BOOK III.THE WARS OF RELIGIONS IN NETHERLANDS (CONTINUED)
CHAPTER
XXIV.
ALVA SENT TO THE NETHERLANDS.
1567.
While Margaret was thus successful in bringing the country to a state of at
least temporary tranquility, measures were taken at the court of Madrid for
shifting the government of the Netherlands into other hands, and for materially
changing its policy.
We have seen how actively the rumors had been circulated, throughout the
last year, of Philip's intended visit to the country. These rumors had received
abundant warrant from his own letters, addressed to the regent and to his
ministers at the different European courts. Nor did the king confine himself to
professions. He applied to the French government to allow a free passage for
his army through its territories. He caused a survey to be made of that part of
Savoy through which his troops would probably march, and a map of the proposed
route to be prepared. He ordered fresh levies from Germany to meet him on the
Flemish frontier. And finally, he talked of calling the cortes together, to
provide for the regency during his absence.
Yet whoever else might be imposed on, there was one potentate in Europe
whose clear vision was not to be blinded by the professions of Philip, nor by
all this bustle of preparation. This was the old pontiff, Pius the Fifth, who
had always distrusted the king's sincerity. Pius had beheld with keen anguish
the spread of heresy in the Low Countries. Like a true son of the Inquisition
as he was, he would gladly have seen its fires kindled in every city of this
apostate land. He had observed with vexation the apathy manifested by Philip.
And he at length resolved to dispatch a special embassy to Spain, to stimulate
the monarch, if possible, to more decided action.
The person employed was the bishop of Ascoli, and the good father delivered
his rebuke in such blunt terms as caused a sensation at the court of Madrid. In
a letter to his ambassador at Rome, Philip complained that the pope should have
thus held him up to Christendom as one slack in the performance of his duty.
The envoy had delivered himself in so strange a manner, Philip added, that, but
for the respect and love he bore his holiness, he might have been led to take
precisely the opposite course to the one he intended.
Yet notwithstanding this show of indignation, had it not been for the
outbreak of the iconoclasts, it is not improbable that the king might still
have continued to procrastinate, relying on his favorite maxim, that “Time and
himself were a match for any other two”. But the event which caused such a
sensation throughout Christendom roused every feeling of indignation in the
royal bosom, and this from the insult offered to the crown as well as to
the Church. Contrary to his wont, the king expressed himself with so much
warmth on the subject, and so openly, that the most skeptical began at last to
believe that the long talked of visit was at hand. The only doubt was as to the
manner in which it should be made; whether the king should march at the head of
an army, or attended only by so much of a retinue as was demanded by his royal
state.
The question was warmly discussed in the council. Ruy Gomez, the courtly
favorite of Philip, was for the latter alternative. A civil war he deprecated,
as bringing ruin even to the victor. Clemency was the best attribute of a
sovereign, and the people of Flanders were a generous race, more likely to be
overcome by kindness than by arms. In these liberal and humane views the prince
of Eboli was supported by the politic secretary, Antonio Perez, and by the duke
of Feria, formerly ambassador to London, a man who to polished manners united a
most insinuating eloquence.
But very different opinions, as might be expected, were advanced by the
duke of Alva. The system of indulgence, he said, had been that followed by the
regent, and its fruits were visible. The weeds of heresy were not to be
extirpated by a gentle hand; and his majesty should deal with his rebellious
vassals as Charles the Fifth had dealt with their rebel fathers at Ghent. These
stern views received support from the Cardinal Espinosa, who held the office of
president of the council, as well as of grand inquisitor, and who doubtless
thought the insult offered to the Inquisition not the least of the offences to
be charged on the Reformers.
Each of the great leaders recommended the measures most congenial with his
own character, and which, had they been adopted, would probably have required
his own services to carry them into execution. Had the pacific course been
taken, Feria, or more probably Ruy Gomez, would have been entrusted with the
direction of affairs. Indeed, Montigny and Bergen, still detained in reluctant
captivity at Madrid, strongly urged the king to send the prince of Eboli, as a
man, who, by his popular manners and known discretion, would be most likely to
reconcile opposite factions. Were violent measures, on the other hand, to be
adopted, to whom could they be so well entrusted as to the duke himself, the
most experienced captain of his time?
The king, it is said, contrary to his custom, was present at the meeting of
the council, and listened to the debate. He did not intimate his opinion. But
it might be conjectured to which side he was most likely to lean, from his
habitual preference for coercive measures.
Philip came to a decision sooner than usual. In a few days he summoned the
duke, and told him that he had resolved to send him forthwith, at the head of
an army, to the Netherlands. It was only, however, to prepare the way for his
own coming, which would take place as soon as the country was in a state
sufficiently settled to receive him.
All was now alive with the business of preparation in Castile. Levies were
raised throughout the country. Such was the zeal displayed, that even the
Inquisition and the clergy advanced a considerable sum towards defraying the
expenses of an expedition which they seemed to regard in the light of a
crusade. Magazines of provisions were ordered to be established at regular
stations on the proposed line of march. Orders were sent, that the old Spanish
garrisons in Lombardy, Naples, Sicily, and Sardinia, should be transported to
the place of rendezvous in Piedmont, to await the coming of the duke, who would
supply their places with the fresh recruits brought with him from Castile.
Philip meanwhile constantly proclaimed that Alva's departure was only the
herald of his own. He wrote this to Margaret, assuring her of his purpose to go
by water, and directing her to have a squadron of eight vessels in readiness to
convoy him to Zealand, where he proposed to land. The vessels were accordingly
equipped. Processions were made, and prayers put up in all the churches, for
the prosperous passage of the king. Yet there were some in the Netherlands who
remarked that prayers to avert the dangers of the sea were hardly needed by the
monarch in his palace at Madrid! Many of those about the royal person soon
indulged in the same skepticism in regard to the king's sincerity, as week
after week passed away, and no arrangements were made for his departure. Among
the contradictory rumors at court in respect to the king’s intention, the
pope's nuncio wrote, it was impossible to get at the truth. It was easy to
comprehend the general policy of Philip, but impossible to divine the
particular plans by which, it was to be carried out. If such was the veil which
hid the monarch's purposes even from the eyes of those who had nearest access
to his person, how can we hope at this distance of time to penetrate it? Yet
the historian of the nineteenth century is admitted to the perusal of many an
authentic document revealing the royal purpose, which never came under the eye
of the courtier of Madrid.
With all the light thus afforded, it is still difficult to say whether
Philip ever was sincere in his professions of visiting the Netherlands. If he
were so at any time, it certainly was not after he had decided on the mission
of Alva. Philip widely differed from his father in a sluggishness of body which
made any undertaking that required physical effort exceedingly irksome. He
shrunk from no amount of sedentary labor, would toil from morning till midnight
in his closet, like the humblest of his secretaries. But a journey was a great
undertaking. After his visits, during his father's lifetime, to England and the
Low Countries, he rarely travelled farther, as his graceless son satirically
hinted, than from Madrid to Aranjuez, or Madrid to the Escorial. A thing so
formidable as an expedition to Flanders, involving a tedious journey through an
unfriendly land, or a voyage through seas not less unfriendly, was what, under
ordinary circumstances, the king would have never dreamed of.
The present aspect of affairs, moreover, had nothing in it particularly
inviting, especially to a prince of Philip’s temper. Never was there a
prince more jealous of his authority; and the indignities to which he might
have been exposed, in the disorderly condition of the country, might well have
come to the aid of his constitutional sluggishness to deter him from the visit.
Under these circumstances, it is not strange that Philip, if he had ever
entertained a vague project of a journey to the Netherlands, should have
yielded to his natural habit of procrastination. The difficulties of a winter's
voyage, the necessity of summoning the cortes and settling the affairs of the
kingdom, his own protracted illness, furnished so many apologies for postponing
the irksome visit, until the time had passed when such a visit could be
effectual.
That he should so strenuously have asserted his purpose of going to the
Netherlands may be explained by a desire in some sort to save his credit with
those who seemed to think that the present exigency demanded he should go. He
may have also thought it politic to keep up the idea of a visit to the Low
Countries, in order to curb—as it no doubt had the effect in some degree of
curbing—the licence of the people, who believed they
were soon to be called to a reckoning for their misdeeds by their prince in
person. After all, the conduct of Philip on this occasion, and the motives
assigned for his delay in his letters to Margaret, must be allowed to afford a
curious coincidence with those ascribed, in circumstances not dissimilar, by
the Roman historian to Tiberius.
On the fifteenth of April, 1567, Alva had his last audience of Philip at
Aranjuez. He immediately after departed for Carthagena, where a fleet of
thirty-six vessels, under the Genoese Admiral Doria, lay riding at anchor to
receive him. He was detained some time for the arrival of the troops, and while
there he received dispatches from court containing his commission of
captain-general, and particular instructions as to the course he was to pursue
in the Netherlands. They were so particular, that, notwithstanding the broad
extent of his powers, the duke wrote to his master complaining of his want of
confidence, and declaring that he had never been hampered by instructions so
minute, even under the emperor. One who has studied the character of Philip
will find no difficulty in believing it.
On the twenty-seventh of April, the fleet weighed anchor; but in
consequence of a detention of some days at several places on the Catalan coast,
it did not reach the Genoese port of Savona till the seventeenth of the next
month. The duke had been ill when he went on board; and his gouty constitution
received no benefit from the voyage. Yet he did not decline the hospitalities
offered by the Genoese nobles, who vied with the senate in showing the Spanish
commander every testimony of respect. At Asti he was waited on by Albuquerque,
the Milanese viceroy, and by ambassadors from different Italian provinces,
eager to pay homage to the military representative of the Spanish monarch. But
the gout under which Alva labored was now aggravated by an attack of tertian
ague, and for a week or more he was confined to his bed.
Meanwhile the troops had assembled at the appointed rendezvous; and the
duke, as soon as he had got the better of his disorder, made haste to review
them. They amounted in all to about ten thousand men, of whom less than
thirteen hundred were cavalry. But though small in amount, it was a picked body
of troops, such as was hardly to be matched in Europe. The infantry, in
particular, were mostly Spaniards,—veterans who had been accustomed to victory
under the banner of Charles the Fifth, and many of them trained to war under
the eye of Alva himself. He preferred such a body, compact and well-disciplined
as it was, to one which, unwieldy from its size, would have been less fitted
for a rapid march across the mountains.
Besides those of the common file, there were many gentlemen and cavaliers
of note, who, weary of repose, came as volunteers to gather fresh laurels under
so renowned a chief as the duke of Alva. Among these was Vitelli, marquis of Cetona, a Florentine soldier of high repute in his
profession, but who, though now embarked in what might be called a war of
religion, was held so indifferent to religion of any kind, that a whimsical
epitaph on the sceptic denies him the possession of a soul. Another of these
volunteers was Mondragone, a veteran of Charles the
Fifth, whose character for chivalrous exploit was unstained by those deeds of
cruelty and rapine which were so often the reproach of the cavalier of the
sixteenth century. The duties of the commissariat, particularly difficult in a
campaign like the present, were entrusted to an experienced Spanish officer
named Ibarra. To the duke of Savoy Alva was indebted for an eminent engineer
named Paciotti, whose services proved of great importance in the construction
of fortresses in the Netherlands. Alva had also brought with him his two sons,
Frederic and Ferdinand de Toledo,—the latter an illegitimate child, for whom
the father showed as much affection as it was in his rugged nature to feel for
any one. To Ferdinand was given the command of the cavalry, composed chiefly of
Italians.
Having reviewed his forces, the duke formed them into three divisions. This
he did in order to provide the more easily for their subsistence on his long
and toilsome journey. The divisions were to be separated from one another by a
day's march; so that each would take up at night the same quarters which had
been occupied by the preceding division on the night before. Alva himself led
the van.
He dispensed with artillery, not willing to embarrass his movements in his passage
across the mountains. But he employed what was then a novelty in war. Each
company of foot was flanked by a body of soldiers, carrying heavy muskets with
rests attached to them. This sort of fire-arms, from their cumbrous nature, had
hitherto been used only in the defense of fortresses. But with these portable
rests, they were found efficient for field service, and as such came into
general use after this period. Their introduction by Alva may be regarded,
therefore, as an event of some importance in the history of military art.
The route that Alva proposed to take was that over Mount Cenis, the same,
according to tradition, by which Hannibal crossed the great barrier some
eighteen centuries before. If less formidable than in the days of the
Carthaginian, it was far from being the practicable route so easily traversed,
whether by trooper or tourist, at the present day. Steep rocky heights, shaggy
with forests, where the snows of winter still lingered in the midst of June;
fathomless ravines, choked up with the débris washed
down by the mountain torrent; paths scarcely worn by the hunter and his game,
affording a precarious footing on the edge of giddy precipices; long and intricate
defiles, where a handful of men might hold an army at bay, and from the
surrounding heights roll down ruin on their heads;—these were the obstacles
which Alva and his followers had to encounter, as they threaded their toilsome
way through a country where the natives bore no friendly disposition to the
Spaniards.
Their route lay at no great distance from Geneva, that stronghold of the
Reformers; and Pius the Fifth would have persuaded the duke to turn from his
course, and exterminate this “nest of devils and apostates”, as the
Christian father was pleased to term them. The people of Geneva, greatly
alarmed at the prospect of an invasion, applied to their Huguenot brethren for
aid. The prince of Condé and the Admiral Coligni—the leaders of that
party—offered their services to the French monarch to raise fifty thousand men,
fall upon his old enemies, the Spaniards, and cut them off in the passes of the
mountains. But Charles the Ninth readily understood the drift of this proposal.
Though he bore little love to the Spaniards, he bore still less to the
Reformers. He therefore declined this offer of the Huguenot chiefs, adding that
he was able to protect France without their assistance. The Genevans were
accordingly obliged to stand to their own defense, though they gathered
confidence from the promised support of their countrymen of Berne; and the
whole array of these brave mountaineers was in arms, ready to repel any assault
of the Spaniards on their own territory or on that of their allies, in their
passage through the country. But this was unnecessary. Though Alva passed
within six leagues of Geneva, and the request of the pontiff was warmly
seconded by the duke of Savoy, the Spanish general did not deem it prudent to
comply with it, declaring that his commission extended no further than to the
Netherlands. Without turning to the right or to the left he held on, therefore,
straight towards the mark, anxious only to extricate himself as speedily as
possible from the perilous passes where he might be taken at so obvious
disadvantage by an enemy.
Yet such were the difficulties he had to encounter, that a fortnight
elapsed before he was able to set foot on the friendly plains of
Burgundy, that part of the ancient duchy which acknowledged the authority
of Spain. Here he received the welcome addition to his ranks of four hundred
horse, the flower of the Burgundian chivalry. On his way across the country he
was accompanied by a French army of observation, some six thousand strong,
which moved in a parallel direction, at the distance of six or seven leagues
only from the line of march pursued by the Spaniards,—though without offering
them any molestation.
Soon after entering Lorraine, Alva was met by the duke of that province,
who seemed desirous to show him every respect, and entertained him with
princely hospitality. After a brief detention, the Spanish general resumed his
journey, and on the 8th of August crossed the frontiers of the Netherlands.
His long and toilsome march had been accomplished without an untoward
accident, and with scarcely a disorderly act on the part of the soldiers. No
man's property had been plundered. No peasant's hut had been violated. The
cattle had been allowed to graze unmolested in the fields, and the flocks to
wander in safety over their mountain pastures. One instance only to the
contrary is mentioned,—that of three troopers, who carried off one or two
straggling sheep as the army was passing through Lorraine. But they were soon
called to a heavy reckoning for their transgression. Alva, on being informed of
the fact, sentenced them all to the gallows. At the intercession of the duke of
Lorraine, the sentence was so far mitigated by the Spanish commander, that one
only of the three, selected by lot, was finally executed.
The admirable discipline maintained among Alva's soldiers was the more
conspicuous in an age when the name of soldier was synonymous with that of
marauder. It mattered little whether it were a friendly country or that of a
foe through which lay the line of march. The defenseless peasant was everywhere
the prey of the warrior; and the general winked at the outrages of his
followers, as the best means of settling their arrears.
What made the subordination of the troops, in the present instance, still
more worthy of notice, was the great number of camp followers, especially
courtesans, who hung on the skirts of the army. These latter mustered in such
force, that they were divided into battalions and companies, marching each
under its own banner, and subjected to a sort of military organization, like
the men. The duke seems to have been as careless of the morals of his soldiers
as he was careful of their discipline; perhaps willing by his laxity in the one
to compensate for his severity in the other.
It was of the last importance to Alva that his soldiers should commit no
trespass, nor entangle him in a quarrel with the dangerous people through the
midst of whom he was to pass; and who, from their superior knowledge of the
country, as well as their numbers, could so easily overpower him. Fortunately,
he had received such intimations before his departure as put him on his guard.
The result was, that he obtained such a mastery over his followers, and
enforced so perfect a discipline, as excited the general admiration of his
contemporaries, and made his march to the Low Countries one of the most
memorable events of the period.
At Thionville the duke was waited on by Barlaimont and Noircarmes, who
came to offer the salutations of the regent, and at the same time to request to
see his powers. At the same place, and on the way to the capital, the duke was
met by several of the Flemish nobility, who came to pay their respects to him;
among the rest, Egmont, attended by forty of his retainers. On his entering
Alva's presence, the duke exclaimed to one of his officers, “Here comes a great
heretic!”. The words were overheard by Egmont, who hesitated a moment,
naturally disconcerted by what would have served as an effectual warning to any
other man. But Alva made haste to efface the impression caused by his heedless
exclamation, receiving Egmont with so much cordiality as reassured the infatuated
nobleman, who, regarding the words as a jest, before his departure presented
the duke with two beautiful horses.—Such is the rather singular story which
comes down to us on what must be admitted to be respectable authority.
Soon after he had entered the country, the duke detached the greater part
of his forces to garrison some of the principal cities, and relieve the Walloon
troops on duty there, less to be trusted than his Spanish veterans. With the
Milanese brigade he took the road to Brussels, which he entered on the
twenty-second of August. His cavalry he established at ten leagues' distance
from the capital, and the infantry he lodged in the suburbs. Far from being
greeted by acclamations, no one came out to welcome him as he entered the city,
which seemed like a place deserted. He went straight to the palace, to offer
his homage to the regent. An altercation took place on the threshold between
his halberdiers and Margaret's body-guard of archers, who disputed the entrance
of the Spanish soldiers. The duke himself was conducted to the bed-chamber of
the duchess, where she was in the habit of giving audience. She was standing,
with a few Flemish nobles by her side; and she remained in that position,
without stirring a single step to receive her visitor. Both parties continued
standing during the interview, which lasted half an hour; the duke during the
greater part of the time with his hat in his hand, although Margaret requested
him to be covered. The curious spectators of this conference amused themselves
by contrasting the courteous and even deferential manners of the haughty
Spaniard with the chilling reserve and stately demeanor of the duchess. At the
close of the interview Alva withdrew to his own quarters at Culemborg House,—the place, it will be remembered, where the Gueux held their memorable banquet on their visit to Brussels.
The following morning, at the request of the council of state, the duke of
Alva furnished that body with a copy of his commission. By this he was invested
with the title of captain-general, and in that capacity was to exercise supreme
control in all military affairs. By another commission, dated two months later,
these powers were greatly enlarged. The country was declared in a state of
rebellion; and, as milder means had failed to bring it to obedience, it was
necessary to resort to arms. The duke was therefore commanded to levy war on
the refractory people, and reduce them to submission. He was moreover to
inquire into the causes of the recent troubles, and bring the suspected parties
to trial, with full authority to punish or to pardon as he might judge best for
the public weal. Finally, a third commission, of more startling import than the
two preceding, and which, indeed, might seem to supersede them altogether, was
dated on the first of March, 1567. In the former instruments the duke was so
far required to act in subordination to the regent, that her authority was
declared to be unimpaired. But by virtue of this last commission he was
invested with supreme control in civil as well as military affairs; and persons
of every degree, including the regent herself, were enjoined to render
obedience to his commands, as to those of the king. Such a commission, which
placed the government of the country in the hands of Alva, was equivalent to a
dismissal of Margaret. The title of "regent," which still remained to
her, was an empty mockery; nor could it be thought that she would be content to
retain a barren scepter in the country over which she had so long ruled.
It is curious to observe the successive steps by which Philip had raised
Alva from the rank of captain-general of the army to supreme authority in the
country. It would seem as if the king were too tenacious of power readily to
part with it; and that it was only by successive efforts, as the conviction of
the necessity of such a step pressed more and more on his mind, that he
determined to lodge the government in the hands of Alva.
Whether the duke acquainted the council with the full extent of his powers,
or, as seems more probable, communicated to that body only his first two
commissions, it is impossible to say. At all events, the members do not appear
to have been prepared for the exhibition of powers so extensive, and which,
even in the second of the commissions, transcended those exercised by the
regent herself. A consciousness that they did so had led Philip, in more than
one instance, to qualify the language of the instrument, in such a manner as
not to rouse the jealousy of his sister, an artifice so obvious, that it probably produced a contrary effect. At any
rate, Margaret did not affect to conceal her disgust, but talked openly of the
affront put on her by the king, and avowed her determination to throw up the
government.
She gave little attention to business, passing most of her days in hunting,
of which masculine sport she was excessively fond. She even threatened to amuse
herself with journeying about from place to place, leaving public affairs to
take care of themselves, till she should receive the king's permission to
retire. From this indulgence of her spleen she was dissuaded by her secretary,
Armenteros, who, shifting his sails to suit the breeze, showed, soon after
Alva's coming, his intention to propitiate the new governor. There were others
of Margaret's adherents less accommodating. Some high in office intimated very
plainly their discontent at the presence of the Spaniards, from which they
boded only calamity to the country. Margaret's confessor, in a sermon preached
before the regent, did not scruple to denounce the Spaniards as so many
"knaves, traitors, and ravishers." And although the remonstrance of
the loyal Armenteros induced the duchess to send back the honest man to his
convent, it was plain, from the warm terms in which she commended the preacher,
that she was far from being displeased with his discourse.
