance of their friendship. With all this philosophy, we may well believe
that, with a character like that of Philip, some bitterness must have remained
in the heart; and that, very probably, feelings of a personal nature mingled
with those of a political in the long hostilities which he afterwards carried
on with the English queen.
In the
month of February, the conferences for the treaty of peace had been resumed,
and the place of meeting changed from the abbey of Cercamps to Cateau-Cambresis. The negotiations were urged
forward with greater earnestness than before, as both the monarchs were more
sorely pressed by their necessities. Philip, in particular, was so largely in
arrears to his army, that he frankly told his ministers "he was on the
brink of ruin, from which nothing but a peace could save him." It might be
supposed that, in this state of things, he would be placed in a disadvantageous
attitude for arranging terms with his adversary. But Philip and his ministers
put the best face possible on their affairs, affecting a confidence in their
resources, before their allies as well as their enemies, which they were far
from feeling; like some half-famished garrison, which makes a brave show of its
scanty stock of supplies, in order to win better terms from the besiegers.
All the
difficulties were at length cleared away, except the vexed question of Calais.
The English queen, it was currently said in the camp, would cut off the head of
any minister who abandoned it. Mary, the young queen of Scots, had just been
married to the French dauphin, afterwards Francis the Second. It was proposed
that the eldest daughter born of this union should be united to the eldest son
of Elizabeth, and bring with her Calais as a dowry. In this way, the place
would be restored to England without dishonor to France. Such were the wild
expedients to which the parties resorted in the hope of extricating themselves
from their embarrassment!
At
length, seeing the absolute necessity of bringing the matter to an issue,
Philip ordered the Spanish plenipotentiaries to write his final instructions to
Feria, his minister in London. The envoy was authorized to say, that, although
England had lost Calais through her own negligence, yet Philip would stand
faithfully by her for the recovery of it. But, on the other hand, she must be
prepared to support him with her whole strength by land and by sea, and that
not for a single campaign, but for the war so long as it lasted. The government
should ponder well whether the prize would be worth the cost. Feria must bring
the matter home to the queen, and lead her, if possible, to the desired
conclusion; but so that she might appear to come to it by her own suggestion
rather than by his. The responsibility must be left with her. The letter of the
plenipotentiaries, which is a very long one, is a model in its way, and shows
that, in some particulars, the science of diplomacy has gained little since the
sixteenth century.
Elizabeth
needed no argument to make her weary of a war which hung like a dark cloud on
the morning of her reign. Her disquietude had been increased by the fact of
Scotland having become a party to the war; and hostilities, with little credit
to that country, had broken out along the borders. Her own kingdom was in no
condition to allow her to make the extraordinary efforts demanded by Philip.
Yet it was plain if she did not make them, or consent to come into the treaty,
she must be left to carry on the war by herself. Under these circumstances, the
English government at last consented to an arrangement, which, if it did not
save Calais, so far saved appearances that it might satisfy the nation. It was
agreed that Calais should be restored at the end of eight years. If France
failed to do this, she was to pay five hundred thousand crowns to England,
whose claims to Calais would not, however, be affected by such a payment.
Should either of the parties, or their subjects, during that period, do
anything in contravention of this treaty, or in violation of the peace between
the two countries, the offending party should forfeit all claim to the disputed
territory. It was not very probable that eight years would elapse without
affording some plausible pretext to France, under such a provision, for keeping
her hold on Calais.
The
treaty with England was signed on the second of April, 1559. On the day
following was signed that between France and Spain. By the provisions of this
treaty, the allies of Philip, Savoy, Mantua, Genoa, were reinstated in the
possession of the territories of which they had been stripped in the first
years of the war. Four or five places of importance in Savoy were alone
reserved, to be held as guaranties by the French king, until his claim to the
inheritance of that kingdom was determined.
The
conquests made by Philip in Picardy were to be exchanged for those gained by
the French in Italy and the Netherlands. The exchange was greatly for the
benefit of Philip. In the time of Charles the Fifth, the Spanish arms had
experienced some severe reverses, and the king now received more than two
hundred towns in return for the five places he held in Picardy.
Terms
so disadvantageous to France roused the indignation of the duke of Guise, who
told Henry plainly, that a stroke of his pen would cost the country more than
thirty years of war. "Give me the poorest of the places you are to
surrender," said he, "and I will undertake to hold it against all the
armies of Spain!" But Henry sighed for peace, and for the return of his
friend, the constable. He affected much deference to the opinions of the duke.
But he wrote to Montmorency that the Guises were at their old tricks,—and he
ratified the treaty.
The day
on which the plenipotentiaries of the three great powers had completed their
work, they went in solemn procession to the church, and returned thanks to the
Almighty for the happy consummation of their labors. The treaty was then made
public; and, notwithstanding the unfavorable import of the terms to France, the
peace, if we except some ambitious spirits, who would have found their account
in the continuance of hostilities, was welcomed with joy by the whole nation.
In this sentiment all the parties to the war participated. The more remote,
like Spain, rejoiced to be delivered from a contest which made such large
drains on their finances; while France had an additional reason for desiring
peace, now that her own territory had become the theatre of war.
The
reputation which Philip had acquired by his campaigns was greatly heightened by
the result of his negotiations. The whole course of these negotiations—long and
intricate as it was—is laid open to us in the correspondence fortunately
preserved among the papers of Granvelle; and the student who explores these
pages may probably rise from them with the conviction that the Spanish
plenipotentiaries showed an address, a knowledge of the men they had to deal
with, and a consummate policy, in which neither their French nor English rivals
were a match for them. The negotiation all passed under the eyes of Philip.
Every move in the game, if not by his suggestion, had been made at least with
his sanction. The result placed him in honorable contrast to Henry the Second,
who, while Philip had stood firmly by his allies, had, in his eagerness for peace,
abandoned those of France to their fate.
The
early campaigns of Philip had wiped away the disgrace caused by the closing
campaigns of Charles the Fifth; and by the treaty he had negotiated, the number
of towns which he lost was less than that of provinces which he gained. Thus he
had shown himself as skillful in counsel as he had been successful in the
field. Victorious in Picardy and in Naples, he had obtained the terms of a
victor from the king of France, and humbled the arrogance of Rome, in a war to
which he had been driven in self-defense. Faithful to his allies and formidable
to his foes, there was probably no period of Philip's life{ in which he
possessed so much real consideration in the eyes of Europe, as at the time of
signing the treaty of Cateau-Cambresis.
In
order to cement the union between the different powers, and to conciliate the
good-will of the French nation to the treaty by giving it somewhat of the air
of a marriage contract, it was proposed that an alliance should take place
between the royal houses of France and Spain. It was first arranged that the
hand of Henry's daughter, the Princess Elizabeth, should be given to Carlos,
the son and heir of Philip. The parties were of nearly the same age, being each
about fourteen years old. Now that all prospect of the English match had
vanished, it was thought to be a greater compliment to the French to substitute
the father for the son, the monarch himself for the heir apparent, in the
marriage treaty. The disparity of years between Philip and Elizabeth was not
such as to present any serious objection. The proposition was said to have come
from the French negotiators. The Spanish envoys replied, that, notwithstanding
their master's repugnance to entering again into wedlock, yet, from his regard
to the French monarch, and his desire for the public weal, he would consent to
waive his scruples, and accept the hand of the French princess, with the same
dowry which had been promised to his son Don Carlos.
Queen
Elizabeth seems to have been not a little piqued by the intelligence that
Philip had so soon consoled himself for the failure of his suit to her.
"Your master," said she, in a petulant tone, to Feria, "must
have been much in love with me not to be able to wait four months!" The
ambassador answered somewhat bluntly, by throwing the blame of the affair on
the queen herself. "Not so," she retorted, "I never gave your
king a decided answer." "True," said Feria, "the refusal
was only implied, for I would not urge your highness to a downright 'No,' lest
it might prove a cause of offence between so great princes."
In
June, 1559, the duke of Alva entered France for the purpose of claiming the royal
bride, and espousing her in the name of his master. He was accompanied by Ruy
Gomez, count of Melito,—better known by his title of prince of Eboli,—by the
prince of Orange, the Count Egmont, and other noblemen, whose high rank and
character might give luster to the embassy. He was received in great state by
Henry, who, with his whole court, seemed anxious to show to the envoy every
mark of respect that could testify their satisfaction with the object of his
mission. The duke displayed all the stately demeanor of a true Spanish hidalgo.
Although he conformed to the French usage by saluting the ladies of the court,
he declined taking this liberty with his future queen, or covering himself, as
repeatedly urged, in her presence,—a piece of punctilio greatly admired by the
French, as altogether worthy of the noble Castilian breeding.
On the
twenty-fourth of June, the marriage of the young princess was celebrated in the
church of St. Mary. King Henry gave his daughter away. The duke of Alva acted
as his sovereign's proxy. At the conclusion of the ceremony, the prince of
Eboli placed on the finger of the princess, as a memento from her lord, a
diamond ring of inestimable value; and the beautiful Elizabeth, the destined
bride of Don Carlos, became the bride of the king his father. It was an ominous
union, destined, in its mysterious consequences, to supply a richer theme for
the pages of romance than for those of history.