The duke of Alva cared little for the hatred of the Flemish lords. But he
felt otherwise towards the regent. He would willingly have soothed her
irritation; and he bent his haughty spirit to show, in spite of her coldness, a
deference in his manner that must have done some violence to his nature. As a
mark of respect, he proposed at once to pay her another visit, and in great
state, as suited her rank. But Margaret, feigning or feeling herself too ill to
receive him, declined his visit for some days, and at last, perhaps to mortify
him the more, vouchsafed him only a private audience in her own apartment.
Yet at this interview she showed more condescension than before, and even
went so far as to assure the duke that there was no one whose appointment would
have been more acceptable to her. She followed this, by bluntly demanding why
he had been sent at all. Alva replied, that, as she had often intimated her
desire for a more efficient military force, he had come to aid her in the
execution of her measures, and to restore peace to the country before the
arrival of his majesty. —The answer could hardly have pleased the duchess,
who doubtless considered she had done that without his aid, already.
The discourse fell upon the mode of quartering the troops. Alva proposed to
introduce a Spanish garrison into Brussels. To this Margaret objected with
great energy. But the duke on this point was inflexible. Brussels was the royal
residence, and the quiet of the city could only be secured by a garrison. “If
people murmur”, he concluded, “you can tell them I am a headstrong man, bent on
having my own way. I am willing to take all the odium of the measure on
myself”. Thus thwarted, and made to feel her inferiority when any question of
real power was involved, Margaret felt the humiliation of her position even
more keenly than before. The appointment of Alva had been from the first, as we
have seen, a source of mortification to the duchess. In December, 1566, soon
after Philip had decided on sending the duke, with the authority of
captain-general, to the Low Countries, he announced it in a letter to Margaret.
He had been as much perplexed, he said, in the choice of a commander, as she
could have been; and it was only at her suggestion of the necessity of some one
to take the military command, that he had made such a nomination. Alva was,
however, only to prepare the way for him, to assemble a force on the frontier,
establish the garrisons, and enforce discipline among the troops till he came.
Philip was careful not to alarm his sister by any hint of the extraordinary
powers to be conferred on the duke, who thus seemed to be sent only in
obedience to her suggestion, and in subordination to her authority. Margaret
knew too well that Alva was not a man to act in subordination to anyone. But
whatever misgivings she may have had, she hardly betrayed them in her reply to
Philip, in the following February, 1567, when she told the king she “was sure
he would never be so unjust, and do a thing so prejudicial to the interests of
the country, as to transfer to another the powers he had vested in her”.
The appointment of Alva may have stimulated the regent to the extraordinary
efforts she then made to reduce the country to order. When she had achieved
this, she opened her mind more freely to her brother, in a letter dated July
12, 1567. “The name of Alva was so odious in the Netherlands that it was enough
to make the whole Spanish nation detested. She could never have imagined that
the king would make such an appointment without consulting her”. She then,
alluding to orders lately received from Madrid, shows extreme repugnance to
carry out the stern policy of Philip; —a repugnance, it must be confessed,
that seems to rest less on the character of the measures than on the difficulty
of their execution.
When the duchess learned that Alva was in Italy, she wrote also to him,
hoping at this late hour to arrest his progress by the assurance that the
troubles were now at an end, and that his appearance at the head of an army
would only serve to renew them. But the duke was preparing for his march across
the Alps, and it would have been as easy to stop the avalanche in its descent,
as to stay the onward course of this “man of destiny”.
The state of Margaret’s feelings was shown by the chilling reception she
gave the duke on his arrival in Brussels. The extent of his powers, so much
beyond what she had imagined, did not tend to soothe the irritation of the
regent's temper; and the result of the subsequent interview filled up the
measure of her indignation. However forms might be respected, it was clear the
power had passed into other hands. She wrote at once to Philip, requesting, or
rather requiring, his leave to withdraw without delay from the country. “If he
had really felt the concern he professed for her welfare and reputation, he
would have allowed her to quit the government before being brought into rivalry
with a man like the duke of Alva, who took his own course in everything, without
the least regard to her. It afflicted her to the bottom of her soul to have
been thus treated by the king”.
It may have given some satisfaction to Margaret, that in her feelings
towards the duke she had the entire sympathy of the nation. In earlier days, in
the time of Charles the Fifth, Alva had passed some time both in Germany and in
the Netherlands, and had left there no favorable impression of his character.
In the former country, indeed, his haughty deportment on a question of
etiquette had caused some embarrassment to his master. Alva insisted on the
strange privilege of the Castilian grandee to wear his hat in the presence of
his sovereign. The German nobles, scandalized by this pretension in a subject,
asserted that their order had as good a right to it as the Spaniards. It was
not without difficulty that the proud duke was content to waive the contested
privilege till his return to Spain.
Another anecdote of Alva had left a still more unfavorable impression of
his character. He had accompanied Charles on his memorable visit to Ghent, on
occasion of its rebellion. The emperor asked the duke's counsel as to the
manner in which he should deal with his refractory capital. Alva instantly
answered, "Raze it to the ground!" Charles, without replying, took
the duke with him to the battlements of the castle; and as their eyes wandered
over the beautiful city spread out far and wide below, the emperor asked him,
with a pun on the French name of Ghent (Gand), how many Spanish hides it
would take to make such a glove (gant).
Alva, who saw his master's displeasure, received the rebuke in silence. The
story, whether true or not, was current among the people of Flanders, on whom
it produced its effect.
Alva was now sixty years old. It was not likely that age had softened the
asperity of his nature. He had, as might be expected, ever shown himself the
uncompromising enemy of the party of reform in the Low Countries. He had
opposed the concession made to the nation by the recall of Granvelle. The only
concessions he recommended to Philip were in order to lull the suspicions of
the great lords, till he could bring them to a bloody reckoning for their
misdeeds. The general drift of his policy was perfectly understood in the
Netherlands, and the duchess had not exaggerated when she dwelt on the
detestation in which he was held by the people.
His course on his arrival was not such as to diminish the fears of the
nation. His first act was to substitute in the great towns his own troops, men
who knew no law but the will of their chief, for the Walloon garrisons, who
might naturally have some sympathy with their countrymen. His next was to
construct some fortresses, under the direction of one of the ablest engineers
in Europe. The hour had come when, in the language of the prince of Orange, his
countrymen were to be bridled by the Spaniard.
The conduct of Alva's soldiers underwent an ominous change. Instead of the
discipline observed on the march, they now indulged in the most reckless license.
“One hears everywhere”, writes a Fleming of the time, “of the oppressions of
the Spaniards. Confiscation is going on to the right and left. If a man has
anything to lose, they set him down at once as a heretic”. If the writer may be
thought to have borrowed something from his fears, it cannot be doubted that
the panic was general in the country. Men emigrated by thousands and tens of
thousands, carrying with them to other lands the arts and manufactures which
had so long been the boast and the source of prosperity of the Netherlands.
Those who remained were filled with a dismal apprehension, a boding of
coming evil, as they beheld the heavens darkening around them, and the signs of
the tempest at hand.
A still deeper gloom lay upon Brussels, once the gayest city in the
Netherlands, now the residence of Alva. All business was suspended. Places
of public resort were unfrequented. The streets were silent and deserted.
Several of the nobles and wealthier citizens had gone to their estates in the
country, to watch there the aspect of events. Most of the courtiers who
remained—the gilded insects that loved the sunshine—had left the regent's
palace, and gone to pay their homage to her rival at Culemborg House. There everything went merrily as in the gayest time of Brussels. For the
duke strove, by brilliant entertainments and festivities, to amuse the nobles
and dissipate the gloom of the capital.
In all this Alva had a deeper motive than met the public eye. He was
carrying out the policy which he had recommended to Philip. By courteous and
conciliatory manners he hoped to draw around him the great nobles, especially
such as had been at all mixed up with the late revolutionary movements. Of
these, Egmont was still at Brussels; but Hoorne had withdrawn to his estates at
Weert. Hoogstraten was in Germany with the prince of Orange. As
to the latter, Alva, as he wrote to the king, could not flatter himself with
the hope of his return.
The duke and his son Ferdinand both wrote to Count Hoorne in the most
friendly terms, inviting him to come to Brussels. But this distrustful nobleman
still kept aloof. Alva, in a conversation with the count's secretary, expressed
the warmest solicitude for the health of his master. He had always been his
friend, he said, and had seen with infinite regret that the count's services
were no better appreciated by the king. But Philip was a good prince, and if
slow to recompense, the count would find him not ungrateful. Could the duke but
see the count, he had that to say which would content him. He would find he was
not forgotten by his friends. This last assurance had a terrible significance.
Hoorne yielded at length to an invitation couched in terms so flattering. With Hoogstraten, Alva was not so fortunate. His good genius, or
the counsel of Orange, saved him from the snare, and kept him in Germany.
Having nothing further to gain by delay, Alva determined to proceed at once
to the execution of his scheme. On the ninth of September the council of state
was summoned to meet at Culemborg House. Egmont and
Hoorne were present; and two or three of the officers, among them Paciotti, the
engineer, were invited to discuss a plan of fortification for some of the
Flemish cities. In the meantime, strong guards had been posted at all the
avenues of the house, and cavalry drawn together from the country and established
in the suburbs.
The duke prolonged the meeting until information was privately communicated
to him of the arrest of Backerzele, Egmont's
secretary, and Van Stralen, the burgomaster of Antwerp. The former was a person
of great political sagacity, and deep in the confidence of Egmont; the latter,
the friend of Orange, with whom he was still in constant correspondence. The
arrest of Backerzele, who resided in Brussels, was
made without difficulty, and possession was taken of his papers. Van Stralen
was surrounded by a body of horse, as he was driving out of Antwerp in his
carriage; and both of the unfortunate gentlemen were brought prisoners to Culemborg House.
As soon as these tidings were conveyed to Alva, he broke up the meeting of
the council. Then, entering into conversation with Egmont, he strolled with him
through the adjoining rooms, in one of which was a small body of soldiers. As
the two nobles entered the apartment, Sancho Davila, the captain of the duke's
guard, went up to Egmont, and in the king's name demanded his sword, telling
him at the same time he was his prisoner. The count,
astounded by the proceeding, and seeing himself surrounded by soldiers, made no
attempt at resistance, but calmly, and with much dignity in his manner, gave up
his sword, saying at the same time, “It has done the king service more than
once”. And well might he say so; for with that sword he had won the fields of Gravelines and St. Quentin.
Hoorne fell into a similar ambuscade, in another part of the palace,
whither he was drawn while conversing with the duke's son Ferdinand de Toledo,
who, according to his father's account, had the whole merit of arranging this
little drama. Neither did the admiral make any resistance; but, on learning
Egmont's fate, yielded himself up, saying "he had no right to expect to
fare better than his friend."
It now became a question as to the disposal of the prisoners. Culemborg House was clearly no fitting place for their
confinement. Alva caused several castles in the neighborhood of Brussels to be
examined, but they were judged insecure. He finally decided on Ghent. The
strong fortress of this city was held by one of Egmont's own partisans; but an
order was obtained from the count requiring him to deliver up the keys into the
hands of Ulloa, one of Alva's most trusted captains, who, at the head of a
corps of Spanish veterans, marched to Ghent, and relieved the Walloon garrison
of their charge. Ulloa gave proof of his vigilance, immediately on his arrival,
by seizing a heavy wagon loaded with valuables belonging to Egmont, as it was
leaving the castle gate.
Having completed these arrangements, the duke lost no time in sending the
two lords, under a strong military escort, to Ghent. Two companies of mounted
arquebusiers rode in the front. A regiment of Spanish infantry, which formed
the centre, guarded the prisoners; one of whom,
Egmont, was borne in a litter carried by mules, while Hoorne was in his own
carriage. The rear was brought up by three companies of light horse.
Under this strong guard the unfortunate nobles were conducted through the
province where Egmont had lately ruled “with an authority”, writes Alva’s
secretary, “greater even than that of the king”. But no attempt was made at a
rescue; and as the procession entered the gates of Ghent, where Egmont's
popularity was equal to his power, the people gazed in stupefied silence on the
stern array that was conducting their lord to the place of his confinement.
The arrest of Egmont and Hoorne was known, in a few hours after it took
place, to every inhabitant of Brussels; and the tidings soon spread to the
furthest parts of the country. “The imprisonment of the lords”, writes Alva to
the king, “has caused no disturbance. The tranquility is such that your majesty
would hardly credit it”. True; but the tranquility was that of a man stunned by
a heavy blow. If murmurs were not loud, however, they were deep. Men mourned
over the credulity of the two counts, who had so blindly fallen into the snare,
and congratulated one another on the forecast of the prince of Orange, who
might one day have the power to avenge them. The event gave a new spur to
emigration. In the space of a few weeks no loss than twenty thousand persons
are said to have fled the country. And the exiles were not altogether drawn
from the humbler ranks; for no one, however high, could feel secure when he saw
the blow aimed at men like Egmont and Hoorne, the former of whom, if he had
given some cause of distrust, had long since made his peace with the
government.
Count Mansfeldt made haste to send his son out of the country, lest the
sympathy he had once shown for the confederates, notwithstanding his recent
change of opinion, might draw on him the vengeance of Alva. The old count,
whose own loyalty could not be impeached, boldly complained of the arrest of
the lords as an infringement on the rights of the Toison d'Or, which body alone had cognizance of the causes that concerned their
order, intimating, at the same time, his intention to summon a meeting of the
members. But he was silenced by Alva, who plainly told him, that, if the
chevaliers of the order did meet, and said so much as the credo, he
would bring them to a heavy reckoning for it. As to the rights of the Toison, his majesty has pronounced on them, said the
duke, and nothing remains for you but to submit.
The arrest and imprisonment of the two highest nobles in the land, members
of the council of state, and that without any communication with her, was an
affront to the regent which she could not brook. It was in vain that Alva
excused it by saying it had been done by the order of the king, who wished to
spare his sister the unpopularity which must attach to such a proceeding.
Margaret made no reply. She did not complain. She was too deeply wounded to
complain. But she wrote to Philip, asking him to consider “whether it could be
advantageous to him, or decorous for her, whom he did not disdain to call his
sister, that she should remain longer in a place of which the authority was so
much abridged, or rather annihilated”. She sent her secretary, Machiavelli, with
her dispatches, requesting an immediate reply from Philip, and adding that, if
it were delayed, she should take silence for assent, and forthwith leave the
country.
The duke of Alva was entirely resigned to the proposed departure of
Margaret. However slight the restraint her presence might impose on his
conduct, it exacted more deference than was convenient, and compelled him
to consult appearances. Now that he had shown his hand, he was willing to
play it out boldly to the end. His first step, after the arrest of the lords,
was to organize that memorable tribunal for inquiring into the troubles of the
country, which has no parallel in history save the revolutionary tribunal of
the French republic. The duke did not shrink from assuming the sole
responsibility of his measures. He said, “it was better for the king to
postpone his visit to the Netherlands, so that his ministers might bear alone
the odium of these rigorous acts. When these had been performed, he might come
like a gracious prince, dispensing promises and pardon”.
This admirable coolness must be referred in part to Alva's consciousness
that his policy would receive the unqualified sanction of his master. Indeed,
his correspondence shows that all he had done in the Low Countries was in
accordance with a plan preconcerted with Philip. The arrest of the Flemish
lords, accordingly, gave entire satisfaction at the court of Madrid, where it
was looked on as the first great step in the measures of redress. It gave equal
contentment to the court of Rome, where it was believed that the root of heresy
was to be reached only by the axe of the executioner. Yet there was one person
at that court of more penetration than those around him, the old statesman,
Granvelle, who, when informed of the arrest of Egmont and Hoorne, inquired if
the duke had “also drawn into his net the Silent one”,—as the
prince of Orange was popularly called. On being answered in the negative,
“Then”, said the cardinal, “if he has not caught him, he has caught nothing”.
CHAPTER
XXV.
CRUEL POLICY OF ALVA.
1567
.
“Thank God”, writes the duke of Alva to his sovereign, on the twenty-fourth
of October, “all is tranquil in the Low Countries”. It was the same sentiment
he had uttered a few weeks before. All was indeed tranquil. Silence reigned
throughout the land. Yet it might have spoken more eloquently to the heart than
the murmurs of discontent, or the loudest tumult of insurrection. “They say
many are leaving the country”, he writes in another dispatch. “It is hardly
worth while to arrest them. The repose of the nation is not to be brought about
by cutting off the heads of those who are led astray by others”.
Yet in less than a week after this, we find a royal ordinance, declaring
that, “whereas his majesty is averse to use rigor towards those who have taken part
in the late rebellion; and would rather deal with them in all gentleness and
mercy, it is forbidden to any one to leave the land, or to send off his
effects, without obtaining a license from the authorities, under pain of being
regarded as having taken part in the late troubles, and of being dealt with
accordingly. All masters and owners of vessels, who shall aid such persons in
their flight, shall incur the same penalties”. The penalties denounced in this
spirit of “gentleness and mercy”, were death and confiscation of property.
That the law was not a dead letter was soon shown by the arrest of ten of
the principal merchants of Tournay, as they were preparing to fly to foreign
parts, and by the immediate confiscation of their estates. Yet Alva would have
persuaded the world that he, as well as his master, was influenced only by
sentiments of humanity. To the Spanish ambassador at Rome he wrote, soon after
the seizure of the Flemish lords: "I might have arrested more; but the
king is averse to shedding the blood of his people. I have the same disposition
myself. I am pained to the bottom of my soul by the necessity of the
measure."
But now that the great nobles had come into the snare, it was hardly
necessary to keep up the affectation of lenity; and it was not long before he
threw away the mask altogether. The arm of justice—of vengeance—was openly
raised to strike down all who had offended by taking part in the late
disturbances.
The existing tribunals were not considered as competent to this work. The
regular forms of procedure were too dilatory, and the judges themselves would
hardly be found subservient enough to the will of Alva. He created, therefore,
a new tribunal, with extraordinary powers, for the sole purpose of
investigating the causes of the late disorders, and for bringing the authors to
punishment. It was called originally the “Council of his Excellency”. The name
was soon changed for that of the “Council of Tumults”. But the tribunal is
better known in history by the terrible name it received from the people, of
the “Council of Blood”.
It was composed of twelve judges, “the most learned, upright men, and of
the purest lives” if we may take the duke's word for it—that were to be
found in the country. Among them were Noircarmes and Barlaimont, both members of the council of state. The
latter was a proud noble, of one of the most ancient families in the land,
inflexible in his character, and stanch in his devotion to the crown. Besides
these there were the presidents of the councils of Artois and Flanders, the
chancellor of Gueldres, and several jurists of repute
in the country. But the persons of most consideration in the body were two
lawyers who had come in the duke's train from Castile. One of these, the doctor
Del Rio, though born in Bruges, was of Spanish extraction. His most prominent
trait seems to have been unlimited subserviency to the will of his employer.
The other, Juan de Vargas, was to play the most conspicuous part in the bloody
drama that followed. He was a Spaniard, and had held a place in the council of
the Indies. His character was infamous; and he was said to have defrauded an
orphan ward of her patrimony. When he left Spain, two criminal prosecutions are
reported to have been hanging over him. This only made him the more dependent
on Alva’s protection. He was a man of great energy of character, unwearied in
application to business, unscrupulous in the service of his employer, ready at
any price to sacrifice to his own interest, not only every generous impulse,
but the common feelings of humanity. Such, at least, are the dark colors in
which he is portrayed by the writers of a nation which held him in detestation.
Yet his very vices made him so convenient to the duke, that the latter soon
bestowed on him more of his confidence than on any other of his followers; and
in his correspondence with Philip we perpetually find him commending Vargas to
the monarch’s favor, and contrasting his “activity, altogether juvenile”, with
the apathy of others of the council. As Vargas was unacquainted with Flemish,
the proceedings of the court were conducted, for his benefit, in Latin. Yet he
was such a bungler, even in this language, that his blunders furnished infinite
merriment to the people of Flanders, who took some revenge for their wrongs in
the ridicule of their oppressor.
As the new court had cognizance of all cases, civil as well as criminal,
which grew out of the late disorders, the amount of business soon pressed on
them so heavily, that it was found expedient to distribute it into several
departments among the different members. Two of the body had especial charge of
the processes of the prince of Orange, his brother Louis, Hoogstraten, Culemborg, and the rest of William's noble companions
in exile. To Vargas and Del Rio was entrusted the trial of the Counts Egmont
and Hoorne. And two others, Blasere and Hessels, had
the most burdensome and important charge of all such causes as came from the
provinces.
The latter of these two worthies was destined to occupy a place second only
to that of Vargas on the bloody roll of persecution. He was a native of Ghent,
of sufficient eminence in his profession to fill the office of attorney-general
of his province under Charles the Fifth. In that capacity he enforced the
edicts with so much rigor as to make himself odious to his countrymen. In the
new career now opened to him, he found a still wider field for his mischievous
talents, and he entered on the duties of his office with such hearty zeal as
soon roused general indignation in the people, who at a later day took terrible
vengeance on their oppressor.
As soon as the Council of Troubles was organized, commissioners were dispatched
into the provinces to hunt out the suspected parties. All who had officiated as
preachers, or had harbored or aided them, who had joined the consistories, who
had assisted in defacing or destroying the Catholic churches or in building the
Protestant, who had subscribed the Compromise, or who, in short, had taken an
active part in the late disorders, were to be arrested as guilty of treason. In
the hunt after victims informations were invited from
every source. Wives were encouraged to depose against husbands, children
against parents. The prisons were soon full to overflowing, and the provincial
and the local magistrates were busy in filing informations of the different cases, which were forwarded to the court at Brussels. When
deemed of sufficient importance, the further examination of a case was reserved
for the council itself. But for the most part the local authorities, or a
commission sent expressly for the purpose, were authorized to try the cause,
proceeding even to a definitive sentence, which, with the grounds of it, they
were to lay before the Council of Troubles. The process was then revised by the
committee for the provinces, who submitted the result of their examination to
Vargas and Del Rio. The latter were alone empowered to vote in the matter; and
their sentence, prepared in writing, was laid before the duke, who reserved to
himself the right of a final decision. This he did, as he wrote to Philip, that
he might not come too much under the direction of the council. “Your majesty
well knows," he concludes, "that gentlemen of the law are unwilling
to decide anything except upon evidence, while measures of state policy are not
to be regulated by the laws”.
It might be supposed that the different judges to whom the prisoner's case
was thus separately submitted for examination, would have afforded an
additional guaranty for his security. But quite the contrary; it only
multiplied the chances of his conviction. When the provincial committee
presented their report to Vargas and Del Rio,—to whom a Spanish jurist, auditor
of the chancery of Valladolid, named Roda, was afterwards added,—if it proposed
sentence of death, these judges declared it “was right, and that there was no
necessity of reviewing the process”. If, on the contrary, a lower penalty was
recommended, the worthy ministers of the law were in the habit of returning the
process, ordering the committee, with bitter imprecations, to revise it more
carefully!
As confiscation was one of the most frequent as well as momentous penalties
adjudged by the Council of Blood, it necessarily involved a large number of
civil actions; for the estate thus forfeited was often burdened with heavy
claims on it by other parties. These were all to be established before the
council. One may readily comprehend how small was the chance of justice before
such a tribunal, where the creditor was one of the parties, and the crown the
other. Even if the suit was decided in favor of the creditor, it was usually so
long protracted, and attended with such ruinous expense, that it would have
been better for him never to have urged it.
The jurisdiction of the court, within the limits assigned to it, wholly
superseded that of the great court of Mechlin, as well as of every other
tribunal, provincial or municipal, in the country. Its decisions were final. By
the law of the land, established by repeated royal charters in the provinces,
no man in the Netherlands could be tried by any but a native judge. But of the
present court, one member was a native of Burgundy, and two were Spaniards.
It might be supposed that a tribunal with such enormous powers, which
involved so gross an outrage on the constitutional rights and long-established
usages of the nation, would at least have been sanctioned by some warrant from
the crown. It could pretend to nothing of the kind,—not even a written
commission from the duke of Alva, the man who created it. By his voice alone he
gave it an existence. The ceremony of induction into office was performed by
the new member placing his hands between those of the duke, and swearing to
remain true to the faith; to decide in all cases according to his sincere
conviction; finally, to keep secret all the doings of the council, and to
denounce anyone who disclosed them. A tribunal clothed with such unbounded
power, and conducted on a plan so repugnant to all principles of justice, fell
nothing short, in its atrocity, of that inquisition so much dreaded in the
Netherlands.
Alva, in order to be the better able to attend the council, appointed his
own palace for the place of meeting. At first the sittings were held morning
and afternoon, lasting sometimes seven hours in a day. There was a general
attendance of the members, the duke presiding in person. After a few months, as
he was drawn to a distance by more pressing affairs, he resigned his place to
Vargas. Barlaimont and Noircarmes,
disgusted with the atrocious character of the proceedings, soon absented
themselves from the meetings. The more respectable of the members imitated
their example. One of the body, a Burgundian, a follower of Granvelle, having criticized
the proceedings somewhat too freely, had leave to withdraw to his own province;
till at length only three or four councilors remained,—Vargas, Del Rio,
Hessels, and his colleague,—on whom the dispatch of the momentous business
wholly devolved. To some of the processes we find not more than three names
subscribed. The duke was as indifferent to forms, as he was to the rights of
the nation.
It soon became apparent, that, as in most proscriptions, wealth was the
mark at which persecution was mainly directed. At least, if it did not actually
form a ground of accusation, it greatly enhanced the chances of a conviction.
The commissioners sent to the provinces received written instructions to
ascertain the exact amount of property belonging to the suspected parties. The
expense incident to the maintenance of so many officials, as well as of a large
military force, pressed heavily on the government; and Alva soon found it
necessary to ask for support from Madrid. It was in vain he attempted to obtain
a loan from the merchants. “They refuse”, he writes; “to advance a real on
the security of the confiscations, till they see how the game we
have begun is likely to prosper!”
In another letter to Philip, dated on the twenty-fourth of October, Alva, expressing
his regret at the necessity of demanding supplies, says that the Low Countries
ought to maintain themselves, and be no tax upon Spain. He is constantly
thwarted by the duchess, and by the council of finance, in his appropriation of
the confiscated property. Could he only manage things in his own way, he would
answer for it that the Flemish cities, uncertain and anxious as to their fate,
would readily acquiesce in the fair means of raising a revenue proposed by the
king. The ambitious general, eager to secure the sole authority to himself,
artfully touched on the topic which would be most likely to operate with his
master. In a note on this passage, in his own handwriting, Philip remarked that
this was but just; but as he feared that supplies would never be raised with
the consent of the states, Alva must devise some expedient by which their
consent in the matter might be dispensed with, and communicate it privately to
him. This pregnant thought he soon after develops more fully in a letter to the
duke. —It is edifying to observe the cool manner in which the king and his
general discuss the best means for filching a revenue from the pockets of the
good people of the Netherlands.
Margaret,—whose name now rarely appears,—scandalized by the plan avowed of
wholesale persecution, and satisfied that blood enough had been shed already,
would fain have urged her brother to grant a general pardon. But to this the
duke strongly objected. “He would have every man”, he wrote to Philip, “feel
that any day his house might fall about his ears. Thus private individuals
would be induced to pay larger sums by way of composition for their offences”.
As the result of the confiscations, owing to the drains upon them above
alluded to, proved less than he expected, the duke, somewhat later, proposed a
tax of one per cent. on all property, personal and real. But to this some of
the council had the courage to object, as a thing not likely to be relished by
the states. “That depends”, said Alva, “on the way in which they are
approached”. He had as little love for the states-general as his master, and
looked on applications to them for money as something derogatory to the crown.
“I would take care to ask for it”, he said, “as I did when I wanted money to
build the citadel of Antwerp,—in such a way that they should not care to refuse
it”.
The most perfect harmony seems to have subsisted between the king and Alva
in their operations for destroying the liberties of the nation,—so perfect,
indeed, that it could have been the result only of some previous plan,
concerted probably while the duke was in Castile. The details of the execution
were doubtless left, as they arose, to Alva’s discretion. But they so entirely
received the royal sanction,—as is abundantly shown by the correspondence,—that
Philip may be said to have made every act of his general his own. And not
unfrequently we find the monarch improving on the hints of his correspondent by
some additional suggestion. Whatever evils grew out of the male-administration
of the duke of Alva, the responsibility for the measures rests ultimately on
the head of Philip.
One of the early acts of the new council was to issue a summons to the
prince of Orange, and to each of the noble exiles in his company, to present
themselves at Brussels, and answer the charges against them. In the summons
addressed to William, he was accused of having early encouraged a spirit of
disaffection in the nation; of bringing the Inquisition into contempt; of
promoting the confederacy of the nobles, and opening his own palace of Breda
for their discussions; of authorizing the exercise of the reformed religion in
Antwerp; in fine, of being at the bottom of the troubles, civil and religious,
which had so long distracted the land. He was required, therefore, under pain
of confiscation of his property and perpetual exile, to present himself before the
council at Brussels within the space of six weeks, and answer the charges
against him. This summons was proclaimed by the public crier, both in Brussels
and in William's own city of Breda; and a placard containing it was affixed to
the door of the principal church in each of those places.
Alva followed up this act by another, which excited general indignation
through the country. He caused the count of Buren, William's eldest son, then a
lad pursuing his studies at Louvain, to be removed from the university, and
sent to Spain. His tutor and several of his domestics were allowed to accompany
him. But the duke advised the king to get rid of these attendants as speedily
as possible, and fill their places with Spaniards. This unwarrantable act
appears to have originated with Granvelle, who recommends it in one of his
letters from Rome. The object, no doubt, was to secure some guaranty for the
father's obedience, as well as to insure the loyalty of the heir of the house
of Nassau, and to retain him in the Catholic faith. In the last object the plan
succeeded. The youth was kindly treated by Philip; and his long residence in
Spain nourished in him so strong an attachment to both Church and crown, that
he was ever after divorced from the great cause in which his father and his
countrymen were embarked.
The prince of Orange published to the world his sense of the injury done to
him by this high-handed proceeding of the duke of Alva; and the university of
Louvain boldly sent a committee to the council to remonstrate on the violation
of their privileges. Vargas listened to them with a smile of contempt, and, as
he dismissed the deputation, exclaimed, “Non curamus vestros privilegios”, —an
exclamation long remembered for its bad Latin as well as for its insolence.
It may well be believed that neither William nor his friends obeyed the
summons of the Council of Blood. The prince, in a reply which was printed and
circulated abroad, denied the authority of Alva to try him. As a knight of the
Golden Fleece, he had a right to be tried by his peers; as a citizen of
Brabant, by his countrymen. He was not bound to present himself before an
incompetent tribunal,—one, moreover, which had his avowed personal enemy at its
head.
The prince, during his residence in Germany, experienced all those
alleviations of his misfortunes which the sympathy and support of powerful
friends could afford. Among these the most deserving of notice was William the
Wise, a worthy son of the famous old landgrave of Hesse who so stoutly
maintained the Protestant cause against Charles the Fifth. He and the elector
of Saxony, both kinsmen of William’s wife, offered to provide an establishment
for the prince, while he remained in Germany, which, if it was not on the
magnificent scale to which he had been used in the Netherlands, was still not
unsuited to the dignity of his rank.
The little court of William received every day fresh accessions from those
who fled from persecution in the Netherlands. They brought with them appeals to
him from his countrymen to interpose in their behalf. The hour had not yet
come. But still he was not idle. He was earnestly endeavoring to interest the
German princes in the cause, was strengthening his own resources, and steadily,
though silently, making preparation for the great struggle with the oppressors
of his country.
While these events were passing in the Netherlands, the neighboring
monarchy of France was torn by those religious dissensions, which, at this
period, agitated, in a greater or less degree, most of the states of
Christendom. One half of the French nation was in arms against the other half.
At the time of our history, the Huguenots had gained a temporary advantage;
their combined forces were beleaguering the capital, in which the king and
Catherine de Medicis, his mother, were then held
prisoners. In this extremity, Catherine appealed to Margaret to send a body of
troops to her assistance. The regent hesitated as to what course to take, and
referred the matter to Alva. He did not hesitate. He knew Philip’s disposition
in regard to France, and had himself, probably, come to an understanding on the
subject with the queen-mother in the famous interview at Bayonne. He proposed
to send a body of three thousand horse to her relief. At the same time he wrote
to Catherine, offering to leave the Low Countries, and march himself to her
support with his whole strength, five thousand horse and fifteen thousand foot,
all his Spanish veterans included, provided she would bring matters to an
issue, and finish at once with the enemies of their religion. The duke felt how
powerfully such a result would react on the Catholic cause in the Netherlands.
He besought Catherine to come to no terms with the rebels; above all, to
make them no concessions. “Such concessions must, of necessity, be either
spiritual or temporal. If spiritual, they would be opposed to the rights of
God; if temporal, to the rights of the king. Better to reign over a ruined
land, which yet remains true to its God and its king, than over one left
unharmed for the benefit of the Devil and his followers the heretics”. In this
declaration, breathing the full spirit of religious and political absolutism,
may be found the true key to the policy of Alva and of his master.
Philip heartily approved of the views taken by his general. As the great
champion of Catholicism, he looked with the deepest interest on the religious struggle
going forward in the neighboring kingdom, which exercised so direct an
influence on the revolutionary movements in the Netherlands. He strongly
encouraged the queen-mother to yield nothing to the heretics. “With his own
person”, he declared, “and with all that he possessed, he was ready to serve
the French crown in its contests with the rebels”. Philip’s zeal in the cause
was so well understood in France, that some of the Catholic leaders did not
scruple to look to him, rather than to their own government, as the true head
of their party.
Catherine de Medicis did not discover the same
uncompromising spirit, and had before this disgusted her royal son-in-law by
the politic views which mingled with her religion. On the present occasion she
did not profit by the brilliant offer made to her by Alva to come in person at
the head of his army. She may have thought so formidable a presence might
endanger the independence of the government. Roman Catholic as she was at
heart, she preferred, with true Italian policy, balancing the rival factions
against each other, to exterminating either of them altogether. The duke saw
that Catherine was not disposed to strike at the root of the evil, and that the
advantages to be secured by success would be only temporary. He contented
himself, therefore, with dispatching a smaller force, chiefly of Flemish
troops, under Aremberg. Before the count reached
Paris, the battle of St. Denis had been fought. Montmorenci fell; but the royal party was victorious. Catherine made a treaty with the
discomfited Huguenots, as favorable to them as if they, not she, had won the
fight. Alva, disgusted with the issue, ordered the speedy return of Aremberg, whose presence, moreover, was needed, on a more
active theatre of operations.
During all this while Margaret's position afforded a pitiable contrast to
the splendid elevation which she had occupied for so many years as head of the
government. Not only had the actual power passed from her hands, but she felt
that all her influence had gone with it. She hardly enjoyed even the right of
remonstrance. In this position, she had the advantage of being more favorably
situated for criticizing the conduct of the administration, than when she was
herself at the head of it. She became more sensible of the wrongs of the
people,—now that they were inflicted by other hands than her own. She did not
refuse to intercede in their behalf. She deprecated the introduction of a
garrison into the good city of Brussels. If this were necessary, she still besought
the duke not to allow the loyal inhabitants to be burdened with the maintenance
of the soldiers. But he turned a deaf ear to her petition. She urged that,
after the chastisement already inflicted on the nation, the only way to restore
quiet was by a general amnesty. The duke replied, that no amnesty could be so
general but there must be some exceptions, and it would take time to determine
who should be excepted. She recommended that the states be called together to
vote the supplies. He evaded this also by saying it would be necessary first to
decide on the amount of the subsidy to be raised. The regent felt that in all
matters of real moment she had as little weight as any private individual in
the country.
From this state of humiliation she was at last relieved by the return of
her secretary, Machiavelli, who brought with him despatches from Ruy Gomez, Philip's favorite minister. He informed the duchess that the
king, though, reluctantly, had at last acceded to her request, and allowed her
to resign the government of the provinces. In token of his satisfaction with
her conduct, his majesty had raised the pension which she had hitherto enjoyed,
of eight thousand florins, to fourteen thousand, to be paid her yearly during
the remainder of her life. This letter was dated on the sixth of October.
Margaret soon after received one, dated four days later, from Philip himself,
of much the same tenor with that of his minister. The king, in a few words,
intimated the regret he felt at his sister's retirement from office, and the
sense he entertained of the services she had rendered him by her long and
faithful administration.
The increase of the pension showed no very extravagant estimate of these
services; and the parsimonious tribute which, after his long silence, he now,
in a few brief sentences, paid to her deserts, too plainly intimated, that all
she had done had failed to excite even a feeling of gratitude in the bosom of
her brother. At the same time with the letter to Margaret came a commission to
the duke of Alva, investing him with the title of regent and governor-general,
together with all the powers that had been possessed by his predecessor.
Margaret made only one request of Philip previous to her departure. This he
denied her. Her father, Charles the Fifth, at the time of his abdication, had
called the states-general together, and taken leave of them in a farewell
address, which was still cherished as a legacy by his subjects. Margaret would
have imitated his example. The grandeur of the spectacle pleased her
imagination; and she was influenced, no doubt, by the honest desire of
manifesting, in the hour of separation, some feelings of a kindly nature for
the people over whom she had ruled for so many years.
But Philip, as we have seen, had no relish for these meetings of the
states. He had no idea of consenting to them on an emergency no more pressing
than the present. Margaret was obliged, therefore, to relinquish the pageant,
and to content herself with taking leave of the people by letters addressed to
the principal cities of the provinces. In these she briefly touched on the
difficulties which had lain in her path, and on the satisfaction which she felt
at having, at length, brought the country to a state of tranquility and order.
She besought them to remain always constant in the faith in which they had been
nurtured, as well as in their loyalty to a prince so benign and merciful as the
king, her brother. In so doing the blessing of Heaven would rest upon them; and
for her own part, she would ever be found ready to use her good offices in
their behalf.
She proved her sincerity by a letter written to Philip, before her
departure, in which she invoked his mercy in behalf of his Flemish subjects.
“Mercy”, she said, “was a divine attribute. The greater the power possessed by
a monarch, the nearer he approached the Deity, and the more should he strive to
imitate the divine clemency and compassion. His royal predecessors had
contented themselves with punishing the leaders of sedition, while they spared
the masses who repented. Any other course would confound the good with the bad,
and bring such calamities on the country as his majesty could not fail to
appreciate”. —Well had it been for the fair fame of Margaret, if her
counsels had always been guided by such wise and magnanimous sentiments.
The tidings of the regent's abdication were received with dismay throughout
the provinces. All the errors of her government, her acts of duplicity, the
excessive rigor with which she had of late visited offences,—all were forgotten
in the regret felt for her departure. Men thought only of the prosperity which
the country had enjoyed under her rule, the confidence which in earlier years
she had bestowed on the friends of the people, the generous manner in which she
had interposed, on more than one occasion, to mitigate the hard policy of the
court of Madrid. And as they turned from these more brilliant passages of her
history, their hearts were filled with dismay while they looked gloomily into
the future.
Addresses poured in upon her from all quarters. The different cities vied
with one another in expressions of regret for her departure, while they invoked
the blessings of Heaven on her remaining days. More than one of the provinces
gave substantial evidence of their good-will by liberal donatives. Brabant
voted her the sum of twenty-five thousand florins, and Flanders, thirty
thousand. The neighboring princes, and among them Elizabeth of England, joined
with the people of the Netherlands in professions of respect for the regent, as
well as of regret that she was to relinquish the government.
Cheered by these assurances of the consideration in which she was held both
at home and abroad, Margaret quitted Brussels at the close of December, 1567.
She was attended to the borders of Brabant by Alva, and thence conducted to
Germany, by Count Mansfeldt and an escort of Flemish nobles. There bidding
adieu to all that remained of her former state, she pursued her journey quietly
to Italy. For some time she continued with her husband in his ducal residence
at Parma. But, wherever lay the fault, it was Margaret’s misfortune to taste
but little of the sweets of domestic intercourse. Soon afterwards she removed
to Naples, and there permanently established her abode on estates which had
been granted her by the crown. Many years later, when her son, Alexander
Farnese, was called to the government of the Netherlands, she quitted her
retirement to take part with him in the direction of public affairs. It was but
for a moment; and her present departure from the Netherlands may be regarded as
the close of her political existence.
The government of Margaret continued from the autumn of 1559 to the end of
1567, a period of eight years. It was a stormy and most eventful period; for it
was then that the minds of men were agitated to their utmost depths by the new
doctrines which gave birth to the revolution. Margaret's regency, indeed, may
be said to have furnished the opening scenes of that great drama. The
inhabitants of the Low Countries were accustomed to the sway of a woman.
Margaret was the third of her line that had been entrusted with the regency. In
qualifications for the office she was probably not inferior to her
predecessors. Her long residence in Italy had made her acquainted with the
principles of government in a country where political science was more
carefully studied than in any other quarter of Europe. She was habitually
industrious; and her robust frame was capable of any amount of labor. If she
was too masculine in her nature to allow of the softer qualities of her sex,
she was, on the other hand, exempt from the fondness for pleasure and from most
of the frivolities which belonged to the women of the voluptuous clime in which
she had lived. She was stanch in her devotion to the Catholic faith; and her
loyalty was such, that, from the moment of assuming the government, she
acknowledged no stronger motive than that of conformity to the will of her
sovereign. She was fond of power; and she well knew that, with Philip, absolute
conformity to his will was the only condition on which it was to be held.
With her natural good sense, and the general moderation of her views, she
would, doubtless, have ruled over the land as prosperously as her predecessors,
had the times been like theirs. But, unhappily for her, the times had greatly
changed. Still Margaret, living on the theatre of action, and feeling the
pressure of circumstances, would have gone far to conform to the change. But
unfortunately she represented a prince, dwelling at a distance, who knew no
change himself, allowed no concessions to others,—whose conservative policy
rested wholly on the past.
It was unfortunate for Margaret, that she never fully possessed the
confidence of Philip. Whether from distrust of her more accommodating temper,
or of her capacity for government, he gave a larger share of it, at the outset,
to Granvelle than to her. If the regent could have been blind to this, her eyes
would soon have been opened to the fact by the rivals who hated the minister.
It was not long before she hated him too. But the removal of Granvelle did not
establish her in her brother’s confidence. It rather increased his distrust, by
the necessity it imposed on her of throwing herself into the arms of the
opposite party, the friends of the people. From this moment Philip's confidence
was more heartily bestowed on the duke of Alva, even on the banished Granvelle,
than on the regent. Her letters remained too often unanswered. The answers,
when they did come, furnished only dark and mysterious hints of the course to
be pursued. She was left to work out the problem of government by herself, sure
for every blunder to be called to a strict account. Rumors of the speedy coming
of the king suggested the idea that her own dominion was transitory, soon to be
superseded by that of a higher power.
Under these disadvantages she might well have lost all reliance on herself.
She was not even supplied with the means of carrying out her own schemes. She
was left without money, without arms, without the power to pardon,—more
important, with a brave and generous race, than the power to punish. Thus,
destitute of resources, without the confidence of her employer, with the people
stoutly demanding concessions on the one side, with the sovereign sternly
refusing them on the other, it is little to say that Margaret was in a false
position: her position was deplorable. She ought not to have remained in it a
day after she found that she could not hold it with honor. But Margaret was too
covetous of power readily to resign it. Her misunderstanding with her husband
made her, moreover, somewhat dependent on her brother.