The
wedding was followed by a succession of brilliant entertainments, the chief of
which was the tournament,—the most splendid pageant of that spectacle-loving
age. Henry was, at that time, busily occupied with the work of exterminating
the Protestant heresy, which, as already noticed, had begun to gather
formidable head in the capital of his dominions. On the evening of the
fifteenth of June, he attended a session of the parliament, and arrested some
of its principal members for the boldness of their speech in his presence. He
ordered them into confinement, deferring their sentence till the termination of
the engrossing business of the tourney.
The
king delighted in these martial exercises, in which he could display his showy
person and matchless horsemanship in the presence of the assembled beauty and
fashion of his court. He fully maintained his reputation on this occasion,
carrying off one prize after another, and bearing down all who encountered his
lance. Towards evening, when the games had drawn to a close, he observed the
young count of Montgomery, a Scotch noble, the captain of his guard, leaning on
his lance, as yet unbroken. The king challenged the cavalier to run a course
with him for his lady's sake. In vain the queen, with a melancholy boding of
some disaster, besought her lord to remain content with the laurels he had
already won. Henry obstinately urged his fate, and compelled the count, though
extremely loth, to take the saddle. The champions met with a furious shock in
the middle of the lists. Montgomery was a rude jouster. He directed his lance
with such force against the helmet of his antagonist, that the bars of the
visor gave way. The lance splintered; a fragment struck the king with such
violence on the temple as to lay bare the eye. The unhappy monarch reeled in
his saddle, and would have fallen but for the assistance of the constable, the
duke of Guise, and other nobles, who bore him in their arms senseless from the
lists. Henry's wound was mortal. He lingered ten days in great agony, and
expired on the ninth of July, in the forty-second year of his age, and the
thirteenth of his reign. It was an ill augury for the nuptials of Elizabeth.
The
tidings of the king's death were received with demonstrations of sorrow
throughout the kingdom. He had none of those solid qualities which make either
a great or a good prince. But he had the showy qualities which are perhaps more
effectual to secure the affections of a people as fond of show as the nation
whom Henry governed. There were others in the kingdom, however,—that growing
sect of the Huguenots,—who looked on the monarch's death with very different
eyes,—who rejoiced in it as a deliverance from persecution. They had little
cause to rejoice. The sceptre passed into the hands
of a line of imbecile princes, or rather of their mother, the famous Catherine
de Medicis, who reigned in their stead, and who
ultimately proved herself the most merciless foe the Huguenots ever
encountered.
CHAPTER IX.
LATTER DAYS OF CHARLES THE
FIFTH. 1556-1558.
While
the occurrences related in the preceding chapter were passing, an event took
place which, had it happened earlier, would have had an important influence on
the politics of Europe, and the news of which, when it did happen, was
everywhere received with the greatest interest. This event was the death of the
Emperor Charles the Fifth, in his monastic retreat at Yuste. In the earlier
pages of our narrative, we have seen how that monarch, after his abdication of
the throne, withdrew to the Jeronymite convent among the hills of Estremadura.
The reader may now feel some interest in following him thither, and in
observing in what manner he accommodated himself to the change, and passed the
closing days of his eventful life. The picture I am enabled to give of it will
differ in some respects from those of former historians, who wrote when the
Archives of Simancas, which afford the most authentic records for the
narrative, were inaccessible to the scholar, native as well as foreign.
Charles,
as we have seen, had early formed the determination to relinquish at some
future time the cares of royalty, and devote himself, in some lonely retreat to
the good work of his salvation. His consort, the Empress Isabella, as appears
from his own statement at Yuste, had avowed the same pious purpose. She died,
however, too early to execute her plan; and Charles was too much occupied with
his ambitious enterprises to accomplish his object until the autumn of 1555,
when, broken in health and spirits, and disgusted with the world, he resigned
the sceptre he had held for forty years, and withdrew
to a life of obscurity and repose.
The
spot he had selected for his residence was situated about seven leagues from the
city of Plasencia, on the slopes of the mountain chain that traverses the
province of Estremadura. There, nestling among the rugged hills, clothed with
thick woods of chestnut and oak, the Jeronymite convent was sheltered from the
rude breezes of the north. Towards the south, the land sloped by a gradual
declivity, till it terminated in a broad expanse, the Vera of Plasencia, as it
was called, which, fertilized by the streams of the sierra,
contrasted strongly in its glowing vegetation with the wild character of the
mountain scenery. It was a spot well fitted for such as would withdraw
themselves from commerce with the world, and consecrate their days to prayer
and holy meditation. The Jeronymite fraternity had prospered in this peaceful
abode. Many of the monks had acquired reputation for sanctity, and some of them
for learning, the fruits of which might be seen in a large collection of
manuscripts preserved in the library of the monastery. Benefactions were heaped
on the brotherhood. They became proprietors of considerable tracts of land in
the neighborhood, and they liberally employed their means in dispensing alms to
the poor who sought it at the gate of the convent. Not long before Charles took
up his residence among them, they had enlarged their building by an extensive
quadrangle, which displayed some architectural elegance in the construction of
its cloisters.
Three
years before the emperor repaired thither, he sent a skillful architect to
provide such accommodations as he had designed for himself. These were very
simple. A small building, containing eight rooms, four on each floor, was
raised against the southern wall of the monastery. The rooms were low, and of a
moderate size. They were protected by porticos, which sheltered them on two
sides from the rays of the sun, while an open gallery, which passed through the
center of the house, afforded means for its perfect ventilation. But Charles,
with his gouty constitution, was more afraid of the cold damps than of heat;
and he took care to have the apartments provided with fire-places, a luxury
little known in this temperate region.
A
window opened from his chamber directly into the chapel of the monastery; and
through this, when confined to his bed, and too ill to attend mass, he could
see the elevation of the host. The furniture of the dwelling—according to an
authority usually followed—was of the simplest kind; and Charles, we are told,
took no better care of his gouty limbs than to provide himself with an
arm-chair, or rather half a chair, which would not have brought four reals at
auction. The inventory of the furniture of Yuste tells a very different story.
Instead of "half an arm-chair," we find, besides other chairs lined
with velvet, two arm-chairs especially destined to the emperor's service. One
of these was of a peculiar construction, and was accommodated with no less than
six cushions and a footstool, for the repose of his gouty limbs. His wardrobe
showed a similar attention to his personal comfort. For one item we find no
less than sixteen robes of silk and velvet, lined with ermine or eider-down, or
the soft hair of the Barbary goat. The decorations of his apartment were on not
merely a comfortable, but a luxurious scale;—canopies of velvet; carpets from
Turkey and Alcaraz; suits of tapestry, of which twenty-five pieces are
specified, richly wrought with figures of flowers and animals. Twelve hangings,
of the finest black cloth, were for the emperor's bed-chamber, which, since his
mother's death, had been always dressed in mourning. Among the ornaments of his
rooms were four large clocks of elaborate workmanship. He had besides a number
of pocket-watches, then a greater rarity than at present. He was curious in
regard to his timepieces, and took care to provide for their regularity by
bringing the manufacturer of them in his train to Yuste. Charles was served on
silver. Even the meanest utensils for his kitchen and his sleeping apartment
were of the same costly material, amounting to nearly fourteen thousand ounces
in weight.
The
inventory contains rather a meagre show of books, which were for the most part
of a devotional character. But Charles's love of art was visible in a small but
choice collection of paintings, which he brought with him to adorn the walls of
his retreat. Nine of these were from the pencil of Titian. Charles held the
works of the great Venetian in the highest honor, and was desirous that by his
hand his likeness should be transmitted to posterity. The emperor had brought
with him to Yuste four portraits of himself and the empress by Titian; and
among the other pieces by the same master were some of his best pictures. One
of these was the famous "Gloria," in which Charles and the empress
appear, in the midst of the celestial throng, supported by angels, and in an
attitude of humble adoration. He had the painting hung at the foot of his bed,
or according to another account, over the great altar in the chapel. It is
said, he would gaze long and fondly on this picture, which filled him with the
most tender recollections; and as he dwelt on the image of one who had been so
dear to him on earth, he may have looked forward to his reunion with her in the
heavenly mansions, as the artist had here depicted him.
A
stairway, or rather an inclined plane, suited to the weakness of Charles's
limbs, led from the gallery of his house to the gardens below. These were
surrounded by a high wall, which completely secluded him from observation from
without. The garden was filled with orange, citron, and fig trees, and various
aromatic plants that grew luxuriantly in the genial soil. The emperor had a
taste for horticulture, and took much pleasure in tending the young plants and
pruning his trees. His garden afforded him also the best means for taking
exercise; and in fine weather he would walk along an avenue of lofty
chestnut-trees, that led to a pretty chapel in the neighboring woods, the ruins
of which may be seen at this day. Among the trees, one is pointed out,—an overgrown
walnut, still throwing its shade far and wide over the ground,—under whose
branches the pensive monarch would sit and meditate on the dim future, or
perhaps on the faded glories of the past.
Charles
had once been the most accomplished horseman of his time. He had brought with
him to Yuste a pony and a mule, in the hope of being able to get some exercise
in the saddle. But the limbs that had bestrode day after day, without fatigue,
the heavy war-horse of Flanders and the wildest genet of Andalusia, were unable
now to endure the motion of a poor palfrey; and, after a solitary experiment in
the saddle on his arrival at Yuste, when he nearly fainted, he abandoned it for
ever.