At last came the Compromise and the league. Margaret's eyes seemed now to
be first opened to the direction of the course she was taking. This was
followed by the explosion of the iconoclasts. The shock fully awoke her from
her delusion. She was as zealous for the Catholic Church as Philip himself; and
she saw with horror that it was trembling to its foundations. A complete change
seemed to take place in her convictions,—in her very nature. She repudiated all
those with whom she had hitherto acted. She embraced, as heartily as he could
desire, the stern policy of Philip. She proscribed, she persecuted, she
punished,—and that with an excess of rigor that does little honor to her
memory. It was too late. The distrust of Philip was not to be removed by this
tardy compliance with his wishes. A successor was already appointed; and at the
very moment when she flattered herself that the tranquility of the country and
her own authority were established on a permanent basis, the duke of Alva was
on his march across the mountains.
Yet it was fortunate for Margaret's reputation that she was succeeded in
the government by a man like Alva. The darkest spots on her administration
became light when brought into comparison with his reign of terror. From this
point of view it has been criticized by the writers of her own time and those
of later ages. And in this way, probably, as the student who ponders the events
of her history may infer, a more favorable judgment has been passed upon her
actions than would be warranted by a calm and deliberate scrutiny.
CHAPTER
XXVI.
REIGN OF TERROR.
1568.
In the beginning of 1568, Philip, if we may trust the historians, resorted
to a very extraordinary measure for justifying to the world his rigorous
proceedings against the Netherlands. He submitted the case to the Inquisition
at Madrid; and that ghostly tribunal, after duly considering the evidence
derived from the information of the king and of the inquisitors in the
Netherlands, came to the following decision. All who had been guilty of heresy,
apostasy, or sedition, and all, moreover, who, though professing themselves
good Catholics, had offered no resistance to these, were, with the exception of
a few specified individuals, thereby convicted of treason in the highest
degree.
This sweeping judgment was followed by a royal edict, dated on the same
day, the sixteenth of February, in which, after reciting the language of the
Inquisition, the whole nation, with the exception above stated, was sentenced,
without distinction of sex or age, to the penalties of treason, death and
confiscation of property; and this, the decree went on to say, “without any
hope of grace whatever, that it might serve for an example and a warning to all
future time!”
It is difficult to give credit to a story so monstrous, repeated though it
has been by successive writers without the least distrust of its correctness.
Not that anything can be too monstrous to be believed of the Inquisition. But
it is not easy to believe that a sagacious prince like Philip the Second,
however willing he might be to shelter himself under the mantle of the Holy
Office, could have lent himself to an act as impolitic as it was absurd; one
that, confounding the innocent with the guilty, would drive both to
desperation,—would incite the former, from a sense of injury, to take up
rebellion, by which there was nothing more to lose, and the latter to persist
in it, since there was nothing more to hope.
The messenger who brought to Margaret the royal permission to resign the
regency delivered to Alva his commission as captain-general of the Netherlands.
This would place the duke, as Philip wrote to him, beyond the control of the
council of finance, in the important matter of the confiscations. It raised
him, indeed, not only above that council, but above every other council in the
country. It gave him an authority not less than that of the sovereign himself.
And Alva prepared to stretch this to an extent greater than any sovereign of
the Netherlands had ever ventured on. The time had now come to put his terrible
machinery into operation. The regent was gone, who, if she could not curb,
might at least criticize his actions. The prisons were full; the processes were
completed. Nothing remained but to pass sentence and to execute.
On the fourth of January, 1568, we find eighty-four persons sentenced to
death at Valenciennes, on the charge of having taken part in the late
movements,—religious or political. On the twentieth of February, ninety-five
persons were arraigned before the Council of Blood, and thirty-seven capitally
convicted. On the twentieth of March thirty-five more were condemned. The
governor’s emissaries were out in every direction. “I heard that preaching was
going on at Antwerp”, he writes to Philip; “and I sent my own provost there,
for I cannot trust the authorities. He arrested a good number of heretics. They
will never attend another such meeting. The magistrates complain that the
interference of the provost was a violation of their privileges. The
magistrates may as well take it patiently”. The
pleasant manner in which the duke talks over the fate of his victims with his
master may remind one of the similar dialogues between Petit André and Louis
the Eleventh, in “Quentin Durward”.
The proceedings in Ghent may show the course pursued in the other cities.
Commissioners were sent to that capital, to ferret out the suspected. No than a
hundred and forty-seven were summoned before the council at Brussels. Their
names were cried about the streets, and posted up in placards on the public
buildings. Among them were many noble and wealthy individuals. The officers
were particularly instructed to ascertain the wealth of the parties. Most of
the accused contrived to make their escape. They preferred flight to the chance
of an acquittal by the bloody tribunal,—though flight involved certain
banishment and confiscation of property. Eighteen only answered the summons by
repairing to Brussels. They were all arrested on the same day, at their lodgings,
and, without exception, were sentenced to death! Five or six of the principal
were beheaded. The rest perished on the gallows.
Impatient of what seemed to him a too tardy method of following up his
game, the duke determined on a bolder movement, and laid his plans for driving
a goodly number of victims into the toils at once. He fixed on Ash Wednesday
for the time,—the beginning of Lent, when men, after the Carnival was past,
would be gathered soberly in their own dwellings. The officers of justice
entered their premises at dead of night; and no less than five hundred citizens
were dragged from their beds and hurried off to prison. They all received
sentence of death! "I have reiterated the sentence again and again,"
he writes to Philip, "for they torment me with inquiries whether in this
or that case it might not be commuted for banishment. They weary me of my life
with their importunities." He was not too weary, however, to go on with
the bloody work; for in the same letter we find him reckoning that three
hundred heads more must fall before it will be time to talk of a general
pardon.
It was common, says an old chronicler, to see thirty or forty persons
arrested at once. The wealthier burghers might be seen, with their arms
pinioned behind them, dragged at the horse's tail to the place of execution.
The poorer sort were not even summoned to take their trial in Brussels. Their
cases were dispatched at once, and they were hung up, without further delay, in
the city or in the suburbs.
Brandt, in his History of the Reformation, has collected many particulars
respecting the persecution, especially in his own province of Holland, during
that "reign of terror." Men of lower consideration, when dragged to
prison, were often cruelly tortured on the rack, to extort confessions,
implicating themselves or their friends. The modes of death adjudged by the
bloody tribunal were various. Some were beheaded with the sword,—a distinction
reserved, as it would seem, for persons of condition. Some were sentenced to
the gibbet, and others to the stake. This last punishment, the most dreadful of
all, was confined to the greater offenders against religion. But it seems to
have been left much to the caprice of the judges, sometimes even of the brutal
soldiery who superintended the executions. At least we find the Spanish
soldiers, on one occasion, in their righteous indignation, throwing into the
flames an unhappy Protestant preacher whom the court had sentenced to the
gallows.
The soldiers of Alva were many of them veterans who had borne arms against
the Protestants under Charles the Fifth,—comrades of the men who at that very
time were hunting down the natives of the New World, and slaughtering them by
thousands in the name of religion. With them the sum and substance of religion
were comprised in a blind faith in the Romish Church, and in uncompromising
hostility to the heretic. The life of the heretic was the most acceptable
sacrifice that could be offered to Jehovah. With hearts thus seared by
fanaticism, and made callous by long familiarity with human suffering, they
were the very ministers to do the bidding of such a master as the duke of Alva.
The cruelty of the persecutors was met by an indomitable courage on the
part of their victims. Most of the offences were, in some way or other,
connected with religion. The accused were preachers, or had aided and comforted
the preachers, or had attended their services, or joined the consistories, or
afforded evidence, in some form, that they had espoused the damnable doctrines
of heresy. It is precisely in such a case, where men are called to suffer for
conscience' sake, that they are prepared to endure all,—to die in defense of
their opinions. The storm of persecution fell on persons of every condition;
men and women, the young, the old, the infirm and helpless. But the weaker the
party, the more did the spirit rise to endure his sufferings. Many affecting
instances are recorded of persons who, with no support but their trust in
heaven, displayed the most heroic fortitude in the presence of their
judges, and, by the boldness with which they asserted their opinions, seemed
even to court the crown of martyrdom. On the scaffold and at the stake this
intrepid spirit did not desert them; and the testimony they bore to the truth
of the cause for which they suffered had such an effect on the bystanders, that
it was found necessary to silence them. A cruel device for more effectually
accomplishing this was employed by the officials. The tip of the tongue was
seared with a red-hot iron, and the swollen member then compressed between two
plates of metal screwed fast together. Thus gagged, the groans of the wretched
sufferer found vent in strange sounds, that excited the brutal merriment of his
tormentors.
But it is needless to dwell longer on the miseries endured by the people of
the Netherlands in this season of trial. Yet, if the cruelties perpetrated in
the name of religion are most degrading to humanity, they must be allowed to
have called forth the most sublime spectacle which humanity can present,—that
of the martyr offering up his life on the altar of principle.
It is difficult—in fact, from the data in my possession, not possible—to
calculate the number of those who fell by the hand of the executioner in this
dismal persecution. The number, doubtless, was not great as compared with the
population of the country,—not so great as we may find left, almost every year
of our lives, on a single battle-field. When the forms of legal proceedings are
maintained, the movements of justice—if the name can be so profaned—are
comparatively tardy. It is only, as in the French Revolution, when thousands
are swept down by the cannon, or whole cargoes of wretched victims are plunged
at once into the waters, that death moves on with the gigantic stride of
pestilence and war.
But the amount of suffering from such a persecution is not to be estimated
merely by the number of those who have actually suffered death, when the fear
of death hung like a naked sword over every man’s head. Alva had expressed to
Philip the wish that every man, as he lay down at night, or as he rose in the
morning, “might feel that his house, at any hour, might fall and crush him!”.
This humane wish was accomplished. Those who escaped death had to fear a fate
scarcely less dreadful, in banishment and confiscation of property. The
persecution very soon took this direction; and persecution when prompted by
avarice is even more odious than when it springs from fanaticism, which,
however degrading in itself, is but the perversion of the religious principle.
Sentence of perpetual exile and confiscation was pronounced at once against
all who fled the country. Even the dead were not spared; as is shown by the
process instituted against the marquis of Bergen, for the confiscation of his
estates on the charge of treason. That nobleman had gone with Montigny, as the
reader may remember, on his mission to Madrid, where he had recently died,—more
fortunate than his companion, who survived for a darker destiny. The duke’s
emissaries were everywhere active in making inventories of the property of the
suspected parties. “I am going to arrest some of the richest and worst
offenders”, writes Alva to his master, “and bring them to a pecuniary
composition”. He shall next proceed, he says, against the delinquent cities. In
this way a round sum will flow into his majesty's coffers. The victims of this
class were so numerous, that we find a single sentence of the council sometimes
comprehending eighty or a hundred individuals. One before me, in fewer words
than are taken up by the names of the parties, dooms no less than a hundred and
thirty-five inhabitants of Amsterdam to confiscation and exile.
One may imagine the distress brought on this once flourishing country by
this wholesale proscription; for besides the parties directly interested, there
was a host of others incidentally affected,—hospitals and charitable
establishments, widows and helpless orphans, now reduced to want by the failure
of the sources which supplied them with their ordinary subsistence. Slow and
sparing must have been the justice doled out to such impotent creditors, when
they preferred their claims to a tribunal like the Council of Blood! The effect
was soon visible in the decay of trade and the rapid depopulation of the towns.
Notwithstanding the dreadful penalties denounced against fugitives, great
numbers, especially from the border states, contrived to make their escape. The
neighboring districts of Germany opened their arms to the wanderers; and many a
wretched exile from the northern provinces, flying across the frozen waters of
the Zuyder Zee, found refuge within the hospitable
walls of Embden. Even in an inland city like Ghent, half the houses, if we may
credit the historian, were abandoned. Not a family was there, he says, but some
of its members had tasted the bitterness of exile or of death. "The fury
of persecution," writes the prince of Orange, "spreads such horror
throughout the nation, that thousands, and among them some of the principal
Papists, have fled a country where tyranny seems to be directed against all,
without distinction of faith."
Yet in a financial point of view the results did not keep pace with Alva's
wishes. Notwithstanding the large amount of the confiscations, the proceeds, as
he complains to Philip, were absorbed in so many ways, especially by the
peculation of his agents, that he doubted whether the expense would not come to
more than the profits! He was equally dissatisfied with the conduct of other
functionaries. The commissioners sent into the provinces, instead of using
their efforts to detect the guilty, seemed disposed, he said, rather to conceal
them. Even the members of the Council of Troubles manifested so much apathy in
their vocation, as to give him more annoyance than the delinquents themselves!
The only person who showed any zeal in the service was Vargas. He was worth all
the others of the council put together. The duke might have excepted from this
sweeping condemnation Hessels, the lawyer of Ghent, if the rumors concerning
him were true. This worthy councilor, it is said, would sometimes fall asleep
in his chair, worn out by the fatigue of trying causes and signing
death-warrants. In this state, when suddenly called on to pronounce the doom of
the prisoner, he would cry out, half awake, and rubbing his eyes, “Ad
patibulum! Ad patibulum!”—“To the gallows! To the gallows!”
But Vargas was after the duke’s own heart. Alva was never weary of
commending his follower to the king. He besought Philip to interpose in his
behalf, and cause three suits which had been brought against that functionary
to be suspended during his absence from Spain. The king accordingly addressed
the judge on the subject. But the magistrate (his name should have been
preserved) had the independence to reply, that “justice must take its course,
and could not be suspended from favor to any one”. “Nor would I have it so”,
answered Philip, (it is the king who tells it;) “I would do only what is
possible to save the interests of Vargas from suffering by his absence”. In
conclusion he tells the duke, that Vargas should give no heed to what is said
of the suits, since he must be assured, after the letter he has received under
the royal hand, that his sovereign fully approves his conduct. But if Vargas,
by his unscrupulous devotion to the cause, won the confidence of his employers,
he incurred, on the other hand, the unmitigated hatred of the people,—a hatred
deeper, it would almost seem, than even that which attached to Alva; owing
perhaps to the circumstance that, as the instrument for the execution of the
duke's measures, Vargas was brought more immediately in contact with the people
than the duke himself.
As we have already seen, many, especially of those who dwelt in the border
provinces, escaped the storm of persecution by voluntary exile. The suspected
parties would seem to have received, not unfrequently, kindly intimations from
the local magistrates of the fate that menaced them. Others, who lived in the
interior, were driven to more desperate courses. They banded together in
considerable numbers, under the name of the "wild Gueux,"—"Gueux sauvages,"—and
took refuge in the forests, particularly of West Flanders. Thence they sallied
forth, fell upon unsuspecting travelers, especially the monks and
ecclesiastics, whom they robbed, and sometimes murdered. Occasionally they were
so bold as to invade the monasteries and churches, stripping them of their rich
ornaments, their plate and other valuables, when, loaded with booty, they
hurried back to their fastnesses. The evil proceeded to such a length, that the
governor-general was obliged to order out a strong force to exterminate the
banditti, while at the same time he published an edict, declaring that every
district should be held responsible for the damage done to property within its
limits by these marauders.
It might be supposed that, under the general feeling of resentment provoked
by Alva's cruel policy, his life would have been in constant danger from the
hand of the assassin. Once, indeed, he had nearly fallen a victim to a
conspiracy headed by two brothers, men of good family in Flanders, who formed a
plan to kill him while attending mass at an abbey in the neighborhood of
Brussels. But Alva was not destined to fall by the hand of violence.
We may well believe that wise and temperate men, like Viglius,
condemned the duke's proceedings as no less impolitic than cruel. That this
veteran councilor did so is apparent from his confidential letters, though he
was too prudent to expose himself to Alva's enmity by openly avowing it. There were others, however,—the princes of
Germany, in particular,—who had no such reasons for dissembling, and who
carried their remonstrances to a higher tribunal than that of the
governor-general.
On the second of March, 1568, the Emperor Maximilian, in the name of the
electors, addressed a letter to Philip, in behalf of his oppressed subjects in
the Netherlands. He reminded the king that he had already more than once, and
in most affectionate terms, interceded with him for a milder and more merciful
policy towards his Flemish subjects. He entreated his royal kinsman to reflect
whether it were not better to insure the tranquility of the state by winning
the hearts of his people, than by excessive rigor to drive them to extremity.
And he concluded by intimating that, as a member of the Germanic body, the
Netherlands had a right to be dealt with in that spirit of clemency which was
conformable to the constitutions of the empire.
Although neither the arguments nor the importunity of Maximilian had power
to shake the constancy of Philip, he did not refuse to enter into some
explanation, if not vindication, of his conduct. "What I have done,"
he replied, "has been for the repose of the provinces, and for the defense
of the Catholic faith. If I had respected justice less, I should have dispatched
the whole business in a single day. No one acquainted with the state of affairs
will find reason to censure my severity. Nor would I do otherwise than I have
done, though I should risk the sovereignty of the Netherlands,—no, though the
world should fall in ruins around me!"—Such a reply effectually closed the
correspondence.
The wretched people of the Netherlands, meanwhile, now looked to the prince
of Orange as the only refuge left them, under Providence. Those who fled the
country, especially persons of higher condition, gathered round his little
court at Dillemburg, where they were eagerly devising
plans for the best means of restoring freedom to their country. They brought
with them repeated invitations from their countrymen to William that he would
take up arms in their defense. The Protestants of Antwerp, in particular,
promised that, if he would raise funds by coining his plate, they would agree
to pay him double the value of it.
William had no wish nearer his heart than that of assuming the enterprise.
But he knew the difficulties that lay in the way, and, like a wise man, he was
not disposed to enter on it till he saw the means of carrying it through
successfully. To the citizens of Antwerp he answered, that not only would he
devote his plate, but his person and all that he possessed, most willingly, for
the freedom of religion and of his country. But the expenses of raising a force
were great,—at the very least, six hundred thousand florins; nor could he now
undertake to procure that amount, unless some of the principal merchants, whom
he named, would consent to remain with him as security.
In the meantime he was carrying on an extensive correspondence with the
German princes, with the leaders of the Huguenot party in France, and even with
the English government,—endeavoring to propitiate them to the cause, as one in
which every Protestant had an interest. From the elector of Saxony and the
landgrave of Hesse he received assurances of aid. Considerable sums seem to
have been secretly remitted from the principal towns in the Low Countries;
while Culemborg, Hoogstraten,
Louis of Nassau, and the other great lords who shared his exile, contributed as
largely as their dilapidated fortunes would allow. The prince himself parted
with his most precious effects, pawning his jewels, and sending his plate to
the mint,—“the fit ornaments of a palace”, exclaims an old writer, “but
yielding little for the necessities of war”.
By these sacrifices a considerable force was assembled before the end of April,
consisting of the most irregular and incongruous materials. There were German
mercenaries, who had no interest in the cause beyond their pay; Huguenots from
France, who brought into the field a hatred of the Roman Catholics which made
them little welcome, even as allies, to a large portion of the Netherlands;
and, lastly, exiles from the Netherlands,—the only men worthy of the
struggle,—who held life cheap in comparison with the great cause to which they
devoted it. But these, however strong in their patriotism, were for the most
part simple burghers untrained to arms, and ill fitted to cope with the hardy
veterans of Castile.
Before completing his levies, the prince of Orange, at the suggestion of
his friend, the landgrave of Hesse, prepared and published a document, known as
his “Justification”, in which he vindicated himself and his cause from the
charges of Alva. He threw the original blame of the troubles on Granvelle,
denied having planned or even promoted the confederacy of the nobles, and
treated with scorn the charge of having, from motives of criminal ambition,
fomented rebellion in a country where he had larger interests at stake than
almost any other inhabitant. He touched on his own services, as well as those
of his ancestors, and the ingratitude with which they had been requited by the
throne. And in conclusion, he prayed that his majesty might at length open his
eyes to the innocence of his persecuted subjects, and that it might be made
apparent to the world that the wrongs inflicted on them had come from evil
counsellors rather than himself.
The plan of the campaign was, to distract the duke’s attention, and, if
possible, create a general rising in the country, by assailing it on three
several points at once. A Huguenot corps, under an adventurer named Cocqueville, was to operate against Artois. Hoogstraten, with the lord of Villers, and others of the
banished nobles, were to penetrate the country in a central direction through
Brabant. While William's brothers, the Counts Louis and Adolphus, at the head
of a force, partly Flemish, partly German, were to carry the war over the
northern borders, into Groningen; the prince himself, who established his
head-quarters in the neighborhood of Cleves, was busy in assembling a force
prepared to support any one of the divisions, as occasion might require.
It was the latter part of April, before Hoogstraten and Louis took the field. The Huguenots ware still later; and William met with
difficulties which greatly retarded the formation of his own corps. The great
difficulty—one which threatened to defeat the enterprise at its
commencement—was the want of money, equally felt in raising troops and in
enforcing discipline among them when they were raised. “If you have any love
for me”, he writes to his friend, the “wise” landgrave of Hesse, “I beseech you
to aid me privately with a sum sufficient to meet the pay of the troops for the
first month. Without this I shall be in danger of failing in my engagements,—to
me worse than death; to say nothing of the ruin which such a failure must bring
on our credit and on the cause”. We are constantly reminded, in the career of
the prince of Orange, of the embarrassments under which our own Washington
labored in the time of the Revolution, and of the patience and unconquerable
spirit which enabled him to surmount them.
Little need be said of two of the expeditions, which were failures. Hoogstraten had scarcely crossed the frontier, towards the
end of April, when he was met by Alva's trusty lieutenant, Sancho Davila, and
beaten, with considerable loss. Villers and some others of the rebel lords,
made prisoners, escaped the sword of the enemy in the field, to fall by that of
the executioner in Brussels. Hoogstraten, with the
remnant of his forces, made good his retreat, and effected a junction with the
prince of Orange.
Cocqueville met with a worse fate. A detachment of French troops was sent against him
by Charles the Ninth, who thus requited the service of the same kind he had
lately received from the duke of Alva. On the approach of their countrymen, the
Huguenots basely laid down their arms. Cocqueville and his principal officers were surrounded, made prisoners, and perished
ignominiously on the scaffold.