There
are few spots that might now be visited with more interest, than that which the
great emperor had selected as his retreat from the thorny cares of government.
And until within a few years the traveler would have received from the inmates
of the convent the same hospitable welcome which they had always been ready to
give to the stranger. But in 1809 the place was sacked by the French; and the
fierce soldiery of Soult converted the pile, with its venerable cloisters, into
a heap of blackened ruins. Even the collection of manuscripts, piled up with so
much industry by the brethren, did not escape the general doom. The palace of
the emperor, as the simple monks loved to call his dwelling, had hardly a better
fate, though it came from the hands of Charles's own countrymen, the liberals
of Cuacos. By these patriots the lower floor of the
mansion was turned into stables for their horses. The rooms above were used as
magazines for grain. The mulberry-leaves were gathered from the garden to
furnish material for the silkworm, who was permitted to wind his cocoon in the
deserted chambers of royalty. Still the great features of nature remain the
same as in Charles's day. The bald peaks of the sierra still rise above the ruins of the monastery. The shaggy sides of the hills
still wear their wild forest drapery. Far below, the eye of the traveler ranges
over the beautiful Vera of Plasencia, which glows in the same exuberant
vegetation as of yore; and the traveler, as he wanders among the ruined
porticos and desolate arcades of the palace, drinks in the odors of a thousand
aromatic plants and wild-flowers that have shot up into a tangled wilderness,
where once was the garden of the imperial recluse.
Charles,
though borne across the mountains in a litter, had suffered greatly in his long
and laborious journey from Valladolid. He passed some time in the neighboring
village of Xarandilla, and thence, after taking leave
of the greater part of his weeping retinue, he proceeded with the remainder to
the monastery of Yuste. It was on the third of February, 1557, that he entered
the abode which was to prove his final resting-place. The monks of Yuste had
been much flattered by the circumstance of Charles having shown such a
preference for their convent. As he entered the chapel, Te Deum was chanted by the whole brotherhood; and when the emperor had prostrated
himself before the altar, the monks gathered round him, anxious to pay him
their respectful obeisance. Charles received them graciously, and, after
examining his quarters, professed himself well pleased with the accommodations
prepared for him. His was not a fickle temper. Slow in forming his plans, he
was slower in changing them. To the last day of his residence at
Yuste,—whatever may have been said to the contrary,—he seems to have been well
satisfied with the step he had taken and with the spot he had selected.
From
the first, he prepared to conform, as far as his health would permit, to the
religious observances of the monastery. Not that he proposed to limit himself
to the narrow circumstances of an ordinary friar. The number of his retinue
that still remained with him was at least fifty, mostly Flemings; a number not
greater, certainly, than that maintained by many a private gentleman of the
country. But among these we recognize those officers of state who belong more
properly to a princely establishment than to the cell of the recluse. There was
the majordomo, the almoner, the keeper of the wardrobe, the keeper of the
jewels, the chamberlains, two watchmakers, several secretaries, the physician,
the confessor, besides cooks, confectioners, bakers, brewers, game-keepers, and
numerous valets. Some of these followers seem not to have been quite so content
as their master with their secluded way of life, and to have cast many a
longing look to the pomps and vanities of the world
they had left behind them. At least such were the feelings of Quixada, the
emperor's major-domo, in whom he placed the greatest confidence, and who had
the charge of his household. "His majesty's bedroom," writes the
querulous functionary, "is good enough; but the view from it is
poor,—barren mountains, covered with rocks and stunted oaks; a garden of
moderate size, with a few straggling orange-trees; the roads scarcely passable,
so steep and stony; the only water, a torrent rushing from the mountains; a
dreary solitude!" The low, cheerless rooms, he predicts, must necessarily
be damp, boding no good to the emperor's infirmity. "As to the
friars," observes the secretary, Gaztelu, in the same amiable mood,
"please God that his majesty may be able to tolerate them,—which will be no
easy matter; for they are an importunate race." It is evident that
Charles's followers would have been very willing to exchange the mortifications
of the monastic life for the good cheer and gaiety of Brussels.
The
worthy prior of the convent, in addressing Charles, greeted him with the title
of paternidad, till one of the fraternity
suggested to him the propriety of substituting that of majestad.
Indeed, to this title Charles had good right, for he was still emperor. His
resignation of the imperial crown, which, as we have seen, so soon followed
that of the Spanish, had not taken effect, in consequence of the diet not being
in session at the time when his envoy, the prince of Orange, was to have
presented himself at Ratisbon, in the spring of 1557. The war with France made
Philip desirous that his father should remain lord of Germany for some time
longer. It was not, therefore, until more than a year after Charles's arrival
at Yuste, that the resignation was accepted by the diet, at Frankfort, on the
twenty-eighth of February, 1558. Charles was still emperor, and continued to
receive the imperial title in all his correspondence.
We have
pretty full accounts of the manner in which the monarch employed his time. He attended
mass every morning in the chapel, when his health permitted. Mass was followed
by dinner, which he took early and alone, preferring this to occupying a seat
in the refectory of the convent. He was fond of carving for himself, though his
gouty fingers were not always in the best condition for this exercise. His
physician was usually in attendance during the repast, and might, at least,
observe how little his patient, who had not the virtue of abstinence, regarded
his prescriptions. The Fleming, Van Male, the emperor's favorite gentleman of
the chamber, was also not unfrequently present. He was a good scholar; and his
discussions with the doctor served to beguile the tediousness of their master's
solitary meal. The conversation frequently turned on some subject of natural
history, of which the emperor was fond; and when the parties could not agree,
the confessor, a man of learning, was called in to settle the dispute.
After
dinner,—an important meal, which occupied much time with Charles,—he listened
to some passages from a favorite theologian. In his worldly days, the book he
most affected is said to have been Comines's Life of Louis the Eleventh,—a
prince whose maxim, "Qui nescit dissimulare, nescit regnare," was too well suited to the genius of the
emperor. He now, however, sought a safer guide for his spiritual direction, and
would listen to a homily from the pages of St. Bernard, or more frequently St.
Augustine, in whom he most delighted. Towards evening, he heard a sermon from
one of his preachers. Three or four of the most eloquent of the Jeronymite
order had been brought to Yuste for his especial benefit. When he was not in
condition to be present at the discourse, he expected to hear a full report of
it from the lips of his confessor, Father Juan de Regla. Charles was punctual
in his attention to all the great fasts and festivals of the Church. His
infirmities, indeed, excused him from fasting, but he made up for it by the
severity of his flagellation. In Lent, in particular, he dealt with himself so
sternly, that the scourge was found stained with his blood; and this precious
memorial of his piety was ever cherished, we are told, by Philip, and by him
bequeathed as an heirloom to his son.
Increasing
vigilance in his own spiritual concerns made him more vigilant as to those of
others,—as the weaker brethren sometimes found to their cost. Observing that
some of the younger friars spent more time than was seemly in conversing with
the women who came on business to the door of the convent, Charles procured an
order to be passed, that any woman who ventured to approach within two bowshots
of the gate should receive a hundred stripes. On another occasion, his
officious endeavor to quicken the diligence of one of the younger members of
the fraternity is said to have provoked the latter testily to exclaim,
"Cannot you be contented with having so long turned the world upside down,
without coming here to disturb the quiet of a poor convent?"
He
derived an additional pleasure, in his spiritual exercises, from his fondness
for music, which enters so largely into those of the Romish Church. He sung
well himself, and his clear, sonorous voice might often be heard through the
open casement of his bedroom, accompanying the chant of the monks in the
chapel. The choir was made up altogether of brethren of the order, and Charles
would allow no intrusion from any other quarter. His ear was quick to
distinguish any strange voice, as well as any false note in the performance,—on
which last occasion he would sometimes pause in his devotions, and, in
half-suppressed tones, give vent to his anger by one of those scurrilous
epithets, which, however they may have fallen in with the habits of the old
campaigner, were but indifferently suited to his present way of life.
Such time
as was not given to his religious exercises was divided among various
occupations, for which he had always had a relish, though hitherto but little
leisure to pursue them. Besides his employments in his garden, he had a decided
turn for mechanical pursuits. Some years before, while in Germany, he had
invented an ingenious kind of carriage for his own accommodation. He brought
with him to Yuste an engineer named Torriano, famous for the great hydraulic
works he constructed in Toledo. With the assistance of this man, a most skilful mechanician, Charles amused himself by making a
variety of puppets representing soldiers, who went through military exercises.
The historian draws largely on our faith, by telling us also of little wooden
birds which the ingenious pair contrived, so as to fly in and out of the window
before the admiring monks! But nothing excited their astonishment so much as a
little hand-mill, used for grinding wheat, which turned out meal enough in a
single day to support a man for a week or more. The good fathers thought this
savored of downright necromancy; and it may have furnished an argument against
the unfortunate engineer in the persecution which he afterwards underwent from
the Inquisition.