The enterprise of Louis of Nassau was attended with different results. Yet
after he had penetrated into Groningen, he was sorely embarrassed by the
mutinous spirit of the German mercenaries. The province was defended by Count Aremberg, its governor, a brave old officer, who had
studied the art of war under Charles the Fifth; one of those models of chivalry
on whom the men of a younger generation are ambitious to form themselves. He
had been employed on many distinguished services; and there were few men at the
court of Brussels who enjoyed higher consideration under both Philip and his
father. The strength of his forces lay in his Spanish infantry. He was
deficient in cavalry, but was soon to be reinforced by a body of horse under
Count Megen, who was a day's march in his rear.
Aremberg soon came in sight of Louis, who was less troubled by the presence of his
enemy than by the disorderly conduct of his German soldiers, clamorous for
their pay. Doubtful of his men, Louis declined to give battle to a foe so far
superior to him in everything but numbers. He accordingly established himself
in an uncommonly strong position, which the nature of the ground fortunately
afforded. In his rear, protected by a thick wood, stood the convent of Heyligerlee, which gave its name to the battle. In front
the land sloped towards an extensive morass. His infantry, on the left, was
partly screened by a hill from the enemy's fire; and on the right he stationed
his cavalry, under the command of his brother Adolphus, who was to fall on the
enemy's flank, should they be hardy enough to give battle
But Aremberg was too well acquainted with the
difficulties of the ground to risk an engagement, at least till he was
strengthened by the reinforcement under Megen. Unfortunately, the Spanish
infantry, accustomed to victory, and feeling a contempt for the disorderly levies
opposed to them, loudly called to be led against the heretics. In vain their
more prudent general persisted in his plan. They chafed at the delay, refusing
to a Flemish commander the obedience which they might probably have paid to one
of their own nation. They openly accused him of treachery, and of having an
understanding with his countrymen in the enemy's camp. Stung by their
reproaches, Aremberg had the imprudence to do what
more than one brave man has been led to do, both before and since; he
surrendered his own judgment to the importunities of his soldiers. Crying out
that "they should soon see if he were a traitor!" he put himself at
the head of his little army, and marched against the enemy. His artillery,
meanwhile, which he had posted on his right, opened a brisk fire on Louis's
left wing, where, owing to the nature of the ground, it did little execution.
Under cover of this fire the main body of the Spanish infantry moved
forward; but, as their commander had foreseen, the men soon became entangled in
the morass; their ranks were thrown into disorder; and when at length, after
long and painful efforts, they emerged on the firm ground, they were more spent
with toil than they would have been after a hard day's march. Thus jaded, and
sadly in disarray, they were at once assailed in front by an enemy who,
conscious of his own advantage, was all fresh and hot for action.
Notwithstanding their distressed condition, Aremberg's soldiers maintained their ground for some time, like men unaccustomed to
defeat. At length, Louis ordered the cavalry on his right to charge Aremberg's flank. This unexpected movement, occurring at a
critical moment, decided the day. Assailed in front and in flank, hemmed in by
the fatal morass in the rear, the Spaniards were thrown into utter confusion.
In vain their gallant leader, proof against danger, though not against the
taunts of his followers, endeavored to rally them. His horse was killed under
him; and as he was mounting another, he received a shot from a foot-soldier,
and fell mortally wounded from his saddle. The rout now became general. Some
took to the morass, and fell into the hands of the victors. Some succeeded in
cutting their way through the ranks of their assailants, while many more lost
their lives in the attempt. The ground was covered with the wounded and the
dead. The victory was complete.
Sixteen hundred of the enemy were left on that fatal field. In the
imagination of the exile thirsting for vengeance, it might serve in some degree
to balance the bloody roll of victims whom the pitiless duke had sent to their
account. Nine pieces of artillery, with a large quantity of ammunition and
military stores, a rich service of plate belonging to Aremberg,
and a considerable sum of money lately received by him to pay the arrears of
the soldiers, fell into the hands of the patriots. Yet as serious a loss as any
inflicted on the Spaniards was that of their brave commander. His corpse,
disfigured by wounds, was recognized, amid a heap of the slain, by the insignia
of the Golden Fleece, which he wore round his neck, and which Louis sent to the
prince, his brother, as a proud trophy of his victory. The joy of the conquerors was dimmed by one
mournful event, the death of Count Adolphus of Nassau, who fell bravely
fighting at the head of his troops, one of the first victims in the war of the
revolution. He was a younger brother of William, only twenty-seven years of
age. But he had already given promise of those heroic qualities which proved
him worthy of the generous race from which he sprung.
The battle was fought on the twenty-third of May, 1568. On the day
following, Count Megen arrived with a reinforcement; too late to secure the
victory, but not, as it proved, too late to snatch the fruits of it from the
victors. By a rapid movement, he succeeded in throwing himself into the town of
Groningen, and thus saved that important place from falling into the hands of
the patriots.
The tidings of the battle of Heyligerlee caused a
great sensation through the country. While it raised the hopes of the malecontents, it filled the duke of Alva with
indignation,—the greater as he perceived that the loss of the battle was to be
referred mainly to the misconduct of his own soldiers. He saw with alarm the
disastrous effect likely to be produced by so brilliant a success on the part
of the rebels, in the very beginning of the struggle. The hardy men of
Friesland would rise to assert their independence. The prince of Orange, with
his German levies, would unite with his victorious brother, and, aided by the
inhabitants, would be in condition to make formidable head against any force
that Alva could muster. It was an important crisis, and called for prompt and
decisive action. The duke, with his usual energy, determined to employ no agent
here, but to take the affair into his own hands, concentrate his forces, and
march in person against the enemy.
Yet there were some things he deemed necessary to be done, if it were only
for their effect on the public mind, before entering on the campaign. On the
twenty-eighth of May, sentence was passed on the prince of Orange, his brother
Louis, and their noble companions. They were pronounced guilty of contumacy in
not obeying the summons of the council, and of levying war against the king.
For this they were condemned to perpetual banishment, and their estates
confiscated to the use of the crown. The sentence was signed by the duke of
Alva. William's estates had been already sequestrated, and a body of Spanish
troops was quartered in his town of Breda.
Another act, of a singular nature, intimated pretty clearly the
dispositions of the government. The duke caused the Hôtel de Culemborg, where he had fixed his own residence before the
regent's departure, and where the Gueux had held
their meetings on coming to Brussels, to be levelled with the ground. On the
spot a marble column was raised, bearing on each side of the base the following
inscription: “Here once stood the mansion of Florence Pallant”,—the name of the
count of Culemborg,—“now razed to the ground for the
execrable conspiracy plotted therein against religion, the Roman Catholic
Church, the king’s majesty, and the country”. Alva by this act intended
doubtless to proclaim to the world, not so much his detestation of the
confederacy—that would have been superfluous—as his determination to show no
mercy to those who had taken part in it. Indeed, in his letters, on more than
one occasion, he speaks of the signers of the Compromise as men who had placed
themselves beyond the pale of mercy.
But all these acts were only the prelude to the dismal tragedy which was
soon to be performed. Nearly nine months had elapsed since the arrest of the
Counts Egmont and Hoorne. During all this time they had remained prisoners of
state, under a strong guard, in the castle of Ghent. Their prosecution had been
conducted in a deliberate, and indeed dilatory manner, which had nourished in
their friends the hope of a favorable issue. Alva now determined to bring the
trial to a close,—to pass sentence of death on the two lords, and to carry it
into execution before departing on his expedition.
It was in vain that some of his counsellors remonstrated on the impolicy,
at a crisis like the present, of outraging the feelings of the nation, by whom
Egmont in particular was so much beloved. In vain they suggested that the two
nobles would serve as hostages for the good behavior of the people during his
absence, since any tumult must only tend to precipitate the fate of the
prisoners. Whether it was that Alva distrusted the effect on his master of the
importunities, from numerous quarters, in their behalf; or, what is far more
likely, that he feared lest some popular rising, during his absence, might open
the gates to his prisoners, he was determined to proceed at once to their
execution. His appetite for vengeance may have been sharpened by mortification
at the reverse his arms had lately experienced; and he may have felt that a
blow like the present would be the most effectual to humble the arrogance of
the nation.
There were some other prisoners of less note, but of no little
consideration, who remained to be disposed of. Their execution would prepare
the public mind for the last scene of the drama. There were nineteen persons
who, at this time, lay in confinement in the castle of Vilvoorde,
a fortress of great strength, two leagues distant from Brussels. They were
chiefly men of rank, and for the most part members of the Union. For these
latter, of course, there was no hope. Their trials were now concluded, and they
were only waiting their sentences. On the ominous twenty-eighth of May, a
day on which the Council of Blood seems to have been uncommonly alert, they
were all, without exception, condemned to be beheaded, and their estates were
confiscated to the public use.
On the first of June, they were brought to Brussels, having been escorted
there by nine companies of Spanish infantry, were conducted to the great square
in front of the Hôtel de Ville, and, while the drums beat to prevent their last
words from reaching the ears of the by-standers, their heads were struck off by
the sword of the executioner. Eight of the number, who died in the Roman
Catholic faith, were graciously allowed the rites of Christian burial. The
heads of the remaining eleven were set upon poles, and their bodies left to rot
upon the gibbet, like those of the vilest malefactors.
On the second of June, ten or twelve more, some of them persons of
distinction, perished on the scaffold, in the same square in Brussels. Among
these was Villers, the companion of Hoogstraten in
the ill-starred expedition to Brabant, in which he was made prisoner. Since his
captivity he had made some disclosures respecting the measures of Orange and
his party, which might have entitled him to the consideration of Alva. But he
had signed the Compromise.
On the following day, five other victims were led to execution within the
walls of Vilvoorde, where they had been long
confined. One of these has some interest for us, Casembrot,
lord of Backerzele, Egmont's confidential secretary.
That unfortunate gentleman had been put to the rack more than once, to draw
from him disclosures to the prejudice of Egmont. But his constancy proved
stronger than the cruelty of his persecutors. He was now to close his
sufferings by an ignominious death; so far fortunate, however, that it saved
him from witnessing the fate of his beloved master. Such were the gloomy scenes
which ushered in the great catastrophe of the fifth of June.
CHAPTER
XXVII.
TRIALS OF EGMONT AND HOORNE.
1568.
Nine months had now elapsed since the Counts Egmont and Hoorne had been
immured within the strong citadel of Ghent. During their confinement they had
met with even less indulgence than was commonly shown to prisoners of state.
They were not allowed to take the air of the castle, and were debarred from all
intercourse with the members of their families. The sequestration of their
property at the time of their arrest had moreover reduced them to such extreme
indigence, that but for the care of their friends they would have wanted the
common necessaries of life.
During this period their enemies had not been idle. We have seen, at the
time of the arrest of the two nobles, that their secretaries and their private
papers had been also seized. “Backerzele”, writes the
duke of Alva to Philip, “makes disclosures every day respecting his master
Count Egmont. When he is put to the torture, wonders may be expected from him
in this way!”. But all that the rack extorted from the unhappy man was some
obscure intimation respecting a place in which Egmont had secreted a portion of
his effects. After turning up the ground in every direction round the castle of
Ghent, the Spaniards succeeded in disinterring eleven boxes filled with plate,
and some caskets of jewels, and other precious articles,—all that now remained
of Egmont’s once splendid fortune.
Meanwhile commissioners were sent into the provinces placed under the rule
of the two noblemen to collect information respecting their government. The
burgomasters of the towns were closely questioned, and, where they showed
reluctance, were compelled by menaces to answer. But what Alva chiefly relied
on was the examination of the prisoners themselves.
On the twelfth of November, 1567, a commission composed of Vargas, Del Rio,
and the secretary Pratz, proceeded to Ghent, and began a personal examination
of Egmont. The interrogatories covered the whole ground of the recent troubles.
They were particularly directed to ascertain Egmont's relations with the
reformed party, but above all, his connection with the confederates,—the
offence of deepest dye in the view of the commissioners. The examination
continued through five days; and a record, signed and sworn to by the several
parties, furnished the basis of the future proceedings against the prisoner. A
similar course was then taken in regard to Hoorne.
In the meantime the friends of the two nobles were making active exertions
in their behalf. Egmont, as we have already seen, was married to a German
princess, Sabina, sister of the elector of Bavaria,—a lady who, from her rank,
the charm of her manners, and her irreproachable character, was the most
distinguished ornament of the court of Brussels. She was the mother of eleven
children, the eldest of them still of tender age. Surrounded by this numerous
and helpless family, thus suddenly reduced from affluence to miserable penury,
the countess became the object of general commiseration. Even the stern heart
of Alva seems to have been touched, as he notices her "lamentable
situation," in one of his letters to Philip.
The unhappy lady was fortunate in securing the services of Nicolas de
Landas, one of the most eminent jurists of the country, and a personal friend
of her husband. In her name, he addressed letters to several of the German
princes, and to the Emperor Maximilian, requesting their good offices in behalf
of her lord. He also wrote both to Alva and the king, less to solicit the
release of Egmont—a thing little to be expected—than to obtain the removal of
the cause from the Council of Blood to a court consisting of the knights of the
Golden Fleece. To this both Egmont and Hoorne had a good claim, as belonging to
that order, the statutes of which, solemnly ratified by Philip himself,
guarantied to its members the right of being tried only by their peers. The frank
and independent tone with which the Flemish jurist, himself also one of the
order, and well skilled in the law, urged this claim on the Spanish monarch,
reflects honor on his memory.
Hoorne’s wife, also a German lady of high connection, and his step-mother, the
countess-dowager, were unwearied in their exertions in his behalf. They wrote
to the knights of the Golden Fleece, in whatever country residing, and obtained
their written testimony to the inalienable right of the accused to be tried by
his brethren. This was obviously a point of the last importance, since a trial
by the Council of Blood was itself equivalent to a condemnation.
Several of the electors, as well as other princes of the empire, addressed
Philip directly on the subject, beseeching him to deal with the two nobles
according to the statutes of the order. Maximilian wrote two letters to the
same purpose; and, touching on the brilliant services of Egmont, he endeavored
to excite the king's compassion for the desolate condition of the countess and
her children.
But it was not foreigners only who interceded in behalf of the lords.
Mansfeldt, than whom Philip had not a more devoted subject in the Netherlands,
implored his sovereign to act conformably to justice and reason in the matter.
Count Barlaimont, who on all occasions had proved
himself no less stanch in his loyalty, found himself now in an embarrassing
situation,—being both a knight of the order and a member of the Council of
Troubles. He wrote accordingly to Philip, beseeching his majesty to relieve him
from the necessity of either acting like a disloyal subject or of incurring the
reproaches of his brethren.
Still more worthy of notice is the interference of Cardinal Granvelle, who,
forgetting his own disgrace, for which he had been indebted to Egmont perhaps
as much as to any other person, now generously interceded in behalf of his
ancient foe. He invoked the clemency of Philip, as more worthy of a great
prince than rigor. He called to mind the former good deeds of the count, and
declared, if he had since been led astray, the blame was chargeable on others
rather than on himself. But although the cardinal wrote more than once to the
king in this strain, it was too late to efface the impression made by former
communications, in which he had accused his rival of being a party to the
treasonable designs of the prince of Orange. This impression had been deepened by
the reports from time to time received from the regent, who at one period, as
we have seen, withdrew her confidence altogether from Egmont. Thus the
conviction of that nobleman's guilt was so firmly settled in the king's mind,
that, when Alva received the government of the Netherlands, there can be little
doubt that Egmont was already marked out as the first great victim to expiate
the sins of the nation. The arguments and entreaties, therefore, used on the
present occasion to dissuade Philip from his purpose, had no other effect than
to quicken his movements. Anxious to rid himself of importunities so annoying,
he ordered Alva to press forward the trial, adding, at the same time, that all
should be made so clear that the world, whose eyes were now turned on these
proceedings, might be satisfied of their justice.
Before the end of December the attorney-general Du Bois had prepared the
articles of accusation against Egmont. They amounted to no less than ninety,
some of them of great length. They chiefly rested on evidence derived from the
personal examination, sustained by information gathered from other quarters.
The first article, which, indeed, may be said to have been the key to all the
rest, charged Egmont with having conspired with William and the other banished
lords to shake off the Spanish rule, and divide the government among
themselves. With this view he had made war on the faithful Granvelle, had
sought to concentrate the powers of the various councils into one, had resisted
the Inquisition, had urged the meeting of the states-general, in short, had
thwarted, as far as possible, in every particular, the intentions of the king.
He was accused, moreover, of giving encouragement to the sectaries. He had not
only refused his aid when asked to repress their violence, but had repeatedly
licensed their meetings, and allowed them to celebrate their religious rites.
Egmont was too stanch a Catholic to warrant his own faith being called into
question. It was only in connection with the political movements of the country
that he was supposed to have countenanced the party of religious reform. Lastly
he was charged, not only with abetting the confederacy of the nobles, but with
having, in conjunction with the prince of Orange and his associates, devised
the original plan of it. It was proof of the good-will he bore the league, that
he had retained in his service more than one member of his household after they
had subscribed the Compromise. On these various grounds, Egmont was declared to
be guilty of treason.
The charges, which cover a great space, would seem at the first glance to
be crudely put together, confounding things trivial, and even irrelevant to the
question, with others of real moment. Yet they must be admitted to have been so
cunningly prepared as to leave an impression most unfavorable to the innocence
of the prisoner. The attorney-general, sometimes audaciously perverting the
answers of Egmont, at other times giving an exaggerated importance to his
occasional admissions, succeeded in spreading his meshes so artfully, that it
required no slight degree of coolness and circumspection, even in an innocent
party, to escape from them.
The instrument was delivered to Egmont on the twenty-ninth of December.
Five days only were allowed him to prepare his defense,—and that too without
the aid of a friend to support, or of counsel to advise him. He at first
resolutely declined to make a defense at all, declaring that he was amenable to
no tribunal but that of the members of the order. Being informed, however, that
if he persisted he would be condemned for contumacy, he consented, though with
a formal protest against the proceeding as illegal, to enter on his defense.
He indignantly disclaimed the idea of any design to subvert the existing government.
He admitted the charges in regard to his treatment of Granvelle, and defended
his conduct on the ground of expediency,—of its being demanded by the public
interest. On the same ground he explained his course in reference to some of
the other matters charged on him, and especially in relation to the
sectaries,—too strong in numbers, he maintained, to be openly resisted. He
positively denied the connection imputed to him with the confederates;
declaring that, far from countenancing the league, he had always lamented its
existence, and discouraged all within his reach from joining it. In reply to
the charge of not having dismissed Backerzele after
it was known that he had joined the confederates, he excused himself by
alleging the good services which his secretary had rendered the government,
more especially in repressing the disorders of the iconoclasts. On the whole,
his answers seem to have been given in good faith, and convey the
impression—probably not far from the truth—of one who, while he did not approve
of the policy of the crown, and thought, indeed, some of its measures
impracticable, had no design to overturn the government.
The attorney-general next prepared his accusation of Count Hoorne,
consisting of sixty-three separate charges. They were of much the same import
with those brought against Egmont. The bold, impatient temper of the admiral
made him particularly open to the assault of his enemies. He was still more
peremptory than his friend in his refusal to relinquish his rights as a knight
of the Golden Fleece, and appear before the tribunal of Alva. When prevailed on
to waive his scruples, his defense was couched in language so direct and manly
as at once engages our confidence. “Unskilled as I am in this sort of
business”, he remarks, “and without the aid of counsel to guide me, if I have
fallen into errors, they must be imputed, not to intention, but to the want of
experience.... I can only beseech those who shall read my defense to believe
that it has been made sincerely and in all truth, as becomes a gentleman of
honorable descent”.
By the remonstrances of the prisoners and their friends, the duke was at
length prevailed on to allow them counsel. Each of the two lords obtained the
services of five of the most eminent jurists of the country; who, to their
credit, seem not to have shrunk from a duty which, if not attended with actual
danger, certainly did not lie in the road to preferment.
The counsel of the two lords lost no time in preparing the defense of their
clients, taking up each charge brought against them by the attorney-general,
and minutely replying to it. Their defense was substantially the same with that
which had been set up by the prisoners themselves, though more elaborate, and
sustained by a greater array both of facts and arguments. Meanwhile the counsel
did not remit their efforts to have the causes brought before the tribunal of
the Toison d'Or. Unless this could
be effected, they felt that all endeavors to establish the innocence of their
clients would be unavailing.
Alva had early foreseen the embarrassment to which he would be exposed on
this ground. He had accordingly requested Philip to stop all further
solicitations by making known his own decision in the matter. The king in reply
assured the duke that men of authority and learning, to whom the subject had
been committed, after a full examination, entirely confirmed the decision made
before Alva's departure, that the case of treason did not come within the
cognizance of the Toison d'Or.
Letters patent accompanied this note, empowering the duke to try the
cause. With these credentials Alva now strove to silence, if not to satisfy,
the counsel of the prisoners; and, by a formal decree, all further applications
for transferring the cause from his own jurisdiction to that of the Golden
Fleece were peremptorily forbidden.
Yet all were not to be thus silenced. Egmont's countess still continued
unwearied in her efforts to excite a sympathy in her lord's behalf in all those
who would be likely to have any influence with the government. Early in 1568
she again wrote to Philip, complaining that she had not been allowed so much as
to see her husband. She implored the king to take her and her children as
sureties for Egmont, and permit him to be removed to one of his own houses. If
that could not be, she begged that he might at least be allowed the air of the
castle, lest, though innocent, his confinement might cost him his life. She
alludes to her miserable condition, with her young and helpless family, and
trusts in the king's goodness and justice that she shall not be forced to seek
a subsistence in Germany, from which country she had been brought to Flanders
by his father the emperor. The letter, says a chronicler of the time, was not
to be read by any one without sincere commiseration for the writer.