Charles
took, moreover, great interest in the mechanism of timepieces. He had a good
number of clocks and watches ticking together in his apartments; and a story
has obtained credit, that the difficulty he found in making any two of them
keep the same time drew from him an exclamation on the folly of attempting to
bring a number of men to think alike in matters of religion, when he could not
regulate any two of his timepieces so as to make them agree with each other; a
philosophical reflection for which one will hardly give credit to the man who,
with his dying words, could press on his son the maintenance of the Inquisition
as the great bulwark of the Catholic faith. In the gardens of Yuste there is
still, or was lately, to be seen, a sun-dial constructed by Torriano to enable
his master to measure more accurately the lapse of time as it glided away in
the monotonous routine of the monastery.
Though
averse to visits of curiosity or idle ceremony, Charles consented to admit some
of the nobles whose estates lay in the surrounding country, and who, with
feelings of loyal attachment to their ancient master, were anxious to pay their
respects to him in his retirement. But none who found their way into his
retreat appear to have given him so much satisfaction as Francisco Borja, duke
of Gandia, in later times placed on the roll of her saints by the Roman
Catholic Church. Like Charles, he had occupied a brilliant eminence in the
world, and like him had found the glory of this world but vanity. In the prime
of life, he withdrew from the busy scenes in which he had acted, and entered a
college of Jesuits. By the emperor's invitation, Borja made more than one visit
to Yuste; and Charles found much consolation in his society, and in conversing
with his early friend on topics of engrossing interest to both. The result of
their conferences was to confirm them both in the conviction, that they had
done wisely in abjuring the world, and in dedicating themselves to the service
of Heaven.
The
emperor was also visited by his two sisters, the dowager queens of France and
Hungary, who had accompanied their brother, as we have seen, on his return to
Spain. But the travelling was too rough, and the accommodations at Yuste too
indifferent, to encourage the royal matrons to prolong their stay, or, with one
exception on the part of the queen of Hungary, to repeat their visit.
But an
object of livelier interest to the emperor than either of his sisters was a
boy, scarcely twelve years of age, who resided in the family of his major-domo,
Quixada, in the neighboring village of Cuacos. This
was Don John of Austria, as he was afterwards called, the future hero of
Lepanto. He was the natural son of Charles, a fact known to no one during the
father's lifetime, except Quixada, who introduced the boy into the convent as
his own page. The lad, at this early age, showed many gleams of that generous
spirit by which he was afterwards distinguished,—thus solacing the declining
years of his parent, and affording a hold for those affections which might have
withered in the cold atmosphere of the cloister.
Strangers
were sure to be well received who, coming from the theatre of war, could
furnish the information he so much desired respecting the condition of things
abroad. Thus we find him in conference with an officer arrived from the Low
Countries, named Spinosa, and putting a multitude of questions respecting the
state of the army, the organization and equipment of the different corps, and
other particulars, showing the lively interest taken by Charles in the conduct
of the campaign.
It has
been a common opinion, that the emperor, after his retirement to Yuste,
remained as one buried alive, totally cut off from intercourse with the
world;—"as completely withdrawn from the business of the kingdom and the
concerns of government," says one of his biographers, "as if he had
never taken part in them";—"so entirely abstracted in his
solitude," says another contemporary, "that neither revolutions nor
wars, nor gold arriving in heaps from the Indies, had any power to affect his tranquility."
So far
from this being the case, that not only did the emperor continue to show an
interest in public affairs, but he took a prominent part, even from the depths
of his retreat, in the management of them. Philip, who had the good sense to
defer to the long experience and the wisdom of his father, consulted him,
constantly, on great questions of public policy. And so far was he from the
feeling of jealousy often imputed to him, that we find him on one occasion,
when the horizon looked particularly, dark, imploring the emperor to leave his
retreat, and to aid him not only by his counsels, but by his presence and
authority. The emperor's daughter Joanna, regent of Castile, from her residence
at Valladolid, only fifty leagues from Yuste, maintained a constant correspondence
with her father, soliciting his advice in the conduct of the government.
However much Charles may have felt himself relieved from responsibility for
measures, he seems to have been as anxious for the success of Philip's
administration as if it had been his own. "Write more fully," says
one of his secretaries in a letter to the secretary of the regent's council;
"the emperor is always eager to hear more particulars of events." He
showed the deepest concern in the conduct of the Italian war. He betrayed none
of the scruples manifested by Philip, but boldly declared that the war with the
pope was a just war, in the sight of both God and man. When letters came from
abroad, he was even heard to express his regret that they brought no tidings of
Paul's death, or Caraffa's! He was sorely displeased
with the truce which Alva granted to the pontiff, intimating a regret that he
had not the reins still in his own hand. He was yet more discontented with the
peace, and the terms of it, both public and private; and when Alva talked of
leaving Naples, his anger, as his secretary quaintly remarks, was "more
than was good for his health."
The
same interest he showed in the French war. The loss of Calais filled him with
the deepest anxiety. But in his letters on the occasion, instead of wasting his
time in idle lament, he seems intent only on devising in what way he can best
serve Philip in his distress. In the same proportion he was elated by the
tidings of the victory of St. Quentin. His thoughts turned upon Paris, and he
was eager to learn what road his son had taken after the battle. According to
Brantôme, on hearing the news, he abruptly asked, "Is Philip at
Paris?"—He judged of Philip's temper by his own.
At
another time, we find him conducting negotiations with Navarre; and then,
again, carrying on a correspondence with his sister, the regent of Portugal,
for the purpose of having his grandson, Carlos, recognized as heir to the
crown, in case of the death of the young king, his cousin. The scheme failed,
for it would be as much as her life was worth, the regent said, to engage in
it. But it was a bold one, that of bringing under the same scepter these two
nations, which, by community of race, language, and institutions, would seem by
nature to have been designed for one. It was Charles's comprehensive idea; and
it proves that, even in the cloister, the spirit of ambition had not become
extinct in his bosom. How much would it have rejoiced that ambitious spirit,
could he have foreseen that the consummation so much desired by him would be
attained under Philip!
But the
department which especially engaged Charles's attention in his retirement,
singularly enough, was the financial. "It has been my constant care,"
he writes to Philip, "in all my letters to your sister, to urge the
necessity of providing you with funds,—since I can be of little service to you
in any other way." His interposition, indeed, seems to have been
constantly invoked to raise supplies for carrying on the war. This fact may be
thought to show that those writers are mistaken who accuse Philip of
withholding from his father the means of maintaining a suitable establishment
at Yuste. Charles, in truth, settled the amount of his own income; and in one
of his letters we find him fixing this at twenty thousand ducats, instead of
sixteen thousand, as before, to be paid quarterly and in advance. That the
payments were not always punctually made may well be believed, in a country
where punctuality would have been a miracle.
Charles
had more cause for irritation in the conduct of some of those functionaries
with whom he had to deal in his financial capacity. Nothing appears to have
stirred his bile so much at Yuste as the proceedings of some members of the
board of trade at Seville. "I have deferred sending to you," he
writes to his daughter, the regent, "in order to see if, with time, my
wrath would not subside. But, far from it, it increases, and will go on
increasing till I learn that those who have done wrong have atoned for it. Were
it not for my infirmities," he adds, "I would go to Seville myself,
and find out the authors of this villainy, and bring them to a summary
reckoning." "The emperor orders me," writes his secretary,
Gaztelu, "to command that the offenders be put in irons, and in order to
mortify them the more, that they be carried, in broad daylight, to Simancas,
and there lodged, not in towers or chambers, but in a dungeon. Indeed, such is
his indignation, and such are the violent and bloodthirsty expressions he
commands me to use, that you will pardon me if my language is not so temperate
as it might be." It had been customary for the board of trade to receive
the gold imported from the Indies, whether on public or private account, and
hold it for the use of the government, paying to the merchants interested an
equivalent in government bonds. The merchants, naturally enough, not relishing
this kind of security so well as the gold, by a collusion with some of the
members of the board of trade, had been secretly allowed to remove their own
property. In this way the government was defrauded—as the emperor regarded
it—of a large sum on which it had calculated. This, it would seem, was the
offence which had roused the royal indignation to such a pitch. Charles's
phlegmatic temperament had ever been liable to be ruffled by these sudden gusts
of passion; and his conventual life does not seem to have had any very sedative
influence on him in this particular.
For the
first ten months after his arrival at Yuste, the emperor's health, under the
influence of a temperate climate, the quiet of monastic life, and more than
all, probably, his exemption from the cares of state, had generally improved.
His attacks of gout had been less frequent and less severe than before. But in
the spring of 1558, the old malady returned with renewed violence. "I was
not in a condition," he writes to Philip, "to listen to a single
sermon during Lent." For months he was scarcely able to write a line with
his own hand. His spirits felt the pressure of bodily suffering, and were still
further depressed by the death of his sister Eleanor, the queen-dowager of
France and Portugal, which took place in February, 1558.
A
strong attachment seems to have subsisted between the emperor and his two
sisters. Queen Eleanor's sweetness of disposition had particularly endeared her
to her brother, who now felt her loss almost as keenly as that of one of his
own children. "She was a good Christian," he said to his secretary,
Gaztelu; and, as the tears rolled down his cheeks, he added, "We have
always loved each other. She was my elder by fifteen months; and before that
period has passed I shall probably be with her." Before half that period,
the sad augury was fulfilled.
At this
period—as we shall see hereafter—the attention of the government was called to
the Lutheran heresy, which had already begun to disclose itself in various
quarters of the country. Charles was possessed of a full share of the spirit of
bigotry which belonged to the royal line of Castile, from which he was
descended. While on the throne, this feeling was held somewhat in check by a
regard for his political interests. But in the seclusion of the monastery he
had no interests to consult but those of religion; and he gave free scope to
the spirit of intolerance which belonged to his nature. In a letter addressed,
the third of May, 1558, to his daughter Joanna, he says: "Tell the
grand-inquisitor from me to be at his post, and lay the axe at the root of the
evil before it spreads further. I rely on your zeal for bringing the guilty to
punishment, and for having them punished, without favor to any one, with all
the severity which their crimes demand." In another letter to his
daughter, three weeks later, he writes: "If I had not entire confidence
that you would do your duty, and arrest the evil at once by chastising{133} the
guilty in good earnest, I know not how I could help leaving the monastery, and
taking the remedy into my own hands." Thus did Charles make his voice
heard from his retreat among the mountains, and by his efforts and influence
render himself largely responsible for the fiery persecution which brought woe
upon the land after he himself had gone to his account.
About
the middle of August, the emperor's old enemy, the gout, returned on him with
uncommon force. It was attended with symptoms of an alarming kind, intimating,
indeed, that his strong constitution was giving way. These were attributed to a
cold which he had taken, though it seems there was good reason for imputing
them to his intemperate living; for he still continued to indulge his appetite
for the most dangerous dishes, as freely as in the days when a more active way
of life had better enabled him to digest them. It is true, the physician stood
by his side, as prompt as Sancho Panza's doctor, in his island domain, to
remonstrate against his master's proceedings. But, unhappily, he was not armed
with the authority of that functionary; and an eel-pie, a well-spiced capon, or
any other savory abomination, offered too great a fascination for Charles to
heed the warnings of his physician.
The
declining state of the emperor's health may have inspired him with a
presentiment of his approaching end, to which, we have seen, he gave utterance
some time before this, in his conversation with Gaztelu. It may have been the
sober reflections which such a feeling would naturally suggest that led him, at
the close of the month of August, to conceive the extraordinary idea of
preparing for the final scene by rehearsing his own funeral. He consulted his
professor on the subject, and was encouraged by the accommodating father to
consider it as a meritorious act. The chapel was accordingly hung in black, and
the blaze of hundreds of wax-lights was not sufficient to dispel the darkness.
The monks in their conventual dresses, and all the emperor's household, clad in
deep mourning, gathered round a huge catafalque, shrouded also in black, which
had been raised in the center of the chapel. The service for the burial of the
dead was then performed; and amidst the dismal wail of the monks, the prayers
ascended for the departed spirit, that it might be received into the mansions
of the blessed. The sorrowful attendants were melted to tears, as the image of
their master's death was presented to their minds, or they were touched, it may
be, with compassion for this pitiable display of his weakness. Charles, muffled
in a dark mantle, and bearing a lighted candle in his hand, mingled with his
household, the spectator of his own obsequies; and the doleful ceremony was
concluded by his placing the taper in the hands of the priest, in sign of his
surrendering up his soul to the Almighty.
Such is
the account of this melancholy farce given us by the Jeronymite chroniclers of
the cloister life of Charles the Fifth, and which has since been
repeated—losing nothing in the repetition—by every succeeding historian, to the
present time. Nor does there seem to have been any distrust of its correctness
till the historical skepticism of our own day had subjected the narrative to a
more critical scrutiny. It was then discovered that no mention of the affair
was to be discerned in the letters of any one of the emperor's household
residing at Yuste, although there are letters extant written by Charles's
physician, his major-domo, and his secretary, both on the thirty-first of
August, the day of the funeral, and on the first of September. With so
extraordinary an event fresh in their minds, their silence is inexplicable.
One
fact is certain, that, if the funeral did take place, it could not have been on
the date assigned to it; for on the thirty-first the emperor was laboring under
an attack of fever, of which his physician has given full particulars, and from
which he was destined never to recover. That the writers, therefore, should
have been silent in respect to a ceremony which must have had so bad an effect
on the nerves of the patient, is altogether incredible.
Yet the
story of the obsequies comes from one of the Jeronymite brethren then living at
Yuste, who speaks of the emotions which he felt, in common with the rest of the
convent, at seeing a man thus bury himself alive, as it were, and perform his
funeral rites before his death. It is repeated by another of the fraternity,
the prior of Escorial, who had ample means of conversing with eye-witnesses.
And finally, it is confirmed by more than one writer near enough to the period
to be able to assure himself of the truth. Indeed, the parties from whom the
account is originally derived were so situated that, if the story be without
foundation, it is impossible to explain its existence by misapprehension on
their part. It must be wholly charged on a willful misstatement of facts. It is
true, the monkish chronicler is not always quite so scrupulous in this
particular as would be desirable,—especially where the honor of his order is
implicated. But what interest could the Jeronymite fathers have had in so foolish
a fabrication as this? The supposition is at variance with the respectable
character of the parties, and with the air of simplicity and good faith that
belongs to their narratives.
We may
well be staggered, it is true, by the fact that no allusion to the obsequies
appears in any of the letters from Yuste; while the date assigned for them,
moreover, is positively disproved. Yet we may consider that the misstatement of
a date is a very different thing from the invention of a story; and that
chronological accuracy, as I have more than once had occasion to remark, was
not the virtue of the monkish, or indeed of any other historian of the
sixteenth century. It would not be a miracle if the obsequies should have taken
place some days before the period assigned to them. It so happens that we have
no letters from Yuste between the eighteenth and twenty-eighth of August. At
least, I have none myself, and have seen none cited by others. If any should
hereafter come to light, written during that interval, they may be found
possibly to contain some allusion to the funeral. Should no letters have been
written during the period, the silence of the parties who wrote at the end of
August and the beginning of September may be explained by the fact, that too
long a time had elapsed since the performance of the emperor's obsequies, for
them to suppose it could have any connection with his illness, which formed the
subject of their correspondence. Difficulties will present themselves,
whichever view we take of the matter. But the reader may think it quite as
reasonable to explain those difficulties by the supposition of involuntary
error, as by that of sheer invention.
Nor is
the former supposition rendered less probable by the character of Charles the
Fifth. There was a taint of insanity in the royal blood of Castile, which was
most fully displayed in the emperor's mother, Joanna. Some traces of it,
however faint, may be discerned in his own conduct, before he took refuge in
the cloisters of Yuste. And though we may not agree with Paul the Fourth in
regarding this step as sufficient evidence of his madness, we may yet find
something in his conduct, on more than one occasion, while there, which is near
akin to it. Such, for example, was the morbid relish which he discovered for
performing the obsequies, not merely of his kindred, but of any one whose
position seemed to him to furnish an apology for it. Not a member of the toison died, but he was prepared to commemorate the event
with solemn funeral rites. These, in short, seemed to be the festivities of
Charles's cloister life. These lugubrious ceremonies had a fascination for him,
that may remind one of the tenacity with which his mother, Joanna, clung to the
dead body of her husband, taking it with her wherever she went. It was after
celebrating the obsequies of his parents and his wife, which occupied several
successive days, that he conceived, as we are told, the idea of rehearsing his
own funeral,—a piece of extravagance which becomes the more credible when we
reflect on the state of morbid excitement to which his mind may have been
brought by dwelling so long on the dreary apparatus of death.
But
whatever be thought of the account of the mock funeral of Charles, it appears
that on the thirtieth of August he was affected by an indisposition which on
the following day was attended with most alarming symptoms. Here also we have
some particulars from his Jeronymite biographers which we do not find in the
letters. On the evening of the thirty-first, according to their account,
Charles ordered a portrait of the empress, his wife, of whom, as we have seen,
he had more than one in his collection, to be brought to him. He dwelt a long
while on its beautiful features, "as if," says the chronicler,
"he were imploring her to prepare a place for him in the celestial
mansions to which she had gone." He then passed to the contemplation of another
picture,—Titian's "Agony in the Garden," and from this to that
immortal production of his pencil, the "Gloria," as it is called,
which is said to have hung over the high altar at Yuste, and which, after the
emperor's death, followed his remains to the Escorial. He gazed so long and
with such rapt attention on the picture, as to cause apprehension in his
physician, who, in the emperor's debilitated state, feared the effects of such
excitement on his nerves. There was good reason for apprehension; for Charles,
at length, rousing from his reverie, turned to the doctor, and complained that
he was ill. His pulse showed him to be in a high fever. As the symptoms became
more unfavorable, his physician bled him, but without any good effect. The
Regent Joanna, on learning her father's danger, instantly dispatched her own
physician from Valladolid to his assistance. But no earthly remedies could
avail. It soon became evident that the end was approaching.
Charles
received the intelligence, not merely with composure, but with cheerfulness. It
was what he had long desired, he said. His first care was to complete some few
arrangements respecting his affairs. On the ninth of September, he executed a
codicil to his will. The will, made a few years previous, was of great length,
and the codicil had not the merit of brevity. Its principal object was to make
provision for those who had followed him to Yuste. No mention is made in the
codicil of his son Don John of Austria. He seems to have communicated his views
in regard to him to his major-domo, Quixada, who had a private interview of
some length with his master a few days before his death. Charles's directions
on the subject appear to have been scrupulously regarded by Philip.