The German princes, at the same time, continued their intercessions with
the king for both the nobles; and the duke of Bavaria, and the duke and duchess
of Lorraine, earnestly invoked his clemency in their behalf. Philip, wearied by
this importunity but not wavering in his purpose, again called on Alva to press
the trial to a conclusion.
Towards the end of April, 1568, came that irruption across the borders by Hoogstraten and the other lords, described in the previous
chapter. Alva, feeling probably that his own presence might be required to
check the invaders, found an additional motive for bringing the trials to a
decision.
On the sixth of May, the attorney-general presented a remonstrance against
the dilatory proceedings of Egmont's counsel, declaring that, although so many
months had elapsed, they had neglected to bring forward their witnesses in
support of their defense. He prayed that a day might be named for the
termination of the process.
In the latter part of May, news came of the battle won by Louis of Nassau
in the north. That now became certain which had before been only probable,—that
Alva must repair in person to the seat of war, and assume the command of the
army. There could be no further delay. On the first of June, a decree was
published declaring that the time allowed for the defense of the prisoners had
expired, and that no evidence could henceforth be admitted. The counsel for the
accused loudly protested against a decision which cut them off from all means
of establishing the innocence of their clients. They had abundant testimony at
hand, they said, and had only waited until the government should have produced
theirs. This was plausible, as it was in the regular course for the prosecuting
party to take precedence. But one can hardly doubt that the wary lawyers knew
that too little was to be expected from a tribunal like the Council of Blood to
wish to have the case brought to a decision. By delaying matters, some
circumstance might occur,—perhaps some stronger expression of the public
sentiment,—to work a favorable change in the mind of the king. Poor as it was,
this was the only chance for safety; and every day that the decision was
postponed was a day gained to their clients.
But no time was given for expostulation. On the day on which Alva's decree
was published, the affair was submitted to the decision of the Council of
Blood; and on the following morning, the second of June, that body—or rather
Vargas and Del Rio, the only members who had a voice in the matter—pronounced
both the prisoners guilty of treason, and doomed them to death. The sentence
was approved by Alva.
On the evening of the fourth, Alva went in person to the meeting of the
council. The sentences of the two lords, each under a sealed envelope, were
produced, and read aloud by the secretary. They were both of precisely the same
import. After the usual preamble, they pronounced the Counts Egmont and Hoorne
to have been proved parties to the abominable league and conspiracy of the
prince of Orange and his associates; to have given aid and protection to the
confederates; and to have committed sundry malepractices in their respective governments in regard to the sectaries, to the prejudice of
the holy Catholic faith. On these grounds they were adjudged guilty of treason
and rebellion, and were sentenced accordingly to be beheaded with the sword,
their heads to be set upon poles, and there to continue during the pleasure of
the duke; their possessions, fiefs, and rights, of every description, to be
confiscated to the use of the crown. These sentences were signed only with the
name of Alva, and countersigned with that of the secretary Pratz.
Such was the result of these famous trials, which, from the peculiar
circumstances that attended them, especially their extraordinary duration and
the illustrious characters and rank of the accused, became an object of general
interest throughout Europe. In reviewing them, the first question that occurs
is in regard to the validity of the grounds on which the causes were removed
from the jurisdiction of the Toison d'Or. The decision of the “men of authority and learning”, referred to by
the king, is of little moment considering the influences under which such a
decision in the court of Madrid was necessarily given. The only authority of
any weight in favor of this interpretation seems to have been that of the
president Viglius; a man well versed in the law, with
the statutes of the order before him, and, in short, with every facility at his
command for forming an accurate judgment in the matter.
His opinion seems to have mainly rested on the fact that, in the year 1473,
a knight of the order, charged with a capital crime, submitted to be tried by
the ordinary courts of law. But, on the other hand, some years later, in 1490,
four knights accused of treason, the precise crime alleged against Egmont and
Hoorne, were arraigned and tried before the members of the Toison. A more conclusive argument against Viglius was afforded by the fact, that in 1531 a law was
passed, under the Emperor Charles the Fifth, that no knight of the Golden
Fleece could be arrested or tried, for any offence whatever, by any other body
than the members of his own order. This statute was solemnly confirmed by
Philip himself in 1550; and no law, surely, could be devised covering more
effectually the whole ground in question. Yet Viglius had the effrontery to set this aside as of no force, being so clearly in
contempt of all precedents and statutes. A subterfuge like this, which might
justify the disregard of any law whatever, found no favor with the members of
the order. Arschot and Barlaimont,
in particular, the most devoted adherents of the crown, and among the few
knights of the Toison then in
Brussels, openly expressed their dissent. The authority of a jurist like Viglius was of great moment, however, to the duke, who did
not fail to parade it. But sorely was it to the disgrace of that timid and
time-serving councilor, that he could thus lend himself, and in such a cause,
to become the tool of arbitrary power. It may well lead us to give easier faith
than we should otherwise have done to those charges of peculation and meanness
which the regent, in the heat of party dissensions, so liberally heaped on him.
But whatever may be thought of the rights possessed by the Toison d'Or in this matter, there can be
no doubt as to the illegality of the court before which the cause was
brought;—a court which had no warrant for its existence but the will of Alva;
where the judges, contrary to the law of the land, were foreigners; where the
presiding officer was not even necessarily present at the trial of the causes
on which he alone was to pass sentence.
If so little regard was paid to the law in the composition of this
tribunal, scarcely more was shown to it in the forms of proceeding. On the
present occasion it does not appear that any evidence was brought forward by
the prisoners. And as we are in possession of only a small part of that which
sustained the prosecution, it is not easy to form an opinion how far the
parties were or were not guilty of the crime imputed to them; still less
whether that crime, according to the laws of the land, amounted to treason. The
gravest charge made, with any apparent foundation, was that of a secret
understanding with the confederates. The avowed object of the confederates was,
in certain contingencies, to resist the execution of a particular ordinance;
but without any design to overturn the government. This, by our law, could
hardly be construed into treason. But in the Netherlands, in the time of the
Spanish rule, the law may have been more comprehensive in its import; nor is it
likely that the word "treason" was limited in so explicit a manner as
by the English statute-book under the Plantagenets.
We have information of a curious document of the time, that may throw light
on the matter. Peter d'Arset, president of Artois,
was one of the original members of the Council of Troubles, but had retired
from office before the trial of the two lords. It may have been from the high
judicial station he held in one of Egmont's provinces, that he was consulted in
regard to that nobleman's process. After an examination of the papers, he
returned an answer, written in Latin, at great length, and with a purity of style
that shows him to have been a scholar. In this, he goes over the whole ground
of the accusation, article by article, showing the insufficiency of proof on
every charge, and by argument and legal reference fully establishing the
innocence of the accused. The president's opinion, so independently given, we
may readily believe, found too little favor with the duke of Alva to be cited
as authority.
But even though it were true that the two lords, in that season of public
excitement, had been seduced from their allegiance for a time, some charity
might have been shown to men who had subsequently broken with their former
friends, and displayed the utmost zeal in carrying out the measures of the
government; a zeal in the case of Egmont, at least, which drew from the regent
unqualified commendation. Something more might have been conceded to the man
who had won for his sovereign the most glorious trophies of his reign. But
Philip's nature, unhappily, as I have had occasion to notice, was of that sort
which is more sensible to injuries than to benefits.
Under the circumstances attending this trial, it may seem to have been a
waste of time to inquire into the legality of the court which tried the cause,
or the regularity of the forms of procedure. The real trial took place, not in
Flanders, but in Castile. Who can doubt that, long before the duke of Alva
began his march, the doom of the two nobles had been pronounced in the cabinet
of Madrid?
CHAPTER
XXVIII.
EXECUTION OF EGMONT AND HOORNE.
1568.
On the second of June, 1568, a body of three thousand men was ordered to
Ghent to escort the Counts Egmont and Hoorne to Brussels. No resistance was
offered, although the presence of the Spaniards caused a great sensation among
the inhabitants of the place, who too well foreboded the fate of their beloved
lord.
The nobles, each accompanied by two officers, were put into separate
chariots. They were guarded by twenty companies of pikemen and arquebusiers;
and a detachment of lancers, among whom was a body of the duke's own horse,
rode in the van, while another of equal strength protected the rear. Under this
strong escort they moved slowly towards Brussels. One night they halted at Dendermonde, and towards evening, on the fourth of the
month, entered the capital. As the martial array defiled through its streets,
there was no one, however stout-hearted he might be, says an eye-witness, who
could behold the funeral pomp of the procession, and listen to the strains of
melancholy music, without a feeling of sickness at his heart.
The prisoners were at once conducted to the Brodhuys,
or “Bread-House”, usually known as the Maison du Roi,—that
venerable pile in the market-place of Brussels, still visited by every traveler
for its curious architecture, and yet more as the last resting-place of the
Flemish lords. Here they were lodged in separate rooms, small, dark, and
uncomfortable, and scantily provided with furniture. Nearly the whole of the
force which had escorted them to Brussels was established in the great square,
to defeat any attempt at a rescue. But none was made; and the night passed away
without disturbance, except what was occasioned by the sound of busy workmen
employed in constructing a scaffold for the scene of execution on the following
day.
On the afternoon of the fourth, the duke of Alva had sent for Martin Rithovius, bishop of Ypres; and, communicating to him the
sentence of the nobles, he requested the prelate to visit the prisoners,
acquaint them with their fate, and prepare them for their execution on the
following day. The bishop, an excellent man, and the personal friend of Egmont,
was astounded by the tidings. He threw himself at Alva's feet, imploring mercy
for the prisoners, and, if he could not spare their lives, beseeching him at least
to grant them more time for preparation. But Alva sternly rebuked the prelate,
saying that he had been summoned, not to thwart the execution of the law, but
to console the prisoners, and enable them to die like Christians. The bishop,
finding his entreaties useless, rose and addressed himself to his melancholy
mission.
It was near midnight when he entered Egmont's apartment, where he found the
poor nobleman, whose strength had been already reduced by confinement, and who
was wearied by the fatigue of the journey, buried in slumber. It is said that
the two lords, when summoned to Brussels, had indulged the vain hope that it
was to inform them of the conclusion of their trial and their acquittal!
However this may be, Egmont seems to have been but ill prepared for the
dreadful tidings he received. He turned deadly pale as he listened to the
bishop, and exclaimed, with deep emotion: “It is a terrible sentence. Little
did I imagine that any offence I had committed against God or the king could
merit such a punishment. It is not death that I fear. Death is the common lot
of all. But I shrink from dishonor. Yet I may hope that my sufferings will so
far expiate my offences, that my innocent family will not be involved in my
ruin by the confiscation of my property. Thus much, at least, I think I may
claim in consideration of my past services”. Then, after a pause, he added,
“Since my death is the will of God and his majesty, I will try to meet it with
patience”. He asked the bishop if there were no hope. On being answered, “None
whatever”, he resolved to devote himself at once to preparing for the solemn
change.
He rose from his couch, and hastily dressed himself. He then made his
confession to the prelate, and desired that mass might be said, and the
sacrament administered to him. This was done with great solemnity; and Egmont
received the communion in the most devout manner, manifesting the greatest
contrition for his sins. He next inquired of the bishop to what prayer he could
best have recourse to sustain him in this trying hour. The prelate recommended
to him that prayer which our Saviour had commended to
his disciples. The advice pleased the count, who earnestly engaged in his
devotions. But a host of tender recollections crowded on his mind; and the
images of his wife and children drew his thoughts in another direction, till
the kind expostulations of the prelate again restored him to himself.
Egmont asked whether it would be well to say anything on the scaffold for
the edification of the people. But the bishop discouraged him, saying that he would
be imperfectly heard, and that the people, in their present excitement, would
be apt to misinterpret what he said to their own prejudice.
Having attended to his spiritual concerns, Egmont called for writing
materials, and wrote a letter to his wife, whom he had not seen during his long
confinement; and to her he now bade a tender farewell. He then addressed
another letter, written in French, in a few brief and touching sentences, to
the king,—which fortunately has been preserved to us. “This morning”, he says,
“I have been made acquainted with the sentence which it has pleased your
majesty to pass upon me. And although it has never been my intent to do aught
against the person or the service of your majesty, or against our true,
ancient, and Catholic faith, yet I receive in patience what it has pleased God
to send me. If during these troubles I have counselled or permitted aught which
might seem otherwise, I have done so from a sincere regard for the service of
God and your majesty, and from what I believed the necessity of the times.
Wherefore I pray your majesty to pardon it, and for the sake of my past
services to take pity on my poor wife, my children, and my servants. In this
trust, I commend myself to the mercy of God”. The letter is dated Brussels, “on
the point of death”, June 5, 1568.
Having time still left, the count made a fair copy of the two letters, and
gave them to the bishop, entreating him to deliver them according to their
destination. He accompanied that to Philip with a ring, to be given at the same
time to the monarch. It was of great value; and as it had been the gift of
Philip himself during the count's late visit to Madrid, it might soften the
heart of the king by reminding him of happier days, when he had looked with an
eye of favor on his unhappy vassal.
Having completed all his arrangements, Egmont became impatient for the hour
of his departure; and he expressed the hope that there would be no unnecessary
delay. At ten in the morning the soldiers appeared who were to conduct him to
the scaffold. They brought with them cords, as usual, to bind the prisoner's
hands. But Egmont remonstrated, and showed that he had, himself, cut off the
collar of his doublet and shirt, in order to facilitate the stroke of the
executioner. This he did to convince them that he meditated no resistance; and
on his promising that he would attempt none, they consented to his remaining
with his hands unbound.
Egmont was dressed in a crimson damask robe, over which was a Spanish,
mantle fringed with gold. His breeches were of black silk; and his hat, of the
same material, was garnished with white and sable plumes. In his hand, which,
as we have seen, remained free, he held a white handkerchief. On his way to the
place of execution, he was accompanied by Julian de Romero, maître de
camp, by the captain, Salinas, who had charge of the fortress of Ghent, and
by the bishop of Ypres. As the procession moved slowly forward, the count
repeated some portion of the fifty-first psalm,—“Have mercy on me, O God!”—in
which the good prelate joined with him. In the centre of the square, on the spot where so much of the best blood of the Netherlands
has been shed, stood the scaffold, covered with black cloth. On it were two
velvet cushions with a small table, shrouded likewise in black, and supporting
a silver crucifix. At the corners of the platform were two poles, pointed at
the end with steel, intimating the purpose for which they were intended.
In front of the scaffold was the provost of the court, mounted on horseback
and bearing the red wand of office in his hand. The executioner remained, as
usual, below the platform, screened from view, that he might not, by his
presence before it was necessary, outrage the feelings of the prisoners. The
troops, who had been under arms all night, were drawn up around in order of
battle; and strong bodies of arquebusiers were posted in the great avenues
which led to the square. The space left open by the soldiery was speedily
occupied by a crowd of eager spectators. Others thronged the roofs and windows
of the buildings that surrounded the market-place, some of which, still
standing at the present day, show, by their quaint and venerable architecture,
that they must have looked down on the tragic scene we are now depicting.
It was indeed a gloomy day for Brussels,—so long the residence of the two
nobles, where their forms were as familiar, and where they were held in as much
love and honor as in any of their own provinces. All business was suspended.
The shops were closed. The bells tolled in all the churches. An air of gloom,
as of some impending calamity, settled on the city. “It seemed”, says one
residing there at the time, “as if the day of judgment were at hand!”
As the procession slowly passed through the ranks of the soldiers, Egmont
saluted the officers—some of them his ancient companions—with such a sweet and
dignified composure in his manner as was long remembered by those who saw it.
And few even of the Spaniards could refrain from tears, as they took their last
look at the gallant noble who was to perish by so miserable an end.
With a steady step he mounted the scaffold, and, as he crossed it, gave utterance
to the vain wish, that, instead of meeting such a fate, he had been allowed to
die in the service of his king and country. He quickly, however, turned to
other thoughts, and, kneeling on one of the cushions, with the bishop beside
him on the other, he was soon engaged earnestly in prayer. With his eyes raised
towards Heaven with a look of unutterable sadness, he prayed so fervently and
loud as to be distinctly heard by the spectators. The prelate, much affected,
put into his hands the silver crucifix, which Egmont repeatedly kissed; after
which, having received absolution for the last time, he rose and made a sign to
the bishop to retire. He then stripped off his mantle and robe; and again
kneeling, he drew a silk cap, which he had brought for the purpose, over his
eyes, and repeating the words, "Into thy hands, O Lord, I commend my
spirit," he calmly awaited the stroke of the executioner.
The low sounds of lamentation, which from time to time had been heard among
the populace, were now hushed into silence, as the minister of justice
appearing on the platform, approached his victim, and with a single blow of the
sword severed the head from the body. A cry of horror rose from the multitude,
and some frantic with grief, broke through the ranks of the soldiers, and
wildly dipped their handkerchiefs in the blood that streamed from the scaffold,
treasuring them up, says the chronicler, as precious memorials of love and
incitements to vengeance.—The head was then set on one of the poles at the end
of the platform, while a mantle thrown over the mutilated trunk hid it from the
public gaze.
It was near noon, when orders were sent to lead forth the remaining
prisoner to execution. It had been assigned to the curate of La Chapelle to
acquaint Count Hoorne with his fate. That nobleman received the awful tidings
with less patience than was shown by his friend. He gave way to a burst of
indignation at the cruelty and injustice of the sentence. It was a poor
requital, he said, for eight and twenty years of faithful services to his
sovereign. Yet, he added, he was not sorry to be released from a life of such
incessant fatigue. For some time he refused to confess, saying he had done
enough in the way of confession. When urged not to throw away the few precious
moments that were left to him, he at length consented.
The count was dressed in a plain suit of black, and wore a Milanese cap
upon his head. He was, at this time, about fifty years of age. He was tall,
with handsome features, and altogether of a commanding presence. His form was
erect, and as he passed with a steady step through the files of soldiers, on
his way to the place of execution, he frankly saluted those of his acquaintance
whom he saw among the spectators. His look had in it less of sorrow than of
indignation, like that of one conscious of enduring wrong. He was spared one
pang, in his last hour, which had filled Egmont's cup with bitterness; though,
like him, he had a wife, he was to leave no orphan family to mourn him.
As he trod the scaffold, the apparatus of death seemed to have no power to
move him. He still repeated the declaration, that, “often as he had offended
his Maker, he had never, to his knowledge, committed any offence against the
king”. When his eyes fell on the bloody shroud that enveloped the remains of
Egmont, he inquired if it were the body of his friend. Being answered in the
affirmative, he made some remark in Castilian, not understood. He then prayed
for a few moments, but in so low a tone, that the words were not caught by the
by-standers, and, rising, he asked pardon of those around if he had ever
offended any of them, and earnestly besought their prayers. Then, without
further delay, he knelt down, and, repeating the words “In manus tuas, Domine”, he submitted himself to his fate.
His bloody head was set up opposite to that of his fellow-sufferer. For
three hours these ghastly trophies remained exposed to the gaze of the
multitude. They were then taken down, and, with the bodies, placed in leaden
coffins, which were straightway removed,—that containing the remains of Egmont
to the convent of Santa Clara, and that of Hoorne to the ancient church of St.
Gudule. To these places, especially to Santa Clara, the people now flocked, as
to the shrine of a martyr. They threw themselves on the coffin, kissing it and
bedewing it with their tears, as if it had contained the relics of some
murdered saint; while many of them, taking little heed of the presence of
informers, breathed vows of vengeance; some even swearing not to trim either
hair or beard till these vows were executed. The government seems to have
thought it prudent to take no notice of this burst of popular feeling. But a
funeral hatchment, blazoned with the arms of Egmont, which, as usual after the
master's death, had been fixed by his domestics on the gates of his mansion,
was ordered to be instantly removed; no doubt, as tending to keep alive the
popular excitement. The bodies were not allowed to remain long in their
temporary places of deposit, but were transported to the family residences of
the two lords in the country, and laid in the vaults of their ancestors.
Thus by the hand of the common executioner perished these two unfortunate
noblemen, who, by their rank, possessions, and personal characters, were the
most illustrious victims that could have been selected in the Netherlands. Both
had early enjoyed the favor of Charles the Fifth, and both had been entrusted
by Philip with some of the highest offices in the state. Philip de Montmorency,
Count Hoorne, the elder of the two, came of the ancient house of Montmorency in
France. Besides filling the high post of Admiral of the Low Countries, he was
made governor of the provinces of Gueldres and Zutphen, was a councilor of state, and was created by the
emperor a knight of the Golden Fleece. His fortune was greatly inferior to that
of Count Egmont; yet its confiscation afforded a supply by no means unwelcome
to the needy exchequer of the duke of Alva.
However nearly on a footing they might be in many respects, Hoorne was
altogether eclipsed by his friend in military renown. Lamoral,
Count Egmont, inherited through his mother, the most beautiful woman of her
time, the title of prince of Gavre,—a place on the
Scheldt, not far from Ghent. He preferred, however, the more modest title of
count of Egmont, which came to him by the father's side, from ancestors who had
reigned over the duchy of Gueldres. The uncommon
promise which he early gave served, with his high position, to recommend him to
the notice of the Emperor Charles the Fifth, who, in 1544, honored by his
presence Egmont's nuptials with Sabina, countess-palatine of Bavaria. In 1546,
when scarcely twenty-four years of age, he was admitted to the order of the
Golden Fleece,—and, by a singular coincidence, on the same day on which that
dignity was bestowed on the man destined to become his mortal foe, the duke of
Alva. Philip, on his accession, raised him to the dignity of a councilor of
state, and made him governor of the important provinces of Artois and Flanders.
But every other title to distinction faded away before that derived from
those two victories, which left the deepest stain on the French arms that they
had received since the defeat at Pavia. “I have seen”, said the French
ambassador, who witnessed the execution of Egmont, “I have seen the head of
that man fall who twice caused France to tremble”.