One
clause in the codicil deserves to be noticed. The emperor conjures his son most
earnestly, by the obedience he owes him, to follow up and bring to justice
every heretic in his dominions; and this without exception, and without favor
or mercy to any one. He conjures Philip to cherish the Holy Inquisition, as the
best instrument for accomplishing this good work. "So," he concludes,
"shall you have my blessing, and the Lord shall prosper all your
undertakings. Such were the last words of the dying monarch to his son. They
did not fall on a deaf ear; and the parting admonition of his father served to
give a keener edge to the sword of persecution which Philip had already begun
to wield.
On the
nineteenth of September, Charles's strength had declined so much that it was
thought proper to administer extreme unction to him. He preferred to have it in
the form adopted by the friars, which, comprehending a litany, the seven
penitential psalms, and sundry other passages of Scripture, was much longer and
more exhausting than the rite used by the laity. His strength did not fail
under it, however; and the following day he desired to take the communion, as
he had frequently done during his illness. On his confessor's representing
that, after the sacrament of extreme unction, this was unnecessary, he
answered, "Perhaps so, but it is good provision for the long journey I am
to set out upon." Exhausted as he was, he knelt a full quarter of an hour
in his bed during the ceremony, offering thanks to God for his mercies, and
expressing the deepest contrition for his sins, with an earnestness of manner
that touched the hearts of all present.
Throughout
his illness he had found consolation in having passages of Scripture,
especially the Psalms, read to him. Quixada, careful that his master should not
be disquieted in his last moments, would allow very few persons to be present
in his chamber. Among the number was Bartolomé de Carranza, who had lately been
raised to the archiepiscopal see of Toledo. He had taken a prominent part in
the persecution in England under Mary. For the remainder of his life he was to
be the victim of persecution himself, from a stronger arm than his, that of the
Inquisition. Even the words of consolation which he uttered in this chamber of
death were carefully treasured up by Charles's confessor, and made one of the
charges against him in his impeachment for heresy.
On the
twenty-first of September, St. Matthew's day, about two hours after midnight,
the emperor, who had remained long without speaking, feeling that his hour had
come, exclaimed, "Now it is time!" The holy taper was placed lighted
in his right hand, as he sat up leaning on the shoulder of the faithful
Quixada. With his left he endeavored to clasp a silver crucifix. It had
comforted the empress, his wife, in her dying hour; and Charles had ordered
Quixada to hold it in readiness for him on the like occasion. It had lain for
some time on his breast; and as it was now held up before his glazing eye by
the archbishop of Toledo, Charles fixed his gaze long and earnestly on the
sacred symbol,—to him the memento of earthly love as well as heavenly. The
archbishop was repeating the psalm De Profundis,—"Out of the depths have I
cried unto thee, O Lord!"—when the dying man, making a feeble effort to
embrace the crucifix, exclaimed, in tones so audible as to be heard in the
adjoining room, "Ay Jesus!" and sinking back on the pillow, expired
without a struggle. He had always prayed—perhaps fearing the hereditary taint
of insanity—that he might die in possession of his faculties. His prayer was
granted.
The
emperor's body, after being embalmed, and placed in its leaden coffin, lay in
state in the chapel for three days, during which three discourses were
pronounced over it by the best preachers in the convent. It was then consigned
to the earth, with due solemnity, amidst the prayers and tears of the brethren
and of Charles's domestics, in presence of a numerous concourse of persons from
the surrounding country.
The
burial did not take place, however, without some difficulty. Charles had
requested by his will that he might be laid partially under the great altar, in
such a manner that his head and the upper part of his body might come under the
spot where the priest stood when he performed the service. This was dictated in
all humility by the emperor; but it raised a question among the scrupulous
ecclesiastics as to the propriety of permitting any bones save those of a saint
to occupy so holy a place as that beneath the altar. The dispute waxed somewhat
warmer than was suited to the occasion; till the momentous affair was finally
adjusted by having an excavation made in the wall, within which the head was
introduced, so as to allow the feet to touch the verge of the hallowed ground.
The emperor's body did not long abide in its resting-place at Yuste. Before
many years had elapsed, it was transported, by command of Philip the Second, to
the Escorial, and in that magnificent mausoleum it has continued to repose, beside
that of the Empress Isabella.
The
funeral obsequies of Charles were celebrated with much pomp by the court of
Rome, by the Regent Joanna at Valladolid, and, with yet greater magnificence,
by Philip the Second at Brussels. Philip was at Arras when he learned the news
of his father's death. He instantly repaired to a monastery in the neighborhood
of Brussels, where he remained secluded for several weeks. Meanwhile he ordered
the bells in all the churches and convents throughout the Netherlands to be
tolled thrice a day for four mouths, and during that time that no festivals or
public rejoicings of any kind should take place. On the twenty-eighth of
December the king entered Brussels by night, and on the following day, before
the hour of vespers, a procession was formed to the church of St. Gudule, which
still challenges the admiration of the traveler as one of the noblest monuments
of medieval architecture in the Netherlands.
The
procession consisted of the principal clergy, the members of the different
religious houses, bearing lighted tapers in their hands, the nobles and
cavaliers about the court, the great officers of state and the royal household,
all clad in deep mourning. After these came the knights of the Golden Fleece,
wearing the insignia and the superb dress of the order. The marquis of Aguilar
bore the imperial scepter, the duke of Villahermosa the sword, and the prince
of Orange carried the globe and the crown of the empire. Philip came on foot,
wrapped in a sable mantle, with his head buried in a deep cowl. His train was
borne by Ruy Gomez de Silva, the favorite minister. Then followed the duke of
Savoy, walking also alone, with his head covered, as a prince of the blood.
Files of the Spanish and German guard, in their national uniforms, formed an
escort to the procession, as it took its way through the principal streets,
which were illumined with a blaze of torchlight, that dispelled the gathering
shadows of evening.
A
conspicuous part of the procession was a long train of horses led each by two
gentlemen, and displaying on their splendid housings, and the banners which
they carried, the devices and arms of the several states over which the emperor
presided.
But no
part of the pageant attracted so much notice from the populace as a stately
galley, having its sides skillfully painted with battle-pieces suggested by
different actions in which Charles had been engaged; while its sails of black
silk were covered with inscriptions in letters of gold, that commemorated the
triumphs of the hero.
Although
the palace was at no great distance from St. Gudule's, the procession occupied
two hours in passing to the church. In the nave of the edifice stood a sort of
chapel, constructed for the occasion. Its roof, or rather canopy, displaying
four crowns embroidered in gold, rested on four Ionic pillars curiously
wrought. Within lay a sarcophagus covered with a dark pall of velvet,
surmounted by a large crimson cross. The imperial crown, together with the
globe and scepter, was deposited in this chapel, which was lighted up with
three thousand wax tapers.
In front
of it was a scaffolding covered with black, on which a throne was raised for
Philip. The nobles and great officers of the crown occupied the seats, or
rather steps, below. Drapery of dark velvet and cloth of gold, emblazoned with
the imperial arms, was suspended across the arches of the nave; above which ran
galleries, appropriated to the duchess of Lorraine and the ladies of the court.
The traveler
who at this time visits this venerable pile, where Charles the Fifth was wont
to hold the chapters of the Golden Fleece, while he gazes on the characteristic
effigy of that monarch, as it is displayed on the superb windows of painted
glass, may call to mind the memorable day when the people of Flanders, and the
rank and beauty of its capital, were gathered together to celebrate the
obsequies of the great emperor; when, amidst clouds of incense and the blaze of
myriads of lights, the deep tones of the organ, vibrating through the long
aisles, mingled with the voices of the priests, as they chanted their sad
requiem to the soul of their departed sovereign.
I have
gone somewhat into detail in regard to the latter days of Charles the Fifth,
who exercised, in his retirement, too important an influence on public affairs
for such an account of him to be deemed an impertinent episode to the history
of Philip the Second. Before parting from him for ever, I will take a brief
view of some peculiarities in his personal, rather than his political
character, which has long since been indelibly traced by a hand abler than
mine.
Charles,
at the time of his death, was in the fifty-eighth year of his age. He was older
in constitution than in years. So much shaken had he been, indeed, in mind as
well as body, that he may be said to have died of premature old age. Yet his
physical development had been very slow. He was nearly twenty-one years old
before any beard was to be seen on his chin. Yet by the time he was thirty-six,
gray hairs began to make their appearance on his temples. At forty the gout had
made severe inroads on a constitution originally strong; and before he was
fifty, the man who could keep the saddle day and night in his campaigns, who
seemed to be insensible to fatigue as he followed the chase among the wild
passes of the Alpuxarras, was obliged to be carried
in a litter, like a poor cripple, at the head of his armies.
His
mental development was equally tardy with his bodily. So long as Chievres lived,—the Flemish noble who had the care of his
early life,—Charles seemed to have no will of his own. During his first visit
to Spain, where he came when seventeen years old, he gave so little promise,
that those who approached him nearest could discern no signs of his future
greatness. Yet the young prince seems to have been conscious that he had the
elements of greatness within him, and he patiently bided his time. "Nondum"—"Not yet"—was the motto which he
adopted for his maiden shield, when but eighteen years old, at a tournament at
Valladolid.
But
when the death of the Flemish minister had released the young monarch from this
state of dependence, he took the reins into his own hands, as Louis the
Fourteenth did on the death of Mazarin. He now showed himself in an entirely
new aspect. He even displayed greater independence than his predecessors had
done. He no longer trusted everything, like them, to a council of state. He
trusted only to himself; and if he freely communicated with some one favorite
minister, like the elder Granvelle, and the cardinal, his son, it was in order
to be counselled, not to be controlled by their judgments. He patiently
informed himself of public affairs; and when foreign envoys had their audiences
of him, they were surprised to find him possessed of everything relating to
their own courts and the objects of their mission.
Yet he
did not seem to be quick of apprehension, or, to speak more correctly, he was
slow in arriving at his results. He would keep the courier waiting for days
before he could come to a decision. When he did come to it, no person on earth
could shake it. Talking one day with the Venetian Contarini about this habit of
his mind, the courtly minister remarked, that "it was not obstinacy to
adhere to sound opinions." "True," said Charles, "but I
sometimes adhere to those that are unsound."
His
indefatigable activity both of mind and body formed a strong contrast to the
lethargy of early years. His widely scattered empire, spreading over the Low
Countries, Spain, Germany, and the New World, presented embarrassments which
most princes would have found it impossible to overcome. At least they would
have been compelled to govern, in a great measure, by deputy,—to transact their
business by agents. But Charles chose to do everything himself,—to devise his
own plans, and to execute them in person. The number of his journeys by land
and by water, as noticed in his farewell address, is truly wonderful; for that
was not the day of steamboats and railways. He seemed to lead the life of a
courier. But it was for no trivial object that he made these expeditions. He
knew where his presence was needed; and his promptness and punctuality brought
him, at the right time, on the right spot. No spot in his broad empire was far
removed from him. He seemed to possess the power of ubiquity.
The
consciousness of his own strength roused to a flame the spark of ambition which
had hitherto slept in his bosom. His schemes were so vast, that it was a common
opinion he aspired to universal monarchy. Like his grandfather, Ferdinand, and
his own son, Philip, he threw over his schemes the cloak of religion. Or, to
deal with him more fairly, religious principle probably combined with personal
policy to determine his career. He seemed always ready to do battle for the
Cross. He affected to identify the cause of Spain with the cause of
Christendom. He marched against the Turks, and stayed the tide of Ottoman
inroad in Hungary. He marched against the Protestants, and discomfited their
armies in the heart of Germany. He crossed the Mediterranean, and humbled the
Crescent at Algiers. He threw himself on the honor of Francis, and travelled
through France to take vengeance on the rebels of Flanders. He twice entered
France as an enemy, and marched up to the gates of Paris. Instead of the modest
legend on his maiden shield; he now assumed the proud motto, "Plus
ultra;" and he vindicated his right to it, by sending his fleets across
the ocean, and by planting the banner of Castile on the distant shores of the
Pacific. In these enterprises he was generally successful. His success led him
to rely still more on himself. "Myself and the lucky moment," was his
favorite saying. The "star of Austria," was still a proverb. It was
not till the evening of life that he complained of the fickleness of fortune;
that his star, as it descended to the horizon, was obscured by clouds and
darkness.
Thus
Charles's nerves were kept in a state of perpetual excitement. No wonder that
his health should have sunk under it; like a plant forced by extraordinary
stimulants to an unnatural production at the expense of its own vitality.
His
habits were not all of them the most conducive to health. He slept usually only
four hours; too short a time to repair the waste caused by incessant toil. His
phlegmatic temperament did not incline him to excess. Yet there was one excess
of which he was guilty,—the indulgence of his appetite to a degree most
pernicious to his health. A Venetian contemporary tells us, that, before rising
in the morning, potted capon was usually served to him, dressed with sugar,
milk, and spices. At noon he dined on a variety of dishes. Soon after vespers
he took another meal; and later in the evening supped heartily on anchovies, or
some other gross and savory food of which he was particularly fond. On one
occasion, complaining to his maître d'hôtel that the cook sent him nothing but
dishes too insipid and tasteless to be eaten, the perplexed functionary,
knowing Charles's passion for timepieces, replied, that "he did not know
what he could do, unless it were to serve his majesty a ragout of
watches!" The witticism had one good effect, that of provoking a hearty
laugh from the emperor,—a thing rarely witnessed in his latter days.
It was
in vain that Cardinal Loaysa, his confessor,
remonstrated, with an independence that does him credit, against his master's
indulgence of his appetite, assuring him that resistance here would do more for
his soul than any penance with the scourge. It seems a pity that Charles, considering
his propensities, should have so easily obtained absolution from fasts, and
that he should not, on the contrary, have transferred some of the penance which
he inflicted on his back to the offending part. Even in the monastery of Yuste
he still persevered in the same pernicious taste. Anchovies, frogs' legs, and
eel-pasties were the dainty morsels with which he chose to be regaled, even
before the eyes of his physician. It would not have been amiss for him to have
exchanged his solitary repast more frequently for the simpler fare of the
refectory.
With
these coarser tastes Charles combined many others of a refined and intellectual
character. We have seen his fondness for music, and the delight he took in the
sister art of design,—especially in the works of Titian. He was painted several
times by this great master, and it was by his hand, as we have seen, that he
desired to go down to posterity. The emperor had, moreover, another taste,
perhaps talent, which, with a different training and in a different sphere of
life, might have led him to the craft of authorship.
A
curious conversation is reported as having been held by him with Borja, the
future saint, during one of the visits paid by the Jesuit to Yuste. Charles
inquired of his friend whether it were wrong for a man to write his
autobiography, provided he did so honestly, and with no motive of vanity. He
said that he had written his own memoirs, not from the desire of
self-glorification, but to correct manifold mistakes which had been circulated
of his doings, and to set his conduct in a true light. One might be curious to
know the answer, which is not given, of the good father to this question. It is
to be hoped that it was not of a kind to induce the emperor to destroy the
manuscript, which has never come to light.
However
this may be, there is no reason to doubt that at one period of his life he had
compiled a portion of his autobiography. In the imperial household, as I have
already noticed, was a Flemish scholar, William Van Male, or Malinaeus, as he is called in Latin, who, under the title
of gentleman of the chamber, wrote many a long letter for Charles, while
standing by his bedside, and read many a weary hour to him after the monarch
had gone to rest,—not, as it would seem, to sleep. This personage tells us that
Charles, when sailing on the Rhine, wrote an account of his expeditions to as
late a date as 1550. This is not very definite. Any account written under such
circumstances, and in so short a time, could be nothing but a sketch of the
most general kind. Yet Van Male assures us that he had read the manuscript,
which he commends for its terse and elegant diction; and he proposes to make a
Latin version of it, the style of which should combine the separate merits of
Tacitus, Livy, Suetonius, and Cæsar! The admiring chamberlain laments that,
instead of giving it to the world, Charles should keep it jealously secured
under lock and key.
The
emperor's taste for authorship showed itself also in another form. This was by
the translation of the "Chevalier Délibéré,"
a French poem then popular, celebrating the court of his ancestor, Charles the
Bold of Burgundy. Van Male, who seems to have done for Charles the Fifth what
Voltaire did for Frederick, when he spoke of himself as washing the king's
dirty linen, was employed also to overlook this translation, which he
pronounces to have possessed great merit in regard to idiom and selection of
language. The emperor then gave it to Acuña, a good poet of the court, to be
done into Castilian verse. Thus metamorphosed, he proposed to give the copy to
Van Male. A mischievous wag, Avila the historian, assured the emperor that it
could not be worth less than five hundred gold crowns to that functionary.
"And William is well entitled to them," said the monarch, "for
he has sweat much over the work." Two thousand copies were forthwith
ordered to be printed of the poem, which was to come out anonymously. Poor Van
Male, who took a very different view of the profits, and thought that nothing
was certain but the cost of the edition, would have excused himself from this
proof of his master's liberality. It was all in vain; Charles was not to be
balked in his generous purpose; and, without a line to propitiate the public
favor, by stating in the preface the share of the royal hand in the
composition, it was ushered into the world.
Whatever
Charles may have done in the way of an autobiography, he was certainly not
indifferent to posthumous fame. He knew that the greatest name must soon pass
into oblivion, unless embalmed in the song of the bard or the page of the
chronicler. He looked for a chronicler to do for him with his pen what Titian
had done for him with his pencil,—exhibit him in his true proportions, and in a
permanent form, to the eye of posterity! In this he does not seem to have been
so much under the influence of vanity as of a natural desire to have his
character and conduct placed in a fair point of view,—what seemed to him to be
such,—for the contemplation or criticism of mankind.
The
person whom the emperor selected for this delicate office was the learned
Sepulveda. Sleidan he condemned as a slanderer; and Giovio, who had taken the other extreme, and written of him
with what he called the "golden pen" of history, he no less condemned
as a flatterer. Charles encouraged Sepulveda to apply to him for information on
matters relating to his government. But when requested by the historian to
listen to what he had written, the emperor refused. "I will neither hear
nor read," he replied, "what you have said of me. Others may do this
when I am gone. But if you wish for information on any point, I shall be always
ready to give it to you." A history thus compiled was of the nature of an
autobiography, and must be considered, therefore, as entitled to much the same
confidence, and open to the same objections, as that kind of writing. Sepulveda
was one of the few who had repeated access to Charles in his retirement at
Yuste; and the monarch testified his regard for him, by directing that
particular care be taken that no harm should come to the historian's manuscript
before it was committed to the press.