Yet the fame won by his success was probably unfortunate for Egmont. For
this, the fruit of impetuous valor and of a brilliant coup-de-main,
was very different from the success of a long campaign, implying genius and
great military science in the commander. Yet the éclat it gave
was enough to turn the head of a man less presumptuous than Egmont. It placed
him at once on the most conspicuous eminence in the country; compelling him, in
some sort, to take a position above his capacity to maintain. When the troubles
broke out, Egmont was found side by side with Orange, in the van of the
malcontents. He was urged to this rather by generous sensibility to the wrongs
of his countrymen, than by any settled principle of action. Thus acting from
impulse, he did not, like William, calculate the consequences of his conduct.
When those consequences came, he was not prepared to meet them; he was like
some unskillful necromancer, who has neither the wit to lay the storm which he
has raised, nor the hardihood to brave it. He was acted on by contrary
influences. In opposition to the popular movement came his strong feeling of
loyalty, and his stronger devotion to the Roman Catholic faith. His personal
vanity cooperated with these; for Egmont was too much of a courtier willingly
to dispense with the smiles of royalty. Thus the opposite forces by which he
was impelled served to neutralize each other. Instead of moving on a decided
one of conduct, like his friend, William of Orange, he appeared weak and
vacillating. He hesitated where he should have acted. And as the storm
thickened, he even retraced his steps, and threw himself on the mercy of the
monarch whom he had offended. William better understood the character of his
master,—and that of the minister who was to execute his decrees.
Still, with all his deficiencies, there was much both in the personal
qualities of Egmont and in his exploits to challenge admiration. “I knew him”,
says Brantôme, “both in France and in Spain, and never did I meet with a
nobleman of higher breeding, or more gracious in his manners”. With an address
so winning, a heart so generous, and with so brilliant a reputation, it is not
wonderful that Egmont should have been the pride of his court and the idol of
his countrymen. In their idolatry they could not comprehend that Alva's
persecution should not have been prompted by a keener feeling than a sense of
public duty or obedience to his sovereign. They industriously sought in the
earlier history of the rival chiefs the motives for personal pique. On Alva's
first visit to the Netherlands, Egmont, then a young man, was said to have won
of him a considerable sum at play. The ill-will thus raised in Alva’s mind was
heightened by Egmont’s superiority over him at a shooting-match, which the
people, regarding as a sort of national triumph, hailed with an exultation that
greatly increased the mortification of the duke. But what filled up the measure
of his jealousy was his rival’s military renown; for the Fabian policy which
directed Alva's campaigns, however it established his claims to the reputation
of a great commander, was by no means favorable to those brilliant feats of
arms which have such attraction for the multitude. So intense, indeed, was the
feeling of hatred, it was said, in Alva's bosom, that, on the day of his
rival's execution, he posted himself behind a lattice of the very building in
which Egmont had been confined, that he might feast his eyes with the sight of
his mortal agony.
The friends of Alva give a very different view of his conduct. According to
them, an illness under which he labored, at the close of Egmont's trial, was
occasioned by his distress of mind at the task imposed on him by the king. He
had written more than once to the court of Castile, to request some mitigation
of Egmont’s sentence, but was answered, that “this would have been easy to
grant, if the offence had been against the king; but against the faith, it was
impossible”. It was even said that the duke was so much moved, that he was seen
to shed tears as big as peas on the day of the execution!
I must confess, I have never seen any account that would warrant a belief
in the report that Alva witnessed in person the execution of his prisoners.
Nor, on the other hand, have I met with any letter of his deprecating the
severity of their sentence, or advising a mitigation of their punishment. This,
indeed, would be directly opposed to his policy, openly avowed. The reader may,
perhaps, recall the homely simile by which he recommended to the queen-mother,
at Bayonne, to strike at the great nobles in preference to the commoners. “One
salmon”, he said, “was worth ten thousand frogs”. Soon after Egmont’s arrest,
some of the burghers of Brussels waited on him to ask why it had been made. The
duke bluntly told them, “When he had got together his troops, he would let them
know”. Everything shows that, in his method of proceeding in regard to the two
lords, he had acted on a preconcerted plan, in the arrangement of which he had
taken his full part. In a letter to Philip, written soon after the execution,
he speaks with complacency of having carried out the royal views in respect to
the great offenders. In another, he notices the sensation caused by the death
of Egmont; and “the greater the sensation”, he adds, “the greater will be the
benefit to be derived from it”.—There is little in all this of compunction for
the act, or of compassion for its victims.
The truth seems to be, that Alva was a man of an arrogant nature, an
inflexible will, and of the most narrow and limited views. His doctrine of
implicit obedience went as far as that of Philip himself. In enforcing it, he
disdained the milder methods of argument or conciliation. It was on force,
brute force alone, that he relied. He was bred a soldier, early accustomed to
the stern discipline of the camp. The only law he recognized was martial law;
his only argument, the sword. No agent could have been fitter to execute the
designs of a despotic prince. His hard, impassible nature was not to be
influenced by those affections which sometimes turn the most obdurate from
their purpose. As little did he know of fear; nor could danger deter him from
carrying out his work. The hatred he excited in the Netherlands was such, that,
as he was warned, it was not safe for him to go out after dark. Placards were
posted up in Brussels menacing his life if he persisted in the prosecution of
Egmont. He held such menaces as light as he did the entreaties of the countess,
or the arguments of her counsel. Far from being moved by personal
considerations, no power could turn him from that narrow path which he
professed to regard as the path of duty. He went surely, though it might be
slowly, towards the mark, crushing by his iron will every obstacle that lay in
his track. We shudder at the contemplation of such a character, relieved by
scarcely a single touch of humanity. Yet we must admit there is something which
challenges our admiration in the stern, uncompromising manner, without fear or
favor, with which a man of this indomitable temper carries his plans into
execution.
It would not be fair to omit, in this connection, some passages from Alva’s
correspondence, which suggest the idea that he was not wholly insensible to
feelings of compassion,—when they did not interfere with the performance of his
task. In a letter to the king, dated the ninth of June, four days only after
the death of the two nobles, the duke says: “Your majesty will understand the
regret I feel at seeing these poor lords brought to such an end, and myself
obliged to bring them to it. But I have not shrunk from doing what is for your
majesty’s service. Indeed, they and their accomplices have been the cause of
very great present evil, and one which will endanger the souls of many for
years to come. The Countess Egmont’s condition fills me with the greatest pity,
burdened as she is with a family of eleven children, none old enough to take
care of themselves;—and she too a lady of so distinguished rank, sister of the
count-palatine, and of so virtuous, truly Catholic, and exemplary life. There
is no man in the country who does not grieve for her! I cannot but commend
her”, he concludes, “as I do now, very humbly, to the good grace of your
majesty, beseeching you to call to mind that if the count, her husband, came to
trouble at the close of his days, he formerly rendered great service to the
state”. The reflection, it must be owned, came somewhat late.
In another letter to Philip, though of the same date, Alva recommends the
king to summon the countess and her children to Spain; where her daughters
might take the veil, and her sons be properly educated. “I do not believe”, he
adds, “that there is so unfortunate a family in the whole world. I am not sure
that the countess has the means of procuring a supper this very evening!”
Philip, in answer to these letters, showed that he was not disposed to
shrink from his own share of responsibility for the proceedings of his general.
The duke, he said, had only done what justice and his duty demanded. He could
have wished that the state of things had warranted a different result; nor
could he help feeling deeply that measures like those to which he had been
forced should have been necessary in his reign. “But”, continued the king, “no
man has a right to shrink from his duty.—I am well pleased”, he concludes, “to
learn that the two lords made so good and Catholic an end”. As to what you
recommend in regard to the countess of Egmont and her eleven children, I shall
give all proper heed to it.
The condition of the countess might well have moved the hardest heart to
pity. Denied all access to her husband, she had been unable to afford him that
consolation which he so much needed during his long and dreary confinement. Yet
she had not been idle; and, as we have seen, she was unwearied in her efforts
to excite a sympathy in his behalf. Neither did she rely only on the aid which
this world can give; and few nights passed during her lord's imprisonment in
which she and her daughters might not be seen making their pious pilgrimages,
barefooted, to the different churches of Brussels, to invoke the blessing of
Heaven on their labors. She had been supported through this trying time by a
reliance on the success of her endeavors, in which she was confirmed by the
encouragement she received from the highest quarters. It is not necessary to
give credit to the report of a brutal jest attributed to the duke of Alva, who,
on the day preceding the execution, was said to have told the countess “to be
of good cheer; for her husband would leave the prison on the morrow!” There is
more reason to believe that the Emperor Maximilian, shortly before the close of
the trial, sent a gentleman with a kind letter to the countess, testifying the
interest he took in her affairs, and assuring her she had nothing to fear on
account of her husband. On the very morning of Egmont's execution, she was
herself, we are told, paying a visit of condolence to the countess of Aremberg, whose husband had lately fallen in the battle of Heyligerlee; and at her friend's house the poor lady is
said to have received the first tidings of the fate of her lord.
The blow fell the heavier, that she was so ill prepared for it. On the same
day she found herself, not only a widow, but a beggar,—with a family of orphan
children in vain looking up to her for the common necessaries of life. In her
extremity, she resolved to apply to the king himself. She found an apology for
it in the necessity of transmitting to Philip her husband's letter to him,
which, it seems, had been entrusted to her care. She apologizes for not sooner
sending this last and most humble petition of her deceased lord, by the extreme
wretchedness of her situation, abandoned, as she is, by all, far from kindred
and country. She trusts in his majesty's benignity and compassion to aid her
sons by receiving them into his service when they shall be of sufficient age.
This will oblige her, during the remainder of her sad days, and her children
after her, to pray God for the long and happy life of his majesty.—It must have
given another pang to the heart of the widowed countess, to have been thus
forced to solicit aid from the very hand that had smitten her. But it was the
mother pleading for her children.
Yet Philip, notwithstanding his assurances to the duke of Alva, showed no
alacrity in relieving the wants of the countess. On the first of September the
duke again wrote, to urge the necessity of her case, declaring that, if it had
not been for a “small sum that he had himself sent, she and the children would
have perished of hunger!”
The misfortunes of this noble lady excited commiseration not only at home,
but in other countries of Europe, and especially in Germany, the land of her
birth. Her brother, the elector of Bavaria, wrote to Philip, to urge the
restitution of her husband’s estates to his family. Other German princes
preferred the same request, which was moreover formally made by the emperor,
through his ambassador at Madrid. Philip coolly replied, that “the time for
this had not yet come”. A moderate pension, meanwhile, was annually paid by
Alva to the countess of Egmont, who survived her husband ten years,—not long
enough to see her children established in possession of their patrimony.
Shortly before her death, her eldest son, then grown to man’s estate, chafing
under the sense of injustice to himself and his family, took part in the war
against the Spaniards. Philip, who may perhaps have felt some compunction for
the ungenerous requital he had made for the father’s services, not only forgave
this act of disloyalty in the son, but three years later allowed the young man
to resume his allegiance, and placed him in full possession of the honors and
estates of his ancestors.
Alva, as we have seen, in his letters to Philip, had dwelt on the important
effects of Egmont's execution. He did not exaggerate these effects. But he
sorely mistook the nature of them. Abroad, the elector of Bavaria at once threw
his whole weight into the scale of Orange and the party of reform. Others of
the German princes followed his example; and Maximilian’s ambassador at Madrid
informed Philip that the execution of the two nobles, by the indignation it had
caused throughout Germany, had wonderfully served the designs of the prince of
Orange.
At home the effects were not less striking. The death of these two
illustrious men, following so close upon the preceding executions, spread a
deep gloom over the country. Men became possessed with the idea that the reign
of blood was to be perpetual. All confidence was destroyed, even that
confidence which naturally exists between parent and child, between brother and
brother. The foreign merchant caught somewhat of this general distrust, and
refused to send his commodities to a country where they were exposed to
confiscation. Yet among the inhabitants indignation was greater than even fear
or sorrow; and the Flemings who had taken part in the prosecution of Egmont
trembled before the wrath of an avenging people. Such were the effects produced
by the execution of men whom the nation reverenced as martyrs in the cause of
freedom. Alva notices these consequences in his letters to the king. But though
he could discern the signs of the times, he little dreamed of the extent of the
troubles they portended. “The people of this country”, he writes, “are of so
easy a temper, that, when your majesty shall think fit to grant them a general
pardon, your clemency, I trust, will make them as prompt to render you their
obedience as they are now reluctant to do it”.—The haughty soldier, in his
contempt for the peaceful habits of a burgher population, comprehended as
little as his master the true character of the men of the Netherlands.
CHAPTER
XXIX.
SECRET EXECUTION OF MONTIGNY.
1567-1570.
Before bidding a long adieu to the Netherlands, it will be well to lay
before the reader an account of a transaction which has proved a fruitful theme
of speculation to the historian, but which, until the present time, has been
shrouded in impenetrable mystery.
It may be remembered that, in the year 1566, two noble Flemings, the
marquis of Bergen and the baron of Montigny, were sent on a mission to the
court of Madrid, to lay before the king the critical state of affairs,
imperatively demanding some change in the policy of the government. The two
lords went on the mission; but they never returned. Many conjectures were made
respecting their fate; and historians have concluded that Bergen possibly, and
certainly Montigny, came to their end by violence. But, in the want of
evidence, it was only conjecture, while the greatest discrepancy has prevailed
in regard to details. It is not till very recently that the veil has been
withdrawn through the access that has been given to the Archives of Simancas,
that dread repository, in which the secrets of the Castilian kings have been
buried for ages. Independently of the interest attaching to the circumstances
of the present narrative, it is of great importance for the light it throws on
the dark, unscrupulous policy of Philip the Second. It has, moreover, the merit
of resting on the most authentic grounds of the correspondence of the king and
his ministers.
Both envoys were men of the highest consideration. The marquis of Bergen,
by his rank and fortune, was in the first class of the Flemish aristocracy.
Montigny was of the ancient house of the Montmorencys,
being a younger brother of the unfortunate Count Hoorne. At the time of Charles
the Fifth's abdication he had the honor of being selected by the emperor as one
of those Flemish nobles who were to escort him to his monastic residence in
Spain. He occupied several important posts,—among others, that of governor of
Tournay,—and, like Bergen, was a knight of the Golden Fleece. In the political
disturbances of the time, although not placed in the front of disaffection, the
two lords had taken part with the discontented faction, had joined in the war
upon Granvelle, and had very generally disapproved of the policy of the crown.
They had, especially, raised their voices against the system of religious
persecution, with a manly independence which had secured for them—it seems
undeservedly—the reputation of being the advocates of religious reform. This
was particularly the case with Bergen, who, to one that asked how heretics
should be dealt with, replied, "If they were willing to be converted, I
would not trouble them. If they refused, still I would not take their lives, as
they might hereafter be converted." This saying, duly reported to the ears
of Philip, was doubtless treasured up against the man who had the courage to
utter it.
The purpose of their embassy was to urge on the king the necessity of a
more liberal and lenient policy, to which Margaret, who had not yet broken with
the nobles, was herself inclined. It was not strange that the two lords should
have felt the utmost reluctance to undertake a mission which was to bring them
so directly within the power of the monarch whom they knew they had offended,
and who, as they also knew, was not apt to forgive an offence. True, Egmont had
gone on a similar mission to Madrid, and returned uninjured to Brussels. But it
was at an earlier period, when the aspect of things was not so dangerous. His
time had not yet come.
It was not till after much delay that the other nobles, with the regent,
prevailed on Bergen and Montigny to accept the trust, by urging on them its
absolute importance for assuring the tranquility of the country. Even then, an
injury which confined the marquis some weeks to his house furnished him with a
plausible excuse for not performing his engagement, of which he would gladly
have availed himself. But his scruples again vanished before the arguments and
entreaties of his friends; and he consented to follow, as he could not
accompany, Montigny.
The latter reached Madrid towards the middle of June, 1566, was graciously
received by the king, and was admitted to repeated audiences, at which he did
not fail to urge the remedial measures countenanced by Margaret. Philip
appeared to listen with complacency; but declined giving an answer till the
arrival of the other ambassador, who, having already set out on his journey,
was attacked, on his way through France, by a fever. There Bergen halted, and
again thought of abandoning the expedition. His good genius seemed ever willing
to interpose to save him. But his evil genius, in the shape of Philip, who
wrote to him, in the most condescending terms, to hasten his journey, beckoned
him to Madrid.
Besides the two envoys there was another person of consequence from the Low
Countries at that time in the capital,—Simon Renard, once Charles's minister at
the English court, the inexorable foe of Granvelle. He had been persuaded by
Philip to come to Spain, although to do so, he knew, was to put himself on
trial for his manifold offences against the government. He was arrested;
proceedings were commenced against him; and he was released only by an illness
which terminated in his death. There seems to have been a mysterious
fascination possessed by Philip, that he could thus draw within his reach the
very men whom every motive of self-preservation should have kept at an
immeasurable distance.
The arrival of the marquis did not expedite the business of the mission.
Unfortunately, about that period news came to Madrid of the outbreak of the
iconoclasts, exciting not merely in Spain, but throughout Christendom, feelings
of horror and indignation. There was no longer a question as to a more
temperate policy. The only thought now was of vengeance. It was in vain that
the Flemish envoys interposed to mitigate the king's anger, and turn
him from those violent measures which must bring ruin on the country.
Their remonstrances were unheeded. They found access to his person by no means
so easy a thing as before. They felt that somewhat of the odium of the late
transactions attached to them. Even the courtiers, with the ready instinct that
detects a sovereign's frown, grew cold in their deportment. The situation of
the envoys became every day more uncomfortable. Their mission was obviously at
an end, and all they now asked was leave to return to the Netherlands.
But the king had no mind to grant it. He had been long since advised by
Granvelle, and others in whom he trusted, that both the nobles had taken a
decided part in fostering the troubles of the country. To that country they
were never to return. Philip told them he had need of their presence for some
time longer, to advise with him on the critical state of affairs in Flanders.
So thin a veil could not impose on them, and they were idled with the most
serious apprehensions. They wrote to Margaret, begging her to request the king
to dismiss them; otherwise they should have good cause to complain both of her
and of the nobles, who had sent them on a mission from which they would gladly
have been excused. But Margaret had already written to her brother to keep them
in Spain until the troubles in Flanders should be ended. On the reception of
the letter of her envoys, however, she replied that she had already written to
the king to request leave for them to return. I have found no record of such a
letter.
In the spring of 1567, the duke of Alva was sent to take command of the
Netherlands. Such an appointment, at such a crisis, plainly intimated the
course to be pursued, and the host of evils it would soon bring on the devoted
country. The conviction of this was too much for Bergen, heightened as his
distress was by his separation, at such a moment, from all that was most dear
to him on earth. He fell ill of a fever, and grew rapidly worse, till at
length, it was reported to Philip that there was no chance for his recovery
unless he were allowed to return to his native land.
This placed the king in a perplexing dilemma. He was not disposed to let
the marquis escape from his hands even by the way of a natural death. He was
still less inclined to assent to his return to Flanders. In this emergency he
directed Ruy Gomez, the prince of Eboli, to visit the sick nobleman, who was
his personal friend. In case Gomez found the marquis so ill that his recovery
was next to impossible, he was to give him the king's permission to return
home. If, however, there seemed a prospect of his recovery, he was only to hold
out the hope of such a permission. In case of the sick man’s death, Gomez was
to take care to have his obsequies performed in such a manner as to show the
sorrow of the king and his ministers at his loss, and their respect for the
lords of the Low Countries! He was, moreover, in that event, to take means to
have the marquis's property in the Netherlands sequestered, as, should
rebellion be proved against him, it would be forfeited to the crown.—This
curious, and, as it must be allowed, highly confidential epistle, was written
with the king’s own hand. The address ran, “Ruy Gomez—to his hands. Not to be
opened nor read in the presence of the bearer”.
Which part of the royal instruction the minister thought best to follow for
the cure of the patient,—whether he gave him an unconditional permission to
return, or only held out the hope that he would do so,—we are not informed. It
matters little, however. The marquis, it is probable, had already learned not
to put his trust in princes. At all events, the promises of the king did as
little for the patient as the prescriptions of the doctor. On the twenty-first
of May he died,—justifying the melancholy presentiment with which he had
entered on his mission.
Montigny was the only victim that now remained to Philip; and he caused him
to be guarded with redoubled vigilance. He directed Ruy Gomez to keep an eye on
all his movements, and to write to the governors of Navarre, Catalonia, and
other frontier places, to take precautions to intercept the Flemish lord, in
case of his attempting to fly the country. Montigny was in fact a prisoner,
with Madrid for the limits of his prison. Yet, after this, the regent could
write to him from Brussels, that she was pleased to learn from her brother that
he was soon to give him his congé.—If the king said this, he had a
bitter meaning in his words, beyond what the duchess apprehended.
It was not long, however, that Montigny was allowed to retain even this
degree of liberty. In September, 1567, arrived the tidings of the arrest of the
Counts Egmont and Hoorne. Orders were instantly issued for the arrest of
Montigny. He was seized by a detachment of the royal guard, and borne off to
the alcazar of Segovia. He was not to be allowed to leave the fortress day or
night; but as much indulgence was shown to him as was compatible with this
strict confinement; and he was permitted to take with him the various retainers
who composed his household, and to maintain his establishment in prison. But
what indulgence could soften the bitterness of a captivity far from kindred and
country, with the consciousness, moreover, that the only avenue from his prison
conducted to the scaffold!
In his extremity, Montigny looked around for the means of effecting his own
escape; and he nearly succeeded. One, if not more, of the Spaniards on guard,
together with his own servants, were in the plot. It was arranged that the
prisoner should file through the bars of a window in his apartment, and lower
himself to the ground by means of a rope ladder. Relays of horses were provided
to take him rapidly on to the seaport of Santander, in the north, whence he was
to be transported in a shallop to St. Jean de Luz. The materials for executing
his part of the work were conveyed to Montigny in the loaves of bread daily
sent to him by his baker. Everything seemed to promise success. The bars of the
window were removed. They waited only for a day when the alcayde of the castle
would not be likely to visit it. At this juncture the plot was discovered
through the carelessness of the maître d'hôtel.