Such
are some of the most interesting traits and personal anecdotes I have been able
to collect of the man who, for nearly forty years, ruled over an empire more
vast, with an authority more absolute, than any monarch since the days of
Charlemagne. It may be thought strange that I should have omitted to notice one
feature in his character, the most prominent in the line from which he was
descended, at least on the mother's side,—his bigotry. But in Charles this was
less conspicuous than in many others of his house; and while he sat upon the
throne, the extent to which his religious principles were held in subordination
by his political, suggests a much closer parallel to the policy of his
grandfather, Ferdinand the Catholic, than to that of his son, Philip the
Second, or of his imbecile grandson, Philip the Third.
But the
religious gloom which hung over Charles's mind took the deeper tinge of
fanaticism after he had withdrawn to the monastery of Yuste. With his dying
words, as we have seen, he bequeathed the Inquisition as a precious legacy to
his son. In like manner, he endeavored to cherish in the Regent Joanna's bosom
the spirit of persecution. And if it were true, as his biographer assures us,
that Charles expressed a regret that he had respected the safe-conduct of
Luther, the world had little reason to mourn that he exchanged the sword and
the scepter for the breviary of the friar,—the throne of the Caesars for his
monastic retreat among the wilds of Estremadura.
The
preceding chapter was written in the summer of 1851, a year before the
appearance of Stirling's "Cloister Life of Charles the Fifth," which
led the way in that brilliant series of works from the pens of Amédée Pichot, Mignet, and Gachard, which has
made the darkest recesses of Yuste as light as day. The publication of these
works has deprived my account of whatever novelty it might have possessed,
since it rests on a similar basis with theirs, namely, original documents in
the Archives of Simancas. Yet the important influence which Charles exerted
over the management of affairs, even in his monastic retreat, has made it
impossible to dispense with the chapter. On the contrary, I have profited by
these recent publications to make sundry additions, which may readily be
discovered by the reader, from the references I have been careful to make to
the sources whence they are derived.
The
public has been hitherto indebted for its knowledge of the reign of Charles the
Fifth to Robertson,—a writer who, combining a truly philosophical spirit with
an acute perception of character, is recommended, moreover, by a classic
elegance of style which has justly given him a preëminence among the historians
of the great emperor. But in his account of the latter days of Charles,
Robertson mainly relies on commonplace authorities, whose information, gathered
at second hand, is far from being trustworthy,—as is proved by the
contradictory tenor of such authentic documents as the letters of Charles
himself, with those of his own followers, and the narratives of the brotherhood
of Yuste. These documents are, for the most part, to be found in the Archives of
Simancas, where, in Robertson's time, they were guarded, with the vigilance of
a Turkish harem, against all intrusion of native as well as foreigner. It was
not until very recently, in 1844, that the more liberal disposition of the
government allowed the gates to be unbarred which had been closed for
centuries; and then, for the first time, the student might be seen toiling in
the dusty alcoves of Simancas, and busily exploring the long-buried memorials
of the past. It was at this period that my friend, Don Pascual de Gayangos,
having obtained authority from the government, passed some weeks at Simancas in
collecting materials, some of which have formed the groundwork of the preceding
chapter.
While
the manuscripts of Simancas were thus hidden from the world, a learned keeper
of the archives, Don Tomas Gonzalez, discontented with the unworthy view which
had been given of the latter days of Charles the Fifth, had profited by the
materials which lay around him, to exhibit his life at Yuste in a new and more
authentic light. To the volume which he compiled for this purpose he gave the
title of "Retiro, Estancia, y Muerte
del Emperador Carlos Quinto en el Monasterio de Yuste." The work, the principal value of which consists
in the copious extracts with which it is furnished from the correspondence of
Charles and his household, was suffered by the author to remain in manuscript;
and, at his death, it passed into the hands of his brother, who prepared a
summary of its contents, and endeavored to dispose of the volume at a price so
exorbitant that it remained for many years without a purchaser. It was finally
bought by the French government at a greatly reduced price,—for four thousand
francs. It may seem strange that it should have even brought this sum, since
the time of the sale was that in which the new arrangements were made for
giving admission to the archives that contained the original documents on which
the Gonzalez MS. was founded. The work thus bought by the French government was
transferred to the Archives des Affaires Etrangères,
then under the direction of M. Mignet. The manuscript
could not be in better hands than those of a scholar who has so successfully
carried the torch of criticism into some of the darkest passages of Spanish
history. His occupations, however, took him in another direction; and for eight
years the Gonzalez MS. remained as completely hidden from the world in the
Parisian archives as it had been in those of Simancas. When, at length, it was
applied to the historical uses for which it had been intended, it was through
the agency, not of a French, but of a British writer. This was Mr. Stirling,
the author of the "Annals of the Artists of Spain,"—a work honorable
to its author for the familiarity it shows, not only with the state of the arts
in that country, but also with its literature.
MEMOIRS
OF CHARLES.
Mr.
Stirling, during a visit to the Peninsula, in 1849, made a pilgrimage to Yuste;
and the traditions and hoary reminiscences gathered round the spot left such an
impression on the traveler’s mind, that, on his return to England, he made them
the subject of two elaborate papers in Fraser's Magazine, in the numbers for
April and May, 1851. Although these spirited essays rested wholly on printed
works, which had long been accessible to the scholar, they were found to
contain many new and highly interesting details; showing how superficially Mr.
Stirling's
predecessors had examined the records of the emperor's residence at Yuste.
Still, in his account the author had omitted the most important feature of
Charles's monastic life,—the influence which he exercised on the administration
of the kingdom. This was to be gathered from the manuscripts of Simancas.
Mr.
Stirling, who through that inexhaustible repository, the Handbook of Spain, had
become acquainted with the existence of the Gonzalez MS., was, at the time of
writing his essays, ignorant of its fate. On learning, afterwards, where it was
to be found, he visited Paris, and, having obtained access to the volume, so
far profited by its contents as to make them the basis of a separate work,
which he entitled "The Cloister Life of Charles the Fifth." It soon
attracted the attention of scholars, both at home and abroad, went through
several editions, and was received, in short, with an avidity which showed both
the importance attached to the developments the author had made, and the highly
attractive form in which he had presented them to the reader.
The
Parisian scholars were now stimulated to turn to account the treasure which had
remained so long neglected on their shelves. In 1854, less than two years after
the appearance of Mr. Stirling's book, M. Amédée Pichot published his "Chronique de Charles-Quint," a work which, far from
being confined to the latter days of the emperor, covers the whole range of his
biography, presenting a large amount of information in regard to his personal
habits, as well as to the interior organization of his government, and the
policy which directed it. The whole is enriched, moreover, by a multitude of
historical incidents, which may be regarded rather as subsidiary than essential
to the conduct of the narrative, which is enlivened by much ingenious criticism
on the state of manners, arts, and moral culture of the period.
It was
not long after the appearance of this work that M. Gachard,
whom I have elsewhere noticed as having been commissioned by the Belgian
government to make extensive researches in the Archives of Simancas, gave to
the public some of the fruits of his labors, in the first volume of his "Retraite et Mort de Charles-Quint." It is devoted to
the letters of the emperor and his household, which form the staple of the
Gonzalez MS.; thus placing at the disposition of the future biographer of
Charles the original materials with which to reconstruct the history of his
latter days.
Lastly
came the work, long expected, of M. Mignet,
"Charles-Quint; son Abdication, son Séjour, et sa Mort au Monastère de Yuste." It was the
reproduction, in a more extended and elaborate form, of a series of papers, the
first of which appeared shortly after the publication of Mr. Stirling's book.
In this work the French author takes the clear and comprehensive view of his
subject so characteristic of his genius. The difficult and debatable points he
discusses with acuteness and precision; and the whole story of Charles's
monastic life he presents in so luminous an aspect to the reader as leaves
nothing further to be desired.
The
critic may take some interest in comparing the different manners in which the
several writers have dealt with the subject, each according to his own taste,
or the bent of his genius. Thus through Stirling's more free and familiar
narrative there runs a pleasant vein of humor, with piquancy enough to give it
relish, showing the author's sensibility to the ludicrous, for which Charles's
stingy habits, and excessive love of good cheer, even in the convent, furnish
frequent occasion.
Quite a
different conception is formed by Mignet of the
emperor's character, which he has cast in the true heroic mould,
not deigning to recognize a single defect, however slight, which may at all
impair the majesty of the proportions. Finally, Amédée Pichot, instead of the
classical, may be said to have conformed to the romantic school in the
arrangement of his subject, indulging in various picturesque episodes, which he
has, however, combined so successfully with the main body of the narrative as
not to impair the unity of interest.
Whatever may be thought of the comparative merits of these eminent writers in the execution of their task, the effect of their labors has undoubtedly been to make that the plainest which was before the most obscure portion of the history of Charles the Fifth.
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