This person neglected to send one of the loaves to his master, which contained
a paper giving sundry directions respecting the mode of escape, and mentioning
the names of several of the parties. The loaf fell into the hands of a soldier.
On breaking it, the paper was discovered, and taken by him to the captain of
the guard. The plot was laid open; the parties were arrested, and sentenced to
death or the galleys. The king allowed the sentence to take effect in regard to
the Spaniards. He granted a reprieve to the Flemings, saying that what they had
done was in some sort excusable, as being for the service of their master.
Besides, they might be of use hereafter, in furnishing testimony in the
prosecution of Montigny. On this compound principle their lives were spared.
After languishing some time in prison, they were allowed to return to the Low
Countries, bearing with them letters from Montigny, requesting his friends to
provide for them in consideration of their sacrifices for him. But they were
provided for in a much more summary manner by Alva, who, on their landing, caused
them to be immediately arrested, and banished them all from the country, under
pain of death if they returned to it!
The greatest sympathy was felt for Montigny in the Netherlands, where the
nobles were filled with indignation at the unworthy treatment their envoy had
received from Philip. His step-mother, the dowager-countess of Hoorne, was as
untiring in her efforts for him as she had been for his unfortunate brother.
These were warmly seconded by his wife, a daughter of the prince of Epinoy, to whom Montigny had been married but a short time
before his mission to Spain. This lady wrote a letter in the most humble tone of
supplication to Philip. She touched on the blight brought on her domestic
happiness, spoke with a strong conviction of the innocence of Montigny, and
with tears and lamentations implored the king, by the consideration of his past
services, by the passion of the blessed Saviour, to
show mercy to her husband.
Several months elapsed, after the execution of the Counts Egmont and
Hoorne, before the duke commenced proceedings against Montigny; and it was not
till February, 1569, that the licentiate Salazar, one of the royal council, was
sent to Segovia in order to interrogate the prisoner. The charges were of the
same nature with those brought against Egmont and Hoorne. Montigny at first,
like them, refused to make any reply,—standing on his rights as a member of the
Golden Fleece. He was, however, after a formal protest, prevailed on to waive
this privilege. The examination continued several days. The various documents
connected with it are still preserved in the Archives of Simancas. M. Gachard has given no abstract of their contents. But that
sagacious inquirer, after a careful perusal of the papers, pronounces
Montigny’s answers to be “a victorious refutation of the charges of the
attorney-general”.
It was not a refutation that Philip or his viceroy wanted. Montigny was
instantly required to appoint some one to act as counsel in his behalf. But no
one was willing to undertake the business, till a person of little note at
length consented, or was rather compelled to undertake it by the menaces of
Alva. Any man might well have felt a disinclination for an office which must
expose him to the ill-will of the government, with little chance of benefit to
his client.
Even after this, Montigny was allowed to languish another year in prison
before sentence was passed on him by his judges. The proceedings of the Council
of Blood on this occasion were marked by a more flagitious contempt of justice,
if possible, than its proceedings usually were. The duke, in a letter of the
eighteenth of March, 1570, informed the king of the particulars of the trial.
He had submitted the case, not to the whole court, but to a certain number of
the councilors, selected by him for the purpose. He does not tell
on what principle the selection was made. Philip could readily divine it. In
the judgment of the majority, Montigny was found guilty of high treason. The
duke accordingly passed sentence of death on him. The sentence was dated March
4, 1570. It was precisely of the same import with the sentences of Egmont and
Hoorne. It commanded that Montigny be taken from prison, and publicly beheaded
with a sword. His head was to be stuck on a pole, there to remain during the
pleasure of his majesty. His goods and estates were to be confiscated to the
crown.
The sentence was not communicated even to the Council of Blood. The only
persons aware of its existence were the duke's secretary and his two trusty councilors,
Vargas and Del Rio. Alva had kept it thus secret until he should learn the will
of his master. At the same time he intimated to Philip that he might think it
better to have the execution take place in Castile, as under existing
circumstances more eligible than the Netherlands.
Philip was in Andalusia, making a tour in the southern provinces, when the dispatches
of his viceroy reached him. He was not altogether pleased with their tenor. Not
that he had any misgivings in regard to the sentence; for he was entirely
satisfied, as he wrote to Alva, of Montigny’s guilt. But he did not approve of
a public execution. Enough blood, it might be thought in the Netherlands, had
been already spilt; and men there might complain that, shut up in a foreign
prison during his trial, Montigny had not met with justice. There were
certainly some grounds for such a complaint.
Philip resolved to defer taking any decisive step in the matter till his
return to the north. Meanwhile he commended Alva's discretion in keeping the
sentence secret, and charged him on no account to divulge it, even to members
of the council.
Some months elapsed after the king's return to Madrid before he came to a
decision,—exhibiting the procrastination, so conspicuous a trait in him, even
among a people with whom procrastination was no miracle. It may have been that
he was too much occupied with an interesting affair which pressed on him at
that moment. About two years before, Philip had had the misfortune to lose his
young and beautiful queen, Isabella of the Peace. Her place was now to be
supplied by a German princess, Anne of Austria, his fourth wife, still younger
than the one he had lost. She was already on her way to Castile; and the king
may have been too much engrossed by his preparations for the nuptial
festivities, to have much thought to bestow on the concerns of his wretched
prisoner.
The problem to be solved was how to carry the sentence into effect, and yet
leave the impression on the public that Montigny died a natural death. Most of
the few ministers whom the king took into his confidence on the occasion were
of opinion that it would be best to bring the prisoner's death about by means
of a slow poison administered in his drink, or some article of his daily food.
This would give him time, moreover, to provide for the concerns of his soul.
But Philip objected to this, as not fulfilling what he was pleased to call the
ends of justice. He at last decided on the garrote,—the form of
execution used for the meaner sort of criminals in Spain, but which, producing
death by suffocation, would be less likely to leave its traces on the body.
To accomplish this, it would be necessary to remove Montigny from the town
of Segovia, the gay residence of the court, and soon to be the scene of the
wedding ceremonies, to some more remote and less frequented spot. Simancas was
accordingly selected, whose stern, secluded fortress seemed to be a fitting
place for the perpetration of such a deed. The fortress was of great strength,
and was encompassed by massive walls, and a wide moat, across which two bridges
gave access to the interior. It was anciently used as a prison for state
criminals. Cardinal Ximenes first conceived the idea of turning it to the
nobler purpose of preserving the public archives. Charles the Fifth carried
this enlightened project into execution; but it was not fully consummated till
the time of Philip, who prescribed the regulations, and made all the necessary
arrangements for placing the institution on a permanent basis,—thus securing to
future historians the best means for guiding their steps through the dark and
tortuous passages of his reign. But even after this change in its destination,
the fortress of Simancas continued to be used occasionally as a place of
confinement for prisoners of state. The famous bishop of Zamora, who took so
active a part in the war of the comunidades,
was there strangled by command of Charles the Fifth. The quarter of the
building in which he suffered is still known by the name of “el cubo del obispo”,—“The
Bishop’s Tower”.
To this strong place Montigny was removed from Segovia, on the nineteenth
of August, 1570, under a numerous guard of alguazils and arquebusiers. For greater security he was put in irons,—a superfluous piece
of cruelty, from which Philip, in a letter to Alva, thought it necessary to
vindicate himself, as having been done without his orders. We might well
imagine that the last ray of hope must have faded away in Montigny’s bosom, as
he entered the gloomy portals of his new abode. Yet hope, as we are assured, did
not altogether desert him. He had learned that Anne of Austria had expressed
much sympathy for his sufferings. It was but natural that the daughter of the
emperor Maximilian should take an interest in the persecuted people of the
Netherlands. It was even said that she promised the wife and step-mother of
Montigny to make his liberation the first boon she would ask of her husband on
coming to Castile. And Montigny cherished the fond hope that the influence of
the young bride would turn the king from his purpose, and that her coming to
Castile would be the signal for his liberation. That Anne should have yielded
to such an illusion is not so strange, for she had never seen Philip; but that
Montigny should have been beguiled by it is more difficult to understand.
In his new quarters he was treated with a show of respect, if not
indulgence. He was even allowed some privileges. Though the guards were doubled
over him, he was permitted to have his own servants, and, when it suited him,
to take the fresh air and sunshine in the corridor.
Early in October the young Austrian princess landed on the northern shores
of the kingdom, at Santander. The tidings of this may have induced the king to
quicken his movements in regard to his prisoner, willing perhaps to relieve
himself of all chance of importunity from his bride, as well as from the
awkwardness of refusing the first favor she should request. As a preliminary
step, it would be necessary to abridge the liberty which Montigny at present
enjoyed, to confine him to his apartment, and cutting off his communications
even with those in the castle, to spread the rumor of his illness, which should
prepare the minds of the public for a fatal issue.
To furnish an apology for his close confinement, a story was got up of an
attempt to escape, similar to what had actually occurred at Segovia. Peralta,
alcayde of the fortress, a trustworthy vassal, to whom was committed the
direction of the affair, addressed a letter to the king, inclosing a note in
Latin, which he pretended had been found under Montigny’s window, containing
sundry directions for his flight. The fact of such a design, the writer said,
was corroborated by the appearance of certain persons in the disguise of friars
about the castle. The governor, in consequence, had been obliged to remove his
prisoner to other quarters, of greater security. He was accordingly lodged in
the Bishop's Tower,—ominous quarters!—where he was no longer allowed the
attendance of his own domestics, but placed in strict confinement. Montigny had
taken this proceeding so ill, and with such vehement complaints of its
injustice, that it had brought on a fever, under which he was now laboring.
Peralta concluded by expressing his regret at being forced by Montigny's
conduct into a course so painful to himself, as he would gladly have allowed
him all the indulgence compatible with his own honor.—This letter, which had
all been concocted in the cabinet at Madrid, was shown openly at court. It
gained easier credit from the fact of Montigny's former attempt to escape; and
the rumor went abroad that he was now lying dangerously ill.
Early in October, the licentiate Alonzo de Arellano had been summoned from
Seville, and installed in the office of alcalde of the chancery of Valladolid,
distant only two leagues from Simancas. Arellano was a person in whose
discretion and devotion to himself Philip knew he could confide; and to him he
now intrusted the execution of Montigny. Directions
for the course he was to take, as well as the precautions he was to use to
prevent suspicion, were set down in the royal instructions with great
minuteness. They must be allowed to form a remarkable document, such as has
rarely proceeded from a royal pen. The alcalde was to pass to Simancas, and
take with him a notary, an executioner, and a priest. The last should be a man
of undoubted piety and learning, capable of dispelling any doubts or errors
that might unhappily have arisen in Montigny’s mind in respect to the faith.
Such a man appeared to be Fray Hernando del Castillo, of the order of St. Dominic,
in Valladolid; and no better person could have been chosen, nor one more open
to those feelings of humanity which are not always found under the robe of the
friar.
Attended by these three persons, the alcalde left Valladolid soon after
nightfall on the evening of the fourteenth of October. Peralta had been advised
of his coming; and the little company were admitted into the castle so
cautiously as to attract no observation. The governor and the judge at once
proceeded to Montigny’s apartment, where they found the unhappy man lying on
his pallet, ill not so much of the fever that was talked of, as of that
sickness of the heart which springs from hope deferred. When informed of his
sentence by Arellano, in words as kind as so cruel a communication would
permit, he was wholly overcome by it, and for some time continued in a state of
pitiable agitation. Yet one might have thought that the warnings he had already
received were such as might have prepared his mind in some degree for the blow.
For he seems to have been in the condition of the tenant of one of those
inquisitorial cells in Venice, the walls of which, we are told, were so
constructed as to approach each other gradually every day, until the wretched
inmate was crushed between them. After Montigny had sufficiently recovered from
his agitation to give heed to it, the sentence was read to him by the notary.
He was still to be allowed a day before the execution, in order to gain time,
as Philip had said, to settle his affairs with Heaven. And although, as the
alcalde added, the sentence passed on him was held by the king as a just
sentence, yet, in consideration of his quality, his majesty, purely out of his
benignity and clemency, was willing so far to mitigate it, in regard to the
form, as to allow him to be executed, not in public, but in secret, thus saving
his honor, and suggesting the idea of his having come to his end by a natural
death. For this act of grace Montigny seems to have been duly grateful. How
true were the motives assigned for it, the reader can determine.
Having thus discharged their painful office, Arellano and the governor
withdrew, and, summoning the friar, left the prisoner to the spiritual
consolations he so much needed. What followed, we have from Castillo himself.
As Montigny's agitation subsided, he listened patiently to the exhortations of
the good father; and when at length restored to something like his natural
composure, he joined with him earnestly in prayer. He then confessed and
received the sacrament, seeming desirous of employing the brief space that yet
remained to him in preparation for the solemn change. At intervals, when not
actually occupied with his devotions, he read the compositions of Father Luis
de Granada, whose spiritualized conceptions had often solaced the hours of his
captivity.
Montigny was greatly disturbed by the rumor of his having been shaken in
his religious principles, and having embraced the errors of the Reformers. To
correct this impression, he briefly drew up, with his own hand, a confession of
faith, in which he avows as implicit a belief in all the articles sanctioned by
the Roman Catholic Church, and its head, the Vicar of Christ, as Pius the Fifth
himself could have desired. Having thus relieved his mind, Montigny turned to
settle some temporal affairs which he was desirous to settle. They did not
occupy much time. For, as Philip had truly remarked, there was no occasion for
him to make a will, since he had nothing to bequeath,—all his property having
been confiscated to the crown. If, however, any debt pressed heavily on his
conscience, he was to be allowed to indicate it, as well as any provision which
he particularly desired to make for a special purpose. This was on the
condition, however, that he should allude to himself as about to die a natural
death.
Montigny profited by this to express the wish that masses, to the number of
seven hundred, might be said for his soul, that sundry sums might be
appropriated to private uses, and that some gratuities might be given to
certain of his faithful followers. It may interest the reader to know that the
masses were punctually performed. In regard to the pious legacies, the king
wrote to Alva, he must first see if Montigny's estate would justify the
appropriation; as for the gratuities to servants, they were wholly out of
the question.
One token of remembrance, which he placed in the hands of Castillo,
doubtless reached its destination. This was a gold chain of delicate
workmanship, with a seal or signet ring attached to it, bearing his arms. This
little token he requested might be given to his wife. It had been his constant
companion ever since they were married; and he wished her to wear it in memory
of him,—expressing at the same time his regret that a longer life had not been
granted him, to serve and honor her. As a dying injunction he besought her not
to be entangled by the new doctrines, or to swerve from the faith of her
ancestors.—If ever Montigny had a leaning to the doctrines of the Reformation,
it could hardly have deepened into conviction; for early habit and education
reasserted their power so entirely, at this solemn moment, that the Dominican
by his side declared that he gave evidence of being as good and Catholic a
Christian as he could wish to be himself. The few hours in which Montigny had
thus tasted of the bitterness of death seemed to have done more to wean him
from the vanities of life than the whole years of dreary imprisonment he had
passed within the walls of Segovia and Simancas. Yet we shall hardly credit the
friar's assertion, that he carried his resignation so far, that, though
insisting on his own innocence, he admitted the sentence of his judges to be
just!
At about two o'clock on the morning of the sixteenth of October, when the
interval allowed for this solemn preparation had expired, Father Castillo
waited on the governor and the alcalde, to inform them that the hour had come,
and that their prisoner was ready to receive them. They went, without further
delay, to the chamber of death, attended by the notary and the executioner.
Then, in their presence, while the notary made a record of the proceedings, the
grim minister of the law did his work on his unresisting victim.
No sooner was the breath out of the body of Montigny, than the alcalde, the
priest, and their two companions were on their way back to Valladolid, reaching
it before dawn, so as to escape the notice of the inhabitants. All were
solemnly bound to secrecy in regard to the dark act in which they had been
engaged. The notary and the hangman were still further secured by the menace of
death, in case they betrayed any knowledge of the matter; and they knew full
well that Philip was not a man to shrink from the execution of his menaces.
The corpse was arrayed in a Franciscan habit, which, coming up to the
throat, left the face only exposed to observation. It was thus seen by
Montigny's servants, who recognized the features of their master, hardly more
distorted than sometimes happens from disease, when the agonies of death have
left their traces. The story went abroad that their lord had died of the fever
with which he had been so violently attacked.
The funeral obsequies were performed, according to the royal orders, with
all due solemnity. The vicar and beneficiaries of the church of St. Saviour officiated on the occasion. The servants of the
deceased were clad in mourning,—a token of respect recommended by Philip, who
remarked, the servants were so few, that mourning might as well be given to
them; and he was willing to take charge
of this and the other expenses of the funeral, provided Montigny had not left
money sufficient for the purpose. The place selected for his burial was a vault
under one of the chapels of the building; and a decent monument indicated the
spot where reposed the ashes of the last of the envoys who came from Flanders
on the ill-starred mission to Madrid.
Such is a true account of this tragical affair, as derived from the king's
own letters and those of his agents. Far different was the story put in
circulation at the time. On the seventeenth of October, the day after
Montigny’s death, despatches were received at court
from Peralta, the alcayde of the fortress. They stated that, after writing his
former letter, his prisoner's fever had so much increased, that he had called
in the aid of a physician; and as the symptoms became more alarming, the latter
had entered into a consultation with the medical adviser of the late regent,
Joanna, so that nothing that human skill could afford should be wanting to the
patient. He grew rapidly worse, however, and as, happily, Father Hernando del
Castillo, of Valladolid, chanced to be then in Simancas, he came and
administered the last consolations of religion to the dying man. Having done
all that a good Christian at such a time should do, Montigny expired early on
the morning of the sixteenth, manifesting at the last so Catholic a spirit,
that good hopes might be entertained of his salvation.
This hypocritical epistle, it is hardly necessary to say, like the one that
preceded it, had been manufactured at Madrid. Nor was it altogether devoid of
truth. The physician of the place, named Viana, had been called in; and it was
found necessary to intrust him with the secret. Every
day he paid his visit to the castle, and every day returned with more alarming
accounts of the condition of the patient; and thus the minds of the community
were prepared for the fatal termination of his disorder. Not that, after all,
this was unattended with suspicions of foul play in the matter, as people
reflected how opportune was the occurrence of such an event. But suspicions
were not proof. The secret was too well guarded for any one to penetrate the
veil of mystery; and the few who were behind that veil loved their lives too
well to raise it.
Despatches written in cipher, and containing a full and true account of the affair,
were sent to the duke of Alva. The two letters of Peralta, which indeed were
intended for the meridian of Brussels rather than of Madrid, were forwarded
with them. The duke was told to show them incidentally, as it were, without
obtruding them on any one's notice, that Montigny's friends in the Netherlands
might be satisfied of their truth.
In his own private communication to Alva, Philip, in mentioning the
orthodox spirit manifested by his victim in his last moments, shows that with
the satisfaction which he usually expressed on such occasions was mingled some
degree of scepticism. "If his inner man,"
he writes of Montigny, "was penetrated with as Christian a spirit as he
exhibited in the outer, and as the friar who confessed him has reported, God,
we may presume, will have mercy on his soul." In
the original draft of the letter, as prepared by the king's secretary, it is
further added: "Yet, after all, who can tell but this was a delusion of
Satan, who, as we know, never deserts the heretic in his dying hour." This
sentence—as appears from the manuscript still preserved in Simancas—was struck
out by Philip, with the remark in his own hand, "Omit this, as we should
think no evil of the dead!"
Notwithstanding this magnanimous sentiment, Philip lost no time in
publishing Montigny to the world as a traitor, and demanding the confiscation
of his estates. The Council of Blood learned a good lesson from the Holy
Inquisition, which took care that even Death should not defraud it of its
victims. Proceedings were instituted against the memory of
Montigny, as had before been done against the memory of the marquis of Bergen.
On the twenty-second of March, 1571, the duke of Alva pronounced sentence,
condemning the memory of Florence de Montmorency, lord of Montigny, as guilty
of high treason, and confiscating his goods and estates to the use of the
crown; "it having come to his knowledge," the instrument went on to
say, "that the said Montigny had deceased by natural death in the fortress
of Simancas, where he had of late been held a prisoner!"
The proceedings of the Council of Blood against Montigny were
characterized, as I have already said, by greater effrontery and a more
flagrant contempt of the common forms of justice than were usually to be met
with even in that tribunal. A bare statement of the facts is sufficient. The
party accused was put on his trial—if trial it can be called—in one country,
while he was held in close custody in another. The court before which he was
tried—or rather the jury, for the council seems to have exercised more of the
powers of a jury than of a judge—was on this occasion a packed body, selected
to suit the purposes of the prosecution. Its sentence, instead of being
publicly pronounced, was confided only to the party interested to obtain
it,—the king. Even the sentence itself was not the one carried into effect; but
another was substituted in its place, and a public execution was supplanted by
a midnight assassination. It would be an abuse of language to dignify such a
proceeding with the title of a judicial murder.
Yet Philip showed no misgivings as to his own course in the matter. He had
made up his mind as to the guilt of Montigny. He had been false to his king and
false to his religion; offences which death only could expiate. Still we find
Philip resorting to a secret execution, although Alva, as we have seen, had
supposed that sentence was to be executed on Montigny in the same open
manner as it had been on the other victims of the bloody tribunal. But the king
shrunk from exposing a deed to the public eye, which, independently of its
atrocity in other respects, involved so flagrant a violation of good faith
towards the party who had come, at his sovereign's own desire, on a public
mission to Madrid. With this regard to the opinions of his own age, it may seem
strange that Philip should not have endeavored to efface every vestige of his
connection with the act, by destroying the records which established it. On the
contrary, he not only took care that such records should be made, but caused
them, and all other evidence of the affair, to be permanently preserved in the
national archives. There they lay for the inspection of posterity, which was
one day to sit in judgment on his conduct.
BOOK IV. SPANISH EMPIRE AT WAR WITH THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE |
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